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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-02-11 - Orange Coast PilotI Irvine City hood Violen~e · Erupts· Ele~tion Wins, At War Protests:; LAFC Approval Boy~ Offi~er Burt DAILY PILOT ers. o ·c rea * * * 10' * * * THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 11, 197 1 VOL. 64, NO. M, 4 l•CTIONI, " ,A.II Surprise Move LAFC Approves Irvine Ci,yhood By JACK BROBACK Of tilt C.llr f'llOt l ttfl Or111ge County political observers were 1tUl buzzing today after the Local Agency Formation Commission,·tn a suprise 1pUt decision, Wednesday ruled ·that citiiens of Irvine commun ities shouldrbe allowed to vote on 1 proposal to create their own city. The LAFC's action which will brine about lhe cityhood election came alter 4(1 minutes pf someUmes heated discussion and a 3 to 2 split vote. supervisors RQhald Caspe rs of Newport Beach and Ro!ert Battin of Santa Ana; sitting as LAFC commissioners, voted nay and lost. They were known opponents nf the cityhood and in the turn of recent county politics, it was an_ticipated their op- posttion woul d prevail. ·But San Cl emente Councilman Sta nley Northrup pushed hard in favor. of the cityhood election and lhe key swing vote tn favor was cast by LAFC Chairman Louis Re inhardt of Fullerton. Newport's Gaspers was ~b.viousl~ feel· tng the heat in the pohUcal kitchen when he argued against putting the cityhood issue to a vote of the people .. At one point the freshman supervisor said quieUy. "My stock is low now but 'J hope lhe people who live there will unde rstand that 1 am doing what I think is best for lhe are9. "I think •the county is In the best. posi;tlon to plan what is best for th.ls are1." He said he recognized many people would oppose his stand. . ''1 only hope a?£i pray that the people ;< Oru1e Cout l\'eather Another groovy day is on tap for Southern Californians Friday, with warm. sunn y weather push· lng into the 80s along the Orange Coast. INSWE TODAY British b4tt.ks closed Wedtt.t&· day afternoon to allow the M · tion to make tile bigge11t Jinan· ciol readju.stment i" 1,200 yeors to thf decimal s11stem. SCP Pag• 8. Ctllltt11!• I (1\K•llil UJ 1 Cltnlli.I tf.M Ctmk1 11 CmlWtl'll ,, Dlt"' Nttkft 11 141WS.I ,_,. 6 lllfl'fllll-1 *" ,Ina Mt U·IJ "tl'M<.Mt II AIHI LlllW~ ,; U IMwltl J._11 Mul•ll l"tMt 14 N•lt.MI ~ W OrtllM CMltr 11 '""' zt.tl SJ9dl Manllh l•U Ttlf\'111111 U ,..,.,""' a ... 11 WMlllH 4 Wt_., Ntwl 1P·lt Wtl'M Ntwl 4•1 / ' will 'understand that I do what J feel i8 best for them." With approval of the LAFC, it U now a virtual certainty that the people t1f Irvine communities will ge t a chance to vote on the proposal that would create a city embracing 18,145 acres generally &urrounding the UC Irvine campus. Supporters of cityhood. principally the Council of Communities of lrvi.ne a n d the Irvine Company, may now circulate petitions which would call for the cityhood election. Petitions must' bear signatures of t1wners of land representing 2S percent of the taxable value within the proposed city boundaries. This is considered largely a formality since the Irvine Company owns far more than 25 percent of the taxable value . The company favors cityhood. The only real power on the issue remaining with the county Board of Supervisors would then be setting the actual election date. The election could be blocked if more than SO percent of taxable landowners protest the election. This appears unlike- ly. Monthi; of debate 11nd reams of paperworkll were compiled. along with fSee IRVINE. Page %) Holiday Closing Schedules Vary On Orange Coast The four day holiday weekend for Lincoln's and Washington's bir1hdays will result in some businesses and civic of- Uces closing. -and some not closing. In Costa Mesa, Fountain Valley. Hun- tington Beach and San Juan Capistrano, the city offices will dose Friday and Monday. The same will happen in state offices, such a:. lhe Department of MOtor Vehicles, and county offices and courts. In the cities of Laguna Beach. Newp<irt Beach and San Clemente, civic offices will rem1in open on Friday, but will close Monday. · And in Seal Beach, city empl<lyes aren't going to get any holiday as city offices will be open both Friday and Manday. The' Post Offices In the area will stay open for business Friday and ~tur· day -there will be. mail delivery both days -but will close on Monday. Banks and businesses are also following 1 varied pattern. Many will be open on Friday and closed Mo11day. As far as &hops that might be open Saturday, the best way f1>r reside nts in the Orange Coast area to find out, u ta call betore &bappina. • • I Slain Iilller Shot_CQast Girl Also? By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tllt D•I,., 'Hot Sl•ft Bertram Greenberg, the killer tif a 13-year.old Los Ange les girl, two Arizona patrolmen and a New Mexico resident. may have shot a San Clemente girl two weeks before he went on his three· state killing spree th at ended In his own death. Newport Beach Detective Sam Amburgey said Greenberg is a prime suspect in the shoot ing of 19-year-<>ld Susan Spector. ''It's going to take 11 lot or work before we can pin it do"·n.'' Amburgey said, "But we have some good le3ds," Miss Spector was shot in tht left side Jan . 23 as she lea'ped from the car of an abductor. She had been picked up hitchhiking from South Laguna te Ne-A'porl Beach and jumped from the car at the intersection of East Coast Highway and Newport Center Drive when the dr iver pulled a gun on her. Amburgey said he has shown mug shots of the former mental patient te the shooting victim who has returned lo her San Clemente home. "She couldn 't make a positive iden- tification," lhe detective said, "By lhat I .mean she couldn't positively say it "'as him. but she couldn't eliminat.i him either." Detectives are lrylng to obtain photos or Greenberg without his glasses on to show Miss Spector. "The man who shot her was not wearing glasses,'' be said. Amburgey said one of their leads In the case is a description of the shooting suspeet's car wb.ich was supplied by witnesses. AD CLEANED VP FOR COAST MAN You could staff I.he housekeeping de· partment of a hotel with just one DAILY PILOT classified ad. One Newport Beach 1 man proved it for himself. The following ad got 70 responses! HOUSECLEANING. Middle Ai'°d woman. 4 hrs • day, 2 dAy& a wk, $3 hr. IOr 'llliet bachelor'• baytront home, <Phone No.) Results tame quickly, too (all 70 of the calls Jn two days), when )'OU phooe the direct line to a DAILY PILOT ad-visor. Dial yourself aome results 1t "2-5678. • • e.r1· in:..._ . ' ~ ' -, ·-· ' . , . . I . J • • Tangi~, W"'ek ' • 1 ' --' • • Noxious fumes and smoke rise from sCene of train wreck Wednesday near -Ashkum, Ill . 1Twenty·two cars or an Dlinois Central Railroad freight train were derailed and tbr;ee ,tank cars filled with vinyl chloride exploded. About '600 residents of Ashkum were evacuated from the town becauf6 of the rumes.·See story, Page 5. Boy Shot, Officer Beaten As Protests Span Nation From Wirt· Servlcts , k 16-)'etHld boy Wis ahot tn the thigh at 1 Stanford University r11ly ·and police 1kJrmi1hed with 1,000 anti-war demoMlrators at the University of California at Berkeley as prole!tl over U.S. Involvement in the Laos U&htlng laced the nation. In Boston, an American flag was bum. ' ed at the downtown post oJfice after 1 peaceful rally. About 3,000 peace •d· vacates i:logged New York's Timts Square during rush hour and the mayor of Ann Arbor, Mich ., jolned in a com- munity marth against tht w1r ln Indochina. ProteW or incidenU abo occurred (See PROT&mi, Pa1e II Thousands t. Stay Aw~y From Area The threat of a new aftershock pushlnl toward the interuiity of Tuesday's earth- quake kept 120,000 San Fernando Valle1 residenU away from their homes again today. Los Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty ex· tended an evacuation order for the now· deserted area lying below the cracked Van Norman Dam by 48 hours, on adv!~ o( earthquake specialists. Dr. Charle11 F. Richter, retired. developer of lhe seismographic scale that bears his name, told Yorty a major' aftershock is common and could come 1ny minute. Police set up command centers where residents of Mission H i ll a and other ~ tracts could be issued identification passe.s for quick hip! home. Many went back to rescue pets, television and radio sets and other valuables possibly attracting looter.s. The heartbreaking task or digging fo!' bodies -the known death toll hit 53 today -in the rubble of two hospital1 continued as temperatures soared to 90 degrees. "We can never go on the assumption th~l no one Is left down there a]ive,'' said crane operator Sam Thompson, who worked 19 hours straight at the San Fernando VA Hospital near Sylmar. Six persons are still mis!lng. Meanwhile. as millions of gallons of water was being drained from the im• periled Van Norman Daln, supplies were tieififffijCkeirliitOOUTsfy San Fernando. The city of 17 ,000 is without water or sewage &ervlce. A ma11sive traffic jam developed tn ISee EARTHQUAKE, Page 2) Sanders-Gabor Marriage Off INDIO (UPI) -Actor Goorge Sanders, who rejoined lhe Gabor clan last December when he mar· ried M11gda, has filed suit to nullify the marriage. Sanders, 64, who once was mar- ried to her lister Zu. ZU, wed Magda. 49, in the chambers_of Indio Municipal Court Judae Claude Brown. Following the Dec. 4 weddin1. Miss Gabor's mother. Jolie, uid: ''J always liked Gtorge, but when 1 son-in-law comes back, I really like him." Zsa Zsal who was Sanders' 1e- oond wife, once described him as "I slight cad" who had "a phobia about mooey.'1 The couple teparated Jan. 5. lt was the fifth marriage for both. : • • • . • ' • " • • f I 1 I ......... ~ .. 1 ... ·.~··· ; Z OAllY PllOI s Thursday, Ftbruar7 11, l'f71 l'ro11t Pqe l EARTHQUAKE the San Ftmando ValJey atta at r u 1 h how', Thuradl,y morn.Jng where 1trttche. of ff'eeway1 were still clo.ed by tallen ~bridges. The California Highway Patrol foresaw ooe 'ot the worst snarls In Southern Callfomla hi3tory this evening when Angelenos head out for the start or a four-day holiday weekeod. The majority of the city and county public schools reopened for the first time ,in the Uu-ee dilys, but more thJn 100 In the sao Fernando area remained closed wblle engtnetrs checked structural damage. The cost of the quake wu sUll being t&llled, but county englnetr John A. Lambie 1ald, "A qulck estJmate would be lhat II will be In the billions." City ofllcl.als said structural damage in Lo!I Angeles alone was estimated at $16U million. Yorty extended the mandatory evacun· tion of an 18 square mile section of the suburban valley after Dr. Richter warned that most quakes are usually followed by an aftershock approaching the severity or the original earth tremor. "We always have reason to betlev~ that the largest aftershock will occur not Joo Jong after the main earthquake.," said Richter, the retired Caltech expert who invented the scale used to nleasure the se\'erity of earthquakes. Richter said the aftershock could be on the order ot 5.3 on hia scale . ''large enough to give a serious shake" 1n the area of Van Norman Dam. Tuesday's destructive quake measured 6.5 and the strongest of the thousands or aftershocks since read 4.5. Meanwhile the State Assembly, warn~ that a temporary gas tax Increase may be' upcoming, today voted unanimoUJ approval lo a bill making earthquake- stnick Los Angeles County eligible for state and federal disaster aid. The measure, by Assemblyv•oman Pauline Davis (0-Portola), went to the Senate on a 61.0 vote_ The measure contains $12.S million In st.ate aid, including nearly $9 million for repair of damaged lOC4l streets and highways. It also helps make Los Angeles County eligible for relief under the federal disas~er laws. .Frotta Page 1 PROTESTS ... on at least three othe r American college campuses, including Kent State Universl- t )' y,·here four· students were shot to death less than IO months ago. The teen.age ·son <lf a Stanford University professor was shot as he Gtood outside the headquarters of the Fpe Campus Movement. Earlier three persnns were injured during clashes between antiwar activists and the con- servative FCM. :The third day of violent protests at Slfnford tills week against the invasion or . Loos .ilso prodld 12 arrests and three injuries. The shooting t¥"red when John Dav.•son, Palo Alto High School student aOO son of Dr. Philip Dawson, slood near UWheadquarters of the Free Cam- pus fl,lovement, which describes itself as: a conservative-libertarian group. \\fitnesses said they heard several ex- plosions, which they firsl thought y,·ere firecrackers. The witnesses said one person on foot <lid the shooting and they said he ap- parently fired 6 to 20 shots from a pistol. He was chased, but not caught. Dav.·son was reported in satisfactory condition at Slanford hospital. A university spokesman estimated $1,000 damage was done to a computer after demonstrators occupied the school's computation center. ~lean\\·hi!e, at Berkeley, lawmen bat· t!ed wilh some 1,000 protestors. The fighting left a poli ceman beaten un- conscious and an Atomic Energy Com· mlsson car burned. \\"itnesses said a young man standing 0 11 the roof of a parked car leaped on Sgt. Biii Eller's back. rode him to the ground and six others joined In kicking and beating the man bloody. Eller was hospitalized in satisfactory (.'<Jndition. The violence followed a noon rally in Sproul Plaza near an entrance. to the campus. The rally was called an "open-ended" protest against the LaQ!: invasion. DAILY PILOT H••,•tt 11:.th H111tllilf" ••• L"'"' l••~h h111teh1 Y.Uey CMt• M"' Sn a.--. ORJJfG! "COAST PIJtllSH1HG tt:iMPA"Y Rob11t N. w •• ~ PreJHl•~! •r.t Pvbl"lllt J,,li: R. C11,1,., Viet Ptrl:dtnl tr.d "-•1 Mtn~ lilom11 K11vil Eallor Tllom11 A. M•rp,.i111 M..,191111 Ell!., Ric,.1rd P. Hill S11111h Ort l'IO'll Coun1v Elftror Otflcet Ctlll Mn.11; "'Wnl ••v Strttl NfWPOl'I IMCll: nn Wu/ lllbOI lllllLIYI,.. Lf0\11'11 let.;11; ft1 l"flfn l Av"'" Hunll"llOll k«/llt 1n1J •••cfl IWllW•"" $111 Cltmtnltl .lOI NW1ft El C11mlno llMI 'It Was Right' No Remorse Felt By Susan ·Atkins LOS ANGELES (AP) -"! leet no 1uilt for what l've done." said Susan Atkins, conlesle<I killer of Sharon Tate. 1'Jt was right then and I still believe it WI! right." ''But how can it be right to kill !Omebody" a defense lawyer 13Jted. "How can it not be right when it's done with Jove" she replied. CaJm end deliberate, lhe tall brunette testified for a second full day \Vedne.sday, Baborating on her earlier confession that she stabbed the beautiful blonde actress during a frenzied series of k.lllings. She asserted she was pressured into telling her story to a county grand jury by a prosecutor who thre11tened her with the gas chamber if she didn't testify. She also told of dealings with a lawyer y,·ho, she said, talked her into telling her story, then sold it without her knowledge. As a witness in the penalty phase ol. her trial and that of Charles Manson and two other wotnen, she eagerly detail· ed her feelings during the act of killing. She said she felt merciless and guiltless. "I belleve I told Sharon Tate I didn't have any mercy for her at one time, Two Indicted In Murder Of Liberty Special to the DAILY PILOT SAN DIEGO - A pair or cellmates accused of strangling Candlelight Killer Robert \V, Liberty three weeks ago on the eve of murder trials for all three were indicted by the county Grand Jury Wednesday. Timothy E. Dudley, 24, of New York City and Carl R. Riggs, 21, of Dearborn, Mich., were ordered held without bail. Liberty, 23, /ormerly of Westminster, was strangled with a T-shirt as he lay on his bunk Jan. 20. He and Kendall A. Bierly Liberty, 24, who he married in Colorado while. both were held there last summer follow- ing a crime spree, were to go on trial the following Monday. HJs jailhou.se bride has pleaded guilty to reduced charges of " o J u n l a r y mlJlsJaugbtu and (Obbery in ~nnectlon with the murder <lf Robert D'lon, 52, itl San Diego last June. Dudley &~ on trial Feb. 22 on charges of strangWfg a youth in Balboa Part last October. Jl!lp . and hit 1ltoll>or ClarWt; -, anoschodulld'lor ll'IJl In March. diargad with the recenl murder of off-duty San Diego Police Of fleer James P. Lewfs. Patrolman Lewis, 23, was killed during an aborttve liquor store robbery. and I doo't expect any." she sald. MW Atkins and her three ~efen· dants have been convicted of murder- coiuplracy in the k i I Ii n g ::i of Miss Tate and six olhers on two C<lnsecutive nlght.1 in August 1969. The jury must decide between We imprisonment or death. The slender Miss Atkins .. 22, in black pants suit and pink blouse, said the seven murders were planned as "ropycat killings'' meant to convince police that the slayers of musician Gary Hinman were still on the loose. She said it was hoped polict then would release Manson "family" member R~Beausoleil, under arrest and later convicted for that murder. ChJef defense attorney Paul Fitzgerald asked Miss Atkins, "Why were these people killed." "Because I believed it was right to do anything to get my brother out of jail," she said, referring to Beausoleil, "and I still believe it was right." Q, Did you kill lhem out of passion or hatred? A. No. f didn 't know them that well th at I fell anything about them . Q. Do you feel remorse! A. Feel remorse for what was right •.. f'eel sorry for what was right ? Miss Atkins, pale from more than a year in jail, clutched the s!des of the witness box as she declared intensely, "If you see guilt in me, you see guilt for everything you have ever done . I have no guilt in me." On questioning by defendant Leslie Van Housten's attorney, Maxwell Keith, Miss Atkins said she was "stoned " on UD during the killings and had taken the ha.ljucinogenic drug since she was 18. "I saturated myself in it," she said. "L.SD Is like a catalyst. It opens your eyes." Earlier, on direct examination by her own attorney, Daye Shinn, Mi ss Atkins said she y,·as threatened by Deputy Dist. Alty. Vincent Bugliosi with a death sentence if she didn't testify before the county grand jury. Her testimony, which Jed to in· dictments In the case, "wasn·t fre~ly and voluntarily given because t had so much pressure coming from so many different places," she said. She quoted Bugliosi as telling her if she didn't cooperate, "I'll see that you get the gas chamber." She stared at Bugliosi, y,·ho sat at the counsel table, and said, "Vince. you know it's the truth.'' She said he Pr9mised her immunity from proteCUtlon and custody of her child, a son now about 3, if she testified against other defendants at the trial. But even if she only testified to the grand jury, she said, she wu told by BugUoal thll he would not -the death penalty against fter Or others on trial. Miss AtkirtJ testified to the grand jury but not at the trial. Bugllosi ill asking the death penalty for all four. From Pagel IRVINE APPROVAL. • • t1.,.o lengthy public hearings, before Wednesday's showdown vote by the LAFC. The LAFC then declared public arguments ended at its Jan. 13 se!slon. In Wednesday's action, San Clemente's Northrup went right to the front in favoring the cityhood vote . He said the only questions to be settled v.·ere if the Irvine communities' people ·were capable of carrying out the incorporation and if the boundaries were logical. He then moved to approve the in· corporation and include an additional 687 acres to the southeast as requested by UCl Chancellor Daniel Aldrich, Jr. Supervisor Battin promptly offered a substitute motion that the incorporation be denied "without prejudice." This would allow the proponents to renew their action at any time. Outright denial would have killed the i~ue for one year. Battin read a prepared statement ·which concluded y,•ith, "The proponents believe they are capable of correcUy developing the new city. I do not. There are many problems including th os e which affect the entire county." Northrup. In a rare display of emotion, snapped, ''There Is never a case before us where everything is answered. \Yhat bothers me most Is the possible animosl· ty to the Irvine Company dcmonstr11ted hy some members of the commls!lon. l am afraid that delaying tactics could be employed to continue lhls issue on and on." Commissioner Charles Pearson of Anaheim , who represents the general public on the LAFC, had seconded Northrup's motion and now rose lo his defense. "Elimination of unincorporated areas Is the goal of this commission. We '\\'ant to get rid of these islands. To deny this petillon Is only delaying the inevitable.'' Ne~rt·s Caspers, who had seconded Battin s sub.stltute motion. cnlled the question "a matter of ti1nlng and si7.e. It is cert.alnly not an Island, more like a continent. The county must carry out careful planning for development of this Olr(!I." Northrup countered lhal Caspers' cnn- tention that the county should do heavy planning for the nrea could r es u It In a waste of taxpayers' monry as lhe lncarpqratlOl'I would certainly proceed soon. LAFC Chalrm&n Rtlnhardt of Fullerton. who al thl! point obvlou!ly htld the deciding \'Ott. qucs1ioncd Assis. tant Coun ty Counstl William J. ri,fcCourt on procedures. McCourt explained that a petition with the names o( persons representing 25 percent of the assessed value of the proposed city must now be presented to the county Board of Supervisors. The supervisors are then obligat.ed to set a date for a public hearing at which time a protest from persons own- ing land which represents more than 50 percent of the assessed valuation could stop the incorporation. Otherwise, the supervisors must call an election of the people residing in the area for a final decision. Battin quoted the Citizens Direction Finding Commission which had called the incorporation "prem11ture" and ura:ed furthe.r study. At one point Reinhardt said he had been flooded with mail "some of it accusing me of sellina; oul to Battin and Caspers.'' He added, with emphasis, "Thert is not enough money to buy me. l only want what's best for I.he county.'' Finally the crucial vote was called for. Only Battin and Caspers opposed the incorporation. The vote was greeted with cheers and applause !rom proponents in the audience. E. Ray Quigley. one or tbe leaders of the incorporaUon movement , said he 11·as elated. adding. "\Ve will move right ahead with plans for lhe new city." A movement to create the new city surfaced last "'larch when the Irvine Co mpany announced plans for develoJ>' ment of the central ranch area \lo'hirh ca lled for an Incorporated city of 53,000 acres nnd an <'l'C'ntual populallon of almost hfllf a milllon. The nev.·ly-ror1ncd Council of Com- munities of Irvine. 8 loose confederation of homeowner groups. eventually filed no!ice or Intention of lncorPofating an area of 56.000 :icres. • Opposition from Newport Beach, Santa Ana. Tustin and 1.a~una Beach cau$ed a big sw1tt"h In plnns and the cooncil e\·cntually filed plans for the 17,520-acro cit y. The ncv.' boundRries excluded the in. acre COilins Radio Company on ~TacArthur Boulevard. This property haJ since been annexed by the city Clf Ntwport Beach. \Vlth the adjustm11nl lhc Clnly seriou!I oppo.~IUon to the new ci ty came from lhe City of Santa Ana. • • No Lih Laughs Goldwater Joke Cets Gals ' Goat WASlflNGTON <UP!l -Women 's liberalionisls are ratlling tht lr sv.·ords at Sen. Barry ~1. Goldwater (ll·Arlz.), a former two-slar general who doesn't look kindly on sending women to \\'ar. In a telegram to Goldwater \Vednesday, four leaders of Washlngton-area women's liberation groups de1nnnded that the silver·haired senator apologize for joking at a hearing this v.•etk that "we have enough trouble with women without giving them Ml6 l'iO~." Senators, specta tors and witnesses at Ult hearing into continuing the draft dissolved in laughter at Goldwater's crack. Ladies of the lib, reading about It later, didn't think It fUMY- ''lt is an uncalled-for, insulting statement which alienates and angers women who make up a large part of your constituency and want to see an end to the drafl just as you do.'' the women wired Goldwater. ''Daily we fight this kind of thoughtless stereotyping of women. We do not expect such statemenb from a U.S. senator. We a.sk for an apology ," they said. \Vomen don't want to be prot ected from the draft, they said, because ''we are not child·like creatures to be talked down to." Bigger Yachts Taking Lead in Mexico Race By AL~JON LOCKABEY IN!ln• IEdi!OI' Class A yachts in the Marina del Rey to Puerto Vallarta ra ce took over corrected time leads Wednesday afler two days of strong winds conspired to leave the smaller yachts falling viclim to their shorter waterlines. But as the 26-boat fleet slid past Magdalena Bay today there was an in- creasing possibility that the 1,125-mile race was in for a third stage by the time they reached the fa teruJ parking tot off Cape San Lucas. After · two days of 15-18-knot winds. the northeaster had dwindled to 7-10 knots Wednesday . Stealing the boat-for-boat lead from Bob Lynch's Sirius IT, the scratch boat , was Bill Wilson's 59-fool yavd Ra scal from Santa Barbara. Al the noon rollcall Wednesday Rascal and Sirius II were abeam of Cap San Lazaro, but Rascal had a 10-mile edge by virtue of having found better winds some 70 miles offshore. The contest for first to fin ish had actually boiled down to a six·boat duel with the leaders all sailing v.·ithin a 50-mile radius off San Lazaro -sorne 180 miles from the cape. Others in lhe running \\'ere Jim Feuerstein 's Columbia.SO Querida 11 from Del Rey Yacht Club: John Scripps' 89-fool ketch Novia del Mar1 San Diego Yacht Club: Bob Beauchamp's Columbia·57 Dorothy 0 , NHYC, and Russ Ward's Colum bla·57 ArieS, Lahalna YC. Taking over the handicap lead for the first tilne since the race started last Saturday were three Class A packeis -Querida If, Dorothy 0 and Rascal in th at order. Crewmen aboard lhe escort and com· munications vessel Pioneer \Vednesday were chortling about a "first arrival'' 1n the 1·ace. Bill Weinberg. the Pioneer 's 01vner and skipper, received a message that his wire had given birth to a baby girl. Weinberg left the vessel at Turtle Bay and flew home. The Pioneer also reported that they y,·ere being escorted by literally hundreds of porpoises which were churning lhe ocean as far as the eye could see. SeYeral of the lead boats were already at or near the halfway mark in the race. According to position reports, Rascal had 524 miles to go, Sirius II, 534; Querida 11, 562; Novia de! Mar. 571.: Dorothy 0 , 51!0; Aries, ~I. and Widgeon, 587. The bulk of ltle neet was spread out a distance of 200 miles behind the leaders. Here are the handicap standings as of \\'ednesday at noon : • OVERALL -(1) Querida II: (2) Doro1hy O; 13J Rasca l; (4) The Odd Couple, Ron Lee, DRYC; (5) Freestyle, Lippold & Cicero. NHYC. CLASS A -~I) Querida 11; 12l Dorolhy O; (3) Rascal ; (4 ) Aries ; (5J \Vidgeon. CLASS B -(\) Siren, Frank Rice, NHvc ; (2) Dakar, William Goodley, DRYC; t3) Quasar, Arthur Biehl, Rich· mond YC; (4 ) ~fadrugador, William Allen, Cal YC; (5) Destiny II, John Hoolen, BCYC. 11 ·SOFAS & LOVESEATS e SERVERS - Nixon Asl{ed To Intervene 111 Lockheed From Wire Strvlctl BURBANK -Union leaders have demanded intervention b)' President Nix· on into problems of Lockheed Aircraft Corp. and JtoHs·lioyce which have led to the layoH of 6.500 Lockheed workers. Lockheed announced the employment cutback \Vednesday, blaming it on the financlal troubles of Roll s·Royce, th e British firm that had contracted to sup- ply $435 million worth of engines for Lockheed's new Tr iStar jetliners. f\,1eanwhile , Daniel J. 11 au g h Ion , Lockheed board chairman, said he would fly to London next y,·eek to meet with Rolls and British government officials. James Quillin, president. of District 127 of the Tnternalional Association of 1'.1achinists and Aerospace Wbrkers. said Nixon should get productive negotiation! under way between Lockheed and the British goYemmenl. If necessary, Quillin said, the talks should Involve the U.S. and Britis h governments directly. or Lockhet!d's 28,000 employes. 15.lm have been working on the TriStar. London trade unions joined in 1he plea for help. "Thousands of jobs are at slake here and in America es a result of the collapse and we \\'ant measures taken by both the British and American governments." Jack Service. general secretary ol Brita in's Confederation of Shipbuilding and Engineering Unions, said. Service said lhe American Interna- tiOhal Association of Machinists con· tacted the British union and planned what he termed a "summit conference" of both organizations he hoped woul d be held In Britain next week. Service spoke as nea rly 1,000 Rolls- Royce workers converged on London and marched with placards calling on the government of Prime Minister Edward Heath to save the banknlJll company and their jobs. "RoUs·Royce saved Britain in 1940 - will Britain save Rolls·Royce?" read one or the signs carried by the marchers, who traveled by special trains and buses from Rolls·Royce factories in Derby, East Kilbride and other locations. Picasso Gives Gift NEW YORK (APJ-Pablo Picasso has given to the Museum of Modern Art a sculpture called "Guitar," from his clos~ Jy hoarded classic Cubist period collec· ti on. e HUTCHES VALUES $399 TO $695 NOW $199 TO $395 e HEAD BOARDS e IEDROOM SETS e MIRRORS e BOOKCASES e DINING ROOM SETS e BENCHES 33 UPHOLSTERED CHAIRS VALUES $129 TO $239 NOW $69 TO $119 5 PC. GAME SETS REG. VALUES $495 & $595 NOW $299 & $399 55 OCCASIONAL and COCKTAIL TABLES VALUES $99 TO $299 NOW $49 TO e SCAHNS e AREA RUGS ALL AT HUGE SAVINGS THROW PILLOWS OUR REG. 3.00 VALUE NOW $149 ALL LAMPS WARl~~USE 1/2 OFF MANY, MANY MORE ITEMS· TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION. COME 'IN IARLY •OR BEST SILECTION BRING YOUR STATION'WAGON OR PICKUP TRUCK OPEN MON.-THURS.-FRI. EVES. H. J. GARRETT FURNITURE 2215 HARBOR BLVD. 646·0275 ' I I J • San Clemente Cap~sir_ano ' EDITION • Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL. 6'1 , NO. 36, 4 SECTIONS, 68 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1971 TEN CENTS Slain l(iller May Have Shot San Clemente Girl By JOANNE REYNOLDS 01 tll• 01lly l'Uot it1ff . Bertram Greenberg, the killer of a 13-year-old Los Angeles girl. iwo Arizona pa trolmen and a New Mexico resident, may have shot a San Clemente girl l"'O v.•eeks before he went on his lhree- state killing spree that ended in his own death. i· Newport Beach Detec tive Sam Amburgey said Greenberg is a pr ime or Riles Asks :Quake Aid To Schools SACRAf\tENTO (UPI ) - Asking ""A'hat price do you put on the lives of childre.n." 1tale schools chief \\'ilson C. Riles Wednesday urged the legislature to pro- vide funds to shore up schools unsafe In earthquakes. The State Superintendent or Public Instruction said he suppo rted a measure by Assemblyman LeRoy Greene, (0- Sacramento), that would provide S30 millkln for building new schools and for improving schools that fail to meet the earthquake safety standards of the Field Act. "\Vhat price do you pul on the lives of children? I'm not willing to altach a price tag. Let's just figure out what has to be done, and do the job,'' he said. ''It's patently unfair to ma~e .• child attend school in an unsafe bwld1ng. We are requiring by law that a child ~n· danger his life. while we worry with budgets," he declared. Riles said California still has i ,m r;chool buildings dating from before 193.1, when the field Act \vas passed, that have not been made safe. Forty percent of those schools are in L'.ls Angeles Coun ty, he said. State law requires all schools to meet r;afety standards by 1975 or be closed. But "unless we had a crash program y,·e couldn't redo the sc hools anyy,•ay.'' said J im Orsburn. field representative of the Departme nt of Education's bureau of school planning. "There's not enough money.'' .. "We 've been prett y lucky so far. he said. with earthquakes hitting a~ hours when children are not in school. ''I don't think anyone can forecast when these lhings are going to happen. Who knows?'' "The legislature can pass all kinds of laws and. if they don 't put the money Jn and they le ave it up to the local people· to pa!S bonds and they don't pass them. t h e school offic ials are between the devil and the deep blue r;ea .'' Orsburn said that all the school buildings in Ne~·hall. where the destruc- tive ·Southern California quak e "'as centered. meet field act standards. Greene. chair man of the education committee. told the Assembl y that 20 Los Angeles Schools constructed before 1933 "'·ere closed by the quake. Orange Coast Weather Another groovy day is on Ulp for Southern Californians Friday, with warm. i;unny weather push· tng lnto the 80s along the Orange Coast. INSIDE TODAY Brilisli banks r.losed lVt dnts· da11 after11oon to allow t11t no· rion to mokt tht bigg11st fl'114tt.- ciat rtadjmtment in J .200 11tars lo tht decim4l r11stem. SCP Pagt B. t 1Mitf'lolt I Chtdr:I"' UI 1 Clt "lllHI 1'»• C:tmlc:• n c:nu..,.. 11 Otllfl Ntflcl~ 11 .. dltwi.• ""' t R111trt1l11m•~I l ... l, '•r•"'' '"" MtrMWlt It Aft~ LU1tltrJ 11 ""..i.1 Jt-t, MWhlll """'" U J11ti.o.11 fftwi 4-I Or111H CIUl'I\' II '""' tt-J:I li.d Mtrtllt 11•11 Te1tvi.1t<1 M Tiit""" 16•11 Wttllltr I w.,,.w•1 N-e ""' WMtf Ntw'I t.J suspect in lhe shooting of 19-year-old Susan Spector . "It's going lo take a lol of work before "'e can pin it dov.•n:· Amburgey said. "But we have some good leads." f\1 iss Specto: "'as shot in the lefl side Jan. 23 as she leaped from the car of an abductor. She had been piCked up hitchhiking from South Laguna ti) Ne11i·p-0rt Beach and jumped from the car at the intersection of East Coast. Highway and Newport Cente: Drive when ru the driver pulled a guo on her. Amburgey said he has shown mug shots of . the former mental patient to the shooting victim who has returned to her San Clemente home. "She couldn't make a positive iden- tification." the detective said. ··ay that I mean she couldn't positively say it was him, but . sbe couldn't eliminate him eilher. '' Detectives are trying to obtain photos o( Greenberg without his glasses on Geologist Re1•orts Yawning Quakes Mostly Fictional By PA~fELA HALLAN OI Ill• Dtllt Pllet SU H Remember the old movies where the ground rips open and swallows all the dinosaurs and a few members of the cast? If you don 't, chances are Tuesday's earthquake jarred your memory and all the old terrors depicted by Hollywood came back to you. Bill Edgington. Dana Point geologist , can allay all your rears. ''Crack! large enough to engulf anyone rarely occur,'' he said. "Most damage to people and property Is a result of sbaking." Edgington. who works (or the Mines and Geology Division of the State Depart- ment or Conservation .. ls currently doing an intensive study of an area called Down the Mission Trail Ter-affic Shot,· So He Thougl1t SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -Bill ' Meadows enjoys golf , but he·s begin nin g to have second thoughts about those wOO play the game. Driving do"'" San Juan Creek road next to the San Juan Hills Country Club Meado"·s met a golf hall eye to eye just before it shatt ered his v..·indshield . Being unhurt !the ball mlssed his head by inches) he got out of the car lo assess the damage, looking around for the guy with the terrific slice. Someone came rushing over-but not to see if he \\'as hurt. It seems he wanted the ball back. e Give ii. o Fli1111 LAKE FOREST -A class in baton twirling for all Lake Forest girls aged 4 and up is forming. Janet l\lerr1am. head majorette at ?.fission Viejo High School, will leach the class on Saturdays at 10 a.m. at the Beach and Tennis Club. A demon11tralion "A'ill take place nn SatUrday, Feb. 13 al IO a.m. at the cl ub. Those interested will be able to sign up and pay their $4.50 fee at that time . e Artbd" H'l1111er MISSION VIEJO -Jesse Coan. 1'1i~ion Vkljn reside nt, recently won a watercolor painting by Lloyd Harting dlU'lng a mttUna: of lbe MJ.ssion Viejo Kiwanis Club. The paintlng was of Mlsslon San Luis Rey And Is one of many pain tings done on Americans and the historical west by the awRrd winn ing artist. The watercolor was part of a btnefll for the Youth Service Fund ln the Sa(J.. dleback VaUty area. the Dana Point Quadrangle, which ex· tends from northern San Clemente to Three Arch Bay and includes San Juan Capistrano -a community which in 1812 wa s baptized by a deadl y earthquake that killed 40 persons. His work includes geologic mapping of the area to delineate the iones of landsliding, faulting, and other geologic features which would be useful in urban planning. Edgington has round geveral active fault Byslem5 in SOUthern California which are close enough to produce damaging earthquakes in thia · aeneral area. ;'Earthquakes tend to produce greater destruction to buildings and utilities con- structed in poorly consolidated materials such as landslides, stream alluvium (fan shaped silt deposits), slopewash and in weak unstable or deeply weathered bedrock." he said, Knowing where these areas are can help minimize potential danger . One of the geologic features he's been studying are faults -those moving cracks that cause earthquakes. "A good geology book definition or a fault is a surface or zone of breaks in the earth's crust along which there ha~ been movement," said the geologist. "When there is movement along a fault , shock "'aves are produced," he said . Some faults move horizontally, like the San Andreas. It's west side moves north, its east side moves south . Others have vertical movement -one side moves up, the other, down. Edgington said most of the faults that are in the Dana Point quadrangle appear to he inactive. But he is quick to point out that jusl because a fau it hasn't moved in 100,000 years d~,n·t mean it will never move again. "Faults are pretty 'll:elJ sprinkled throughout the area ," he said. One which is clearly visible is the Dana Point fault which can he seen in the corner of Dana Cove seacliff behind the pier. Jl is also exposed just north of Blue Lanter!\ Slrcet in the road cut where coast Highway curves. Another is the Christianitos fault "·hic h begins northeast of El Toro and extends oul to sea a mile south of San Onofre. Other faults include the ForstJ?r fault, a western branch of the Christlanitos east of San Juan Capistrano, and .several Intra-formational faults in the Palisades area. "The most active of these fault s is probably the Christianltos, but even that hasn't moved in a minimum of 30,000 YCArS." he said. The geologist said danger ll'J structures from earthquakes will probably be minimiied as more is discovered about them. "We still need to Improve site in· ''Cstigatlons and know more about soil and rocks we're building structur,.~ on ,'' he· said. "It is necessarr to control not only the type of development on certain formations. but ro atrlctly enforce ubting building codes." The last v1slble evidence or earthquake damage. ln the Dan Point Quadrafiile l" the re.malns or the cathedral' In San Juan Clpl.strano Mb:sion, destroyed in 1812. Since lhcn , nothing has happenM, Bu t nothing happened nn lht S111 Gabriel fault e.ither-untll last Tuead1y at 6:01 1.m. 1 to show Miss· Spector. "The man who shot her was not wearing glasses," he said. Amburgey sald one of their leads in the case is a description of the shooting suspect's car which v.•as supplied by witneises. ··we are trying to gel information from AriJOna and New Mexico about the car. From witnesses. we determined the model year lo be around 1968 and tha~ it was a gold car \l.'ith a dark vinyl roof. This is pretty cloW to the car lhat Greenberg was driving which was a 1968 Pontiac which was gold with a black vinyl roof," he said. Amburgey also noted that the partial license number given by witnesses is being checked against the license on the car Greenberg was driving in his flight from California . Greenberg, who was an ex-convict. was originally sought by Los Angeles police when the body of Mary Hill was • s rv1ne · l ~y "tl•T l tltft .,... TOWERING PEPPER TREE AGEL EH AS ' SAN JUAN It H11 Borne Llttlt fHt l'or Otn1ratton1 Huge Capo Pepper Tree Makes 'Social Register' A towering pepper tree which has borne the climbing of generations Of San Juan Capistrano youngsters has found a place in the nation 's archives. The 57-foot-high, gnarled tree near San Juan Elementary School has no exaCt age, because no one can remember when it was planted . Nevertheless. it has won a place as lhe second·largest pepper In the U.S. forestry Department's "Social Register of Big Trees." Standing broadly in front of what once served as a principal's residence, the · pepper tree has a trunk circu mference of 26 and one-half feet and a diameter spread of limbs of 76 feet. And had il not undergone severe prun- ing several decades ago. it probably v;ould be number one in the records today. The pruning. however. could have sav- ed its life, because Santa Ana winds had begun ripping !he large limbs off. Probably the resident expert on the pepper tree ls San Juan's Harold Ambuehl, the prinicipal of the elementary school who raised a family in the small duplex nearby. Ambuehl came to the city In l!M3 to work in education and pointed out this week that both hU daughters grew up with the toweriag pt!pper tree. "They had 1 tree house In lt for years and that tree was one of their favorite places lo play,'' he said. But no one -not even Ambuehl - can vouch for even an approximate age. "Even the old timers say It has been huge. ever since they remember," he said. AD CLEANED VP FOR COAST MAN You could staff the housekeeping de- partment of a hotel with just one DAILY PILOT classified ad . One Newport Bea~H' man proved it for himself. The following ad got 70 responses! HOUSECLEANING. ?.1iddle aged woman. 4 hl'li a day, ~ days a wk, $3 ht. lor quiet btchelor's bayfront horn~. {Phone No.) Results came quickly,, too (all 70 of the calls In two days). when you phone the direct Ible to t1 DAD.. Y PILOT ad-visor. Dlal yourself some results at 642.3678. found In Griffith Park a w e e k ago, She had been raped and strangled. In a destructive flight across the Arizona desert, Greenberg shot and killed two Arizona highway patrolmen who stoi> ped him near Sanders, Ariz. He abandoned his car outside Gallup. N. 1'1ex. and flaQed down a car driven by Mr. and Mrs James Brown. He fatally wounded Brown and shot Mrs. Brown in the face three times and left her for dead . LAFC Gives Split Vote Approval By JACK BROBACK Of tllt OIHY l'lltt lttlt Orange County political observers" wer• 1till buzzing today after the Local Agency Formation Commission, in a suprise split deelsion, Wednesday ruled· that citizens of Irvine communities should be allowed te vote on 1 proposal to create their ewn city. The LAFC's "uPn which will brine about the cityhood election came arr.er 4tl minutes of sometimes h e a t e d discussion and a 3. to 2 split vote. SUperviaors Ronald Caspers or Newport Stach an(I Robert Battin of Santa Ana, l!llttblg as LAFC commissioners. voted nay and lost. They wtre known opponents of the cityhood and in the tum of recent county politics, it was anticipated their op- position would prevail. But San .Clemente Councilman Stanley Northrup pushed hard in favor of the cityhood election and the key swing vote in favor was cast by LAFC Chairman Louis Reinhardt of Fullerton. Newport's Caspers was obviously feel· Ing the heat in the political kitchen when he argued against putting the cityhood Issue to a vote of the people. At one point the freshman supervisor said quietly, "My stock is low now but I hope the people who live there will understand that I am doing what I think is best for the area. "l think the county is In the best position to plan what Is best for this area." He said he recognized many people would oppose his stand. ''I only hope and pray that the people will understand that I do what I feel ls best for them ." With approval of the LAFC, it is now a virtual certainty that the people of Irvine communities will get a chance to vote on the proposal that would create a city em bracing 18.145 acres generally surrounding the UC Irvine campus. Supporters of cityhood, principally the Council of Communities of Irvine and the Irvine Company. may now circulate petitions which would call for the cityhood election. P"etltions must bear signatures of owners of land representing 25 percent of the taxable value within the proposed city boundaries. Clemente Hospital Begun Hundreds Attend Elaborate Groundbreaking Rites By JOHN VALTERZA ot IM Ot~t .. iltf $1111 ln one of the largest such ceremonies In recent years in San Clemente, hun- dreds of residents Tuesday helped christen the area's first hospital on a terrace of land overlooking the sea . Using a bulldozer, Dr. Ralph Graham of Orange and community leaders broke ground for a 116-bed acute<are: faclllt)', which Graham has promised will admit JUI flrrt patlenta before year's end. Praising the project as "one madt possible by the remarkable efforts of leaders In thi• commw\lty," GrJham and others In the Chapman Ge.ner1l Hospital group said they have m.arve.led at the amount of local residenl.1 whn have paid pcr.t0ntl vlslta to Chapman General }fospltal In Orange. That facility \'<Ill set lhc pattern for the San Clemente development to be built by the Lomar Corporation <lf Santa Ana. By year·a tnd, Graham said, San Clemente Gtneral's inJUal facilities wUI lnrlude.: -A 43-bed medical nursing section. -A 43·bed surgical nur~lng stetlon. -A IO·bed peill•trlcs wlrig. -A 14·bed ob.stetrical section, -A slx·bed combined blten&lve care and coronary unll -A aurgery department with three major optratlng suHts with o n e spectflcally designed for urology ind fr1cturi work. A nearby recovery room ""'" bt able lo ~ndl• roor pationts at 1 Ume. -A fully.staffed emereency dtparl· mmt c:Jp1ble of handUng up t<l aev'tn patients at one time; two delivery rooms and thrtt private labor rooms lor preanaocies. Other services to be provided by the initial hospital will Include laboratory facilities . nuclear mtdlcal services, medlc•I testing departments and full phii.rmacy facilities. Peter Hutchinson, a vertran of 17 years in ho1pit&I admlnsitration, will move from hl! top post at Chapman General to serve as administrator in San Clemtnte. The: ·hotpitll erpec:ta to have a total employe roll of 200, Including nurser, technici•M and cltrlcal employes, who will: staff the hoapltal on a sevtn-day·I· Wetk, 24-hour buis. Sile preparation work <ln the acrtace at 6S4 Cimino de loe: Mares will begin wlthln Uie 'next few days, wlth completion expected IOfnetlme in late fall or early winter of this year • . . .~ DAILY PILOT SC lhursday, febrUll'f ll, I,,.l South Coast School Unification E x plained A compUC&lad unlllcaUoo proced""' .. \\·as explained to a handful of leaders from lilt conun&lllitiet of lrvlno and tho loddllhr.ll V1Uoy W~. Ralph Gatts, Superintendent of the San Joaquin Elementary School District, outlined three alternatives and stressed the need !or an Immediate decision. The four dlltricts mandated by the atate to bave a wliflcalion election in June of 1971 are th Joaquin, 'l'ustin Elemen,tary, Trabuco lementary and TUIUn High Scbool Dlttrlct. ~ntaUvts from these f Cl U l' diltrlctl will be m .. 11., f eb. II lo dlcldo whtcb altem11!Y1 thoy would ltke lo uplm. Gateo uld tho dlttrlct cao -k for unUleatioft along the •11l1tlng hl&h .chool boundarlei, susgut the high school bo11n· darles and then work against it, or divid• the, dlltrlct lnto a group of separate unified districts. "For a matter o! illustration, the high acboot dlltrl!I might be divldld Into ,lht Tustin 1r11, the Irvine Rllndl aru, and tho l 1ddl1b1ck Vlilt)'JJ'rabllco ar .. ,1' ntd 01tc!1. let It l1o't A W Y I I It IOllllClo. The oi.i. roqulr11 that 1 dlttrlct wllolo a1ee1Md v1lu1tlon per JtU?'I 11 1bove the IJ.lte average can only divide if the ensuing divisions have a nearly equal astessed valuation. T h e difference be· tween district.!i can only vary 15 percent. Tustin Hi&h school's assessed valuation Caspers Seeks 'Shakeup' Aide Says Supervis or Do esn't Wa nt Heads to Roll Filth Olstrlct Superviaor R o n a l d . Cisper1 of Newport Beacb dottn't want heads to roll at the county seat but simply 1etU 1 1hake\lp, his ad· m!nlltr1tiv1 111!1Llnt declared Wed-- nelday, Caspers' aide Tom Fuente1 aava thla capsule anal ysis of the county situation in a talk before the Ca pistrano Beach Chamber of Commerce. He alto outlined plans for a complete reorganization of the county 's administrative 1tructure. Fuente1 N H rted bit boss favors aome cutback In the county'• 40 department heads. He also 1ugge1led that County adminl1tratlve Office r Robert Thom as ''should serve at th e will of the 5upervlsor1." Salary and persoMel cuts, Fuentes said, will now await a three.month study period ordered In the latut action by the county board . 1'Tbere will have to be some cult:," be 111erted. Fuentes also malnt1ined, however, that more of the county's admlnlltrltlon 11 immedittely being 1hUted to the offlce1 of the elected supervitor1. 1be Ca1per1 aide 1110 declared that his boss has an airport slogan that suggests "Anywhere Except the 5th" -apparently meaning that any new Orange County jetport should be located outside of the Fifth Supervisorial District along the Oran1e Coast Fuentes allO Indicated Casper• will increase effort1 agalmt .;pocketa of in· tense drue abuses" he 1ald exist in San Clemente, Laguna, Newport Beach and Huntington Beach. Capistrano Chamber members were also assured by the supervisor's aide that the coUDty sign ordinance approved Wedne1day will be '• r 1 p Id1 y Im· plemented" in the Capistrano Bay art• aa reque1ttd by the Chamber. Detalllnc other actlona tabn by the board "ln itl abort four weekt 1n office,'' Fue nte1 said, "We kept ou r promise and rescinded the Back·B1y trade, and Salt Creek Beach will he open to the public this summer. He explained Caspers' testimony before the State Landi Commission in opposition to offshore sel1tnic tests as effort to protect the entire shoreline from oll·lt ak damage. "The tt1ts are a camel's nOM under the tent for off.shore drllllng," he said. His boss's efforts to cut through ad. ministrative tangles was noled by Fuentes, who said, "Just Wednesday we learned we would have a new harbor, but no road to Jt." Forlilift Accident Cause s San Clemente To Attempt Recy cle Plan Second Ci·ash in Laguna A Laguna Canyon accident that capsiz· ed a heavy forklift was blamed by police for a 1eeond colllaion ln which a West Covin• man was 1llgblly hurt !hortly after I p.m. Wedne1day. The victim, Brian Arthur Wilker10n, 26, sustained cuta and bruise• when his car tlammed Jnto the back cf a vehicle drtven by Robbie Janice Fulbrlaht, 26, of 26tl2 Naccoma Drive, Million Viejo. \, Tho Fulbright car had been stopp«I y a Laguna Beach tlreman as lt turned onto El Toro' Road from Uguna Ca nyon Road, whlrt police had Ht cut fl1res •t tbe scent of an wli•r accident. Woman Arrested On Calls Charge Pleads Innocent Laguna Beach re&ldent li-firld a Marki, •rrested Jan. 21 on a charge of makln& annoylns telephone calls to the police department. en,tered a plea of innocent in South County Municipal Ccurt Tueaday morning. Mrs. Marki wa1 arraiined befo re Judge Richard Ha milton, who set a pre· trial date of Mar ch 4, and a jury trial date of March 17 In the case. Relea1ed on her own recognizance fo llowln1 her arre1t, Mrs. Marks, 1244 Victory Walk, 1ald she did not understand the charge and would like to hav e the matter cleared up be fore a jury. The arreat was made on a warrant Issued by the District Attorney's office at the request of the police department \~1hicb maintained the defendant had made frequent and annoying calla. Mrs. Marks aald 1he had ca!Jed the city only in reference to a 1treet repair problem in the La guna Canyon area, which wa1 taken up before the city coun- cJJ last week. DAILY PILOT Newp•rt l•Mlli Llopu ... ,. C"t• M'"' " ............ h -..N111 ,..., llllll Ct....te OIV.Nlil COAST PUILUHINO COllll"AN'f •olttrt N. w,,, ,,..1ltlt11! ""' "'.illlMt J ttk •. C111l1v Vlt• '""1<111n1 •rA G.n.•tl Maftttw 1 kol!'l11 K11¥1l Eolror lho"''' A. Mur11hh1• M1~911\J Editor l Jd.,r4 ,, H11f ""'" C>r•J'9t CA>ll!lt)' ..itw Offlc• COl11 Mftll nt Wtll llY l lrwt NnrJ10r1 11•«~; nu w .. 1 ,,..,,'"'""re , Lat<1111 111~11: m Fol'ftl Awn"" Hw.ll1111foil I Htll: 11111 II'°"" "'11...,l rd s.tll Cllmtnll1 • Nlrlll ii "llllrlt R .. I Dtlplle a reported dwindlln1 demand In the firat mlthap, which occurred for old new1paper1 tn other Oranae Coast at 8:07 p.m., truck driver Jerry Wayne cltle1, San Clemente will 1ttmipt a pilot ' Callahln, 31, of Anaheim, overturned collection plan for recycllnl newtpr lnt a forklift he wa1 towlnr when he 1werved at the beitnnlng of ne.xt month. hill truck to avoid 1trlkln1 a ctr that Blnl provided by the 1ttte'1 l1r1e1t stopped in front of him at the traffic new1prlnt recycllna firm wlll be provided signal. at the Market Bsaket parking lot in Officera were attempting to clear the snorecliff• so that cltlzent can dump lnteraedctlon whtn the aecond crath C>C• their old paper• in the Jntere•t of ecology. curre · But despite 1ucoe11 in collectJng: C.Uaha.n told police be bed betn fellow· newaprlnt In Newport Beach, that city ~ • car ....... !!i.l Toro Road ~· .. bu aba~ed ti. project becoUH the ~ -· Giiii Jldl'1-ID. of 111 C •II•' mfl'lrel'fll'i&e old paper b dyln1. . aeon •. 1£opptd auddenly u the 1iplt Too many fecfctlnr projectl are part light changed in•tead of proctedlnt of the cauee for the glut of newsprint throuei 15 •h\•hld expe~ted. ~ The local project was worktd out cat hani ~erve~ his t~ck to . the between City Alaoije~ ..... ~ Carr and r!Bbt, polJ<lo • ·bul th•,f<ll!lllll'.tow 11>4' "8eckl'ard Eco~'flroup," local JICk.tnJfed, aM lbt be1vy1mtCbini:hlt . dt.lzena concerned with ecology JM Moy vehicle '.111.d overturned. Garden State, "'hicb built its 0patented· There were no lDJuries to other drivers. proces! plant in Pomona abcut foo r years ago, is the major Southern Youth Job Unit Fi nds New Home The Youth Employment Center of the South Coast Y~tCA has moved to new quarters in Laguna Beach arter beln& forced out or their old building by demoll· lion plans. The center, which formerly was localed at 382 Park Ave. in a bullding owntd by St. f\.1ary's Ep\1cop1l Church, has transferred Its operation to a new of(ice at 415 Forest Ave., at the Community Presbyterian Church. The center is open from 9 1.m. to noon Mondays through Saturdays and Friday afternoons lrom I p.m. ta 4 p.m. The center also provides a counselor at Laguna Bu ch High School each Fri· day from 12:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. Sc1i mitz Urges War on Hanoi Freshman Congre1sman John G . Schn1itz (R-Tuatln) h11 reintroduced a House resolution calling tor a declaration of war against North Vietnam . In a new1letter to his coru;tituents in Orance County '• 35th Congres!ional DJ1trlct, St:hmlti said the passage of the re101ution would result In a decla ra· lion er Wi t on North Vlelnam y,•ilhln 30 da ys of Its passage If the North Vietnamese failed to "'ilhdraw from South Vietnam. lie uld he reintroduced the resolution because • military victory in Vietnam 11 nece•••ry to prevent "transforming the current U.S. policy of orderly retreat into a galloping rout." Another Laguna 'Weed P a tcl1' Hit ConOnuln& their specialized weed· abatement proaram, La1una Beach poliCfl headed for the 2000 block of Glen· ,iicyre Street th11 v.·eek to uproot 1nother 30 small marijuana plant• which • resl· dent reported nou.rlsblni In a vacant lot. "'he plants, which police 1ald appeared be growing wlld and had not been Jvattd, were duly taaa:td for de1truc· Uon by the polic~ department. Jn an earlier foray I.his month, officers obliterated a smali marijuana "farm" in the Woodland Drive arta, where some plant• were thriving on a \\'tll·cultlvated lot. California con1umer of newtprlnt. Carr aecured • trailer-type bin from the firm , and recently sugge1ted se\·eral city-0wned sites to park the vehicle. Then spokesmen for the ecology rroup 1u11ested a collabor•tion to aecura more cenlral locaHoni for tb e bln. Several weeks later the name of the market was chosen at random, Carr said. Moat of the ·area'e 1upennarkets had consented to 1iving apace for the bin ... Newport Beach General S er v I c t s Director Jake Mynderse said thie week the project in his city will be bandoned because th e demand has dipped to a point where no one wilt buy the newa- print. Pearl Harbor Vet Lost i11 Quake SAN FERNANDO (UP!) -A forme r Navy mess attendant who said be y,•11 the first man to fire on Japanese planes at Pearl Harbor l! one of the missing in the Los Angeles earthquake. Norma n J . Stewart, 5~. of nearby Pacolma, was a patient at San Fernando Veter8n11 Administration Hospita l that wAs devastated by Tuesday'!'! earthquake. Stewart was never officially cited by the Navy hut he !aid he shot at I.he enemy planes without orders from a machine gun aboard the USS Hulbtrt, a converted avlatlon patrol destroyer. Ste1vart left the Navy In 1947. $2 Mill io n in Ca sh Nea1·ly Beco1nes Ash CITY OF C0'.\1MERCE (AP) -Arm- ored truck driver Albert Stewart had nioney to burn -$2 million in cash - and some of lt did. literally. Stewart slammed on his brakes \\led· nesday y,·hen about 25 1tack1 or currency caught fire while beini tr1n1ported to 11 Federal Reserve BiRk In Sin Oiea:o. A paaalna motorist liaved tht day with ti portable fire 1x.tlngul1her. Police said 1 Hahted cia:a rette may hive been at ftult. Au to Crash Victim Di es of Injuries Esther Fllnn. 50, of 1901 Oak St., Fullerton, died Wednesday nlghL in Ora.nie County ri1edlcal Cent.er of Injuries receh·ed In 1 Jan. 1$ accident In Stanton. Police said Mr1. FliM'• car went out of control and struck 1 power pole 111 the interstctlon gf Western and Orange~·ood Avtnur . • per pupil 11 $13,rtO, Tustin Elementary '• 11~e11ed v11lu1tlon l1 only $10.400. a 21 percent varlatlon. The l~vlne Ranch arta'a a1seued valuation l• f24,700 per pupil, 1 variation of 86 percent. The S1ddJeb1ck. VaUey-Trabuco as s e ss ed valu1tlon ll the only one y,•ithin reason. $14,000 per pupil, a variation cf on I y six percent. "But these figures dori't count," !laid Gates . ''The figures have to be projected :seven years into the future." UPI Ttll~~o,. R e 111e111b e r lier? Mandy Rice Davies carries her daughter, Dana, 2, as she ar_. rives in London for three·week vacation. Mandy, now O\\'ner of a nightclub in Tel Aviv, figured prominently in the early 1960s in the Profumo scandal that rocked England's then·Conservative government. Tf a divided dlatrlcl 11 to ht considered a consultant will have to be hired to work on lhe bowldariei and the weu~d v1lu1tlon proJectlont, accordinf to oate11. And I.hat'• the prlm&J')' r11aon for the urgency in making a decision. "Most of us gre pretty sure we don't want a huge unified district along the high school district boundarie1," said Board President Gratian Bidart. "The board will make Its decision next \\lednesday," he added. "We're not asking you to make our decision for Lawy ers Huddle · u1. 'M\at's cur responslblllty. We are interested. however. in your fetlings." The (.'fl!ISt!n11u1 or lhe aroup indicated that the t:holce Jlet 6etween retom· mending the onllfcatlan on the present boundaries and hopina it fails , thus pro- viding six more years of the status quo. or recommending di vision and launching a study. Gates reminded the group th3l the Onal plan which wlll go on the ballot a yea r from June will be up to the county unification 1.'0mmillee. 'Devil Cul t' Sla ying Suspect Trial Dela yed Oi>tnin g argument1 in the ~ana:e County Superior Court mur der tri1I of Arthur Craig "P.1oose" Hulse were delayed today as the I6-year-0ld defen· Services Held For Nurse Aide Joseph H a,vley Funeral services wil l be held Friday al I p.m. for Joseph E. Hawley, a South Coast Community H o s p i ta I employe killed In an auto mobile accident Tuesday. He was 25. Rev. Ker mil Long or North Hollywood will conduct the services at the Laguna Hills flfethodlst Church. Interment \1•ill follow at El Torn District Cemetery. ~1 r. Hawley. who lived in North l lolly"·ood, had been visiting his parents. Rev. and Mrs. Lawrence Hawley of Laguna Hills. other sur vlvort Include a 1isler, Mrs. Kenneth Nickel, of Hawaii and a grandmother, Mrs. Bertha Hawley of Ontario. f.1r. Hawley v.•a1 killed in a head-on collision on La Pa:r. Road just norlh or the Crown Valley Parkway in Laguna Hills. At the time of the mi1hap, he \1•as on his way to work at South Coast Community Hospital, v.•here he was employed as a nurse's assistant. The family 1ugge11ta that memorial be rTiade in the form of coi:itributiolll to the building fund of Lagun1 Hills ~1ethodist Church, where Mr. Hawley's falher Js paator. d111t'1 lawyers huddled with Judie Ronald Crookshank and lhe proaeculQr in a chamber conference. Newsmen "'ere denied even minor details of court proceedings as Judi• Crookshank's clerk and bailiff rl1idly imposed security arrangements ordered Wednesday by the veteran jurist The jury picked Wednesday after three day1 of selection procedure• waittd behind closed doors this momicg for !he beginning of llulse·s tria l on charges that he kilted service station attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin, 21 , last June J. The burly Garden Grove youth waa indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury for the hatchet slaying of the 21.year-0ld Carlin and was named as an accessory to the "devil cult" murder less than 24 hours late r of ?\.11.sslon Viejo school teacher Florence Nancy Brown. Deputy District Attorney f.iartin J. Heneghan will use Herman Hendrick Taylor, 17·year-0ld transient who U ac· cused of both lhe Carlin and Brown killings, as a "'itness against Hulse. Taylor'• trial on bc>th charges is held over until April 5. Steven Crail Hurd, 20, a transient goes on trial March 22 for the double killings. Hurd, Taylor and Christopher "Gypsy" Gibboney , 17, a Portland, Ore., youlh 11·ho is fighling extradition procedures from his Portland jail cell are act:u1ed of kill ing Mrs. Brown, 31, El Toro, in an Irvine orange grove last Jun e 2. lnvestigators claim that members of the group dismembered the woman's body and burled it in a shallow grave after a ritualistic tribute lo sat.an. Hurd has stated in ccurl that "the devil 11 1ny father.'' e SIRVERS e HUTCHES e BOOKCASES 11 SOFAS & LOVISEATS VALU ES $19' TO $6'5 e HEAD IOARDS • BEDROOM sm e MIRRORS e DINING ROOM SETS NOW $199 TO $395 33 UPHOLSTERED CHAIRS VALUIS $tzt TO U lt NOW $69 TO $119 5 PC, GAME SETS llti. VALUIS $4'5 & $5'5 NOW $299 & $399 55 OCCASIONAL and. COCKTAIL TABUS VALUIS $9' TO $299 NOW $49 TO $149 e llNCHES e SCUENS e ARIA RUGS ALL AT HUGE SAVINGS THROW PILLOWS OUR REG. l .00 VA LUE NOW $149 ALL LAMPS w1.u~':iuSE Y2 OFF MANY, MANY MORE ITIMS ·TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION. COME IN EARLY FOR BEST SEUCTION BRING YOUR STATION WAGON' OR PICKUP TRUCK OPIN MON .•THURS.•FRI. EVES. H. J. GARRETT FURNITURE 2215 HARBOR BLVD. 646·0275 . . - DAILY PILOr JIJ TO SA VE UP TO .$100 ON SYLVANIA'S ONCE -A -YEAR . SALE! Thi• !a tho ulei event th1l 1matt buye11 have been waitin g for. Now, for a limited time, you can cet all the quality and eneineering excellence Sylvania home entertainment product• are !1niou1 for, •. and with up to $100 in aav- ings, But don't delay, if you miu this opportunity you may have to wait & whole year !or another chance at bar;aina like theae. Bl• 25 Inch (dia r. meas.) 1crHn Sylvania color TV model CL810. Includes iUlh· button AFC and the IGlbulw 851 I <husi• SALE PRICED AT 539" YOUR CHOICE SAVESSQ Now Only 59911 HURRY! QUANTITIES LIMITED ATTHESELOW SALE PRICES! SAVES1QO Plus Three Fe1tur1 Pack color TV model CL883. The bl&cest color acrtta av1ilable: 25" (d lar. meu.}. ln1tt.nt Pu!h-button Tunlna: 1ivH a perfect color picture Instantly, Solid stat• [Qlbr1!t1r l®lMJ chwll, the ultlmat• • • The ScJle you'~ Wc1ited a year for, Is on. S4\4: IJPTOl/OO In tellability. Now Only 84911 SAVES75 Out.aLandint u.vi ncs on Sylvania Ntw Dimensional Col or TV with the bllf8lt picture ever: 25" dla(. m111.1er1111n. Glbralt ar1"' cha•il, with ln1t1nt Color"' and AFC. 1.ledit1rrane1n 1tyled color console model CL868. Now Only 649 11 TV Rt:ta:PTION SIMULATED lM-119,_I\ lyl\19111e llMll!t P~tl I ... Per10n1l 1ized aolld &l.11.e Bl1ck I& White TV model MW16. Full 12" diag. mus. picture pro'ridea 1111:traordhury clarity and brt1htn•. Equlpptd with -.rphone jack. Elrphone optional extra. SAVES10 NowOnly 8911 21" dl11onal,mea1urt screen color TV model CE81. Perfect for the bedroom or an~ room la your home. Has the lon1-llfe lGlbralij 8$nl] chaul1 with AFC. SALE PRICED AT 42911 Mediterranean 1tyled color TV mod el CL875 with the Sylvania Plu1 Three Featur1 Pack. Includes 25" (dlar. m111.) Ntw Dlmtntion1l Color p!clurt tubtJn1tant Pu1h-button Tunlnf and tolld 1L1t1 IGJbnltlr 100fil) chUlll. SAVES75 Now Only 77 4" Choo•• fro m !our aulhtntical\y d•i1n1d furn iture 1lyln with all the m01l looked· for featuret. 2~" dia1on1l measure picture lubt tha t comblnt1 brl1htneu and con· trait !or the sharpe1t picture 1val11ble.,, and lher1'1 mort ..• The Sylvania Gl brall1r1M chaul1 with aolld copper rlrcuit1 and plu1-ln tran1l1tor1 orren unu1u1l- ly rtlltble performa nc e. Instant Color™ 1lvt1 you1ou nd ln1l.ln tly ,., a picture in 6c1ndln1vlan atyltd color TV model CL821 with the biQKt a.creen ever: 25 .. dlac. meu. Hu the lone-II re Gl bnltarTM cha•l1 with AFC. SAVES40 NowOnly 57911 'IV RICUTlON llMULA.TtD ~,....,_. ~· llec!tlc ''°"""'"KC. Sylvania malched componenL &lereo model MSllO includ11 FM/AM plus FM stereo ndio and 1utom1tic 1terto turn- table. Sylvania sealed Air Suspeaalon 1peakers, tinted dust co••~ and ltand Included. SAVES25 Now Only 229" Mediterranean sly led color TV/stereo entertainment center model CL479 with the Syl vania Plu1 Three Feature Pack. New Dimensional Color wltb Ult bt11est color screen available, 25" (dia1. meas.), I111tant Push-button Tun\nf for a perfect color picture inttantly. Soli d atate !Qlli:ra!WTifOffil rhtul1 for the ul timate In rellablllty. Also Includes 50lld 1tate AM/FM plu• FM stereo rad lo and automatic stereo turntable, plus the Sylvania M&11d Air Sua- N1~:kot~ly 104988 1111thanfi1tc0nds. Automatic r'tne 'l\l nlna auur• you a perf1etly tuned plchut every time you turn on your 11t or chanp channtll. Nrw DirneNilonal Coloz by Sylvanla. lt'11 •h arper v.·ay oC lookinr at thln11. And It.I 11!1prlc11l1t your Sylvan!• dealtr now. ~tedilemntan 1t)'led coloi coniOle model CL829. Superb French Provincial 1lyled color cont0l1 model CL833 with ro11tte amamtnted bue rail and can·ed ct.brlol1ltp. Authentic Early Amtrlcan 'tyled coior con10l1 model CL832 with Nmut1tld draweri. bue rail and IC&lloped 1lllary. Eltiant Italian Provincial lt)'ltd coa,. aole model CL836. HARBOR CENTER 2300 HARBOR • BankAmerica rd COST.A MESA • Master Charge TV and APPLIANCE 540-7131 • Tiptons Revolving HOURS: DAILY ,9:00 • 6:00 • MON. • THURS. • FRI. 9:00 • 9:00 " , I J <f DAILY PILOT ',_ . '" . ... LEGAL NOTICE • ...,.,~ r •lotn • "co1Dl t n ,...,con"' COIT',... on E10 ' Aft 0 111 ....... 11 ... ,..IM•[~• Oyt>I 1'~110• I J JS ICll 91 6-1! LEG .\I NOTJCE ·-· SC ThUttdo Ftbru~rJ 11 1971 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE . ...,. Cl•T"' CATI O' •UUNl"il ,ICTIT 0 1.i'S NAMI TM 11nd& i)Qnf'd don Ct t IV '"' • Cond11dlna .. but MH 11 102ll Ou •fl90 ll:!ve Cl F""°"'' n YI fV t11'11 Cl to'l'I • undt the I ctlTlov• I rm "'""' e,f LA$HF#lilll t l'ld tlltl li d I m l tOMPOl~d of th• lo! ow ,,. " llOft whoH nune Ill tu I u MI 111<• ot rn dlNlft I t i IO io...,, NIM¥ Sht Ol'I SPK!Or lm.t D1I lllP It ~· Cl F1>U11t11 \ltl tY (1111 DI ed Jtn 17 1'11 1<11ncv Mi• .,,. »ec "' STATE OF (A.l FOllN A Oii.ANGE COUNTY o.. J111111..., 17 1'1 tltlo t ,.., • No 1rv P111t c '" t nd to lt d S et. Pf sen• • tll>fl ed Ni ne" Snt on SPK to know11 o m1 ti! ~ n~ •~ •On whott ,,,,... • 1u1t1c llH to ht w tn 11 n1 .,,....,, t nd 1dlnowle<lte<I oho t M 1'<11 td Int 1ome Hlll t 1 Stt Mt rv I t II MO on to l v ,.ubtc Ct to n 1 ,., nc "' Ofi ct In 0 tnOP (l>UMY My Cc-mm ,. M e~ .. t i AP!' t '1 !'I.lb '""" O 1no1 C011I Dt Iv ,. °' Jl.wtf'V 21 F•DfUl rY i, It 1'11 1 ~11 I EGA.' ... NOTICE Merger Revealed 1 000 t OP: OIL 1'.AINTIN<ii WHOLISALf WA•IHOU5l Ol'lN TO THI l'UILIC CEll!T c • • ., "' • ""Nl!S! so•'o , CTITIOUS NAMI! /4 OFF T ~t 'o~•~ 601, '' " 111• • LEGAL NOTICE u, 1; 110 NGEll SANT• ANA ~ 1uc nll • b.,,.,.. I • 7'7 A •II•"' ~ ~ ,.~Ml lUUOI •~ COi • MH• [1 I(! • "Cl ~ --------------- ! 111\JI I "' "'"'' cf CLIFF S .t.UTO SAii )MT 1;r~-=~"~.,~·~·~·~·~C~l~O~·=·~·~·~·~·~·=~:::;=: l!~l'A 11 •n<I 111 11 <J m , '""'"""ti! SU,.l!IUOll COUll!T 0, THI! I) 11\t I~ ow no 01 son1 wll~ t n1me' STATE 0 ' CALl,Oll NIA I~ an.cl o ICtl ., rt <!~net It FOii THI COUNTY 0, OllANO I! ' NI A 11411 NOT Cl 0' NEAii NG 0' ,.ITITION ,.0 11 l'llOIATE 0, WILL Al<IO LET I Tl&llS TI STAMENTAllY' e1 1 , 01 ltOI ERT s D£ GR.•SSE I 1•• R.o~ 0• G 1H• 1~1 ll ol" S C 1 Dt G 1u 1 Dt<tllt <I t.101 CE S HEll:EllY GIVEN I • Ea c; C• G~n· n•1 l •d he ~" 1 or! fo" kl P ob• t c W 1n~ '>' UUll\tt of Le I • l" 1mtn I 'f to P~ one • • one• I~ "'" t~ I m1oe '"' tu "' 01 1cu 1 • 1n<1 1111 ''" 1 m• 11111 Pl•" o nt1 na "'I •~mt 1\1 bten e fo F' b •'f l~ '1 t 9 )(I o m 1" lhr tour oom "' D•"rtm1nl Ne :i ()I SI II UIU 1 JCIO eve C•n •r D •t Wn hi lht C v of Stn I Allt [I ffl<" I 01 t<1 Ft brue 'f • 111 W E STJOHN [Aun C P' al WITTMAN ANO SCHM OT 3 '-II 1•1 WM tHH Or $~ 1 !'It ----NIW,"1 t 11dl Ct llrott1 "~II LEGAL N~'I Ttl 11111 UI 101 VlH, Atl•MYt +ff 1'•11 Ollt -----1 Pub ,nod 0 Afl<i• Cctlf Ct 1 " cl NOT Cl: 0' Slll Fttll'l,ll v I 11 11 ti l f II l EGAI NOTlCF: ••II 10111 ,U,1 111011 COUttT 0, TH I STa t E OF CAL '0 111<1 A POii THI: COUNTY flF OllANCI ... ... ..... ., NOT Cl OF HEAii HG 0' •!T T!ON ,0 11! PllOlATE 0' W LL ANO LET TElll Tl:fTAM!:HTAllY f \I • of A MLTON GllE(N ~~· •LVlH Ml TON GREEN OtC•I •d S•f •• J ft ~ •Ul>C\•~H 1¥11• nen el "'' unci• '111te e c1 •01 e• \ ~na \•~c• n In. •~fl<lll c 53" QO °"' nt w ~ t61! &I ad•~rl t n; ~!Ill t°'n' <>I ,. f NOT CE S HEllEllV 0 VEt.t ~· 1 N IC1 1\Yfl G efn .... I N! httn. "'"" fo< l'cb•• ~WI 1na l<>f \Utntt o Lt t • lt ltmtn ,.., IC P1 I M• ~r ·~c hi wncn mttl• 0 •~rt111 01 cu 1 • •1111 n• 1n1 l'llt •"a n 1t r l>f n1a n<i h• ltmt ~I b-111 te ID Frb ut • H tit a t JO '"' n nr tll\J oon> et Drot tmtnt t.to l ot '' <1 t ll\J t 1 00 C c Ctnff D v~ Wt sl n• ( ¥ QI ~11111 Anl (I Off\ t 0. tf 111 1 10tn dov o ., llobt I I.\ Ht Od P• "' lHSnr S•v tt t tw tns (O\lt MtM Ct tor~l• t>uD ~'°" 0 1nt1 Co11t 01 01 td Ftbnltt"I' t t1 ,~YI Y J11 W E ST JO!iN (.ou11y C't (00KIE'I' SC"UMA(HEll COLIMAN M NVAllD ANO NCJWAll D -------::--::;:-------IU f l'1¥11 1..-C111111! r 1111, .__.,, 0 ..... (11111'11 . ,, ... LEGAi NOTICE ,l[Ttl lOUS I UllNlll Tl ''' 111 NAMI lfATIMINT A It flfY• 11 ''' 11-... r T"f le c .. "' llPltOll 1 o;,.,. bus""'~ Pu!> •he.:! o •nnr Co.~I D• • " "'I , (r"'"'' 1 11 n mn ... •llllC~TWEST 71'00 Pr r ton W1y ----- • 0 '°" ll~ COO • Mti• (1 I ~"· eu "'" tl GIY '* ,.. t '°" W•• llH:lt n-r. C'"'' Mt.i.I (1 I U'3• fl\ I bus!Mon I bt Ill t.0!\llU( tel "' '" ""'~1..... I l ur10I! t.I C•v "vb '"*' Dr•,..• CM\ 0 1 ' " ti I J1,,yf y J! 1t I/Id f rb Ul f'V l II IOI Ut 11 STARS Syd111y 0"'• t .~, ef 1~, WO ''I t ••• 1 1lro1 .. ,,n H' te!ijl!I~ t 0111 ,f t~o DAILY PILOTS 'rt•I f11tu 11 A VANISHING BREED THE GENERAL PRACTITIONER lty TlltlY G•ANT It n O\rr !he ~car• \,. hi\\(' stcn mR iy old and fan11l e.r ravontt~ pa~s from the ~crn,. Often " II uul rnrn me 11 Hc-ce.n ll} ' ,, cad thnt alt\ I .ch lh 11 Hal nu l bf>r r 1 t),,Jf'nn~ l1d c1~11' d 11 Ur \11~t f\e )eru' II r nun11.. r GP ' tCf'nrr11l I 111 I I 011<'1'!1; i;:1~J\ 1n11: 1,. 1 arh )~rir I 1l'nt' )lllr" tl,. I"' 1f'nlAJ!l' hns d 11 ~d f 1 11ln1ost ,.J-0 f ! h ~ r n~ 1 nllt"l t ?fl 11nrl n riru f ti rm A " '" r fi;:i ) nr~ nlrl \\ "' ll lll \ '11 k I 11 hu J 11,,. 111" ht>! or Gr !': en\• r ~1wrnl7.rod /r1111l :i tlf'f' d<'d tntrd mn !:.& 1 (lr ~ Ill ,. lh:it f' bnrk 110n lh fontt 1 orlr~ Qf thl' 1 d d <:lllrrl s1:1 'lr.t YOU on \OUT: DOCTOR CAN PllQNE US h<'n ) OU Of'('d I\ dcl \rry \\to ' Ill dl' lher prom1 tly \\ lthout e' 1111 rhnrj.!e A ~cnt m11 y pt'DOlt> rel v on ~ for 1hclr hrRllh ni'1>ds \\ ~ ''"'C('lm" N'Q.U"~t' for ri<'lh erv sen.ice ind rh:trge e.ccounts PA•lt LIDO l'HA•MACT J S1 H•splHtl l•oll H•wp•rt IHC)t •4Z 1110 f 1H Dtll"ft'f USHER'S GREEN STRIPE SCOTCH START THE NEW YEAR OFF WITH BIG S2.00 SAVINGS • - OVER THE COUNTER ......... 1111W ......... Iv .w!lllMI •t •""'IBlll.,_,, f • 111 ~ N.UO. ,.,lut .... ~ "1•11 ... llUl't. ..... ...-..... .. __ ...... NASO L1•t1ng1 for W1dn11d1y F1bru1ry 10, 1971 .. " • ' ' " Nc 'v Sales 01icf Se t MUTUAL FUNDS ,, "" Gouo ~< Ill"'• " 111 ~a '""' St G nFd A ' "' G a <In "ltm :1t1 ""' [)(ln:lld I\ ft ke d has been H:i;;.. pro1notcd to director ol !'i11les1~1twt• 'iodO Gor ror sporting goods al A~1F M~# \ 011 Inc (If SHnta Ana He~· 1~' .. ,, Hub1mn succeed~ Lem Finley who has cM F n resigned to enter business for s~ ~~" '" h1mse!r {n.:o:,; Fhke1d joined \;olt In !!ISO ,;o c~" H~ a sates rcpresenL'lt1ve lie ~· ,(';,~ h:is since ser,t'<I 1n :l \anct' ~Tc.~ of sales 11nd n1erchand1~lng ~~ f0 ~1 positions In \Vh leh h(' has nYI\ lie' l <f tn~de a s 1 g n 1 f I ca n t con !- tr1but1on lo the {fr01\lh cf the e Al Jle\ con1panv P ior lo his ap-• •t• 10, po1ntmcnl as dircrtor of ~lt:s he \\85 general s11ler1 manager for nntlonal accounts Fhkcid begtin his carer.r ln sporUng goods in 19-IB as a field sales represrntallvc for a sporhns good,, wholesaler f hke1d and his 111rc 11\c tn Newport Beach California Ma ke a Trade Sharp Ust Complete-Ne'v York Stock List _,_ • ~ ' • " • .r, .. 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I Ma y th e Groundhog Of Ha ppiness Leave a Valenti ne In Your Cherr y Tree THINK? .J ~'/:. • Whether ycu 1ee your 1h•d ow or not , , , com e '''our beautiful spring selection of Geist •nd Bleyl e. WESTCLlfF PLAZA -17th & IRV INE -NEWPORT l!ACH THI NEWPORTER INN · NEWl'ORT IEACH SWEETHEART SPECIAL 10°/o OFF VALENTINE GIFTS 20°/o OFF CHARMS . . . . . . A VALENTINE EXCLUSIVE! For the gift giver '"'ho is: loving, meticulous. wise, clever, prudent. thoughtful, gallant ... and "'ants to be loved . CHARLES H. BARR Westclin l'lw, Newport Beach, ~lir. 211 ·Marine Avenue, Balboa Jlland, Calif. , 'one-stop' shopping a.t its :finest! OPEN THURSDAY AND MONDAY EVENINGS SOFT LOOK AND FEEL IN WHITE, PINK, IONE l LILAC CALF $17 • "Where Shopping ls A Real Pleasure " 1052 IRVINE WESTCLIFF PLAZA NEWPORT BEACH 548-8684 *HALLI DAY'S* SPRING PLAIDS & CHECKS An early offering of tropical weight. all wool sport coats. Flawlessly tailored in Halliday's own natural shoulder model. Combined with Corbin spring \\'eight trousers in a crisp blend of Dacron & \Vorsted . A most discriminating choice - SPORT COATS ........ $70 to $80 TROUSERS ......... $27.50 to $35 MEN 'S TRADITIONAL CLOTHING 17th & IRVIN 5 AVE. NEWPORT BEACH WESTCLIFF PLAZA PH . 64S-0792 1/2 PRICE BALI BRA SLIPS LINGERIE SUPPORT_ HOSE AND HIP • HIGH HOSE Veta's IJTlllATt APPAllL ............. .,.., .... Phone: 642-1197 CORDS You Won't Pay Less ••• Anywhere. 1029 lrvll'I•, N•wport B••ch, C•tlforr'll• D2eeO. Phori• &4'2· 7Cle1 7 I I Lagu11a Beaeh EDITI ON Today's Flnal N.Y. Stooks VOL. 6'4, NO. 36, 4 SECTIONS, 68 PAGES ORA NGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSD~Y, FEIRUARY If, 197 1 TEN CENTS Perennial Pub· Pincushion Playing Planned By PATRICK ' BOYLE Of 1~1 Dt ily ,!1111 tt9ft M06t Americans know what a bowling ball looks like, ~ven if they have never rolled one down a gutttt. But when the word "darts" is mentioned, many people thin k you are talking about those rubber tipped things ki<b shoot al each other. the game of • darts, the kind with a round target board and steel tipped missiles. Is beginning to grow in populari· ty in Southern California. These "un·. derground" dart players surprised the Laguna Beach Jaycees in 1970 wben • • a dart tournament was held Jn the Art Colony in conjunction v.ith the \Vinter festival. The event turn!<! out to be the most popular of the festival . at- tracting over 200 shooters and 1,000 spec- tators. 'l'he Jaycees are holding their second tournament Feb. 20 and 21. and are expecting an even larger turnout tha111 last year, moslly because of the in· creasing popularity of the game. "The game is almost 85 strong in popularity here 115 in England," says Jim Green, 11 Tustin dart enthusiast who organizes a weekly tournament at the Bull and Bush, an English-style pub In Cost.a Me&a. Every Wednesday nljht, mort: than 50 dart players from aU parl!i ol Orange Qrunty galhtr at th! pub to enjoy tht:ir sport. The men draw lots for partners and play a double-elimination contest unUI one team wins. The winner• are each awarded an engraved beet tankard and become eligible to 11lay in tht: cham- pionship at the end of the JJ.week ~ lest. On Thursday nights. the pub hosts the Tri-Coonties Dart League, made up of teams from Los Angeles, Riverside and Orange Counties. The teams are rv1ne • I Aftershock Of Quake Feared The lhreat of a new aftershock puJbinl t<lward the intensity of T\i~ay's earth- quake kept 120,000 ~Fernando Valley residents away ftoin' their homes again today. L<>s Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty et· tended an evacuation order for the now- deserted area lying below the cracked Van Norman Dam by 48 hours, on advice of earthquake specialists. Dr. Charles F. Richter. retired developer of the seismographic scale th at bears his name, told Yorty a major af tershock is common and could come any minute. Police set up command eente.ra wber' residents of ~1ission ff i 11 s and other tracls could be issued identiHcation passes for quick trips home . Manv went back to rescue pets, television and radio sets and other valuables possibly attracting looters. The heartbreaking task of digging for bodies -the knov.•n death toll hi t 53 today -in the rubble ()f two hospitals continued as temperatures soared to 90 degrees. "We can never go on the asswnption that, no ()11(! is left down there alive." said crane operator Sa m Thompson, who worked 19 hours straight at the San Fernando VA Hospital near Sylmar. Six persons are still miJslng. Meanwhile. as millions of gallons ()r water was being drained from the im· periled Van Norman Dam. supplies were being trucked into thirsty San Fernando. The city of 17,000 is without water or sewage service.. . A massive traffic jam developed 1n the San Fernando Valley area at r u 1 h hour Th ursday morning where stretches of freev.·ay~ were still closed by fallen bridges. The California Highway Patrol foresaw one of the worst snarls in Southern California history this evtning wht!!n Angelenos head out for the start' of a. f()ur-day holiday weekend. The majority of the city and county public schools reopened for the fin:t time in the thm days, but more than 100 in the San Fernando area remained closed while engineers checked structural damage. Tennis A~e Due Jack Kramer, internationally known tennis ace, will join .with two other top professional tennis stars in a special benefit for the Laguna · Greenbelt Feb. 28 on the Irvine Bowl Park courts. Vern Blackman of the Laguna Beach Tennis Associatkln said Kramer, who will serve as scorer and comment.ator, is expected to name the partici- pating pros next week. Teaming up with the pros in doubles matches will ht: lW() Laguna $1.ars, hJ.&h school counselor Art Wahl and banking executive Chuck ~ibner. "'" No tickets will be sold, but donation• will be requesfid at the ia~:aod all proceeds will &o lo the Laguna Greenbelt to booa,lt. tliwl for the acquJii; t1on of opeo apace land. " • • The Gi'eenbe1t, with headquarters al 216 Fores Av~ ~king eoun\y· wide support through special programs and dl.s1rlbuUon of \ Green" button!, decab and bumper slrlp~ \ \ Art Work Jurying Slated March 13 at Irvine Bowl Jurying of art works for the 1971 Fdtival of Art.s will take place at Irvine Bowl on Saturday, March 13, grounds manager Mogens Abel announced today . • Artists and craftsmen wishing to apply for space on the grounds are requested lo bring three examples of their work to the Bowl between 7 a.m, and 10 a.m. on that date. Jurying will last from 10 a.m. t~ 3 p.m. after which artists should pick up their w()rks, Abel said. The Festival will not be responsible for any art work left at the Bowl after 5 p.m. The judging is open to new artists, artists who were not selected last year and artists who exhibited last year but were asked l() re-submit f()r the 1971 season. Artists wh() exhibited in 1970 and v.·ere not asked to re-submit a r e: entitled to apply f()r 1971 booth space without further jurying. An artist wishing to apply in more than one medium must submit three works in each medium, the grounds manage.r said. A seven-member jury will judge the works submitted. The four jury members chosen by the artists are Herb Griswold, Heinz Norhausen. A. Wellington Smith and Philip Freeman. with Anne Reid G-OrOOn and Jacquie: Moffett as alternates. The Festival board of direc- tors will name three additional jury members. Each judge scores the Mtist applicants and those receiving the highest score.~ are awarded available space on a priority basis. The 1971 FestivaJ will run Crom July 16 through Aug. 29. Holiday Closing Schedules Vary On Orange Coast The four day holiday weekend for Lincoln's and Washington's birthdays will result in some bminesse& and civic of· (ices closing -and some not closing. In Costa Mesa. fouritain Valley, Hun- tington Beach and San Juan Capistrano. the city offices will close Friday and t-.1onday. 'Ille same will happen in state ()(fices, such as the Department of Motor Vehicles, and county offices and courts. In the cities of Lapn1 Beach, Newport Beach· and San ctermnte. civic ()flict.! will remain open on Friday. but will close Monday. Froui Lag11na Realtors Syf an Asks High ·Rise Help Chamber of Commtrce preaident .Bernard Syfan took the case for hJ&b rise to the l.lguna Be1ch Board Of Re11:1tors this morning. urging the members tn tltlp di!Mlrnlnate the hotel zont fac\s to !he community. "Your mipport is just one way to 1upport the rising tide of the city of Laguna Beach." Syfan uid, The ch1mbt:r president, who Is a buildtr, t G I d the: aastmbleri group thal many people qutt- tion whether or not lhe hotel buslnen helps the community. -- I ''I am very disturbed at the lack of_u:qder1tandini: 'the community has as flft lbe value or U>t tour ist to this com- munity," he said. ''The tourist Is our bread and butter." Syfan noted what ht calls 1 "lea kage factor," the altl()Unt or money Laguna Beach reai~ta spend in other near-b y communitie!I. Ht 11id I.hat even lhough &0 many people •hop elsewhere, Laguna Beach "a:els ·more sales ta1 per capita than any cthillr town in the county. We live ()ff thal tourist." He said the city mu.st be developed In a positive manner with advance plan- ning, Mting the present n~ 1 new sewer 1yttem and a ~ ').ollcti: building. "These things need to~l to the mind11 of the corn Ind )t is our responsibility to ¢ le fa• oot," he said. "If we do11't. we wOl develop by default." often sponsored by bars in the various communities, with Laguna Beach usually sending teams (rom Mother's Tavern and the Hatchcover. The Bull and Bush is an ideal settin g for these contests, having a large, well· ltghted room with six dart boards lined against one wall.' The pub, named from the lyrics or a London music hall tune, is owned by the unlikely trio of an Irishman, a Scotsman and an American. The three mel\ took over management ot the pub in 1!11!9 and changed II to a family-style atmo,,pher e in an ef fort to attract a • 1ven Decision Surprises Observers ' 1 l I I , t J • -, •. .,,-.ACit ~­' Gt:·"" 0111)' jl>ji.t' .... '· ' ' Ora.qt County political observen were still buzzing tocfay after the Loe.ii Agency Form1l{on Commission, in a suprile split declskln, .Wednesday ruled that cit.izena or Irvine. communities should be allowed le vote on a proposal to create their own city. The LAFC 's action which will bring about the cityhood election came after 40 minutes of so.metimes h e • t e d discussion and a 3 to 2 split vote. Supervisors Ronald Caspers of Newport Beach and Robert Battin of Santa Ana, slttin1 as LAFC commissioners, voted ·nay and lost. They were kn()wn opponents ef the cityhood and in the tum of recent county politics, it was anticip ated their ep- position would prevail. But San Clemente Councilman Stanley Northrup pushed hard in favor of the cityhood election and the key swing vote in favor was cast by LAFC Chairman Louis Rein hardt ()f Fullerton. Newport's Caspers was obviously feel· Ing the heat in the political kitchen when he argued again.st putting the cityhood issue to a vote of the people. At one point the freshman supervisor said quietly, ''My stock is low now but I hope the people who live there will understand that I am doing what I think is best for the area. "I think the county is In the best position to plan what is best for this area.'' He said he recognized many people would oppose his stand. "I only hope Ind pray that the people will understand that I do wbat J feel Is best for them ." With approval of the LAFC, it is now a virtual certainty that the people (){ ""wine communities will get • chance lo vote on the proposal that would create a city embracing 18,145 acres generally surrounding the UC Irvine campus. Supportt:rs of cityhood, pr:lncipally the Council of Communilies ()f Irvine a n d :~.e Irvine Co mpany, may now circulate petitions which would call for the cityhood election. • Petitions must bear signatures (If owners of land re presenting 25 percent of the taxable value within the proposed elt1 boundaries. AD CLEANED UP FOR COAST MAN You could staff the bousekttplna dt- partmnt ol a Mtel with just one DAU. Y PILOT classlfled ad . One Newport Beach man proved It for himself. The following ad got 70 re.sponsesl HOUSECl.EANING. Middle ~ woman. 4 hrs a day, 2 days a wk, $3 hr. for qu"t bachelor's ba.yfront h<>me, (Phone No.I 11.esuJtJ came. quickly, too !1U 7tl of the calls In two days), when you phone the direct line to 1 DAILY PILOT ad•"Yi.!J()r. Dial yourst.ll some result! at 642.wll. • clientele of European origin. It has grown into the most popular pub in tht county. Another dart pl1yer frequtnling th.ese wtekly tournaments Is Jim Tynan, 1 Jaycee who iJ <lrganiz.Jng the upcoming Laguna Beach Dart Tournament. Tynan says be has only been playing the game for about six years and became in-- terested in the sport when he was a bartender at the Hatchcover. He agrees that the sport ba.s really grown in popularity recently, "Fivt: years ago, there were nevtr more than 20 people here • throwing darls, '' he saya of the Bull and Bush, which i3 now usually filled to ca1>11city. Hmmmm, Next Time ••• People Litnit? "The dart people art: a very cordial mixed group," he says. "1 have never seen anyone get out of hand here like you see so often in many bars." Tynan expects the upcoming Laguna Beach Tournament to attract more participants than the Jaycees will be able to accommodate, so It will r,robably have to be limited to about 400 p ayerl. The tournament will be held at the Boys' Club beginning at 11 a.m. P'eb. 20. The Jaycees will have singles for men and women and team events in the contest. with all of the proeeed! being donated lo various youlh-orltnted organization.s in Laguna Beach . WATCH THIS ONE L1rry Ke rbs, Laguni Professor Says Restudy Needed· ·1 sy miJ.ra:·mo~ Of ...... .., ,,IM SMff Planning for water and freeways based on the ''bigger 11 better ntyth" must be restudied if Southern California i1 to survive. Cal Poly Pomona Pro!essor Mark Von Wl'ldtke, 1ddressing a Southern Calif()rnia Association or Governments p a n e I Wednesday 1t Newporte.r Inn, suggested 1 shirt in planning to consider the car· rying capacity or the resource base versus continued reliance on population growth. stall.sties. The typical reli ance of planners on populalion projections based on past growth must be replaced with planning that balances growth with the potential of I.he area's resource base, Von Wodtke argued. Hi storically, development of California depended in par t on the influx of pe()ple whose wealth added to the !inanciat base for !urlher growth. Expecting 2tl million people lo be living In Southem Califomla by the year 2000, the region has planned highways, utilities and water supplies to meet this growth, he said. "This presumes. and I question the noti()n, that we live within an open system with an abundancy of air, water and land and that technology will solve all pollution problems." By 1980. when 14 million people are expected to live ln Southern California. however, the area will have reached its air carrying ca pacity. "Perhaps that is the maximum number of people the Foreign-born Artists Still May Register Registration of foreign·born a n d second-generation-American artists in the J..aguna Beach Winter FesJ.Jval's lnterna· tional Art Exhibit ls still open, according to chairman Flora Bass. Mrs. Bass says the one day event will be held Fe~ 2<I from noon to dusk at the Irvine wl P1rk. So far. she hu registered artists in the event. TboR entere so far include Margeret Neild, from Au.stralla ; Jeannette El Noulty fror)1 France; Wilnam and K1th1een Gee, Louise Rash and Fred Falkner. all from Canada ; Arthur Wlckins and Wil llam Schuman , both from England : "SuMy'' Latson, Ukrainian: MiMie Luthlger, SwiN ; Ne Uy Ali.it1 Ctechoalovaklan: Geza Pa I • 1th y, Hungar ian; K1tryn Couvalt, Turkish. Sean Leo Kelly, Jrl!h: Melita Howard, French; Jannlgje Betlem and J ohannes PijJ, Dutch; Angelita Pic:em, Peruvian •nd a grandfather-grandson e:a:hlbit or Philippine palntingi by Henry and Mk:bael Biss. lnttrested pt:r10ns may register at the Chamber of Commerce, 280 Park Ave. \ ' area Is capable of supporting," VO Wodtke noted. "We shou1d be striving to deve1oP a steady state versu.s the. e.ver expa~ economy." ·: Another panelist supported Van Wodtke's concern over the possible IJck of alr by citing data colltcted by the air pollution C()ntrol district in ~ Los Angeles basin. Dr. Joel Behar of the Statewide ·Atr Pollution Research Center at UC Riverside. told the government ()fficiala devices ''hung on automabiles to C()ntrol emissions are not the answer, even if manufacturers meet the 1975 stand.arda for emissions." Dr . Behar contended that even with emission controls the air pollution pro- blem in the Los Angeles basin would only be "reduced by half. We'll never again see 1940 levels of oxidants in the air, because people no longer live where Ibey did in 1940 but are spread throughout the basin .'' Behar showed 24 maps showing the accumulations ()f smog over a 24-hour period which proved smog is di~ly related to the activities of resident.! of the basin with peaks forming at rush hours and throughout daylight hours. Bolh men called for renewed con. sideratlon of some form of mass transportatio n "to optimize our air resources .. , Von Wodtke also urged "planned population distribution by regulation of roads and utilities placement -t09ls which may be used to effec t cha~ he said. At the federal level he urged a positive stand on family planning, research ef- forts similar to war research, an in- ventory of our resource base and a new look at "new towns" as a means to relie.ve population pressures on already_ overburdened areas. Orange Coa1~ \feather Another groovy day is on tap for Southern Californians Friday, with warm. sunn,y weather push· ing into the 801 along the Oranga Coast. INSIDE TODAY British bonk! c'osed W ednt1· d4t1 a/itrnoon to allow th• na· tion to make lhe biggeat Jinan ·· cial rea.dj11&tme:nt in. J .200 11e:a.r1 to 1ht decinw.l systtm. SCP Pao• B. Call"""9 I CMcll"" U• 1 CIM1l'*I "'M c.m11:1 :n Crttt'INfll H O.•tll Nollc9• n f.lll!Wll/ '"' • 1"111tr .. r-1 ,.1, fl'fll•nc• 1•1• Hen"'" II ... " l.l lldtn ,, I 2 IWLY PlkOT SC lhursday, rtbru""' 11, l'fll " South Coast School Unification Explained A complicated unlflcatlon prooedure was e:1plained to a handful of leadtt1 r-die communiUes ol Irvine and tho Soddleback Valley Wednesday. Ralph Gates, Superintendent of lhe San Joaquin Elementary School District. outlined three alternatives and stn5$ed the need for an lmmedlate dect.slon. Th< four dlstrk:ls mandated by the state to have a unlllcatlon electlon ln June of 19'12 are the San Joaquin, Tu.stin Eltme.ntary, Trabuco El!tnentary and 'l'llslln HJgh School District. Repn:stnlaUves from lheie f o u r dlotrlet! will be m .. Ung Feb. 24 to ~ wl>kh altoniall•• they wollld llie lo upJore. Gates llld the district can work for unification 1long the e:1lsttn1 high school boundaries, SUQest the high 1chool boWI· darle& and then work against It, or divide the district lnto a group or separate unified districts. "For a matter af illustration, the high 11<hool dl.ltrlc\ might be dMded lllto the Tustin area, the Irvine· Ranch area, and lhe Saddl<t111cl< Valley·Trabll"' .,. ... J&ld Oates. Bet it Isn't aa euy 11 it IOWXls.. 'Ille stale reqlllres that a dlstttct wbolt asseased valuation per pupil 1s 11bove the atate average can only divide if the ensuing divisions have a nearly equal assessed valuation. Th e differenct be-- tween districts can only vary IS percent. Tustin High School's usfSied vaJu.atioo ·~aspers Seeks 'Shakeup'· .. :Aide Says Supervisor Doesn't Want Heads to Roll · F~(h D~trict Supervlll>r R o o a I d Ca.spen; of Newport Beach doesn't want beads to roll at the caunty seat but simply seeks a sh8keup, his act.. rninlstrative assistant dtclartd Wed- nesday. 1 Caspers' laidt Tom Fuenles gave this capsule analysis of the county ettuallon jn a talk before the Capistrano Beach Chamber ol Commerct. He also outlined plans for a complete reorganization af tbe county's administrative strUcture. FUentes asstrted his boss favors some cutback i,, the county's 40 department heads. He al!O suggested that OJunty adminiatraUve Officer Robert Thoma.a: "should serve at lbe ~·ill of the supervisors." Salary and personnel cuts, Fuentes said, will now await a t.hree-.month study perlod ardered in the latest action by the county board. "There will have to be some cuts," be asserted. Fuente; also maintained, however, that more of the county's · administration is Immediately being shifted to the offices of the elected supervisors. The Caspers aide also declared that his boss has an airport slogan that suggests "Anywhere E:1ctpt the 5lb" -apparently meaning 1hat any new Orange County jetport should be located autside of the Fifth Supervisorial District along the Orange Coast. Fuentes also indicated Caspers will Increase efforts against "poc~ts of Jn~ tense drug abuses" be said exist In San Clemente, Laguna, Newport Beach and Huntington Beach. Capistrano Chamber members were also assured by the supervisor's aide that the county sign ordinance approved Forklift Accident Causes S~cond Crash in Laguna /\ Laguna Canyon accident that capsiz- ed a heavy forkllfl v.·as blamed by police for a second collision in which a \\'est Covina man was slightly burt shortly after 8 p.m. Wednesday. The victim, Brian Arthu r Wilkerson, 25, sustained ruts and bruises when his car slammed into the back of a vehicle driven by Robbie Janlct Fulbright, 26, ot !6112 NacCQme Drive, f\-1ission Viejo. The Fulbright car had been stopped by a Laguna Beach fireman as it turned M!•""EI Toro Road from Laguna Canyon Road, when . police had set out flares af-tbt scene of an earlier accident. Woman Arrested On Calls Charge Pleads Innocent Laguna Beach resident Mirkla Marks, arre.sted Jan. 28 on a charge of making aaJWl)'lng telephone calls to the police df!J)a:rtment. entered a plea of Innocent In South County J\.iuniclpal Court Tuesday morning. • Mrs. Marks was arraigned before Judge Richard Hamil ton, who set a pre- trial date of March 4. and a iury trial date of f.farch 17 in the case. Released on her 011,11 recognizance follo wing her arrest, Mrs. Marks, 1244 Victory Walk, said she did not understand the charge and would like to have the matter cleared up before a jury. Tl1t arrest v.•as made on a "'arrant 1s$Ued by the District Attorney's office ar-the request of the police department ":hich maintained the defendant had made frequent and annoying calls. )1rs. f.farks said she had called the city only in reference to a street repair problem in the Laguna Canyon area, which was taken up before lhe city cou~ cil last week. DAILY PILOT Newp•rt l11dt Let1111 lt1cb C"te Mnt1 H1lll191tM .... h111h111 " • .,. .......... Rob1rt N. w,,, PrHNlent IM "'blltlltr J1ck ,_, Cvrlev Vlct Pru:o ... 1 •r.d ~•I Mll'lftw llio111•• Ketvil E<llltr 1liol'llt • A. Mvrplrit111 M1n1gl11J Ellllt<' "ich1rd P, tc11f ~ $ov1~ or1110t Cwro1r Ellltor \ omc.. COlll /lhM! U0 WIJI a., S""' Mtw1«1 11u 11: m! W•• 11111o1 •llWNY• .. , lAt ..... llN<ll: "l7I f"«llll A-I.II HVl'lllr!lllM llet(ll: 11111 11_,,ll '-'i.>'t"' S..n Cltl'Mllll; JOI HOl1h ll Clrnlllo 11. .. 1 ~n.v l"ILOT. w1111 W!llch 11 ~ "" N._i-r,u, It. publ/J!ld llJlly •Ollpt """"' de' .. M!Nlrl ,. Ollf ........ u..nt 8N~ H._I kfQI, Col'• ~. ""'""''"' •••tl'I lll'ld '°"""Ill "·~.., ...... wllll .... , .. M<MI •111eM, or..,.. ~ ~!ltfr>1"9 ~'I' ..,-ll!t"'9 pllll1• ....... ,, .... •••• arw .. """"' affCll.r n DI _, .. , l lrMI, COUI M#t. Ttl.,.. .. 17141 &41-4111 Ct..stl'H A""""'1 .. '41.JIJI S.. C ....... AH 1.,a1wwwtt1 Tole,.... 4f1-4411 ~'· ,,.., on• °"' .......,..,,. °""'"...,, "41 NWl 1""111, hhilofrllllnt., ......,., """-... c.r . ..,,•-lf ....,....., -l' .. '"""°"""' •ltf911t ..-llJ ,.,.. ... 1111 .e CllJl'Yfilf!I """*° • ltcn ti.. '''"'" ,. .. "' """"" '*"' ..... Cit!• 111111,Jf, C11!""'11 • ....,...,.r.tl W uni... U..U ""'~"'1r1 W ,.,,11 tt.11 ~I ,..mrary m 11r1t1i.it. tUll -"'"'· I ' In the first mishap. which occurred at 6:07 p.m., truck driver Jerry \Vayne Callahan, 31, of Anaheim, overturned a forklift he was towing when he swerved his truck to avoid striking a car that stopped in front of him at the traffic signal. Officers were attempting to clear the intersection when the second crash oc- curred. Callahan told police he had been follow- ing a car down El Toro JWad when Its driver, Glen Moy, 72, of 773 Ca 11 e Aragon, stopped auddenJy u the signal light changed instead of proceeding through as he had expected. Callahan swerved his truck to the right, police said, but the forklift tow jack-knifed, and the heavy machine hit the Moy vehicle and overturned. There were no inJurJu lo other drivers. Youtli Job Unit Finds New Home The Youth Employment Center of the South Coast Y!\tCA has moved lo new quarters In Laguna Beach after being forced out of their old building by demoli- tion plans. The center, which fonnerly was located at 362 Park Ave. in a building owned by St. f..fary's Episcopal Church, has transferred its operation to a new office at 415 Forest Ave., at the Community Presbyterian Church. The center is apen from 9 a.m. to noon J\.1ondays through Saturdays and Friday afternoons from 1 p.m. W 4 p.m. The center also provides a counselor at Laguna Be.sch High School each Fri- day from 12:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. Sch1nitz Urges War on Hanoi Freshman Congressman John C. Schmitz tR·Tustin ) has reintroduced a House resolution calling for a declaralion of war against North Vietnam. In a ne"•sletter to his constituents tn Orange County's 35th Congressional District, Schmitz said the passage of the resolution v.·ould result in a declara· tion of war on North Vietnam within 30 days of its passage if the North Vietnamese failed lo "'lthdraw fro1n South Vietnam. He said he reintroduced the resolution because a military victory in Vietnam js necessary to prevent "transforming the current U.S. policy of orderly retreat into a i alloptng rout." Another Laguna 'Weed Patcl1' Hit COnUnulng thelr specialized weed· 1b•l.emenl program, Laguna &ach police headed for the 2000 block of Glen- rreyre Street thl1 week: to uproot another 30 small mllijuana plants which a resl· dent reported flourishing in a vacant Jot. The plant!. which police said' appeared be growing wltd and had not been , ltlvat.ed, were duly taged for destruc. lion by tht police department. Jn 1n earlier foray this month , officers oblltHated a small marijuana ''farm'' Jn the Woodland Drive area, whf're some plants y,·ert thrlvln& on a well·culllvated lot. Wednesday will be • 1 r api d1 y im· pltmented" in the Capistrano Bay area as requested by the Chamber. Detailing other actiom taken by the board "in ita short four weelu in office.'' Futntes said, "We kept our promise and rescinded the Back-Bay trade, and Salt Creek Beach wfil be open to the public this summer. He e:1plained Caspers' testimony before the State Lands Commission in opposition to offshore seismic tests as effort to protect the entire shoreline from oil-leak damage .. "The tests are a camel's nose under the tent for off.shore drilling," be said. liis boss's efforts to cut through ad- ministrative tangles was noted by Fuentes, who said, "Just Wednesday we learned we would have a new harbor, but no road to il." San Clemente To Attempt Recycle Plan Despite a reported d.,..•indling demand for old newspapers in other Orange Coast cities, San Clemente will attempt a pilot collection plan for recycling newsprint at the beginnJng of next month. Bins provided by the slate's largest newsprint recycling firm will be provided at the Market Bsaket parking lot in Shorecliffs so that citizens can dump th.eir old papers in the interest of ecology. But despite success ln collecting newsprint in Newport Beach, that city has abandoned its project because the market for the old paper is dying. Too many recycling projects are part of the cause for the glut of newsprint The local project was worked out between Clt.y Manager Ken Carr and the "Backyard Ecology Croup," local citizens CQncerned with ecol6gy, Gar4,n Stale, which built ita patented· proces• plant in Pomona about four yea rs ago, is the major , Southern Cllifornla ebrtlwner cl newspilnt. Carr !tc\.U'ed a trailer-type bin fro m the firtn. and recently suggesled several city-owned sites to park the vehicle. Then spokesmen for the ecolo&Y group suggested a collaboration to secure .more central locations for the bin. Several weeks later the name or the market was ch.osen at random, Carr said. Most of the area's supermarkets had consented to giving space for the bin ... Newport Beach General S e r v I ct s Director Jake Mynderse said this week the project in his city will be bandoned because the demand has dlpped to a point where no one wUI buy the news- print. Pearl Harbor Vet Lost in Quake SAN FERNANDO (UPI) -A former Navy mess attendant who saJd he was the first man to fire on Japanese planes at Pearl Harbor i! one of the missing in the Los Angeles earthquake. Norman J. Stewart. 5S, or nearby Pacoima, was a palient at San Fernando Veterans Administration Hospital that v.•as devastated by Tuesday's earthquake. Stewart "'as never ofricially cited by the Navy but he said he shot at the enemy planes "'ithout orde rs from a machine gun aboard the USS Hulbert, a converte<f aviation patrol destroyer. Stewart left the Navy In 1947, $2 Million in Cash Neady Becomes Aslt CITY OF COMMERCE (AP) -Arm· ()red t.Nek driver Albert Stewart had money to burn -$2 million in cash - and some of it did, literally. Stewart slammed on his brakts \Ved- nesday when about 25 stacks of currtncy caught fire while being transporttd to a Federal Reserve BaRk ln San Diego. A passing motorist saved the day with • portable fire extinguisher. Police said a lighted cJgarelle may ba~·e been at ratdl. Aulo Crash Viclin1 Di es of Injur ies E5lher Jo~llnn. 50, of 1901 Oak St.1 F'ulle.rton, dled Wednesday nig ht in Orange County Medical Cenltr of injurlts recti\•ed In a Jan. 25 actldenl in Stanton. Pollce said J\frs. Flinn's car went out of control and struck a power pole at the Intersection of Westtm and OrangtY.·ood Avenut. per pupil Is $13,270. Tustin Elemenlary'1 usessed va!u.aUon Is only $10,400, a 21 percent varJation. Tbt lrvlne Ranch area'1 -auaatd valuatloa ii "24.'100 per pupU, a varllUon al Mi percent. The Saddleback V11ley.Trabuco assessed valuaUon ii the only one within reason, $14,000 per popil, a variation of on I y six perctnt. "But these figures don't count." said Gates. ''The figures have lo be projected aeven years into the future." Re1t1enaber Der? 1\"landy Rice Davies carries her daughter, Dana, 2, as she ar- rives in London for three·week vacation. Jiiandy, now owner of a nightclub in Tel Aviv, figured prominently in the early 1960s in the Profumo ·scandal that rocked England 's then-Conservative government. It 1 divided district ls lo be considered JI consullant will have lo be hired lo work. on the boundarie11 and the assessed valuaUon projections, aCcording lo Gates. And that's the prlmary reaton tor the urgtr>ey in mlkin1 a de<!ision. "Most of w are pretty sure we don't want a huge unified district along the high school di.strict boundarjes,'' said Board President Gratian Bidart. "The board will make its decision next Wednesday," he added. "We're not asklng you to make our decision for Lawyers Huddle us. That's our responsibility. We are interested, however, ln your feelings ." The oonseasus of the ifOUP indkattd t.h•t the cboice lies between recom· mending the unification on tht present boundaries and hoping it fails. thus pro- viding six mort' years of the status quo. or recommending division and launching a study. Gates reminded the group that th• final plan which v.•111 go on the ballot a year from June will be up to the county unification committee. 'Devil Cult' Slaying Suspect Trial Delnyed Opening argumenl.8 ln the Orange County Superior Court murder trial of Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse we.re delayed today as the lg.year-old defen- Services Held For Nurse Aide Joseph Hawley Funeral services will be held Friday at t p.m. for Joseph. E. Ha.,..·Jey, a South Coast Community Hos pit a I emp\oye killed in an automobile accident Tuesday. He was 25. Rev. Kermit Long of North Hollywood will conduct the services at the Laguna Hill! Methodist Church. Interment will follow at El Toro District Cemetery. Mr. Hawley, who lived in North Hollywood, had been visiting his parents, Rev. and ?o.1rs. Lawrence Hawley of Laguna Hills. Other survivors include a sister. Mrs. Kenneth Nickel. of Hawaii and a grandmother, Mrs. Bertha Hawley of Ontario. Mr. Hawley u•a.~ killed in a head·on collision on La Paz Road just north of the Crown Valley Parkway in Laguna Hills. At the time of the mishap, he was on his way to 'vork at South Coast Community Hospital. where he • was employed as a nurse 's assistant. The family suggest! that memorial be made in the form of contributions to the building fund of Laguna Hills f\.1ethodist Church, where Mr. Hawley·s father is pastor. dant's Ja1,1:yers huddled with Judie Ronald Crookshank. and the prosecutor in a chamber coRference. Newsmen were denie<t even minor details of court proceedings as Judge Crookshank's clerk and bailiff rigidly imposed security arrangements ordered Wednesday by the \'eteran jurillt. The jury picked \Vednesday after three days Of selection procedures waited behind closed doors this morniDg tor !he beginning of Hulse's trial on charges that he killed service station attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin, 21 , last June I. The burly Garden Grove youth was Indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury for Ilic hatchet slaying of the 21 -year-o!d Carlin and "'as named as an accessory to the "devil cult" murder Jess than 24 hours later of !\.fission Viejo school teacher Florence Nancy Brown. Deputy District Altomey Martin J . Heneghan will use Herman Hendrick Taylor, J7-year--0ld transient who is ac- cused of both the Carlin and Brown killings, as a witness against Hulse. Taylor's trial on both charges is held over until April 5. Steven .Craig Hurd, 20, a transient goes on trial J\.farch 22 for the double killings. Hurd, Taylor and Christopher •·Gypsy" Gibbone)'. 17, a Portland, Ore., youth who is fighting extradition procedures from bis Portland jail cell are accused of killing f.1rs. Brown. 31 , El Toro, in an Irvine orange grove last June 2. Investigators claim that members ot the group dismembered the woman '!I body and buried it in a shallow grave after a ritualistic tribute to satan . Hurd has stated in CQUrt that ''the devU ~ my father ." e HUTCHES e IOOKCASES e SHVUS 11 SOFAS & LOYESEATS VALUES $399 TO $'95 NOW $199 TO $395 33 UPHOLSTERED CHAIRS VALUES $119 TO $23' NOW $69 TO $119 5 PC. GAME sns REG. VALUES $4'5 a, $5'5 NOW $299 & $399 55 OCCASIONAL anti COCKTAIL TABUS VALUES $99 TO $29' NOW $49 TO $149 e HIAD IOARDS • IEDROOM SETS e MIRRORS e SC:RDN5 e DININ<O ROOM SETS e IENCHES e AREA RUGS ALL AT HUGE SAYINGS THROW PILLOWS OUR HG. 3.00 VALUE NOW $149 AU LAMPS WAIE~~USI 1/2 OFF MANY, MANY MORE ITEMS• TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION. COME IN EARLY llOR BEST SIUCTION BRING YOUR STATION WAGON OR PICKUP TRUCK OPEN MON.•THURS •• fRI. EYU. H. J. GARRETT FURNITURE 2215 HARBOR BLVD. 646-0275 Saddleha~k EDITION Today's Fl•al N.Y. Steeb VOL. 64, NO. 36, 4 SECTIONS, 68 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1971 TEN CENTS Slain l(iller May Have Shot San. Clemente Girl. By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of lllt O.lty Pl .. 1 SI.ti Bertram Greenberg, the killer of a 13-year-0ld Los Angeles girl. two Arizona patrolmen and a New ti.1exico resident, may have ahol a San Clemente girl two weeks before he went on hts thrte· state killing spree that ended in his own death. Newport Beach Detective Sa m Amburgey said Greenberg is a prime or Riles Asks ,Quake Aid To Schools SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Asking "what t:irice <lo you put on the lives of childre~," state schools chief Wilson C. Riles Wednesday urged the legislature lo pro- vide . funds to 1hore up schools unsafe in earthquakes. The State Superinte ndent of Public Instruction said he supported a measure by ASsemblyman LeRoy Greene. (D- Sacramento), that would provide S30 million for building new schools and for improving schools that r,_iJ to meet the earthquake safety standards of the F'Jeld Act. "What price do you 11ut on tht lives of children? I'm not willing to attach i price tag. Let's just figure out what has to be done, and do the job," he said~ "lt's patently, unfair to make a child attend school In an unsafe buildi~g. We are requiring by law that a child ~n· dinger his life, while we worry with budgets," he decla red. Riles said California still has 1,Tr1 school buildings dat ing from before 1933, when the Field Act was passed, that have not been made safe. Forty percent of those schools are in Los Angeles County, he said. State law requir es 11.ll schools to mett safety standards by 1975 or be closed. But "unless we had a crash progra m we couldn 't redo the schools anyway,'' said J im Orsburn, field representative of the Department of Education's bureau of school pla nning. "There's not enough money.·• 1 .. "We've been prelly lucky so ar, he said. with earthquakes ~itting at hours when children are nol 1n school. ''I don 't think anyone can fo recast when these things are going to happen. Who knows?" . "The legislature can pass all kinds of Jaws and , if they don't put the money in and they leave it up to the local people to pass bonds and the y don't pass them. the school officials are between the devil and the deep blue 1ea.'' Orsburn said thal all the school buildings in Newhall . where the destruc- tive Southern California quake was cen tered . meet fie ld act standards. . Greene. chairman of the education committee, told the Assembly that 2{) L<>s Angeles Schools constructed before 1933 were closed by the quake. (Aaat \1'eather Another groovy day is on tap for Southern Californians Friday. wllh warm. SWUI Y we11ther push- ing Into the IOI 1lon1 the Orange Coast. INSIDE TODAY Bri!ilh ba nJc.i clo.ttd. \Vednti· da11 o/ttrlloon to aLlow tht na- tion to !'l'Wke the biggtti Jlnan· c14l readjuslnltnl in 1.200 11ears to the decimol 111stcm. SCP PoQ< S. C1llt9n!M I a.ca... "" ' .-t:~ n .. • .... , ... u . .. ' ... 1.a .... ,.. '' """'" .... ., MlltHI "llMt 14 M1tltflll .._ 64 Or•llM (....., )t ,,..,... 11•U Stttll Marlllh U•11 Ttlt¥1tllll u T'll•••itn ,..,, w .. fltv • Wtf'IMl't ....... )1•• ~ ......... . - ' suspect in the shooting of 19-year-old Susan Spector. "It's going to take a !of of work before we can pin 1t down,'' Amburgey said, "But we have some good leads." Miss Spector ""'as shot in the left side Jan. 23 as she leaped from the car of an abductor. Sht: had been picked up hitchhiking from South Laguna to Newport Beach and jumped fro m the car at the intersection of East Coast Highway and Newport Cente: Drive when ru the driver pulled 1 gun on her. Amburgey said he has shown mug shots of the former mental patient to the shooting victim who bas returned to her San Clemente home . "She couldn't make a positive idi n- lilication," the de tect:ve. said. "By tbat I mea n she couldn't positively 1ay it was him , hut she couldn't elimJn1te him either." Detectives are trying to obtain phot6i" of Greenberg ~·ithout hls glasses on Geologist Reports Yawning Quakes Mostly Fictional By PAMELA HALLAN or 1h1 0111y "11•1 51111 Remember the old movies where the ground rips open and swallows all the dinosaurs and 1 few members of the cast? Jf you don't, chance.s are Tuesday's earlhqua~e jarred your memory and all the old terrors depicted by Hollywood came back to you. Bill Edgington. Dana Point a:eologisl, can allay .tll your fears. "Cracb large enough to engulf anyone rarely occur," he said. "Most damage to ~le and property Is 1 reault of Shaking." Edgington, who worl<J for the Mines and Geology Division of the State Depart· ment Qf'Conservation, is currently doing an inteNive 1tudy of an area called , Down the Mission Trail Ter-affic Shot, So He Thougl1t SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -Bill 1\-teadows enjoys golf , but he's beginning to have second thoughts about those who play the game. Driving down San J uan Creek road next to the San Juan Hills Country Club Meado~·s met a golf ball eye to eye just before it shattered his windshield. Being unhurt (the ball missed his head by inches) he got oul of the car to assess the damage, looking around !or the guy with the terrific slice. Someone came rushing over-but not to see if he was hurt. ll seems he wanted the ball back. • Give It a Fling LAKE FOREST -A class in baton twirling ft:lr all Lake Forest girls aged 4 and up is forming . Janet Merriam , head majorettt at Mission Viejo High School, wiU teach the class on Saturdays 11t 10 a.m. ~t the Beath and Tennis Club. A demonstration will take place on Saturday, Feb. 13 at 10 a.m. at the club. Thole inte:rest.ed will be able to algn up and pay t.beir M.$0 fee at th.It Ume. e Artl1tle Winner ' MISSION vrElo -Jme Coan, MiNkln Viejo resklent, recently won a watercolor paJnUng br Lloyd Harting durln( I meeUng or lh< MWlon Vltjo Kiwanis Oub. The palnUng WIS or MJulon San Luis Jtey and Ls one of many painUngs done on Americans -and the historical west by the award winning u tlst. The w1ttrmlor was part or a benefit for the Youth Service Fund In the Sad· dleback V1Uey area. the Dana Point Quadrang le, Y.'hich el· lends from northern San Clemente to Three Arch Bay and includes San Juan Capislrano -a community which in 1812 was baptized by a deadly earthquake that killed 40 persons. His work includes geologic mapping of the area to delineate the zones of landsliding, faulting, and other 1eologie features which would be useful in urban planning. Edgington has found several active fault systems in Southern California which are closa enough to produce damaging earlhqUakta in tbJ1 1eDeral area. ' "Earthquakes tend to pn>du~ greater destruction to buildings and uUUtles con- structed in poorly consolidated rnateriala such as Jandlllides, stream alluvium (fan shaped silt deposits ), slopewash and in weak unstable or deepl y weathered bedrock," he said. Knowing where these areas are can help min imize potential danger. One of the geologic features he 's been studying are faults -those moving cracks that cause earthquakes. "A good geology book definition of a fault is a surface or zone of breaU in the earth's crust along which there has been movement," said the geologist. "When there is movement along a fault, shock waves are produced," he said. Some faults move horiwntally, like the Sa n Andreas . It's west side moves north, its east side moves south. Olher1 have vertical movement -one side moves up. the other, down. Edgington said most of the faul f.s that are in the Dana Point quadrangle appear to be inactive. But be is quick to point out that just because a fault hasn 't moved in 100,000 .years doesn 't mean it ~·ill never move again. ''Faults are pretty ~:d!r-1prinkled throughout the area," he said. One which is clearly visi ble 11 the Dana Point fault which ca n be seen in the corner of Dana Cove seacliff behind the pier. It is also eiposed just north of Blue Lantern Street in the road cut where coast Highway curves. Anolher is the Christianitos Fault which begins northeast of El Toro and eitends out to sea a mile south of San Onofre. Other faults include the Forster fault. a western branch (If the Christianitoa east of San Juan f;apistran(I, and several intra-formational fault.a in the Pall.sades area . "The most active of these faulU is probably the Cbrlslianitos, but even · that hasn't moved in a minimwn of 30,000 years." he said. The geologist said danger to 1trudures from earthquakes will probably be minimized as more ls discovered about !hem. ·•we still need to Improve site ln- 'Yestigations and know more about IOU ind rocks we'n! building structures ont' he nid. ''It is ntctssary to control not only the type or development on c:ertain formations, but .to atrictly enforce existing building d>des /' The la.st visible evklence of ear0Kw1ke damage In the Dan Point Quadrangle la tht remains or the cathedral in San Juan Capistrano Mission, destro}td la )812. Smee then, nothing has happened. But nothing happen'd ()JI tM !fin Gabriel fault elther~tU Jut Tuesday lit &:02 a.m. I to show Miss Spector. "The man who shot her was not wearing glasses." he said. Amburgey said one of their leads in the case is a description of the shooting suspect's car which was supplied by witnesses. "We are trying to gel informaUon from Arizona apd New Mexieti about the car. From ~·itnesses, we determined the model yea r lo be around 1968 and tha t it was a gold car wilh 1 dark vinyl roof, This is pretty close to the car lh•t Grt.enberg was driving which was 1 1961 Pontiac which was gold with a bJack vinyl roof,'' be $aid. Amburgey also noted that the partial license number given by. witnesses Is being checkf4 against the license on the car Greenberg was driving in bis flight from Califorrila. Greenberg, who was 1n ex-convict, was originally . sought by Los Angeles police when the body of Mary Hill, Was • s rv1ne DA ILY •1LOT lletf ,...,_ Huge ·CapoPeP,per Tree Makes 'Social Register' A towuing pepper tree which bas borne -the cllrnOing of generatklrl..