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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-02-15 - Orange Coast Pilot7 • • _1rs ex1co • . . Costa Mesa Girl State Rules ,Fees Criti~ally Burned On Bay T~tlelands In Apart111ent-~~ire: Not Mandatory • . DAILY PILOT • * * * 10' * * * MONDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY ;1s, :1971 YOL. M, NO. 1', I llCTIOllS, 11 l".&G•S Rascal Next Sirius II Wins Race to Mexico Fees for Tidelands Use Jluled Not Mandatory By l . PETER KRIEG lt is "discretionary." 01 1111 0.11., .. 11011 11111 T\.1orris. in referring to commercial . Newport Beach can. but does not have rees. d6es say that when the operator "derives substantial profits, the judg· to, charge rent for the use of city-con-ment and care normally required of trolled tidelands. the Stale Attorney a trustee. would appear normally to re- ·General's office has ruled . quire the city to charge a reason'able The; ruling, In response to a query rental." from the City Council. could serve to He cautions, however. "lhat any such rental must, of course, be used for ·reopen the batlle over the city tidelands trust purposes. 'use fees" imposed 14 months ago today. "Especially," he said, "where all or It will certainly recharge the opposition a portion of the consideration for a to the ex.isling fees -especially since lea se is the public benefit, sufficien~ It notes there is some justification for controls should be retained by the city Cree rental. in order to assure ,that lease operations The ruling was sought last trecember will be conducted in a manner promoting as the council tabled a move to introduce the trust subject. to which the city holds an ordinance to rescind the fees. its granted tidelands." The opinion. forwarded through th11 l\1orris also says there have been U.S. Planes Bomb CIA Laos Base SAIGON (UPll -Lt. Gen. Hoang Xuan Lam, commander of the J6,000 South Vietnamese troops In Laos, said today his men have cut the main branch of the Ho Chi Minh Trail. He predicted a major Communist oUenslYe to reopen It. Communist China renewed its warnings today against U.S. intervention in Laos, and western diplomats in Vientiane ex· Qtessed concern about possible Chinese intervention in Laos. 'Mley based their fears on Peking statements and remarks cf Olinese diplomata: to senior I.aos officiali in Vlenuane. By ALMON LOCKABEV OAILY l"ILOT .. ,tint lfihr PUERTA VALLARTA -Bob Lynch's 82-foot · cutter Sirius ll from NewpOrt Harbor Yacht Club crossed tbe fini!h line at. t0 :1Jl p.m. SUnday to bkome the first to finish in the I.125-mlle Marina del Rey to Puerta Vallarta race. Second boat in the 26-(oot fleet will be Bill Wilson·s Rascal from Santa Barbara Yacht Club which at 10:50 a.m. today was about five miles from the finish line. Sirius IT beat Rascal by 19 hours which means that Rascal will have beaten Sirius If on corrected time. A large crowd greeted Sirius lI al the new Puerta Vallart.a marina.. as she $5,185 in Loot Taken in Mesa Holiday Heist Taking adYantage of the long weekend, burglars raided 1 vacationing Costa Mesa executiYe's home Saturday ind stole '5.185 in valuables, including gOld and silver table· service. A Wlif:fman's wife liv!flg 1,n the ~e area piJlP.Qint,ed· tije apRJ'OXIT'{'ite tune of the burglary.when she recal\ed seeing window' shades -left up by the family -cloeed at mid-afternoon . office of Assemblyman Robert E strong arguments deliYered that would Badham IR·Newport Beach ). answer! justify free rental for private piers. Troubled a .series of questions listed by City At-Morris also points out that some have There also were new anti-American demonstrations In Chins , this time in Shanghai where Korean War vderan.~ called the American military "a paper tiger." There were slmilar m a s s denionstralions earlier in Peking and other Chinese cities, emphasizing Peking charges the inva.skm of Laos was "a grave menace" to China. James 0. Hicks, a roofing complny vi~ president, notified authorltres of the looting when he1 rettirned home from Palm Springs. torney Tully Seymour . contended that a law dealing with leases John Morris, deputy attorney general by the State Lands Commission pro. and author of the opinion, said the city hibitiog private pier rentals should be "does not have a legal duty~·-to charge applied to city and county rentals, also. 1 ree for commercial piers -although Secondly. he says, "it has been it iJ reasonable to do so. represented to lhis office that public U it does, Morris said, "the city may benefits are derived from private piers ... at its discretion. exempt private In that the public cost of dredging the residential piers fr9m rerifa1.r• ---· main ch111nnet has been 'greally reduced - A third point. on how to compute by the frequent dredging by· littoral the charges, Morris said, ' · any owners at private expense. bl "And." he said. "the private piers reasonable basis'' is accepta e. In asking for the ruling, the council benefit vessels in Newpart Harbor during had sought to determine if, as a majority heavy fog." appeared to believe, the state con-He said. "lf these representations are sidered it mandatory that fees be charg· accurate. they would appear to be legally ed. sufficient to justify free rental of 11uch Councilman Richard Crou/, a supporter piers, at the city's discretion where the of the fees . had pointed out. "The state city properly makes the finding that 11 looking toward C<>mplete takeover of they are in aid of navigation and not the tidelands." and noted that five bills incons istent with the trustl.'' designed to facilitate that takeover had Newport Beach currently charges a been introduced in the last session of flat fee for pr\Yate piers and a graduated the Legislature. fee for commercial uses. Authorities at La Tuna Correc· tional In stitution near An- thony, Tex., say they caught David Harris, husband of sing- er Joan Baez, with marijuana in his possession. Harris is serving time for refusing in· . 4~li9P i~to )he _!'!"med fo/ce51 Hooch Hijacked LONDON I AP) -Hijackers attacked a driver and his mate near LOndon docks today and escaped with a truck1oad of whisky valued at $104,160. U.S. spoke!men in Saigon said a U.S. Air Force F105 "Wild Weasel" jet made a "protective reaction" strike Sunday against a Communist mlsslle site In North Vietnam. And in Vientiane Amertcan sourees said a U.S. plane accidentally bombed a CIA-supported clandestine army base •t Long Cheng In northern1 Loos; krtling . 10 Meo hill tribesmen and wounding 20 persons including an American believed to be a member of the ClA. Lam predicted heavy fighting since the· ~mviunists "have to keep their supplies open" and told television c•meraman Train Dai Minh there were tWo North Vietnamese divisions , the 308th ,tSte INDOCHINA, Pase %) Officer Jim Farley said the1ranslcked residence a't 2980 Mindanao Drive, was entered via a rear bedroom alldlng glass door jimmied open with a l>t'Y tool. Pillow cases were used as bags to tiarry ·the l:Z.service 11Uver af'ld goldware sets, plu11 jewelry. an antique silver watch, two cameras. two rlnes, 1' .4.5 caUbfr automatic pistol. radio\ c o I o t tel~;J.slqn 'sjt ~nil m~µin~ ~mi. Hlj:ks 'Slid llvint room .drllP'• · were left open and· found that way upoti his retu~n; but the neighbpi'hood witness told police ·She saw them closed at. one poiht Satdrday arrernoon. ' Sketching Crooks Into. Jail • He said the state is insisting that The county is cunently studying fees 1 l I I le l l for its tidelands, although It has slapped s C' -n z · A . 'C ' s ts :.~.g~,~~~n:::i~~.~d:~· ncompe n ° sliflcharg .. oncommerci.alu""· an wmente r.o ice rtist aptures uspec Morris' ruling gives no indication how ' • . ._ ·. . • , · his ollice would "'.act II lhe city did JE''°"'ER Ji'.ES:f.l.Jl.Afi· ' . ·'J!¥<JOllN•W."t"TEliliA' . ' u··i 'ioi' 't11e ""ill11\.t.°'r<( skelcli~ Iden~ Here"s how it wenl: not charge a r~. po1~tln,g ~L r~~t.e<!.lf •. ; .. AJ..l.J · · • · Of ,.... 0eu-, 1"11.t. itllff, •• ~.~·A I ;, ' etn oenttal;oitadg~ Goii'IYf 'ahd 'We sat down at Martin's tiny desktop through the "''page opll1ion •. bhlY lliiib , • •, · . ·-'""~~~!lllft~ · ' · 'PREVIEW Sl11'Jflf ~. been but he helps catch crooks all tWe'Moxlcan border. . easel which held tracing P'P'" Washington Ups ta ged ADAMS. Mass. (UPI) -The women 's llberatlon movemenl scuttled observance of George Washington 's birthd!J.Y Mond11y In this city where Susan 8. Anthony waa bom. Municipal officials approved token ceremonies commemorating the birth of the famed woman's suffrage leader lSl years ago in Adam.1 instead of the ob1ervances of Washington's birth.- day. The DAILY PILOT prestnts, in a !!pecial t..vo-page spread to be publilbed Tuesday, 1 preview of the 1971 Winter Festival. It opens its 17-day run in Laguna Beach on Friday. The specl1l stories, photos and ids from Laguna Beach are dtaicned lo tell residents from lhroughout the Orange Coast the entire Ftstlval •tQU in 1 capsule. Witch for it Tuetday inside •II editions of the DAILY PILOT. lhe lime. 1 'Ale quiet , kind and patient rettred And in routine fashion he unloaded And he does lt with a tiny metal 1 corfimen::lal artist l!n'l in It for the his eqes and lips, setting them aside box, pencils and a little stack of eyes, money, becau11e he wants none. for latter. llps and heads he carries around 1in He catches crooks for nothing. We started. ln.'itead, with the geoera1 a small vinyl pouch. liow he goe11 about it i! a fascinating shape of the head and jawa-he has san Clemente police detectives con-trip into the. puzillng world of the human about a half dozen versions of those. sider him Invaluable in a major in-memory under stresa. One emerged •s the clo!est shape vutlgalion. Mirtln and this DATLY PILOT and went under a blank sheet of tracing Give hlm -4S mlnutt:s with even a reporter 11at down rtctntly to enaege h)'!terlcal victim or witnw. they 1ay. in a little exerclM of "I'll describe a.ad he'll turn out a chillin& likeness you-and you draw yourself." of 1 rapist, robber-even 1 kJller. Save ror the lack of a11itaUon ind Martin. 73, the only police erUst -stress, we made it authentic. ' piper. Next we worked on the halr. 11 went fast. .. If it's not right. mike a !See ~"RTIN, Pa1e II change was eased stern to the sea wall last night. "How \\las the race," Lynch '4'RS asked. "Slow" was his succinct. ,answer. Lynch said there was only about 20 hours dur\ng the race when there waa enough wind tll move the boat anywher• near hull speed. The race started at 12:15 p.m. Satur~ day , Feb. 6. Sjriun' ela~d time w a• eight days, ten hours. five minutes and 15 seconds. Costa Mesa Girl Rescued · From Apartment Fire A young Costa Mesa woman remains In critical conditiOh today wtth burns over 80 percent of her body, after being rescued: from . her blazing apartment Saturday morning. Jeanette Vasbinger, 23, of 388 W. Wilson SL. apparently became confused and collapsed while seekil!g. a . way out, blocking the apartment door. . · Pirer6en RoAet Lo!)OSsa and Jaclt Michaels. braved the · inf~rno to . rescue MW .Vasbing~r .. wh}le two oth~r ~ cupants of the apartment tsc?ped_ on their own. Battalion Chief Ron COieman said Miu • _ VNbinger's mother and a frien<I, Mich.a.el Hetrick. climbed out a bedroom windoW and were uhinJur~. Investigators tentatively blamed th« $4,500 blaze on a cigaret drop}>ed ihto the living· room couch and snioldered until after the three occupants retired. Miss Va!blnger was· taken to the burrt unit of Orange County Medical Ce.ntet in critical :ond!Uon aod remained tit that '°ndiUon today . Beside! covering most of her body, the burns suffered after the victim col· lapsed due to smoke lnhalaUon· are severe, .nurses said.~ Orufe ·Coast Weather Cloudy sklei, whlch rmy leak a litUe in gpots." are the outlook for Tuesday along the coast, with temperatures skinned back to the middle SOs. INSmE TODAY . Ccmfusion rtiQntd. auprtme in Britain today as that naiion 1crapped Ur 800.~tor·old mont• tary system. for a decimal coin· aae Uke that u.sed in. the U.S. and Europe. See atorv Page 4. •• ,tll, ,, .. •llflt II (•11191'1111 • (!Md!!"' u, , CleHlllMI ll•ft CMUcr 1' C,.ff~ II o..111 Ntlkn If Ol"""-tl 11 l•llWlll ,,.. i l t1hltl11ft1111t111 , .. ,. ttlrosetff 11 > ' ' I , , • J DAil Y PllOI s Monday, Ftbruary 15, 1971 Patriotism Honor Goes ToCountian '"1e act or defending the fl a g bas earned a Santa Ana resident the Freedoms Foundation George Washington Award and $5,000 presented today at Valley Forge, Pl. Bill Pierson, Navy veteran, is to be cited for standing off a chanting mob o( 150 students nearly a year ago 011 the Cal State San Diego campus. 'Iben a student at the college, Pierson was walking to clas.s when he saw the- -flag being raised and lowered by students. Some wanted It fiying at full &ta!f, others · at half mast. Raising It . lo the top, Pierson, a six.foot, three Inch, 2.IO pouoder, guarded the flag !or more than three hciurs. The citation aceompanying the award reads: "For loyal patrlotiam ao dramaUcally demonsttated When, for three and one. hall hours, be atood alone a n d defemtletS, defying a weaming, heck:l· Ing, menacing group of dissident students bent on tearing down and destroying an American Flag. "For ·his simple statement, ••1 was born Qnder that Flag; I fought under . that Flq and I am going to collea:e became of what It stands for. To me that J'lag Ls a symbol of everything my Country hu stood for in the part and everythlng It wUl stand for in the fu ture.' " Pierson, a native of Oklahoma City Is a Navy veteran with service off Viet- nam. Among olhers who have received the Freedoms F o u n d a t i o n George Washington Award are former President Herbert Hoover, Walt Disney, FBI Direc- tor J. Edgar Hoover, astronaut John H. Glenn, Jr. and Gen. Harold K. Johnson , former U.S. Army Chlef ol Staff. Nine others from Orange County were commended by the Freedoms Foundation today, including actor John Wayne, ot Newport Beach who was given the Na· tional Servlce Medal "for consistent, unabashed loyalty to America and Its ideals. The citation accompanying Wayne's award continues, "For heroic mov ie ex· ploit.s which have inspired American fighting men : h1.s visits to Gls in combat zones and his support of lhe younger generation 'who have taken more interest in society than we did'." Othen commended today include: From El TOl'1): Marine Corps Maj. Donald M. Bahl\%, an Honor Certificate Award for his speech givin Dec. 3, 1969. From Fullerton: Daniel H. Poole, George Washington Honor Medal for his magazine article "A Young Patriot Speaks His Mind." From Garden Grove: Miss Tyler DeHaven, Honor Certificate for youth essay "Our Constitution -Ordained by Free Men, Sustained by Free Men." From Los Alamitos: Hugh Brainard of the Naval Air Station, George Washington Honor Medal for his Armed Forces letter "Freedom -Privilege or Obligation?" M ore more From J\1bsion Viejo: Judy A. Headlee, 26892 Pree la dos Dr., Honor Certificate for her magazine article "Patriotism: To Be or Not To Be." From Santa Ana : Marine Corps Private George E. ?i-tichael, Honor Certificate for his Armed Forces letter "Freedom -Privilege or Obligation?" Santa Ana C o 11 e g e, Distinguished Service Award in the college campus programs category. From Tustin: Rev. Harold F. Leestma, George Washington Honor Medal for hil sermon "The Foundations Are Strong." Others honored at today's Washington's Birthday observance are fonner House Speaker John W. McCormack, journalist Victor Riesel, busineMman H. Ross Perot and radio newsman Paul Harvey. DAILY PILOT N...,.., .. _. H11• ... t• .._. ............ ,._.,.,..., C•t. M"• S. Clt.nte OAAHGE COAST P'Ull!SHING COMP'ANY Roh1rt N. W1M ,., .. icltfLt "" hfllltMI' J1c\: It C11rlrt Viet ,.,._~Otnl 1r.d ~·• ~ ... Tho"''' K11vil Ell!llf' Tho"'tl A. M11rphi11• MIMt~•I Edi!.,. Ri$ht rd P. H1ff Sou!h Ortr11" C-IJ Edlllr Off! ... Co.ti Mtott: )31) Wnl lrf ltr'lff H.-,o.. e .. ctu 7111 Wnl l1lio1 I Dlllnlf'f lAt~~• 8Ndl: m l'wnt "''"'"" Hvrill""l!911 BNdl: 111rs ••Kfl aevt..,.nl '•~ (1~m•nl1: :Illa 1'11rlll El (tmlnf llMI D.t.n.Y PILOT, w.1111 W'llldl II '-"""C• ,,,_ p,i,_.~ II polb!111!al 0111T •Ufl'I '- 01y It\ ..,.,,,. CJlll-tor L ..... 1 l.C<l\o N...,..,. 11...:ll, Cftll Mt11, lt\ill1IM!afl .""' .. 1'1111'1"'"' ................. '""" -fflllMI •ll11ot11. Ol'Mtl CINU M!l"'lns c.-r ,.,11111111 ptt1111 '"' 11 n11 w.11 ... llM IM~ NtwllOl"I ltad'I. n all W.t .. , '"""' '*"' ...... ,...,... .. l11 4l 642-4)11 Cl..m.4 All'r'lt'tkfllt '42·1671 s-ct.111111• An o.,.,,...; ,..,. ... 4'2-44H ~ tt1' Ot•• c-1 ....,."""" ~. ... -~ '"""' lllllttrlliwl .. .......... 111t1""' er t,,,_,IMIMU lllt•ll! _., M ~f wlttwl lfltltl ,_ • ...... .. .,....,.. "'"""· _.,... dUI ntl"' Ot11f It .. ....,.,. Wt!! •A c-t1 Mt;t, C1tlfln'illi. l.iMUi,lllft ff I:_,.. U..tl _,,_IYI .., _n U .fl -IM)'I "' '"1111,,.., ............ U.B "'°"llllJ. l1a Count11 Bills Hiker Survives 42-ho·ur Ordeal A 15·year-old Anaheim boy was home safe today after a 42°bour ordeal in the mountains near Saddleback Peak. Richard D. Connelly survived a 20-fool fall down a waterfall and two hours of semi-consciousness during his wan- derings after he became lost from a high school hiking club outing Friday. "I never thought I would oot be found and I kept praying,"' the boy was quoted as saying. He regained contact with others Sunday morning when he came across an off.duty Marine fishing in the Bear Springs area. Richard became lost while oo a planned one day hike with 17 members of the Magnolia High School mountain club. From Page J INDOCHINA. •• and 320th, totalling 20,000 men facing his 16,()()()..man force. ll was his first hike with the group. "I slowed down and began to fat( behind a bit." the boy explained .. , kept seeing glimpses of them around the bends but I couldn't catch up and finally los1 them." He told of hearing people talking and seeing helicopters but effort.a to make his whereabouts known failed 'in every, instance. Saturday night he slept in a ditch he had dug, covered with leaves. A rescue team of sheriff's deputies, county firemen and U.S. Forestry peri;on- nel covered mo re than 60 square miles in the search for the boy slnce Friday. Newport Firm Planning Sale Of Debentures A MARINE CAPTAIN ESCAPED WITH HIS LIFE IN CRASH DESTROYING CAR With Only Minor Cuts, Capt. MacMa ster E5timated Loss At About $3,000 He said the North Vietnamese were being reinforced by the 304th NVA Division with another 10,000 men. But asked if the S o u t h Vietnamese forces were spread too thin he said, "we are very strong here." Avco Financial Services, Inc. has filed with the Securites and Exchange Com· mission a registration statement covering a proposed public sale of $50 million of senior debentures due March l, 1971. Valley ~chool Looms For Crippled Pupils By TERRY S. COVILLE Of lt'lt O•Ht P'llot Sl•ll By this time next year, 100 children confined to wheel chairs or walking with crutches may attend their own school in Fountain Valley. It all depends on how fast stale legislators push through an emergency 2 Hippie-type Bandits Strike Mesa Station A pair of hippie-type bandits who like to see service station attendants run for their lives robbed another Costa Mesa ouUet of $130 in cash Saturday night. · Daniel T. Weibel told police he saw the 19 to 20-year-old stickup men ap- parently casing Grant's Gulf Service, 1740 Newport Blvd., twice earlier. fie said they passed by at 6 p.m. and 8 p.m., before returning at 10 p.m. to ask what time It was, the same method used in hitting anotber Newport Boulevard station last week. Weibel told of being ordered to hand over the cash by one suspect, who wore a bushy, lull-face beard and fla shed a short, chrome-plated revolver. They fled after Weibel look off trotting down Newport Boulevard and up Rochester Slreet as ordered. A similar robbery at a station farther north on Newport Boulevard last Yleek netted about the same amount. Man Shot After Restaurant Row An argument at a Garden Grove restaurant was followed by a shoOting early this morning. One man was jailed on supicion of attempted murder and the other treated for a gunshot wollhd In the upper right arm and released. Police said the victim was Richard \Vhite. 22, of Garden Grove. He argued with Michael H. Bartholomew, 23, also of Garden Grove in Bob·s Big Boy restaurant, Harbor Boulevard and Chap- man Avenue. Bartholomew left the cafe and about lS minutes later White followed. He was shot by Bartholomew, police claim, in the restaurant parking lot. When Bartholomew was arrested at his home five hours later, police claim, to have found marijuana and dangerous drugs. They accused him additionally wilh possession. bill to release more money for the construction of special schools. "\Ve 've been told such a bill has cleared the Assembly,·• reports ?i-1ike Brick. superintendent of the Fountain Valley School District. His dist rict is laying the groundwork for the orthopedically handicapped school. lt will serve crippled children fro1n seven school districts fr om Newport Beach to Seal Beach. Two months ago plans were under way for construction of the special school district when state authorities said there was no construction money left for special schools. An old law limits state-aid on special schools to 3.5 percent of state bond money tbal bas been sold for school conslruction. ''The Assembly has now amended that figure to be 3.5 percent or all bond n1oney approved. v.•hether the bo nds have be!'!n sold or not." Brick explained. "But it still has lo go through the Senatl'." 'The orthopedically handicapped . school will handle about 100 crippled children from the Fountain Valley. Newport-Mesa. Huntington Beach High, Huntington Beach City, Ocean View, \Vestminster and Seal Beach school districts. No di strict in th is area has a school specially equipped to handle student s in \\'heel chairs, on crutches or with missing limbs. The school will be combined with a regular elementary school. .. The combination will allow han- dicapped children to intermix with others, as they must in society," Brick said. The orthopedic school will be equipped with special classes and special teachers to handle the crippled youngsters. It v.·ill also have an out-patient clinic starfed \\'i\h medical personnel by Orange Coun- ty's heallh department. School districts currently pay for private instruction of orthopedically han- dicapped students. The new school would ~reatly reduce costs while providing ban· dier facilities for the children. Ho"·ever. if the emergency bill hits a snag, or Fountain Valley doesn't receive any of the new money, the orthopedic school could be delayed at least two years. But Brick speaks optimistically: .. We have the support or state Senator Dennis Carpenter (ft.Newport Beach). and Assemblymen Kenneth Cory ( D . Anaheim ) and Robert Burke IR-11un· tinirton Beach).·• "We think our project will receive 1t priority status," Brick adds. "But there isn't any v.•ay to guarantee it." Doll Deli-vers! Pull a Zipper and Out Pops Baby PARIS (AP) -Children sated v.•lth silly dollies v.·ho only v.·et their pants or croak "mama" got a very grownu1> new toy Monda y: a pn!gnnnt doll lhat turns anybody's 8-year-old into an obstttrlcian. The <'hild jusl pulls on a zipper runnlnJ:: along the blue and Y.hltc trousers of the "future mama doll ," and out pops a baby. It is painless childbirth. Tht doll. described by it.s manufllC!· turers as the first of its kind In the world, was unveiled at lhe Paris Toy Show. "It'$ an educational toy. desl&ned to demystify childbirth," said A D d r e e Ccsset a spokesman for Plntel. the manufacturer. "We've round that about nine out of 10 ~op1c y.·ho've seen it think it'• in good 1as1c. f ''The rest complain lhat it's not necessary for kids to know \\'here they <.-ome from. hut our attitude Is thnt "'ith men on the moon. you can't keep saying that Jacques' baby brother \Yas left in. the cabbage patch by a stork," he added. The baby, v.·ho!e father is not named in the sa les brochure, Is a un ise x child v.·hich looks reassuringly llke the smiling. blonde mother. She "''ears a bright pink doll's mattrnUy dress over her troustrs. Onct In the cruel v;orld. the: Uttlc baby rloll cries ir you squeeze it. Mrs. Gessel said that most children who played v.·llh lht dolls "considered the \\'hole arrangen1t'nt with such naturalness that It shames any adult who Is troubled by the notion.'' The don. v.·hlcb ·probably "'ill be ex· pc>rt~; sells for J9. Marine Captain Injuries Minor After Accident A Maritle Corps captain escaped with only minor cuts and bruises early Satur· day morning when his sports car struck a guard rail In Laguna Canyon, ·'completely di sin le g rating '' the fiberglass body of the auto. Laguna Beach police said John C. ri·lacMaster, Tl, of 1076 La ~1irada, was heading toward home at about 6 a.m. when the mishap occurred just north of Sycamore Flats. The Marine ap- parently lost conlrol of his car, officers said. and slammed into the newly-in· stalled guard rail. lfe estimated the loss at about $.1,000. The fiberglass car body shattered on Impact , but ri1acMaster suffered only a cut lip and a few bruises as a result of the accident. He apparently was lhrown into a field. Nex t Time She'll Call a Hippi~ You:ve all seen the bumper sticker that says: If yo_u Don't Like Policemen, next Time You Need Help call a Hippie? Well, an 18-year-old Costa Mesa woman called police Saturday morning to com· plain that her Jong-haired former hus- band had been knocking her around. Patrolmen Dennis Hossfeld and Mark Be rnal arrived at lhe woman's apartment and, instead of ordering the 23-year-old former spouse out. arrested the couple. They were booked into jail 011 suspicion of possession of marijuana, and a small quantity was confiscated. Ttlere also were Indications tank bat· lies mighl be in the offing along lhe Ho Chi Minh trail. Lam said his air and ground units have knocked out five PT76 Soviet-built tanks and a number of T34 tanks in the eight-day old invasion. The South Vietnamese have lost lYlO to enemy gunfire. U.S. military sources in the field disclosed that 10 percent of the American helicopters supporting the South Viet· namese invasion of Laos have been destroyed or severely damaged during the first week of the operation. They said more than 300 were being used and this would mean 30 or more shot down. Two more helicopters were shot down today including a CH47 Chinook, the giant chopper used Lo hoist heavy · artillery and other supplies into Laos. It was shot down in flames with unknown loss of lives and was the first Chinook lost. Th.e official report o( plane losses in Laos and the border areas of Vietnam was 15. Hei:tVY fighting was reported in border areas of Cambodia where Soulh Viel· namese reported killing 78 in two clashes Sunday, bringing to more than 500 the number of Communists reported killed in that incursion. Cambodian villagers wielding machetes reportedly drove off Communist troops seeking refuge in their community 15 miles northeast of Phnom Penh, and killed several. a government military spokesman said today. The spokesman said the incident oc- curred last Wednesday, but \Vas reported only today when Cambodian troops reached the vi llage of Phum Chrey Thom on a search-and-clear operation. The Vietnamese Communist troops \vre fleeing a government push, designed to clear the rocket belt east of the capital across the Mekong River. when they entered Phwn Chrey Thom, t h e spokesman said. The villagers, fearing allied bom~rs more than the Communists, barred their \\'ay, and used stick.s and machetes. they drove off the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese, he said . Rex Harrison Sued Vientiane dispatches said Communists shell ed it government outpost at Ban Na on the southwest edge of the Plain For Divorce by 4th 01 Ja" du.mg the night but apparentty pulled back slightly from Long Cheng SANTA t.10NICA (UPI) - Actor Rer after a vicious assault before dawn on Harrison. 63, has been sued for divorce Sunday. by his fourth wife, Rachel Roberts. 