\ o{ San Juan Capistrano youog.sters . bas found-1 place in the nation 's arc~ve1. The 57-foot·high, anarled tree. ne.ar San Juan Elementary School has nb eiact age, bec11use no one can remember when it was planted. Nevertheless, it has won a place as the second-largest pepper in the U.S. Forestry Department's "Social Register of Big Trees." Standing broadly in front of what once 1erv_fl" as a principal's residence, the pepper tree has a trunk circumference of 26 and one-half feet and a-diameter spread of limbs of 76 feet. And 'ha'd it not tmdergone severe prun· Ing several decades ago , It probably would be number one in the records tod ay. The pruning, however, could have sav· ed its life, because Santa Ana winds had begun ripping the large limbs off. Probably the resident expert on the pepper tree is San Juan's Harold Ambuehl. tht prinicipal of tJ'le .tlementary school who raised a family in the small duplei nearby. Ambuehl came to lhe eity in 1943 to work in education and pointed out this week that both hia daughters grew up with the towering pepper tree. "They had a tree house · in It for years and that tree ~as one of their favorite places to play," he said. But no one -not even Ambuehl - can vouch for even an approzimate age. "Ever. the old timers say it has been huge ever slnct they remember," he said. AD CLEANED UP FOR COAST MAN You could staff the housekeeping de- partment of a hotel with just one DAIL V PU.OT classified ad. One Newport Beach man proved It for him.self. The Jollowing ad got 70 reaponses! HOUSECLEANING. Middle aged woman. 4 hn a day, 2 d11ya: a wk. S3 hr. for quiet bachelor'r; bayfront home. (Phone No.) Results eame quickly, too (all 70 ot the calls In two days). when you phone the direct line to a DAILY PlLOT ad-visor. Dial yourself aome resu lta at w..sm. foond in Griffith Park a week aro. She bad been raped and strangled. In a destru ctive flight across the Arizona desert, Greenberg shot a.nd killed two Arir.ona highway patrolmen who stop- ped him near Sanders, Ariz. He abandoned bis car ootside Gallup, N. Ji.1ex. and flagged down a car driven by t¥jr. and Mrs James Brown. Re fatally wounded Brown and shot Mr1. Brown in the face three times and left her for dead. LAFC Gives Split Vote Approval By JACK BROBACK Of lt!1 01Hy "lit Sl1ff Orange County political observers were still buzzing: today after the Local Agency Formation Commission, in a suprise spilt decislon, Wednesday ruled that citizens of Irvine communities should be 1l1owed te vate on a proposal lo e.ruk their •Wll City. The LAFC's action which will brine about lbe cityhood election came 'after 40 minutes of sometimes b e at e d Wmmion and a 3 to 2 split vote. Supervhors Ronald Caspers of Newport ~ llld Rliliff B.uio:Ji um..w. aittllli as tb,c ,(onunJutqners:, YOted. 0"1 IJjil l~I. ' TMy wert known opponents of the cllybood llld-bi tbe 111!!1 •r recenl - poliUci, Jt. "' 1111icip1i<d iW ... pOsition would prevail. But-San ·aemente· GouncUmaa r~ Northrup puslied hard Jn 1.iYl)r of ~ cityhood election and the key swing ~ i!J. favor was cast by LAFC CbairmQ liluis Reinhardt of Fullerton. Newport's Caspers was obviously fee] .. Ing the heat in the political kitchen when he argued against putting the cityhood issue to a vote of the people. Al one point the freshman supervisor said quietly, "My slock is low now but 1 hope the people who live there will understand that I am doing what I think is best for the area. "I think the county is in the best position to plan what is best for this area." He said he recognized many people would oppose his stand. "I only hope and pray that the people will understand that I do what I feel is best for them." With approval of the LAFC, it la now a virtual certainty that the people of Irvine communities will get a chance to vote on the proposal that would create a city embracing 18,145 acres gener1Uy aurrounding the UC Irvine campus. Supporters of cityhood, principally the Council of Communities of Irvine a n d the Irvine Company, may now circulate petitions • which would call for the citybood election. Petitions must bear_ signature! of owners of land representing 25 percept of the taz1ble value within tht proposid city boundaries. Clemente Hospital l3egun Hundreds Atrerul Elaborat,e Groqndbreaking Rites By JOHN VALTERZA 01 Ille SNlty l'lltt M.., In one of the largest lltCh ceremonies Jn recent years in San Clemente. bun· drtds of residenta Tuesday helped chritten the attata first hospital on. a terras:e of la nd overlooking the sea. Usina 1 buildoztt1 Dr. Rlfph Grahlm of Oranae and community leaders broke ground for A Il&«d acute-care faclllty: which GraharA bts.prnmtaed will admit lta nm pa'llentl btlonJ year'• ~\ Prlllln·g the projec~ as, ",Int },Ttade poulbl• •by !he reinarkltile .efloril o( lt1dV1 ln ·thil coniinuntt~ """'Graham anCI • otllers .Jn tJii, Cli1pa11!1' Geoeral H01pil.tl sroup uld Ui•Y hive mm<led 11 •tbe 1mowir Of. loclll ~ •Iv> ,hav~ p1ld -11 .Nj\s )to Clllpl!W> General H01pit•I Ill,~· · ' · That f1cility will .Id tht pftern lor the-San ~1..,,..i. d•l'$fmeiil, to be built by the Lomar Corporation of Santa Ana. By year's end. Graham sald, San Clemente General '• in.IUal facilities wlU Include : -A U.bed medleal nursin& ~tion. -A 0-bed surgk°al nur1inc ltCUon: -A JO.bed pedJ1trlCI" wlnf. • · -A 14-bed obslftrioll MCllM. . -A six-bed combined lntenilve. care Ind con>nary unlL · -A •uraery department with lhr<e m~or operattnc 1Ultn with ·one •P<Cillc1lly deaJgned for ltl'OIOI)' and fracture wwk. A nearby rte0very room wUI be a~re to hlndi. f"" pati<nts at a time. 1 -A fully~Wld' ~ d<l!lrlo mail: <1p1~ !!"~Inf <IP lo ..,.. patleo!i olpoo iumel Ml delivery ,....,,. an<! llire. Jlrintl llbor rooma for E I pregnancies. Other services to be provided by the lnlUal hoopllaf will Include Jaboutory faclltUts, nuclear medical services. mCdical testing departmenla Ind ru11 pharmacy facillUes. Ptter Hutcbin90n, a verera J... 17 yeUST bi -ilospltal admlnlltrl•, "111 move r1om b~ top P90t', •t :C:W.~on Gencr11 · to selv• u ·admllllolqtir'a san Clemente. The· bospilal n~ lo haV. 1 lotll empioye roll of 211>. inci~I ...,..., technician.s and clerical empl~ who wlU staff lbe ,hospitll OD I 5'Ven-day-'1• week, 24-hoor buts. Sile preporolion work .., the ocreage 1t 654 cami .. c1e lo• w. .... wm kaln wlth\n the Mii 'k\o dlJI, 11!111 c:omplcll°' ex~ted s0meUme In late fill or 11rl1 wtnter of this: year. ' I 2 DAILY PILOT SC South Coast School Unification Explained A complicated unification procedure v•as explained to a handful of leaders lrom lhe _..un111u of Irvin• 111d ll>e S.ddleback Valley Wednesday. Ralph Cates, Supertnltndent or the San Joaquin Elementary School District, outlined three alternatives and stressed the need for an immediate decision. The four districts mandated by the inate to have a unification election in June oI 1972 are the San Joaquin, 1'ustln Elementary, Trabuco Elementary and Tustin Hlgh School Dlslticl. Repreaent.aUvu from these f o u r dlslrlcts will be meeUng Ftb. 2l to decide wblcb allemaUve U.ey wOllld like to explore. ' Gates aald the dlttrlct can work for wliflcatlon along the existing high ~l boondariea. suggest Ult ttigh school boun· daries and lhen work against it, Dr divide the di.strict Into a group of sepa ra te unified districts. "For a matter of iUustraUon, the high l<bool district might be divided Into Ule, TulUn area, th• Irvin• Randi area. and !he Saddleback Valley-Trabuco area," tald qates. Bet ft lsn'I u euy as It IOUJl<b, The ·state requires that a district whose assessed valuation per pupll 11· above the state average can only divide if the ensuing divisions have a nearly equal assessed valuallon. Th e difference be· tv.·een districts can only vary 15 percent. Tustin High School's assessed valuation Caspers Seeks 'Shakeup~ Aide Says Supervisor Doesn't Want Heads to Roll Filth District Supervisor R on a I d CasJ>frs of Newport Beach doesn·t want beads to roll at tbe county seat but simply seeks a shakeup, hie ad- ministrative wlstant declared Wed· nesday. Caspers' aide Tom Fuenles gave tbls capsule analysis of the rounty situation in a talk before the Capistrano Beach Chamber of Commerce. He also outlined plans for a complete reorganization of the county's administrative '.itructure. Fuentes asserted hl.s boss favors some cutback in the county's 40 departmtnt heads. He also suggested that County administrative Offictr Robert Thomas ''should serve at the will of the supervison.'' Salary and • personnel cuts, Fuentes said, will now await a three-month study period ordered in the latest acUon by the county board. "There will . have to be: some cuts," he asserted. Fuente1 also maintained, however. that more of the county's administration is immediately being shifted to the offices of the elected supervisors. Tbe Caspers aide also de clared that his boss has an airport slogan that suggests "Anywhere Except the 5th" -apparently meaning that any new Orange County jetport should be located outside of the Fifth Supervisorial District along the Orange Coast. Fuentes also indicated Caspers will increase efforts against "pockets of in- tense drug abuses" he said exist in San Clemente. Laguna, Newport Beach and Huntington Beach. Capistrano Chamber members were also assured by the supervisor's aide lhat the county sign ordinance approved Wednesday will be ''rapidly Im- plemented" in lhe Capistrano Bay area as reque«ted by the Chamber. Detailing other actions taken by the board "in its short four weeks in office,'' Fuentes said, "We kept our promise and rescinded the Back-Bay trade, and Salt Creek Beaclt will be open to the public th is summer. He explained Caspers' testimony before the State Lands Commission in opposition to offshore seismic tests as effort to protect the entire shoreline from oil-leak damage. "The te sts are a camel's nose under the tent for off.shore drilling,'' he said. His boss's efforts lo cut through ad- ministrative tangles ,,,.as noted by Fuentes, y1ho said, ''Just Wednesday we learned \\'e would have a new harbor, but no road to it. 1• Forklift Accident Causes San Clemente To Attempt Recycle Plan Second Crash in Laguna A Lll~ Canyon accident that capsiz· ed a heavy forklift \VU blamed by police for a second collision in whic h a West Covina man was slightly hurt shorUy after 8 p.m. Wednesday. The victim, Brian Arthur Wilkerson, 26, sustained cuts and bruises when his car slammed into the back of a vehicle driven by Robbie Janice Fulbright, 26, of 26411 Naccome Drive, Mission Viejo. The Fulbright car had been stopped ~y a Laguna Beach fireman as it turned cnto El Toro Road crom Luuna Canyon Jlold, where police had Set out flares at the scene of an earlier accident. Woman Arrested On Calls Charge Pleads Innocent Laguna Beach resident f.firkla Marks, arrested Jan. 28 on a charge of making' annoying telephone calls to the police department. entered a plea of innocent in South CoWlty Municipal Court Tuesda y morning. Mrs. Mark! was arraigned before Judge Richard Hamilton, who set a pre· trial date of March 4, and a jury trial date of March 17 In tbe case. Released on her own recognizance following her arrest, Mrs. Marks, 1244 Victory Walk, said she did not understand the charge and would like to have the matter cleared up before a jury. nie arrest was made on a \\'arrant Issued by the District Attorney's office at the request of the police depanment which maintained the defendant bad made frequent and annoying calls. Mrs. Marks said she had called the city only in reference to a l!itreet repair problem In the Laguna Canyon area, which was taken up before lhe city coun- cil last week, DAILY PILOT '''"'"''" ... .......... ..., .. _ DkAHWE COUT P!.llLltHIHO COMPM!Y R.o .. •rt N, W,d Prcs•t 1111 l"nl...., J ,,\ k. Cltlf•y Vl<I Prtsldtftl l r.d GMtr•I ~ 1hom •• Kt1Yi1 Etllfr 7hoM•• A. M111pM11• M•nafll'lt ldltw l icht"' r. Hal lmtt Of'.,,.. COllrl'Y 141tor -C11r. MBll DO Wuf an$"'"' N.....,1 euc"': mi Wco1 .. ~ •• _....,.,, U.-l tttfl; 7n F.,nl A'ffi'Mlt H\lftf1"1• ... di: Hl 1J 9ttdl '°"'9¥1r<1 .. fl ~I .JU Nwtll ~I CarTllrlt AMI In the lint mishap, which occurred at 6:07 p.m., truck driver J erry Wayne Callahan, 31, of Anahelm, overturned a fork.Wt be was towing when he swerved hi.s truck to avoid striking a car that stopped in front of him at the traffic signal. Officers were attempting to clear the Dtspite a reported dwindling demand for old newspapers in other orange Coast cities, San Clemente will attempt a pilot collection plan for recycling newiprint at the beginning of next month. Bins provided by the slate's largest newsprint recycllng firm will be provided at the Market Baaket parking lot in Shorecllffs so that citizens can dump intersection when the second crash oo-thelr old papers in the interest of ecology. curred. But despite success in collecting Clllahan told police be had been follow4 newsprint in Newport Beach, that city S,,. a ~ar 4t>WJ! ~El Toro Road ~hen "' bu . .ti~. its project because the lls drl'nr Ole ...,, n, ol m c all o-markttror lhe Oii! paper b dying. Aragon, stopped .suddenly as the signal Too many r8cyc11ng projects are part light changed mstead ot proceeding of the cause for the glut of newsprint through as he;~ad expe~ted . The local project was worked out cal/aha~ swtrved his truck .to . the between City ¥an ager .J:Cetl Carr and Tllill. police ~:bul U.q 12~~ tht "lll<kyord,'EcoJQitl 'f:roup," local ~:knifed, and Git beayY'ma iii• citizen. concerned Willi e<ology. UM Moy vehicle ~n.d '!Verturned. . Garden State, which built Us patented· There were no WJUr1es to other drivers. process plaat in Pomona about four years ago, is the mJ!.F Southern Youth Job Unit Finds New Home The Youth Employment Center of the South Coast YMCA has moved to ne1v quarters in Laguna Beach after being forced out of their old building by demoli· tion plans. The center, which formerly was located at 362 Park Ave. in a building owned by St. l-.1ary's Episcopal Church, has transferred its operation t<> a new offi ce at 415 Forest Ave., at the Community Presbyterian Church. The center is open from 9 a.m. to noon f.londays through Saturdays and Frid ay afternoons from l p.m. to 4 p.m. The center also provides a counselor al Laguna 668.ch High School each Fri· day from 12:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m, Sc hmitz Urges War on Hanoi freshman Congressman John C • Schmiti (R·Tustinl has reintroduced a House resolution calling for a declaration of war against North Vietnam. In a newsletter to his constituents In Orange County's l!lth Congressional District,. Schmitz said the passage of the resolution would result in a declara- tion of war on North Vietnam within 30 days of Its passage if the North Vietnamese failed to ~·ithdraw from South Vietnam. He saJd he reintroduced the resolution because a military victory in Vietnam Is necessary to prevent ''transforming the current U.S. policy of orderly retreat into a galloping rout.'' Anotl1er Laguna 'Weed Patcl1' Hit CcmUnulng their speciallitd weed- abatement program. Laguna Beach police headtd for the 2000 block of Glen· neyre Street this week to uproot another 30 sm11.ll marijuana plants y,·hich a res!· dent reporled flour ishing in a vecant Jot. The plants, which police 1aid appeared be 11rowtng wild and had not betn .iivated, were duly tagged for desltuc- t.lon by the police dtparlmenl. In an earlier foray this month, offieprs obliterated a small marijuana ''farn\'' in the Woodland Drh•t area, where some plants were thriving on a \~ell-culth•ated lot. California consumer of newsprint. Carr secured a trailer-type bin from !he firm, and recently suggested several city-owned sites to park the vehicle. Then spokesmen for the ecology group suggetted a collaboration to secure more centrlll localions for the bin. Several y.·eeks later the name or the market ~·as chosen at random. Carr said. Most of the area's supermarkets had consented. to giving space for the bin ... Newport Beach General Ser v I c 'es Director Jake Mynderse said this week the project in his city will be bandoned because the demand has dipped to a point ~·here no one v.·ill buy the news- print. Pearl Harbor Vet Lost in Quake SAi'l FERNANDO (UPI) -A former Navy mess attendant who said he was the first man to fire on Japanese planes at Pearl Harbor is one of the missing in the Los Angeles earthquake. Norman J . Stewart. 55. of nearby Pacoima, v.·as a patient at San Fernando Veterans Administration Hospital that \\'as devastated by Tuesday's earlhquake. Stewart "'as never officially cited by the Navy but he said he shot at the enemy planes without orders from a 1nachine gun aboard the USS Hulbert, a converted aviation patrol destroyer. Stewart le ft the Navy in 1947. 52 l\1iUion in Cash Nearly Becon1es Ash CITY OF C0~1~1ERCE (AP) -Arm. ored truck dri\•er Albert Stewart had money to bum -'2 mlllion Jn cash - and some or it dld, literally. Stewart sla1nmed on his brakes \Ved· nesday when about 25 stacks of currt?ncy caught fire \\·hile being transported to a Federal Reserve Bank In San Diego. A passing motorist s.aved the day wilh a portable fire extlngub;her. Police sald a llghted cigaretle may have been at fault. Auto Crash Vic tin1 Dies of lnjni-les Esthtr Fllnn, SO, of 1901 Oak St., Fullerton, died \Ved nesday night in Orange Count)' ~ledlc1J Center of Injuries rectived in 1 Jan. 25 aecident in Stanton. Pollce said J\.-frs. Flinn's car v.'e.nl out of control and struck 1 power pole at the Intersection of \Yesttm and Orangev.·ood Avenue. per pupil bi $13,270. Tustin Elemenlary's 1asessed va!uallon ii only $10.400. a 21 perctnt variation. The Irvine Rane:h area's auessed valuation is $24,700 per pupil, a variation of 86 percent. The Slddleback Valley-Trabuco a s se ss ed valuation is the only one ~'ithin reason. $14 ,000 P"r pupil, a variation of on I y six percent. "But these figures don't count." said Gates. "The figures have to be projected seven years into the future." UPI Ttit11h11tt Re 111er11ber lie r? ]l.·tandy Rice Davies carries her daughter, Dana, 2, as she ar· rives in London for three·week vacation. h1andy, no\v o\vner of a nightclub in Tel Aviv, figured prominently in the early 1960s in the Profumo ·Scandal that rocked England's then-Co nservative government. tr a divided district is lo be considered a t:onsu!tant will have to be hired to work on the boundar~s and the assessed valuation projections, accordlng lO Gates. And that's the primary reason for the urgency in making a decision. "~1ost of us are prelly sure .,.,.e don't want a huge unified district along the high school district boundaries," said Boa rd Prt>sident Gratian Bidart . "The board will make it.s decision next Wednesday." he added. "\\'e're not askin~ ~ to make our decision for Lawyers Boddie us. That's our responsibility. \\le •re inlerested, ho'f'ever, in your feelings.'' The consenJus of the fl'OUP 1Ddie1ted thal the choice lies between recom· mending the unification on the presenl boundaries and hoping it fails, thus pra. viding six more years of the status quo. or recommending division and launching a study. Gates reminded the group that lhe final plan "'hich y.·ill go on the ballot a year from JWK' will be up to the county unification committee. 'Devil Cult' Slaying Suspect Trial Delayed Opening arguments In the Orange County Superior Court murder trial of Arthur Craig "!\toose" Hulse were del ayed today as the 1&.year~ld defen- Services Held For Nurse Aide Josepl1 Hawley Funeral ser\'ices V.'ill be. held Friday at I p.m. for J oseph E. Hawley, a South Coast Community H o s p i la I employe killed in an automobile accident Tuesday , He v.·as 2~. Rev. Kermit l.-Ong of Nortb Holly\\·ood v.•ill conduct the services at the LagWla J~il\s Methodist Church. lnterment \\'iii follow at El Toro District Cemetery. !\·fr . Hawley, who lived in North Hollywood, had been visiting his parents. Rev. and Mrs. Lawrence Hawley of Laguna Hi lls. Other survivors include a sister. Mrs, Kenneth Nickel, of Hawaii and a grandmother, ~1rs. Bertha Haw ley of Ontario. ~1r. Hawley was killed in a head-on collision on La Paz Road just north of the Crown Valley Parkway in Laguna _Hills. At the time of the mishap, he \\'35 on his way to work at South Coast CommWlity Hospital. whe re he wns employed as a nurse·s assistant. The family suggests that memorial be made in Uie form of contrlbuUons lo the building fund of Laguna Hills J\.1ethodist Church, where Mr. Hawley'a father Is pastor. .. dant's lawyers huddled with Judae Ronald Crookshank and the prosecutor in a chamber conference. Nev.·smen v.·ere denied even minor details of courl proceedings as Judge Crookshank"s clerk and bailiff rigidly imposed securit}' arrangements ordered Wednesday by the veteran jurist. The jury picked \\'ednesday after three days of selection procedures waittd • behind closed doors this morniug for the beginning of Hulse·s trial Dn charges that he killed service station attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin, 21 , last JWle l. The burly Garden Grove youth was Indicted by !he Orange County Grand .Jury for the hatchet slaying or the 21-year~ld Carlin and was named as an accessory to the "devil cult" murder less than 24 hours later of !\fission Viejo school teacher Fl orence Nancy Brown. Deputy District Atlorney Martin J. 11eneghan will use Herman Hendrick Taylor, I7·year~ld transient who is ac-- cused of both the Carlin and Brown killings, as a witness against Hul se. Taylor's trial on both charges is held over until April 5. Steven Craig Hurd, 20, a transient goes on trial Marcil 22 for the double killings. Hurd, Taylor and Christopher "Gypsy'' Gibboney, 17, a Portland, Ore .• youth who is fighting ei:tradllion procedures from his Portland jail cell are accused of killing Mrs. Brown, 31, El Toro, in an Irvine orange grove last June 2. Investigators claim that members o( the group dismembered the woman'a body and burled it in a shallow grave after a ritualistic tribute to l!lalan. Hurd has stated in court that "the: devil ii my father." e HUTCHES e IOOKC:ASES • snvus 11 SOFAS & LOVESEATS VALUES $399 TO $6'5 NOW $199 TO $395 33 UPHOLSTERED CHAIRS VALUES $129 TO $239 NOW $69 .TO $119 5 PC. GAME SOS H'i. VALUES $495 I S595 NOW $299 & $399 55 OCCASIONAL and COCKTAIL TABUS VALUES S99 TO $299 NOW $49 ro $149 e HEAD 10.t.IDS e ll!DROOM SETS e MIRRORS e SCREENS e DINING ROOM SETS e ll!NC:HES e AREA RUGS ALL AT HUGE SAVINGS THROW PILLOWS OUR ll(i. 3.00 VALUE NOW $149 ALL LAMPS WAIE~"ouSE · 1/2 OFF MANY, MANY MORE ITEMS· TOO NUMEROUS TO f4'ENTION. COME .IN EARLY FOR BEST SEUCnON BRING YOUR STATION WAGON OR PICKUP TRUCK OPEN MON.-THURS.•FRI. EYES. H. J. GARRETT FURNITURE 2215 HARBOR BLVD. 646-0275 • ' 117 , ' BontingWon Beaeh EDITION Today's Final· N.Y .. Stock• VOL 64, NO. 36, 4 SECTIONS, 68 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THU RSDAY, FEBRUARY II, 197 1 TEN CENTS City Testing "Germ Warfare' on Smelly Dump: • I By ALAN DmKIN Thr:j process involves mixing dried 01 ,.,. 0•11'f ~•i.t 111'ff bacteria cultures in a nutrient and Billions or bugs may solve Huntington spraying the mixture. The trained Beach's problem mud dump by eating bacterja become active and then eat it.· all dead orga~ic matter. including oil. A lest team from cln Orange-based which was formed from decomposed company has been spraying a pond in plants and animals. the 3S-acre Steverson brothers dump in "We know we can solve the proqlem an attempt to prove that crude oil. -w·e·ve tackled tougher jobs than this," blamed for offensive odors by homeown-Marden Chlarson, a sales representative ers in southeast Huntington Beach, can for Gerald C. Bower Inc., said this morn· be removed. ing. "All we have to do is to convince the Steversons that this is the way to go." The firm has completed one six-day test at the dump -located behind the Southern caHfornia Edison plant and used for lhe deposit of rotary mud from oil W.f!ll drilling -and belleves it has stopped the odors in the test area . "If you could isolate the pond we have tested you would find no odor coming from it," Chi arson said. J0&eph and Carl Steverson own the d.ump_,..a)ld allowed the company to con- duct Q:periments on restoring an estimated one "million cubic yards ()f mud and oil waste -80 feet deep ln.part.s -to usable material. Hauling the present oozing mass for disposal in thin layers at other refuse site! hai; been deemed too expensive by city officials and the Steversons in considering alternate solutions. Another avenue that has been explored Is spreading the mass over a large area and mixing it with sand to compact lt. Assistant City Administrator. Brander Castle pointed out that the difficulty with this approach is that the only avai\'lble land is owned by the Sol.lthern California Edison Company. "It also would be an expensive procedure,'' CasUe added. Another idea suggested is to put a concrete slab over the 39-acre lot and build an elev1ted shopping center an pilings over 'the area. ''It would have a nice ocean view but would be awfully expensive, too," Castle aaid. Thematerial u.se d by Bowe.r company is called , DBCplU.s. ~son explained that there are 21 culturea in the strain that have betn trained and refined .to form a grlater working force than nature provided'. ~ • ' "If you put 50,000 of them on~a piece IS.. MUD DUMP, P11e _I) ' ualie Fears Posed Threats l~eep 120,000 From Hornes The threat of a new aftershock pushing toward the intensity of Tuesday's earth- quake kept 120,000 San Fernando Valley residents away from their homes again today. Los Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty ex- tended an evacuation order for the now- deserted area lying below the cracked Van Norman Dam by 48 hours. on advice of earthquake specialists. Dr. Charles· F. Richter, reticed developer of the seismographic scale that bears his name, told Yorty a major aftershock is common and could come any minute. The city of 17,000 is without water or sewage service. A massive traffic jam developed in the San Fernando Valley area at rush hour Thursday morning where stretches of freeways were still closed by fallen bridges. The Calif()rnia Highway Patrol foresaw one of the worst snarls in Southern Cali fornia history this evening when Angelenos head out for the start Jury Mulls -· of a four-day holiday wee~~d. The majority of the city and...county public schools reopened for the first lime in the thret days, but more th8.Jl 100 in the San Fernando area rem'ained closed while engineer! checked· structural dainage. · The cost of the quake was still being tallied, but county engineer J()hn A. fSee EARTHQUAKE, Page I) THIS IS THE STEVERSON BROTHERS DUMP FROM THE MAGNOL IA STREET SIDE Cen Bugs Bug the Oily Plot Th1t's Bugging Homeowr:aers in Huntington Buch? Police set up command centers "'here residents of Mission H i ll s and other tract.s c.ould be issued identification passes 'for quick trips home. Over Cllarges Boy Shot, Offi~r Beaten As Protests Span Nation From Witt Servioel A 16-year-old boy was shot in the thigh at & Stanford University rally and police skirmished with 1,000 anti-war demonstr8tors at the University Of California at Berkeley as protests over U.S. involvement in the Laos fighting laced the nation. In Boston, an American flag was burn- ed at the downtown post office after a peaceful rally. About 3,000 peac.e ad- vocates clogged New York's Times Square during rush hour and the mayor of Ann Arbor, f.1ich., joined in a com· munity march against the war in Indochina. Protests or incidents also occurred on at least three other American college campuses, including Kent State Universi· ty where four students were shot to death less than IO months ago. The teen-age son of a Slanford University professor was shot as he stood outside the headquarters of the Free Campus Movement. Earlier three persons were injured during clashes between antiwar activists and the con- servative F'CM. The third day of violent protests at Stanford this week against the inv.is ion of Laos also produced 12 arrests and three injuries. The shooting occurred when John Dawson, Palo Alto High School student and son of Dr. Philip Dawson , stood near the headquarters of the Free Cam- pus Movement, which describes itself as a conservative-libertarian group. \Vitnesses said they heard several ex- plosions. ·whiCh they first thought were firecrackers. \ The witnesses said one person on foot <:oaat "'eaiher Another groovy day is on tap tor Soul.hem Californians Friday. with warm, sunny weather push· Ing into the 80s along the Orange Coast. INSIDE TODAY Brittsh banks closed Wtdne1- doy afternoon to allow the. TIO· tion to mok.t the ·biggest finan- cial readj ustment Jn l.200 11ears to tht decimal svstem. SCP Page 8. Ctllfor11l• • ..... 1 .. 11 (lllC~lllt \I~ ' M~tw_, l'Wt " ("HlllM "'" N1tt.111I ·-.. c. ..... 1c, " °''~" '""" " c ... , ... ,. " '""' tt·H O.t11'1 Miiiett .. ll'IKll ~wlllh U·U 1UJ11r111 ..... • Telt'lflfotli ff 11111r11r11m1~• ... Tl'lt1'9rt M•f7 lf111111« , .. ,. WM-• ........ (." .. Wlll'ltfl't Ht .. fl·tt ... Llll'ffrt .. Wff• ·~ .. .- did the shooting ind they said he ap- parently fired 6 to 20 shots from a pistol. ·He was chased, but not caught. Daw10n was reported in saUsfactory condition at stanford hosp ital. A university spokesman estimated $1,000 damage was done to a computer after del?lonstrators occupied the school's computation center. Meanwhile, at Berkeley, lawmen bat· tied with some 1,000 protesters. The lighting left a policeman beaten un· conscious and an Atomic Energy Com· misson car b~ned. Witnesses said a young man standing on the roof of a parked car leaped on Sgt. Bill Eller's back, rode him to the ground and six others joined in kicking and beating the man bloody. Eller was hospitalized in satisfactory condition- The violen<:i! followed a noon rally In Sproul Plaza near an entrance to the campiis. The rally was called an "open-ended" protest against the Laos invasion. The crowd was reportedly exhorted by a female speaker to help the North Vietnamese by destroying institutions here. The march was led by Pathet Lao banners. The marchers found the AEC car park· ed at a gymnasium, flipped it over and ignited the gas tank. An AEC pickup truck was also spotted but the driver managed • lo get it away under a hail of rocks. After the band broke some car windshields , · it regrouped and pelted police with rocks. Some tear gas was fired and two arrest.s were reported. Holdup Suspects Win Dismissal Two men charged with armed robbery after they aUegedly took $108 at gunpoint fro.m a Huntingtoe Be1ch bar have been cleared of the charaes in West Orange CO~nty Municipal Court. ·The district attorne['s office dropped ita case agaihst. Danie Ortiz. 23, of 16922 Lyndon St .. Huntington Beach. ud Mich- ael Blado, 18, Yuba City. Ariz., when a barmaid from Little Aggies bar, 16391 Beach Blvd.. refUied to testify agaimt tht. two men. Her testimony, investigators said today, directly led to tht. pr05tcution of both de· fendant.s-and-fill111~ of charges lhaL !My entered the bar last Jan. 25, took the money 1t aunpoint and locked her in 1 ren room, Judge KcMeth M. Smith dismissed the char1es for lack of evidence. Labor Leaders Ask Nixon Help For Lockheed From Wirt Services BURBANK -Union leaders have demanded jntervention by President Nix- on into problems of Lockheed Airtraft Corp. and Rolls-Royce which have led to the layoff of 6,500 Lockheed workers. Lockheed announced the employment cutback Wednesday, blaming it · oo the financial troubles of Rolls-Roy~. Ult British firm that had contracted to sup. ply $435 million worth ()f engines for Lockheed's new TriStar jetliners. Meanwhile, Daniel J. Haug b ton, Lockheed board chairman. said he would fly to London next week to meet with R()l!s and British government officials. James Quillin, president of District 727 of lhe International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers. said •Nixon should get productive negotiations under way between Lockheed and the British government. If necessary. Quillin . said, the talks should involve the U.S. aod British governments directly. Of Lockheed's 28,000 employes, 15,000 have been wot'king on the TriStar. London trade unions joined in the plea fol' help. "Thousands of jobs are at stake here and In America as a result of the collapse and wt. want measures taken by both the British and American g()vernments," Jack Service. general secretary of Britain's Confederation of Shipbuilding and Eni'i.neering Unions. said . Service said the American Interna· tional Association ()f Machinists con- tacted the British union and planned what he termed a "summit conference" of both organizations he hoped would be held in Britain nell't week . Many went back to rescue pet&, television and 'radio &ell and other vaiuables possibly attracting loqters. The heartbreaking task of digglnl for bodies -the known death toll hit 53 today -in the rubble of two hospitals continued as tamperature1 soared to 90 degrees. ''We can .never 10 ()ft the assumption that no one ls left down there alive.'' said crane operator Sam Thompson, who wo rked 19 hours straight at the San Fernando VA Hospital near Sylmar. Six persons are still missing. Meanwhile, as millions of gallons of water was being drained from the im- periled Van Norman Dam, supplies were being trucked into thirsty San Fernando. • Holiday Closing Schedules Vary On Orange Coast The four day holiday weekend for Lincoln's and Washington's birthdays will result in some businesses and civic of- fices closing -and some not closing. Jn C.Osta Mesa, Fountain Valley. 11un· tington Beach and San Juan Capistrano, the city offices will close Friday and Monday. The !ijlme will happen in state offices. such as the Department of M()t()r Vehicles, and county offices and courts. In the cities ()f Laguna Beach, Newport Beach and San Clemente, civic offices will remain open on Friday, but will close Monday. And in Seal Beach, city empl{lyes aren't going to get any holiday as city offices will be open both Friday and Monday. The Post Offices In the area will stay open for business Friday and Sntur- day -there will be mail delivery both days -but will close on Monday. Banks and businesses are also following a varied pattern. Many will be open on Friday and closed Monday. As far as shops that might be open Saturday. the best way for resideiits Jn the Orange Coast area to find out, is to call before shopping. New Stable Backed On Phoenix An Orange Count)' Super!Qi Court Jury today ended seven hours of dellberation behind closed doors to return to Judge WilliAm Murray's courtroom f o r clariflcaUon of several charges flied against accused rapist Gary HarOld Phoenli: Of Costa Mesa. Judge Murray discussed with the panel the discretion left to the jury Jn determining the injuries allegedly in- flicted by Phoenix on several women victims. Acceptance by the jury of the pro- secution's argument that the 29-year.oJd bachelor kidnaped, robbed and raped three of the nine women allegedly at- tacked in a 28-day spell last summer could mean the death sentence for the tall, husky, physical culture expert. The jury is mulling 33 felony charges filed against Phcienix. Nine women vie- tims te1tified against him in the five- week trial on charges or rape, assault with intent to commit rape, kidnaping, robbery and sex perversion. .Judge Murray started court at the unprecedented timl! of 8:30 a.m .. cut the lunch break by 30 minutes and adopted several time saving maneuvers in the closing days of the trial in a bid to reach a verdict before tonight and the beginning of a four-day court holiday. Phoenix remained calm and im passive today and watched the jury keenly as they questioned Judge Murray on the extent of several charges filed against him. He has only once abandoned that de- meanor during the long trial. That crack in his composure came on the last day of trial when he rose from his seat to accuse Huntington Beach detective Ray Anderson of lying from the witness box. Leif Erickson's Son SAN LUIS OBISPO IUP!l -William Leif Erickson, 24-year-old son of actor Leif Erickson. was killed in an auto collllslon tOOay as he made a U-turn on Califotnia 1 near here. Horses Given Their Rein Horses were given a free rein by the Huntington Beach Recreation and Parka Commlnion Wednesday night Bf 10 to 1 vote they approved the concept of a 68-horse stable to· be built near Golden West and Taylor street! on land uJtimately tabbed as property of the Huntington Central Park . But before horseman Rex Reynolds will be •ble to htrd his· ponit.s Jnto the 10-acre pare·et he must cleJr !he hurdles of the Pt,nqi11g Commis.sion and the City Council who require a toning varlanct for the horses. Reynolds, who has already done ti· tensive grading and road work on the site, is seeking a five·year variance • I : on tbe land uniil development Of the park's third phase is under way. Planning commissioner.& -referred his application for a zone , change to the reereatlon commissioners to f i rs t determine if the stables would hinder lhe park's development On a, motioa by Jey Mastroianni, the COJTlmi41lon agreed to endorSE the zone change. Only Commissioner Tom COoper , vot,ed agalnst the proposal. The commission and recreation depatt· ment staff members gaid they wouJd pursue \he matter further to determine if some t~ nf hor~ stabl~ could ultlmateJy'be Incorporated in the park. A. C. Marion, a Huntington Beach • oiiman and himself a 1table owner, said he would like to see a commercial "horse center" included in the park plaMing.- "lt could actually bring in quite a lol of money. tf there were horses in the park, it could create a drawin& card which would be hard to equal.'' he 'said. Marlon, however, voiced some concern about the manner in which the concession would be h11nded out by the city. "There might be a posslbilliy of a sfable going in adjacent to the park and then wind up with the '!Onctsslon to the park. This wouJd be totally wrong. Such a concession 1hould &Q out to bid,"' be 1aid. OFFICER OF THE YEAlt Founteln Valley's Colelftin Exchange Club Names Coleman Officer of Year By TERRY COVILLE Of lh1 Diil)' P'ri.1 Sl1ff Pat COieman is 23, a college graduate and modesl. He 's also a cop. One of Fountain Valley's best, according to the Exchange Club. Wednesday, patrolman Coleman wat named Fountain Valley's Officer of the Year. "I really don't know why," he says, slightly embarrassed. "I hav!!R 't done anylhing special." "He represents the young, new breed of officer -college trained and· a fast learner." explains Lt. Les Rowland, Coleman's boss in the patrol division. Coleman gradu1't.ed from. Cal State Long Beach, with a bachelor's degree in police science in June 1969. "I came on the force right after that,• Coleman says. "Police work has always interested me. I enjoy the contact& with peopJe and the variety of situations I find." Coleman wasn't honored for any one Incident or act of heroism, but fqr rapid progress in his year-and·a·half on the Fountain ValJey force. "He's adapted fast Crom lbe college campus to the.street beat," Lt. Rowland says. "He learns well, and bu been ' sbJe IQ, apply his college knowledge to community work." AD CLEANED UP FOR COAST MAN Yoa-C.Uld sWf the h_k,.ping .i.. part111 .. 1 of • bo!el wl!h jUst one DAILY PILOT classified ad. -one Newpor& Beach man proved ft for himself. The followi.na ad cot 70 responses! HOUSECLEANING, Middle agtd woman. 4 hn a day, 2 d1¥1 • wk. $3 hr. tor quiet blchelor'1 ba,yf:ront borne. (Phone No.) Resulla came quickly. too !Ill 70 Of the calls in two days). when you pbooe. the direct line to a DAILY PILOT id.visor. Diel yourself some result.a at IQ.$671. ( '· . • ' Surp rise ltlove ---·- LAFC Approves Irvine Cityhood Apartment Request Re jected ' By JACK BROBACK Of lh EMllJ 1'1141 'l•ft Orange County political observers were still bunJng today after the Local Agency Ponnatlon Commission, in a suprlse split decl!lon, Wednesday ruled that citizens of lrvine communities should be allowed to vote on a proposal to create their own city, The LAFC's ac:Uon which will bring about the cityhood election came after 40 minutes of sometimes h e a t e d discussion and a 3 to 2 split vote. Supervisors Ronald Caspers of Newport Beach and Robert Battin of Santa Ana, 6.itting as LAFC commissioners, voted nay and lost. They were known opponents of the citybood and in the tum of rtttlll county f'rom Pagel MUD DUMP. •• o{ paper they would look like a white fleck of dust," he said. He said that there must be a head of water over the area for the bacteria lo grow in. The bacteria tSt all dead organic matter and are harmless. ·'We even mix the bacteria and the nutrient in barrels by hand," Chlarson said. Once the oil has been talen, there Is no problem with the bugs. "They die,'' Chlanon said. \Vhat would be left would be soil plus \Valer which could be drained oft "But the soil would be very valuable because it wou1d contain all the dead bugs and would be a bi~hly organic fertilizer," Cblarson claimed. He pointed out that his company had done much similar work jn· waste disposal for oil companies in Santa Barbara County. Chlarson declined to give an estimate or the cost of the treatment but claimed that although it would be initially ex· pensive it v.•ould be the most profitable rourse to the Steversons in the long run. The fertilizer could be sold and the dump zoned for the building of homes and thm sold at a blgh value per acre. * * * P11n.el Re.jec~. Plan to Alter Dump Into Park A plan to convert the Steverson Brothers mud dump into a park was rejected by HunUngton Beach recreation and parks commissioners Wednesday night on the grounds such a project i\·ould be "unfeasible." The suggestion had been placed on !he commission agenda by Recreation Director Norm Worthy who said he had Jeen approached by several residents to determine whether the industrial waste dump is a potenlial park sile. Commissioners agreed ttlal it would ~ imposslble to compact the oily ooze sufficien lly to create a s!able foundation !or a park: "Even il the Steversons were to give as the arta we wouldn't know if ~·e i\'OU!d take it. If we did . v.·e y,·ould De responsible to turn it into a park," 1aid Worthy. The 39-acre y,·alled dump n e a r Hamilton Avenue and Magnolia Street 1as been under fire from nearby residents who have complained of noxious odors allegedly c:oming from the oil well \vastes being deposited there. "Drilling wastes are about the toughest things to dispo3e that I know of." said Commission Chairman Ron Bauer. "It l\·ould be almost lncooc:eivabfe to move Uicm out to another part of lbe city.·' DAILY PILOT O~ANGl5. COAST .-UaL.llttlNW aiMl'AMY Roltert H. WtH Prnlclttll t r.II P'llMllMr J•c.k R. Curley Vkt l"rnldWll tr.I 0-.1 ~ Thorn•• Korrll E1llor lho1r111 A. Mur,hTM M11>11ln• Elll:W Alt11 Dlrklll Wnl Ortflff Counlr UIW Alb1rt W. l1tot A\tOCillltl ll!dltw H•11tl111tto1 .... Offke 17t7& lttt.h l o11lo1v1ni M1 ili119 Addreur P.O. hx 7f0, f 2i41 OtMr OM.. LtfW!ll 1tte111 m '""""'' ""-c:-11 M"'! J» W..I ..., ll,_. Ntwptrt .. tell: ttll W•I ........... IC la11 '*'""1111 al Horllt ~ Gao"*'-a..1 ·-. politics, it was anticipated their op- position would prevail. But San Glemente Councilman Stanley Northrup pushed hard in favor of !he cityhood election and the key swing vote in favor was cast by LAFC Chairman Louis Reinhardt of Fullerton. Newport's Ca!ipers was obviously feel- ing the heat in the political kitchen v.·hen he argued against putting tbe citybood issue to a vote of the people. At one point the freshman supervisor said quietly, "My stock is low now but 1 hope the people who live there will understand that I am doing what I think is best for the area. "I think the county is in the best position to plan what is best for this J11niping for Joy Fountain Valley P I an n Ing Com· missioners denied a req uest !or .Y apartments \Vednesday. night . They refused to zone 2.4 acres o( land at the southeast corner of La Alameda Avenue and Brookhurrl Strtt!l for R-4 (high density l apartment con· struction. 'l'he C<>mmission also refused to rezone ty,·o adjacent acres for commercial con· struction. Charles Ishii owns the 4.4 acres ol land. He lost his chance for apartments y,•hen he re fused to go etlong \\'ilh a commission request for continuance on the matter. area." ' He &aid h'e recognized many people would oppose his stand. "I only hope and pray that the people will understand that J do what I feel is best for them." Bonnie Pull, 16, captain of the drill team at Foun· tain Valley High School, leaps above her team, \vhich is preparing for Miss Drill Team pageant Saturday at Santa Monica Civic Auditorium. Foun· lain Valley took third place in the com petition last year. Another girl, Cindy Leeds, 17, will represent Fountain Valley in individual competition tbu1 year. Planning Director Clinton Sherrod ask· ed commissioners to continue the zone change until early May in light ol recent city council comments about apartments. The council has asked for a restudy of lands master planned for apartment! and is eyeing further reductions in the apartment potential of the city . WJth approval of the LAFC, it is now a virtual certainty that the people of Irvine communities will get a chan ce to vote on the proposal that would create a city embracing 18,145 acres generally surrounding the UC Irvine campus. Supporters of cityhood, principally the Council of Communities of Irvine and the Irvine Company, may now circulate petitions which would call for the Pair Indicted In Libe~y Murder Case cityhood election. Special to the DAILY PILOT Petitions must bear signatures or SAN DIEGO _ A pair of cellmates owners of land representing 25 percent of the taxable value within the proJ>03Cd accused or strangling Candlelight Killer clly boundaries. Robert \V. Liberty three ""'eeks ago on Th.is is considered largely a formality the eve of murder trials for all three since the Irvine Company owns far more were indicted by the county Grand Jury than 25 percent of the Wable value. Wednesday. The company favors cityhood. The only real power on the Jssue Timothy E. Dodie)', 24, of New York remaining with the county Board of City and Carl R. Riggs, 21, or Dearborn, Supervisors would then be setting the J\1lch., were ordered held without bail . actual election date. Liberty, 23, formerly of Westminster, The election could be blocked if more ""'as strangl~d with a T-shirt as he lay than SO percent of taxable landowners on his bunk Jan. 20. protest the election. This appears unlike-He and Kendall A. Bierly Liberty, 1 24, who he married in Colorado while YN.onths or debate and reams of both were held there last summer follow· paperworks were compiled, along with ing a crime spree, were to go on trial two lengthy public hearings, before the following 1.fonday. Wednesday's showdown vote by the llis jailhouse bride has pleaded guilty I.AFC. The liAFC then declared public to reduced charges of v o I u n t a r y arguments ended at its Jan. 13 session. manslaughter and robbery in connection with the murder <>f Robert Irion, 52, In Wednesday's action, San Clemente's in San Diego last June. N~ went-. !iCbt to the frpnl in • D.Ldley goes on trial Feb. 22 on charges llit!lrllJ the:~ ..at.. He oal!I tlle ·of •lrthalint .• youth in Balboa Park only questtons to be settled were if last October. the Irvine co~unities• pe<>ple were Riggs and hU brother Clarenct, 28, capable of ~gout the Incorporation are sclleduled for trial in March, charged and Uthe ~ries were logli:al. "tllh the~ recent murder of off-duty San ,Jf~e then · moved to appro1 ~· Dieeo Police Officer James:P1.Lewis. co~on and titcrude an · a<fi . 1J · Patrolman Lewis~23, w1&ki1led during 887.~ to the soutfieaSt as requt•. an abortive liquor store to~bery. by tftI Chancellor Daniel Aldrich, :Jr, • GaJkin Selected Realtor of Year George Galkin or Huntington 1Beach has been named 1970 Realtor of the Year by the Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley Board of Realtors. Galkin, who with his wife, Phyllis, runs Tradewinds Realty earned the Associate of the Year award in 1963 and has been a member of the board since 1962. r..trs. Maryanne Boozan, manager of the F. r..t Tarbell Company in Huntington Beach was named Top Salesman for her sales of ~1.5 million in property last year. , Honors for Top Lister went to Cha rl_es Diercksmeier, Jr" of Leadership Really. Hun tington Beach . while Bill Haas of Village Real Estate, Huntington Beach, was named Associate of the Year. Youth Ci tize ns' Day Scheduled In celebration of the Linc o In· Washington birthdays, Seal Beach city hall will host a Youth Citizens Day prog ram Feb. 16. Partieipating youngsters y,·iJt take over the du ties of civic officials that day and perform the duties of fi.tayor. Police Chief. fire chief and other administrative officers. SChedultd to take part In the celebra· tion are Dan Thom, city manager; Shan- non ?\.furay;:clty attor1iey; ~tar! Schadee, · mayor; Dan a Babin, coun cilman; Joan Linn. council~·oman : Paula Ober. coun· cilwoman: Bob Eaglt'.'. councihnan: Jamie Knight, p<>lice chier : J\·lary Ann J\.1oreno. fire chief : Dan f\.liller. city en&ineer, and Sheryl Fuller, city clerk. Pen11y Coa st Colleges Appoint Russell Chancellor Aid e ~1ax Russell, former superintendent of the old Newport Harbor Union High School District, is the new assistant chancellor for personnel service of the Coast Community College District. He y,•as appointed to the post by di strict trustees \Vednesday and v.·ill begin duties immediately. In his new position. Russell y,·ill be responsible for all personnel services for the district's 700 emp\oyes. The post was created more than twG years ago. but has not been filled until ' now. The coast district includes Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa and Golden West College in Huntington Beach. Russell, who lives in Newport Beach, resigned his post in the old high school district shortly before it was merged et!ong with two elementary districts into lhe Newport-f\.1esa School District in 1965. Since that time he has served as an editor of lhe College Bluebook, 1 reference book on higher education, Valley G1idders Huntin g Coaches The Junior AU-American Football League of fountain Valley needs c:oaches for the 1~71 season . The league serves boys aged 9-13, \('aching them the art of tackle football and providing team competition. Five learns are expected to take the field next fall in Fountain Va\1ev. Volunteers \\'ho would ·like to ,~·ork \l'ith the league may phone Claire Hein· baugh. athletic director, al 968·2351. a Pine Sttule nts Help to Reforest Range What's 1 penny worth'! Etaclly one pine trte -seedling form -at Nleblas School In Fountein Valley. The 880 youngsters of the school chip. Ptd In their pennies to buy pine tree sttds to reforest the badly burned mountain r11nges in Riverside Md San Jkrnllrdlno counties. 11iey handed $26.50 to U.S. Forest Rang~r Robert Smart. He. In turn. wlll buy 2,6$0 seedli of \'ariou! types o! pines to be planted in the scarred earth. The pine tree progr1;1m evoh•ed f r o m the schoors ecology committee, com- posl!d of one spokesman for each classroom. After the recent flrcs I h e y suggested doing something to replace I.he los t timberland. "The idea ol coUecting ptnnles came from our class president, Nanette Thompson,'' rf'port.s eighth grade teseher Peggy Griner. "And the ecology class met each Friday to count pennies." - Two Valley Proposals Win Planners' Approval A city center 11rchitectural control zone and a scenic corridor proposed in Foun. tain Valley have passed their first tests. City pl&Ming commissioners agreed Wednesday night to recommend adoption of regulations for both zones to the city council. The architectural control zone would give the commission the power to carefully select~ the type of buildings built along Brookhurst Street, Warner Avenue, and a portion of Slater Avenue from Brookhurst to Ward Street. It would also limit the height of any Dog License Sale, Ra bies Clin ic Se t A combination rabies clinic and dog license sale is planned from 7 to 9 p.m. t\1arch 15 at the Huntington Beach fire headquarters, 704 Lake St. Licenses. good from April through March JI, l!m, cost $S. Shots to satisfy the requirement of the rabies certificate will be given for $2. free standing sign to no more than 12 feet. A 15--foot-wide strip of landscap- ing will also be required along the Cront of all streets mentioned. The scenic corridor would require a 25-fool·wide landscaped path along the north side of Warner from Euclid Street to the Santa Ana River. Both zones apply to areas labeled the "city center" by Fountain Valley leaders. LIFE GOES ON- EVEN IN DISASTER Life goes on , even in the weke of major disaster. Lawmen issuing passes for residents of an area ordered evacuated due to .. the cracked Van Nonnan Dam let one young lady go back on a particularly crucial mission \Vednesday. She v.·as allowed into the forbidden zone to retrieve her birth control pills after two days without them. • 11 SOFAS & LOVESEATS e SERVERS Sherrod also suggested tG C<ITTI· missioners that il Ishii did not agree to the continuance his request shoold be denied and the land should remain in an agricultural zon~. From PtJRe J EARTHQUAKE Lambie said, "A quick estimate would be that it will be in the billions." City officials said structural damage in Lot Angeles alone v.·as estimated at 'l million. Yorty extended the manda acua4 tion of an 18 square mile section of the suburban v8lley af . Richter warned that most quakes are U!Ually followed by an aftershock approaching the severity of the original earth treroor. "We always have reason to believe that the largest aftershock will occur not loo long after the main earthquake." said Richter. the retired Caltech expert who invented the scale used to measure the severity of earthquakes. Richter said th e aftershock could be on the order of 5.3 on his scale. "large enough to give a serious shake'' In the area of Van Nonnan Dam. Tuesday's destructive quake measured 6.5 and the strongest of the thousands of afte rshocks since read 4.5 . Meanwhile the State Assembly, warned that a temporary gas tax increase may be upcoming , today voted unanimous approval to a bill making earthquake- struck Los Angeles County eligible for slate and federa l disaster aid. e HUTCHES VALUES $399 TO $695 NOW $199 TO $395 e HEAD IOARDS • IEDROOM sns e MIRRORS e BOOKCASES e DINING ROOM SETS e lll!NCHES 33 UPHOLSTERED CHAIRS VALUES $129 TO $239 NOW $69 TO $119 5 PC. GAME SETS REc;. VALUES $495 I. $595 NOW $299 & $399 55 OCCASIONAL and COCKTAIL TABLES VALUES $99 TO $299 NOW $49 TO $149 e SCREINS e AREA RUGS ALL AT HUGE SAVINGS OUR REG. 3.00 VALUE NOW $149 ALL LAMPS WAH~':,USE V2 OFF MANY, MANY MORE ITEMS• TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION. COME IN EARLY FOR BEST SEUCTION BRING YOUR STATION WAGON OR PICKUP TRUCK OPEN MON.•THURS.-PRI. EVES. H. J. GARRETT FURNITURE 2215 HARBOR BLVD. 646-0275 I j I I I 'It Was Right' No Remorse Felt By Susan Atkins LOS ANGELES (AP ) -.. , f,.I no guilt for \Vhat I've done " said Susan Atkins, confessed killer oi Sharon Tate . "It \\"as right then and I still believe It was right." "But how can it be right tc kill somebody " a defense lawyer asked . "How can it not be right when it's dcne y,·ith love" she replied. Cairn and deliberate, the tall brunette t.estiCied .for a second full day \Vednesclay, elaborating on her earlier confession that she stabbed the beautiful blcnde actress Bigger Boats Take Mexico Race Lead By ALMON LOCKABEY •"tint •di"" Class A yachts in the Marina de! Rey to Puerto Vallarta race took over corrected time leads \\'ednesday after two days cf strcng winds conspired to leave the smaller yachts falling victim to their shorter waterlines. But as the 26·bcat fleet slid past Magdalena Bay today there was an in· creasing JIClSSibility that the 1,125-mile race was in for a third stage by the time they reached the fateful parking lot off Cape San Lucas. After two days of 15-18·knot winds. the northeaster had dwindled to 7-10 knots Wednesday. - Stealing the boat.for-boat lead rrom Bab Lynch's Sirius 11, the scratch beat, v.·as Bill Wilson's 59·foot yawl Rascal from Santa Barbara. At the noon rcllcall Wednesday Rascal and Sirius Il were abeam of Cap San Lazaro. but Rascal had a IQ-mile edge by virtue of having found better winds some 70 miles offshore. The contest for first to finish llad actually boiled down to a six·boat duel •with the leaders all sailing within a 50.mile radius of£ San Lai.aro -some 180 miles from the cape. Others in the running were Jim Feuerstein's Columbia·50 Querida II from Del Rey Yacht Club; John Scripps' 89-foot ketch Novia de\ Mar, San Diego Yacht Club; Bob Beauchamp's Columbia·57 Dorothy 0, NHYC. and Russ Ward 's Columbia-57 Aries, Lahaina YC. ·Taking over the handicap lead for the first time «inee' the e.net· ltllrted last Saturday were three Class A p~kets -Querida ll, Dorothy 0 and Rascal in that order. Crewmen aboard the escort and com· mtlnic8tions ve~el Pioneer Wednesday \\'ere rchortling about a "first arrival'' in the race. Bill Weinberg, the Pioneer's cwner ·and skipper. received a message that bis wife bad given. birth to a baby girl. Weinberg left the vessel at Turtle Bay and flew home. The Pioneer also reported that they were being escorted by literally hundreds of porpoiseS which were churning the ocean as far as the eye could see. Several of the lead boals were already at or near the halfway mark in the race. According to position Teports, Rascal had 524 miles to go, Sirius Il, 534; Querida JI, 562; Navia del I.far, 571: Dorothy 0, 580; Aries, 581, and Widgeon, 587. The bulk of the fleet was spread out a di stanct of 200 miles behind the leaders. Here are the handicap standings as of Wednesday at noon : OVERALL -11 ) Querida JI; (2) Dorothy O: (3) Rascal ; (4) The Odd Couple, Ron Lee, DRYC; (5l Freestyle, Lippold & Cicero, NHYC. CLASS A -(1) Querida IT ; t2l Dorothy O; (3) Rascal; (4J Aries : lS) "'idgeon. CLASS B -(1 ) Siren, Frank Rice, NHYC ; (2) Dakar, William Goodley. ORYC; (3) Quasar, Arthur Biehl. Rich- mond YC: (4) Madrugador, William Allen, Cal YC: (5) Destiny 11, John ~tooten, BCYC. during a frenzied series or killings. She asserted she was pressured into telling her story to a county grand jury by a prosecutor who threatened her vdth the gas chamber ii she didn't testify. She also told cf dealings with a lawyer \\'ho, she said, talked her into telling her story, then sold it without her knowledge. As a y,•itness in the penalty phase of her lrial and that of Charles Manson and two oiher y,·cnnen, she eagerly detail· ed her feelings durin g the act cf killing, She said she felt merciless and guiltless. "I ' believe I told Sharon Tate I didn't have any mercy for her at one time, and I don't expect any ," she said. Miss Atkins and her three co-defen- dants have been convicted of murder· conspiracy in the k i 11 in gs of Miss Tate and six ethers on two consecutive nights iii August 1969. The jury must decide between life imprisonment or death . The slender Miss Atkins, 22, in black pants suit and pink blouse, said the seven murders were planned as "copycat killings'' meant to convince police Lhat the slayers of musician Gary Hinman were still on the loose. She said it was hoped police then would release Manson "famil y" member Robert Beausoleil, under arrest and later convicted for that murder. Chief defense attorney Paul Fitzgerald asked Miss Atkins, "Why were these people killed." "Because l believed it was right to de anything to get my ·brother cut of jail," she said, referring to Beausoleil, "and I still believe it was right." Q. Did you kill them out ot passion or hatred? A. Ne. I didn't know them that well that T felt anything abcut UJem. Q. Do you feel remorse? A. Feel remorse for what was right •.. Feel sorry for what was right? 1i1iss Atkins, pale from more than a year in jail. clutched the sides of the witness bcx as she declared intensely, "II you see guilt in me, you see guilt fer everything you have ever done. I have no guilt in me." On questioning by defendant Leslie Van Housten's attcrney. Maxwell Keith, Miss Atkins said she was "stcned" on LSD during the killings and had taken the hallucinogenic drug liinee she v.·as 18. "I saturated myself in it,·• she said. ''LSD is like a cata lyst. tt opens your eyes." Earlier, on direct examination by her own. •U:orney, .Daye .~. Miss i.A.lkiM said ahe was threatened l)y Deputy Dist. Atty. Vlncent Bugliosi ~Ith a death 1entenee if she didn't testily betore the county grand jury. Her testimony, which led to in- dictments in the ease, "wasn't freely and voluntarily given because I had so much 'pressure coming frcm so many different places," she said. She quoted Bugliosi as teJHng-·her ir she didn't cooperate. "I'll see that you get the gas chamber." She &tared at Bugliosi, whc sat at the counsel table. and said, "Vince, you know it's the truth." Schpiitz Urges War 011 Hanoi Freshman Congressman Jahn G . Schmitz IR·Tustin) has reintroduced a House rescluticn calling for a declaration of war against North Vietnam. In a newsletter to his cons! ituents in Orange Ccunty's 35th Congressional District, Schmitz said the passage of the resolution wculd result in a declara- tion of war 9n North Vietnam within :JO days cf its passage if the North Vietnamese failed to withdraw frcm South Vietnam. He said he reintroduced the resolution because a military victory in Vietnam is necessary tc prevent "transforming the current U.S. policy of ori;lerly retreat into a gallcping rout." llc111e111ber Her? 1Iandy Rice Davies carries her daughter, Dana, 2, as she ar· rives in London for three·week vacation . 11andy, no\v owner or a nightclub in Te}-Aviv, figurep prominently in the early 1960s in the Profumo scandal that rocked England's then·Conservative government. Revenue Sharing Viable, Unlikely Says Rep. Hanna The concept o( federal revenue sharing is viable -and necessary -but Presi- dent Nixon's chances er getting it through 1he 92nd Congress are slim, U.S. Rep. Richard T. 1-lanna (0-Hunlington Beach) said \Vednesday. Hanna, who said he likes the general idea, but not the specifics of Nixon's controversial proposal, told the Southern California Association of Governments <SCAG) that is \von't gel lo first base this year. ''The opposilWn b simply I 0 o formidable," the veteran lawmaker told a luncheon audience at the Newporte.r Inn . lfanna rattled of( a list or Washington powerhouses who have already vciced their opposition ~ including Rep. Wilbur ~1ills, chairman or the mighty Jiouse \Vays and ti.1eans Committee, Rep. John W. Byrnes (R·Wis.), the ranking Republican and Rep. Hale Boggs, the Democratic ma jority leader. Hanna said the $16 million Nixon has proposed be turned back to various levels of local government "has mos l Congressmen caught in the middle." J1e said, ''They want to support the concept, but they are unsure. wi- comfortable about the specific plan." ,,He sa id the practicaliti es of the transi· Hon v.·orry them, pointing out that $10 billion of that total is not new monies, but federa l monies already being turned hack to local governments through existing programs. He said the $5 biUion in totally new fund s. representing 1.3 percent of all federal income tax revenues. has raised doubts in \Vashingtcn as to whether it will be effectively spent. Under Nixon's plan, Hanna said, California would be in line for $590 mlllion, half or wh ich would be paid directly to county and m uni c i pa 1 governments. He said he is afraid this money would go to communities such as Beverly Hills, City of Commerce and Vernon which he mainlained "have adequate means or raising their own reve nues." Great Earthquake Due? Experts Scoff at Sea Slide Bu.t Not ~1njor Trenior PASADENA lUPI) -For two years. Californians have heard predicticns - Srom beth sdothsayers and experts - that a .. great earthquake" was due to hit the state. An assortment of astrologers, ttligious _fanatics and hippies predicted it v.'ould iinap the stale like a stale cookie and drop most of ii tnto the Pacific. The more sober earthquake experlo; !\coffee! at that picture -but warned that the 600-mile Jong San Andreas fault \\'as due for one cf its periodic inovements similar to lbe cne that cau,.s. ed the San Francisco quake ~or 1900. To the 10 million residents of the Los Angeles area y,·ho were jelled awake by Tuesday's devastating temblor, the prediction'1' seemed to have come true as the quake killed more than 50 per!IOns and caused d:lmagc that will run into tilt billions of (iollars. They're wrong, aceordinr to Dr. Clarence R. Allen, professor er goology and geoph ysics at Caltech's stlsmology lab. ; ··tt is certainly not a great earthquake in the se nse of lhe San Frencisco quake." he to ld a ne"'' conftrcnce Wednesday. HC! echoed the predictions of other geologlsts that a great quake -one v.•ith a Richter reading of eight or higher -would hit along the San Andreas Fault in Southern C111ifomia sometime within the next century. However, Allen said kncwledge of quakes and their causes isn't surficienl to allow a prediction any closer than that. "But we knew great earthquakes occur periodically along the San Andre1ts Fault," he said. "They 're not goin~ lo stop just because we're here.·• Allen said that Tuesday's quake. y,•hich measured 6.5 on the Richter Scale. was one th.at didn't cccur along the S3n Andreas or any kncwn rault system . He said the epicenter, or starting polnl. ·was In a remote canyon 10 miles en~I er Newhall, probably en the obscure Soledad fault, which is so smnll it seldom shows up on earthquake maps. But the qunke didn 't fellow th e faul t Instead, t&rth movement s pre. a d southwest under the San Gabriel Moun• ta lns and Into the populcus San Fernando \1alley north or Los Angeles. Thr mo~I ~vrre shak ing and ground fracturi ng occurred midway along a 20· 1nile long quake zone -a t Sylmar and the hills above it where a veteran's hospital collapsed and a dam threatened lo r.ru1nblc. Allen sa id there was extensivr. and unusuall y comp lex ground cracking in the SyJmar area. with the earth moving as much as t\\'O 10 three feet in som e spots. "We don't understand en1ircJy v.•hat hnppened," he said. "It is not an area fh:it h11s hart n great dea l of seis mic 11ctivlty Md the re is no recognized active faull. "~ly own bet would be that it didn°t occur on a ,single new fault but on a series of breaches or faults along the 20·mile zone fron1 the epicenter to Chat.sv.·or!h in the. San Fernando Valley. 1• Earth strain con!.inucs to build up along the San Andreas Fault -the border between tv.·o hltRC conlinent·i:ized blocks of earth's surface whi ch are in· ching in opposite direction~. When ·the strain ~rov•s too strong. the great quake \\ 111 occ ur Thursday, February 11, 19-71 H DAil Y Pit OT 3 Hulse Called 'Sick' Youth's Drug 'Addiction_ Revealed to J1iry By TOM BARLEY Of ttlt IMll'f' PllM llfff Arthur Craig "Moose'' Hulse iwas defended today in his Orange County Superior Ccurt murder trial as a •·very sick young man" whh a long rec.,rd of addiction to dangerou., drugio; aod alcohcl. Defense lav.'Yer Robert Green built his opening argument in Judge Ronald Crookshank's courtroom arcund what he said was a fcur-year addiction that began at the age or 12 when the burly young defendant first sniffed glue. "He was .on LSD at 14," Green said . "Then it \Vas whites (benzedrine). speed (methedrine), hashish and Seconal." By the time cf his arrest last June 1 on charges of murdering serviti! station attendant Je rry Wayne Carlin, the Garden Grove youth was on "25 tc 60 Seconals a day" and his arms bare many needle marks, Green said . Green, whc is offering the plea that his young client is innocent and innocent by reason of insanity, told the jury that Hulse was now at the stage when he cculd add to hiii drug problems by drinking a quart of vodka er a gallcn and cne·half of wine at a sitting. Long before the youth 's arrest , it was slated, l!ulse had been treated in Orange County P.1edical Center for an overdose of narCQtiCs and it was discovered in the hospital that he had been 1.aklng cocaine i11travenously. 1'He bore absctues from his lnJ~Uons and he was later examined at a psychiatric hospital and round to be 5Ufferlng from adolescent turmoil and terrible psychological problems," Green said. Deputy District attorney Michael J. Heneghan limited his opening argument to a recital of the charges that Hu\,~e \\'BS a nlt~mber o( a gang cf 4riftcrs who took $50 from the till at Carlin's Santa Ana gas staticn, used a hatchet to mulilate their victim and left his almost dismembered body on the washroom Ooor. Hulse ¥:as indicted with lhree other members of his gang for that killing. And he was named In the same in· dictment as an accessory to the murder less than 24 hours later of I.fission Viejo Little Lost Snake Found Af ter I Month FAIRMONT, P..linn. (AP) -A 3-foot boa constrictor lost in a home for a ·month was found Wednesday, weak but alive. Robert Grenwald discovered it ly- ing on top of the bathroom radialor. The nonpoisonous snake belonged t.o Greenwald's son Dan. a student at Brain· erd Vocational School. Jt disappeared from its cage Jan. 10. teacher Florence Nancy Brown. Henegban said he will prove that ltulse was involved in the killing of CarUn and he has stated that he wUI use Herman Hendrick Taylor, 17, a transient as a witness against ~lulse. Taylor is accused with Steven Craig Hurd, 20, a transient and Christopher "Gypsy" Gibboney, 17, of Portland:. Oregon or the killings of Carlin and Mrs. Brown, 31. or El Toro. Hurd. who goes on trial March 22. ts identified as the leader of the druc using group which allegedly killed f\.1rs. BroY:n in an Irvine orange grove arid devoured part;s of her body in a ritualistic- tribute to satan. Hurd has stated in testimony read in Supt>rior Court that he acknowledges the devil to be his falher. Gibboney is currently confined In a Portland jail cell awaiting the results of his appeal against the extradition procedures instigated by the Orange County district attorney's office. Carlin's ~ister, Mrs. Jackie Salazar of Santa Ana. was HeneRban's first v1itness today as the prosecution opened • its case against Hulse. The attractive blonde, o b v l o u s 1 y distres sed, iden tified her brother's body from photographs taken an.er the killing and she identified a Levi jacket produced in court as clothing she purchased !or . her young brother just two weeks before his murder. Top quality roses at rock bottom prices ·99¢ Florabunda and Hybrid Tea Roses -, ~11!i grade~ aioose from these varieties. Fashion, Goldilocks, Peace, Forty Niner and Summer Snow. Stanclanl Pllcl<aoed CUmblnQ Roses-111 grade. Varieties Include: Blaze, Fllllce llld Crimson Glory. .. .. 239 Unlvanlty Compost to start your roses out with the right soil mulch. ' 6 cu. ti. bag. 198 Kelloaa'1 Gromulch. Excellent for nrtafnlng moisture, keeping roots cool 2 cu.~ bag. 229 "Florabunda" Rooea-t1 grade-pruned and potted, ready to plant Varieties include Fashion and Red Pinocchio. 4so Patented Grancftllora ROM. 1971 winner. Potted and ready to plant. Aquarius. 3so Patented Hybrid Tea Roses-J1 grade. They're potted and ready to · p(ant. Choose from Mr. Uncotn ~ Golden Prince. • n.e ,_.ore preplanted and prepruned, Just dig hole 1nd plant. Available al Penney Garden Center._ FASHION ISLAND, Newport Center; HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Beach. Shop 12 to 5, Sunday, too. 4 OA!LY PILOT l hundillY, FebrUMY 11, 1971 'Hqw come yoa•re not anemplOyed li/ce the other.Diuh?' Scrupulous With Taxes By DICK WEST WASJUNGTON -It came aa a shock to 1wn there 1!! an active revenue-shar- lna ring in the capital and that the Pritklent of the United States himself • opaly advocates: the practict. L try to lteep an open mind and a modern oulloo~. despite advancing years, but I'm sharply not ready for anything that unconventional. It"s my l!itra.it.laced upbringing, I guw;. As a child, I was taught to believe f~· The , , lLll dDIHJ'il'IElll! ; .. . i J t1<, Side . <' , In liscll fidelity . America in those day~ was a monomonetary society in which tbe government that collected your taxes 1perit taxes. And no horsing around. I had, of course, heard rumors lhat e •revenue-sharing cult existed in Washington. But I aJv;ays figured such t.a1U were grossly exaggerated. 1 even went to see a movie about revenue-sharing. ll was called "Vermont and Georgia and Indiana and Oregon" and it dealt with four states that became tnvolved with each other's exchequer. But It was primarily a comedy and didn't Impress me as being very realistic. At any rate. I never t.houghl I'd see the. <fay when revenue-sharing would bet'Ome more or le.ss respectable. A friend or mine who is inclined to be brOfld-minded about these matters told me my attitude was anachronistic. ''Gove rnment is by nature po(ypecuniary," he 6lld. "In these mOdem times. it is too much to expect the government to confine itself to a single tax standard, the way it did ""btn you were a boy. "You apparently have no acrupl._, against paying taxes to your county and &Late government!. so why should you abject to the federal government sharing its revenue with Lhem ?" I said. •·to me, taxation is an intensely personal experience. Unless I feel emo- tionally involved with the government to which I pay taxes, the whole thing becomes sordid and meaningless. "At the present time. for example . t tm domiciled in Virginia. It's govern· ment provides me with license tags for my auto and perhaps performs other servicts of ·which I am unaware. Two of my children were born in the stale. Consequently. there is a sentimental at· tachment. "But if the federal government were to lhare my taxes with. say, South Dakota, with wh.ich I have never enjoyed an intimate relationship, I would feel indifferent and unfulfilled." Given the times in which we lh•e. ft may be that revenue·sharing is in· evitable. But in the process I fear we will be losing something that is fine 1nd good and beautiful. -UP! 'Sll,500 Vtareported' GOP's Ford Hit On Fund Charge By JAMES R. POLK WASHINGTON (AP) House Republican Leader Gerald R.. Ford fa iled to report $11,500 in campaign con· tribulions last fall from slock brokers, an oilman, bankers, doctors and a union group. Instead. th~ checlu given to Ford were detoured through R e p u b 11 c a n head- quarters here wh ile roughly the same amount -Jll.233 -was ~ing fed back to Ford's district to pay off post· election debts. Through this two-step p r o c e d u r e , flames of the special interest groups were not listed on Ford's sworn cam· paign report to Congress, although the money flowed through his bands. The Corrupt Practices Act requires full public disclosure of all campaign contributions received with a candidate's knowledge or consent. In an inttrview , Ford defended his procedures in handling campaign checks as being "within the law ," The Michigan Congressman said he signed the checks over to the GOP because he had reactled his slate's legal Jimlt on the money his own campaign committee could handle. He s a i d he had no knowledge of the GOP g i v i n g back more than $12,000 to other Ford committees. Not listed on Ford's report to the House were : ~ -A $5,000 check from the Securities Industry Campaign Committee. The en· dorsement on the check shows it was signed over to the GOP headquarters before the post-election payout! began. ... The $5,000 donation to Ford was the largest single contribution made by the Wall Stree~ stock brokers' fund . -A $2,000 check from lhe Bankers Political Action Committee, whose money was refused by nearly half lht Intended recipients in a controversy over a pen- ding bill on bank regulation. -A $3.000 check from Jobn M. Shaheen, head of a New York City oil firm wllb refineries in Canada, california and Arkansas. -A $1,000 check ·from the political arm of the Boilermakers-Black.smiths union with national headquarters ln Kansas City, Kans. .... A $500 check from the Michigan Doctors Political AcHon Committee. Unlike m0&t cnadidates. Ford acted as treasurer of bl1 main campaign group the "Ford for Congress Committee." and therefore was bound by the Corrupt Practices Act to file a complete report • of its money dealings. However. FClrd said, "l would gay, under the interpretation of the law as it has been interpreted over the years . that my action was within lhe law." He did not elaborate. Jn the 4S.year history of t.he Corrupt Praclices Act. the Justice Department has never brought a court case against a congressman for campaign wrongdoing. The $11 ,500 in Ford campaign con· tributions was turned over to the Republican Congressional Committee in a llklay period just before and after the Nov. J election. Space Heroes Prepare To Make Samo(l Flight ABOARD USS NEW OR!,EANS (APJ -Apollo 14'1 moon astronauts toda y fly off this recovery carrier to Samoa and transfer to a plane for a flight to Houston's MeMed Spacecraft Center. Alan B. Sheperd Jr., Edgar D. Mitche ll and Stuart A. Roosa depart the ship when the New Orleans steams wtthin helicopter range of Pago Pago, American Samoa. The a.stronauta have been quarantined ln a trailer-like isolaUon van aboard the ship since they were plucked from the South Pacific Tuesday after a bull'&:· eye landing that climaxed man's third moon·landing mls!Jon. i For the helicopter transfer they wore special biological mask.s to prevent them exhaling genns. At Pago Pago they move into another quarantine van aboard a Cl41 jet transport for a trip to Houston, arriving about I a.m. Friday. They will be quarantined in the Lunar Receiving Laboratory until .Feb. 26 wilh 12 other persons including engineers, medical technicians end cooks . Apollo l4 's isolation might be the last for astronauts returning from the moon. It was ordered for this mission, just as it was for Apollos 1 l and 12, because the astronauts visited a new type of lunar terrain. Some scientists believe that the ancient Fra Mauro highlands where She pard and Mitchell ex plored could possibly harbor organ isms !hat don't live in the relatively flat plains where the earlier astronauts landerl. "We certainly hope this will be the last nne," said Dr. Robert Gilruth. Center medical director. "We have found no evidence of any living organisms wha\.'ioever in both Apollo 11 and 12 and ·we learned from the Russians that they also found nothing in their Luna 16." Riding in the quarantine van '"ilh the astronauts are Or. William Carpen· tiu, a space agency flight aurgeon. and R. H. CUlberl.son, en engineer. Carpentier is conducting ei:tensive medical exams on the spacemen. He reported preliminary results ahow them in excellent health. Shepa rd and Mitchell, who made two moonwalks totaling more lhan nine hours, returned to earth with no ap- preciable we ight loss. But Roosa, who orbited the moon alone while the other two were exploring below, lost eight to 10 poonds, the doctor reP9f{ed. • Gold Missi1ig- 1.5 Tons of It ATI'LEBORO, Mus. (UPI) - Handy and Harmon Co., ha! lost ir. ton and a half of gold worth St.8 million and no one really knows what happened to it. All the industrial alloy l!Upplier knows is that it's gone. The missing metals were ln a variety of forms from scrap to ingot. Officials say the company was unable to detcnnine whether the gold was taken in a whole chunk or disap-- pe11red in bits. The loss -6 percent of the gold refined by the firm in a year. and almost I percent <lf the nation"s -was discovered Tuesday as part of a year-end audit. The missing metal was !raced to the Union Street plant of the Attleboro Refining Co.. tnc.. Handy and Harmon's local subsidiary. Local police have not entered the case but an FBI sp<ikesman .:onfirmed it has been consulted and was ··making inquiries." 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" » ~ " ~ !1 \ft ~ " ._. ,,, .as . ,, . " . " J! '~ It ~I ~ ... ll • N 14 JI ftS J I -' .It " " 1t " 9f Ul"I TtlflltM'-'CHECK$ DETOURED' Rep. Ger.aid Ford • 60 Nations Sign Seabed Arms Treaty By United Pre11 International The United States, Russia, Britain and 57 other countries today signed a treaty banning nuclear weapons from ocean floors. President Nixon expressed hope ll would prove a stepping stone toward curbing the strategic arms race. Nixon !poke brieny during a ceremony in Washington, at the State Department, in which the United States gave its formal endorsement to the seabed treaty. "We hope." Nixon said , "we will be meeting some time in the fut ure, in this room. or in some olher capital. for the final great step -the control cl nuclear arms on earth." At a l!imllar ce.remony in f\toscow. Soviet Premier Alexei N. Ko5ygin called the treaty ''the first important step towards the complete demilita rization of the seabed ."' Nixon described the treaty as a ''modest but important step.'' and added ; ''We consider it a step toward a greater goal of the control of nuclear weapons on earth. We seek an agreement there (at the U.S.·Soviet arms control talks) which will reduce the danger af modem war that stands over the earth." Bulldup laa Laos Helicopters Rush \t'"iets Into Fray SAIGON fUPI) -U.S. helicopters flew another 1,000 South Vietnamese troops into Laos today to j-Oin the drive against the Ho Chi Minh trail and hauled in heavy artillery it; slings be.neath the choppers. Little fighting w1s reported In I.his area but It br<lke out with new Intensity in northern Lao! and in Cam· bodia . There was an increase In Communist activity jwt below the demilitarized zone (DMZ) paralleling the alllel!' Highway 9 supply line. The Communista shelled fire support b~se Vandergrift and near. Lang Vei on the border, but they did little or no damage. Informed sources in Saigon s1id a U.S. 7th f'Jeet Marine landing team of about 1.500 men was aboard the alrcralt carrier USS lwo Jima off the coast but stressed It was a routine contingency measure and that the same force had · been deployed to the Gulf or Thailand during operations to clear Route 4 in Cambodia. Military sources in Saigon said South Vietnamese attempting to cut the Ho Chi Minh trail at its narrowest point in Laos were nearing their objective, the Communist base area to Sepone (also Tchepone) tonight. One column was just to the north and another to the south but neither has entered lhe to\Vl'I, sources said. Sepone' is 27 miles inside Laos and was listed as the major objective of the drive into Laos. The mountan passes which funnel Communist supplies from North Vietnam into Laos empty into the Sepone area which was a gold mining center in French colonia l days. Brig. Gen. Pham Van Phu, com- mander of the 1st South Vietnamese infantry division spearheading the opera- tion. said there have been no large ground contacts in lhis drive. He said his paratroopers had linked up with an armored cavalry column at Ban Dong, 12 miles inside Laos. securi11g Highwa y 9 and opening an overland supply route. Spokesmen said South Vietnamese units had found some Communist arms caches 33 Coal Miners Safe KITAKYUSHU, Japan (UPI) -Thirty· three coal miners !Oday made their way to safety without injury following a cave- in at a mine near this city on Japan's southern isla11d of Kyushu. in Laos including 1U: Soviet-b uilt Molotova trucks and a number of weapon$ but not the lar;e cache! wb.icll are the primary objective of lhe drive. Communist troops were reported mak· ing major gains in northern Laos abtiut JOO mile! northeast of the South Viet· namese Incursion. tJPI correspondent Kim Wlllenson reported lrom Vjentiant that North Vietnamese overran four government positions northeal!t of Long Cheng and were shelling goverrunent positions in the area. Jordan Army Units Ra.id Rebel Areas AMMAN (UPI) -Palestinian guer- rillas said 600 Jordan army troops su p- ported by tanlts launched a dawn attack on the Jabal Himlan Area of Amman today and killed and wounded a number of civilians. Commando sourcts said it ~•as the biggest outbreak of fighting in Jordan In ne&rly four weeks. A government statement said .securlty forces moved into lhe area. arrested persistent violators of c e a s e • f Ir e agreements and confiscated weapons. It said the detainees wou1d go fin trial. The statement, on official Ammaa radio, made no mention of fighting. The official spokesman of the ranking central committee of guerrilla groups, Ibrahim Bakr, said Palestinian leaders opened up arms caches in v•hich weapons were stored under the latest truce and handed out guns to militia,men. Bakr said King HUSsein's tanks "open- ed fire on civilian homes and militia arms caches while soldiers tried t(t penetrate the area. This forced the cen· Ira] committee to redistribute the weapons to the militia in the area to defend the civilian population.'' Amman airport was closed but the government made no mention of the ' fighting in its morning broadcasts. Jordanian troops and Palestinians have clashed frequently over the government'• restrictions on 1clivities of Jordan.based guerrillas against Israel. Thomas and Theodore join Fashion Island in a ... PRESIDENTS BIRTHDAY SALUTE to George Washington and Abraham Lincoln FRIDAY, SATURDAY & MONDAY See the 819 Sperlal Fahlon hland New1pepe,. See- tlon lnolde today'• Pllol. New1 of e.rcltlnt happening• all 3 days • FASHION ISLAND J<llWJ'OaT CllllTlla , ..... --........... --...................... I 7 Fountain v ·atley Today'• Flaal . . N.Y. Sioelu VOL. M. NO. 36, 4 SECTIONS, 68 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THU RSDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1971 • • • City Testing 'Germ Warf are' on Smelly Dump By ALAN DIRKIN OI Ill• 0•111 PllOt Sl1fl Billions of bugs may solve Huntington Beach's problem mud dump by eating It. . ~ A test team from an Orange-based company has been spraying a pond in I.he· 39-acre' Steverson brothers dump in in attempt to prove that crude oil. blamed for offensive odors by homeown· ers in southeast Huntington Beach, c.an be -removed . The process involves mii:ing dried bacteria cultures in a nutrient and spraying the tnixture. The trained bacteria become active and then eat all dead organic matter. iricluding oil, which was formed from deComposed planUi and animals. •·we know we can solve the problem -we'.ve tackled tougher jobs than this,'' Marden Chlarson, a sales representative for Gerald.C. Bower Inc., said thls morn- ing. "All we have to do is to convince !he Steversona that this is the way to go.'' The firm has completed one sit.day test at the dump -located bt:biJld the Southern California Edison plant and used for tht deposit of rotary mud from oil well drilling -and believes it has stopped the odori in the test area. • "It you could· isolat' the pond we have tested you would Jind no oder ooniing from it," Chlarsori said. · DAILY PILOT Sltlf """' THIS IS THE STEVERSON BROTHERS DUMP FROM THE MAGNOLIA STREET SIDE Can Bugs Bug the Olly Plot That's Bugging Homeowners in Huntihgton Beach? Boy Shot, Offic(fr Beaten As Protests Span N_ation From Wirt Senlce1 A 16-year-old boy was shQt in· the thigh it a Stanford University rally and police skirmished with 1,000 anti-war demonstrators at the University of California at Berkeley as protests over U.S. involvement in the Laos fighting laced the naliorr. In Boston, an American flag was burn- ed at the downtown post -office after a peaceful rally. About 3,000 peace ad- vocates clogged New York 's Times Square during rush hour and the mayor of Ann Arbor, Mich .. joined in a com- munity mar~ againsf the war in Indochina. Protests or incidents also occurred on at least three other American college campuses, including Kent State Universi- ty where four students were shot to death Jess than 10 months ago. The teen-age son of a Stanford University professor was shot as he r;tood outside the headquarters of the Free Campus Movement Earlier three persons were injured during clashe,, between antiwar acti vists and the con- servative FCM . The third day of violent protests at Stanford this week against the invasion of Laos also produced 12 arrests and three injuries. The shooting occurred when John Dawson, Palo Alto High School student and son of Dr. Philip Dawson , stood near the headquarters of the Free Cam- pus Movement, which describes itself as a conservative-libertarian group. Witnesses said they heard several ex- plosions. which they first thought were firecrackers. The witnesses said one person on foot Oruge Coaat did the shooting and lhey &aid he ap- pareoUy fired & to 20 shots from a pistol. He was chased, but not caught Daw&Qn was reported in satisfactory cohdition it Stanford hospital. A university spokesman estimated $1,000 damage was do-ne to a computer af_!er demonstrators occupied the 1chooJ·s coit1putatlon center. Meanwhile, at 'Berkeley, lawmen bat· tied with some 1,000 protestors. The fighting left a policeman beaten Un· consciOu.s and an Atomic Energy Com· misson car burned. Witnesses said a young man standing on tbe roof of a parked car ~eaped on Sgt. Bill Eller·s back. rode him tet the ground and six others joined in kicking and beating the man bloody. Eller was hospitalized in satisfactory condition. The violence followed a noon rally In Sproul Plaza near an entrance to the campus. The rally was called an "open-ended·' prote5l against the Laos invasion. The crowd was reportedly exhorted by a female speaker to help the North Vietnamese by destroying institutions here. The march was Jed by Pathet Lao banners. The marchers found the AEC car park- ed at a gymnasium, flipped it over and ignited the gas tank , An AEC pickup truck was also spotted but the drive r managed to get it away under a hail of rocks. After the band broke some car windshields, it regrouped and pelted police with rocks. Some tear gas was fired and two arrests were reported. Labor Leader~ Ask Nixo,n Help For Lockheed From Wlre Services BURBANK -Union leaders bavt demanded intervention by President Nix· on into problems of Lockheed Aircraft Corp. and Rolls-Royce whiciJ have led to uie layoff of 6,500 Lockheed workers. Lockheed announced the employment cutback Wednesday, blaming it· on · the financial lroubles of Rolls-Royce, the British firm that had contracted to sup- ply $435 million worjh of engines for Lockheed's new TriStlr jetliners. Meanwhile, Daniel J. Haughton. Lockheed board chairman. said he would fly to London next week to m~et with Rolls and British government officials. James Quillin, president of District 727 of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers. said Nixon should get productive negotialions under way between Lockheed and the British government. - If necessary, Quillin sai d. the talks should involve the U.S. anrl British governments directly. Of Lockheed's 28,000 employes. IS,000 have been work ing on the TriStar. London trade uni ons joined in the plea for help. "Thousands of jobs are at stake here and in America as a result of the collapse and we want measures taken by both the British and American governments." Jack. Service. general secretary of Britain's Confederation ot Shipbuilding and Engineering Unions, said. Service said the American Interna- tional :Association of Machinists con- tacted the British union and planned what he termed a "summit conference" of both organizations he hoped would be beld in Britain next week. Joseph and Carl Steverson own the dump and allowed the company to con. duct experiments on restoring an estimated one million cubic yards of mud and oil waste -80 feet deep in parts -to usable material. Hauling the present oozing mass for disposal in thin layers at other refuse sites has been deemed 'ioo expensive by city officials and the Steversons in C<ln:siQering alternate solutions. Another avenue that has been explored is spreading the mass over a large area and mixing it with sand to compact it. Assistant City Administrator Brander Castle pointed out that the difficulty with this approach is that the only available land is owned by the Southern Cilifornia Edison Company. "It also y,·ould be an expensive procedure,'' Castle added . Another idea suggested Is to put a concrete slab over the 39-acre lot and build an elevated shopping · center on pilings over the area. "lt would have a nice ocean view but would be awfully: exl?'nsive, too, .. Castle ~Id. ' Thema te r ia.I y'sed by , Bo wet company is called . DBCplus. Chlaraon explained that there are 21 cultures in the strain that have been trained and refined to form a greater working force than nature provided. "If you put 50,000 of them on a piece (See MUD DUMP, Pale I) ualie Fears Posed Threats l(eep 120,000 From Homes The threat of a new aftershock pushing toward the intensity of Tuesday's earth· quake kt!!pl .120,000· San Fernando Valley residents away from their homes again today. Los Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty ex- tended an evacuation order for the now- deserted area lying below the cracked Van Norman Dam by 48 hours, on advice of earthquake specialists. Dr. Charles F. Richter , reticed developer of the seismographic scale that bears his name. told Yorty a major aftershock is common and could come any minute. Police set up command centers where residents of Mission H i ll s and other tracts could be issued identification pa11ses ·for quick trips home. Many went back to re$CUe pets, television and radio sets and other valu4btea possibly 11ttracUng looters.- Tht. heartbreakjng task of. dligln& iet- bodles -the known death toll hit 53 t~y -in the hlbble of two hospltals contfilued as tem·peratures soared.to 00 degrees. "We can ne\l:er go on the assumption that no one is left down there alive," said crane operator Sam Thompson , ·.vho worked 19 hours straight at the Sa n Fernando VA Hospital near Sylmar. Si.x persons are still missing. Meanwhile. as millions of gallons of \Yater was being drained from the im- periled Van Norman Dam. supplies were being trucked into thirsty San fernando. Holiday Closing Schedules Vary On Orange Coast The four day holiday weekend for Lincoln 's and Washington's bir.1.hdays will result in some businesses and civic of· fices closing -and some not closing. In Costa Mesa. Fountain Valley, Hun· tington Beach and San Juan Capistrano, the city offices will close Friday and Monday. The same will happen in state offices, such as the Department of Motor Vehicles, and county offices and courts. Jn the cities of Laguna Beach, Newport Beach and San Clemente, civic offices will remain open on Friday, but will close Monday. And in Seal Beach. city employes aren't going to get any holiday as city offices will be open both Friday and Monday . The Post Offices in the area will stay open for business Friday and Satur- day -there will be mail delivery both days -but will close on Monday. Banks and businesses are also following a varied pattern. Many will be open on Friday and closed Monday. As far as shops that might be open Saturday. the be St way for residents in the Orange Coast area to find out, is to call before shopping. The city or 17,000 is without water or sewage service. A massive traffic jam developed in the San Fernando Valley area at rush: hour Thursday morning where.stretches of freeway:1. were still closed by fallen bridges. The California Highway Patrol foresaw one of the worst snarls in Southern California history this evening when Angelenos head out for the start J~ry Mulls Over Charges On Phoenix An Orange County Superior .Court J\ll'1 tdday eqded 1even houn of di.IJberatloll behind closed doors to return to Judgt Will iam Murray's courtroom f o r clai-i!lcatlon of several charge• filed against aceused rapist Gary Harold Phoenix of Costa Mesa. Judge Murray discussed with the panel the discretion left to the jury Jn determining the injuries allegedly in- flicted by Phoenix on several women victims. , Acceptance by the jury of the pro- secution 's argument lhat the 29-year-0Jd bachelor kidnaped, robbed aDd raped three of tbe nine. women allegedly at- tacked in a 28-day spell last summer could mean the death sentence for the tall, husky, physical culture expert. The jury is mulling 33 felony charges filed against Phoenix, Nine women vie· tims ter;tified against him in the five- week trial on charges or rape, assault with intent to commit rape. kidnaping, robbery and sex perversion. Judge Murray started court at the unprecedented time of 8:30 a.m., cut the lunch break by 30 minutes and adopted several time saving maneuvers in the closing days of the trial in a ~ to reach a verdict before tonight and the beginn ing of a four-day court holiday. Phoena rema ined calm and impassive today and watched the jury keenly as they ques tio ned Judge Murray on the extent of several eharges filed against him. He has only once abandoned that de· meanor' during the long trial. That crack in his composure came on the last day of trial when he rose from his seat to accuse Huntington Beach detective Ray Anderson of lying from the witness box. Leif Erickson's Son SAN LUIS OBISPO (UPI) -William Leif Erickson. 24-year-old son of actor Leif Erickson, was killed in an auto colHision-today as he made a U-turo on California 1 near here. of a four-day holiday weekend. The majority or the city atld county public schools reopened for the first time in the three days, but more 'than 100 in the San Fernando area , remained closed while engineers checked structural damage. The cost of the quake was still belng tallied, but county engineer John A. IS.e EARTHQUAKE, Page I) OFFICER OF THE YEAR Fountain Valley's Col1rmn • Exchange Club Names Coleman Officer of Year By TER.l\V COVILLE 01 Ill.-Dtlly ,.!IOI Sltlf Pat Coleman is 23, a college araduatt and modest. He's also a ·cop. One of Fountain Valley's best, according to the Exchange Club. Wednesday, patrolman Coleman war named Fountain Valley 's Officer of tht Year. "I really don't know why," he say!, slightly embarrassed. "I haven't done anything special." "He represents the young, new breed of offi cer -college trained and a fast learner," explains Lt. Les Rowland, Coleman's boss in the patrol division. Coleman graduated from Cal State Long Beach, with a bachelor's degree in police science in June 1969. "I came on the force right after that,'' Coleman says. "Police work has always interested me. 1 enjoy the Contacts with people and the variety of situations I find ." Coleman wasn't honored for any one lncident or act of heroism, but for rapid progress in his year-and·a:hatf on the Fountain Vcilley for~. HQldup Suspects Win Dismissal Neav Stable Backed "He's adapted fast frorh I.he coll9a:e campus to the street beat," Lt. Rowland says. "He learns well, and bu been able to apply his coUege knowledge to community work." \ l1'eather Another groo"Y day is on lap for Southern Californians Friday, With warm, sunny weather push:· {ng into the 80s along the Orange Coast. INSIDE 'fOD'l l' British banks ctostd Wtdnes- dOll afternoon to allow tilt na· tion to m-0ke the biggest finan· cial rtadjwtmtnt in 1,200 11tars to the decimnl system. SCP Pog< 8. l::ttlftf'llll I Cllml,.. V• I C"ulll.. tf.M '9111 Ki 11 (l'IH-4 ll DMlll Mttl<lt n 14iMrlll ..... ' ""'"1111111111 , .. ,, l'llllMI 1t•lf "·--,, """ i..t•.. ,, Mf•lt• U.11 M~t1111 l'1111t1 1' 1'111111111 H-.. , Ol'l!ttl "WlllY II '''"" 21·11 SIK• Ml,.t1' 14·\f Ttll~lt"" 11 ntlMl'I 1 .. U ""'"!Mr f Wemetl'I lilt'WI ,,.,. Wtl1f NfWI 4·1 Two men charged with armed robbery .iw they allegedly took $108 at gunpoint ,_ a Huntingtc>1 Beach bar have been ••red Of the charges in West Orange Couhty Municipal Court. ' The district attorney's office dropped its case apjhtt Daniel Ortiz, 2.1, of 16912 ~n St., HuntlngtOn Beach. IAd Mleh- ael Blada, 19, Yuba CJty, Ariz., when a barmaid from Little Aggies bar. 18391 Beach Blvd., refused to testify against the two men. Her testimony, investigators said tod1y. direcUy led to tilt prosecution of both de- fendants and fllilg of ebarges that they entered tht htr last Jan. 25, took the money at fUnpoinl and locked her in .a rest room. Judge KeMeth M. Smith dismissed tht char&es for lick of '-vldtnce. • Horses Given Their Rein Horses were given a free rein by the Huntington Beach Recreation and Parks Commission Wednesday night. By IO to J vote they appi'oved the concept of a 68-horse stable to..,_ be built near Golden West and Taylor streets on land ultimately tabbed a• .property of the Huntington Central Park. , But before horseman Rti' Reynolds will be able to herd hls ponies into the lo-acre parcel he must cle11:r the hurdles of the Planning Commission and the City Council who require a zoning variance for the horses. Reynolds, who has already done' e•· tf"nlllve gr11ding and road work ~nn 'lhr.: site. is seeking a five-year variance , . on the land unW development of the park's third phase is under way. Planning commissione rs referred his applic1ition for a ztne change to the reeteat!Ori commisiiioners to f i rs t determine if the stables would hinder the park's ·development. On a' motion by Jay Mastroianni. the commissi on agreed to endorSE lht. zone ch11nge. Only Commissioner Tom Coo~r voted against the proposal. The cO~mission and recreation depart· mtl'lt ataft members said they would pursue the matter further to determine ,lf· som~ type of horse stable could ttlilmately be Incorporated in the park. A. C. Marlon, a HWllinrton Beach allman and himself a stable owner. &aid he would like io set a commercial "horse center" included in the park planning. "It could actually bring in qui~ a lot of money. If there were horses in the park. It could create a drawing card which w'Ould be hard to equal," he said. Marlon, however, Voiced ROme concern itbout the manner In which the conces11ion would be handed out by the city. "There n'light be a possibility of a st3ble going in adjacent to the park ltnd then wind up with the concession. to the park. This would be totally wro.ng. Such 1 concession sbouJd ao out to bid," lie 1aid. ·~· AD CLEANED VP FOR COAST MAN '(oo could staff the housekeeping de- partinent of a hotel with juat one DAILY PILOT classified ad. One Newport Beach man proved it for himself. The following ad got 70 resgonses! HOUSl!CLEAll!NG, Middle aged 'Nl>man. 4 hn I da,f, 2 days • wk. $.1 hr, tor quiet ~ehelor°a bayfi'ont hon1e. (Pho~ No,) Results came quickly, too (all 70 of the calls In t"'O days), when you phone the dlrect lint to a DAILY PILOT ad.visor. Dial yourself some results at M2-567l 1. \ "'-"-"-'-'-'-"-"-'----'".c_ ___ l_;h_:'_:""=''·c.':..::'bru.\ry 11 1 ~ •• . Surp rise Move LAFC Approves Irvine Cityhood Apartment Request Rejected By JACK BROBACK Of ~ O.lly ~li.t SI.ti Orange CoWlty Political observers were still buzzing today after the Local Agency Formation Co1nmission, in a suprise split decision, Wednesday ruled that citiiens or Irvine communities sbould be allowed te vote oo a proposal to create the ir own city. The LAFC's action which will bring about the cityhood election came after 40 minutes of sometimes h e a t e d discussion and a 3 to 2 split vote. Supervisors Ronald Caspers of Newport Beach and Robert Battin of Santa Ana. 5itting as LAFC commlasioners, voted nay and lost. They were known opponents of the citybood and in the turn of recent county • f'rotn Page 1 MUD DUMP. • • of paper they would look like a white fleck of dust," he said. He said that there must be a head of water over the area for the bacteria to grow in. The bacteria tat all dead organic matter and are harmless. "We even mix the bacteria and the nutrient in barrels by hand," Chi arson '5aid. Once the oil has been eaten, there ts no problem with the bugs. "They die," Chlarson said. What would be left would be soil plus water which could be drained off. .. But the soil would be very valuable because it would contain all the dead bugs and would be a highly organic fertilizer," Cblarson claimed. He pointed out that his company had done ·much similar work in wast e disposal for oil companies in Santa Barbara County. Chlarson deelined to give an estimate of the cost of the treatment but claimed that although it would be initially ell:· pensive it would be the most profitable course to the Steversons in the long run. The fertilizer could be sold and the dwnp zoned for the building· of homes and thus sold at a high value per acre. * * * Pap.el R$ljec~ Plan to Alter l)ump Into Park A plan to convert the Steverson Brothers mud dump into a park was rejected by Huntington Beach recreation and parks commissioners Wednesday night on the grounds such a project would be "unfeasible." The suggestion had been placed on the commission agenda by Recreation Director Norm Worthy who said he had been approached by several residents to determine y,·hether the industrial \raste dump Is a polcntial park site. G:ommissinners agreed that it would be impossible to compact the oUy ooze sufficiently to create a stable foundation for a park. "Even if the Steversons v.·ere lo give us the area v.·e v.·ouldn 't know if v.·e lrould take il. If v.·e did. v.·e v.·ould be responsible to turn it into a park," ~aid \\.orthy. The 39-aere v.·alled dump near liamillon Avenue and Magnolia Street hns been under fire from nearby residents who have complained of noxious odors allegedly coming from the oil ,1·e\J ,,·astes being deposited there. •·Drilling wastes are about the· toughest lhings to dispose that I know of," said Commission Chairman Ron Bauer. "ll \\'ould be <*Host inconceivable to move thrm out to another part of the city." DAILY PILOT OltANG~ C0Ai1' PU8llMilNG COMl"AHY Robert N, WoM r r1:1id111! .,... ,..,.llal\tt' J 1c.lc It. Curl•y Vite rr111deo1 "'" Oe<\Jr11 M.wittr Tliorn•l Ktt•il Elfl+or 1tiorn1• A. M11,pltiftt M1111gh\I ElfJ,or Al111 Dirkin Wn! Or•ttis C°"'"ry IJll1'it Alb1rt W. 11101 Auod 1M f:lfllN' Hu11tl1t1to• ..... Offk• 17175 8101,ti l oult •of-4 M1ili111 Addr111: P.O. l ox 190, tl&~I Otlltr Offlul LlfUl\t 8•dH UI '°""' .-,.,..,,,,. Co1!1 M111: ))I Wnt .. ., llr .. I H....,..., •••tfl! nn W•I ........ I~ ~'" Clement•: ;aos Httlll fl Ctmlnt kMI DAILY ,.ILOT, w1lf\ Wf\lal • (lllftblftd I'll ,,....,..,,,..._ la "11111Vlll MU., utll"I ~ ,,.,, "' ..... ,.,. ~llllm .... ...A..11111'11 ....... tH -1 81ldl, CO.ti M-, """''iflto*' ... ~II .,... f'Wflttlll V1D1y, ,-., w~ ,_ r.;flrl.lt e11111*'9. Orllltl Ont '°"'!"'""" Clmpi11Y ""'"""' #fflfi ..... , 1111 W.t .. Ille, t~ .. H....,.,, ltilCI\. ,,.. DI Wiit ' 111 $1•"'1, C:-11 M-. Toi.,..a. 17141 6•2-4tJ1 P.,•n1 W•fllllMttt eel '40·1221 ClnalfJs• A ... rtW .. 642·1171 COPY•lthf, ltN. Orlllfe C.0111 hOlltl'llrtt C-t1'f. N1 -. tlllltl, lll•t11111e111o. 1-1111orJ1I 111111ff tr ....,.,Tltt11'14"11t MN!n ,.,.,, M r..,.W\Pttf wlll!Ollt #Odil ,.,. 11\l•tlon ol ,.,.,,,IOI!, .......... hWnd cl1tt *It,. ..tit II N ........ ht~ .,... (!1111 ~-. Cllfltrfli.. $11l1Kl'fllllln .... ,..,..., $2.IS IMll!llly1 .... """ o.n "*'*IYI ,..ui11ty fallnllltt1lo C.if "!Mrlllr, politics, it was anticipated their op- position would prevail. But San Clemente Councilman Stanley Northrup pushed hard in favor of the cityhood election and the key swing vote in favor was cast by LAFC Chairman Louis Reinhardt of Fullerton. Newport's Caspers was obviously feel- ing tbe heat in the political kitchen v.•ben he argued against putting the cilybood issue to a vote of the people. At one point the freshman supervisor said quietly, "1fy stock is low now but I hope the people who live there will understand that I am doing what l think is best for the area. Jti•nping ftw. Jog Fountain Valley PI an n in g Com· n1issioners denied a request for 48 apartments \Vednesday night. They refused to zone 2.4 acres of land at the southeast corner of La Alameda Avenue and Brookhursl Street for R-4 (high density) apartment con· structlon. The commission also refused to re:z011e two adjacent acres for commercial con· struction. Charles Ishii o\vns the 4.4 acres or land. He lost his chance for apartments \\'hen he refused to go along with a commiss ion request for continuance on the matter. "I think the county is in the best position to plan what is best for this area." He said he recognized many people would oppose his stand. "I only hope and pray that the people will understand that I do what I feel is best for them." Bonnie Pull, 16, captain of the drill team at Foun· tain Valley High School, leaps above her team, "'·hich is preparing for Miss Drill Team pageant Saturday at Santa Monica Civic Auditorium. Foun· tain Valley took third place in the competition last year. Another girl, Cindy Leeds, 17, 'vill represent Fountain Valley in individual competition this year. Planning Director Clilllon Sherrod as~· ed commissioners to continue the zone t;hange unlil early r.1ay in light of recent citv council comments about apartments. The council has asked for a restud.Y (Jf lands master planned for apartment.! and is eyeing further reductions in the apartment potential of the city. With approval of the LAFC , it il!i now a virtual certainty that the people of Irvine communities will get a chance to vote on the proposal that would create a city embracing ltl,145 acres generally surrounding the UC Irvine campus. Supporters or cityhood, prlncipany the Council of Communities of Irvine and the Irvine Company, may now circulate petitions which would call for the Pair Indicted In Liberty Murder Case city hood election. Special to the DAILY PD.A>T PetltioM must bear 'signatures of SAN DIEGO _ A pair of cellmates owners of land representing 25 percent of the taxable value within the proposed accused of strangling Candlelight Killer city boundaries. Robert W. Li~rty three weeks ago on This is considered largely a formality the eve of murder trials for all three since the Irvine Company owns far more were indicted by the county Grand Jury than 25 percent of the taxable value. Wednesday. The company favors cltyhood. The only real power on the issue Timothy E. Dudley, 24, of New York remaining witb the. county Board of City and Carl R. Riggs, 21, of Dearborn, Supervisors would then be setting the i-iich., were ordered held without bail. actual election date. Liberty, 23, formerly of Westminster, The election could be blocked if more was strangled with a T-shirt as he lay than 50 percent of taxable landov.·ners on his bunk .Jan. 20. protest the election. This appears unlike-He and Kendall A, Bierly Liberty, l 24, who he married in Colorado while y Y.onths of debate and reams of both were held there last summer follow. paperworks were compiled. along with ing a crime spree, were to go on ·trial two Jeng thy public hearing~. before the following Monday. Wednesday·s showdown vote by the lfis jailhouse bride bas pleaded guilty LAFC. The LAFC then declared public lo reduced charges of v o I u n t a r y arguments ended at its Jan. 13 session. manslaughter and robbery in connection with the murder of Robert Irion , 52, In Wednesday's action, San Clemente's in San Diego last June. Northrup went right to the front in Dudley goes on trial Feb. 22 on charges "1votiag th!, ~I~ 'fOle. He said ~ of str!JlglilW a youth in Balboa Park only qaethons tb ·t>e settled were if Jas1 October. the Irvine ctl~munilles' people were Riggs and his brother Clarence, 28, capa_ble of c~ing out the i~rporation are scheduled for trial in March, charged and if the bdiindarles were logfcaJ. 'i wUh Uie ~nt murder of off-duty San • He then movJ!f;I to apprm theJ;Jn-~ Diego PoUce Officer James P. Lewis. to~alion and ~de artr ~tiODll J. Patrolman Lewis~.231 w~:l[lned during 681' acres to the southeast u requested an abortive l!quor store robbery. bylJCJ Chancellor t>aniel Aldrich~ Jr. ' ' Galkin Selected Realtor of Year George Galkin of Huntington Beach has been named 1970 Realtor of the Year by the Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley Board of Realtors. Galkin. who with his 11·ife, Phyllis, runs Tradewinds Realty earned the Associate of the '\'ear award in 1963 and has been a member of the board since 1962. ~frs. Maryanne Boozan. ma nager of the F. ~1. Tarbell Company in liuntington Beach was named Top Salesman for her sales or $1.S million in properl y last year. Honors for Top Lister went lo Charles Diercksmeier, Jr., of Leadership Realty. Huntington Beach, while Bill Haas of Village Real Estate, Huntington Beach, was named Associate of the Year. Youth Citi zen s' Day Scheduled In celebration of the L i n c o I n • Washington birthdays, Seal Beach city hall will h(lst a Youth Citizens Day program Feb. 16. Participating youngsters will take over the duties of civic officials that day and perform the duties of ?>layor. Police Chief, fire chief and other administrative officers. 'Scheduled to take part in the celebra· tion are Dan Thom, city manager; Shan. non Muray: city attor11Py : Marl Schadee, mayor; Dana Babin , councilman: Joan Linn , council\Yoman : Paula Ober. coun· cilwoman : Bob Eagle. counciln1an : Jamie Knight, police chie f: !\·lary Ann ?>foreno. fire chief: Den · t-.1iller. city engineer, and Sheryl Fuller, city clerk. Coast Coll([ges Appoint Russell Chancellor Aide Max Russell , · former superintendent of the old Newport Harbor Union High School District, is th~ new assistant chance llor for personnel service of the Coast Community College District. He was appointed lo the post by district trustees Wednesday and will begin duties immediately. In his new position. Russell will be responsible for all personnel servicel!i for the dist rict's 700 employes. The post ,.,.as created more than tv.·o years ago, but has not been filled until now. The coast district includes Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa and Golden \\lest College in Huntington Beach. Russell. who Jives in Newport Beach, resigned his post in the old high school district shortly before it was merged along with two elementary districts into the Newport-Mesa School District in 1965. Since that time he has served as an editor of the College Bluebook, a reference book on higher education. Valley Gridders Hunting Coaches The Junior All-American Football League of Fountain Valley needs coaches for the 1971 season. The league serves boys aged 9-13. teaching them the art of tack.le football and pro\•iding team competition. Five teams arc expected to take the field neN:t fall in Fountain Valley. Volunteers \\·ho would like to v.•ork \\'ith the lea gue may phone Claire Hein- baugh, alhletic director, at 968-2.151. Penny a Pi11e St1ule1its Help to Ref or es t Range Whaf1 a penny worth? Exaclly one pine tree -seedling rorm -at Nieblas School In f ounta in Valley. The 880 youngsters of lhe school chip- ped In their peMles to buy pine tree seeds to reCoresl the badly burned mounta in ranges in Riverside and San Bernardino counties. They handed $26.SO to U.S. Forest Ranger Robert Smart. He, In turn. will buy 2,650 seeds or various types or pines to be plt1nted ln lhe scarred tarlh. c 'l'he pine tree program evolved r r 0 m the school's ecology commltl.tt, com- posed of one spokesman for each classroom. After U1e recent fires the y sugges ted doing something to replace the lost timberland. "The Idea of collecting pennies came from our class president, Nanette Thompson,·· reports eighth grade teacher Peggy Criner. "And the ecology class met each Friday to count pennies.'' Two Valley Proposals Win Planners' Approval A city center ;i.rchitectural control zone and a scenic co"rridor proposed in Foun- tain Valley have passed their first tests. City planning commissioners agreed Wednesday night to recommend adoption of regulations for both zones to the city ctlUncU. The architectural control zone would give the commission the power to carefully select the type of buildings built along Brookhurst Street, Warner Avenue, and a po rtion of Slater Avenue from Brookhurst lo Ward Street. It would also limit the ·height of any Do g License Sale, Rabies Clinic Se t A combination rabies clinic and dog license l!iale is planned from 7 to 9 p.m. March 15 at the Huntington Beach fire headquar~ers. 704 Lake St. Licenses, good from April through ?.larch 31, 1972, cost $5. Shots to satisfy the requirement of the rabies certificate will be given for $2. free standing sign to no more than 12 feet. A lf>.foot-wide strip of Jandscap. ing "''ill also be required along the front of all streets mentioned. The scenic corridor would require a ZS.foot.wide landscaped path along the north side of Warner from Euclid Street to the Santa Ana River. Both zones apply to areas labeled the "city center" by Fountain Valley leaders. LIFE GOES ON- EVE N IN DI SASTER Life goes on , even in the wake of major disaster. Lawmen issuing passes for residents of an area ordered evacuated due le the cracked Van Nonnan Dam let one young lady go back on a particularly crucial mission Wednesday. She was allowed into the forbidden zone to retrieve her birth control pills after two days without them . 11 SOFAS & LOVESEATS e SlRYERS Sherrod also suggested to com· missioners that if lshii did not agree lo the continuance his request should be denied and the tanq should remain in an agricultural zone. f'ro1n Page J EARTHQUAKE Lambie said , "A quick estimate would be that it will be in the billions." City officials said structural damage in Lo! Angeles alone was estimated at $16'1 million . Yorty extended the mandatory evacua- tion of an 18 square mile section. of the suburban valley after Dr. Richter warned that most quakes 1re usually followed by an aftershock approaching the severity of the original earth tremor. "We alv.·ays have reason to believe that the largest aftershock will occur not loo long after the main earthquake," said Richter, the retired Caltec tt expert who invented the scale used to measure the severity of earthquakes. Richter said the aftershock could be on the order of 5.3 on his scale. .. large enough lo give a serious shake'' in the area of Van Norma n Dam. Tuesday 's destructive quake measured 6.5 and the strongest or lhe thousand! of aftershocks since read 4.5. !\1eanwhile the State Assembly, warned that a temporary gas tax increase mav be upcoming , today voled unanimou'S approval to a bill making earthquake- struck Los Angeles C.Ounty eligible for state and federal disaster aid. VALUES $399 TO $695 NOW $199 TO $395 e HEAD IOARDS e llDROOM SETS e MIRRORS e HUTCHES e BOOKCASES e DININI; ROOM SETS e IENCHES 33 UPHOLSTERED CHAIRS VALUES $129 TO $239 NOW $69 TO $119 5 PC. GAME sns 1£(;. VALUES $495 I. $575 NOW $299 & S399 55 OCCASIONAL anti COCKTAIL TABLES VALUES $'9 TO $2f9 NOW $49 TO ,$149 e SCREINS e AREA RUl;S ALL AT HUGE SAVINGS THROW PILLOWS OUR REI;. 3.00 YALU! NOW $149 ALL LAMPS WARl~':,USE 1/2 OFF MANY, MANY MORE ITEMS· TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION. COME IN EARLY FOR BEST SELECTION BRING YOUR STATION WAGON OR PICKUP TRUCK OPEN MON.•THURS.•FRI. EYES. · H. J.)GARRETT FURNITURE I 2215 HARBOR BLVD. 646-0275 I I ' Newport-Bea~h ~ EDITION TodaY'• Flnal N.Y. Stoelu VOL. 64, NO. 36, 4 SECTIONS, 66 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CA~IFORNIA THURSDAY, FEBRUARY II, 1971 TEN CENTS Irvine City hood Plans Approved Formation Agency Ruling 'Comes as Surprise' CIAIL Y r1LOT N1W1 ~ MAP MARKS PROPOSEO CITY OF IRVINE IOUNDitlRllS Small, Dark /;rOI N01r UCI Is .t.ddltional 645 Acr11 Newport 'Superagency' Post Remains Vacant Newport Beach City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt lias left the new post tif director of community development va- cant in announcing t e m p o r a r y assignments in the new I y-c re a I e d superagency. Hurlburt. in an unexpected move. WedQesday, appointed City Planner Laurence Wilson and Building Director Oliver Grant as acting assistant directors of community development. Each. he said, will carry on with their previous responsibilities "until the transition is complete." Both will receive the same salary as before, $18,804 an- nually. Hurlburt 's action tends to underscore reports that he has offered the director's post to former city planner Ernest f\.1ayer. . Hurlburt again declined to comment en the report this morning. Jn announcing the temporary assignments, Hurlburt said he has given Holida y Closing Schedules Vary On Orange Coast The four day holiday weekend for Lincoln 's and Washington 's birthdays will result in some bUsinesses and civic of· fices closing -and some not closing. 30 days' notice to one employe, William Dickey, a building inspector with the least seniority in the department. Three of the four division hea.d posi· lions in the new organization were also filled on an interim basis. Hurlburt appointed James Hewicker, formerly assistant planner. as zoning administrator. Robert Fowler, formerly a plan check engineer, was named building administration superintendent and Eugene Cich, formerly assistant building director, was selected as building inspection superintendent. The post of city plan administrator was not filled, pending recruitment. J\lrs. Darlene Raat. director of person· nel. said this morning she is beginning the. procedures for open recruitment for all six top positions. Sources in city hall said, however. that if Mayer accepts the director's post. advertising for that job will be cancelled. Mrs. Raat said all other personnel. with two exceptions. were g i v e n permanent assignments within t b e department. All, she said, will carry the same titles and have the same responsibilities as before . ,,,-....; The two exceptions are Mel Hauge. who was temporarily named acting zon- ing inspector and William Foley. former zoning inspector who was named acting assistant planner pending completion of his work on the proposed Lower Newport Bay Civic District. By JACK BROBACK Of tllt ~Hr ruet $11ff .. ·;) Orange County political observers were 1 still buuing today after the Local Agency Formation Commission, in a suprise split decision, Wednesday ruled !h:t citizens of Irvine communities should be allowed to vote en a proposal to cr,ate their own city. The LAFC's action which will bring about the cityhood election came after 40 minutes ef sometimes h e a l e d Shock Threats il.iscussion and a 3 to 2 split vote. Supervisors Ronald Caspers of Newport Beach and R'obert Battin of Santa Ana. sitting as LAFC commissioners, voted nay and lost. They were known opponents of the cityhood and in the turn of recent county politics. it was anticipated their op· position would prevail. But San Clemente Councilman Stanley Northrup pushed hard in favor of the cltyhood election and the key swing vote Quake Victims Still Homeless The threat of a new artershock pushing toward the intensity of Tuesday's ea.rth· quake kept 120,000 San Fernando Valley residents away from their homes again today. Los Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty ex· tended an e~uation order for the now· deserted are lying below the cracked. Van Norman am by 48 hnur~, on advice of earthquake specialisl5. Dr. Charles F. Richter, retired developer of the aeismogra.phic scale that bea.rs his name, toid. Yorty a ma)or aftershock is common and could come any minute , , Police set up command ctnlert where residents of Mission H J ll s· .and other tracts could be is&ued !rlcntification pas5es for quick trips home. Many went back to rescue pets, television and radio sets and other valuables possibly attracting looters. The heartbreaking task of digging for bodies -the known death toll bit 53 today -in the rubble of two hospitals continued as temperatures soared to 90 degrees. "We can never go on the assumption that no one is left down there· alive," said crane operator Sam Thomp.'!On, who worked 19 hours straight at the San Fernando V'A Hospital near Sylmar. Six persons are still missing. Meanwhile. as millions of gallons of water was being drained from the im· periled Van Norman Dam, supplies were being trucked into thirsty San Fernando. The city of 17,000 is without water or sewage service. . ' A massive traffic jam developed In the San Fernando Valiey area al rush hour Thursday morning where stret ches of freeways. were still closed by ra!len bridges. The California Highway Patrol foresaw one of the worst snarls in Southern Californ ia history this evening when Angelenos head out for \he start or a four-day holiday weekend. The majority o( the city and county public 3Chools reopened for the f\n;t Ume in the three days, but more than lO!I in the San' Femando arta remained closed while engineers checked structural damage. The cost of. the quake was 1UIJ beina: taljied, but county engineer JOhn A. Lambie said, "A quick estimate would be that it will be Jn the billlons." City officials said structural damage in Lo! Angeles alone was estimated at $16iJ million. Yorty extended the mandatory evacun· tion of an 18 square mile section of the suburban valley after Dr. Richter warned that most quakes are usually followed by an aftershock approaching the severity of the original earth tremor. "We always have reason tb believe that the largest aftershock will occur not loo Jong after the main earthquake," said Richter, the retired Caltech e11:pert who invented the scale used to measure the severity of earthquakes. Richter said the aftershock could be on the order of 5.3 on his scale. ·'large enough to give a serious shake'' in the area of Van Norman Dam. I See EARTHQUAKE, Page Z I Aide Says Caspers Wants Shakeup, Not Big Firing Fifth District Supervisor R o n a l d Caspers of Newport Beach doesn't want heads to roll at the county seat but simply seeks a shakeup, his ad-- ministrative assistant declared Wed- nesday. Caspers' aide Tom Fuente5 gave this capsule analysis of the county situation in a talk before the Capistrano Beach Chamber of Commerce. He also outlined plans for a complete reorganization of the county'r administrative structure. Fuentes asserted his boss favors some cutback In the county's 40 department heads. He also suggested lhat County administrative Officer Robert Thomas "should serve at the will &f tbe supervisors.'' Salary and personnel cuts. Fuenles said, will now await a three-month study period ordered in the latest action by the county board . "There will have to be some cuts," be asserted. Fuentes also maintained. however. that more of the county's administration is immediately being shifted to the offices of the elected superviscrs. The Caspers aide also declared that his hos! has an airport slogan that liUggests "Anywhere Except the Sth" -apparently meaning that any new Orange C:Ounty jetport should be located outside of the Fifth Supervisorial District along the Orange Coast. Fuentes also indicated Caspers will Increase efforts against "pockets of in· lense .drug abuses " he said exi5t in San Clemente. Lagun11, Newport Beach and Huntington Beach. In favor was cast by LAFC Chairman Louis Reinhardt of Fullerton. Newport's CaSpers was obviously feel- ing the heat in the political kitchen when he argued against putting the cityhood issue to a vote of the people. At one point the freshman supervisor said quietly, "My stock is low now but I hope the people who live there will understand that I am doing what I think i5 best for the area. ''1 think the county i1 in the best TAKES COLLEGE .POST Newport's Mox RlllMll Coa~t Colleges Appoint Rus8ell Chancellor Aide Max Rmsell, former superintendent of the old Newport Harbor Union High School District, is the new assistant chancellor for personnel serv.ic::e of the Coast Community College District. He was appointed to the post by district trustees Wednesday and will begin duties immediately. In his new position, Russell will be responsible for all personnel services for the districl's 700 employes. The posl was created more than two years ago. but has not been filled until now. The coast district includes Orange Coast C:Ollege in Costa Mesa and Golde1t West College in Huntington Beach. Russell. who lives in Newport Beach, resigned his post in the old high school district shortly before lt was merged along with two elementary districts into the Newport-Mesa School District in 1965. Since that time he ha5 served 85 an editor of the College Bluebook, a reference book on higher education. AD CLEANED UP FOR COAST MAN You could staff the housekeeping de- partment of a hotel with just one DAILY PILOT classified ad. One Newport Beach man proved it for him.sell. The following ad got 70 re:iponses! HOUSECLEANING. Middle a.ged woman. 4 hfll a day, 2 days a wk. S3 hr. Jor quiet bachelor's ba.ytront home. (Phone No.) Results came quickly, too (all 70 of the calls in two days), when you phone the direct line to a DAILY PILOT ad-vl!or. Dial fOUtSeU some resull5 at 6CJ.5fi78 .. In Costa Mesa. Fountain Valley, Hun· tlngton Beach and San Juan Capistrano, the city offices will close Friday 11nd Monday. The same will happen in a::ate offices. such as the Department of P.totor Vehicles, and county offices and courts. Killer Linked to Newport Shooting Jn the cll.ics of Laguna Beach, Newport Beach and San Clemente, civic offlcea: will remain open on Friday. but will close Monday. And In Seal Beach, city emplnyes 1rtn't going to get any holiday as city offiets will be open both Friday and Monday. The Posl Offices In the are• wU\ 11tay open for business Friday and Sntur. day -there will be mail dtllvery both days -but will cln!'ie on Monday. Banks and buli ineS!es are also followlng a varied pattern. '-1any will be open on Friday and clostd f.1onday. As far as shops I.hat might be npe.n S11turday, the ~st way for resident.I In tbi!: Or;nge Coast 1~11 to flnd out, la to call before shoppin1. By JOANNE REYNOLDS OI' ... 0.ltJ '"" Sltfl Bertram Greenberg, the killer of a 13-year-old Loi Angeles tirl, two Arizona patrolmen and a New Me.xico resident, may have shot a San Clemente girl two weeks before be went on hlJ three- llate kUllng 1prtt that ended ln his own dt3th. Newport Beach Detective S a m Amburgey said Greenberg is 1 prime suspect Ln the shooting of Jg.year-old Susan Spector, "It's 1oina: to ltke a lot cf work before we can pin It down." Ambur~ey 1aid, "But we have some good leads.' Miu Spector waa shot In the left side Jin. 2.1 111 1he leaped from the car of an abductor. She had bf!rn picked up hitchhiking from Soulh Laguna to Newport Beach atld jumped from the car at the intersection 0£ East C:Oast Highway and Newport Cente. Drive when the driver pulled a gun on her . Amburgey said he haa 5hown mug sbota of the former mental patient to the shooting victim who has returned to her San Clemente home. "She couldn't m11ke a po11ltive iden· tification," the detective said. "Dy that t mean she couldn't positively say it was him, but sbe couldn't eliminate him either." Detectives are trying to ob~in photol of Greenberg without hl11 &l•MU M to show Mi15 Spector. "The min who shot her was not wearing glasses," he said Amburgey said one of their leads Ln the case is a description of the shooting suspecl's car which was supplied by wltne1Ses. · "We are trying to gel Information from ArizOna and New ~leidco aboot the car. From witnesses. we determined the modrl ytar to be around 1968 and that It was a gold car with a dark vinyl roof. This· Is pretty close to the car that Greenberg was driving which was a 1068 Pontiac which was gold wllh a black vinyl roof." he 11id. Amburgey also noted that the partl11l license number given by witnesses is being checked agaln5t the license on the car Greenberg was driving In his fillht from eaurornla. Greenberg, who was an ex-convict, ' was orlginaJly sought by Los Ana:eles pollc:.,e when the body of Mary Hill was found in Crifflth Park a w e e k .. o. She had betn raped and Strlftg)fl:d. ln a destructive night across the Arizona desert, .Grttnberg 1bot and killed two Arizona highway patrolmen who tt.op- ped him riear Sandus, Ariz. He ebandoned his car outside Oellup, N. Mex. and fiagged down a car driven by Mr. 11nd Mrs Jame' Brown. He fatally w0W1ded Brown and shot Mra. Brown in the fact three limes and ltft he.r for dead. Police In GranlJ, N. 1'-lex. spotted Grttnbera: as he 1ped through lown In the Bmwns' car. An eight-milt chaM! e.nded when he was brought down In a haU of bullets after crashing the car. position to plan what ts be.st tor W. area." . He said be recognized m~f people would oppose bis stand. "l onJy hope and pray·tha( 1ht people will undenitand I bat I . do what I feel is best for them." With approval of the LAFC, it 1' now a virtual certainty that the people of Irvine communities will get a chance to vote on the proposal \hat would create !See IRVINE, P11e I I Boy Wounded In Stanford War Protest FNlm Wire Sen1eta A 16-year-old boy was shot In Ult thigh at a Stanford University rally and police skirmished with 1,000 anU-war demonstrators at the Univer1ity (If California at Berkeley as protest.I over U.S. involvement in the Laos fighting laced the nation. In Boston, an American (lag was burn. ed at the downtown post office after a peaceful rally. About 3,000 race Id· vocates clogged New York S Times Square durinc f1!1h hour and pie mayor of Ann Arbor, Mlclt., jolned in • com. munlty march against the ,.ar la Indochina. Protests or incidents also occumd on at Je11t three other American college eimpusea, in'eludlng Kent State UnJver!i· ty where four .students were abot tO death less than JO montbl ago. The teen-age son of a Stanford Uni versity professor wa.s shot as hi stood out.side the headquarters of the Free Campus Movement. Earlier three persons were inj ured during clashes between antiwar activists arid the con· servative FCM. The third day of violent protests at Stanford this week agains.t the Invasion of Laos also produced 12 arrest,s and three injuries. ·-· The shooting occurred wtien John Dawson. Palo Alto High School student and son of Dr. Philip Dawson, stood near the headquarters bf the Frte Cam· pus f\.tovement, which describes Itself as a conservatlYe·llbertarian croup. Witnesses said they heard several n• plosions, which they first thought were firecrackers . The witnesses said one person on foot did the shooting and they said he •Po parently tired 6 to 20 sbot.s from a pistol. He was chased. but not caught. Dawson was reported in sati!:factory condition at Stanford hospital. A university spokesman esUmated $1,000 damage was done to a computer after demonstrators occupied the school'a computation center. Meanwhile. at Berkeley. lawmen bat. tled with some 1,000 protestors. The fighting left a policeman beaten un· conscious and an Atomic Energy C.Om· misson car burned. Witnesses said a young man standing on. the roof of a parked car leaped on Sgt. Bill Eller's back, rode him t6 the ground and sir others joined ' in kicking and beating the man bloody. Eller was hospitalized in satislactory condition. The viO!ence followed a noon rally in Sproul Plaza nea r an entrance to the campus. The rally was called an "open-ended" protest against the LIOI' invasion. Oruge We•tli.er Alloll!u 1roovy day Is on tap for Southern C..Ufomians Friday, with warm, aunny weather push- ing Into the IOI olong ll!e Orange Coast. • INSmE TODAY BrltU~ ba•kt tloHd W «Ill' .. day ofttrn<>on to allow th1 11t>- tion to make tht btgae.st Jina~ cial readjustment in J1200 11ears to tht dtcimaL &~$tem. SCP Page 8. C•Al'lnll• I Cllftlllllt II• r Cllullleil tJ.M c.tnlcJ n c,..,.,. ti Dttrfll Ntlktl 11 ••twlel '•" ' 1iflltf1tl...it111 ,..., '!"'"'' 1+11 ...,.__ 11 """ L.tlMMtt 1, .~ • ' N Thursday, Ftbruary 11, 11J71 Irvine An lncorporallon elecUon could easily take plaet amon1 the ttSldenu or 1rvine wtUrln the next m months, Richard ~~ uecuUve d.lrect.or of the Local Agency Formalloa Commission. 1al<I to- d•Y· Turner outlined Lhe procedural steps ln'*POration proponents will have to follow before that election, saying that wiU\ but one exception. all steps are rout'lne. H~ said the county Board of Election Seen Supervilori, if all erellminary acUona art carried out; has no choice but to set an electJon date, but does have the aulhorlty to rule on lhe bound1rlea or the city., Jf lhe aupervl.sors decide they atf dissatisfied with the proposed 18,000-acre city 1imlts, Turner said. they could recommend altering them. This recom- mendation, however , would be subject to the approval of the LAFC. I( the LAFC concurs with the changes, the election could be scheduled, Turner said. "but," he added, "if the I.AFC says no dice, then J don't know what would happen." A• Ollililled by 'funlor, th• procedural st.epa 111e as tollowa: -A notice of in tent to circulate petl· tlons for incorporation must be flied \V[th the Clerk Of the board Of supervisors. It must contain l he signatures of at least 25 but no more than 50 property owners. From Page 1 IRVINE APPROVAL ... a city embracing 18,145 acres generally IUJTOUnding the 1.JC Irvine campus. Supporters of cit)'bood, principally the Council of Communities of Irvine a n d the Irvine Company, may now circu-late petitions which would call for the citybood election. PeUtions must bear si1nalures of own ers of land representing 15 percent of the taxable value within the proposed city boundaries. This is considered largely a formality since the Irvine Company owns far more thin 25 percent of the taxable value. The company favors cityhood. The only real power on the issue renwing with the county Board of Supervisors llo'Ould then be selling the .actual election date. The election could be blocked if more than 50 percent of taxable landownen protest the election. TbJs appears unlike- ly. Months of debate and reams of paperworks were compiled, along with two lengthy public bearings, befOre Wednetday's showdown vote by the LAFC. The LAFC then declared public argumenta ended at ils Jan. 13 session. In Wedne&day's action, San Clemente's Norlhrup went right to the front in favoring I.he cltyhood vote. He said the only questions to be settled were if the Irvine communities' people we re capable of carrying out the incorporation anci if the boundaries were logical. He then moved to approve the in· corporation and include an additional 687 acres to the southeast as requested by UCI Chancellor Daniel Aldrich , Jr. Supervisor Battin promptly offered a substitute motion that the incorporation be denied "without prejudice.'' Thi:!! would allow the proponents to ren~w Qi.eir. action at any time. Outright derual would have killed the issue for one year. Battin read a prepared statement which concluded with, "The proponents beUeve Utey are capible of correcUy developing the new city. I do noL There are many problems including t b o s e which affect the entire county.·• Northrup, .in a rare display of emotion, snapped, "There is never a case before us where everything is answered. What bothers me most Is the possible animosi- ty to the Irvine Company demonstrated by some members of the commission. 1 am afraid that delaying tactics could be employed to continue this issue on and on." Commissioner Charles Pearson of Anaheim, who represents the general public on the LAFC, had seconded !\"orthrup's motion and now rose to his defense. "Eli.mlnaUon of unincorpor ated areas 1s the goal of this commission. We want to gel rid of these islands. To deny this pe.Ution is onl)' delaying the inevitable." Newport's Caspers, "'·ho had seconded BaUin's substitute motion . called the question "a matter of timing and size. tt is etttainly not an island, more like a continent. The county must carr y out careful planning for development of this area." Northrup counte red that Caspers' con- tention that the county should do heavy planning for the area could r e s u I t in a v.•aste o( taxpayers' money as the incorporation would certainly proceed soon. LAFC Chairman Reinhardt or Fullerton, v;ho at this point obviously DAILY PILOT ORANGE COolll l'UllL."H1NG COMPANY rtaberi N. W••' ''"Iden! 1!'1d Pll&lll l\tf J1cli k. Curl1y Vkl l'Taldlnt al'ld Gt111r1I Mllllltr Edlflf Thom•• K11wil Tha1"11 A. M11rphin1 L. P1t1r Kri19 NIW!lOrl lt•Cfl C:lrl' 1!11/!0r NtwPOrt .._. OHie. 2211 w •• t l1lba• la~1 .... ,d M1ilh19 Addr11•1 P.O . lox l 0 17S, 92661 --Cotll M ... 1 NII W•I .. ., Slr"1 Llll\111& B•cl'I: m "°'""'A.,..,,,.. HIMttnolwl llffclll 1JJl5 IMdl a.wi.v1rd ..... (le-tfl *" Nwltt •• Ca'!'lnll ltffl OA11.Y JllL(ll, will! ll«!ldt II _.,... tf"9 H""'·Pr""', b OllOl!tfteil dlltJi 91C~ ~ dtY Ito M!Nlr911 M N""" W l..MWll lffdl. HfWPOrt ... di, C."' MIM. H\lrllln'I"" a1&e11 11'111 F_,ltlfll Viii..,, llOl\I wltll i.. r"klMI H it......_ °'"'" Cotti 'llllH9'11nt ,_., .,.lftllnt ~· 1r1 11 nn wu lalb!M 11¥11 .. """'"" Mtd\. .tnd S. WW l1y ltrffl, Cotti M-. t..,.._" 17141 MJ-4J21 Ct..tf,.cll Ad.,.,mi .. 642·1671 Qf'Yrltftl. \t71, Ono1199 CM" PllOlttftllit COl'Nlffl'I'. He -110flf1, HM1r•llOM. .,,..,..., l!lllfff ., .cr.tn'ltftMlllt ,..,. ..... INY DI ~ Wl"'9Ut 1!*111 ..... m1111ar1 at eop~lgllt _.,.., $l(ltfld t1111 llMllOI j1.11f 11 HIWlllM 1.-cfl ,,,. Casi• M•• Qlllor11ll, kbterl,ilofl .., atrlfr IJ.U mtflll!IJ1 ~ 111111 IJ,7J mom'lllJI Ol\llll•rY o.ffntlliDl'll. U J$ t'IDll'll!Y. held the deciding vote. questioned Assis· tant County Counsel William J. ~1cCourt on procedures. McCourt explained that a petition with. the names of persons representing 25 percerlt cf the assessed value of the proposed city must now be presented to the county Board of Supervisors. The supervisors are then obligated to set a date for a public hearing at which time a protest from persons own· ing land which represents more than 50 percent of the assessed valuation could stop the incorporation. Otherw ise, the supervisors must call an election or the people residing in the itrea for a final decision. Battin quoted the Citizens Direction Finding Commission which had called the incorporation "premature·· and uri1:ed further study. At one point Reinhardt said he had been flooded with mail "some or it accusing me of sellin& out to Battin and Caspers." He added, with emphasis, "There is not enough money to buy me. I only want what's best for the county." Finally the crucial vote was called (or. Only ~ttin and Caspers opposed the incorporation. The vote was greeted with cheers and applause irom pr oponents In the audience. E. Ray Quigley, one of the leaders of the incorporation movement, said he \Vas elated, adding, "We will move riJht ahead with plans for the new city." A movement to create the new city surfaced last March when the Irvine DAILY '!LOT 11111 '"'" Nem at YMCA Don 1i1uhlig. 43, is the new executive director of the Orange Coast YMCA , which ·serves Newport Beach and Costa Mesa, Muhlig comes to the Harbor Area from Med· ford, Ore. He replaces Hollen N. Brousard, who resigned last October to enter private bu.Si· ness. Company announced plans for develop- ment of the .central ranch area whi ch Tenm· s Tourney called for an incorporated city of 53,000 acres and an eventual population of almost half a million. D dJi N The newly-formed Council o! Com-ea ne ears ~ ol lrvine, a loose CQllfeda;aUon .. of"'liomeowner g11idps, eventually. jlltd \Dead.line for entries in the 1971 notice ol intention of incorporating an Newport Beach Recreation Department area of .~.000 acres. \Vinter Tennis Tournament is Friday. Oppos1t.ion..tt.m Newport Beach, Santa . Ana, Tustin iatid Laguna Beac& caused' ! Matches will be held Feb. 27 and a big switch 1n plans and ;t:ie' coundl 28; March 6 and 7, and 13 and 14 ,ventually filed plana for tht ,17.~•' att.Newport Harbor Hlgh ,&:bool in 10 city • classes. ~The new boundaries excluded the lT7· To be eligible for t~e tournament, acre , Collins Radio Company o n people mu~t have. parUcJpated in the J\1acArthur Boulevard. This property has department s tennis program no later si nce' been annexed by the city of than fall, 1969. In doubles ~al~es, both Newport Beach. partners mus~ .have participated, except \Vith the adjustment the only serious ill husband·"'.lfe, where only one needs opposition to the new city came from to hav_e participated the City or Santa Ana' Entries should be sent to Judy City Manager Carl Thornton prottsled O'Shaughnessr at the Parks, Beaches that the proposed new city ,vould ''place and RecrecM10n Deparlf!lent, 17_1• W. an intolerable burden on our city which Ball~a Blvd. 1'.urther information lS now has 85 percent or the blacks and available by calling 673-3180. 35 percent of the Mexican Americans in the county." The new city will have a population of less than 10.000 to start. Irvine Company President \Vi\liam R. ?o.lason said the company was gratified by the decision. ""The LAFC decision must be ve ry gratifying, and understandably so, to all the many citizens of the general Irvine community "ho y,·orked so long and hard for the r ight to vote on the issue of incorporation," A1ason declared. "Wednesday's action was a tribute to their efforts. to their dedicaUon and to the democratic process itself. "This is, of course, only the st.art or lhe incorporation procedure. The final , decision still rema ins to be made by the voters themselves, and th at is eminently appropriate, because the City of lr,•ine \\'ill be their city. "It does not yet exist In the legal sense. But it does exist in spirit. That , it seems to me, has been the principal achievement of the people o! the general Jrvine community durinj? these past many months of study, debate nnd ad· \"ocacy. pro and con. All of that is now prolggue." LEADS UNITED FUND Irvin• Comp1ny's Perkin• • Robert Perkins Ne'v Head of United Fund Robert \V. Perkins, vice ~ president of personnel for lhe lrvine Company. is the new president of the Harbor Area United Fund for 1971. Per kins succeeds Jack R. CUrley. vice president and general manager o( the DAILY PILOT. In addit ion to the installation of new officers Wednesday night, the United Fund honored 27 Harbor Area companies for their eHorts in conducting major employe contribution plans in the recently-concluded drive. Installed to manage this year's cam· paign, in addition to Perkins, were Vaughn Redding, first vice president; B. James Glavas. second vice president: · r.lrs. James Schafer. secretary and Charles Cringle. treasurer. J\·lrs. Schafer and Cringle will be serv- ing their second one-vear terms. Cringle also "''as elected to a three-year term on the board of direclors, al ong with Dr. Steve N. Asahino, Be ve rley Benson. Joe Berney. Agnes Blomquist, Charles Clarke, Chames Dodds, Glavas, San1uel 1'. Parker and Mrs. Robert So renson. The organizations honored for their efforts last year were Atlantic Research Corp.. Automobile Club of Southern Californla. Alpha Beta Markets, Babcock Electronics, Buffum's, Bank of America. Californ ia Federal Savings and Loan Associatipn, Cadillac Controls. J. C. Carter Company. Gullton Industries, ll)'land Laboratories, and the Imperial Savings and Loan Association o t Ne'A·port -Pasadena. Also, the Irvine Company. ~lay Com· pany. Orange Co ast DAILY PILOT. Pacific Ttlephdnt! Com pany, Philco-Ford Corporation Aero nut r on i c Division. Robinson's. Security Pacific National Dank, Sta co Switch, ~ar5. Southern California Edison company, Technicolor, United Califomla Bank. U.S. National Bnnk. Union Bank. and Xerox. ln nd dltion. awards for employt cam-- p11lgns were given by the United Fund to the C~ta f\1t>sa city employes, Newpor t Beach city tmployes. Ne\\'port ?-.le!iB Uni(Jed SChool Distrlct, and Orang e Coast Coll<'gc. l . Months Six Next • 19, -Proponent.I have 120 days to circulate petillons to obtain t he signatures of at least 2$ percent of the property owners who In turn must have at lea1l 25 percent of the assessed valuation. Irvine Company officials said this morning they did not know at this time how many pr operty owners Ulere are within the boundaries. The)' placed the total assessed valucition at more than $70 million, but said they do not know how much of that Is thelrs. They uid they did know the compan)' owrui more than 50 pttcent of the acreage, ho"'ever ~ -Upon receipt of the petitions, thr clerk has 30 days to validate the signatures and then must publish a notice of a protest hearing. -Turner said the 11upervisors· hearing must take place within 60 days and Coast Area Property at that hearing. if lilt inoorpgratlon is 'hot protes ted by owners or more tnan $0 perctnt of the assessed valuation. must set the tltctlon. He said the only delay could come st !his time, if the supervisors move tQ change the boundaries. -The election , Turner said, likely y,·ould be scheduled about 45 days follow- ing lhe hearing, or U1e supervisors' ac· ceptance of approval or the boundaries. Newport 01\.s Annex Talks Newport Beach agreed Monday night lo initiation of formal talks between officials of Laguna Beach on the an- nexation ;iind development o( unin· corporated land between the two cities. The talks e1pected to be at the coun- cilmanic committee level will focus on a determination of boundaries, according to Newport Beach Mayor Ed Hirth. Although it has been presumed the 3.500 acres would most likely be almost equall y divided belween the two coastal commun!Ues. Laguna Councilman Roy llolm said last week discussion he has had Y.'lth Irvine officials indi cate Laguna may get the lion's share. Holm who has beeJJi,. working since September in negotiation~ with officials of the Irvine Company, \1·hich O\vns the entire stretch, saict Laguna Beach may get as much as 2,500 acres. The Newport council's action Monday night came at Hirth's suggestion. He told fellow councilmen, "\Ile wish to in itiate plann ing of the coastal area between Newport Beach and Laguna Beach, including determining boundaries jointly with the city of Laguna Beach.'' Hirth called the action of one ··policy· !<Ptting" that \Yill eventually lead lo the establishment of co mmittees to carry out the planning phasr. Extradition Sought For Beach Hot Dog Man Orange County authorities are today seeking the extradition from Arizona of a n1an accused of swindling Harbor area residents of nearly $500,000 in a fraudulent hot dog machine enterprise. Flghtlng proceedings launched by the district attorney'..! office is Grego rios Pavlou, formerly of 398 22nd St., Newport Beach. He has been indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury on charges of grand theft, issuing stock. without a state permit ami using a scheme lo o(fer or sell stock to defraud, Pavlou was indicted after a year-Jong Investigation by district attorney's in· vestlgators and state Department of Corporations agents into the operations of his personally registered Mido, lnc., of Costa Mesa. Investigators said Pavlou, also known as Gregarious Busch, interested more' than 150 Orange County residents in his plans to sell hot dogs (rom specially designed and unique vend ing machines. They sa id Pavlou financed his cor- poration by giving promissory notes la potential investors putting up Mido stock as collateral. Pa vlou , they cl a i m defaulted on th ose loans so the investor could hav@ the Mido stock issued in their names. Pavlou is then accused or asking in· vestors to return their certi(icates ta him so he could effect a 10·1 stock split. But no r.1ido stock certificates were ever returned to the Investors to replace those they had re turned IG Pavlou, investigators said. Many prominent Orange County businessmen and investors v.·ere duped by Pavlou during his touting of th@ non-existent hot dog machine, in· vesligators claim. 11 SOFAS & LOYESEATS e SUVDS At its last meeting. the Laguna Beach City O>untjl had instructed City Manager Lawrence Rose. to continue annexation talks between the company and Newport BPacll. . Irvine Company ol!icials last "'eek said the firm ·s plans for the J.S..mile strip are Jess than two y&ars from completion. They declined to outline an y specifics In volved in their current thinking on the use, saying only plans '"\\•ill probabl)' incl ude recreational and r eso rt facilities ." These are expected to include one or more high-rise hotel developments. Fro1n Page 1 EARTHQUAKE . Tuesday's destructive quake measured ti.5 and the strongest o( the thousand! of aftershocks since read 4.5. Meanwhi!e the State Assembly, warned that a temporary gas tax increase may be upcoming, today voted unanimous approval to a bill making earthquake-- struck Los Angeles County eligible for state and fede ral disaster aid . The measure. by Assemblywoman Pauline Davis (D·Portola), "·ent to Lbe Senate on a 61 -0 vote. The measure contains $12.5 million in state aid. including nearly $9 million for repair of damaged local streets and highv,.ays . It also helps make Los Angeles County eligible for relief under the federal disaster laws. Picasso Gives Gift NEW YORK (AP)-Pablo Picasso has given to the Museum of Modem Art a sculpture called "Guitar ," from his ~lose­ Jy hoarded classic Cubist period ct1Uec- tion. e HUTCHES VALUES $39' TO $695 NOW $199 TO $395 e HEAD IOARDS e llDIOOM SITS e MlllOIS e IOOKCASES e DINING ROOM SETS e BENCHES 33 UPHOLSTERED CHAIRS VALUES $129 TO $239 NOW $69 TO $119 5 PC. GAME SETS REG. VALUES $4'5 I. $595 NOW $299 & $399 55 OCCASIONAL and COCKTAIL TABLES YALUES $9' TO $29' NOW $49 'TO $149 e SCREENS e AREA RUGS ALL AT HUGE SAYINGS THROW PILLOWS OUR REG. 3.00 VALUE NOW $149 AU LAMPS WAH:rousE 1/2 OFF MANY, MANY MORE ITEMS· TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION. COME IN EARLY FOR BEST SEUCTION BRING YOUR STATION WAGON OR PICKUP TRUCK OPEN MON.-THURS.-FRI. EYU. H. J. GARRETT FURNITURE· 2215 HARBOR BLVD. • • 646-0275 • l;osta Mesa EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stoeu· VO~. 6-4, NO. 36, 4 SECTIONS, '66 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, FEBRUARY II, 1971 . TEN CENTS Af tershocl{ Threatens ' Thousands Stay Away From Periled LA Homes / ~------- ' DAILY ,ILOl Ntw1 ~· The threat or a new aftershock pushing toward the intensity of Tuesday's earth· " quake kept 120,000 ·San Fernando Valll!!Y residents av.•ay from their homts again today. Los Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty ex· tended an evacuation order for the now· deserted area lying below the cracked Van Norman Dam by 48 hours, on advice of earthquake specialists. Dr. Charles F. Richter, retited developer of ~be seismographic 1cale Two Indicted In Murder Of Liberty SpeciaJ to the DAILY PILOT SAN DIEGO -A pair of cellmates accused of strangling Candlelight Killer Robert W. Liberty three weeks ago on the eve of murder trials for all three were indicted by the county Grand Jury \Vednesday. Timothy E. _Dudley, 24 , of New York City and Carl R. Riggs, 21 , ~f Dearborn, f\flch .. were ordered held without bail. Liberty, 23, formerly of Westminster, was strangled with a 'T-shirt as he lay on his bunk Jan. 20. MAP MARKS PROPOSED CITY OF IRVINE BOUNOARIES Small, Dirk Ar•• N•ar UCI Is Addltion1I 645 Acres He and Kendall A. Bierly Liberty, 24, who he married in Color•do while both were held ~rt lut lutrutl'1 fo!ki.,. ing a crime spree, wett to go on trill the followin,g Monday. County Observers Abuzz Over Irvine Dec~ion By JACK BROBACK OI !flt Dtll1 ,llol '''ti • Orana;e County political observers were still buzzing today after the Local Agency Formation Commission, in.a suprise split decision. Wednesday ruled that citizens of lrvine communities should be allowed to vote on a proposal to create their own city. The LAFc·s action which will bring about the cityhood election came after 40 minutes of sometimes h e a t e d discussion and a 3 to 2 split vote. Supervisors Ronald Caspers of Newport Beach and Robert Battin of Santa Ana. sitting as LAFC commissioners, voted nay and lost. They were known opponents of the cityhood and in the turn of recent county politics. it was anticipated t.peir op- p0sit ion would prevail. But San Clemente Councilman Stanley Northrup pushed hard in favor of the cityhood election and the ke y swing vote iri favor was cast by LAFC Chairman Louis Reinhardt of Fullerton. Newport's Caspers was obviously feel· Ing the heat in the political kitchen when he argued against putting the cityhood issue to a vote of the people. At one point the freshman supervisor said quietly. "My stock is low now but I hope the people who live there Holida y Closing Sched1tles Vary On Orange Coast The fnur dey ho\lday wetkend for Lincoln's and Washing\on's birthdays will result In some bwinesscs and ci V4! of- fices closing -and some not closing. will understand that' I am doing what I think is best for the area. ,"I think the county is in the best position to plan what is best for this area." He said he recognized many people woul d oppose bis stand. ''l only hope and pray that the people will anderstand that I do wbat 1 feel is best for them." With approval of the LAFC, tt is now a virtual certainty that the people of Irvine communities will get a chance to vote on the proposal that would create a city embracing 18.145 acres generally surrounding the UC Irvine campus. Supporters of cityhoOO. principally the Council of Communities of Irvine a n d the Irvine Company. may now circulate petitions which would call for the cit.yhood election. Petitions must bear signa tures o! owners of land re presenting 25 percent of the taxable value within the proposed city boundaries. This is considered largely a form ality since Lhe Irvine Company owns far more than 25 percent of the taxable value. The company favors cilyhood. The only real power on the issue remaining with the county Board of Supervisors would then be setting the actual election date. The·election could be blocked if more than 50 percent of taxable landowners protest the election. This appears unlik~ If . N.:onths of debate and reams of paperworks were compiled, along with two lengthy public hearing~. before Wednesday's showdown vote by the LAFC. The LAFC then declared public arguments ended at its Jan. 13 session . His jailhouse bride bas pleaded guUty to reduced. charges of v o I u n t a r y mansla ughter and robbery in connection with the murder of Robert Irion, 52, in San Diego last June. Dudley goes on trial Feb. Z2 on charges or strangling a youth in Balboa Park last October. Riggs and his brother Clarence, 28, are scheduled for trial in March, charged with the recent murder of Qff-du ty San Diego Police Officer James P. Lewis. Patrolman Lewis, 23, was killed during an aborflVe liqllor store robberj. Jurists Mulling Over 33 Charges Against Phoenix An Orange County Superior Court jury today ended seven hours of deliberatio n behind closed doors lo return to Judge William Murray's courtroom for clarification of several charges filed against accused rapist Gary Harold Phoenix of Costa Mesa. Judge Murray discussed with the panel the discretion left to the jury in determining the injuries allegedly In- flicted by Phoenix on several women victims. Acceptance by the jury of the pre> secution's argument that the ZS.year.old bachelor kidnaped , robbed and riped three ol the nine women allegedly at- tacked in a 28-<lay spell last summer could mean the death sentence for the tall. husky. physical culture expert. The jury is mulling 33 felony charge• filed against Phoenix. Nme women vic- tims testified against him in the fiv~ week trial on ch81gea or rape, assault with intent to commit rape, kidnaping, robbery and sex perversion. Captai•• Jailed that bears his name. told Yorty a major aftershock bi common and couJd come any Minute. "" Police set up command centers where residents of Mission H i U s and other tracts could be issued identification passes for quick trips home. . Many went back to rescue pets. television and radio sets and other valuables possibly attracting looters. The heartbreaking task of digging for bodie5 -the known death toll hit 53 TAKES COLLEGE POST· Newport's Mix Ruuell ' Coast Colleges Appoint Russell Chancellor Aide Max Russell. former superintendent of the old Newport Harbor Union High School District, ls the new assistant chancellor for personnel service Of the Coast COmmunity College District. He was appointed to the post by district trustees Wednesday and will begin duties immediately. Jn his new position, Russell will be responsible for all personnel servicta for lhe district's 700 employes. The post was created more than two years ago, but has not been Jiiled until now. The roast district includes Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa and Golde1 West College in Huntington Beach. Russell, who lives in Newport Beach, resigned his post in the old high school districl shortly before it was merged along with two elementary districts into the Newport-Mesa School District in 1965. Since that lime he has served as an editor of the College Bluebook, a reference book on higher education. Purse Snatchers Escape With $39 A pair of youths wbo snatched a 9Chool teacher's purse in the South Coast Plaza shopping center lot Wednesday night escaped with '39, despite a foot chase by the victim. Mrs. L<lrraine Sandstrom M 2523 Andover Place. Costa Mesa , told police the loss was primarily in credit cards and personal effects. She described the thieves as 17 to 19 years old and said she could probably identify one of them, who .wore a mWJtache. today -in the rubble of two hospitals continued as temperatures soared to 90 degrees. "We can never go on the assumption that no one is left down lhere alive." said crane operator Sam Thompson, who worked 19 hours straight at the San Fernando VA Hospital near Sylmar. Sit persons are still missing. Meanwhile, as millions of gallons of water was being drained from the Im· periled Van Norman Dam, supplies were ,.. Officer Hurt being trucked into thirsty San Fernando. The city of 17,00> Is without water or sewage service. A massive trafUc jam developed tn the San Fernando Valley atta at r u 1 h hour Thursday morning where stretches of freeways were still closed by fallen bridges. The California Highway Patrol foresaw one of the worst snarls ln Southern California history thls evenins when Angelenos head out for the at.art (See EARTHQUAKE, Pase I) Youth Wounded At War Protest From Wire Services A 16-year-old boy was shot in the thigh at a Stanford University rally and police skirmished with 1.000 anti.war demonstrators at the University of California at Berkeley as protests over U.S. involvement in the Laos fighting laced the nation. In Boston, an American flag was burn- ed at µ,e downtown post office after a pea:ceful rally. About 3,000 peace ad- vocates clogged New York's Times Sctuare durlo& rush !)our ed. 'thf.. mayM ~-= "r:i':h M~;\:-1 ll!Jor ~ Indochina. , P..-15 or JncldelilS mo "'"'""' tn at least three other Amtrtcaa caDec& <lli>puleJ, Jncludin( x .. 1 &tali 11n1 ... 11- ty where four student\ wm abot to death less than 10 monthi ago. The teen-age IOn or a Stanford University profesaor was shot as he stood outside the headquarters of the Free Campus Movement. E1rlier three persons were injured during cla1hea between antiwar activi1ts and the con- :;ervative FCM . The third day of violent protests at Stan"fOrd I.his week lgalnsl the fnvasion nf Laos also produced 12 arrest.s and three injuries. The shooting occurred when John Dawson, Palo Alto High School student and son of Dr. Philip Dawson, ltood near the headquarters ot the Free cam. UC Student Body Presidents Hire State Lobbyist SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Unive rsity of California student body presidents today hired a lobbyist to "work within the sys. tern " in the halls of the Legislature "as an alternative to street conlrontation." ··rm here to represent hairy people, bald people, radicals and conservatives 1\ike,'' announced the lobbyist, Richard Judson 'I'wohy, 26, at his first news con· ference. "We have a lol of ground lo cover in Improving the image and effecUveness of students," he added. "Burning and rock throwing have been largely Ineffectual and counterproductive . ti's time now to get into the hard. daily grind of improv- ing the laws ... " Twohy will be paid a salary of $10,200 and an over1JI budget of $25,000 -.!Ill of it from associated stude nt body contri· bu lions. pus Movement, which describes itself as a conservative-libertarian aroup. Witnesses said they heard several et· plosions, which they first thought were firecrackers. The witnesses said one person on fuot did the shooting and they said he ap. parently fired 6 to 21l shots from a pistol. He was chased, but not caught. Da'.".son was reported in satisfactory, condition at Stanford hospital. A university spokesman estimated 41 ,000 damage was done to a computer · IS.. l'llOTF.ITI, Pop I) Comm:ittee OK's Restored H ea/,th Care Program SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The Demo. cratic-dominated Assembly Health Com- 1l)iltee today approved a bill restorin& full ·services itt tbe state Medi-Cal hel lth care program. The measure. by Assemblyman John L. Burton tO.San Francisco), was sent to the W~ys and Means Committee on a split voice vote. It requires the Reagan admini stration !Cl reinstate the Medi.Cal program to the. level in effect before a controversial Dec. 15 reduction. "We found lhat the cuts were tremen- dous hardships on the people," Burton said. ''The areas where the most amount of money was being saved was in the area of eyeglasses for children and dental care. ''It was the view of every coonty that th.is (cutbacks) had to have an effect of Increasing a burden on them," Burton told the committee. Burton said in mariy cases doctors were authorized only to provide emergency treatment. "Caocer was not an emergency treat- ment as against imminent death," he sa id. The Reagan admh1istration opposed the bill. "This bill remove11 from the depart- ment (of health services) any discretion. ary control it may have," complained Al· len J. Manzano, assistant health care services director, Before the hearing. chairman William Campbell said Democrats "programmed" the bill to be approved. Campbell, of Ha- cienda Heights, is a Republican but hiJ committee is divided ,_4 IA favor or the Democrats. Oruge Coast In Costa ?i1esa. Fountain Valley. Hun- tington Beach and San Juan Capistrano, the city offices will close Friday 1nd Monday. The same will happen in stale offices, such as the O<!partment of Motor Vehicles. and county offices and courts. In Wednesday's action, San Clemente's Northrup went right to the front in favoring the cityhood vote. •le said the only questions to ht settled were If the trvine ·communities' people wer8 capable of cArrylng out the lncorporatiori (See IRVINE, Page II Red Sailor Alive, Well Weedier Another groovy day Is on tap for Southern Galifornians Friday, with warm, sunny we11ther push- ing Into the 80! along the Orange Coast. In the cities of Laguna Beach. Newport Beach and San Clemente, civic offices will remain open on Friday, but will (Jose Monday. And in Seal Beach. city employes artn'I going lo get any holidny as city !){fices will be open .. both Friday and Monday. The Post Offices ln the art• will stay open for business Friday and Satur- day -there will be mall delivery both days -but will close on Mond1y. Bank/ and businesses ire Al~ following 1 vAried patlcrn. Many will be open on Fridniy and closed MondAy. A~ faf as !hops th1t might be open Saturday, the best WAY for residents In I.he Or~n11e Coast area to find out, ls to call before shopping. f AD CLEANED UP FOR COAST MAN You could staff the housekeeping de- partmewt of a hot.el with just one DAlL Y PILOT classified ad. One Ne~t Beach man proved it for himself. The following ad got 711 rtsponses! HOUSF.cLEANJNG. Mlddlfl lllt'tt lr.'Oman. 4 hn a day, l days a wk, $3 hr. for qu~t bAchelor's baytronr home. (Phorlf' No.) Results came quickly, too (all 70 of toe calls in two days). when you phone the d1recl llne to 1 DAil.Y PlLOT id-visor. Dial yourselr Aome results 111 642·5ft78. MOSCOW [AP) -Sim" A. Kudlrko. no lhtt•t of prosecution, though th< the Lithuanian sailor who wu refused informant! Celt this wa.s only temporary and that he would be arrested later. poUtical asylum in America •fltr be The IOUn:ta were unablt to determine jumped aboard 1 U.S. Coast Guard cutter what Capt. Popov hld been Charged last November, is alive and well and with, but .aid it seemed appartnt he Jiving in a new apartment. reliable So\iet was court·martlaled for falling to prevent sources reported today. the atlfimpltd derecUon. But the commandtr of the Russian The Incident took place Nov. 23 last ship. Vladimir M. Popov, has been e-0urt· -year while the U.S. cutter Vigilant was martialed and Is In a Soviet labor camp, linked With the R!.Wlan sblp. the these informants said. SOvietek1y1 Lltv1, during a conlerence News of Kudlrka's sltua.tlon came 11 on Hshlna rigbt1 arranged ail I.he requrst a surprise to most Westernen here. of Ole Run1ans. They had exptcted Russhu1 aulhorllles AJ, Ult talks were taking plaice aboard to punish the would-be defector severely. lhe' U.S. cutter. Kudlrka indicated Q'.ree He was reported living In the port times In its officers that he wanh.od rily of Klaipeda, Soviet Lithuania, facing to defect. He passed ~ claarette package ' •• lo one officer tonlainln& a me.ssage: "My dear comrade, I wW up down of Russian ahip J.nd go with you together. U ii • poastbJe plea1e 1ive me a signal I keep my 1h1rp lookout -Siin1s." About 10 minutes laU!r, Kudfrka te1ped across the •pace Hparatin( the sblps -about 10 feet -landina on the Vlgllant's deck. The captain ol the cutter, Cmdt. Ralph E. Eustis. then noflfltd Coast Guard district headquarters In Boston. Alter Kudlrka had been aboard the cutter for 10 hours, Eustis received order!l lo return him to the Russians and four SOvltl seamen were allowe.d lo board the Vigilant. ~ ' INSIDE TODA. l' British banks clased Wednt,. dC111 afternoon to allow ihe -no- tio?l to mo.let: Che biggest fhtoit- · cfal readjiutment Jn 1,100 year• !o the decilT'.ol 111stcm. SCP Page 8. (I Ml'tnl• • Clltdllt!t II• ' ci.11111111 ~ ~"' rl ,,.,,...... .. O.erti •elctt n ldllll'ta.I "'" • , l'.lllfffl l-1 "'Ir fll11-• Mo\J !WttK-lf A1111 LI .... ,., 1r I \I Me'+'lft Jt.IJ MulWI l'flllllls 16 Hlllt111I "'"" W OrtllM (OlelltY It IWtt. tf.2t Sllldl /rihlt,th 16-ll TtlnhlH H ni.11tf'1 .... ,, w .. "''' • Wtl!ltfl'I Nftt l'f·lf W1ri. H.-. t-1 ! ii DAil Y PllOT c Thur5day, Ftbruarr 11, 1971 Frem P .. e J IRVINE APPRO VAL ... ancl ii the boundarits were logical. He tht.n mov~ to approve the in- corporation and include u addlilonal 687 acrts to the sou.theaat as requested by UCI Chancellor Daniel Aldrich, Jr. BalUn promptly -• motion thal Ille lncorparallon without pr<Judlc'e." ,. ou1d allow the proponents to renew their action at any time. Outright dtrtial would have killed the Issue for ~e year. ,. BatUn read a prepared 1tat.tment which concluded with, "The proponents believe they are capable of correcUy developing the new city. I do not. There are many problems including l h o s e which affect the entire county." ~ Northrup, in a ran dlsplay of emotion, snapped, ''There ls never a cue before Us where everything is answered. What bothers me most is the possible animosi- ty to the Irvine Company demonstrated by some members of the commission. r am afraid that delaying tactics could be employed to CMtlnue this issue on and on." C.OIMli!sione·r Charles Pearson of Anaheim, who represents the general pubUc on the LAFC, had seconded Northrup's motion and now rose to his defense. "EllminaUon of W'llncorporated areas h1 the goal of this commtsslon. We want to get rid of these island!. To deny this petlUon is only delaying the Inevitable." Newport's Caspers, who had seconded Battin's sub.st.itute motion, called the question "a matter of timing and size. It Is certainly not an island. more like a continent. The county must carry out careful planning for development of this area." Northrup countered that Caspers' con- tention that the county should do heavy tilaM\ng for the area could r e s u I t in a waste of taxpayers' money as the tncorporation would etrlainly proceed soon. LAFC Chairman Reinhardt o f Fullerton, who at this point obviously l'rom Pagel EARTHQUAKE of a four-day holiday weekend. The majority of the city an4, county public schools reopened for the first lime in the three days, but more than 100 In the San Fernando area remained closed while engineers checked structural , damage. The cost of the quake was still being tallied, but county enginffr John A. Lambie said, "A quick estimate would be that i4 ·will be in the billions." City olficilll aaid structural damage in Los Angeles ·•lone was esJimated at $181l million. 1 Yorty extended the mandatory evacua- tion of an U square mile section of the tuburban valley arter Dr. Richter warned that most quakes are usually followed by an afte~hock approaching the severity of the ariginal earth tremor. "We always have reason to believe that the largest aftershock will occur not loo long a!ter Ute main earthquake," said Richter, the retired Caltech expert who invented the scale used to measure the severity of earthquakes. Richt'1' said the aftershock could be an·Uie arder of S.3 an his scaJ·e . "large enough to give a serious shake" in the area of Van Norman Dam. Tuesday's destructive quake measured 6.5 and the strongest of the thousands of aftershocks aince read 4.S. iteanwhUe the Stale ~mbly, warned that a temporary gas tax increase may be upcoming , today voted unanimous approval to a bill making earthquake· r;truck Los Angeles C.Ounty eligible for sta te and federal disaster aid. The measure, by Assemblywoman Pauline Davis (0-Portola), went to the Senate on a 61-0 vote. held lhe deciding vote, qu~tloned Assis- tant County CoW1sel wuuam J, MCCOUrl on ~urea. MCCOU.rt explained that a pe:tition witb the 111mes of per&Onl represtntlng 25 percenl of lhe ·-Yalu ol lhe fll'Ol)Oled city must now be pNllllttd lo lhe county Board of Supervtaoro. The supervilOrt m lben oblllalld lo set a date for a public hearing at which time a protest from persons own- ing land whi ch repnsenls more than 50 percent of the assessed valuation could stop the incorporation. Otherwise, the supervisors must call an election cf the people residing in the area ror a final decision. Battin quoted the Citizens Direction Finding Commission which had called the incorporation "premature" and uried further study. At one point Reinhardt said ht had been flooded with mail "some o[ it accusing me ol sellina out to Battin and Casj>ers." He added, with emphasis, "There is not enough money · to buy me. I only want what's best for the county." Finally the micial vote was called for. Only Battin and Caspers oppo!ed the Incorporation. The vote was greeted with cheers and applause from proponents in the audience . E. Ray Quigley, one of the leaders of the incorporatian movement, said he was elated, adding, "We will move riiht ahead with plans for the new city ." A movement to create the new city surfaced last March when the Irvine C.Ompany announced plans for develop- ment of the ceatral ranch area which. called for an lnrorporated city of 5J,OOO acres and an eventual population of almost half a million. The newly-formed Council ol Com· muniLles of lr\llne, a loose confederation of homeo"-'ner groups, eventually filed notice cf intention cf lnc.orporating iin area cf 56,000 acres. Opposition from Newport Beach, Santa Ana, Tustin and Lagwia Beach caused B big switch ln plans and the council eventually filed plans for the 17.526-acro - city. The new boundaries excluded the Jn. acre Collins Radio Company o n MacArthur Boulevard. This property has since been annexed by the city of Newport Beach. WJth the adjustment the only serious oppoiltlon to the new city came from the City of Santa Ana. ~City Manager Carl Tharnton protested that the proposed pew city would "place an intolerable burden on our city which now bu 8S percent ot the blacks and 34. ptrcent of the Mexican Americans Jn 1llO county." . · 'l'lit .. w ~<Ill. 'lriU·bav• a ~, ol'J.., than 10,000 lo ilart. !nine Company President William R. Muon· aaict the· °'1:ipa.ny wu grati!Jed f· I>)'. lhe deci.Slon. "The ~· declJlon mill! ,be ,...,. grallfylng, and llllderatandably .... to all the many cl~s of the gfnft'al. lrvlne community who worked 'IC long and bard for the' right to vote on the issUi~of lncorpor.atlon," Mason declared. ''Wednesday's action was a tribute tO· their efforts. to their dedication and to the d!mocratic process illelf. . "This .is~ of course, o.nly the .start of the incorporation procedure. The final decl.!lion still remains to be: made by the voters themselves, and that is eminently appropriate. because the City of 1rvlne will be their city. "lt does not yet exist in the legal sense. But It does exist in spirit. That , it seems to me. has bun the principal achievement of the people of the general Irvine cammun ity during \hese past many months of study, debate and ad· voca cy, pro and con. All of that is now prologue." 0"-11• Y rlLOr 1!1ft rhttt New a t YillCA Don li1uhlig, 43, is the new executive director of t Ji e Orange Coast YMCA , which serves Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. Muhlig comes to the Harbor Area from Med· ford, Ore. He replaces Rollen N. Brousard, who resigned last October to enter private busi· ness. Masked Bandit Holds Up Station A buck·toolhed , barefoot butcher knife bandit with a ladies stocking over his head robbed a Costa Mesa service station cf $33 Wednesday night. Attendant Doug Langevin told police he was surprised in the Lerner OU Company station iit 2360 Newport Blvd., while eating a sandwich. "Lel's have all the 'bread'," the grotes- queJy garbed intruder demanded, but not in reference to Langevin's lunch. He said the nervous, mustached youth c~rrled aa eight-inch b4tcher knife and fled after ordering him to lie an the floor in the back room. "Don't woory. It's not your money.'' he quoted the second bandit to hit the station in one v.-eek as saying before he left. Strange Satchel 'Non-explosive' A 1U!pkious gray suttcul discovered near a major biochemical laboratory in Costa fl.tesa was gingerly " removed by police Wednesday as a possible bomb. The satchtl reported .at the Myland Division of Travenol Laboratories Inc., b'y Dick Landis. of 434 · Bolero Way, Newport Beach, was non~xplosive. ti.nd i.( Y.our na:me ls Louis Gibson, a Tennessee VA hospital patient. you can pick up your extra set cf clothes and prescribed medication at Costa Mesa police headquarters. Picasso Gives Gift NE\V YORK (AP)-Pablo Picasso ha! given to the Museum of Modern Art a sculpture called ''Guitar." fr om his close- ly hoarded classic Cubist period collec- tion. Student Gets Charged l1·vine Official In stalled 11-tANlLA (AP) -Police today charged the president of the student body of the University of the Philippines with mur· der, holdup and robbery. The charges against Ericson M. Baculinao, 19, grew oot of the eight-day occupation cf the campus by radical students opposing the government of President Ferdinand E. }.1arcos. DAllY PllOT OR.I.MGR COAST '1.llLllHIMQ COMrAHv R.0~1rt N. W.H J 11k R. C¥rl1y Vici ,,..t.ftrlf md G«lertl M-..- tll01'111 K11¥1I l•I .... TUm11 A. Mwr,hlnt M-tlnt e•rrv C.hl .... OMc. JJO W 11t l1y Str11t M1ilin9 A ddttfU r.o .••• 1160, t?614 .....,_ M_,.rf lh6dl1 2211 W9t .. !Ml t~lntrt LltuM t l9dl: -"'"" ....... .,. H111111111"" tlldl: rnn '4oKtt 1w1~ .. 11 °""91111: .. Nwftl S1 (in\IM .... As United Fu11d Pres ide11t • Robert W. Perkins, vice president cf personnel for the Irvine Company, is the new president of the Harbor Area United Fund for 1971. Perkins succeeds Jack R. Curley, \'ice president and general manager of the DAILY PILOT. tn addition lo the lnstallalion of new ofttcers Wednesday night. the United Fund hanON!d 27 Harbor Area companies for the.it efforts in conducting major employe contribution plans in the recently-cimcluded drive. Install~ to manage this year'a cam- palgn. :in addition lo Perkin!, were Vaughn Redding.' first vice president : B. James Gla vas. second vice president: Mrs. James Schafer. secretary and Charle.a Cringle, treasurer. Mrs. Schafer and Cringle v.·ill be serv- ing their second on~year terms. Cringle a)so was elected to a th ree.year tenn. on. the board of directors, along wilb .Dr. Steve N. Asahi no. Beverley Benson, Joe Berney, Agnes Blomquist. Charle• Clarke, Charries DoddJ, Glavas. Samuel 'f.. Pa rker and 1'1rs. Robe rt Sortnaon. "f11e or.anlaatlons honortd for their efrorts Jast year wtrt Atlantic Rest'arch Corp., Automobile Oub cf Southern California, Alpha Bet.a Market!, Babcock Electronict, Burtum 's, Bank of America, cali!arnia Federal Savings and Loan AssoclaUan, Cadillac Controls, J. C. Carter Company, Gullton Jndustrif~. Hyland Laboratories. and the Imperial Savings and Loan Association o f Newport-Pasadena. Also, the Jrvlne Company. ~lay Com· pany, Orange Coast DAILY PI LOT. PaclrJc Teleph{)f'le Company. Philco-Ford Corporation Afro nut r on I c Division. Rohloson's, Security Pacific Nationil Bank. Staco Swnch, Se.ar.i, Southem LEADS UNITED FUND Irvine ~omp1ny'1 Perkjn1 Callfornia Edison Compa ny, Technicolor. United California Bank, U.S. National Bn nk, Union Bank. and Xero:<. In addition, award.s for emplOyt cam- paigns were given by the United Fund 10 the Costa t>.!csa city employes, 1''twporl Beach city employes, Newporl i'olesti l:nlf!ed School District. and Orange Const College . Slain IGlle1· Shot Coast Girl Also? By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tflt Ollly Pll91 Maff Bertram Greenberg, the killer ot a 13-year--0ld Los Angeles girl, two Arizona patrolmen and a New hlexico re sident. may have shot a San Clemente girl two weeks before he went on his three- slate killing spree that ended in his own death. Newport Beach Detective S a m Amburgey said Greenberg Is a prime suspect in the shooting of 19·year--0ld Susan Spector. "(l's going to lake a lot of work before we can pin it down," Amburgey sild "But we have some good leads." Mi.ss Spector was shot in the left side Jan. 23 as she leaped from the car of an abductor. She had been picked up hitcbhUting from South Laguna lo Newport Beach and jumped from I.he car at the intersection of East Coast Highway and Newport Cente_ Drive when the driver pulled a gun on her. Amburgey said be ha~ shown mug shots of the former mental patient to the shooting victim who has returned to her Sao Clemente home. "She couldn't make a positive iden- tilication," the detective said. "By that I mean she couldn't posilively say it was him, bul she couJdn •t eliminate him either." Detectives are trying to obtaii1 photos or Greenberg without his glasses on to show f\Uss Spector. ''The man who shot her was not wearing glasses .. , he said. Amburgey said one of their leads in the case is a de scription of the shooting suspect's car which wa s supplied by V.'itnesses. "We are trying to gel information fram Arizona and New Mexico about the car. From witnesses, we determined the model year to be around 1968 and that it was a gold car v.'ilh a dark vinyl roof. This is pretty close to the car that Greenberg was dr iving which was a 1968 Pontiac which was gold with a black vinyl roof," he said. Amburgey also noted that the partial license number given by '>1-'ilnesses is being checked against the license on the car Greenberg was driving in his flight fram California. Greenberg. who was an ex-convict. was ariginally sought by Los Angeles police when lhe body or Mary Hill V.'as found in Griffith Park a week ago . She bad been raped and strangled. Jn a destructive fiight across the Arizona desert, Greenberg shot and killed two Ariwna highway patrolmen who stop- ped him near Sanders, Ariz. No Lib Laughs Goldwater Joke Gets Gals' Goat WASHINGTON (UPI) -Women's llberatloniJto ano rattlin& lbtlr 1words -t Sen. Barry M. Goldwater (R·Arlr:.). a former tWo-star general who doesn't look kindly on sending women to war. In a telegram lo Goldwater Wednesday, four leaders of Washington·ar_ea women's liberation groups demanded that the silver·haired senator apolog1ie tor joking at a hearing I.hi.! weei that "we have enough U"Ouble with women without giving them M16 rifles." Senators. spec\ators and witnesses at the hearing into continuing the draft dissolved in laughter at Goldwater's craek. Ladies of the lib, reading about it late r, didn't think it fwmy. "It is an. uncal\ed.(or, insulllng slatement which alienates and angera \\'omen who make up a large part of your constituency and want 19 see an end to the draft just as you do ," the women wired Coldwater. "Daily y,·e fight this kind or thoughtless stereotyping of women . \Ve do not expect such statements from a U.S. sena!ar. We ask for an apology," they said. Women don't want to be protected from the draft. they sa id, because "1o11e are not child·like creatures to be talked down lo." Aide Sa ys Casper s W aµt s Sl1akeup, Not Big Firing f'ifth District Supervisor R <1 n 1 I d Caspers of Newport Beach doesn't want heads to roll at the county seat but simply seeks a shakeup, hi s ad· ministrative assistant declared Wed- nesday. Caspers' aide Tom Fuentes gave this capsule analy sis of the county situation in a talk before the Capistrano Beach Chamber of Commerce. He also outlined plans far a complete re organization of the county's administrative stru cture. Fuentes asserled his boss favors some cutback in the county 's 40 department heads. He also suggested that County administrative Officer Robert Thomas "should serve at the will o( the supervisors.'' Salary and personnel cuts, Fuentes .said , will now await a three-month study period ordered in the latest action by the county boar.d. "There will have to be some cuts," he asserted. Fuentes also maintained, however. that more o( the county's administriition iJ immediately being shifted ta the offices o( the elected supervisors. The Caspers aide also declared that his boss has an airport slogan that suggests '"Anywhere Except the 5th" -apparently meaning that any new Orange County jetport should be located • outside of the Fifth Supervisorial Distrid along thf! Orange Coast. Fuentes also indicated Caspers will increase efforts against "pockets ef fn. tense drug abuses" he said el.isl jn San Clemente. Laguna, Newpert Beach and Huntington Beach. From Page l PROTESTS ERUPT ••• after demonstrators occupied the school's t.'Cmputation center. t.1eanwhik•. at Berkeley, lawmen ba l· tied \\'ith some 1,000 protestors. The fighting left a policeman beaten un· conscious and an Atomic Energy Com· misson car burned. \Vltnesses said a young man standing on the roof of a parked car leaped on Sgt. Bill Eller·s back, rode him to the ground and six others jained In ki cking and beating the man bloody. Eller waS" hospitalized In: sati!factory condition. The violence followed a noon rally in Sproul Plaza near an entrance to the campus. The rally was called an . '"open-ended'' prottl!t against the LaOI invasion . Disturbanus erupted after a peaceful rally of about 3,000 on Boston Common. · Smaller groups of demonstrators stream- ed into streets at rush hour, a flag was burned at the downtown post office, fourteen persons were arrested tor assault and windows in the Victorian back bay area v.·ere smashed. • SIRYUS e HUTCHES e BOOKCASES 11 SOFAS & LOVESEATS e HEAD IOARDS e IEDROOM SITS e DININli ROOM VALUES $39' TO $695 NOW s199 TO s395 33 UPHOLSTERED CHAIRS VALUES $12' TO $239 NOW S69 TO s119 5 PC. GAME SETS REG. VALUES $495 & SSts NOW S299 & S399 55 OCCASIONAL and COCKTAIL TABUS VALUES $9' TO $299 NOW S49 TO s149 SETS e MIHOlS e IENCHES e SCREEHS e AREA RUGS ALL AT HUGE SAVINGS THROW PILLOWS OUR HG. J.DO VALUE NOW Sl49 ALL LAMPS wAu:i':iusE Y2 OFF MANY, MANY MORE ITEMS· TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION. COMI IN EARLY FOR BEST SIUCTION BRING YOUR STATION WAOON OR PICKUP TRUCK OPEN MON.•THURS.-FRI. EVU. • H. J. GARRETT FURNITURE 2215 HARBOR BLVD. 646·0275 \ \ I n esident s Warned Folk Dance Home Burglaries Fete Se t Rise • Ill By PATRICK BOYLE Of 1111 ~II~ '!IOt lldt The soft rattling noises you hear in the night may just be a man out walking his dog, but they could just as easily be -and more likely are -a burglar breaking into your neighbor's house or even your own. One Laguna Beach insurance broker says residential burglaries have in- creased by the phenomenal rate of 300 percent in the j)ast 10 years. Although they don 't tabulate stalistics, Laguna Beach police agree that burglaries have increased in Lhe past few years to a State Action On Hinsha\v Gi ven Delav • State Board of Equalization action against Orange County Assessor Andrew J. Hinshaw has been delayed in Superior Court. "·ith the possibility that the dispute \\"ill be settled before the new hearing elate of Feb. 25. Hinshaw commented Tuesday that the clelay \\'as agreed to by state officials •·after they learned that much of their information was inaccurate. I '''as never n1ade a\\'are of several of their com· plaints and 1 certainly didn't have time to prepare my answer for Tuesday's scheduled hearing," he said. State officials sought the writ of man- date against Hinshaw with the allegation that the Orange County off i c i a I persistently refused to bring his county's paperwork into line with that used in California's 57 other counties. They argued in their writ that Hinshaw's refusal to comply with the 6late·approved written text on assess· ment document!1tion added to county taxpayers' costs since it necessitated !he printing of forms unique to Orange County. Hinshaw dismissed that allegation Tuesday as "ridiculous" and commented that if he complied with state standards it '''ou!d cost Orange County taxpayers an estimated $10 million. "\\le in Orange County ask for more details than the state would have us :;eek." he said. "\Ve· go into many con- it ruction and development projects v.•ith the thought that we want to know c~ts on a year-by.year basis rather than take the gross cost figure accepted by the state. ' .. If we're.•guil~ of a~yt~g it's over· compliance," Hhishaw: said. "We are lhe acknoWledged.:' leader in Californta "·hen it coiries to assessment principles and practices and the State Board of Equalization knows this. "What the board is saying,'' Hlnsha\V gaid. "is "lobk', Andy. you're ·~oo ad- vanced, v.·e're going to hold y~u down lo the level of the other counties even !hough we know that your meth?C1s a~e superior to theirs and more str1~ly ~n compliance wtth the records \Ve ma1nta1n ourselves'." The \\'Tit filed by the state indicates that Hinshaw·s proposed use cf the form! currently being utilized by his office "'as rejected by the board last Oct. 19. C.ourt action followed the state board's determinaticn that a warning letter or last Nov. 27 had brought , no response from Hinshaw. $40 Billion Hike I n Debt Hinted WASHJNGTON (UPI) -Chairman \\lilbur D. Mills of the House Ways and Means Committee said Wednesday President Nixon will ask Congress to increase the national debt limit by $40 billion so the government can keep paying its bills. ~fills said his committee would hold ::i one-day hearing on the proposed Feb. 17 with Tre <:1sury Secretary John C.on- na:ly as the first witness. Such a request \\'ou\d seek to raise the debt limit to a record $435 billion, nr $40 billion more than the present limit of $395 billion. ltastatat Bn••k Laguna l)Oint where there are no\Y about 20 to 30 residenUal burglaries every month in the Art Colony. That figure combined with the three or four commercial burglaries ·per month, adds up to an average or one illegal breaking and entering every day of the year. Laguna Beach Detective R ob er t Briscoe. v;ho investigates these crimes, says most of them could be prevented if the resident had cnly observed a few minor precautions. "l.fost of the time, entry is gained through an cpen door ," the officer says. He says the large innux of a transient popu1ation into the Art Colony in the past few years has been the major factor in the burglary rate increase. These "yoUng people withcut a job and nc, way to make money'' are often almost lured intc homes by the careless resident who has gone away for the \\'eekend. The mail is still in the box, the newspapers remain on the porch and a living room window has been left standing open for ventilation. Briscoe says while there is no \\'&Y to really keep a determined thief out -"He could just break a windo,v'' -a few precautions by the homeowner could prevent many residential burglaries. He says the most important thin« to do, besides locking the doors and \\'indo\vs, is to inform the neighbors that you are going away for a fc\V days. The neighbor v.•ill then know that noises coming from your home al night are not being made by you. Briscoe says another precaution that should be taken when going on long vacations is to inform the police depart· ment, who will then make a pericid.ic "vacation check" of your home. Briscoe notes that a light left on in the main room of the house will also often deter a would-be thief. 111e resident should do everything possible to make it look as if he is at home, the officer 11ay11, including hav- ing someone take in the mail and ne\11Spapers. Doors and windows should be well secured and a strip of wooden dowel rod should be placed along the runner of sliding glass doors as a precau· tion. Another good, idea, he says, is tn keep valuables, such as jewelry and money. in a place that is not easily acctssib\e. Briscoe says i£ a thief does get inJl the home, he will most often take pro- perty which can be concealed easily and sold quickly. Large items, such as furniture or ftereo cabtnets, are rarely taken. Most ltolen merchandise is picked up in one quick search cf the house and if money ()II-jewelry is tying about, ft will be taken first, he says. . One good idea, Briscoe sai~, is tc copy down the serial number of any valuable .item which has such a number, particularly guns. Jn this way, if it is recovered, it can be quickly returned. Bi-iscoe j:ioirits out that Only abcut one third of the goods stolen from Laguna Beach residents is ever recovered, often after several months have elapsed. In cne 6uch recent recovery. the person it was stolen from had left the area by the time the property was found. Talent Sought For Water Fes t Dancers, singers and variety acts are tnvited to audition for two Winter Festival presentalions from 2 tc 5 p.m. Sunday in the Laguna Beach High School auditorium. Producer Ed Van Deusen is seeking performers representing a cross section of Laguna talent for the Winter Festival variety show, "Laguna On Stage." to be presented March 5 in the auditorium. Also needed is entertainment for Stage 8. a Winter Festival innovatk>n this year, designed to provide continuous en- tertainment on the Festival grounds for visitors viewing arts and crafts exhibits and special events in the Festival Forum. Robert Hastings, who is in charge of Stage 8, will assist Van Deusen in auditioning performers for the grounds presentation. Jndividuals and groups selected may be able to appear n1ore than cnc·e if they wish. For Laguna ... Colorful folk dances from arcund th• "·orld will be presented in Laguna Beach this weekend by dance groups from throughout Southern California attending a twCHlay folk dance festival. \Vorkshops and teacher demonstrations \\•ill Occupy the visiting dancers during the daytime hours and dance prOgrams, open to the public free of charge, will be presented in the high school girts• gym on Saturday and Sunday evenings. The Saturday program, beginning at 7 :30 p.m., will include exhibiticns by the Cygany Dancers, directed by John Hancock and the Scottish D a n c e Ensemble. directed by Jim Lomath. The Sunday program, starting at 8 p.m., will feature the Canary Island dancers. directed by Anthony Ivancich and El§ie Dunin's Hungarian dancers. The Borino Kolo orchestra will play for the dances. The Laguna Folkdancers. 'vith Carel Brand as chairman, is host group for the festival and will present Sunni Bioland, UC Berkeley dance instructor, in a rare Southern California appearance. The Laguna dancers will make three local appearances during the Winter Festival, on Wednesday's Feb. 24 a 11 d March 3 in the girls' gym at the high school and in the Laguna On Stage variety show in the school auditorium Battin' s Feast DrctuJs Notables, Rai ses Funds Supervisor Robert \V. Batlin's $100 per person recall·reelection fund raising cocktail party drew 200 notables Tuesday evening to the Villa Fontana in Orange. A Battin aide said because the event v.•as a "private party" no guest list could be released. However, some or those attending in· eluded business interests in fields of land development and construction. Jeff Lodder represented Mission Viejo Company and Jack O'Neill of the Mission Viejo Ranch attended. Two representatives of the Irvine Com· pany which frequently has been subject to attacks by Battin in the two years he's been in office also attended, Richard Reese, vice president for planning and James Taylor, director of general plan- ing administration. Architects present included Al Alve s of Santa Ana and Robert Thomu of Newport Beach. Robert Bein represented Raub, Bein and Frost civil and structural engineering firm of Costa Mesa. • Homebuilders there were John Klug ot Newport Beach and James Croul. George Osborne represented the Orange County Flood Control District. Two ether supervisors joined In the quiet , three-hour event at which the prime diversions were handshakes and ~nv~rsalion._ Th.ey were Ra!ph·~ B. Qark of Anaheim and Ronald W. Caspers of Newport Beach. Honor Society Chapter F or1ned At Marco School A new chapter of the National Junior Honor Society has been formed at Marco Forster Junior Hjgh School, San Juan Capistrano. Nineteen charter members of the ln· termediate school society were initiated at recent ceremonies. Elected ofHcers were B a r b a r a Lemberg, president ; Art Baker, vice president : Toni Toumanian, gecretary and Russell Rice, treasurer. To be eligible for membership in the society, a student must earn a grade point average of 3.S or A-minus, and must maintain the average in order to remain in the chapter. Other members of the Marco Forster chapter are: Kathy Contois, Barbara Cudsik. Susan Geach, Phyllis Koontz. Nancy Nugent, Cindy Evans, Sue Enquist, Dan Blank. Karen Sharp, Stephanie Williams, Alyce Bambrough, Lisa Farr, Robin Clow, Lynn Collins and Eric Lucha. A 2.160 square foot, pre-engineered. ~ank of A~er· lea branch "rill be erected on Pacific Coast lltgh· \vay near Street of Violet Lantern in Dana Point. 1'o ~pen in Afay, the temporary branch \Vill offer banking services while plans arc made for a perm· anenl structure in the area. The instant branch is actually th ree 12·by 60-foot mobile offi ce trailers installed \Vith a modern exterior . .. , • Thur$day, F'tbruary 11, 1971 s DAILY PILOT :J - • LAGUNA FOLKDANCERS PRACTICE ON BEACH FOR TWO-DAY DANCE FESTIVAL Colorfully Costumed Dancers Will Present Two Free Programs at High School Top quality roses I. .l . ' ~ . .. •l . . " ' •• . ' .. • . . at rock bottom prices ·99¢ Florabunda and Hybrid Tea Roses - 111~ grade-Choose from these varieties. Fashion,.Goldilocks, Peace, Forty Niner and S!Jmmer Snow. 239 University Compost to start your roses out with tile right soil mulch. 5 cu. ft. bag. 198 · Kellogg's Gromulch. Excellent for retai ning moisture, keeping roots cool. 2 cu. ft. bag. 139{ Standard Packaged Climblnll Roses-#1 grade. Varletlaoo Include: Blaze, Peace anil · Crimson GIOly; 229:, "Florabunda" Rosas-it ; grade-pruned and potted.; ready to plant Varieties include Fashion and Red Pinocchio. 4so1 Patented Grandiflora Rose.' 1971 winner. Potted and readY · 10 plant. Aquarius. 3so Patented Hybrid Tea Rosee_, · * t grade. They're potted and ready lo plant Choose from Mr. Uncoln ar Golden Prince. • ,,,_ rOHS 1re preplantod 111d proprunod, Just dig hole and plant. Available at Penney Garden Centers. FASHION ISLAND, Newport Center; HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Beach. Shop 12 to 5, Sunday, too. . I • • 4f ~lll Y PILOT Th1Jrsd1y, Ftbruvy 11, 1971 • r.., .. • • • :-= l . • 't u ;. now come ,)'Oa•re not i anemployed lilce the · other. DaiU?' . $crupuwus With Taxes . . ·: .. ;: By DICK w= \YASHINGTON -It came as a shock to '-rn there is an active revenut-6hlr· int°: ring in the capital and that the Preildent of the United States himself opeljiy advocates the practice. 1:. try to keep a.n open mind and a inodern outlook. despite advancing yeai:s. but l'm sharply not ready for an~ing that unconventional. It's my slritt-Jaced upbringing, f guess. ~ a child. J was taught to believe .. The [LTJ~ll11PlE!JfS. In fiscal fi delity. America in those days v.·as· a monomonetary society in whlch the government that collected your taxes spent taxes. And no horsing around. l liad, of course. heard rumors that 8 Tevenue-s haring cult ex:isted i n Wruihington . But l always figured such t.alei were grossly exaggerated. I :even went to see a movie about revenue-sharing. It was called "Vermont s,nd :Georgia and Indiana and Oregon" and:it dealt with four states that became lnvalved wi!h each other's exchequer. BUt IL was primarily a comedy and didn't imprefi& me as being very realistic. At any rat!. I never thought I'd see the : day when revenue-sharing would be~e more or less respectable. A·,friend of mine who is inclined to be btoad-minded about the5e matters told .me l)'ly attitude was anachronistic. '"Govern m en t is by nature poljptcuniary," he said. "In these moa,m times. it is too much to expect fhe :2overnment to confine itself to a singje tax st!ndard. the way it did wheti you were a boy. "You apparently have no scruples ag$st paying taxes to your county and.~atate governments. 10 why should yoll :.object to the federal government &haryng its reven ue wilh them ?" r ·said, "to me, taxation ls an intensely pe rsonal experience. Unless I feel emo- lion.t1:lly involved with the government to }Yhlch 1 pay taxes, the whole thing bectimes sordid and meaningless. "i\t the present time, for example. T am domiciled in Virginia . It's govern- ment provides me with license tags for my· .auto and perhaps performs other ::;er'fkes of \\'hich I am unaware. T~·o nf ioy children were born in the state. Corlsequently. there is a sentimental at- ta chment. "But if the federal government were to share my taxts with. say, South Dakota, ~·ith v.'h.ich I have never enjoyed an -fntimale relationship. I would feel indifferent and unfulfilled." Given the times in which we live . H Q:iay be that re~·enue-sharing is in- ~vitable. But in the process I fear we ~·Hr be losing something that is fine and good and beautiful. -UPI '$11,$00 Unre porte d ' GOP's Ford Hit On Fund Charge · By JAMES R. POLK WASHINGTON <AP) House Republican Uader Gerald R. Ford failed to report fll,500 in campaign con· trlbutions last fall rrom stock brokers, an oilman, bankers, doctors and a union group. Instead, the checkl given to Ford were detoured through R e p u b 11 c a n head- quarters here while roughly the same amount -$12,233 -wa! being fed back to Ford's district to pay off post- election debts. Through this two-step p r o c e d u r e , names of the special interest groups were not lilted ()0 Ford 's sworn cam- paign report lo Congre". although the money !Towed tnrough his hands. The Corrupt Practices Act requires full public disclosure of all campaign contributions received with a candidate 's know ledge or consent. Jn an interview, Ford defended his procedures in handllng campaign checks as being "within the law." The Michigan Congress.man said he signed the checks over to the GOP because he had reached his state's legal Jimit on the money hls own campaign committee could handle. He s a id he had no knowledge of the GOP g I v i n g back more than $12,000 to other Ford committees. Not listed on Ford's report to the House were : -A $5,000 check from the Securities Jnduslry Campaign Committee. The en- dorsement on the check shows il was signed over to the GOP headquarters before the post-election payoubi began , ... The $5,000 donatlon to Ford was the largest single contribullon made by the Wall Street stock brokers' fund. -A $2,000 check frd'm the Bankers Political Act!on Commlttee, whose money was refused by nw-ly half the intended recipients in a controversy over a pen· ding bill on bank regulation. -A $.l,000 cbeclc from John M. Shaheen, head of 1 New York Clty oil firm with refineries in Canada, California and Arkansas. -A Sl,IXKI check from the pOlitlcal arm of the Boilermakers-Blacksmi~ union with national headquartera in Kansas City, Kans. • -A $500 check from the Michigan Doctors Political Action Committee. Unlike m011t cnadidates, Ford acted as treasurer of his main campaign group the "Ford for Congress Committee,'' and therefore was bound by the ,corrupt Practlces Act to file a complete report of Its money dealings. However, Ford said. "I would say, under the interpretation of the law as it ha s been interpreted over the years. that my action was within the law." He did not elaborate. In the 4>year history of the Corrupt Practices Act. the Justice Department has never brought a court case against a congressman ~or campaign wrongdoing. The $11,500 Ul Ford campaign con- tributions was turned over to the Republican Congressional Committee in a I().day period just before and after the Nov. 3 election. Space Heroes Prepare To Make Samoa Flight ABOARD USS NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Apollo 14's moon astronauts today fiy off this recovery carrier to Samoa Md transfer to a plane for a flight to Houston 's Manned Spacecraft Center, Alan B. Shepard Jr., Edgar D. Mitchell and Stuart A. Roosa depart the ship when the New Orleans steams within helicopter range of Pago Pago, American Samoa. The astronauts have been quarantined in a trailer·like bolatlon van 11:board the ship since they were plucked ·from the South Pacific Tuelday after a bull's- eye landing that climned man's third moon-landing rnJalon. For the helii::opitr transler they wore special biological masks to prevent them exhaling germs. At Pago Pago they move Into another quarantine van aboard a C141 jet transport for a trip to Houston, arriving about 1 a.m. Friday. They will be quarantined in the Luna r Receiving Laboratory until Feb. 26 with 12 other persons including engineers, medical technicians and cooks . Apollo 14's isolation might be the last for astronauts returning from the moon. It was ordered ror this mission, just as it was for Apollos 11 and 12, because the astronauts visited a new type of lunar terrain. Some scientists believe that the ancient Fra Mauro highlands "'·here Shepard and l'ifitchell explored could possibly harbor organisms th at don't live in the relatively flal plains where the earlie r astronauts landed. "We certainly hope this v.'ill be the last one." said Dr. Robert Gilruth. Center medical director. "We have found no evidence of any living organisms whatsoever in both Apollo 11 and 12 and \.l.'e learned from the Rll.5!ians that. they also loond nothing in the ir Luna 16." Riding in the quarantine va n with the astronauts are Dr. William Carpen- tier, a space agency flight surgeon. and R. H. Cujbertson, an eniJneer. Carpentier is conducting e.1tensive medical uams on the spacemen. He reported preliminary results show them in excellent health. Shepard and Mitchell, who made t wn moonwalks totaling more than nine hours, returned to earth wi th no ap- preciable weight Jos.s. But Roosa, who orbited the moon alone while the other two were exploring below, lost eight to 10 pounda, the doctor reported. Gold Missing- 1.5 Tons of It A'M'LEBORO, Mass. (UPI ) - Handy and Harmon Co., has lost a ton and a half of gold worth Jl.8 ril illiOn and no one reaDy knows what happened to it. All the industrial alloy supplier knows is that it's gone. The missing metals were in a variety of forms from scrap tn ingot. Officials sa ~ the company was unable to determine whethe.r the gold was taken in a whole chunk or disap- peared in bits. The loss - 6 percent of !he gold relined by the firm in a year. and almost l percent of the nation's -Y"as discovered Tuesda y as part of a year-end audit. The mis.sing metal "'as traced to the Union Street plant of the Attleborn Refining Co.. Inc.. Handy and Harmon's local subsidiary. Local police have not entered the case but an FBI spokes man :onfi rmed it has been consulted 11nd wa s "making inquirtes." 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Gerald Fo rd 60 Nations Sign Seabed Arms Trectty By United Press International The United States, Russia , Britain and 57 other countries today signed a treaty banning nuclear weapons from ocean floors. President Nb.:on expressed hope It would prove a stepping stone toward curbing lhe strategic arms race Nixon spoke briefly during a ceremony Jn Washington, at the State Department. in which the United States gave its formal endorsement to the seabed treaty. "We hope," Nixon said. "we will be meeting so me tlme In the future, in this room, or in some other capital, for the /inal great step -the control of nuclear arms on earth." At a similar ceremony in Moscow, Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin called the treaty "the tirst important step towards the complete demilitarization of the seabed." Nixon described the treaty as a "modest but important step," and added ; "We consider it a step toward a greater goal of the control (If nuclear weapons on earth. We seek an agreement there (at the U.S.-Soviet arms control talklil which will reduce the danger of modern war that stands over the earth." Bulld tap ltt Lao s Helicopters Rush \liets Into Fray SAIGON (UPl) -U.S. helicopt.ua new 11.nolher 1,000 South Vietnamese troops into Laos today to join the drive against the Ho Chi Minh tn1il and h1 uled ln heavy artillery i11 i;ling., beneath lhe choppers. Llttle righling was reported In this area but it broke out with new lntt:nsily in norlhern Laos and in Cam- bodia . There was an Increase in Communist activity just below lhe demililar'lzed zone IDMZ) paralleling lhe allies' Highway 9 supply line. The Communists shelled fire support base Vandergrift and near Lang Vei on the border. bl.\t they did little or no damage. Informed sources in Sargon said a U.S. 7th Fleet Marine landlng team of about l ,500 men was aboard the aircraft carrier USS Two J ima of[ the coast but stressed It was a routine contingency measure and that th e same force had been cleployed to the Gulf of Thailand during operations to clear Route 4 In Cambodia . Military sources in Saigon said South Vietnamese attempting to cut the Ho Chi ~finh trail at its narrowest point in Laos ~·ere nearing their objective, the Communist base 11:rea to Sepone !also Tchepone) tonight One column was just lo the north and another to the south but neither has entered the town. sources said. Sepone is 'J:T mil~ inside Laos and was listed as the major objective or the drive into Laos. The mountan pas~ which funnel Communist supplies from North Vietnam into Laos empty into the Sepone area which was a gold mining center in French co lonial days. Brig. Gen. Pham Van Phu. com· mander or the 1st South Vietnamese infantry division spearheading the opera· lion. said there have been no large J(round contacts in this drive. He said his paratroopers had linked up with an armored cavalry column at Ban Dong, 12 miles inside Laos. securi11g Highway 9 and opening an overland supply route. Spokesmen said South Vietnamese units had !ound some Communlst arms caches 33 Coal Miners Sa fe KITAKYUSHU. Japan IUPI ) -Thirty- lhree coal miners today made their way let sa fety without injury following a cave. in at a mine near this ci ty on Japan's 15outhern island of Kyushu. in Laos includfng six Sovle!·bu JJ t Molotov11. trucks and 1 number or weapons but not the large caches whlcb are the primary objeclive of the drive. Communist troo~ were reported mak· Jng major gains in northern .Laos abou t 300 miles northeast of the South Viet· namese incursion. UPI correspondent Kim Willensoo reported from Vientiane that Nor th Vietnamese overran four governmenl posilioru northeast of Long Cheng and were shelling governmtnt po.sitions in tht area. Jor dctn Ar1ny Units Raid Rebel A re as AMMAN !UPI ) -Palestinian guer· rillas said 600 Jordan army troop~ sup. ported by tanks launched ;a dawn attack on the Jabal Himlan area of Amman loda y and killed and wounded a number of civilians. Commando sources said II was the biggest outbreak of fighting in Jordan in nearly fou r weeks. A governm ent statement said security forces moved inio the area, arrested persistent violators of c e a s e . f i r e agreements and confiscated weapons. It said the detainees would go nn trial. The statement. on orficia l Amman radio, made no mention of fighting. The official spokesman or the ranking central co~mittee of guerrilla group11, Ibr11.him Bakr. said Palestinian leaders opened up arms caches in which weapons were stored under the latest truce and handed out guns to militiamen. Bakr said King Hu.~Sein's tanks "open· ed fire on civilian homes and militia arms caches while' soldiers tried to penetrate the area. This forced the cen- tral com mittee to redistribute the weapons to the militia in the area to defend the civilian population." Amman airport was closed bul the government made no mention of the fighting in its morning broadcasts. Jordanian troops and Palestinians have clashed frequently over the gove rnment's restri ctions on activities of Jordan-based guerrillas against Israel. Thomas and Th eodore join Fashion Island in a ... -PRESIDENTS BIRTHDAY SALUTE to George Washington and Abraham Lincoln FRID AY, SATURD AY & MONDAY See the Big S pecial Fa1hlo11 ftlattd New1papfll'.' Seeo tlo11 l11•lde t ada11'• P ilot, Nem1 of e.t:cltlllfJ happeitlllfJI a ll 3 d•fl•· FASHION ISLAND HEWPO&T CllHTl1Jt 'Deeply in Love' Companion Tells Angela Motives HOLLYWOOD, Fla. IAPJ - Despite numerous f a 1 s e sightings and rumors that black activist Angela Davis had fled the country, she really never had any plans to leave. says the man ar- rested with her. "She wanted to contribute to the liberation of black and oppressed people in this coun- try.'' said DaVid R. Poin- dexter. "And she had to re- main in this country lo at"- compHsh her goals." Also, Poindexter said, "she \Yas well on her way to resolv- ing her personal philosophy -what it means to be a black woman in America ." He said he rushed to Miss Davis' side because of "my Jove for her.1' And it's QO ordinary love. said Poindexter. "It is deeper and more time-tested than !,he romantic conception known in this country." "Angela is one or the most exceptional women in this country,'' he said, speaking ()Ut in an interview for the first time since FB I agents arrested him and f\1iss Da vis in a New York motel Oct. 12. The handsome C h i c y...g o businessman is free on $100,000 bail pending trial in New York on charges or harboring a fugitive. Ile has pleaded innocent. Miss Davis is being held in San Rafael, where she faces charges of kidnaping, murder and conspiracy in conoectioa with a shooting in t h e courthouse there 'last Aug. 7 in which four persons, in- cluding a judge, died. She ha s pleaded innocent. Poindexter said that soon after she was indicted in California, Angela phoned him and said "she wanted to rest." ''Angela and 1 llave beeR friends for several years,'' he said. ''We both are Marxists. Soldiers of the liberation army." Relaxing in the plush living room of his mother's Hollywood home, Poindexter shared his observations of Miss Davis during the three months she dodged the FBI : "She has a special. sort or dedication. She sticks to something until completion. She had become a full grown revolutionary.'' Dangerous Chemicals Leak 011t ASHKUM. JU, (AP) -A freight train carrying explo- sive chemicals jumped t.he track Wednesday and a leak· age of flaming liquid combined w 1 t h choking fumes forced evacuation of the 600 residents of Ashkum. After a six-hour fight, fire- men pulled back from the flames that enveloped a single tank car, rearing further ac- tion might cause an explosion and spread the flames . Earlier, officials of the Illi- nois Central Railroad said the fire had spread to two other tank cars. However, at mid· evening only one of the tour tankers that derailed w a s burning. Officials said the blaze was under control and would burn itself out. Railroad o[ficials termed the pullback a ''strategic with- drawal" because chemicals in the other dera iled cars might explode 'f further cooled by water. The blaze began in midafter- noon after 22 cars of the £3. car train dera iled at U.S. 45 and Illinois 116 at the northern edge of Ashkum, an Iroquois County community in the Tiorthern sector of central II· linois. Airport to Evict Big 'S pruce Goose' LONG BEACH (AP) -The mysterious "Spruce Goose," a 200-ton, eight-engine flying boat designed by Howard Hughes, has been ordered out of its hiding place after 23 years. The Hughes Aircralt C:O. was notified by the Long Beach llarbor Commissic~ Wednesday that the plane -made mainly of plywood -must be removed from its $36.000.a- year storage hangar by March 1972 to make way for a marine terminal. The $19.5 million plane has been as closely guarded as the billionaire Hughes himself since he took it up on a one- hQur maiden flight in 1947 in Long Beach harbor. It never flew again and no one since has reported seeing it outside its air-conditioned hangar in Long Beach Harbor. - A Hughes spokesman said the tight security was a per- sonal wish of Hughes who became annoyed with certain ad- jectives used to describe the plane. "'Spruce Goose' was not one of them," he said. •·we will probably have to move the plane if they want us to." the spokesman added. "But Ulere are no plans to dismantle it." ~ ******************* MERCURY SAVINGS and loan association Open Mon.·Thurs. 91.m.-4 p.m.; Fri. S •.m . .fi p.m. BUENA PARK Morcury Savings Bid(., Valley View etllncoln HUNTINGTON BEACH Mercury Saving• Bldg., Edinger at Beach TUSTIN M~rcury Savings Bldg., Irvine Blvd. at Newport Ave. ******************* Good : ·Far:.the price ofa Chevrolet Nova you get two cars in one;1 · -· · , ra";riot:t~big~~~]d.i~ot-tOO;small~r~ • . The nOHoo-big Nova.\ It fits neatly into garages. It's only 189.4 inches from end lo end. Only 72.4 inches wide. Makes impossible parking &paces po8Sl'ble, thanks lo a l t l ' wheelbase and a 41.4-foot turning circle. It's a gas squeezer. Pick the standard 6 or VB and you can have your fueJ economy and peppery performance, t<Kl. It's an agile one. Along with Nova's tidy-size wheel· ==== base and wide stance. you get taut steering. So you also II get enjoyment out of taking curves and comers. The not-too-small Nova. Th e coupe seatlll fiT'e, the sedan six. Full-size, comfort- Jov ing adults in each instance. At home on 'be higbwa1. Nova's hefty weight and -·- ' 59-inch tread give it a solid grip on the road, make it more impervious to side winds. Family-size trunk. You get up to 14.!l!l cubic reet of luggage space. Rides more like a bi g car, thanks to Chevrolet engi· nccring and attention to detail. (We even match the springs to the weight of the car and the equipment you order on it.) That's about the size of it But check the other cars in Nova's field. Then go to your Chevrolet dealer·s. Sec how much val· ue Nova has going for you. ' ,. Thursday, F'ebn1ary 11, 1971 GENTRY LTD. idf!J!!I BIG SALE DAYS to CELEBRATE THE BIRTHDA lS OF LINCOLN AND WASHINGTON FEBRUARY 11-lZ-13-14·15 EVERYTHING IN OUR STORE OFF UP TO 50°/o" , USE YOUR BAN KAMERICARD AND MASTER CHARGE DAILY PILOT South Coast ?tua BRISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FWY-COSTA MESA OPEN 6 NITES A WEEK 'TIL 9:30 $40-1502 SUNDAY NOON TO 5 P.M. ,. '. ' ··~ - • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Political Shenanigans &11'.ing to public protest, the Orange County Board o! Supervisors voted 4 to 1 Tuesday to refer the ques· tion of firing County Administrative Officer Robert Thomas to a three-man committee for study between now and budget Ume In July. These conclusions emcrg· ed: -Robert Battin, board chairman, stands in the public eye as a man \Yho badly bune:led his first major political po\\'er play. J·fis actions in the episode can't help but give new impetus and new a1nmunition to the recall drive already mounted against him in the !st District. -5th District Supervisor Ronald Caspers comes off almost as poorly as Battin. He seconded Battin's tnotion to fire Thomas out of hand on Feb. 2, announced natly to a service club Feb. 4 that Thomas would be fired Feb. 9, then reversed himselr and voted for the committee study when lbe heat was on. -4th District Supervisor Ralph Clark, a freshman on the board aloOg with Caspers, showed a surprising ~treak or political realism after most observers had con· eluded he \\'IS in close harmony \Vith Battin .and Caspers -and their shadowy backroom "cabinet." By propos· ing the committee solution, he may have smoothed over -at least ror the moment -one of the roughest chap· ters in recent county history. -Both 2nd District Supervisor David Baker and 3rd District Supervisor William Phillips came on strong· ly, sho\ving determination not to stand idly by in the face of so blatant a power play. Both stood for good and orderly government in the face of possible reprisals from a Battin-Caspers.Clark majority. -And Thomas himself stands out as somewhat of 1 hero. a man who seemed genuinely surprised at the Epontaneous outpouring of support for the county ad· ministrative officer form of government and for him personally when Battin strung out a list of fltmsy char· ges against him. No matter lbat Thomas remains on lbe job, at least ror the next fe\v months, many aspects of county govern· tnent remain serious question marks. \Vere it not for the strong display of public support for Thomas -and for the CAO form of government -he undoubtedly would have been summarily and unjustly fired. There remains no guarantee, however. that some controUing behind· the-scenes forces are not still bent on manipulating coun· ty government away from the professional type of or· ganization it has been developing into in recent years under Thomas. They apparently would return to a spoils system of lhe political dark ages. Another major question remains: \Vhat about the rest of the county's key employes? At least seven. per· haps 12, department heads ate known to be prime tar- g-ets for Battin and Caspers -and perhaps a swing vote from any of the three other supervisors. The county chiefs' heads could fall at any moment. All department heads were put on notice last month by a 3 to 2 vote that their jobs were on a month-to-month basis, And a large number of them have been singled out by innuendo, rumor or statement from the Caspers· Battin combine that it was only a matter of time until they would be fired. They can hardly be expected to perform their du- ties \\'ell or make any long-range plans with such a threat hanging over them. In summary, the timetable on the Battin·Cai;per~ political railroad has been upset -thanks to the actions or t\\'O veteran supervisors, an aroused public and a shO\Y of greater fairness -or at least more public awareness-by a third supervisor. But there is precious little assurance that some other threat of political foolishness won't be forthcom- ing from the same manipulators tomorro"'• next week or next month. Not Seera Sirace the Civil War Police Aren't Fitted to Judge Morals Army Is Torn by Rebellion W ASHJNGTON -Not liince the Civil "'ar has the Army been 10 torn by rebellion. The crisis has all but overwhelmed General William \\'estmoreland, the harassed Army chief, who is altempting to restore discipline ~'Ith more beer, longer hair and old ilogans. We haYe spent weeks ta1tlng to toldlers, from privates to generals, al baits at home and overseas. At least a t:hird of the enlisted men are in some 11t.ates of rebellion, we would estimate. from the mild draftees "'ho would consider the Army a ridicuJous waste of time to the soldier f'ditors of ''underground'' newspapers, v.•ho write openly and often of revolution. tN VrETNA:\1, officers and noncoms no tonger simply iss~ orders. Blind obedience has gone U. coute . of the horse ca\•&1ry . The young draftees who bear the brunt of the fighting now want lo kno\\' the reasons for an order. 1£ the reply is inadequate, the order may be ignored. An officer v.-ho Irie& to enforce an unpopular order may find himself ;'frag- i;:td''-on the receiving end or a hot grenade. 'l'he fighting effectiveness of 11ome units has been shattertd by the. threat that erJisted men may slip up in the shadO\\"S and toss " live grenade Into officers' quarlerl. Bomb threal.\: have forced officers to tvaaiate homes, ·offices, hospitals. "The real miracle," one colonel, a combat cffice.r, told us . "ill that v.·e haven 't had an open revolt." ON MANY ARMY posts, long hair. hippie beads and peace medallions have become part or the unifonn. At F't. Hood, Tei:., Fl Lewi!, Wash., and other bases across the country, GI coffeehouses cffer dissident aoldlers aympathetic gathering places. Activist soldiers have filed lawsuits against their commanding officers. Enlisted men have formed division coun· cils, which exclude all noncoms above buck sergeants. The councils make demands upon the division commanders. The only soldiers left untouched by the spirit of revolt are the "lifers.'' the :m.year sergeants and old-line of· ficers, whose inslincliYe reaction to the rebellious kids is to put them on KP, take their stripes away and slap them in the stockades. BUT THE KIDS refuse to accept this kind o( treatment. Thty go AWOL; thl'-y desert. Others are too abject, too numb to dissent. They turn to booie, babes and drug! for escape. Particularly drugs. An extraordinary number smoke pot, and a great many shoot heroin. The Army probably has more drug addicts than it h a s paratroopers. Ft. l{ood in Texas has such a marijuana problem that it has been nicknamed f>~t. Head. And Ft. Bragg in North Carolina is the second biggest heroin market in the country, right after New York City. Drug abuse often goes hand in hand ""ith the Army's racial problems. In Korea . we learned that black· and white Gls. hopped up on drugs and booze, often meet and fight in the shantytowns outside mHitary camps. Groups of blarlL!, fired up on drugs, lie in wait in the shantytowns for w~ite soldiers. AT EUROPEAN bases, racial tension is threatening to break into full-scale rioting. On a rem ote post in eastern Bavaria last year, for example, blacks demonstrating against discriminatilon were rebuffed by their commanding of· ficer, Brig. Gen. Mashall Garth. Later a fragmentation grenade eitplodcd in a me" hall, and ten men y,•ere l\'Ounded. A black noncom, James Earl Hobson , Iv.ice decorated with bronze stars in Vietnam, was charged with attempted murder. In another incident al ~1cNair barrack.-; in \\'est Berlin, whiles and blacks ripped into each other wilh rocks, pipes a n d wooden clubs. Five men were arrested, some 25 suffered injuries. Else .... ·here in Europe, black servicemen have held demonstrations, and y,•hite have coun- lered with Ku Klux Klan type rallies. The Four-day Work Week Growing number$ of American workeri ~re h.lppily joining the Thank·God·lt's- Thursday club. Companies are turning 10 the four-day, 40-hour \\'eek as the n1ost effi cient use of manpower. They claim it increa.Sf:S produclivi1y and reduces turno\'er and absenteeism . As many as 11.000 workers in about 60 finns are already on shorter \\'Ork weeks. A clear sign of the spread of the Idea is the conlract .!!igncd Jan. 19, 1971, bet"·een the United Auto 'Vorkers :::ind Chrysle r. It calls for the establish- ment of a joint committee to study the establishment ol a pilot program for a four-day v.·cek for assembly line \\"Orkers. Douglas f'raser, head of the union's Chrysler department, says: "W'e think lt offers some very exciting possibilities ." . The nation·, third largest union - the million-member Uniled SteCl\l·orkers of Amer ica -has added lfle four-day \\'eek to Its list of goals In the bargaining later this year for a new contract. RiYa Poor 1 '"'ho has made a 1tudy of the ...... iiliilliiiliili Thursday, February 11, 1971 TM td1torial pa.gt oj the Dailu Pilo& sttk! to infonn and .stfm.. tdotc: rc:od.rrs bl/ presenting lht! ~per 's opinion& and. con1· mrttory on topics of i~t~re8t o:rtd 1ignificanct, bu prov1d1ng a /orum jor the expression of our ~ead.e,1' opinions. and bJI pr~1efttinQ the diutrst view- poffttl of fnjormtd obse,.v~T.i aM 1pokerm6rt on lopta of lht tilt~. Rabort N. W•td, Publliber Editorial • Research four-day y,·eek, predicts It Y.1ill •·.sweep the country -and much faster than the five-day \\'ee k replaced the six-day v.·eek.'' VIRTUALLY ALL Ame:r lc:an industry now operates on a four-day "·ee k for 10 percent or lhe year. This is due to federal legislaUon thal has made rive or the 10 national holidays fltll on Monday, notes Kenneth E. 'Vhee!er in the llarYard Business Review. While larger companies are studying lhe four· day Y.'eek, he notes that it is most widely used in smal\ business. Th~ movement to a shorter work "·eek Is by oo means new. As early as the 1950s. the UAW's late president. \Vali er Reuther. tried tG include ii in labor contracts he negoliat.td "'Ith I h e automobile manufacturers. A century ago, the average American worked a 12·hour day. sl x-d11y y,·eek. Time-off from work ws1 barely surflcicnl to eat, l.'ike care of personal needs and sleep. Jnhum•nly Jong \\'Orking hours gil''e the unions en entering "'edge for building up their strenglh in the 19th century , The eight-hour da y y,•as the rallying i:ry but it "'as 1 Jong time in comtng. In tech decade bet"·een las<I and 1900 about two hours V.'l'rC cut frOTTI the workweek . Four hour~ wtre dropped in each decade b<'t\ll'en 1900 and 1940, ·when lhe 4G-hour "·ork\l·cek began becoming commooplace. TllE UNRt.""SOL\'ED question Is Just ho"' the "·orker will us1 additiona l rree llme ir there were • gene.ral sy,·ing to the. four~ay week. some analysts uy lhat continued lnflaUoo would cause \ many ·wGrker~ lo moonlight -tG hold second jobs -in order to make ends meet. Others say it y,•ould result in a slo11·ing of 1he rate of gro111h of the Gross National Product But Paul A. Sa muelson . the Nobel Prize-winning economist and advoc11te nf the four-day y,:eek, disagrees. "If \\'e use the knowledge of the newer economics, y,•e can insure that there 11·ill be enough jobs to go around even if people should take H into their heads to 11•ork a 50 or 60-hour y,·cek." he has "'ritten. "If, inslead, people decide they 11•ant more leisure, the fact lh11t lhis will slo1\' down the rate or gro1vth of lhe GNP is only a reflection or lht' inadequacy of the way 11·e measure that magnitO.de ." Some firms have already gonc beyond the four-day y,•eek. A handful of com- panies in New York st11te and other Jireas have put their e1nployes on a :!·day. 12~i·hour .shifl 11·ith four d:i}'S off. Anyont for the Thank·God·lf5. \\'ednesday club? Dear Gloomy Gus: The onl)' lhlng \t·rong ll'ifh most of the younger generation ls that I'm no longer a pnrr of It! -f'. c. f~lt +l•hlf• ,.Hre.11 ,,u-..-t• "r,..., "' llKtUtrfJ, lllt .. ti "" ll•Wt•tPt,, Stl'lf Ytllr llff '"¥' N Oltetro' On. OtllY l"l•t, A sheriff in lndianapolis, whose name v.·ouldn't interest one in this part of the world, fired a young girt in his civil office for wearing her skirt short. It fell four inches above her knee-cap. 1be sheriff uid, ''Sex crimes have increaaed since akirt.s were ahortened. 1 can't criticize the p.tblic if our awn girls walk around ex- posed." What qualifies a sheriff to say mini- :, skirts increase u::t A::·'. '\ crim~? ~ovided • ~~ ,, there 1s an increase:. -~. 1 it has scores of ' causes. Further, who is a sheriff to ''criticize the public~" No- body elected or appointed him to critici1,e anybody. His duty, and that of a police chief counterpart, is to maintain the po~ lie order under law, and on his delegated authority to arrest and charge those he believes guilty of a misdemeanor ()r a crime. This censorious tendenc y of the police authority. or any political authority. is pure usurpation by those wholly unfilled to judge the. manners and morals or the people who pay their salaries. POLICE SERGEANTS who barely skinned lhrough high school waste thousands of the public's marihours in American cities cha.1ing book.sellers and film enterpre.neurs for pomoa:raphy, so-called. Fortunately, in San Fr1ncisco at least. judges elected by the people void most of these cases, either by judicial order or instructions to jurors. Often jurie! don"t need instructions to free the ac· cused. so there's something wrong In one area of police activity. A few years agG school administr1tors and school boards began sending fem1\e pupils home, or teachers home, in the short skirt syndrome. Fortunately again, these stuffy folk lost mOit or thelr ca.set to ~bllc opinion bf:. fore the y reachtd the courts. 