43, Long Cheng is the headquarters for to end their nearly four-year marriage. Meo General Vang Pao and his 9,000 Miss Roberts said she was satisfied man army which is flnan~ by the with a property settl ement the couple U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). had rea ched but was upset because she The Laotian government ordered rein· dirl not get custody of the couple's basset fo rcements sent toward Long Cheng to-. hound, Homer. day. I ~----- • A MODERN UP TO DATE j JEWELRY and LOAN WITH YOU IN MIND ~· • CASH LOANS On most •ny •rticle, special i1in9 in low cost, short term loani. • SAVE MONEY ON EVERYTHING The announcement of the bond sale was made today al the Newport Beach headquarters of Avco Corp .. parenl com- pany of Avco Financial Services. The offering will be made by a na· tionwide underwriting group managed by Lehman Bros., Inc., probably in early March. Net proceeds from the sale of the bonds will be added to the general funds of the company and will be available to pay current indebtedness and to carry additional receivables. Application \\'i ll be made to list the debentures on the New York Stock Ex- change. AVCO Financial Services Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of AVCO Corp., was formerl y Seaboard Finance Co. The com· pany conducts its lending operations in f\110 major areas of the finance busineu, namely consumer loans and sales finance . Through subsidiaries, the com· pany also conducts an i n s u r a n c e business. in part related directly to its finance activities. Boy, 16, Freed After Alleged Sex Kidnaping A 16-year-old boy hitchhiker picked up in Costa r-.tesa Sunday afternoon by a male motorist told police he finally escaped afte r being forcibly fondled and propositioned for perversion. The youth said he wa s picked up on Harbor Boulevard at Wil son Street aboul 4 p. m. by the suspect, in his early 30s, and said he was quickly ap- proached. He refused an offer to go to the man 's apartment and was then grabbed by the motorist. who wore a plaid shirt and blue jeans, according lo reports. "Let me out," he demanded as they slopped for a red light at Peterson \Vay. but told police the man grabbed his arm and pulled him back in as he opened the car doo r. The boy said he was finally allowed out of the car at Harbor Boulevard and Gisler Avenue after the suspec~ drove around, apparently .deciding wblt to do. Investigators today were tracing the 1968 ca r's license number in an effort Ip identify the suspect in the kidnap and disorderly conduct case. ~-l • YOU BUY e DIAMONDS & JEWELRY e MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS e STEREO EQUIPMENT e SPORTS GEAR •nd Mlny Mor• ltemi • Come in ond see whot we offer our customers. A new and unusual experience in in s hop pi n 9 enjoyment. Where people in the know save money every time they buy. 1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE· FIRST Racitis COSTA. MESA ~EWELRY and tOAN 1838 NEWPORT BLVD· A DOWNTOWN COSTA M SA -Bet-n PHONE 646·7741 I I' ' Huntington Beaeh EDITION Your Hometown Dally Paper VOL. 64, NO. 39, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES OP,ANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, FEBIUARY 15, 1971 TEN CENTS Beach Policemen Demand $650,000 From City By TERRY COVILLE t'>f ttl• 01111 l"Uor 51111 Huntington Beach policemen a r e demanding $650,000 from the city for .alleged damage lo their character and integrity. The large claim stems from what the policemen's associa tion terms "bad faith'' over salary negotiations last September. "This is just the first step toward a law &uit , .. , plan to file in early March for back pay and benefits pro· tnised by the city," officer Ron Pomeroy, 3 Arrested In Bizarre Incidents A series of three incident! related to an alleged child molestation left three men jailed early today, one of them shot by the alleged victim's enraged father. By the lime the confusion ended and the dust settled, police in two cities listed these men arrested and the charges against them: -Paul E. Genthner. suspicion of assault with intent to commit murder. -John A. Bake r, suspicion of child molest. -Russell Rou\k Jr., suspicion o! strongarm robbery. Authorities attempting to unravel the complex, bizarre case. said it began Sunday night when Genthner's 1.year-old daughter claimed she was molested at her babysitter's home. Genthner. of 10151 Barbara Circle, Buena Park, reportedly ran acrou the street and broke down the door. shooting Baker, 25, in the left arm· with a .22 caliber revolver. · Baker went to Los Alamitos General Hospital for medical treatment and was allegedly pursued there by Genthner, who brought along his neighbor, iden· tified as Foulk. Baker had been visiting Faulk when the alleged molestation occurred. The pair allegedly burst into the emergency room as attendants were placing the shooting victim into an am- bulance for transportation to Orange County Mecical Center. Los Alamitos police said Genthner and Foulk demanded to know how badly Baker was wounded . "This is the guy that shot me," Baker cried, causing hospital officials to abruptly refuse any information. police &aid . . Genthner and Foulk then wrested Baker's medical records away from an intern. police said. but dropped them outside when chased by hospital person· nel. Buena Park police held Genthner on the shooting charge after he and Foulk were stopped by la\vmen near the hospital. Foulk was kept in custody by Los Alamitos authorities on the strongarm robbery charge stemming from seizure of Baker 's medical records. The confusing series of incidents was touched off when the Genthners picked up two of their children at the Foulk residence Sunday night after attending a drive-in movie. Police said the 7-year-old child's ac- count of her evening at the residence where Baker was visiting led her father to return and break down the door see.king revenge. Beach Cyclist Hurt in Crash A 32-year-old motorcyclist from Hun- tington Beach was severely Injured over the weekend when he ram med a power pole . Authorities at Hunt ingt on Intercom· munity Hospital said Kenneth Commons, 15442 Duke Circle, Is in satisfactory condition today. He suffered head injuries in the. accident. Officers said Commons was eastbound C'.ln Bolsa Avenue about 8 p.m. Saturday night when the crash took place near the Springdale Street Intersection. H~ apparently struck a curb and then hit the pole, Investigators said. 'Holy Water' Tainted JERUSALEM <UPI) -Israel la quarantining bottles of "Holy Water" Moslem pilgrims bring back frum Mee. c1's sacred well of Zamiam following report.a the well may be contaminated with cholera end mal&rta, tht health minlslry nid today. a director of the police association, ex- plained. City Administrator Doyle Miller v. ill ask the city council Tuesday night to deny the $650,000 claim and refer it to Herbert Moss, a labor relations at· torney. Pomeroy said the $65(1,000 doe s not cover any pay loss or actual benefits. "This is just a damage .claim. It follov.s a similar suit by policemen in Lynwood.'' Last September. policemen signed an agreement with Miller for l l percent pay raises, plus other benefits. Firemen r;igned a similar agreement with their salary Increases ranging from ll percent to 13.5 percent. The city i:ouncil. however. refused to accept 11 percent increases for either public ssfety group and set pay raises at 8.25 percent, the same as other city employes received. Since then, policemen and firemen have threall:!ned to take the city to court to settle their salary dispute. The $650.000 claim, filed by PomProy with the city last week. is the first step toward legal action taken by either group. "\Ye haVen 't outli~ any specifics In this claim," Pomeroy isaid. ··Our March suit will list all the points of disagree- ment." Besides back pay under the 11 percent .\greement. Pomeroy 11-lso said the city has failed to provide an educational incentive plan, an allowance for unifonns and an impasse agreement for future salary talks. "The benefits were promised by the city council. They were supposed to sta rt Jan. I, but they didn't," Pomeroy said . All 11 percent pay raise was not pro- Viets mised by the council, but poll~emen indicated they would press thei r law suit for that as well , because of the manner in which salary talks were con- ducted . The JSO-~ember p o,11 c em.en's association is represented by Pomona attorney Ross Irwin. He was not available lor comment today. Fireme'n have not yet taken legal ac· lion on the.ir .pay dispute. A spokesman for the firemen said, however, they would probably not file a damage claim with the city, as policemen had, but would press a sult in court sometime ne,t month. The basic dispute over the salary talkJ occurred Sept. 15 when the city council set the 8.25 percent increase 'rate, IJ· noring Miller's recommendation and not sending him back for more talks with police or fire spokesmen. Miller's recommendations had been made on the basis of a 12<ity survey to find what other poliei! and firemen were making. Councilmen said they were setting the 8.25 percent rate because of current economic conditions. Cut Trail Commander \redicts Red Offensive Ul'I Tti.,ftoM The Odd Couple Somebody forgot to tell "Foxy" and ":i.1usket" that they are natural enemies. The swift, brown fox and the beagle \vith a baritone voice live in the back yard of the Danny Dv.·ight home in Ventura . They share meals and playtime. Life is good. They even have carpeting on the floor of their A·frame home. Sirius II Finishes First ,, In Puerta Vallarta Race By AL.\fON LOCKABEY DA.11.Y l"ILOT a1uln1 ldlttr PUERTA VALLARTA -Bob Lynch's 82-foot cutter Sirius II from Newport Harbor Yacht Club crossed the finish line at 10 :20 p.m. Sunday to become the first lo finish in the 1,125-mi!e Atarina de! Rey to Puerta Vallarta race. Second bciat in the 2S-loot neet wi\1 be Bill Wilson's Rascal from Santa Barbara Yacht Club which et 10:50 e.m. today wes about live miles from the finish line. Sirius II beat Rascal by 19 hours which means that Rascal will have beaten Sirius n on corrected time. A large .crowd greeted Sirius II at the new· Puerta Vallarta marina as &he was eased stern to the l!iea wall last night. "How was the race,'' Lynch \t'&S asked . 1'Slow"·was his succinct an swer. Lynch said there was . only about 20 hours during the race when there was enough wind to move the boat an}"A'here near hull speed. The race started at 1%:15 p,m, Satur- da y, Feb. 6. Siriun' elapsed time was eig ht days, ten hours, five minutes and 15 seconds. Russ Ward's Aries reported this morn- ing lhat he was expecting to finish some time tonighl. Not more than a mile from Ar ies was Bob Beauchamp's Dorothy O. One or the C'.lthe.r was calculated lo be the third boat to finish. It's Labor of Love For Postmistress LOVELAND, Jowa (UPI) -Mrs. Iona Wood, postmistress here for 31 years, work ed overtime Sunday processing about 200 Valentine cards. She dated each one, added the "LC'.lveland" postmark and added a st.amp reading ''Iowa's Sweetheart tow n , greetings from Loveland, Iowa.11 She said she doesn't mind working on Sunday "one day out of the year." SAIGON (UPI) -Lt. Gen. Hoang Xuan Lam, commander of the 16,000 South Vietnamese troops in Laos, said today his men have cut the main branch of the Ho Chi Minh Trail. He predicted 11 major Communist offensive to reopen it . Communist China renewed ii.a warnings today against U.S. intervention in Laos, and western diplomats in Vientiane ex· pressed concern about pouible Chinese intervention in Laos. They based lhelr Principal 3rd Trustee Race Entrant Elementary school principal , OeMis H. Mangers has become the . thlrd person to file for the April 20 trustee election In the Huntington Beach Union High School District. Mangers. 30, joins Westminste r resldentt} Edmund C. P. Shtehan, 11n Alcoholic &verage Control Board i~ vesligator, and Joseph A. Mitrahi, a retired deputy sheriff. in seeking the two·seats slated to become vacanl A Huntington Beach resident and prin- cipal of the James 0. Harper School in the Fountain Valley School District, Mangers says he is stressinl the need for a "voice of reason" on the school board. He said he would promise to Improve communications between lhe elementary i;cbools and the high school district, expand vocational programs, promote harmony on the board and work actively to use school facilities more efficiently. "More communication between the schools and the public will restore con· fidence and prestige in the education of our high school students," 11.fanger.r i;aid. "\Ve should start reading about the good programs our high schools offer, rather than personality dlflerences of board members." Addilional program!'i Mangers would like to see incorporated include more creative and responsible u.se «if tax monles, increased acet1untability for the effectiveness of academic programs and a comprehensive drug Information effort. Mangers Is currently working on hi s doctorate al the University of Southern California where he earned his master's degree. 11 Die in Clashes CALCt.rJ'TA (AP) -Eleven per.sons were killed Sunday in pre-election clashes between Marxilits and their rivals in Calculta and other parts of West Bengal . Sketching Crooks Into Jail San C1.em ent,e Police Artist 'Captures' Suspects By JOHN VALTERZA Of !Rt o,tU, l'lllf st1H Sindy MArtin Is no policeman-never has been but he help~ catch crooks all the lime. And he does it with a tiny metal box, pencllt Md a little !!tack of eyes, II~ and head3 he carries 11round In a 1mall vinyl pouch. S.n Clemente pollct detectives: to~ aider him invaluable in a major in· vestigaUon. • Give him 45 minutes with even a hysterk:al victim or witness, they 11ay. and he'll turn out a chilling likeness ti a r1pist. robbtr-even a killer. Martin, n, the only pollce artist - ~ save for lbe standard, sketchy Iden- likit-between ei!nlraJ Orange County and the' Mexican border. The quiet, kind and patient retired commercial artist Isn't in ·It for the .money. beca'Use be wants none. •re calche$ crooks for nothing. How he goes about It Is a tascinating trip into the punling world of the human memory under streu. Martin and lhls DAILY PILOT reporter ut down rtttnUy to engage In ll Uttle extrcise of ''I'll de$ctlbe .you and you draw YQunelL" Save for the laclt of agllatlon • .tnd stress, we made It ~ulhentic. • Here's how Jt went: We sat down al ~fartln'a tiny deskiop easel which held tracing paper. And In routine fashion ht unloaded his eqes· and Ups, . .,tunt them aside for lauer. • ' We itarted, Instead, with the ceneral shape of the head and jaws--he has about 1 half dozen versio1'18 of tholle, One emerged as the clotelt afulpe and Went under 1 blank sheet of lr«lll( paper. Next we )'orked · on the hair. It -went rest. ~ "'If ll'1 ,,.;I rlghL . mokt . i chanp !See SXETCHER. P.,. ll '~ fears on Peking slatements and remarks of Chinese diplomats to senior Laos officials in Vientiane. There also were new anti·Amerlcan demonstrations in China. this time in Shanghai where Korean War veterans called the American military "a paper tiger." There were similar mass demonstrations earlier in Peking and other Chinese cities. emphasizing Peking charges the invasion of Laos was "a grave menace" to China. SEEKS SCHOOL BOARD SEAT School Prlnclpal Man9tr1 Lawsuit Vowed After Contract Given for Drain Despite the threat of a lawsuit, Orange CoUJltY supervisors have awarded a con- lract on a $423,000 storm drain project in Seal Beach to the Belczac-Basin, • joint venttire in Westminster. Joe' Long, head of Lomar Corporation of Huntington Beach, second low bidder, threatened the law6uit after arguing that the low bidder did not list his sub- contractors on the bid forms as required. tong·s firm was second loW of 19 bidders at $439,434. · County Counsel Adrian KuYJ>Cr ru1ed that Belciac-Basin did not have to 'list subcontractors if they plaMed to do all the work themselves. DeMis Couremarche, assistant city mana8:er of Seal Beach, urged the supervisors Ip award t~e contract because the stonn drain work was need- ed badly and as soon as pQSSible. Supervisor Robert Baltin wanted to throw all b)ds out and · readverlbe. but he lost 3-: with only Sqpervisor Ronald Caspers •upportln& him ln the board action Wednesday. · Bench . Warrant Out For Young Official FRESNO (U.Pll - A ~ch . warrant has betn is.