1t1oreoYer, the miniskirt ()veflGOk them and n()\\'a· day! they must sit and stew in their puritanism. NOW THERE IS somethin g the fas?lion sorcerers call "hot pants." and as Carson said lhis "·eek , it doesn't me8Jl what It 1neant .,.,,hen he was a kid. These are not tennis shorts of drill, but the !lame lhing in elesant fabrics.. Thty're in all the magatines, in color. Even in the eastern chill they appear, and come summer, they'll be everywhere, causing cerebral hemorrtiages among tho aging censorious. Remember when thf! bolder tennis &iris abandoned skirlS for shorts, and the tennis moguls wtnt banaoas, yapping about good taste, which they didn 't kno'of from a hot roc.k? When will the censoriou! .. ·ake up to the. reality th•l manners and morals of the pt:ople are none ot their business, that th~y don't know much about them anyway, and that the mass of the people, generation by gener1ttlon, \\'ill set their own standards. defying the petty tyran- nies prepared for t hem~ Probably never, So we bid !ht sheriff farewell, and hope his succ.:ssor "'Ill have othtt anx· ietits-, such as supprtssing crime 1M lndi1n1polls, whtre it do\lbtlus etlst11. 'Religion': Whole Reason There was a drama assiinment l didn 't •ant to cover, becau.se it fell on a Friday C!Vening, which conflicted with a SC1Clal engagement I had been eagerl y looking rorv•ard to that night. The morning be- fore, I telephoned my wife from ttie cffice and told her we could aceept the social engagement, •'Good news," I said, "lhe performance hu been .....Ued for Friday aighL" What was the , "good news?'' Etn1yn Williams' wife had died suddenly in London. and he flew back to arrange the funeral, scratching all bis perfonnances of "An evening with Charles Dickens." AS t RUNG UP, it octurred to me what I had said. This was sad news, really, for a man on a successful tour of the count ry. But aL the moment, my silly engagement on Friday night loomed larger to me than his permanent persona.I loss. And this, basically, is what the theologians mean by "original sin." Not liomething profound and dreadful and mysterio~ and shockingly wicked: noihing as dramatic as all that. Simply that a pebble in our own shoe is more important, and more aggravating, than a man (or a million men) perishing in Pakistan at that very instant. AND NOT Up!rj'Tfl... this balance i! redressed -not until the world is nG for It longer seen as re..,olving arollOd each indivldual ego, which is the Sun, and e..,eryOOdy else just satellites -will any political or social or economic system work ror the full benefit or mankind, instead of for a powerful few . This is the whole reason for what we call •·religion," and the rtst is mostly nonsense: to help us beeome God.cen4 tered rather than man-centered, to make us realize that what happens to uytoe else is as significant in the scheme of things as what happens to eaeb of US- NOT HING LESS than this is Jarte enough to shake us out of our aboriginal seUishqess. For if \l'e do not worship this true god, y,•e begin to worship false ones -the state. the race, the church itself -and compound the sin ot selrishness by commitling collective in· justices upon those who give allegiance 10 a different state. race, ()r church. "\VbaleYer y9u do to the lowlie1t of men you are doing unto Me," Uesus warned, in lhe most direct e:tpression of this creed . To cheat. to hate, to kill -even to "not care" -is to \\'OUnd the 1'.faker of the universe. AJ. long as the pebble in the shoe takes precedence over the pestilence in P.!lkistan. we remain enslaved by the illusion of our individuality; and lhou.gh "·e cry "~faster, Master." we cannot distinguish the good ne"'S from the bad. Something New, Drastic This is the: time when we look al the record. crJticize our failures, and firmly resvlve to do bt:tter in the New Year. At least, that'• tM way it used to be . Now. we ba'fe reached the stage where we seme something new in history. Something gradual bu t nevertheless drastic, something as yet only half comprehended Q asserting itselr in the corporate conscious mind which \\'ill affect the corporation's profits and perhaps its very ealstence. rr TS NOT THE developmenl of a rreat ntw political ide1 or even the emergence of a. powerful new social l!:roup. It is more profound : a \\'hole new relation between the American system of doing business and the stuff of which the: v.wld i.s made, It it called social involvement or c o r p o r a t e responsibility, and its impact is not even mea$'Urlble al this moment in time. \\'hat is being pitilessly critlclied Is the American commitment to abundance. _produet.h·ily, and the creation of a rich economy with a wide. dlstrlbullon of material be.nefits because thls has bten aecomplished without much thought of social constquern:es. What Is being scorn· ed and rejected by our young rtvotu- lionaries are the peculiarly Amtrlc11n cllaracterillliCS of rt.lentless hard 1\•ork, ri!lt·takln&, iMovallon. gnJ\vth and pre>- fit.s . tN ESSENCE. OUR cctlnomic freedom s are in jeopardy. \\le have not made ~ clear that once the American capitalist has ldtnllfled the existence or error in the system, he ha! the ctlpaclty to correct It, and the resolution to eliminate the problem In the future. Some com- panies have atopped lnformln& the public ... of their environmental improvement tf. forts because of press or politic.al cr iticism. Wounded pride or fear of advertisln1 trrors has oo place in t.be fight to keep the record of social progrtss in the public eye. It ploys directly intn the hand of those "'ho would deslro~ freedom. Kno"•ledgc is the only real safet y this world provides. f'rcedom or the mind 1~ the foundation-or all other freedon1s. -.and if it is lost, the othe.rt are soon foun d not y,•nrt11 keeping. t;lliabttb 1\1ae0onald 7'1annt.1 Publhb<T F'l.Noc• .---B11 George ---· Dear Georg': Amerlca·s newspaper• used to have one funny ccilumn ~Jter anolhtr. Of late, everything is deadly serffius. \Vhat happened to humor in Ame.ric1 's ntw•pai>er1! DEPRESSED Dear Ot!pressed : Cheer up! Everything's o.k. oow. T .,.,·as only on vacation a few day5. fSend your prob ll'ms to Citorae, the mos! conru!td advice colwnnlst in the enUrt bush1tss. I CONFI OF.NTIAl. T 0 CON· • Floe.~TIAl. l\lAGAZINE : \'le can't go on meeting IU:e thi.!I. I I I r CHECKING . •UP• Sales men Should Mak e Like Fish By L tit. BOYD r-:OT ONLY DID the men of Old Rome wear rouge ()n their cheeks. but they touched up their elbo'Ws with it and their knees. A pretty lot. They all looked as though they 1uf- fered floor burns. It's a historical fact the men there and then wore more makeup than the women . . . AND SPEAKING of ancient Rome, a household guest customarily was served as many goblets of "'ine as there were lettars in said guest's name. Think of that ! Here's to Engelbert Humperdinck -clink ~ CUSTOMEr. SERVICE -Q. "will you accept the scienlific claim the only animal belides man that naturally hunts for sport is the weasel?" A. Can't buy that. Whal about the housecal? For that mailer, ·what about pointers, setters, hounds? ..•. Q. "ls it true fat people tend to get seasick?" A. !\fore so than thin people, anyway. A 1''EW ORLEANS EX~ EClITIVE only hires salesmen who are excellent swimmers. On the theory any Southern gentleman who doesn't know1 how to swim has to be neurotic. Odd. But not just whimsy maybe . Some J>Sychiatrist.s n1aintain irs valid. A man who's scared of water, who doesn't turst i~ buoyaocy, who's terrified he'll sink, such a man, they say, is far too upt,ight. Still. what's wrong with the New Orleans "~xecutive's theory, t think is apparent. Namely, neurotic · salesmen are the Mail Trucks Go on Block 'I'he Huntington Beach Post Office is selling 57 three- wbeeled mail trucks at the main office, &nt Wa rner Ave. Prices range from '50 to $200 depending on the con- dition of the mail carriers. Most of the carriers were in ope ration until recently when they v•ere replaced by newer models. For additional informalion phone Lester L o u c k s , superintendent of the main· tenance shop at 842~- very best kind. STUDIES al the University of Pittsburgh purport to prove that female high s c h o o I teachers as a group are more responsive in love than other teach!rs • . . AN EXPERT on wild creatures says beware of beasts that bear the colors orange and black. such as tigers, gila mons ters and wasps ... IF ALL THE GOLD- DIGGERS on Dean Martin's show were synthesized into ooe good little girl, it's reported. she would tape measure 36-26-37, wear green, and prefer gin. NEXT TlME YOU bump In· to a stogie smoker, ask him what got him started on cigars. It's generally known the cigar smoker is more than usually conscious of his image. Take President Ulysses S. Grant._. for instance. He never smoked a cigar until a photogra pher asked him to pose with one in his mouth. Shortly thereafter. we 11 wishers sent him about 1,000 t,oxes of cigars. And by the time he got them all smoked up, he was hooked. WHAT DO the porcupine and the rhinoceros have in common? Not much. But you can knock either one un· conscious with a rap on the snout. Thal's from our Household Hinl!l file . . . • 14AT WHAT AGE," Inquires a subscriber, "do the orientals teach their youngsters to use chopsticks?" Abrut age 3. ALWAYS THOUGIIT If I dug straight down far enough I'd come out in China. But that's wrong. The Indian Ocean is the antipode of the contiguous United States. It's the man in Brazil who if he dug 'straight down would come rut in China. Amazing all the things a fellow doe~n't learn in school? Just found out, for instance, that M o s c o W , U.S.S.R. is closer 'to Washington. D.C. than Is Hooolulu, Hawaii. Your questfom and com- 111e11t.s are wtlcomed and will be used in CHECKING up· wherever possible. Ad· dress letters to L. M. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, Newport Beach, Calif., 92660. IN-SINK·ERATOR MODEL 77 SALE TH E NO. 1 DISPOSER WI. do wom •n buy mor• ln-Sin~·Er•lor1 ' ·1 I . thi n •nv other di1po11r1 l11ul1 u corro.ion- p•oof .t1inl111 1t11l. EJt.lu1iv11. Ii~. th.• ··w,~nthett•" tl.11 l1h you t l11r r•m • 1111· ly. And mo••· No wond1r !~1 wond11ful Mod•I 77 1!11 1 lif1ti"'1 torro11on w1rr1nty, A11 di §.y11r '"'" w1rr1nly, loo. The qu1li- ty th 1t midi l~·Sin~-Er tlor the Number Ont clitpo11t b1lon91 in you• ~itthen. MOOEL JlJ SALE 54999 52599 llG. SJ7.tl REG. SJJ.11 REPUBLIC "GEMINI" WATER HEATERS 20 Gal. • • • • 547.99 30 Gal. • • • • 549.99 •• 40 Gal. • • • • 559;99 50 Gal. • • • • 574.99 ,_ INSTALLATION A'AILAILI OPEN MON:· FRI. 9 A.M. -9 P.M. SAT .• 9 A.M. -6 P.M. -SUN. 10 A.M. -4 P.M. l hur~:l~y. F'tbruar~ 11, 1q71 DAILY PILOi 7 Studen ts Use Free Money l(itty CORYAWJS (UJ'll -"Our money, take what you need -give what you can." The sliJi is attached to an -open cash register a~ the Oregon State University stu- dent union. Jt was placed there a month ago by 10 studenta: v•ho pooled $15 In change for I.he initial kitty. Since then, the register has contained from a few pennies .started as an experlmtnl lo to a $2G bill -y,•hkh didn't see if 5tudents really wanted last Jong. -;;';;0;;';;ha;;';;'·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I Karen Byers, a junior in r political science and ane of the originators of the project, says "quite a few use ii." but no one knows th e circumstances of those y,·ho take and those y,·ho doa't. THE BEST USHER'S GREEN STRIPE SCOTCH She said the fWld was Rt1dtrd1ip potl1 pre~• "P11• nuh" 11 Oftt of tk1 worlcl '1 lftOif popultr c:ornic: itript. R11cl It cl1ily in fkt DAILY PILOT, ~1 START THE NEW VEAR OFF. WITH BIG $2.00 SAVINGS ........................... ; ,~ I . ~= .. " ' .. I !I lllmrt C.l lH•,Qitf,_., ... ...., "'S11tiJfat:tWn C~ • IR DATSUN • TOYOTA &. OTHERS s ! BRAND NEW ~~,•FUll . • I MorkC.llooooe .... ~.., ROAD TEST MAGAZINI! And Costs No Morel 4PlY s F 0 R 5l1113-5.lll113 &.!1)115-li.85115 5.&1115-5.91115 t. ..... ,1.$lllii.ff fd.h .T1111d tmO•·COH C11riil1 .. 1<a.11' Belted or UNmoY AL Whitewalls LAREDO •2.95Ellra &.95x14!071/14) l 15x141F71/14J 7 .35x14{[71/14) J.7h15(fJl/l 5) •15 95 1.50113 (111/13) *17'5 $1995 ..,,,,. 1.25'15 1&7111'1 (&11/15) 1.0t.13 ICJl/111 $22'5 $26'5 •2495 Mlilt1 l.IS1TS 011/15) All Thu CaL+1tJ2 II SUI h!b. Tn Dtfotll'I U1111111.10llllllll! SlJ1 mu 1995 ..... 11.1111 llllflj fl tu Wiiee1s· INCL.14" & 15" ••• FORD, PLY., & CHEY. CRAGAR Super Ch rome Wheels ••• 8.55114 (HJl/lfl 1.55115 (HJl/15) t.H/1.15115 (l71/1SJ UNIROYAL6.50x13 . TUBELESS i 95 ii llHft•lf (111 + 1111 ,,., b. lit J1r llft WORLD'S FINEST ••• SHO CKS ~::: :~~ ·-:-..• :::· ]\\\ :-:. ·-~·.·· UNIROYAL TUBELESS BRAND NEW fU LL'-4 PLY 7.75x14 7.75xl5 7.00x13 8.25x14 8.25x15 (F 78/14J (F78/15) 7.35x14 (G78/1 4) (G78/15) 8.55xl 4 (H78/14) 8.55xl 5 (H78/l 5) 9.00xl 5 (L78/l 5) 8.85xl 5 (J78/l 5J All n ... , ....... Sl.71,. SUI '"'" luh• '•• • •• Wloltt.tlll 1ttJ lltr1r FAT MAX RADIALS 2 SUl'ER BELTS Of RADIAL PROTECTION! •]6~~ SPECIAL ti ALL SIZES r.1.11. ,. ... •PlfCIAI. 10 POINr ... BRAKE RELINE •1595 IT@'S ALL $2295 U.S.CARS * 11•1U• W•ttl Cyll1•er1 H IU£D£tl 11IJ SS.15 ti. * DllUMS T1r1t• If NllDED 1111 ••• ,,. $1JS u. * flOIH GIEAS( SUlS It llltfl D 111J •• 11.51 "'"' * llETUIN SPRlN'S II NElDEO 1111,.,., $2.211"111 * M11t1rtJ1~ ll•Stl. W•Ll1ul1p 11tn111tlt"M•• 3005 HARBOR BLVD. GAROEN GROVE -14040 Brookhurst -530-3200 CORNER OF BAKER AND HARBOR COSTA MESA . NEWPORT BEACH AREA 557-8000 ANAHEIM· BUENA PARK 6962 Lincoln Blvd. -826-5550 FULLERTON -1321 Euclid St. -870.0100 . ." t ' \ .. . . . . :: ·: ,• '· • :; . . -: -" . • . ...... ·2'"r 'i . " . . . .. It DAILY l'ILOT Medi-Cal Deficit 'Too High' SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Slate ~partment of lteallh Care Services says Ule non· partisan office of Legislative Anal1st "mltinterpreted" data showing a $40 million Medi-Cal deficit. A study by an independent fiscal ·eiq>ert heallh care director Or. Earl \V. Brian said Wednesday, shov.·s that "withouL the cosl·saving and trims" ordered into effect last nee. 15. the program faced a 4137 million budget overrun. Principal Analyst T nm Dooley told la\\'makers Feb. 1 that Brian cut back on health services 31h times more than was necessary v.•hen he ordered the" 10 percent across the board cuts in all Medi·Cal payments plus a freeze on "nonessential" services. And almost half of the re· mainlng dericit V.•as caused by foot-dragging ad- ministrators rather than big increases in weUare rails, Dooley said. Dooley said his estimate nf the $40.5 million overrun was based on more recent figures oo ·welfare caseloads than those used by Brian. The Legislative Analyst's of- fice does extensive research for the legislature. Brian said the• independent fi rm or Coates and Crawford of San Francisco, consulting actuaries. used more accurate lnfurmalion in calculating the budget deficit. Ten Injured In Westwood Gas Blast LOS ANGELES (UPI) Ten persons v.·ere injured in a cas explosion and fire al • tw01Story Westwood Village oflict building Wednesday. Oae of the injured wa s a fire department captain. Damage was estimated at $150,000. The explosion ap- parenlly occurred in the base- ment or lhe building where gas company employes y,·ere working. Fire department officials sakl the blast may have been the result of ruptured gas lines caused bf Tuesday's big earthquake. The fire department captain • Thursday, rebrll.tr)' 11, 1971 Fishing Boat Fir ed Vpon By Ecuador SAN DIEGO (UPI) -An American tuna fishing boat was seized in Ecuadorian waters \\lednesday, the 18th victim of Ecuador"s 200-mile territorial fishing limits Utis year. Skippe r George Sousa, San Diego, was talldng to the owner of the boat. !he John F. Kennedy, by radio when she was seized. Sousa told owner U:iu Brito, "the Kennedy was about 100 miles off t he Ecuadorian coastline. It had just arrived in the area and was adrift v.•he:n fired upon ." Brito said he was informed the Kenm'dy v.·ould be releas- ed at Salinas after paying a $45,000 fine. Ed Silva, vice president of the American Tuna Boat As- sociation based here, said the Kennedy was the second Amer- ica n tuna boat fired upon by Ecuador this year. The Apollo, the world's largest tuna boat, "'as fired at prior to 1ts seizure Jan. 18. Nooe of the 16 crewmen .aboard the 65<J.ton vessel 1vere injured. accori:iing to Si!V'a . Quake Dan1age Deductible LOS ANGELES I AP ) Persons who ha d earthquake losses in excess of $100 may deduct the damage from their 1970 income tax reports - even if they have already fil- ed. the Internal Revenue &rvice office here s a i d Wednesday. Frank S. Schmidt, district director of IRS, said the deduction was made possi ble by President Nixon's declara- tion of the quake area as a major disaster. Losses . which are deducted must be of a noncommercial nature, Schm idt said. wa s struck by a colla.psinglfii_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_, \\·all. He suffered major in· juries as did the I wo gas company employes working near the scene. Seven persons seated in a restaurant nex t door to the demolished building ·were in- jured. All IO v.·ere taken to the ' UCLA ~JedicaJ Center ~or1 fractures, cuts, smoke 1n- halaHon and shock. Traffic v.•as blocked for more than an hour at the corner of Kinross Md Glendon Avenues because or rubble and l ..,. (~~ '"'S',~ Ir iewels by 1oseph APPRAISALS DIAMONDS GEMSTONES ESTATE JEWEL RY Soytl\ Ca.it Pl111 I l ristal 1t Sin Di1q11 Fwy. 540·,066 glass in the street. ~~~~~~~~~ Where can you find real beauty?· A ,veat poet once said, "Beauty is in the eye of the beholder." The Bible shows that beauty is a quality of God, who is the Soul of n1an. 1'his means tl1at all the beauty w..: c;ou!J t:\·.:r hopC for is already present in our own real consciousness. But to find it, we need to tum lo God, and to. sec ou~lves in relation tO Him - the source of true beauty. Christian Science can he1p you do Utis. The Bible Lesson on "Soul" to be read in our church this Sunday is a good place to begin . • You are wannly invited to co1nc . 01R1S11AN SCIENCE CHURCH SERVICES C•1t• M"• -Fl,,t Clt-rth 11f Chrl,t, k .. 1tl1t 2110 Mn• Y•rd• Or., -11 A.M • Hntf•tt1111 le•clt -Pi"t ClturcJri. of Cltrlst, Sc .. 11llM ltJri. f Ollff -t :J O I 11 A.M, NP'pert fNc.Jri. -FJnit Clatrteh ef Chtl•t, kle11rf1t JJOJ YI• Ll4• -9:15 & 11 A.M, H..,,._,. hocfl -S.C"41 Chteh el Chrltt, S<Jettht JlOO raclflc View DJ., C•r•• lfel M., -10 A.M. Na11aed by Younger Task Force to Study Gamn1g SACRAMENTO (AP) -At- ty. Gen. Evelle J. Younger has named a It.man task force to determine whether further legaHiaUon or gambl- ing in California would attract organized crime or cause other poltce problems. Younger said Wednesday that although most of the mful named to the panel are "burdened with prejudices'' against liberaliilng gambling lav.·s, they "'ere selected for their abUlll to cast their bias. ed notions aside and pursue lhe study with open minds. The task force or law of- ficers, prosecutors and legal experts includes "some ol the best men in I a w en- forcement," he said, who "hopefulty will come back with information the . legislature will c on s i d e r pursuasive." Younger said ~ operation would include sending staff 1nvestigators to Nevada. New York and New Hampshire to SOU11d out how legalized gambling there has affected law enforcement. If the task: force evidence "indicates that I e g a Iii e d gambling would not be at- tractive to organized crime and would not be to the public detriment . we should have no reluctance to so ~ate," he said. But if the evidence indicates that expanding g a m b I i n g "would attract or g a n. i zed crime, lead td corruption of public officials or otherwise be to the publlc detriment • v.·e v.'111 have facts to support our opinion." Members of Younger's force include the district attorneys of Los Angeles, San Franctsco and Alameda counties: San Francisco's police ctuef and the sheriffs of San Diego, San Joaquin and Alameda coun· ties. Asked if he is personally opposed to legalized gambling, Younger said "it's fair to say J traditionally have." But he sakl he feels his mind is open because "if it isn't, the legislature isn't going to pay any aUtntion '' to his task force 's repc;irt. ------ •• , •• WE'RE CELEBRATING THE BIRTHDAYS OF LINCOLN AND WASHINGTON ••• THURS.· FRI.· SAT.· MON. FEBRUARY 11 • 12 • 13 • 15, BY OFFERING YOU THESE OUTSTANDING VALUES! SUITS DOUBLE BREASTED SUITS • , • $<19. LARGE SELECTION OF DACRON WOOL & WOOL BLENDS -MANY STYLES -TO $69, ~su1rs FORMERLY GENTRYS 2300 HARBOR BLVD. (Harbor •I Wi110n St.) HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER MALL YOUNCiLAND'S. ~•mm mnrinv~ii ' BIG SALE DAYS 4 Thunclay • Friday • Saturday • Monday 'Feb. 11 • 12 • 13 • 15 GlftlS COllS & CAR .CO~~S UG£1 , .. , A EVERY STYLE, EVER'f coA'I' IN ALL SIZES ALL COLORS-CHOOSE FROM HUNDREDS '1'0 $30 VALU£5 10 99 • GIRLS DRESSES • Buy ONE Ar REGULAR PRICE G•r A SECOND ONE 1PR ON1r I $ ~~ f GIRLS TOPS·BLOUSES AND CAPRIS VALUES TO $5 ................... -.. JUMPERS VALUES TO $3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . GIRLS GOWNS AND P.J.'s VALUES TO $6 ....... _ ............. . BOYS PAJAMAS VALUES TO $4.50 . . . . . . . . . . . ' .... ' ... INFANTS T·SHIRTS VALUES TO $6 ........ ; ............ . sac s177 $249 '1'9 s149 All SKIRTS , cro OFF • BOYS T·SHIRTS VALUES TQ $6, .•.•.•..............•• s171 BOYS SLACKS '1!.!, 1.IMITIO 2300 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER 545-1440 Thursday, Ftbruary 11, 1Cl71 • DAILV PILOT ~ ' .. :: . • 3 BIG DAYS THUR. FRI. SAT.I February 11th, 12th & 13th :· U.S. l\11ail \VASHINGTON (UPI) -1'0 charge more fo1· Jess would he a disastrous policy for a business firm that had to com· pct e for cuslonle:s. The U.S. Postal Service can gel away \\•i\h ii, however, because it has a 1nonopoly in the business or carrying n1ail. ll has initiated action to raise !he price of a first class letter from six to eight cents, It postcard from five to seven ce1.1t~. and airmail from ten to elel'Cll cents. The increases arc expected to take effeet around J\lay 15. Postal authorities frankly acknov.'ledge that the higher charges won't be accompanied by any immediat e im- provement in service. "This increase in rates is to catch up "'ith costs i11c~rred over the past and not to pay ror improvements in the fu!ure," savs A s s i s ta n t Postmaster General James W. Hargrove. '"The higher rates 1ri!I have no direct effect on the crficicney or the mails." Jn fact. lo save money, the fQSl<1I service plans to make trrtain "adjustments" in ex· ~ti.ng mail service. One of tl'w:!m is elimination of Satur· day mail service in downtown ~reas of big cilies and other ~u/aces ''here postal officials Uecide it is not really .J:ecessary. ~Another plan calls for sharp-- reduch;ig postal staffs over e weekend, allowing mail pile up for sorting on Sun· y night. 1Postal officials insist these danges should be ca lled "ad- j1ibncnts" rather than cut-~ in service. But th is antic distinction may not much comfort to mail use rs w have to wait even longer lh<11 now for lhe delivery of tlieir letters. In some parts or lhc coun· try, ril least, mail service already is slo\v and erratic. 'fhc , nation·s capita I . Washington, and its chief business center, New York, °'-........; are among the cities \\'here · mail users are apt to en· counter bizarre a n d in· expli~blc delays. It tiapJkns even to high government officials whose mail might be expected to receivr special handling. A few \1't'eks ago, President Nix· on mailed an important letter lo forincr Gov. \Villiam \V. Scranton fl[ Pennsylvania. The letter lcfl the \Vhite llousc at 4 SO p.m. Thursday, as regiStcred. special delivery airn1;1!1. Three days later, the President called to discuss the malkT -and learned that lhe jettrr still had not been delivered to Scranton. Pa. AJt:ilhcr letter mailed from the 1\llhite House on Nov. 8 \\'as delivered lo the-UPI \Vas ington Bureau -barely lv;o ·1ocks away -an Nov. 12. G Icy proofs of a book, mail from New Yo rk on Jan. 27 \1•ilh extra postage paid l1or special handling, ar· rived al the National Pre~ building in \Vashlngton orw F'eb. ~ -eight days in transit. A l~tler mailed from the U.S. Capitol by a member of C~ress took 6 days. to reach 'a news office in down! 'l1 Washington, only I~ blocks ·~·ay. It m<tt not be rain or snow or gloG:n of night, bu t SOMETA°ING seems lo be staying lllese couriers from the S\\'ift completion of their appointed rounds. Do Yo~• FAL E TEETH Koep omlng Loose? Don't be al'lilld tll•t rour Calle t.ee\h Will •!om. or Cl.rop Ju.t '' \ht Wl'Onl "''· P'or mon MC11rlt' aod oomtc &nrinll• PA8'1'UTU Dtntura A em;h·e Powder on rour Ill•'"· PAS etrH hold• (leuture1 ll":f'ri~~f l M•l .... uni ....ier, PA '!lot ae10. N1> •11mmr f-r, .,....tJ tt. DenlUl'e'I thll~ l'li .,.. ttnn~1 to llt11Jit). a.. rour I tl•Ottllt lllWIJ. C11t ttir1·to•UM .... 'fl"Vl' ·~ &U dfutl CO\U!,ten. Free Delivery LAKEWOOD 4433 Candlewood Avenue Candlewood Shops (across from Lakewood Ce~ter) Phone: 634-4134 J With the purchase of a king size "Ortho Posture" mattress and 2 matching box springs or, at the same price, two complete "Ortho Posture" Twin size sleep sets or two complete "Ortho Posture" Full size sleep sets. "Ortho Posture" King size or Queen size• sets include the Ortho-Pak & Double Bonus. Ortho The name that stands . for quality and value ..• so you can rest on maximum support and comfort! The name that assures your "Ortho Posture" is packed with extra thick cushioning for true, full-t ime support. The name that assures you of comfort, ease and durability from the innerspring out! The name smart peopl e always look for when they want the very most for their money. KING SIZE MATTRESS Ind 2 BOX SPRINGS or 2TWINS 2 'FULLS MATTRESSES & MATTRESSES & BOX SPRINGS • OR BOX SPRINGS •tv offer available In $2 IJ 985 QUEEN SIZ·E only 11 • -~ 6 You bet! .. : the offer includes the original and famous ORTHO-PAK • Fieldcrest no-iron King or Queen size top sheet • Fieldcrest no-iron King or Queen size fitted bottom sheet • 2 King, or Queen size bolster pillows • 2 pillow cases • King or Queen size mattress pad • King or Queen size metal frame on easy-rolling casters DOUBLE BONUS King or QuHn: headboard plus quilted bedspread. - Twin or Full: plastic head- board · and metal frame on easy-rolling ·casters. The Nation ~s Largest Chain of Mattress Specialists SANTA ANA and ANAHEIM FOUNTAIN VALLEY 16131 Harbor Blvd. Next (co.rner of Edinger) to Zo dy's • Phone : 839-4 570 1811 West Lincoln Avenue Between Euclid and Brookhurst Avenues Just East of Fed Mart • Phone: nS-2590 • - ro DAILY PJLOT TlturUI~. F1br111r1 ll, 1971 QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi 9 Bla~k CongreMsmen Given Cold Shoulder. WASfUNQ'IV)I !UPI) -llllMrt ol 4morlca" 1111rd. bltcl<Oul apporenlly ruled Ulal Nearly a y1v Qt, nine bl•cl -POIH for picture• with tut. congressmen a.Peel Utt WhJt• ti collC11e 1Wden\I who took Rlperltr1 1 were struck by House for lft lppolftlm!nl WIUI • fo••·nndln • lrip It lo•lh lht numbor of Hm'8 Preu President Nl1on ti ti~ Utt: " ".,, . ..., •-R PHght of bl1oQ In 4mt1l•1. \'j1ln1w a11d rfh,rnod wUh -"ftlllry tnald L. Ziegler " 111ld of 1 query about They •rt 1Ull wa\l~ '°' • r111 report, Jnd1Chln1 : •1J won't take that a face to !aot mt1llJIC With Nl.,il'o 1111 plld1• to main-qu11llon." the chief tltoVllVt, ind JJ,t t1ln an "optn admlni slraU11n" Nl1on'1 naval aide, Cem- White House brushes aside was dusted eff last week by mander Charles (Chuck) E. questions about the aituatlon. repo'rtera stymied by the ex-Larsen, is 1o!ng back lo sea The silence is especially traordinary cloak of silence again in or-er to get the duty pw:zling in light of post-elec· around news from Jn(fochine . credit. euential for pro- tlon moveJ by Nixon toward Officials ignored the needle:. motion. He needs 1 y11r on • lbt payoU or · more than 1 year's efrort by the President "Next time we'll invite )111U told 1.!lsa Sills after ber to sin& for a Kine.'' Nlxon perrormanet. and Mn. Ni10n to arrange 1-----------------~-­ an appearance by her. more conciliatory postures on The information blackout a nuclear submarine t.o move many political fronts. contrasted sharply with Nix· up the ladder and ha1 r1t11c-=::::;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;=;1 The President is a bosy on's actiom during the Cam. tantly made a decilion to"(- man. But last week during bodian incursion of r-.tay. 1970, depart. She finally was able to fit into her s che du le a '"theatrical" evening al the White House. The Nixons first wanti!d her to sin& at a wplte- tle .dinner honoflng Frflncb Pre1lden t and Mr1. Georges Pompidou; then at a dinner honoring Brit13h P r J m e Minister Edward Heath. She couldn't make either. the height of the te nsion aver whe.n he went on televi1ion Howev er, Larsen will ht sta· developments In Indochina, to announce that American tioned at I an Dieao. not too Nixon managed to work in troops were «in the march far from Nls:on's s an one of his regular weekly toward enemy 1anctuari11. Clemente White Hou&e. ';happy hours" when visitors There were indication• that Star Beverly Sills 1! tb1 CHU..DBEN LIKE UNCLE LEN come and go in large num· Nixon had plans to hold his New York City opera company bers. first press conference of the was 1 smashing success at Du ring that latest '"hour for lr~y~e~or~la~st~w~e~e~k,~b~u~t ~th~e~o~e:w:s J'~he~W~h~it~e ~H~o~u~se~la~st~w~.,,~k~, ~~~~~~~~~~::;;.~:;:;.:;;~~~;.;;;~~~~~:::~ courtesy visits" he: .....-- -Presented the "heart ef lhe year" award to speaker Carl Albert. "So, unfortunately. is Webtr, Smith, Barkley and Company,.," -Presented µie ''Truck Driver of the Y11r'' •ward to a Tes11 driver. -Received the first "Big Thur .·Frl • .S.t.-lun. FEIRUARY 11-12-13·14 ALBUM SPECIALS OF THE WEEK I CHICAGO Ill COLUMllA Doublr Album includrs: Si na A Mcen Tunl' Kid, LonP· Hnr1~ I• Just A Word, W)Jal F.J1e Can t Say, I Don't $ \\'ant Your l\foncy. Travt'I Suite, Flig_ht 602, l\olot.orboat To !\tar•. 1''rel', A fi'J·ee Cnuntry, .At TI'!e Synrlse, Happy Causr I'm (tolnf.: l<lomo, 1'1othr r, Lowdown, An Hour Jn Th,. Shn\\'f'r. It l[ard Risln' l\tornlng Without Break· fa~t Off To \\'ork, Fallin' Out, Ottamin' Home, Morn- Jni:; Blur!; Ai,:al n. Elegy. Whr n All The Laughter Die!! In Sorro11•. Canon. Once Upon A Tlmf', Proirress~ The 'ApprOflchl nR Strirm, ll,lttn V5. itan, The End. JISUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR INCLUDll: Overturr, l~l'aven On Their l\linds, \Vha t's ThP Bu1.1./$tran1:tr Thing l\ly1tltyln1t, Evtrything's Al· riRhl, Thi• J,.su1 Jlo1u1 1 Dit , 110 .. anM, Simon Zealote!I / Po11r Jtoru111.Jen1, J>l11t1''1 Drl'An1, Tht Ttmple, Every• fhin1f1 Alrla:ht , l [kin't 1<nn1\' How To Love ~fim, Damnrd f or Al\ Tlm,./Blood Money. 'J'hto IA.st SupJWr, C.-fhJ.tm1™' ((only "'I nt to •l)'I, Tht Arrest. Pr.trr·1 1)(-nu~l. PHA1t And Chrl~t. Kini:" llrrod'1 Sonf:., .Judas' 0.-11h, Trial Brfort' Pl111.tr, Super1tar, Crucifixion. John !'\lnrlern: forty-One. List $9.98 = E NITIY GRITIY DIRT BAND HURRY QUANTITIES LIMITED i "Uncle Ch1 rl1y end hi' do9 Teddy." 1 SALE s21& LIST $4 .98 PARTRIDGE FAMILY Ea. I = 3 GRANTS GETS IT ON WITH EXTRA SAVINGS BUY NOW & SAVE 8 TRACK TAPES STEREO TOP ARTISTS TOP LABELS Jtfftr&on Airplane Bobby Sh1rm1n J Dog Night Ea. .. ~ '2~. I ~ """" J Tht GutH Who 1 PcR~~E $)97 $6.95 SAVE OVER $3.00 llOOKHUUT AT ADAMS HUNTINGTON BEACH ·Cll&&ic styled console color television model CL883B'T with the . SylTania Plus Three Feature Pack. SAVE S100 Now Only $84911 TV Rl:CBPTION SIMULATED w..1 ...... s...i-i. £i..i.t< ,..,..,,._ 1 ... !THE ONCE-A . This is the saJes event that smart buyers have been waiting for. Now, !or a limited time, you can get all the quality and engineering excellence Sylvania home l!ntertainment products axe famous for •... and with up to $100 in savings. But don't delay, if you mis.5 this opportunity you may have to waft a whole year foe another chance at bargains like tbse. . . 'nle n"" Plus Three Featutt Pkt eol« teteridon from Sytrania brings you the 11test adv1nces in tel evl1ion ltchnolOfY. Like the solid st.ate \Gibr1J.11r-1001~1 chauis wh!Ch eliminal.ea all tubes: I.he major source of componenl d1maging htil and waited power. ! ~Th ... new models also hive the bi"est screen ner. 25 inches diagonal J meuure. Thi• 011tatandln1 picture tube combines, brightness and contrast lo tit? you the 1hlr,..a. color IYallabJe tod1y at any price. I And tbt third Ph11 ls IRl&ant Push-butt.on Tuning. You electronically sekct any one ot tl•vtn pr .. tuned, pre-selected. st.atk>ns (or a perfecL picture every ~:me you tum on your Mt or chanft channels. · SAVE s75 on either of these color televisions with the $ylwnl4 Plus l1vu Feature P<K:k .. Contemporary st.y ll"d color co n· sole model CL860. Mediterranean styled color consolll model CL862 . YOUR CHOICE Now Only $72488 8'1nnia Cionlemporary styled Clll'*>IC CIOlorTV model CF702, has 23"diag. mMs. screen, Walnut grained ri11yl on met.al cabinet. .Hu the dependable .fmbiili:a/85n<J chassis. SAVES3Q HURRY! QUANTITIES UMfTEDATlHEsE LOW SALE PRICES! .Now Only s449's COSTA MESA 411 E. S1vent11nth St. 646-1684 doily 9·9 Sot. 9·6 EL TORO l•gun• Hill_l Pl11a RADIO DISPATCHED TV & APPLIANCE. SERVICE \Vt h111•t our O\\n flN"I of homr sf'r\'il'r trul'lc' &IRffrd "'ith ft'IC'lory traint'd !iervit'r' !l:pt'('1atisl5 to d!!l 1rr 11.11d !IC'rvict the product$ 1ve sf'll. f•ctory AuthorltM S•rYIC• for: 137.J830 daily lQ.6 M/F 10·9 SYLVANIA • MAYTAG -RCA · FRIOI D~l•E •OR DlP!NDAOLE 548 , 37 'RllNDLY SIRVICE, CALL • • 8 Free Polaroid instant pictures on us. Buy 3 packs of Co lorpack Land f ilm. .,et a free pack of Polaroid Type 107 B&W f ilm. luring this special offer you can ke eight extra black and white ots absolutely tree -when you y 3 pa cks of Polaroid's Type 108 lor film. Get your free pack when u buy your Polaroid ·color film. id have some tree fun soon. er ends Feb. 13th. )96 . per pack Limit 3 Per CusJomer ELL & HOWELL CUBE ~ROJECTOR Model No.977 USES COMPACT 40-CAPACITY SLIDE CUBES ' GAF 690 AUTOFOCUS PROJECTOR Sale $ 95 Price • You locus tht first slide only .. , the projec1or t8kll5 car1 of tli1 otMr 99! • Sh•rp 1/3.5 l•ns • SOQ.w•lt brilli•nce • Forw1rd, reverse cycle et projector i nd nn rtmott co1d • Sell.eontelntd c1rryinlj; tlH 1nil one spill·prool GAF lOO·shde wertlc1I trey. 1-~~~~~~~~~~~~--1 ' For Pictures You Can't Afford ro Mi ss Sale Price Linlit 3 Per Custo111er POLAROID 320 CAMERA Sale Price l STYLE D IN WOOD·GRAIN, BLACK, ANO CHROME LUMINAR OPTICAL SYSTEM 1 EXCLUSIVE 20" LENS ELEVATION ~ PREVIEW/EDIT STATION •EXCLUSIVE SCAN{SEARCH FEATURE • EASY DRDP·IN LOADING Sale Price POLAROID 350 With free Flashgun a ~OO·WATT QUARTZ-HAI.OGEN LAMP, CIA 10-HOUR LIFE • LIDE EJECTOR 1 SY-ACCESS SLIDE CHANGING MECHANISM • ICE RECALL I l~P EJECTOR ,_ • CO~D STORAGE COMPARTMENT • 4"f/3.5 PROJECTION LENS' e 000-QRAIN TOP WITH HANDLE • ZEONLYl"19~1a" $ Sale Price 88 Thursday, 'ebni~ry 11, 1q71 DAIL V PILOT J f '.\ 1 • Bell & Howell 314 autotoad Super 8 Zoom • movie camera Sale Price ! 'op in i::i rt rid!,ic, :. ta rl shoo! - 1ng movies like 11. pro! Pull po\vcr trigger in iH:lion pislol l!ri p. Fin~cr lip conlro\ zootn lrns: reflex vicwf'r; footacc 1.:ounlct; run-lock cnnlrol. . -, The Sharp- Shootin' Super 8 zoom! • Automatic Thru-th•-l•n• $ CdS •xposure control e Sharp f /1.7 zoom l•n• .. • Briaht reflex vie-Aflnd•r • Low-liaht warnin& sianal e Film puls• indlcato~ • L-shaped &rip with thumb rel•••• trlu•r m•chanism e Easy-to-handle, compact desian • El•ctrlc motor driv• Sale Price ENJOY BETTER LIVING WITH GRANTS' CREDIT . . • . ' ·~ ' • • • • • • • • ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' . . • ' • • ' ' ' • • • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' • • I I . ' . . . . ' . . • ' ! '· • ' ' ' . ( .. .. .. .. ~ ; ~ ~ • • • • • . • • ' • ' • ' ' ' • • • • • . . • • • • • ' • • • • • • • . • • • • . ' • • • • • . . . • • . . . • • • • • . • • • • • • . , '• DAllY PllOT Dealh Notice• . J••N ltt Burton. "or JI. ot 350 "'•OC-, 1 11, C1111• Mr ... Of!r"' 01a111, l'e0tu1rv 10. S...vl<•• 1>11'10in• •• 8t!I llt~w•v Motfu•"'· l'•tED•ICl'ISEN EOWl •O H"'1tV f'rle<i•ICllHn Jiot 11, of 15J 0.rrtll St . CClllt ,,.... Otlr ol or1th, F•11<u1rv • Survi\e<I riv llwr tl<othvs, H1rrv, of Co"• MU•, "..,...., 1...i lt1v, '""''' Grt nt Fr...,dchltll. Tr•· ••: 11• 1lt1tt1, £mm• a-. l•url ltm•, lltrtr.. Jotf\1, E.111 S•eYi•rt. !.elmt Htt-111" tl'IO £Hot (h"\tl'f'ifll St"'lc"' F'101v. ' PM. 8tll llrll.OWIV """'· Wlllo Rev. J•mtl G 811111 111!kll•l""', lnle,,nl'f!I, Ptdllt V\t ·., Mtm11tltl Ptrl. Belt llro.Owtv Mn''"••V Dl•.Clort. H.t.WLl!Y JMfl>h £". ktw!tv. D~lt DI 1111111. FttH'U· 111'\1 J. Sunr1ve<1 t>Y Ptrtnt•. Rrv. 1110 M,,. Ltw•enc:t H1w11v; 1lt11r, Mrt. K11111"'h Nldct l, H-•u!u; 11r1r.Gmotll1•, M" II.er· Ill• Htwlev. Dnltr!D. S..rV•Ct•. FrlOtv, Ftt1<\lttV 11. 1 PM, Mtll'G0\11 C~urcll of Ltount 1-i1ll1, with Or Krrmlt LOl\9 ct 1<0tt11 Hollv ... -. otllcitllno. lnlt'l"ment, El Toro Olllrlct (tmtlfrv. ~lltfttr Lt· ount 811cn MO"uerv. DorrC!on Nll!HAUS Otvld .t.1111 Nltll•u1. 1116 Shtllmtr Or. (11111 Mtu. Otlr ot Ottth. FH>rutrv t . Su...,hted l>V wlte, Mtrl~., son. 1Clm~•lv 1 !11u11>!tr, ~lie; 1lsitr~, Mt ri!v" Vu!• kin• 111<1 P1l•lclt McllrNn; ffthrr, L11ron Nlel\1us. s ... 1ce1, s11ur<11¥. 1 PM, Perto F.,,.lly COIOlll•I Funor•I HOmr. "U.T1<001" J•m•• LOUii Plitfool ...... "'· O! 71• K1>11~ l'l1c1. (11111 Mt ... Dal• OI Ofltll, F~l'UI•~ •. SurYl~eo bv .. 11r, M":ii•th1; ''"" """'' J""'n L. "'° Ew1111 Plllfl!Olr '"'° 0tu(lf>ler1. Liii! Ann 1n<1 P•trklt : 11111H'ler, Helen PllllOOI; two brotl'>fo•J. 8<>0 i ncl G~llO Pl1Uool: 1lllff, Lucille Prt !t, 111 01 Ca.ti Me ... llo .. rY. tonlllll, Thllr1· a•r. 1:JO PM, aerr l •11tdw1v c111~1. Requi..m. Meu, FridlY. t :JO AM. St. JoK,.lms Coll"Glk Church. lntt rmtnl, G09d S/lt'l>l'>ford Ctmettrv. lie/I llr11t<l'W1r MOrlu1rv, Dlrtclll'"I. ll:Or tf.OUl:T Jovc1 lt0<>lectu1f. !.M-U Jivenl!I~ M•la•cl, L1w n1 Hiii•. °"''"' Ot••n. Fft>Ntf"1 10. ~vrviVMI l>Y son. Gtr•IO L Ra~llQUtl• <11u11111r. Mvrllt Halmtt: lll:PSllll, Fred c. ltapleouel; 11111r. G11ov1 "'""1111111. ServlcH wl11 bl htlO Frloov, Fet>rut rv 11. J PM, Ptc!flc View Cl\1pel. llll.r!I• .......... P1dlic vi ... M-1•1 P•••. PKI· lie V!tw MOrTut ..... Dl•KtDro. BALTZ l'tfORTUARlES Corona del l'ttar .. OR 3·S4SD Costa J\1esa . , .. mi 6-ZUf • BELL BROADWAY MORTIJARY 110 Broadway, Cosla l'tfesa u l-S43l • 1\1L-CORM1CK LAGUNA BEACH MORTIJARY 1195 Laeo• Canyon Roel. Of.MIS • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery l\fortuary Chapel l5fO Pacific Vie w Drive Newport Beach, Californil "4-%781 • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7101 Bolsa Ave. \\'estminster . . 193"'15%5 • s~ums· MORT\JARY 627 ~lain SL Huntington Be•ch 53~ • to Meet Long Beach 'Queens' • Ill ' lkllEDS el KO)tG ~o a ORANGE Queen Elizabeth, !ht f o r m e r passenger liner. Jeft P o r 1 E\•erglades. Fla. Wednesday on her way to becoming home for Chapman Colleg~'s World Campus Afloat. She will steam lo Hong Kong where she will be refitted and then will make a historic £lop in September in Long Beach, "·here her sister shi1). the Queen tttary, is mak ing her home. When she bulbs in l.Dng Beach to take on students for Che globe circling conege semester, it will mark only the third time tbe two ships GeoUrey Marr, ex-clipper of Her latest U1p ls lO be a to meet standards for sailing, have been ln the same port tM •year-old retired ocean JS,UOO.mile hopscotch voyage But Cmdr. W. Hsuan said al the same time. liner. expec\td to last 45 days. The water would be jettisoned to \Vben both "'ere queen" of The EUt.abeth, rechriltentd ,lhfp will be attended by 90 make her sit level. the Atlantic, the two ships the S.S Sea wise University, fChine.ae and Engllsh sailors To stave off last minute were in porl together only was retired from act i y e ·and c1U at ports in the West liens against the ship -the twice -in New York in 1940 service as an ocean liner af'd lndie1~ Cape Town, South Queen was $13 million in hock and in South Hampton, Eng. settled in Florida as a tourist Africa and Singapore. following her stay in South in 1946. attractton t~o years ago. She Marr, who will accompany Florida -agents for the ship At the moment, the flopped in her new role ancf the old ship a1 an advl_ser. posted a $40,000 bond, ac- Elizabeth looks like a poor drove her promott:s Into said that it would be sailing cording to Port Commissioner relation compared lo her bankruptcy. with only half • boiler room, Phil McConagagy. • In NEWPORT BEACH, Fob. I ~ 12 CUatom Tailoring tor Men l at Fantnttc Hong Kong Qi ......... ....., ............ 1111 S.llo, t• ... Special affe' ?. .. 2 SUITS $11 ... ~~~. \' and 1 SHllllT ••• for •otlT'f Cll "{ MR. N. M. NARI, 6'12·8252, 9 • • 9 pm "°" TRAVELODGE, 6~08 Wost Co•st/Hlghw•y Un•ble to vltlt? Just write l bt on our m1lhrw !lat. McNede, K.P.O. Box ·72'6, Kowloon, Hong Kong sister shiip which is in tbe The giant vessel was bought cruising at a maximum speed Owner Tung plans to spend midst or a $60 mi 11 ion in auction for $3 .2 million by of 14 knots instead of her another $2 million irl rehauling remodeling project. Chinese shipping magnate potential 30. the Queen to meet safety re· "Ifs very sad, she's rusly .. JC~.~Y~.~Tun~~g~who~~is~re~mode~~ling:~~The;~•l~d~Q~u~ee~n~'s~s~te~r~n~is-q~u~~~e~me~n~i..~a~n~d~ou~t1fit~he~r~a•~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ and that sort of thing; l hope it into a floating university. sitting too low in the water a university by September. she can look better in the future," said Commodore 'Professor's Appeal Rejected by Court • SAt>.'TA ANA -An appeal by Dr. Stu.art Silvers against his conviction and six-month 'Friends' Sponsoring Ba y Stroll Orange County reskients will be able to take walking tours of Upper Newport Bay Feb. 13 and March 13 from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Sponsored by Friends of Newport Bay, the tours will be guided by specialists in the f i e I d s of archaeology. p a I e o nto\ogy. ornithology, botany and biology. Speakers will include Dr. Charles Greening of Fullerton, president of the organization : Wesley Marx , author of "The Frail Ocean"; Paul Colburn, former director of the Tucker Wildlife Sanctuary; La n c e Gilbertson and Gary James. Orange Coast C o I t e g e biologists, and John Johnson. biology instructor at Corona del ~1ar High School. For f u r t h e r information about the toun phone 673-0894 or 646--0154. UCI Professor jail term on charges or discurbing the peace at Cal State Fullerton has been re- jected by the appellate division of the Orange County Superior Court. Silvers, 33, of 114 7th St., Seal Beach. now has 14 days in which to file an appeal with a higher court. Failure to do so will mean execution of the sentence imposed on the former Cal State Fullerton philosophy professor last May 29. ' Silvers was convicted after being identified in h i s municipal court trial as one of the leaders in the F'uJ.lerton campus riots last March 3. It was testified that he en· couraged s tud en l s and militants to attack police and damage campus facilities. Jt "'as argued for Silvers al the appellate hearing that he had not had sufflcient time to prepare for his municipal court trial. The three·judge bench ruled in favo r of Municipal Court Judge James Cook. Court Files Show Highs SANTA ANA -Orange County Superior Court filings and dispositions reached new highs during 1970, according Now on Board · t" as s istant Ceur't IRVINE -Dr. David W. Furnas, associate professor of surgery at UC Irvine's College of Medicine, has been elected to the Board of Directors of the Educational Foundation of the American Society o f Plastic and Reconslructive Surgery. Dr . Fu mas, a Santa Ana resident. bas been on the faculty at UCI since 1969 and currently heads the division of plastic surgery. Administrator Henry Rogers. Rogers said 33,030 filings were made , compared to 30,071 in 1969. Dispositions jumped to 28,328, an increase over the 26,035 total or the year berore. Civil filings, i n c I u d i n g dissolulions of m a r r i a g e , personal probate and eminent domain came to 2 4 ,429 . Criminal cases totalled 2.687, while juvenile case totals reached S,027. RENOWN NYLON ECONOMY 4·Pl.Y Four fuH plia9 el runt<! nrlan ..,.&. ".uM ""0011., • f,00! with ilOVllncfll oo.i1n •AG <Dn,!fu<lion. PRI> f\.Ul F.E.T. rn1111 PllTIE 14.l) $1.71 11.lJ 2 04 u.u l .17fl.1CI 11." "!.ll/?.JS 11.tO 2.~, Unbeatable For Color In The Summ er Shade Garden Just Arrived . . . The Finest Bulbs Ever ! * Ruffled Form *Rose Form * Picotee * Hanging Basket Form .•• Highest Quality Selected From elajt '/jea1· ~ mojt Beautiful Bloom WE'LL SHOW YOU HOW TO PLANT THEM I EXTRA LARGE TUBERS ' $198 -·· " (}ooJ Valnlinej ••••• : .... • • • • • •• :···· a1•e .J./.a1•J :Jo Jind Yours to the Finest Flowe rs From YOUR FAVORITE CREDIT CARD IS YOUR PASSPORT TO Char<Je by Phone FLOWERS, PLANTS , TREES, FERTILIZER, VALENTINE GIFTS TOT COLORF L SPLEND R OFA SUM R STILL TIME TO PLANT W VARIETIES AS WELL .t t OLD FAVORITES .. . e TROPICANA e PEACE e A9U.IUS e PRES. HOOVER e MOJAVE 'ClfCUS f e CAMELOT e DUET e ANGEL Ff CE ' FINEST NO. 1 QUALITY FROM $1.98 DYNAMITE '2Jwa1/ '5J.,·uif :Jreej , They pack a terrific crop of fruit BONANZA PEACH • NECT ARINA.NECT ARNE. READY sggs TO iwn .. .,1¥ Pol¥•Mff cord Im•...-.~."°"'~~''" ''"· Up ta 16,. w.Ofl 1m" ~ <"""ntll!Olll wu. CELEBRITY G/P BBIED PERFORMANCE r: PLANT -• B~RE ROOT __ .,. n.lfa lllTEIM1 .PU( P\.111 f.EJ. N!lllE IHTllE PllTIU 6.SO..IJ a ir i 1.18 7.JS.14{1 •. \S-IS "" :?.25/2.21 7.7S·14f7.7S-TS 21.•1 1.«{2.-40 l .'2S.14/8.2S.1S 1S.U 2.60 8.SS.14/1.SS·lS 21.1' 1JIO •.. ,,,.,.111111 Qutlhw" lo k"!'·'Nlf>c!M>IG'• dt1lf.n1t1011. A!!"""h cl'olf• h ... -•Jll'IM Gl~"'lllY ,1,,Ml.rO Of 1tnHnt .... "' ••I tit• 1111--If II ha• IM 11•,,.. ••.:t11~~p<inJ!Oclll", JM ~ h M • ll'• ,.v.ir1v...,ML r./P Cot1 .. ritetlon: Twfn lil>t .. I•" i..1,. •nd r.-in ,olyflllH ca<~ plot< 1<1111 IH•d r.ili-o!I, rHM tn..,ly 4alR•1 1h' "'''·•"Id• trHd !~r ou• ••~di•• l••t!• kw! •nd <..,ll'QI. tll\lincto .... rwon wh"• •IO•••ll. NICE Plbl f.E.T, PU lift£ PEJ r-E 6.S0..1.1 l'.l.lf $1.6S 7.JS.J4(7JS·I~ u.u 2.lS/2.41 7.7S-14/7.7S·1S H.11 1.SS/2.61 A.1S-14/l .25·1S H.t1 2.67(.!.77 3.SS·l4/IJS·IS "·'c' _.~2.9~l~/2~.9-"!-' OTHll SIDI AYAl'-AILI AT LOW r11:1C1s ALIGNMENT _$695 -MOST C.t.1$ • ~ RACE TRACK Panj~,i ~ Magnificent Array of Colors for Borders orl Bedding . Plont in well·preparad '(,.-~". soil. Feed with B:Ood-Mea/ • Buy 2~-79c Doz. G~T-~f.RE~ HOURS: Mon. thru Fri. 9 to 6; Sun. 10 1.m. to S p.m.; Sat. 9 1.m. to S:lil p.m. SPECIAL PRICES GOOD THROUGH SUNDAY, F-El. 14 NU ESY J 2640 Harbor Blvd. Ql\IST COSTA MESA "Ou•lity ••d 5•rvlu 51 "'• l94b" CALL 546-5525 ( I .. JrSddY, FebtUAry 11, 1971 DAILY PJLOT J-iJ ' • ' " 'TO SAVE UP TO $100 ON SYLVANIA'S ONCE -A -YEAR SALE! ,• 1 .. This ts the u.teS event that smart bu.yers have been waiting !or. Now, for a limited time, you can get all the quality and engineering excellence Sylvania home entertainment products are famous for .. , and with up to $100 in sav- ings. But don't delay, if you mi.ss this opportunity you may have to ~·ait a ~·hole year for another chance at bargains like these. Bil 25 inch (dlag. meas.) screen Sylvania color TV model CL810. In cludes &usb- butlon AFC and the iGibraltar 85 · I chassis. SALE PRICED AT 53988 YOUR CHOICE SAVESSQ Now Only 599•• HURRY! QUANTITIES LIMITED AT THESE LOW SALE PRICESI SAVES1QO Plus Three Feature Pack color TV model CL883. The biggest color screen available: 25" (diag. meas.). Instant Push.button Tuning gi\'es a perfect color picture inst.anlly. Solid state ICibraflar 1011-ni] cht~is, the ultimate In reliability. Now Only 849 88 SAVES75 ' . The sale you've waited a year for, is on. S4VE lJPTOl/OO Outstand ing savings on Sylvania Ntw Dimensional Color TV with the big est picture e\'et: 25" diat. meas. screen. Gibraltar,,. chassis, with Instant Color'IM and AFC.1-lediternnean styled color console model CL858. Now Only 649 11 Personal sized solid stale Black &t White TV model MW16. full 12" diag. mm. picture provides extraotdii\ary clarity and briehtneM. Equipped with earphone JICk. Elrphone optional extra. Scandinavian styled color 1'V model CL828 with the bi111est M:reen ever: 25" di•&-meas. Hu the long.lire Gibra ltar .... chtRSi5 with AFC. SAVES4Q NowOnly 579" Sylvania matched component &l.ereo model f..15110 includes FM/AM p\UA FM ltereo radio and automatic stereo tum-· table. Sylva nia i;e11led Air Su~pelision "peakers, tin led dust cover, and &t.md included . T\' R£Cl:..PTJOS SIMULATID TM-!>Ol-'1 h l-!4 E! .. 11'~ ,..,;..,.ia IOC. SAVES1Q NowOnly 89" 2111 dia11onal measure screen color TV model CE81 . Perfect for the bedroom or any room ia youc home. Has the long-life I Gibraltar 85l'W] chassis wi th AFC. M~itemnean 11lyled rolor 'l'V model CL8i5 with the Sylv1nla Plus 'f.hree Feature Pack. Jnclude.s 25" (di•I· meas.) New Dimensional Color piclure tube, Instant Push·button Tunini and solid st1le(Clbr1lflr-Jti0l".] chassis. SALE PRICED AT 42988 SAVES75 Now Only 77 488 Choose from four authentically d~igned furnilure styles v.·ith all the mOll. looked· for features. 25" di~gonat meas ure picture tube thal comhines bri11htne&S and con- t rast ror the 5harpest picture a1·1ilable .. , and there·~ more ... The Sylrania Gib raltar1,. chaSfiis with M>lld copper circuits and plug-in transistors o!fen unusual· Jy rPliRble performance. Instant Colorr,. 1ivH you sound instantly,. ,a picture In TV RF..CEPTION SlMULATF.D .,,,,__, __ h-• ll .. !il< ~-..... 1 .... SAVES25 Now Only 229" Mediterranean styled color TV {stereo entertainment cent.er model CL4 7a with the Sylvani11 Plus Three fea\.ure Pack. New Dimensional Color w!t,h:.the biggtsl color screen a\'allable, 25" (diag. meas.). Instant P~sh_::_!!utton ~un1n1 for a perfect color piclure instantly. Solid state iCLbralta r tOOij rhau1s for the ultimate in reliab ility. Also includes solid state A~1/Ft.l plus F~1 stereo ndlo and automatic stereo turnllble, plus the Syl\·an ia sealed Air Sm-- N;~:ko'~iy 104988 )1!!5 Lhan 5 seconds. Aulomatic ~'ine 'l'uninr assun!& you a perfectly tuned picture evtry time you turn on you r 5el or ch1n1e channels. New Dimensional Color by Syh'tnia, It's a sharper way of Jookinii at thints. And iLs sale priced at your Syh·ania dealer now. l lediterranean it)'led color con&Ole model CL829. Superb French Provincial sty led 'color console model CL833 with rowtlt om1mented blM! rail and carved cabriole le1a. Authentic Early American styled color console mod'l CL832 with 1imul1ted drawen, base raU and ICllloped &allery. Elrg11nt Italian Pro\'lnc11J 1tyled COIP 10le model CL83S, HARBOR CENTER 2300 HARBOR • BankAmerica rd " COSTA MESA • Master Charge \ } ' ' • f TV and , APPLIANCE 540-7131 • Tiptons Revolving HOURS: DAILY 9:00 • 6:00 • MON. • THURS. • FRI. 9:00 • 9:00 I ' • I I J .f DAILY PILOT LEGAL NOTJC!! s LEGAL N011CE LEGA' .. NonCE SUPl!I O• COUIT 011' 'TMI! STATI! 01' CALll'O•N A 1'01. TME COUNTY 01' O•.t.MGE t • H• Ao"4n 1 ,.. • t •"'!ofl ~ "'I"" 2:F 7 '4 NOT (I! 01' NEAi NG 011' l'l!TIT ON I t (•'1> l't Ale"'" 115' ~ c ¥ Av•r • POI PIOIATI! 01' WILL AMII l'Olt •~• '-.-a !" I '" If ,..••"" Ll!TTl!li Tl!STAMl!MTAl'I' I~ """' • ~ ""' • •rt ...... "'"'.. ... Es I. ol Joul>h Ewrtll WI 1 _.,. or I 1Wl'.I _, ""i ,..,.,_ 0.Cel Jed et• of loo (I) \ltllS flll "tt lfl NOT CE of ""' • i 1 "I .,.. VIRGIN 4 4 WEIL.JINi'.l .... 1Mf ¥ k110Wn '"""' 10 Il l "'th • t • o IN!! 11 Y RG N A J COllLEll: h.aJ I ltd i •vi ii s-"•\' lo ""°hertn•i>t Ofl lo o~leP!wl ¥ld •"la ~""' •• ••fJ ..,. o oa•rtv or•IO(f lot t lUol'IC-• ct 1.entn Tts11rr1e1't..-. , '" M• I' i ce COi I " !SI '" Pt! 11.oftt l':le ... nc• to wt\ ch II r~ 1 ",., 1u tone ,,,.de fo fl,lriho 01 t cvlt ' •nd th• F ~· nl "'" 50) • 11• 1bn,,... '"" 1 me """ pl1tt ol llel n• ht ns r ·~"• • 'l' ~·s o <• ••mt 1111 wen set le Ftb """' J6 ., r c• 1 ~. P ""' ''""""'"' nt 197 t t :io 1 m In tr.. cou oam """"I jl'IO 71 F1 D' v Co• 1 i e•• of Dtol tm~I No 3 ot '" II courl C lfor 11 7ao Cvc Can t ti ¥• Wt • " r ... 1. M• a • 1nn ne (&mm ~en 11111c 1¥ <11 S•n 1 """ Ctl lo n • r~, •1 l!ec~ D1 td Febru1 v I '1 rn min W £ ST JOHN oml~ ~~Ct~ ~t•r'Y 1ndD •rc t1 1n n&M ch•1IJMI"' "'ub n·~ ,., •nvt Co.•• 01 v " ~1 Nu,...ltt Mv,... U •n• lttm., r bru1,..,. 11 111 l •n uo-nt1• s1 .... 1 ----------------1N1w.wt hlCll C1IM'"1 t2'4J Ttl l110 •U'*JO AMrMYI fw l>tlltilnt -------------~~--! PuOl lhfll D allllt Co1U Di V P a Cl!ltT • ,. • .,.,, ""' • 1 "llSf' Ft b veN 0 11 16 lt7 11071 LEG \I ~OTICF. I' CT TIOUS NAM!" ,.~ "JI• ~ ~"" c• .. tv 11• LEGAL NOTICE ~nd Cl r1 1 b M I • Sol. V ,,.,' •• '.1-------_--,ccc------~ I ' '1• (I I 11, •ct t "' • I m n -t !ff T'41" COT P-+tJ't ... ~(':" Cf'"""" ~""" •1111 11111 1•1d Cl!ITlll"ICATI! 01' •USIMESS I ,,.., s ci:m~ ..... of ~ le -~• a• .en I' (TITIOIJS NAME • " tut 1i>o1 ••ct el' e:1 CtlKt ~ D• v " ~ t 7 3 'n Merger Revealed LEGAL NOTI CE IAll :IOO<I iU,Ell 011 COi.HiT 0' THE JTATt: 01' CAlll'OllNt4 1'01 TNli COUNTY 01' OllANGE Nt A .. MM NOTICll 0' l'IEAlllNG OF l"IT 'NON 1'011 JlllOIATE 01' WILL AND 1'01 LEnEllS TESTAMENTAIY El It of JAME~ E Cll.UTC11F ELD Dt>ePiSfd NOTICE The F •I Covntv i 1111 on1 b111k "9 I UO( 11 Oft, "''t ied !>f en• oe !Ion lo P otia f of 'NTH ,,,., tor luu1nce of Lt e 1 Tn '"''" ,,..,. o Pt ~ r~e tnc:t to wh Cf! I m-la< fu l ht <>•rt Cl/• 1. •nd ~· h" llrr1• 1n<1 oi.c• or 1>ea n11 ...... , SUPElllO• COUllT 0 1' THE ST4Tl 01' (4LIFOl'tN it. 1'011 THE COUNT'!' 01' OltANGE H• A 6MIJ NOT CE 0 1" MIE41 NG 01" PET f ON 1"01 PltOIATE 01' WILL 4NO LET TEIS TESTAMENT.I.Ill' E•ll e of MARY LOU SE 1!4~1(l':Jt 1 Ml known •• Lou s 1!11 ~· " ' "' --' 000 1 OF OIL PAINTINGS WHOLES.All WAllHOUSl OPEN TO THI PUILIC ....... ,~ l: Ct!ltT. , ..... 01' .... INl!SS ,-~=----"'"C==---1~ so•'o OFF I' CT!T OUI JjAMI! 1 _ /I T~ ~· " •<I &e•I c1 v in ¥ • • LEGAL NOTICE I Ulf • EOl"OEtt s"NTA ANA ,.....,,_t ~c • bu 11 ' 11 10 JI •~· rr I'll..,, tlJ..440t • (01 • '~U Cl e ~ ~ •df ,..,-. -t OEALt:IS W4NTEO •t ""'I .., n1m of (l CFS ,1.\J TO • P4 I! • <1 "'"' s.t <I l1rm CC"'l><I~ t ( G"" ... 00 100' W~:l'Jf "l lTle i nc ,. 1t'1 "' o""'' • , .. -l " 1 Ji u.,, y .. '" ic ...... -P C0<11 ,,.,,, C1 la"' 1 o-.. c "!.,,, v• nu ~..,..,coo p (!111 "'"" c. to ft . °'~"-..... ,, ,, l • •• "' ""' oe .. c c .. v,.,1 •clC1 "°"' 0 1n•t(0&1ft ¥ o ,~..,,,.., n t J bo'{a ll"e H -.... •JOI C ~ '"" tor ''<I ~ I t • -"'"" '""' ..., LOI• l!u ~ v~ •NI' e-e " ('1tte<l Y•I ~"°"" e "'' to ,,..,.« ~•"'t"'tn1,,.,.,•t 1vtrw; ~ .... c 1 ~ w'I">" .. , "'""" .,,,, V '.> .,.._.,t<: • ~tC~ IC ltlo II "'' t:;J"~ C I L \!.I L .,. I -, v ._.. ,~..,. •vo<.C• ""• • nc 11 0tnct I" ""''""'°"""' A VANISHING IREED THE GENERAL PRACTITIONER . ,. c.,.-... n16'1 E••"l ,.,.,,,,,, r vn~ 0\rr ti )":'ll"S .,..,. h~\,. WITTM4N "NO ''""'OT ~I'~ m AI ~ Id ond fam1lu1r .. ~ -I"!!,.,._(~\ c ...... ~ ,~..,. l IL 1$ Ml ell I 1)1 ll .. 11 Utl Wiik " 0, 5~ ' :m HI\ )f (('S 1 !I.!>~ t oru ti~ -----.. _,,•••ch c1 M "' nu1 cen ,. ()f l \ ll ()lJ l C'Om LEG 'L '"OTIC,.. ,,, 11111 1'6<n11 ,. ,.. Lo A1'1'WMV1 .. , Pt ...... n Pnt I Cf' ll) \~ r 1d that ----·I •lt':l -""" 0 .... (Ct 0•. 3;:1 Rllhn gh II t RC IU t nurn ,.0T1CE o• \ALI! ·'-'-"-"'-N--'-'~"~c'ccc=:::----n l;i r )f 1 h)~lr 1n~ I ad ... fl<I =· •"W~ Cl/ t 'I ~0 :lll1 '"° T n "" ,.. c ~ c1 eA~f'd n 11 .. ln~1 f\,. <.O<!, "' "" s ,,. M C• "Y~ • • ,,.n ( th,. "' rnlll'r r GI v ~t.,.. "'° H • H ~HE LL -=1 .... .,.. Miil r. "" Ill P1 fll l I on r~ lllT' Col I MM• Cl e rt 4 " ! IUP!•IOlt COUltT 0, THf J I I • •Ub l 11/C Ir.rt I iO /'I 11"~ STATE 0 1" C"lll'OIN A ..,r \ ""' ' I'll(' ~ at s Ce • ,,. • C.• 16' • I ,. ..... iro• TM! (l)UNTY ,., 014NCE t \f' t \ \ RI~ I),. pr l'tf'OtR"<' Th ""'" ..,, ''"' dt~ c Fe ,,.... "" ,1....,.u h&~ dr p1w·d ft nrn almo~I t•n ti'• to low ,,. G••tl o.11 .. -TY NOTl(ll 01' 1'1E•• "'" 0' 1'£TIT!ON ~ nf , , ~1('\111111 Ir .. tiout '°"'"'v 9 a (1 -UM l'O• P•Ol.lff OI' W LI. 4NO LIT 20 11nd f' f flh f lht' 11 TE•S 11!JTANll!llT.l•V ·~-.. Ct -~t ('. £1 t " .... l TO!i GPEe N -~· Rrl' \l'r r, rir~ Id 0 No -Pl~ .. W~T ,l.LY,I." YIL OH "'"~ (l"(••.,, '' till m ~ In,. Rnd L u.n t /'i o ll t •I -l~ l :IE ll'! •••OY r: VE I ~. Ct t.IOT " \ '" 1 ri1k1111:: ' lh th~ r no~ •• '' • t h••v .,..t.n ..,..,.N w;,~,.... c.~ ... ,... '""'""•"' I d Id \ DI' 1-..-,. u ~ 1 • 11 1~ nh11 "'" th l,.'rAn n ;i fifll el "'t <>llllt I '"""' Dr Cl "" ~-..-, T• ,,.,.,, '"' o t, I o f ('; \ S 11 I\ I I Ir p~ " &nd t i"/ t• " ,,,_ om-<If '· -~ , ,. 0 •"Tf-• t "'" c~ .., '""'' ~M~t• 1, ,.. ..... ...,t :i.O(f 1 r,. IJ1JOO "'"~'Wit>(°'' '""' t <ti O' t -• •l<f (l.11 .... "'''"" '" ,.,L-b anG •~~"' al•• ,... • ...., 1 .. c <.I""',,. 1111 ''"'I ~V'C'l11l 11 d hl':\lth :\ti' II tl1 tc !?I s 1111n f4Y ct ~· ~ ., to r-u•rr '' t7 t h,.,.r 11,.cl r:i1M1 1'11<'1 ,.IP 111"1 " "' 11cn. 1 M HI' od •• t"" • • :ic. 1 -1-1 "'' '°" ocm I \)art r>f a tin,, thAI 1r lo k •-0~01""'"" + J d 11 f otl I .. , k < ·-0 l>h f••d n -" 1-<~H ~hr ""¥tr Jr:t> C t '" ti~ Wtt "''" " '" "" .-., K W ltlll .S C 1¥ of St n 1 it.n• ( .. torn I <\r[l't Ot ti r r d l'd t Rll'd SI' C&\11 Nr t Ct to"• "'' P ~lt •llMI ti_.,., Ct111I Ot ¥ Ct ..e r .1m1.rv ' \ ll'f' ' ' w e sT JOHN vou ~" votm oocro" ,._,,..111 v l t l CnuntC •rt. '11'• " LEGAL NOTICE <OOICll'V 1cHUMACMl!1 COLEMA" CA~ PHONE U"= "hrn ~1)11 M NV"tto 4NO HOWAltO nC'f'd I!. dPI \l'ty ,,,. \\Ill de -----~ _------11'1 T••" •ltll Cov"'' 1"' Iller I oompT'.( ' 11 hout t :>.: "--'" 0 ..... C•I ...... I nm l"l(TITIOU! IUllHl!\S ,, S'' 1 " ti II <'h;'lrS!P ~ t'l\t m :iny N4MI STATEMllllT ....... , • .., "''' •M f'W"(lf),,. rl'l\ ()n us f or !hrlr- Tl1t IC OW ni Ol Ml" It <lo nt IH.il "'' "~~'"'~ 0 1~•' '~' 0 • ""I hl'Allh nrf'd~ \\r \f'll'nm e " '.:I,'="=="='=='='="=="=====-"'-'', M.t.ll l(ETWl!ST noo "' ~ 0011 w1v rrQue~l~ fnr d r l 1l'rV ~ervlee • o 11oi 1:u1 Co•'• Mtu C• 1 and <'har:::'°' RC'<'tiunls 92~1!n1111 r1 (;A., 100 "''so 1v STARS PAii LIDO PHAIMACT l ldi 11-G COi 1 N•M Co 1 '7~'' $,dft t V Omt r 1 ont ol *~• ll1 Ho1.lttll l e od Tfrll1 IM,rf; nH S • Ct 1111 (tl~~Ut tel ltY '" lndlvldv•I wo Id 1 • 11! ••holot•" H ' H•wl"•tt hec.11 642 ISIO avrton N Gll r colu"'" 1 0111 of tll1 DAILY 1-tff o.llv.,., ,.ultlli.lle4 Or'-• Col\ Ot ' ,.-kl1 I S f J,11111,... 11 :M ..... l'tt1 111rv 4 :''~'i!l~'~'~Lo:;;r;,:,~•~";•~•~·;·~·~·~·~·:;,,,,,,,,,,:=~::=::=::=::=::=::=::=::=::=::=::=::=::=:1 IM 1~n USHER'S GREEN STRIPE SCOTCH START THE NEW YEAR OFF WITH BIG $2.00 SAVINGS llmlt;01flllttll!Jil14 ... -~llPll.IDIClllr {UPU(. l't 011!1 I OVER THE COUNTER .......... 1¥; l•lw 0 11 1' ...... el ..... 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J6 J I -\0 I IUI 00 ollll! -1 , no s .1 11 101 O)~ ll o '1\l ' I.II 11 ti 11 I s n ., ., J1 , ·~I .SI!,_,, \t i .II" j Wt -r J 1 ll 1,11 11•-IJI -r. 1 111" sa ~-I n111 n .. I JIO,JC1 7)J' ·~»JJ1l-•. 111 "• u J6 ,,.,.,. .. , r'OJt1)1 1J~1 ... 1•11 n .,, I 11 1l 11 0 -~ ''11 •1••-'':16 '14"-Uo-llO • I ,1 .&I') ID Jf 11 'l •-111(! 1 1 !• l l!t JJ U o I '" ... " [''' 11 11 :1 -1 I 0 o I 1 ~ ~ .. ~ • ~lfflt -1 ;:~ u ,: ~1, j\. u, ,~~~, •• ! S& jl ,_,,. W e'dnesday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List ""' ... ..,.. ___________ \ (Mt.I Hitt! W. Cltt• C"f Stoek Leaden MOST SHARES ,. ,j '~ "' ' ... .. ... " "' '"' , .. " " '" ll ~ , ' J~ '" '" . "' ,\; '" ~· '" .. ~ "' " " 1971 DAILY PILOT Con1plete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List ··-' .,..... • llC l GCA Ca P J El1ln H "" • MMl l'.i Pl S Tt~ !n011• 'tond ,,.., 1wov~w w I Am I t Arn hf.itH11 1f :,:,":o,,h 11 Jim Halli !J C1v't.. Pl C. I'"'' .... VS Smet > ~-m•I C' I Vi nt ,0 , 111! '"' ,. • "' ' ,,, ,. 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Sl l • ' 'I '" ' " ... u S'lo S1 1' IT I I ~ 1:'· 'J 1;. ' " " .. .. ll " " '" " ' ,l t~ Ji ,. .. ti ,! .. .1 n " r. .. n ,:t " " ,, • " •• " .. " " .. • ' ' . ,., ' 1S11 .. ' "" "" or.; "" " ,, " " ' . "" • • '" "' " • '"' Si 11 N.i 411<1• Hltll low C OH Chi " 10•8 " • " • " " • .. " " 0 " • ' • " " '• "' ' " '"' , ' ' ' .. • t. 6. 11 ll\'o ' " , . ]9 lit ' . 0 10 ~ ti XI ' ,. .. . .. ' f6 .,, 80 l ' 76 ~<.:. 11 .. ~h • • t It o ~ IS 1 ,, '• 1 10 10 . ... . 83 78 ' 00 9 • ' ' , • 7 6 10 9 • ' ' ' , 'ltt ... :: m 1~ 11 •H •~ tt 1 "' 1 " 'I • ·~ I 'I-. I • •o ?o 11.; u • • 3 100 f': 9 . ,, '~ ; ~ 11 'J : / v .. " ' . " . " ' M ' . ... ~ i3 ' .. ',,? ,~ ~ ,,. . ' ' " , . t6 IS • ,! .. • 10? " " " ,; • .. ! , . ". • "' " 11~. 'l '" .. ' . , " .. 11 •• "'' (IMIJ I H fll LtW (IOlt Cht I , SI to Htl 411dt ) H th LtW C t it (ht ' " " ... "' • "" • • • • l , ' " • • ' " "' " " 0 ' " " " • .~ • ' " • " ' ~ .. 'l ' " '" ,. " " ' • " " • "'" "' 'l ' . ' '" ' "' .. • ", '"' ·~ " • ' . '" " " • • • '" • .. .. .. " "• Mt! • .. "" 15•• .. " . .. ' ' " i "~ " . J~ .... ' 4110 l " • • " • '" " ' " '" ' . .. ' ,, .. " .. .. , .. • ... \1\t .. ' • ,, ", ' . " ,, •• " • .. " • • • •• "" .. .. " '" " ,. ... .. ' •• " '" " ,.. • • 17~. " ' . ' " " ,. "' • ' S.itt Htl •HI ) Hlij~ LOW (!Ott (ht I' \ ! • I I i I l Mav th e Groundhog In ' Of Happin ess Leave a Val entine ' Your Ch errv THINK? j ;.;: .--~" I Tree. Whether you 1ea your shadow or nof • , • come ••• our Cea utiful spring 1alection of Gtist t nd BleyJ a, WISTCLIF, PLAZA · 17th & IR VINE · NEWPORT IEACH THE NEWPORTER INN· NEWPORT BEACH SWEETHEART SPECIAL 10°10 OFF VALENTINE GIFTS 20°10 OFF CHARMS . . . . . . A VALENTINE EXCLUSIVE! For the gift iiver who is: lovin g, meticulous, wise, clever, prudent; thoughtful , gallant ... and wants to be loved. CHARLES H. BARR Watcl.ilf P1111, 218 Marine Avenut, Newport )each, Cal.if. Balboa JIJ3od, Cali!, Mt'"b•r CJI flit A'"•ri''" Gt'" Stt i•ty I •one-stop' shopping at its finest! OPEN THURSDAY AND MONDAY EVENINGS SOFT LOOK AND FEEL IN WHITE, PINK, IOHI & LILAC CAL,. $17 "Where Shopping lJ A Real PleaJure" 1052 IRVINE WESTCLIFF PLAZA NEWPOR T BEACH 548-8684 *HALLI DAY'S* SPRING PLAIDS & CHECKS An early offering of tropical \veight. all wool sport coats. Flawlessly ta ilored in Halliday's ov.•n natural shoulder model. Combined with Corbin spring v.•eighl trousers in a crisp blend of Dacron & \Vorsted. A most di scriminating ch oice - SPORT COATS . . . . . . . . $70 to $80 TROUSERS ......... $27.SO to $35 MEN'S TRADITIONAL CLOTHING_ 17th & IRVIN i AVE. WESTCLI FF PLAZA PH. 645-0792 NEWPORT BEACH \ I 1/2 PRICE BALI BRA SLIPS LINGERIE SUPPORT HOSE AND HIP · HIGH HOSE Veta's lllllllATE APPAIEL ........... "", .... .......... c.. ... Phone: 642-1197 CORDS You Won't Pay Less ••• Anywhere • I I • ' .. • . "'j ~ Or1nu• Coa•t .P1iJ y PUQ.t -.J.hwrM14y,.fOru.ry .11 , lt71 "> . I : . . . .. 1 .. , • . ~ ., I I , • I • I . : .. ' .. •" ( . . •... ' . , 'f eb. f s 1abulous ••• • .... at th e Grandest Mall of All. Starting today, 5,000 American flags will be given away from noon 'til 5 p.m. to the acco mpanim ent of music played on the mall. It's all pf!rt of celebrating "A- n1eri ca n Heritage Days" honoring two pre sident s, sweethearts everywhere and our Orange Empire Boy Scouts (February is Boy Scout Month). The Red , White and Blue will be given . ' • • • ' ,. I ... I .. ' •• . . .. • • $ • "' ... :· ·, .1 • . .. away al I days of the sale (but not on Sunday) by scouting units from the Orange Empire Council in the Carou se l Court. And as we said before there'll be music. The dixieland sounds of Orange County's own "Back Bay Jazz Band" will stroll the mall. Enjoy the holiday weekend with us. P.S. The celebration has also inspired mall stores to really reduce prices. 5outh Coast 'Ptua "THE GRANDEST MALL OF All" BJUSTOL AT !AN DIEGO fllEY A Y. COST A M!SA ~·:., ·.~ -~ " • • • • • ' . • ·=· ..... . ::': ~ .. ,, ···" ; ... '.• . .!' . ' .. i( • . • .. . ' . ! .. • ~· . •• • . . • ~ ~ . . •• ' . OYll IO FINI STOllS AND SHYICU. • .A 11 C1~ o Al .. 1'1'1 H11lery o Alm's• Awc1 Snl111 & LHtl •-'•Till f1slll .. 1 o .... stro•'• lllly Ml'!ll •C.H. l1hr o, l'"k 11 A11orlu o llrrlclol C1dl11 o lollor llrhn, • C•••t't Ctrilhlrt•'• Sffts • c ..... Sltett • C.ret'1 • C-lt1 s,wtt Clllttr • CH11t1'1 • c•1f Y· • ·c•lc Acc111•rit1 • C•rlt' f•1lllt11 • ,Cllat't St1tl11try • Cr1clt1r Cltl11n1 N•tloft•I la•lt • Crow1I .. ''*" S.IH •' Dlcor1tor u ... Fol lick'• Coffoo ,.., • fl•I•'• -· • flH'I ,. ... , .. -· .... flnt ... ._ ll•k • , .. '""' Co11t P1111 Thim • Tloo •·n-llft1 & C1 .. IH • 0 .. 1·1 ..... ,., 11•. GIOPll M .... , • G1l•10 HoHlo • Grffl1'1 • G••...a;nttt Sll1H • H1ll1111rk StetfHtrt • l1rrl1 I fnt1tk • lt.f.C. • hn"t llMH C1httrfe e Nick..., f1n11•H111t1f f1llrlc9 •l111t 1f Ml•t • N11111f T1ll1rl•1 •Ht••• tf T1rry t H•llM' • 1 ... 1 Sltffl e ; Jewels lly Jo..,lt o ............. lo.0~1.-.Troo_o ...... _1• W.loa.llchl1_0,hl.M.1.ldJl~llllJ>IH'I Dolle--I losleorootolColt Wit o l~H11J1wilor1 o Loll lrroot • L1 Petit o LI Soop coo Rutnroot ol ... '1 Slooo-='---I 0Llllln'10L1 .. ..,,lhltrft1000Morf-f1~0MlyCo, o Miu -II •O. T1oo h Trnll •Poe•-o Poclflc Snl111 & LH• o .ickwkk loobhp o Th Prop Shp o hi of lo•lo o hi lotorHtlnol • Rl•lffe lt•t••r••t • l111r1 l111t1 Worl• I lt1tt1'1L11111•1 S1•rl11 eS11r1 • Sl .. tr •SM* Cent Dtwl• 1 S.Ht llMH 1n..Mcb1 Tit IHk• Tht4tr 111 • T•y Wert• • U41ff11 HoMt ft1111ll•trih111 • VJ. •.tlMll ... k•:-.. Wolllch's Mule City o W11sflol4'1 J'wtl1ro o T1oo Wtt lo!! o ~llM'I Co•oro o Wll-'1 Mfo't SlloJ e f,W, WMlwlllli• Yteit l'tllllnlty o l11J1,'1 Ylllo.IV"8•rMI •• • . --. .. 2-South Coe1t Pl1u Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Thurs.d1y, Febru1ry 11, 1971 '.American ~ Heritage Da ys ' Mark Presidents ' Birthdays At Plaza ' ' > r aEE' YOURSELF -\\'hether it's putting an applique bee on your knicker ~kets or ~·hatever. the ~·hole point of ti.lay Co.'s craft kits offered in the Per· ?.'JOn al Involvement Shop !first floor of ?.lay Co. Costa 1'1esa. South roast Plaza) ps to express yourself in fashions. Getting the point here is Oa\\'n Richards t<leftJ and \Vhitney Terry lrighl) of the Costa ~Iesa store's '{out h Advisory ~ard . Smiling approval both of the bees and of \Vhitney's dress ls Virginia ~ckter, fashion coordinator for the May Co. Costa Mesa slore. • . . • •• ~Spring • • . lSouth l to Take Over Entire Coast Plaza 's May Co. .South Coast Plaza Sets <Wheels ) Derby . Neve.r m.Jnd Indy, the real drive for Orange County boys and &iris in the age group between seven and 12 from now until Feb, 20 is bound to be the first annual "Hot Whee.ls Derby Championships'' at Soulh Coast Plaza. Sponsored by tbe Calta ~fesa Jaycees. I.be COlltest will be limiled to "stocl" Hot Wheels cars. A1 Ras. Jaycee president, said that the can cannot be altered in any way. Even J hough registration and finals racing is not scheduled until 10 a.m. on Feb. 20 al the Sears end of South Coasi Plaza. there v.·ill be practice racing held at the same location throughout the v.·eek beginning next Monda y. Practice runs will be held from 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. each day. F1nal eli mination~ will begin en race day at noon . :'\o more than one car per entrant v.·ill be permitted. Orange County lnternalJonal Raceway v.·ill display !he SideYdner 111. the rear-engined 5upercharged fuel dragster, along v.·1th ~lattel's Ho t V.'hee ls Funn v Cars in the Rod Runner. Double Dare Race set. Hot Curve! Race: Action set. Strip Act ion set, Stunl Action set, plus the following Super Charger sets: the Race Set. Sprint Set , Rally and Freeway set. Grand Prix set. Super Charger and Double Super Charge:r. A giant trophy also v.·ill be presented lo the winner by a racing celebrity. Trophies will be: presenltd lo the runners-tip in the follow- ing categories : Champion. runnei:;-up. seoior di\'ision winner. senior division runner-up. junior division win· ner. junior di vision runner·up, 1'.liss Hot Wheels. Jaycee derby winner and Jaycee derby loser. Girls Tr y For Racing Trophies ORGAN·IZEO -)'oungsters ga~·k ing al $135.000 Schlicker pipe organ at f irst Baptist Church in Santa t\na seem to be having d ifficul ty d c~iding .\\'h cth~r to look at its complicated keyboard /left, foreground 1 or huge pipes be1n_g po1nled out 1center. ba ckground! by Leonard \·an Olden , pian o and organ in structor at \\lallichs ~lu!l.lc Citv 1Sou th Co ast ·ro~·n Center. rosta >lesa 1. \'an Olden or· gan·ized his students ·on the field trip by even taking them inside the huge or· gan to see its v.·orkings. American H erita ge Da ys Set mall the enti·r·e week of Feb. There v.·ilJ be a girls' com· , 1.,. · th •·H t Wh 1 American Heritage Da~·s to its patrons. ,,,, _________ -. 1~20. In addition, 0 a n pe 1 ion In e o ee s r Gurney·s All Amer ican Racer!! Derby Champion~hip'' finals v.·hicb 5tarts Friday at South Cos I a ~t e s a uni ts v.·ill display a big track com-schedu led for South Coast Coast Plaza celebrates the participating include: Cu b petition car. Plaza on Saturday, Feb. 20. birthdays of t.,.,·o presidents Pack 373, Tr oop 399 and Troop South Coast Plaza .,.,.ill The girls will race v.·heel-to.. and bas Valentine·s Day 189. sponsor the v.·inner of its Hot wheel against boys in tv.·o sandwiched in betv.·een. Orange Couniy's own Back \\'heels Championships at 1he divisions. juniors i eges seven During all day s of t.he Bay Dixieland Jazz band also l\'ational competiti on to be 10 nine) and senfrs I IO lo celebration, \'arious scouting .,.,,111 perform on the ma ll. pro· held in Saginav.·. ~1 ich. 12 1· units from the Orange County viding mus ic fitting the OC· First prize v.·ill be an all-ex· As an added feature of Hot Empire Council will be casion. I F" Fine W~fches pense paid trip for the winner \Vheel5 Derby week 111 South present in the mall givinl{ The mall \\'ill be decorated and parent to the nationa l Coast Plaza a Powder Puff away America n flags from in red. whne and b I u e South Coe•' Pl••• De by I g. I I • ~ Br••tol el Sen 0 ;090 l=wt, finals to be he ld 1n Saginaw r or ir s on~· age. noon unt il 5 p m. Some 5.000 throughout. with huge 8 x l~ c011, Me•• s~0 -901>6 en t-.larch 20. seven lo 12. will be held on ,.Jf~la~g~s~h~a~,·~e~b~e:e;n~p~u~rc~h~a~se:d~b~y-f~I~. iA~m~e~r~kra~n~f~la~g~s~hu~n~g'._'.a~t~§===~:'.:§§§gt Th Wednesday, Feb. 17. Registra· the shopping center to give each end of the ma ll. 1 e South Coast Plaza v.·1n-tion at the race track /Se ars ner will arrive in Chicago on lower mall ) will begin at 6:30 Thursday, ~larch 18. for a pm. with eliminations to chartered jet fl ight I • begin at 8 p.m. The v.·inner Sag1na.,.,·. Retu rn trip i s .,.,·ill receive a trophy and t.1at· scheduled for Sunday, ~larch tel merchandise. i Spring is expected a lillle ;t:arly th is year al the ~fay X:0.'11 Cosla Mesa store. Tha t :brightest season of them all :Will lake over the entire store :a t South Coast Pl aza. 5piration. the v.·ig bar. Revlon cO!imet ic 21. The firs t annual lfot \\'heels The music of Rick Robins "councillations," and Kifl \\"ith Included in the list of l1 r~t Derby sponsored by the Costa will 5el the Ecene for each purchase al the cosmetic plaei! pr:1zes is a youngster's !o.lesa Jaycees copies many flf of four sbov.·s beginning at counter. dream-come.true: the features "f the world 12:30 p.m. The china department v.·ill The J\laUel Hot \\'liee!s Sky !amou~ soap box derby that An exhibit of handcrafted offer 8 new slant on table ShO\\', Drag Chute Stunt set, is held outdoors every IWD' : Jn conjunction wit h Seven· :teen magazine, the store v.·111 :present fashion shows and ex- :hibil.! dedicated to the "in- !dependenl look" for both gals ':and guys when 5pring arrive s Saturday. wear and crafls designed by settings and enterta ining. Rod Runner Speedway set. mer in Akron. Ohio. local students and adults will\--'jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ___ , spark the imagination with ./ ideas in clot hing and decor for the '71 independent. The exhibit v.·ill feature craftsmen deJ'Tltlnsl rating the ir artistry. I DO YOU NEED A PIANO, ORGAN OR GRAND? The workaday d e n i m ~ , homespun naturals. madras plaids and .skinn y knit~. will • be some nf the fashions show n along with the peasantry fashions y.·ith L1tranian in· The independent's in nuence v.·ill be seen !hroughout the store. "''ilh instructors to answer questions of "how \o"I in the art needlework depart· ment. Tovar wig styling al lnterlandi, Holloway Judge Plaza Posters Frank lnlerlandi, no le d Laguna Beach artis t and Lns Angeles Times poh t1ral car· loonist and Sterhna Holloway, noted entertainment Ct'lebrity, this week al Sout h Coast Plaza Judged lht. final event of the Dental Health Po!lter Contest Y.'hich will rema in on exbibil all this week at the plaza . The lop three v.·inners ln e countyv.·ide contest for founh graders in 359 publ ic and parochial school! 1n 27 1 &ehool districts are presently exhibited in the Carousei1 Court of the shopping center. I Nine Sl5(1 U. S. Saving.~ Bonds an d two bicyclt..~ fnr lhe three 1op county winners' v.·ill be presenled the v.·inners. I -~~~~~~~~- DIVERSION FOR HOUSEWIVES 'ut •••y your mop •ncl com• Into ...,, ahop to h1v1 1om1 fun I W•'ll toach you t1 kftlt your own w•rclrolM I YlMl'll ww• money 1ftcl yot be tMi IM1t clr11MCI wom•n In your troupl W1 h•w• tho y1rn1, tho _.,_ t1rn1 •nd 1v1rythln1 you n~. The KNIT WIT hutt. c-• ''''' .wtLMA.~---cost ... MESA I I • St91"woy • Cklc.k•rln9 Ir••· e IC11•b• • :Sttck e Morlholl. W•11d•1I .ANO MAOIV OTWlll; ~.t..MOU\ Mll(ll REGULAR $1195 Prfus llnllff! y,, .. .,. du,.. w.111ch'1 ,, .. ,"'"''' ,,,., C'-r-•I C1111• 111 e'ltl we'll lllff ''' • l111fll• .,,. ell tlllM ert•lll. pl111u or Gr•11clsl HAMMOND ORGANS Save up to $1000 WURLITZER ORGANS Save up to $500 Used Organs SAVE MORE THAN 'h OF NEW PRICES E XPERTLY REBUILT TI111e G1111ocl '101101 O•• '.built by o•r own Europeo11 ••pem -c.ose1 refht• llll•d lllrc -· •t1tt11119 ! New HM• merlleotls1 New tlomp•• f1!h! M•11y e re r1pl11Mttl1 Com• 111 11ow 011cl ye11 'U ~et o b1011tlfut l11urum111t ot • prlc.• yo11 "'"' bell'''d poulbl1! WURLITZER, KNABE PIANOS UP TO 15°/o OFF SOUTH-C.OAS.T_PJ.AZA._ .. TH -'"N " Ojfiirli!itiiilliiit Co1 t1 M111 Phone S40.3165 c1n •It • FEB. 11 THRU FEB. 17 WORLD FAMOUS EEEF STICK· Summer Sausage REG. $1.99 LB. '"'"'¢err RIG. ~~u. PBICI MINI-SWISS CHEESE · ••.. "'"' = orr REG. ' 1 ·"' ••• ""!J. Pl\!Ct CVT' FRl:Sl-I TO '4.l>N SlZ£ BANANA CHIPS Y.u•ll i.vt ""' '""01< "It M>I<• lo.cl. A tNI lrt~I! I ll\' firlf bo• ot ritq. p•ic• -Sft. Git ~c· •11d bo• fo ronly SOUTH COAST PLAZA LOWER LEVEL UISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FREEWAY, COSTA MESA ~HONE 540-6991 ' Special Worst U.S. Problem Is Peop le WASHINGTON t UPI) America's worst urban p~ blem is not crime. or traffic, or money. It's people. 'Too many people living too close together. The 1970 census shoY.:ed that about two-third.ii of the U.S. population now is huddled together in urban areas com- prising less than 2 percent of the nation's land area. Overcrowding either causes or complicates virtually all of the other difficulties in· volved in the present urban crisis -traffic congestion. housing shortages. r a c i a I tensions, crime, air pollution, inadequate municipal services. Events, Past and Future, Newspaper Snapshots Exhibited South Coast Plaza will ex- hibit in the Carousel Court the winners of Lbe 26th Annual Newspaper National Snapshot ~ awards beginning on Washington's Birthday (1t1on- day, Feb. lS, by new federal law ), !e winning entries. a col· le on assembled by Eastman K ak, represents 78 major metropolitan newspapers in the U.S., Canada, ,,1exico and Puerto Rico. The co111pe1ition has been a consistent outlet for the creative inspiration or the amateur photographer since 1935. The exhibit is in color. • HEAD TABLE -All American flanker Randa Va- taha, Stanford Head Coach. John Ralston and Her· bert 1...-0ugheed who, at 100 years old, is Stanford's oldest illmnus land oldest letterman), dominated head table at South Coas~ Plaza's Player of The Year Banquet. Left to right. head table guests are Harry Baker. Stanford almnus; flanker Vataha; llenry Segcrstron1 of Segerstrom family; Coach Ral· ston: Emcee Spider l\1acLean of Radio K\VlZ: Ken Fagans, CL~, com1nissioner; Gene Robens, Soulh Coast Plaza general n1anager; and centurian Loug- heed. ll also contributes to the rapid deterioration of manners the disappearance o f ordinary decency -from human relationships in big cities . Psychological test s have demonsirated that rat~. 1J1hen placed in an overcro\vd- ed cage, be<:ome tense. ir- ritable, insecure and finally Senate Official Savs Home Again ; Sally, a black and \vhite mongrel dog. is home after \Valking 300 miles from Cheboygan, t.1ic h. to Detroit. The dog's O\vner said it took Salty 18 days to cover the di~tance between the two cities. What's Right, Wrong vicious. Excessive proximity .-----------------------, seems to have the same psychological effect on human beings. While tv.•o out of thrtt Americans are struggling v.·ith the increasingly inhospitable environment of urban life. 98 percent of the nation's land area, including many of the most beautiful sections. re- mains underpopulated. In this vast expanse of town and country America. life is less stressful, the pace is more leisurely, the air is cleaner, the cost of living is lower. and it's still possible not only to know your neighbor. but to love him. !11ayor Finally 1 Ii' ins On 2nd Tinte Arott1id SCRANTON, S.C. (AP) -Scranton has a mayor. Final- ly. Republican Ray DuBose do1111ed his Qemocratic op- ponent, John G. Singletary. 155 lo 114 Tuesday in their third face-l1>face election in thi s small Florence County to11,11. DuBose and Singletary tied 86 to 86 in their first elecl· ion contest last Oct. 6. A second try to clecl a mayor. Oct. 20, found the two men tied once again. 93 to 93. After a recount, Du Bose had 94 votes to Singlelary's 93. However. a C'Ontested ballot was ruled legal, it counted for Singletary, and the results were tied again al 94 to 94. Clearly the time has come l...----------------------' for a reversal of the now of population into u r b a n centers. And there are en- couraging signs that such a reversal may be in the mak- ing. Betv.·een 1950 and 1960, so many people moved into cities that their population grew about 50 percent faster than the nation as a whole. All that's needed to start population nowlng in the op- posite direction. many experts believe. is for the federal government to offer some in- ducement for people to quit the overcrowded cities and start life anew in the great -0pen spaces. There is abundant historical precedent for government ac· tion to influence population movements. Jt has been done from the earliest days of the spectacular republic, through land grant s, homesteading laws, subsidized transportation facilities, and other c!evi.ces of public policy v.•hich encouraged se\llement of the frontier . Today the -;ost feasi ble in - centive probably would be some kind of tax benefit. For example, people "'ho live in non-metropolitan areas might be allowed a special deduction from their income laxes - a not unreasonable benefit, in - asn1uch as they genera1ly cost the government far less than city dwellers. \VASHINGTON tAPJ Perched just below l he presiding officer's chair in the U.S. Senate, ~!'!rl f.1. Ridd ick once spent 84 straight hours al his job dispensing advice nobody had to take. Bui is he needed':' Ask Spiro T. Agnew, Humbert H . Humphre y, Ly ndon 8. Johnson, or even President Nixon. A parlia:· ._ .. ,arian in the Senate for 20 years. Riddick, 62, is there to tell vice presidents or their appointed stand-ins in ii'le presiding of- ficer'·s chair v.•hat the rules are and how they "'e re in- terpreted in lhe past. Agne\v, H11!!'phrey, Joh.nson, Nix.on -they've all presided over the Senate and had oc- casion to pick Riddick's brain. He and tv.·o assistants tread a narrO\V an9 touchy political tightrope. "\Ve have nn political in· terests and \l'e act as sort of referees in the Senate," he said in an interview. "\Vhen there is a political issue or an emotional debate. the parliamentarian sits in the hot seat." He's seen them all : recur· rent battles O\'er limiting filibusters, the 195~ censure trial of Sen. Joseph McCarthy. t R-\Vis.), and most recently questions during the supersonic transporl battl e over v.·hether Senate conferees exceeded their power . .• ll was during an eal'ly-l9$0s debate on a :>Ublic-power issue that Riddick rem ained al his post for 3\i days . Riddick's longevity in the job, which pays about $36,000 a year. is accountable to the fa fth senators have in his generally bipartisan nature, he ' ·A pa r ii a mentarian's greatest value to the Senate is the confidenct senators have in you ," he explained . "If they don't fee l they can trust you to give the chair the proper advice without any political or personal feeling involvec!, you're no good to the Senate." "\Vhatever we tell the chair is advisory,'' he says. "The chair does not have to follow our advice but they usually do because they know we are not political and our decision is based according to the rules and regulations. "The problem is the a~ plication of the rule," he adds. ··we know the precedents I.hat have been estabHshed for in- terpreting the rule. This is the filling, by bridges, of gaps in the rules with practices and precedents over I h e years." Rarely, says Riddick , co- author of a book on Senate rules is he caught by surprise during a debate, no matter how heated. Cline~s STATIONERY & OFF ICE SEE OUR COMPLETE SfLECT/OH Of \IALENTIHf CA•D~ SUPPLY SOUTH COAST PLAZA COSTA MESA PHONE 639·2973 THE CITY ORANGE PHONE 540-4760 OF BETTER AMERICAN ART IN PORCELAIN ~ CYBIS ' by Francois REGULARLY PRICED $1400 to $1800 SPECIAL GROUP Handbags 1/4 TO 1/20FF MANY STYLES AND COLORS TO SELECT FROM ACCESSORIES SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA'S LARGEST SELECTION OF ACCESSORIES SOUTM co•sT Pu.li-COST• MISA Hnriq~ C.ter-1""41 P•rll Cybis Porcelain: A Living Legend l'hc sensitive artistry of Cy6is Porcela.ins rcnecn lhc techniques and devotions of d.e early muter craftsmen. Dedic•ted to crH.ting memorable sculp· tu.rct for 1hc coonoisKur and collector, Cybis i1 • ,mill aod disciplined group of American artists ""ho understand and practic e tht European mcth· ods. Most Cybis pieces arc designed and produced to become collectors items -"The lllltiqucs of the future" and are highly negotiable currency in the inttrn11ion1l market. Jn the Cybis scudio in New JcrKy, each porcelain is ind j,..idual ly crafted and no two arc ever exact I y alike. Each sculpture bearing the Cybi• ;tt1prim1tur, c"rries -.within it so mething of the plcasurl' 1nd devotion of the 1rtists who helped to create ii. Whether i n Limittd Edi1ion or non-numbertd pitct. a porctlain by Cy bis is a memorable and la.H- ing posstssioo. o SILVER o GIFTS o CHINA O C~YoTAL o ·-"""' "Spirit L1kt .ind Grey lull Blsln, lrobn Bow ind Woll C~k P1!iS. Musting Dr1w Ind t iling St.Ir, Arrow l ocli1ncl Norlh Swttl Crat1",,, With the pttstotation of tht North Amt:rican Indi- an tculptures, Cybis brings into fruition a projttt ""hich bad iu ioctptioo many ytan a10 io tht mag- nificent grtce and tribal culture of a peoplt "Who~ place.names att r«ordtd likt 1ignal fires across the •bolt of out coorhttor. To the uti1t'1 eyt It ""u tSSential that tht color lllld ri tual or this •a.oishing ptoplt bt prne"td u .... i .. uaJ legacy of a 1ignificant tra io our country's histo- ry. An inttruity of rHea.teh bu gont into tht sc:ries ..,hich ... iU comprise all thr major tribn. In limited edition, thnt authtotic Kulpn.11TS mt- morialltt the North Amtrican Indian. Subitct 10 r rior u1lt, Bristol ot The San Oieoo Frwy .. Costo Mesa Phont.5•0·2627 Cy bis Porctla..ins art in great n1ustums, che Vatican. priv1tecollection1 and the Smithsonian Institution. Prtsidrnts Kenntd)', J ohnson and Nixon ha,·e com mi ssiontd Cybis 10 make gifts of ~1a1e such as 1he Iris, prtsen1ed to H.R.H. Princt Philip and the Thoroughbrtd 1-forse, presented to tht Prt~idtnt of Korea. In addition to their limittd editions, Cybis creaccJ somt wonderful children~ porctlains. Amon(!: the~e 11e ''f irst Flight", "Wendy", "lieidi", "Rafnts .. the Raccoon and M>mc 20 others of birds, children and 1nim1ls. MoJc of thtse are curren.tly on display. ~-.. u-.-n. •• t.mll South Coast 'Plua • ' . ' • . • • • • • . ~ ' • ' • • • • • • • I l • ,_ l' Mo111ba Beco1nes New Mo1n111a Beal Mind Blower Scientists Try Jekyl-Hyde Experi1nen~ LONDON (UPI) -Dr. problem. Jekyl and ~tr. Hyde -one According to MtdicaJ News. good, one evil -lived in the Tribune, Prof. Gauaniga said mind o( a single man in the thi.s seemed to show that brain celebrated fictional creation of dJssectim product;d two Robert Louis Stevenson. cognitive systenu which could Now scientist& are won· be stimulated separately to dering whether two distinct the point of conflict, leaving personalities, two minds, can each hemisphere competing in fact be produced within for control. Th1J ls opposed a single skull by the separa· to the theory or a singl~ Uon of the two hemispheres underlying system, in the of the brain. brain. ln a recent conference of "Could a pass of the al surgeon's knife produce two the B r t l i s h Psychologic separate and distinct personal Society, Prof. M. S. Guzaniga entities all within one head?" of New York Un I ver s i t y Gauaniga asked. described experlnient.s with "Initially the idea is a bit monkeys which he said had · I b showtl° that the same stimulus 1.'htlling and unmanageab e ut aftu living with it over the could produce opposite effects past ten years Its macabre In the hemispheres or the quality wanes even tboui:;b my brain. Thi! conflicts with the confidence grows that our theory of a single underlying original assertion . of the ex-istence ol do u b l e CCII· system in the brain. sciousness is accurate.•• In the monkey experiments 1'1ost delegates found the eye which communicated wll.h the intact hemisphere it was a normal, aggressive animal. When it looked only through the olher eye It wu un- naturally tame. A woman who bad un- dergone brain surgery was asked to identify object,, wltb her right and left fields of vision. When a photo of a nude was shown to her right eye "a kind of sneaky grin began to spread over her features and even the tone of voice changed." Asked what she was grin- ning at she said she didn't know. An :I in the minds of some at the conference this raised the question of whether both sides « the blssected brain were equally conscious, Valley Man Pas es Exam "ANKH RING " 0 11t mort ... ., lo 11y "I lo"• yo11 .. on V1l111tl1111 Ory. A di1· tincli¥t •int for hi111 •f Jowol1 by Jo1eph. 25.00 So11th Coe1I Plt Jt l ri1tol '1t Hie Si n Die9~ fwy. 54 0-t06& the h e m i s p he r e s were "split brain pbeoomenon" as separated and the monkeys puzzling as when it was first Paul A. Kramer, of 93921;~~~~~~~~=~ ·were given learning tests. described ne_arly 20 years ago. El Blanco Ave., Fountain Thhe~ where onlrewarded hit one Dr. \\'. A. Lishman o I Valley, has passtd l he em15p ere Y saw 1 e pro-'.\•,.11dsley Hospital in London Internal Revenue Service tax blem and n~t rev.·an:I~ if tht told of a monkey v.'h.ich had practioner examination, ac· 0.ther hemisphere intruded. hzd su r gery on one cording to F. S. Schmidt, the The DAILY PILOT- Tho One That Caru Nevertheless the 0 t ~er jih~e~m~lsp~ne~r~e~oo~l~y.~Th~r~ou~g~h~th~e~~Lo~s~A~n~ge~le~s~J~R~S~di~re~c~lo~r.-.;~~~~~~~~~~~ 13-year-old Black African Rhinoceros, Momba, keeps Denver Zoo. The female ba by is reported in good hemisphere kept tr ying/_ a watchful eye on her new 60-pound baby at the condition -but don't try to pet it. hopeles!ly to take part in the -=~~-----=--::-:~1~~~~~1! LJdoff•s CAPE KENNEDY, F I a . (AP) -'The Apollo 14 astronauts apparently took along 110me unheralded cargo on their moon trip: microfilm copies of newspapers. The space agency said Tues· day that astronaut A I a n Shepard took a copy of Cocoa's Today ne\\'Spaper on the moon flight. The Houston Post and Boaton ·s Christian Science Monitor said tbey had provided cbpies or t h e i r publication to Shepard also. It was not known im· mediately whether Shepard took all the papers with him or whether he left any copies on the moon 's surface. At Cocoa, managing editor Bob Bentley said Today con· tacted Shepard in July about taking along a copy. Bentley said Shepard wrote a letter about three weeks prior to blastoff confirming that he "'ould take along the copy and leave it on the moon. Bentley said he took along '·ti.1an·s Odyssey to the ?\1oon," a special edition prepared for the Apollo 11 launch in July 1969. The edition chronicled man's space history. Bentley said he had no doubts that Shepard had left the microfilm on the moon. The nev.·spaper is publ b;hed b y Gannett Florlda Newspapers just a few miles from the site of the Apollo 14 launching. \Villiam Hobby, president of the Houston Post. said his paper provided Shepard with seven historic pages of the Post. He said the microfilmed ed itions were delivered in late December to Shepard \\'ho planned to leave them on the moon. Hobby said he had no confirn1alion that Shepard did so. The Christian· S c I e n c e ti.1onitor said in its Saturday editions that a microfilmed copy of its first ediUon dated l'\ov. 25. 1908, was given to Shepard who planned to leave it on the moon. WOllBl-SlVB 1/3-1/2 DRESSES. PANT SUITS AND SPORTSWEAR $2 MEN 'S KODEL • & COTTON T-SHIRTS. • 1.50 MEN'S ORLON• RIBBED HOSE, NOW $ 27 COTTON TERRY VELOUR KIMONOS $8 PERMA-PRESS FASHION SPORT SHIRTS $18 MEN'S ENGLISH LAMBSWOOL SWEATERS $10 MEN 'S FASHION FLARE WASH PANTS • . 99¢ . 88¢ 15.99 . 3.99 11.99 5.99 lftl SOUTH COAST PLAZA, COSTA MESA o,..w ... H....,. 0,.. h-4eyt IJ .. I P.M. ANAHEIM CENTER, ANAHEIM Opt• I•.-. 'HI 6 r.M. -lrupt Mei. & '11. 'tll t P.M. E. * * l* *' * * * * * * * * * WE'VE SLASHED PRICES TO CLEAR THESE ITEMS NOW! HURRY! 9UANTITIES LIMITED! GIFT WARE SNACK SETS 75% OFF SllVICI FOi 4 * $3.39 REG. 1s~ llG. S1l-$1.69 SET $1.88 llG. S7 - DINNER WARE SCULPTURES 10 re. Sll'flCI fOI I COLLECTION Of CHOOSI flOM 7 rAntlNS llAUTlfUL !TIMS $29.97 llG. SIS-$7.88 llG. S4S- $34.95 llG. S75 -$7.88 llG. SSO- llG. SIO-$29.97 llCl. SSS -$7.88 .......... _ $49.50 llG. Slt.tS-$7.88 STAINLISS STllL NATIONALLY KNOWN FLATWARE FLATWARE ASSORTID rAnllNS SILYlll'LATI SO l'C. SllVICI fOI I 511YICI fOI I VALUES $1997 TO $39.95 RE$~~AR $7995 45 PIECE. SERVICE FOR I CASUAL STONEY/ARE REGULAR $39.95 ONLY AT SOUTH COAST PLAZA l•ISTOl AT THI SAN DllGO F•llWAT·CO COSTA MISA u,,... Lf!•irf -A1rfll '11 .. W11lwert• l'HONl-14 .. 7117 • HOME FURNISHINGS-SO. COAST PLAZA CUSTOM MADE DRAPERY SALE ~~1, LABOR ONLY REGULAR $3 4 DAYS ONLY $1 '"' THURS FRI SAT MON ,;.''t~ .. FEB. 11 12 13 & 15th o,,,.,,. Choose from ""Y of our fabrics I not ju1t a selected group ) a nd we wil l mak• the fin•st in custom drapari•t to your mea surements! Be your ow" decorator • Choose the fabric & color • Ask for th1 fullnets you wa nt and you will saYe 1/3 & mor1. Rodi & inita ll ation "110 et low sal. pricet, Bring your mea1uremenf5 • Wt will r•me as ure inst<!l!lations! Washable-Quilted BEDROOM ENSEMBLE MATCHINCi TIFFANY LAMP Including chain 2999 Rog. $45 . . . . . ,. . MATCHIN(i FABRIC 45'' wide J " Rog. $3.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . yd . SPREADS TWIN h9. $25 1999 FULL 2499 Re9. $30 H1vt th1 mot! gl1111oro111 b1droom1 in lo"'l'I - l1111ti!wl p11H q11ilied polyt'Jifr fillod, i" both r11ff!ed tnd th10 .. 1tyl11- 011r b11t 11tli n9 p1lttrnt f,om 011r r1911l1r t loclr - S1v1 now! Matchl"'I Woslloblt PLEA TED SHORTIE DRAPERIES • 41" wide to pair • ... 4.SI .... S.00 .... 1.10 let. 7.00 14" LONG Jo·· LONG l•·· LONG 4s·· LONG l .88 pr. 4.48 p•. 4.81 pr. 5.81 pr. Uclof~·~ 11. ~ ~~ Sooth Coo•I Pino lower l•vat / 546.6812 llUSTOL ••SAN DIEGO F-kE(WAT Lots of Effort Nixon Hustles \\ ASlllNGTO~ ! <\Pl "Comin~ on like gangbu!>ters" i" a !rile phrast', but il fit s President N1-.:on's c:urrcnt cf· fo1·1s to sell Congress and thr. vu!L·rs on his 1!17! ··1){)11l'r to the people" prog!':1n1 r-.ot C\'Cf)'OllC lrl th!• \ijl\!1 11 here Dcniucrats (' <1 n I r o I Congre!'s 1s bu~ 1ni; thl' r-.·1:-.:on blue prlnt fnr "hunling 16 billion tax pa~ er dolh1rs lo the stales -!o do 11Jth generally ns they "ish -:ind tn cut the 12 Cab1nl't rh·pa rtmt·nt.s do11·n to ('1ght Bul f\1.'\Ull IS tr~'ll\j..'. Ill' really is So111f' IJeznocr,:t~ su:,:gt·st the President d1,c~n't rcallv expect to grt 11h:it hr scekS but. r;ither. 1s tr.vin~ to build ;i can1pa1 gn issue f1Jr 1~72. Nixon prc~s s e c r r t a r y Bunald L. Z1ci;lcr s;tys his boss is "nrit lunk1nr fur an i s~uc but for b1par1isan at.·· lion." To11ard ll11s end. f\1xo11 ;111rl VicC' Pt'C'~idl'nl Sp1ru T Agne11• plan to tour lhc country in the n1on1hs nhl'nd t(I rlrun1 UJ) popular sup(l0r1 State of the Union address. Since then, however, he has invited just about e\•eryone "'ho counts in the con· gressional leadership and on 1'0ncerned committees to visit him and hear the ad- ministration's arguments fo r his plan But the ··~Jling job" really lx>gan with the news media. Starling at 9:3U Friday morning, almost 12 hours befor.:' mos1 n1embcrs or Congrl'ss \1·ere clued i n , selected fl•porlrr.'i and rol- un1nis:s shO\\'cd up at the \\'hilc 1-1,1uS(' to hear the ad- 1ninist ration·s sales pitch . Vrorn a ne1vs standpoint. perhaps the tnost productive of the .. bac kgrounders '' \\'as arranged by Agnew 's office. Eight selected reporters at- tendee! and not only 11·erc bricrcd on the Stale of !ht' Union add ress but \l'Cre givC'n <-1 in u ch -sought-after <-ld· ministration secret -the size nf the federal budget for !he llsc;i l ye<1r that begins July - I \1 1u•ie1l Witater Sce1ae It'll be a cold day in J anuary \vhen a scene like this appears as a nice summer day. A lone fisher· rnan tak C'!-i arl vanlage of \vhat was actually a cold South Coast Pion Supplomont to tho DAILY PILOT, Thurtdoy. Fobru1ry 11 . 1971-5: > day on the Nc\vport pier \vhdc the rc(Jection of the ~u 11 on the \vater makes it look like a laz,y, ha zy late ::;un1111cr aft ernoon. Too Mu~h Love-~ Endearment Fuels Firing ·~ LONOON (l 'PI) -What the Ullian's coworkers e<:hoecl"~ world needs now, says the the f\.Urror's senlimcnts. :g S011g, ts love. Not so, says "If I v.·en t into Woolworths~ Leona rd Argut. and somebody called mt "lt Is company policy that madam, as f\.1r . Argue s~emf cwtomers should be treated to think \\'e should, I'd thlnK with the utmost respe<:l at they were pulling my leg.". alt times," Argue laid arter said Chrlstie Bradfield. \\ho ;~ £iring sales woman Lillian works in the sanw branch . ~ Giddens. "I always call customers ~ Lilll1n, working in an East 'Love.' It's friendly and it ' LOndon branch of Woolworths, makes thern con1e again." called her customers, "Love" Geofr rey Kaye, chief of a - a not-uncommon manner supermarket chain said "\Ve of address among British probably 11:ou\dn'l 1 have any'£$ shopfolk:. staff left at all if we told ·~ Arg ue tol.d. her to stop it them not to say 'love' to the; .. • or Jea1•e. Lillian left. Bul to-customers."• . .:.:- day some of her colleagues.1-----~-- spoke up on her behalf. Eve n BOO.KS a nationa ll y -circulated newsp,per, Jhe Daily Mirror, had something to add. "Instead or being arfronted, ~~~1~:.s ~~u~~i;avfn be!~ BOOKS editorial entitled ··Love 's Labors Lost.'' '·A ,1•elcome word , a cheerful greet ing and BOOKS a smile across the counter provide a boost ror trade . . • that'! not a qualification BOOKS for a push. It's a qualification ---------- lor promotion." PICKWICK ~~:~-;.> THE BEST BOOKSHOPS '1 ' R.1cl1rd1 ip polt1 prOYI .. ,,,)• TH( CITY . . ni.rft" i1 on1 of th• world'1 moil Oro~g• • f71 •) 6Jt.7700 \\'hilc it already is ap 11arl'ol !he administration's rcl't'llUt:· sharing plan . his No. I pru· Ara1n. is in deep trouble 1n Congress. Nixon these da ys sel•ms posith·eJy jaunl~. · EVERYON·E LISTENS TO ANN LANDERS •·•·1•• ... ,, ,,,,,,_ ... , " '0 ''" '0"' '"" 0•· d•ily ;, t'-DAI LY PILOT. '-•• ""'' "'" ''°·""' '-··•• Tht' spending figure : A r==------=:.:::::::=========~~-=::::=::::===:=:::=.::.::::::~----~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~§:==~~~ rceord $2'29.2 billion. The nn. - ))~per d C f j C i t : SomCl\'here bet\\een SIO billion and Sil billion. The President appnrC'ntly L" counting on go\'Crnors and mayors nr rinan1.·ially hard- prcssC'd sla tes and t'ilics lo trcatr for hint a "people's lobby·· Thc hope ts ap1)arc11tly th11t citizens in rna nv state's mav tock ar1n~ behiiid thf' Nixon progr~m ;:is orf('ring the be~\ hope of il\'01dit1g h11;her s!:ite laxes. Bv a[J accounts. Nixon er111- su1tCd IC'aS! 11 ilh I h c Democrats \\·ho c ont r o I CongrC'ss before springing tu' $16 billinn ~urprisc 111 ~·ritlay·s You th A1·1·csl Law ~Lrickcn SA\! FRANC ISCO (UPI) I\ 1:111' 11·hicb prOl'idcs [or• llr· res ting juveniles hecause they a1·c "in dongl.'r of leading 1111 idle. dissolutC'. lc1l'd or iin. 1111iral lifC''' is unconstitutional. a federa l court has ruled. The !hrec judge court held Tuesday that the slate \1'elfarc code provision i:; too vague tn he const1tutionaL .-~~~~~~~- HURRY ! QUANTITIES LIMITED S·700 S11p1rll te E'poKy vr ir1Rdlfblndlnq . . . S·SOO Flberg1015 • I Z onlvl S-~00 Airtrian Mer•I I l onl~J S·300 f ibrr9lo1\ Wroppcd wood1n corf AVANT ALU Super Mctol -l lur AYAllT Al.U Supl'.!r Metal -Rid R_,. Sl59.00 SALE lt19. 5140.00 SALE R19. SI 00.00 SALE lteg. s 80.00 SALE lt19. \ 79.00 SALE llr9. S Sf.00 SALE $98.00 $88.00 $78.00 $48.00 $68.00 $48.00 BOOT SPECTACULAR S 811ekle lrotli1r loot Ei:io•y Reinfou1d S 911,"te Leather Boot Meni & Women\ SIJts we,. 565.00 SALE 5 l utkle Leotli•r loot -G>reot Wt11 540.00 $38.00 $28.00 $1 8.00 $12.88 for Bl'.!9l1111n1. Mf!n1 & Wom1n1 Sit••· SALE A11nrior1 Af111 Ski looh Mens Or11, Wert Sl 5.11 SALE Wom11n1 ,t.fler !';•I 1.,el1 -8re~c11 ' SA VE U' 400/. Sires. Some one of o •ind, TO I 0 SELECTED SWEATERS AND PARKAS PR IC ED TD CLEAR SAVE UP TO 50°/o COMPLETE RENTAL PROGRAM Includes Adult and Junior Sizes METAL SKIS, BOOTS, POLES ·:::'!:< $9 . 10% DISCOUNT TO· SK I CLUB MEMBERS 1 Full Rent1I may be applied to Ski Purchase mad' within 1 S days 11 I Sears I ""' • ""'~•'·HO· SOUTH COAS1 PLAZA 3333 BRISTOL STREET COSTA ME SA 540.3333 Just Say Charge It At Sears in our sm all way we too are mak ing history th is first Presidents' Days weekend we tip our stove pipe hat to our wo nderful cu stomers who 111ade our holiday bu si ness so good that we can affo rd Lo take hatchet in han d and chop down the prices on our remaining pantsuits, dr esse s: coa ts: sportswear etc. to ridi culously low prices for ' fin al clearance AL ROE SOUTH COAST PLAZA } • • ~ • • • ~ : • i • I • • ' • ' I ' ~ ! ~ ! ~ • • I I, • ' ~ • j. t Swth CN•I Pl111 Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Thurod1y, '"""'"Y 11, 1971 \Sunny Show -Astrologer Stars on Radio PARIS (AP) -A rat v.·oman aspirations," she said, "and of 57 who could pass for P.1rs. the name I have, Mme. Soleil, Nikita Khrushchev has carved helped a great deal. You know out a unique and' important nlcbe In French life. She calls how much importance a name henelf Mme. Soleil _ 1'1rs. has. It's extraordinary, but Sun. it really is my name. My rather was Monsieur Soleil. The woman is an astrologer who tells telephone callers But please don't make me a Hollywood star. I'm not during her daily radio hour ca pable of It and have no --.bow to run their lives -who interest in it. I am a modest ~io marry. y,·hen to divorce, y,·oman v.•ho does what she whether to travel or stay in-can in her niche and with doors. all the heart she can put iIJto Some 26,000 callers a day it." art said to compete for a The woman says she makes moment with 1t1me . So\eil on her predictions for her callers the phone, her voice soothing, not only on the basis of their wheedling, then shooting out astrological position -they such pronouncements as "that give their date and hour of brother or yours is in peril, birth -but also on what my little lady," or "You've her intuition draws from their got to sell that busioe55. Put voices. ads in the paper. see agents, ;=========:::;! but get rid of it in tYlO months." "Yes, madame, thank you, madame." the voices on the other end reply, aft.er she ex· plains how Jupiter moving past Mercury will influence a choleric uncle or an ef- feminate grandson. Europe No. 1. the private radio station which broadcasts Mme. Soleil, claims she has the largest audience in the country. One of her listeners apparently is President Georges Pompidou. w h o brushed oH a question at his last neY.·s conference with "J am not t.1me. Soleil ." One radio executive says Mme. Soleil is successful because she combines th e perfect ingredients of 1'"'rench conversation : s~, money and health. "You add the predictions, the adv ice, and you're working with the eMentials of life," he went on. "Everybody wants to listen. This is n o housewife's hal( hour with ad· vice on gardening or sewing ." Mme. Solell sees il a little differently. She sees a growing worldwide i ntere s t in astrology . an interest that barely existed when s h e ~µ-aveled as Germaine Soleil '('1n a carnival trailer 25 years ago. "I am just the first person to crystallize this interest," 1he says. "l crystallized certain STARS Svdnty Omo1rr i1 on• of tho1 world's 9rto1t o11trolo9tr1. Hi1 column i1 on• of tho1 DAILY PILOT'S 9ro111t fo11turo11. "ANKH RING" On• mor• wty lo 111y "I lo•• you" on l/1l1nlin11 City. A di1· tincli~• ring for ht r 1t Jtwtl1 by Joi1ph. 19.95 So11tk Coit! Plt1t lri1iol t i !ht 5111 Dit90 Fwy. !li40.,066 £>rt.c~a \ Va \0( s i~ al\ d.Qf~or\._.,.\& J .. tssu; b\oq~(S sk~r"ts swe•t•.-s pa-.n acctssov-?e.s t.lc., ~r -fo 50 io oi}- a11l ....... o.-t_ ... Ge.ar -t-or Gu1 Stoa 1 ~~\ .. \.'1r's: Tt~ ,, 10:00 o"I. !;.101 \'J.-S !) ... \h Qo~rr-Zla70 Costa \'fle.sa save $50 on Mayfair four-piece stereo component ensemble Component system including AM/FM radio, 8-track cartndge tape deck, two speakers. Sepa· rate bass, treble controls, AFC-./ · tape and phono jacks. All in walnut-grain finis h. ' was129.9S 79.95 •tereos 7211 save $24 Philco-Ford 14 cu. fl. refrigerator with top freezer Features 1 full -width sliding, 1 full-width a justable shelf. De- luxe ice se ice, porcelain en· amel mea kf;!eper, no defrosting either ion. Trade your refrig- erator an save more. was279.9S $255 refri gerators 721 save $42 RCA 14·inch diagonal lightweight portable color Iv With snap.on dayli ght picture booster to improve contrast in bright sunlighl 3 1.F. stage chas- sis, 21,000 volls power, comput· er tested solid ci rcuits for superb sound, auto. color purifier. was319.95 $277 feleYiMons 722 Hoover converlible upright is two cleaners built into ··one. Cleans rugs, converts to above flo or cleaner. Goes under low furniture, 4 position adjustment. regularly64.99 49.99 I I vaOJums, 73 Store val u e~ for 4 big days. Friday, Feb. 12 through Monday Feb. 15 A savings sa lute lo Washinglon and Lincol n. School's out for two days, so bring th e kids shopping. Mediterranean design 5-piece bedroom Thomasvi lle Segovia bedroom has nioldings, ri chl y g rained pecan veneers and red oak solids. Triple dresser, mirror, fu ll or queen head- board, 2 night stands. Other pieces available at similar savings. reg ul olrly $800 furniture 143 • ' may co IOUth COltSt pl.au. un diego fwy at bristol, co.u meu; 546-932 I shop mond.y thru uturdiy 10 am to 9:30 pm, sunday noon 'Ill s pm I MAVCO PARIS (UPI) -The Paris subway at last may gel a fa ce·Ufting. Expert$ faclnt a \raffle crisis fear it's too little and too late. a new jdea wtuch m1y be abandoned because the tires ovtrheaL T h e state~wned subway company promlstd 830 new cars ••soon." Attractive display windows underground lihow the goodi of nearby shots and ad· vertising poster have Louis The city elders h a v P discovered they made the same mistake as New York and other world capitals - improved roads leading Into the city but l!ttle since 1952 to improved the 7G-year--0ld decaying 1ubway and bus 1ystem. XV style frames. The subwayl.·----------stop near the Louvre Museum Thus more people are en· couraged to drive cars in this affluent age to dri ve to work and discouraged from using the antiquated public transportation system. The subway has been losing nne percent •af its customers each year for the last three yea/'3. The car population has ahol from 1.6 million in 1965 to 2.06 in 1969. The situation exploded into headlines last November when 25,000 Parisiens m a r ch e d down the streets of Paris to complain or a proposed hike In subway.bus fares and to protest that the government broke its promise lo allocate a bigger budget for public transportation. Pierre Bas. president of the Paris Administrative Council. laid it on the line to President Georges Pompidou: "Absolute priority must be given to Paris public transportation, especially to extending the subway to the su burbs" within the next five years. Only after that. he says, should highways around the city be improved. Bas has high hopes the transport budget will be In- creased. One complaint or the Paris subway. called the Metropolitan or ''Metro," is that it fizzles out at the edge ftf the city. The subway does little !or the growing army of suburbanites who must transfer to buses or surface trains to gel to and from new suburban areas springing up around Paris. Twelve percent of the rat· tling red and green cars on the Metro -one of the world's first -date back to pre.World War l. Onlf' JO percent of the Metro stations have been modernized. fhe s m e 11 y , crowded statioo platforms are IO short that tach train can haul only five cars. And the price of a secon4 class subway tic~t. bought i1 strips of 10, has zoomed fron 30 centimes to 70 centimes (Js U.S. cents) si nce 1960 and ~1 go up in 1971. A first class ticket costs -1 franc 30 centirrcs (23 U.S. cents). "The Metro is Ill old lady who ha1 aged badly." as the Paris newspapers olteo say. In othe• ways foieigners find the Paris subwlj's not bad at all. One of ils ~· aceful "art nouveau" 1900 e ances graces the New York seum of Modern Art. Gre1t1 and yellow metal covers tie old white tile walls in some st.a· lions -but not enough. The walls match the sparkling new green and yellow ell's that run gllently on rublKr tires, features reproductions o I great scu1ptures. Automatically closing doors leading lo the platforms keep lhe clientele from running to the trains. Each train has A first class car with soft seats and second class cars v.ith hard seal!. Every car has a section reserved for the aged and war veter1ns. Large, clear maps and direc· lion signs hang in every sta- tion and car. Tbe subway company is ad- dini; more moving sidewalks and escalators to the stations and is even toying with the idea of pine-scented colo111e to s~·eeten the air . The Paris subways work up an a\•erage speed of on1y 14 m.p.h. because the average di.stance. between the 296 sta· tions is only 1,500 feet. The short haul is the reason why the trains carry an annual load of 1 billion 124 million voyagers a year, or 11 passengers per kilometer (0.6 miles) which the subway system says is many more than any other underground system in the world. Whatever is being done must be done quickly, the traf· fie experts; say, because up on the surface the situation is near paralysis. Every Parisian appears to want a car and when he gets «ine he prowls incessantly to find a parking space. squeezes into It with a crunching «if fenders and then leaves the vehicle there all day. Parking tickets are not rigidly enforced and motorists park on sidewalks and in pedestrian zones. The Paris Police Chief, Maurice Grimaud, has pro. posed trying to keep the 950,000 suburban cars from entering the city by building obligatory parking lots at the edge of Paris to connect with !iUhways. That would leave on· ly 900,000 city dwellers's can in circulation. Grimuad sucg:est.& that the 300,000 motorist parked «in Paris street.! each day be forced to pay a tax which would be refunded when they rent space in garages. Many underground garage1 have been built around Paris in recent years and more are promise.d. The "police chief demands that overparking tickets be made more expensive (now they are 30 francs, or '5.80) -anything to force cm off the street.I. In recent months Paris police have increa~ the use of a gadget they claim is an American invention, the "Denver Boot." a metal cl1mp on a wheel that Is remOTed only an.er the motorists pays a 100 franc ($18) traffic fine. QualiCr ft Shoes s , • """" for -.. cllW<tftlf ta .... lftlll tNt MM our .. ,,.,,.,.,_,~ .W \ '~ knit suits for boys in easy-ca re cotton Show n, one from a group. Choose long or short ponts. All pura cot· ton. sizes 12, 18. H months. r ... 5.50. 7.00 3.99 l11ft11h Jt group of boys' jackets big choice of styles Groot-look ing outdoor iockets to keep him warm. D e s i g n e d for oclive lods . 1~·20. were 16.00 • 11.00 11.99 boys' famous maker Junior size jeans Ono of the most lomous lobel s. Ruggod jeons for school or ploy wear in e big choict of colors. wtro 4.00. 5.50 2.59-3.99 lt•v•' ""''r 14 coveralls and top for toddler boy or girl Corduroy c0verolls, '9d. ton , blue, green. A to?, white or with color- ed trim. Find both 1n cotton. lnit top. vol. 3.00 ___ 1.79 coveralls val. 4.00 2.59 tod~ltrs 111 no-i ron sport sh irts bright-tone stripes Permanently pressed polyester and cotton short sleeve s h i rt s with foshion long point collar. 8-20. 8-20. were 4.00 • 5.00 2.59 lloy1 w11r J) t-shirts and cord pants, just what boys will wear Flere leg pan ts in brown, olive, baiga, gold. And • stripe shirt. Pure cotton in sizes '4·7. r ... 4.91·6.50 2.99 Storewide values for 4 big days. Friday, February 12 through Monday, February 15 lt't • 1•¥ings s a 1ut1 to W•shington •nd Lincoln. Monday' a a school holiday, so bring tha kids 1hoppin9. dress plus pant sets . . . pretty savings for girls They're new ond on sale right now. Ponls with flare le~s. Poirod with their own drass tops. Choose one with frothv. rufflos in • loce·liko lnit. Or e toilorod set with top stitch. ing and buttons. Both are ecotete. Postel colors. Si1os 7.1~. reg. ·1s.oo 10.99 reg. 13.00, •ize 4.6x, 9.99 • t frf•' ''""' '' • SouACml~ lrlstel at tlM S.O DI ... frwt. Celt• Mesa may .. Mvth -it ,1na, ... 41111 fwy. •I ~rlotol, coot• masa; 54'-9321 thop monday thru oaturday 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., sunday noon 'Ill I p.m. MAVCC> l ' ... l - th Coa1t Plow Supplemont to the DAILY PILOT, Thu....Uy, felwuery 11 , 1971 . Monday's Big Day \ ·British Currency • • '. System Changes WNOON (API -The pound survives as the key to British currency, bul shill- ings are on their way to becoming something you read about in Samuel Pepys' diary. The" biggest cash refonn in the nation's hiitory takes er- fect Monday, scrapping a l ,200-year.old system of cur- rency by breaking the pound into decimal change. The pound, equivalent to $2.40, will be divided into JOO parts instead of the 20 shill· ings or 24 pennies lhat now rule. Banks, shops, ofrices and even bookmakers ,~·ill open their doors on O.Oay-Decimal Day -with new accounting syslems and a ·whole range of new prices that already have the average Briton baf- fle<I. The process will vastly- timplify a currency thal began with Emperor Charlemagne, but the confusion at the outset will be colossal. Despite a mammoth publicity campaign explaining the details, many a Briton hasn't the faintest Idea of how to break down his powids by 10s. Some just don't want to learn. "It's rid.iculOU.'!5, the 'A'hoie thing," protested a distraugt.t housewife in a launderette. "Ifs a waste of time. I'm not going to learn anything about it." "It's going to be bloody murder in here Monday," pro- tested a supermarket cashier. "All day long I'm going to be arguing about prices and how much change I'm giving, and even though I've had three weeks' training I only half understand it myseU." New bronze decimals coins to a total or 3.4 billion go into circulation Monday and every bank account in the country will be shown in the new currency. All banks have been closed since Wednesday to rewrite the figures. A bank check that read two pounds, seven shillings and five pence last week 'A'ill read 2.37 pounds Monday. A package of frozen fish that cost six shillings and two pence Saturday wHl be 31 new pence from D-Day on. out a new price in terms o! the old face bafflement -In many amounts precise conversion is impvssible. Both two pennies or three pennies in the old money equal one new penny, for e1ample. Practically everyone in the country is expected to carry around a "shoppers' table" issued by the Currency Board, or some other prepared chart, showing equivalents. The bronze decimal eolr~ going into Circulation are the new halfpenny, the new peMy, and the new two penee. Silver- colored decimal coins of higher value have been in circulation for two years, stamped as new pence but regarded as shillings. The new penny, worth 2.4 cents, ends a happenstance that has eased money-transla- tion fo r Americans for several years. Once the pound was worth almost $5, and later $2.80. When it was devalued to I.he equivalent of $2.40 it happened that one penny, or l-240th of a pound, exactly equaled one cent In Amtrican money. New American tourist!: will have to l~am that two or the new pennies, or new pence, almost equal a U.S. nickel. The interriational value of the pound at $2.40, is un- cha'nged in the new system. Britons are convinced that in converting old amounts to new, prices will go almost impe r ce pt i bly up, and dishonest tr a de r s may deliberately raise t h e i r charges. The Decimal Cur· rency Board Insists that for every pria! that rises a cor- responding orie will fall - but it warns shoppers to beware or cheating. One example or a clear price rise -14. percent - is for passengers using the coin-<>perated t o i le t s in railway stations, which used to cost a penny. Since the new halfpenny isn't heavy enough to work the mechanism, the Jocks are being converted to take a new penny worth 2.4 cent.s. Britain is streamlining its money to increase efficiency (See DECIMAL, Page I) 'The Jetter P is being used for new pence. The newspaper Observer says that signs using say 64P as the price of merchandise "induce a senselii' ________ "i~ vf insecurity and sometimes panic in anyone over the age of 8." blost children under 8 have an advantage because they have learned nothing but decimal money in school. One cause of the predicted confusion is that for a while businesses will be allowed to continue transactions in the old systems. Many intend to do so until they get their cash registers and accounting gystems converted. The government's Decimal Cur- rency Board is allowing 18 month s for the full changeover. Many price tags will show price! in both new and old currency. The old coins will remain legal tender. but only new coins can be given as change. The old coins gradually will be withdrawn from circulation except for the sixpence, whose fate hasn't been decided. The sixpence, the most popular coin in the realm and often called a tanner. will be called by the bulky but official title of 21.2 new pence in decimalese. Customers trying to figure "'PROMISE RING" fer th • firtt tim• •nd jr.r1t I" tim• for v,1,11ti11•• O•y. A v•rv 1p•ti11 ring for 1 verv 1p1ci1I girl. Thi pric1 i1 1p1ci1I 1 110, t•OC Geld' On1 Di1mo1ul $15.95 14K Gold Two Di1111011d1 $21.95 Prir.11 1ff1ctiv1 tfii1 w11J. only. South Co••t Pl111 l ri1tol 1t the S111 Di190 fwy. Co1t1 M 111 540-9066 PRESIDENT'S llRTHJ>A Y SALE NOW ON 2 FOR THE 1 PRICE OF DRESSES, SPORTSWEAR, LINGERIE, BLOUSES, PANTS BUY ONE & GET ONE FREE SAVE 50% & MORE SEE'OUR NEW COt.j PLETE LINE OF eETIT fASl:ILQt-IS by PETITE SOPHISTIC.... TES , South Coast Piasa l .. ft•.u11t~t111 w•n• ''u 1111!.1 •t '"" t...o I • , .... ,. '"°"• ...... Plt<Mlf f.ltll un AllUllCli•• FASHION SAVINGS ACETATE KNIT PANTSUIT in navy or black, a trio of zippers, 10· 18 value 22.00 boulevard dresses 95 19.99 COTION SUEDE PANTCOAT wrap style with belt, jr. sizes S· 15 special ly priced jr. coats 24 ALL·WEATHERCOATS a large selection in sizes 8· 18 values $S0·$80 mi sses' coats 103 29.99 ALL-WEATHER POPLIN COATS polyeste~-cotton, double-breasted styles value 27.00 boulevard sptswr. 16 14.99 FAMOUS MAKER KNIT PANTSUITS pure polyester, choose from sizes 8 to 18 value 38.00 active sptswr. 76 26.99 SOFT CAREFREE SWEATER JACKETS three styles, pure acrylic knit, S..M·L value 15.0Q. 17.00 knit sptswr. 72 ..a 10.99 FAMOUS MAKER GO-TOC!THERS pants, skirts, sweaters, sol ids and plaids were 15.0Q.26.00coordinates 101 10.99 SOFT NYLON PAJAMAS tailored pajamas from a famou s maker reg. 9.00 lingerie 10 6.99 PASTEL SLEEP G9WN of polyester, nylon, and cotton batiste reg. 7.00 lingerie 10 4.99 NYLON BIKINI PANTS classic style or trimmed with lace reg. 1.35 day· time lingerie 28 99c LACE CONTOUR BRA in white or nude, A-B..C cups was 5.00 bras and girdles 44 3.39 ACCESSORY VALUES FAMOUS MAKER HANDBAG GROUP many styles in soft leathers, colors, too. valu e 17.00-32.00 handbags 26 11.99·19.99 SOFT BRIGHT ROBES long robes in purple, blue, print value 21 .00 loungewear 53 16.99 FAMOUS DESIGNER SILK SCARVES vibrantly colored prints, oblongs or squares. value 6.00·10.00 accessories 19 3.99 or 2/7.00 ACRYLIC CARDIGAN SWEATERS in fancy knits, seven colors, sizes s-m-1 . value 12.00accessories 19 7.99 BLOUSE AND SHIRT GROUP easy-care, in prints, stripes, solids. value 9.00 blouses 31 3.99 BRIGHTLY COLORED FASHION RINGS jewel-like stones, birth·month rings too reg. 6.00- 7.50 jewelry 22 3.99 LINED AND UNLINED GLOVES soft leather styles from Italy were 10.00· 12.00 gloves 3 6.99 SHINED COBERLAC PATENT PUMP has the look of reptile, three colors reg. 24 .00 better dress shoes 125 16.99 PRIMA DONNA LEATHER PUMP with an instep strap and side buckle. reg. 15.00 boulevard shoes 112 9.99 CARESSA'S LEATHER SLIP-ON comfortable, navy, black, or ca mel. reg. 21.00 betterdressshoes 125 16.99 LEATHER SLIP-ON BY INCREDIBLE with a side buckle, choose black or navy. reg. 19.00 moderate dress shoes 12 12.99 CHILDRENS SAVINGS KNIT SUITS FOR BABY BOYS washable cotton, 12, 18, 24 months reg. S.50· 7.00 3.99 COVERALLS AND TOPS FOR TODDLERS corduroy coveralls, cotton knit tops value 3.00- 4.00 toddlers 128 1.79-2.59 T·SHIRTS AND PANTS FOR BOYS corduroy flare pants, knit shirts, cotton were 4.00·5.SO little boys 52 2.59·3 .99 JUMPING JACK CHILDREN'S SHOES boys' and girls' styles, reg. 13 .00· 14.00 young peoples' shoes 70 7.99·9.99 DRESS PLUS PANT SETS flare pants, dress tops, 4·6x and 7· 14 reg. 13.CJO. 15.00 girls' dresses 56 10.99· 11 .99 .·. ·' may en IOUlh coast plwi, un ditgo fwy ;at bristol, c"5t;a mew; 546-9321 shop.-.daythru utunl;ay 10 am to 9:30 pm, sunclay noon 'til 5 pm I Storewide values for 4,big days. Friday, February 12 through Monday, February A savings salute to Washington and Lincoln. School's out for two day., so bring the kids shopping. • CHILDRENS SAVINGS GIRLS' TERRY PAJAMAS Acrilan® acrylic, cora l, sizes 4-14 . were 8.00 gi rls' lingerie 79 4.99 GIRLS' KNEE HIGH SOCKS in three patterns, white, red , navy, blue. reg. 1.0Q.1.25 girls' accessories 118 2/1.49 KNIT DRESSES FOR BABY GIRLS in cotton knit, colors, 12, 18, 24 months. reg. 5.50-7.00 infants 38 3.99 GIRL'S LONG PRAIRIE DRESS in cotton, red, blue, sizes 7-14, 4-6x. value 8.CJO. 10.00 sportswear 77 5.59-6.99 ' MEN'S, BOYS' WEAR MEN'S WOOL SUITS A big choice of patterns and colors. valu e 85 .00 men's suits 21 59.00 MEN'S OUTDOOR JACKETS Choose from many rugged styles. Reg . 45.00 men'ssportswear4S 24 .99 ARROW, VAN HEUSEN DRESS SHIRTS ~ Long and short sleeves. Solids. Stripes. were 7.50-9.00 men 's furn. 6 4.99 MEN'S CASUAL PANTS No-iron. Belt loop or continentals. were $11 -$14 men'ssportswear133 6.99 ARROW, VAN HEUSEN SPORT SHIRTS Prints, .stripes, solids, plaids. S to XL. were $6-$8 m~'s-funM 2~ FAMOUS MAKER SWEATERS Choose from pullovers and cardigans. were $11 - $13 men's spt furn. M S.99 YOUNG MEN'S SPORT COATS Single and double-breasted styles. were $45-$60 barrton hall 116 19.99 BOYS' OUTDOOR JACKETS Sure to keep him nice and warm. were $16-$18 boys'wear14 11.99 HOME SAVINGS VINYL LACE TABLECLOTH St Moritz easy-care vinyl that wipes clea n. reg. 6.00·9.00, lin~.s 30 3.99-6.99 SPRINGMAID RADIANCE TOWELS Solid color cottoo velour in 11 colo~. reg . 90c· 4.00, towels 30 69c-2.49 VINYL BEAN BAG CHAIR Contou~ to fit your body; wet look colors. Reg. 30.00, draperies 113 22.99 CUSTOM REUPHOLSTERY Ask about our 11 pt. reupholstery service. 7.00- 14.50 yard .. custom fabri cs 11 yard 4.19-6.79 3 STYLES ARTIFICIAL TREES Plant a fem, rubber or yucca in your home. "'8· 30.00 each, gifts 82 19.99 G.E./UNIVERSAL KNIFE Slice it right with this light elecl g. 12.99, small appliances 74 9.99 I JOHNN)'1LIGHTNING CARS The r;1ce:is on forthese•speedy onesl reg. 99c each, t<;>ys 42 1 38c ' : HAND-CUT LEAD CRYST!f-L Sparkling savings on candy boxes, more. re g. ~~·itel:j~~· glassware 1:6 10.99 Make a poncho, bolero, vest , midi, more. reg. l 5.CJ0.95 .. 00 art needleWl>rk 40 9.99·59.99 SANYOHANDVAC I Th e might mobile mi</Set vacuum clea ner. reg. 34.99, vacuums 73 , 29.99 DELUXE UMBRELLA TENT 9'x9', sleeps 4,,very ,P.OPular style. reg. 55.99, sporting goods 50 ' 39.99 5 PIECE BEDROOM GROUPI NG Thomasvil le Segoviai Med ite rranean. reg. 800.00, furniture 1 t3 659.00 VELVET-CANE ACCTNT CHAIRS Choose from 3 styl~. All with wood frames . reg. 119.00, furniture 141 , 77 .00 SEALY FIRM GUARD BEDDING J Twin or full mattress or box springs. Reg. 79.95 sleep shop 145 u . pc. 59.90 MAVCO ~"'.ar' Deats Ue • Fishing Di$pute .. Straining J;ies $lnce 1961, Ecuador and Nations last year banning Peru have seized somethtnr weapons ot mass destruction like 100 U.S. fishing boaJ,s and t'rom the ocean floor. fined their owners more than Examples or the n e e d $1 million ror violation of "ter· abound and go far beyond ritorial . Witters" which both . ~fishing rights .. claim run 200 miles to sea. Communist Chlha, for ex· For the boat owners it is ample, claims all oil rights not much more than a minor •on the contillentaJ. shelf ex.- irritant since the United States .tending off the Chinese coast, government ultimately repays an~ bas issued stern warnings them for whatever fines are lo the Nationalist Chinese on levied. Formosa, lhe Japanese and Since the 1950s, however, the South Koreans against at- the ~alled fishing war has ttlldptlng to exJ;loit whatever been an irritant in the rel a-oil: JTlay be found there. tions between the United Tbe question ~f offshore oil States and its Latin American rights has enhanced Japanese neighbors. interest in hereto(ore obscure It began taking on pro-islands in the Ryuku chain. portions of a major irritant Tbe United States this year when Ecuador alone ree-0grilzes a three mile ter· levied fines against U.S. ritorlal-offshore limit, but bas fishing boats totalling more negotiated fishing agreements than $500,000. with 1ltfe Soviet Union and In this particular case the Japari (qr up_ to 12 miles. . Issue revolves around the las--'Ibe'queshon of a nation's ty blue fin tuna wbOse right b> mineral riches on its migrating habits take him 20 continent@l shelf never bas miJes off the Ecuadorian coast been clearly defined. and 80 miles off the coast President Truman in 1945 tf Peru. · claim~ "Jhe natural resources Twice each year. North of the "tbntinental shelf" off American fishing boats take AmericaQ ,Coasts for exclusive eff from their California ports United States "jurisdiction in hot pursuit of a catch that and control." In 1958, the annually comes to around Truman · pri{lciple was ac- 29(),000 tons, most of it taken cepted at 3 Geneva Con- by the Qallfornia boats. · venti<lrl. , In 1947, Chile proclaimed But a continental shelf may a 200 mile limit to protect extend ·from several .miles to what it regar,ded as a national several hundted miles off the J;"esource: It soon was joined mainlaM. Some natiOns have by Peru and Ecuador. Today, no contltlental shelf. Ecuador nine Latin American nations and Peru are among them. claim the 200 ·mile limit. When \be UniteCI Stites pays · M much as a need to define the fines ' levied bY Latin International fishing limits, Americait . n3tions on the the dispute points up the need fishing !mts, it avoids a for internaiional authority direct coofi:onlation with the ever an ocean resources, As hot tempered and nationalistic of today there is no in-Latins, ·But it contributes ternational atreement except neither to .a principlei nor a that reached by the United final soluti~~ DECIMAL ... ' ' '' (Continued from Page I) shed -and •Wt1ich will make and brinJ the country into for extra conlaslon in the new system -is the use of the 1,ine with the rest o{ the world, guinea. whi9h lon g ago switched to decimals. It is also part of This hasn't eris~ as a coin since 1813, bu~ it has been a larger scheme'to put Britain used for ye'1's tO designate 00.1'· the metric system -21 shillingS, worth $02 .·52. meiefs and liters instead of Tailors and auctioneen, as yards and quarts -by 1975. well as doctOrs. have quoted The aim is to bring Britain prices in guineas as one way -and Ireland, ~hich also of squeezing an extra shilling i.s making the chetlge· -in out of the pound. line With Europe mid much Many Say tbe'y 'll stiO figure or the rest of the world. in guineas. Sir Christopher Wren, the.:;~~~~;;~~~~ architectural genius ,who ~uilt;. St. Paul's Cathedral, argued for decimal money q,ck in 1696, and a decimal cafnpaign was . -iaunched in Parliament more than 100 years ago>. "We are slow to siled a tradition,'' a Londoner ~ays. One tradition that wd6't be \'(lio Cares? No othw n•w•p•p•r l11 th• worltl ctr..ii •bout your CO!r1Jru1• nity lilie your comrnu11ity d•ilv n•w1p•p•r Jo••· lt'1 the DAtLY PILOT. I , Crowning Glory beauty salons PERM , SUP~R SALE! • $20 MAGIC CURL $ 9.50 I , • $25 GLAMOUR qJRL $11.50 • $30 REGAL CURI: $14.50 BUDGET PERM alwaysi $5.95 (Normal Hair) SPECIAL SA Vlt\IGS! · · M...-r-.. w...i L..., w ... SHAMPOO-SET 2.95 3.45 STYLE-CUT 1.50 2.00 Sfitl,t ~ i llO'lllY Ille,... . SOUTH COAST Pl.AJA JU L'17 .. ST., COSTA MISA L•w•• L•"•l-N111t t• s-•• ,.. PhM l41·fflf .. Ph.,.. 146·111• Op11t t:..-e11T11t1 6 S1111d1, 0,111, f.,1111i119l J1 we a•• ,_. '"' Ullll ,...,, "''' misses' pant sets l;J.99 regularly11.99 Tunic length top with matching pants. Two springtime styles in gold, blue or lilac. Short sleeves. Sizes 10 to 18. budget store, sportswear 800 jr. cotton knit shirts · 2.99 regularlyl.99 Crew neck or tank top. Cotton knits in a big range of vivid stripes-and solids of red, navy,. gold, white, tan, brown. S-M-l. budget store, juniors 801 jr. boys' denim jeans 2 for 3.00 reg. 1.99-2.99 Long-wearing double-knee jeans of all cotton or cotton/polyester· blend. Rein- forced atstrainl'Oints. 3 to 7. budget store, children's 808 misses' knit pant sets 12.99 comp.value14.99 Hi-bulk acrylic knits with all sorts of little niceties-tri-tone effects, ribs, more! Four styles, great colors. S-M-l. budget store, dresses 81 O misses' pant coats 19. 99 reg. 24.99-27.99 Dapper cotton corduroys with rayon quilt or acrylic pile Jin- ing. Choose from bronze, brown or gold .. .Size 10-18 budget·-· coats 828 man's all-weather 15.00 was 19.99 Coat with zip-out acrylic pile liner. No-iron polyester/cotton shell. Tan or black. 38·46 reg., 38-42 short, 38-44 long. budget store, men's 814 double-knee jean 2 for 5 .OOcomp. val. 2.99 Boys' blue cotton denims. Double-knee for more wear. Reinforced at strain points. 8- 18 regular, slim, husky. budset.-, boys' 822 insulated draperies 6. 99 comp. value 11.00 Machine wash, tumble-dry. Permanent press for easy care. 48x84" long. C~t)on-rayon damask in lovely c lors. ~&ti mre, draper; .. 8 f 8 South Coast Pfau Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Thursday. Ftbru1ry 11. 1971-9 women's shoes 5.99 were6.99·10.99 Dress-up and casual shoes. Many styles, colors, heel heights-but sizes, colors and styles are broken. Shop early. budge! store, shoes 812 misses' nylon shells 1. 99 comp. values 2.99 Sleek turtleneck shells of dou- ble knit nylon. All set for spring in yellow, pink, white, blue or navy. S-M-L sizes. budget store, sportswear 800 al I-weather coats 17. 99 regularly 24.99 Misses' sizes 8-18. Two models to choose from-safari style or Edwardian collar coat Perma- nent press polyester and cotton. budget store, co.ats 826 women's sleepwear 2. 99 regularly 4.99-6.9~f Warm and pretty brushed paja- mas, waltz ~owns, long ~own~. Acetate/nylon, embroidery, lace, other goodies. 5-M-L. budget store, lingerie 821 men's dress shirts 2 for 9 ,00 reg. 6.00 ea. Long·sleeve no-Iron dress s~irts in bold stripes and rich solid colors. Sizes 14 Y,-17, sleeve length 32-35. 4.99 each. budget store, men's 806 boys' nylon jackets 8. 99 were 10.99 Warm zip-front nylon jackets with rayon quilt or acrylic pile lining. Machine washable. Siz- es 6 to 18. Popular colors. budget s1ore, tx>ys' 822 men's winter jackets • 10.00 were12.00 Cotton cords, blends, vinyl ~. Warm acrylic pile or rayon quilt lining. Bush coats, click- ers, surcoats, more. 36-46. budget store, men's 817 Dacron panels 1. 79 value 2.49 Flocked flowers on, Dacron® polyester. White-on-white, / scalloped sides, 5-inch bottom hems. No-iron. 40x81" lon g. budget store, draperies 818 Store val ues for 4 big days. Friday, Feb . 12 through Monday Feb. 1 S A savings salute to Washington and Lincoln. School's out for two days, so bring the kids shopping. one-size panty hose 79c regularly 1.39 Pantyhose of quality nylon-· nude heel style. Suntan shad e for all ensembles. One size fits 5'0"-5'8", Hurry. budget store, hosiery 807 girls' tunic/pant sets 4.99 regularly6.99 Orlon® acrylic in two great lit- tie styles. Sizes 3-6X. Pink; lime, maize, blue in th e group. Reg . 8.99 sets, si·ze 7-14 . 5.99 budget store, girl s' 824 infants', tots ' crawlers 2 for 5, 00 comp. val. 4.00 In fants' sizes 12-f 8-24 month. Toddlers' 2T-3T-4T. Bright sol- ids and plaids of never-iron polyester/cotton. Easy on-off. budget store, children's 808 long peasant dresse s 4. 99 comp. value 8.99 Pretty peasantry for at-home. Floor length, double-knit ace- tate in a summertime print. 5- M-L (short length 3.99). budget store, loungewear 8 rs man 's sport coat 16.99 were19.99 Cotton corduroy in two big- now styles .. Norfolk jacket or 3- button mod el. Brown, tan , oys- ter, beige. Nylon lined. 36-46. budget store, men's 814 boys' flare-leg pants 3.39 regularly 3.99 Button-fly striped fl a res-the right-now jean of heavy-duty cotton denim. Bra ssy stripes. Solids also ava ilable. 6-16 . budget store, boys' 822 shower curtain sets 1. 99 value 5.00 Standa rd size 6x6' shower cur- ta in and matching window cur- tains with tie-backs. Heavy gauge vinyl In gay patterns. budget store, linens 831 chair throw covers 4.99 value5.99 Solids of blue, green, brown or gold. 70x60 " chair size. Ma· chine washable, 7.99 90x70" 6.99 11.99 120x70" 9.99. _budget storei-s.lipcovers 818 handbags for sprin g 4 • 99 tomp. value 6.99 Handsome vinyl bags-black patent finish, or krinkle patent in black, bone, navy, red and white. Dress and casual. budget store, handb.ag s 827 jr. boys' sport shirts 2 for 3.00were1.99-2.49 Permanent press, short sleeve shirts with the now lonr,er col- la r. Stripes or solid co ors. Of polyester/cotton. Sizes 4-7. budget store, children's 808 girls' knit pant set 6, 99 comp. value 8.99 Jewel-neck tunic top over sassy flare pants. Navy or lilac dou- ble-knit cotton, sizes 3-6x. 9.99val.pantset,7-14 7.99 . budget store, girl s' 824 women's uniforms 5 • 99 regularly 10.99 Up-dated and smart look(ng uniforms for many vocations. All white in sizes for misses and women. budget store, dresses 81 b men's knit shirt buys 3, 99 regularly 4.99 Acrylic knit shirts in lighter col- ors for spring. Cr~w neck and placket styles , solid colors and stripes. Sizes S-M-L-Xl. budge! store, men's SOS boy's knit shirts 1, 9 9 comp. value 2.49 Complete with chest pocke t. Cotton knits with short sleeves-- a 11 set for spring and sumn1er . Many colors, 8 to 18. budget store, boys' 822 9'x12' nylon rugs 3 9, 99 regularly 49.99 Conti nuou s filament nylon pile, embossed popcorn design. Jute backs prevent stretchin~. Many colors to choose from . budget store, rug! 81 I 6x9' nylon area rugs 2 9, 99 comp. value 49.9.9 Oval or oblong. Plush nylon pile, or sha g-t{,pe nylon . Fringed and non-ringed styles in a wide choice of colors. budgelstore, rugs 811 -maycolOUth cout plau, san diego·fwy;at·bristo~costa·mesa;-546-93i.1 1hop mondlly thru .. turday 10 i.m. to 9:30 p.m .. sunday noon 'Iii S p.m. MAY CO . BUDGET STORES ! .. ' • • ... . . 10--South C~1t Pl111 Suppltm1nt to tht DAILY PILOT, Thursday, F1bru1ry 11 , 1971 Fair Shake? Scientist Describes Earthquake State Quake 'Not Great' NEW YORK (AP) -'Ibere year, most beneath lhe sea. "M~l ceologists ," an expert APril 18. claimlng more than The ability to record tht polnt where the . 1 h • t ~ are forcts within the e1rt.h, While I.ht Cllifornia earth-wrote in 1957. hwould not be 700 livts and causing $400 earthquake and its intensity origin ated and bow uttense ll LOS A~GELF:S I ... Pl - Tue~a\'·s trtn1or <' 11 u s ed ·.deaths 3nd dev11st ation but fell rar shor1 of Uu• destruction or Californ1t1 for<'told in the . Greal Earthquake Scare of 1969. seventh place in the pop music rankings with such mocking lillf'S as "Where you goin' to go, when there's no more San Fr:tncisco'.''' in certain well-defined reatons, quake Tuesdly was cen-surprised at a great e1rth-million in damage from the is much more advanced. WbenJ "w"a"•.· """'"""""""••&;i bending and strainin& the tered 1n t.he San Gabriel' Moun-quake along the fault's central quake and fire. Iii earth's crusl Ltina, the best-known soura: or southern portion within the the crust moves suddenly, lt 1\ri1hrr .... as ii the . supershock •hat seismologists . for ~·e;irs hayr been sa~·ing • is riuc along lhf' fabled San Andreas fault. a crack in the \ f'arth·s crust !ha t runs 'irtually lhe length of the S1ilt r. Californians took to remark· ing, "It doesn't even look like earthquake weather." A popular gag had it t ha t Howard Hughes had bought all that land in Nevada so he would have beachfront pro- perty. "Geologists know t h a t When the stra in becomes of coocem for residents there next U years. severe earthquakes will con· causes the whole earth lo loo great, the earth's crust is the San Andre as fault, a "Certainly.'' he rontinued, tinue to happen along the San quiver. shock waves are pro- snaps, or moves. That's wbat @-mUe fracture or ~he e1rth "the segment or the fault Andreas fault, .. the Geologica l du ced which roll through the happened Tuesday Jn. extending from· north of San between Holllster and San Survey says. ''The on ly un· earth like ripples in water. Californ ia. Francisco into Me-.ico. · Bernardino now appears far certainty is when." "The seismograph ," Father This ls tne way the Rev. An el.J'thquake is a read· more dangerous than the seg-This inability to predict Lynch has written, ''is the Joseph Lynch, director of the juslment of the earth's crust ment of the fault near San earthquakes has frustrated founta in pen used by the Seismic Obs e r v 1 tor y at to the pressures around it. Franc.I.set which broke in scientists, and a great deal earthquake to ~·rite it s Fordham University in New So is a landslide or a 1906." of research is under way in signature." Fer Unusu•I Gifts Seutll C•11t 1'1111 Co1+• M111 5"40-tO'' l ri1tol 1t 011 S111 Di191 f-wv. The big scare of 1969 folto"'· eri publication of "The La st Day~ of the Late Greal Stale or California.•· a book that told of an earthquake so tre. mcndous 11 'would split the slate off the ('()Otinent and tumble it into the Pacific. There were bumper stickeri!I pro cl a iming: "California Deserves a Fair Shake ." A real estate offi«: sported a sign: "Sell Quick , Before Quake.'' York , describes an earthquake snowslide on 1 sloping roof. The famous 1906 earthquake an effort to detecl and This recording de v Ice -a sudden movement of a And the pressure.s continue was the last of ''extremely measure the strains within the measures the quiver sent portion or the crust of the lo build up on the San Andreas strong " intensity in California. earth lhat precede earth· through the earth by the shock earth. 1 _11~a~ul~t.~g~eo~l~o!gi~s~i:._:s~a~y.~~~~~It~oc~c~u~rr~e~d-•~t'_.'..5:~1:3~a~.m~.~o~n~q~u~a~k:••~·~~:__~~~~~~w~•~''~·~•~n~d~th~•~•~c~ie~n~Us~~~pm~·~-~~~~~~~~ The precise nature of the forces causing earthquakes are not fully understood, Falher Lynch says, but he suggests they could b e "thermal currents," nowing heat energy perhaps 500 miles deep within the earth. The book quickly became 4 Californ ia best seller. During i\1arch that year Los Angeles Civil Defense Coordinator \\'illiam Frank received morf' than 1.200 . phonP calls and 50U letters asking for pamphlets telling what to do in case of an earthquake. Los Angeles schoo l children became so disturbed by the rumors that teachers took 'time off from studies to re,,ie"' disaster procedures. Seismologists of California Institute of Technology issued L"'O reass uring releases in Jes~ lhan three weeks attempting to sci public fea rs al rest. A delegation of II members ·~of the Fellowship of the An- '*cient Mind. a psychic cult. ~-sOO"·ed up at City Ha ll seeking ~,<I sal\'agc permit for use if ~ !'he bi,c quake came . ~ . ~fembers or small funda -~!i !mentalist churches look off :cor stabler states. 141 : Finally, It became a joke. • ~ ;iA ca lypso song called "Dav ~jAftcr Day'' jumped Int 0 • • Serious scie.ntisls still say a great quake is inevitable some day because of the known slre~ in the earth. But the latest just didn't qualify. Jn the words of Richard H. Jahns. dean of the School of Earth Sciences at Stanford University: "We were lucky today. This ·was a big earth- quake but nol a great one." Paper, Sta1np Firm Dicker CINCINNATr (AP) -The E. W. Scripps Co. Tuesda y revealed its plans to sell its controlling interest ln The Cin- cinnati Enquirer to a California based tr a d ing stamp firm and scrap ill agreement to sell the morning daily to Enquirer minority shareholders. Spokes men for Scripps in New York Tuesday identified the prospective buyer as the Blue Chip Stamp Co. which has offered the same price as the minority shareholders . Sl7,569,510 for the 60 percent interest. Contraction of the crust by cooling or the effect! of the earth's rotation also could play a part. The U.S. Geological Survey has estimated that 80 percent of all earthquakes occur in' the so-called "ring of fi re.'' a heh surrounding the Pacific Ocean. The survey says a catastrophic e a r t h q u a k e strikes about once a year. But more than a million quakes are recorded eacb Level Lowered In Radiation BERKELEY (AP) Radioactive debr is that leaked from an underground nuclear test in Nevada Dec. 18 did not affect the general level or radioactivity ·of the air over California last month, State Health Director Dr. Louis F. Saylor said. :: : t•; ~~ •. ' ~: ~~ ~·: Harris & Frank ·.~ ..... ~·· COSTA MESA SOUTH COAST PLAZA -3333 BRISTOL AVE . ~: . --~We Cannot T ell·a·Lie Savings For ... Ji Our WashingteA's Birthday Sale! ' ' ~ .... • t•',), .... t, r t-JY, , • l • . ' • ~ ~ •! .. " ~ I •' .. ~~ ._f ,' , . •' : ., ; ~· ~~ ~· ~: . Friday, Saturday, Monday, Feb. 12, 13, and 15 Save $13 On Two Pairs! Famous Brand Men's Quality Dress Slacks, \> ..... • ! ! • ~ Kenmore Canister Vacuum 2-Stieed Poli•he,..Shampooer YOUR CHOICE $ ••. J I . ,. ,. ~. ,, ,, t-~ • . • REG. $20 ~R. 13 '90 2 FOR $27 ' . I Men's 2-Trouser Suits You'd Expect To Pay ~ :$125 To $135 For .•• Fine Imported Woolens • . ; ., NOW JUST saa ~By George! You'll Save At Least s20 On ~These Sport Coats Selling Elsewhere at 69's .. OUR PRICE 49.95 • :· . . :: .. ~."Almanac" Perfect Al 1-Year California Suit ~ With The Latest Back Pleats, Belted Details ' .. FEATURE PRICED AT s99 ,, ~ \. ~· ~ t MEN'S FURNISHINGS ~· ~.:R EG. TO $9 FAMO US MAKE DRESS SHIRTS •...... . ........ 2 for S9 ~· MEN'S SPORTSWEAR '.: REG. $11 & $12 FAMED MAKE KNITSHIRTS ···········-·················-···· t: REG. $8 TO $11 MEN S CASUA L PANTS ····-·· ..• ~ REG. $15 TO $15 CARD IG AN & PULLOVER SWEATERS •...•..... ~ REG. $7 TO SIO MENS SPORTSH IRT S .~ WOMEN'S SHOP $23.90 to $22.99 to $5.99 $5.99 $9.99 $3.99 $39.90 $26.99 to $19.99 Open A Hor6s & Frank Open.End Cred:t Account Or Use Your Ban,Americ &r or Masfer Charge Harris & Frank ... ,. ! I. • -.......... -- -..,.. ... ' ·- A; k ~~out .~anl ,.; Con,•enieut I • ' .;;redit Plans ' ' •'J ·11 -:: l 'l:J,. I } I l j ' ., ~ ·, I . 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COMl'fOH GUHl•U ION$ 11.lUI '"l.lDIH" l l HT.l .t.H.l IOUtK CO.llT ""''" :~~l.lTll(.f U.1Nlt'-M..MM1, f;JOA.M, lef~t.M".htn•t l2HHtltl IP.Mo 1'h lld9'11e• Gvwnl•t4 .,.,_,..">' ... " """"°"' Poland Cr isis Bar ed Ne ar-revolution in Decernber Told ~ .... By PID.L NEWSOM ,,u~1~1:::v::~ :;;and I ~ r~~~l~~ f:W:~ mber'i anUgpvernmeot onsirations and the friglk they threw · into the Com· munist leadership. Quite obviously more is ye t 1J.o ,come and quite obviously ; the leadership still is frighten- : ed. Also catching the attention .. &Kremlin watchers has been lhe Soviet reaction. A natural target and first to fall \Vas party leader Wladislaw Gomutka, provldlng an interesting footnote to history since Jt "'a.s by the same route that Gomulka rose to his job after the Poznan "bread and freedom" riots of 195';. More than two score are said to have died in the December outbreak a n d "'helher more blood is to bt shed will depend upon the skill or Gomu1ka1s s u c ce s so r , Edward Gierek. and the pa- tience of the workers \\'ho boil- ed over last December with news or an increase in food costs and a new job incentive ~~-1 system. Also playing an important role 'vill be the powerful Roman Catholic church whose leadership i.!1 counselini cau- tion. What must cause concern to the leadership and a situa- tion which caMot be tolerated for long is the su dden knowledge of Polish \\'orkers of the power they hold. . II v.•as this that led to Gierek's visit to Poland's northern ports where he pleaded for understanding and patience and told the workers. "'\\'e are made from the same clay." And it was this that· led the workers who cheered him •. nonetheless. to torm .-ction committees to see to it the ne-.v regime carried out its promises. As Gierek attempts to re- establish the party's· tradi- tional role of leadership, he LA Skyscrapers Shake , Not B·reak LOS ANGELES (AP) -~lid.night lt11ssion, kllltd tno Though occupants of taller man, and injured _others. building! ma y have felt as Of the 42 buildings in Lo! though they were In a crows' Angeles tha t we.re evacuated. nest during a gale, the 28 were in the old sections s ky sc raper s survived of the central city. · Tuesday 's earthquake without By ron trast, the new high· major damage. Some experts rise buildings suffered, a$ say they were the safest most, a few broken windows. places in the city. cracked walls, and an oo- "The ability to resist earth-c a s J o n a I maUunctionini quakes actually Increases as elevator. the bu;Jd;,~ gels taller ... ,.;dl-8--0--0--1--5=-- J. Edward ~1artin . whose arch itectural firm designed the 42·slorv Union B a n k Building and the unrompleled 5 2: s_ \or y Atlantic-R ichfield BOOKS Bu1ld1ng. lie said tall buildings made or flex ible matuials sway smoothly. \\•hile smaller in-BOOKS nexible buildings are subject lo sharp jerking in a quake BOOKS and are more prone to struc- tural failure. wm be ••• e .. ed by •t 1'"t P r oud Eagle F e lle •I three Important p1<essures. ._, Ont is the knowledge that A look at Los Angeles H!l(Mt\' 1..uc.i. l•oc• ~, •. • '1ceel• seemed to bear MarHo PICKWICK °"' Bricks. plaster. aod BOOKSHOPS fl~ l if the Polish party itself can-One of the last of North America's bald eagles is a prisoner at Ontario's Point not res tore leadership and Pelee National Park, the victiln of a hunter's shot \Vhich forced amputation masonry from small , an-. tiquated structures littered the ~!.,~'! 171 ,, '3f.7700 discipline. the Soviets will do of his right \\•ing up. The bi rd \Viii spe nd the rest of his life in a gainc pre· it for them. This much was serve. He can not fl y. .~treets. Falling debris from sou1H coAsf ,LAZA o~·· one old two-story building, the Co•N M••• • 111•1 s.t0.11t1 ...... ,, SAVE! ~~ SOo/o OFF! StJ'¥"1 fronl our rr-sular ~tock or qualit~ narne hra11d~. Amerii:an Touri!ter, Samsonite, Sl}· way, Fre nclt, llalliburton, Leed!, U rk, Harl· mann, Ventura •and many more. SELECHD GROUP Of QUALITT ttANDBAGS V2 PRICE! l onkAmericord Master Charge ROOTENS LUGGAGE SOUTH COAST PLAZA Son Diego frwy. at lristol, Costa Mesa 540-3110 Mon thru frl. 10 A.M.-9:30 P.M., Sat. 10 A.M.-6 P.M. proved by Soviet action in ----------, Czechoslovakia in A u g u I I , 1968. The in tensity of the Polish "' o r k e r s ' demonstration surprised many both inside and outside of Poland, coming as it did with the Czteh action still so fresh in mind. A second pressure is the weakness of the P o 11 s h economy. long evident but so far resistant to all attempts at cure. Shoddy workmanship "'hich makes Polish industrial goods unsalable abroad now has been augmented b y weather, reducing agricultural output for two successive years. And still another pre ssure is that generated by the Polish people themselves. They are \Vestern oriented and demand Western standards. Even if they had money there is little upon which to spend it. The official soluUon so fa r has been lo raise the price or food which everyone must have, and lo\\1er the price of badly constructed television sefs which nobody \\'anLs. T here May· Be Other Fi11ks, Too EAST LANSING. ~1 i c h . (UP I) -Fink coats n1ay be in high fashion in a few vea rs if Michigan State University scientists can work it out. A £ink, the result of m::1ting a ferret 1vith a mink. would ideally ha ve the lush fur of the mink and the calm disposi- tion of the ferret. they sa.v. "I don't know if the mink lvlll tear the ferret apart in lhe mating process, but we're going to try it this sprin g," said Dr. Richard Aulerich, head of the university's mink research. "\\1e'll probabl y tra nquilize the n1ink in thc.1 natural mating or u s c. artificial breeding." Attend the Church of Your Choice Regularly -g J eek·end ale! Final Days! All sale shoes reduced to_ None higher! Fantastic values ••• reg. to szo THOUSANDS OF PAIRS TO CHOOSE FROM: IMPORTS, SANDALS, PANTSHDES, PUMPS, EVEN BOOTS-ALL COLORS AND MATERIALS, HEEL HEIGHTS AND SIZES AVAILABLE ... THIS IS THE BIG ONE-CONT MISS ITI BANKAMERICARD, MASTERCHARGE FREE TAX RETURN PREPARATION DEPOSIT $5,000 -to a new or existing savings account at Pacific Savings and receive FREE preparation of your personal Federal and State tax returns. Some peo· pie will save $200 to $300 or more in accounting fees . Of course, this offer doesn't apply to corporation, partnership, bu siness or similar returns. PROFESSIONAL -quafified tax counseiors will ·prepare your personal rebns and make sure that you receive every possible benefit under the tax.law. Each retum wi ll then be triple-checked for legal and accounting accuracy by highly.trained spe· ci alists. All work is done in the priva cy of your Pacific Savings office using the trained personnel of Skousen Tax Se rvice, Inc. The Skousen firm, started in 1946, is the second largest tax company in the United States. They currently employ over 3,000 counselors and have prepared more than l ,000,000 tax returns. · WORK GUARANTEED -by the Skousen Ta x Service, Inc. Guaranteed Accuracy. Returns are triple-checked for accuracy of mathe· matics and reprodu ction. If the company makes an error resulting in any penalty or interes t charge, they will pay this penalty or interest. Guaranteed Protection. 1t your retum is questioned by the GoverMient, they will handle all the details at no. charge including representation at an audit conference. BRING OR MAI L -the attached certificate to Pacifi c Savings when yoo open or add new funds to your account so that it can be wlidated. At the same time, we will set up a specific ·appointment for you to meet a tax counselor at a later time most convenient to you. PLUS -you get a FREE Safe Deposit Box, servicechargeFREETraveler'sCheques up to $2,500, FREE Collection of Notes, FREE Notary Service and FREE Financia l Counseling. AND -your deposit earns 6% per annum in a two year Certificate account -514% per annum in a one year Certificate account or 5% per annum in a regular passbook account, all compounded daily. REMEMBER -to qualify for this free offer you need only to make your deposit and get the attached certificate validated. If you have an ACCOUNT ELSEWHERE, let us have your passbook and we will transfer your money to Pacific for you. Offer good until revoked but not beyond April 5, 1971. SO HURRY -make your deposit TODAY -or call me, Rick Jack, Manager, at 5404066 or st<>P by our office for more information. Pacific Savings and Loan Association SOUTH COAST PLAZA 3333 BRISTOL STREET, COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA 92626 ' -----------------------------------------------------~~~ THIS CER I• ICATE 0000 FOR WJ•V11• TAX RETURN PREPARATION . ,. . - • 12-South Co•st Pl.11• Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Thursd1y, Febru1ry 11, 1971 . Telior i 1e - fll)eSt elide · '"Foboel()t -'~oppe ... is eelebrming Audien~e leers .Opera MJLAN, lUlly (UPI) -At reading by Meno Fiorenza Giuseppe Patane, wheeled lo you'll bear music." ''This Isn't his b;iton. I the end or the stcond act, Couotto which drew duerved face the aUc!il),ct, thrust his music.'' "Is thls La Scala or Then, almost by miracle, someone in the third balcony cheers. But at the end of baton ln the direction of tbe not." "Bravo for the con· the tenor found a range above yelled down at the stage, "the the tenor's "Mal Rea&endo," thlrd Uer critic and shouted, ductor." "Shut up.'' ''Pig.'' anything he had sun g1 tenor is a joke." the audiences hissed at the "This ii La Scala, not a root· "Dog." previously and gave a com- By the end er the third, claques in the fifth lier who ball atadlum." The audience mendable reading of "Di l the conductor was in a tried to start aome applau.te. Immediately d1vided. For the BA.CK TO \VORK Quella Pire," even hitting the I shouting matcll with half the A JOKE! nelt four Cit" five minutes, The tenor, striking a high C. audience. Jeers and taunts new like martyred stance, s t.o o d The audience went vdld and At the final curtain c11ls shrapnel IC1'0IS the magnili· sileoUy by the s o p r 8 n o at the end of lhe act, the for •' Fine Diamonds 'WASHLilEOGLNTON8 BIRTHDAY.;."'1ith a 1 lt was a night at the c.pera for the act. aomeone in the cent home of opera. d at La &ala. Outside, a cold, third tier shouted "the tenor onstage, his head bent as tenor and conductor \valke 11 ,---------'i midwinter wind ruped as the ... a joke .. "Jf thla ii La SCala, then though in prayer. Finally, the arm in arm on stage to stare So11th Co•1t Pl••• orchestra tuned for the final , · conduct." "He's right, this is din quieted and the condu ctor, defiantly at the third tier boxl Co1•• M•t.• s .. o.<iot.!I performance of the season _ The soprano, who, in the La Scala. Shut up." "Let's \Vho started it all, turned back while cheering echoed around Br;1tol •l th. S•" Oi190 f ww Verdi's "II Trovatore." 11 pro-rescue scene hid upstaged the -~h~··~·~m~ua~ic~.'~' ~"~Sh~u~t~up~a~n~d_t~o~th~e~~or~c~he:s~tr'."a'....:an'.':d~r~a~is:"ed~~th~e:..ll:hal~I.--------~;;;;;;;;;;;;~ ~~ lV WOO~ rt'~ AM~ rouolt ved to be a testament to the tenor throughout a~ drowned health of Italian opera. o~t the poor man m the fln1I trio, cast an angry glance at n:e us.ual .crowd was there. the third tier in bis defense. Ladies 1n Jewels and furs. The conductor winced ... ' ' real and fake. Young girls The battle lines ~ ... were in s~uined blouses 8 n dd drawn and everyone came minis irU, trying to preten back in for the third act J0U1l the cold did not matter. There v.·aiting for the tenor's st('(lnd were men ln tuxedoes. hinting scene aria, "Ah, Si, Ben 111io." the evening's re a 1 en-tertainment would come later, They sat quietly through an impressive procession or ma.ii and young music lovers in and armor _ catapults and shaggy turtle-neck sweaters mounted stronghows _ while end jeans, sneering at the the cborw sang. capitalist opulence aro und But the voice just was no! lhem with only a trace of strong enough. Jaia dld not jealousy· have the range, slurred ever J.'IRST SIGNS some passages and missed a 'fhere was one disquieting piece of new s in the program. The tenor. Flaviano Labo. was indisposed and was replaced by a substitute tenor named Gianni Jaia. But !he bea utiful Horseshoe House wa s glitt ering and the six tiers of boxes and galleries \\'ere mostly full. Only about a haU doz en of the some 150 boxes were em pty and the student and claque sections -1vhere the professional clap- pers stand -v.·ere pa cked. The opening aria v.·as an cimen. couple of high notes com- pletely. Loud hisses and shhhs came from the audience at !he claques trying to do their job. SQUEALING PIG ''The tenor is a pig," the same voice from the third tier yelled down in the ensuing silence. •·He sings like a pig squea ling." At this, the conductor, Israel Bond Rally Slated A rally benefitting State ef Israel bonds will take plact? Feb. 12 at 8 p.m. at Harbor Reform Temple, 3209 Via Lido, Newport Beach. • • • • • • • 'fhe bass gave a timorous reading of ''Abbie tta Zingara." mi ssing a top note In one passage. The man in the seat adjacent leaned to his wife and muttered. cluck- ing his longue, "he made a mistake there." Tbe applause coul d be de sc r ibed op· limistically as polite. Eugene Kaufman. general chairman of the bond rally committee. explained that the bond issue is the central source of investment capital for Israel's program of economic development. South CQast Pla'Za • Iowei-leVel cneXt -to May Comyan"j) Costa Mesa·s~o-821>2 In the second act , things went smoothly enough through "La Zingarella" and ''Vide La Strampa" -the last a dramatic and "' e I 1-s ung SAVE AT GE ORGE MURRAY'S GO LD RUSH! Regular $49. 95 · $2995 LIMITED QUANTITIES LAVISH 23-KARAT GOLOPLATE FLATWARE 50 PC. SERVICE FOR 8-CHOICE OF THREE PATTERNS Gold, rich and impre$sive, will lend an aura of splendor to your teble. Gold need, no poli,hing -ours is luxurious in weight end finish, it', the rich•st f1bl• delight in all th• world, inspired by th• spl•ndor of th• palec• •• v.r,a illes. YOU GET All THIS ' J 6 T ea ~poon s 8 dinner krii .,,.es, 8 dinner forks, B soup spoons, plus two s•rYing piec•• USE OUR CONVEN IENT LAYAWAY PLAN 8RIOAL ltf G1 5TRY -Gtf:"T WRAP -NO CHARG[ W E SHIP EVERYWHERE IANKAMfR ICARO MA STER CHAR•t \ OUR OWN CHARGl GEORGE MURRAY 1-tLV llll:-C." 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' '• .1 ·l .,, ' " . ,, H '·' h .-.1 ' ··-~ .. ~. . ,, ,• , . . , al Vigil Ships ; GREAT Bl , · Eapt (AP) -Rus and salt lre eatln1 away the 14 foreign &hips stranded here since the outbreak o f Arab-Israeli bosWitles In June 1967. : Abandontd by their original crews, and even rejected by their owners, the ships are watched by a group or 60 men delegated by Lloyds, the ltisurance group which now· bolds title to the vessels. The ships are huddled in small groups to withstand wind and sandstorms. An American ship, the African GieM, is reported in danger. One Greek sailor looks after the vessel and reports constant water leakage into It. Another American ship, the Observer, anchored in Lake Timsah, is also reported in poor shape. American, British a n d French seamen were freed from this "open air prison" last July. Today there are only 9 Germans, 21 Poles, ~ • Eg y pt .. 13 Bulgarians and 6 Ozhechoslovaks still on duty aboard I.he stranded !hips. They try to keep up their spirits. Capt. Georg Fisher of the \Vest German Nordwind said seamen meet on his "church ship'' ever1' Sunday, ostensibly for prayers. "But they drink beer instead," he said . Fisher is prayer leader. He also reads the results of tbe week's sports competitions and announced the program for the following week. None of the seamen like the place. The only reason for coming to Bitter Lakes, they say, is "more money." They were not excited about the recent Egyptian overture calling for the opening of the Suez canal should Israeli ulljiertake a partial pullback in Sinai. "I do not believe the canal will be reopened ," said Fisher. "l've heard these words too often to believe them." Tucker111obile? Ile Owns Tliree of The1n ON'l1ARIO l~P) -Bill Hamlin, a retired 57-year-old space engineer, has a special distinction based on devotion to an automobile that never got on the market. Hamlin owm three of the 50 Tucker motor cars pro- duced. It was in 1944 that the late Preston Tucker of Ypsilanti, 1i1ich., advertised: "I won't be satisfied until a Tucker is mine." That describes H a m I i n rather well. He wasn't able to buy one at the outset becalL!le he lack· cd the ,2,000 cash price. But llamlln, who never has owned a new car, was fascinated by the Tuckermobile and subsequently bough t one in 1952 for about $3,500. Now ht owns -according to assembly Une numbers - the No. 2 car built, plus the 14th and 38lh. He can account for the location of some of the others, one of which was destroyed in an accident. Olhers are in Brazil and Mex· ico. Preston Tucker, d e s I g n engineer, died in 1956 after a court battle with the Securities and Exchange Com· miulon. None of his 50 cars ever was marketed officially. After 23 years, says Hamlin, one or hi! Tuckermoblles with 150,000 miles on ii, can still Tears of Joy Jewish Fa1nily Finally Gets Visa From Ru ssia NEW YORK (UPI! -For more than 15 years, ·vosef Eisner had been seeking permission for him and hls family to leave the Soviet Union and join relatives . in the United States. Each of his many applications was denied ..• .•• Until about tv•o weeks ago, when. for no reason tha t any of the Elsners cou ld determine, their exit visa - the piece of paper vilol for emigration from the u.s.s.R. -was granted. Eisner, 67, his wife Rose, 50. and their si~ children m a d e ar· rangemenls to fly here on the first available plane. So Eisner's brother s Harman. Samuel and 1.fayer -the latter two had not seen him since all lour were hauled off to Nazi conct!lltration camps 30 years ago -and their families waited nervous- ly as the eight Soviet Jews arrived late at night at Ken· nedy International Airport. The Americans, tears on their faces, rushOO forward when the emigres cleared customs. and the families embraced in silence. Yosef, 11 smnll. frail man \.\'ho bad been a grocer in the Ukraine, spoke Yiddish in· terpreted by Hannan to a cluster of reporters: "I'm very glad to be here.·• Hill wife and children. rang- ing in •1e rrom 1t-21, all _ bundled In heavy coats and Russian-st yle fur hats. stood smiling. The only one who spoke was Leah, the eldest child, a bookkeeper . "Fine,'' she said in English. "Fine." This v.·as the second family for Eisner (he calls himself Friedman -his mother's maiden name ). His first wife and four children ditd In the Auschwitz prison camp, where they were sent v.·ith the other three Eisner brothers when Nazis and Hungarian col- laborators o v e r r a n the Eisners' home, the village of Kusnica in Czechoslovakia. Leah is named after Yose('s first wife. Harman, now a rabbi in Ellenville. N.Y., and Mayer and Sa muel. V.'ho live in Brooklyn, v.'ere freed by Americans at Aus ch wt t z. Yosef, who had been sent to a Hungarian labor camp, was released by the Russians 11fter World \Var II. In the middle 1950s the brothers established contact again and there began the long eUort to reunite I.hem. The Eisners in the United States enlisted the aid of the State Department \\'hile Yosef kepi filing for an exit visa. but for years there was no chink in the bureaucracy that kept them apart. Three years ago Harman visited h i s brother in the Soviet Union. and that meeting enabled them to keep up their hopes. Then, two weeks ago, as in· explicable as the refu.sals, ac- co rding to the Eisners, cnme the reversal: Yosef. Rose. Leah. Rosalie, So Io man, Theodore. Ludwig and Jacob were free to leave. 1\1esa Studen t On Honor Roll Catherine Pettijohn", daughter of ~Ir. and Mrs. A. Ross Pettijohn of 3075 1i-1olokai Place, Costa ~1esa, has ~n named to the fall term honor roll at George Fox COiiege , t\e\.\.·berg, Ore. A junior majoring In psycholqg)' a n d sociology, Miss f"eltljohn was one or 119 students earning a 3.4 or better £rade point average. ' South Coast Plaza Suppltn1ent to the DAILY PILOT, Thuradty, February 11 , 1971-tl 4 OF 14 TRAPPED SHIPS ARE TIED TOGETHER IN GREAT BITTER LAKES Abandoned by Regular Crews, Ves5tlls Are W•tched by Insurance Group IAlfllilll lllTllll'\i - at SU NSET HOUSE Ii j + + + + + + ... + + '" .... ... ... .,, ... ... .. ~--*fl r;;:r:::~..,,.o ~ •' t.. I .. A>••••OI ,. ·~~ "'t t , '••• l•IJ 1i 1: ~di I A• ( o :f I "'.'..,"" I 'J.~ A'~! •t :J ~·••ot· -....... lt .. ~ .... l ! . I i .. ' PAP~;HIN ; ' ·. ( . - I ' 1· I Joke Boomerangs On Plant Jestor LYE, England (UPI) -ll was alJ for a gag, Doug Smith's friends said when they asked him to n1ake a tea-break speech calling for a strike at their steel plant. So the 45-year-old shop steward gave out wilh a real rouser. It was so stirring that the workman at whom the joke v.1as directed believed what he heard -and promptly told the factory bosses. Smith v.·as fired on the spot for "malicious gossip'' -and his fellow-workers \Valked out on a real strike in protest, halting production for t\VO days. But the 1nanagement relented and rehired the slc\vard. , '"It's a great relief, but I'm still upset about it,11 Smith said. "To tell the truth, I don't believe in strikes. J like a good joke, but I'll have to be more on 1ny guard from no\v on.'' Fastest in The Weat Buy 11. Sell it. Try the faslest response in the West against your O\vn clock. Test Dime-a-line Ads, where the action is, in Saturday's DAILY PILOT. ,. ' • ~ •• -'====================='~ ' • • . , .. :~ • • • • . '• ( 14--South Ce>1st Pl111 Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Thursday, February l 1, 1971 Britain's Jobless Increasing L O N DO ~ 1 AP ) Unemployment in Britain is expected to ir;crC'ase th is year. One forecasts says a million. inure than 4 percC'nt of the \York forl'f'. \rill be out of \\'Ork in a year. The countrv "'as ::.tunnf.'d by lhC' Janua,.Y une1nployn1ent figures of 690 .000, or 3 percent unemployment. \\'hilc half the L".S. figure. is high ftlr Britain. Ther~ 1::. C\'1dcncc that employers, follO\\'ing a year in "'hich the numbC'r of "·ork days los1 through strikes \\'3.S tile highest since 19Z6. are t ngaged in a massi.·e :.ha ke out of marginal \\'Orkers. The Times predicts that figures soon to be published "'ill sho"' a substantial fall in the size of the "·ork force lhrough permanent cutbacks. Those employed by pro· ductiqn i ndu s tr i e s are estimated to number 300,000 fe\\·er than 12 months ago. and in manufacturing lhe shrinkage is put at ld.000. The Sunday Telegraph th is "'eek pred icted a mill ion out of "'ork \\'ilhin a yea r. and ~aid : "Bey11nd dou bt the huge \.l'age increases have forced firms to cronnm ize in the use of labor . In additi on to !he closure of uneconomic plants. the normal "'astage of labor had been allo"·ed to take its toll and in many cases where "·orkers have left Jobs they ha \'e not been replaced." The increase in "'age costs v.·ill also hit investment. the Telegraph said. and business confidence ''is at a particular- ly low ebb." It explained : '·The two ma- jor reasons are that compa ny profits and cash flow showed very little increase in 1970. "\Vhen a11owance for the rise in prices i~ made . it will be seen thal th e purchasin g po"·er of company profit~ d ecli n ed . I n s u c n circumstances. busi11esses are compelled to cul back in in- \'estment spending plans." Business investment is likely to be adversely affected for another year, the newspaper said, but a consum~r-led rec<lvery 1s expected lo sta rt In 1972. bolstered by an ex- pansionary budgPl and fur!her culs in income rax. Health Care May Replace Solo Doctors LOS ANGELES tU PI \ - A med ical school instructor here bt!lieve!:. that "'ithin 10 vears the solo practice of inedicine \\'ill be I a r g c I Y replaced by a kind of health care servi ce designed lo keep people \.l'Cli ins1ead of treating the sick. Or. Richard P. Boggs. Chief nf Neurological Sciences at Ra nc h o Lo s Ami g o s Rehabilitation Hospital and an instructor at Loma Linda School of ?>.tedicine. is presi· dent of Satell ite 1-1 ea I 1 h Systems. a corporation in- troducing the a I t er n a t e medical-care systr.rn Boggs envisions. Boggs says private ntedici ne will disappea r cnlirely un less solo practioners band together In clinics 1n pro.,.idr more comprehensive' carr 1han is provided by the ex1.~11 ng solo. fee-for-service systen1. Boggs believes ;i nallon:1l health crisis within the next few years "'ii compt>I the government to pass com- prehensive health ca rr pro- grams. "In spilr of the l'urrC'nt an· nual expt•nd iture of over $(ill billion. there are nearly 25 million poor with a hii<:her than average incidence of il· lness v.•ho art not gelling tho medical care they need,·· Boggs said. To make more efficient usr ef the limited numher of doc - tors and nurses and reduce the costs of medi cal services. health care systems rnust ht' reoriented to'.l'ani prcvenlion or disease. Bogg s;ud Local cliniCli "·ould providl' a "program lo detect in ad· van~ the medica l. deni al and psychological problems "'hich now lead lo prolonged il1nes~ and expense.'' Boggs said. The prog ra m v.•ould use computer-analyz.ed pa t i e n I data Lo pick 9'Jl tendrncie~ toward disea!lrl"' as "'ell as periodic testing nnd review. "Assls~nt physicians'' and teehnlcians would he t ralnrd at the clinic to handle screen· Ing procedures and automntl'd hlslories, fu rth<'r conservin g lbc lime and producllvil y of tt. doctors. - >troller lengtl1 mink coats $499 stroller-length ' natural mink coats Mink c0Jt3 01t nicer-than-ever sav ings. Silky. lush. Truly elega nt. The versatile mink . Stroll er length . Perfect for day, fo r evening. All lav ished with designer de tai ling. A great value. This is the perfect time to add the lu xury of a mink coat 10 you r ward robe today. May Co South Coasl regal quality mink coats Choose iron1 lldtural Emba Azurene*, Tou rmaline•, fdwn, roya l pastel, pearl, dyed ranch or blue vi olet mink. •Roya le fu ll-length mink coats • weightle>S, fema le mink stroller coat> •full-len gth des igner mi nk wrap coats •stroller mi nk coats. sizes 40 to 46 •IM llllba ~link Bft'f'fl~ """""'~'on black broadtail .a.,__.-,. lamb coats $299 greatly reduced one and few-of-a-kind luxury furs 3-t iered natural Saga Norwegian blue fo x cape> $69 collection of exc iting full length young vogue casua l furs, sizes 6-10 only $89 full-length shaped wh ite-dyed K,1l ga 11 lamb coats $139 coats of black-dyed broadta il processed lam b lavishl y collared and cuffed with natura l fox $299 let-outdouble-mink-<:ollared capes or stoles in radia nt natural min k swagger-length mink jackets in three iavorite shades includin g natural Emba Azu rene® mink $349 $399 SOU TH COAST PLAZA 3333 So. Bristol, Costa Mesa shop monday thru iaturday 10 a.m. to 9;30 p.m., i.unday noon 'ti l .S p.m. .- MAY CO . . South Coast Plen Supplomoot to tho DAILY PILOT, Thurtd1y, Fobru1ry 11, 1971-15 - Plaza and Buena Park High .Ri se May Co111e Do wn Soon ! •. ' i ; I I I I . ' ' j I I ~·/ ~/,' f 1( ·'t . !'' , . "" ' i..t , I . . J :4. '.~ .... , ___ ..... ' " f ( I I ' I ' ' ' 'I ,. "·· . \\~ .r " \ ,, . ' . . ' i l I I [ ! f ~ ,. ' !, !\ 1, 'I /.• t "' ·0.' · .. ' '. ' . \ \\ .\ ., ., ; ' .. ) ' I ! . I I ,,/_~·· . .., -- \ I ' ' " !& 1, ,) l { 0 ·' '. I . . ! ( \ ' \ \ . ' I ' ' I ,\ \ \\ I t~ , < ~ ,..~\ . . ' ' ,/ : -~, , ... ' ; ' .. .. If ' 1 :• t .' ...... ·, . I . . , p'' \ . ' ·1. . ' )'~ . ' i . l \ I l . r , I ' \ I " ,' ! ··::i .,}\j ' ti < t ~ \ I , . '· . ' l I I ,.:"·~ . : \.'. ' ~" ~ , I \ \ ,' ,, :\ ! I' " .~ ~'Ii. . .• .; ..Gll!l.,14'. ~· I~ ~ l ffi• /pr.~' ' ' . . ' .._, J ' , ·. I , ' , .. ' I • ' SOUT H COAST PLAZA 3333 So. Bristol , Costa Mesa shop mond1y thru uturd1y 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., sund1y noon 'tll S p.m. " Fr iday, Sat urday o nl y! Yes! lust tv.,10 dc1vs. Corne experience 1he luxury of own- inR the fur you've al\vays wanted. We've gathered to- gether an entire collection of unsurpassed fu r values. Furs so elegant, values so great ... we believe you won't be able to duplicale thern fo r the san1e low price, anywhere! Fun furs. Sportive furs. Elegan t furs. By oleg Cassini, Conessa, Margit Branclr, Chombert and more. Come ect rly for widest selection. Friday! Sa lurday only! May Co Costa Mesa and Buena Park Only . may co fur s.11on 47-south coa~t plala and buena park only "iOrry no m;iil or phone orders convenient services at no extra cha rge •charge your fu r on your may co account or why not open one during this event •free allerations for custom fit and comfort • free personalized e rnbroidered monogram • free storage in May Co's fur vault until you \..Vant you r fur .. ,. ,......,,..., 1,"'"..,."' .i.r. .. ~"""'" ...r ... ,,1~.,1-~-1 ~ ... ........ -... , .... "" .. _ ""-"""-"'"""'- { new, longe r le ngth shaped mink coats ·1 he Scandia. Toda y's mink exciten1pnt. Crafted in thf' 1r1ost luxurious skins irnriginable. Silky. Finiitcr-rlP.<'p. Gracefully interpreted, flowing In the calf. Chnme irom the pa!e~.t brown shadow niink lone rlPftly height- ened with bright ner added . Or rl r a ma I ic rl yrd rd nr. h mink. Such fluid elegance. You'll know this is dn excep- tional value the n1on1ent you try it on! MAVCO " \ WASHI NGTON (AP) -Tha Nixon Administration is con· 1ddering tearing down 16-ycar- old Pruitt-Igoe, a $36-mil lio• federal public housing prnjr("l that became a high -rise hell for the poor of SL Louis. A recommendation to lf'vel the 33 tombstone-like slrur. tures in the heart or the city and replace them in the next five years with a mix nf garden apartn1en!s and rnw houses is awaiting actio11 by Secretary of ~lousing Gcor,2e Romney. "We have this war on pover- ty and \li'e got our ships out and we got one that's lost. l!'s sunk. let's face 11. Write if off," said a Romney aide , Ron1eny is expected to decide 'vilh in the nl'xt !wn weeks whether to accl'p\ the recommendation or try onre more to find a formula that will make J>ruitt-Igoc a fit place lo live. Repeated earlier ('ffor1s tn find .~uch a for1n11la , includinl! a $5-mBliort 1nndcrniza!inn program And a S5-mitlion prn- Rram of special io c i a I service.~. failed 1o s1rm A lide of murder, robbery. rape and vandali sn1 . In 1969. police report ed !fl murders. 14 rapei; And 120 as.~aults at !he project. Van- dalism costs al one point "'Prt ninning at Sl ,iOO a day. The latest 1nurdrr ''if"- lim "'as an 8-vear-old J!:irl, found slAin 3nrl i;cxua ll.v molested before Christm:is in one of the cornplex·s hundreds of dcser1cd ap:irtn1rnl s. Only fiOO fan1ities now li vP in Pruitt· Igoe, which 1,1•as built to accommodale 2.800. Tn simplify !'lccuri!y and inain- 1.enanre they are huddlert together likr survivors in 1he fpw buildings that ren1<1!n rrl;;itively sound. \Vhole ·buil1lings stand aban· doned. s1ripped of cverythinJ!:. "11 looked li ke a haU1cfirld . Tl's still a battlefiC'ld ," said a spokPsman for the SI. Louis Civic All iance for Hnusin~. The Alliance decided a ,,·rek ago that the onl y solution \.\'as den1olition . "Rom111ey 's gol to do something," said 1' ere n c e 1 .. TcCormack, the Alliance's ac- ting rlirecrnr. ''He's got to say yell or no." Caniarillo' s Refor111ator y • Go es 'Coe<l' CAMARILLO (AP ) -Out- numbered about eight to one by the opposite sex. the boys In this experimen1al coed reforma!ory are learning to mind lhrir manners and ad- just quicker to society . "You watch your J,1ngUaJ!:e, you i;ha\·e morr ofl cn, you're more careful of what you wear. Your whole outlook 1ust changes somehnw." summed up an 16-ycar-Q!d inmate from Ontario. Called 1hr Ventur11 School, the experiment began fill.Jr mon!h.~ ago when 10 ynun~ men were lransfrrrcd from the youth !raining school al Chino to this prev1ou~ly all -girl insti tution in Ventura Cou nty. Now !he bnys nun1ber 42 am/'Jl'lg a population nf 35fl. "Our program Al Vcn1ur a is finf' as 11,ng as 1he girl:oi outnumbrr the boys." !'laid Beatrice Doland, school direc- tor. ''The girls fert they ha,·e to compete for thr boys· al· tentioo, but if it \li'As lhe othe r way around "'e'd have trou· ble ," she said. Rill, a San Francisca n 1,1·hn has spent much of his Ill yf'ars in corrrcrional 1n sht11l1ons, said the coed school is helping him change hii: life palll"rns. "!l's just a lot bcrter hcrr,'' he said. and added hi" is lc<1rn.- ing to "watch niy mou!h and behave around girls." 1'he girl s s<1y they like It loo. "Let's face tt?whcn the np- posi!e sex i~ around you don 't ha ve to resort tn rrtating on ly to other girls." said Rosie, l7. Mrs. Doland i:aid the boy~ 11nd girls are hoosed ttp11rt and soc ial C'vents are c11rcfully chaperoned. but !hcy are }lenerally frt.c to ml.I. The experiment i!! 1o1•1)rkln" ~o Wl'!ll officials from the Slate Youth Aulhonly s;:iy tht'.v may quadruple the numbt!r or mill'.· ed prisoners by (he end of lhe...year_ Tho DAILY PILOT- Tops ;,, Local Sports~ ' ' ,. -South Coast Plttl Supplement tO the DAILY PILOT, Thursd1y, F1bru1ry 11, 1971 Apollo 14's Perfect Trip Soups Up U.S. Moon Program SPACE CE/\'TElt. Houston CUPI f Apollo I ~ . 5 .. absolutely perfect :.cQrL'' n1oon mission recharged the run-dow n b a I i e r 1 l' s of America·s space pro11,ran1 h started as a make-<1r· break 1niss100 for 1nat1ni•d space exploration. II rnadl.' 11. Despite 1nany in·fhght pr(J· blen1s. the on -tar get splashdown Tuesday 1n lhc S-Outh Pacific lei\ the Apull n progn1n1 in bettrr sh~pl' \hfj ll 1t hali bttu in for 13 1nonths Apollo I~ ~rascd the b(Ucr f,11lure of .-\polli;t 13-a fhghl heildt·d h)"·ard ti~ s..·unP Ian· ding ~1tc on the moon "hen 11 ":i~ r()(·k1'<1 by an ox~ge:1 tank e:<plos1011 !<1st April. A recurd haul of 96 pounds of lunar rocks and soil had been returned to scientists. who y,•jH spend years extracting frorn 11 Sl.'cret s of the solar system's l"rer1tion. Thi' p1t·turc had bc~·11 111uch 1<·~~ <.'l.'rl<t 1n before Apollo 14·1 3lfuhbub "'Wt.-1/u Adi- .Ja11 31 blastoff from <.;ape l\ennrtly . ··t 1hink thl' pressur e fro1n a fa1tu r1• 1n this fli ght \\'OUld h<ive caused a ve ry k>ng dela y 1n the prog ran1," said manned ~paceflight chief Dale r.1yers. "This success certainly sets us solidly on the course of tht re1nainlng three flights i11 the progran1. Apollos 15, 16 and 17 certainly are now a solid part of the American space program . and "'e're looking forward to tremendou s C()M., ~ 0., 43~ kuv cm., to-()Wl; G~ ~aDD,! ~ »ru :Th' w-bl ~ t '5~ OJY1LL ~ l:Rai 4CMlQ_, oJ:, ~u.tkir­ Jt1t ~~owu~ OlQ, 'wimfu., ~ <flour .t&u,. ~ .' ~JJ.wa:t : ~~S.'1Mt1'~ ( '1UDJV ~lo.Un.,) . ONLY 62 increases in scienti(ic results fron1 those flights too.'' crowded <:01runand shi p hi~e. :il"IOD.rd Apollo~ 15-17) b~tau:i.e he said. "II has movfd• us anyway. ~tyers said it appeared the or learning of that difflculty, into a much· broader t l· Looking back. over the nine- day mission, acting space agency Adminilltrator George 1\1. Low said: "Alan Shepard and his crew in Apollo 14 have shown us what man can do and given us a visio• of what man will do in the future." A battery in the lllndl11g monochromat ic color. harsh ''\Ve have bef.>n recogniz111; ~p=l:oc~a~H~o~n ~o~f~lh~:...;-~~n;;.;;";;;;;;;;; craft showed a low voltage. iiunlight and shadows. lack ()( thal up-sun 1s diffic~Jt ar1tJ1• but also worked. A fa ult y familiar references like trees down-sun gives U!S :..ome ncw j switch kept sending the landing or buildings for estimating halo effect> I.hat were not1 craft computer signals to stz.e-aAd . thus distance--and recognized in previous fhgh!~. abort the land ing while it still the aiming of the nu)()n11·alk 11 would indicatt' \IP 1•·oul I was in moon orbit. The com· path directly into the sun were be better off planning as 1nuch 1 puter was out·smarled by an all at fault. as t,•;e can j 11orth·and·south emergency procedure y,·orked "l lhink this traversing pro· trav erse (a t a nght <in~le IO I out on the ground. blen1 and landmark dist:incr the sun 's direction.)" ~1itchell 's moonwalk sui t judging is something new to ti.1yers. howev~r. Ii k e leaked. A waste dump v:itve us," he said. ''! think we everyone else. 1vas ple;iscd fo, Uniq ue Jewelry .. "I can only give Ibis an absolutely perfect score," Low said. "The flight achieved all of the objectives that we set out to achieve." stuck. The back guidance are going to think a little with Apollo 14. I Se~th Co•1* Pl•1• system failed arter tirt oJ( from bit more about the planning "I think this flight Joas been Coil• M•1 • S40·'0~6· '. lhe moon-the first such of our missions with the rover a tremendous step forw;:i rd f11r l 6ri1tol •I th• s." Di•9o F•.;• There were problems, true. but Shepard and crewmates Stuart A. Roosa and Edgar D. Mitchell-with the OC· c:asional crucial help of ground controllers-overcame I h e m all. failure in Apollo-but it 1vas (A jeep-like vehicle lo be our y,•hole space _~pr~O~J:'~a~<~n~,"~1 ~~~~~~~~~~~ too late to af fect the mission ---- An antenna misbehaved. and L t h ' parachute hnes draped <icross as c ance the rnoo11sh1p after 11 hit the e Pacific. L st ~ .1( h &' s * A1180 ·pou nd mechanism designed to link the command ship and th~ lunar lander toge~her (ailed five times before it worked late the first night. u~s,~il~ ::1.~~~n~1:~:,v',~1! . a uear s . ouc ewi· 11 had been the lea s! troubl~ .J , Apollo m1ss1on. · sewing machine b'i Singer There \\"ere sorne questions · to be considered before Apollo s100 --;•. The bug disappeared. and it worked again perfectly in the crucial redocking in moon orbit. Engineers surmised a foreign object had jammed it, but askeU the astronauts to bring it back home in thei r 15 takes off in July. a mission Myers said was likely to >> ' · • \ on schedule . These y,•erl! the ·-......... problems Shepard and ~1it· ~ chetl encountered j u rl t! i n g · ··-, distance and recognizing Of F landmarks dudng a Jwo·m1te ~ * ·i:r ·(:, ·i:r ft ft Time Running Out NASA Scientists Too Late for Moo11. SPACE CENTER. Houston said Dale l\tyers. associate (AP J -\Vith only three moon NASA . administrator. when asked "'heth~r Schmitt would landings remaining, i l 's be named to one of the two bec<iming clear to the 14 scien· remaining fligh ts for which tist--astronauts that £cw of crews ha ven't be c n an· them, if any , will ever tread nounced. lhe moon's dusty plains. Three three.man crews are And under crew selection planning for Skylab. The first criteria established by the Na-is expected to have t1vo drawn tional Aeronautics and Space from lhe engineer and test Adm inistration, no more than pilot group of astronauts 1vith six can be selected to man the third member a medical Skylab, the two-story. earth· doctor selected from I!,. orbiting space station planned scientists. The t11·0 later ere1vs Jor 1973. probabl y 1v1!1 have o n e "l"m very disappointed I engineer-test pilot and two didn 't gCt a flight to the scientists. moon." said Dr. Anthony For most of the scientists. ~ngland, 28, "'ho holds a doc· the years w11h NASA ha\·e !orate in geology and physics been taken out or the middle from i\lassachusetts Institute of what y,•du ld ha\'e been thei r of Technology. most produ cti\'e period as •·1 really wanted to go lo research scientists in in. the moon in the worst kind duslria l or academic positions. of y,·ay. But , that"s JUSI the They 've had to devote their u·ay it goes." time to learning lu fly JC\ The y o u nge s l astronaut. aircraft and s par c c r a f 1 England was chosen in 1967. sirnulators and mas'lt!ring thr "Maybe over a beer J can skills or the astronaut. become bitter." he admits. And the life of the scientist· '"bol the country did n · l astron<iu l doesn't leave much guarantee me a ride to the time for individual scienti fic moon and il has been an ex· research. citing program anyway." Reg. price Now's your last chance to save $100 while you help us clear out last year's Touch & Sew" sewing machines by Singer to make room for a newer model. It's the machine with the fan tastic Singer-exclusive Push-Button Bobbin. a bu1lt·in buttonholer and more! Get it now. in the Singer sewing cabinet ol your choice. It's an offer beyond your wildest dreams! WATCH "SINGER presents BURT BACHAAACH"' IN COLOR SUN DAY, MARCH ·1.1, CBS-Channel 2 9 P.M. Imagine! A Touch & Sew•sewing ·machine by Singer from as little as , s129ss! Ii has drop-in Irani Push· Button Bobbin, Singer exclusive sla nt needle. sews chain stttches, too. Many one of a kind-some floor models and demonstrator~. Come in for yours while they last~ The Singer 1 lo 36' Credit Plan helps you have your machine now-within Y.2M!' budge(. SINGER In all. NASA namoo 17 "You feel like you"re not s ci en 1 i s 1 astronauts-one doing your job if you take roraddr~~of 1heS1nqerSewinq.Centern"-Jr('·t ' IOI Or I e do·10,, , O"r own ' "'1 ~"'''.'Ir :p f'.1neo; •lnder Sl~GEA CQl,,.IPANY. •A T·~'1r'rnJ·~ 1,1 THL ~NCCf:i COM'''""" group in 196J and another in ini l'.o •· " ''r-~---..;._..;....,...,;...;.;.;... ........ _______ .... ;.;.;;,;,;;;;.;,;;;.:;;,;;;,;:;;;.:,;;;;;;;;-;;::"., 1967. Three have quit. research."' England said. '·But "Al the lime we brought ii ~·ou don "! do ~orne 11·ork of your own. you lose your 1 the last group of scientists I on board 11·e kn!.'11' \\'e ivou!d proficiency. So you end up COSTA MESA lri1IRI & Sunlkowu HO·l•ll Soi/If! CO••I Pllll COSTA MESA lJOO Mubor l l•d. Kl •·llU t1•rl>or Ce•lor HUNTINGTON ORANGE GARDEN GROYI BEACH 11 Sn•nnon E~•I Ed•"11e• •I ltKll Hll Ch•PIMll "'·1011 SIJ.J~•I SJ0.•011 HuntinQ!On B••ch "fhf Coty .. Oru••t CPU"!' Pllt• Cenler Center SPORT COATS have no flights: for them" said l_:d~o~in~g~il~n~ig~h~ls::an~d~w~e~ek~·c~n~d'':·_"~1 ~~,-~~~~~~~,-~~--..;;..;;~---~..;;~--.;,-~~~~~~ ;.+o-411-Donald j \. Slayton. director of fliglit crew operations. "And they 1vere apprised of that when they joined us. . ·; ;- ' j• • ,, VALUES TO $65 ONLY 59 BOYS SPORT COATS SIZES 14·10 VALUES TO $35 ONLY 174 FAMOUS BRAND PANTS SIZES 28 . 36 VALUES TO $12 ONLY 441 -FAMOUS BRAND SLACKS SIZES 21~36 VALUES TO $15 50 PLUS MANY MORE CLOSEOUT BARGAINS \ ' .---., . ' ' -soUTH COAST PLA Z·A-eosT A ME5A I ~: t ··Howe\'er. '1'e do have a great amount of u·ork for these peopl e to do in support uf fo!101v·up program5 and they've been helpful in doin g thi s, prin1arily in Skylab ." The onlv scientist-astronaut ]:!ivcn a ·remote chance or fl ying lo 1he moon on Olli'.! of the re1naining A po 11 o rnissions i~ Harrison Schmitt, 3;). a lunar geologist y,•ho join· cd the astronaut corps in 196~, He currenlly is assigned to the backup crew for Apollo Ii <1 must duty before a rookir is gi\·en a spaccflighL "I think there's a chance,'' Chilly Fred Gets W ur1n 'S nakeneck' 1"1JCSCON. Ari i . li\P) - Frrd looked col d and Nen a cold·blooded snake could use a \Va rm swe.ater. That's \\'hat 8-y ear -eld Coleen Olson thought. Sh!' crocheted Fred sweater Fred l1vt's in a glass.fronted 1·agr in Coleen·s third·grade t·lassroorn at \Valier Dougla!i School. Ringed in banana hues of ye llow and black, Fred i5 40 inches long. The 5weater is somewhat shorte:r. Th<.' two-toflfl:I pullover Is hot pink. on top and baby pink on the bottom. "That'5 all lhc yarn T had.'' said Coleen, "·ho ha~ one year's knitting and crocheting CJ.Jl('riencc. The style; --''It'' t1-3nt1kenttk-~wtflter!' 111s101 AT TH[ SA N DIEGO FarEw.t.r -IN THt tAltOU5fl cou•t I Coleen giggled. "lle'd NEVER L-----.;...;..;;,,;..,._..,; ______________________ .. wear 1 turtleneck tne." ' 1 -SECTIONAL AND WALL FURNITURE- -LAMPS AND ACCESSOR/ES- fhe AMERICANA collection - Nostalgic Signs and Plaques \Vall plaques and dccor;\l ivc accessories inspired by 1\mer1- ca·~ int eresting pai;;t au th entically reproduced \', ilh antiqued colors on \rood ~, an 111v1tat1on to you to pu t the nai ve zest of the 19th <'en lurv into your decorating life . '. from $3.00 to $30.00 ANTIQUE BANKS AND WHEEL TOYS,, . Tht\t lteint 011 11produc:1d hotn ori9• l"ol•, o"d ll~t the ori9inols ore mad• of 1a"d.cou 9roy lro", co•tlully o•· """bled 011d palll!ilold1191y ho"d point· ' ' • 'l "i( ~~ ., i ~~ • i ed '" full detail , .. 1hown here it TOYS? ju1t o par! of • 1111lqut, in1e1eJti119 • - -• collection. PAST .•• CAPTURED FOR TOD Y TREASUgl!D MEMORIES FROM THE TEDDY AND THE BEAR BANK \,•Hrl T,•dd~· r:'"'"~·1«lt'< "lln 1'1!h n 1•11\n, 11 .. h'lll'1'>. 111 ... hf'lld 1\1111 ~11"•11 < l"!)lfl 111tll !11'1· llnd <•ut !XII•~ l>C'ar. 011i.;1 nllll~ 1•111d 1-•· ,.d in 1907. 127.00 FIRE ENGINE 17.95 ICE WAGON $7.95 Co I n I~ pl11N'11 I" j(lt'kr~··~ lll•HJlh. 'lh•·11 lr1• · 1< l•t"t~•r(!, 111111•· ktek'. )01·k••\ tin"· n11 r n1111,·, hrad And rtr"l'' 1·<11n 1!l •lnl. 11n;:1nol 1·uld111·r·d In \~i'·r' $27.00 South Coast '.Plaza l r.itol '' ,~, s~" Oie90 ~"'"''"·Coil~ M••• low•f Mill l ••t1 -S~0·1111 KICKING MULE BANK • • ·Thomas and Theodore join Fashion Island in a ... PRESIDENTS BIRTHDAY SALUTE to George Washington and Abraham Lincoln I FRIDAY, SATURDAY . & MONDAY ' Come buy this birthday holiday weekend as all 60 merchants at Fashion Island celebrate with special purchases and special values in honor of two of our greatest presidents. 3 days of bar- g ains. Friday, Saturday apd Monday. Exciting mall events all 3 days . (See Ne ·ws of 1nall events i1tside) All fiO stores (i ncluding Buffums', Robin son's, Broadway and Penney's) open Friday nnd Monday nighl<. FASHION ISLAND . NEWPORT CENTEll Pacifi< Coilit l-l ighw.ay between Jamboree and i\1.icArlhur, Frccw~y minutes .iw.1y. 0 . • " • I • , ... t -F11hl1tn ltl1nd Supplement to the DAILY PI LOT, Tliur1d1y, February 11 , 1971 Fashion Island Sets Racing 'Fair' Compan y Designs R Vehicl es for Bedroo This one ls for sleeping not for racing. It's the Can Am Race Car Bed. Combining. lhe COJ11pat1y'1 B. F. Meyers & Co. or Fcun· tain Valley, manufacturer! and designers of the original fiberglass dune ·buggy, the Meyers Manx. and more recently the sports car, the Meyers SR. has designed another winning "vehicle..'' original aulomolive design NIGHTMARES CAN'T CATCH UP WITH THIS 200 MPH BED talents with it.s high qvality R1cer·Sh1ped Youth Bed Made In Fount1in V•lley By Mtyers fiberglus abilities, Meyers i!,\ ___ _.:::::::_::::::!'.::....:..::.:.:::..:::...:::::::.~_.:_:.::.:::::...:.:..::::_:.:__:;_ ____ _ 4t h Grader Pos ter Kid Dana Dubrow, a fourth grade student at Mariners School will represent lhe Newport-Mesa Unified School District in a countywtde poster contest for National Children's Dental Health Week. producing the: bed of the same high.gloss fiberglau /ll the Can Am Race cars themselves. Authenticity of the design i! c.uried. right down to its replica racing wheels and tiret and race. sponsor stickers to please the fye cl the most scrutinizing "purist." • Perfect for a young boy's ! SUZUKI TRAILHOPPER JUST WAITING ON TRAIL FOR WINNER Motorcycl1 is Major Prize To Bt Given At Ricing 'F1 ir' Dana, who is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Dubro w, 151 1 Santiago Drivr., is the first place winner for the di.strict in the poster con· test. final judging in the contest between the representatives or 2.'i Orange County school districts will be held Monday at South Coast Plaza. room or a sports car afj. cionado's den, the Can Am sleeper meauures 98'12 inches Jong by 59 inches wide and 23h inches high. It comes complete with a standard twin box spring and mattress and is available in four bright, lifetime racing colors -signal orange, German s j Iver me talflake, Bridgehampton green and French formula blue. ~-acing Mac hines Highlight First priz.e will be a SISO sa\•ings bond and bicycles will be awarded the two runners up. The contest is sponsored by the Orange County Dental Association as part of the na- tional dental week, Feb. 7-13. The Can Am sleeper is available factory-direct or through appointed dealers. Suggested list price ls S349. Early response to the bed has bttn gratifying eoough to enccurage Meyers designers to plao several ether models or beds and furniture for children's rooms. 13ig Presidential Weekend' Real racing cars. races for miniatures !with prizes for ~·oungsters vdm enter and y.•inl and displays of some of Mat· trrs ™"•~·est toy11 are only part Clf a big, holiday weekend planned by fashion Island merchants. The shopping c e n 1 e r's retailers "''ill celebrate both Lincoln's and \Vashington's birlhdavll with a three-dav /'fair'' ·scheduled for Frida}i Saturday and fl.tonday. Major priu to be given av.·av to those who turn out for ihe star-spangled wrekend 'A'i\I be a Suzuki SOR Trailhop. per motorcycle from James, Ltd., Costa 1'1esa. The motorcycle will be av.·arded ~fonday e v en i n g . \V iMer need not be present to win. Aul long before the event reaches that climax , Fashion Island 's b i g "Presidential Week e n d '' Yl'i!l offer youngsters opportuni! ies lo try ou t and compete for Mau er toys fOI" prizes and will offer adults a look at some real racing gear. At least hi racing mach ines "~1hich have campaigned al Orange County International Racev.·a ~., Long Beach Lions Dragstrip, Ontario Ra~v.·a y and in American Ra cin g Association e"·ents \\'ill be on display. Dune buggies and racing motorcycles abo "'ill be shown. * * * * * Mattel Schedules Toy Fair at Fashio n Isle Island v;•ill be open Frida y and Monday nighL1 until 9:30 p.m. The popular center is located off Pacific Coast Highway. belween Jamboree and l\.1acArthur, ''above '' Ccrona del Mar. On e manufacturer even v.•inlt::;V~;:.;;~~C('121~;----;c;~f"".:f'-;:--~r~;:;-;;.,-·1 show a fiberg1a~ youth bed made in the shape -and colors -of a Can Am racer. Competition for youngsters -with prizes being offered virlually every hour on all lhrce days of the celebration -y.•ill include : Z00.\11T Contestants shoot l\.1attel's new Zoomit.s into a target area. Competitor "'ho comes closest to target each hour is cha mpion for that hour and gets the prize, WIZZERS Each challenger ''bowls'' a Wiuer at a set of cluck p i n s. Challenger \\'ho knock! down most pins is champion and v.·ins the prizes for the hour in v.·hich ht is cham p. RRUM BLERS -Introduces! Mattel's new R r u m b I e r miniature racing motorcycles. ConteslanL1 race lhem on Ho! \\'heels tracks. Winners of each heat qualiry for runoffs. \Vinner of runoffs held each hour becomes that hour's champion and takes the prize. Special hours at Fashion Island will be in effec1 for the weekend. l\.1ost of the cenlefs SO s1ores w1!1 be open until 9:30 p.m. each night on Friday and ~londay. For A Lifetime Of Happiness a.ntly Cul Diamond Bridal Sets from Zan .~ $595 .M USEZALES a.JSTOM OiARGE $39' ZAllS t)ZoJo~1m 17 FASHION ISLAN'o • NIW,OIT CINTrl 10J W. •TH ST., SANTA ANA Mattel , lnc .. "'orld ramous toy manufacturer. will present an exciting Toy fair on the mall at Fashion Island, Fri· da~·. Saturday and ~1onday, Feb. 12. 13 and 15. Frtt con· leit!S and prizes v.·ill be ''featured attractions '' at the f;ur. ~1 allel \l.'111 int rodui.:t for lhc l1r«.t time any .... ·here the new Rumbler, .... v.·nrld 's f a s I e s l miniature mot o r c y c I e it . Children v.·111 be invited 10 ra<'e them nn Hot \\'heels tracks and pass them lhrough d;irede\•il stunts. Conttsts "·ill he conducted with the help nf the HarOOr High School \'1-Y Club. Steve \\'innell is president 300th Joins 552 Club 1- Othrr ,\1aHc1 dcn1on~t rations and contests will include 1he n""' Zoom1t. \~'izzers and gyrnscnpe tops. There Yl'ill be approximately fl(! pr1zr~ in all fnr "'i nning t•on1estan1s f'ree ri rav.·1ngs "·ill be conducted on the mall at r~ash 1on Isla nd. All r..o st ore' 1n Fa ... t11nn ~!embers or Hoag .1\lemoria! Hospital's 552 Club have an· noonced the signing nf thei r JOOth member. He is John P. Condon, assis· Ian\ to the president of .>\utonetics anri a rPt ir('d l \!ar1ne Corps ~lajor General. The a52 Club was formed four years ago b.v local men v.·ho pledge<! In sign up 552 rnembf>rs "'ho will pay $100 a year for fl\'C yc;irs. The l monev raised by !hP club ~oes . ' 1n l:'Xpand the bed capacityl nf thl:' hn~pita! Final Clearance OF OUR ENTIRE WINTER STOCK OVER 50% OFF FASHION SOUAR E S1nt1 An• .FASHION ISLAND NewpOrt Be1ch FORGET ME NOTS? YOU BET! Lots of Super Thin.gs for the Conteniporary Man i11 Yot1r Life This Valentine Day You Can Turn Him On With A Little Superise From GUYS GEAR* 65 Fashion Island, Newport Center 644-6500 ·~rem the Se1111 '••pl1 t41et lre•tllf Y•• Tll1 Lee•-JJ f11tllle11 l1l•11d a year ' savings on mademoiselle pumps reg. $25 NOW 1890 ANAHEIM Anaheim Center NEWPORT IEACll Fashion hlond WHITTIER Whiltwood Center RIVERSIDE Riverside Ploza SAN DIEGO Fcshion Volley BANKAMER ICARD, MASTER CHARG E, PAUL ALLAN CHARGE c pen daily 10 o.m. to 6 p.m.; mon,, thurs., frj, 10 a .m. to 9 p.m. HEY GALS IT'S HAPPENED AGAIN The Most Anticipated • S.A LE In All Orange County Entire Stock of Fall e Holiday e Early Spring Dresses.Jump Suits-Pants-Shirts-Sweaters 50% to 75% OFF ~····························· : A S pecial Valnetines Gi ft : : Our Own Groovy Jumpsuits : : MANY FABRICS ALL SIZES : : Values to $80.00 NOW $25.00 : •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• The-lPok • • ~la u ni 33 Fashion Island, Newport Center .. • • • TALON TRAINER STANDS,READY FOR INSPECTION JUST AS IT Will AT FASHION ISLAND Air Force's Advanced Jet Trainer Scheduled For Display At Newport Beach Shopping Center Talon Jet to Be Displayed at Fashion Island 'Die \1·orld 's most advanced JCl pilot trainer, the Air Force T-38 Talon \lill be on display at Fashion Isla nd. Feb 22 through 28. The T-38 earned a unique distinction in i\1arch 1961 by becoming the ~rorkl's first supersonic trainer. At that time ii was phased into !he Air Training Command's pilot lraining program. Student pilots use the two- sea t twin engine trainer lo ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ complete basic flying re-The an portion of the T-311'.s Soulh Vietnamese Air Force quirements. fuselage is delachable to and a dozen other nations. The a i r c r a f t, \\'hich permit engine installation or Exhibit of tht' p J a n e , llNCOlN-WASHINGTON BIRTHDAY SAlE SAVE UP TO I 12 AND MORE ON FAMOUS MEN'S AND WOMEN'S SHOES 1''or Women '!i ' Naturalizers originally to $23 now $11 Nina, Tempo. Fanfare, Miss America, Parma originally to $23 now $8 1 For lrten Florsheim orig inolly lo $34 .95 now $16 WETHER Y ~KAYSER #4 Fashion Island Newport Beach . . ' • I performs at speeds exceeding removal without difficulty or sponsored by Ne"·port Center 800 miles per hour at altitudes bulky equipment. Kiv.·anis Club in cooperation above 55,000 feet. is ideally A single-seal version of the "'ith the U.S. Air Force will suited for student training T-38. known as the F-5 be open to tilt public at no purposes. Performance is Freedom Fighter. is a tactical charge from 10 a.m. lo 5:30 comparable to combat aircraft. ~fi~1g~ht~e<~n~o;w~ti.~in~g~use~d~by~1~he~~p.~m~. ~da~il~Y·=========~===~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "'eighing '"'ice as much asjj= the T-38, making it an ideal traine r for supe r sonic bombers and tac tical fighters. KATE PORTER SUNDAY MAn LEWIS II 37 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER ~ ... """"'' ... ,... .... Am .... Park! ... Ft-•t/•11• •044-2030. Safety features, an im- portant con sideration i n training a i rp Jane s. low Qperating cost and ease of maintenance were major fac- tors in the de sign of the Talon by the Northrop Corporation. The twin-engine T-38 can take off on one engine should the need arise. The cockpit is a sludy in simplicity v.·ith everything in front of the pilot and easily reached with either hand. The ai rcraft can also be flo"'" and landed safel y using the control surfaces of onl y one wing. Andy's Fun A.sic any kid. "Ask Andy" Is fun. Stt It Sat~rdays In U1t CAIL Y PILOT. WONDERFUL WORLD OF PETS LINCOLN DAY SPECIALS FOR VALENTINE GIVING SPECIALS THURS., FRI., SAT. & SUN . l,"YE IS A U'A H ~I PIJPPY COMl'LETE 5 GAL. PEMCO AQUARIUM SET 2000>~ '(I e DOBERMENS e ST BERNARDS e ALASKAN MALAMUTES e DACHSHUND e YORKSHIRE TERRIER e POODLES e BR ITTANY SPANIEL e SAMOYED e DALMATIONS e SHIH TZU e PUG e MIN. SCHNAUZCR e BASSET HOUND e LHASH APSO e GERMAN SHEPH ERD ~ e KEESHUNDS COMl'LnE e SILKY TERRIERS 199 • e COCK ER '" ~ e SPITZ >, e GERMAN (' SHORTHAIR ~~ SI 2 LOCATIONS FASHION ISLAND TO SERVI YOU • NEWPORT OPEN. Opp. Broadway 7 644-0980 ! DAYS ' CHIPMUNK & CAGE ~ I COMl'Ln1 ) I 995 "" ~:~ I ~g" ' • COMPLETE 1995 ··''' >~ '!.! FASHION SQUARE SANTA ANA OPP. BULLOCKS IJS-0311 for gals: the "beach bum" group xodi1c knits p•tch pocket knits lace·UP slacks other knits for men and boys; stripei. swimwear in solids & po1tterns coming soon: sweatshirts, windshirts, jackets 7 fa sh ion island,. newport center f 644-5070 ' .. . . • ! .. \ ·. . .. . . .. '1-t-'.•5hion l5l•nd Suppl1m1nt to the DAIL V PILOT, Thursday, F1bru•ry 11, 1971 Copter Crews Bear Brunt Bomb Halt R ais es N umber of Chopper Hits in Vietnam UPI T11t.,._lt WASHINGTON iUPIJ - Whether being lhe pUot of a fixed wing plane or a helicopter is more haxardous In combat depends on what kind of war you are fighting, If U.S. casualty statistics are a guide. The statistics show that when the United States stop. ped bombing of North Viet. nam in November, 1968, more than 1,000 fixed·wlng crew members either had been cap- tured or were missing in ac- tion, 767 were listed as ltiUed in action. At that · time, the total 0£ U.S. deaths in Vietnam due to enemy action a g a i n s t helicopters was 1.1&9. An unspecified bl.It certainJy small number of helicopter crewmen were captured or missing. 1jo Stop a T~iel Since the ,bomblitg halt. helicopter crews have been bearing the brunt or air com· bat and have sustained far heavier losses -1,296 mtn killed in action. compared to 212 for nxed·\l'ing units, with the number captured and mi ssing remaining almost the sanle. The United States nov.· has , 3,800 helicopters and just over 2.000 fixed \Ying planes in Southeast Asia. In addition. Ttie original painting by Charles tit Russell depict-28 canvases fron1 th e 1iussell and Fredric Reming- ed1 a reaJ.Jife episode in ?t'.lontana -a shoot-out be-ton collections reproduced as giant posters in Peo- t ~\~en horse thieves and a posse of ranchers. En· pies' Gallery display on the mall at Fashion Island titled '·\Vhen Horse Flesh Comes High," it's one or no \r. -' ------------------ 5r~BJjllii1ljil.t1ialltl1m.m1jMBl'l! §1 §! TOY AND HOBBY STORf· WIDE CLEARANCE LIMITED OFFER! WHILE SUPPLY LASTS! \~ Q 13 to. r.\l PLAY· POKER P!" ,. • ., tho '"""• ""· A "''" tul,o(l•t JOhr '""''· lot• t"' o<roloO. Mtdo I• kl0<k I 01,.11, tiohh 01 .. '""' wldo. ' ••1•• •11•. I '''' tMr\, Poll I~• ..., ....... ,..-. , .... ., ~-"'". _ ............... . .......... -· ·-·-·· ... ADO, SUITAACT, MULTI PLY KARL'S Hobby Clearance only $2.99 Reg $6.00 Wi•h n-. h•nd\I ecc.ur•t• ulcul••o• wn1ch oi~•• intun1 •n•-ra. G•••• lo• Plo........o•~ check Ing I••••, •re. To1tl1 up to 99,99999 &MO'• !!.""•·•fin u tlly Into•-• df•-•· UCHm> - FREIGHT --' STATION ::::.•r .. '":.i::' -:r,., .... , .. ,i,, ....... -. S•I•• A1g.l.OO ~N~l ,..t~ ...... ~ C....U:MllCAll llUllJGllUIOllC .. 11 ~-1/:·--. ••o Ull:I Slit fk "" 1,. S~ll ff< tt0mR CAii RACING FANS ! HQ.SNAP SWITCHES FhmoH A.H. Rrmo1e L.H, M11"uf1J R,H, M1nu1! L.H. ••g. l ll.l!iO ••e. S!!i.110 ••t· S3 oo ••g. Sl.00 '" i ·YL111'1111 n ONLY IJ.99 ONLY SJ.99 ONLY S2.A7 ONLY S2.A7 SAVE 50°/o PLASTIC MODELS SPECIA L SEL ECTION Cars -Plan11 -Boats AMT -RtYtll -Monogram RC11«!£1 I 00000 1 .. .,. •• , ,,, 11 .... ,.,,, "'' ro•ot ''"' ""'''' lo """ "'"'"""' NOW 2.99 TEXAS DECK Fuo for th o whol1 f•mily ._.,tit thtu GIANl C.-.~Ul, 1.99 ROCKn HAWK It" I• fly , . , ohoolr ''"" l'o '"""'' ••H•• ••• 1~• .. 11•tr llAW( .~ .. 1. lolt t•o ,~,· l ••I lih o rnl --o!. Co.,olo1o, , ... , " "' 1•••••1•1 ·~? .... t i 11 1•1 Joi 1 .... ,_ 1 ...... , lllt•h l lGo. 2 99 "·" . SUPER BALLOON GIANT 10' BALLOON SAILS OVER 100 FT. ONLY aa~ TUBE OF TOYS Appro1i m~tt ly 10 pl.,\;c !cy1 for boy• •nd 9irl1. Tcy•, ch•'"''· '"'"'•11, dcU1, •le. l lG. ''c 47c NOW HANDCUFFS Prcfenio~•I lypt htndl111f1 101 1hc1t who likt the '"''V b~11, Slro"q, for,td dtt l, n<c~tl pl•1tti •"d h i ~hl, po!i 1ht ti, Comtt com· pl•t• ,..;1h 1 ~•vi . 0 ... LY 2'' Save 50% Special Selection Cars · Planes • Boat s AMT· Revell -Monogram ~ 50 FASHION ISLAND, NEWPORT CENTER I 644-0981 OPPOSITE BROADWAY .ka:rls . . • •• ~ . ... ' ,. °"''··· ·· .. li ~AJYAY.46V-AKV..Aa helicopter crews are larger ol lbe upper air is maintained. Lockheed OleyeMe w a s oo the av,rage (usually two The Army and Air Foret canceled, the Army had ex- to five men). men are lo agree me 0 t, pected to prov ide a greatly The Army files matt of the howtver, that the helicopters superior iunship for this helicopters. are well worth tbelr cost for purpose. Asked by UPI to asseu the certain combat p u r p o 1 e s , The reason given f e r relative dangers of helicopter besides being Jdeal for air cancellation of the Cheyenne's and fixed wing combat, the re1cue and medlcal evacua-production contract w a s Army replied : lion. 'lbe problem l! how to "problems of rotor st.ability ''St.atistlcal comparison of provide more protection for and control, for which the helicOpter vs. other aircraft the choppers and their crews. contractor has offe~ no ade· losses is not valid ln terms A classified number (known quate solution." of assl~ mis1Jon and en· to be comparatlvely small) But research and develop. vironment as well a.s other of Huey Cobras art the only ment of the Cheyenne is con- variables." helicopter JWllb.ips now p~ tinuing. Sooner or later, a pro- Tbe Army statement con-yldlng cover for the }ow-flying ject to provide the helicopter tinued: craft in Vietnam. Until March, units with more armament "Considering the fact that 1989, when production of tbe seems certain to be revived. helicopters operate over actived---'----'------------------ fire (shooting) flght.s and at low level, with such operations lasting for long periods of time, the rate of losses of these aircraft, per o n e thousand flying hours, ts less than for high performance fix· ed wing planes. ;rA reason for th.ls low 1055 rate is that damaged helicopters have the capability of making forced landings at unprepared locations and are readily recov~rab!e rrom the field. High performance aircraft generally b e c o m e total losses when downed by enemy action." Fixed-wing pilots who were asked about the Anny's state- ment took some exceptions. They pointed out that a high flyer has a chance to bail out. and that a helicopter vdll drop like a stone if its rotor is knocked out They also con- tended that choppers probably can operate only where control N e'v Airplane Built to Be Soundproof LONDON (AP) -Veteran inventor Sir Barnes \Vallis D "PYice c:. on DRES«;,E.5 value! +o ~.250 NOW ~15.i,25,$50, Feb . l'l-13·15 onl~ £/egllHCC iH 'JllSHiPH .,. -~ ·t ·» ·»->} ·•8 KUMlll lllYlll I fASHIOll ISLAllD I NlWPOIT llACM 644·2212 claims he has de~igned a 120-.1----------------------- passenger plane that will fly at five times the' speed of sound and land on runways 300 yar~ long. \Vallis also told newsmen his plane's wedge shape \\·ould make its supersonic boom in· audible on the ground. The de signer said his V- STOL SST -for vertical and short takeoff and landing supersonic transport -is on the drawing board at the British Aircraft Corp., the chief British collaborator in he Concorde the Brilish·French SST. \Vallis, 82, is credited v.·ith developing the revolutionary S\\lillg·\Ving principle f 0 r planes. He designed the Well· ington bomber and the "boun- cing bombs'' of \Vorld \Var II \rhich ricocheted off lake ~urlaces to blow up German dan1s. The Concorde. which may be in se rvice in 1975. \viii make o!Tly half the speed \Vallis claims ror his nev.• aircraft, "·ill need runways of up to three miles and causes a supersonic boom thal is already causing trouble "·ith cnv iron mentalists . \Vallis said his plane could be in the air by 1980. The inventor said It \rould be ~ boon ror conservationists, ending the dem11nds on coun· tryside and environment made by rapidly expanding in· ternational airports. He said his new plane "'ill look rather llke a paper dart. with a square fuselage and \\'edge-shaped nose and tail instead of the conventional round fuselage and conical nose. He belie\'es the v.•edge shape has at least two times less drag than the cone, a desi"n principle used by many Gra~d Prix: racing car builders. lie said this will make it fast and economical. \\lallis calls his plane a "universal aircraft'' because, he says. it v.·ill carry either 120 passengers at a cruising speed of 3,000 miles an hour or can be changed quickly to a freighter. • · He figures the ,plane "'ould cost "a small frac tion" of the Co n corde . whose estimated price started at $34 millior. in 1968 and is now up to $28.8 million. J\lesa Student Gets Cita tion Harold S. Turley, son ol tll rs. June Turley of 611 Capitol St .. Costa 1'tesa. h;is been cited by a Dartmouth College history professor for outstanding acadrmic achieve- ment during the fall tenn. The 1967 graduate of Costa ~lesa 1tlgl'I School ~·a9 granted lhe rar~ fitculty citation for his "unusually thQµght ful ~nd BUFFUMS ' NEWPORT AN D SHEARSON -HAMM ILL invite you to a BULL AND EGGS BREAKFAST AND LECTURE (no charge) ME ET llllt. JIOSS MC ADAM, lnveslmenl [.'(etu~~e. He'll eive you imponant lips con cernin2 investment s and investing. He'l l discuss: . lhe Seven Common E11ors ol lnvt!s~ng . Bonds-ls It Too Lale? Is the Mutual Fund Dead? Investment Management Se1vites !Of Ile Managed Portfolio DATES: Silurday, fcbruar; 201h or Satu1day, February 27th TIME: 9:00 a.in. PLACE: franciscan Room Resla1.11ant ForyOt.11 rese1vations call (714) 644-22001 ed. 75, NEWPORT H1wp•rt, •I Fcullio• l1l•1ul, Newport C911ter e 644·120f outstanding contribution to\ '---------------------' claS! discussion." -- F11hlon l1l1nd Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, : cal~tt~r I "' Oil Spill Proved Many Care SAN FRANCISCO I UPI) - Doti.'t tell Robert T. Orr that people used to care but don't any more. Orr, now associate director of the California Academy of Sciences. was a y o u n It naturalist and scientist in 1937 when a ship colllsion caused a large oil spill in San Fran- cisco Bay. It w:is similar to the col- lision of two Standard Oil of California tankers last Jan. ]8 with these differences: -In the 1937 accident. 2.7 million gallons o( oil spilled out into San Fra11cisco Bay. compared with 840.000 gallons In the recent accident. -Jn 1937, the effect on seabirds was "devastating." Thousands upon thousands died. -And i11 1937 -in contrast to the hordes of volunteers who turned out this time to clean beaches and rescue birds -nobody cared. "There was no effort made at the time to work un public reaction." Orr said. "Besides. nobody really knew lvhat to do." On March 6. 1937. the passenger steamer Pres}de.nt Coolidge struck the As~oc1ated Oil laJ'lker Frank H. Buck in the Golden Gate. No one was killed but even- t ually 2.7 million gallons of oil spilled from the Buck as she lay stranded on rocks about 100 yards offshore. . Orr was one or two scien· ti sts to studv the tffects of the Buck spill. The oil extended alon~ Sf! miles of coast Jil'!e outside the gate anrl reached from 15 to 20 miles out to sea. he says. The 1'-1urres. a penguin-like sea bird. were the har~s\ hit. By conservative estimate. 6,600 fell victim to lhe catastrophe. Orr and colleague James i1offit ·who was killed \\'hile ~erving with the Navy in \Vorld War 11. issuf><l a report on their study in 1938. "Hardly anybodv read it then." OIT said . "But there Is great demand ror ii now. 111 ligh t of the Standard col- lision." Orr said lherc "·ere no facilities in those days for sucking up oil and no army of volunteers to ·wash the oil· covered birds. "This llme ynu have people. particu larly young people. wh<J are interested." Conditions at B o l i n a s Lagoon. a focal ~!nt of effor.i. this time were very bad ln 1937, Orr said. "There "'ere litcri111 y hun- dreds of dyin~ birds. Lack of time prevented a CQUnl being made of the doo"'!ed birds, a circumstance \\'h1ch has since been regretted." lhr two men said in their 1938 report. "At several plaef's where pickle-weed apnrQached the water's edge. clumps of this growth appearOO lo ~ moy· Ing. UpoR close inspection ~1s npparition was seen to consist of the heads and necks of dozens of these birds in- effectuallv attempting l o remove oil from their feathers with their bills." Log booms were placed across the lngoon during the r ecent spill. . That idea occurred to (1sh :ind game people i11 the 1937 disaster but it was more of an afterthou~ht. Paul A Shaw. chemist in charge of the pollution detail for the department. said at the time "there was already so much cil on the waters of Bolinas lagoon that Jillie could be done to remedy mat· let$.'' Ont: lhing was done ror the !lirds, thouRh -the SPCA sent a ma.i to patrol the beaches and put them oot of thei r misery. ';:;=:===""="'=========;! STARS Syd11ty Om •rr h en• ol ll!t -.11d't trtat 1ttrolott11. Hi1 •olum11 11 on• ef flit DAILY PILOTS tr•af fo1tu1••· Friday and Saturday.:. come, see how far you can stretch the y_ankee dollar ... our two-day, double-value event. Lincoln's Birthday Buys and thrifty, gifty valentines 48.00 reg. &0.00 BLACK AND WHITE and twoed all oVer •.• The cape for Spring is a versatile all·weather show-off in· water repellant wool blend. Smartly edged In black h<aid, with ~ button front and a de- tachable capelet. r . ' .... ~. r ·ic--. Co.ii ind St.I it Shop 8. 99 reg.17.00 BRAEMER OF SCOTLAND qual. ity and style in a men's V-neck l.1mbswool,.Jl.Ullover sweater. Fully-fashi~~ with smart new :!>addle shoulder. A wide range qf outstanding colors. Shrink re- sistant and machine washable. Sizes38-46. ,_l('n'sSporhwtClr, 2.99 \·•l S.oo.6.00 GIRLS' SLEEPYTIME WEAR By a famous maker. Bright colors. happy prints. • sofl cotton flannel. In sizes 4to14for all your little sleepyheads. Cills' We.Jr. 22.99 special purchase PANTSUITS FOR JUNIORS Reg. 28.0(). 32.00 polyester panBuitsby famous manufacturer. Soft. pastel colors for Spring. Four fresh short sleeve styles. Sizes 5-15, in aqua, pink, melon, mint,, navy. Youna~l'.ornr• Shop - 2/7.00 reg.6.0Q ed. PATTERNS, STRIPES, SOLIDS irt firie men's neckwear. All current styles and colors. In today's best and most fashionable 4" width., /l.1en'~ I url'li~hings · - - 29.99 29.99 SALUTE SPRING in crisp navy with \\!hiteor blc1ck with white. Th"""'Pie<e pantsuit 'by Puritan Forever , Younghas tunic top and long sleeveless \le!.L slimming pants. Textured I 00% bonded acetate. Sizes 1().20; 12~22Yi. """"" Q<moo. '"S· 35.CJ0.45.00 BUSH COATS in 100% Durawale corduroy cotton suede. Many n1ore styles a nd a good selection or colors also al lh i!> special price. Alf sizes. V•r.1ty Slit>p 3. 9 9 yd. v.lue 6.00.7.00 ACRILAN SWEATER-KNIT FAB· RICS in onf.' of thf' season's mo!>'t ~ul.ir racke l kn its. 100% Turbo acrylic in textures and colors ••• cable, rib, mesh and some multi- color slripc; machine washable. !i 4 to 60". r •!ohlon FabncS, DowntDWn long II,.,,\ h. S4nta An.i. Pomon.i, l.i H.iln ) 18.99 special putdiaoe THE VELOUR in sculptured terry hostess robes. Plush cotton \lelour in bright colors to \vear poolsicf~ •tlhei-:h, orj1151for lo1111ains. Back zip, sizes S.M. L. In pinf(/orange; blue/-: ora"8f/Yellow: blue/purple. 19. 9 9 ..,. 35.00-40.00 s6vs• IMPOITED IACkETS wilh the luxurious loOk of cotton suede. Expertly tailored and de- tailed by a fine Belgium maker. Double breasted, wide notc'1 lapel and collar, Acryf'ttJrayon pile lined for ex1ra warmlh. Sizes 8-20. Store ror 9oys 19.95 ONEIDA CUSTOM STAINlESS lLATWARE ••• SS piece service for eig l-lr .. Finely cra frt'd hollow handle knives. Serving pieas include two tablespoons, one butter knift', one sugar spoon, one cold meat fork, one gravy ladle, one pierced tablespoon. In Roseanne, Autumn Memory, Plantation. HOllSl!!W~reo; ~ 6.99 SCREEN PRINT pant lops in Springtime colors to freshgo your wardrobe. Long sleeve cotton in new 26" length: Button Ot zipper front closing. Specially pri<.:ed for thi• sp<ciil d•y: 10 to 18. """"""'""" 3 . 9 9 ~g. 7.00-8.00 Glll'S SWEATER o( Orlon ' acrylic in cardigan s1yle. 4. 99. Val.7.00-10.50 SKllTS, PANTS, JUMPERS In plaids and soJids. Cirls'Sht>r> 9.99 CORNING DUET St'f inC"fudc s 2YJ.qt. covered pan .and ID-inch covered skillet ••• goe" from f~ezer to stove to t.i blr. Buy by the set .ind s.tve 8.4b ovrr open stock prices. Hou.sew.,~. -- • • , ... .. • ·'· . . ~;: .·, ... .•· : ' . . . . ., . ~;. ~' .j ' . , ,, • l!J " ! :t •/ '/ ·' ~ :-,., -1------....l.-------l--------t-------1·' ) 2. 99 rtg.5.00 PETER PAN liRA in lacy cmtour ~tyle w ith elastic back. Whle or honey, B or C cups. '2.49 reg.5.00 PETER PAN PANTY brief of soft ela1tic with f'lose..hugger bandt. , Perfoct avet pantyhose to give control: keep hose wrinkle-free. Fovnd.iflons ' _, SHOES FOR THE ENTIRE F1'MILY 40-50% OFF SAVE ON WOMEN'S SHOES Reg. 15.0().39.00 5lyles by Do, I iso Debs, Hill & Dale, Barefoot Originals, Andrew Geller, Amalfi dnd many other~. Best colors, heel heights in drC!IS, walki ng, <.dsual !!hoe~. \Vomrn'~ :,~, 18.00-34.97 reg. 23.00-48.00 GREAT MEN'S SHOE VALUES ••• by [. T. Wrigh~ Billy, Free- man~ Good selection o f styl~ olnd colors but not all brand~. :.tyles in all :!!lores. 7. 99 rcg.12.00 MEN'S ATHLETIC SHOES WITH BLACK $tlipes. Slightly irregular but fully Bllilanteed. Mm'sS~_,. .. 5.00-9.00 reg. 9.00-17.00 BOYS' AND GIRLS' SCHOOl, PLAY SHOES. A !tpecial group. 7. 99 reg. 12.00 GIRLS' KllNKlE PATENT BOOTS in smart Spc-ing red. ,_.,ildrtn'i Shot'i 6.99-7.99 "'8· 10.0().lf.00 BOYS' IOONDOCICR IOOTS Sizes for both b;a •nrl •m•ll guys; Childmfs~~lon11 BtKh. S...i liM. PamoM, La ...-1. P•IOs Ven1tt 1/3 OFF Skf AND APRES SKI f.imou' maker fashions. In-season wear In shine on the slopes ••• make 1hr Powder fly. Sweaters, p..-i rk.1•, p.ints ••• all al great 'iiJvin~'· 99 00 <OnlPM<dl • 165.00 COMPLETE SKI OUTFIT ••• •II you need to get in the ski ac.1ion. Fimous Maker metal ~k1s ••• step-in bindings ••• Tamie ~·n· a!e I.aper poles. When you ~o tn snow ••. go equipped! Six>mman·1~' L---------..1....----------------------------....i.-----------'. Newport, #1 Fashion Island, Newport Center • 644-2200 • Mon., Fri., 10:00 till 9:30; Other Days,. 10 till 5:30 I , , ' I t-n ce-:.1•i1\on l•land Supplement to th• DAILY PILOT, Thursd1y, February ,.(, l97t Humphrey Rea~ Winner in Kennedy-Byrd Party ·Feuds ; ·~VASlllNGTON tUP ll -between Sens. Edward M. The big winner from faDoot Kenner:fy and Robert C. Byrd -:-J:generated by the bitter feud may well turn out to be ·--- ., 1.:. .; ~l:f9 shions for ... ": i:\. e '. "': ... . , . L : ~. ~ ··1r ;:,._, .., !•~· [ ·~ ·:n: 1 .. ~ Fa1hion l1l•nd, Newport Be•ch Stonewood Ctnttl', Oownty former vice president hube:rt H. llumphrey . In a major upsd: which stunned Senate liberals, Byrd deposed Kennedy as the Assis.- taRl Democratic floo r leader. In t h a t confrontatio~ Humphrey, newly elected as a Senator from Minnesota,. played a minimal role. Along with his colleaguell, he cast one vote -a vote for Ken- nedy . Bui B;Trl 's victory may have major implicatioJ11s for Humphrey's own career -not in the lield of national p:ilitic! so much but in tht Senate artna where the formeT vice president and 1968 presidential nominee previously had 3erved 16 years. No oae ever expected that Hwnpt\f'ey, on hls return to the Senate, would suddenly materialize as a wallllpwer or a quiet back-bencher~ His experience does not demand such a role and his con- stitution does not pertnit ii. But with Ken111edy in lhe Senate leadership, the liberals Better In Mnuy Respects bad the best-known pogslble advocate in the councils or power. With total expGsure available alm05t at beckoning. Kennedy could have presented the position of Senate liberals as the 1972 electiollS ap- proached. With Byrd in the leadership, the liberals have nothing . Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield votes liberal and pushes liberal legisla- tion-such as the 18-year old \'Ole-but he has never been considered a leader of the Young People Shirk Voting Rights WASHINGTON (AP) mobile -45 percent of _lite went to college in 1970 than Of the 3.2 million between American youth are better persons of thi.!= age moved in 1960. ages 20 and 24; 65 pera!nl educated, more mobile and be;tween 1969 and 1970.'' AQout 94 pircie,nt o{ young were m· the labor force, Z2 less prone to marry than Uteit d r ,_ d Tb e-report sh e w' d J>eOple between ages 14 an .............. nl ift the Armed Services counterparts o a ~ea e ago. lltd · •··l ~ •• · , Americb youth are more apt 17 were enro m scl,IVI). and 13 percent were not wort-But. as voters. t h e y r e shi rke rs. to get.a more extensive educa. compared wi~ 9Q perceat a ing. lion than they did 10 years decade ago. or the 16-lo-21-year-old part-They also make up a sizable chunk of the nation 's civilian ago. The percenlage of IS..and·l9-time ~liege students, nearly labor 'force _ and their in--Among. young adults wlHI ')'ear-olds eprolled was 50 per· · 40 percent Wi!re in the labor ~-· 1 t v.•ou1d ·ha ve 'recently com-cent last year, 31 percent in force, an increase of seven comes are 11:11ng. a act no 960 ignored by the country's pleted their schooling 18 pe~·l 1 · percent from a decade earlier. businesses. cent of the whites and 51 1 Of 7.4 million c oll 1 g e Of · the full -time co 11 e g e The Census Bureau sketched pe rcent of minority persons students, 4 9 2 , O O O were students, nearly 37 percent were at least high school Negroes, a 110 percent in· ,vorked. up 'l:l percent from out Wednesday its every-11). aduate · 1970 I · f' iod yesr profile of the nation' gr s m . n 1960z' \ crease in a JYe-year per . a decade ago. yotlth between ages 14 ,. f lhe hil d l . ' -. • •• A ..... Clll"'t A<<OUflll l~v!ttol Americ•n E•I""••• •1HAmtrk1nl llld r11lff CMf9t, ""' , and the figure.s were 64 percem1· 1 ln;1960, 61.1 percent of men Greater educational al· o . w. es an 39 percent \\between 18 and 24 were single, tainment means rising family 24:. fl of min,or1ty descent. ~but in 197tl, it was G7 percent. incomes in the years ahead, Je~•elers Since 1917 Youth between 14 and !} T SLAVICK'S en percent more of the Jn 1960, 40.S pera!nl of the said Census Director George 18 FASHION ISLAND now comprise 20 percent male high school graduates women were single. but the Hay Brown. predicting real NEWPORT BEACH -b44-138 0 the popu lation. compared ~·ith and nine percent more of the k1970 figw-e climbed to 47.7 incomes will grow about 100 ' I prices slashed to 1/2 off on famous-name brand 15 pereent a decade ago, and v.·om h. h h 1 du tel in.rcent b 965 Open Mon. MCI Fri. 'til 9::30 p.m. 40 million now are in that, -~~e~n~ig~sc~oo~~gr~a~a~~,~-~~· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~pe~rce~n~l~y~l~·;,_iiiiiiiiiiii~~:::iiii:::iiii:::iiii~:::iiii:::iiii:::iiii:::iiii:::iiii~~~~:-~~~~:-iiii~~~~~= age group. II 'I'hr population now i younger, with a median &ge of 27.6 years, compared with 29.5 in 1!160. • LONG AND SHORT ROBES But the figures indicate the new law lowering the voting age to 18 in federal elections means politicians will have a difficult job in getting young Americans to the polls. • LOUNGEWEAR • SLIPPERS In the November 1 9 & 8 presidential election, only 33 percent of the 18-to-20-year· olds voted in states ·where they could cast a ballot for the nation's leaders. • BRAS • PANTIE GIRDLES • FULL AND HALF SLIPS good selection of assorted colors plus ite: but sizes 'broken ... so hurry .. ·very best selection! "For all states." the report ""ent on, "only SI percent of the persons 21 to 24 years old reported that they voted as compared with 70 percent of the persons 25 years and . ~ . / oPfrl ~rl),J.D a.m. to 6 p.m.; monda, ;u1d frtdaJ to 9:30 P·"'· older." From March 1969 to A-larch 1970. the report said, 10.3 mill ion per!on5 between 14 and 24 moved. '"those 22 to 24 years old are especially v ...... C"AltGI YOUlt l'UllCHASES AT l"ASHIOH$ l"Olt LA J'"!MMI ! " ' •• .. ~\ I ·~· , . . . . . .... WI ACCl:,.T MOST MAJOlt Cltl"Olf (AltOS VIKINGS FOUR of 'Sdvang a nd Newport GIVE SOMETHING DIFFERENT FOR VALENTIN·ES ' 1 ~i c~. and c'f..S G\r\ ?~ : !NT ERNA TIONAL DECORATIVE BEER-PAK GIFT BASKETS FROM 24 COUN1'RllS FOR All OCCAS IONS e COMPLETE LIQUOR '"d LIQUEUR STOCK e COMPLETE WINE SELECTION LIQU ORS e GOURMET FOODS e DOMESTIC ood IMPORTED WINES e BEERS FROM AROUND THE WORLD e IMPOR TED & DOM ESTIC CANDY e UNUSUAL GIFTS FOR ALL OCCASIONS • ¥bit Otrr H1h1e Ta•lltr!J Room • WE ARE AS CLOSE AS YOUR PHONE Open Mond•y & Frid1y 10 1.m. to 9:30 p.m. "'T Dilly lO a.m. To 6:30 p.m. -Sund1y 12:00 fo 5 p.m. 56 Fashion Island • Newport Center Opp. 8ro•dw1y 644-0991 • FRIDAY • SATURDAY• MONDAY • • • • ---LADIES SHOES---- • • •11 •7 •s vaney. Johansen, Florsheim Values to $30.00 Vitality, Enna Jettick, Hush Puppies Values to 22.00 Edith Henry Musketeers Flats and Casuals BOOTS: Reg. $35-$25.00 / Reg. $20-$15.00 MENS SHOES----- FLORSHEIMS Reg. to s16 $39.00 WINTHROP Reg. to s9 $22.00 ....,__--CHILDRENS SHOES---· e OtSCONTINl/EO STYLES e BROKEN SIZES STRIDE-Rf TE LAZY BONES BOOTS Reg. to $1.6. s5 e ALL SALES FINAL OPEN MONDAY & FRIDAY TILL 9:30 P.M. 54 ~ASHION ISLAND Newport Center Opposite Broadway -644-4223 * MASTER CHARGE * BANKAMERlCARO * liEMPHILL CHARGE • Last Voyage The American flagship passenger liner ,;Santa Ro- sa", last U.S. liner on the East Coast, arrives in Ne\v xor~ on her last voyage and is welcomed by the city s newest landwarks -the twin to,vers of the World Trade Center. Prisoners' Quality Declines in State SACRAMENTO (AP) California isn't getting as high a caliber inmate in the state prisons as it used to. and it's causing some problems. The Jack of "trusty-quality" prisoners has forced a cutback in the number of fire.fighting conservation camps th.at help protect California's 38 million acres of public and private forest land. And the greater percentage of hard-core prisoners ls driv- ing up per-capili! costs of state prisons and crowding max- imum and medium security institutions, even t h o u g h overall prison population is down. Once med ium-security Soledad rehabilitation center is looklng more like a •·max" institution all the t i m e , without any major change in facilities. One result is eight slayings, Including two guards. in the 2,800--man prison in 1970. Prison officials say the change in prison populations is a byproduct of a successful probation program. Today state prisons receive 10 percent of the men and women convicted of felonies -one·third the rate of IO years ago. Furthermore. the rate of return to prison of paroled convicts is down from 4~ percent to 30 percent. prison officials say. Philip D. Guthrie , spokesman for the State Department of Corrections. credits the success to a state program of paying counties up to $4,000 a year for each fe lon they don't send to state prison. Guthrie says the money is being used for a wide variety or rehabilitation programs in· side county jails and for felons on probation. The program has eliminated undesirable prison contact '.''ilh hardened criminals for man y first of· fenders and made more money available for probation programs. The state prison population has also declined by 15 percent to a present total of 24,600. ln the past 12 months, Guthrie added . But the cost of runn ing prisons is up three pe rcent -to $127.6 million -with medium and maximum securi- t y facilities overcrowded, Guthrie said. About half the priso n population is now "five-t~ lifers," Guthrie said. "This means, in effect, the burglars and bad check men we filled our camps With are no longer here." Five of lhe 29 fire camps are being closed this year, and total camp population Is down 500 from the high of 2.000 men five years ago, even though higher riSk prisoners are being accepted. This has meant more escape tries, and one escapee faces a murder charge. But rural residents are still sorry to see the convlct camps cut back because the crews have good reputations as fi refighters. One coastal town saved by a crew has a statue honoring the inmates. A potentially more serious problem exists in the high security prisons, a I t h o u g h prison officials blame only a small part of the Soledad kill- ings on the change. "The kind of robber, or burglar or mu rde rer we get today isn't much different than it was IO years ago, and rehabilitation Is more suc- cessful." Guthrie s a i d . "\Vhat's different is the mix. A greater portion are here for violent crimes." "It's a problem," he said. "Ifs a problem of success." Arctic Week Blows Cold STOCKHOLM (UPI) Plans by a Stockho l m restaurant for an "Arctic week" got off to something less than a roaring start. In the interests of publicity. the restaurant sent a three- man expedition by helicopter to 6,351-foot high Kebnekajse in northernmost Sweden to get glacier ice to use in drinks served during the week. The helicopter crashed and was wrecked. The three men escaped with bruises. Plans for "Arctic Week" - ""ithout glacier ice -are going ahead. Be happy when somebody gives )'01 Tune like this ... llAYLOR li Diamonda 17-Jev.·els $79.95 ELGIN T""'""' 14 Karat Gold 5135 11 FASHION ISLAND • NlWPOlT CI NTl l IOJ W. 4TH ST .. SANTA ANA F11hion Island SUPfllamanl lo the DAILY PILOT. Thursday, flbruory 11, 1'71-7 New Concerns End Civil Rights Work Feat ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -Uonal chairman~ the activist "There is a different feeling when you go Into tho!se places now," said .'obn Lewis. "You don't think about what mJgbt happen to yoo -il you're killed. That time has passed Now there are other con- ·cems." The words came slowly and qul~y from Lewis as he ttflected on the vk>lent early yean of the civil rights stru.g- gle In the South. Lewis, in faded. S\\'eat- talned dungarees and work shirt. was a fa1niliar figure during the period as the na- Stu d e n t No nviolen t Coordinating (;omm1ttee. Suc- cetded by the more militant Stokely Carmichael In the spring of 1966, he faded Into civil rights oriented foundation work in New Y«k. The n1ustached Lewis, a fi10ire oo the national scene riu ring the '60s, is now a largely desk- b:>und executive who heads the AUan ta-based V o t e r F.ctueation Project. ·•rm pursuing lhe same goals now , but differently ," said Le\vis. "It took the other and now II lakn this. \Vhen t WI! In f\1\ssisslppl during the sum- met. project of 'H, about %3,000 black people were reaistered to vote. That figure ls now about 286,000 and black people are holding office." The 31-year--old graduate of Fisk University. a native of Troy , Ala ., took part in the hrst test l'lil·ins in 1959 in Nashville, Tenn., and a few rnonlhs later at Grennsboro, '.li.C. He was at the meeting in Raliegh . N.C., in April 1!160 when SNCC was established !s the result of a suggesti~ rom the late Dr. ~iarttn Luther King Jr, King envisioned SNCC serv- ing his own Southern Christian Leadership Conference as a youth corps -but the ac. tivlsts of SNCC, Lewis among them, sw1!1ly struck out on their own, moving guerrllla- like through the Southern countryside. Lewis was also on the first "Freedom Rides" In the spring of 1961-He was beateri by a white mob l n i\.t.ontgomery, Ala .. during one of them, and was saved when a white official stood over him with a pislol and warned his attacken away. His face wa~ mangled , bruised, and he suffered a roncussion. In March 1965 he was among more than a S<:J,rc of persons bloodied 'by highway patrolmen trying to hall the Selma·lo--1\lontgomery march. He spent lhre~ days in a Selma hospital. There were more big cam- paigns and Lewis was at the head of them. But the SNCC split on taC:tics and Lewis, alv.·ays ll scholarly, irr- tro5pectlve man, was ousted by supporte~ Of Stokely Camtichael, who felt that the oonvtolent tacUcs of Ln'ls were no lon&:tr vlable. Lewt1 le.ft the 1laf! a few weeks later. Today, say1 Lewis, SNdc exist!: only on pa~ ~ 1n the memory of LilOSe wi.o worked within it. Some of tla leaden have turned \.lo teaching, others have k>it touch with Lewis and the others. Carmichael now lives in Africa. "It's too bad It Ill had lo pass," sald Lewis. "I think SNCC could be usef11l today,. It served, you know, as a domtJtic peace corps. Sale. If you buy them both you save a whopping 33.90 SALE PRICES EfffCTlVE TltllOUGlllATURDA Y AtQ.111.15. PenncrMt• wahtr wlth41pood-- Features 4 wath/spln speed settings, 3 wash/ rinse temperature eettlngs, waterleYel selection. Whiteonty. Penncreot• gas dryer with 4 lempenture oe11lng1. Temperature aettlng1 tor all popularf1brlca. fluff dry forapeclal 1r1lcle1. White, coppertone, avocado or harvest gold. Penncrest• electric dryer with 4 lemporature settings. 139.95 $148 Reg.159.95. --•-lllJer wilh31empenlunleollltlp. T emperalu re settings forpov.Mrflf>rics tluffdryforspecial--oalr. Penncrost• eleotllo...,. .... I lempenture selllngl. "-Ul.lli. Sale$118 Penncrestit prognmmed gndryw. programs, autom.tk: 1lme control ellmlnat• oveodrylng. Wlllt9 orh1rvest:gold. Penncresl• eledric d,.,., wlth8PfOlllWllllMll settings. 1ftl5 Value. It still means something at Penneys. enne111 • • -.~ • • . ! ! • • ' . • • • • ' ' • 1 • ; I • I Av101ble al these Penney stores: FASH ION ISLAND , New port Center; HUNTINGTON CENTER, Hunt ington Bu ch. Buy ii on Pen neys Time Payment Piao. , ,...,,• I I ._,othlon l1lond Supplomonl to tho DAILY PILOT, ,: Deadline On Bridge Nearing RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) - Four new contracton art trying to meet a December deadline for completion of the world's fifth longest brkiae, linking Rio with Niterol, 11h miles away. The government repla~d the original six contracton beeause it "ctinsiders thi! 1 challenge in a countty. oi ao many challenges," a a i d Transportation li-linister Mario Andrtazza. One British, ·one Americain and !out Brazili•il finns were replaced with four lar,ger Brazilian companies. Construction of the flQO.. millio 11· span across Guanabara Bay w a s in· Urrupted last year by two nlajor accidents that killed several workers and engineers. Andreazza said at the rate construction was pre> eeeding the bridge would have taken five more years to build. Half the cost is being financ- ed by a consortium of British banks, with the remainder coming from Brai lli an treasury bonds and other na· tional sources. Andreaua said Hnancing arrangemtnts make a December completion date mandatory. Original ly the bridge was to have bee n in use by the middle of this year, ·but the . government granted an er- tension Nhen it became ap- parent the deadline would not. be met. Ferries now provide the only means or crossing the bay bet~·een Ri(I and Niteroi, the capital of Rio de Janeiro St.Ille. Boats leave on the 20-- minute trips every 15 minutes. Driving around the bay re- quires two hours. Crossing the bridge will take 25 minutes. Pl ans for a link betwnn lOO cities are not .new. Emperor Pedro If. approved in 1876 a design for an un- deN·ater railway tunnel, but that plan ne ;er left the talking stage. Doctor's Curiosity Ends in Trip . SAN DIEGO (AP) -Dr. Emerson Hoover says at the age of 88 "1 have thi1 gru t curiosity-not just a curiosity like ordinary people but a king iized curiosity, an insatiable curiosity." Alter 66 yean as a family doctor. Hoover locked his of. fice door for the last Ume' recently. The gentle physician aays he 'll hitch up the house tra iler behind his home and take his office nurse on a trip to !ee America . The nurse, his wife Verle, married him shortly afttr Hoover set up practice al Independence, Kan ., in 1905. There were seven miles of pavement in \Vichita, Kan., al that time-"so much fun to drive a car there''-so the Hoovers mo ved to tttat city before shifting to San Dieao in 1922. Soon. Dr. Hoover was 1et- t ing $35 for deli vering a b1by, J7S for taking out an appendi:c and $35 to $75 for setting 1 bone. ··depending on bow tough it was:' The discovery and develop- rr.cnt of antibiotics were the greatest steps in medicine during his long career, says Hoover who rates antitoxins ~ second. But he calls heart tJ ansplants "regrettable," an intrusion against nature. lie says, "Those transplants ma)' be fine for some, but J sure "'ouldn't want to have one." ··rm closing the door to 66 years of absolute joy," says the oldest practicing physician in San Diego county. who con- fesses he can·t hold back his civioslty about the outside- world any longer. "l'm going to 1et to the rim of the Grand Canyon just before daylight. Then l'm goina: to sit there and watch lbt sun come up. Then I'm aoing to watch that canyon oil day." Alaska Oiline Hearillg Set WASHINGTON (U P() fie [irst public hearings '611 the propoSed oll pipeline across Alaska wlU be held i 11 Washington Feb. 16 end t7, according 10 the Interior Department. The Anchoraat segment of the hearings, which were tO bt first, wili now be held thtre Feb .. , 2.5 and 28~ 1 QX>keomon said. I ' I • Thura.doy, .Fobruory 11, 197\ 3 for s1 lnf1nts' pullover ahirts of 100-k combed cotton in white, sizM Y,-3 • ' \ 3 s1 ,¢~iJ' for Watefprool pants keep baby dry afld comfy in plfstic coated ' Pre-school boys creased flare teg jeans. Polyester! cotton Penn Prest"': Uaorttd stripes and solids 3·7 reg .. slim. , 1ayon. New circular knit, longer wear. Si zes 0·3. . lnh1nts ¢ombed coT10n tra1nrng pants . Double body. lnple crotch. White, sizes 1-3. ... 166 -. ' l ~ , I ' ' ! ' Drapery Sale! 'Tique' draperies, 15°/0 off. The bigger your window, the more you save. 50" wide 75 " wldt 100" wide 125" wide 1 SO " wide Length Rea. Now Reg. Now Reg . Now Reg . Now Rea. Now . 54" ~.49 7.21 17.00 14.45 22.00 18.70 63'' 8.99 7.64 17 .00 14.45 22.00 18.70 84" 9.49 8.06 20 .00 17.00 2600 22.10 32.00 27.20 38.00 32.30 'l 1Q1J11' ready made dr1oer1es are cotton/rayo n j acquard with the rmal foa m back Penn P•est • to machine war.Ii . 1urnble dry, never iron. Sizes indicated on table above av ailab- le 111 gold, white or moss. 147 other colors and l1zes available on spe cial order basis: • .. "~: 399 cardigan Pre-~criool boys Polyester /cotton P.<>nn Prest· soort shirts. Short sleev<i style 1n s1r1pes of solid color~. Women 5 elastic leg nylon briefr. 1ri white and pa stels. S•zes S-M-L. 299 S.zcs 3-7. ! Sizes XL-XXL 3 lor 1.25 pullov er Special ouvi Women '.s lQQ&,o acrylic sweaters 1n assorted colors. The crew neck card1qanr., ::;1zes S-M·L. Full fashion oullovers, sizes 34-40. ' Value. It still means ' ~HARG E THESE VALUES Al • hrift shifts. At Penneys your money works as hard as yo,u do. Euy fitting, p111ttily printed 1hiftl fllhioMd ot uaortld bl1nda °' 100% cotton. Your ehotoe of atyln, too, and •11 •t such 1 modllt price, that you'M want to select HY1r1l lor the MllOl't ahead. Mt.. ... 10.11. 