\Ued for the arrest. of Robert Trotter, %2, California's younge.st elected official. Municipal Court Judge Ralph Moradlan Issued the warrant aflfr Trott~. a mem- ber of the Fresno County School Board, failed to appear tn cotlrt 'I'hursday. ' He was charged with bdn1 drunk, ~ slsUng arrest, disturbing the ptat:e aad battery in 'In Incident.. he.re last weekend 1 bl • mot<l·patkln&•lot. • Mor1di•n ordered Trotltr"• boll ot "2i forieited and re-set bail at $2,0IO. 1 U.S. spokesmen In Saigon said I U.S. Air Force F105 "Wild Weasel" jet made a "protective reaction" 6trike Sunda y against a Communl.st missile aite in North Vietnam. And in VlenUane American sources said a U.S. plane accidentally bombed a CIA-supported clandestine army base at Long Cheng Jn northern Laos, killing 10 Moo blll lribesmen and wounding 20 persons including an American believed to be (See !NOOCHINA, Page 11 Handicapped Kith May Get Valley .School By TERRY S. COVILLE Of tftt Diii' P'llot Sllff By this time next year, 100 children confined lo wheel cbair11 or walking with crutches may attend their own school in Fountain Valley. Il all depends on how fast state legislators pu9h through an emergency bill to release more money for the construction of special schools. "We've been told such a bill bas cleared the Assembly," reports Mike Brick, superintendent of the Fountain Valley School District. His ·distriet. is laying the groundwork for the orlbopedicelly h a n d i c a p p e d school. ·It will serve crippled children from seven school districts from Newport Beach to Seal Beach . Two months ago plans were under way for construction of the special school district when state authorities s,aid there was no construction money left for special schools. An old law limits state.aid on special schools to 3.5 percent of state bond money that. has been sold for school construction. "The Assembly has now amended that figu re to be 3.5 percent of. all bond money approved, whether the bonds have been wld or not," Brick explained. "But it still has to go through the Senate." The orthopedically handicapped school will handle about 100 crippled children from the Fountain Valley, Newport-Mesa, (See SCllOOLS, Page Z) Hooch Hijacked LONOON (AP) - Hijackers atta::ked 11 driver 11nd his mate near London. docks today and escaped with a truckload of whisky va1ued at $104.160. Orange Coast Weather Cloudy skies, which may leak a llttlt in spots, art the ouUook for Tuesday along the coast. with temperatures skinned back to tbt middle 60s. INSWE TODAY Cunfu1ion reign1d 1upremc tn Britoin today a.s that nolion scropptd iU 800-yeor·old mont· taru system Jor G dtcimol coin· .age like that u.ye:d iJJ th• lI.S. and Ewrope .' Sec Sto'l/ Page '- l lr!Rt .1. ... ,,.., ts C.llltr!tll I Cll9dtlll9 U• J c11..i11t11 u.n """' .. t'"n1•111 H D91tll Mttktl ,. Dl'l'f~" ,. ld""'11I ""' ' ·~ltrtll!UMlll ,.1, """"'" 14 ' ' Z DAIL V PILOT H Her Family, llome Gone; Now Alice Losing Jlealth By PAMALA HALLAN Of I~• Otlly 1"1101 Sl•lf Alice Case ls afl'lld to close her eyes at.nigbl She might dream. The Dana Point woman once had a dream of a futurt full of promise for her beautiful little girl. The dream became a nightmare. She once dreamt or a peaceful retirement with her husband and a simple home in which lo .spend it. Those dreams brought mol'f: pain. There was no future for Alice's child. She was buried as a teenager, the victim of an "unloaded" gun accident There was no peaceful old age for Alice's husband. He too died pre- maturely, the vlcUm of a heart attack. There isn't even a home for Alice. It, too, is buried -under a mountain or legal technicalities. The contractor built it on the wrong lot and it will be a ruin Alice fee.ls, before the legal entanglement are ever straightened out ' Allee Case is a lonely, bitter woman robbed of all the things most people take for granted -children, husband, and home. "At least I have one thing to be thankful for," she once said. "I still have my health." Last week she was told she bas cancer. But maybe Alice's luck is changing. The doctors feet sure they raught It in lime. "Actually J feel pretty good," said Alice. who is in her 70's, Her voice soqnded strong and cheerful. lt was a far cry from the Alice Case who sat in a chair, pitifully holding her face between her hands as she told her story of tragedy two years ago. At that time she had just teamed that the contractor had built h"1r house in Capistrano Beach on the lot next to hers. Alice had been about to move in when the building inspector ordered her out, closed her home, and Alice waved goodbye to her life's savings. Since then she's been trying to get her home back. But the woman who owns the lot won't trade her lot for Alice's identical one without payment. And the l"Olltractor hasn't moved the house, despite a court order to do so. Living in a small rented house that takes most of her meager income, Alice is waiting patiently for something to happen, "l haven't given up yet," she said brightly. "J still have hope." SANDY MARTIN IS NO POLICEMAN BUT HE CAN DRAW Al Ltft Is Composite Of Martin, Al Right A Photogroph I From Page I SKETCHER ... anytime you want," he said calmly. Next, we went to the ears. "Probably pretty ordinary, aren't they," he asked with nary a hint of cheating. He sketched them in. Now we got to the good part. He pulled out a stack of eyes ranging from average to hypnotic to absolutely psychopathic. We setUed for a pair of little on the kind-0f-droopy side. The master then went beneath the tracing paper and aa a description flowed they took form with am11ing accuracy. -DAILY PILOT O~ANO:: CO.UT PUllL.15HING '°'9\PAMY Ro\i1rt N1 W11cl P'tl:lllJMll ..... l'lllllltl'lff' J1di: R. Curl1y \lkt ,l't11d111t 11'"4 Gll'lfl'll ~Mltr ThoJn•• IC11Yil Edlltl' lhol'lltt A. Mv,pfii111 M9!•t0lr11 l!d'1;tr A!111 Dirki11 Wl:ll Orl"lll C°""!f !:dllot Albert W. l1t1t A.noc:l1l1 Editor H1111tl1111t1l .._. Offi,e 11•1s ''''" ''"''"·"' M1illnt Add11u : P.O. lox 7t0, •2641 OtMr Offlt" lltfUM l••th: m Fe,.it AY911\lf C.0.t. Mtw: DI WHI 81~ SltHI """"" ... c11: nn wn1 •1tt1111 ikvlfYtri $fll 0--."l aM Norlh El C..m~ ~tfl ••tt helps to have the original set underneath betause you can move them up and down on the face. Notice the whole fact changes when I do it?" We got the glassn on after that, then went to the nose and mouth. The "'vitness'' was getting the hang of it by then. In all, our "suspect'' took aboul 40 minutes to draw, and the finishing touches, v.'rinkles-"Don't be bashful about facial description. • .I see my face too often in the mirror to be vain" -made the image much more alive, A few office visitors later saw Martin as he left after the drawing session an.d then gared at the "portrait". "Tbat'a lhe guy who just left, isn't It?" Martin bad sucettded. Earlier he had explained how he became one of Southern Califomla's few police artists. About six years ago LL Robert Mason from lhe local force called to Inquire if any member of the San Clemente arts and crafts club would be interested in doing police work (Martin has been keenly active in the group for years). "I asked around, and nobody wanted a thing to do with it, so 1 called back in a few days and volunteered.'' lie went to work immediately, and has beeo "on-tall" day and night ever i!iince. "I've become so interested In the whole thing," he said, "~at l borrowed stacks of police texts on mh~rvlew proctdurts- how to n,ake a wit ness at ease; how not to aSk conclusions and put sug- gesUons ln their answen ••• all 10r1S of lntorestlng lhings," he uplalne<I. And It ts that very skill-honed after dozens of sessions with the frightened, someUmes hymrlcal and angry wit- nesses-that makes the kindly old gentleman so deadly to criminals. "The guy ls amazing,'' Chief Clifford '-f'urray llld recently, he hn that kind, grandfather manner that pub anyone at ease right away, "And when he's done, we'\'e got our suspect pegged." But fl.fartln -unlike m01t artists - doesn't iwell percepUbly 11 !he praise.. "I'm only u: good as the \li'ltness, '' he said. • • Drifting Along From Page J INDOCHINA • • • a member of the CIA. Lam predicted hea\'Y fighting 11nc:e the Communists "ha\'e to keep their supplies open" and told tele\•ls.ion cameraman Train Dai Minh there were two North Vietnamese divisions , the 308th and 320th, totalling 20,000 men facing his 16,000-man for<.'t'. He said the North Vietnamese were being reinforced by lhe 304lh NVA Division with another 10,000 men. But asked if the Sou th Vietnamese forces were spread too thin he said, "we are very strong here." There also were indications tank bal· ties might be in the orfing along the Ho Chi Minh trail. Lam said his air and ground units havf knocked out rive Pli6 Soviet·built tanks and a number or T34 tanks in the eight-day old invasion. The South Vietnamese have lost two to enemy gunfire. Heavy winds coupled wi th more than a foot of ne\v snow produced scenes like this in Rochester, N.Y., over Ute weekend. Elsewhere in upstate New York, roads were blocked by four to six·foot drifts and thousands of commuters \Vere unable to get home since last Thursday. Many spent the four·day week· end in hotels. Despite ne\v snow, ski resorts were forced to close because skiers couJdn't get to them. U.S. military sources in the field disclosed that 10 percenl of the American helicoplers supporting the South Viet- namese invasion of Laos have been destroyed or severely damag~ during the first week of the operation. They said more than 300 were being used and this would mean 30 or more shot down. Two more helicopters were shot down today including a CH47 Chinook. the giant chopper used to . ho~st heavy artillery and other supphes into Laos. Tt was shot down in flames "'ith unkno\\'ll loss of lives and was the first Chinook Jost. 'T'he official report of plane . losses in Laos and the border areas of V1etnan1 v:as 15. $40,000 Emerald Bay Mesa Woman Rescued From Apartnient Fire Fire Blamed on Wiring Heavy fighting \1'3S reported in border areas of Cambodia where South Viet· namese reported killing 78 in two clashes Sunday, bringing to more than soo. the number of Communisl.s reported killed in that incursion. There is a possibility that faulty elec- tric wiring may have caused a fire that seriously damaged an $80,000 Emerald Bay home Saturday nigbt, a county Fire Department spokesman said today. The blaze at 11 Emerald Bay Drive vlas reported by several residents when it broke out at 9:20 p.m. Occupants of the home. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Hall, winter vlsit<irs from Denver, Colo. had left for dinner about two hours earlier. Filteen men in three engine companies battled the fire for more than half an hour before bringing it under control. Damage to the house and its contents From Page I . SCHOOLS ... Huntington Beach High, Huntington Beach City, Ocean View. Westminster and Seal Beach school districts. No di.strict in this area has a scbool specially equipped to handle students in wheel chairs, on crutches or with mis.sing limbs. The school will be combined wltb a regular elementary school. "The combination will allow han- dicapped children to intermix with others, as they must in society," Brick &aid. The orthopedic school will be equipped with special classes and special teachers to handle the crippled youngsters. Jt will also have an out.patient clinic staffed with medical persoMel by Orange C.oun- ly's health department. School districts currently pay for private instruction of orthopedically han- dicapped students. The new school would greatly reduce costs while providing ban- dier facilities for the children. However, if the emergency bill hits a snag, or Fountain Valley doesn't receive any of tbe new money, the orthopedic school could be delayed at least two years. But Brick speaks optimistically: "We have the support of state Senator Dennis Carpenter (R·Newport Beach), and Assemblymen KeMeth Cory ( D • Anaheim) and Robert Burke (R-Hun- tington Beach)." Apartment Unit Cutback Ruled In Sunset Beach A Sunset Beach man has bee.n denied pennJssion to build six apartment units on two lots because of a long standing agreement among residents of the area. County Supervisors. led by David L. Baker of Garden Grove. ruled that David Perrin's project at 19th Street and Pacific Avnnue on the oceanfronl would have to be limited to fi ve units. Perrin also was limited lo two stories, another agreement among property owners. The agreement calls for no more than two units on inside lots and three on corner lots. according to county supervisors, who said the lots are really too small for even tv.'o units in most cases. However, the density factor has been allowed to stand because of the agree- ment and because the Jots were sub- divided many years ago. The standard seems to be acceplable to the com· • munily, supervisors nid. 'Happy Chandler' l\1ay Seek 3rd Term FRANKFORT, Ky. (UPI) -A. B. 1'Happy" Chandler. former major league baseball commlsslont:r and two-lime governor, announced today he may ~i: a third term as 10\'tmor of Kentucky. Chandler, 72. told a news conference he was considering running as an in- dependent. though ht Is a Democrat ''The candidates so far haven't enthuse.d the ~pie ..