2 for s7 Sir.a 31-44. l • • \ 3 for $5 4 pairs s1 An exc1t1ng value! Oecorat1vt pillows that are plump 18" 1qu1rt1 Special buy1 Girts' cottOfl elllti• leg: briefs in aolidt or prlntL Fahion coforw. Slzea ~14. covered in wove11 broe1d11 and velv1t"n1; lilied willi kapok. ns something at Penneys. Alf YOUR LOCAL. PENNEY_STOREI. F.tiieol t.i.IMl Suprl ....... 119 lhi DAILY PILOT, Thundty, , • ..,r 11, ,,,,_, ' Mtin'1 cottor broadcloth ~·1. Notch colllfin auorttd prirta, -1na S-M·L~L " Gr11t valutl Plump potyatar lilied bod pliiowo, tinllhtd 11n ,' 20 x 2&"' Non·1ll1rg1nlc, light, frtlh. G1uze diapers art2t X40", all cotton. Special weave hllps 1Umin1t1 wrlnklM. One dOHft por Pl19. Girft' iolyootar/ootton ...... -~-­pretty ;c. trimt. Wlllta o Ii-3-IX llld 1•'-. r • .. Congress Seniority Never· Dies W ASHlNG11lN (UPI) - Well, they rdorm<d th o Seniority syllem, didn't they! So ltt'1 take a look at tbe J lineup of bright, youn1 new face1 among the committee chaJnnen of the 9 2 n d Congrtss. '111ere ls Sen. Allen J. Ellender (0-La.), new I y elected chatrman of i h e Senate Appropriations Com- mitt.et. He Is 80, and previous· Iy was chairman of !be Acric\llture Committee. Jn the House, Rep. F. Edward Hebert CO.La.) 1uc· cteded to Ille olnC<! of Anned Servlca chairman. Hebert is 61. Replacing Ellender a s Chairman of Agriculture is Sen. Hennan E. Talmadge (0. Gt.) wbo is 57. Rep. John A. Blatnik (0.Mlnn.) ne1v chairman or House Public Works, is 59. Rep. Emanuel Ce lier f [).. N.Y.) 82, Chainnan or House Judiciary for ~ yeara, has been elected for two years more. So bas Rep. William 1'1. Colmer (O.Mi11.) 80, Rules Committee Chairman in the two previous Congresses. Rep. George ~llller (0. Calif.) centlnues as chairman of tbe Houe Space Com- mittee. Miller ii Ml. His Senate opposite number rema ins Sen. Clinton. P. Andersori 1 0.N.~t.) wbo ii 75. CbaJrman of the House llnlcill6 OlmmiUft Js Rep. Wrf.ibt1'atman ([).Tex.). Sen. John J. Sparkman ([).Ala.) continues as chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, 1od II n. House iovemment opera· lions has a new chairman, R!P. Chet Holifield (0.C.lif.) w&b ls 67. Sen. John L. McClellan (0.Ark.) remains as chairman of senate govern- ment operationa:, at age 74. So It CMs· In fact, except where a predecessor died or wasn't l'Mlected to Con(lres s, there are no new committee chairmen in Con1ress. And thole who are new were selected in strict accord with Ille aentortty syat<m. Se whit was the an· tileaJOrity nolae all about ? It WU •bout liOrDe minor nforrm that later may prove si,nJficant. What they proved lb.la: Ume is that even &lven a choice, moat memben of Conerua still favor selecting their legislative leaderli oo the basil of bow lon1 they have served. For tbe flrat time, House Democnts and Republicans sep1rateJy voted themselves tbe right to review and vote on all nominations a s chairman (or in cas• of the Republicans, banklna minority member). The Democrat1 tben challenged one 110mln1tlon. that of Rep. John L. McMillan (0.S.C.) chairman of the Dlatrtct of Columhi1 Com· mlttee. Tbey bad a MCTet volfl en McMiiian. He won re-cite· tJon to the pool he ha• h<ld ror 22 years. 1be vote wu lit to M. McMIUan 11 72. (Senate ReJ111blie1n1 d I d make a rule to allow only one rat1kln1 committee spot ptr member. 1bat spreads the 1tnlority systom a r o u n d , aa)'way. HOUie Dtmocrats Im· poood a •lmllar limltaUon on tUbcommittae dlalrmonlhlPf. ai.. brlnctna more membtr& Into the action.) At for the House ind Senate leadership teams, they newr !lave betn tlected on the basis of salorltr. But the House thla year replactd reti"" Sj>tal<er John W. McCorma<k . wbo "" 71, with Rep. Carl Albert, wllo ts 62. On the 6Uter hand, Senate Dernocrat.s toatd out Sen. Ed1tard M. Kennedy (D)Mus.) u their whJp, In favor or Sen. Robert C. 8~ ([).W. Vo. J. Kennedy b 38. B)Td is 53. Of course aomt lf•lns wcrt made on the Mnlortty front. Stn. Milton R. Youna fR·N.D. I f• iilst&nct, resigned et 71 M M<ntary of the Re1"111hlican Omrerenct, to make way Set • younger man • .. • li1,.-Fa•hion l•l•nd Sv le1M11t to the L,,AIL Y .. ILV I, l hursdl , Fel:.rU1ry 11, 1971 Mardi Gras Getting ough Carefree Carnival Has More Cares Than ver B efore NEW ORLEANS (UPI) - '•ll's getting toogller to be :-<;arefrtt at carnival. Even in ·,the. city that care supposedly forgets each Mardi Gras. Orleanlaos are approaching :.'their U-day carnival ~·ilh ex· :.·citement, but with more than i~ a bit of caution. , The carnival. which begins :i Saturday challenges f u n • · seek~n to get their fill of kicks before the lenten season. ·:But the fun is threatening to ··get out or hand. Forty-eight policemen were tnjured trying to control the 30 parade crowds last year. .. Several hundred persons were ~· gfven emergency room treat- . ment or booked with • d isturbances ranging from : drunkenness to assault. . '·ft was the most dangerous • ]If anti Gras to date," said Jrvo'in Afagri, head of the • , Patrolmen's Association -0f 'New Orleans. Unlike the carnival in Ro : De Janeiro, the New Orleans ].iardi Gras has caused very few deafhs ever the years. But many Orleanians fear their celebration is growing in viol en ct. The roncern reached a peak last year when trumpeter Al Hirt's career was almost eodtd by an injury. He said he was hit on the lip by a rock while riding on a parade OoaL Nearly everyone agrees that the celebrations have been amazingly happy and the troubles small, considering that on 1'1ardi Gras -Fat Tuesday -nearly a million people art enrouraged to jam the streets and shed the.ir in-- bibitions behind masks, cos· turnes aiid alcohol. But polict fear the !rouble potential is growing. One concern is the in-- creasing influx of college students and young bippi~ bent on having the time of their lives. 1.fany do not understand the traditions or limits of t h e celebration. Thousands poured into th( city last year without housing reservations and tried to con· vert parks and riverfront areas into cami>ing grounds. Police objected, saying they could not handle the additional enforcement and sanitation problems. Some city Jeaders bluntly said people without hotel or housing reservations were not welcome al carnival. 1.fore welcome are the hotel tourists and the 15 e v e r a I tbooaand sailors who pour into the city aboard the hall dozen U.S. Navy ships that annually dock here for carnival The sailors bring their own shelter. Hotels are usually booked solid months ln advance with visitors who must take rooms for a minimum of three days, at special carnival rates. Young Moon La ndr le u , preparing for his first f\lardl Gras as mayor. appointed a committee in 1970 to recom· meqst cemival safeguards. But the pN1posals -including a ban on drinking \\'hlle riding floats -Wett re.)ected by the city council. Councilmen are traditionally reluctant to regulate carn"'aJ because the ertensJve: freedom to let yourself go that hi! made the celebration, the n8- ~·s biggest fun festiva1. 1.fagrt's police: union has demanded triple pay for carnival overtime. That could break the financially troubied city because all 1,500 police work 12·hour shifts during carnival. But if the troubles are In- creasing. so is the native ap- petite for carnival. Ne w organizations spring up each year to conduct addJtiooal val balls and parades. 1be growth ls especially evl· ot in New Orlearu suburbl, here neighborhood groups avoiding some: ol lhe iMtr ty troubles by staging their n parades. They are at- ctjpg increasing -and s-worried -CNl\vd.s. But on Mardi Gras, which the fmal climatic day cf e carnival, the acUon is sill \\11town and in the· French er. Behind masks, c r a z y otbes, cans of betr and alher wine bags, several j!D<~ thousand natives and are apected to again st. Olarles, Canal and bon Streets, to laugh at another and squeeze as ch' fun out of Feb. 23 as have on any previous rdi Gras . Police report that Fat Tues· usually produces less le proportionately than prectdfng carniva l kenci. 'Ibey attribute it y to the carefree spirit ·the day, and the fact that y student! mu.st return school rlght after the end. Penneys is a· pet's best frie d 499 ~-outftllncludes golden hamster, hamster cage made of wire, with exercile wheel and drinking bottle, llld a hamster kit which lncludeo food, -I and nibbles plus a l*pful pamphlet. Extr. hunllen, each 88~ 3 for 99 Tropical fllh that will and fascinate you for on end. Choose Chin Algae Eater, Bloodfin 'I' or Sunset Variatus. . ,, ;. t Av1~1bfe al th ese Penney stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport enter; HUNTI~ !GTON CE NTER, Huntin9ton.,lleach. Like ii! Charge ! I I ' . • ... ·.·.·.· "· • See top fuel dragsters, funny cars, formula, ascott and off-ro ad racers ... motorcycles, dune buggys and speed accessories arr on display at SPEEDFAIR '71 on the mall at Fashion Island. Top nam es in high performance and recreational vehicles. Kids! Win Malle I Toys. Be the first to race Mattel's new Rumbfers, to be introdu ced for th e first time anywhere at Speedfair '71. Test your skill wi th the latest Wizzers or try your hand with the fantastic new Zoomit-both by Mattel. Contests from 10 am daily except Sunday. Fe:b ruary12, 13, 14and1 5 ~ ORl!ifi COUNTY ; INTERMATIDNAl t:--4 RACEWAY Award Motors .,,.~····· , I • •••••••••••• • Win a Free Su1uki Trailhopper or Mattel • b toys . Drawings will be held f'eb ruory 12, Toys y • 13 ond 15 oi;,oo pm. Yoo need nol be • MATTEL : ::::nttowln, :· • Address _________ _ • Ci1y Phone ____ _ • Drop fh i1 coupon in the enlry box under • the "Sky Divers" in the Stage Court area • al Fash ion Island •••••••••••• Suzuki Trail hopper Any one In the fam ily con ride lt, 3 hp. engine. Front' and reor suspen. sion ond hond·brokes. Adju~to b l e seat and handlebars. CCI outo. nio lic lube. FIRST BIG SKI-SALE of 71 20 to 40°/o OFF ON 1970 • 1971 SKI MERCHANDISE ! STARTS THURS. FEB. 11 SKIS • ' ' 1Q. 0 IAL& .'wllll•·5t.r s.w .... >st ... tllf .... 'Wll\tt' Slllr • ' ' 1-r 'IS.IL .. ., .. 211 •• •ul.Jt W~fhl,Sl1t -W ... , 2\t.M IUl.lt llN Sl•r •s SL •... llJ.N llH.M ••11t $11r W •.•..•.• , 1115 ... llM.M Klll1 -............ tot.II $Ut.M ..-, ................. us.• nn.Jt t°' ................... , IU .11 JlU.lt W ................... lU.11 llM.M ntE ................ ltl.M J "·°' no .................. 111.11 J11'.Jt HI ................... IM.M 111.M Com,.ililM ,,,,.,,,., HJ.Ill JJU.M Eli!• .............. ,,, 1 ..... I H .OI H.tkllt ....... ........ H.M I 4->.M PARKAS '"'::!!~-... ~::·. '. 'SWEATERS 1/J 'OFF '•"'"' N•mt f,.r'I\ O'"""" t•). "ANTS 6 JACICIETS -I/I ptfl • VEIT 6 SUITS -\\ l'RIC& , SKI-PANTS OON L\,ll'lilt·IOl!IWl!SS-1/I 0,. · O'i'li·¥.~Ot'· · · · 111s 111.aoon · .... $ff.ts-NOW 114.tl .... S_JJ.SO-NOW '$14.et· IUDS Sl1$-25% Off KIDS SKJ P4N,11-21'-()PP. Kl• SIU PA~IA-ll'llt 9" . J(,11·11 ,,,,,, .. , ,, ,, . ., 11.0I I Jl.M ~ < VOLICL !dirt .............. ,. :IOO.M 1121.M !l'Y·?OO '"""'"'''' ..... I It.st PorlUll ,, , ... ,., ., •• 1111.00 I )4.00 IOSSIGNOL 51tl .. All ..•.••..•.. , Ul.DI 11'2.Jt (onc...01 .... , , • . ... H.ot I H.IO SUN VALLllEY A&T l'lbtt OllH •••• U .OI I 2t,tl ALY • StHI .......... N.t5 I Jl.50 VOIT SIC.IS-40•/e O,F FISCHER SIC.IS-25•/. OFF KASTLE SIC.IS-25~• OFF SKI-BOOTS 1f7D·71 U.NGE,LD REO. SALE Sl•nffflll ............ Ut.M I n.se .,,.., •• . . . •. ••••. • ••• 14J.H UM.ft Com,, ..•••.• , ••.••• , , 171.11 llll.11 Ctmptlllt .... !JI.II I tf.Jf WMrtD SHllTS LAOlliS l'OL YE$.Tlilt 1/J Of<I' AFTllt SIU IOOTS OV£1t , ........... 01'1' OVlill 22.Jt -.,_ OFJ UNDER 22.Jt -ll%. Ol'J SOOT Tltl!l!S ltiG. U.H -$ALE -st.It TURTLli NECIC T-SHIRT5 llEG. s.n -SALE '4., .. ALL CALIFOINIAN LUTHER·SOIDI ~ JACUTS 1/J Off SIU COYEIS-20% OFP SIC.I.POLis-JO"° O.PP SICl.SION UNDllWIAI SKIS SKI BOOTS PARKAS SWEATERS BOGNER SKI PANTS AFTER SKI BOOTS CALIF. JACKETS NOT OH SALi IUT IN STOCK NOW ! Sirfety StJept-AI SM:U Wllldb ..... .,. wa..s111 ....... ,. lh1cll11t-Slli·locll1 c,wi..,. k•tt-$111 C•p• Heod lolldJ-S1t19lftHI ,.,., ... .._w •• L1MITEO STTLE5 ANO 5IZE5, NO REl'UNOS, ClltllllT5, LAYAWAYS. l•~kAmtrlc•rt • M.i•l~r Cl'l•rt• • DiMrl • Cll'k lllntM 3 SUPER SPORT SHOl'S • Soohl Ana, 219 E. 4th Kl 7·5723 • Fvlie<tOft, 601 S. Euclld 171 ·5988 • Newport C•nter, •27 Fashion lslancl 644-2121 STORE HOURS: l'•lllieft bl.Incl; MM. 111111 l'rl. l .. '1111. 1N -5111!1 Alll•l'Ull1!10n: MM. I l'rl. t :•t Tun .·Wtd.·Tllwr.·Stt. ,,_ SKI REPORT Kl 7·2545 ;~. ' ' ~· . adidas there's one just for you • fuhloo ltlo•d Supt0l.omont to .tho OAlLY PILOT, Thursd•y, F1bruary 11,.1971-H. New Lioonse ~ Gim-JBiek Not FLOP Governor Reagan's Personalized Plate Pl.alt Falls Sliort of Goal& SACRAMENTO (APJ Last August, Gov. Reaaan launched California's n t! w persooaJized license plate pr1r gram with a fiour!sh, calling it a key part of bis batUe against smog and other pollu· tion. You could get CLEAN er WOW or ZAP or BOB or CAROL OR TED or ALICE ' on your license plate and help clean up California at the same time, &agan said. By today, only 14,000 of the state's 10 million aut.os carry the s p e c i.a l yellow-on·blue "vanity" plates and even the senator who sponsort>d the bill creating the program hasn't bought ene. Nor bas the . governor. • Some itate officials private- ly acknowledge disap- pointrrient in the saJes so far. But they refuse to admit it's a FLOP. Nor can it be called a HIT with. California drivers -many of whom n1ay be shunning such luxury items during lhe current economic slump. For $25, canforni a motorists can get their choice of up to six letters er six numbers or a combination of the two -except ones already issued er words that are considered bad taste. The money, minus pro- duction and paper-handling costs, goes into the new C a I i f ornia Environmental Protection Fund created by the same legislation. As the governor put ii: ''This plan will provide all of us who own and drive cars with an opportunity to help solve the smog problem we all help to create." • • • Whtn the program was provide$ Marks free of charge His plate ii BEE 13. year from the proaram apd launched last August, so1ne as a senator and ·ll carrfes of lhe private cars parked Utat other estimates maidt state officials privately said the senator'1 special license on two floors of the state pubUc at the Ume Rfflen tQ{!y hoped to sell 300,000 sets number, st. Indicating he is garage two blocks away, two 1igned the bW were blgbl1 of 'plates In the first y ea r , from the 9lh Senate District. )tad special plates -DOLDER exaggerated. brbiging tn about $8 million to The special legislators' license and RW. At the Department of MO\(lt tbe.amog-flgbting fund. ' plates have been used for a In five &tllte parking tots Vehicles, Jrwin Cooper, publle The ·tally six months later number <1f years at n& cest near the CapJtol and the lnformaUon officer, said U.• II about 14,000 cf the plat~ to the law makers. Resources Agency building -had been an increase Jn cSe. for a gross lAke of $350,000. Reagan's press office, In whert many of the slate's mand during the 11ce n s 1 It coslfJ $5 to make each reply to a query, .said the smog.fighters work -there renewal period wblcb ntna special plate and pay for the governor baa a private· car was only one special plate, through Feb. 4. 1 papery,•ork and handling in-in Southern California but has HERKY. ?i.1any applicants are diAp- Volved. So the new ineome not purchased ooe of the However, John S. Tooker, pointed since common narDes Jo the fund so far bas bee'b personaJized plates. an aide to R e s o u r c e s are the first to go and Ille '280,000 based on figures sup. The Associated Pr es s Secretary Norm an B. program doesn't allow any plied by the Department of surveyed nearly 1,000 autos l.Jvennore, and Tom Bright, duplication. Motor Vehicles. parked in the b a s e m e n t a Department of fi.f o ta r u Almost any name -Tom By comparison, oil com-garage in the Capillll, the Vehicles official in the Capitol er Sam or Bob or LoulMt panies and other supporters stale garage and five state say some staff members, -somebody'• QSQaUJ asked of the so called "higb'A·ay lob-parking lots. Only four cars bought the plates. Some may for Jt by now," Cooper said., 'by" spent 333,446 during the had the special p I ates, legislators and others have Other popu]ar requesta .,_ , election campaign last fall to although many of those autos be on second autos not driven for names or initials e( chi\13, defeat Prop. 18, the ballot belong to state officials, aides to work. names and style! of autM measure that ·would have to the governor. top officials, Tooker said, 1'We really or legends reh\ting to ~ aUowed minor diversions from and aides to legislators. won't know where we Ire until mctorist's job. . the $900 million·a-year . state The only auto with a special lhe license renewal period is One sergeant inajor at highway fun4 for antismog plate that parks regu1arl y in <1ver." Camp Pend1eton got SGT research and rapid transit the Capitol basement garage He said the Reousrres Agen· ~1AJ. The mayor ol Newirk The legislature passed 11 is that or Assemblyman Carlos cy had expected to get only got NEWAJ\K. SomeOne hal bills by the end of the sesslon,B_•_•_fr_o_m_1h_e_1_31_h_D_is_1r_ic_t. __ •bo_u_1_1_mJ_ll_io_n_1_n_lh_•_fi_rs_t_F_L_Y_PS_A_. ------ -the sa1Tl8 day Reagan sign- ed the license plate bill ~ app ropriating $1.9 ml l t Ion from the environmental fund .created by the bill. ' Sen. Milton Marks, (R.S.n Francl!C.'O)t ·prime author Cf the bill, siid in an Interview · Wednesday he's not disap- pointed with the sales, saying it will take a w~ile to get the program established. "I'm very hopeful." he said. "'If they sell just one, the n It's been a good thing." Has he bought a set of the plates? No, Marks acknowledged. ''I have only one car," he said. That is the car the staF l ., • •• .. All 14k gold. All 20%off. All in time for V-Da}t leafy cln:le pit! Wlshboneplnwltll synthetic ruby,. with .a a•rnelo. rog. 44.95, Now-reg. 22.95. Now111.3• SaUn..ffmsh stud earrings. reg. &.00, NowC.IO Florentine-finish dn>p eerriog1, reg. O.!O, Now7.00 Cultured peott ctrOp earrings, .,g.1t.C10, Nowl.IO Dlamondondhea!t pondant, reg. 24.95, Now11.11 'lie My VolenlhMI' .el!ann, rog. 1o.60, Nowl.40 'My Vl,lenttno' O¥lf charm, reg.. 13.50, ·-- Syntlletic -""""'" '"' pendant. reg.37.815, -- ~~ DoubledMnkbrocelet, "'!l.14.9S,Now11Jll just for your activity. "' ., ~, Textunid i-rt ond·llnk bncelet. reg. 39.95, Nowll.ll 7 fashion island, newport center 644-5070 l\nnelJ• line jewelry ) . .. Charge n at -""'"1ey ''°""'' CANOGA PARK C4RLSBAO OOWNi't ' FASHION VALLEY.sAN DIEGO FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEAat LAKEWOOO MONTCLAIR ORANGE "THE CITY" RIYERsm VENTURA Ule Penne)'t Time Payment Plan. Hoi Tax Dodge~ New Shorts Boori to Britairi LONDON CAP) _: Britain's tax man views hot pants not as a boon to legwatchera but as a tax dodge for British \li'omen. Hot pants are short shorts cut along the lines of men's basketball briefs and designed to flash seductively from beneath a slit or see-through skirt. Paris says they're the thing this year. ' But they're causing no end of trouble to the harried Customs· 'and Exci se Department, which has the job of rou nding up the money to run th.e British government. The' department complained today t h a t fashion·minded women are buying thousands of dollars worth of children's shorts as hot pants, evading Britain's 14 percent tax on clothing for adults. There is no ,levy on children's clothes in Britann. hot pants anyway." Shorts manufacturers say they are caught in the middle . ''It'a absolute chaos in the trade," said Robert Krausz, managing director of Dolly Dolly Dressmakeni. "Some people are charging purchase tax. some are not." Krausz is appealing a ~toms and Excuse ruling that taxed two hot pants out- fits he designed. The shorts are being bought by women, but Krausz says they are within the measurement limits for children's wear. A Customs and Excise spokesman said talks a·re under way with clothing trade groups and a decision to close the loophole is expected next month. . College Bond 1 Ballot Sought SACRAMENTO (AP) -A Winnie Moves 111 The tax men said the trouble stems from tbe regulation that says shorts with larger than a 28-inch waist are for Mom and are taxable but those with smaller \Va ist sizes are for daughter. community c o 11 e g e con- struction bond issue of about $150 million is being urged for inclusion on the June 1972 primary election ballot by the chairman of the S e n at e Education Committee. \Vorkmen maneuver an eight-fool bronze statue of the late Sir \\rinston Churchill into place in the lobby of the U.S. Embassy in London. The statue's eventual home will be the Chu rchill Memorial and Library in Fulton ?lfissouri. It \vill be shown first at the embassy. •·sut how many swinging girls do you know with a 28· inch waist ?'' said a frustrated Bureaucrat. "Anyone with a wa ist that large and hips t., match wouldn't want to wear Sen. Albert Rodda (D- Sacramento) has subm itted legislation to provide for a bond issue of unspecified size. High Level Protesting Under Way WASHINGTON (AP) -It looks like dozens of other rooms in dozens of other cities staffed by casually dressed long·haired youths. But this partic ular antiwar nerve center is in an offi~ building of the •louse ef Representatives. Posters display photographs of maimed Vietnamese children. wounded American Gls and burned fields -all in st.ark black and white. One picture shows a half dozen U.S. soldiers standing over four Oriental beads that have been severed from t h e I r bodies. Half-empty coffee cups and ashtrays litter the tables in tbe room. Rep. Ronald V. Dellums (I). Calif.) has turned over the small room on the fourth floor of the 1.Angworth 0 f f i c ll Building to a group of Viet· nam veterans called The Citizens' Commission of In· qulry on U.S. War Crimes in Vietnam. The room doesn't even have a number. It's between 1419 and 1421. Tt is part of the new congressman's suite of offices. Dellums, a black actiVist from Oakland who ran as a peace candidate. turned the room over to the group in an attempt to add a Utile clout to its efforts to get con· gressional hearings on alleged U.S. war atrocities. "I'm committed to making the war the No. 1 issue of the 92nd Congress," Dellums told a news conference in the room Friday. "\Ile oroseeuted people In "'arid War II for much less lhan is being done in Viet- nam,'' he said, calling war "a totally absurd inst rument for solving international dif· ferences. '' /.like Lhl. a 26-ycar-old ~eter.an "'ho was in an Army 1ntelhgence unit in Vietnam sa id the group considers th~ much publicized ~fy Lai massacre not an aberrati on but "the kind of thing that happens all the time. except to a greater deitrcc." "These atrocities result In the total distrust and hate the Vietnamese ha ve for the Americans," he said. Uhl, Bob Johnson, a \\'est Point graduate and former Army captain . and othe rs working out of the Longworth Building office say they will use the space as a base for seeking congressional support. They have already met with 4 different congressmen or their assistants. Specifically, they are work· Jng with Dellums to drum up support for full congressional heatings Into the allegations. And the group has a bundle of those. l'fprlnted from hear- ings it held in 13 different cities in 1970. ''We're trying to say In Congress there's no way to esc-ape ," said Jeremy Rifk in . Z&. a national coordinator for tbe organization. ''They can no "°"r say the inform ation wasn't available to them." FAIR f••t• ftir, f•1l111f. ThoJ• tfln• ••"'• 1v"' 11p f1c:lor1 111 o~atioit 011 th1 DAILY ,llOJ .iltori•I P•9• '"'"' d1y. ' PLACE 'n magnificent @mstrong floor designs .•. one to suit your taste and budget Bring Jn Your room dimensions for 1 n<>-0bllgallon estimate. 'Santa Cruz' An extremely papular vlnylCorlon• floor at an economy price. Unique all over chip design, 6'wide, a colors. 'Castilian' In 6 and 12' widths. for an 'instant tloor'i ·in exciting patterns. 49 colors, cushioned for comfort. 'Corrie Marble' Vinyl Corlon 11 with alkalin&moisture resisting Hydrocord* back. 6' wide, 8 colors. · 111 marble-like look. ' 299 sq.yd. 450 sq.yd. 399 sq.yd. PRESS™ EXCELON®TILE Now, even an an.-thumbs homemaker can put down a beautiful, new tile floor ..• and with no muss or fuss! You just peel off the paper (Place 'n Press has ifs own adhesive right on the back) ... place the tile ~nyl-asbestos by 'Omstrong in pcsition .•. press •.. and ~ it's on the floor to stay. Ifs that easy! And it doesn't cost a fortune· either.12X 12" Now29¢ atno Do It yourself and save! ... or ... protesslonal . Installation Is available. Do it yourself: tiles for a 9'x 12' floor cost only $32. J\nne111 COmo In°'-OOWNEI' (869-<5411 FASHION YALlEY ·SAN DIEGO 129t-ec>50) FULLERTON {871""4343) >-n.JNTTNGTON BEACH (892-7771) LAKEW000(634-7000l MONTCLAIR (821'381 11 NEWPORT BEACH (64-'·2313) ORANGE "THE CITY"(639-S091) SW It on Penneys Time Pl)'mlnt Plan 4th Grade Success Story l Editor Discovers Experience Pays LA MESA CAP) -Tyler Ochoa's first venture Into put>lishing ended in failure two years ago but he profltted from the experience and today his Rewspaper is doing better than ever. "I learned a lot of things that I didn't know bfifore " he adm its. ' Now things are looking up, he adds, pointing with pride to the last seven Issues of "Neighborhood News" which he has edited and published during bis spare time . Tyler, 8, is a fourth grader at Northmont School. A good newspaper needs a top managing editor, he ex- plained in an interview, and the best available was brother Derry, 6, who was "thrilled" with the appointment. The boys, younp1t of the five chlldrell .:>f lht Joseph Ochoas. found their "printer" under their own roof -their mother types copies of the one-page newspaper for distribution in lhis San Diego County community. The brothers alln double as newsmeJ1. They type out news . fonns that they distribute to neighbors \vho want Items printed. The first edition or the paper, which is distributed free, appeared last lttey. The managing editor began with a word for his readers "I've decided I want to be called by my middle name. Wilson, · instead of Derry. Love, Wilso1 Ochoa." \Vith that said U1ey went on to more serious matter:>, like nporttna: 10me changes in .the ~lalouff famUy. 1'Karen chanced her canary's name from Charlie to Sir Chesterton Pinker ton Smythe lll, a11d the rabbit's name from Jeffery lD Eeyore. Shari changed the name of her canary, P!tle Bird, to Rover." The second edition, t'vo months later, includ<'d an advertisement. "Quick trips to Safewa/ for hwy neighbors. One to five items.' 25-ceat s e r v i c e charge." Readers appreciate "Neighborhood News" . and show it, Tyler said, and the big metropolitan newspapers present no real competition. • "Mrs. Barbara Minie gave us a frultcake," the tdlt« :said. "She likts ft better than the ot.her paper.'' Circulation? "Oh, about 24.'' Singer Okays Support Pay LOS ANGELES (UPI) Cory \Velis, 28, lead singer of the Three Dog Night rock group has agreed to pay tern· porsry support of $350 a month to a young woman wh() claimed he fathered her ~ month-old son. Wells, who denies he is the father, will pay the money to Linda Britland. 19, pending trial April 29 o! her paternitY. suit. silverwoods Double Header Birthday Sale Here's an exciting collection of Spring' 71 fashion merchandise. Specially priced items mean sabstantial savings during this one time event. Tine Piece Blazer Suii. solid colors in single or double breastl!d with one matching and one contrasUng pair of trousers. Tan, gray, brown, n!Nf. Regularly 125.00 now 99.90 Silverwoods Label Suits a collection of newest single and double breasted styles. select"'..., .. from handsome stripes, plaids and solids. Regularly to 100.00 now 69.90 Sport Coat Duos single and double breasted blazer models. 'Each solid color coat includes its own coloNnated flare trouser in new spring patterns. SHOP SUNDAYS NOOHTILL 1:00 Regularly 95.00now 79.90 Very posh 3-pc pant ensemble of marvelous polyester knit Ln a jacquard pattern, by famous maker. Slimmlng pants, and ribbed turtleneck shell are tnpped by lined, long sleeveless vest Regularly 90.00 now 49.90 ~ Drwa Shlrll crisp new striped patterns from the Kent Collection. Permanent press Dacron• poly- -/cotton fabr ics mean a cool, fresh 'look. stripes or ICllkla. Regularly 6.50 now 3.99 Boucle Knit Shtrta-short sleeve, machine washable Arne! acetate and nylon, mock turtle or placket styles Regularly 14.00 & 15.00 now7.ll Flared or Str1lght Leg P•nts-pattema and perma press fabrtcs. Regularly 11.00 & 12.00 now7.n ' UndonNlr -briefs, T.,,hirts, athletic shirts. Boxer shorts, whtto & solid colors. Reg. 3/4.50 now3/3.50 11111'1 lox-nyfon, Orlon acrylic. Rog.1.50 now .ff llen'1 Owr-C11f nylon aox. Regularly 2.00 now1.u F1onhelm Dr-Shon s)l&Oially priced, now n.oo CV."'""" 11'.oeL Regularly 10.95-21Jl5 now a.to 45 Fashion Island , Newport Center .faihlon liland Supplament to the DAILY PILOT, Custodian at School Child's Best Friend FRESNO (AP) -A. J. Laney can fix just about ar.ylhlng, acCilrding to the chlldren at Columbia Elemen- tary School. He'l!i been a school custodian there for the last eight yean. A. J. fixes P.Urse l!ilraps on little girl's pUrses. He can find lost lunch money for a little boy sobbing ln the cor ner of the play yard. He can the slide projectors and can find rut why the record player goes "s..q-u-a-w-k." He stops fights on the playground at recess time. He keeps strangers away from the school ground. And A. J. everi fixes stuck zipper$ for worried Utile boys 1tranded in the boys' rest room. A. J. does other things, too. things that keep the 58-year- old school in good condition. lfe c I e a n s blackboards, 11weeps floors, straightens out crooked rows or desks and does about everything else whenever it's needed around the school. Out of all the children at Columbia Elementary and out of all the teachers and all the office worke rs, A. J. is the only one everybody knows by name. A. J. is 35 year! old, was born in fdabel, Okla., and wears a moustache. In a few months C-Olumbia school will be tom down and replaced by a new l!iChool. It will have A. J. in it, too. end& sale I ~ . Huny for llV!np on dan,titfut btts of thl• •nd that from our 1tmHnnual ele1ranca. a.le~ the look at FASHION ISLA_}ID, Newport Center ~ look you love by JnMOM. .. for Valentine's Day t he sheer linear fabri c is of washable polyester & rayon wrinkle resistant. nightgown at Sl 2. matching robe at $13. sizes petite, small, medium. newport beach, 15 fashion island Artists Pose Thursd•y, Ftbruory 11, 1971-13 Pollution Solution Seen .. General Motors Says Solution Expected in 20 Years BERKELEY (UPI ) -The and partly it will be II pieces catalysts. which G?o.1 says it General Moton 11 u ex- man hired lo oversee en-fitted lo the engine and in wl\1 use, or wbal 's calltd a ampl e ls spending J50 million vironmental activities at the exhaust. thermal reactor. which other for the rights to produce a General 1'1otors Corp. sa)'! he's One of the ways to Improve tlrm.\ say they·r~ looking at new engine, the Wankel from confident that air pollution an engine Is to change seriously. Gennany. It's a gasoline problem~ will be solved in radically ill carburetion and Q. How much 1s It going engine without pistons and the next 20 lo 30 years, with valving system. You can pre>-to cost the car buyer? there are 100,000 already on phasing out of the traditional vide fue l injection and reduce A. The best estimate In the the road in Japan. Internal C1>mbu.stion engine. the compression ratio, and industry is that the smog con-Q. Do you expect that Emtst s. Starkman, an air many othtr things. trol equipment will add $200 something will be dJ!CQ'.Yered poUution specialist, is leaving But in order to get all the to $300 to the car's price to replace the internal cOm· hi U · ·1 J c 1·r · way to the r~uirtd 1975 sticker, As we learn how to bustion engine:' s n1vers1 Y o a 1 orn1a .,.., A. [ have -nflde•-·that post at age st to undertake federal standards, it will re-make cont rol systems more ..... ..., his first job in Industrial qu ire more than that. efflcienLly it will ·become less tn the long run we will not management. In addition, it will take some expensive. That's the history b:e using gasoline PI 1to11. ..._He takes over April 1 as,=;;d~e~vi~co~o~•~th~e~exh~a~us~t~-e~ith~e~r~o~f~t~ech~n~ol~ogy~.~~~~~iii;~en~g~ine:l~.iii;iii;iii;iii;iii;iii;iiiij head of Gli1's new Department Ii of Environmental Activities. Starkman has predicted In an interview that the gas turbine engine will replace the Intern al combustion e11gine before the year 2000. "After that direct energy conversion systems. powered with batteries or fuel cells, will come In," he said. ''They'll produce no pollu ting emissions whatever." A professor of mechanical CHILDREN 'S & TEEN GRAND FINALE Two members of the Artistes de la Rue, Carolyn and Debbie Humphreys, pose with oil and pen and ink art which will be presented at Fashion Island Thursday, Friday and Saturday, Feb. 25, 26 and 27. One hundred fifty members of the Orange County artists' group will present approximately 2,000 ori· ginal works of art throughout the center's mall . engb1eering, stoutlsh and rud- dy-cheeked, Starkman h a s headed the California Air Resources Board's technical advisory committee since January 1968. He let In draf- ting California's tough stan- dards on auto exhaust. Q. Do you think the motor l11dustry was slow to recognize and accept responsiblity for air pollution? SHOE SALE Regular To $17.00 A. Yes, industry le aders say they did not recognize early enough the contribution that the automobile was making to air pollu tion. If I were convbiced that Florida Feels Full; Cries Enough Puff that recognition and the e!- y,·hich yould be used to en· forts to correct automobiles-1 courage people to move Into caused pollution were not the stale permanently. honest ones, J wouldn't be TALLAHASSEE, Fla. CAP) -State officials. hard pressed to keep up with citizen service d emands , have taken themselves out of the business of encouraging retirees of limited income to move to Florid<.. "Florida no longe r desires to be known as the fastest growing state in th e union:' state Senate President Jerry Thomas said 1'londay. "\Ve have our hands full taking care of over 6.8 million permanent residents without encouraging more." Florida leaped to ninth in popula tion in 1970 from 19th in 19M, with a gain of 1.9 million residenl!I. S ta t e leaders project a 35 percent Increase to 9 millioft by 1980. Thomas appealed to the state Senate Ways and Means Committee to block .any 1971· 72 fiscal year budget request I He also urged the committee Interested in taking the job. to see that appropriations for T think things are chang ing. industrial developn1ent spell The automobile industry-at out that only "environmentally least General Motors-has clean" industry is being become impressed with the sought. necessity to get on wit!t the "Many of our se nior citizens job. whn have come tn Florida Q. Is the key in the design Pt.,,., .. All S1f11 F-in1I. No Ex,h11191• or R1f~~d• Shire Op•rr 10 .f,.M, 30 FASHION ISLAND e NEWPORT CENTER • 644-2464 to retire are learning that of the engine? it is not quite the inexpensive _ _:A::·_:P'._'.'".''.'.tly~it"'<'_'.'ln'....".lh':e_'en~g>'.".n':'~""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""~ state as some promoters led 1 them to believe,'' Thomas declared. Two weeks !go. L. K. Ireland, Gov. Reubin Askew·s top budget oflicer, questiolled the need for the $5.2 million the st.ate Division nf CCMO- mercial Development planned to spend in 1971·72. gJ ' IQ p •n CDMEAND .. CELEBRATE Roy Thompson Jr .• division director, said he now spends only about $3,000 out of a $5 million budget on pro- motional material for retirees and I.hat this small sum is solely for pamphlets sent on request. r I '"\Ve're not l'lctively en - couraging them to come, but we're not pulling up the bar- riers on the Georgia line, either," he said. The 1.nain prnmotional dollar now is concentrated on bring· ing the bigger spender to Florida, the man who makes $15.000 a year or more, he said. "The man making that kind of money has shov.11 a ten- dency to go other places. We're getting pretty stiff com· petition from Ca Ii f o rn i a, Hawaii. Europe and the Islands," Thompson added. "'flle Islands" are the Bahamas &l!d the Caribbean Islands. Cliarwoman, Dismantles Small Bomb I f: 1 I !I ~ ,J t NEW YORK (AP) -A • cleaning woman found an ex· plosive device under a seal at the famed Radio City 1'-1usic J Hall and partially dismantled I il before notifying the ! theater's security guar d , II police reported. The woman found what ap- peared to be a full pack of t cigarettes. Feeling it• weight. I she tore off the wrapper and • exposed the device. 11 The police bomb squad said the contraption c o n t a I n e d highly explosive powder with a wristwatch timing apparatus that included intricate wiring and three tiny camera flash bulbs. LET'S BE FRIENDLY It you have new nclahbors or know of anyone moving lo our area. plrase tell us so that ""C may extend a friendly '>''elcom~ and help them to l~omc acquainted in their ~w 1111rroundlnp. So. Coast Visitor 4-7' 4ff.t:J61 Harbor Visitor 646-0174 FEBRUARY, THE FESTIVE MONTH ••• AT DUR ABUlOUS EBRUARY UR CLEARANCE WITH ~~~ ~8#4 &~r.e:t..V~ .. tZ';!/MtZ(IV~ •. / MASTER FURRIER SINCE 1933 $300,000 Wortli of Fabulous Furs Awaiting Your Inspection JACKm-COATS-STOLES-CAPES AND MANY OTHERS • Sable • Beaver • Mink • Fox • Lynx • Broadtail Many Jungle Furs DRASTICALLY REDUCED MANY BELOW COST REDUCTIONS UP TO 50 %·0FF (v1ry n11• f~r Gt1l911td trrd c:u1foft'I cr1ft1d lo p1rf1,tio11 irr ou r own Fur S1l11111. Iv•,.,. thing yov '•• 1v1r '""'"'" i" 1 rn 1t11lfic1nt fur: lu'1.lry, Oyll119, ••1•1tlllty. Not to 11111111011 I~• J•11111ry pric:1 1191, Drop i11 te11111rr-ind ••• our bltuliful l1r91 ••lt clion. M. AC ues 14 Fashion Island, Newport Center, Newport Bea ch, 644-4661 I I • I 14-F11hlon la11nd Suppl1ment to the DAILY PILOT, Thur1d1y, Febru1ry 11, 1971 PRESIDENTS ' BIRTHDAY SALE CELEBRATE WITH SAVINGS! FEBRUARY 12, 13, 15 • SHOP FRIDAY ·-AND MONDAY, 10:00-9:30; SATURDAY', 10:00-5:30 / / KNIT DRESSES, 2.99 REG . 9 .00. WASHABLE ACRYLIC KNITS IN A WICE RANGE OF PASTEL ANO DARK SHADES , HERE , JUST ONE OF MANY STYLES, WITH BUTTON-FRONT PIJ.CKET • R IB10 POCKET AND CU FF .DETAIL, 4-6X. CHILDREN'S 3-6X. PEASANT DRESSES, 3.99 REG, 6, 97-7, 97, FLIRTY, FREE-SWINGING DRESS WITH PUFFED SLEEVES t ELASTICIZED MIDRIFF• WHIRLY SKIRT. IN A GREAT SELECTION OF BRIGHT COTTON PRINTS. PRE-TEEN 61ZES 6-14, IN OUR HI-SHOP. ... NEWPOR T CEN TER I I PANTSUITS, 9.97 REG, 13.00-20,QO, A GREAT SEL ECTION IN MANY FABR ICS ANO COLORS . SHOWN, DRESS- OVER-PANT, WITH FRONT AND POCKET ZIP DETAIL, AL.SO, WALKING SU ITS OR VEST AND PANT STYLES, 7-14. GlRLS 1 7-14. I TOPS 'N SHORTS, EACH 1.99 REG, 3.00 , 3 .SO , BOYS 1 COTTON KNIT 6HORT SLEEVE SHIRTS , STRIPES OR SOLIDS, 8-18 . REG. 4.00, 4 .so. BOYS' WASH 'N WEAR WALK SHORTS IN COLORFUL PLAIDS, SOLIDS. SIZES 8-16, BOTH IN OUR BOYS1 SHOP. NO -I RON SHI RT, 5.99 REG, 8.00-12 ,00. BOYS 1 BODY SHIRT SHAPED FOR SNUG FIT·. l.ONG SLEEVES , DOUBLE BUTTON CUFFS, A GREAT GROUP, ALL. WASH AND WEAR, IN VAR IED SOLIDS ANO STRIPES. SIZES s-xL, FROM OUR CAMPUS SHOP. \ • '· ACRYLIC JUMPERS, 3. 97 REG , 8,00-9,00, EASY-CARE, ACETATE BONDED. VARIED STYLES ANO COLORS, TO WEAR WITH AN ACRYLIC SWEATER1 IN SOLID SHADES, REG, 4.50, 1.99, BOTH, 4-6x . FROM OUN CHILDREN'S 3-6x . P..IAIL AND PHONE ORDERS FILLED FROM OUR YOUNG WORLD . I ROBINSON'S FASHION ISLAND GIRLS ' SLE EPWEAR, 2.99 REG. 4.so. s .oo. SNUG COTTON FLANNEL. GOWNS AND PAJAMAS TN SOFT PASTE'-PRINTS. SHOWN, PAJAMAS WITH MUL TJCOLOR POSIES ON P INK. LACY FROSTING, B LUE BOW, SIZES 4-14 . IN OUR GIRLS' ACCESSORIES, r ~ , i \ I BOY S' PAJAMAS, 1.99 REG0 3.50, 4,00, FROM A FAMOUS MAKER, ALL IN WARM 100•/. COTTON FLANNEL, VARIED STYLES INCLUDING SKI AND CARDIGAN TYPES, CHOOS6 FROM COLORFUL PRINTS AND SOLIDS, $1ZES 4, 6, 8. IN CHILDREN'S 3-Ex. 644-2800 Energy: A Capital Gain By BEA ANDERSON W•M..i't lltll9t Three years ago Madine Carpenter wasn't interested in politics and she had no party affiliation. Today, sfie i~ a staunch supporter of the Republican party l.nd is on a first name basis with it!I key, figures . Why the sudden change? There's been a very special incentive. She married a very special Orange Coun- ty Republi can, State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter. During their courtship and first two yea rs of marriage he served as chairman of the counly and stale central com· miUees and she accompanied him to most R'epublican function!> and they did a g~at deal of entertaining. Through constant association wilh Republicans she learned about the party, 11.J philosophy and how It is run - what she calls her special cram course. BLUNDERS Sh~ goocl-n11turedly admits that she made plenty of faux pas while learning and still blushe.~ while telling aboul them. One in particular that she recalls hai:r pened at a dinner party some six months after President Nixon took office. They were seated witp son1e of the nev.· Cabinet members. Madine said she wasn't too well versed on the ap- pointments and her timing couldn't have been worse. "Just as all conversation stopped at the Lable I was asking the person next to me, 'and what is it thal you do Mr. , . a . , a .. Mitchell ?'" She ha stily comes to her own defense, explaining the blooper was an innocent mistake because, "Al. that time how many knew who John Mitchell was? I still say it's Martha who has made him famous. •·This story is a favorite or Dcnny'1 and he likes to tease me about it, saying 'he made it to Sacramento in spite of me .' " COMMUTERS Unlike many elected stale officials who move to Sacramento permanently, the Caprenters plan only to stay there four days each week and return to I heir Newport Beach residence for three. This is the schedule they hope to maintain. but already demands in Sacramento <ind a ca11 In Washington. D.C. have altered their plans on retum- ing to Newport several weekends. They are well prepared for commuling as they own a plane. Although both are licensed pilolc;, Madine usually does the flying while her husband works - dictating and reading briefs on the trips . She learned lo ny al Orange County Airporl where she also was a flight ins tructor, and she has been a three.time Big Hearts Benefit Children A valenline theme will prevail Salur· day, Feb. 13, when the Orange County Dental Society's Women's Auxiliary presents a benefit ball in the Airporter Jnn. Funds raised will go towards !he auxiliary'5 pledge of more than $5,000 for equipment <it the Children's Dental Clinic. The group already has realized SJ.000 through past projects, anri ii check for this amount ha s been presented lo Dr. Theodore Ediss. hospital committee chairman. The clinic, which was rounded 15 years ago by •the dental society, still is operating with the equipme.nt that wa s purchased in 1952. Lack of equipment is the reason the rlinic has nol been able In afccpt any more patients today than in 1958. The a11erage is 125 per mnnlh. Mrs. John T. Forte. ball chairman is being assisted by the Mmes. Tosh Takeyasu. C. C. Graham, David Ness, Dale Rallison. Thoma s MacKinnon. Thomas Ra.v navies and Eugene Brown. ri1rs. Graham 1n11y be called at 6.17·1817 for ticket reservations. ' I • ,..,,, ' t'"fD,4•~~" -., ..... : ' NEWPORT-TO.SACRAMENTO FLIGHT PLANS LOGGED WEEKLY State Sen. <1nd Mrs. Dennis E. Carpenter Experienced Commuters entrant in the Pov.1der Puff Derby. The attractive brunette loves to travel and meet people but laments that she rarely ha s a chante tn· really know those she meets. Al mnsl functions there 's only lime for small talk, "'hich she detests. She'd rather ~a~· nothing thi1n engage in small talk so. she says, "I'm quiet a good deal of the time. "Those I've gotten to know well are the ones I suppose I should be in awe of. \\1e see key people so· ~often "'e've become old buddies . . . a closely knil group. "I feel sorry for Pat !Nixon\ and Nancy (Reagan) because I heir demands arc so great and all they must have 1ime for at all those functions is small talk." But lhere are demands U1at Mad ine ... L!...t must cope with, too. r>ays for the Carpenters slart no later lhan 7 a.m. and it is not unusual to be up al 5. They usually retire around midnig ht. In Sacr<1menlo r-.1ad ine's pace is ralher frantic. Each Monday she receives " wPekJy sc hedule from the scnAlor's office te.J!ing her "'here she is expected , at what lime and what she is to wear. (Stt CAPITAi.. Page 18 ) THEY'RE All HEART -\Vhen it comes to he lp· ing children in need. the Orange ('ounty Dental 1\uxiliary proves it is all heart. Displaying a valen· tine centerpiece, l.o be used at the dent.al ball . are (lef t to rif.!hll Mrs. John T. Forte, Jonathan Forte and J\.1rs. Thomas Ma cKinnon. • ~men ..... ,, Careers Unlimited Dark Days Erased ·By Bright Future Ry JO OLSON 01 ""-D•lty l"lle1 11111 J~'!I tt Jong way fr o'm $14,000 01 $20,000 a year lo a Sli5 a week unemployment compe nsation, but many Orange County families have found themselves on the bottom extreme in the past year. Who does it hit the hardest. the unemployed husband or his wife, who typically ia the mastermind • of the budget? Some 10,000 county aero.space v.·orkers have been the victims of cut-backs on the federal level dur· ing the past year, the first recession the aerospace industry has ever known. Some have been out of work for several month5 , some for near· ly a year and some have not had a full paycheck for 18 months. Some f<imilies have several children in college and other~ have up to t I lo support. including a couple in rollege . AH have lightenrd the budget to almost a strangle and others have laken more dra!itir steps. The auslerity mea!iures include nnl going out to dinner or to places like Disneyland. culling out vacation p I a n 1 and collecting things that used lo be thrown away . CHILDREN WORK In families where the children 11re old enough to go to work they either add to the Income or support the family entirely. One 11rea family decided that the l;:iy..()ff was sin ide;:il opporl.unity to make a complete break ;ind mov. ed to Arkan:iia~. ThPy sold thrir home a0nd plan lo purchase about 300 acres anq become farmers. Arkansas was selected becau~ of its inlermediate cl imate and because the family found it 10 have the most productive land for the money. They have nor been discourajilcd and are eager lo go lo what they feel will bf a ''simple. basic way of life." The father commented that when he opened a checking account in one of the larger cities, lhere was no account numbe r on !he checks. "My name wsas Rood enough." This tay-<iff wa.~ ex p e c I e d because he frlt !hat things had been "going wur" for six lo 12 months. He received his l!i-year pin and his termination notice on the same da y. William Clegern. an Irvine re~i· dent whose career in aeronautical enginee ring spans 30 112 years. was glad for his t~rminalion because it left him free to turn his hobby into 11 bu5incss. ''I don't plan 10 J:O back into aerospace," he commented. "I'd been planning this step myself for several years." OUTGROWTH OF INTEREST Clegern's bu~iness is an outgrowth of hi11 interest In people and is called the Humanitie! Research Institute. He said he saw the lay'(lff coming for about a year and a half before ii actually happened and had been preparing for it by expanding his hobby of leaching cour!le~ in ere at Ive meditation, the spiritual nature of man, handwr1t1n!!: Analysis and other related subject.5. ~~ His wife, Roberta, 1 bus ' ess major In college, went b lo work to supplement their income, after being out of the field for 30 years to ra ise her family . George E. Taylor. a,Costa Mesan v.·ho was in the field for eight years, was one of the more fortunate job seekers who found another position within 10 weeks . He now has to drive to Hawthorne each day . but considers himself one of the "luc w." According to Mrs. Taylor. hey had suspected from the first f 1970 that the lay-off was in the·-.__.__, offing and had t>qn preparing by watching their spending. Taylor had a tolal of nine weeks vacation and severanae pay coming which tided them over until 1 paycheck started coming in again. STARTING OVER Another Costa Mesa family . with two daughters going into college, experienced the lay-off with a feel· ing of trauma and hopelessness. ''It was like starting all over again ," the wife stated. The husband had known for about a year that the lay-off was coming, but before it actually happened he had only several days noti~. It was not knowing when it would happen that was lhe worst. "It is the lension that bothers lht fellows." his wife said. Her husband was aoother of the fortunate few able to get another job in ,the same field. He installe~ di.~hwashers between w r it in g resumes during hii two-month wail. anrl was able to keep ahead of the family bills with this income. His wife. who has been working for approximately two and a half yC'ars. happened to have surgery during the time her husband was off and v.·as home the exact number of weeks he was. Though he was handy lo have around during that lime for hospital visits and errands, they agreed that they wouldn 't want lo do it again. NOT WITHOUT Al.LIES The men and their families 11.ri. not without allies, however. Several concrete things have been done to help find employment for them. A state·supported endeavor , Ex; perience Unlimited. has opened its doors in the Human Re!iou rces bu ilding in Santa Ana and has a branch in Fullerton. Here. any person n ee d l n g employment in the technical and professional fields may register, and many of the 10,000 aerospace men are among the 2400 applicants. Led by Fred Crysler, the service has as il'I directors Ray Hajek and Stew Wilcoxen. 0 f f i c e secretary is Mrs. Norma Morand, and treasurer is Rudolph Gonzalez. All are former aerospace work er!. These staff members worked without sa larie5 for several month~ and now have become part of the Department of Human Resouri::ts Development. (Set FUTURE UNCLOUDED. Page 111 It's Too Late to Lock Barn Door After Horse Is Gone DEAR ANN t.ANDERS : I was shocked last week v.•hen I learned that our son and his friends stayed all night 11t 11 ji!irl's house. Her folks were nut of town and the boys lour son included ) told thrir parents they were staying wit h ;i buddy. We nnw know \hat several Rirl s spent !he niJ:h! in the hou!ie also. We learned the truth "'hen !he lsalhtr of one of th r boy!I bttamr :iiuspicious and went 11"1 thf' i;:irl 's hou.'ir e11rly the nelll morn- in,11. The front door wits open so he wal kf'd in and woke the kids up. Our son is 17 -no loni:er It chiht lif' will bt i:oinr;: ltWltY In :iichool nt'Kt rall. If he brh:IVC5 lh\!1 WAY nflW. hfl \I "'ill be. bchllvf' when hr 111 on hlio nwn? \Vhat should wt do? Wt h11vr nn proof 1hat 1n;¥lhing lmmorAI v.·t nt on. bul ANN LANDERS it's unre11\isl1c to :ts:iume: these ki d!i did nothin~ more than talk all nigh!. Can you advise u:;? -OUTF OXED AT 4&.5.1 Ot:AR OUTFOXEn : Refore yo u assume anythlna;, ha\•e a <'hat wilh ynur ion and get tht. slralp:ht Rl11ry -;ill 11f ii. Tht facl that tht boy ~Pf'nl th«: nip:hl at 11 lfltl's hnu~c and llrd a~ut It b: nl'I~' a nu1lttr or rerord. Thi~ ~hnuld not lt:fl Un!'unishC'd. A !iCp:tralr i~sue Is what did Ht dn lhrre? II he .-dmlU ht ~a• Intimate with a 1lrl, ;icrept thf' fact that he new 18 tt· ,pt'rimenting with sex and will un· d11uhtl'dly cnntlnue ln do Sil. If 18 or the utmost lmporl1n ce that the boy underst11nds the rt11pon.sibllltie11 lh111 go a\onjl with sex trperlmentallon. ~lakt sure he is infllrmed 11n method!' nr prrvenling VD and precn:tncy. Rnys \\'h11 dn nnt ~avt. adequate Information, or "'llr~e ytl. lt'tl \1'5 up to the girl tit "lakt. ca re 11f hrrstlf" 511mellmes enrl 11p inft'clt.d or prem1Hurely married. It IR u5elcss to condemn and &ermonlJ;e. A 17·ye11r~ld boy who does not cnn11ider prtmarital !lex lmm11ral will tune you out e11mplelely. DEAR ANN : My fia nce is -45. three times divorced and living with his mother. If l'm lucky I see him once•or twice a week. The other nighl, he !ilY!i he is tired and going to. bed. The next day I find out he was in a bar ,u night getting crocked. He says he loves me and I tx>lieve him. I'm sure he never looks at anothel' woman . He Is succc11i;ful in hi15 work ;ind wonderful company, when T can get hint But !IO m11ny things don 't add up. Plcsise help me undcrsU!nd. Whal'5 with him anyhow? -COtlrUst:o DEAR. CONf'USt:D1 Never m Ind what's with HI M, Wh1t't with you? Why are you wa.,tlng ynur llme an a three· Ume lose r who llves with his mother yet? Why are yau· bun• up on 1 clown whl) would ralher get bent out fir shape In • bar than 1pend an evtnln« with you? When you ("()me up with 111 answer lo THESE quesllon11 you'll know It's time to 11y 1ood-by. DEAR ANN: ~1y hearl went out to the mother who feared her children would love their rlrh grandparenu more than the poor grandparents because the former frequently broujtht I av i ti h presenl..'!. The poor grandp;irents brought only hearts filled with love. I'd like to 11dd 110methlng tn your advice. The attltiud• of lhe children'• paren1s is vital. If they wax wltd1y -i enlhusi.11stic over the expensive gifl• the kids will soon sense ef what is Important -love or money. We had the same situation In our famil y. Our children. now grown. love both seUi o( grandimrent.. for what they ARE -not for what they give. - MONTANA , . DEAR .M.: Your •ddlUon•I cornmenll are Yalu•blt ind I 1pprecl1lt O!em Y"I mucb. Thanks for wrltlftl. How will you know when , lhe real thing comes along? Ask Ann I.Andera. Send for her booklt'I "Love or Sex and How to Tell the Difference." Send 3S cents In coin and 1 long. 1u!:lf·addressed. it.amped envelope with your request In esrt ol ll'le DAlLY Ptl.OT. I \ ?ft11tsda,y, F' tbruary 11, 1971 Mother's Cookies Crum .bling By ERMA DOMBECK There's a lot of static about how important is il for a mother to be at home when her children arrive from school. Ideally, it's the hour when you sit down w i t h <1 plate of cookies and listen to their day . J won't quarrel with that. But does anyone care what happens to a mother who is abandoned by her children in those all-important hours? Yesterday, I stacked my cookies in pyramids and From Page 17 AT WIT'S END "''ailed for the kids to come in. The phone rang. •·Mom? l went home on Greg's bus. We're going to shoot baskets and mess around ." "But. .. when are you com· ing home?" I asked souUully. "I don't know. His brother will bring me." "Wanta know what I did today ?" I asked excitedly. "Not now, Mom. You can tell me when I get there." "But I'll forget it by then." "Write it cktwn." (Click.) I ate the cookie and watched the clock. The door ()pened and l greeted our daughter. "HJ, guess what I got on sale.. today?" I said ftlllowing her to her bedroom. "Tell me while I change," she said. • • • Future Uncloudetjr Hajek, a Costa 1'<fesa res i- dent, had enough saving~ to tide him over from his cut-off. He said his first reactions were despair, disbelief and shock. His wife has not had to go back to her job which she quit seven years ago. THERAPY Just putting on a suit to come to Experience Unlimited was therapy for the staff members, who are encouraged about their average of two placements· per day. The crash in the aerospace . " " industry is its first since it being given to many or the started mushrooming during highly qualified men by other industries is unfair. and followi11g World War 11. f They are not hired because lt also is the first many o prospective employers are the families have experienced. afraid they won 't be happy, "Scime will learn and some the sah1rles won't be high will not," Hajek said. ''Fifty enough and/or they will leave percent invested wisely and when the aerospace industry some lived from paycheck to opens up again. paycheck." One management represen· "Change for what? You going out ag1iln?" .. I'm going to the library. Thty're holding a couple of books I have to pick up to- day." "Don't you have time for milk and cookies?" "I'm ()n a diet. You ea• 'em, but don't ruin your din· ner.'' "It's no fun eating by yourself. Can I go with you?" "You'd be out of place in the library. No adults go there in the afternoon." I ate another cookie and awaited the arrival of my scn. "Did 1 get any mail?'' he asked. "A thi ng that looks like a picture from Baltimore. Did J tell you the funny thing the butcher said today?" "Hey, that's Jim O'Brien'J autograph l sent for . I'm gon-- r.a call Chuck. Mom, why don't you run along and watch TV?'' I sat there. That's the trou- ble with mothers to d a y • There's no one to com· municate with them. No one to share their day. No one to give them a 5ense of im~ portance. Small wonder they hang around the beauty shops, join gang-like organizations. have long lunches with fat- tening desserts. There's no one to care. Spring : Fashions Headline Luncheon Cleaners After unemployment com· tatlve lamented that "most pensation runs out, t he of them would adapt and take Welfare Department is the cuts in pay. They could do next stop. Bill Erickson, assis-those industries a lot of good." tant direc tor, said 1 he Whatever may happen to de~rtment's worry now is the men and their families, ·11 h · I d \li'ho must make many drastic what wi appen to its a rea y adjustments, their o u t 1 o o k overextended budget if many I flipped on the TV to Mike Douglas. "Okay, Mike," I said kneeling two inches from the set. "I'm going to tell you about my day and if you walk out of the room while I am talking I'm going to punch you in your baby blue eyes!" What's ne\v in fashions "'ill be paraded for the .Huntington Beach Monday Morning Club after an 11 :30 a.m. luncheon Monday, Feb. 15, in the Shera· ton Beach Inn. 'Fashions fro m Huntington Center Frori Page 17 • • . Capital "There's always something going on. and al night there are so many places we have to be," she said, adding. "I don't mind going as long as I don't feel forced." Their weekends in Newport are about as hectic. Jt's a constant round of entertaining and being entertai n ed . Although they have live-in help, there still are many household chores to catch up with . and tne mother of 9- year-o ld Suzanne tries to sgend as much time as possi· ble 'vith her daughter. The -new senator's wife claims she has Jots of energy which is fortunate becaUse she has never been able to sleep . in anyway. "J haven't gotten tired yet, but I take lots of vitamins ... just in case." She finds Sacramento ap.. pealing in that is has a small-, Horoscope Gemini: FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIEs (l'\1arch 21-April 19 ) · Include family member in making future plans. Accent is on travel, vacation. basic preparations. Moderation Is key. Don't make promises you can't keep. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Involvements now are not halfway. Be prepared to handle surging ernotlons. Con- trol impulses. You will have ·to face yourseH in morn ing. Response to affection is high on.agenda. GEl\.tINJ (May 21·June 20J: Chapter Meets town atmosphere. She also l\Irs. Toin J'\lcNear will open likes the fact that there is her Westminster home for the less pressure on being well· dressed in the northern city 8 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 16, than here. 1neeting of B e I a Alpha Pi There is one drav•back chapter. Beta Sigma Phi. which is only temporary. So Presenting a dran1a pro- far they are not completely gram will be J'\.1rs. !\tcNear settled in their newly rented and Mrs . Jerry Chouinard. house. and J'\1adine finds it Inducted into the chapter a challenge to sandwich in will be !\lrs. Terry Flinn and time bet"•een luncheons and Mrs. Vinee Harrington. leas to shop for .the household Valentine decorations "'1\1 essentials. brighten the day for patients Once that is done she no at the Royale Convalescent longer will lament that "we Hospital. They \\'ere made and ha ve yet to have a meal at decorated by the members of home or friends in." Pi Pi Chapter. r~==== ---------------Fullerton Open Sun., 12·5 p.m. I Sizes 40-50 feel frag ile 01 a 1i1e 8 in lovely, loce·y lingerie. Holf-Si:i:e Shop feature~ the lingerie look you love fo si:i:~ 50. fr;om $6.00 ' , •' . ' ' \ ~~'sHALF-SIZE SHOP 1805 NEWPORT BLVD. [-...-! COSTA MISA I V1 Ilk. N. lltt. St.I .. 84 HUNTINGTON CENTER • HUNTINllTON IUCH . IH•tt,. lerkef l rM. ftl"Mt•r.> AIM: UI 0-ANt•rAt• MAU ,Ult.llJOll "'ilJ be n1ode!ed by members. Reminding members of . the -spring headliner are (left to right) Mrs. :\rnold Lindberg and Mrs. Charles K. Otis. Defend Rights Obtain hint from Taurus message. Some who are en- vious do more than talk. Show that you are not wit hout allies. l\.ieans defend your rights. Get expel'\ legal counsel, if necessary. CANCE R (June 21·July 22): Journey could be disrupted. Check safety devices. Ex- ercise caution a r o u n d rnachin cry. Avoid exces s speed. Finish rather than begin -complete necessary Lasks. /lave fun later. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You break through restrictions. Ke.v is lo express yourself. Ooe "''ho 1nay appear distant is actuully 1nuch interested. Reulize this and proceed ac- cordingly. Put feelings on the record. VIRGO /Aug. 23-Sepl. 22): Hunches are accurate. Pay heed to inner voice. Older in· dividual expresses money con· cern. Protect you r inlerests. Get \1•hat you need 'vithout overpaying. r-.1essage will be lncreasingly clear. LIB RA .(Sept. 23-0ct. 221: You could be impatient \1•ith one 11·ho tells half-truths. Sense of humor would be great all~·. Don't take other~ -or .voursclf -too seriously. Rch.ise to sell yourself cheap. SCORPIO (Oct. 2.'l·Nov. 21): Check tendency to say and Back-to-school A speaker fron1 Parklane School \\'ill describe modem teaching n1 t' tho d s for members of lhe Saddleback ~lathers of T\vins Club follow· ing a 7 p.rn. dinner on \Ved neSday. l"cb. 17. Hescrvnlions for the dinner in the Mission Viejo Jolly Ox restaurant mav be 1nade with t-.'lrs. Robert 1:·igeira by l\1on- day. spend more than is wise . Conservative course now is difficult. but may b e necessary. Dealings with children a r e emphasized . Don't mix business and pleasure. SAGITTARIUS INov, :l2· Dec. 21): You find much in common now with Scorpio in· dividual. Avoid jumping to conclusions. Accent on fulfil!· ing ambitions -and <lbliga· Hons. Meaningful change is due. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..Jan . 19): You may ha\'e to sec unusual source for needed in· formation, You may be in midst of family controversy. Key is to remain neutral. This is not easy, but probably ls necessary. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20..Feb. 18): Friendships are ac· tivated. You find out where you are going -and why. Pertinent information is disclosed. Make most of it. Financial dilemma can be resolved. Stop brooding about il. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Lie lo\v; do plenty of listening, observing. One associated with legal procedures may play prominent role. Accept added responsibilit y. Don't attempt to side-step basic rules, IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you should be t: convincing speaker. a fine conversationalist. Finish what you begin. Overcome tendency lo have too many irons in fire. Recent setbacks taught you valuable lessons. Road ahead points to happiness. Ac- cept changes. If single, mar- riage is on horizon, To tine! 0111 mor~ •bOlll YOllrt•lf IN! al!rOIOVI', «der SYdMV Om1rr's !<0- Pl!le bQok!ll, T~e TrUI~ ,l,~I ,l,•!r• IOllV. StNI blr!ncl1lt end 50 cenh to Omerr 8ookltl, !ht 0,1,llY PILOT, 8c• J240, Grand C1J11lr11 $!1tl(Mi, Ntw Yori<, N.Y. 1Q011. • Can Help Flea Sale Spring cleaners can clean out the cupboards and aid others as well by donating at· ticles to a good cause. Members or the Laguna Beach Ballet Guild need cos· tu me jewelry. dishes. books and bric-a-brac. but no clothing, for a flea market on Saturday and Sunday. Feb. 27 and 28. in the Boys Club. Proceeds will be used to fulfill a $500 pledge to the Laguna Beach Civic Ballet CAimpany. Donors are asked to take items in good condition to the Laguna Beach Ballet Center before Sunday, Feb. 21. Ca~ds Ployed The monthly bridge and canasta party for members of the Monday Morning Club of Laguna Beach \Viii begin at 11 :30 a.m. on i\1onday, Feb. 15, in the Laguna Hills home of Mrs. Blanche S1nith. Included in the luncheon se~ion will be a showing of metal scul pture by Don Hargraves of Laguna Beach. ~ C;4/vAmo HAI R STYLIST CURLING IRON and HOT ROLLERS 9Yfttloft : I h••• b11n 111i11g ihe Hot Roll1r1 on my h1ir quilt 011111, 1r1 Jk1y d1m19i119 to th1 h1ir7 Mr1, L. C. Santi A111, C1I. Answer: It d1p111d1 on whit -;;.;-;;;o~------~-..;;-;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~fl vo11 m1111 by hot. If you m1an I 1101111, th1y ~ould bt "''V dttl'I· \ THE ONLY FRANCHISED s.J.R.E.J.C-H & SEW (T.M.I Fabric Center Of Orange Counfy 724 East K1tell1, Orang• PHONE !7 14) 633°2842 REGISTER NOW !! I I) LEARN l.0 SEW All 1<.Nll FABRICS-F•b. 26-9 A.M. !2) MEN'S PANTS j l I SERIES II-New 1 R1"i•w-F1b. 21, PM ; Mir l , AM ! ~I LINGERIE-F1b. 11 , 7:JO P.M. IS) SKI.PANTS-Fi b. I) W1'•1 r111 TV1 Ck111n•I IJ, W1d"11d•v• 11:-tS 1.11'1. W1l<h A"" Peno11 "Excellence In Service. Quality & 'Price" S-T-R -E-T·C H & SEW IT.M.) Fabrics of Oran9e County • . . 19in9 to vo11r 11p11l•lion 111d drying lo your h1 if. On lh1 oth1r hand if ycu m11n h••t•d, th•11 they •r• onlv dryi119 to your hair tnd you 1hould u11 c:ondilion111 lo off.11! th1 direct h11! on lhe h1 ir. Qu11rlo11: h lher1 '""'' way lo k11p from burnin9 lht e1r1 whtn curlin9 th1 1id1 of th1 h1ir ""i!h th1 curl<119 iron1 Miu Burnt E111 Co1!1 M111. C1. .Aniwff: Ari vou one "' S111dt1'1 p1hon1 11 H1ir Hunt- '' S1lo117 H 10, vou'r• in lro11• bit. If not, you might try bind· in9 the •••, or ~•fn9 I b;9 11- b!" 1poon le covt/ th1 ••r. Q11ntloft: 11 • curlin9 :ron· 111 bitter or •• 9ood 11 1 r19- ul1r 1111 Miu W. T. M111 V1rd1 A11sw•r: It d1p111d1 , by 1om• i11di .. idu1l1 neither••• 1ny 901d: Bv 1 prof1ulo111I h•inty!i1t •lth1r 0111 will 11r¥1 th1 pur- po11, d1p.i•1d j119 on th1 11f1cl I ihtl you mi9ht w1nt, 9ueft1011• T•1 I Pl•OM Mollor Cell I ~~!': 70 FAlHION ISLAND NIWPOIT CINTll 644·1111 t . more unemployed come for generally is one of optimism. "We don't want a sob story." help when their compensation many said when interviewed. runs out. , . . They are turning to the The department s pro1ectton basic things in life out of of 600 new families for the first half of the current fiscal necessity, and are sorting outlr;iiii'iiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiii . II 800 the things that are most im· 1,000'1 OF OIL PAINTINGS year now 1s we over , portant. and the second half of the WHOLESALE WARIHOUSI year promises to be equally They have a rough path to OP'EN TO THE PUILIC as grim. walk, but are proving that SQO/o OFF The l·ncrea••s are due to they can surmount the -obstacle d t b k th ,,1t E. EDINCiER. IANTA ANA the "fall-out" from the s an ge ac on e l'htn• 11S-460t aerospace problem. Erickson1;::r=o=a=d=a=g=a=i"=·========'·::"""':=="=""='='='='=·='="="=:•::::=•=e::•:: added. "The cleaning woman the engineer's wife used to employ is out tlf work, and so on down the line. We are fseling the softening ()f the entire economy." KAREN TRACY Has Returned TRAINING PROGRAM Shampoo & Set-$3.50 and up Haircuts $2.50 A training program has begun at UC J for aerospace engineers that will lead to a masters degree in ·en- vironmental engineering. Funded by a $127,730 federal grant. the program Is ad- ministered by the Department of Human Resources Develop.. ment and is the 1 first of its kind in the country. Permanent Wave -$10.00 and up From the management's point of vie\\'. the treatment Mrs . Jaycees Huntington Beach l\1 r s . NOW OPEN EVENINGS Monday throu9h Friday 9 'til 9 Seturday 9 tll 6 Other Operators to Serve You Bonnie Lori Oneida \Vyvonne Karen Howell CLIFFORD'S BEAUTY STUDIO 9027 Adams at Magnolia A1ph1 l1t1 Shopping C1nt1r Jaycees meet the second Mon· day of the month at 8 p.m. Location information may be received by telephoning Mrs. Michael Brooks, 536-7022. Phone 968-8080 Huntington Beach Sun Dried SEA SALT 26-o:i::. Re9. 22e SPECIAL 17C Mo1de from Sun·o1v1por1t1d Sea W1ter VITAMIN E D-olpho '' "''l•d tKophMo111. 100 $1 98 1.U.-100 Cap, 191. 12.45-SPICIAL • 200 1.u. 1 oo Capt. a.,. S4.71 $3 59 5P£CIAL ,.,................... 1 SUPER B Yl-.111bt I c•111pl•1. $1 59 JO t•ltJ9'1. let. S1 .tt-SPICl.Al 1 VITAMIN A 21,000 US, Fish Li"' 011 C•p111I"' 100 C•P•Mln, a.,. Sl.10-SPICIAL 79c FOR THE MONTH OF FEBRUARY ONLY! COASTLINE'S 96 i'. Protein, our OWN spe cial formula, with lecithi;, & Pap•in. 1 lb.-VERY $2 49 SPECIAL PRICE-e GRANOLA 26 01. Buc~et Rog. $1.39 $1.09 Cold Pt1111d, l ·ot. •••. '"" $2 19 SPECIAL -• Pure Korean GINSENG lrv it! 10·1 t••i~ C1p1ul1i .... ..... $7.25 WI Mvt I lart1 '~'ply fl Ml!AT and CHICICIN I" IVf ftffllr-, ,1,1 ... I t relf Vl f19tJ If fthh Wfll ........ t llEADI t JOf ROLLS. ' 2 STORES TO SERVE YOU . ' COASTLINE HEALTH FOODS COSTA MESA 270 E. 17th St. 541°9537-ln Hlllgron Squore . . TUSTIN 1094 Irvine Blvd, 544-7134-Ne•r Sev·On Ttiursdily, FrDr11i1ry 11, }q]} OAIL't' PILOT Jf) Janet Cejka Wed Dance Club The Tattler Tee Evening Rites Read ' ____ .,., • ' The first, thlrd and fifth Frldaya of the month m tilt dance dates selected by Lace 'n Leather pquare Dance Club members . The music starts at 8 p.m. in the ReereaUon Cenler, HW\tlngton Beach. St. John the Baptist Catholic ""''4·•- Church was the setting for (Edf!Of'1 NOi•: A colu""' ol wome11·, lo!) toil ttorr1 wlll 11>11<11• •1(11 WMlr. In tl'le OAILY PILOT. l o fel>Otl tcor•1 for the wetk, "~'" m111 ,.,..,., to P.O. l o• 1560, Calla MHI. Tiit~ mutt be rKelvrd bv MonOIY) Vtllon, Robtrl O'L1mtltr. '''"" '°''''' )f; Abr•ll•m1, II~·· LIWffl\C.f, »: 8 Flltllt, ,,,. Mm ... Kfflntlll E1rb, R-•• Ewn. IUWrd Tunnell, 'Sl; L. J, Murlh1, Mer90ITll $1\10f, Jo-Smo111., )3; c Ft!tM. The ........ ,. (level1nd ltrrY, 33; ltou, IC, w, Ftnd!tr, 3'. ROMANIAN EXPERT Miss Sunni Bloland Folkdancing Weekend Group~ Perform the evening ri tes linking in marriage Janet Theresa Cej ka and Charles La P.1ont Rough Jr. The double ring ceremo11y · ~'as performed by the Rev. Kenneth Krause for t h e daughter and son of ?i.1r. and Mrs. George ti-1. Cejka of Costa Mesa and Mr. and ti.1rs. C. L. Rough of Orange. Mrs. Paul M. Johnson serv- ed as matron of honor and bridesmaids were Mrs. Robert G. Cejka, sister-in-law of the bride, Miss ti.1ary Ann Cejka, her sister, and Miss Patricia Newman. Richard R. Rough was his brother's best man and guests were seated by David Jetton. Russell \Varner, Vincent J antz, Franklin E. Beasley and Steven Satchel. Both the new Mrs. Rou gh and her husband a t t e n d California State College at Fullerton. She is a Mater Dei High School graduate and a Club Lecturer Has Designs Fashion and Design will be title of the program to be1 presented by Mrs. Kenneth l H. Mansfield who also will l host a meeting fo r Orange Dances of Ro ;11 an i a .. v"ill incl~de dance exhibits by County .Stephens C 0 11 e gel J-lungary , Czechoslvvakia and performing gro'.Jps 1n 11atlve Alumnae in her Huntington Poland will be demc>j'Jstrated during a f estival \\'eekcnd cnslu1nes . Beach home at 7:30 p.m . Tues- .sponsored by the Laguna The public is weicon1e a~ day. Feb. 16. Folkdancers. spectators to both evening 1-irs. Mansfield. \\'ho designs f\.1iss Sunni Bloland, an 10• sessions. Those interested in under the name of Marlene structor at the Uni'lersity of info1mation may call the Del!. has designed costumes1 California, Berkeley, w i 11 Laguna Beach Chamber ()f for movie stars and governors' teach sessions in lhe Laguna 1 __ C~o~m:;m=e=r:;ce:.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;w:;;i\;'';'·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:: Beach High School gym from 2 to 4:30 p.rn. on Saturday r and Sunday, Feb. 13 and 1·1. Olher weekend events \VilJ CANDLE VALENTINE draw dancers from So"thern 1 Cal ifornia. Romanian films v.•ill be showA from 7 to 8 p.m. Sunday in the cafeteria prior to the Laguna Festival Danct be~inn ing at 8 p.m. br the gym from 7::W to 11 :30 p.m. on Saturdav, members \Viii participate · ,n the Elizabeth Sanders \,.a l£n- tine Party given by the San Diego State College Folk Dance Conference ln rai.~e scholarshi p fu nd~ An after part:; iR the cafete ria will feature the Borino Kolo Orchestra playing Bal kan music. 'rhc orchestra v.·i ll play again on Sunday in the gym from 8 p.1n. to mid- night. Both evening darice sessions Spouses Feted Richard Petitbcln of the ·Los Angeles Rams \vi[] present the program \vhen South Coast Juniors entertain l he i r husbands during a potluck din- ner in the Fountain Va 11 e y Communitv Center. The fes1.ivities 1\'ill begin ad 7 p.m. Tue~ay, Feb. 16. I Send your Valenti.9earingnf heart,; candle tb'!t"?cleases a delicate scent of '.:fa.;mii,;e as it burns. Packed in a Valentine 1 ·rton. 3.95 THE CANDLE DOCK 308 (oldJ No. Newport Blvd., Newport WA-4168 Open 10 to 6 Closed Mond•v• Beach l fPort f9'r!all fl>asadena /;~~'I\ L 4. ·' ii'\ 'f '. ' ' . ' ' . . ' ·~ ~~-; ''1'. -.-, • I .. I ''Provocative Prints" Just two of the many fashion loo~s lo be found in our e~clusive collection by Vested Gtnlress. Th e1fs long patio wear 100! Rayon/Uax. s11es 6·16. "Funny 6unn1cs" in green/while. 32 00. ''Horses In a Conal." beige/01ange, 36.00. Also available: ··P1~~ltd H~rnn~,' 'Alhaator Beach Bum." "long Turtles." Alf fun designs in sun colo1s! 3400 VIA LIDO • NEWPORT BEACH • 675·7810 LAGUNA l•ACN ACl!S WILD TOU•NAMENT -A Flight, Mr1. Cor111nu1 Toom1v, u, Milli Gr1cl1 JGl'ln$Oll, 7)1 8 Fl!glll, Mr1. Ev111•1flne Cllr!st!1nwn, •11 M11. Ed!Tll M1rks, 6•. PAii l'OU•S -A Fllohl, M" Oon tlurlbut. •21 M", W•lltr 01vi:on. •1i>1 I FlltM. Mrs. loome~. •l'~' Mri.. Sim M1rk•, •~: C FliQlll, lv'r.. Rklllfd Wllll1k.,, U / Mt>. GI"'" McMullen, d . Remember Veta's llANCNO SAN JOAQUIN INTI MATELY LOW Nfl TOUllNAMINT -Fir~• Plitt. M,., Frink BHkmen, 1:; Se-cono Pllct. M ... J1mr1 KHlft, M"· J. E. Waf!hal!. 15; ThlrO P!l'e. M•s, J . l. Wtlbrldgt, Mtl. Ottln W•l~nt, "· FOR VALENTINE'S DAY MRS. ROUGH Home in Anaheim senior n1ajoring in art a11d he is a Crescenta Valley High School a I u m n u s doing g r aduate work. The bridegroom also earned his bachelors degree at CSCF. They will reside in Anaheim . ' LOW HET TOUllN•MENT -•<•, Mr•. Cottllcl T1lm1ge, 10; fligM A, the Mmu. Wr!ghl, n; Gii 10~. "''"'' Gtll&11htr, 1J; Flight e. •he Mm••· M1rvln Joluuon. n; ':1r~! o·s~·•· 73; Willer lhom11o, W111:>rldn1, U : F!)ghl (, lilt Mmt•. Frtttk S<h .. tlla, 111 C••l Stlrsen, 11; Ill M1I;. waon,nw lacknor, '9; Filth! C, !ht w.m0, tlo .. 1rd F1rwtU. 1!; J1mts 81&-t'T>O•f. n. EL TOllO YOU PICK 'EM TOU•NAMEMT - Firs!, 1ht Mme1. Alton flurc~I=, 8111 tltnrv, M1t11ld Wltttttkt, 33; Alfred O'Learv, J1me1 Robert•. Richard 1101!. .1l: Seclllld, lht Mmu. Ctrl Me11on, Chuck V11ton, 36; £. II. (!1mp1, Marolcl Pe!tr1on. Wlllltm Elt~~ • .11.; Low Ne! or Mon!h, M'1. Cllurk Abrah1ms, m. LOW PUTTS -A Fll;hl, lht Mmtt Veta's lllTlllATl APPAllL ONCE A YEAR BRAND NAME SHOES AT DISCOUNT PRICES Savings llp To WOMEN'S SOCIALITE NATURALIZER LIFE STRIDE 97 .N,. - Values AND ..... to $20.00 .. DE LISO DEB AIRSTEP RISQUE JOYCE MISS AMERICA $ DELMAR DE.BS A!R STEP FRONT ROW LIFE STRIDE Values to S12.00 • & MANY OTHERS MEN'S $ 00 JARMAN HUSH PUPPIES SANDY McGEE Values to $18.00 A HARBOR CENTER ~ COSTA MESA • JARMAN WEYENBERG ITALIAN IMPORTS • Values to $22.00 ,,. ~··· , ...... .,.,, -.. !.'J 2300 HARBOR 546-6775 ' . .. ~E ~-- r • ' 20 DAILY PllOT Talking Their Language : Impossible By JODEAN HASTINGS 01 .. Dett'I' ,., .. , Jt•" How to talk to a woman! You can't, claimed Buu !L.J.I 0111y, 5ptakil'll It a lWlCheon meeting or th~ Jt un · tington Beach Board o r Realtors Women's Council 111 l''rancois restaurant. "The difficulty in dealing ll•ilh women defin1tely is in communication 11nd I <.'Onsider myself an authority on the subject since l"m surrounded \\1th them : a granddaughter, fl. twn daughters, II and 24 : my wile of 29 years and my moihtr. who's older than I am'' Tht il unllng1on B ~a c h rra\tor procttded to reg;ile hi~ audience Oncludiiig his wifP ) "'ith examples frOm his own elliperience-. In the. first place. they don't even speak the same language men do. he maintains. "Llsttn l.O two women in thf' kitchen some time. The conversation goes sometlllng like this : 'Where's you put the thingamabob ?' 'Oh, h's over there on lhe whalall.S." Or, he C'Mllnued, his wife v•ill walk in the room Hnd say. "Remember 'l\'hRI "''' were talking about IWo weeks ago .• ," GUESS ,WHO Dlb:D? Thill conversation might be followed by one with hl~ mothe r saying, "Guess who died ~" Daly patiently explained thal he v.·as reading a technical book which didn 't happen to contain obituaries. ··sadi•." "That"s 1tond : ~h~ "''"S always jumping O\'tr the fence and tearing up the lawn.'' Double Wedding • Sisters Share St. Mary"s Episcopal Church of Laguna Beach was lhe set- ting for a douhle ma rriage ceremony for Sally Beth Jones anrl Norn1an Vance Fellers Jr. and Nancy Ann Jones and 1-iark Alexander Bollas. The .~isters wert escorted to lh! altar by their father , Harold A. Jones for I double ring ceremony conducted by the Re\". Robert L. Corn elison. Thr~· also sire the ·daughters of the !ale Mrs . .Jones. Sa lly Bf'th Jones. who returned from Heidelbera, Cermanv. for 1he service, named ·her sister as honor allendanl \\'ilh bridesmaids ~1iss Sharon Leeds and Mrs. A. Bingham Cherrie. Nancy Ann Jones was al· tended by her sister and bridesmaids Miss S u s a n n e Treacher and Mrs. Geo(f Kern . Fellers, son of M rs . ~1argery fellers of Selah, Wash. and Norman V. Fellers of New York City, chose Richard E. Buba as best man with Norman Vance Fellers Susan Brecher Bride Of Michael su~an Ka y Brecher and Michael A. Eric k so n e1- changed vow!'> and ring! before the Re\•. Willlam Diamond in St. Anne ·s Catholic Church. Seal Beach. Parenl.s or the bridal couple are Mr. and ~irs. Robe i* Brecher of Huntington Beach And Mr. and ~1 rs. Easton Erickson of Sunse! Beach Gh,en in marriage by her father. the bride was attended by Mrs. Palricia Newcomer as matron of honor. Brides-- maid~ were the Mie ses Carol Cirac~ Deborah Turlis, \'.ii;ki Green and J an e t COLLEEN McPHEDRAN November Bride Erickson Brecher. the bride·i; !'>ister. Serving as best man was Bob Prince, and ushers were Ken ~Ifs, Ken Gunnell and Jeff Brecher, the bride's bro!her. . The bride is a graduate of Mar ina High School and at- tended Golden \\'est Collegt. Her husband is a graduale of Huntington Beach High School and Orange Coast <Allege and \\'ill ~n his bachelors degree in political science in June at California State College at Long Beach . The newl yweds \\'i!i reside i.n Sunset ~ach. Ceremony Date Set Colleen ~1 cPhedran w i 11 become lhe bride of Raymond c:eorge !.enhausen Ill durin~ l'\ov. 6 riles in SL Bonaventure Ca tholic Church. Huntington Beach. Their engagement h;:is bf'e11 announced b\" r..1r. and Mrs. John A. McPhedran of Hun· tington Beach. parents or the br1de·t~be. ~1 iss McPhed ran is a senior It fountai n V;:illey High School. From which h c r f1ance was graduated.He 1~ 1he son of Mr. and Mrs. R. fi. Lenhau sen .Jr . of Hun· tington Beach. SAVI •20 to '40 PROFESSIONAL QUALITY EXERCISERS wt HAHOll SfVllAl TYrts AND H.l.VI THI L.AlOIST SILICTIOH TO CHOOSl ",OM COMI IN AND TlY THIM ALL I ·:; USI 1-Z TlllM ONLY 15 MIN. A DAY MODELS FOR PAST lllOUCING AND SLIMMING 011 l'lllMING AND STAYING IN SHA.Pf. 'f/Pu/' CAPict Pf ' •299s ••••• •68 .. .... 49.ll .... •. 115 V" lea1tlful C1ler1 I Stylt.t ""'11111•11111, Yl1yl, C11,11 V lfftiti'I lrtralu R11tl111 *"" 11: .. ,,,tly FaM11•11 U11t1 .!dB "" .., CllDfT c-.-.. -...iNlf .. hit lMI. ............................... 9"Mttl l·Z TIU• EXEllCISER COSTA MESA 1132 H•rbor Blvd. '" •itc• "'"" " '"" '"""" PHONE 64S.ll71 #GI ••. $AT. 11.6.M ... , ... ANAHEIM 2141 W. Lincoln I 111'9<111 Utl .. l11et1 llW, f"'tllw1, "1 PHONE 121-5110 '1SADIE SINGL.EHOOPER'!'' Firmly wedged In t he doghO\lse himself, Daly trltd In explain that he thought she was talking about the poodle down the 1treel. Jle advised tht! male con· tingcnt In the crowd not tu a.sk questions since they pnr bably wouldn 'l get an answer -only another question , He Illustrated wil.h lhis viRnetlt. ··rn1 going to the store - want anything~" to which his ~·i fe replied. "What store ?" "Any store you wan t. \\'hat store do you "'ant me to go to?" "Did I ever tell you wh at slnre lo go to? Here -make out a shopping i5t .'' Groaning that he n ll w realizes why they're. sn poor, Daly makes out the list Cf!m· prised o( 11x king-sized soft Ritual SD Home Selected The bride. daughter of Mr. ;ind ~r.~. Oonald Picc 11rcl of New po r l 8C'ach. v.·as gracluated from Ne\\' por t H;irbor High St·hool ;incl at· tendec1 Orange Coa st Collrge ;ind r-.1aun;. Olu Col lege , Hawaii. The bridegroom. son or ~1r .1 and ~1rs. Philip ~1 on r oe Klauber nf San tJiego. is a l{raduate of San ~1il{uel High School and attenderl l he Univ ersil y ol Redlands. Newlywed Pair Home In Alabama VALENTINES DAY So ... t th•~, S,1«•1 fe• Th • Ot1t Y1M lov•I llHGl-IJ.lllHGS & OTHll JIWILIY IH "'ODllH SlYLIS. Stl!lflO\, <~I 11_, !t .,.fhY ltll11 j, I (,tl tfl'lt '~POii~ lo• tf'" 'Do-ll·Yllll• ltll" jt W•lrt m~~•fJ FIVE M GEMS 11' I . Ulfl It,· •II · C11h "lfl• "'flloJl'lfl ."lff • ~·ofJtt ... . . . ... ~ Furniture-in-the-Nude 333 E. 17th ST. COSTA MESA I hhh1d th HouM of Pe11c. .... I Thousands of ori9lnal oil . ·intin9s 64S.1212 De.t ier Showroom W arehou1e ope" to public. Bo( .tt dealer's prices. Custom Fr.tmes .t v.t il- ab •· lay.away on Mester Che ~ge or B•"~Am eri. cerd. ~ENT -LEASE -SALE Hours -9 a.m. to /, p.m., Monday thru Saturday ORIGINAL OILS, LTD. 1619 E. LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL N011CE LEGAL N011CI .IMl·ANHUAL llll>OllT 0,-,UI LIC AOMtNllTllAT•ll TO THI HOHOltAIL• HAllMON •. sc•V1lll. l'IOIATI J UO•• etr TNI su,11u•• (OUllT .,. THI ITATI 0, C.t.lll<OltNIA. fN ANO 1'011 TNI COUNTY oP e1tAN6I: JJ..MfS I!" "elM. ,iu~llt At1m..,11tr•~r et •till (111nty, rl'!'Mctl11llV m1~tt 1141~• tom. 1<1te 1111 "'""' ter 1111 1erm ctmmt !lclllG July 1, ltl~ •nd entli~I ltliJ rt+ur11 et •II •l11eil f l •tc•t11t1 Wl'llch O.C1mMr l l, 1'11. 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Intense SOHOW 12 Emtr9t 13 Venturtd.· 18 "Be gone!" 23 Out ·--··• limb : 2 Wf)fdS 25 Racket 2& Worry -··· 27 Defee! 28 A11cienl people of Gaul 29 Tough , in dea lings JO Nolicrd Jl P1rsr1vrs JJ Pall of lhr foot . )5 ·-·· Sta11lry Gard nrr 3b Ma II JB Wan 39 The Wrsteh1 l and • • " "" " 2J .J " A&OUT w -'1411 6 INDUSTr:llES?' 2/11/71 41 ····-•-!he Conq ueror •2 Miss West 44 Zoo an ima l o15 Existrd 46 Of fr at u1te1ly: Slang 47 Thr l one Range1''i> friend 48 Vrnrtian blind parts 50 Roman dat e 51 Takr on lood 53 Catalogue 54 Comprt rnt 55 RrQ uire 58 --·· Dinh Diem ; S. Vietnamrsr Pres ident 59 Beret's 1elatl ~e II " " " " '. I·-.: " " ,, ~ " " • -.. ~ " " " " " .. "'" " .... " ly Cliester Gould By Tom K. Ryan SE"6EA>lT- BRING lN n-us NICE "°""" llACHELDR , ,.._,,,,, lO MOISHE- ® ' ' SALLY BANANAS GORDO FIVE 0 1CL.OCK, PORF/12.JOf COCI<.-• TAIJ.. T IM/;f • Thursday, February 11 , }q71 ~ OAIL Y PILOT I J ly Al Capp J~T aAIW.1! 1 > By GU$ Arriola By Harold Le Doux .--,...OON MULLINS v:::::-cc-"""~,,.""".,.=s-w~MA~J~ I L1KE TO MEA.li!:! Wl-IAT k1Wt> OF oues· TIONS PIP ME By Ferd Johnson =-= '-' PERKINS A.~K, LIZ? MISS PEACH KELLY Sc Hoot. $1'VPEN1' Courir YOUR J.fONOF{,IAM A&OLlf TO "T'ELl. ."\ STOR.Y 7'HAT ! KNOW WIU... E"'O IN .JUSTICE Sf.ING OONE ; LINO.A. ..1usr PUNC>ffO ME IN 'TMIS EYE, KIC.l<EO ME, Pl.l.MMeL.EO ME ANO PlJNCHeCJ ME AGAlN,AU. wrr,.,aur· "'"' .... <e«10~ ~ Mf.t.c.1111 ""';' STEVE ROPER PEANUTS MV SClENCE l'KOJECT? '<?S, MA'.AM .. ! HA'w'E IT REAOV10 SHOW 101l<E O.ASS. PROVOCATION !.' ,,, k:' •. 1: 'TMAT'.5 THE!: CUTE"51 STORY I'VE HEAg,O IN A6E-5 ! ~-. C,.,_, D 1•1-1-11JRI> 1\le l'l\6E'; WHe!l l 1M GOOD AW flJADIJ ! -~-­ ~...--. . ' ' . ' By John Miles By Mell LINDA,POYOU HAVE MJY .JOKE5 iO TEL BEFOIU! :t Ol~M/55 "THIS CA5G '! 2t TMf STIANGI WOI~ MR.MUM By Roger Bolen DENNIS THE MENACE By Sounders and Over9ard AT FIRST l HAI> A LITILE 1!10Ulll£ 1Rlll<G 10 DEC~ WHAT l1l 00, M HERE IT IS ..... ;· • I I J, " • j I s t •.,, . ,• • .... ' . . . • DAJLY PILOT lru.irstf.aJ, ftbruir1 11, }q]l Clay Camp--Not for Emily Pos t\ UCl'S RICHARD CLARK GOES FOR REBOUND. -------- E111e1·so11 Nips El Sl1af ei • hi Pl1illy Ten11is Tourney PHILADELPHIA I AP l -The fir i;1 major upset y,·as scored \Vcdnesda y night in the Philadelphia lnlernalional Tenn1~ <:hampionship \1•hen power hitting Qy,cn Da,·idson unsea led second-seeded Ken Rosl'11·all. a fel1011 Auslralian, 6-3, 6-.f. Sbi;th-seeded Boy Emerson of i\e11·pon Reach "as challenged all the 11·ay by lhe no\c\\"orth\' h1t11ng of Ismail El Shafei. CAR Icily Sahle1 madr several mistakes in the sixth and eighth game~ of the final set and 11as beaten 6-4. u . 6-2 Davidson. 11ho 1.:oached rhe Br111sh Da\'IS Cup team las\ year. scored !hf! important brcakthrnugh or service: 1n the fifth game of the second set He Ageless Pancho Seeki11g Place 011 Cup Squad CHICAGO 11\P \ -Po:.ncho Gonzall.~l. 11 retired tennis pro at 43, \\'ants a ~OOt at lh' Ln1tcd States· Davis Cup team in its 1971 ILll' defense. \1·as in full command or his strokes throughou\ the mat ch and made le11rr errors than Rose11·atl in the con tesl Rose1\'<l!I made a brief come-fro1n· behind surge 11hen he rose 1n the fin al gainc fron1 0-:JO 10 lead 40-30 But Da vison e1·ened the game al deuce \\'il h a \'olley placement :ind then took the match by forcing Rose11·all into 111-·o netter shot s. Another upset of lesser 1mportancr ~a11 :\o. 12 seeded Fred Stolle. former \\'imb!edon and UnitC'd States champion from Australic1. beaten. 7-5. ~2. by California's Bob Lul l Lut z took thr first set by rifling a ser1•1ce return to Stollt's feet Bob Carn1ichuel exet·utcll cll'ver pas:-· ing shot.:; in beating follo1r Australian Dick Crealy. 6-4. G-i Two other seeded pl:1.vers advanced to thl' second round . The 1wo. Joh n Kewcombe. the current \Vimbledon champion from Aus\ralia. and Tom Ok- ker ol Holland. both prorited lrom couble faults on gamr points by their opponents. t\ewrombe put out Roy Barth. a ne""' American contract professional ~2. tt-3. Okker scored by 6--1. ~3 over f>"'red ~ll'\l illan. a two-handed hitter rrom South Africa. Roger Taylor. English leflhander anrl seeded r-io. 9 defealed Bill Bo\\Tey or Austr;ilia 7-5. £>.-2. Cliff Drysdale. another l\\'O-handed hitter from Sou1h Africa beat Allan Stone of Auslraha &2. ~I. ~11Mfl BEACH, Fla. (AP) -Muh.am· mad Ali 's training camp is deeorated 1n early Damon Runyon. Earthy is not elegant. "Hey, somebody swat that mosquito,'' said Angelo Dundee. .. He got in without pay ing." It's no place for Emily Post. Nickel-dime figh ters pound b a g s , jun1p ropes and do situps as the crowd 1nultiplies in the Firth Street gym. They pretend the people came out to watch them ... but , they know better. Muhammad Ali's ebony body prances from a makeshi ft drts.sing room and the people applaud. Tita11s Fall To Anteater Five, 77-72 By HOWARD L HANDY Of ti!• 0111~ l'l"l llatl UC Irvine has been playing basketball for six years and the end of an era is already al hand. The Anteaters of coach Tim Tilt hand- ed Cal Slate (Fullerton) a 77·71 defeat Wednesday night in the losers' gym before a sparse crowd of 562 fans . The game was the fourth of the season betv.·een the two schools and they split the decisions. ironically. 11-·ith each team \\'inning a pair on the other's home court. Unless the CCAA has a change or heart. the game marked end of com- petition on the hardwoods between the t\.l'o schools in regular season action. All CCAA schools are banned from scheduling UC! beginning next season. 'rhe game itself left a lot to be desired from an artistic standpoint but neilher coach was using a canvas to paint a picture. A piece or chalk on the hardwoods during timeouu was the only semblance of a drawing. The victory brought lhe Irvine season record to 12-10 and ended a four-game losing streak that began in 1\e\v Orleans !wo v.·eeks ago. '"I thought we played \\'ell In thl! last four games even though we missed !'llme !llho~ we should have had tonight ," Tift said after the victory. "The difference in my book was when ·we began to hit V.'ilh aboul six minute~ to play. Then \\'e pressed them a couple of times and had things our \.l'ay at the end.'' The turning point came when lhe Anteaters v.:ere leading by one \Vilh 6:01 10· p!ay, 57·56. Big Ed Burlingham hit a pair of free thro\.l'S and a, 15-foot jump shot to make it 6l·M and UCI held the lead for the balance of the game. runn ing the margin lo nlne witti 13 seconds left. Phil Rhyne. playing despite havin.I!: influenza. v.•as hi gh point man with 19 followed by consistent Bill ~loore \\'ith 17. Burlingham had his best scoring nig ht or the year v.·ith 16 and Bill George. rnaking one of his rare lengthy ap- pearances, scored IO on fi\'e field goals. "George made some moves out there tonight I didn't know he had ,'' Tift praised the man \\'ho "''as a starter last se ason. The \'arsity will rest until a .... ·rek fr om Saturday \\'hen ii entertain~ Cal Poly i Pomona I in Crav.·ford Hall. UC Irvin• !Ill CS PUlll,,..., 111) •• " " " •• " ,, •• "~vnr • , ·' .. Cn•Utnn~m • ' ' .. Moot• , ' ' " cn,ldren ' ' • ' Cl~ro ' • ' ' Roclrl9V!l ' ' .. P.vflino~11 ... • ' " ' JDnh ' ' " ll•kor ' ' ' ' Gtrlt!s ' • ' .. "' ' • ' • R1m"y • • ' " M111!ew1 • • • '~· • • ' • Gtor~t ' • " lD!ll• • " " " le!1I• " .. " " Hlilf•fl't. " Fulll r1Dn "· "' lr•lnt • UCt '""'" Pi) CS, l'f911t Ufl •• tt • " " " " " Ho....., In\ ' • • , N.onr ' • ' • ""'"" ' , JonH ' • ' " ~-' • K•f y<h• ' ' • 1<1n•t n • ' ,, Al<•'•' ' ' " Mg•l"' • • F<< .. • , ' !lunch • • ' • 8'\Kf • ' ' tump.,on1 ' " VanLuYt n • • ' • 1<190 .. , ' " Tuum • • ' • JOrd1n ' • , Sii!H ' • " Perk•no • • • Connolly ' ' ' • M1cOcn11d • • • HowlnQton • • • To11i. " " • " Toti ls ~ M " • HllU•me. \JCI Fro.1~ 3', ($ "ullt•JOn Frein 7•. Fans will pay $150 a head for ringside seats when Ali battles Joe Frazier for the hea vyweight title f\lal'('h 8 1n New York. Here. the admission is $149 less Ali bounces into the training ring and begins shadO\.I' boxing. Onlookers scan his unntarked body. ~1ost are ama zed at his size, 6-foot·3 and 22! pounds. "I'm rtady," Ali announces. "Get Stan · ford." Stanford 1-larris. a squa t 235-pound Jamaican, Cllmbs up and trades shols 11·ith the cobra-quick AH for three rounds. }farris is wearing 16-ounce gloves. twice the si te of \what Frazier will s"'ing. Dundee, gym proprietor and Ali'.s trainer, talks with his man after Harris 1s done. So does Drew "Bundln.i" Bro .... ·n, another Ali aide. Despite such chat sessions, it's ap- paN'nl the man is bossed only by hJJnself. rr Ali \\'ants to box some more, he does. That's that. He "''ants more this time. Across the ring, a plump lady watches '''ilh a slight smile. She's Odessa Grady Clay. 1nother of the man now kno"'n as tiluhamn1ad Ali. "Sure, I worry anytime my so n s light ,'' sh' said. "But I think he 'll beat Joe Frazier. I always think he'll \\'in ••• he always has." By oow, the gym rmella or penplr .. lion. "People gonna be shocked how easy 1 be al Joe Frazier," says Ali in a sudden explosion of brashness. "He mado his reputation beatin' guys who wouldn'& be a good workout for me. "Frazier just moved his training camp to Philadelphia," he said. "He's all con· fused. The weather's against him •• , the hotel food is against him." Ali's diet is built around fresh cooked vegetables, beef and lamb. It's cooked ~ for him specially in his apartment. , ANTEATERS EVERYWHERE _:_ Bill George 144 \ or UC Irvine. grab!' a rebound \'.'1th Ed Burlingham ~3 1 ) and Ric hard \lark !left) ready to join the ac· lion. A pair of ominous bands are behind George and belong to a Cal State (Fullerton) player. UCI won. 77·7 l to bring its season record to 12·10. In Hope Classic A rnied W ithN ew Putter, Pal11ier Battles Leader PAL'.\! SPRJ!>;GS (AP) -Balt!in~ to re gain the 1rinn1ng touch 1~htch has ev11d- ed hin1 14 n1onths. Arnold Palmer armed hi1nself "'ilh a ne1~· putter \\'ith it he !'ank son1C' loni: ones. UJl to 40 feel. and missed a trio of th rer feet or less in the openin g round nf the $140,000 Bob liope Desert Classic golf tournament. His 67 going in!o today 's second round at th is desert locale left Arnie JUSt one stroke off tile pace Qf 26-year-old Texan tilarty Flecklnan who f i red a six-under-par 66 . Also at 67 were Roberto Bernarclini, the rookie PGA pro from Rome. Italy, and Hiiie kno .... ·n Bill Brask, Joe Carr and Larry \\'ood. Attention centerrd on Palmer. threr tunes the Hope tourna1nent champion and golf's leading money earner \1·ho ha sn't \\'On a tille since December . 1969 "This puller is a different type than I've ever used," explained Palmer 1\•ho ha~ been having miseries on the greens "Ifs a blade type v.·ith a !langc on the back and i:enter-shafted. The center ::.halt niakes it different. The big thing 11·as that the ball rolled so much better \1'1thout too much effort. If it's rolling 11ell . you'll gel lo the hole.'' Surprisingly, Pa!n1cr's tee shots had a tendency to ~tra~. "It \1·as not good. less impressi\'e than ii ·s been tn quite some time,'' the powerful 41 -y ear-Old commented. "But on the par fives, I hit good te e shots \\'hen I needed then1 . But I pushed a eouple and pulled a couple on the otl1er holes. "lf it means dr1v1ng poorly and scoring \1ell, 10 hell v.·it h lhe drivi ng." Hol111es' Win First for U.S.; Ki11gs Roll, 5-2 SAPPORO. Japan -Julie Holmes of Littleton, Colo .• won the women·s figu re skating competition of International Sports \\"eek today, bringing the United States its first gold medal in the Pre· Ol ympic Games. • INGLEWOOD -Los A n g e I es de-. fen seman Da!e Hoganson scored a fluke goal in the second period and the Kings exploded for four more in the final period to defeat the Detroit Red Wings 5·2 in a National Hockey League game \\'ednesday night. The victory, fifth in a row on home let>. it gave the sixth plact> Kirigs a 16--25- 1 l record in the \Vestern Division anc! 43 p(iJnts. five back of Pittsburgh for the final playoff spo t. • LOS ANGELES -Al Oowning. a ZS.. year-0ld former New York Yankee star pitcher, n1ay be the key to the pennant hopes of the Los Angeles Dodgers. Gonzalez. ...,.ho anoounud his retire- ment from a lucra1ive pro t•areer last \\'e,k. said toda} he "ould seek L·1uted Slates Lawn Tenni s Association approval for his ehgib1hty lor Da\'IS Cup pla~· The bouncy Pancho. told I~ Associated Press ··1 think I Ct41ld pla~ "''ell enough and I can n1ake the Da\'1S Cu p team.· Russian Blasts Brundage Palmer played lhe quartet or par f11·es a to1a l of si x.under-par wilh two eagles and hro birdies. The eagles can1e at the -i92-ya rd fifth hole at the La Quin ta Country Club v.•hen he dropped a 12-foot putt alter 1 .... ·o ~·ood shots put him on rhe green. A 50-foot chip dropped into the cu~ at lhr 13th. Fleckman also olayed La Quinta, perhaps the toughe st of the courses to be played by the 136 pros and ~08 amateurs. The Dodgers acquired the ~foot-11, 180-pound left-hander from the f\filwaukee Bre1\'ers Tuesday, giving up utility outfielder Andy KosCil, another rormer Yankee. Gonzalez appeared in JUSt on' Da\·1~ Cup competition, teaming with Frederick Schroeder to \.\'In over Australia in the J9-49 finals a1 F'ortst Hills. . Pancho said sincr he no longer 1s a contracted pro player that he regards himself eligible for Davis Cup play and will presenl his case at the USLTA meeting in Bellaire. Fla., S&turday. . Conuler. said his Davis Cup amb itions were prompted by the rac\ the defending U.S. t.eam potential has been v.·eakened bec:•WJt Arthur Ashe, Bob Lurz and Charles Pasarell now are pros "The cup leaders now are Slan Smith . a1rr Richey, Clark Graebner and In JS-y,l.Mlld' youngster from Los Angeles, Jim Connen, '' said Pancho, "I may be loo qld . bul the \1orld Is made or us guys wtlo are. trying, ind I'll try. Nobody will work ha rder than me lo get Into shape ." Gon1.alez i;•id lhl.~ would be a te~t o( I new US LTA ruling that a diSCQO· Unued pro rot.Id return to Divis Cup ellgtbtllty as he said Austr1ll1's Mel Anderson has done . I 83-year-old IOC Boss Called Ridiculons SAPPORO (A P) -Sovit t Husina's sports chirf said Thursday that Interna- tional Olympic Commitlre President Avery Brundagr's approach lo pro- fessionalism in skiing 1s "ridiculous." Brundage lasl November rull'd 10 world class competitors ineligib" for thr 1972 "'Inter Olympics here because lhry \\'Ofk· ed al a summer ski camp in California "Wr think maintaining the amateur statu!ll of the Olympics is important but ...,., cannot br ridiculous about it,., said S. P. Pa vlov, chairman, of the Soviel Stale committee for Physical Cul!urc and Sl)Orts "\\'r ;ire agains1 pro- fesi;ionnllsm hut ...,.e slso are against nonsenst Speaking t.o ncws1nen l'OVl'rtng 1he pr<'· Olympics hart. Pavlov !!laid : '·BecuuSE: one or two, or maybe 10 a!hletes ha,·e violated Lhelr 11m11tcur status. i\fr. Brun· dag' uy:!t let's ranccl tht v.·hole isport. All this I! rldlculous.'1 Brundage has bet-n critical for years of Olympic skiers wbo indulge in Cilm- merciatism. \\'hat the Olympics needs, said Pavlov. i~ more "democratit.ation." There ar' too many dukes and lords on the Intern&· lional Olympic Committee \\·ho aren"t sportsmen. he continued. but make decisions on important ques1ions. An lnternatlonel Olympic t..:ongres~ hasn·t bttn called for 40 years. he added , and il·s about Lime it was. Indirectly criticizing the BJ.year-old Brundage. "''ho ha! been running the IOC for as long as anyone can rtmember. lhf' blond. 1quare'·j8'A'ed Pavlov aRid !he roc should and must recognize and listln tu the ;1dvicc of 1he international sport~ fedtrations and the national Oly mpic <.>on1mi ttees. "\Ve think these organiiation~ are doing good "'ork ." he said. "They should bf' reco~nlzcd not only in the law bul In f11ct " . . . ,.... .. . . On a subject closer to home. Pavlov \"'as less emphatic. Asked \Whether steps should be taken lo get Communist China back into the Olympic movement. he replit'd vaguely, "\\'e always ha~·e been against any political or racial discrunina- tion... He paused, t h e n added, "And \If' "ill alv.·ays be against them." As to re suming sports relation:i ~·11h the Chinese mainland ruptured since 1965. he s;iid cautiously that go\'ernment C'On· su ltations are 1n progress bet11-een the 1wo countries and "v.e v.1U see. · Asked if this n1cant Iha\ negotiations between Chinese-Soviet sports"organiza· lions are taking place. he replied \\'ith !ht empha11 <· · n~el " Commenting on Thursda) ·~ b1a1hlon m1xup in \1·hich lhe four-Un1c \I Or Id champion . 1\l ck.sander Tikhonov of Russia 1\a:s disqualified for choosing 1he wrong course. Pavlov s11ld the organizer~ nbv iC1u.sly will make certain next rear that there cou ld be no mist<:1ke. . . They drew Tan1ar1sk for today's sec'Cind round of this 90-hole rive-day marath6n. fteckman fired seven birdies and only one bogey on his round which he te.rmed the best he·s had since com ing on the tour three yea rs ago. The stocky young player from Port Arthur, Tex., started his par breaking \fith a 15-foot birdie putt al the fourth hole and wound up dropping a 25-footer at the 18th. Fleckman, in a prolonged slump, said , "I'm a perfectionist and a perfectionist is ~ver satisfied . But l'm convincing 1nyself to let lhings happen -don 't press for birdies because you can't force lhen1 No"'' I seem to be driving the ball belier and n1'y rounds are more consistent " Bernardini. Brask. ~rr and \\'oocl all shot their ri rst rounru at India n \Veil~. l\111s1ers' ch11mpion Billy Casper shot ., ii at La Quinla and defending chan1· •pion Bruce Devlin of Australia had a 73 there. Lndrr the !lope format. each pro plays ont> round over each or the four courses and cacb d11y has a differen t trio of amateur partners. • SEATTLE -Three of four black foot· ball players who Jed a recent verbal attack on the Univer~ily of Washi ngton 's athletic staff for 111leged racism have enrolled at other schools, it "''BS reported '\'ednesday. Calvin Jones, a defensl\'e back from San Franclsro. has enrolled at Long Beach City College. . Ira Hammon, of Portland, Ore., and Charles Evans, of Chicago, both pass receivers, have begun second Se.meslcr classes at Pacific Lutheran University at Tacoma. \Vash. ~lark \\'heeler. the other player, re· mains in Seattle. • KA NSAS CllY -Barry Ashrr Of Calta l\1csa returned to the top 16 in thfl \\'t:ek 's STP bowling classic Wednesday after t1vo rounds of (.'()mpetll lon with a 2.683 pin total, 193 behind the leader, Alli(! Clarke. of Akrtn, Ohio (2,876) .... Asher nlissed the top level competition at San Jose last week after finishing in the money for three conseeutlve v.·eeks. CIAILY .. IL01 .. MN " '•Irick O'l>IMell 11'1Yr$d~)'. Februal')' 11, l1J71 DAIL V PILOT 2j Oilers, Vikings Fight for Title By ROGER CARI.SON Of Ille Dilly l'llfl Stiff It's au on the line tonight when Hun- tington Beach Hlgh's Oilers and rival Matlna square off in Sunset League basketball action. Tipoff is slated for t o'clock and an overflow crowd is expected at the Viking confines. Oiily 1 Coach Tabs Oilers Over Marina The home court advanta.1e is the predominant factor w b y the majority of the Sunset League basketball coaches fa vor Marina over Huntington Beach tonight. Four of the coaches tabbed Marina, Ne wport Harbor t'Oa ch Dale Hagey pick- ed Huntington and a sllth mentor ca1led it a toss-up. Fpllowlng are the coaches' comments: At tla.ke !or the: hoat Vikings of Marln1 is a portion of the Sunaet lead, a chanct to avenge a first-round loss to Hun- tington and in all probability a berth in the CIF AAAA playoff!!. Two games still remain for both ct11~ tingents next week, but it's general\J conceded that the outcome of tonight"& showdown wiU diet.ate whether the two will share the loop title or Huntington wins it all. t.1arina trails Huntington Beach by one game, as does Newport Harbor, another contingent that figures in tht: race. Coach Elmer Combs' Oilers possess a 54-~ first round win over Marina, but coach. Jim Stephens' Marin a Vikings have been coming fast in recent action and have been in.stalled as ''°" point favorltes tonight. Huntington, which was rated first ln Orange County until last week's stunning loss to Westminst er, has tumbled to the No. I spot in lhe rankings. MaJ'lna DAILY ,ILOT ,.I DICTIONI Gi..n Whllt: Mllrlne M, MMllfll .. ft JI 1t1pr Cer111e1u Mllrllo• Jt, Kvnt"'9fM 11 Crtll llll'H: Mtrlfll t J, M1111!1!111" t i K-flll M1My: M11'1n1 IS, '4111111...-. t• .... ll ••u: M1l111o1 t:t. MtNlllnflM JJ is rated third and has won its Iut two games by margins of 31 and J2 points. HUNTINGTON ANO MARINA WILL RESUME THEIR TORRID BASKETBALL RIVALRY TONIGHT IN A SUNSET LEAGUE CRUCIAL. Don Leavey (We1tmln1ter)-"I think Marina is going to win. l don't think height is golng to be the determining fadDr. Huntington Beach Lt a very deceiving team as far as height is con- cuned. Steptlent calls the key to a rt1arina win the ability to connect from ouWde Huntlngtoo's 1-2-1 zone. Thompson Sparks GWC Rustler Guard Gets 37 Points in 95-82 Win By CRA IG SHEFF 01 1~1 CllllV .... , t11tl' One can excuse Golden West's hot shooting gua rd Chris Thompson for ha v- ing an occasional ()ff night That appeared to be the case after 16 minutes of play during Wednesday night's Southern California Conference basketball crucial with LA Southwest 1t Orange Coast College. To that point, Thompson had hit only t~·o of 10 attempts from the field and he and his teammates were struggling. But suddenly the flashy Rustler caught fire, propelling the state's No. 3 ranked team to a come-from-behind 9&-82 victory over the underrated Cougars. The win kept Golden West in the top spot in the rugged SoCal race. I t:i games ahead of LA Harbor, a 42-37 '11inner over Cypress Wednesday. Thompson finished with 37 points, hit· ting 13 of 71 attempts rrom the field (48.l percent) and 11 of 12 from the free throw. line. Wheeler on Move ll V.'3S Thompson who got the Rustlers rolling with four minutes left in the initial half. With Golden West behind by nine (37- 28), the all-SoCat gu~rd canned two straight jumpers from long range and teammate Brian Ambrozich followed with a IS.footer, cutting the deficit to three (37·34). After a Cougar basket, Thompson clicked on two more long range shots to bring the Rustlers within one. Teammate Rick Barnes followed with a bucket to give his club the lead (40-39), but the Cougars added two points just before the buzzer for a one-point edge at the half. But with Thompson hitting well from outside and Ambrozich working v.·ell on the boards, the RusUers maintained con· trol through most of the second half. The scrappy Cougars still were in It wltli si1 minutes left and trailing by just one (70-69). But a trio of Thompson charity throws, Watch Out for Marina In Future Grid Wars A sleeping giant houSfd in a modern castle, surrounded by v,·hat appears to be a moat. has shown recent signs of movement -a not so pleasant pro. spect for rival Sunset League football coaches. In five years under the P.1arina High School banner. the Vikings had managed riine wins, 33 losses and three standoffs. Their greatest achievements were in defeat. losing by lvo points (9-7) lo 1967 CIF AAAA champion_ Anaheim and a 14-13 loss in '66 to Anaheim . A new coach and a new system last --------- ROGER CARLSON ---- year reversed the trend as the Vi/(es gained a winning season t!t-4) including impressive wins 01·er Santa Ana (38-0) and Loara (1 4-12 ). But it appears apparent that coach Leon Wheeler and Cc:I. are far from sat- isfied with their lot. The latest addition to the football pro- gram is the dropping of La Puente and South Torrance from the practice schedule". Replacing that pair ii; the imp:ising tandem of El Rancho and Hawthorne on Mme-and-home arrangements begin- ning this fall . Wheeler had something like .W varsity players last year, but now ht:'s got 8S involved in the picture. Winning has it's way or miking the results worth the price. '* * * Oflklatlng at prep b&1ketblll 11mu thb: yt1r, bellevt It or not. ts rectlvlng u eve• laraer •ban! of criticism Chan In lhe past. Chief complaint Is the consistent rate of inconslsltn~y In c1llln1 fouls. Bloody mayhem stiem~ lo go ur;uiollced, then 1 licky tack foul 11 levied. Technical fouls seem lo be ga1nu1g popularity among the officials to quiel do\\'n irate victim s. Coaches from e\•ery corner, Including tbe big v.lnners, nave ''oiced their concern repeatedly, but are reluctant lo he quoted because of fea r of reprisal. * * * San Marino High has a couple of jntern ational swimmers in the fold, but they are not eligible for CIF activity. Norway's Sverre Kile (16:56.6 in the 1.500 meter) and Sweden's Bengt Gingjo (a lick back of Kile's 4:14.6 400 meter time) will be competing in AAU com- pelition while at Sen ~arino. * * * Costa r.1e1a and Glendora are dropping out of the annual Huntington Beach b11ketball lllvttaUonal. Replacing them are Millikan and Sunny HUb. * * * Laguna Beach High's football schedule undergoes a minor change front last yea r "·ith Gladstone of Azusa furnishing the opposition in the opener. Oth'er non league games for the ArtisL<1 include San Clemente and Los Amigos (during the bye week). Saddleback Falls To RCC, 89-77 COnlerence leade r Riverside City College took advantage of 31 free throw s Wednesday night to hang an 89-n rt1ission Cclnference bas.kttball defeat on the host Saddleback Gauchos at Mission VlcjO High. •1"'"i.' '"' Soflllff•d; 11n ~· ,,,.,,~" .. lltllfl• ll•rJOrt 1 t 1ULl!ltV JIJ• I'-1 0 1 llEC1Wtr~Ol2? C~ •lJUHfl'Cl .. Mtl111' l'~lt $ ll 1 U Cllrt• .. ~1,.. 11 • \ JO l l(h•ld ·' ~ tt M inton I 0 S 16 ~l&rl• 0 I 1 G1rd~tr I 1 l t AN1tr10~ O I 1 Hol•nu J J 10 I-It~~· G04 !utle• o I Prl(t "" 1 I 0 1otth " Jl II •t 111!11' J! 11 ?J 11 HtlllllM. llt! ... MIO• '.\ S•l!Cllletllcl ll. a pair of short jumpers by S.10 center Mark Dekker and Ambrozich 's steal and dunk shot sparked the Rustlers to a 79-71 lead and the y never looked back. Golden West finished with a 49.4 per· cent shooting mark, canning 38 to 77, wltile LA Southwest !tit at a 42.5 percent clip (34 of 80 ). Three other Rustlers hit in double figures. Ambrozich canned 18, includ ing eight of 13 field goal attempts, Oek:ker had 17 and Barnes finished with 12, clicking on £ive of five from the field . Golden West is now idle until next Wednesday when it visits Harbor. ... Id ... W111 lUI LA s.vt11w111 1n1 Barn" Thompi,on .,.. .. Am1>rc1lc~ Ande<son Pc,.,trs Brown 11 n ,i 1, te tt"'' S?112 Garl\lr ,G,17 IJ 11 l 11 Anduson 1 ' O 20 I I S 17 Bvch1nt" 1 2 J 1' I 1 lllPonlKOll l I l' •0 6 1 Wllchtr 21JS OOIOJolm1on IG22 o Jo 3S1mlltcn • l Jl5 s,on 1 1 1 l fot1l1 ll U U tS TOii!• J..I " 11 11 H1111;mt : LA Soulllweil •I, Goldtn Wat ID, Barons, Valley In Key Irvine Cage Collision By PHIL ROSS 01 T!\41 Di iiy l'lltl S111f Fountain Valley'1 Barons and the in· vading Santa Ana Valley Falcons will each have different ideas on their minds tonight (B) when they clash in an Irvine League basketball biggie. The Barons (6-5) are currently knotted for the Irvine's runnerup spot with Magnolia, which hosts Edison tonight, and a Fountain Valley win would at least keep the Barons in second. Coach John Kubas' SA Valley Falcons, meanwhile, are f>-6 and they face a must-win situation in order to remain breathing as a playoff possibility. Hov.·ever, Kubas seems to be using Psychocybernetics in his club's present predicament. ''We're pretty confident because Fountain Valley and Magnolia both have to get by us. "We've been inconsistent all year . But the team that finishes second could be 7-7 and it could well be us.'' Baron mentor Dave Brown, who ha s no doubt availed himself of .some Alka Selt;er during the sometimes frustrating campaign, saya, "we've rebounded well in the last three ga mes (wins over Magnolia and Costa Mesa sandwiched around a setback to Corona del Mar). "Bul our shooting has bet n lnconslstent," adds the Cal Sstat (Long Beach) grad. "\Vlten our shooting is hot. we win . And when il's cold, we lose-it's as liimp1e as that."' Prime examples of Brown's theory ::ire the lo~s to Corona (a 25.5 ~cent ~hooting efrort for the Barons) and the conquest over Mesa (v.·hen Fountain Valley hit 40 percent for the entire contest and a sizzling, 53.6 in the second holf). The Bar on11 will more than likely em ploy some sort or wne defense (only Brown and the Barons know exactly ~11.lch type of zone will be used) in order to neutralize the Falcons' 6-6 Jim Keyes, the league's top scorer at 24 .2. Brown says, "he got 30 against 1.1.1 last time but nobody elst got more than sl1 so we beat them." Fountain Valley's balnnced 4>Uensive flrepov.·er crnanates mostly from &-2 forwti rd Ken Shibata t9.8 scoring norm) :ind guard.s Rick Power (10.1) and George Gerber (8.7). Pirates Drop Overtime Tilt To Santa Ana By RON EVANS Of lti, D1ll1 "lltl Sl•U Santa Ana College freshman guard Mark Olson bucketed a charity toss with just a second left in overtime to provide the Dons with a 76-75 win over host Orange Coast College in Souttt Coast Conference basketball a c t i o n Wednesday night. Coach lferb Livsey's host Bucs now drop deeper into the conference basement with a 1-7 mark while Santa Ana im- proves to 3-6. Olson was clipped by OCC's Duane Diffle as the Don guard was starting to release a jumper from the top ot the key with the cOW1t knotted at 75-75 . Livsey then called for a t i m e o u t and Olson missed the ensuing first toss of the two-shot gratis situati on. After Livsey had asked for a second timeout, O I s o n returned to t.he foul line for the clincher. Santa Ana, which avenged an earlier overtime setback to the Bucs, blew a 22-12 lead midway through the first bait and then watched the hosts fight to a 39-39 deadlock at intennission. The contest was tight right up to the end of regulation play when the score was 67·67. Steve McLendon f18), Larry Goswiller (16) and re.serve Paul Holmes (14) scored in twin figures for the Pirates. 11!111 An1 !II) Ori n,. CMal 1111 ''""'" ''""''• 1!1nbr1 I 3 ' " Ccnr.,. S 1 C I Htlll\ ••l?OLtC~e<' ?lll or-•~51,Willtn lJ 4t °'"'" ' J 2 1J Gon•1111!f I 0 2 1• MI Y 70 l4MCL-Oll 1 4 $11 w1111.,.,, o J l 2 Holmu ' 1 4 1' P'llritrtv 0 0 l 0 Dlftlt I 0 Ji 1 •1Dlllt 21 ~If 16 To!t ls lO 15 )S 75 Hllllimt: Or1119t Co11t lt. Santi An1 Jf. Erld of '"ultllor>: o,..,., Cout f l , S.nl1 AMI 17 "I think t.farlna is going to be terribly hungry tonlght, thinking about the first game with Huntington Beach this aeason. "Jim Stephens (Marina coach) told me that when his kids heard we had beaten Huntington, it was jusl like win- ning the CIF title. He said his kids jumped up and down and yelled." Joe Cucinella (Santa Alla)-"l , think the game is a toss-up but Marina has a slight edge because of home court. "ReboWldlng height mu st go t• Marina by a narrow margin. Shooting of the two teams ls pretty similar but Hun· lington Beach has been a little more consistent. rtfarvln Blemker (Western)-"t'd hate: to say which team wlll win. It looks like Huntington Beach has been in a ~lighl slump but 1 think it will be a tossup and could go either way . "Bot.It teams shoot well and l wouldn 't want to pick a winner. it's thet close." Dale Hagey !Newport Harbor)-"l'll have to go with Huntington. 1 think they're the better ball club. They're a better disciplined team and thty shoot better inside than Marina has in the past. "I don't think board strength will make a difference. Marina has an edge but I think they can be screened out. "Huntington's shooting will. overcome Marina's board strength. Marina should take away part of Huntin gton"s inside game. tr they do to a big degree it will really hurt Huntington. • Tom Voight (Loara )-"Marina should be able to ha ndle Huntington. Huntington is by far the better shooting team, but ~farina has the power. "The boards should be the difference and Marina has the edge. If Huntington can get the boards by luck and if their fast break is working, they ·wlll win it. "Also free throws-and the of- fi ciating-<0uld be a conclusive factor." Tom rt11ner (Anahetm)-"lt'1 a tossup, but I'd have to give the advantage to Marina since it's the ir home ga me. And ~farina ia hot right now. Huntington shoots better, but Marina should get the board.•." "We don't expect to do anything dil~ ferent, I don't think it's necessary: It boils dov.'11 to e1ecuting. We played poorly last time and lost by four. "If you can't hit from outside you can't beat them," he says. Combs says his team is capable er bouncing b a c k after Jts I o 1 1 to Westminster and less than spectacular win over Santa Ana. "I can't really find an explanation for it, we just didn't play well . "We've shown what we can do tn the past and the press ure is on Marina. They have to win. They lose and 11'1 all over." says Combs. Huntington Beach has the top scorer in the circuit in junior Steve Brookl. v.-ho has pelted the nets from his hiah post al a 20.4 rate. And with Wes Thomas firing a w a y from outside at a 16.0 clip Jim Worthy (10.4) at the low post. it has been a tough combinaton. The Vikes COWlter that, however, with a balanced attack that has four players in double figures. Baird leads the Viles in scoring with a 14.11 average while junior Bruce Miller has been 1 steady factor with his outside shooting (12.9). Brian Sanders has averaged 10.4 from his forward poaition and Dean Bogdan has come alive with a 13.1 performance in the last half dozen Marina o'utings. Bogdan (6-6) figures· to take I~ defensive heat off nf Baird 16-5) in tonight's crucial. Huntington was ab le to collapse effectively on Baird In the first test, holding him to two points. M1ntt119leN llMI Ml~ln• (lt-0 ,, Servile 42 1l Wiison J7 I I Edllon U !.S Mltllk•n ... 11 Vlll1 P&rk l'O « (II High M 11 Sunny Hiiis U N SI. Jol'ln ... co lJ 107 Sltr•• ~I 5' Contonnlal U 7~ Ptt!llc n o Lo1 Al1mltot 41 S1 Mon~v11 " 17 IC1!1tl1 .. SI Compton " '2 P'u1i.r1on f ) t2 Sin c1.,,,t1ir1 tJ 7t II••-' .. n LOI Allmltos .. 70 Arc1d!• ,, 7l M19...,J!t SO ji Mollr0¥1a ... " Lot•• iS 1• Ht!li II '' Wftllt'n 'J 4.1 EdOIWOad .ff 41 St~ll AA• '4 61 W•1trn lJ 7J Wftlmlnst•r S5 11 S.nll An1 JJ '' AMhelm 31 $1 NirwpOrt ,. Sl M1rln1 SO tf Anthelm )I t2 Wtsltrtl S4 11 U.re 4t JJ N-rt to " Hvntlnollll'I J' IJ LOlr• •7 11 51nl1 AM JI u Wn tl'!'llMlu n ,, Wftlrl'llnst1r 71 ~ Sant• Ant 41 " Wftllm '° n AntMlll\ ~4 17 ~-" JJ Shoes- Adidas-Spot Bilt Converse-lack Purcell PumH:ollegiates Collegiate Basketball Shoes lack Purcell Tennis Shoes Broderick Wrestling Shoes Adidas Tennis Shoes- Flats-Soccer Shoes Track Shoes-Basketball Shoes Spot-Bill BasebaH Shoes Football Shoes-Soccer Shoes Track Shoes • Converse Tennis Shoes Basketball Shoes-Wrestling Shoes Cross Country Shoes Puma Track Shoes - Football Shoes-Work out Shoes CLOSED SUNDAYS Wilson-Dunlop-Bancroft Davis Tennis Rackets Voit Basketballs-Footballs Tetherballs-Yolleyballs Playground Balls-Soccerballs Softballs-Water Polo Balls Rawlings-Wilson Baseball Mitts Adirondack Bats Champion Handball Gloves Speedo Swim Suits 3 Speed--10 Speed a. Single Speed Bikes Tires-T ubes-Accessaries OPEN 9 to 6 Monday thru Saturday • Jln!rY.lay FtDruary 11 l 'fli Area Briefs State NCAA Golf Qualifying OCIR Features Sea Kings To Battle To Be Held at Mission Viejo Top Double Bill Mustang s E<lison's Chargers v..Jll be trying to do their bitter rivals, PUN APPROACH $HOTS TO AU.OW SlllPl.E fVT1S --A variety Qf golf courses surround the city o! Long Beach and lhe Cal State College campus in !hat cilv but the school h<1s seleclr.d Mission Viejo Golf Course tor qualifying rounds in the state NCAA championships whirh ~·ill be played May Ii. a 41 lo gain l/lp honors. Dottie and Pete Francisconi teamed with Jun and i'eg Hender!IQn for r u 11 r1 e r u p laurels with a 42. Cornwell and Fem Sproul tied lor runnerup. Gloria Talmage bat! a 7~ and Pat LackAer a 77 for lhe top !pols in C flight while Betty Blakemore was in with The C.S. Pro Stock Charn· pionshlp:s havr bten combined "'1\h this Sunday's th trd race in the All-Pro Championship Series. Quali(ying star1s at 11 a.111. with racing follo"•ing at 2 p.m. The r om bo meet v.·;os changed v.·hen Ontario Alotor Speed v.· a y scheduled the )liller High Life ~ Feb. 28, the same dale original!) ~t for OCIR's third Alt-Pro race. So. 1n addition to seeing the interesting combo of funn} cars and lop fuel dragsters in lhe All-Pro senes. fans '>l'ill also gel a first h~ look at pro stocks. another niaior drag racing category. l.. Fountain Va lley's G a r ~ Cochran heads the lop fuel entries Ydth hot shots hke John \\'iebe 1Ne.,.,1on. Kan) and Don Garlits (Seffner. Fla. l :i!so In the same field. 'J'he Jauer was the top luel v.·inner at last v.·eek's 'Vintcrnationais in Pomona. Port Worth 's Gene Snow and Tlichard Siroonian of \\!hillier are knotted for lhe lead in lhe funny car div ision. Top cnunty hopeful in the pro stockers .,.., i I I be Don :'\'lcholson of Orange Y.'ilh defending cha ~p1on B i 11 Jenkins of Be~')'TI. Pa. al~ competing. \\lleelstanders Chuck Poo!f' I Anaheim 1 and Dale Emory I Corpus Christi f \.\'ill ofter thei r services as an added al· traction. Rtue ht Pla11o ffs \\'hen the Dodgers' '.\-laury \\"ills sends his llermosil!ri Orange Groy.·ers inlo the Caribbean Series a g <1 i n s 1 Puerto Rico, he will h3ve a Joung right-handed pitcher on his roster who worked seven innings against his team 111 a pla}'Olf game . Don Rose. a natJ\'e of Covina and a graduate of Stanford liniversity, ii; the nephey.· of Charles Rose. minister of the Comrnun1ty L'nlled :\le1hodi'it Church in Jlunt1ngton Bench :ir1d is the proper!} or !he :'\cw York ?-lets. Yount: nosr p1lched in l'ars, Lions Test Su n:set Caoe Rivals t) \\'hen a baskt>tba!I team has rt'ce1pted for a pair ol losses totaling 65 points 1n le ague acl10n one might consider rt:. t11Jc chances pretty shm. Despite th! tv.o lathering~ ~e"'·port Harbor !11gh·s Sa1lvr5 ha\t' rece1p1cd for at the hands of Huntingtl"Jn Beach and :•larina. l'OOch D 11 I e Hage.\ ·s hot·and-cold Sailors l9·21 are sull "er~ much a\i\e in tht> race for the loop cro\\·n ~nd or 11 CJF AAA.\ playoff berth. Ton1fhl lht'~ trek !(I \\""•tt·n1 Jhgh m a must-~ 1n .,1111at1on v.hi!e Huntington anfl \lar111a are settling up al the samc 1nne l'ipolf is schedultd for I ()·C1ock. as is the case ln 1he nlher Sunel Leaguf' J~SU<' 1n- ,·otvi ng an Orange Coa~I area 1eam. \liestminster s Lion..... g1\·en up far d:?ad . ha\'C <:ome on :itrong y.·ith impreSS1\c v.i1is o\'Cr Hunt1ng1on Beach and Anaheim Coach l)on Lea\·ey 's "'estm1nster cre\1' will bf> tT)·ing for its fourth stralght tonight in lhe Loara gym. \\1cstf'rn lost to Newport. 71- fiS. 11·h1lc Loa ra fell IQ 78-59. in first • I :\1emphis in AA ball last season and is scheduled to play for Tidewater in AAA ball this year. He ""'as picked by Wills to partici pate in lhe Puerto Rico series along wilh Vicente Romo and Jose Pena. botb ma)Or leaguers \Vhile in high school at Covina Rose was named lo the second team All..CIF squad and at Stanford in h i s freshman season . he ~I a record for the lowest e.r.a. in the schoors history. He has been playing winter ball in the AAA J\lexican Pac1hc Coa.sl League. Gy111r1ast~ Tie Lynn Govin of the Ne~·porl Beach gymnastic learn and Carla Abbey of Huntington Beach High tied for first place in all round competition in ;i Southern Cal.ifomia women·s gymnastics meet held al Westminster High School over thf' Y.1eekend. Five teams C()mpeted in the event v:ir h Judy Korligh of t~ Los Angeles Athletic Club placing third. Suzie .Friend of Newport fourth and Terra . Tyler of Newport in fifth. ll11stlers ft11r1 Golden \\'est College will enter its mile relay team in the special Junior college e1'ent of Friday night's indoor track and field meet at the f'orum . Running for the Rustler5 ""ill be \Vall Ankennan, Ron Oickson. Bryan Strough and Dennis ~taas. i\tel Hobbs is the allemate. Other teams entered include Mt. San Antonio, Pierce, LACC and Contra Costa. The race is set for 9:35. Sefl Kh19• f'o11rl/1 \VE ST C 0 V !NA-Four medalists helped pace the Carena del ~1ar Sea Kings to a fourth place finish Salur- day at the Edgev.·ood wrestling tourne~. Corona tallied 52 po1nls in the 16-team affair w hi 1 e Bald\\'in Park was the team v.·inner \\'ilh 89 points. Ste \·e \Vade 1115) and Ttm Bandel (1681 each picked up first place medals while run- nerup honors went to Sea King grapp!ers John Blanpied I \30} and Gary Casey (157 ). To1• Pre r• Field A loaded field is expected lo shoY.· up for the high school tY:o mile even1 at the 12th annual Times Indoor Gam es Friday night 7:30 al the forum in lngle.,..·ood . Among the notables entered are undefeaird cross ('()Untry runner Jose Amaya rLA \\'Uson!. 19i0 state two milf' runnerup :\iark Du I a n e y 1Palos Verdes!. 1970 stale mile titlist Brent Tu b b iCle\elalld. Reseda ). C fF' crri-.~ countr;.o champ Chris llu!lm<in iSt. Bernard. Playa del Rev 1 and Lakewooci"s Lar· rv GrCer the nation"s best prep si x miler. tM Fountain Valley Barons, -•· a favor lonight ~·hen coach Dave Mohs' Chargers tangle with h<Et "1agnolia in a crucial Irvine League basket· ball oontesL Edison is vrrtually out of contention for a post-season playoff berth 11nd a win over f\.1agnolia (tied v.·ith Fountain Valley for secOnd place) e<!U pled y.•ith .11 Baron victory over Santa Ana Valley could pt.JI the Baron! in sole possession of lhr runnerup spot with three games to go. Other ahractions around the Irvine find Corona de\ J\lar (5-6) and Costa l\1es<: ($-0) at each other's throats oo the Mesa floo'r with Estancia's Eagles (4-7) traveling lo Los Alamitos. All games are slated to begin al 8 o'c lock. The latter has already clinched no \Vorse than a lie for the championship. It'll be like a hattle or redwood trees at f\.lagnolia with the Chargers' 6-6 John There Is • slight ad..,tlaw In polling 1111· lo, rathe< than down to, th• bole. On uphill putts the bock edge of the. hole Is higher titan the froat. Firmly sltud< putts will hit the bigher .bock edge and stm dn>p, A downhHf putt sttucl< too firmly will not only fail \o bold the cup, but also will run past. I suggest yt>U plan your approaeh shots to finish below the hole whenever possib... tf you really want to cut it f.ne, p*t to finish belaw the hole and in a spot offering • straight·-irl putt. • .not a side-hitter. Cusia 1Ue1a A special lovers and other litr'8ngers tournament will be staged at Mesa V~rde Sunday. The women's c l ub president's t:up co1npetition is currenlly in t~e [·JUTth round of cnmpetition. Qualifying ror the nlcr."s club president's cup soH Rancho SJ championship at Cosla J\tesa Golf and COlu1try Club i£ cur-Gloria Talmage was I~ ace rently taking plare with fir,al of a women's club ac~ tourn&· rompetilion set Sa1•1rday and men! at Rancho San Joaquin Sunday. recently with a 70. Jn 8 women's club mo:il Dorothy Wriqht ~·on A flight pars tournament, Lu ci t 1 c with a 72 while Virg1Ria Ide \Vilson and Mary Evelyn and Betty Callagtier tied for Imler tied for first in A flight second at 75. wi!h 13. In the .B competition, Millie Ann Pappas wa.; B flig~.1 Johnson was low with 72 fol- winner wi th 14 follO\.\'e<l by lowed by Jean O'Skea (73), and Elise Stipes with 13. Irene Thomas and CharleJ'Je Nina Danielson won C flight \Valbridge !74J. \\'ith 10. llelen Schwella W<1.i the C Vi Hoskins. compelin~ in !lie flight winner at 76 with Betty A flig:it, had a natur::rl birdie Seiersen next at 77. A three- on the four·oar fifth hole way tie resulted al 79 for third place betwee• 'i·vonne. ltlen1lo1v lurl.; l laig. Pat Lackner and Betty \ Poindexter. \1able Chrisl!c:nson fi:·ed a Zola Bartholomew fired a a 77 for D fl ight honors. · Charles Barnhart and Bob Larrabee tallied a 61 to win 1 men's club partners be~t ball tournament. Jay Swift and Art Isaacsoa had a 6.1 for UMerup. Laguna, Uni In Finales A pair of grim campaigns nnally come to a close tonight for the l..tiguna Beach Artists and the fledgling Univenity Trojan!. Laguna ('G-9) closes out what rnay tum out to be a winles'i Orange League slate when coach Jerry Fair's junior· dominated squad hosts El Dorado (6-3). Tipoff is slated for 7 o'clock. Coach John Driscoll'!! Tro· jaos (7·15) close tiut their free Janee schedu1e with host Garden Grove Le 1 g u e member Los Amigos at 8. Fisher and 6-4 Mark Harmon challenging I he Sentinels' high·scoring trfo of &.3 Charley Richie (Ill.I), M Bob Stewa rt fl7.4) and &.ti Ken :..turray Basketball Scores !ow net 70 lo Jllab A flighl 75 to win a low ntt touma- honors in the rn on th 1 Y menl. flight A. Jeve r l y v.·omen's club tournament all ___ ..,;;;;;;iii;;.._..,;;iiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiii.iiiOiii., ?-1eadowlark Country C 1 u b'' over the \\'eekend. I ( 10.5). Junlft V1r"ty Coach Tandy Gillis o I Mlr ina 1111 !:II/ "~•~•Im Fe-to nn F 101 c ...... 1~, Corona is eltpected to thro\'/ Mam1 111J , na1 e.•ut1 the Sea Kings· normal ball ~PNki o i 1 "•l tlldwlq W•9QO!>Or ru1 <"> t11 LvNl""I" control offense al the run-a nd· wuw IJJ c; ttJ F1or~1 gun Mesans or C<lach Emil See""' IUD•-Matl<>a -Roule• •. Neeme with both si des '"'•"on '· a ... •. ~wtr.so<> 1 Ht,,ne~ ;. Wollt l. fighting lo stay alive for the Htlllim1: M•rln1 ~.11 second playoff spot. N,..._, in1 un ~ •• J\1ark Grig s b y '1 4.7 SPretn 01) F {9) 8onnau<1 Tuckft (0) F (111 [llfOl>if\d averagel a n d Casey Jones Nlt11<>n <o> c 11J Fl~"" i 10.5) spearhead Corona with Bowman 11 i 1 G !ll ROl>!•I~ Jolln1'001 (II C. fl l £dw1rt1• Mesa relying heavily on Doug korlne wM· N~"°'' -H•t~te !O, i\lacLean I I 4 . 6 ) . Torn La.:wm 1. Lotr• -JM,,•on 1 P~''''°~ 2, Sco11 11. Sampson (13.2) and Scott tt•illim•: Lotra ;s.11. F'riested (10.3). coM Utl u11 Fewn11111 van•• Coach Gary Carr·s Estancia ctr111n Jn F rs> e ..... n1 fi ve will be struggling 10 stay Griu•o~ <~> f PDi su111vtn 'WnartOll llll C !U) ROWC::- OUl of the cella r while adding Lcweree 16) G 1s1 sw1n1w tarnish to Los Alamitos' Conrov !•1 c; ~ii H1tt•t•d ScOO'lno wo1 (dM -nont. Foun1tln t.,-,,.. iltl Mi r IQ1 11'1 M1tMH1 C1rlt.Ofl l•I F Ul UllOr1f Gtlt1by !IJ f t•l &.rtolt W"-rlon Ill C 110) Mvu1~ l°""tre1 !II) C. Pl 11:1(1'- C""tOY !U ~ (llJ A,dam•on Scorl11t 1vt>s: C1>r-dtl M1r-Sl1w• . .. •. M1llhm1: Ma11rooh1 1'·1•. .Edi..., Uf) lUI Lff Al1mlht1 WIY HI F UOI lf~IM•ton liunter (IJ F 121 81loff 81lch 11•1 C 151 U•v1rmen Wl!ll1m1 (I) G 16) A,rclllb1IO Patker (I ) G (10) My1..,_ Scorl119 1ub1: Edison -Collin$ •, l1cllman I. S•ftemtirt '"' V1!1t' !HI UtJ 11rancl1 Miii II ) F ft l MC~lla lie!! !10) f !H $111• IUl~l\t IG) C !•) Ret<I W1ll1c1 (1) G 111) Collin> Srtt anno 17) G flOI 0.Vri•• Scotlnt IUb!" E1!tf>Ci•-M•l1c!I 10. Vallf""e s. Tl'>O<'n~I<>" 1, BIVIV J, Br1Nll 1. Hall timt. f:1t1ncl1 lt-1'. l!d!SOll !HI 14'J [dM SCl'IOH 1101 F t•) Anlete~ Wll1°" !t) F (10 IJ.ot"O<!n f0<0 l!J (. /10] SiiYl9" Alberta Sundstrom v.•or B, flig ht with a 72 1vhilc Vick.ii Hubbard v.·as the f) \\'inJ11er ' wilh a iO. 1 A men's cluh lo.v net com·I petition is scheduleJ S:iturday and Sunday at P-lee1clowl2rl: . t:I Niguel 'Vinners of a Ji<lrtncrs he .. t ball tou rnament at El Niguel Coun try Clu b in L a gun a Niguel recentlv \Vere i)t~o Bayer and Millingion Grny \Viih a net score of tit ~ :\ilr. and Mrs. John r..1orrov.• won a mixed best oall tourna- ment \vilh a net lj2. ~lesu Verde w11ue tJ) c. !C• c.ro .. 1• Da ve Hillman ~·as 1 do11blr Fl. V1HIY fU) (SI) Ct1!1 Mua Zirbel O~! c; rn Mui~., already impressive record. V•ll•Y -""""· Tritons, M,7 In Spoiler Bid Tonight l u•n• (11' ~ n > •1cntr sc"'"'ll •~b•· EO•'<>"-H1rn•""'"1 1. \1·inner in a men·-. cl11b be~t su111v1n !HI F 10 Enc111,, M1111 1. caM-Kc:m111 •· w11i.1m1 •· ball of partners tot;rriawen! Hllhtld tn r UJ Otl"'tt M(N11r. s. s. Ror>..c~ 1•1 c. nn S•ownonq H•I"!""· Et1l1Gr1 11, CoM u. at i\1esa Verde Coun\rv Clu)) ~ .. •noon 10 G cui HO<•• 0 ,.,, the weekend y.·hcn h<> Si;orlnv 1ub1 · F""nlt•n V1lltY-Mtun· ' 1er 11 Cet011 MeOl-Nev••le s teamed ~·ilh Di:::k i.aS."f.'1 for H~1111~: """"'•ln v.u,y ,s. c •• 1. J C Teimi"s-1 r "' d Mei.a 11. . a ow gross score o "" ar "'ynti"""" u sJ cJ.11 S•"'• _.,,.. y.·ith Ke vin \\'heeler lor a low v,•i.ite n•i F etH r_, net mark of 57. Garland (I) ,. lll) H........ Gltt11nWtll II) tt) lint•,,,,. I f r co."11; 111 c tl J 1v11r 11,,,11, In a best ba I o oursome A~•l•on 0 1 :. Oo> KHnoe<>t>t<o lr•cY e r .... tG1 won 1.1. •·1. lournamcnt that wa~ cut short Ort\tltr (•I G U) Z1rt11 IClr-Cl<•-tG) WO<\ U , loll, f h I bee f S Cl • nd 1-'8 wb" Cl••" 10 . A1n!a•t1 1•1. cra19 Orr tGl won •·'· •l. a te r 13 O es ause o an emente S Tritons a H1rt11n 111. Brian G•brvc11 rG1 won •·L •·1 darkness Sundav , J1Y? And • ., NEVER BEFORE KNEISSL' ,. ROSSIGNOL 1970 MODEL SK IS 20% OF ~ And 1More Here's, r~al "iO ,·seaso n" savi ng.~ on famous brancf skis-. lhe best! By Kneiss/: White S1ars, Super White Star. Red Star and · Blue St.ir. ·1 By Rossignol : Stral1i.: Jr. Conco rcle. Alais Major .• 'I.• .9ioro. Oo-..·ritow" Long &!Kh, Pom()., • L.i H.ibrd. N-l)Off;5..tn 01e3t) the Mission Viejo Diablos will Hlll!lmt: 1'·1t. Jim Lvn<>DH (GI won 6-1, 6-1 Billi& Spara110 teamed \\lth get giant opportunities tonight End °' '"v 1 • 1•°": l0·50. 5 ' 0 " PIPllt• !Gl won •·•· '· 1 't~J~o:h:•...:•:nd:.~H:~~le:n..:B:e~,g~c:•..::lo:•~, ====:iii::iii:iii::iii::iii::iii::iii::iii::iiiii: :ii:i:::iii::iii::iii::iii::iii~ !8l to utilize their roles as Mt111.., vi11t 11•1 1111 K•1tll1 ·Oau~I•• Brennan l•J r O!) OIJO~ Cr~,.-Orr "'on 6·1. 1·1 I ---~ -- spoiler!! b in the11 Crestview ~!~~ ... ~~~)no> ~ 11%1) ~11~~: ••;·;•~~.01~·.~'r:!o~~J·~~0:~1;·11,G~·'.;..,,, .. CJ ,-. ...., ,.,... " . f'r"'\ ~r':'l ·..;.~, -~ ... H!WPOr1. •1 l'11/1i111 llli t\41, H1w•r1 Cti!IU • 6"-12ot Mon .. l'rr .. IO:oo 1111 t:JO; or111r O•Y•· ll:ot till J:JI Leagu!! asketba chase. w111<inoon n·n c; 11o) .,~nnt• -,. , ,1 \;./'\~ / Coach John Baker's Tritons C•D'•1'1"" 1101 r10\ BenlcocMn t<oldtn W••' ftl co> c1mpt1n , Scoring 1~c1 · MIU•On Vltio--Mu•lll1• A k h t b ll l t • ~:~~: ~~~il1:°~~~ad~~b(~:Ste)~~ B:· .. Mi~~~I OI) ~(It/ H1;:~·~::~~ ~::~:012~\~;f~~i.·~~:.·~·1, : s er 0 e your r a en 1ne coach Pat Robert5 la so 4·7) ~o•O rc1 ~ 1n JDl1n><>n · L !GI 1 7 ( v.·ill be out to ambu sh the Sw•ni,on (111 [ ()) lolplvit ~;':rt ;~p-::i:: !GJ ~ ::.; ~~ •·l. 1·S. W'.l'th a FRIG I DA I RE Ad•m• (101 C. (161 Sl>'tPn tc.tlTti OtlhoOO !GI won 6·•· 6-1. Villa Park Spartans (7·4! al Ro•al•• 111 G D) luck"' Ooulll•• rh' Di.bros' -zy a 0 d Scoron9 subs : Marln1-Spt1k1 1, t-1"· ' -0 > >..V '°"' J, Slt!IO¥ 1, W•~·· l . N-'1-•ew " w ...... ,, 6 sometimes spooky j (or visitors u •i.on l, Nlcl>o!s ,, Pelln9:r1 1. Kelm· Lvnncr11.tc,I•~ or1tioOO ,.en •1. ''°· v.•ithout the services of ex· ~ r_-r';_ M ·ra ~ CfJ:. ~~~:S:rua~p ~~aifs.~n~~~nng .. (it'/i{ilt«lf•i@EA 1':Jl4141@1MH:Iiti~rcl ave rage. The Tritons ha\e been get- ting de<:enl efforts lately from 6-3 1 ~ Howard Valore (10.3) and 6-71i Steve Ka\ota (15.7). Six·fOOL·four Jeff Masterson has been the only Oiablo who's shown near-consistency with a 13.4 scoring mark while U UNGllllG OVEll THE IOOT llt9. 555. ALL OTHER l"ANTS 25 ~'• Off $34.95 PANTS This PARKAS $34.95 LJUNGlfllG THI WlT LOOJC ll•'J· t55 ma tes Steve Ashcraft and area Kevin Shannon are best 1 ... •.g_• .. in•s•l •lh•'-'~.,n.,1•eoiid•'•"ii.Oiii0iiiij There v.·ill also be a pair of sprint relays on the hi gh 5Chool card o< the 2~vent program. ~o Orange Coast sithletts are entered. ALL OTHEll l"All114S J5 ~• Off SWEATERS 200/o Off. Fri9idaire Built-in CJets dishes /\em Officers Lou Jans.sen has b t. t. n elec!ec! president ol the Pac11Jc Anglers of lhe Balboa Bas Club ror tht ensuing year1 v.·ith ~1. A. Cornell the ne wly [ eleC'ted l1Ce president :\\ Buttef"'orth will ser\'t ~ treasurer and Hobe r1 D. Johnson as secretary. Electrd to the board of directors were Troy :\tiller, Tim Tate. Dr.\\'. !\elson. Paul l\lc\'ay and Gene \l:ooten. GOLFERS ~"d ,,.,,r1 "'•" 0 , ... •h•" , • .,., -Yo11 c:o11 tot -'Wltli pr.c.tlc:• AT THf fr4fWP'Olllfl INN P'All J G.OLf COURSI WITH THIS AD. STIEL llLT CORD TllllS 'flT~: fOIDS· CHIVYS·PlYMOUTHS All ,t.m~•ic1" Ctn! SJ6 :.i"i 11 •~1¥ • tLll Sh,.., M•1•11 Wllll•w•M1 T•lltltn "'' 1u.11 40.0011 MILi GUAIAHTll AM for detoll• MI CHEl lNS ~IT All DOMESTIC l FOREIGN C-'RS HERBERT L. MILLER TIR I CO. INC . SINCE 1,21 ---- SANTA ANA 2tt IUSH ST" •.... COSTA MESA \ ~f 547.SUS 642·ll81 WINDSHIRTS POPLIN IUTION DOWN WARMUPS JUST A fEW Lift LANGE ., ...... FLO ,.o HUMANIC .,. HU MANIC '" RIG. S?l .00 $11.95 $15.00 $95.00 $115.00 $52.50 $64.00 ALL SKIS 25°/o OFF THE ROARING FORK SKI SHOP DANA POINT 34141 COAST HWY -496·4921 • EASY LOADINCi·UNLO.A.DING llOLL·TO·YOU RAC KS othtrt 11 low '' S 1 69'5 5-YEAR: NATIONWIDE WARRANTY, b.O.td br Genfft[ M~. l 1tl' l'>'•rrt•lf ta1 190t!r ct••• dtl,tl ..,!,_.t rli.t11•. ~ ~• ,_.,.., "''trtllo~ 1'11~ 1~1111 Gr1'1) ~' mft!·.Mr c rtlll•r•,.,•"1 lor ~"l 11ttecu .. 11•ut 011 l'llt ""'tor. •u""' l"d w1l•t •lf(Ml1hflt t)lltl", ll"Rt lflll ..,..If ~HllU ,_ mehl\ Ml '°""'"d. shower.clean HO llTltA CHAlllJI fOR CCLOll:! e Sup11r Sy•91 w•1hi119 "'"0" -liHlt•Or·~o pr1·1i111i119 • 4 !yd •• -fVffl I pl11. w1•m1r. e Ri•t• ooi.ditio11t1 do1p11111' kt lp1 lc•ap di1h91, 1lt 1111 from 1p0Hi~t. e 01d•r i11!1•,h1119 at \rlt fro11! p1nt l1 11p•11f1!y, color1, H1rvt1I Gold, Avott ile. CoppttfOftt, Whil a I11tegnly rnid Oependobilit11 stnct 1041 41 1 E. Seventeenth St. 646-1684 d.,ily 9.9 s.1. 9-6 l •gun• Hiii' Pl•r1 (,....,, ... s..-.0111 837.JIJO d1ily 11).6 M/F 10.9 l ·, . • Coacli's Pe1•plexing Mo11ie1it Costa ~1esa High basketball coach Emil action during a 70-60 loss to Fountain cost Mesa CIF playoff berth. Neeme shows the ups and downs of Valley - a defeat \\'hich may have OCC, Sa11 Clemente Down Swim Rivals JC Hoop Standings SOUTHlllN CAl CONl'l!lll!NCI! Orange Coast College sy,•ept to eight individual first places \\ledncsday en route to han - ding visiting Gross mo n t College a 56-47 non-conference IH\'im defeat (M1•~•" D. W•l-'O'I, IClng, Sorl~arrl. Time: l :S6. I w l ,,.. ,,, Chris Gammon led co.,;ch Jack Fullerton 's host crev.• v•ith a pair of y,•ins. taking the 200 individual n'edley in 2: 19.7 and the 20IJ butterny in 2: 10.2. In high school action. Snn Clemente dumped vi s i Ii n g Santa Ana Valle y. 84-6. JOO?] Hartman led 1he Tritons \Yith .e pair of wins. Or•n•e Co•11 U61 (4ll GrGHmCnl •OO me<ll'Y relay -I. GtCJ!mO~! 4·01.0 l!IOQ lrep - \ ~c~w'• fOl ' llOCl~Pi IC.I J. McLtren IGl. llmt · 11 ·D• • iOO !rte -1 Bannon (0) 2. SPOrle-d•r IGl J Juli•" !Gl lime: 1·ss.s Sii tree -\ ~Hutt (OJ ) S11<1rltdtr IGl J Schaer IO! Time: n • :KIO 1n<lo mtdlrv -1 Gammon 10) 1 llt~!tr 101 l Wrl9M IC.). l«nt 2·1tl 01vln9 -I. lie~ IOJ 2. Smit~ !GI J. Otier11 /Ol. PD•nh. 121 J 200 /Iv -I G1mmon !Ol 2. B~nnon (Ql J. "<I •hi•a Tlme. 1:10 l !!XI lrtt -I O'Brltn {GI i lbtie1i.cn IOI l LIO<l•S !Ol. y,.,,r. " ' :KIO btc~ -1 lle•~r 101 1 011ar1~ IG l l. Oe!-lul! 10 ) Time'. ) 16 . SllO f•H - 1 !.<nwer 10) ; 'lodge• IGl J. Mel•"" (Gl Tim• J·n 1 ZOC Oreast -l Glt!•r !Gl ; ltttRr !Ol J G~lk!D IGl. Tim.: ,.,. ~ olGO !re~ ,. Gr.,,•mon! J . ]6.0 V1rsl1Y " Si n C!t..,tn' •l SA VtlllY 200 Mf<llf-11, Son C'tmtn•• 100 Free -1 1-t~rtmtn IS! 1 W1lco!t fSl J. L!IHtDi~t !Sl. T1mt. I: S9,0 50 Free -I, o Wll\.On !Sl l. DlalTIQnd 15) l. Hcn!lv {V). Tul'I• : is • JOO. lnaivi!IU•I Mtdl•v - 1 Al~•ft;oll !SI 1. Llmtb<lclc /SI J. Skll-9 !\Cl. Time: 1:11.l OivlnQ -!. Gr.ov (V) 2 l-811 !5! l . Berg CS). Poln1' • .i.! a 100 Fly -I. 0 WU1cn (\) 1 Adlc lnl(lfl (5) J. C111$ (VJ. rlmt: I :OS S 100 FrNI -I. 5orln11., ($\ J. 01-ond 15) l . Mauerm•n ISL f•m• 51.l 100 Btc~ -.1 M wnoo" l'I 1 Mal~PI (S! l . Burr11 (Sl. ·1m._ 1 a.I.I 100 Frtt -1 .1-/~rtman (!) 1. limtbtck (SI J T11Cc!t (SI. Tlmr. "19.3 HJ(! B•ee•! -l Burri• {~\ J. IClnt IS) l. EC!wf'llS (VI. Timt· I . 10.2 ..00 Fr~e 11.•l•v -1 '"~ c10,..•n1e (M. Wll~n. Oi1molld, HtrT"'~"• Sprint• 1r). Tlmf: J.lB,1. '"' 51n Cltm1n!1 !l:tl 11'1 SA Vlll~V 700 Mtdltv 11.tlt v -l. ~tnli An& Vallev. Time: 2:a.l.S l!KI l'ree -l. McCI•"'•"' (Vl 1. Besse (5) l . l-lall C~f. TIM•: 2.11.1 SO Frtt -1. G•mmtll !5! J J Mauerm1n /SI 3 N:1111m! (VI, Time. 16.1 100 ln<l1~i<lllftl Mei!IPV -t f\<!J'Ct /5) 1 C!'to!O<lenlc• !Vl l. ~D•f!l~I !Vl Time: 1:11.S 50 Flv -1. (Ul'•11 .. in• ('II ) Wrlll~! (V) )_ Bell"" fV L l omf. ,. . 100 l'r•• -l J M•u~•man !51 2. Ft!19tn fV) l . Brvtnl pJ;. Tom., 1 ;DJ 1 5C Bick -I McC•tm•M IVJ l B•uct fS) J Cummln1 (VJ. J1mo; '" 50 Brt1>! -1 Gtf'lm•ll 1S l 1-C~oloden~a (Vl l GrtY !Vl Tlrn•: "' 200 Fret l;l•lev -l <en Cl•-n•n" !Buse. B•uoe, Mau .. man. G•~·mtl•o. l ime. ! 53 O C...ldtn WU! ' ~ lA l-l1rr>er ' "' E&1! LA ' • .., lt•o MOl'ldo • ' "' Cvoreu • ' •• lACC ' ' ., LA 50U,,,1t1ttl ' "' WtdntlflY'\ S<Otfl Gold.., Wts! 9j. LI Soo!Jl"wes! ll E1••LA le, JtloHOO!IO 11 l.t. 1-tartor 41, (yp~I JI lACC, O•t i<rld1v'1 G•m•I l• l-l•rtl(lr ti It'll Hon<lo lACC 11 Etsl l A ("''"" a! lA Sou•~we•• GOl<len Wt$!. bv1 MISSION CONl'llllNCI w ' .. 11,.,.,,,1111 ' ' '" C~•lfe• • ' '" Cl!•US • ' •• "" B•rnarolno • ' "' l>•l!lt"t r ' .. Sa<ldltb1ck ' "' Soulf>we11e•n ' • '" Grcn•mon! • '" Wtdnt1d1y•1 Scart• Rlvenidt g9, St<ldlebtc~ 11 C~afft• 6S. Soul"wesltrn 51 S•n Be<Mrdi"" t6. Cilru1 !I P1lomar ''· G•oumonl 61 SllUNllV'I G1me1 ~•ddlo-blck ti Sou•hwe11ero• (~al!tY 11 C!t•UI Groumof'I 11 Stn llernt r<11no Ptlomer •' RIYt r1111e SOUTH COAST CONl<EJllNCI w ' .. Cerri..,, • ' '" Fulltrron • ' "' San Ole<><> Mf'f • ' '" Stntt An• ' • "' SJn Dl"o ' • '" Ml 5•n 11.n•nnlo ' • "' Ortn!lt '°"''' ' ' "' Wltdnttdt•'I Scortl "' "'t "' q'I ~ "' •• . ., "' "' h58 •• '" M> '" .. ~ .., "' »> •• "' "' If you ore not u1ln9 An1w:irlng S.rYite, You we 11ot t ettl119 all af your call1. JC Golf S•nlt A~• 16, Or1nge Co.SI Ii (O•t r· '"''!l TELEPHONE ANSWERING IUREAU 835-7777 Or1ntt Co11I !J•l lt\'I) Goldt• WH! Bibb 10 1 dfl. Have1 !Gl. 11-11 Sch111011ner (0 ) def. G~r~e (G), 11·11 F•ee1 (Ol de-!, 5w&ln IGl. 11~J Eldrl<1ge fG) Cle/. 5mlr• (0). I0~7 DeGuallt (G\ def. ll<IWIH (0 ). !S-11 Fuller!!><' 10. Se" D•elK! '' Cerrl•o• I.I, S•n 01~90 Me1• ·'' M!. St" An!onlo, bYI Sl!urdlY'I 01mt1 0••1111• CDf11I et Ce•rlros Fulltf!on eT M! S•n Anionic ~""'" An• et Sen Oleao •~~--------.... ~ B'11Wn (C.l de!. 1Ctn1 (Ql. Tl·ll ---Sen Ole~o Mist . bve flOWll Anew Palm IP.Mo/ 1e1ott fot Catnperl. Thaf1 tight. It's a 9reat new ide 1 in camping. Palm Springs Oa1i1 Recreation1l Vehicle Resort now has golfing privileges and space available for immediate occupancy adjacent to a spectacular 18-hole golf course. J ust minutes from downtown Palm Springs, the new resort is• camper's dream, in erea of swaying palms and lush, green l1wns •••. 1par~ling pool ••• and luxurious clubhouu' wifh billiard room and lounge. Be1t of all ii the price! You can bring your whole family for ju1t $5 e day or $30 per wee~ (including waler, electricity, and 11wer). There'1 room for your extra vehicle and boet, too-- the Salton Sea and its scrappy corbina are only 45 mile• away. But space is limited, 10 hurry! -•• L-.... ~® Write or c•n today for reservations! ·-A• t c!i•ity ol Iii• U.S. 'l"'"cl1t '-r•u• ... .,,,.,. 3•100 '11,.. S"•i•q1 Orlve C1tlieclr•I C ity. C11ifor•1• •22e2 It "lio•e f714) l2t-4t1J -· Tlmr~day, February 11, 1171 DAILY PILOT !5 Ref's Call Olympic Pool Oka yell For Newport Harbor UCI, Bucs To Settle Voids Goal; Kickers Tic A 50-meter Olympic size SY.'1mming pool will be buil t nn the campus of Newport Harbor i-llgh School follow ing t1on of the Newport campus. presently the sile of an aged bus garage. Tennis Tie ~lyror ri.·lcNamara's UC Irvine tenn1~ team will re- play a douh!es m a t c h to determine a team winner against Orani;e Coast th\.!L afternoon then move into a home contest with UC San Diego F~iday afternoon before pla.vin~ at Cal Stat(' !Long Beach) S~turd;i_.,, n1orn in~. """' l•'1r•I •• , •• ~ti• of SI 9!) .. ,.. '00 lJ b•..u .... ~ The Coast Rangers atlempt a decision by the Ncwport- lo bounce back from a 2-2 '.\1 esa l!nified School District tie suffered Sunday against to approve needed funds. Long Beach when they journey "The distric t has approved to Fullerton this Sunday for the diff erence between monirs a 2:30 Pacillc Soccer League pledged arid raised and money game. required to build the pool. It ~'ill be available to all district schools, y,·hicq,_includc CoronR del r..1ar . Cost a r..1esa, Estanc ia and Newport. Cunningham was vague on y,•hen grou nd breaking. wou ld occur or on a timetable for cnmpletion. mainly because scver11I items are still to be ironed out. Coach Br ian !\-lcCaughey·s \Ve'll be reco1nrnend1ng ;in Jlangers managed to maintain architect to 1he hoard of lirsl place in the clrcuil when education Tuesda y." s a\'' challenger Temple City \\'as district superintendent Dr. also involved in a tie -2·2 William Cunninghan1. Oi·io]e \VJ1iz The L:c1-0cc compet ition y,·as tied al 4-4 with the first doubles match called hv darknc!'.'I after !he third set y,·as lird, .).5. Tuesda y. with Dinubia. Total cost of the d1slr1ct ~1cCaughey l ashed of-pool could go as h1.11h as Speaks al HB uc 1,..,1ft1 11t 11i or1ft1eco••' ficiating of Costa ~1esan Brian $.111.000 y,·Jlh the actual cost sifttl•• d d I I Do B f d I ft f. Id f 11.•1 11~••"1 101 di!, ll<ID C~•~MI AlcMillian. y,•ho den ied a epcn ent on sevfra a ternate n u or . e 1e er or iuc 11. 1.6 6i Raoger goal when he fell the items. v;hirh i n r 1 u d e the Baltimore Orioles baseball MIO• CArrai1 101 otL Be11 "•v•n bf h I . . I ·11 k (UC!l. •l-&• Long Beach goalie might have eac crs. enc1ng. vanou~ eem. Y.'L s Pe a on oon•n c11nr1"9n .... !!)I 11ei. &,111 been injured. !yprs of deck equipment and "Sportsmanship·· tonight at J~o1on10..1 1uc1i. el. 1-1 the number of shower and Lark View School , Huntington si~ve "'ewrrpuq~ 1ucn de•. S•!~~ It turned out the goalie y,·as f-kc• 1,,,.1,.1.,,,. B h E'T\Qry 101. "''· ~-1 not hurl and the goal by Leif ,_,,_ , " cac . ~·en Tripp iucu "~'· J1•..,. W1n1•r• Werneid was nullified. A citizens committee ra1srd He \.\'ill be the guest at 1°d;..,!~'· ; .. ' • .,.nit cucn 11,1• St•v• $12.000 and the City of a PTO-sp0nsorcd Father and sc~w mer 10. ~-J, •·l McCaughey also rapped his l\ewport Beach p I e d R rd Son Banquet . scheduled for oouo111 team 's inability to cash in $87,500 IO\\'ards the building 7 in the school's TMR building. C.•"e11 ond E<T>OrV (Q) 11•1 ~lW· on scoring chances sayi"g b•ou~~ .. ~11 M cn1nt1 iuco. ,.,. 6-' . . of the pool. Price of admission is $3 for Pa•tn an(! Td~f> lVC!) "''· Wlnltr\ that Werneld missed a sure Location of the sleek facil1!v each father and son. plus $1 i rwi sc~,.,1 ... e• f01. i.1, .i., score and that Chris ~lcCarthy y,•ill be on the southcas! po;.. for each allditional son . c !::~11'i .~: J,;~;;;;~~t';', ~~1 ~ied and Johnny Haynes each miss· 1----------'----------------'--"'-------"--- ed two excellent opportunities. The Hangers twice had to fig ht back to tie the invaders y,•ith Jackie Ogil vie bagged the first sho t then defensive fla sh Eric Smith crashed through lo get the Z.2 equalizer with 15 minutes left in the gam_f. Smith headed his shot into the net. Ranger reserves f i n a I I y scored and won . 3-1. y,·ith Tom 1'1orrison hitting two tallies and Geraldo Sousa one. -.. ---....... -US1<~11·s -·- USHER'S GREEN STRIPE SCOTCH START THE NEW YEAR OFF WITH BIG $2.00 SAVINGS FREE 1/2 gal.now ... $11'1 WHEEL ALIGNMENT With Purchase Of 2 Tires • Rugged 4-Ply Nylon Cord (most sizes) • Good traction and skid resistance • Good mileage at a low price •• , ... 11s .1• & 1 ~. 7 _1~_,, !:Ht• ... •"" w~.,,, .... w. 1J.OO MOrt...,. t•• S lrt I 55·1' & 15 •v•ll•ble in""'""-~\' l't •U.00 •P•oe•1 Div•~ ft. of 11!9IO12.S-t ~· ••• l>I~• kl<lt·•• ... iii iftljf i n * TC ....... ..• WE HONOR ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS COSTA MESA: ORANGE: WESTMINSTER: THI JONES TIRE SERVICE JONES TIRE SERVICE L. l. OITTLE BIG 0 TIRE LlfHAVB' .. •ADIAL TIU 2049 Harbar Blvd. 1100 Tu1tin Ave. 7352 We1tmin1ter Ave. PIOf'U ~:19' !At Bay ) (Across from New Post Office) 89:1-ll72 646-4421 5411-4343 lJ2.J38J \ • N DAil y PILOT His Job: Help :tlinorities GRANNY NOT EASY TARGET Sl.N DIEGO (AP) -M. Granger ~torgan, 29. isl't lhe typical truck driYer. Bal U>tn. the rig ht \\'hffb amsld Cll~' 1\rttt.s isn't lbt typical truck. J.torgan has a PbO in physics. The truck is a com· EYES RIGHT •• l l. LOUIS J, HASILPILD 0,......, .... If '1'011 C•" .... lk owl of 1"-• brol· li•nf 1u111hi"• ;"'• • di,..,ly Iii •oO"' o"d il!'lllloc/•Olt ly 1•t .... ,..,. tltit"t obout yow, you• "Der~ ole." •• ,,1i.nt YOU .,. fort~­ .,..,. i11deed. Mo1 t of UI h ••• 10"'' +.ouble w;th 1h:1 .. 'Vite· "''" A will help •hodop1i11 •• , Lon9 e•po1w•t io th, •un, ,,.o ... f;t ld1, lulOl;I wt!e• or olh,, •OUfttl c..f brilfitftt t "'f~fl the .depletion to dtrl•ell "'or• diff•cult. Sot <it l 1 ..... 1.,.,,,,..;,. 1:011 '"" 9leut1 ctn ~t i p to ft· du<• 1h• .g lt 10 duri119 '" o•ttnd- .d t 1po1ure. Ckt•p •wn 91tut1 i10111,..,;1 35 to 50 P••<•lll o• "'ore of li9lit. Good qutlity '"" 9lt11t1 t u! o.,t 111 but 1 l or r 5 perct,.I. !y t~lti n9 out Ille bril- li t "I li9!.I, .,ou •~t bl1 your t Ytl fo t diusl to dtr~n•u "'or• q1>itl.ly. 'fou• •v•• 1!.ould ••• will tr•o11.g!. to e111 blo vow lo t roiov ·etdi"t· TY 111d eU •i1u1! te1 ~1. If "of, l tf WI •i.gkt • .,,., in f;,,, Poi11h Slioppi119 C~M1r, Meiro St. e t !ttch l l•d. fl Phone 147-1271 puter laboratory. His job: training dtsad- ,·antaged blacks and ~Juican­ Americans for careers as computer programmers. The idea came to him two years ago \\'hien he was teaching a summer course in programming to high school st udents on the San Diego campus of the Unlversily o( California. The young students \\'ere so enthusiastic, he said. that he began to wonder if disad,·antaged youths might be "turned on'' by computer science . "I \\'enl to the black com- munity and the C'hicano sec· uons. ·• ht recalls. ··1 found tremendous interest, but J also found many of tbose interested THINK LOVE ' for Valentine'5 Day! I S,.y ,, .. ;m ... , HEW S1llii.c1t•ot1 ("'•fl· lnl1 <••IO<o ,,.,;1..,..,J or our 1.ne ,.,.,.,~ ctn GrHt!r>v <•f<ll , , , « lel SNOOPY Clt"Y1'' lllt mfll,t9~! Mtwy elfl"' lt1lil0f lift iolt•1: • C111u,,.. J......W-, e s.c ... 1..i C-IH , ... ._NW \lff1t1t!I e HEW "911enl • M.,.K ~·:.':, e Wtll P c-"" .. , ~ -IMrm! 0'"1fN SUH., l"E I. 1-. 11·• sabfna's <..G•".....Uot,1-Cost-J~wt"Y -At111111 -'"'·'at /Notl•lil H""ll"'""' lffC~, NP! II Llldr'I hi-till -....... ,,,...it11'11 I I ' were working eight-hour jobs. So I decided to take the school to them.·· He canvassed the city look- ing for a rig. Finally 1 supermarket chain donated a W.foot trailer. A research firm helped buy a l~whtel surp lus military truck. l\1organ got a license te drive the behemoth. Volunteers turned the trailer into a handsome classroom with a general purpose com· puler . "'We've put this together th'e hard way." ~!organ says. "ll was accomplished by turning highly qualified programmers into painters and carpenters. by scrounging used electrical ·wires from old buildings and by pulling PhD's to \\'Ork dig· ging, sa<A·ing and ham- mering .. , Completed a year ago. the van accommodates 20 student! at a lime. So far about three. dozen young men and <A'omen have graduated from the 2&-week course. "'hich is sponsored by · GIFT PACKAGES wt MAR Mlm!EI£ WITClt IS MIKE fltE1tU#65 PEANUT ( BUTTER . MO ADO tTIYES MO PIUUYATl'IES FULL · POUND ''Artistry in Moving'' for the BEST MOVE of YOUR LIFE Call: 494-1025 .. .. . ' , ... I 580 Broadway • • ' i •• j 1 · . ' FINAL STOCKS! tht Universily •f Calilornia at San Diego. •·tn one class ''"e had a dish11i·asber. a mail clerk, two jani~rs, a messenger and several people "'ho were unemployed." ~!organ said. '"Today they are all working in programming jobs or taking advance training at various colleges." TY!'O to three nights a wee.k ~lorgan takes the van to a black or ~1eJi:.ican.-Americao neighborhood. Each c I a s s meets once a· week for four hours. The course is free. Students are selected on the basis of their interest in computers rather than aptitude tests. \\'hich ~torgan believe$ display a cultural bias that particular- ly affects minority group members. So successful has the pro- gram -:--called Computer Jobs Through Training -been that the ·califomia State Office of Vocational Education recently granted it $35,000. With that. l\lorgan plans to add three more classes. New Sc hool Goe s Where Action l s MILL VALLEY (UPI) For four San Francisco area young~ters, a small camper 1ruck 1s a school v•hich moves to any part of Northern California. When a student asked how fish spawn the \•ehicle \\'ent to a fish hatchery on the American Ri\'tr where there were lessons in bioloi;y, eco l ogy, history and mathematics as v;ell as \\'ril· ten reports to help the study of English. The school. called the Pacific Trek Bay School is the idea of Patricia \Vright, y,·ho decided l'ast September that six years of teaching in public and private schools was frustrating. PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - Granny McCarath loots like a swut. defemele.u old lady. Granny walked down a North Philadelphia street "''ben two youths started to follow. They tralled granny about 45 minutes, twice asking for directlons. and finally they snatched her purse. "Granny" arrested t be youths. Patrolman James ritcGrath, sometimes decked oul in a grey '\\'ig, spectacles and blue housedress, has at least 30 purse snatch al"ffiils to his credit, police said. Shattered Man Loses Everything PORT TALBOT, W 1 le s !UPI) -Akhtar All P..Jobam- med's world went to pieces the day his parents were sentenced to life in jail for killing the woman he bad '\\'anted to mlrry. "I'm a double loser," the 23-year-old Pakistani had told friends arter the trial. "J"ve lost Joan forever and my parents are in jail. I can never forgive them. I ' can never be happy again." Akhtar turned his parents. Ghulam and Salamate ?ilohammed. over to police after his wife-t~be. 23-year-old divorcet Joan ?itacLean. and her five.year-old daughter J.taureen were found strangl- ed. Their deaths had followed a quarrel between Akhtar and his parents. who had selected another bride tor him, ac- cording to testimony in their trial. The parents were con· victed Half of each day usually Is spent exploring and the o!M r half on \\'ritlen work drill and tutoring. Among the places the school ;==========.I Akhtar, despondent. tried lo kill himself once "''ith drugs but failed . Sunday a small boy \''liking through the woods outside Port Talbot discovered Akhtar's body hanging from a tree. Police said the second try had been successful. has visited are the Marine Biological Laboratories a t Bolinas. a redwood logging camp on the ~1endocino Coun· IY coastline, mus eu s m , ·shrines, landmarks, a n d ~lonterey \\'here the scholars watched \\'hales migrate. Tuitio n is $2,000 a year. • .:::::: .. ::::I . .... .-·. KIDS LIKE UNCLE LEN . ' , The DAILY PILOT ~ The ''Today'' , ' ' -.. " ''u , ' ' " ! .. ·:, ~ • .. l • ' • ' ' • . • . -"" . .; . . . ' ' •; --.............. ~ ,. • • to .. • ' • .. . . J .. " ~, _,_ ~.I! l it .. . ..... : i, +' '+ t ... -· •·. NOW INCLUDES ~· • 1 • . .. '. _, " (,. .. HOLIDAY SPECIAL NOW THRU THURS., FEB. 18 * ONE ORDER NO. 7 FISH and CHIPS our famo us Icela nd ic Cod fro m the deep seas plus cri1p Fre nch Fries . . . -e: •When You Buy a Second Order at Regular 1.1 D Menu Price 2 ORDERS for the PRICE of 1 SAVES YOU 1.10 NO LIMIT No l imit On This Delicious Fish Item! Also ... Try Our Delicious GOLDEN SOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN New for You ... BIG, JUICY , HAMBURGERS -CHEESEBURGERS TOO ••• We're Here to Serve You 7 DAYS A WEEK MON-THUR 10:30 • 7:30 ·~~~,~ile>:J~·,;~ FRI-SAT 10:30. 9:00 Ii SUNDAY 11 :00 • 7:00 FISH ~ n CHICK 9041 ATLANTA, HUNT. BEACH (A! M119 noli• Lucky ' Discount Shopping Center) Newspaper ·- • -· ·-'-' ' , ' . .. ' ' . ' .. ' .,, • . , . . , . . . ' •• ' • • ,, ... ~ " . ' ' ·> ~ " ·' ' • In Y.our .Home-delivered Editi~ · ~· ;..:,...;. ·. ~; ; ' ,, '- " . ' ' l • I, , ..-l.<!. ,_.,.. ,;_..... ~ ~ ~.r " ' . . ... ' -" " ~' .: .. ::., .. ..~; ;a» )' I • __ ..,, DAILY PILOT ·--f!i~q. ftbrua11 11. 1971 .. s DAILY PILOT 27 UC &vine Offering Students Grope Through Beckett's Murky'Endgame' By TOM TITUS Of lflll lloallr Pllet 11-*t It is, it would 1ttm, long past time to cease venerating writers of putrescent prose whose enigmat ic mutterings 1tir little other emotion than physical revutslon. Heresy it may ht, in the light of bis recent Nobel Prize, but after exposure to four of his workl, the opinion persists that Samuel Beckett ls either a madman or a con man, pulling off lhe greatest pul-on in lhe history of drama. This view ls rei nforced by the UC Irvine production· or Beckett's ''Endgan1e, '' described by the playwright as a refinement of his more notable "Waiting. for Godot." and by its director. graduate student /.-1ichael Van Lan· dingham. as possessing "absolutely no plot." He could not be more accurate : "Endgame" not only is devoid :. DAILY. LOG I ___ , ......... ...._ Thursday Evening F'ElltUAl!Y 11 •:eo a Mr.·111 • 0 Tit Rifte911 o l!llm m..,...._ G NIWI luttt W1rd. m ... Puhltln/Fithmtn. ........ ,., .. fDTMf,_.CW I!) fll ..... 111111-•n ......... ,.... WlllMI*-.,. C.11 .. ,..., ,,.. tr (CO!Mdr) '56--.llO: Lem· JllOll, JuM Allyson, ·--... o-........ .,.,_ ID-'-#199. 7:55 al CM:lllilt M S..u.oo. ~. 1:00 O Qtl CJ) Ji11 Ntbon Phyllia Diller i nd Tommy ltonetti 111est. m Tt Ttft at Tritt! ED Whllll•rtol Wttll in Rwitw fID TIM StOl'J II) Vt ..... l:OS al) Ttl .. ltrristl Mllliul 1:15Qltk• Wrtp-Up l :HO@@ mlrwtidt "Uctpe." O•TP• o l!llm m......,. m DIWW frest SMw Guub: 01· d1t1 Nash, '"'" Otvis, l)'l'ln All· de1ton, Uvinpton Trylor. ind prizr· •i1111in1 dop. m Dly9pic lolinc m NET Pllytloae t11 tht Thirtits '1be Re-Oisawtced Film." A full· length lnO'fit ol tflt period nMt htlo1r Jeen on tell!Yisiotl. Shown is ''Onu ill • lifetime," 1 1932 litm with Jtck 01~ie, Z1su Pitts. or plot, but of sense and mean· Ing 11s well. Unlike "'Godot." \V b i c h transpires on lower, often varying, leyeJs of pathos with some welcome scraps of humor thrown in at intervals, "Endgame·• ls two unin· trrrupted hnurs or bleeding. witless emotional catharsis. ll is Jhe sort of material which makes fine fodder for acting classes or workshop exercises, but theater it's not. Yet, while condemning this pitiful scourge of dramatic diarrhea, one must in all fairness \\'holeheartedly ap- plaud both the dedication of Van Landingham in suffering through its staging and tftc outstanding acting ability of students Larry Loll and Bruce Bouchard who agonize over eYery wretched line. - Lott is the blind paraplegic v.•ho cannot sland: Bouchard bis frustrated servant Y:ho cannot sit. They are. y,·e are led lo belie\'C, SUr\'ivors of some nuclear holocaust, along V.'ith tv.·o other. C\'Cn lesser defined. characters housed in garbage cans -\l'hich is "''here Beckett's play belongs. ,OOOTAIBT i:...-------~ l 'Girl' Play Held Over In Clemente Two additional performancts have been added to the run of "Everybody 's Girl." the John Patrick c •med y originally sC'heduled to close I as t \\'('{'kend at the San Clemente community Thea'ter. Director Joanne App\egett announced today fhat the play will be repeated on Friday and Saturday evenings. Howe y er, the Friday performance already is sold out to a local church group. Tickets for the Saturday i;taging of the comedy, which features Doris Oonka. Gene Applegett and Jan Wentz, are st ill available and mav be reser\'ed by calling ·the pla yhouse at 492-0465 arter 3 p.m. "Everybody's Girl'' is being presented al the Cabrillo Playhouse. 202 A" en id a Cabrillo. San Clemente. The theater·s next produc.tion. "Who'll Save the Plowboy," is scheduled for March 11 opening. Televisiota Review 'Medical Ce11ter' Sticks to Tradition By C\'NTHJA LOWRY NEW YORK (API "Medical Center," oow in its 5ee0nd successful season on CBS, appears to be one of the net-.rork 11erles almost ctr· lain to be renewed for a third year. This doctor show steers a so 1 '. d, mi ddle-0f-the-road course, rtlying heavily on t!wse familiar scenes on which the dedicated physician nobly flouts authority and risks his rarecr in the Interest of his patient. Wednesday night's episode started out v.'ith the earnest young doctor -played by Chad Everett -treating a young girl injured in \1•hat appeared to be a suicide at- tempt brought on by an un· fortunate loYe affair. To this was added the plight of an ':'!x..comedian · y.•ho worked around lhe hosp i tal en- tertaining young patients - a part 1,1.•ell played by .Jack Carter. He suffered seizures during which he attacks anything or anyone nearby - thiYincluded the girl and ihe doc. It all came to a happy en- ding. The comedian's problem was an operable brain tumor and the girl was getting a new lease on life. But unless <lne has a real affection for this type of entertainment, it can be a bit or a drag. On ABC, "The You n g Lay.·yers" was bu~v \Vt!d· nesday night expanding In conform to "The r-.1od Squad" fo rmula. now apparently man· datory for TV series about young people. The hour ha s fared poorly ln the ratings and the network obYlously hopes the change will help improve things. When the series staned In September, Ltt J. Cobb was the older, father-image at· tomey, and Zalman King and Judy Pace were the young stars. Now they have added Philip Clark as the third regular: "Tbe Mod Squad" Dramatic Phantoms In 'Leaves' By WILUAJ\I GLOVE R NEW YORK · (API n1le11 call ror lhrtt kids and one older figure. A week or so ago, CBS revamped its "Storerront Lawyers" 30 that It complied v.·ilh the rule, ad· ding an older, father-figure. Clark, considerably more of an establishme nt type than the Jong-haired King. joined the team with a story thJt had him charged \\'ilh assaulting and the glrl'11 11ory about his fantasy. However, It gave Cobb a chanC'C to mastermind one of those courtroom con.. fessions In the Perry Maso11 style. In nve months of trial work. the young lalf atudenls ln the ABC series haven't cklne much in the Niel~ns, but lhey haven't lost a case. a 1S-year-0ld high school girl.!fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;; He was innocent, of course, fathering her unbo~n child was B!I A~Ylh 1J,1'-Jn. 11.lf-<llllllAll 7k ~·-....... "FOOLS" ••• "CHAR LY" wilft Clltl •tlle<'llOll SPEC.IAL ICIOS MAr1N£E 1 ""'· -l'a l. -SAT.· MOH. NIFTY THEATRE J07 Molli St. Hwlltlltft• '"'" "A LOSS OF ROSES" Dir.emf ~ T•• Tltn "MAGMll"ICElllT DlllAM.A" lon'I 81rlfi~-Delt1 Piiot FRl.-SAT.-1,30 kit ~.-Mn'Gtf•M C.11 557.7297 There's a little bit of most l~:::;====~;~~=====~=~=~ e\'ery type of play in 4'Thell House of Blue Leaves," and .11ms IQln--=- they au add up to .zere>-minus Al R PD RT entertainment. ~ -BURT. UNClSTER •DEAN llRTIN ~UN SEBERG •JlCOUEUNE BISSET ,._re•·~··._.., ..... ~-o-"":"=:"~ Now Skwlltl) r • r.. '. , fi ],, 1 011 the Po1dM1o1I• bcl•tf"'' .r ·~ • • j ,71-4041 e1:00 • t :Jo The latest 1o1·ork of John Guare, who has picked up a C'Crtain chic foJloy,•ing In t he lhealrical community, spread numbingly \Vednesday night across the stage of off. Broady,·ay 's deceptiYely s1o1·ank Truck & \Varehouse Theater. Guare likes to p ur s u el~;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::::;o;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::~ dramatic phantoms a I o n g sometimes parallel , sometimes cross-over pa ths. The binary route to this theme is (ull of indulgent Potholes. ar\'I• .,, ..... ., ~-~.!!~ .... ~ COllONA O'EL M41t ALSO PLAYING "DARLING LILI" Storrl11t ..11110 A1drewi Ill (I) 11M -....... 11!1-"' """' lllMlll .. MIAI• m--m htltrl '°' 1iri111 1:00 I) 9 (Il CIS Th11'1dtJ Movie; "flit Cinci11n1ti Kid" (westtrn) '65 -Sltvt McQueen, Edward G. Rob· lnson, Ann·M111ret, Tueld1y Weld. A darln1 rarntiter Is willint !ti stake his Hft for th• title ol kln1 ol !ht poker·pla)'in( world. Lott is an im1nensely strong aclor, rilled "''ith the stomach- churning intensity of a Shakespearean tragedian. And his is a sustaining quality. as evidenC'Cd by his command of a 15-minute monologue and his ability to draw a numbed audience into the almost beautiful closing moments or the play. SCR Plans 'lnvali<l~ On hand is .\tlie who, when not knding animals at the Central Park zoo, composes tinhom tunes. pleads with .a busty neighbor to concoct ex- otic foods and keeps a neurotic ll'ife sated with sedatives. She ultimately attains the am- bition expressed In preY ious suicide attempt by being throttled as motlled lights dim the anguished finale o f BILLY WILDER'S TllE ~Lll'E or SHERLOCK HOLMES '"'a--Olil•- D-m"'""" 111-m .Wi lddtwf .. Ill-' l.ltitt """' m._~ ... -m.....,_ •II CIMrt • --~!OO IDJCD llC-""' .... m111r ,..,. .. ""'. lltllllpl'1hMM ··--""" 1§"991/ .......... tm c..m, c.dllltl m IH Wllll's l.n Tilt: m-m w..-. c...tt 1:918.llnJw.t ... Q The fMaffivl 0 @ [}) rl) Mlkt ROOlll for ;r1IMldlddf "Ovtr 30 1s Out." Oan· ny ii e1u1ht followln11 Linda and her M• date. Jack Bender plays .leff C1rSG11. l]l)0!1!11ntt llJ LH k""1y dt h ral't'illo rJ'1) N1Udt1 t:JO B Q) 11) m Adllll·I Z "Onct I Cop." A bitter U·C:OP ind I Holly· wood sl1rlet and he1 111ent (Shelley Berman} •present unusutl p1oblem tor M11!0)' ind Rttd. Katie O'P1c1 b featured. 0 DAN AUGUST-THRILLS * DRAMA, SUSPENSE-NOW! 0 (fij rn m Dan Auaust '1ht ••11111 .... Jtny Dunphy.-Worst Crime." Ott. Lt. Au1u5t 01d· D DIC "'-'icl Tom Sn,dtr. 1rs 1 round·UP of 111 known sexual 8 ~ ....... M LA. l.akera n . olfendtn 1tttr 1 youn1 Cir! is mur· MilWtuktt B11tb It Milw1uktt. dere d. Fernando lamas. Sil Minto 0 "SHIP OF FOOLS"-ind Tom Troupe ruest. * Part 1--LEE MARVIN O C.ndid Clmtca &. SIMONE SIGNORET! t:m Muaic:tl1/P1slor'• Delk fJ Sii O'CW llltirit: "Ship If al Sldtn1 dt An1usti1s fttW" Ptrt I (dr1ma) '65-Yivien . ttip, SirloM Slrnont, Josi f1rrer, 10:00 ~ ~~ 'rey~~;'-M~~~ ~~~;!~ D lid: 'hi .,.. Marty Feldman i nd Th• Golddiuus. II DI ,,...... O l it 5 Klws m D (I) k Tttl 0 ••rt« Wafd Ntws flll Alt ~ m Nnn Geor2e Putnam. Cit CJ) ltWl/W..U./Sptrb m Sf*U11tioft "A Com em lion Ull fill!«,..., With ttormin M1ile1," P~litlu prile· m lhtidtrl 34 wi~ninl! author ol "The Almies of m TtM........ lhl f'tiiht" ind "Of I Fir. on th• Moon." m u 11«1 F111111et • t....i. I!) llUI - •:• 0 CNdll C.Mtfl m TIM flyiq ""' ID H1Qar1 ... l.tdfl GUldld "111/Mniale m,.,....,._. Gri)l.MDlridtdtl muc: ..... ail Aq-ui Trts l°ltinu IO:lO 0 Movie: "Tiit l1d1 V1nilhes." (mystery) '38 -Mich1el Redgrave, O @@ fl)Tllis 11 Your Lil t m l ill lotl111 NIWI m lncertldull'lbrt G) t+omeopo con ti Pre!. Horanl!'I 11:00 e 9 00 llJ Ntws o @rn m•.., 1:118 ca 1...i111 ...... 0 &) News DIS nc 1t1t1rt1r '8twl O Mowte: "S""1od Mol11111 i nd D -.r1 111J UM! Orftlld tt lilt" (myslery) '46 -m !D Cl) I LM LICf B1sll ~lttlborl•, Ni1el Bruce. e ID CE 11np1t m Morit: "TH Salon t111r111" (dr1- rn11 '4! -Robert Montcomtr,, rz'I blllflt ....... SUSln Hl)'Wtrd. 19 a..id: .. Utfll hd m Morit: ''Port tf Htff' (dr1m1) e llMlrit '54-Warne Morris, C•role M•thewt. er:> Sl••lu 1 II Mat1t ED TIM Alhottta "Should All Drup m........ a.. u 111i1e<1r '"° B Ill clJ ,..., -"'" 1E1 """"' "' """' D ID CIJ ll!"' -'""" -· 1r1 Art C.m1Y. l&lb•rt re1don, Jl:H 1J Q!i ([J Mn ;rt11111. Burt R11· Thi Modm Jm Quarttt 111d H1r nolds ruests. fluitr. l!I :2] (!) m 1th""' C.mn from 0 \lll Cl) GJ Miit S.illl Mid Burt11n~. "'"' ''The Girl in Bolt•f #3." 0 GJ Did: Cl'lttt CJ Millllll $ Mwti: "'tt'fltltilfl W IZ:l5 0 rtlpiclln'I Mlllulf a ,..,........ ('ll'Uttfn) '64 -Yul 111')'111*, J1nlte Rult. lZ:JO O to1nm11nitJ l ullttin m fnitll • c..1111..-. "Blick History 'flleek." en tt T••, nw m All-NiPt s11ow: '1h• nrn "'""' fD T1Mitf1' M Tht lr1f fl'ltattf ~rn.rs,,. "Into Pit 11111" i nd pJOductloe l'I "Vidot C.1111en," • ''Kl If • furttift.'" lpooi' of World WM \l'a "HoUr· 1:00 I) MM: "TN Shido• ti tlMI "* C.nt111i''.IJIN movies. Ctr' (drtm11 '61 -Arldrt Morell, cg a.-JI B1fbtt1 SlltlltJ. ... -oo- \ Friday DAYTIME MOVIES """" (comedy) "!>I-Ru H11riton, K17 K.nd1H, Collnft Sttvtni. m "•111 111• c.." 11111 ..,.., ..... .. ,. Flrtct'"-.· Rouchard is a soul in fonnenl, sentenced to an in· escapable purgatory of self sacrifice and straining in utter despair over his inability to perform the simplest of men· lal tasks. His commitment is real as 11·ell. drawing genuine tears from him at one point in the show. The others -Thomas Culp as Lotrs apparent lather and Anne Pearson Cohen as the lady in the adjoining can - are so sketchily wrillen that one y,·onders why Beckett chose to include them at all. But then, one \\'onders many things about a Beckett play. not the least of 1o1'hich being \\•hy it \\'as y,•ritten in the first place. There is a passage in ,r..ioss Hart's "Li~! Up the Sky" which comes repeatedly lo mind as one endures the tragedy and travesty of ''Endgaine." Jn discussing the opening of an equally enigmatic play. ont' character tells of !he man behind her 1vho says. ''This play is either an allegory or the biggesl joke ever played on !he city of Boston." A little 1o1·hi1e later. she goes on. he says, "By God, they're not joking : ii is an allegory." \\'hereupon he walks out. Somehow the late t.1r. Harl must have kno1o1•n Samuel Beckett would be a Ion g shortly. South Cost Repertory will return to an old familiar style of theater. the commedia del- l'arte. v.·ith the <lpening Feb. 19 or its next production, f\loliere's ·'Th e Jmaginary Invalid." This classic tale o I hypochrondria at its most absurd V.'ill be directed by Ronald Boussom . ..,.·ho recently returned from a year's study 1\'ith the American Conservatory Theater in San F'rancisco lo take major roles in SCR's "Indians'' and "The Birthday Party." Boussom. V.'ho received in- tense mime training while al ACT, \1'ill employ this s!yle in his production of "InYalid. '' taking a mime role himself. The show also will include the fast-paced moven1ent, pratfalls and double en!endre popularized by lhe Costa f\1esa company in its earlier com· media productions, ''Tartuf· 'Circle' Set HOLLY\\'000 (liPI) Osc:tr 1o11inner F'red Zinnemann will direct "The First Circle " from Aleksandri Solzhenitsyn's 1970 Nobel-winning book. J...'00 m '11M l 111t lltlfleld" P1it II '"""" dr11111) '36-Wirtltm Powtn. ~~ ROBERT STEPHENS·COLIN BLAKELY sww'iliiEA W<llWlbfBILLY WILDER n lA.LD!AMOND -~~~,';Q":'lll'l'l.I fe," "The !\1andragola.'' "The f\t•:er" and "The Three CUck<llds." Gua r e 's i r ri t at ln gl~=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=::=:=:=::::=! kaleidosropc. I Taking the title role of the old hypochondriac will be SCR veteran Hal Landon. y,•ith Saundra ro..1athey,·s-Deacon cast as his scheming w if e . Cameron Young and Janis !\lorrissette play lhe young loYers. 1o1·ith Elaine Bankston in the role or the maid. Others in the SCR cast are William Verderber, J ames r-.icKie. Jeff r-..litchell, Reginald Rook and Phil Oert!y. "The Imaginary lnYalid"' will be presented on Friday and Saturday nights for seYen \\'eekends al the Third Step Theater, 1827 Ne11•port Blvd., Costa f\1esa . Sharing the stage \\'ill be performances i n repertory of SCR's popular original musica l • • f\f o l he r Earth.'' carded for \Ved- The farce·melodrama-salire- s en time nt-nostalgia-poetic complex all oCcurs 1o1•hen the pope uisited New York on Oct. 4. 1965. a date possibly selected as conducive to occult dramatics, or at least reason enough to have three merry nuns clamber doY.1l a fire escape and take part in a morbid street bombing. There's a lot more collate ral action, approximately related to the indicated Ci!ntral theme about loneliness and the need of e.veryone for s e I f · ex- pfeSsion. ·The renectivi con· tent is on a par with the easy-gag substitutes r o r humor that roused spectators lo uncertain laughter oc- casionally. "The House of Blue Leaves" nesday, Thursday and Sunday is a ramshackle specimen of production. undisciplined creativity. Ticket reserval ions for both ------c_ ___ , ··invalid" and "f\tother Earth " to91fti ,_....,. _., ~ & may be obtained by calling ~/) ,.C'JJ:llill ' I • PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT! NOW PLAYING "Sa•tlhiltg .... " fl'omtM director of M:A"S·H ~MA'l'ER~ t!fJ:v.sTLR MCO.O.O'-.., El..O CCfff,, SAUY K£U£AMo\N • MOW:l M.ffHY C.O.Slarrn,1 M.J..111.M 'MNXM ..., RENE AUBEfl.CN.JISv._,,, i»w< M!""'Cll•<a• 0.. .. ocli ll•d. Betw••~ C.O.den G10•• ond S-Diovo ,,., .. a., • };14-61!1 -~ _:cR box offi~, ~46-1~ ~ j\S ,... __ ....... ,__.. .. ...-1.c..-.ill.:=-------;;:::::::::::;:;;:::::::::::::;:::;;;-------~ LOCAL 1m1111.1111 No other n1w1p1per tell1 you more, 1w1ry d1y, 1bouf wh•t'1 qoinq on in lht Gr1•l•f Or•"CI' Co•1t th in fli1 DAILY PILOT. ~1.1. ~~ El CLUSIVE ORANGl CO UNTY ROAD SHOW lNGAGlME NT HOW SHOWING W~Hd Mat\- 1:00 & <4:30 P.M. Reserved Seats Now At Bo11 offic:e And By Mall tpH 01J1y tZ•to11 I• s,m SHOW l lNlS & &01111111011 r•itll- frtOICT OrtCllllTIA !$2.~ & Sl.IOI ORCllflTll f».Oll & SJ.IOI All SUM. TMRU TMUR. lVll. 1:00 1'.llL !$3.00 & SJ.SO) All fRI , & SAT. l Yll.-1:)0 P.M. ($l.OO & $l.10) MATIM(ll wtO.-l :JO P.M. Ill.SD A SJ.DO) SAT.-1:10 & J:OO P.M, !12.~ & I J.00) I Ull.-11011 & 4100 l'.M. {IS.OD a ».10) I l l . It a 11-•r•r~. TlllU . 1:00 1.4:10 (J2.IO l JJ.OCI) C&ll Nl·lh1 FO• lrtOUP U tll • 121 -4070 r1t£Mllilll! ENG.1.GEMl!MT I All M~<Gr1w 9 Ry " O'Ntll "LOVE STOR Y" IGPJ Sun .. T~ufl. -6:00 · t :OO • 10:00 1111 •• stt.-a.1.10 ·12 p.rn. Undor 17 Mull •• W!!ll l'•rtftl 'LITTLE Fol.USS lo llGI HAU'I'' PIUJ Ill) An~ M1r9 .. 1 e JOI Htmil~ "C.C. lo COMl'ANY" iltl ································~··· , (.o.~r l'•••u• n on 51m1 l'r"9r•ml Und1r 11 Mu~t 11 Wiii! P1r1111 "IAl'IM ... Kl!ll" Cit) •aors IN T"E I .I.ND" trtl "WEDDING NIGIHT" (Gl'J ··~·································· All coi.r l'run11r1 IE"l•l•mtnll W111 Dlwltf PrftWlts "THE w11 .. o COUNTrtY" !Gii plul e l tberl Mlrll • 1'1111 511\ft!'I ''THI! IOATNIKS" fGJ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ____ All ColOr Eulu.ivt Drlv•I" SMw1m11 Und ... 11 Mull •• Wlrtrt ........ "lltEWSTEI McCLOUO" 111 1 PIVI • l!lllolt CHkl "MOVE" 111:1 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• A.I Coler Prt mic(I 111191iltMl'!lt Ul'llltr 1' Mvsl 11 Wlfll ''""'' lrtl ''TMlrtl WA$ A C~OOICIO MAN" f lul e W, H11dt11 e S. 1.,.,...lltl ''THE WILD I UNCff" lrtl .................................... HOD "llft Mt • Sal*"' lcomldJ1 'll-M1rth1 Rl}'t. Solt twpt. "Chit ltllht ii Ll*ff" (tdv1ntur1) '41- frtd M1tMutny, M1d1l1lnc C.noM. Z:oa O "llllJ l udd"' (d•ssic) '6Z-!? 1;._:.r·- '''" "'""'" ''"" "''"· "FANTASY IN TllE SKY" "1~~-·, °"'till"""'"" I~• , .. .,.s...., and till 1 p,111, tn Mond17 All CtlOf -'flt•ll!ll LM M•tvM "MOMtl WALSM~ 101'1 ,1~1 • ll~l• 1',.1"k1 IOI "!LVIS-TMAT'i THS WA'( It Ii" ..... o .... -""'"""'"<""· tdJ1 '!Hirttf Sii~ Jt111 s.Mra. •:JO 0 "Apftt for M.A.JtJl. • (tehtn· 1_~~·~•~ri•~l~fi;•; .. ;';';";;"~'~h~n~l8~h~t~t~hn>:;;••;h~Su;n;d~•=Y=· ==· ~=============~'.:...! lure) '66-Mlrll Rltl\lrl•~ ····················~··················· • . l . ·~ • I 1 DAILY ,ILOT S!•H l"llt" Point of Conflict Ron Filian threatens Beth Titus in an emotional scene from \Villiam Inge's drama "A Loss of Roses," playing Friday and Saturday nights at the Nifty Theater in Huntington Beach. MANY PERFORMANCES SOLD OUT the NEW musical revue EXTRA SHOWS Saturdays 11 pm MOTHER EARTH '@ Jbuth Coast Repertory TONITE -8:30 SNOWMAN IN THE EMPTY CLOSET RESERVATIONS 646·1363 OR ALL AGENCIES '<'I ~ • ~ "~ Lam i< ~ . AUORrf HfPBURN·RfX HARRISON ,.~·~~t~c·a~· \.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES FEB RUA RY··--·· ••••••••••••••••• -·--·. -··-· •••••••••• -- ' lOllC. WllllJID CAI.DID.ti: HMINOEI 4 CWT DAYS TD CATCH UP Dfl All THE MOVIES YOU'VE BlDl '' f "'"""OSIIATNATIONll. GENERAL TIEATRES. FJN( DCrolff> • ll!NI\! ra«fl ~ere'WB8 ~ ttcrooked man ..... AIM: ''THE WILD BUNCH'' Witd.·Thurt.•Tu•. "IUNCH"-9:45 Ottfy :::.!.!!!!!!!!!!l!l!!!~·!•M:.::AN"-7:30 01tly Coming Feb. 13 Family Weekly '"''"" . .. ·\ f· Coming-ne Electronic Bolllef ield The U.S. Army is forging a startling revolution In warfare. Many of the new computerized sen$ors are now being used on the battlefields of Vieln'!"'- • ·LIBERATED 'VALENTINE' -Today's woman is a differe11 t breed from the swooning sister of an earlier generation and if you want this one to be your "valentine," you'd better read "A Valentine's Guide to the 'New' \Voman." e CAT TALK -Cats do talk and express their needs in special ways. Short article tells bow they do it and includes a cat ''vocabulary" so you can translate Tabby 's messages. , All Coming Saturday in the I DAILY .PILOT I Thursd.iy, f'rbruary 11, 1971 ,.. DAILY• PILOT -.- Hoss Blocker Now Transatlantic Commuter By 808 moMAS HOLLYWOOD (AP) -8"" Cartwright hi the land of fon· due and yodel? It seems unlikely, but Dan Blocker, the Sierra-sized star of TV's "Bonanza" aeries, has moved his family tG Lugano, Switzerland . He intends to make hla residence there whenever he Isn't working. How did it happen? "Well, I happen to be a subscriber to Nati.on a I Geographic Magazine," he ex· plained . •·0ne time they did a spread on the lake country of Italy and Switzerland, and fro m each segment of the series. "That kind of money ls unbtllevable," he admitted. "Yet It isn 't out of line when you consider what some other series stars earn. Jim Arness gets double that. And Chuck Conners. who had a hit with 'Rifleman' and then three flops. still gol 125,000 tor that last one, 'Cowboy in Africa.· It knocked my eye out. My wife and I had been to Europe <lnce, and I told her, 'The next time we go. we gotta - see that lake C<>untry.'" CHANGING HOSSES "J'm not complainin', No, sir. But when you con sider that 'Bonanza' Is the most profitable series in the rustory of television. I don't think we're overpa id." Doesn't the series drag after 12 se asons? "Sure it does . It's routine, the same way most jobs are routine. Oh, once in a while something comes along to Last year the Blockers went TV's Dan Bloc ker -and were entranced. They visited Lake Como and Lake Maggiore. then v I e w e d Lugano, which Blocker termed "the prettiest place I ever saw." They di sc overed an American school nearby and last September the family moved into a chalet - parents, 17·year-old twin girls, boys, 15 and 13, plus two other boys from their old neighborhood who are at- tending the school. GREAT FOR KIDS give us a lift as actors. But paying taxes here. My only most of the time it's a job . objection is how my tax But damned weJl.paying .you money is being used. fnstead gotta admit." of going for highways and ,;Bonanza " y,·as recently No. the environment and the social 1 in the audience ratings and programs we need so badly, shows no signs of failing. How it's be ing used to drop napalm much longer can it last? on people in Southeast Asia. "I'm the last person to ask. That's what I object to." Halfway through the first The isolation o( a Swiss season I predicted It wouldn't villag~ may have had its en· last a year -and it nearly ticements to him. Like James didn't. I said the same th ing Arness. star of "Gunsmoke," the second year. Now I've Blocker has never enjoyed the ~topped makin' predictions. It HOLIDAY MATINEES FRI.· SAT.· SUN. -MON. 2 Milt$ SOUTH SPECIAL HOLIDAY MATINEES Fii.· SAT.• SUN.· MON •. IN MISSION Vll!.JO EDWARDS CINEMA VIEJO SAN lllf!"iO fV.¥ 41 lA P4/ lU~f<Off 830 6'l90 Special H011d.., M•tl•tts. FRI.· SAT.· SUN.· MON. -·-............... -···--........... .-. -.............. . ht AREA SHOWING • HOLIDAY MATINEES• FRI.· SAT.· SUN.· MON. 1llll !lllST _., ~ HOlD[H · BOA~NINE ·RIAN · O'iAl[H . 2nd OUTSTANDING Walt Disney Feature ...~ .. o1o..•r ... -""" ·PLUS· THEW'I.LD BUNCH "It's great for the kids, .. gaid Blocker. "They go to a fine school, they're learning languages and all of Europe is just a short train ride away. We've got no discipline pro- blems; my wife ha 1 everything under control. attention that his televisionlf~m;a;y;g~o;o;n;•;nd;•;n •. ;I.I .·;··~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~, fame has brought him -and I'll slick with it." neither he nor Arness can get lost in a crowd. " 'Bonanza· appears on "I was there for the holidays, and I get back whenever t can break away. All I need is a fouf-day weekend. That'll give me a couple of days with them." Blocker denied that he made the move for financia l reasons. Swiss TV," he remarked dur· ing a shooting break here. "But 1'nly in Gennan. There aren't many German·speaking people in southern Switzerland, and I admit that had something to do with me settling in Lugano." It's a long distance from a farm in Bowie County. Ter., to a chalet In Switzerland, and Blocker admits that he is among the luckiest of ac· tors. The 42-?'ear-old onetime substitute teacher Jn a Glen· "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 mass .**** (H~l!tsl Ailing) EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT _N_QW PLAYING ! 10!• C...tv'Vr"' ""~" l lo~•ontt '""''•" """'" J.n l'n>duc.IOI. 2 HOLIDAY MATINEES · Fri.-Sat.-Sun.·Mon. "Taxes? lfell, I don't save a dime in taxes. If I were to take dual citizeiiship, that'd mean I'd have to pay 17Per-- cent of my earnings to Switzerland -plus what I'm paying here. No, thanks . dale, Calif., high school wa si===========-=----====== moonlighting in bit parts when he was chose n to play one of the ranching Cartwrights in 1959. I FEE~ GUILTY "Course, I don't mind Concert Set At Fullerton The music of Scheidt, Schutz, Lotti. Mendelssohn, Ravel and five other 20th cen· tury composers will be sung by more than ,60 students in concerts this month at Cal State Fullerton. The NBC series has made , him a millionaire, and he said. "I feel a little guilty when 1 see so ma ny actors out of work. I've had it too easy." His salary now? "How much am l makin'?" Ile asked an aide. He was told $15.000 per segment - about 26 a year. Plus 100 percent residuals, ·meaning he eventually gets another $15,000 Curtain time for th e performances by the College Costly Flick Singers Feb. 19·21 in the Little Theater will be 8 p.m. Tickets HOLLY\VOOD (UPI) are available ln the depart· Director David Lean whose ment office, 870-3511. or the "Lawrence of Arabia," "Dr.1 theal.er box office, 870..3371. Zhivago" and "Bridge on the Conductor for the annual •River Kwai" were multi·' program will be David O. million dollar epics. spent Thorsen, professor of music. more than $13 mill ion on his Assisting him will be graduate latest, "Ryan's Daughter." student conductors 0Y!'ight fifj~~~~~~~~~ll Fichtner and Ann Wood, both of Anaheim. and Drew Carlson of Covina. I.ewe it Of .... it _ .... _.........__ -ALSO a- lOllaT RIDFORD "LITTLE FAUSS AND BIG HALSY" I STEVE FORREST YER.A MILES ,, _ . TtCHHICOLOR' ... bo Wolt Dliti••f• "BOA TN I KS" Cor1thtuo1o1t Fri.·S.t.-5un.•M o11. ffo111 IZ:OO. I See by Today's Want Ads e If you y.•ant to help out a poor pup (he's going in tor hesrt surgery soonl. Then atart buying fish. • ,you can get a groovy aqusr. !um complete wlfluores- cent lite & fiJ ter tor only !JO. e A rare breed ol fox?!!! Oe:fl!lged too!!!! And it's only 9 months old. Just right fO stsrt trainlna ..• For y.·hat ? \\'ell. use )'OUt imagination! e Hoy.• about a sh1psey bung- alow tu live ln, at least unnt June. Thia nauticAl I &droom m11y ~ J u s I what you·r,. JOl'klni for ..• Stt 360, the beachtypr M'C· tion. EXCLUSIVE! PlR.ummn ~s PRESfNIS PREMIER ENGAGEMENT Ali MacGraw • Ryan O'Neal Pacific's Buena Park Dri11 In & Edwards Newport Cinema A HOWARD G.MINSKY ·ARTHUR HILLER Production John Marley & Ray Milland ['RicH sEGAL IR!HuR HILLER HowA'Ro G.M1NsKY 0AV'1aii'ol'orn rR'AN'cis'LA~ """o"'I~~ l,lP,9ll J SD(OO) 1.uu. 1.tl!OM AVJ1Llll.L011 rw1'!00fl1 MtttDS I [GP) .. !'. ·~:.::;:::..o ··~·: ~\\l Ill It.A .. ~ ~,,; "IBST·FILM OF TBB Tiii!" -WBU.. Woll, Cue M•cuiae "STBINSBNT AND PDWBIFUL! AITIVI PBllll IS A IASTBB!" J11•illl Crilt, tri:. Y. M•fUlM "DNI OF TBI Tl!l'S lD BEST!" St1photn K1111f1r, """' 111..,..1.,. Vlnc1nt COl'lby, N 'I'. n .... J11dlth Crist, H.r. "'•"'ii"" lob Solma99!, •-• w N-1 leonottl HanK, c1s fl/ Slewott Kl1in, ,. .... -r.rv ···-..,Wolf, .: ... .,_.r .. Chari:, Cho1nplln, L.t. 11 .. ,. Woll Str"t Jo111llfll • CO-STARRING 1Airf1 BUENA PARK DRIVE-IN LINCOLN AYE. • 7 BLOCKS WEST OF BEACH BLVD. (Adjoining 1111 LINCOLN DR IVE·IN) CHtlORlN UNDER 12 IREE/ Tllll"HONE 71'4/121-4070 DUSTIN HOffMMI "LITTll 816 MAN" MARTIN BALSAM • JEFF COREY • CHIEF DAN GEORGE • FAYE DUNAWAY NOW AT BOTH THEATRES HARBOR al AOAMS. COSTA MESA, PHONE 546·3102 HOUDA Y MATINEES FRI . • SAT. • SUN. • MON. . • .. -. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -. -. • • I l ' • i-• • • { i • . . : • • ' • • • • • : • • • l I • • .. • . ' • • ' • l • • • I • . : • • • • I • I • ! I ' . _.·\._D_A_l_LY-'-Pl;.:L.:.OT'------'::':"'..'.;d::''.!:"C:''..:':'.b<::'."':'."!:'.\:';,_:l'.:'~71 LawDtaker Fights Raeist Tag WASHINGTON (UPI! - The new congresswoman from Boston is a plump Irish grandmother. She has been called a raci st because she favon '' n e I g h b or hood 1chools," She is strong on law and order. Her predecessor, forn1er Speaker John \V. ~fcCormack, calls her pro- gressive. She is Louise Day Hicks -representative from_lhe ethnically mixed. but mostl y "'hite ninth distri ct 0 f Massachusetts. :-0\rs. Hicks objects lo being called a racist or a person \\'ho calculatingly u s e d '·backlash" to move up the political ladder. Irish Grandmother Creates Quite a Stir the dentocrat ic way, If the re are deficiencies in the school, don't use busing as a shield. Build schools where I he children are . If that is the racist way, then so be it.'' f.lrs . Hicks won her political spurs as a battler against the National Association for the Advancement of Colored Peo· pie (NAACP), but thert is no hint or an aggressive tone as she discusses her years or trench "'arfare in Boston. e.\ection and she expects to supporl liberal leglslalion of interesl to organized labor. such as medicare, increased Social Security benefits and manpower training. Another major · interest of hers is getting more federal funds for hard-pressed cities such as Boston. She supports in principle President Nixon's revenue.sharing plan. but in- sists there must be. strict ac- counla bility to the federal ' go\•ernment to make sure !Unds arc nol "'asted. On other issues, 1.1rs. Hicks expresst:s a conservauve viewpoint. She supported, for example, Ni4on's controversial • 'no knock" legislation. which 11l101vs narcoUcs officers wlth warrants to enter private premises unannounced. "Our problem ls not so much one of having more 1a"'s, but of getting those on the books enforced," she said. '"Too often we have seen police officers make an arrest, go into court and by the time they came out, find themselves the defendants." ~trs. llicks has been In Congress less than a month, but sbe has already fought . and lost. her first battle. She \\'anted to get on the Armed Services Committee, but another P.1 ass ac hu set t s Democrat, 1.11 c h a e t llar· rington, claimed the seat and got it. "I am a little resentful of J\lichael Harrington," she said. She likes to recall that when she announced for Congresi'I and someone sniffed about the fact she was a woman, the longshoremen "Of B o s I e n retorted in her behalf: "She's man enough for us." 1 ' I \\'hen asked about ii. ~he rr-calls that Ill c Cormack , preparing to retire last year 11 flcr representing the 9th district for 44 years. called in ncvfsmcn ro meet her and said it "'asn't so. She is brown·haired. bro1\'n- r-yed, a commanding figure of a woman at 5 feet 9, and uniformlv pleasant and sofl- spokeyi. She gives her age as 49, but laughs about it and admits that's a year or so shy of the truth. The 'daught'er or a BoSton Irish judge, and widow of John ·Jay Hicks. a prominent engineer and sportsman, ~1rs. Hicks comes from a non· political family and wa s herself a lawyer with lilll~ thought for politics only a few ye~rs ago. Men in Ser-vi~e Ul'I ,.ai..M1'ot '"Th is i.~ my hc:ind·picked ~uccessor," said the then Speaker. "She is a pro- "grcssive." Now ~lrs . Hicks is in Congres!I and she say:\ ihal \1·hile ~1cCormack's word! n1ade her proud, she doesn't care for lags and most especially for that of racist. •·Every part of the country has to have a scapegoat. and, in Boston I happened to be 1he scapegoat of people ex· plaiting a situation for their •r.i1\·n advantage," she said in a recent interview. "The neighborhood school is But lhen she :;erved as chairman of the Cance r Crusade , and some of the women involved in that began to talk about problems in !he schools and to urge her to run for the school board (or school committee as it is call· ed in Boston). She consulted her family . and after they disposed of a number of objections he.r AIR CONDITION win: COAS NOW ... l RECEIVE $100 u,,on com pletion of g•• CASH •ir-c.ondificnin9 letion . You'll ••t $100 ht ~ash ••• with tht TkADE IN of your 11ld he•li"ll or c:oolin9 •qui,1111',.nl upon tloli•••Y of new Gt1 Air Conditioning (offtr 1nd 1 F1bru 1ry 111 IT'S !ASY TO HAYI GAS All COHDITIOHING , , , WITH A NfW FINANCING> !'LAN THAT INCLUDfS r'AK TS AND Sf~YICI Of THI UNIT FOR UI' TO It YIAK5. 6 gas air conditioning day &night ® CALL US NOW AND GET ALL THE FACTS PACIFIC HEATING CO. AIR CONDITION/NG SPECIALISTS 2175 LAGUNA CANYON RD. Call Us for Prompt Service ancl Repair LAGUNA BEACH 494.9745 FURNITURE lnatanl Delivery on Instant Pleasure! Velvet La-Z-Boy• Reclina-Rocker"' " AB has the chair that really makes ii in every way. An lmpor- 1anl l'llgh·lashion design in plush o Uve or gold velvet, gracerul and lovely, and simply the most com- fortable reclina-rocker ever made, with La·Z·Boy guaran· teed qu!llity. Also divine I A ma tc hin g sole lie , 1299. LAGUNA HILLS-VIEJO 837-2000 .. CALL FO• Ol'ININ• AND STARTING> TIMI - 1'iarine Lance C or p o r a I James E. f.turray, son of 1'!r. and Mrs. Phil E. Murray of 207 S. P.fayfair. Daly City . was promoted to his present rank while serving at ~1arine Barracks, Naval St at io n , Treasure Island, San Fran- cisco. Airman Jeffrey S. Behnke, son of J\1rs. Elizabeth W. Kuzitbtrg of 6122 Warner, Huntington Beach, has cop- pleted basic training a t Lack.land AFB, Tex. He is remaining at Lack.land for tr8ining as a s ecurity policeman. Airman Behnke . a 1969 graduate of La Hab ra High School. attended Golden \Vest College . Navy Petty Officer f'irsl Class Eddlt J, Viet Jr., hus· band of the former ?-.1iss Carol L. Henrie of Laguna Beach, i~ now serving aboard the amphibious assault ship USS Tripoli homeported at San Diego. <..:oast Guard Seaman Seo« ff. Smith, son of 1'1r. and J\frs. Philip H. Smith <1f 407 Gloucester Drive, Costa Mesa, Is attending the Coast Guard Officer Candidate School at the Coast Guard Reserve Training Center, Yorktown, v .. Upon completion of the 17 ~·eeks of training he 1\·ill be commissioned an Ensign and serve a thn!e year tour of active duly. Navy Seaman Apprentice Gary W. Eccleston, son of IDS INGILES: 612! Wolshire Blvd. Mi1"1• Mil" 11040 W. Pico Blvd.; 8840 S. Western lvt. !NAHUM; 1671 W. lincoln IAKIRSFllLO: 3010 Mln1 Avt Cl!RlMDNT /POMONA: 232 E. foothill COVINA: 945 N. Azus• DOWNE!: 9435 £. fimtono GllNOAlE: 333 N. Con!rol Ave. GRINIDI Nill$; 10100 B1lb01 Blvd. HUNTINGTON BUCH: 19431 B"ch Blvd. ll HABRA: 1720 W. Wh;tlier l ONC BEACH, 2189 Lak .. iood Bl·1d. MONTEREY PARK: 415 S. Allonlic Blvd. PISADENI: 85 S. Ronmud RIVERSIDE: lD,000 M•goolia SANTI IJIA/IUSTIN: 1703 £.171h SI. SIN BERNARDINO; 999 S. "l" St. SOUTH Ill: 15533 S. Cranshaw Blvd. THOUSAND OIKS; 244 Thomnd Oaks Blvd. VINIURI; 3409 lel•araph Rd. WOODlANO HILLS; 22123 Vtnlura Blvd. SHOii 1 DAYS A WEEK• WEEKDAYS.11UNTIL9 • SATUftDAY 10 UNTIL I• SUNDAY 1UHTIL6 •FREE P'AftKjNQ •Flt[( OlCOltATOlt SEftYICl•COHVI.NIUfT IANK TlftMS , wild bird feeder 197 f-u,. Cll'o.d trolk 101 you• !oY· 0<11• lelioe! (l.ss ,;,1r; ol do-cl (Orpets o,..d 11pholo ery') 47~ Hold~ el'OVgh ~ for o banquet! C!ltOr p\.(l'!.hc "d1;, ~hehered 1"9rthe-., l-o"9i"'OI hoolc. Eo1y to \,!!, terromi11 fish food ..... 38~ jtarDkHt .... 2 .... 26' nail care 23~" 99~ Au orlm1 nt i~dvd•~ ~c;ul lr!r, t mery boord1, !oe~o•I dipper, cuticle ~·uon, d-og. 1 .... eer1tr. '-di••' ' coiffure """•' •., 8 9 .. ,,, ... 18~ .. 68~ Comb1, comb1, evtry....+.e<t! Teo1c·n·lrft, pocket. bo•bc< (e>mb~. looorbrush Mii'\. clc. hai karate 11s 176 Y~'re OflfM righl KM!t ,., bu! be prcporcd to t.,.,d off Cl ilock of '""';,..j""' f.ollowenl lolli••' scuff slippers A tof! tovch. lor tcnde-, Ji red IOOlioet! T Otl iri, ond •hty"rt on •.• l'IO bending! Loh of col0!'1; l<toll>dw0tfiob!e, too i.t11e1' .,,.,. ..... , •• t•'•" 1tretch M•tlet , .• 5 7 t 'upon I anti-• rust ANtt ~usr 67~ ~~'¢ ... , . Contcnlro11d 1nhob1tor pit · vt nli ru~I fonnohon, nci.ilrO• h1e~ oc 1ds ond rctord1 1.tolt ond co•101.on; l11b1kotc• ..,ooer pvtnp, •odl~or. •vltlir• ,,,_, '°'SI eil Hiter ............ .A 1er9-nf's llo9 or cor An •~tell•"' food for y<JlfW tfopitol fi1h: os nouri1hing es Ii Ye food; wo<1'! <Lo<.1d "'(rt•. 7/l ••I· 73~~- pvlv•x vita-vurv vitamins flea collor plOJ,ic pet brush 54~ ,.127 '•lu 138 1-!i·poJency y;. lake1 the "91•r·f.. !ol!"in·rrJllM!lrol Keel)!. yCM11 pe! fleo- lree up to 3 "1on•h11 od(uth to fit "'01! s11ts. 0111 of grexornOrg' •u pp!ernenl witlt Smootfi "b•i•tlt 1 ", ''1i1-up-ond·beg• easy-grip hondlt. ~~·~··~"·'•"'lldii""iiit'• nylon sleepwear __ 393 F1ogron1ly f~,,,,,.. ond !lotlf"ngl E~- • ,, c ho ~1tng gowns o"<i · hoby dollP1• l t "' !obli!ou. "~ .11, •tylt-1 o,,.; con-' , lt(••on c~o«., ' loY1>l1 lovel•e1 IOI" • ')'OOI'" le11urt ly loung· ,._ ing ... or infoi!T>al e nterta•ni"9. A tijlomor·ono1""4nl al prittk o~ $Olids' hoppy legs ponty hose ploytex nurser· kit 687 -.7::. 77~ Hove ''"''" colle.c, beige, cioriomon, choc· olote, riovy or blotK, :;~,1t­ ~niooth lit! l ••lw r, J 1i111 motor oil ~city'• ••• "i<• ploylCA disposal bottles 104 pf•yt•.r nipples 81~ ,,.., .. ,.""' wirlr 30 rabs free! 598 Cu1IO"' f0<,..11lottd to ~ttp vovr t ng1ric in hlp condition IO Q•~t VOU ,..,. ptrformal'l{t 1~1 ..,01 buoll •~to 11. H•Qh·pOICMy 1111om1n 101'1"\ll~ ..,,,~ "fltneroh ... lo gi¥t you tt.1 boo~! you !'ltd 011!111 '""' °' yeor, help ..,ord off cohk • I VAH IHI •T •On fl\(0\1111 Clltfl~ "'"M' , O •A O IJ IO NIWl'Ull!AYI u•l 1'>1 111\'1'-1 I~·'(~"'"~""' " N1, 11111\IU(lt() (,A~OIN !.ll OVI Wll!l !ll R11!\ll~IN llH WllollilW I 'II ,.,-, I 1+•1~1'" <l'<'IW , ,'-!lft II , '" Mi ~."(i ., ,..11 'T 11 lltlll ~l'll!Nt..£1 •11 Wtlllof 'I ''!• lou •. ~''''" '•''"'' l .,l(n \'j 11111 1M OJN ll ~l 1 111 ~O\I AllANl~HUN!INt.lt1"1 Hl 0 (11 • • • • ) ~ . . . . . . ~ ' . .. . . ' Thur~;iv Ftbruary 11, 1"171 DAILY PILOT B Money Burns Hales inBussians ~ Pochets 8y JOHN BAUS111AN MOSCO\V (AP) -Alex and LudmJla ha\•e li ved in the same ?.1oscow ;ipartment for eight years-without a change in rent. 1.odmila pays about the same as she did 10 years ago for bread and potatoes, or for eggs and meat \\'hen they are available. Socks. stockings and nylon sh irts ha\'e gone down in pr ice. Suits and overcoats are about the same. naoon. By mid-1970 sa\'ings rC('tntly available in the the goods people ~·ant, price!! increasing al a ra le of about some ha\'e been allowed to pai s:n to C\lrb p.\coholism. construclion lndustf)' but also totalled 43.8 billion rubles o·r United Sta~s. for scarce items get out ot 5 perrent per year. Except move up. The price rises are The introduction th.is year hits some consumers who !.Ml $48.7 bill ion. Savings in the United States line. for those in the lowest calculated, and move in of a new model of the Volga building or improving swnmer Since 1967 savJn.gs have have been going up, too. but \Vestern tourists see it ""~" brackets, ~·ho can buy more spurts. automobile gave opportunity homes. risoo .about 50 percenl and the re it is parUy a case or they are approached by the of the basic things they need, The increases sometimes to raise the domestic price Economic ptans for this the rate has beeo increasing P.;Cople deciding to hold onto shaggy-haired set trying to the increased income finds lit· renect social or political of a Volga by 60 percent to year inc lude big increases in in t.hl' past two years. In the 1noney Instead of spending it, buy clothing items at severel li e practical use. motives. The better brand of $10,222. Minor changes in the consume r goods production, fi rs t six 1nonlhs of 1970, Soviet TI1e United States <(11d the times th eir norl'Q.l.l4 value. You Thus much of it goes into vodka now costs $4 a bottle, smaller Moskvich car boosted. sou rred. in part at least, by citizens deposited S.of billion So\•iet Union have comparable see it in the farmer's free !lavings accounts in the hope up 30 percent during the last the· price tag by 400 rubles the simple economic necessity rubles in savings banks. ac-populations. Savings In U.S. mark et where tomatoes in that eventually it can be spent year. Cognac doubled In price to 4.900, equivalent to $5,444.. _,to provide an outlet for con· cording to official reports. banks or building and loan "'inter are $2.SO a pound. for an automobile or a dacha . and champagne rose 5 O Even at these prices there sumer rubles. . The savings accounts pay associ ations at. the end of the By Western standards such the prized summer home of percent. are more buyers than cars If Ale x and J,udmila are 2 pcrctn!, \\'ith fr ee 1970 totaled Sof51 billion, nine priceS are unrealistlc in a city apartment dwellers, or The effect ts to drain off available. lucky. the economic plannerli y;i1hdra,val rights. of 3 perren t tiiues the Soviet fi gure. country \\'here the average for quality goods if and when purchasing po\\'e r and in· Prices of lun1ber, i:tass and will be ~ble .to kee p the on n1oney deposited r o r Since th ere are excess urban \\'aJ!e is around 115 available. crease slate profits on th ese other buidling supplies also repressed 1nfl~t1on u~der con· definite periods. These are rubles around and the Soviet rubles or $139 a month. \\'hile the offi cial policy is items. The higher price also tiave been increased. This trol and cool it off wllh more Does this mea n Alex and Jess tha n ha/£ the rates economy does not produce all Soviet incomes have been In hold the line on prices, fits in with the official cam-ma inl y affects the s~te run and better consumer goods. Ludmila have escaped thesort ...:.::::__:::::_...:.:_:._~~~~~~~--'-~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'--'...:.:...:.:_:_:::__c:...:.::::_...:.::::._:::__::=-::.:..::::.::::=-=-~...:.:=-:..._~...:.:'---~--'~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ol inflation ~·hich \\'orries families in \Yestem coon tries? The answer i! partl y yes and partly no. The Soviet style of inflation \\'Orks diHeren!ly. This is hardly surprising. given the b::sic di fference bel\\'etn \\'estt>rn free err terprise and the centra lly planned. t i g h t 1 y controJled So v i et system -bet1o1·een 1 \\'estern arrays of arailable cnnsumer goods and the shortage econom}' th a I operates here. ALL RKETS .CLAIM ''Lower Prices!'' The Soviet Uni on hn" long held to the polic)' that the only \\'ay prices can move Is do"·n. \\1ith some nota ble exce ptions this policy· holds finn. Prices for most basir li\•inl? requireme.nl s are slable . but automobiles. vodka a n d cognac. and some luxu ry items ha ve been sharpl y in- creased. The relatlvel \1 small amount of imported \\'cstern Items cost up to five limes their normal pri rt. abroad. The {act that these hi12h-priced items arP sold out almost as soon as they come into stores is evidence of "·hat economists call repressed inflation : purchasing po\rer e x c e e d s a\·ai\able good~. Citi7.ens h11 \'e monev in their pockets. but nothiilg to spend it on . The rubles retain their value for dail y necessities. but any n1bles left over ha\'e no place to go. TI1e furn itu re. the a~ pliances and stereo sets, the car th?t the famil v \\'ould like art frequentl y -just not a\·ailable. Some of the excess rubles go for the luxury items at innated pr iCt>s. Some Russians buy ''odka and dri nk lip the excess or even oar! of the essential inco1ne. litany rubles izo intn sa1·in1?s bank account s. and this i~ !he rh'<'f mea sure of the repressed in- Cam p us Hit By 'l Bi g' Pot Cloud BALTI\lORE. Md. (AP) - So many students are sn1oking marijuana at Johns Hopkins University, says !he alumni magazine, that th':! s1nell can be miffed even in classes and the gym loc~er rooms. I Entitled ''Turning en at Hopkins:' the article in thel current issue of Johns Hopkins! 1'1agazine asserts 70 to 80 per· cent of the school's 3.200 students ha\·e experiment~ 1 l\·ith pol. I "As a social pastime it is 1 rapidly streaking past i-uchl ()Id colle~e standbys as liquor and beer.'' !he magazine says. Robert J . Annbruster. editor of the ;.2.000<irC11lation ma galine. said thr story y;as ll»ritten because "alumni ouflhl to be a'.rare of whAl reality ts. rather than \~hat the)· y;ould like it 10 be." A brief statement Issued hy the uni\·ersity made no ob- jections to the anicle. y.·ritten by the maga1ire's associate tditor , Richard !'\. \\restcott. "\\"e re.It lhe story "'as fairly well-rounded and there Is no need to say an ything further ... said Rnbert He\\·e~. the cam· pus public infonnation direc· tor . "\\'hile the unirersity takrs a dim vit"' of drugs," the article said. "It does not play an extremelv active role in controlling · the1n. ~1 a ny :student!! actually think lhe unive rsity looks the other .way." Use of marijuana i~ so \\'idespread. \\'es tcott \\'role. that It can be S!en or s1nelled almost any,vhere on campus. "including places like !he library, the gymnasium locker rooms, the pa rk ing \~s and even an oc ca s 1onal cl-.ssroom.'' Newpo1·1 l\fau Ou EECO Boa1·ll Newport Beach r e s I d e n I Patrick 1'~. Codlgan, 1210 Polaril!I Drive. ha! b e e n elected to the board of dlrec· tora or tM Electron ic En1Jnttrfng Co. ol Calif., ac- eordlng to Burgess Dempster. dJainnao ol the board. ' ' ~~:;·.s~o~e~~s .. WHO:,i~A~LY::·~f)·ft.'PA~E :,·, PROVE .LUCKY . TRUE. .DISCOUNT .. e · PR.ICING. MIANS GREATER · SAVINGS.~ ---· "....:...--__ _, . -·--~· MRS. BARBARA INGRAM COMPARED IDENTICAL ITEMS OF HER . OWN CHOOSING AT ANOTHER SUPERMARKET... -' ·.: •. · .. ;.~~ ,. • ; ,":'\\ l._ .... "'" .,...-.,.~--~ ~ ALL STORES CLOSED WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY MONDAY, FEB. 15th -SHOP EARLY! T llU!ltnl 89 ' Mrs . l1rb•ra Ingram wn m the check-out line 1t a LUCKY DISCOUNT SUPERMARKET in ~ ". t.iikewood when we asked her if she would buy the ex1ct same item1 or comparable \1~ bn1nds et any other market of her own choosing , •• · J! CROSS RIB ROAS ...... ··············· .. MRS. INGRAM SHOPPED~ COMPARED HER OWN LIST i,\ 1 T-BONE STEAK ~:t.' ...................... 'lf,' S Oll<•lliiS 32' CUT-UP FRYER .. . . .... .. RIB ROAST !!:.~~11":0 ...................... ' 1 ~\~ She spent $43.95 at LUCKY •• , The same shopping list •t the other market cost her $48,59· · " Mls. Ingram is convinced , •• OAST <IMTO S"' CHUCK R '"'······················· ,. SIRLOIN STEAK ........................ .' 11.' TOM TURKEYS ~~:.!.,,,,, 1 ., ..... 36f~, SHE REDUaD HER lO SSM. FOOD COSTS AT LUCKY • -JO YOU CAN DO THE SAME • SHOP LUCKY r . g • FRESH FRYERS \. U.S.D.A. GRADI A ~ ,. WHOLE IODY ~· •. CHICKENS I \~'. ,.,\ft 8 C ,Ai#·;~ ,# 6. 111. .... CREME COOKIES '"'· ........ 37' "1'" "llSIOl 1\lMOM, OIO(Otafl, •a111ua1 PREMIUM CRACKERS ~:~:.•:,, .. 36' BREAKFAST rnlllUlf lllSlAlll 49' ~ 1.11s.01.101 .......... . FRENCH BREAD Dl C.1.110 1.1.llllAll 41 < 1 l-01. lDaf ........... .. O" RICE-A-RONI ""'·'"·········· 31 ' GOUll ll 'lA!tl iCtllClfll, UH. ,,.Nl!ll, llllD ~C[I ~ SOUP MIX ~'.','.~.:~,~·~·~·~··· 27' o--JELL -0 DESSERT ~~:.•::, ..... 18' ~ POT A TOES ::~,~:~~~:. '~~~'.~~~41 · ~···K'at&rl KLEENEX TOWEL S 33c BOUTIQUE 12S COUNT ROLl WHE4J--GERM ~~.1~~~~ .............. 47• WHOLE WH EAT BREAD ...... 31' ••••1111 w 1 -100~. , ._or, tO•r RAIS IN BREAD ~:~~~~::.' .............. 33• EGG LASAGNE :!':t",~~~1.11 ............. 34 • LIPTON TEA BAGS "·"·"'········ 63' CAKE MIXES~1~::. :~:.1 .............. M •• 37• PANCA KE MIX ,,.,, ....................... 56' .l.'WT UM'JU llHHll!U\l •t ' CIRCUS PEAN UTS~:,~'::,. 28' GROUND BEEF lllClf ICNllll IOI n••ot .. _ .................. -SSf •. ()• ..... K&;&r! NAIVUT DAY ( PEARS 37 29-0UHCI CAM ~ PICKLES ~o':.0:.': ..................... 45 ' !DIU llAIVll, •DSllll OIU 11.1.1vn1 BABY MEATS ~~~Zl, .................... 26• oA PORK & BEANS:~;i', ........ .24' ,,-. LADY lEE CORN ::':, .......... 18 ' ·oA LADY LEE PEAS ••H.m ....... 18' AUNT JEMIMA SYRUP,,., ..... 39' ,,-. HUNT'S TOMATOES i:·'::~.23' TINY TOT SARDINES 11o•w1,U1M-J'll.01.CAM ...... , ......... -w ............ 35• ()• •···K'at&r! . CHEERIOS 55c CIRIAl 1S-OUNCl l OX BUTIERNUT COFFEE '"'·'"-· '2" I BUTTERNUT \~;;', ....... 8S' / .':l~~E~~ .. ~.o.u.~·E···-·2 .. ACCENT Ml•T '1.AVOll"' 89' 4\'o·OLU.11 ............ . PEPPER KlllWllGI GHii• 27< IU(I I.OJ. <.I.II,.,.,,., ~" ~'I LOW DISCOUNT PRICES ON lffALTH ANO BEAUTY AIOS II tl'I I -ill·Sltt -ttllt-t Ibis II t•t Ill: e1tn ''"' ftll!-ffS II "' \llC-~ OUllOW $119 IVERYOlY ,.1(1 ()' .... K&;8'y! HEAD & SHOULDERS l ~., "' 11tiqs •• yw hmlU •11lfrlff.fif;Ui11 $104 ,, . .,. .. 4.l OUN(l TUii HEAD & SHOULDERS i VICKS NYQUIL ~ lt'''' •1ir 1t1ur an• 1111R11e1~1111 II T't 111hl·t1int ti" HllliJ, tlttt 1111 ~ rlts SCllJ 11 IASit,llJ •aLffl I. 11 1111k IR 1!t t-1 111• lnc11nl1rt1, ~.\:;;:;.I····· LOTION '1 28 lets Jll Ill l~t llltJ , •• 11U. .. ~ 6.JOI...................... • 1~1 "g~::~~" $174 'if"l" · J~~;;~·ii1oor·ii·j;·i~ri9 • ~ IVlRYDAY PRICI N111wit•1r1Jt1e••rl1,llnrs AQUA NET HAIRSPRAY 62 ,,.,un c1 wi1J·ll1•t111t111r ... •~ilsl,tt btl• th1t ••f t 111 yHr •1tr•1 C ,,-· ,... 1111. Coil tastllc, ltt. •011t1. •et. SIJll'. 11sc111tl. Ii.ft. t11. I ~ flMILY SIZE 81 ( v... 0. ... 1 ouuow •• , "'Afl ~f· IVllYDAY PRICE GILLmE I . GILLmE RIGHT GUARD "THE HOT ONE" , ANTl-PERSPIRANT -··-SHAVING CREAM Qi s11,1 '''r ,,, w1111n. ,n1K ts ()11('.Jhe Ult 11J&ic •.• '•ar•·s.1111111 Mt ''"" Jll !11• •111!11 $ lijf II nc l11t• ti I ll111r! ftf It"•' 'tit li&'I. 114 6 OUMCI Sill 9 9 ( '/ I OUMCl SIZE :!."',::; OUI lOW •:"'. " Ill IUY PllCI IYEIYDAY 'llCt ~~°'~21!!~~1(~~~~:: .......... 9 3 ~- CHUCK ROAST~'.'. ....................... 53~ •. E·Z CUT CUBE STEAK ............... •1:: PORTERHOUSE ~~~·o,, .................. 11 ~: HAM '•1111.ll 101111-IUlll (00110 58' IUU lll•lllll•ll-llCKlllMO•ID.......... 1-. ~t) FRESH SPARE RIBS::!:,,,.,.69,', PORK SAUSAGE ~~~~~., ......... 28c LINK SAUSAGE:.~:.~·~.'. .............. 79' "-}1"~-~-·-",., ....... ~~~· .. ~~i: .. ~_,f,.;,..J~,,~j '1".!' TOMATO JUICE ::':l'.'u• ..... 30' 0'"4 DINNERS!~:~~!~~~~.1.~~ ............ 951 ~ NOODLEs:::i~C:~~~.~'.~ ...... 291 ~·CHERRIES ;~o·r~t!;~~.'.~ ........... 27'" ~ FRUIT COCKTAIL ~!~'r~~~ •.... 24c ~ PIE FILLING ~~:~n~~.~~~.~~ ...... 49c ()• .... K&;&r! PRUNE JUICE 3 7c MARVIST DAY ll·OUNCE IOTTLI: ,,-' CRANBERRY JUICE ~~·~::.'.69 ' NECTAR lllWl .1.PIKOt 49 ' ~ .. l\O.Dl.Ull,, ................. . ,,,. HUNT'S KETCHUPu.•L m ... 47' PRESERVES lllll STUW11tl t 65' tr"' S2·0L SAi ............. .. or RED SALMON r::~:'c•11 .......... 99( .llOUUliCfllEililr r KOTEX NAPKINS~:V.•:: •..... 11" ORCHIDS NAPKINS ;:::: .......... 55' .-. scon Towns ;::~: .......... 31 ' MR. CLEAN CLEANER\~:~ on. .... 66' oA CHIFFON TISSUE :::\r:'~\.25' CAMAY TOILET SOAP.,, ......... 13' ... SANI FLUSH :!.":.'!!:'.'~ .......... 49 ' Our LOW Evel)OOyPrice! DETEIGINT ECOLO·G $199 Cotrl&INS NG PMOSPllATCS, KIA 1t1 (Nl'fM[S 11·,0UND IOl llOlllll[IUMf ..... ~ DOWNY somNER :~~~·m. ........ 78' .r PALMOLIVE ~ro~::~~~.~~~M.-.45' CHEER DETERGENT :!:~ ............. 11" _... POWDER IUllll lOVl lUIN 20' v-. Ufll-1 .. 0l. ••G ...... MM ... SALVO TABLETS ~:·::: ............. 79' ~ DOW CLEANER !.':t'<::~ ....... 67' IVORY SOAP FLAKES :!1~ ........ 88' ,,-. BLU BOY CLEANER f.:.' •n ... 63' JOY LIQUID :r::.•:::: ..................... 82' STA PUF RINSE ~~•n. ........ -.. --78' Our LOW Ever)dayPricc '. TOMATOES HARVEST DAT 21.0UNCI CAM Prices ore Discounted EJCcept on · Fa ir Traded & LADY LEE BACON ~.~·:.. . ........ 55' FARMER JOHN BACON :':~~: ...... S7' BACON f.1.111.*0IMIL WlllOM 01 63 < UMDUlSOUO l ·UI. rlG .......... , ... ,. OSCAR MAYER BACON:'.~': ..... 68 ' THIN BACON ~~: ~i~;;~ ,., ............. h9• () ~uf ;~;H~/2.~7-; LADY l l E 29·0UHCE CAN llOUSEilOtt ITfMlrz. TIDE DETERGENT "·"·"'············88' r WATER SOFTENER ~:'~:~~~ .. 79' ,,-. RUG GUARD '"'·"'··-·-····'1" o-4 TEXIZE ~::.~:=~~.~~.~ ..... M ........... 83' , , · FIOZEN F.OOOS .-• oA BIRDSEYE VEGETABLES 2S' lfllltC:ll GHDI IUll1. MIJIO Yl,ITAkU.(11 GIHll IUtn. (llOIPIO llO<COln •. or.'''· BROCCOLI SPEARS ~::~·::, ......... 32c SWEET & SOUR PORK ~~~~::::. .... 92c ORE IDA POTATOES ~:~~.·:::~~.-.35' LASAGNE OR MANICOTII ........ 77' IUITOlll-lJ.Dl. rlG. Wlllll lllAD OOUGll BRIDGFORD 1J11.1 ••·01.,.,, ___ 6Q1 () •.... K&;&,..t VIENNA SAUSAGE 49c UIBY'S •-OU NCE CAN PEAS & CARROTS ;~;~~,':~ ............. 38< '1"' BANQUET SUPPERs:::~ .... '1" tllK10 lllF '".'Gl••T, (lll(llM I OUMPUll~l, JI.KIO TUl«IT w/Gl~YT) MORTON HONEY BUNs :::: ........ 31' CREAM PIES rro~'.'.~1 .................... M M • 21· . CHUN KING EGG Rou::;; __ 75' !MUI 6 IM!W, C11fCl111. l.lltlMf, lOUTlll STRAWBERRIES ~~~°!~:::~~rc .. _ .... 37' BIRDSEYE VEGETABlfS ,,,,.. ... 45' rlltllll.1.TIOM•l. 'APAllU1. D.1.111'11. SrAlllSll, Mli!C.l•, IAVAltAll llAll CHERRY PIE :'!':'\':: .................... _71 ' \t ) ORANGE JUICE !'.::.1~~~ ........ M. 23• PEPPERS ~ro11~~::.~.~~~~.~.~~.~~~.~.~~~.~ ...... J9' FISHSTICKS ~:~~.':::." ........... --... M_ '122 OCEAN PERCH ~:·,~:·:.rr ............. -... 14' BAGGED STEAKS ~!":L·~~,,~~.~~:~ .. M·•-s 1°' SIRLOIN TIPS :~:~: ............. -.... 45' ,.::::tmMCl · lPIJfl SHASTA BEVERAGE 11 c 11n11onc1u.t1 •.• --~·-·--- COORS BEER 162 GOLD SEAL GIN 366 fMPllOlfllVAITIOml--·· ............. -•• --fAVAllAIU. '' IU llClf stotn Wltll llff'OI Dtrl.I Shop A ny Day .•• Save Every llay ••• With Lucky Low Discount Priei ng Policy. " r----------------, I Ano ther! NEW LUCKY I I DISCOUNT SU PER MARKET I ! OP!f!~LE !1~~!' y I I 3405 I . BROO KLYN AVE. _,1 ! _______________ _ EXTR A LIAN GROUND 89< BEEF -ROUND QUALITY..... "· • Our LOW Ever)'d<ly Price! All MEAT FRANKS 59c lUCllY BR AND 1 ·POUND CELLO PllG. SMOKI E LI NKS 79c l r.tl.l lllltl,... ·-..... ll U. '"· ~~:~!.~!Y!~~AL~~I •• "' 59c ~~(~~~!A!~~' ~~L0.6 ~~1t. , •. 49c MONTEREY JACK CHEESE $189 IMHIOU......... .. ..... I US. !1,!~,~~N CHEOOAR .CH E~~.~ $189 ~;,~~~T;tt~~~F~~> ~.1.~~~tL •u. $1°2 ~,~~lBo~~!t ~J~.~~\!~ 101 ru11 9c !~.R~.t~.'~~,~~~ .. t:!!::: ........ 3 9' ~a!l~~H~f:~ .. ~~~.K.eo ... 81~~f .•. 73' . ,, I DAJRY • ts ~~1 ·--• .PR _ C . c,J 't) ORANGE JUICE ::::~::, ...... 59' RODS IMO ~rJ~~~~.1.~~~ ................... 37• PREMIUM ICE CREAM::!~'t.'ll.. .. 79• LADY LEE ·SOUR CREAM ~,':: ...... 28' PET FOODS .< il TABBY CAT FOOD ~~·:1~::: ............ lac ,,-. PURINA CAT CHOW :!:'.: .. 38' IVllA 01 U'lll ALPO DOG FOOD~!!Ui~~~!~ ... -.... -31 • ~ CHUCKWAGON:tt.~!~.~.~.88' rBANRANAS •· 100% CHIQUI TA 9 -""'liill BRAND C ( 1' GOLDIN . A RIP! BUNCNIS lb. ) ' • llri111 ••• ,,. ••• ) J ,,, v.1 ... 1i1111 0.,1 • MUMS • TUUPS • AlAlU.S 111~ •HYACINTHS •t ~ Al lUCrl' lDW [YlRYIMY · OISCOVHT PllClS. !fl POT A TOES ,OUND U.S. N0.1 10 cmo 39c RUSSETS IAG DAILY PILOT .f9 Everyone Has Something Th at Someone Else Wants DAILY PILOT CLASSiFl·E·D ADS 'I -You"Can ~II It, Find It, Trade It With a Went Ad The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642·5678 for Fast Results l~I "~"'"''~ I~ I -..." ... I~ I -.... I~ I -· .. I~ I -.... Generil Generel ,:;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;:,:iiii~l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.:,:;;;;' 1;;::;::;::;::;::;;;;;::;::;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;\:G~e~n;•~ra~li;,;;o;;--;;;;;\"-\~G;•;•;•;r•;l;;;::;;::;::;::::;;;\!General General TA V LOR CO. ;;BA~RG:i;;AIN°HW.:UNITTJEft.'RS!il! J ;;;;;Fa;;;;;irw;;;;;1y;;;;;Spo;;;;;c;;;;;i•I;;; Huntington &.ac:h Irvine A Du',1P. This fo-,, mod•! DECEMBER B~R"-l-D_E_S-1 ·;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;::;;;;;::;::;;1 "" TO A SMALL BOY tnme ls tn terrible roriditlon JU!t back from your honey· Costa Mti1a elinJa Jj/e EASTBLUFF I~-~.:"-·· ~' Truly a magnificent large IW'J#.'r' ~ "\·t.l 4 BR·FAM RM./ '""om ~;.J,,d on the 11th bllt o"''ner will g1,·e carpet moon and looking for a place Home is just a "filling" 1IA· allov.-ance and allow fllA to live~!? Well, look no Hon, but to i1om &. Dad 11'5 or VA flnancinr. Heavy further, here iJi a beautiful much more, • ,here Is 1ueh shake root, hardv.'OOd floors, starter home v.ith room to a home tha t otter. •VttY· all bltrui, dble detached rrow. This sharp Condo in-thing It only a hOp, skip I;. garage, fa mily room, 3 cludes: carpets, drapelii, jump to shopping cenler l: bedrooms It 2 baths. E.'1(-stove & refrig. Ce .... ~ pur~ 9Cl'lool. .. 5 BR.., 211.. ba., for Brautilul f11n1ily homt> 11 '4 bdnns, ~·it & tormc.l DB. Lo1·ety pool. $.)9,900 LI 00 NORD $260,DOD 711' Bli)'fl'onl, LU.\Uri0\15 j BR, 4 ba & gLI<'!.1 apt, Ple1· slip -!-i;a11dy beach. ~~~ Fairn·ay of l\lesa Verde ~:'J~ $19 500 C2!WJ.ry Club. 3300 Sq, t1 .. 5 PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES IJJ J.;_l,i l , 6Mrn1s, dining rm & over- ~ ,..._ :tr' sizl'd lan11ly rm. 3 Car gar- 53 Linda Isle Drive Home ?n lagoon, 5 BR., 4'h ba .. w/4 frplcs., Jacuzzi tub. hd wd. firs .. sep. Jiv. rm .. din. rm., Cam. rm. & brkfst. rm , . . . . . $175.000 ! 11 ~I Anil ~l1ll a:-. a rock. Only agl'. 6'-4 ':" .. Financing. One ~ t-~.. 6 yrs. young. 1'1odcrn c.'On-block a11i·ay from pooJs £: \'cn1enre~. Fan1ily sired tennis courts. ctllent residential a re a . " ~ n1 ...,, """ chased GI with no --,,.y 0 y ..,.,,_, $29,!f.IO or Make oUer. Call ""' ><>-84>1, South Colli dowoo"llA •ithS1<t<ttot.i ,. _red h·.11 For compl•t• information on all home1 & l~ts, please call: SPANISH. S4l,75D 3 Rdrrn., DR, how.t.:., Cour1. )i<rd BSSlff"S pnvary. 203:1 Jrv~1r Al't'. Open ·rhurs .. fn., Sa!. 1 to 5. Ul'tlll()U(_ tt()M.(J l-uun1t1' kitchen. Latest elcc. Rr11 t.111e, &7!>-6000 built-ins. 4 ~ sized ))ed. Jtealton. cost inclldosing C05L SlB,950 _R_E_D_U~C~E~D-.$-2000 ___ , .. ~I.Ill price. But hurry it will not la11, 3 br on approx ~1i acre ocean REALTY 133 BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR Dov•r Dr., Suite 3, N.8 . 642-4620 "Ow· 2tiU1 Year" Wesley N. Taylor Co. YOUR LOT Salrspcople; cast your 101 Y. i1h Unique Homes~ \\'c're ~rowing strong! 4 Quality minded producers are anx- ious to be joined by like n1indL>d lndiv1duals. Fresh new ideas in seUinJi, unique t'Ol111uission schedule, a pro- fit sha1 lng plan ;ind an off- ke that's lhe talk of the IUll'n, roon1s. 2 la,,;sh baths. Wood panelled fafllfiy r1n. Ankle dC'f'p <:3.fllCling. Sprinklers. Hoon1 for hoat. Cul-de-sac art"a. nexible 1ern1s, \Vhere CORONA DEL MAR 3 BR. &. den, Beach privU. in 1he "'"orld can you find a y .. _ 1 __ , vir1v Jot. Cul-de-sac, near ll 1llJge Re al Estate 1iiChool1. $25,500. Owner. 642-1122 eves: or ~4192 96i.+t71 ( :::.) 54M10l Univ. Park Cente.r, Irvine Call Anytime 83.1-0820 I "'='='i"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"" I R [,\L TOHS IG•neral I G n I 2U t San .Joaquin Hills Roan starH•r bargnin like this~ OU ~y,·n t,..,. """'· B1•[1er ht1r1·y? Call 1714) Xlnt terms. $42,SOO 11ay, ~fESA VERDE Delightful, lafie I a m It y home In perfect locatiOn. 4 BR, 2 BA,. fam. rm. Lge quiet 11vlnr nn. Like new 5hag lllruouL Prlced to sell BRAND NEW-1-Lo..;•o.::9cc11""-''-B•_•_ch __ _ MODEL HOME PANORAMIC j;;;;;::;MIN;;;l;;;;RA;;;N;;;CH;;;;!;;;;;;; ~~STIC SPANISH N;~;:~·"~H;~-~o 962-~i Home Show Realtors · "Armchair Househunting"' In .one of the fine!t seci ion~ VIEW Hone P'°l"rty w;lh • ,..,.,i "SACRIFICE"-POOL $:~A,O/OV°; 3 bt'droon1, 2 bath hon1e on l a.lrTIO!lt a ~acre of Jarid. Jl's Seller losing home .. Behind in Thru a rustic sph1 rail gate OK ·for hones, goats, chick-payrnen1s. Enter via Spanish this 11·a~on ''"hCC'I charmer ens, rabbits etc. Real "coun. arched veranda, 4 huge bed-has 3 big bdrn1s., (.'tJUntry tr)' living" on a close-in ){)-rooms. Unique fam, rni., kitchen, .'jcparatr knotty pine cation. New listing with lots FOR.\1AL DINING. Cozy run11Hw roon1 big enou~h for cl 6'.tra& and FVI'URE PO. I floor lo ceiling rock lire-pooJ 1able, lots or fr\Ht ;.nd TENTIAL. Priced right at pl.ace. 3 Bellis, De I u x I' shade !rer~ on large grounds ;411,SOO, maid's kiH:hen. l.o\'ely li' -prired lo sell. pool. 1: mile to bi>achl'S. RC"-Dial 171~1 &t5-030:: COATS duced $3,600, UNDER itAR- . & KET! Pick up payn1ents and WALLACE take over 6';',, annual ',C.. rate REAL TORS GI Loan. Subn1it! Hurry - -54Ml41-Can't last! Call (714) 962-5.)B;; . - FORlSf [ OL,ON .. , !?£At TORS Be someor.co Unique! Enjoy )'OLlt \\'ork and earn a lot, cast ~·our lot 1<'ith Unique Honie~. Ui'tlHlUJ: 11VMJ:S Real Efl•te. S7S«l00 lul e. co~~t Hwy. Co•OIMI Otl Mlf, C.Mf. Would You Believe .. ? j()()I) Sq. f!. rummercial Build. (~p~n Evenings) Costa illesa ing PLUS. , .COMPLETI:: 1----------Berr Bar PLUS .•. CO~t : 2299 Harbor, 431,.o;.VAASSUMPTION -~-PLETE Laundromat lnettli. Quiet CUL DE SAC Street _ l-.-J er onp in operal1on1 PLUS rllRL\T [ OLSON '"' R~ALTORS Prime Eastsidr location. WATCH THE ... $SOO 1 /nio. S••h. Income. Completely rcdC(.'<>l"atcrl, 1 19131 Brookhurst Ave. U KS S79,500 spacious four Bdrm., f am. Jluntington Beach D C Jn a i:rea1 locat ion, , .and Rrh., {wilh floor to ceiling m;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;iGo by from 1hf' patio arlfl nrw all !'£JU1pmen1 <free and fireplace) Dining Rn1., and Sl 950 dcc:k1t1g of tlus i;pat•1ous, , . clrar• included. For Sale BIN Kit. Covered par1o \ltith 5, 5 BEDROO~l CANALFli.ONT ONLY as a TOTAL Patk· 'Waler fall and decorator for 4. and den/ -!-complete-age, ll(hUng. Will also :iel! "·ith 2 Bedrooms & fan1i ly room. IY separate fa1111ly roon1 }ow down at fl!A-VA Ap. large corner lot. Obie car that \rill ac,:on1n1od111c a praisal. garage w/boat door. Bl1n pool table: :; rul) halhs, 2 elec kllchcn. Room 10 build ca1ing are1~. A shor1 !ipiin on. to lhe lx'a<·h lor sunners & • • • * DELUXE Waterfront Apt Evenings Call 548-3265 Newport •• Fairview 646·8811 surft>rs~ Sli,:.00. ASK l---OR A'.'I N CO.\TS, 67j...1930 • ~&CO.I 01\'n it for les.~ than r<'nl . _.., 1Ua1 ,... .. ,n.~u• After Oo11n Pymt. only S.t\e,/ I WO-RKSHOP :;~ ~ ~:~r ,:;11~~;~! (anytime) Bus. Olric:.:c, City Liccn~ 1 rtllllS'I [ OL,ON "' PC~L rOPS l~l~l Brookhursl Ave. Huntlng!on Beach CAMEO SHORES Ocean \iey,• nomc- ,Jus1· listed on Gorham H.G.'ld ~ Bedrooms, 3 b;1ith5 "''arm, paneled den Pool rnclo~t>d hy Sff.1111-u lence crea1 Jocation ror Ttus lo\'ely home 18'.1.SIJO REALTORS SINCE 1945 t.73-4400 If You're Tired ot lonkin; al IN1''LATED PR!ci::::, n1ake a date "'ith us and SC'(' "ha! $11.800 \\'ill buy. 3 Bedr1n, 2 bath, fam- ily roon1. dble gar., bltni1, r1·pts & drp!t. Near shoppin g & schools. Good terms. for details call 5'1().ll:il, (open f'\'('!I), HERE 'S THE 1--~~~[ INCLUDED Appro,,d. I LOW DOWN l /3 ACRE~~~YCREST Fantastic 3 lx'drm. Lllc.~a Realtor Ed Babson .;.IS-j41 21. DUPLEX Verde hon1r on quirt Jl'l'f' Check this pool honie set dttP lined cul-de-sac. 2 :\lass1\'r1~~~~~~~~~~ Forest £. Olson Jnc., has a on tree shrouded lot, offer. lirrplace~. beauliful 1111111-I: +- lareg numhtr of sparkling lng c:omplete privacy, 011'n-mum upkeep yard. sparkling Deluxe Condominium dean FHA-VA -3 & 4 Bdrm er must sell nO\\'! It's on an uilerior all bl1n"' 2 baths & SPACIOUS THREE BED· homes ready /or )'PU. Take I r ighty thousand$ street for large n;a~irr ~rni. Absn. ROO:\T,. T\~O BATH wii_h 1tdvan1age or !he new low in-$69,950. Jule niust ~o gee al $32.500, huge 12 x24 sunny, bctlul1- terest rate. Come n1ake one Cal] S45-8424. fl11ly planted enclosed patio. Owners Separate Home AH 2 bodrm. FHA appn1isal $.r.?.~iOll. 10';, Down !O 90';! Joan t J-111\ ! • Newport your 01\'n. --Offering B/N Elect. oven DIAL 61a-0303 & rang<", l!rcplacc, radiant •• 1299 Harbor. Costa l\lesa B/B 22 YEARS Of REAL ESTATE SERVJCE IN THE JIARBOR AREA Baycrest Beauty ·t BR. 3 ba. 21 Ft. paneled den 1~·/nr. ro ceil. l.rpl. Hugt> kiN:h. 1\·/brkfst. area. Easy tern1s. $62.500. 675-3000 ISLAND• KITCHEN \\lesa del \\far -Beautiful, plush and clean as a "'hisUe. Priced at $30.900. Name your terms, Ol'.'Jlet"s ears are wide open and ready IB listen 10 all ntfers. \Ve have the key. CALL Walker & Lee Reill ton Z79r) !{arbor Blvd. nt A<lams 545-9'191 Open 'Lil 9 P~I OPEN SAT/SUN. 1·5 311 FERNANDO Ba\bo!l. Steps to hay, 5 BR .. beaut, furn. Dbl. 011l'ns, 2 !'!'frig., 11·a~hcr. dryer. \\tany ! exlrtl.S. $63,ffiO. I Call: 673-3661 67~ E11t'1. associated 8AOKEAS-REALTORS %025 W lolboo 67).)66] • • Coldwell, Banker hear. lush carpeting and 1l1o1oc:oi-.~a.111y , drafl<'·"'· tlC'Lach<'d double i;:aragrs, profl"~sionally land- ~<"aprd thru·OUt. Enjoy rasy living on t h c badminton Fairview 646-8811 (anytime) 833-0700 644-2430 BIG HOUSE Macnab-Irvine courts, shuffle board put-~ -un~ grren, an11 heatrd' pools I DID YOU KNOW!! Realty Company \\llh ::2 other charn1ing Thal you can move Into a LITTLE PRIC E FREE nel~hbors. $~7.00 per month lovely J bedroom. 2 bath A sharp 3_ Bedroom 2111 .h~!h It "'on't cost 10 take 8 look includrs all mainlenance-tton1e with a f;jn1ily room home 'A'l!h tons ol hv1ng 31 this Univei·;,ity Park b;ir. and extPrior painting. Relax and 11"<33 foot heated and spa~r. A B-J-_G separate gain. A good site 3 hPdrooni, anrl Liv<' -FUL.L PRICE fli tf'N'd pool 1n i\lesM Verde fan11ly room with 1vet bar, family rooin. Lan::c JC"ni·rd 01\LY 'SJj,750. lor only $JJ.9j(), You mu.~t forn1a! d1n1n~. huge eas~ yarrl. Near clubhou~r. pools.J,.:!111!•11!111!111!1!1!11111!1C.,l lire h to hclir\'e it. Call right care re11r yal'~ l\'l1h f':111t tcnlHS l'OUl'ls. l::xlr<is . g:ir-a\\'ay. ~16-2313. tree<:. lots of gia~s 11.nrl .JO() ag(' rlrclrir l'\'f' _ ;!2() I\ inn~ THE REAL E.l:iTATERS sfl. ft. of ron('t'f'11', Bi;: 1900 1 , ·, 121~ HARBOR VIEW I L I 131""" 10'' • \1•11,:; u•r , 'ry1-r, • ,01\111. sq. 1· 111 e '"""• '0 Takr tlial Jonk 110\\" HOMES Do\\'n. CALL 673-S:lj() TIIE REAL EST,\TERS Macnab-Irvine 220 E.17rn 675-32 10 642-8235 IOR~l [ OLSON. ' ...... ~ JiEALrORS •\ ~ . , __ .. A pride of 01\'nerl'hip beach triplf'.'<. TY.n 4 BR &.: one 3 BR. Excellent ,;ummerl>A1n. tcr rental.~ 1tw11vlng net op. <'r:ll!nt; lnf'Ome of nvrr $1'1,00l)/yr. lnle1'C~ll'd? Take a look 11t thr price, Sll0,000, then c11ll &16-7171. TI·IE REAL ESTATERS RANCH HOME 2422 E. 22nd St.'. ·i:i.s. Stop ir1 • npcn f'verydfly'. ~ 4 1111~<' l>rrlrm~. :I hath~. ru!l- h)m hullt. nVf'r :'1200 sq. II. or t"f'NI country ]iv\ni:;. Shllkc mof, hta1f'CI pool. Lachenmyer Rlty Call 64&-39211 E\'CS: 673,4366 IF YOU'VE THOUGHT OF BUILDING O<i hll\"I" fl look al 1hi.~ \~I'll lnt'.ill'ri, lflrg• IJ't.• lttt 1n Nl'Vi · port Beach Mec.r tile t.:pper ""'· ()111 now for an ;ippofntm<'nt 10 l!<'l'. 61Wt50 Tl IF. ltEAl~ 1;:.i;TATERS 1 The fal!lfsl dr~w in tho \V•s! • , a D'RUy P ilol Clu.,Uied Ad. 5-12..,"'678 • ---·-· - 3535 E. COlls1 Hwy., CdM 675-7225 20 AC. Orange Grove, •River-Sll,400. 557-6837. 11ide ILI't'L 6 Yr. old tret'I. , _D_U_P_LE_X_, -13-1-,500-.-J-,-,.,-m-. Good income. Xlnt comer $3780. 2 BR,. lncd patio, Joe. for fut are awreciation. Stovt>, relrir, car, cpUdrp. 5"cri,fke $70,COO. 10% Down, Owner 2238-A SI a I e , bal. 9 yrs. 11.tay trade. O\VN-64~. F:R ~8-3263 POPULAR Monti~lltt split RED HOT ! i"'' "'°"'' ' + '· "'"· adult aection. Ree It. pool l Bedroom on choice R-2 lot. facil. $22,300. ·Owner , Ready to rTnl a top inve1t-s.ID-1481 mtnl at $20,50() • Only 10% do>A·n. CalJnow.6.J6.7l71.. E ASTSID E. 3 Bdnn, THE REAL ESTATERS fireplacr, hardv.'OOd noon. new carpels, drapes &c Balbo• Island pain I, Large fenced yd. $23.500. 640-76:2'7 l'.'.1MAC. 3 BR + detached SlO'.'.I dn, eld own car 1st. ~c. rm. College Park 3 Bd, 2 Ba, frpl + g.st heated pool home. Frplc &: hse ...,., it~ ba. Nr v.•at. extru $32.500 54>.1097. pat. 67~7 t ---~-----­r.tESA Vt>rde an'11., l sty, Corona del Mar 4 BR. &.: de n, 2\• ba, bltn&, $39,500. By o"''llr, aft 4 - DUPLEX S.l&-1758 PVT ply, no down to Vets, 2 1ty1 3 BR, 2 ba , many xtru, Jandscpd, $34,950. M:>-6174. SOtrrH OF HIGH\V A. Y Tv.·o 2 Bedroom units in one ol Corona del l\fan most de- sirable locations, Walk to China Cove, shopping and ---------- t>lementary sch&[. Fresh E11t Bluff In Huntington Beach, 4 bed- rooms and family room. 2400 Unobs tructed ocean v I t w sq, It. of IWtury. Deluxe lron1 all rooms o! this 3 kitchen with dishwasher. bed1'00m home, perched on Carpeted and landscaped se<:luded hill, waiiling dis- rea.dy lo mo\'e in. $37,TJO, tance to beach. Built-in ·only 10'1~ dO\\'n or libf-ral kitchen. Garage. Declu &. FHA tenn.s .. Phone 8-l?-7ilj large, terraced yards. $42,500 ntE REAL ESTATERS Call - $28,950 Rere.'s'a.cbance 10 be a win. ner for once. New carpet arid drapes. 3 Bedrooms 1 AO/an REAL ESTATE baths, covered patio, close 1190 Glenneyre St. to shopping. Yt>s, Virginia, t 494-S.173 549-0316 there ls a fireplace and \\'e * HARD TO FIND • have an assumable 7 \~ Fl!A Loan. Phone 84.2-2535 THE REAL ESTAiERS $1000 Under Market For quick sale. (BR, 1'' BA, like new ·rond_ FltA • VA • Conv. terms. Won't last, call Collins & Watts 962-5523 c & w In beautiful Laguna Beach. Ocean view home. 4 BR. 2 ba. Good cond. Nice yard. Xlnt neighborhood close to schools. Priced at '$36,500. ttwlhlmn ~ :;oon1 i..o.Gl.tlA. c.wr. 499-2800 * TiiREE ARO[ BAY * 01vner offering lor the ti1"5t time This large family home. * * * * * * 5 bedrooms, study, family NEW LOCATION 'oom, 5 ball", '"'! J:>'ll' paint, ne\v c;ui>et and 1ow 1-----------I in Huntington Beach yard, ne1\' kitchen including 21-562 Brookhurst breakfast room. Priced 11 \ price makes this todays best buy, Only $45,9j() BY OWNER (comer Hamiltonl L1rwin Realty, Inc. 540-5411 $79,j{)() lirm. 4.!fl-2159 for appt. Principals only, DIRTY FACE A REAL ESTATEP.S EXCLUSIVE CA LL 673-8";{)0 TIIE REAL ESTATERS Beaut park view condo. Im. mac cond. Dolores model . $46.000. 644-5468 Fountain Valley • • • 3 BR., 2 ba.. biln R&O. --6~1~,S-$~l~O~O--'"'" c10., <tow" Joc. N"d' paint & rep<tlr. Ottered u is - • • • 2 ON A LOT + Guest Apartment Older 2 be-drm honte with largr 2 story bldg .. "''ith 2 lleclrm + gueSt apt. Needs fixin' • priced right at. .• Neer Park &. Golfl 4 Bedroom, 3 Bathf Loan balance $29,500, at 6'1. '1e- at $2fi0. per mo total ~':Ith approx S5500 ' down. Undt>r priced $34.950. HAFFDAL REAL TY TOTAL DOWN O....·ner must sell 3 BR, 2 BA home with bllns ln Hunting. Ion Beach. Call 847-85..'U. The Real Estate Mart DESPERATE OWNER $31.950 M1s.~ion ~l.V ' 4!}!--0731 100· VJE\V or ocean &· Cat11li n11 . !'imall bu! buitdabie lot ~In Lagun11.. $7,5!10 full prier. l.11w dn & Q.\V.C. wl IO'f monthly payment5. Bk:r. 4!13-ll53 or $45,000 PERRON 642_1771 M2-4-105 Eve11: 541-2446 BLDR 'S S8criflce -Span. style nu custom 4 Br. S.32.500. $1500 dn. Loadt>d \\'/xtr11s. Shake11. Frpl. Cpt thruou!. Sprink, lndscpd, lncg. 10223 Phcaslllll Ave . 537--0380. FIXER UPPER S1rcial! 3 Bdrtn., 2 bath: 1 blk. to the beach. Needs 1011 of \\'Ork! J u s I nduced .s.i.000. °'''ner sailing around lhc Y.Orld &: v.•ant.s action! $.J4,9j()_ l\fakf' Offer! Delancy Real Estat• 2828 E. CORSI HI\')'., Cdl\1 4 BR, 2 BA, crp1s & drp~ I -'-'-'""'-'-'-'-"'-'-------1 thruou1. ~lode! condition. Lido Isle 64-1-7270 BY OWNER, S24,;o:J, 4 BR. 2 b11., bllns, frplc, covered palio fncd, nr achools. 642-22&t e CHOICE AREA e Huntington Beach Braut. exec, OOmc. Spac, 4 I---------- Submit on terms, KRAFT REAL TY 17171 B!oach Blvd .. Hntgn Bch &12-1-418 Eves: 962-6424 DIVORCE Force~ sale, near-ne\Y 3 BR. 2 BA, Ayres. built home, bl~. drps, crpts. frplc, bll'k \\'all, heated POOL, land· &eaped, 1 mi to ocean. A11- sume xlnt loan. $32.990. 968-2929 Bkr. NEW EXCLUSIVE Ba)1ront, i;andy beach Immaculate 3 BR., den, 3 baths ~"''n by app't. only $13.i.OOO LIDO REAL TY INC. 3377 Via Lido 673-7300 * BY OWNER-REDUCED! $69,950. 3 br, 2 ba, •ID' lot, lgr patio. 20:\ Via \\len!onf', Lide. !sir. Opl"n 111 <lay ren 13 14 & lS. Call 67~2681 or' ~a.-2.~12. Mesa del Mar BR. & ran1. rm, Perlect for entertaining & tun for The children in th(' htd. &: lilt. pool. Ocean view. l\fany t>ll:- lra.~. ]\.fay we sOOw you this? MORGAN REAL TY 673-66'2 675-6459 T ired Of Rent Receipts 3 Bdrm - 2 bath area Town- house prime area, priced right · $18.S!iO! Lg liv rm, w/w cpt, drps, W ID, n frig, lg patio It. POOL priv.! Full price $18,Sj(J -1ubmit. Cal! 847-1211 Huntington Harbour SACRIFICE $89,000 Magnificent 4 br 4 ba . 1valerfront home 'in Hun- tington Harbour. 101'1----------·I waterfront 57' dock. Cal! MESA DEL MAR * OPEN CAIL Y 1·5 * 338 Evening Canyon Rd. -- 2131592-.t&'.ll tor apl. Prin-3 bdrm, 2 bath, lgc kitchen 8' cipals only, lan1 rn1 with bullt-in11. W/\V carpe1in~. drapes, frpl, c:ov- tred pa1io. 2 car gar. S.11,500. LI"'" "'"l. Shore<llU.. '°' TIME· FOR only $58.000. Key to prlv. beach. 3 BR. 2 ba_ + fam. ;k:~~ng area k bltn, BBQ cl1_1_41_1:,~'~~'~~-··~ti~~,·~~·~~~.~~t~~"-Bc_h-I QUICK CASH Scenic Pl"Opertics 675-~726 NO DOWN to \'tlt'r11.ns or THROUGH A Costa Mesa IBA terms avallable. Pric- Pd for immrdiale &ale RI o .... ·ner ~clling: by appoinl- ment. 557,731;, Me1a Verde l\I 0 V ING-TRANSFERRED- Tired of fighlin& w i th tl'nanls? Call the problem r.olvers -South Coast Real Eslate, Properly Manage- ment Division. 125 • 000 -'rl"• "'"' ""'"' DAILY PILOT brush. Fantastic tree lined rrsidenllal atta and quiet, SUPER lo ca !ton -15 86 \\fyrUe...,·OO<I. 3 BR, fam, frplc. FHA-VA pcndini:;:. S27 .500. Owner 4.9'3-l!I01 or (1) 496-3949. trallic-frtt localion. Good 3 WANT AD bedroom. 2 bath home - 5-lj...84.24 m"'t b< '°Id!!! Ca II . 64•~5678 5-15--84?4, South Coast la 1Waltor1. $@~4U1v\-~"BtfS" The Puzzle with the Built-In ChucHe O Reorrcng• letters of the · four .terombt.d words be- la.¥ to form fovr simple words. I TOPLAS 1 I 11 I I I I HYDAL I r• I I I i f· r_:G;..;,Hc.,l,:..I ..:;E 1 -"11 c... 1 ".....t' i . Honorable dl!.chorg" I wos L=·==-=~-=~-=~--·~on KP In the ormy so much I r .gof a medico! dlKliorge. I N I D E 0 I hod -hands. ·-t h-5-T-'-t7-,_"-r::-,.--! O Cbmolet• th• chucll• quo\itct I 1 by IJlllng ln th• .mlulng word you dewlop from llep No. 3 below. & PRINi Nt.W&ERCD lETlERS IN THESE $OU.AR $ 0 ON5CIAMS<f l ErTIR5 10 I , GET ~NSWfP. I I SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSlflCATION 900 '-- Newport B•ach PANORAMIC VIEW of jelly k main channel. ! BR., 4 ba. OOmc v.·/~ormal din. rm., study: 2 lrplcs, v.·et bar. Newly redecor. On M.ndy beach. $169,500. UH Baysldt Dr. By 1pp't. Bill Grundy, Realtor 83.1 Dover Dr., N.B. &12-4621'1 * On Bay W/Slip * Brt'alhtaking View! Pool -Balcony • Elev. [)c.. luxe 2 bdrm Apt. Inco mpar. able value • only $:i2r>J. MO~ REAJ. TV 64::!-8732 BALBOA COVES WATERFRONT Prime Joe. 3 BR. 2 bl.. 1lnglc 1tory, Newly delw, Fenctd )"d, 30 ft. boal allp, $79,500 Biii Grundy, Realtor 8l3 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-Q NE\YPORT Uch, by ov.·ner. Do\•t>r Shores \V e 5 I c 11 f f area, \Valkil'l6t d~tllnc-t to 11\1 school!", 5 SR., 4 k Fam rm, filttn!tl Ir heattd lge pool, Lite lot & circular d1·lvl\, Idea l hom f' rt1ll!llc~Uy priced. 6-1&-461)3 1-BR. sh4rp k clean. 3'li Cl\t1Un11. Dr. Cpl~. rlrps, Gar. ~111lute c.-pl~. Nn pcls • Slt'.i \\lo. Broker 646-2-11-1. ~ . .. . • . . . . ._ ... . .. . . .. . :JO DAILY PJlDT Thu"41, r.b...,, 11. 1911 I~ L-b ... _ ll!l I ~-"'-I[!] I ,..,. ............ l ~ 11 ,..,._u, .. -J~ ~~~ l~I l~I l~I l~I ---_.,. .. Newport a..c:h RMI E1!1tt Wo-114 Hou,.. FurnloNd 300 Ho-Unlum. 305 Townhouse Unfum. 33S Apta. Fum. 360 AFts. Fum. 360 Apt. Unf\lm, Coste M•H l6S Apt. Unfurn. EASY Lht!nr~ 2 BR, 2 bt. G1ner1I Cotti M111 Huntington Beech Co1t1 Mtla Newport 8eich '°"~• Xlnt cond. Job \VE are the ucludve apna tranisltr, $26.500. Onr, tor a national c:orpora.tSon • $125 • UtU pd. Lrt Bach w/ 2 BR. l9S'T-<: 01arie St. 3 BJ.l, l ~ BA. carport &. e $30 WEEK It UP OCEANFRONT -on 1hf" &U-4i~. NEED HOl\fES !or ttansftr-kit, prlv pallo, Avl now, $135/mo. No dot._ Call Patio, blr·I~, w/w crpta 1 SR. or sTUDIOS tum w/ beach. s br, :z ba, maa;nlfi. BY Ownf:r J BR, dm. 2~1 ffL Call kM:al qtnt before BIU9 a.i~n * 645-0111 642.-2259 or &&-i011. & drp.s. Ava.ii 3/10/n S200 comp!. kitchen Call eltc.). Ct'tll view w/prage. Of/. BA, Pool $38,000. 1936 l !1y!!ou!!!!l!!ls!!L!!84!!!!!-66!2.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!P $225. Sttpa to Bch, Cha.rmlna: 4 br hse near So. COi.at ~· ~isJsut &. c:lnnl"' f'J'ff linen,. htat~ pool. air. !k':BSOll rental. 1.Llil incl, Te.rt.slta Ln, N.B. 6'12-237!. A U . In ~ do 2 BR. Fnit Sundeck. Yrty. Plaza. $20 mo. n4r.>34·2311 · • cond, TV & nwd 11ervlce $2"JO mo. 646-4!33 or Pl. ruts •"""" loea n Blue Beicon *,,."Ill ~-""'"°",.,·--,"7'-.,.--Irvine avail. 548-4757, *223 OCEANVIE\V Ave for v.•anted by pvt buytt. Coad --~---; ..,--,~-=====--~ sale by owner. View ot a.,y not Import.ant. 67":>-lSlL B•lboa lsl•nd 3 BR, 2 BA, pool, lrg: play 3 BR 2 BA ~~~~·~~1o:i~f. r:~'hst * BA YFRONT * & Ocean. 54~7983. 1.;;;.==..;..;;=;.;..---· I rm. 2 trplcs, crpts, drps, Del 1 d 1------~---1 1..EASE on houJe (any cond> 3 BR + a:u,st rm, Avail bltlna $2!K> mo 963--02~9. & 1'1 amOy beautifully de<.'Ot· • 642·26U • uxe . new 'I ,ewr, n~w Newport Heights w/klt suitable for bid&: 45' Feb thru June, 0 fl en 4 BR, 3 ba, Cpl!. drps, bltni, alcd, lush ca.tpet.ing & drap. B/Amerlct.rd e M/Cbarge draperies. 2 BR s, 2 BA s. I ~boo~t.~(~21l~l~28!~-~258~1~~~ I sat I s u n P. r.f • 2 2 o romplettly ttfurbished, $300 r.s. Minimum ca.re landacap. * Studio Apt $11 0 J.175· 3121 \V. Coast H\\')', Npt I i Amelhysl, BJ. 675--8196. (213) 681-2709, n;...noa. ing. Short wtJk ro scho(IJ, 2 BR. apt!. a vail. now to CHARMING MANOR Two stcr,,.• prestige homt financial $340 per mo. Jl.tAPLE ST, NEAR Im{ mont!'Uy rates. • * '* • El Puerto M esa Apts *'**'* 1 Bedroom Apts. $130 up Incl. utilities. Also furn, Pool Ii Recreation arta. Quiet Environment. Oft ~treqt parking, No child. r,n, no pets. l9j9·1961 ~laple Ave. eo~t~ tt1e.sa It•. J -=c-.,-on~•-d"°o"°l "'M"'•-r---11 ,0--0"v'-•r"°"S~ho"'r"'•"'•----1 shoppLng,Pool, teim!.s&£"0U. * 1 Bedroom $130 June 15th. Weekly or ll'ith a spirkl!fti: POOL. 4 "-;miimmmm;;~m;J ~C~o:;•l;•c:M=•~H=-;;:::--:=l-4 BR, tarn nn, den. bltn . '4S.OJ4t Associated Broke" 673--3663 ~:~ :ib~.·~~~:.u;:~ • Xf!"'T localion.Near 1~ ;,:1~~;:::,~~~~30view. ~red h1·11 *sR*Crp $135 * * ~e~~.1~i~Yini~rao;:~~~~ Park-Lik• Surroundings epts/drps. A ttAI family Business 200 ping-3 Bedroom, 2 bath E.'l:·l="°'o--------\W1 I . ls, drps, stove, re. 642-6478. * * * * homf', $55.000. Stt this today, Opportunity ecutlve home. Built-ins, El Toro trig, Carport, laundry rm. Nol,2~B~R~-'---w-&J~k--bo~-h-I QUIET 1-2 & 3 BR APTS, CAL L ti) '''·l414 y~~~"!'.' :~~~,':·pd~~~~ te!~l;lo...B~R.~.""'2-ba-.-.-b-J-tim-.-,-P-,.-. Univ. p~!;;r, !NW :f~~ ~\~~~o:.~i: ~ ~/~7_nY:.ar~;. A~~ ~: ~~~.*BAl~~ "'.~~ ...... ...., _,,, "·r. ·-" "--.• ,,,. .. 2. car gar, lease_ sm. Ca!t An•...i .... O't'>-~. N .. s"'-'g • Adul" o-•y ~....._.. ARE YOU CVNCERNED~? '' .~ nc rou .:x..: ..., • ., ,, .... ..,. ~ l BR. $120 & $!25. Spacious. * CUTE NAUTICAL l BR • '"'l' "" '" deposit ttqUired. 54~. Aviul. imml!d. 496-=t0 MARTINIQUE APT$ AEA-LTY !nvestia:ale this first time D I F "S Adults. Pool. Ideal for untU JunP See at 2D8 43rd N••r Nt •por1 P••I Office orf'r to distrib llte amazing Lido Isle Huntington Beach up exes urn. -Bache'lors, 548-9633. 1993 St NB aft{;&: wknds lm Santa Alla Av,., C~f Cost• Mes• * TOWNHOUSE * 2 BR. l \~ BA, crpls, dJ1>1, p.ario. AdWis. Sl60, 13~ E. ~lelody Ln. 548-1168 2 BR. Unfurn. Chlldre.n olr. No, pell, He&ted Pool. Cpt.1/d1'P~. l2ti ~Ionit V11ta A\'e., CM ATIRAC like ne\V 1·2 BR. Le: pool, cp!s, drps, displ, utl pd, 1884 J\lonrovla . 548--0336. • BEAUTIFUL I !: 2 BR, Contemporary Garden Apts. Patios, fr p I c s , pool. ~14>-$160. Call ~Jl.63. LRG. 2 & 3 Br. Crpta, dtpt. freshly painted & clean. .Kids ok. 64&--0627 or &12-ti344. PRJV pa~tio~l"°"B°"R-. 01°\l-.8°A·.1 studio triplex, 'i1 blk l71h St. shop, 25.l Cabrillo . 642-{MSI. OCEAN view, 211 La Jolla, · rod Church . . •1-. Apt \ll "".5542 new automouve P uct. 5 BR. ~1;. b•. \\'llf, .. lront [.ARGE & old 2 BR 1''/big Ne..wport Blach LGE 1 BR c "•· ~ 4 BR, f ha, Rumpus nn , _ -wJ d '·• • FUR ~ B h I & I B apl &Ya Feb. LRG 1potlt.ss l BR. C1.to:, & 1 500 66 u.JW cost ouou coruiwner ,. ho~ \\·/dock on Li'do Nord yard. Needs fixer upper ac • or r. 5 thru June $I7S mo dl•- • Bar, t9, · MS-57 · mands make It a must for SlSOOmon th' ''nanl.s e.'lf. low rent. $165. NE\V oceanfront upper Exe ptionally nictl 7141521--0988 •'m-sooo. · lNDMDUAL PRIVACY drps.