• they want me to run," Chandler said. I was estimated al $40,000. The two.story frame and studceo struc- ture is owned by Ralph Roberts of Pasadena and bad been rented for the winter by Hall, who county fire officials said is a retired Army sergeant. Thief Really Filled Her Up The operator of a Huntington Beach service station lost 1,590 gallons of prem.iwn gasoline to an enterprising thief with a big tank over the weekend. Sam Meli, an employe of the Shell station at 16471 Springdale St, told officers the thief broke the padlock on the station's supply tank Sunday and then apparently hauled away the gasoline in a big pumper truck. The loss wu estimated at $500. Cruse to Head Residents Group Roderick Cruse has been elected presi- dent of the Golden West Homeowners Association in Huntington Beach. lfe and other 1971 officers will be installed at a diMer at the Gold Anchor restaurant on Saturday. Also on the board will be Mr!. Rosalie Rehling, first vice president, James Tringham. second vice president. Mrs. Pat Mandrell, secretary, and !\1rs. Nancy Corcorran, treasurer. Cruse has pledged both new projects for the association in 1971 plw con· tinuation of 1970 projects, including a $1 ,000 donati on toward improvement or Greer Park and two $150 S(holarships for graduates of Marina High School. Real Life Valentine WATERBURY. Conn. IAP) -An eight pound, 11-ounce Valentine was delivered to ~fr. and Mrs. Edward Valentine Sun· day. His name is Daryl -born at 3 p.m. St. Valentine'a Day in St. Mary 'a Hospital. A young Costa Meaa woman l'f:mains in critical condition today with burns over 80 percent of her body, after beinl rescued from her bluing apartment Saturday morning. Jeanette Vubinaer. 23, or 383 W. Wilson St, .apparently became confused and collapsed while seeking a way out, blocking the apartment door. Firemen Roger Lopossa and Jack Michaels braved the inferno to rescue Miss Vasbinger, while two other oc- cupants of the apartment escaped on their own. Battalion Chief Ron Coleman said Miss Vasbinger's mother and a friend , Michael Hetrick, climbed out a bedroom window and were uninjured. Investigators tentatively blamed the $4,500 blaze on a cigaret dropped into the living room couch and smoldered until after the three occupants retired. Miss Vasbinger was taken to the burn unit of Orange County Medical Center in critical condition and remained in that condition today. Bes.ides covering most of her body, tht bums suffered after lhe victim col- lapsed due to smoke Inhalation are severe, nurses 1aid, Company Gives Funds for Kids Wil.dlife Trips Joey, Sandy and all the other llrst graders at Perry School in Huntington Beach will take their first trips to Sea World and Lion Country Safari this year thanks to a Buena Park finn. Nutrilite, makers of food supplements, cosmetics and household goods, is han~ ding the school a $1 ,087 check to make !he trips possible. Mrs. l\iargery Carter, s first grade teacher at Perry, arranged the donation. 'l!ie Sea World (San Diego) visit b &eheduled for May 22, while the Lion Country Safari will take place sometime in April. "Teachers are volunteering their time to take the children (In Saturday trips." Mrs. Pepper Fitz, Perry principal, added. "But without this donation, the trips v.·ouldn't be possible." Al least 180 first graders will see the African animals in their natural habitat, and the fish and mammals or Sea World. • A MODERN .UP TO DATE JEWELRY and LOAN WITH YOU IH MIND e CASH LOANS On most any articl•, 1pKiali1ing in low Cott, ihort t•rm loani. • Cambodian villagers wielding machetes reportedly drove off Communist troops seeking refuge in their community 15 miles northeast of Phnom Penh, and killed several. a government military spokesman said today. The spokesman said the incident oc- curred last \V ednesday, but was reported only today • \\'hen Cambodian troops reached the village of Phum Chrey Thom on a search·and-clear operation. The Vietnamese Communist troops wre fleeing a government push. designed to clear the rocket belt east o( the capital 3.cross the ~lekong River. when they entered Phwn Chrey Thom, th e spokesman said. The villagers. fearing allied bombers more than the Communists. barred their way. and used sticks and machetes, they drove of( the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese, he said. Vi entiane dispatches said Communists shelled a governmenl outpost at Ban Na on the south"'est edge of the Plain of Jars during the night but apparently pulled back slightly from Long Cheng alter a vicious assault before dawn on sunaay. Long Cheng Is the headquarters for Meo Crl!neral Vang Pao and his 9,000 man army which is financed by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). The Laotian government ordered rein· forcements sent to .... ·ard Long Cheng t0o day. Western diplomats said Yueh Tai-lieng, the Chinese charge d'affaires in Vien· tiane, told Lao officials verbally China v,.ould "never let the Americans get away wilh this." Diplomats said if South Vietnam cut the Ho Chi Minh trail China would gain considerable intluence in Hanoi by helping reopen it. Minimal Agenda For City Council Foun tain Valley city councilmen will top off a four-da y holiday \lo'ilh a light agenda at Tuesday night's meeting. No public hearings are scheduled and no apparent controversial items are listed on the agenda of the 8 p.m. session. In recent meetings, councilmen hal't chopped a\l·ay at apartment uni ts pro-· posed in the city, and indicated furth er cuts would be made in the future . However, no apartment Items are on Tuesday's list. SAVE MONEY ON EVERYTHING YOU BUY e DIAMONDS & JEWELRY e MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS e STEREO EOUIPMENT e SPORTS GEAR and M.ny More Items • Come in and SH what - offer -CllStolMrs. A MW and unuseal experience in in shop pin CJ enjoyment. Where people in the know ICIYe moJMy nery time they buy. 1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST ' Ratitis COSTA MESA JEWE~RY and LOA~ 1838 NEWPORT BLVD· PHONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -Btlwttn Hor ..... '& Brotdway " Flag 1 •oero!'> Cited ... Former Student Defends American Banner The acl of defending the I 1 a g has earned a Santa Ana resident the Freedoms F o u n d a t I on George \Yashington Award and $5,000 presented today at Valley Forge, Pa. Bill Pierson. Navy veleran. is to be cited for standing off a Chanting mob of 150 students nearly a year ago on the Cal State San Diego campus. Then a student at the college, Pierson \\'as \Valking to class when he saw the na g being raised and lowered by students. Some wanted it flying at full staff. others at half mast. Raising it to the top, Pierson. a six-foot, three inch, 250 pounder. guarded the flag for more than three hours. The citat ion acco1npanying the awaJ"d reads: "For loyal patriotism so dramatically demonstrated \\'hen, for three and one- half hours, he stood alone a n d defenseless, defying a screaming. l\eck.1- ing. 'menacing group of dissident students bent on tearing down and destroying an American Flag. "For his simple stateritent. ''I was born under that Flag ; I fought under that Flag and I am going to college because of what it stands for. To me that Flag is a symbol of everything my country has stood for in the past Faulty Dodge Chassis Recalled DETROIT (AP) -Chrysler Carp. to· day announced it fs recalling 1,246 Dodge 1970 model parcel delivery and motor home truck chassis for replacement of a bolt in the braking mechanism. A Chrysler spokesman said "a few" of the lrucks were discoVered to have "imprope rly heat-treated'' bolts holding the master cylinder push rod to the brake pedal and could break under normal braking press ure . The spokesman said there had been no accidents resulting from the defect. and everything it \\'Iii stand for in the fu ture.' " Pierson, a native of Oklahoma· City Is a Navy veteran with servio8 off Viet,.. nam. · Among others who have recei\led the Freedoms Fo und at io h George Washington Award are former President. Herbert Hoover, Walt Disney, FBl Direc- tor J. Edgar Hoover: astron1ut John' H. Glenn. Jr. and Gen. Harold K. Johnson, former U.S. Army Chief of Staff. Nine others from Orange County \\'ere commended by the Freedoms Foundation today, including actor John Wayne, of Newport Beach who was given the Na· tional Service Medal "for consistent. unabashed loyalty to America and its ideals. The citation accompanying Wayne's award continues. "For heroic movie -ex- ploits which have inspired American fighting men: his visits to Gts in combat zones and his support of the younger generation 'who have taken more interest in society than we did'." O\hers commended today lncludL: From El Toro: Marine Corps Maj. Donald M. Babitz, an Honor Certificate Al1tard for his speech g!ven Dec. 3. 1969. From Fullerton: Daniel 11. Poole, George Washington Honor ~1edal for his magazine article ''A Young Patriol Speaks Bis Mind .'' •From • Garden Gtove: ~1isS Tyler DeHaven, llonor Certificate for youth essay "Our Constitution -Ordained by Free Men, .Sustained by Free ~ten." From Los Alamitos: Hugh Brainard of the Naval Air Station, George Washington Honor Medal for his Armed Forcts letter ''Freedom -Privilege or Obligation?" .. ~rom r.tlsslon Viejo : Judy A. 1-leadlee. 26892 Preciados Dr .. Honor Certificate for her magazine article .. Patriotism: To Be or Not To Be." From Santa Ana: ~larine Corps Pri\'ate George E. Michael, Honor Certificate for his Armed Forces letter "Freedom -Privilege or Obligation?" Santa Ana Co 11 e g e, Distinguished Service A\vard in the college campus programs category. From Tustin: Rev. Harold F. Leestma, George Wa shington Honor Medal for his sermon "The Foundations Are Strong ." Others honored at today 's Washington's Birthday observal'lce are former House Speaker John W. McCormack, journalist Victor Riese l, businessman H. Ross Perot and radio newsman Paul Harvey. More Quakes Recorded But Dam Not Damaged LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Two minor earthquakes jolted this area early today but no damage was reported to the Van Norman Dam, whi ch was \\'eakened by the disastrous tremor last week. The first tremor occurred about mid- night and measured 3.5 on the Richter scale, com pared to last Tuesday's 6.5 quake. The second came at 12:40 a.m. ar.d was estimated at a slightly less intensity although not officially recorded. Officials said that a quick inspect ion of the dam, which is being drained , showed no new cracb. As last week's damage was still being tolled, sightseers poured into the earth- quake area and police ordered the arrest of anyone who doesn't Jive or \vork in there. Doll Delivers! Police established a perim eter control around the communities of Sylmar and San Fernando and posted no trespass ing signs in attempts to keep out the thousands of sightseers who WpUed..J.O:( view the rubble where 62 persons died in Tuesday's temblor. Traffic Sunday at San Fernando Veterans Hospital -where 44 persons died -was so heavy officers erected barriers. Pull a Zipper and Out Pops Baby "You should see the people trying to get in." said Frank Caringelia, a Southern Califomia Gas Company orficia l \\'ho was manning a hospital command post. ' PARIS r AP) -Children sated with silly dollies who only wet their pants or croak "mama " got a very gro wnup ne\v toy Monday: a pregnant doll that turns anybody's 8-year-old into an obstetrician. The child just pulls on a zipper running along the blue and white trousers of the ;'future mama doll ," and out pops a baby. It is painles.s childbirth. The do!!. described by its manufac· turers as the fi rst of its kind in the "'orld, was unveiled al lhe Paris Toy Show. ''It 's an educational toy, designed to demys tify childbirth.'' said Andree Gessel a spokesman for Pintel, the manufacturer. "We'\'e found that about nine out o[ 10 people \\'ho've seen it think it's in good taste. I "The rest complain that it's not necessary for kid& to know where they come from. but our attitude is that "'ith men on the moon. yoq can't keep saying that Jacques' baby brother \vas left in the cabbage patch by a stork,'' he added. The baby, whose father is not named in the sales brochure, is a unisei: child which looks reassu ringly like the smiling. blonde mother. She wears a bright pink doll 's maternity dress oVer her trousers. · Once in the cruel wo rld, the little baby doll cries if you squeeze it. ~!rs. Gessel said that most chi!drt'n who played with the dolls "considered the "'hole arrangement with such naturalness that it shames any adult who is troubled by the notion ." The doll. which probably will be ex· ported , sells for $9. "l don't know about these people. They go lo church and Sunday breakfast and decide. 'Hey lel's take the kids up and see where all the people died.' " Two residents in the immediate area "'hose homes were damaged put up their own signs. One read, "Sight seers please go away. You cannot get within 200 yards of the tragedy even after a 1.4 mile hike uph ill.'' The second sign was more blunt: "Sightseers keep out. Violators will be shol. Survivors will be prosecuted.'' The Red Cross reported to the Federal Office of Emergency Preparedness tha t preliminary surveys indicated about 80,000 families suffered some type of loss in Tuesday's quake. Preliminary estimates totaled S300 million but county officials said they could top the billi on· dollar mark. Pltl MOUNTAIN •..•....... •.• CITED FOR FLAG FEAT Sant• Ana's Pi erson Two Youths Held In Tool Tl1efts Police responding to a silent alarm arrested t\\'O Santa Ana youths Sunday as they assertedly left Dan Gurney 's All American Racers plant carrying valuable tools. The compan y spokesman said the tools \\'ere to be flown today to Argentina where they would be used by pit crews servicing two of Gumey's racing cars. He said if the tools had not been recovered the cars could not have been raced. Arrested were Stephen A. Leonett, 18, and Scott E. Haller, 18. Le:onett was a former employe of the Gurney firm v"hich is located at 233-4 S. Broadway, Sa nta Ana. ' Man Shot After Restaurant Row An argument at a Ga rden Grove restaurant was followed by a shooting early this mornlng. One man was jailed on supicion of attempted murder and th e other treated for a gunshot wound in the upper right arm and released . Police said the victim was Richard \Vhite, 22, of Garden Grove. He argued with Michael H. Bartholomew, 23, also of Garden Grove in Bob's Big Boy restaurant, Harbor Boulevard and Chap- man Avenue. Bartholomew left the cafe and about 15 minutes later White followed. He "'as shot by Bartholomew. police claim, in the restaurant parking lot. When Bz.rlhol omew was arrested al his home five hours later, police claim to have found marijuana and dangerous drugs. They accused him additionally "'ilh possession. No kindling required ••• just touch a. match lo the outer wrap and wa.tch it barn with & comforting heart.h.,varmin~ flame ! One log burns s long .• , \\·atch the flames dance for houn ! And be glad you shopped El Rancho I !We will be Cfosecl Mon., Feb. 15 ... in observne of the new National Holiday I Stewing Chicken .... 39~ Oranges .... ~~ .... 6: $.J00 Compare the size ••• the quality ••• then compare tbe·nlue ! King sized ••. so fresh ! ~Jifornia grow_n t.o be plump •nd tender! London Broil .......... $1 4! Hearty beef .•• so tender a~ juicy • , • compare the valu~ ! Chopped Slrfoln Steak ...................................... 99f:. So very l~an ••• and fresh ••• ea.sy to serve, grtal to eat: Beef Braising Ribs .......... ···-'························· ... 59~ So much me•ty roodooa! Sen ·e with buttered nood ~! • I Price.1 i11. f'fffct Tuc.1J. & li",d.., Feb. J6, 11. No !J<lk1 to tka.J~r1. Monday, r tbnl.vy 15, 1~71 H DAILY PILOT S ln Cotcnt11 Hills " ' Hiker Survives , . • 42-hour Ordeal A 15-year--0 ld Anaheim boy was home aafe today after a 42-hour ordeal in the mountains near Saddleba ck Peak. Richard D. Connelly survived a ro.root fall de>wn a waterfall and twe> hours of semi-consciousness durlng hi5 wan- Slot Machine Scandal Hits Army in Viet \VASHINCTON (AP ) -The Army plans to ban slot machines soon from its clubs in Vietnam. But senatorial investigators still lntenit to determine how the devices got th~e in the first place and whether the millions of dollars put into them have contributed to widespread corruption. In making its announcement late la.st Wttk. the Arm y said it is removing the more than 2.700 slot machines from its base,; ·in Vietnam because it is not practical to maintain them in a war zone. But some members or Congress ~ee the machines as the front of a climate of corruption they say has spread throughout the manage ment of the military services' annu al $6-billion nonap- proprialed·f Wld activities which are sup- ported through sa les to Gls and their families. Slot ma chines generated more than $27.5 mill ion in revenue to Army clubs alone in 1969. Hearings opening before the Senate permanent investigations sub- commitlee Wednesday ·are expected lo produce more dema nds they be banished from all military bases. Sen. ·Edward J. Gurney (R-Fla.), reportin g to the subco mmittee on a trip to Vietnam last November for the in- vestigations panel, is the latest to make that demand. "From Augsburg. Germany, in •he early 1960s to Vietnam in th"e early 1970s, the presence of 'one-armed ban· dils' has been an important contributing facto r in the corruption that we found," Gurney reported . Pocket Pickers Turn to Gals CHICAPO (UPI) -Pickpocket.o. are turning their light-fingered skill to women because more men are wearing tight pants, according to the Chicago Police Department. Sgt. J ohn Castans said the "bag- gy pants" men used to wear were easy pic kings, but bellbottoms and hip buggers are a boon for keeping their wallets, keys and cas h intact. Pocket pickers inc reased from 2,270 in 1969 to 2,321 lest ye a r, and "a great majority" of the victims were women careless with their purses and wallets, be said. derings after ht became Jolt from a high school hlkJng.club ootlnl Friday. "I never thought 1 would not' be found and I kept praying," the boy waa quoted as saying. He regained contact with others Sunday morning when he came acrou an off-duty Marine fishing in the Bear Sprlng.s areifi. Richard became lost while on a plaMed one day hike with 17 members of lbt ~1agnolia High School mountain club. It was his first hike with the group. "I slowed down and began to fill behind a bit," the boy explained .. l kept seeing glimpses of them around the bends but I couldn't catch up and finally lost them.'' He told of hearing people talkini and seeing helicopters but efforts to make his whereabouts known failed in every instan~. Saturd~y night he slept tn a ditch he had dug, covered with leaves. A rescue team or sheriff's deputies. county firemen and U.S. Forestry person· nel covered more th&n 60 square miles in the search for the boy sJnce Friday. 'Death Car' Claims Three More Victims PES MOINES, Iowa (UPI). --It's a junker, a 10-year-<1ld car that probably is .not worth $Hl0: Six people have died in It in the past four mOnths, all of carbon monoxide poisoning. The bodies of the latest victims. thrff Des Moines teenagers, were foWld Sun· day inside the car at a drive-I n theater. Another youth 'W'ho was in the car re- mained in the intefl!ive care ..,.ard ol a Des Moines hospital today. Chapler said the three young people Dallas County Medical Examiner Kieth died of carbon monoxide fumes. Ht identified them as Pamela SUe Barnes and Roxanne Lynn Harmsen, both 11, and Gregory Fetters, 17. Chapler said the car was the aame vehicle in which three Ott Moines residents were found dead or carbon monoxide poisoning early in November. He said the bodies ol William L. "1itchell, 36 ; Mrs. Janet K. nedtke ' 2fi, and her daught'er', Donna Kaye, wer found in the car along Inler1tate IO. Since that time. aulhorlties s1ld, the car has changed hal'Hh twlt:t and each new owner apparently was l"'t'at.e that the auto had ·a leaky muffler which needed.repair. ,, Police said Mrs. Tiedlke·1 husband sold the car to his nephew, Lloyd Warden, 17, who. in tum·, sold the vehicle to his brother-in-law, Robert Schnathorst, 16. Schnathorst was the foutth person found in the car Sunday. Warden's mother, who also 11 Mr1. Tiedtke's mother, said her son had told Schnathorst the car needed repair and Schnathorst had said he planned to have some friends help him with the work. "Right now, I just wish they'd taken the car and junked it," ?.1rs. Warden said Sunday. "ll's killed six people.,. SUa*Meats ...... 35' S<ott Towels ..... 2t Jumbo n>lb ••• choice al 'lrbitA!, colors or docornt.d. Weldl's Grape Jam ............. '. .................... Jr Jam, Jelly or Presc.rvM ••• your choice •.• big 20 oz. st.. smile Cooler Cookies ... -.......... -.. -.. Jr A pple, Cherry or Lemon ••• 10 oz. JlO<bge of aood,_ l I f . DAILY PI LOT Mond,y, F'ebtultY 15, 1'71 Wk ks Birthday By George By DICK \VF.ST WASIDNGTON fUPI) -Radiant wilh Intellectual curiosity, my son George burst into my study v.•here I was an· notating an anthology of the best loved poems from !he Congressional Record (1933-66 ). "Father," he said. ''why are we celebrating \\1ashington's birthday on f'eb. 15 this year?" ··Because Congress has made it legally impossible to celebrate Washington\'\'. birthday on Washington's birthday,·• I replied. "It set the third Monday of February as the federal holiday, whereas \\'ashington was born on eithei Feb. 22, 1732. or Feb. II, 1731, depending on whose calendar you use. "But neither Feb. 22 nor Feb. 11 can fall on the third Monday of February, regardless of whose calendar you use. Got It?" ''Right on," said George, blinking his eyes. "Very well. \Vru;hington himself figu red he "''as bom on Feb. 11 because that \\'as the date on the Julian Calendar then in use throughout the British Empire. "But in 1750 af!er he had celebrated his 19th birthday, the British parliament ;idopted the Gregorian Calendar. And things were never again the same. '. ' { , .Side .' I "The big differenet was that in lite Julian Calendar. New Year's day came on ?11arch 25. But in 1751, after the adoption of .the Grego rian Calendar, the )'ear ended on Dec. 31 rather than March 24. Therefore the days between .Tan. I and March 24 were omitted from th e calendar, making the year only 28Z days Jong. .. Hov.·ever, the period from Jan. 1 fl) 1'1arch 24 v.•as daled 1752. Do you follow me lhus far?'' ''I'm with you," George said, pickin g himself up off the noor. "Good. As you can see. \Vashington v.·as 19 on Feb. II . 1750. but his 21hh birthday Y..'SS on Feb. 11, 1752. NO\V here's the hard part: ·"Since the vernal equinox had been displaced by It days in thr Julian Ca len - dar. the Gregorian Calendar lried to make up the difference by removing 11 days from September. •·tn 1152. there "ere no days datl'd Sep!. 3 to Sept. 13. \\'hirh made it necessary lo add ti days later to cont· pensate. So in 1753. \Va s h i n gt o n celeb rated his 21st birthday on Feb. 22 instead of Feb. 11. All clea r?'' "All clear.'' said George. crav.·ling out from under the desk. "Okay. So now you know v.·hy ·we are relebrating Washington's birthday this yea r on Feb. 15. And always reme mber that you can never learn anything unless you ask questions." -UPI Jews Spur11 Peace Pla11 By Jarring By United Press bttrn allooal Israel has ignored a peace initiative by U.N. Envoy Gunnar V. Jarring in an apparent difference of opinion v.·itlt the United States over Jarring's role in the ~1iddle Easl talks. Prime Minister Golda Meir's cabinet Issued a statement after a meeting in Jerusalem Sunday saying Israel would continue talks only in line with its own proposals. It made no reference to Jar- ring·s suggestions. The statement appeared to reaffirm Israel's stand that Jarring is authorized to act only as a go-between and not as a mediator presenting proposals. But Joseph J . Sisco. U.S. assistant secretary of state, said in \Vashington Sunday both sides in the Middle East conflict •·are committed to aid by whai.e.ver procedures Ambassador Jar· ring decides to p6.rsue, and no procedure is barred." Polit.ical sources in Cairo believed Egypt would accept the Jarring proposal calling for a statement of intention 10 comply with the 1967 U.N. Security Coun· cil resolution on the Middle East The resolutio n call for I s r a e 11 v.·ithdrawal from occupied Arab ter· r itories, and Israeli newspapers in~ terpreted Jarring's proposal as an effort to put pressure on Israel to v.'ithdraw. Yugoslav President Tito, who is urging Big Four pres.sure on Israel to achieve a settl ement, met with Egyptian Presi- dent Anwar Sadat in Cairo today. Sadat explained details of Egypt's pro- posal for a "partial" Israeli pullback from t.he Suez Cana l and a reopening of the canal in an intervie\v with l'-.'ewsv.•eek. Sadat said by "partial" withdrawa l, he meant a pullback to a line behind El Arish. 90 miles from the canal. He said his proposa l included free passage in the Suez Canal and Strait of Tira n of Israel ships, with an in· ternational force to be stationed at the fortress of Sharm El-Sheikh overlooking the Strait. Yank Serviceman T ake1i Priso1ier By Turk Youths ANKARA (UP!) Four Turks overpowered and kidnaped a U.S. Air Force sergeant in suburban Ankara to· day , police and American authorities said. They said Sgt. James Finley, 25. of Fort Worth, Tex., foua:ht his abductors bul v.•as subdued and taken away. Turkish security officials said the kid· napers probably au e:rtremisl leftwing students who have been attacking and threatening the American community in Ankara recenUy. The security men said the four Turks jumped Finley as he sat in a U.S. military pickup truck, doing patrol outside an American warehouse in the capital's Dikmen district. Police found the truck at the bottom or a cliff nearby. It 'vas da1n age d badly and apparently had been shoved over, they said. Police said the ir invesligalion shows Finley apparently tried lo fire his ~·eapon -ht! was armed for his guard duty -but was overpowered too quickl y to pull the !rigger. Finley was a law enr o rcemen t specialist with Delachment 30 of Tuslog. the U.S. military group handling supplies and transport fOr American service units in Turkey. U.S. Ambassador William J . Handley. upon bearing of the. abduction, asked the Turkish Foreign Office to track down the kidnapers and return the ser1eant. SEEKS NEW Vl~T STANCE Dove Sen. fr•nk c·hurc:h Dovish Senator Asks Ne,v Stance On Viet Pullout \VASHINGTON (UPI) -The only serious naw in President Nixon's effort lo pull U.S. troops out of !he Vietnam war is that no provision is being made lo win release of the prisoners of war, Sen. Frank Church (D-ldaho), said today. Church admitted that the troop withdrawals, averaging 3,000 men a week for the past 18 months, are ne ither trickery nor tokenism, but "a ve ry :;ubstantial vrithdrawal. ·· ··Now Ute que stion is how can that withdrawal continue without making some accommodations for the prisoners or wa r," Church said in a recent in- terview. "Clearly there's only one way v.·e can accommoda te the need s of our prisoners of war, and that is to reactt an agr~ment with North Vietnam which v.·ill produce their release. "We like to applaud and pump the table and wave the flag every lime you organize a Flash Gordon altack to reach and release so1ne prisoners of war," he added, "but so far those attacks have produced not a si ngle prisoner of war .•. not one has been yielded up and no doubt the attacks have left the prisoners of war in greater jeopardy.'' Church ~sponsored a 1970 amendment which banned Americao ground combat lroops from Cambodia. But he said at- tempts to legislate a specific end to the war are not worth pursuing. "In recognition of the realities. I think that we ought not fotus any more on lrying to impose an end date, a fin'al date, on the President, trying to legislate an end date," he said. "I think v•e should rather recognize that that isn't going to work. And I would prefer to call upon the President to negotiate a finaJ date for the-completion of the withdrawal of troops.'' Church said that policy should be ex- pressed in a resolution which would set total withdrawal as a national goal. Such a resolution. he added, could break the ice on the prisoner of war front. Italian City Rocked By Bloody Fighting REGGIO CALABRIA, llaly (AP) - Bloody street fighting exploded in this embatUed south Italian city today in expectation that a rival city would be named regional capital. A 16-year-old student "'as struck by ;i tear gas grenade and seriously Injured. Dozens of policemen and demonstrators V.'ere hurt in clashes that ranged all over t.hc city of 140.000 -from the large squares to tiny alleys. Local residents said it y:as some o( the worst figh ting since the people of Reggio began agitating last summer for the.ir city instead o( Calanzaro to be named capital of the new Calabrian region. 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In tllH I ~ mu<~ DI "'"''" Nt* Yeti, Sttlt wtl!\ u ... 1111 ti t !n<"'-tt ""'' el """ tllDW t•IOlftfd. An;ll( cold 1.ntO ltl' tw111 It Tiit l'lt1fl al Ollllt ,,,. '""!"' hl'lt "'"""' l"lfl"'lflt ftt <llK .. !Pit f"'l•tl Giit t nd llO!'I!>· w111 f'lw"•· Tl\9 Mldwt 1t Wftl'l'lfd u• '"" 111 rtet1'1 aou1 wtfll l•ltlf w1 .. 1"''• but 1c111t1t0 1r.o><r. ect111on1l•f' "'rtd ,. '" l•HI•~" tll~ I t Cllltlt, tl•N cl O•tf !