-encl gar, pa!io. A ta, S46-S289 every auto. Minimum re-Bill Grundy, Ritt £.IZ-4620 19311 Beach Blvd. 4!&-1901 duplex .. 4 BR, 2 ba, $300 2110 Newport Blvd. CM AbULT LIVING no pets. S135. 646·1762 quirement.r; begin at Sl.7%. <lr 496-39'19. mo, winter. 50U Sea.shore ' San Clemente Lrg dlx 2 Br, 1 1~ B~ wtgar. 2 Br, bltns, carpor1, $135. lmm•d•'•t• returns posSible. Newport Beach , BR •• d bi t Dr <lr 213/696-1124 $30 \VK • 1 per, wt kit & 1tor Park-like at· 1 br iocl util !125 91U • • crp..,, rps. ns, ' $35. Maid t<.er, linens. TV BAOlELOR, J b!k trom ' · · • Company program provides l.1'0BILE Home, Lido area, pllflelling, 2-car gar. $180. Duplexes Unfurn. 350 & tcle. Sealark J\1otcl, ocean. $80/mo. Util pd, Call mosphere. Fncd Pall 0 ·1 Valencia, 642-1431. ~ inventory buyback, estab-J BR. king bed, crp!g, patio, Avail 2120. Nr sch! & 2301 Npl Blvd. 64&-7445 492-4613. ~:s/bltns. Water pd. 1 Br, &-Sid,, Crpts, drps, lli lished acoounts, national ad-pool, Bay 500'. Adulu, no shop'g. ~2207 (It 213: HO Cosia M1sa QU IET, studios Sll5, 1 BR's, Apt. Unfurn. 365 2437 Ora~ge Ave. fD) Sl~ bl!ns, 1 child <lk, No pels. Acr1ag1 for sale 150 1 \'errising, proven sall"S meth-pe!s, $200 mo. 673-3409 1-2438 1 Br., unfurn dupJ,x. $!6 S12S. No chldrn or pets. 2619 Santa Ana Ave (LY s155 S145. 644-1103. t--.-¥6-A_cr_e_R_•_n_c_h __ , ods andt field di~tion. ll OCEANFRONT' 3 Br, 2 Ba, 2 BR, 1~1: BA, Condo, all mo. 165 E. 18th St. Costa 2135 Elden Ave, Cl\1, gee Generel SEACLTFF ?>Ianor Apts. l 3_B_R_,_2_B_A-.-..,-w-l-y-,.-.~,-c,-I rn I\"&tional Fores! East <lf Y00 1 att orodtereste~-~n an ex· cp!/drps. dlx, Wntr. $250. bltns avail no1v at ;iss. Mesa. 673-SBU. mgr Apr ti. &: 2 BR l V, B S 40-SlSO nu cpt.s & drps, bltns, Capistrano. An ide~I land c us1ve P uet i1..uu a P':°· 1 Adlts only, no pets. 673-8088 . mo. ·can Mr. Hoe a: e e, D I ATTRACTJVE E-.:side Studio S30 mo~e in a~~~nce +: patio. $165. 645-4337. in\'t'Stment and \\·eek.end ::::. area, All or wnte Houses Unfurn. 305 Sl5-84zt, Agent. ':fu~:~~r Unfurn. 355 apt. 2 BR . 11~ BA. Pl:>ol. rei;. disC()unt. Crpts, drps, 2 BR, l'i-S Ba studio, $175, hldea\\'l.f. Unlimited pottn-' l\f Kell I SPOTLESS 3 br, bltns, 1~4 No pels. &16--6610. RENTAL FINDERS patio, pool, infant ok. 1525 ulil incl. Patio. 339 Cabrillo. : 1~:~'::' lf::~10f;,~ Garside ~~ctni~C5, !ne. Genera I ::i·s P=~ic =~-Le~~ Newport Beach LRG 1 BR. \\'/w crptg, Frei To landlords Placentia Ave. 54S-2682 5'18..8803 <lr 846-3648. \\'ith terms. ~ Eut V'me Street 3 Bdrm., 2 balh, dbl. garage, req'd 847_7979 \VE ha tals' A ts bltns, 1 adult, no pet!. $132. 645..0111 VILLA MESA APTS. * * QUIET 2 BR, pr R. s. Brov.·n ex,. 493-4i7~ Salt Lake City, Utah SU21 Fireplace, huge kitchen, car-· · homes; v~7u~I. Winte~ & Yearly. 642-S520 43~ W. lttll,C•te w ... 2 BR, Priv patio. Htd pool. & pool. Cpt.s/drpa. Adults Phone (801) 262.3m pets and drapes. Great loca. l Bedroom partiaU! 1urn. }'early. Avail. now! li1'BcdrooB<(i;;;;;m~,:-;;.i~1-;u~tilm;titi•;,~,l$llirlli·il~~~==;..=.:_.:.:_:.,.,..::.: 2 car encl'd gar. Children only, no pets. 642-30U Apartments ~r sale 152 tion $220 per month. Call Near beach le .:shopPl"&'. S115 Abbey Realty 642_3850 per month. Gt2-S466 days • $180 New 2 BR. apt! bltns, ,.,·elcom,, no pet! plea!e! $150 • 2 BR. 1~> BA. Cpll, PART~ER-WANTED-w· lk & L mo. Rea..lonomics, 6'1....o700 545-8308 eves. shag cpts, drps, p&ho. gar. $165 mo. 719 W, Wilson. drps, stv-<lwhr, a:ar. No LIDO ISLE • )tust u.crilice . 6 beach apts. AU turn. 6 car ga~. 1).. loan. Lease land to yr. 2018. OY.·ner. 642-W97 days. 4 Units (3-1-l·'ll Bargain at $55,750, ID% down . 83.1-8090 24 hrs. Bkr. ANTIQUE BUSINESS a er ee agt. • 35S E. »h. CM 642-t!m ,.._1251 ""· 766 w. Wiloon. W-7958 TRANS .. must move by eat· 1 l~ * Sl;l per .,.,·eek u P MESA E DE RE"alton Jy Jilarch nu 3 bdrm. 2 Apwtrnentsforftant llirl w/kitchens, S25 per week Corona del Mar -V R DLX 2 Br, 1% Ba. Studio. Party man I woman v.i th J45-0oi65 _, • _ ... up Apt.s. ~IOTEL, 548-9755, 2 BR, cpts, drps, bltns, wash/ Bltn.'.5, Cpts/drpa, No pets. $15,000 cuh to invl!'St in a ~~---~~~~~{lh~•~ .. Jb~lt~"~"'·~""~"~·~·~"'r": I :~;~;;;;;;:.:;~~l~~~y~}i~~~~Jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim dry attach. Locked gar & Av! Feb. L $160. ~1 Ve"" •Ycitin<>, profitable &fl. l BR cottage, c:ple OK .••. $90 $265. 53&-7332 ())" 827-3445 NICE 1 BR. Dplx. Quiet. t , --•-t N h , .,, ~ • .., .,._ b Adul s or ...... 5 '-'V:<e s. r. s pg. LG 2 Br 1% ba atudio apt ttque &: import busineSll. 1 BR furn C.M .. •·• ...... $100 3 BR, 2 BA. Dbl gar, walk Aptr. Furn. 360 ""'P· Y garages. ts -$1.50, Owner 540-5599, 548-3209 • ' Ideal Jocation, ~ dont mid. 2 BR house tr1.r furn •.•••• $95 lo bch. Many extra&, Cpta, over 30. No pets. 548-1011 ~~/ no pel!!I, families only. Priv die ki.'1:-figure volume. Add i. 3 BR, kids/pe!J OK .•••.. $150 drps, bltn8, S2l.J 96&-2373. General DUPLEX 1 Br fW'tl, quiet, 'Q. SHARP 3 BR, 21,.i BA, 1000 t ~pa~"-'-· "'~-'-°'-""'_S_I_. 11_40~·- Businesr Property 154 tionalcashneededtoexpand 2BR.lacr,horseranch $165 Newport n-ich no dog!. Nenr shopping. sq. ft. Studio apt, crpl!, 2 BR, 11.oi ba .rudlo, Crpu, 2 l•-1 65 u. drps, nr Sci. Cst Plaza. $200 d bltn Adults. ••""' FOR SALE • dt>IU.'\:e pen· purehasing power. Solid joint 4 BR stry cuv sq fl •••• l HOLIDAY PLAZA Mg..272(1 ON TEN ACRES D . by 973 Va.I · rps, s, ...,... thouse Prof. Bldg, ocean venture 1UTangement, active STAR*LET 776-7330 VIE\V <ll Lido, ocean & DELUXE Spacious l BR $155 _SHARP 2 BR. I & 2 BR. Furn. & Unfum. ~~ 54~';i8 Mgr. encta.. 54~3598, 642-7674 vie.,.,·. Sa.n Clementr 492-1384 or inactive. WholesaJe.reta.il VERY CLEAN 4 BR, 2 BA Catalina. Clean, sharp 2 BR furn apt $135. Heated pool. }fr.ated Pool. Adults no pets Fireplaces I priv, patios. ~ -2 BR. Crpts, drapes, operation. Beach area. If )'OU home in a prime area. Fully & dtn home, beaut crpt'd Ample parking. No children (teen ok). &12.95.,,.' Pools Tt.nnjs Contnt'I Bkfst. Quiet Adult Living bit-ins. Child <lk. 2451 Elden can start now & have the crptd & drpd. Large fenctd ..: rp · s O•uY, no pe s -no pets, 1965 Pomona, 900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-2611 cps, "'"'· a · Ave .. #2. 642·300?. Commercial • d 'd Adll -• t ~ 2 BR. Sh'" t bl ... -c.; ut Property 158 nl'CCSsaJY [n~-estmenr. please yard, $225 per mo. Call $395 mo Incl gardener & C~t 1 BR. &: 2 BR, l% BA. CAfacArthur nr Coast Hwy) lndscpd_ $170. incl util, \\Tite: agent S4S--ll4l wattr 642-1237 a.ft 6 & CHATEAU LAPOINTE Cp.~s. drps: nr shops;. pool. Adlts only, no pel!!I, EARN 15°/o SI00,000 Cash Dov.'n $170,000 Loans a t 7~.S';O "AAA" TENANTS ,lJ,00(, sq tt . OC Airport W .R. DUBOIS INC. * 545-711i6 * OLLY 0 STUDIOS wkood• Ut1, pd , 1884 ~tonrov1a. • -2'1 Av-•do S• * 64" -" 3 BDIDf., Family nn., park • DELUXE furn 2 Br. apt. • PARK Your car &: walk, ., ..,... · u-v~"' P.O. Box 1996, N.B. like yard. Coat& Mesa. Kids WATERFRONT l BR. 4 Ba.. Pool. Close to shops. $150. Dana Point nr ocean, nr shopping. New HARBOR GREENS OK brk. $200 a month. NO home. Newly redec. On san· Adults no pets apts. 2 BR, 2 ba, beam GARDEN & STUDIO APTS Launclry-S.lf Service FEE. 540..1120. dy beach. $1.000 mo. 1941 Pomona Ave, c.~1. SINGLE, TV, pool, pe ts ok, cei~ing, Irplc, many xlras. B h 1 2 3 BR' fro 1110 In major shopping center. FREEWAY H nd 2 BR BW Grundy RHr. 642-4ti20 $25 & up, \\'k\y. Dana $235 & $Z50 at 330 llC . , , s. m . ~lost deluxe in area. 2years a Y -• 4 BR. l BA bit •· * CUSTOr.r FURNITIJRE i\1arina Inn "'"' C•··i :1\larguer1te 675-4873 2700 Peters<>n \\'ay, C.M. RIO. Retr. Child pets ok · ns: crp..,, RENTAL. Se~ ad class 810 ' ' ............. ,_.., 548--7983 • ' 546-0310 ~·oung. Carpeted, color TV, $140 drps, ~n v.·ater. SJ7;>. Pools Call S48-348l ' llv.-y. · l -~=-~=~==-ICH'=A°"R:~"'°'l°'N°"G-.,.Lo_gu_oa__,Bt""'°oc"·h· I paneJ,d; equipped by 1-lay. ALA RPnlals e &;5-3900 & tennis crt, v.'3.lk to beach. Huntington Beach * COROLIDO APTS * NEW DUPLEXES store~ & a pr. on Coast Hv.y. tag. Xlnt trade, attendant. 3 BDRM. + family nn., full Alsc: 4 BR. $325. &i&-7668 Balboa Island 2 B~. s tudias & street levels, 1.2.3 BR, Washer/dryer hook· Lot 80' X 10.J' to alley. Priced below ttplacement I BR ..... ~.... & 1 n 306 Sl85 &: up Ptnthowts $22.0 I · ~ · dlning rm., built-ins., brk. -..... -..y c ea . BEAUTIFUL FUR.i'J. AP'l'S. · -up, enc gar, patio, """" arr. Ful!y ltai;ed. Ownt't ll'lll cost. Stt al Baker & Fair. $390 a month. NO FEE, Catahna Dr. Cpls, drps, 3-BR, 2 BA, yrly lse. w/w $1~$l6S. Quiet. priv, patio, Dshwhr, f.rpJ, dbl carport. Mesa Verde area. 546-1034 finance of i.5'~. Bkr. \iC'\\', Costa ~1esa, then call N'wport, ~1720. Gar. Mature cple. No pets. rrpls, drps, blt-irui. Ph: 2 ... ~-~,, ,_1,, ,_,,,,, Pool, 673--3378 "·" . C .~ "'00 °-tty r Jo•--•-r 5 P'1 $'~'I B k '" 0 •1 • 61""4-c..i\Uvl}C ... ., " ""'"' u• 2 BR. l BA. Garden Units. """ .... onom1C!l orp. o..M11 = o "'" ...,....,. "· MINI RANCH. C a r p~t s, u.;>nO, ro er ~....... .r.u" rm, locked sep. aar, Pool. FOR RENT: BRAND NEW Shag crpts, drps, dshwht', Condominiums _m~~''°..,...1-=-"°"~.,--..,-7 I drapes, stove. $140. OCEANFRONT-3 br, 3 ba, Balboa Peniniula Sauna. Rec rm. unfum 2 Bdr, 2 batb, upper patio, beam ceili~. frplc, for sale 160 • Tak~t .Re'staurant • ALA Rentals • 645-3900 bltns, cpU, drps, Partly 17301 Keelson Ln. (1 blk \V. duplex, $250 mo.. lease. gar. 2650 Elden. 537-0062 ATTRACTIVE Q ua!. Toy,'nhouse by o.,.,"nt.r. 2 bdrms. 212 Ba, 2 gar, nice al'ea. Pool, sauna. e!c, etc. Exe. finance. 548--0120 Chicken, shrimp, ett", Bu11)' $l4~ R d 2 BR-N. ard furn. SZSO Winter. 646-6300 • sz· WK-OCEANFRONT of Beil.Ch Blvd, on Slater). Vogel R e a l t y , Cd:\1 . aft 7 pm & ~n. $165/mo. local io n. Low l,a.se, Immac. .:i • ' eek. · ice Y • or 644-8397. Lo 1 .:i Ba hel 1 BR t ;•~84~2-~7~8'~8~ . ..,...~-..,...=~= 1..;6~7>-~20~211;·c,.,,,..,;--:=-c:-'7.C"".I BEAOr'C'OW;;tt:;(:i;;;;\iilla: colld\Uon. Great for a gar rot 0 • ve Y c on:, -·1; • BEAOT, Counlly Club Villa. Blu9 Be•con * 645-0111 ON THE BEACH 1 BR. 1\laid servict>. Pool. Util. BACllELOR apr. partly furn . 1/EAR !>each & sfore.s New 2 BR 111 BA t ti couple. Sl5,SOO. -----~~--=I Stove, Relr. Child ok. $13.'i e 67>8740 e ~d. 11ove, retrig, w I gar. 2 br & 3 br apl.'.5. Crpts, • ' • pv pa 05• UNTVER.51TY REA.LTV NICE 2 BR, 2 Baths, yard ALA Rentals • 645-3900 furn. Adults only. SS.Olmo. drps, frplc, pvt patios, $2.10 crpf, drps, bit-ins. S2fo0 mo. 3001 E. Cst Hwy. 673-6510 enc. gar. pet ok. $155 NPT Island 2 BR tirtpl & Corona def Mar 536--4G7S ()t 536-4979. 918 10 $31.J. 316 l.larguerite. ~~~=e~~zr11 J eanne POPULAR Z'llonticello split Investment ALA Rentals • 6&3900 2 •1,,. Palm 675--8472 or 213/797-2300 I """'~""""-="CC.~~""" level model 2 + 2 den, ..,~°""--"--~,~B~R~2~B~A.-B~I -t sep, rec. sm. rooms -• I b r 'h J · NE\V 3 BR O\VnE"rs unlt, f:rpl, Opportunity 220 ~M>J • .:xp. • tns, Ba. pr, $295 yr. 673-0883 r urn. S ar 1 n1• &. c e6•0°2· $125-$135. LGE, modern 1 br UNIQUE lrg 2 or 3 Br, adull section. Rec & pool J--"'----'-----1 children welcome. Nr shop'g. !ill. hr ocean; crpts, drps. etc. dbl ba. Cpts, drps, 2 car all b!tns, shag crpt~. drps, facil. $22.300. Owner . ASSOCIATE Bl B * u•ottl Parle Lido 3 BR. 2~~ BA Heliotrope, &l&-6300 o r ·'09 ""II. "'° ·~i. 841•51~ gar. S28a mo. 673--6"'", closed garage. Irnmed. oc-~1481. PARTNER ue eacon _, Cpls, drps, bit-ins. 644-S3!l7. ., ~ ;.o.:>Q-t.<o "" 6'i3-{in9. ...,., cupancy, 540-19 7 3 <lr Income Prop1rty l'6 LONG HAIR OK. 2 BR. Fireplac' $275. 642--87!17 BACHELOR, near .:shop'g. 1 BR, $135 per mon th I=.~=--~~~-~ 54:rz:21. RIO. Refr. enc. gar. $1.50 S t A H • ht . including utilities BR.AND new 2 &: 3 Br apt.:s.l·L~R~G""°~l-cb-~J~•·"'°'•---b~l~t - OELt.'XE f oUll)\ex ntar Dis-) ~5.000.$20.000, ~lust be avail neyland Hotel. 2 Jar~ 2 Bed unme~. & acti\·e manager room and 2 split \eve! 3 Bed. expentn~. $25K to PlK an- room luxury units. \\'all to ~ually, ~~eek start Call ... 1 tin ,_ b .1, tmmed, ,;,.rr . .,,92, 9 azn. S pm. ""-' carpi! g, waPt'S, W . ins. IO'C: dov.n. Ch\"Mr v.i.ll SS.:£0-1-z guarante-ed-moMy carry 2nd or consider )'OW' mak-er-oo ume req'd. '>Vrit" home , Submit rrades. Full C'.u.s:lfied ad Xo. ~05, Daily pnce S69.~. For further I ;.'~. P . 9· &:r.< 1560, Cosla information. pleut c&ll Tom -.ru. Calli. ~ ALA Rentals • 645-J900 •n • na e1g s Priv patio. Adults, $125/mo, Tradewinds RHy 847-8511 So of hwy. 322 ~tarruerite. r, ~ .,.., ns, UliJ incl. 646-4095. .,~.1342 61,,.....,.. crpls/drps, dshwshr. $125 • Nice 2 Br. Dupltx. • £\TALL 2 br, .acre for ~~~~------DELUXE Bachelor Units .,....... or ->-"'"""'· downstairs, no pets, 2 Park·like yd, J\laturt adults. 2 horses, 20271 Acacia St. Costa Mesa Walk to Ocean. Util pd. 3 BR, 2 Ba, cpts, drp.s, stove, children Ok, nr schls. Sl6S. Blue Baacon * 645-0111 $175. 61~2259. . ,. LINOBORG CO. 536-2579 ttitig, d\\'hr, garb displ. ~5-321 5 \VALK TO OCEAN' . 1 BR. University Park REMARKABLY lido Isla S250/mo. 67;)..2G9S. BEAUT. 3 Br, 21h Ba studto Cottage partly furn $115 UNBELIEVABLY Costa Mesa apt. Bltns, new crpts, drps ALA Rentals e 645-l9ll EXTRAORDINARILY BEACH A 1 Fum'sh d I•---------& paint. A\'l Feb. No pets. 2 BR., l balh .......... $225 BEAUTIFUL p s. 1 e I $19.:i, 998 El cam in 0 . $130 • Bring the kiddies 2 3 BR., l~i baths •••••• s:zss V I D" G d A 1 Br.. & Bachelor. Garage. FAIRWAY " "'S B I A ti l/l l BR d' a "ere or on p S 1200, 1225. $2511. 320 Nord. >I~ \ r, \11 gar. \'a . . & 1n. nn. •••··· SJ:z,;; Ad It t Bl B * ,,."Ill u s, nope .'.5 714 : 642-4097 ATIRACT. Like new. 1 BR. ue ••con _....., 3 BR. & fam . rm ....... $325 Putling gret'n, ,vaterfaU le o-''---C"C~~~---1 YlllA APTS Oshwhr, crpls, drps, bltru;. 240 Capistrano Beach 4 BR., 2~ baths ........ S32S stream, Dowers cveryv.•here, Newport Beach ' Htcl pool. All u!il pd. Only 4 Bdrms., 2Y.r baths, view .fJ' pool, ttc. room, billt!.rds.1 ----------$150. Jnquin!: 307 A\l'OCado Ponrr \\1t.'1 Monty to Lo.n Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc. ;n262l. E ... ,..,,,,, """"" 1st TD Loan 1 BR. built-ins, ne w TurUt Rock •••••.•.•• S360 BBQ's, Sauna, furn .. unfurn, Just For 2 & 3 BR's Apt 9, 6-1~4 carpelin;. 7 BR., 4~t baths •• , ..... $4,j(J ~ingles, 1 BR, 1 BR + dE:n, Private patio, pool · indiv. • • • • ?ltd l Oranie. C '.\t OCPLEX ~.~ M1r. W-Ul5 • -l t.:O.l!'S. 1 yr M . Comer :n~. ~.3 BP .. 2 8.\. ~r: :.2 B?.. : B.\, 1 r.x:ely t::::'=. ::! B? .. ! &A 4 ?\"': n: c. ~!. ~. :m ~tr. ~::&'I P 0 ~ U. WI 31 ~-r.n. Two 2 tr. ~. J-LB. t"~Jl tm ~. UIJ:l dailn. ~ ":'i ]:!\TEP.EST Slla )lo. .J96.23l9 alt 6 2 BR F 135 SE" laundry lac. 1 BR Duplex. $123. Pleasant TD L \ 2000 p tom ; •. ~I! s· I Ad It Near Orange Co. Airport t. garden surroundings. Quiet 2nd Oan 1.Co.oo.;r..;°"'=_d,.oo;l..;M;;.;;;•--•_._ __ 1 Be .. "ce~~~n:bo.'&"N64o•~rt70 1ng e U S UCJ. Adults only, & close to shop'g, No pets ,~ ... ' ,,-' 20122 Sa I Ao A <lr children. 548-(i920 3 BR. 2 BA. \\'lllk to beach 2 Blk N, 19th. St:iuth Bay CJub is a w~le n a . a ve. Tern11 ~ on eQ'Wt)'. t school. Baloony. bl1in!i, f Iii d . d ~rgr. Mrs. Joachim, Apt 3-A $120 • Lrg, clean 2 Br. Cpts, u • 2171 545-0lll CASA de ORO new v.·ay () e esigne "-16 621' d lri G & -.&• retrig, ,,,a!her, dn·er, \rork just for gingle people. It's " · a rps, re g, range. as Sl!r.1:•;i: Ha:-bor at"ta 11 yn. bench. garage. Ulil pd, $375. "SINCE 1946.. CASUAL Calif. Living In a flln I~ving "'·ith \\1ltm, dY· [l CORDOVA Ap!S ~~~ ~~7 No pets. <h·er 35· S.tt&er Morfta .. Co. I mo. Yrly leue. Ptts & l st \\'e.rtern Bank Bldg \\'arm Jl.1cditerranean atmos-namlc neighb<>rs, It's a .,...,... "' _,..,"' ..... "-... liiTiith_ ...... _iitiiiiiii I children ok. 673-5456. University Park phere Spacious color co-heL!th club, saunas, s11.i~-OPEN }IOUSE SAT/SU~ U \\'ON 'T BELTEVE! $36.'.) Lease. 2 BR, 2 BA . Days 133-0101 Nights <lrdin&.tM apts ·designed & ~lni;i: pool, party room: ~ii· 0071 Charle St 6-12-4·liO This lrg, clran 2 Br. Ftp!r. r-;,v.·, Fantutic v\ew. On turnlsbed for style & com-liards, ind~r g-0U driVlng REFRESlThlENTS served in Quiet. Adil!;. Nr OCC. 109 !he beach. Adull!!I only fort • Heated pool • Kitch-range. 1enn1s courts.. pro recreation room. Be SUtt to A • C!Mll'brook Ln. 6/;T.>59. 3 BR. 2 ha. homt •.•• S325 en w/ indirect lighting • shop and resident tennis pro, the Ch . 1 2 '* 2 BR. f'lf'C bltns, lock. 2 BR, 1 BA. close 10 to\\1\, 3 BR. 2 ba. fam. trn ... $340 Dclwi:e RIO. Adults only. No Single 1 & 2 Bedroom lux· see se arnung lr ~ar. ~fesa Verde Area. Big adults. SISJ per mo. Ca.II Tur11e Rock 4 BR, Vu • $i75 pets, ury aPartmenb with all the BR Spanish style, prestige rlosels, $1)5/mo. No pt'ls. ag~nt &42-1 771 2 Elegant 3 bdrm, 2~S bath 1 BR.-$175 turn. modem co.nveni~n«s 6vau. apts for adult.I . Extra Jrg I 5.\7-8100 Cash Fast! NEW 2 Br. apt. No children or pets. l'.17 E. 18th I t. Call~ pm, 645-1574. l BR, stove, tt:frig, 1ar, adults , $110/mo. :UO Avocado, Apt A. SU-8230. East Bluff TO\VNHOUSE • Owner's 4 Br, 3 Ba, aha 2 Br, 21/.a Ba. Patios. Encl ear . 67>-5033 ''WHITE ELEPHANTS'' ovem.11ming your house? "C&!!h" .. .sell them thru Daily Pilot Cl&Mified Classifje~ INDEX Advert1s1ng ,__-_,,,_ .. ___,]le) 100-149 lleal E1tat.. f Jll) Gancral ~---' Clas1ifit1tion 150-114 Classifitation 200·260 -.,,,._ lie! Cl•ssification 300-355 Classification 360-370 '--:----"'"_"" _,I~ C l•ssification 400-'465 ---·IM Cl•tsification 500-510 .... ,,.. I~ Cla1sific afion 525-535 [ i..t ~-][SJ Classific:•tion 550-555 lndustri•I Property 16.1 1st & 2nd Trust o..d1 f'PXE >.PPRAISA!S Costa Men Jnvtsfment SO.nil anytime to11'tlho1Ues $375 $425 UTILITIES INCl.UDED sble. Furnished and unfurn.. Jiv nns. shag cpl'd & drp'd c--="°'==~~~~~ LOVELY 3 Br, 1 blk beach. ti ec1······ . 365 W. \V!hion 642.1971 ishcd. thruout. D\vhn, spac clos. * BEAUTiruL l & 2 BR. 11-1 INDUSTR1AL BLOG. M;~;ee~~s 260 ~ts~: c~:;r~~~o . ~· r h·111 NE\V LRG DELUXE APTS els, bcE.uAt.STpooSll,OtEncl gar. ~~~i~s:T~~~. c;:~n$~fsu~ ~.,....1_"'_""" __ .. _ __,L!!J 6.400 Sq, h. industrial bldg. Costa Mesa . BACH-furn $139.50 lifODELS OPEN DAILY $160. ~I 5"4&-5163 Cl•ssifitation 575-510 \\'/l ,200 !q, fl. ol air-cond. REAL'l'Y 1 BR-unfurn $140 10 A.~I. · 8 P .M. Brand new 2 BR. 1 BA. $175. SllARP I I & 2 B r-----~ 111 .,.,.. _ _, •• ., 000 2 BR f $IS C""ls, d-•. dwhr, "II clean. rg · r, I l~ o....,ces. """'~ tit ~. · COLLEGE Park &Ra, 3 BR, u 1 p kc 1 · ~un urn 0 ... ... cpti/drn• hl!ns ·ct bid s-~--•• Xlnt bldg. for an inw.s!or or $17,000 DISCOUNT l~ BA, crpts, drns, bltns. n v. ar rnttr. n ·1ne FUR.i~IS1-IED AVAILABLE RENTS FROM ini: gas oven, all v.·tr &: gas N .. -. I , qui ~· ...-.. ,.;n..., ..... . .,... Call Anyti.n1e 833·0820 $ISO pd: Hid pool. 324 E. 20th ·o pet!. nlant ok. SIJO . _ posslble user. I ln>lc, ave.II Mal"C'h 1st. $250 ADULTS ONLY, NO PETS & SJSO. :-,.10-9m, ~i-~2 Cl•isification bOO-t.9t COidweli, Banker .. Co. URGENT! Choice TO pays )lo. 1st & last + $100 clean-Condominiums * 642-2015 * I S~'';· _1646-~9~1~43~-----1 j:;'5"!;;-';;i;'i'i.:'-ff';;;; I r------. Dick O'amer (714) 6f4,2430 $2,674 per nJO. At 9'?0 for a jn ... Call 545-6671 o.,.,ner or NEWPORT BEACH 1~\VILSON GARDEN PT $!6.l Lg rllx 2 Br. i i; Ba I l[ll)' G ·~ Unfurn 320 ATTRACTIVE 2 BR. Rp••· 880 IRVINE AVE 1 A S. Quie l: adlts. GE k it . •~-J l l'r {lf'riod. u&ranteed w/ 54g..n29 Re11Jtor. '--'-""-""~·---=.:..::~ 2 BR u I N I d .. ~, .. -.. lots for Sale 170 full recourse A·l bank ref's 1• $155. Adults only. Nr. • nurn. elvy ec, Slot itgf'. 110 E. 16th PL 1n41 l''" 41 .. ; tot!•o or,,,,,· RENT OR LEASE Newport Beach Harbor ~ \\'ilscm. 6T.>-S181 IRVJNE & 16th New cpls/drps. S !>a c 51&-&132. C lasii#ication 700,710 l Xhl't Bld£: lots, adj lo models 111 i\fttlla Verde EstJtes amona: luxurious hOmts. From $15,(«I - $16,500. s.s-um Broker. 4 CEMETERY lots. Blue Spruee ll"ctlon. llarlx>r fte5t Jl.femorlaJ Park $700. ~ ~ ~ 2 ho l 'I \' d I BR h"· 8 -grounds. Adlts. no ""ls. I me1 n " <A ·er e. 1----------1 , .. ·n ...i. •-LA RGE 2 BR .'ih1d10. 11, r------~ 14~0 YIELD $2i5. "'/lM'll' ,.,hll; apt: J __ __ __ __ _ __ (714) 64S..0550 $1 40/mn. 2283 Founta i n I I~ I 'fD 1 l 1 BEAUT. Bach &: l Br. apls. \\'ay E. Olarbor, tum \\'. BA, dressin~ rm. patio, Mtnl\andiie ~· st on pr me ac parce . BR $23.J. ;;1:;.40S3. ----~ --.,o:: •·kly • up '"•-I I pool 1•~11"~ """'> '''" 135.000. All .,,. 3 -. Incl. I • ' THE BLU• FS ~ . , -" nc SOUTH BAY CLUB '" Wil.,oJ. . ~ ~. ••• ' . 9" . 1 0 __ J , .• "·pl . BACK BAY, lrs; 3 Br, :z , -.... lc••t-opt•oo or "• uti1. 1\Ionthly terms svail. dnia Cl "f' 1. 1 ,, In .,..,., uan ..... s ... bl 1 -~ 1 1 ........... -l<fll 99S El ~m,·-. "" -.51 asst •t a ion 00.836 · .,,. tns e .. ,.._, frp c (_"\J • • • .... • ... .n<J"'V't LA COSTA '* 2 BR. $150/mo. Pool. r-------, trano. l.J~o discount. Bkr. ne.~c. ·~lareh' t , $265. 1950 Sq: It. 3 BR. l ha.. 2-APARTMENTS C I l!B 493.1154 or 493-!706 r\IU. 6r;M623 or ~2S6l.' &ty. $385 Les~. st:OOO tlp!lon $14> I BR. $Ii:; • 2 BR-!\'EW l & 2 br. Bl tll3, swim· onv, shop'i:. No children. hi• and Suppl.a 'L., nMlney, $.1?,:.00 pn<:<'. UtU ['1(1, Pool, Gardtn Liv-' ' • ming p001 &. pra,ie. All 313 E. 111h Pl. ~2 _ _ .,... 1 BR. Lilt II\• & din arf'a. l~. Adlt5, no pets. 740 \V. Live wher• the fun isl utilltit's Pf.ld. $1.JO to $170 1Slij 2 Bl\, 11, ba stud io, Clai,ific•fion &SO-ISi Kew pa1n1 ln~ide. \\'alk lJth St., C~I. rno. Adults, no JM!ll, 3;,.t rMtt, cpt/drps, adj s"°p'g do\\'nl<l\\'fl. Rehrtd C'OUplt' &st LG~ nlcely fum l BR. ll~I. roi..~rn r O.UB A\'Oeado St., CZ'll. 642.~ ! ~ls-AJOl. 713/:i92-522T L lcwls lnd l~ or 5in&:le lady. Call ~s-3143. Sll:J. Closed gan~e. Nn UVf.\"G 13 4' Rt'-', 2 n... ™'"'. C"pts,, M.rm Equlpmttit tC I .......w7S 11 Hovn& lorRll'lt lf ~ J CON, J adj. R.-1 fff, IClrnt octan • bay view, nr beach, '--------' 5QS.\L May rr.dt. ASK FOR ANNCX>ATS,Acent61MS30. HoulQ Furnished 300 PRNATE Party •11~1 to . Gen•ral aell laf'&t Em1:rald Bay view lot. <194-9988 2 or • cemt!!ltf')I Iota. V•IUf' $260 ea. Sell $:12.J ta. Jfarbor lteat 1\femorl.al Pk. 543-j()ll. AJ.fY D1y 11 the B&!r day I'" run an 1dl Don ' "'"''"v 1'1'11 ffil'lllY, M2 ~'i71- l.ANDJ.ORDS . OWNERS 11nor1-:RiY ?ifANAGERS \\'t \\'Ill N!ftr tenan!J 10 you fi'l'e of charae • , , fllan.v de111r1ble tfln&lll• on our w1a lll nR list. l\JM. Hrnlnl~. ' .. LOVELY nr ~"' homti 3 mf'n, no -is. lrvTUtN" tm · ' * FREE d--~• •hil~n ok -' ' .. 8 .. \\'I'll;;, nr ~~". 1v1~0 Luxury p.nle.n apls, olfel'lng A"•·I" ·1;,~h. •1-, .. ~·,m'·. ~·.~ .,..,5·. Cl•ssifitation 900.tl,,. BR, 2 Ba, Db~. bltns, ==-:::""="'~=-··,,...~1 comp!. prh-a~ he a u c. RENTAL SERVICE ... w " .,,.,..1,, 4 Quiet, 1#, $2 · 6~?-0006. ,\\'AIL OOI\'. 2 BR rurn. Pool. \nd!K'pg k unparalleled rtt· Cost.i. ~le511. • ftantington Slf'rtl. 1 8dr. Dix. Bil-ins, I Ji) &S2-21=U 211~ \llsia; I>tl Oro Rt'C rm, Good IOC'11.tion. So Tt.\tional r~cililie!i in a CCHln-Beach • Ne\\'f)()rt &each I Cpts/Orps, Pri. bale. Gkt. Tt11n190rtatron .... SHARP 3 OR, 2 BA, qUltl Nf'"''JlOrt Bearh 644-1133 pttS tit thlldrtn. 64tt-!i821 rry C"/ub atmosphl'rt, rum. J-2.J BR APTS. l1kp nu, .xlnt IOC". 962-IJSO. _ .. t.ll"Ctl. Nov.• \'Acant, $230 per Si0/1110, &chtlor <'Pt. JI.Ian or Unf • i\lodtls open lO am· .\sk ribnut oor DISCOUNT 2 Br In rourt. Sto\·e, crpt~. Cl•s,ific&.tion 915.94; ~lO. ~II lJ\RRl.', Jletita.fl! "r.!AKE Roo1n r or Dad· on{y, 132 '\'. \\'Ugon, s l'Jrtl. n.-n1~ from S\'4$. PL.\.i"( Call 636.QZ'Q. ~llrllgt" 2 C'hlldrt'n, no pets. I J ..!.:!:.sl F~llll!e S«J..ll~. dy'', .. c lea n our !he :HS-!l.l7l. OAl\\\'000 GARDEN N"iW Sp!fcioua I A: 2 BR, Rcfi. $l4J,. ~IS-6031. 1 · AotOll«~t [':) 4 Rr, 2 ba, fll!Tlily rm. 1'1eu (IU'lp •. )'Our tl'llsh is CASH $120 1 BR, JGij: l"it\\lXU'l APART.'.\IUTS ffin1, crptll, drp5, Kar.tire. 2 BR, Cp1s & drps All elf'r., V*l'l'le Children ck. $265 wUh • D11.lly Pilol Clusifi9d Bh'!i, All utli~lnc.ludl'd. No liOO 16th St., flo'B Imrnf'd. oeeup"ancy. M0-1973 dbh1m-& ~IO\"e, ;q2 Sant11 Cle•tiflc•fit1 n 950-t 11111 !'•lr'l-2:171. arl, per& or children. 648-8S83 e\'e ft.12.SliO (Ir .54.;.2.i21. 1\nn. $16.i. 21.1 111.Jim ------ . Thursd1y, Ff!bruary 11, 1971 DAJLY ~ILOI' :JI .. 1~1-~·-,,,.iiii· .. ~J~~·~1~1;;·";;"""";;";;'"";;"t ;::;I~~, ................ t ][~JI ... ,,.,,.,,.,,, .... l ~ I •· .. ·~··"·"" l~l ............ ~"I~ I )~ '~L"'_"'''"""~)~ [ lntlructlon I~ I Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 36S Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt1., Apt1., Bu1lne11 Rental 445 Found tfrH •di) 550 l-'--------1·-'--------Furn. or Unfurn . 370 furn. or Unfurn. 370 Eu! Bluff Newport Bttch Newport BHch CAN'T BE BEAT ------....----1APr & O!fle< lllO/mo, LOST "Tlg0<", M'1• ocang•, i.:::===-----j;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Huntln'"'on Bo•~ Huntington Bt•-L $45/\\'k, 800 sq, ft. 23'M Jo-hall' cat. Vic: l\tesa I LGE 2 BR studio, 11i BA, ==="'====~=========~===! Ne\\-port B lvd., Ot. ... -NEWPORT BEACH MARINER SQUARE c.rpt.s, drps, bltns & D\V, SINGLE STORY -".,8-;;9;;;1'5.;;;-=::-="""'::::-l'F"~"'i"~"°;:"~"'t540--:;,1"1h"'7:=;tt",-. '°'10'"m-o ·~•• av•• a , 0 "'2-4381 "'°1711. a tmospug-e .1. on ror .... ase, old, Lavish coat, 1/30/n . VIiia Granada Aph. AnnoAu~ARu.,TME~ITbSilty f Neat· HOfli' Hosp. $190. South Se A •-ofa Q .J.J. BE'AUTv Sal '. P'our bedrooms with balcon. . ..... "" .,..,._ 2 BR. • l fuU I I.' .bov •.. below. G-c·,0 ... 2 &. _3 BR _unus !_or adults I '°"='°o=~~~-~~ · 2 BATH Uln a ermoda Y eCf'l PJled, In 1hoppln1 Reward $100. 642-6119. .. ... ... NE\VP RT Shores lge 2 BR, carpets & dt'Ps center, San Clem. 492-2979 livin&' le quiet surrounding desiring to hve ~midst beau. 2 BA, gar, no pets. $lS5. Ah· Condilioflf!d C al 0 La Q l 400, Sl'ORE, ·•·p, oHI-. SMALL fawn-colored female to' lamuy "'ih cho•-·n. ty __ by the sea _in the pre1-d 1 "-As-•~2 asu estate living. ~nter u nta Her-~"" ..... ShepMrd found near Coita Near Corona d'el ?I-far High t1g1ous \Vestchff are• o! I "'YNl"'=""'"-c"o:-'-,'~~~_..,..~·~,.. Ptivate Patios mosa's lush green atmosphere & &troll tree-$95, 2340 Newport Blvd, Mesa. Park. 64S.3965 Schoot Fireplace wet bar & Newport Beach. LIDO ISLE • Bachelors only •IEATED POOL lined walk ways to your apL CJ..t. 64$-2541, sa-&33 ~!ALE Irish Setter, built.in kitchen 8pplian% FROM $230 t..g,. 1 BR apt, all util's pd. ....:~ty otsta,,-n ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED Store-826 \V. 19th St., CM Hubor Blvd. vie. ol · r · 1 · ~ •1 $l60, mo. 675·1892 ...... ""rt &: torage 1 BR U I $150 F $110 $115/mo. * "'7'1• 835 AMIGOS WAY 544. J or Ul ormat1on puune •• r. HIDDEN VILLAGE • n . · -urn. - • • 646-1'138 Coldwell Banker &. cO. Robert r-.r. Buckley, ~1anag. San Clement• GARDEN AP'I'S. 2 BR. Unf. $180 -Furn. $210 lnduatrlil Rentll 450 t.tanaa:inz Aient 541-5221 er, at !n4l 645-0252 or 'vritc ID_E_L_UXE--.-,-B-R-.. -2-B-a-.. -bl_ti_n-,, 2500 south Salta 3 Spac. flr. plans, decor. furnishings: live •---.-~ to The Office or the ?.1an. Santa Ana 6 ' 546.1525 within romantic setting W/fun or privacy. SMALL UNITS A FG HAN Un!vtrsity 646--5645 .... Ave, Near C.M . Fount.In V.lloy 'l dshwshr, rec. room, Adul ts .,. ager, i• ariner Square Apts, only. $180. 492.2259 Terraced pool, pri. sunken gas BBQ's w/ COSTA MESA ALL NE\V 1244 Irvine Ave, NB. CB.I. seculded seating compl. w/Ramada & Foun· S95. & $167. Per ilton!h VALLEY PARK l!!9"64!!!!".!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"""""' _S;;;a;;nt;;;a;;;;;A;;n.;•;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;; IApts., tain. Jmnu~diate Occupancy ' LOST ,, G & Lost 555 APARTMENTS PARK NE\VPORT _ (:nre • Furn. or Unfurn. 370 * Color c:o-ord. kit w'/ indirect li9htin9. New 6500 &q. rt, unit, 18th & 11 Lab ~up ~~a~=urst ••. opens new doors for VILLA MARSEILLES I---------* Deluxe r1n9e & ov1ns * Plush sh19 crpl9. \Vhittier, ll0-220 power, • Adam•. Blk w/wht ,,.. tree livg overlkg tht "'11.tf'r. BRAND NEW ~ • • • • YOUNG FAMILIES 7 pools. 7 tennis cts SiJO.OOO SPACIOUS General * Bonus stor19e spac:e * C ov. c1rport plenty of parking. on chest "Chlvas." If found 2 BR. Apt1 $160 Spa. From $115 10 Srl(l * Sc:ulptur1d marble pullman Ir tile baths See: Robert Nattres1, Rllr, please call bef 5: 835-1514, 2 BR. Garden Apt1 $175 _ Bach. 1 or 2 Br. Al~o 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. * Elegant recreat ion room. Costa Mesa 642-1485 ext 360, aJt 5:30: 96&--9'18 2 .BR. Townhouses $185 2 sty Townhouses. Eleoc. kl., F Adul&t LUlvi1ng PALM MESA APTS FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY NE\V bldg, 1728-:1300 sq. ft. RE \VAR D ! Lctn 1 ha i r 3 BR. Apartment $210 pri~ pat or bal Subtrn pai·kg urn. n urn. · • Blk from Huntig.gton Center, San· Diego Nr &ker k Fairview, l Siamese male."Dark·brown opt mail ser cpts. drps. Dish\vasher ·color coordinat-• Frwy .. "Golden'West Collee:e. )'I' lse, Sullivan, M0-4429. points, tan-c~arn colorln1. Pn·&ehoot'cent•r. Adult pool. Just N. of fashion Isl at ed appliances • plush shag 1 BR unfw·n •••••••• Sl35.oo San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd., So. on Rentals Wanted 460 Answers to "Crackerjack." Cbildren'spool.Privpatio1. Jamlx>rce & San Joaq1ri11 carpet· choice 01 2 ro!or lBRturn ........... si49.50 Beach 3 bl.ks. to Holt·, W. on Holt to ,,. Chlldttn heartbroken. h 2 b th ' 11 Bachelors Furnished 2 CAR G 1 c t 962 95~ · Elee kitchens. 'Vall to \vall Hills Rd. 644-190) (or leas-sc enies • a s • s a from ..,40. Lal"'luinta Hermosa 714: 847·5441 arage n os a -~ closets & carpets. 2 pJay. ing info. showers • mirrored \1'ard· 2 BR apts "$175 mo. 't' r-.iresa. To be u&ed for LOST sm. silver poodle :roun<U. Carports & stor.1 -"-~E~A~S~T~B~L-u=F~F~-robe donrs • indirect light· mo.Imo. OK A storage. Call Terry, The v.•tdark ears v.•earlng a pink age. ing in kirchen • breakfas! • POO pts., Real Estaters 54S..2313 rhine!IOne collar. v 1 c: 17256 S. Euclid St. (just south of \Vamtr in Fountain Valley) Phone (714) 541).4785 Huntington Beach 2 BR. 2 ba. vic1v apt. All bar • huge private fenced L Furn. or Unfurn. 370 II .a.J Misc. Rentels 465 Baker St .. C.M. AMv.·s lo bltns, carpeted & drapC'd . 1 patio _ plush landscaping • • SAUNA Rental• ,-"Cozy". Aft 5: 5tN92f, year old . ~235 !llo. brick Bar-B.Q's. large beat-• J ACUZZI Co1t1 Mesa ------~ Days: 540-6002 816 A.\JIGOS \VAY ed ........ ,, & lanai. 1561 Mesa Dr. Santa Ana ii9'iiiiPiiiilliiii!iiij;iiiiii ••••••••••ILG garage-star: motor ·-· I ~"""""""""'""""""" h -1 boat t 1652 FEMALE, Red Irish Setter, 675-6050 ' 3101 So. BcMol St. VILLA CORDOVA Rooms 400 om<. u '· ' 'c. 9 w"h old Vk. of Fa~ (~~!'Iii. N. of So. Coasi Plaza) Apt1., Npt Blvd, CM. 642-2821, am. Villa Nova CM. She UUll lWW!MUtT C:l .. INC. Sanl e Ana Furn. or Unfurn. 370 1_6',2-;:5J:::ll6:::.:;-:,=:::-=- PHONE: 557-8200 NEW NEW NEW ~;c~:G~r P~,1 :1 h!f; Fenctrl storage 'pace ~413~ns\\·er to r.t 1 r • J Bdrms. - 3 Bath 3red~!!;ral;d, ~~;. s~~P~~'. _..,.N~O~W~'~S~T~H~E!""!! Costa Mesi luxury 40 Unit Adult ~~~1. person w/yd. for ~Ji'~2~s. etc. LADIES watch, vie Harbor Adults. Nr Hoag Hosp. Im· A I t C I Shop'g Center , CM. $175 MONTH • POOL med <><:<:up, 642-1387 or LRG 1 & 2 BR. apts. 10 par men omp ex SLEEPING rm, $60 per mo. ,-------, Keepsake value. Reward. Cpts/drps/bitm/patio 642-1771. TIME FOR min from college, ocean & Priv entr &. ba. Adu.Its, no I Personals 11•1 =!>l"'J-89"'"_8'_.~--~--.,., Kids & pet.s OK, lrg rooms l 's"H'°'A~R~P~B"!o°'!"'fa-, °'l~B~,.-.. ~11,_: rould \Valk to shop'g. Has l & l BEDROOMS pets, 2135 Elden, U\.1. See . TOY poodle, grey, 1 yr old . 2621) Delawal'e, H.B. ba. Nr. pool. Avail noiv, QUICK CASH laundryfac.,carport&prol, FURNISHED OR ?t1gr. No. 6. female. "Sugar" lost vi e i~22'l1; aHer 3 p.m. 535-1816 S325 ~lo, lease. Ag t . Rent from $130-$155, Ask UNFURN. SLP'G nn for steady v.·ork'g Zllt Ii Tustin, CM. 642-0615 ' Schools & lnstrvctlon1 575 I IT'S YOUR MOVE INDUSTRY CAREIRS AIRLINE & IRA YR r OPERATIONS AGENT e TICKET SALES e RESERVATIONS e AIR FREIGHT-CARGO • COMMUNtCAnONs e TRAVEL AGENT Alrllne Schools Pactflc 610 E. 17th, S•nt• Ano 54:1.6596 The DAILi PILOT ORANGE COAST'S I ! •. I OCEANFR.i'lT Vu. Sundeck. 675.593(1. THROUGH A about our dlscount. 1846 2 STORY -SAFE older man no coaking. By Person1l1 530 PART Siamese, blue erta. Beach. Smog (fee. Ne\\'er 2 BR's, X-lg, nr bay & ocean. ;;6-8ace:!~a 1olgr, Apt l I. • Spacious Apartments mo only, $~. 1543 Orange,1----------\Vhlte rliht rear l eg, dlx 2 Br, bltns, cpts, drps, $175 yearly. Newly clec. DAILY PILOT "" ...,.. • Special cabinet space Cill. FULLY LICENSED * RE\VARD 675-1309 I d" patio, lndry, g&r. Nr shops Adults 675-1172 aft 6 prit cl°"B'°R".°'t,-u.--n-. °"ltl0=."2'°"B"R"tu""',n' I e Lock garages w/ lg slo r FURN & unt w/batlt & Renowntd Hindu Spiritualist ~~~~~~~~~ ea b 1ng : &: pier. $165. Adlts, baby & \\•km.ts. w ANT AD $155. 2 BR unfum. ;.155 .• Bm ceil • Lndry . Patios kitchen priv, Pvt home. Advice on all mattera. r I~ I ok. 53&-2131 I Pool. Bltns, crpts, drps, no • O\vhr/displ • Gas stove Brookhurst & Adams area. Love, Maniage, Bu.slntss ln1tructfon ~ Marketplace , I * FRESH AIR Sell the old s!ult 642-5678 children, no pets. 325-J' E. • Special soundproofing 96&-3051. Readings given 7 days a . Buy the new !'.tuU I 17th Pl. CM. 548--2738 e Shag carpets, drapes =~~---~-~~I v.'eek, 10 am. 10 pm. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Walk 3 blks to Beach! i.A"c1==~=---Apts A YNG college 0~ working girl 312 N. El Camino Real, ~ Beaut. bii' 3 BR apt. 'v/"' p s., '' pts., GAS & WATER PAID Balboa .Isl. K!t & TV rm San Clemente Schools& crpts, drps, bltns except Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 tele. $6;;i/mo & up. 675-3613 49z.9136, 492-(1(176 Instructions 575 refrig. $225. No pet!. 536-1711 1G·-.-n-t-,-.-,------G-on-,-,-.-,-------G-t_n_er_a_I_______ 2323 Ei~" Ave., ~ *w/:i1t~he~~S25we~r ."'"~~ PALM READINGS WALK TO OCEAN • up Apts. MOTEL. 5-IS.9755 CARDS 1 BR. Crpts, drP5, some w/ 646-0032 Ancient Sand Readinrs frplc & patios. ;120.$150/per FURNISHED, util pd, w/kit. Spiritual Readings mo. Adu.Its. •• BAY MEADOWS APTS. fe7n0tale only . .,~~o85se..,.to occ, 001.9272. 10 A1>1·10 Pr-.t LINDBORG CO. e SJ6.:z579 .c'=~''-'-"-'-0·-~~~~~-·....,_,.,.1 210 \V. \Vhittier, La Habra MODERN 2 BR. Uo.ur ne·vt mo~aa. BRAND NE\V UNITS all with NICE room \Vfbath, outside Next to La Habra Theater I• A 'WV ~ beam ceilings, pa.neling. pvt entrance, ~~ blk irom bay. SWEDISH MASSAGE Duplex • Frplc, bltns. crpts, • J . f 1 •• tacU Xlnt neighborhood. 6'j3..'1185 AND SAUNA drps, ":ell maintained. 2 , .,,, ., , patios, l'P c, .... 1 rec • ,..,,,. children ok. $135 I mo. ~ .-hou" Id be ·to· .·· . i~ ities. Adults, no pets. Rentals to Shire •""' Trained tech. for relaxation. 842-5817 ' • Bachelor • Private rooms . • ~ -'J , • t BR from $140 • \VORKING girl or 1tudent e Open 24 hours e I. ' · ' · • 2 BR from fl65 • to share Jove.ly home on FIVE String Ban j o -New almplil'led booklet. Learn m play quickly. Send $1 to Banjo, 2014 Continental Ave, CM 92627 "MAKE Room For Dad· dy"', .. clean out the garage •. your trash ls CASH ,, Ith a Daily Pilot Clu!l.fied ad. ------~--- * * * * * 3 Br, 2 ba, trplc, crpt, drps, blW, air cond, gar, pat. Close lo schls, shops & park. Kids OK, no pets. $200. ~1548. CHEZ ORO APTS 8234 Atlanta, 1·2 BR, pool, private garage. \Vashers, 4t'Yen. 536-8038: 536-2727 WALK TD BEACH 11 LOVELY NEW 1 & 2 BR. UK~.. y Balbca P•nin. 1100. CaU all 2626 N•wport Blvd. * 387 W. Bay St ( btwn Harbor 6, 675-7594. COSTA MESA 645-0860 l"•v"•l'.'9',· ' ! ., & Ne"·port Blvd, 1A. mi N. WANTED . Congenial lady SINGLE? WIDOWED? ,;o----------------,J • , ! or l9thc~ 646.0073 to share attrac, NB home. Divorced? Ove~ 21? ' " Pyt ba, au pdv. $80. ,., a "" "p!anatory m... Trader's Parad1'se Crpts, drps, Dishwashers. i09 Palm * 841-3957 BEACHBLUFF Apt• NEW 2 BR 2 Ba, dishwash. ers, pooJ, 'patio. 8231 Ellis. 842-8477 or 847.3957. $140 ASK about our discount plan! 2 BR. crpts, drps, bit.ins. C81'· port. $25 Move.In Allow. ance. 725 Utica: 535-2462. NE\V 2 Br. 2 Ba. near beach Bltns. Crpts, drps, lrg patio. encl yard. 21662 Brookhul'st St, Apt B. 646--0841. ULTRA-private deluxe 2 br, 2 ba, pvt patio, encl garage, single i;tory. $175, 817 Geneva St. 536-8659. NEW 2 BR from $135. Cpt.s, drps, bllns, patio, fam sec· tion, play area, No pets. 846-7277 1 BR bltins, frpl c, crpts, drps,' patio. Small yd & pri. gar&ge. 847-5306. l BR w/stove & re!rig, crpts k drps. Nr beach $125 mo. Tradewinds Realty, 847.8511. 1 BR, <'rpts, drps, ~frig., bltn1, S135 mo. Incl util. Tradewinds R1ty 841-8511 T\VNllSE 3 Br, crpts. dfT!s, "'shr, dryr; RIO, refrig $195/rm. 548-lfOS, 968-9425. Lagune Beech SOUTH Laguna • New 1. br. 1;, block rrom beach, Heated pool. All electric. Compleie kitchrr.. Year round lease for $169.SO. New bed & din. Ing set for sale. at St35 or unrurni11hed . Avail r-.tarch t. 497.1906 or 673-2259 OCEAN front 1pectacular villa. Huge nm. 3 frplcs . Beaut grnds $600 Mo . ,_,, Lido l1le LOOK? *BACHELORS * t.11 liv rm, din a~a. kitrhen, krtg sz bdrm, reJrig, !love, cpts/drps. Util pd. $160. 67:)...1892. Mes11 Verde I ~BR uprtairl. Gar. Newly deCOf', Child ok. No pel!i. ;t50/mo. 557-8400. Newport 8e11ch NEWLY DECORATED HUNTINGTON BEACH -Adult• Look Into ... OPENING 0SPECIAL -1 BEDROOM FROM $145! CASA del SOL Near all beaches • Private Terrace • Rec Building• Saunas 2 Po ols • Billiards • Gym • Putting Green and Vo!leyball Built·in Kitchens • Dishwashe rs • Disposals • Carpets/Drapes Close to 111 shopping • Private Parking and Storaa:e: ALSO: 2 Bedroom w/Fireplace from $205 21661 Brookhursl, Huntington Beath-(714) 962·6653 HUNTINGTON BEACH -Adult and Family Section• The possible dream ..• 1 Bedroo m fr om $135-2 Bedroom, 2 Baths from $155 HUNTINGTON GRANADA If Private Terrace • 3 Pools w/Cabanas • Buill·irt Kitchens Dishwashers • Carpels/Drapes • Walk·in Closets • Dressing Rooms Close to Shopping, All Beaches and leisure Areas 17111 Golden W!Sl St., Hunttn~on llmh (714) 847·1055 (Just South Of Warne r) SANTA ANA-Adult ind Family Setlions Break the monotony ... OPENINGSPECllL-1 BEOROOM FROM $1371 PARK PLAZA Private Patios • Rec Building • Saunas • Jacu ni • Pool 8uilt·1n Kitchens • Dishwashers • l:arptts/Orapas Near South Coast Plaza • lti$ure Areas • Freeways ALSO: 2 Bedrcom/2 Bath From 1167 Town House w/l 1h Baths from Sl75 3900 Souih Flower, Santa Ano -(714) 54S.J214 (2 blockl east ol Brblol and MacArthur) Manag<d By: { 644--0369 gage 24 ht5 a day call jl Beautiful 1 & 2 BR furn SHARE my waterfront home 496-4801 OJ 541·9991 . or Unfurn apts, OFFERING /d k M 30-60 I ' j 'eU clean. ovens. D/\V (in w. oc ' an, years A LCOHOUCS AnonymOIUI Ines , · $150/mo. 675-4331. Ptx:irie 542-7211 or write to 2 Br), displs, shag crpts. SHARE Charmi'"' Bal. J1!e. P.O. Box 1223 Costa Mesa. - drps. Jacuni & Sauna bath. "0 I~~~~~~:::~~ t' Huge Pool. FOR ADULTS :.~~~J:~· Femalel1 1mes Mnll RRIMAC WOODS .. Off_i_co_R_•_nt_•_l __ 440 I Lott and Found jrRl •:; M•rrimao w., , i:::· iiiiiiiiiim.-m;;~L:iJ; dollars Costa Mesa SUPER-DELUXE QUALITYJ~ e DELUXE 1 & 2 BR's. l·Z.3 room, up to 3,000 aq. Found (frH 1d1) 550 ..._ _______________ _, Furn or un(urn. $145 & UP. ft. o(flct suites. Immed. oc· 100 H.P. Johraon O.B. en. Pool. Gardens. 177 E. 22nd ~pancy, Orange County.l·,-,E-D_l_U_M_S_!Z_E_Cnc_k_"_m_ix g1ne. J965, Some extru. $700 St CM 642-364~ /.trporl llvtne Commerc· , al T d f cJ •• • • ;:i, c 1 dj A'-rtu male, brn & blk. Nr \Vllson v ue. ra e or motorcy e, 2 !" b omp ex, a · "'JN & Pl t. H't b Travo! Tral!o• ., '· '· 1250 sq It lg Br, ,2 a, Hotel & Restaurant, banks, acen 1a. t y .car. • uU rm for "'h/dr, patio, San Diego &. N'pt Fwys. under treatment at Animal 548-6178 gar, cpt/dp. $165, 546-8688. UNCROWDED PARKING Shelter. Santa Ana. For info Have ;100,000 equity Jn Huntington Beach~ LOWEST RATES 549-3562· Vlaalia Walnut Grove & Uwne r/mgr. 21'12 DuPont Dr. WOMAN 'S 1963 class ring G.G .• JO units. WANT Or. ON BEACH! * l Bdrm •••••••••.•. $205 * 2 Bdrm ........ from $235 * 3 Bdrm ... , .......... $375 Furniture Available Carpets.dr11 pes-di:.h1vash<' r heated poot.iiaunas·tcnn!:i rec room-Ocean \'iews pa tios-ample parking Security guard!!. HUNTINGTON PACIFIC 71 1 OCEAN AVE:., H.B. (714) 536.1487 Rm. 8, Newport Beach round at laundrom!lt by ange County income prop. 833-3223 Courie!)' to Brokers Speeclymart on Placentia. Bkr/owneor, 645-0441 DESK SPACE 6<5-3965 =~~~-~-~~ 20 acres 6 yr old River!lde \VHT Husky or Samoyed In suburb Oranre Grove, soor.1. 222 Forest Avenu~ Lake Forest area near EQ. $53 M: FOR Land, loguna Beach Jeronimo and Ridge Route. Home or submit. S:ID-4J9.t Call 644.2558 1 --,o=E"S"'K•,.94-..,S94=cp=-"...,A..,C=E-·1P~.~: Collie dog found in Heathkit boonie blk!!--5 hp, 962-9:J68 2 spd, S2AO value. Trade for 305 No. El Camino Re1l 1.--,=,-.,,-~-=-c--~how quality \Vestern gad- Son Clemente LGE hun!ing dog, Vlc: Hun-dle & acees50rlrs to _(it 492-4420 tington Bch. quartrrhorse, 557.6507 962.4798 NEWPORT offices, c pts, -==~----~­drps ocean view from $65 VERY tame raooon, loves per 'mG. Onr An 6 pm: J(arbor View Hills. 675-4644 644-2013 CORONA DEL MAR BICYCLE found in field, 3 BR, 21h ba ·BayCN'llt, $40,000 eq, For: Jots or land, TD's, waterfmt or ? $18.000 bal. at 5~1% assume-. Wiii ::Jr In for rite deal. 673-778-C Ofe o~n 10 sm·6 pm 011.ily \VILL!Ai\.1 \VALTERS CO. 2 Rm !uitc, pvt ha, pvt entr. Newport \Vest area, Identify ! Cape Coral Florida water. Prkg. crpt/drp, u!ll pd. 96Z-5046· front Jots, appr, $6M, 1969. 2 Br . $155 up-3 BR $180 $145/mo. OwnC'r, 673.6157 FOUND a brown fuzzy pup. TRADE for new Boston up. Patio, pool, <'hildren ok. LUX pvt offc, own ent & py, fl"niale, Vic of 2583 San-\Vhaler-SklpJack or income lnq. rental honus no11·. st addr \Vesl cliff Dr 15x17. ta Ana Ave. C.M. 548-6801 property. 548-1936 r-.tOP.A KAT Apts. 18881 •'! pd FOUND ll bl k & h' 1'>1ora Kai Lane, J,i blk E. Cpt drps $85 uu . sma ac w ite * 548-9586. f~male Terrier type Vic. * * Have oceanfront duplex, Newport. Want T.D.'1, 1ree & clear Jots, or submit. Richard Irwin, Rf:altor 675-6060 Have 3 br, 2 ba, swimn\ini pool house i.n San Fernando Valley. Want un!ta 1n Qr. wge County, Cnll 536-8740 WANT HOi\JE, or one or two mobile homes • for 2 BR ocean view own. your~ own !lpartment. Roy J. AmtiOn, Realtor. 494-7260 • Have 8 units Belmont 5hores, Long Beach, WANT flome or more units Laguna Beach. Reva Olson Rltr 213: t3l·f329 or 598-Sn9, Lake Gregory lot • utilities, paved road, Want T.D. Qr. ange property. Time R.E. 835-252'5 or uk for Audrey 838-2896, What do you have to trade? L11t it here -fn Orangt County's largest read trad- lnr poat.S4Z.567S * * * of Beach, ol( Garlield, SI t • E 1·d 96"'~ 5 NE\V offices, 17877 BeachJ'=•.,'.,'==:uc~•~· =-~w~o ;:=:::============:~;;;; 962-8994. Bl. Lo\\·esl rents. C a J l Newport Beech 842-~ or (213) 394-0015. ----------- Westcllff Riviera AIR COND., OCEAN VIEW t & 2 BR, tum or unt. ..Bltns, usorted glzes, shop renter cpt1, drps, htd pooL San Clemente 492-2979 1800 \Vestclltt Dr, NB * EXF.cUTlVE Suite or of. * 642-5388 * fices, 3345 Newport Blvd, * NE\VPORT Island 1 BR. N.B. Call 645-4545. duplex: apt on wa ter , 1670SANTA ANAAVE, CM $175/mo. 871-7013 alt 6 pm. From 300 tq. fL 35c IQ ft. BACH.ELOR. & l hr apts. 675-246" or 541-5032 Nr Bay, Eves. 6'15-7876 or 3700 NEWPORT BLVD, NB 4!>4-2250 e ON mE BAY e =s-.n-,,..,...,A-n_a _____ 67~2464 or 541-5032 ·'------5 NEW offices, 17871 Beach LAS PALOJ'l.lAS APTS. Brand oe'v from $140 Bl. Lowe$! rtntl 842-2525 or 213: 39f-0015 1 & 2 BR. furn .-unfurnl&~d Business Rent1I with diahwuher. Hes.ltd 415 pool & lanai. Central gu _S_U_IT_E_S_a-va_i_l•-bl-,-. -~-lo-dic-'1 1 heating A: air-conditioning. Gas &. water paid. Private profea&lonal bldg, 1 '161 2 pal~ CoIOr choice lihalt BeM!h Blvd, H.B. Parking: CIU"J'ICtlnE: Air cond : Heat i na Sant11. Ana $o$0.-3988 Carpeting: Janitorial serv J.100 \Vtst \V&rntr Avt. Inquire Suite 8, or call North ol South Coast Plaza ~"=l).~ml~·-~~---,.,·i 2 BR, 2 BA tuxury apl Shopping Cent~r k near San STORE or Shop av a 11 . Diego & Newport Freewa.ys. I dow ntown San Juan HARBOR MANAGEMENT CD ., INC. JEAN SMITH. Rl TR. '\'arnar ~ Bristol, hui1ln"~s or oflice:. $8Sfmo. SJ7J month Conwnlt>ntly located comtr I Capistrano for 1.m a I 1 ,'°'...,E., ... ',.",.h,.St~ .... C .. -',.l....,~ .. 6-,.3235,.·"---------------------------'--------:<~O~~l~l~::'.:.·~·9~~~1"~•116::..::_•'~'~'·----------~-~-----·.L.--:------~~-~· . . ---. ' ( I • Buy The DA~L Y PILOT For Peanuts! I Here'• hero's here's CHARLIE BROWN,,, and LUCY ••• and LINUS ••• and here's SCHRO;DER ••• and last but not least, here's SNOOPY PJ1one 642-4321 (Circulation Department) to have the 'vl1ole Peanuts gang eo1ne and visit y ou dally. ' • . I • - llYE £181! c L A s s I F I • E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 - When You Want it done right •.• Call one of the experts listed below!/ DAILY PILOT 33 ][Il]:~l.__~ ..... !!!!!!,_, ... t=)!!!![Il] ~I ;;;, .... ,,_~l[Il]~IJ J;;;;I -'"""-'"'"";;:l[Il];;;IJ,l im( -"""'-'""'-' l::;;[Il] J.:. Wonted, Molo 700 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help We ntod, M' F 710 'lolp W1nted, M' F 710 ,'llAN y,•/1dminls1tath•e tx-COUPLE wanted for largl' HOUSEWlVES • S openlnia PROP, ~1.rmt. Corp. m«da •SINGLE nctdle pow~r ptr. in ambulatory &r can. afll. complex. N«d exp'd P/Unlt'. Av1r. $3 hr. No e,'lp. ex~"CI lA81ll\I Girl. Call machine optral!Ort Abo \'lil'Sctnl 11ome1, &190 all ~ man tor mainttnanc!i. wile nee. \Vr train, t.lr1. Mullar ~7-1002 Thun It f1·1, feh tta1nee1. pha&el of bookketplni i to clean apt&. 5'.4.r)' + ~5110 Vanda Beau!)' Coun. 11 &: 12 bttwttn 2 & 4 ~t.D. r.tANUFACfURING cla.s1 a~y1!1 In manuflc· new apt. 962~ aeloni. pm. Newp>rt Stach 64l-156S lut1na: line, 1408 W, 9th St., e DENTAL ASSISTANT .. HOUSEKEEPERS&. MAIDS PROP£RTY l\tANAGEl\lENT' S.A. Call ~1~70, ask for Deak only. Dental exp. ntc. tra!Md and placed fno fee) Experienctd, maturt coupl•: SOLDERER "tr. Do,e. lns., accl'• rec .. 50me Sat'•· aim r;choollng for you11£ manJie & maintenance al $80 Wetk. Must be exper. In Job W•nftd, Female 702 }~rlnac ~n's. 11.B. Mea. bride~. Surfside Domestic apt. compl!!x, C,.t Sal3.ry aolderini, cabthl\& ar bar. • --C.11 8Am-9pm. 846-.'.la.IO. School. Call 111 646-8911 + apt. Call collect .!.1141 ncssing. l 1~ ~ ADMINISTRATIVE ELECTRONIC enginttr for iHSKPRS Emplyr Pl.YI lee. 776--!'.IMO. CORONET Samte11ncf flepair1 Setvle" and Ptepain I I SECRETARY \lmi!l·d field y,·ork, ln·rilant I Ge('lrge Allen Byland Agn('y pOSITION apen for male EMAP~OEYNMCYENT -';;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ 1 :.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~:..: l\lilutt, knowledgeable. per. adrninl.stratian, sa.lc.1 k 106-B E. 16lh, S.A. 547--039Z. bf.auUcian. l\tl bt exp'd, N.8. w Ill I 1 i::::lablt. lnttresl ln lnd.lvkl· Rrvict ol . industrial elcc· ICE Cream Glrl-tl am to area. For appt 64&-7008, 1630 E. 17th St., S.A, Babysitting Contr•ctor P•plntlngh' • 1 Pu~,:,'. f~~r',.1·,Pncto',e:itlytt"•d'm,d· tronic l115trUmcnt.5 m\'o.iv.ini:; 4 pm l\lon thru Fri. Aprily PLUMBING & heating S41.,.17l 1--;__...;: _____ l----------·1 ln~1~ted circu1t5• digital 2-4 pm dail)' 899 W. 19th rtPflir man, Cood pay ·l"'""""""l!!l""!!!!•l!!l'""'I .COSTA MESA \VALJ{JNG OF.Cl< •p•r •n1in9 1 No, 2049, Daily Piiot, P.O. techn~uf's. Send ri>sun1e to St. C.!\t. lnctntive, only e:oc:per men SUPERVISOR· Direct Sales. PRE-SCHOOL COATINGS PROFESSIONAL Painting. Box 1560, Costa Men., Ct.. Clasaifitd ad No. 13, Daity INSURANCE F I re I< '"ill be Ct'.lns!dered. Local You mt.)' be ane of the 1311': &: ?tlontovia, \; day + Of all types. LM Roollnr Ext"-r. 1 itory, lo\v u S200 I 92626. Pila!, P .O. Box 1560, COlita Casualty underwriler req'd shop. Pbooe tor interview 3 key people we setk to f .... Co., C!>f. 642-7222 1or free /gd · 1 A 118 TOP notch 1ec -attra 1 na: r.1"-&a 92626. 536-6546 develop and train a1 uU ...... y s.euions. P~nned rst, "'' pun . vr rm. . Y c Y ELECTRICAL -··truch"" for '."'II . established co~-, di stJibutort. HJ.ah-lneemt proiram, hOt lunc~s. Ages Acrous. ei!illnrs apra)"td 2-woman , xlnt office .. .,.... '"' merc1al lines agency Wnte *Re liable Apt Mgro Furniture· coat& $15. Roy, M7-~~=0 abilit'ies/bkard. Res pan . expeod_ itor y,·anted. Na t:<· · · ' • pottnllal lor manaaement-2'-6, hrs 6:30 Ai\1-6;00 P~I. --''-'-------.......,., qua~illcallons k s a I a r y Handyman. charming, eHu:. minded fl"-'Oplf'. :.ten or $18 "·k-CO~lPAREt ~-4050 * EXTERIOR-INTERIOR* l;ood refs. Call 642-28Z.?. peritnce ~f'Ctssary. Start S2 rits!red to P.O. Drawer il'nl wife. Retirt'd ar ! Rrl-\\' 54~5960 or 338-5237. FURNITURE SI r Ip p In t . Won't •-u·•orbt"d Cu•-m HOUSES so clean 1hey ·will I hr. Call 546-7242. I 1811 Newport Bc:h 92663 = •-A & ··' ·~~'=m='="""="'°""~==-=' Also, 00..t parts. \Vood k ""' "" "' . . trt>nct._'~ ""\lflllb. Pl _,.1SUPERV1SOR L.VN ll·l:l'.l WVING mother dts i res met11.t. In our lrJ' ,.,t. wtirk. ti11.est painll. Free glow. call SAndy or Flo. • EXFCUTIVE * ary. 6•>0044 nd bab.vsiltinc. Days. 9 mos S4:Z..3<1.U. 'st/color consultinx. Refs. 5.36-4949 ar M&-0023 * SALES CAREER * RICHARDS ;~~· CTl,1~~n:~:sc:~t to 2 years prrferred. Qr. lil, bonded. FUii financing AIDES For convalescence, Staning ulary plus conlm. T •-S 64>-IOO casionat part lirnl' or full Gardening avail. 492-533&, 543-50!5 elderly care ar 11.mily care. flrsl ye a r earnina:s c5! a .. nt howcase C"•=•="='-----~:...:;:.: time. 50c hr. Near Harbor AL'S GARDENING YOU SUPPLY THE PAJNT I Homemaktrs, M7..fi6111. $12.000 • plus possible 2 yr Pop-Slna:en, Plano S1,n&· TELEPHONE &dverttaing Shoppin& Cl'nttr. 548-139;, fo r ~ardening le 1m a t 1 Will paint any rm SIO. I DA v \Vork General Clean· tra.inlnr program by century along & Groups. from aur pleasant Ne'vpart I t I I ' • •· • old national co. Business or Jam i;a""''"' ·-I-me olllces. Hrly \\'&gel, Morn- llIGH school ...irJ voill bah,.,,-1 landscaping lil!rvices, call n ex tr. rtt eat. "J yrs Ing. Child Cai·e. Rt>liablt. """' ~---~ f n·1·· 64"'"~ Ii' Al k iialts ba.ckt'round helpful. No ~Z-5619 l\1r. Taylor ng or tve. s 1 .... -afterl'lOOn~ from 1 : 3 0 ~C>--5198. St!rvin,t Newport, exp. . SO earpenler_ y,·or , Transporlatlon 541-9330 1 33, r.'lr. Madrid Newport Heights area, Jean Cdal, Olsta r.1r.u, Dover any knlri . ~7046, 557-8638. Hel Wanted M & F 710 j trave /~fgmt. opportunities. ROUTE Sales Sl'.IO wk to &l. 642-0022 Shores, West.clilf. LESCO Pa1ntrng Contr11ctor p ' ' ARNIE NlELSON Take ov eslab fuller Brush THEATER MGRS. KEEP your baby welt k J AP ANES E-Ame rlcan Inter & Extf'r, 2 S!ary 8Ja-4f>4S Ext. 291 IR\llNE PERSONNEL rte in l.aQ"Una. Xlnt pt time Hard tops & Drtve int. happy, S7'2 1 week. incl bahy gardener. Exp. Comp I Specialist. Alsa, accou1t Accti. R1c1ivaltle An equal opportunity SER.VlCESif'AGENCY wk alM> avail. Ph. 542-1573 . Sar. Gabriel Valley and ?r· food & Pampers. Xlnt care. gardening & landscapinz. spraying. Lie le In & . Gen '! acctn,1:. Good typist. Employer MIF SARAH Cov11ntry need& fl. ange County. Fast groWln& &tN?S8. 893--0UIO. &t.:;,...2399. Cal!ectiona, 2 yrs "'o~k ex-EXPERIENCED bt'takf1Ut 4S8 E. 17th {11.t Irvine) C.tl-1. or pt time help, No in-Edwards Cinemas. Re.ume i-i~~o-~-~--~I PROFESSJONAL main-No \Vasring: per. Some acctn& prel'd. COOK. Gd ref's. \Vage1 642·1470 vestment. \Vill train, mm to: E .T.C. 140 W. Valley BABYSIT wkrly~. hot meal&, tl.'nance, pruning, tree work, * WALLPAPER * Xln't co. open. Growth potential \Vilh lit '20 545-4296 & 839-7558 Blvd., San Gabriel. big: yard. Nr. Nwpt Blvd sprinklen, pe1tg, dlaease, When you C&ll "}.tac" MISS EXEC AGENCY youni: co. apply in person * INSPECTR.ESS *-'* * sE•:o-.!STRESS • Sail'iiiiiiii.i&i;o;iiiii;;iii,..,..•J " 19th SL 646-llsg, 646-4089. ~•01" ~ow BELL RESTAU ~ 1 ' weed contml. Clean up jobs. '1'IO" ..,4 64&1711 410 W. Coast Hwy .. NB .._,.. • , loft. Some exper. pref'd. Typist/Gen'( Ofc BABYSITTER, all ages, 24 Terms. Gtarge, 64&-5893. *PAPERHANGING 1 646-3939 RANT, 2.376 Ne"'J>Ort Bh·d., W1th f'xpenenct p~ftrrf!d, r.tcKihhin Salls 1821 S80 \\leek. Ina. back&round hours. Warm meals, big FREE "'· Complete t>r &: PAINTING. * 96S·UZS C.~J. !or first clas~ Hore!, and Re}'TIOlds, Santci. An 1 . necess. 'I)'Pe 50 w.p.m. ao- back yard. 641-1592, Cr-.t. partial l&wn main!. I. clean AGENTS • Exp'd Ins. Guar . .EXPERIENCED sewing plea~ant workinE conditions. M0-3684 curately. front afc. pl CLJP this ad-exptr. babysit· up. L. M. Gard, n i n 1 • ~~J:;'rpa=:.'· ~c Yl't salary & c<1mm. Contact machine op1_1rator for sail ALSO • Nig~t ~laid. (n4) s EL f ·atarting, aggressive needed. ters, Harbor Vlt>w Hills 642--097;) bonded. Rt>fs furn. M.2-23.56, Jim \\'ilcox 61~ k>ft. Female. Call 673-1731. 644-1700 Ext. :l'T5. sales ~Pie .,.,·anted lo dis· CORONET area. Own U'ans. 644-5133.. Exp ER T J a Pa ne 5 11 APT. ~!GR-OLDER COUPLE t'1JL.L or part time Mlp, KEYPUNOl Operator-5 tribule a spectacular ma· EMPLOYMENT CHILD Day Catt, ages 3-10 gardent>r. Compltle aanlen-FIRST Oass . Paintinr " minimum duties for partial Bura:'-'r Corral 2233 f'airvil!w Part/Time. Exp. Alpha· chine \\:/21 ytars ol proven AGENCY yrs. C.~1. area. Stat"-lic'd ing servict, Fro• , , t, paper • hanglng. F'rff est. rent. 642-9:>20 aft 5 pm. Rd C i\t NO hane Us numeric. Ne1v s e rv ice All 1"'" E 17 h St s • Call 545-34:>9. · ·1 • P ca · exponenCf'. res1aurants. v.J1J • t . ., .Ao no. 10040. 646-1738. Gf.5--034:J. , . A • RESUl\lE put your ap. Apply 2 lo 5 pm only bureau, Orange C 0 u n l Y bars, tav11rns, hospitals po. 541-4171 NEWPORTHeightsarta. 1 -AL'S Land•capt"•g, Tr•• P.AINTING/papering. 1.8 yrs plication on TOP. \\'o com· airport area. t• t' I Ab It l "'"'""""'""'"'""'""""""'"'I .... 5 " H .__ F NI E Write Cluslfied Ad No. 'f>I n ia ugers. sou t y no :::- yard, sand box. Balanced removaL Yard remadeling. ~ d aruvr area. Lie &: I rinsr & print :xi COJ'lies -UR TUR Daily Pllol P.O. Box lfl60 competition. Top rnmmis· TYPIST for flexowriter . lunch. Xln't care. &&:J.1154 Tra1h t>auling, lot cJ11anu p. n td. Ref's furn. 642-2356. ONLY SliOO. Call ~ -SALES -Co.ala ..,1,53 Cahf 92626 slon. &tS.4220 Bt11-n 9 & 9 P~I ~Ion. Thur 12-4, Good pay. PRE-school age, 5 day v.·eek. Repair &prinklers. 673-U66. INT k Exler, Painting. for appalntment. For local dept. store 1 "' • E P.0 .B. 2202, Newport Bch, Lic'd ins f , t '" I e TOP COMMISSION" LAUNDRESS for new com-• S CRET~R_Y * 92663, Brookhurst g, Adams area PRUNE-WEED-arr • · ree s · ·"' yrs !\ RESUME th t · k b t• d I ' _ _..cc,,_~======·I ' exper. Chuck 645--0809. · · a Y.O~ s Y e CO. BENEFITS mercial type laundry l!xper )'oung a ver Hang mC .. 1· H __ -~B~. -'"'-=30_;1~·----- 1 we Catr.r In Your Every · fnrn1tr penionn11I rhrt!ctor. ,., ed C-'l M 'L· Lo 1vork in adv. d~t. Ne!!d * WA 1 TRESS-DINNER ~ V.'ish 54;,..ti173 m r INTERIOR & t ' ' Quality line to &eU .,esir · 11.1 1 r. intn, HOUSE E 'd food I: Babysitfin,t ln my honie · o n. or , . ex er1or pa1n--Sensiblt prirf'S. Eves & A 1 in 642-S.SGl 11hcrthand, t y p i ng & . xp - Ft>nced yard. References. eves. llng. Average 2 BR apt S85 wknds, too. 673-0969 PP Y person , person!llity. $450-$500. to cockta1\:r;. G da wk . Costa Mesa area 642-0384 Nl:W Lawru;, re-&eed. Campi labor & material 548-1546. AUTO P OLIS H ING & to Mn. Thompson LEGAL SEC y start. Call l\lr. Peck &1.;.. Jntervie\\'S g to 12 noon. BABYSITTING lawn care. Clean up by job PAINTING. protessional. All DETAIL positioni. Exp'd W.p~~~~~;o. l\Iust be xln'l typist. Some 1401 ' SAM'S SEAFOOD, 16m ar mo. free est. For info y,•ork guarn. Calar engi~ cleaning Ir paint-buf-exper. probate. p I. New.* SECRETARY -Panlic Hwy. Hunt Bch r.ty home. &l:l-3212 897-2411 or 846-0932. &recialist. 646--7081: 541-1441 ling. Sal11ry open. C1'0'"''h 9811 Adams Ave., Grant Plaza port Center Ofc, Write Cl1.s-EXECUTIVE * * WAITRESS. Experienced CHILD carr. my home. Pre-LA\VN Serv. mowing:, edi;:e , Plaster, P•tch, Repair co. METRO CAR \VASH Brookhurst &: Adams, sifll.'d ad No, 62. Dally Pilot , Prt>rt-r 5 yr:r; broad food & cocktal11, da}'1L. F~ fer 2 yrs ar older. Fairview vacuum. Compl, serv, reA.s 2950 J-larbor Blvd. c .r.t . Htg. Beach P.O. Bax 1560, Costa Mt&a, 1ecrf'tA:r1a! experience plus pnsition for right girl. Mk '~ Ad C M o •o 01-2 *PATCH PLASTERING An tqual opportunity Cal\f 92626 I \V ...: ams, · . .n;>· :> rates. c .r.t. & liunt Bch. BAB y s 1 TT En. 111 e employer · · 2 yr& rollege f'fluratian or or ayne. Loving cart in my home. area. Lie & Jns'd. :if.~2M3 All ty~j F~timates h 0 u 1 t. keeping -1 cl\ild. LVN . 3:00-11:00 1hift. equivalent. t.1ust be able !(l Rancho San J oaquin ftnced in yard EXPER. ffay,•11iian Gardener =-~=._.:.::..:=---I Satunlays anly, !l 10 4. Park Udo Convalescent perform responsible cler1cal Goll Course • 645-4031 • Camp I e te Ga rd en in g Plumbing Sl .3Jlhr. Sturient a k. GIRL FRIDAY $400 C11nter 642-8044 & &ecrf'larial Y.'flrk: relieve 18021 Culver Road Carpenter Strvice. Kamalani, 646-4676. i----"-------1 646-2Z70 alt :; pm. \Vork w/interesting group ln LCYI' man, must have some Su pt r in tend en tot ad· Newport Beach GARDENING and lav..•n PLUMBING REPAffi BABYSIITER, Live-in, litt nice office:r; &. location, Ac. mechanical exper, Blue m1nistrative detail and dea.1 * WAITRESS-EXP'D CARPENTRY care, werk or month, free No job too &niall houseketping. 1'1aturt / de. cur. typinr, SH & hte Chip Auto Salt•, 2 t 4 5 tlfe.ctivelyt v..ifh ~. wide Must be. tlVtr 21. NO PHONE fl.fINOR REPAIRS. No Jab est. 536-438:i alt. 4 p.m. • &12-3128 •Y pendable. 968-8238 aft 5 pm. bkkpng. Harbor Blvd, C.1\1. 642-9700, v.antt.Y fl ~n ties &. CALLS. Apply In penon, Too Sntall. Cabi~t in car. G I 5 LE\V TAKAS & SONS / NEWPORT 5-Kl-4392 s1tuat1on11: ary range SUrf & Sirloin, 5930 \V, Coot enera trv1ces COMPLETE PLUMB"iNG BErJNNING model, no rxp. p I A I , $624 to $1J9. H NB ages l: othe r cabinet1. HuSband Busy! Call ~looM! 24 HR SERV. 646--8340 1 afternoon a wtek, Great trsonnt 91ncy *' ii.IA 0-Expd. Apply In APPLY prior lt> 4 pn1 Feb.f~7wy~.,'=~· ~·~----~I 545-8115 U no a.mwtt leavt ~·= ng- 1 "R . pay, strictly for fun. Send 833 Dover Dr., N.B. person 2080 Newport Blvd. 17-11 \VAITRESS, Exp•tl. in food msg at ""2312. lL o ..... -,..., w a ter v-epa1r Plwnbing • Elect • Repair 642 •• C M '4"2'11 • k il A ....,.. ' dl'scription (pictur, il possi-·>M70 ·' · <r · \VEST~1INSTER C:OC la I, Age 23-35. pp, 542 _ 77 5:> . ..--64.2--050& hltl to P. 0 . Box 10026, ,,1AN to learn picture !ram· SCHOOL OISffilCT 630 Lida Park Dr. N.B. Anderson Build-Serv Most Thlng11 ST 50 -r hr REMODELING & Repair R~t~.~u~~s.k ln;etal~tbre· R d I & Santa Ana . HAZEL -WE--ing. f.lust be able to "'ork l~!Zl Cedarv.·ood Ave . e WAITRESS, Over 21. Specialist. Comm'!, residen-1 r · uo · emo • Repair BODY & PAINT MAN, for NEED YOUI with hands. 6 days/y,·eek. We1tminster, Callt. Good appt.'arance. ti. I p 1· b · Free est. 968-2208 A I 9 I 11 30 a . a.ne 1ng, c a 1net1, used cll r Jot. !\lust have If you can drive, ('()Ok & PP Y O : am or * 548-1948 * ma.rlite, formica. 644-1598. Hi1uling GENERAL Home Repair o\\'n equip'mt. 64&-2698 or keep a family w/ 4 childr!!JJ 4 ta 5 pm, 100 S, Coast SECRETARY $340 \VANTED: l\1EDICAL ASS'T carpentry, cabinet.s, doors, Hwy Lail.Ina Beach Good "' RE?to10DELING Carpenter EXPERT HAULING screens&: misc. 49z.2654 af'tr S PM. !D7-4MO running smoothly, then you • · stronR' accur. fypiirt 65 Jor bUliY N.B. internist. Some needz work. 35 yrs exper. TRASH &. Garage clean-up, BOOKKEEPER, full cherge, may be juat the addltkin to MAN wanted for early Ar.1 w.p.m. \VU/ train in dicta-lab & xray exper pref'd. By the hour. 64:Z..lrio5. 7 days. SlO a loarl. free est. Roofing machine job slKip. New our family we're Jooking tor. newspaper delivery, New. phone. Must be gd speller. Pt-lime. Age ~35. Salary Carpet Service Anvlime, 548-~1. FOUND NUDE facility, Irvine complex. Salary nea:otia.ble. 644-1408 port Beach &l'l?A. l\fu&t have Mini fine. commenJurate. ~S-3742. Diamnnd Olrpet Cleaning Avg site room S8 Repairing & instal.l111ion!> ~'ree Est. 64~131 7 Cement, Concrete ee CONCRETE. Beal 1'ht> Bad Weather! F I fl a r s • patit>~. Rtu. Call Don 642-8514. CE~IENT. DrJ\'('S, patios, cu~!om slahs. elc. Also, ll!t'· ~egatl.' over f'xisting 1labs. 5.1>->t)G PATIOS, '"'a!ks, rlrivew11y.s removed • rrpoured in con- creii 3X sq It k. up 54.)-7\i.10 CE:'.\1ENT WORK. no job too ~mali, re11ton1ble. fr re Es!in1. H. Sninick, 54&-Ml:l Child Cart CHILD C&l"I'. my home 11 ny hours. HnT lunch, fenced yard. 548--."\~. Contr•ctor l\fOVING, Garqe clean-up I A )taking rool In Dover I Write Class1f1ed ad No 12, S.S. rlependable car 11nd be re-CORONET & lite h.aullng. Realll!lnable. I Shorts. I fixed it. T. Guy Daily Pilot P 0 Box 1560, , HAIRSTYLTST-Exp'd. liable. LA TIMES. 6424800. EMPLOYMENT 'Fret estimatti. 645-1602 r.oolini;: Co. 64 5-218 o. Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626 Somt following prtfd. Ph: MAKE full lime wages, part AGENCY Licensed men and women tor Housec:INning M&--9590. CASHIER counlr.r {irl. 6 am 6'16-134.l. time, be 11; distributor of 1&30 E. 17rh St., S.A. ne~·. general Rtal Estate LEE Roofing co. Roo ling of lo 2 pm, Mon thru fr1. \VANTED: Haii'dresst n, in-pure organlc cleaner1, food 541-4171 nfficecaveringNewport}lar- ------. ----all lypts. Rtcover. repa\J'S , All hohdayli aff, insurance crease your saJa.ries 30$1i. supplem('nls & ro1metics.1_.. ............ '!"!!!!'!"''""""I bor. Huntington Be a eh, SUN Brite 1'1aint CA~~· I roof coatings. Lie/bonded I t,, ,·acation. Ca.II 8J3-Mi66 *Call 67M1250 * 631--4606 or 673-2064 *SECRETARY in Salts Of-Fauntain Valley, Top com. floors, wl~O\\'I etc. Res1d I J . , . 47 642 . 7222 * t!HIN&SE OIEF MOTHER'S helper wanted. flee. 5 Day week. Good mission. Excellent y,·orking Ir comm I. Free e 1 t. gJnt(' · · IQ J"ty • .... * GTRI.S, 18 to 21 . must General housey,·ork. Senior working ronditions, in Casta condifi<iflll. South Bay ReaJ. 537-5621. I EASTERN Quality-Western I u~~ Experitnc-u hllV"-own transp. Part time. hi school ar J .C. girl. 4 J\le1a. ty. 17179 A So. Brookhurst, DOMESTIC ~·ork. Dav or Prices~ All types Reoling. 64 • 19 aft 5• 1.tr. T&Y_lo_r__ 675-6070. hrs every Sat rnorning. Pl'rmalllt Plastics Corp. f .V. Olive English 962-3002 "'f'ek. Experienced . ·Own I Lyle, 673-7980. t COO KS • ~tu~! know I~ *' HEAD \VAITJltESS. 6 Da Dependable. Near Santiaio 548-5125 524-9670 or eVl!B. 675-3051. ' lransportation ;,.iz-:;Xt.1 1 S1win9/Alt1ration1 J 110up5 " sauce~. \Vorking wk. Dinner House . P rrm. & SandaJ.,.,.ood. 548-5185. SECRETARY • --hours 6 am lo 2 pm, r.·ton Jntf'rvrews !I to 11 noon. -wor.tEN F EXPER . house cleaner, By ALTERATIONS, restylin.s::, thru f'r1. AU holiday:o; off. SAM 'S SEAFOOD 16 218 NEED 4 YOUNG r.1EN Half fee paid, Good S.H. k. 1 . • anta~lic ~ day. Ov.n o~rans I Expert fitter. Top ref'~. pairl medical tn1uranrt, 2 Pacilir Hwy. Hunt. Bch. p t ti Age 20 lo JO,,-k Typing. (Also .!!e jobs), c,a1 1 , ri~~~~~. ~a:Xn re:~~ * n.'6--88!1T * N.B. area. 646-2704 Call week~ vacation. C 11 I I ar 1ne · · •· · ·• ·• v11 \\' • Lora1n1_1, 6'15·£• •O, \\lestc ii t.lt'.sa. Cleaning Service Ru1h Call. ~:1:i-S666 Housekeeper $2.50 h r. Full Hnir . • ..... $225 wk. Pcrsanncl Agency, 2043 11.onary Gntw ~~~ly 1,ech· Carpets, 'ol.'1ndows, f'loors J EUROPEAN d ki all COSMETIC One day 18 hrsl per wk . Car nee. Call 11-4 p.m. Westcliff Dr., N.B. n1qur. 1uarantt:r1.1 pa~ Commc'l. 5- 1 8-4\ll . ff'~sma ng Salea. Salary Largr bacht>lor apt, Nrwpnrl 892-1038 SECRETARY for publica· ment &. c ientele at your lo- ___ custom f1Ht'd . Vt ry rea.son. Ruaranre~. Call a lter 4 Pl\1, 81.'ach. ?t1us1 ht hlghly de-S d cations or your home. HOUSECLEANING ablio. 673-ll!4!J ti:;,~?103. NURSE. Neede ror pnvaTt lions XJnL typing & spelling 55? 2'lll Y..f' L B D 0 T . pendt1ble and f'Xperitnctd, duty, RN's, LVN'i, Prarl, 0 m',:sl. <>p•r "q'd, Siiia'"'' · 1ss yons. y ay. w!J r11nspor1ar1on Alter•l'tons _ 642.s••s CONSULTANT. Gen'I f()()\'ls 1 t · · · h 1 d " " ,, 0 =ts .,. x n 1ron1ng, wit ou 11ta.n · Aides. All shifl s/il1l1sr have O""n. 831-1242 or 499-31i60. \VOMAN-Sales. $1JOO mo ~ N 20 needs 1 \1-umen for' Viv1a.ne · f · c·•r F 'd "' e11t, 11rcurate, yl.'ars exp. 1ng rt erenr.r.s. 11.1 r1 ay, rel's. Ph any hr 642-9!1;,j . -salary + c omm I 111 lo n , HOUSE OF CLEAN Tt'le \\loodarri Cosmtlics. We ,,trs. Chamberlain 521·6410. Lcscou!il.' Nurse5 Reist SELL Becllne.tashion5. Ne~rl Exp'd PXl.r11 !tr f Complete House Clearun, f1'11n . Exec po1'1 avail, sm L_:!'.__ 3 slyle-ronsc1011i:: women 1n ' a ac.i~ . .,,._..,, ----------1 Inv. 544-1*4 Dime-A-Line 6-12-~78 *OPERATORS * thii: aN'a. P1rt or lull lime. ~nid•'x' 'd~· Good J>Olll~i~-n -~~-o-_:_=:...,---1 s· I di E · -• c 11 71'/""9-7' aft 6 pan 1n1t comrany ... u . Bay & &ach Janitorial *V,.rrn!, The Tilf' !'.1an* uig e nee e, xpcricnr..... 11 ~ °""""" ~ • or Wil~ 714/871 -2992 Crpls, \\i ndows, floors tole I Cu!!. v.·nrk. Install &: rt>pair5. only, tap pay. ROW-"'S ?tl.f'G. 774-4080 n · Res. & Comm'I. 646-1401. Nn job too sml. Plaster 863 Producuon Place, N.8. WE NEED YOU pll!ching. Leakin_p; ~hfl\\.·er Ph: 6·16-0308. SERVICE CENTER I 11~1 Income Tax I · ,47 1 6-0 E I t A Ml!rchandi•• · rf'pa tr. -951fM 206. OR.o\NGE County·, volume mp oymen gency JltOO'.\t Add1tion5. L. T. ----------1 CERA/\.11C tile nl!w & f"ord dealer ha& apenings ~------J Construruon Sin1lr sl(lry or Crnrr11I Busl nc15 Sf'r\!1Ceg remorlel. Free e5t. Small !or 3 top caliber men on * Ac countant $10K.J•••••••••••J 2. Es111n. 1 plans & layaut. eTHE TAX ADVISORS jol-1 "'eicomt. S36-242S , ne1v car lll.les 1tart. No ex· Rcq's dei:ree min 2 yrs ex. Antiques 100 84i-1::.11 I Pt'rm. orfice-Re111 Rate& 5.11'-88S.'i. pericnce ntte.uary. Earn per/career oppor. l---'-------.::::1 GAR .. util or st(lrai::e nld~ l28 No. Newporr Blvd. Tree Servlce Y 0 U CAN 11'h1lv we lraln )'tlU for good * Personnel PARKING LOT SALE s1 .1:. prr sq fr. (400 ,,q I Oppositt Hoa~ Hosp1111J pay and m11ny frin1:e bene. Tri1inee $350 A "Chair-In" 11 mini Rcsirl, apt & romm'l I t'nr App~ C!!~:>-0400 _ SELL IT fits. Apply 1n person only to T)'J'lt' JO w.p.n1./like detail/ 300 Benlwoods + at l'f'lmparablc cos rs . INCOME TAX SERV TREE". }fedg~s. Top , Tnm. Sales Manager. Theadort! sanie PBX. _ BIZARRE ANTIQUES !12-:i~7 __ l $4 It up. 9 am·!! pm wkdys. rut. riomoved, hauled. !JU. W ITH A Robins rord, 2060 f{arbor * Keypuncl'l Opr $450 2XXI Newport B!Vd, Sat & Sun i\:1Y v.·11 ,v, q1111.Jiry home Oprn r vesl wkntls. Appl~ ~"~2-t<)~"'.;.,.8~'~'~·~"~"~"-~--Bl\ld .. Cosla J\o1esa. ,.Un. I yr exper. rtq'd. ANTIQUE ln1nk. Square 1'flpair \\'all~. ct1!1ng, flllOr,,t avall, ~18-0:i88. l342Newpor1, T1levi1ion Repair DAILY PILOT PAPER BOYS &h.~pe . Ori~!nal cond~~n. 1'1 <'. No joO 100 •mall. C.M. NEWPORT BEACH j()t) Newrnrf Center Or., NB JI! L x 20 W x .23 H. .:_l.l i..0036. 21 hr an&. ~"1"'· 'G~o~r~d-,-n~N"~.w,1-,-,-e-n~P~.A7, l coL~I? TV Servirl'. S2.!ll Rou1cs open In Ne"'port Solle 535 I 641-4981 ~S50-·~"-'""""'-------·I Lic"d Cantr. Rem<ldellng Since 1951. 67~l4.i 11erv1rt call. Special Z4 hrs, WA N'T AD Rr.ach for boy~ age JO.\J. ----Appli•nces 802 Arlflitinns. Plans. Layout 557-22-.'6::,.______ C11 1J Circulalio n 0 ('Pt . * SERVICE STATION HEl,.P'----------1 Karl E. Kenda.U 548·15.17 Ironing UphOfstery 642·4321 Ml'chanic -Lube: ~f1tn. Pump 1KEN~fODL"" t~1. r.Jgr. F\dl timt>, days. · ·~ srovf's, frel(ht Adriltions * Rf'madelina: IRONING my home SI 2.\ ""r For F•st Service & PAPER BOYS Cood l'J&.Y for right me:n. damaged, fullr guaranteed, C".trw1ck I: SOn, Lie. hr. Bnnc Oll>'ll h&.n~;.. 1''111hion Draptr 1,.11 I. FOUNTAIN VALLEY RICHFIELD. l!lth & rtduced In price up. ID $50. t>i.'\.-QHI '*' ~~ 54~7641 lnteriol'!I. UP ho I 11 try, Expert Assistance Rflule~ ol>t'n In f-.v. r.,r boy1 Nt1vporr, c .,.I. Floor clea ranC(! fi'.enmOft lurn11ure, auto. ('arpc!s, 11i;:r JJ.\j, C11ll 642-i321, Cir· SERVICE ~t11.tion lube man. ~vas~lfiJ&. ~ryl '"· 1'°"'""" NOW'S THE TIME FOR BEST I QUICK CASH I Landscaping LANDSCAPING: palK>sm....dcckint Reu. ~7-9.'JOI. Jncludlnt &: renclna. CO'.'tPLl.,.E Pmf t: er v . St•lr llc'd contrticlt)r, Call ' 968-1921. drapery clelllint. f" r e e DIAL t'ulallon Dept 1p · oor c e11ranre rstlmatf'. Fklor samrites 1.,r =cc,-'=.;:.;;;~·=--~ P.T. k 11111 time, day It Kenmtire vacuum& as low I C ..,. w 1 s PBX RECEPTIONIST I"ve. 1101 Bayside Dr. N.B. •s $16.88. Phone! !162-7781 Mt. mi•. w.u . st t.. • fin 201 SA M7-7AA1. 642 5678 Teletype. Brokeng:e E."P· ~ 5 Sean1 ROt'buck &: Co., LTC Upholsl"-r"-r _ Quality " Call Ann, 645-ZTIO. We1tcliff SERVlCE stA A'IT. all Adam11 at ~tagnoha, Hunt. Personnf'I ~ncy, 20U shiflt: open, Apply In pel'$0n, Bch. ~ork Ant!Kiny's Uph . DIRECT \Vt'stcllff Dr., N.8. ,.tac Anhut & "678 Campus1'eo.-ru;:==P7Al~Ro-m-,n~h-.. -cl~,-,-.nl Sf.rv1ce. 64~ N.8 . · Dr NB PERSON for othre dutle11 " 1 • • l11te ~el "'·aslM!n l TIME FOR QUICK CASH who wl!I V.1lrk lrom bon1e: SERVlCE Eslab'd. Fuller dryel'!I, Rsnbl , guar, lt!u~r ~fust know flMplr in 1reas. Brus!\ rt~. S125-Sl'f5 "'k. to Chi OJ<. s.'11-8637 4fl6.3.l72, S.10, Allrr 6. 11., al"° pt. tinlf'_ :.16-5145._ KENMORE 500 'tlec dl')tt. lllYS! THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD • BRICK, block, conc r .. 1e, carpentry, houH. lewling. all typrs TtmOlf1-llng. No jnh too 1m1U. L!c, Contr. 1)S2-fi9.U. Blr1Ckwal11 -P1rlo1 ~df'W~lk~ • f)M\'l"Wll)', Lir S.19-31'13 A~t 11r f'\'f THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD ' . --, PHONE canvaYer ovtr 18 SEWING MACHINE Nt\'tor u~. t>.take oft,.r, tM Salt~ exper pref:d, ,.5:30: _OPERATORS _ Congtt~11. Ca.t M&-2-18!1 SAl•ry + c o n1mI11 1 an . Bikini's. ll l~hrst pitce wnrk FOR SALE: Coldspot 13 cu f..1~911 rllll'l! Exp'd only, apply 4001 It chtst type freezer. Xln't "F'' Birch, N.B. Nr o.c. r.anri . $T.Al 831-86fij, Fast rvsul11 are Jult a phone 111rport. RE~'R.IGERATOR tT cu, I CAil 4\\'aY. 642--561!1 Like> r!CI\', ne\•er u.sed $2!)t, \\le'll help l'OU i;~I\! 6'11-5618 64:Z..26i0 r.m !I I ' • --- I I .,, 1•• .•.•.. . . . I • I • . . . . . . . Tttur\d.Q", February 11, 1971 -~~~i ~~~I I -I~ c--!~I.__-____,!~ l.__ .... _-___,!~l~--'~I[~ _r .... _.vou~j ~[ .... ::=...I~ [ t,.._,,i;,. Ji][· _ ... _ I~ 34 OollLY PILOT l ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ ~llance1 I02 Furniture I""""-:.;....'-'-----110 Gar.,_ Sale 112 TV, Redkt, HIFI, TV, R.adlo, HIFI, FREE to l(IOCl home • Dog, 8oat1/Mlrlne Stereo 136 St•r.o 13' Dobtrman &: Shepherd. Cd. Equip. 904 KEN~fORE 1ut.o \\·ashe.r .It matchiiw clec dryer, Both xlnt cond, $90 :ua.ran!eed & df'llv. 546--867'2, 847-8115. WHY Buy * BAYSHORE * I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 w/childrtn. Jemale. Xlnt.1---------L.AST CALL! ! 1 wat<'h dog. 10 mo' 1. 7 ilP Chrysler/OB. New, l Couches SUG-.floo-#5 ONCE A YEAR SALE 545-6244 2/ll ll("vcr run. QH:l S365. sell FURNITURE? Kings:.: bed t.f1 S75 1.taple • • • NEED loving homP. Jor 7 $250/best ofter. M7-26!k). SEARS electric d1yer 6 n'° du1tl sl't $·15, 3 Dbl bed 1ul1c1 AUDIO & VIDEO EQUIPMENT adorable Buset mix pups Boata, Power 906 old. $100. 52" gold couch Bt Fltxlbltl S.'..0 ea, Db.I headbnt $15, NEW & USED 6 v.·eekJ. 5 n1a.les 2 fern1d{'1 $3a. 3 teak bar i:tools $45. Rt'nt mo. to mo. "'itb Spring & mattren $15. 2 ~td fncd yds 1 892·165'1: 20' Say ch&ractf!?' tug boat. 5~>-7052 100•,4 Purchase Option Breakfasl 1able1 & chain MARANTZ -MclNTOSH &36-4403 2/11 Ideal for harbor cnti1\ng I ' •< & j l5, As.10rled coffee l"==_,,.-.,----:.,..,,,-,--,-1 or small \1·ork boa.I.. Dock LADY Kenmore auto Jnd. Hem select on "" NORELCO F SHER LOVABLE ma.le Co cker table, & end tbls--Sacrifice, 1 -I . · avail. f.tust &ell. $10C"i0. v.•asher, late model, Xlnt 24 Hr. Oely. Spitz mix 10 mo. all "'ht/blk 5'l8-0440 cond. SS..l gUarantttd I: CUSTOM Dishes, Book!! & misc. 26S:l PANASONIC-Other Brands eyes and nose, med sz. loves 1 dellv. 546--8672, 8~7-8115. j Furnitur• Rental Baysho1-e Or 6·12-4062, ch!!dren ~ds good home. LOOK nc1\I, never us~ 7.t Cycles. Bikes. Scooters .. ' f50 BEST ctlcr 1'!u11tan: Fstbek & ~1BG . Both xlnt. fOOd· ,\1ust sell. 646-&110 Antiques/Classics 953 *CORD* 1910 n1oclcr11 cll1.s1ic. Po1\·f'r, auton1atic transfnl~~\on, •ir <:onclll ionlng. SG.500. l\tr. Locking, Commerrial Na. tional Bank, 827-4310 . Dune Buggies 951 El.EC range, a\/OCado grren, 517 \V. 19lh, C.1\1. 5-18.3481 G,1&-4().lS. JEAN MUSICK CORP. 54S--0813; 836-4493 :?113 hp Conimando w 11 4 ' used 9 mo. $&5. 2l04 I Anaheim 77~.2800 l\tAHOGANY 1t!n'g table $33, 2 l\tale kittens V.'Ould like ru64:."2098bout & trlr. First $350. V"' Powrred Buggy, nietal Lo I 170 •-11 •• lbl 2080 Placentia Ave. u-flake blue, walnut dash. ·10 \\'al/ace, Ci\f, &as..386%. Wlabra 694-3708 \'"eSt'a · "" lfl 1 home together lo cat lovt!r.1 o=-.=.~.~.~.-~~---1 Buildinn Mattrlafs 806 ,,10VING: All like ne"" school desk S25, Coffee tbl Cost• Mei. -541-8671 9 "'k!! old, part Blue Mallt'se 65-31_ F airhner Ex P. r ': s s ~hi~i;:_&e~TI. A~l ai;:~: ~~~ • SID Roll-a"·ay bed $11. 9:00 to S:Oo -S.t. 10:00 to 2:00 &: Silver Tabby Persian. Cruiser. Rigged for f1slung, 1009 Kawasaki 90, dirt bike. E)(paocl!ion chamber and many rx1ra parts, 'Like nc\\I, Sl1 PER CLEAN $325. 8.'!&5672 beautiful II' llO!a SlOO. Com-eo'o ks he J v es, Folding ii::::nr.::::::--'"'iii't~r;:~n::::::----•j;"~5-;'84~77'"';~-:-_,!2~11~3 exlraJJ. Low hours. Clean '70 TRIU~1PH j(l()CC rni's. Sl100. 6-16-5612. 3,000 DOORS modes $3.'i ea, ti.tr. & Mrs chairs, assorted trivh1. 10182 Mi1cellan~s 111 M iscellaneous 646--0174 aft 6. UNDER 1600 ~t!LES OF'F·ROAD race car • V\V f $ U c-ha.lrs S65 ea, ga.me table, Clift Dr, lf.B. 962-7323 Wanted 820 L 0 V I N G 3 Yr old . . DRIVEN JUST ON STREET l"JO\\'t•rcd, lT:iOce, 120 hp. One IOO's cf Seronds roin 1 p. SLSO, custom quilted scla, NEEb lot ONEY FOR 1-----------I orani;e/white male cat QUE'.EN ?.Tai')' ~4 cabin $900 New Interior doors beglnn. dark pt>Can cocktail &: com· PATIO Sale-Thurs-Fri-Sal. lJEART SURGERY FOR \\'ANTED: One four.dra"·er ahered, shots, box trained. cn.u~r, fuUy equ1ppe<I, sips !\!UST SELL Sl&-23&1 ~~r:h:n l~~:!in~.f.as~ ~~:~:· a5;°1~~2~~~~r c~7. mode, 1 Kng & 2qudeen ... bcl~ ~~hs~~; P~t~7u~ PUPPY. • .l\lust sell 26 file cabinet .and one large Nleed1 good home, 644..()139 B8. Xlnt.Rrond./96Z-8Ch 1~ 908 1 ~ .. ,~,~ .. ~T~R"l"U~M"PJ;l~.-.Ex="~"~'""'ed rt>ady. i\1usl sell. 5'18-0440 fold s, IOU\Tt'S & &liders. ~e~j25 a;r_s9os:J es...,, .ro;, King bedspread $.1 Cloek S5 gal show a.qua ~i um oUice desk, both used. a ler 6 P.:\f. 2112 oat s, e nt a rt r frol'IT ern:I. Xtra chromf', * * V\V DUNE BUGGY Pan!'ling lsl i:?'3-de 4'x8' 1---·----· ----Sml marble tbl S5 Drapes w/!luoresttnt lite "-ttom 5-10-2219 aft 5:30 P~f B~AUTir;1L m_a.I~ Collie J 32' Tu·lnscrew Chris, fully custom paint. $11;)(] or bes\ r-01· Sall• S-150 ..,,. i I h .shet>rs Sl.99 ea.. \\'ood sash 3 SETS of dbl box sprinp S2 Rods S2 Propane gas filter SJO, Air pump SG, \VANTEO: Used A.~f / F~I yeai:s. \\ell d1sc1phned -equip'd Fishing or Cruis-. tJtf('r . !>16--0328 fiticrgh1ss body. CaU after 12 , 4' l & maltl'f'sses •• ster i l.ized Sl l'.".i:its morT. Dralting machine $15, Receivt>r. Call alter 6. looking: Jor a. good home. ,·og. ~·02.134. '11 Jlood" T·~,,11 7"$300. ·111 .. e .. ., ..,,-indo"'S trom '_, x A um. $20/set. J .sets ht·in box =-'"""'=o--~~---:-,.-1 Polaroid model 80A SlO, VW 546-5710 6 8421063 ?/Jl Ji<>-" '0 ..,.. ~1 pm, ;:, ,,....~.., inum casement windO\\'fl $30. springs "-ma\ tresses, GARAGE Pottery Sa I e: jack SJ, 2 VW casl spoke or 7>-1345 · -lf.1f.tACULATE Nt'\\'porter 4-spd, 200 nii lcs. '71 tags. 1960 CO RV Al R Door 1kin., St Up. Hardbcard sterilized $20/~et. 1 set Hand thro"'n 1tone"·11.re l.: (sunshinel mags Jor 1968 CASH Jor Jum, appliances, llfALE beige and wht terrier for bare boal charter. Call ii-lust sell. 5-16-4033 aH 5 $lOO. 39c a sheet. Aluminum queen box springs & maJ:· porcelain. Bowls, pitchers, &: up $10 earh, Tubular tools, &: ml1c Items. mix 4 months good \Vith FN'd &1~95.:iOa!t u pm. l:i-l6-7Sl 7 After fi sheets for fencing, siding, tress. s!erillzed, like new, teapots, etc. Sal & Sun, frame for dune buggy or &tZ..7015 or Aft 5. 548-4227. children 54~3562 aft 1 B ' S 'I 909 1969 Yamaha 2;ilcc patio COl'ers, 1ra1ll'r skirts, S59/set. Uf'F'. 188.i Harbor 54~. 273 \V.tke f'orest roadster or ! $50. 54:>--35n COUP~ wants used 836-4493 2/11 oats, ai Dirt & S!rcet model Trucks 962 l5c a sq fl. Unfinished pie-Blvd, C:\t, 548-9451 Rd, C.I\1. NAUGAHYDE couch $2:>; ttlrlgerator & gas 1tove. "MISTY" female blue tick e troo 14 No. !H4. Can ,•"!:WI rnlles S400 ,54 PICK UP TRUCK ture frames. hard"•are, FURNITURE retumed from LEAVING State: llousel'°ld sniall freezer $3.l; Skllsaw Call 642-8699 hound dog 11! yrs. Good be seen in Bayshores. $775. • 835-1~9'2 • j - ]()('ks, cabinet koobs & pulli: display 11tudios, model horn. good!i. 80ll Sail Cr, H.B. $20; Hole saw kit $15: drill FURNITURE WANTED 1 w i I h chi Id re n. 1 * &lG-0885 * 1971 NOVA Cobra nli1u bike, I Body rouih, needs ove1·haul !coin siu·plus inventories. ew, decora tors canet'llation. 1 .,:530-.:;..~76~4~8-----~c= bit kit $15: angle drill $30; item or house fWI. WE PAY 523-9194 21ll CAPE COO CAT BOAT 5 hp., 2 \Vks old, S240. 11r1~. S75 l0·5 daily, ll-4 SUn. All Brand New M i1ctllaneou1 818 RCA TV, "·orks U5: check CASI-I. 536-4041 '61 DODGE dooI'!i and 18', fbrbls. f213) 834-3883. bu,Ying larger bikl', Sell G-12.0010 9 AM to l PM MILLER-ORAK E R o FURNITURE writer Sl5; photocopier $75; Musical lnitruments 822 t7nc1ers side glass tor_ sta· B t SI" /D k 910 Sl80. 4~3-3860 1 ·i;u International Metro I\1\11'. :?.406 Sc. I\Tain St., S.A. 1844 N 1 Bl CM 2-way radio: base & mobile t1on ,,•agon after :i : 30 oa s, 1P' OC s MINI BIKE Gd rubber. gd <.'Ond. $975. IN• S d -• B -" I ewpor ., ' ' * AUCTION * 1 exl 10 !Rn U•u rauus f.Ton., Thur. & Fri 'Ti! 9 T.0.P.; i\lctal oUice storage DRUL\t SET, complete, S200. 642.93,SJ 2/13 1) TO 2J FT. slips avail. Race or fun. 6 hp. 2 speed. 8l?.-3172, ;i57-S450. ~1032 \\'ed. Sal. & Sun 'TU 6 Friday, 7:00 P.M. cabinet S20: elec \\later coo]. ExCt'llent condition. Jdeal for 1 yr old med--5z dog, blk !or power boats. Privale ~fake offl'r, ~6-Zl82 1 ·;13 Dodge panel tnJCk· Runs SACRIFICE _ 10 rms near February 12th er SO. 54:>-r.671. advanced s1udent. 548.5143 medccat, mixed breed, likes la.goon, \Yater & elcc. avail. M b"I H 935 good CAB r NETS· complete .... ,.. ,,,.,.,, f"rn in'". 8• CNCl...Ali\JED STORAGE * SPRING eve or weekend. children alt 6: 673-8635 Bayside Vi1\agc, 300 E. 0 1 • omes I Sl50. · * • • 67i-41'.'>6 kitchen. Range, tJven, ~le. ...... " ... REPO'S c t H NB Beautiful &: reasonable. black naugahyde sofa & & WARDROBE * Office Furniture/ 2/12 oas '"Y· CONJEMPO • '70 DATSUN P.U. 1600 &16--5393 loveseal, never used, $150. Sealed cartons, Colored TV's, sizes 5, 7, 9, JS, top Jabt'ls Equip. t24 LOVABLE yg adult br/wht Boats, Storage 9l2 I cc. ~lake offer. Call alt Bunk beds, 5· coHee table, Stereos. -Sdnn sets, Di-bells, sports wear, S"'eaters, female Springer Spaniel 6 Pi\t: 536-6629 Furniture 110 2 end comm 0 de,, vans, !'lta11resses. Commod· dresse!I., coats. loads or ac.. i\10DEL "C" Executi\-e IB'.\1 needs good home 1 523.9194 DRY boat slorage or COMMUNITIES ; Auto Leasing 964 DOVER Short's redt'l'Orating hide-a-bed, Spanish King es. Cocktail tables. Dine lies, cess. $1-Sl.i 675.8922 type"Titcr. Comp J e 1 e I y · 2113 camJ){'i:-. SI per ft per mo. 1 I bdrm, very r sn bl. [){'sks, Headboards, Nite rebuilt. S2.i0. Day Ii: ~ . Fnrd htf'd yard, close to e . )lcd1terranean pecan \\'ood 213/92.J-3622. 5tands, Chests. New carpet· OLD fann \\·agon & heavy 962..Qj(]7: Eves: 531~960. FREE .\longre! puppies lo launching ramps, 410 Jlst 0 LAGUNA HILLS kini: hl'adboard ~ nitc wheels "'OOd v.•/lrcn rims. gOod honie. Beautiful &: St, NB, 642-3392 23301 RIDGE ROUTE DR. WE LEAS[ ~tands, rustom chalr11 , \VHlTNE"'i' Kimball spinet ing. Refrig's. Stoves, \Va~. 2258 trear) 1'.'ewport Blvd, 2 1\lETAL desks, l!ke llf'\V, lovable. See to appreciate.ljiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii (Corner of l\1oulton Pkwy) leather top desk w/chait. piano, sm. i\.laple loveseat, ers and much more! c.~f. $80 each. Call n4/ 846-2674 8,l&-45.ll l/ll 11 Prestige adult community, -maiming dub '""' $65. WINDY'S AUCTION CARP~s. d . h. h I :·':i,'~'~·m~-----,;;:,IFiiri~WiF.OPoi:mi;;.::1 r-:;::;:::-11il adj.ceot to Le i•u.e I\Tap!e coffee table SlO. 1' ""'' • pa • grain ig • 1 • • FREE 6' lall Fan Palm irer, TraJUPOrl•tion ri.oii nEF'RJG. Admiral 20 cu It Ear!y American sofa $j(), lo, red shag, Colonial braid· P1anos/Or9ans 826 Beaut & healthy. You dig .. World. Beautiful surround- 21• Yf" c ld, $2'50. Frplc DlrM>He set $-JO. 968-4003 aft CO~TE BRO\VSE AROUND Pd rug, approx 15>.'l.2. from front yard.1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;; ings, all Ju."\ury appoint. equip s;:.o. tall bookcase S4:l, 201air.i Newpoii Blvd. Stereo. Call aft 5: 962-8956 CLEARANCE 96S--OCXU 2114llA' ft ments. putti.ng green, hobby roffee tbl gla ~s top sz;;. ,~·~·~m~·===~~=~-L H Cl b SALE 1rcra 915 ~hop, niuch niore. uph<ll chr $25. 5-19-1580 3 PORTABLE black & \\'hite Behind Tony's B!dg J\lat'ls H EA T u mem· PUPPY. 1 yr Old, Te1Til'r 1,.:::_c:,:,.:c:..=.:.:,;:;.~:....=· I tv·s in good cond, $59 ea. Costa Mesa * 646-8686 bership..9 mos. at reduced Ove!' JI}() Pio.nos &: Organs & Poodle, playful n!'eds lrgi·.-66-,.,-. -,-.,-,-1-511-.-,-,,-v-C_o_m CALL 830-3900 S' GOLD sofa & chair, S7i l<J JO .... It. white OPEN DAILY 9 to 4 rate. Also Cedar \vardrobe, R d d < . d l yard. 6-16---$647 alt 5 ~M. ~~11 ,..,1 1200 '.IT e SANTA ANA 8' rt'd Doral Sp11nlsh M>fa .... S75 54;;-0983 s r uce <lt' lmm~ · sa e. 2113 ~. """" ....... · -tlOSO \V f'IRST ST s A • 10,·e ••al, $88. 2 10,,n rr!rigeralor.5, like nC\V $65 SACRIFICE: 2 Goodyear --·-=-==='v~e_, . ..-:--Buy Now & S•vel ii.m, 400 S~101{ -0 Time since FA'tlLY. . ·• ·,· -' 2 II 11· G10 14 . I al e BICYCLES e REAL 1 bb --' •1~ p · " community a un. l'ieal s, l ROid floral , 1 red ea. sma o !Ct' or camper x \l'IC e ov s on 0J){'n Daily 10 ti! 6 cue ra its to gvvu lop. .,. ~vv. rivate party n d l . i h.I rtfrigera!ors, SSS ea. LIFF', new chrome reverse rims All types. Gd. cond. Nicely F . 9 S 2 ~ homr. Al s o cage 54[µ1038 'ancetJ recreation Ore 1· floral. $29 ea. Uff, 18S5 r: 10· * un l ·:I 2113· · dl'en, nr. gd. schools, shtJp. Ha.rmr Blvd, Ol. 5-18-9-157 ~!H:i~a.rbor Blvd, C~1. !~I~~~. 3 trs::d S~s5hlf~~ ~pa-l~ot~ed=. •Roc'•"~·,"-.'·~lTI'°"':--COAST MUSIC 962--lS64 Ca mpers, Sa le /Rent 920 ping, pdv. club house. l~~!~:l~~G BEAUT custm coffee table, ~1~~ Se;;~: 8~=.r, cam. XlntH~~ITAL 8 ~-8195 Co~;~e~~T &*HAR~~~J I 11 ~1 CAMPER Bo/1~;L,!;;l~m• $15 blu(grn Italian Ille sel in SY~BRAE.TI'E: Tht" \.\"Ork· \VE have 21 ne1v & used ht' and Supplies of ycur choice, move hand carved fram~. \\'as: IRVINE Coast Country Club . i;7.4:-isz S.JOO, 7JX34 sm. Pair cf family membership for We ing bra, Custm fit~ in pianos and 10 ne\\• & used CLEARANCE SALE 1n to a~, one ol our 8. SWEDISII modem couch, ~ arm chairs S35 each. from member. For ln-my home. 557~151 Ol"gans, all on Special Sale ··orr:.1~ .. parks. olf .... ·hite linen, needs Frplc scrttn 53X2S SlO. formation call ~9131, Mr. -Lo,...Om·be,-,-.-400=•,,.-.~,~,.~3'><~.-,-.,-:..O~.m~:at ;;en;:~ d~al~~ Pets, General 850 Large selecllon pre ·11 HOW OPEN!! -.. ~1 •« =,-n~ ••k ,, .• 1, .. 1 h•"·" ;.,bil'l!'t w/oul Smith .,.,, Amherst Rd, C.~I. c N Sia •-• '~"1""' • ..,_,_ ,..,,,... ""' " u '" ......., "'-I::;..,_,,.., \\'hat you want ill FOX· RARE BREED, All ampers 0\\1 Su" IO for Jane or art 6, 673-3058 component~. ~3222 SHAKLEE Distribut.ot· non--.,. ..... .xi \\IARD'S BALD\VIN ~TUDJO shots, 9 mo, defani:-ed. $49 01E1t THE BEST OF LIKE new: Marlin chair, 3 BEAUT. massive Spanish polluling, oria.nic cleaners, 'W~A~N~'TE==D-, ~u~,-,,-,.-·Al~M""IF'1<~.~I 1819 Newport Blvd, 642-8-18-1 11: ~S..J025 • ACTUAL BOTH WORLDS 17,-7' n •• ,·,h modern '-d-m •••-•-,d~-~ 2 cosmetics & v Il a m in 1 • R·-,·v,r. Call ~•tt'.'r 6, FACTORY • V<U• .,... '"" """'• '"" uvcuu, '"'"" .... HAMi\-IOND, S tein1\•ay, 7' Boa Constrictor tNVOICi For a beautiful home, Jo1v couch, $100, Call 833-3148 nite st.ands, dresser & mil'· Barbara Bernhart S»-2332 ~5TIO or 6'&~345 hi to see ror, like ntw, $lS9 iet. 2 SIGNS mo-airds, posters, Yamaha. New & used Beautitul. S60. 6~2-6817 SlfO"'CASE maintenance and arc "tecur. •-1 S . h -" · k 1 . • SPECIAL UT IL 1 TY pianos of most makes. Bt'st Cal• 852 DEAL".R ally impressive de&ign, Sec Costa ALL MAKES & MODELS BAUER BUICK in COSTA MESA 214 E. 17th St. I\lesa 543-TRiS • LEASE A NE\Y 1971 PINTO $50.0D mo. 8' PIU.OW·BACK sof a, ...,au · panis c o r ne r wluuO\\'ft,. true 11, ow price. SHELVES, 8X6, Folkerts, b•ivs in So. Calif. at Schmidt r. the excili"" new ••vilJ"'"'e lo 1 red · 1 groups, full hvin bed 1r, !'\tom or eves 962-3887. 893-1:>12 ...,, .a FOR . ..., ...,,. me n co 0 • revennb e s119 set. 2 !IOla &: chair 1 7-o:=;:-;=-;-,~;-;;:-;;--;-c~ 1.,::,_;,=:=-=~~-....,.1 J\lusic eo .. 1901 N. !\lain, p u RE BR E LT Burml'sr I-louse" by Levitt ?.lobile 1 cushions. Xlnt eond, $125. A PPR 0 X I Af ATE LY 2 REFRIG·s. J962 Tempest, Santa Ana. spayed femal• k•'l>eo. Al~" J::LDORAOO CA:'ifPERS Syst!'m!I; on display now at 136 mo.l open end RENT !162--0M? M"ls, in good cond, $48 set. .. .,,, THEODORE · . un-·, 1885 Harbor Blvd, 40 assorted law books. $100. xlnt cond s22;,. Dinette seL BALD\VlN JJ01vard •con1bo neutered Brltii;h Blur. Both BAY HARBOR A NEW 1971 PINTO $4 DAY 8' SOFA, ne\•er used, quilted C l. S4S-9-t57 Call after6 pm, &12-2930 1.l.UST ?.fOVE. 64&-1503 organ $500 or best offer. JO mon!hs old. Cdi\-t. Call ROBINS FORD MOBILE HOMES floral, scotchgua.rded $l2j. 812 WE Loan-BU)"-Sell anything KCNG·SCZE n1attress &. box J\Taeslro Rhythm King $25<l 675--3193 e\'l!S only . 2060 HARBOR BLVD. 142:; Bak"r St. Costa r.tcsa i\-fatching love1eat $75. G•ra9e Sale Coast Pawn&: Auction. ~426 sprin~s. A·l ccnd. Clean, or best cfler. 6·16-1311. . D~s _85~ COSTA i\IESA &12·00UI Just S. of S.D. Fwy at Harbor ili1955 Newport Blvd. 6"2-&100. $50. Crib $10. 892-i-IOi -• -.....:-7141~!HiO T\VIN bedJJ, table & capt. -1---~~~~----~ Thomasorgan.walnut spinet, 1 r; 1 .1 SI FRA:.\lE extension for pick· MID 4¢ MILE NORGE ...,·a.shrr &. grui dryer, chrs, youth bed, sofa &: chr, NEWPORT Beach Tennis f.1UST sell, ladles 3-pc dia model 120.A, dbl keyboard. e~a.e s~_ky! 2 ~-k 10"' u11 1rucks . Ila~ platro1·m Triple Widit Cornell Sela, 24 .. re!rtg, dinette get, lamps, be<Upreads. Sat & Club membership, $450. wd set, Beaut custm antiq Xlnt rond, S2&."1. Eves l "'k qua! ltypood. 111 e , , ac 10~ bumfl{'r & srora~e spncr for Continental e Paramount PUT A LITTLE KlCK IN YOUR Lido ls!e 6'1J.-O.t87. Sun. 1415 Santiago Dr, NB l ===*-"'644--066~'-''-*-~~ design, S375 or olr. 673-800-1. ends. ph: 644-0084 nia e , le, 2 " mos. folding chairs $20. 545--0906 &rring1on e Universal 7:-:::--;;;m;u;;""""''"°"l -...:.'-"~'-~-~--·I toy-mini poodles. creme JI ;o,-,;cc-..,,~~---GOLD velvet couch, cpens 6~6--0147 FROLIC In the snow-moun-*** FURNTTIJRE & :\flSC Studio Grand male, 2 leni. 6 blaek mi~is. Cyclei, Bikes, Flamingo • General LIFE! lo quee~i1",,.bed1 . _>f_O_V_J_l\.-G-.-K-io_g_bo_d_l_2;-, 1 taln cabin, sips 6. $90/1vk. ITE.i\IS. 8j51. J ennrich, 5'6", Xlnt cond . .i\fake offer. 646--0142 333 E. lith St.. Scooters '25 flroadmoor • Star .,., -r<JV lge desk S2:>, 16 lb. ~·asher Also \Vknds. 551-4071. \Vestminsler Pvt ply. !!M-26-';) C.~1. liillcrest e Cambrid~ THEODORE ROBINS FORD :!060 lfARBOR BLVD., COSTA ?.TESA 642-flOIO lO-PC R.ATIAN living rm & dr;·t'r S65. plus miscell. BARBELL & \\1eight SetilO 1 'e~~D~A~T~SU=N,--~3~10c-~4-u~.ed'°' KR AN IOI-RACH BABY VALEl\.'TINE puppies. Silky ... ... ... ... ... MOCBHILAEPMHAONMES l!el. blonde, Good cond, :zip. Items . 968-toot • lb. like ne\\•, l Li Call reversed chrome ,,·hl'els, GRA:~D ho 1600 I - - - -• ofl co\·en, Sm. ~5--0869 ~2-3141. radial tires SIOO. 968-t32J. be . II' m~!~:!• or ·reITiers, !'It & r , Darling THINK 1206 N. Harbor, S.A. 14" \\'heels & fires; 7' pool st o t'r. V><>U no-shed, odorless furr y "* 714/5.1I.Sl05 " 42" Round game table & 1able; mi.sc 1 t ems, all CLASS top iron table, 42" THE Fastest draw ln the Sewing Machines 12i babies. $1j() up, tern1s. HONDA ---~~~~-= Auto Service, Parts 966 4 uphol. chalr11 SlOO. Hidea. ttasonable. Fri &. Sat, 374 diameter, 4 chairs. I yr \Vest .. a Daily P ilot 6-l6-733:i BEAUTIFUL. Parklane :roX l----------·I •-;;""';;:::~1100;::;·;;;;;;"~3-<;;:0995~-=·~v~"~·;;;;;;;;...=F=l~o=w~"~·~"';:;:;';;::::;:::;;::::;:::;;;;;;;;.!._'~ld~.=·~;~p~"=·";;;;;;· ~'"'=·'=""=· ~·===~Cl~•~·~·~if=led=A=d=.=642-;:;:=""=7=8::;;;:-PORT~BLE Singer se11ing COCJU:R .Spaniel. A KC. •'fRIEDSl.ILAHDER'' j7 1 BRC, 11, b.a. Dern, Golf I ~ATS.LIN ~:ngine. tran:sm.is-1• maclune, :'Cini cond. inale, JO mos, all shots ,t· C'OurM> pt A\\·n M por sion · P"-' .s. USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK, WE PAY POST AGE! i 125. 673-'"" lio. Hsbkm '-'"' w I '"" "'"' 1..., "' < Aw; Po1: Be" .Pk. Ne" * &f6.Sl6l • ! Sporting Goocf5 t l O ~=;~~~~~ergy Jorces 537-GS24 e 893-7566 ~e~rt~d Mcbile Homes Auto• Wanted 5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES .2711 R'.mlo<too. model 7ro AKC Si l.KY TERR l ER NEW-USED·SERV. 64~3MO £33.2961 WE PAY T-OP--1 \\"llh \\raver 2.J x 7 J)O\\"er PUPS READ\' TO SPOIL ~I Triple Wide Cornell PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND Bill 0 ' Tl Mil $4.50 $5.10 $6.00 betillllill'I o • o • •o• •• oO 0• oo o • •• •• • o •Io • 0 :i ••• ir. •• 11.11 ••• : ••••••• /.': ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• N•111• ••••• , ••••••••• , ••• , • , , , , ••••••••••••••• • ••••• • •. • • • •• •• · • Adollr111 , , ••••• , •••••• , • , , , •• , • , , •••• , , • , , •• , • , •• , , • • • , • , ••• , • • , cay •••••••••••••••••••••..••••••• "'•"• ••• , •••..••.•.....•....• • TIMIJ , TIMIS 12 TIMfS $6.80 $10 .65 $15.90 $20.10 $24.311 $1.2' $13.10 $9.76 $15.55 Pu! 011ly 0 11• word i~ ••ti• l!l •C• •bo••· 111,1114• your •''''" '' pko11 • 1111mbt•. th. co1t •f yowr t d ;, •I th• t 11d of th• li110 •II wh ick th o 1,,1 "''"' of yo11r td i1 writ· ••11-Ad.4 S1.00 ••It• ii Y•W .i,,;,, w•t of DAILY PILOT ao~ ltl•ict .,.jf11 '"'"'' , •• pl;,,, \'ar1ablr scnpe, 2 txlra 'YOUR LOVER \lALE s12· Hillcrest • Flamingo CASH clip-!'. $1.1~. A!~ .2·13 Savage FE'l'LE 11:..' c'AL'L· HARLEY chopper. '67 model !)!)~~ \l'ilh \\'caver K-4 ' '' ~ "1•• ('ngine. xtra tra1t~m1~i:ion & Paramount • Universal scope $1~0. 551-7315. 64-J.4800 AF"TER 6 Pill. Harle~· 11ar!s, phone 492-7911 Barring1on • Broadmoor .-,.----1\VEI'.\lARANER pupples . :! .68 TR!Uil1PH JOI) C.onli11ental "Star TV, Radio, H iF i, 010. Ch. sire & ch. dani. B<'~l ()f!l"r :\hl~l Sl'll! Genc1·al e llillcresl Stereo 836 Xlnt sho11·, field, pet . • -18 ·s~, • CHAPMAN ... _, "" oi:\·c. MOBILE HOMES 1-----------1 714/jJ...~952·1 ·-- 1 for u~rd cars & lTLICks, just c;i!\ us ro1· free estima!es, GROTH CHEVROLET GARRARD rtt'Orcl·chan;!'er· DA(.J-ISHUND u 3 Rall bilir Trailer. F'aciory 12331 Beach Blvd., GG. •l•,vl'r, Diat""lonctsfylu~. reg. • P p i;. madr. F::>:~·<'llen! eond1l10n * 7J l-'531J.2930 + Ask tor S.'llt>s ;..1anagrr ,. m1n1ature, AKC, Black &: SUKI. ;~ I · 1821 l Beach Blvd. S3'.l.50, speeial S27, New At· tan k mahogany r ed. . -. --COSTA MESA Hunl irigton Bearh l11ntic l\lusic 4·t'i E. 17th. TI1/6"-4018. 1970 \ A~IAH/\ YS CJ, !'Xl Ca.•ual i\-lohile t:stale Liv'g 817.f.oOS1 Kl 9.lJJt BR "ND IS" GE I CC s!recl scrnn1ble1·, l:ZOO N , 12 ~ •• 1 \\"d 'lod I __ 1'-' "'"' C?nr IDEAL WATCHDOG m1' Xlnl cond. SlS:>. 842--i967 :'· '"II ~ "' •1 e" es WE PAY CAS TV 1n closed sf!,•le cahLnel . · ----Nnl\' nn d•~rtlnv 1n 5 Shir H 11·/!0turdy ,,.oocl ~tnnd. Only nredspl~celoW~tch. r.iartin. '6!1 llOKDA CT 90 TRAIL. GREENLEAF PARK S2'J:>. _197_1006 or 6n-22j 9_ Crt'SI Kennels, ~1&-0989. Xln1 cond, S2."ID or olfcr. 17;:(1 \\'hillier Avenue &12-13.'j() FOR YOUR CAR -Af1"r Voice ol Thr111cr BF.AGLl::·A~C. xlnl Cal1 6l2-42G7 f'UR,ISHED I 1fl ., \\'/children. 1 yr old. \''ANTED · : • . <'ca n '·~· 1\1-j()() ioprakl'r ~ystem S'O S46-!H!Jl • . \1·/paho, sturagr .~hl'd. J'\r • ~9 • " · JOa or Z"JOec llonda ~ram. , ~hop"g "' oospit(ll. On j\\,·p1 A;\IPI::X T;ire recorder • B_EAGL~ PUP~.• bler.Runningorriot.S.19-1~ Blvd. c .:-.1. 612-j lJ.I 01 \\'/componrnt ;i m I' & AKC f!'gi~ "*" s .. ,i YA.:\1AHA 230 Enduro. Ex· 1 ;,.\~9()1).i spcakrrs. $2j(). 6i3-563·1. _21~~ '\'allace, Ci\1, 6~.;..:>.862 tras. Slfl5. 'A--=,=co=,.~, ~,~.,~d=h~o=m~,~. ~B~,~,-·~1"'<lc \\'ANTEo:u~dAl'lr/ F':\f SHELTJES . AKC, 7 "'k.~ .• 2 * 5.JG--9-lil_* ___ I \1illt1,;('. :-.10. 2ll. 1 roo1.~. I Rrcriver • Call alter b. blk &. 11·h.t females. S30. ·70 13111181.0 ~1alador 2j0 CC. pvl hrach. 6T :1-11 :i o . CONNELL CHEVROLET ZS~'S llarbor Blvd. Cos!;\ J\le11a ~·16-1200 -TOP-DOLLAR-;}.16-5710 or 67:-,...13-15 I sahle male S63. 642-1469 £x. co. Lrst offer. 67'.1·133L -·----·-------•. ~~~~~~~~:=~ISCHNAUZER pups-~lale ai 67:1-07!13. 3.f"TRAv·~c=L~Ez=".f=:-H1.;~,-1t;r, • ror ~t~ _ ~ sturl-GroomlnR. •1>7 YaniAha 260n Tih. full bath. ldc11\ fur 111!n.s. CLEAJi USED CARS 11 frf!• 10 You I .. S41HJS~ F::<cl'llrnl Condillon! iir dt'!<er1, Iii:~~~ Sri• Andy Brown !------------CUT HIJl -rASTI OH YOUll; IHVILO,.I IUSJHESS .. Oran91 Coast DAILY PILOT . . . . P. O. lox 1$60 Com. Mesa, Colif. 92626 • I "' 1-\.llt s1 .. , """"" tr Nllie. .. t~t Ulttlt4 S1a1u ' •·;;;;;;;;~~·~;IVllLENTINE for sale· ~11n. BEST OF'f'ER: &12--7til BEF'O-RF. you Buy~:\C11:--1.1S1 T HEODORE 1 1 111.ture Dachshund, m111e. 8 ~l-llonda 'T'ni ~l~~S\OO~·li!J or Tri.Ide, ROBINS FORD LOVABLE: pl Collie rlOJ: has '1·1(s'....r~~sl:ffl"l. 5-IS·3IS6. Sch" Inn 10 :<rt. S6:,, Boll1 . Cal1 i:i-:n ~:0 llii1·btir nJvd. I had Rahies shot. Needs 11. PO~IER.ANl/\N·Black n111.le. ~ l:~~1'tfl. 5\S-&~s:: __ Un~te~. ~0~1le Homes C.:o•ta r,lr,.. sood hon1e. &IS.-981.; 2/12 6 mn, AKC, all ~hnts . ."iACll 'S '6!l-l2.; Lnrtu r o 1467 A Nf'I Bl. C.~J . &l~-OO\o 4 mo. pt<l\Jrf('C Dalm11tian, IJ(IU!!ebrol(e_n, SS~. S.l7-4:ffl ~\/c!1rf. ftu11< i:;lf. Srr th\~ l>l;).Jl•10 -\lt-;-p,\y 'r()I' OOLl.Ar:. ''""air, all shots, all paprrs. \\k('wl. 6~2-illl. MOtor Home5 940 FOlt TOP USED CARS 6?3-9.i:26 2/12 1 '°''' -" I!~) ~11~1 !r;nl-h1kr-fnfsalc-J ... w tr 11111, ,.,, 1, <"'"• <l••o ---.... 3.i' bu" con,·erted inlo a rom· • .. u l\F.ESHDUND 2'• yr.i ol tl. Ji4atiM Equipment hr1, \;~11 under •10 houn. •rA 11, ri""I. ' . . c II g1-·· ple!l'ly !1elr<0nta111r<t motor ~ ~ •, Vf'ry l:O(l(l "·atchdoi;. all a 1"""1.i6!t ..... $"'""' ~•o IV¥>'"I R llli~,I~ RU ICK Mot s t. l!c'd. s.1g..1903 2/lt F-orM1;;·:--·6'.J-r;n;n_ha so~ .. .,nw. L-""" ,,..(t"'N,. 111 1~. tirh s1. CHA:\tPION Bc?11gl~ & \\1ire General 900 nH!t'~. n1ak(' otfrr, I Trailers, T-;:;;;1--94s f'o-.ra ~lf'~.t .:.1~'176:; Hair puppies 6 \\k&. nld. --!JG.~l::G -l.\ll"'Ol!TS\V11NTl:.D-~DI .~ PP:. ~~~SCRAM-LETS -~0~1?i~~,~~~·= ~~~; ·r~~~·111;~;';'.0~kr. 0 ::::: ~?i~~; ii~".;~~' 9 \\"k~. \'t ry Pf IJ r 11 nit. par-1~ t11 ~II 612--~1 ' 1-,,)~:.00 -~ 1;/l,L ~1/\Xf>'Y 1tJYOT4 ~S.::223 _2111 ANSWERS F~l'Zl'J\l r..oo Xlnt, :i.IXlO Trailers, Utility 947 1/l:~!l.I B~ch Rh·d. t JIUl"PtF.S c,nn<lln Shep. anti ml., 17 hp. ll'?IJ'ranly n1:11nL, I II. Bl-~··h. rh. !'147-1.»' ~ ;>18-0210 2/13 Pt'>'ltAI -;\.l!ld\y -\\'e\$:h -S!iOO, :~i&-4i.i.i 1-4' Tandem T railer I Did )·11u r vrr-tti"inkO!-•Wi"""" ··~11\KE Roo1n t~or D11d: l0<llnt" -P ISll PAN "\!AKI-.:-nnm;;--r orD111f. \VHh 4 v.11«-ls. AU sire\ \\'(•lei. !ni.: th;1t \\'hllc El,.ph:1r1t ~ d y'· .. C'lea11 ,,vi rhr Ho_nnrnhlrd1~h11r14r· t 11 .oi~,<l y'', .. rlrl\n out lhf' N' t'Onslroctio n. :,·· Sl('('I thl' 111 tlc t11r ~inelh lrill yaii i:nr11ge .. ~our 11"/l~h 1.1 C/\Sll on KP In !Ill;' .1111•my M> n1111·h i::'i'll'tl!ZI' .~Ylur 1r8sh 1_. CAS"lf rl("(·k pla11n11:. 5-l.>4361 or I t'nn u~r ~ Try the 1'rllMl'll "!th 11 Dall ,Y Pilot Classified t ~ot a n1e<l i1.:11I dlschari;e. II \I i!h 1 Daily Pilot t.111~~!1\ed 642-:,S4l. \VIII a.ell. Or trade Pandl~,. l'l)lumn tn Ui. DaJ· :id.. harl DISHPAN hnndiJ, 11•! ! for p!c\.;up, ly Piiot \\'ant /11li . Thursday, Ftbruary 11, 1971 DAILY PILOT 35 [ ....... u. l§JI -..... ,. l§JL--1 ... _ .... _ ... __,l§J I l§JI L-·_~ .... _ .. ,·__,!§]I • ... .. , .... ,. I §J I 1§11 l§JL .......... I~ Autot for Sale .......... AlltOtlorMe 1_A_•_10_1_• _N_ew ____ 9_10_A_u1_0..;1,_N..;•;.;w:._ __ ;_9IO:;;;A::;u::.I•.:.:•::.· .:.:N::•w;:._ ___ 9:.;IO:.:.:;A::•.:.:••;:;••..;N::•::.:w:_ __ ,.:.9::..BO::.:A::.u:;l::os::.·.:.N::•:;:w:.._ __ ;_91;:0:,_..;.A:;:•::;to::•·:,:·N::•::w:_ __ _:9::1:::;0Auto1, hew 9IO Autos, New 910Autos, New GUARANTY CHEYROLE ''VEGA'' HEADQUARTERS '" ~ .... --* OPTIONAL EQUIPMENT ----*OPTIONAL EQUIPMENT YOUR CHOICE OF (I) OPTIONAL PACKAGE WITH ANY 1971 VEGA CHOOSE YOUR PACKAGE OUR STOCK PACKAGE #1 -~ OPTION LIST CUSTOM EXTERIOR ....................... 79.40 WITH CUSTOM EXTERIOR WITH CUSTOM INTERIOR #2 #3 { 4 SPEED TRANSMISSION, ................... 52.95 (POWERGLIDE TRANSMISSION ...........•••• 168.25 AM PUSHBUTION RADIO ••••••.•••••••••••• 61.1 S WHITEWALL TIRES ..••••.••••••••••••••••• 48.25 DAY NIGHT REAR VIEW MIRROR • • . • • • • • • .. 6.35 DOOR EDGE GUARDS • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . • • • • • • 5.85 20 8 15 5 11 25 6 29 1 26 WITH POWERGLIDE TRANSMISSION WITH 4 SPEED TRANSMISSION WITH 3 SPEED TRANSMISSION WITH E-Z GLASS WITH AIR CONDITIONING JRIDE AND HANDLING fACKAGE ••••...•••••• 79.40 l_DAY NIGHT REAR VIEW MIRROR • • .. · •. · ••••• 6.35 WITH AM PUSHBUTTON R WITH RIDE & HANDLING PA WITH WHITEWALL TIRES 'OS CUSTOM EXTERIOR ........................ 79.40 AM PUSHBUTION RADIO ................... 61.15 DOOR EDGE GUARDS 5.85 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970' Autos, Imported ,970 ALFA ROMEO FIAT HILLMAN OPEL TOYOTA TRIUMPH VOLKSWAGEN · VOLKSWAGEN VOLVO -~ --------1--------1 '67 Alta Ducllo, soft & hai-tl top, 15,000 mi"s, like ucw. $2295. (213) 862-8746. AUSTIN AMERICA '68 Austin An1crica·Like ne"'· recent tune • up, new liN'11. 23 mpg. Orig O\\'ner. $885. 557-1695 AUSTIN HEALEY '65 VW SEDAN '67 SUNDIAL CAMPER - - - - -1963 HTLLr..1AN J';tlnx. Xlnt '67 Opel l\adett, xln't cond. The All Ne,v 1600 CC '67 SPITFIRE :'ilk JI Convt, • ---- -I cond. Make offer. Assum~ balance. 646-3848 Corollas, \\'ht in•fb!k top, XlnT co11d, ''THINK'' 646-6150 aft j:3Q p.m. 4 Speeds·& Automatics Orig O\\'ner, n1ust sell. _K_A_R_M_A_N_N~-G-H_l_A_, ___ P~E=-u~G-E_O_T~-"''AH '"' coro"' HT 0pc,_,_7>-_12_s_i. ____ _ 12gr~n 1 1 speeds & Automatics ,.~ w~ '60 Ghia, '62 eng, hig bore, PEUGEOT '68, 4-dr, auto, I SAVE ON See stroker crank, ne\v clulch, trans, :14,00l n11'..:, Ol"ig 1970 DEMOS $7>.:,0, 540.-3118. ownrr. $1795. 673-0129 1 Radio & Heatt'r. (VJY650) $795 Fully Equipped, See to appreclale. (UQH692) $1795 VOLKSWAGEN Harbaur V.W. . ., ..• Harbour V.W. 13710 llA.CH ILYO. eng. Trans. 1600cc. 1%0. $300 or"bcs1 offer. Runs WlL t.WW SQUAREBACK HUNTINGTON BEACH 18711 BEAOl BL. 842-4435 "FRIEDLANDER" '"6 MR""" Gh<a "/'&! PELGEOT Stalioo ll'agoo. fi••~ lnu.:i '63 VW 18711 BEACH BL. 842-44.15 IHWJ. 39) I 64•1-0785 great! 673-100~ Teri. TOYOTA !07.X 0Ii9) UUNTINGTON BEAQ-1 893-1566 • 537...,. I MERCEDES BENZ H $4 99 Large Selection '66 VW GHIA 1966 Ao";" 11•al•y "'"' NEW-USED-SERV. _ PORSC E Of VW Campers, $600 or Best offer Yellow w/blk landau top. All 71 '1 Are Here 142 • 144 • 145 • IM • lBOO E 4 Speeds &: Automatics 1970 144 Sedan Demo Radio, Heater, Automa.Uc # 8782 $3094 Overseas Del. Spec. ...t>e.on le.wiA W VOLVO • 83-1~92 • • - - - -• 1---------11%6 llarhor, C."11. 646-93ln CHICK IVERSO?J V K bf '69 AUST IN ;)-Healey Sprite, - -------·~ll~~J~,i;'~~~!\~~:1 r:1~e~~~: '68 TOYOTA SEDAN vw D ansN, cm, u5 ' d New \'alve job. ~N654 1966 Harbor, C.M. Xlnt cond, SI4j(I. Alt 6 pin: '68 FIAT 850 ed. tl1'fll. \\"l!l'kcnd. Has had 1970 HARBOR BLVD. uses, ew se 846-5272 SPYDER excellent care. Low mile· 4 Door. Automatic, radio, COSTA i\tESA lmmediete Delivery 1963 AU!tin llealey Sprilc age. A:\t/Fi\f. Lt>ather steer. healer. CUHH 379) -=--=---CHICK IVERSON Needs 11'0rk $200. 264 16th P.DSTR. Red \\ith black ln-ing \\'heel, bun1per guards, $1199 '66 YW SEDANS VW B C :\I tc1·ior. Like new. YQY834 · 1 S · Place. Apt , .. . $899 t1n!ed g ass. pcc1al 1_4" BILL y ATES 549-30:lt Ext. 66 or 6'I' DATSUN Porsche wheels. Call Tim VOLKSWAGEN Your Choice · CHICK IVERSON MG T•ooor lo• oppo;otmont, CZBW'80) o, rRUFOSll' 1910 HARBOR BLVD, 1--------VW ='~42-4=435='·----~ 32852 Valle Road $895 COSTA l.IBSA '69 DATSUN PICKUP 54~3031 ExL 66 or 61 1-------PLEASE boy my,,..· N"d SM Jo'" Copl"""" T SQUAREBACK $1299 CHICK IVERSON vw 549.3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA J\1ESA '63 VW SEDAN 1.1'1.1"'1.1" ~ THIHI "87' 'VO!Ya "FRiEOlANDER" lSI',. llACll CHWY. arJ 893-7S66 • 537-682f NEW-USED-SE RV. 1970 HARBOR BLVD, .............,. more room '64 Porsche • 837-4800/493-4311/499·2261 Radio & heater. (ASL634) ~~i~;~th(~~~:~;s) ~~~: COSTA MF.SA & THINK ~4~ncf, clean, 1 owner. '70 MARK II WAGON P.adlo & Healer. (XEV457) $765 .............. Wiil 1\ko '""" lradoo< flo. '69 124 SPORT CPE. "MG" '70 911T, R•d w/h!k '"" . 18711 BEACI! BL. 842-4435 $1535 VOLVO ance prlva!e party. Call I Alloy i\·lags. Buy or lease, Automatic, R., II., dlr, (# HUNTINGTON BEACH '?'"""' fail. 494-6811 or 5'16-8736. Sii 51.;....1913. 42'16J . 01vnecl by ll!tle old m111111e , AtrJ'HORIZED ,~~-=~~--Ai\! F:\l, 4 spe-cd. d!r. Ra. I , _ B h 6S V\V A I II -1 1 ,_ SALES $ ,-J2 ''FRIEDLANDER"' man rom ..... guna cae . u oma c • ERVICE N '71 Datsun dial urcs. IYBY 7 l i\tust TOYOTA ew Ta.Lie trade or sm. dn. \\'ill Sacrifice SJJOD 18711 B'.""::ACH BL. 8424435 FRITZ WARREN'S Sl'll. \\'ill lake trade or fin-::~c3101 18711 BEACH BL 0 '" "" 1600 OHC, Pickup with can1p-ant•c. Call 494-n44 _ 1u50 11..,ctt cttw v. iti fin. pvt. ply. Call i\fauf1' J.l.,. · O'I_..._. llUNTINGTON BEACH SPORT CAR CENTER er. Sale prlce $2099 dlr. -=~-~-~-' 89.1-7566 • 5.17-6824 '67 LAND CRUISER 540-3100 or 494-7503 aft 10 am. '68 V\V Au!o. In a hurry, ~NTINGTON BE~ DUNE buggy or Campei 710 E, lst St., S.A. 547-C764 <• PL5214522'10! WIJJ t•k• '~;_.:;:·':u;;' ~~\p'a'.0";;1 NEW-USED-SERV. '69 COROLLA 2 DOOR 112.\11. 53&-3!07 '66 VW BUG '"" •wiog w!odshi•ld S80P<odaliy~9:cl_,Sond&y car in 1r:ide. Will llnnnIT HP. 5 spd. A.\l·F~1. 54(),....0024 ~ 4 V.'heel rtrive. wam?n hubs, 'Gd V\V, Sl.1'25. VW Bus 673-31::16. Autos, UMCI 9'Q :~:~~118~~-rty. Call :>4~736 JAGUAR new nibber. dlr. Take clear Loaded. dlr. l!J,000 miles. Xlnt condition. ~_!JSt sell, 4 speed, radio, heater. dlr, '69 V\V. Xlnt cond, New 1$1i\IG1100 SEDAN I car ln trade or s1nall down. (XNS l20l o"'ncd by liltle CRll G46-:i656 (!tl13 873! \Viii take car in !Ires, brakes, tune-up. '71 DOT DATSUN S37j. C".ood condilion fTRB 3.12) Sacrifice! Call oldlactyfromLeii;ure\\lorld. '66 V\V 1300-Good _mech. tradcorfinanceprivalepar. lie, R/H. T/W. $1595 or OPEN DAil y JAGUAR * * 49~-3.US * * I Ira ;,4, 0.3100 or 494-7503 alt Sacrifice! 1A-'i11 finance pri-l'Of'll'I. $900 full ~rice or ty. Call 494-6811 or 540-8736. bes,. 546-7281 1--------1 10 A l\I --'-rr 6i2--84 9 -'69 RIVIERA GS, &mlbn AND I MGB ·· · vale p::tr!y with 1maJI down """"r 0 er. · 1 WANTED--1970 V'IV Bug-Many extru. stereo tape auto ..ir + SUNDAYS HEAD9UARTERS I '69 CORONA u.u Pot afl 10 AM 540-3100. '69 V\V ""•· '7! ""'""" 1 12500 oow: will sacril!C< or all xtru u..d" wan-sl4oo. 18835 Ceai..h Blvci. The onlv au!horizcd JAGUAR • TRIUMPH 011•ne1 , clean. I'll pay top dollar for ~'OIJr trade. 673-8175 ask Jor Ron Re 64.H,183 o r 6f4..sst.J HW'ltlnglon Beach dcalet:ln 1he entire Harbor '69 i\!GB-GT: n'd, like fie\\'. ~ardtot>. Vinyl roof. 4 1~ei.., $!~flt *** 673-8707 VOl.KS\VAGEN today, Call '67 VW Fastback xlnt col'ld ll, ' c • A<•• 11.000 mi"ll. v.·irr 11·hls, 1mmacula1e, Sky Blue. Sac-, · -and a~k for Ron Pln"hol '. · · 1968 BUICK Sk:ylark CU1tom- la-77Sl or Y.0-0442 · :\lich·'' tires , roo! 1-.ck, riflce. \VIII ta.ke tmcte or ..... .,...._ • 63 VW $400 • "'-'9 -:!31 Ext 66 67 673 r"""'· SleN?O, radial tires. $l200. 2 dr VS vinyl top auto UN PICKUP Complete ;.>"' '71 SPITFIRES Good corn! • 833·2696 "' ~ . . . vw. 64G-3726 ' . '. ' '68 OATS SALES ' h, $2195. >1~7329 oft< I>~ ""'"" pvt, PIY. C~ll S~, '61 & '62 V\V B"P • Both ' --J>'/Pb, r&h, 34,00Q mr, Xlnt SERVICE • l!l67 :\lGB, lo miles $1l!Jj dlr. 510·31()} or 49~·7500 aft. N OW ON DISPLAY '63 V\V Bus in xlnt concf. r.1t1st sell, 63 VW. i\11nor fl'Ollt encf concf:._!!775. 968-1326 - i\fll.llt sell! dlr. (\\'PP 7621 or ofter ' 1 10 a .m }l.'l'S 343. Come in for ii tl'.'sl drivel G? ~rn:I. i\fu_st Sell goin'? 1o Europe, 6~15.Sl damage. Good trans. 1'.takc '63 BUICK Spec. Dlx·Auto, \Vilt takr. car in trade or =~~ii Aftr.r Ii, 8.41-~tlt BJJ T MAXEY F RI TZ WARREN'S J~l050 ofter J Pi\! or 673-9366 ~2-J7B2. PIS. One owner, 55,IXXI mi. lloln<o pri•'•" P"ty. Call BUICK TIME FOR .W l SPORT CAR CENTER '61 VW D,.., '"n <00 I, '!» V\V S<d•o-Now paint VOLVO Good rond. 5'>-1032 541).8736 or 49 1-6811.~ 710 E. ls! St., S.A. ~7.07&1 Ai\1/F~l. blfn beil.' Xlnl I tires, engine. ' '63 Buick Le Sabre, PIS. .66 Dat!lun _ 4-dr, R/H, IN QUICK CASH l!fiQJIYJQ:f 1 ~Al Opr.n d!_il~ 9-9; closed Sunday ~'"!:.__ • _ 5,,'l(i.!J971 * __ $800. 497-1461 '69 1C1 6 CY~ Volvo, perfect ~/~, Fae air, Very clean, 55,lm mi's. '71 11c paid, COSTA MESA THROUGH A I -~ -~ e Tl! Triumph TR 4A, Xlnt • ·sa V\V BUG, Very good '6S vw Sunrt, U.S.· Mfti!: ro~. A~1/F M, auto drive. $50'l. 54..~98 or 84&-3975 p.,.t. pty, $575. 516--6~1. z:w E. lilh Sil"t'ct 188S l BEACH Bl VO, ro""d. A:\l/f:\I, $15:(1. Aft co~. $6.10, i\IUST SELL Ii\!. FluR. mf, New tll"t's. Xlnt s27.o .. 675-8339 _ '65 Sulek Cran Sport-Afr, NO matter what It ls, )'OU 548-77"6:; DAILY PILOT Hunt. Beach '47·C!5S 6 pn1: 6T>7726. '.\lt:Dli\TELV. 6?-8't91· ~ shape, $1500. ~156 • VC ... VO 1962 4-dr ~an. 4 spd. Oean. ca11 tell It with a DAILY 1--------WANT AD 1 ml N, ofa..t ffwy, on":! SEl .1.JNG Your bo11t! "List" V'IV 1970 Beetle·Orlr ov.mr A~nt ~nd. $600/best o!Jer. $600 m-6354 DAILY PILOT WANT AD. Dally Piiot \Vant Adi have 642•5678 Daily Pilot Want Adi have I \v!lh us .. se.11 It flllt. Dally 1varranty, Days: 675-7400; Dally PUol Want Ads have ~·-6· For that Item under $SO, Call 642.$71 A ch&rp It. b'8'alru galott. bargainl galore. Pilot Olusltled. 64~5678 Eves: ~00. bargains galore.. For best restil1.11 00-5678 ll')' the Penny Pl.ncher BUICK • I • • . ' ·-----·------- ~3~1~0~~l~Y~P~ll~OT~~~~~~~~~~·~·~•btu.vf~~l~l,~l~W~l ~~~~~~l ~~~~~~~\-.......... ~1 ............. ,~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~\~~~~~~~ I --~§]I -·w. !§JI --.. I§! I -•w. I~ 1:..·_,, .... _"'·~l§J~Q 1 1 ·-..... l§J I -..... l§J I .,,....... 1§1!1.:. I _."' .... _ ... ...:1 .. ~1 A-Uted 990 Auto•, UNd "° Autos, UMd 990 Ii : A;u;lo;•;· ;u; .... ;;;;;;.:;990~ I Autos, UMd 990 I Autos, Used "°I Autos, Used 990 I Autos, u...i 990 Autos, UMd 990 i=:::...:B:::U::..IC-K-~l:.=:.:;Cc.;:A.:.:;MA;;.._R_O __ l---'-FA_L_C_O_N_ FORD LINCOLN MUSTANG MUSTANG ,_O_L_DS_M_O_B_IL_E ___ PL_Y_M_O_UT_H_. '67 Camam SS, Runs .,..,, --------1969 ' dr °'"ll""""1 G""'"· '65 MUSTANG '68 ""'""< V-8 PIS air '6' llclta, cu'1m i..ir "" '69 SUBURBAN WAGON _.. 1.. Looking far• car? 'v/wht vinyl top. All Xtras cond, au!o., J~ndau • 1op, V.T., P/S, P/B. P/W, Air, strona. $3600 invtst~. must '60 F•lcon as ls $50 e •sy FASTBACK ' 6 f • '66 BUICK RIVIERA &ell $2800. 639-8349 ior ' ""' Xlnt Cond! $3.800. Dys AM·FM xlnt oond 642-91194 1 lo mi's, $2&75. 846-024 a l I _!644-!!:'1~6">~ul<~."lor~F~r~ank~ . ..:__J---•......:Ca~tt ~54ii>-iilii090~-*--Call Auto RefeM'tll frte ot ~7.640: Eves 675-7979 2+2 hardtop eoupe. Equip. '65 Mus~na; con\<I. ~uro., V8~ "6;,...P':c'~· -~~~~-='" Ctls1on1 9 Pl\s.~rngl'r mnd,.1. r utt power + Air. Only 9,000 mile!!. rllr. i\lust 1111cri. f!Cf'! \VlJI takf' tr11rle or tin- 11.n<.~. Call 4\W-7744. Vinyl top, v1nyl atrato lntll!r.I· FORD chargt. We have sellers MERCURY ~d "'ith new powrr tronl GOOd rond . Moving. $700 or '69 O!ds Royale 2-<lr. Full ior, full poy,•er, air condi. CHEVROLET wa ifi ng_ AH types & prices. disc brakes, 3 mo, old bat. offer. 6'12-1 993. I pY.'r. clean, vinyl lop. 35,000 tionlpi:, 1teuo radio, heater, Sellers also welcome. tery rie1-vly tunrn 289 4 bl I .,,~ '·I 1 h 1 tb k Jr~way mi. Xlnt corn:!. '67 CHEVY ''" RANCHERO 352 •"'" 6'2 '•131 · . · "" "u~ aui.:, s arp ai; ac , 1-h 64._ .. 985 WSW, (REH 643) <N " · ' ~, ~fERCURY 1969 ?.1arquls engine, factory a1r condttinn. VB #*'' 11. """" cas . '" eves. Chrm whls, runs good, $3jl) Auto Referral Service 0 I p "· F' 1 . , ,.,_ en,i:, meta Jc =o-=o---,-,c---= PONTIAC $1888 SPORT VAN o a ny a ... 11111. wgn. u I 1ng, and in ov~r-al! ,i:oori or. bmll7. S99S <191i-4'1lJ ah 5 1964 Oldsmobile. Pxcellen! or Mat oiler. ~5--0659 'l!ELBY G.T 350 'fi9. Last poi,1·er, sir conrl . luggage iginal owJlf"r c'Ondit1011 .. fi5,j))}, :.e, • ' condition, good rub~r. 11e1v ---~----- 3000 miles on new engine, '62 Jo'ORD Country Sedan-V( o! ~Ha kind. Air & FM rack, dis(: brake11, lo ml, actual miles. \Veil-taken carf!I OLDSMOBILE JH!lnt job, poi,1'E!r brakqs & 1968 TEMPEST, 2 rloor, sutomatjc t:rMS .• excellent Auto. Run good. Clean .r;:tereo, Hpd, close ratkl. xln1 concl, Pvt p ty of a.nd exceptionally cie11n 61eering, ra.rlio. h.e111er,•$475 spa.rklior: v.·hire & only condition. #6700". S245. 548-4967 Mechanic's guarantee. By 7141&t2-207fi. inside. SU)9j. Private party, e or best ofler. ~778. l~.000 IO<'al m\le:i;, PIS, AU1HOlllZU>........, $1799 19"' "'"'"'· No •qui<y. orig '"""'· 12695. 497-lllOO 1968 Colooy Park ._,.,. ..,..,,, I 159 OLDSMOBILE 98 P/B, R&H , 11595. "'8-3893; 2600co~~s!L., CHICKVWIYERSON ;:;,~~" .,,~" ~mi "" :~:'~~K-UP TRUCK f,~~~::£:"1,:;;, "';: "~~' i~;~,,;:.·c~,;,, ...,.,. '.cou,.. v,,yl "'' """"" t•p I '6P7LYBAMRORAUCTUOHA ;;~~f~~~~llp~l 66 Jo'ORD Coun(ry Squire Body """'"h Jlfi'ds ovtrhaul. d1hon A!\1/F':\1 , 5 yr. y,·ar-1 PSI"" rrlm low mih~ll'"' J ~-9100 Open Sunday 549-3031 Ext. 66 or fi7 Air/C P/8-P /S .New tires • ..._ ' -1969 MARQUrS 11ta "'gn. 10-! 1 L1 ooo ·1 '3 • ... • 6 Pm., 646-5361. e VD One o1o.•ner $1200. 644-2491 SQ I pass. Loaded, Y.'ill i;elJ a t ran y, . fi7--~1,;ll o11·nrr. t'ull po1o.'cr, factory1 . I RAMBLER CADILLAC 1970 HARBOR BL · &12-6910 9 A1'1 lo l Pilf wholesale. $3095. 833--tt49 1. • a' , J air, 111 1 1e!esrop1c \.\'hPl'I, r11-I Vlt. 1tu!o"11111c, dlr. 1tlr tti~d., COSTA t.fESA '59 FORD S300 or BEST Ot~-:---65 MUSTANG -Ne1o.• :is9 d10 ht>tt lt>r "hilr side 11'11.!J pl'l\.\'rr 11IPer1ng, J9.tm milr.~. ---------l--======---1---;,t~~C~f~~cr--1 FER. Xlnl cond. la,000 mi 64 F'ord ~ 4--0~~ B~c~!t '69 Mo_ntego P.fX conv. Auto, Hi-Pf'rf. en~. l'f'blt 4.spd. UT~!>. 1vNW-t181 L1.ke ne w? 1935 BS\V l \\'ill '65 RA 1'-1BLE~ \\'GN. e on nu eng. 642-5930 f ~ats, T-Bird mo r. u • AJ\1 /foi\f stereo, full pwr, new pa int. S950. 642-l!Ki $ALE PRICED takl' iradf'or linllnce pri vate , 6 S!d. 11h11!, rebuilt Pn.g. rad· C OILLAC . . . air. Sport "''.heel coven. new tires. 357-9!M.2 aft 6 art . Call 4g.i_6811 or tr. rrans.. nu hrkl<, H. D. '68 A Black interior. Auto~aflc, arr 66 Ford Cu11tom . 500 2-d~. Ou•flf'r 536-4463. 196.q Merc1.1ry Marquis 'con-'r.G J\1ustang, a uto. low mi's. ~~S-l!)736 Rhoek11 $797;, ~42-~1fi6. rond .. poWf'r steenng, rilr. Xlnt cond. 1 01'ner. sn;i. 'fi9 FORD LTD Cntry Squire \'l'rtible. Air cond. ttlt po"·er, ~t~~~!J9 shllpe. S975· Ph: ib -· 9-·511 RAilfBLER. 23,500 FACTORY PO\\'f'r "'indo\\'S, vinyl !op. 644--0684 or 54s.7129. I JO pa8S Illa wag, Jo mi's, .... h k AM/F.M $'"-~ cit 1968 Rvadrunner, 4 !!pc\, :t&.l ' ml'• s·~. "644'".0734ra es, . '"OI-'" ~MUSTANG, 81111! 302.. "'" AIR CONDITIONING Lrnidcd! (1TV 791 1 J.tust .sac-'fit Ford camper Engine , xln t cond. S.~100. 644--634!1. • '71 tags. Z..fags. 33.'i fX!Si. I ' * ll·\6-2372 * Full poi,1•er incl. door Jocks, rlficP Ill \\•holesale blue tires, 2000 mi. Carpeted. '69 Convt PIB PIS 4 new , fillspens1on. trans 4.11 pos1 , CADILLAC Tape deck & tape:i;, $1500 ~ ----'-'--"~--- bit & tele9copic steering, book! $1100 full priCf'. Call Best offer 642-7431. wide ....:,d f'Olygl;l! tires, 'S.'i MERCURY 4 dr h!. Grl I mags, tape. si:;oo'. 545-3681 •vrHOFllZCo Dt:AU:" or nc~t olfer. ~76.1 I T ·BIRD "" cond. R&ll. $150 ur ofr. 2600 l!ARBOR BL., ste~, Sentinel. ~uU lea!~er 494·7744. '6.'i FORD Econ 100 Van 240-$!900 or best offer. 833-ll.80 646-4017 aft 5 PM SEU.ING Your boal? "List'' COSTA MESA '68 PLYMOUTH Fury 111 1 '59 T-BIRD. exCf'plional. ~n!~nor &excepttonally nice '63 Impala 2-dr hardtp, Pis. six, Good cond, Asking '62 Ford Van $400 For that Item under $50, \Y lth us .. 5C'll 1t fast. Daily l 5'10·9IOO Open Sunday l Convi. R!H. Gooo mech Original cond, re-ce n t inside and Olli. (VRD S52J Air, l owner, . Good cond, $1000. 64:>-4598 * Call 642-4498 * tey tbe Penny Pincher I Pilot Class1f1ed 642-5678 • conrl, S7SO, €42.-8953 I tuneup; $300. B47-TI48 $2999 \\'hi wired "'"'· E"g I ~-~---~= oc7cc-=:~--rtplaced 2 mo ago.' Tran11 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 ! Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 ,Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 just romp!ele rblt. like new, ~al>cit 1":6;~~VELLE .A.. ~CADILLAC 2 Door. Aulomatic trans., ra. AUTHOl'l:IZEO 0£.f.L[fl WXM535 $675 2600 HARBOR BL., dio & heater. • •. . COSTA MESA Harbor American 54D-9l00 Open Sunday 1969 HARBOR fi..16-2061 e '63 Impala 4 dr. Auto. Good • tninsporlation car for young 11dul1 S300 or best offer. CAO. '70 SEDAN "'-"'' or >l&-0341 aft 7 Pi\t. DE VILLE e '70 i\tALIBU, like IJE'w, 3400 mi'5, Dark grn w/Llln- dau, rac! 11.ir & pwr. Pvt FACTORY pty. 675-3323. AIR CONDITIONING , . FULL LEATIIER INTERJOR 70 NOVA·. Still undt<r "''"'~· . 307 V8 slick on floor. Disc Full power incl, door !~ks, brakes'. $1995. 642-6347 tilt &: 1ell!:reop1c s!Penng,l=~=o-o~C""C-..,,-..,,;; vinyl top. 1tereo, locally '64 CHEV Malibu 2 dr. V-!t. driven jewel (025 ADY ) & air, full po11.'er. Xlnt corid. priced to seli IOOay! lo miles. 675-2710 $ALE PRICED . ., IMPALA 2 dr wr . p/,, r&h. Xlnt cond. l owner. Lo mileage. $2695. 646--0431 ibe~~ '65 MALTBU Super Sport 357 I~ engi ne, PIS. P/B. $595. CADILLA 67>72'15; eve11 833-3916. AUT"40~1ZED OlAlER .61 EL CA!'tilNO 32'7 2600 HARBOR BL., 4 ~ 4 A COSTA MESA 5.,_..., ... , nsen mag11.. 540_9100 Open SUnday Xln: cond. 673-6986 aft 5 e '65 Capr~Air. many 6· tr.as Good cond, Oean. Be&t • oUer. 536-13."A) aft 5 pm. '69 FLEETWOOD '65 lmpal• SS 327, a.Jo'"""· full pov.-er, $675. Brougham. Nutmeg brown 1~~-*~<99-_3464 __ * __ _ firemist, cordovan top with '61 Chl.'v. Nomad wagon, new matchi.ng cordovan leathl.'r lire& & brlul. $300. Call interior. Individual power 642--0784. &eat control1. full pov.•Pr,1'·"'6.l~Ch=-"-.,-,~u.-M~al=tb_u_s~s~v"s factory air, stereo, tilt tele. hrdtp, 38,700 mi's, P/S, scopic wheel, power door 11uto RIH w/s/w. 675-4819 Jocks. power tMJnk klek. twl· 'C ' E - light sentinel. auto pilo1, HRYSL R very low mileage 1 owner. (Y'\\IR 125) ' CHRYSLER 1966 300. 440 cu $ALE PRICED t... Jmmoc. Lo mil"<'· ·~1Z£0 OE•LER 2600 HARBOR BL., COSTA l't1ESA PIS, diac brk!, l.'lec seat. reclining seat. full leather, air , power windows, vinyl top. 1 owner. ne1v tire!! & b11ttery. $1400. 837-3370 or a· j , 830-3521 COMET Call :\40-9100 Open Sunday 'fi2 C{lmf'I , >.:In'! transp. Nt\\' e tu"'s. ball. l'xhaui;t 1<ys !.: 1----.----hrk~. Very clean. $22.'>. 2511) !'\. c~i;1 lh1·y. art 72 La-'69 EL DORADO """' Be.ch . , CONTINENTAL Vinyl top, IP11 ther 1flterior,1 ___________ 1 tult po"·er, fa ctory air. 11!1 Sho1v Cii.r-·s.t All- tl.'lescap1c steering whePl, Bl.::.rk Pa.rarir Convt. stereo. po11•er door IO<'ks, Absolutelv concoursl.'. All local I O"'n{'r ca.r. i\'CN -I-Il l fartor~· 'options 11vail Thr11 $5333 '6S inrl radial~. FM. E !,,. C'. ~al>c.S ~~CADILLAC l\!u st ~f'I' l('I bclif've. fi75-R770 :S~ -LINCOLN-Cont ·1-:-Good ru nnine" ronrl, righl rrar dnor miooin~ & i;l i 1;h t rl11 mai:?r $499. 64&-lllOO or AVTH~IZEC Ol,t.l.lR 2600 HARBOR BL., COSTA MESA 100.1 ContinC'nl l\l, lmmaculatt 54G-9l00 Open Sunday candition S69;;;, Call aflf'r • 4:30 P:'lf. 492-8518. 1----. 1 1!!6.i CDNTJNENTAL sedan. All fl01\'f'f f,, air. Good cond . '66 CADILLAC •-"-'"'-· -"'-'-'"---• . I CORYAIR Coupe Of'V11ll.'. Powdf'r blue , __________ 1 with daril blU!': vinyl eop, luxurious cloth & leather in· 1960 CORVAIR $200. terior. Full power, factory ~ni17 air. Al\1.FM. rarlio, 1ill·!l'le-i--~~===~--1 sroplc ~eerlng "'heel. pow. CORVEm er door lock'(. l~OR 0291 $2222 '67 YE'TTE fa~ibRt'k • "427'', 4-s~, · ib .f., AP.f/r J\f radio. New poly-G'N'.dl e~ ~1.~s tires .• Excellent con- ... V c ADtlLAC dltion Driven easy, .1.t./THOAIZ£D OEALE" • $2850 2fOO HARBOR RL., i\!!.k for Mr. Grannis !>46-R&iO COSTA MESA '57 VE'M'E, Good cond. $450 540--9100 Open Sunday or bl.'st offer. • Aft 6: 54£.25.11 * CORD * 'fill VETT'E Convt. 4-spd. f27 1970 modern claaalc. ~wer, w/300 HP, Likf' .rtf,w_. 32.lO:l automatic rransmisslon, air mi's, 1 0\.1.'1)t'.r. 557-&191 COMitio.,ini. 16.500. Mr. DODGE Lock!Jll. Comml"rcial Na. tiont1I Bank, 817.<fJJO, ,,. "'O Co 1 t ~· BANK REPOSSESSION 0.1 ....,., nv, x n vuuy, 966 n...1 D ;,; nd ech cond l'J'O(I lop l'IU I vuul\:f' an • 1r co , :akei. d~le to ·11.'lJ! Pi t . CBll .dm, &f.2-Jlll, f'XI ~' ,_.,_,_._,_,_.,_·_~---.t '63 CPE d..._ VUlt ruu powf'r '6.1 OOtx;E Dan. r.ood 4 air ex°'-llf'~I cond!Oon tnlnspnrtarion f'ar. $400. or $695. 673.Zl~7 hf.~t f'Jfftr. 642--4219 . 19&1 Cldlll•e. new tire1, l '6.1 Dodge-Dart deluxe GT. owner, $995 cub. eAll S.'IX). 535-1167 ask for Otln MS-292!'. nr D11 v,. • IN COSTA MES _,\ IN COSTA MESA FOR BUSINESS FRIDAY, FEB. 12 VISIT ORANGE COUNTY'S NE'WEST MOST MODERN AUTOMOBILE DEALERSHIP PONTIAC GRAND VILLE WE HAVE THE l'INEST SELECTION OF NEW 1971 PONTIACS -ALL SERVICED AND READY FOR DELIVERY. TEST DRIVE TODAY, THEN CHOOSE YOURS! '69 VW BUG ' ,,, •• d "•111"';";""· t•dio .011d h ... 1,r, ! 2•7X"IHI + '69 TOYOTA COROLLA 1 Dr. H.T. Vinyl tep, .outo:>mal1t h1n1min i<1n, , .. jj;,,, h,,1,,. (XTS- l45 l '67 PONTIAC GTO V8, 1111<1., R&H, po:>we• 1le1•i119 & br1k11. bvc- ~•t , ... i.. '""'"'·· ITQS775) 2480 HARBOR BLVD. At FAIR COSTA MESA 5,46-8017 '67 BUICK GS SKYLARK VI <111t<1., RIH, p o:>wer ''''''"9 "' 1:. ... 1, ... 1.,. lory .. :r. !UCN215) SAio! 01160 'WY. • • IA.Jrfl Al'f. • AD&•t~ AYL I • • • I. ' llA\'[ ll:OSS PONTIAC .l et f.air C•sto M"• 546-8017 7 •