~! •t-.. ' Tetnperni 11res 1 1 UNIT•O l"ltElS IHTEltHATIONAL '""'''"U•es •n• or0<in•'•'~" tot '"' l•·llO\lt nt•iotl t tldono tl i 1 "' .AltitnY Al-uer<1u• A111 n11 Ancl'>ortte 9 1or!lt rci. ""''' f!.o1•e" Burt t I• C"•tlf<I C::l••eitncl Doll•• °'""•' Dtl 11olnt1 fl••..e•I f'11•n•n~• MllO"(l!UIU 1na•-IOll1 Juri.•~ ICt~ll' C.lt'f l.•• ""'' Mtn1 .... l1 M it t'!! Mll,.tu~"' M•l\flfftol" Htw Orlt11\1 ......... ,., °"''"' Olr,11/!ofY\• (1'7 ,.,,"' S1•l"'t1 '""lltcl•ltftlt ""otnl• "1"'1111'"' l"Otlltl'(ll. 0'1 t111atc1 c11 .. ·-~l(• .... tflle SI, lO\llt ~fl L.tkt Cl.,, St " Ditto Stn Frt 11< ICO Silo:',~, Hotl\ Ltw l"rte. •1 '' ·~ '' d 11 '~ " . " 5t ., ,01 " " . " '' ,, JI 11 " " 51 1~ " . 11 " " •J7 II 11 " " i l J1 " " • .. " " " " .. " " " " " " ~ ~ • " " ., " " " ,, " .. " .. " " .. " " " " " ~ " " .. ~ " ,. .. • II It's D-Day • Ill Britain 800-year Systeni Replaced by Decimltls LONDON (UPI) -Britain "went decimal" today. Lord Fiske, chairman or the decimal currency board, prc>- no11nced the switchover a success. But clerks found customers asking what the prices were "in real money." At midnight. amid widespread pred ic- tions of near-chaos, Br itain scrapped its 800-year-old poonds-shillings-pence money system. Jn its place wenL a new dollar· and-cents style decimal money. similar to those in the United States and con· linental Europe. The Republic or Ireland changed over, too. • Lord Fiske, who was named by the government to mastermind the s111'itch, conceded the real crunch Ylould not come witil Thursday or Friday, when Britons do their first heavy buying alter '"[). Day", as decimal currency day was dubbed. In some big stores cashiers had un- dergone intensive advance training. Stores v.·ere relatively uncrowded because it was a Monday morning, so few lines formed. ''Perhaps that's a good thing," said .lean Osgood. 20, a supermarkel cashier. .. A lot of our customers seem rather hazy about it all. They keep asking. •v.,hat's that in English money?' or, 'tell me what that is in real money?' " Department stores had experts lo help out confused rustomers. One big store called them ··~tiss Decima l". anolher "Decimal 1'ollies". But they said they had not had many inquiries. • Li sls JO colurnns, totals l l; o\·er eapacil)' safety feature eqi1al key '"'·iJI 11o t dt"prcss when you seek a n 5wer over 11 d igits •~on-add ke)' for codi ng and da ting; Joc-:k~own repeal levtr • lf ravy doty h igl1 i 1npact p lastic for yean of hard 1"ear Ban ks. closed since \\'ednesday niihl to convert 20 million accounts, reopened to deal only In decimals. Despite a $3 million last minute publici· ly campaign by the Decimal CWTency Board, many Britons confessed they were <,.'Onfused. Mrs. Susan Toomey, 30, a \Vest London housewife. said "it is difficult trying to cooverl. I'm doing n1y shopping early lo avoid queues and confusion ." Mr!. Sheila Parness, 21. another house wife, said, ''I don't undersla1td the new system yet !hough 1 spent all weekend studying a conversion chart.•• But J\1iss Pearl \Vhiteman. 18, a florist. said she had to learn all about the new system for her job. Sears 179~~ ,.\,.k Ahout Se:ars Con\'enient Credit Plan ~ SAVE '15! Home Electric Adder • Addt.1Ubtncl8 ind muhipli~ • Ll1ls 1columns.,101al~ S •Combination e111ry L.c~~ Credit Balance Adder Regular $99.9,j 5995 ""''' ..... • • 84~¥ '""'' " ,,..,,.., --"""' ... ·~ ·- ,, BEA ANDERSON, Editor MMll•Y• "~" U, 1171 ll htt lS NEW LOOK MAGNIFIED -A real pro- duction in A Ne'v \Vay to Look at Fash· ion is being planned as a major funding event by Las Brizas de! Mar Auxiliary, Fountain Valley support group or the Children's Home Society. Taking a close look at ne1v styles are J\1rs. Ron Garland, fashion sho1v chairman. Oefl) and 1t1rs. Clyde Story, vice president. Fashions Get • the Act A presentation as fresh and differ· ent as the styles to be viewed is being promised by Las Brizas de! ?\tar Auxili· ary \1•hen the support group for Ghil· dren's J-Jo1ne Society ~ponsors its sixth annual luncheon and fashio n sho\V. 1\n art exhibit and social hour at 11 :15 a.n1. first \l'ill attract members and guests to the Airporter Inn , Nc1v· port Beach, and fo\101ving luncheon l\1rs. Florence Smales 1vill commentate dur· ing a production-type sho\v which 11•ill display the many variations on today's fashion scene through a series of tab- loids, songs and dances intricately inter· 'roven . Instrumental music for the produc· li on, tilled A Ne1v \Vay to Look at Fash· ion. "·ill be provided by the Frank Ponti Trio. In tribute to the children and fam· Hies \vho have benefited through the adoption services offered by Children's Home Society, the function's overall theme 11·ill be Love for One l\Iore '"hich \viii be incorporated in programs and table decorations, said Mrs. John l\1c· Clane, president, and Mrs. Ron Garland, shO\\' chairman. Stacks of oversized, brightly colored children's blocks (using on1y the letters (', 11 and S) will serve as centerpieces \rhile program covers \viii feature a \Veil· kno\vn depiction of mother and child. Art \Vork of, by and for children. is being coordinated by l\1rs. Thomas Mui· cahy. An added attraction during the social hour for the past five years. this year's art shO \V \Viii include \VOrks of 1nembers and their children. Among the prizes to be given a\1.•ay during the afternoon \viii be $100 cash 3\\·ard and a San Francisco holiday for t,,.o \vhich includes transportation. hotel accommodations for four days and t\VO nights and dinners at t"'O popular Bay City bistros. Serving as chairman is h·Irs. Anthony Gajewski. Tickets for the luncheon may be ob- tained from any Las Brizas members or reserved through 1-frs. John Travis, 962·5827, or ~1rs. Josep h Exner, 962-4704. Las Brizas is one of more than 240 auxiliaries throughout the state engaged in the support of the society's goals, and 19 of these are located in Orange Coun· ly. ' Benefits -overflowing Partygoers attending the Fountains for Youth Ball sponsored by the Fountain Valley \Von1an 's Club \Vill be dancing for joy, since all proceeds from the annual ball \1•ill benefit ~larch of Dimes. J\nticipat· ing the Saturday, Feb. 27, event is Mrs."Robert t.loss, chairn1an, holding Paul Lo Cicero \Vilh Lisa SbOPt and Seott \Vessler. Tickets 'viii be $7.50 per couple and playin g ror dancing bety,reen 9 p.m. and 1 a.m .• \Viii be the Sands of Time. ~1rs. JI.toss may be reach- ed at 847·6924 for reservations. Testing Gifts Lauded Children in the liuntinglon Beach area \viii re a p boundless benefits from twn pieces of equipme11t con. tributed by the Santa Ana 20-30 Club to the city's speech clinic sponsored by the As- sistance League. An audiometer and 11peech auditory trainer have been provided for the clinic by lhe <13-man Qrganization whirh aids many philanthropies but has taken Project Deaf as a major project. Accepting the v a I 11 ab I c assets on behalf flf the Assistance League was Mrs. Lee Mosteller, speech center Chairman. Now in Its third year. th!' speech clinic has helped many area children at a nominal fee based primarily upon the parents' ability to pay. Therapy. directed by t<i1rs. C. A. Piccolo, accredlted speech therapist. ls based on each child's individual need after an interview wt th parents. a review of the child's medical history and testing ror hearing loss. No· child betwee" the age of 3 through high schoQI.•i:.. refused due to inability to~· EQUIPMENT CHECKED -John Knipr <left) and Dr. Roger Byron, members of Santa Ana's 20·30 Clu b observe 1vhile ~!rs. C. ;\. Piccolo. therapist, demon- strates ne1v equipment to Jennifer Rootcs in the speech clinic sponso red by the Assistance League of Huntington Beach. Anyone wishing to make an appointment for an interview may do so by calling Mrs. ~fosteller, 842-8548. Yardstick Offered for Measuring Up to Earn Friendship DEAR ANN LANDERS: You get many letters rrom people who complain because they are lonely, They wonder why they have so few friends. and the few friends they do have don't call \·ery often. Just yesterday, a person 1 work with complained to me that no one likes her. I sat down and thought about the personaJity and character traits that I most dislike. Strangely enough. out of the 10 traits, this person had seven. llere·s the list and I hope you will print It, Ann. It m:ght help some folks to see themselves as others see them : 1. A compulsion to show orr knowledge. 2. E>;aggerales lo the point thal it's 1Lc next lhing to lying . 3. Moodiness. Friendly one day, un· friendly the next. 4. Bossiness. t.ifust run everything. S. Not reliable. Word is no good. 6. Chronic complainer. Negative at· titude about many things. Inveterate crepe·hangcr . 1. Nosy. Asks a lots of questions lhat are none of her business. 8. Gossipy. Knows everything <1boul l!\'Cry body and lells iL ~111kes you "'ondcr "'hat she is saying about you . 9. Says things in anger then tries to smooth jt over by buying a little gift. 10. Always fishing for compliment!!: but never gives any. SIGN ~IE -ff.2 0 Town, S.O. DEAR WATERTOWN : J hope every person whet reads this column "'111 measure him~elf against the list. I did -and you hit me on Numbf:r 4. DEAR ANN LANDERS : Tv.·o years ago I went through a messy divorce. I was depressed and miserable because I WI\! the first in a family of five girls to have a marriage failure. Two weeks after the divorce J met a mHn \vho had beautUul hair and teeth. \Ve were married afler a w h i r I w i n d courtship. A few months ago I noticed my husband's hair is thinnlng out. Last week he went to a dentist who discovered a gum condilion that is threatening his teeth. I know this sounds crazy but these two features arc very important to me. \Vithoul them he wouldn't look like much. T'm asham<'d lo tell anyone how "·orried I am. Can you give me some moral support and a word of advice? -ANONY~10US PLEASE DEAR ANON: I( yo\lr marriage was h,\d to gether by hair and teeth rm surprised it lasted two years. Stop being fooli sh. If your husband loses his hair he can buy a rug. If he loses h\5 leeth, he can get china clippers. These da,·1 experls can rebuild, re~tore a!MI lransplant almost anythini. (Remembtr, I said AL.\10ST.) DEAR ANN LANDERS: My sister und I are good bridge players. We married men who arc tournament championship quality. Every Friday ".f' get together ror clinner and cards. ll's gotten i;o I drcacl these evenirg~. The l.en!l!on I! terrible. ~ty husband loses his temper and cusses me out if I make a mistJke. My sister's husband is just as tiad. He got so mad last Friday he slapped her. Is there a way we can get these guys to curb their Lempers'? -A Afl(D P DEAR A & P: Probably not. TkrGw' In the detk -permanently. • If you have lrouble getting along wrm your ptirenU . . . If you can't get them to let you live your own llfe. send for Ann Landers' booklet, "B·~ed by Parent,? How to Get More Fr~" Send 50 cents in coin with your req\eist ;ind a lonii:, stamped, seU-addrtast:d cn\•elopc In care of the DAILY PILOT.~ ' ' I DAILY PILOT Even ing "Taurus: ~ TUESDAY , ~~.;, FEBRUARY 16 .,. -' • •·By SYDNEY 0~1ARR --~A-rles is &aid to be headstrong. But these natives ;--,.~re cour ageous. They are • i!l"l'fitiYr, natural pioneer~. not l •. lifra1d to take chances on their -: 014'n abilities. The Aries ptrsa.1 ·is· mentally stimulated by G.c111ini and physically at- tracted to Leo. Arie1 is lucky in a financial sense for those born under Pisces. Look to Aries could c r e a t e unnecessary dissension. CAPRICORN {Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Accent on desires, abilily lo communicate with friends. You may be surprised by lOuching gesture. Be glad ~·ithout becoming overly sen- llmental. ~l essage becomes clear during day. Accent on publi shing, com· municalions. Stress versalili- ly. Ha ve allernati ve methods at hand. Pull you rsel[ out of emotional rut. IF TODAY IS YO U R BIRTJIDA Y ~·ou are intro- !'['>CCli\'c, ha\·e ability to nurSC', ll'ach and intt'rprel fine points of 1011\'. ''ou arc not easy for others to fool. but you orten fool you rself. You are due for geater recognition. A relation- ship is under pressure. It could end. Double the Trouble When Teacher Talks By ERMA DOMBECK When you're married to a school teacher you learn to live with red un dan cy, Educators can't help i I . Anything worth saying once Is worth repeating: twice and then reviewing: it again for the ones who weren't paying attention the first two times. Our marriage ceremony was like a script from Sesame Street. When the minister as k'- ed my husband lo repeal the vows after him he said ''I do" three times, then turned to me and sa id, "I do sounds like l\vo. We are t w o . Therefore 'I dq' makes us one. l! that's too confusing we'll review it at the recep- tion." Ma ybe it is my imagination. but the world has been talking to me in one original and three carbons ever since. AT WIT'S END Take~ all, for example. lt is i~~~le to me t h a t a game which I have just viewed is played back to me in slov.• motion. stop action, from three different camera angles only to De repeated imniediately follow ing the game and again on the late sports show which follows the tlie film v.•hich was shown im- mediately follovl'ing the game. A couple of weeks ago, I listened to President Nixon's Slate of the Union message, follov.·ed by an assessment of It by a learn of newscasters. This was followed by an ap- Smart Teens Review Drug Abuse Problem A group oC students from Gisler Intermediate Schoo!. Huntington Beach, will discuss the dangers of drugs and how to approach the problem when the Hunlington Beach Republican Women 's C 1 u b meets Wednesday, Feb. 17 .. All members o! Smart Teens, their appea rance pro- vides an opportunity for in- terested adults to hear from the youths themselv~ on besl Aid Given Help Line Help Line will benefit when the Women 's Auxiliary to the Or.enge County Pharmaceuti- cal Association sixinsors a luncheon meeting at 11:30 a.m. Wednesday, Feb. 17. ways to help. Directing the student pro- gram ~·ill be Keith Westly, vice pr incipal. It also provides fitting se- quen ce to last month 's presen- ta tion 11o·hen Sgt. James Mahan of the police department warned that if membe rs of the community didn't do something, we will lose nur most important n a tu r a I resource : our youth. Th e luncheon meeling v.·ill begin at 11 :30 a.m. in the recreation center, and aU in- terested women are invited to attend. Mrs. ruchard Ditt· mar is chairman of the hos· pllality committee. A membership drive now in progress will conclude May l with the club now divided into uptown and downtown teams competing for new members. It now has 121 regular members and 47 associate patron membe rs. Speaking to the auxiliary \\•ill be Mrs. Richard 1'-1arsh, ~tale president. and Mr s. \\filliam l\1 eyer, state Soroptimist5 secretary. Hosting the meeting will be Soroplimist Club or Hun- Mrs. Robert Adler of Tustin tington Beach gathers at 12: 15 assisted by Mrs. Francis p.m. the second and fourth Schuler and Mrs. Ma rvin Tuesday~ in Franco ls praisal or the speech by Sen. ~like f..lansfie!d whose remarks 1o1.·ere then reviewed by another panel or broad- casters. Their view5 were rehashed by our I o c a 1 newsca1ters whose opinions Jn turn \\'ere summarized and interpreted at a cocktail party Jmmediately following l he 1 newscast. I found myself knowing more about the State or the Union than any human being had a. right lo know. "Look, look. look." said my husband the other night. "Here is a movie you have been wanting to see. I want to see the movie. Do you v.·ant to see the movie too?" •·Which one?" I grimaced. "lt's called. 'Low Type Person Lover.' " · "I don 't think so," T said. "Oh, oh, Mother, why?" be asked. ''Because I read a con- densation in Reader's Digest, a serialization in a magazine, a three·part se ries in a newspaper, w a t ch e d 75 television spots on it, heard the star dissect ii on five talk shows and saw It preview· ed at a movie l saw last week." "I think you'll find there are man y beneficial aspects of repetition. among !hem the ab ility to commit to your retention the facility of tota l recall. however taulological." 1 looked up tiredly. "What did you say?" Two minutes later, I could have bitten my tongue. Thetas Plan Social Club Alumnae oC Kappa Alpha Theta from Oceanside to f\1ission Viejo are invited to attend a coffee, at 1 p.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 17, where formation of a social alumnae club will be discussed. \\fomen interested in at· tending the affair in the San Clemente home of ~1rs. Ben C. Edmondson may contact the hostess or Mrs. Lewis Walton for information. FAIR Cruising the Caribbean Cruising aboard the Y..1S Skyward to Haiti. San Juan and St. Thomas are Oeft to right) Mrs. Ruth Penning and ~1rs. Louise Wyatt, both of Costa ~1esa . Their week·long Norwegian Cari bbean Llnes cruise was part of their Florida vacation. Spring Flo~ers Bring Shower of Benefits A fragrant floral at· mosphere will e n h a n c e fashions from Mr. Blackwell during the annual luncheon and fashion show sponsored by !he Y.Wives of Santa Ana- Sooth Orange County Young \\'omen's Christian Associa- tion. Spring blossoms are being flown in to create the Shower of Flowers tak ing place at II a.m. Friday, Feb. 19, in the Airporter Inn. Proceeds from the event will Insure continued support for youth activities with emphasis on I.he summer backyard pro- gram and the Saturday Y -Day Happenings . Pre senting the collection of spring and summer wear will be Mrs. Florence Smales. Chairmen for the event arl!: Mrs. Michael Joyce and Mrs. Robert Caverly who will offer one or the guesls an op- portunity to receive A specia l gift from ~1rs . Richard Nixon. Special prizes, favors, secret gifts and f!ov.·ers are being arranged by the i\1mes. Earl Evans. Fred Andrea, Joseph Arco!io. Keith Ga ynes and John Gray. ~lusic v.·ill be pri> vided by Mrs. Kenneth Ferry. Reservations may be made through the YWCA office at !>42-3577. Two Meetings Calende red Work 'at the Orange County Cancer Dressing Station wil! be discussed by Miss Lois Corcoran. chairman when ghl!: speaks before the Starbright Club. The group will meet at noon Wednesday, Feb. ·11, in th<'! Seafaring f\1asonic Temple, Newport Beach. Brothers' l\ight ·will be observed by the Harbor Star Chapter. Order of Eastern Star at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 23. in the temple. :.. hRIF.S !March 21·Apri1 19): -~rd heal th. Avoid extremes: AQUARIUS 1Jan . 20-Feb. 181: Business, honors , reputa· tion -these are st ressed. ''ou gain needed cooperation . One in authority grants spec ial recognition. Obtain hint from Capricorn mtssage. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Peck restaurant. To find nvt wl>o'i Ive:~" lor VOii' _.:~'°'.:_· ________ _'.~.'.'.'.'.'..:'.'.::.... ______ ',,,,=========::'II In montv •nd lo•t. oratr SvclntY . Ol'!'ll rr'1 boo~ltt. "$K••! Hl"tl lor Fait, f,;,, f•ctu1I, Tho1• thr•• woro:l. t u'" up f•cto ri '" op•r•fio" o" th• DA ILY PILOl tditorit l P•9• '"'l'Y dty. LAST DAY OF SALE SALE ENDS Check tendency to take situa· tions. pe rsons for granted. EK· Advertise wares: let others know ~·hat you have to offer. Mt~ 1'1d Womt~." St t1cl lllr!"<!l!f 11"4 '0 cenh 10 Om••r Al!•oh>t • i~8'..'J'' ~~~.~~1)T,1ro1n~OTN,!0• v1i~: N.Y. 1(11111, press appreciation to one ~'ho --::;im::'""''-""""""'=<::t:""'""'""';o""=o:::"":c::i:l::llc-perfonns lip e c i a I services. .:::rr. = ... "!'...ES*''¥ r.:::t::O:§r .. tli-1 -· •.........,.__,llit ... Welco~ new contacts, challenges . TA URUS lApr il 2(}.~fay 20 ): Obtain hint from A r i es message. Permi1 m a t e or business a~ociate to set pacr ... Oite "'-'ho leaches has •ething of \'alue to offer. ~lize this and be 11o·1lling tz>:listen. ':~E!\11N1 I May 21.June 20 ) · SU:ess versatility. !\1any or fgS!r natural qualities are ar- ~ciated. Some "'ho doubled JOU now express regrets. A K or dependen t needs special 4ltention. Act accordingly. ::CANCER Llune 21-July 22 \: Give thought lo request made ~· yrung person. Be aware iJ .various detai l'i. Study fine print -read between !ht lines Creative approach brings be't results. ?>.take some change~. LEO <July 2.1-Aug. 22 l· A Cancer·born individual plays signiticant role. You are d11c fDr accolade from one ~·ho has withheld prai~. Gain in· dica!ed through written ~·ord. Catch up on calls, cor· respondence. \'IRGO tAug. 23-Sept. 22 ): Find out the v.·hy of events. Investigate. Don 't be satisfied merely thal something hap. pened. Get lo 1he heart nf matter. Discover re a son s . Give full play In intellectual curiosily. LIBRA l&!p\. 23-0ct 22 \: Anything Goes \1 \ Avoid self-tleceptlon. Se~ pe1>-Lachasse of London sa.vs. "'1\nything Goes' pie as !hey actu all y exis t. l\1r)ney opportuni ty i~ present. sti ll holds for the co n1ing season." f You can obtain some genuine A deeply squared collar of this desi gn . ran1cs bargains . Be percept ive. the fa ce and neck . 1'he si n1plc shape eases in to an Analyze your needs. .\ -and top·stitching trims the_ C'cntcr front sea~ SCORPIO (Oct. 23-N ov. 21 1 and collar. Make it in raw silk, silk su rah, synlhellc One vou respect returns the blends. linen or pique. c<>mpiiment. Cycle is high : 73010 is cut in 1'1 isses Si zes 10·18 . Size 12 re· YOllr judJtmcn t is anl to b(' quire.~ approxin1ateJy 31!.t yards Of 45'' fabric .. OOrrect. Stresl! initiative and This precut, preperfor~ted Spadea Ues1g~er greater Jndependence. Your pattern produces a better fit. Order 73010; give effort~ gain special reward . size. name address and zip. Sl.50 postpaid. SAGITTARIUS tNov. 22-Addr~ss SPADEA. Box N. Dept. CX-15. Milford. Dec. 2J l: One v.•ho has been N.J . 08848. Books by Cl assification: Coats and Suits r-~pccially quiet nn~· makes ;==S=l=p•=s=t;:P;:•i,:d=. ===============;! prest1nce -Rnd feelings - Jo;1JWn. Emph1giu low-ke y • -.. pon ... rorcmg tactics ,,.. WHERE DID YOU PUT YOUR KNITIING NEEDLES? r f ' • ... ' L. BEAUTY SALON FASHION FORECAST: LIGHT FROST FOLLOWED BY ADMIRING GLANCES FROSTING SPECIAL, 19.90 COMPLETE LET OUR STYLISTS RIPPL.E HIGHLIGHTS THROUGH YOUR HAIR WITH F INGERTIP FROSTING, STREAKS OF LIGHTENING OR BLONDE ON BL.ONCE. 00 IT WHILE OUR FROSTING SPECIAL IS ONl BEAUTY SALON, 1/2 PRICE PERM SALE OUR SUPER RICH 1BUBBl..Y PERMS' INCUJCING CUT REG. 35.00 VALUE•• .NOW 17.50 COMPLrTC REG. 2s.oo VALUE ••• NOW 12.SO·COMPLETt TONIGHT OPEN TIL 9 PM Your l111ot c.hanc.l'J to s11 ve up to $100 on Sylv 11ni a home entertainm ent produc ts ...•• famous for fine qu ality a nd engineering exc.ellence. Do n't del11 y • if you miss this oppor· tunity you m•y have to wait • whole ye•r for t1nother chance at bargein s like th111se It's up to you! Classie styled stereo model SC388 with 400 watts peak music power. Superb breakfront credenz.a cabinet in Butter· nut finish. Includes Fr-1,'Af\l plus F~l stereo radio and Garrard SL95 auto· matic stereo turntable. HURRY! OUANTlTlES LIMITIDATTHESE LOW SALE P1!JCESI Integrity end Dependability Sin ce 1947 H.rbor TOPS Grt tht'm n111 nn11o: 11 's nmr 1n knit ~nur sprin'1 w11.rdrobr' \\'r hll\"" All lhr nr11 yarn' 11nd p11ttt'rn~ plus ln1s nt nr11', fcit'As COSTA MESA EL TORO Harper School In Colla to ~ht1rt "'-'Ith you. R 0 BIN s Q N'S 411 1. 17th St. Lo9•na Hiiis Ph.1a ~tesa ls tht:' locatlon where 1 The KNIT WIT 5o~1~1~•••' IN••',. S••·ORJ '"•mbers ol TOPS Horborl R • FASHION ISLAND • 6 "-2800 "''"" ••llY '"Soi.•·• 817-llJO ••lly ""' M/• tO·• Lighters gat.htr each Monaay l_•h_•_ .. _" __ •·_••_•_• _____ c_ .. _•_•_M_"_' _____ JL_N_EW_P_O __ T _ _,,-------------------"-"----·1.------_. ____________ ,. evenin1 al 6:30. I 7 7 r\ J I Fountain Valley Your Hometown Dally Patper VOL. "'4, NO. 39, 3 SECTIONS , 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1'171 TEN CENTS Beach Policemen Demand $650,000 From City By TERRY COVILLE 01 1111 Dilly l"llot Slltt Huntington Beach policemen are demanding $650,000 from the city for alleged damage to their character and Integrity. The large claim slems from what the policemen's association terms "bad fai th" over salary negotiations Jast September. "This is just the Hrsl step toward a law suit , .. , pla n to file in early March for back pay and benefits pro- mised by the city." officer Ron Pomeroy, 3 Arrested In Bizru·re Incidents A series or three inciden~ related to an alleged child molestation left three men jailed early today. one of them shot by the alleg E:d victim's enraged father. By the ti me the confusi?n ended . a.nd the dust settled. police m two c1hes listed these men arrested and the charges against them : -Paul E. Genthner . suspicion of ass ault with intent to commit murder. -John A. Baker. suspicion of child molest. -Russell Roulk Jr., suspicion of 1trongarm robbery. Authorities attempting to unravel the co~lex. bizarre case . said it began Sunday night v.·hen Genthner's 7.year-old daughter claimed she was molested at her babysitter's home. Genthner. of 10151 Barbara Circle . Buena Park. reportedly ran acroM the 1treet and broke down the door. shooting Baker. 25. in the left arm with a .12 caliber revolver. Baker went to Los Alamitos General Hospital for medical treatment and was allegedly pursued th ere by Genthner, who brought along his neighbor, iden· tified as Foulk. Baker had been visiting Faulk when the alleged molestation occurr~. The pair allegedly burst into the emergency room as . a~ten~ants were placing the shooting victi m into an am· bulance for transportation to Orange County ~1ecical Cente r. Los Alamitos police said Genthner and Foulk demanded to know bow badly Baker was wounded . "This is the guy that shot me:' Baker cried , causing hospital of.ficials . to abruptly refuse any information, police 5aid. Genthner and Foulk then wrested Baker's medical records away from an intern. police said. but dropped them outside when chased by hospital person· ne\. h Buena Park police held Gent nt:r on the shooting charge after he and Foul k were stopped by lawmen near the hospital. f oulk v.·as kept in custody by Los Alamitos authorities o~ the stron~ann robbery charge stemming from seizure of Baker's medical r.ecords.. . The confusing series nf 1nc1dents was touched off when the Genthners picked up two of their children at the F~lk residence Sunday night after attending a drive-In movie. Police said the 7.year-old child:s ac- count of her evening at the reSJdence whert Baker was visiting led her father to return and break down the door seeking revenge. Beach Cyclist Hurt in Crash A 32-year-old motorcyclist from Hun· tington Beach was severely inj ured over the weekend v.·hen he rammed a power pole. . Authorities al llunlington In tercom· munity Hospital Sflld Kenneth Commons, 15442 Duke Circle, is in 11alisfactory condition today. He suffered head injuries in the accidenl Orflce.rs said Commons wai; ea stbound on Bolsa Avenue about 8 p.m. Saturday night when the crash ~ook p\a~e near the Springdale Street 1ntcr11echon. He apparently struck A curb and then hit lhe. pole. Investigators said. 'Holy Wa ter' Tainted JERUSALEM <UPI\ -1!18'1 I> quarantining botll~ of •·Holy W1ter" Moslem pilgrims bring bl.ck from Mec- ca's ucrtd well nf Zamurt1 follnwing report.I the well may be contaminated with t.boler1t 1nd malaria, the he11Jtb mlnl.stry u.id today. ,1 a direct.or of the police association , ex· plained. City Administrator Doyle Mill er v.I H ask the city council Tuesday night to deny the S650,000 claim and refer !t to Herbert Moss, a labor relations at- torney . Pomeroy said the $65(1.000 does not cover any pay loss or actual benefits. "This is just a damage claim. It follov.·s a similar suit by policemen in Lynwood .. , Last September. policemen signed an agreement with Miller for 11 percent pay raises. plus other benefits. Firemen signed a similar agreement with their salary increases ranging from 11 percent to 13.5 percent. The cily council, hov.·ever, refused !o accept 11 percent increases for either public safety group and set pay raise!I al 8.25 percent, the same as other city emp!oyes received . Since then. pohcemen and firemtn have threatened to take the city to court to settle their salary dispute. The $650.000 claim, filed by Pomeroy y,•ith the city last week, is the first step toward legal action taken by either group. •·we haven't outlined any specilics in this claim," Pomeroy said. "Our March suit will list all the points of disagree· ment.'.' Besides back pay under the · 11 percent agreement, Pomeroy also said the city has failed to provide an educational incentive plan. an allowance for unlfonns and an Impasse agreement for fu ture salary talks. ''The benefits were promised by the cily council. They were supposed to 6tart Jan. l, but they didn't," Pomeroy said . An ll percent pay raise was not p~ Viets mi.std by the council, but policemen indicated they would pre ss their law suit for that as well, because of the manner in ...,·hich salary talks v.•ere con· ducted. The ISO·member' po I i c em en '"s association is represented by Pomona attorney Ross Irwin . He was not available for comment today. Firemen have not yet taken legal ac- tion on their pay dispute. A 6pokesman for the firemen said, however, they would probably not file a damage claim wi1h the city, as policemen had, but would press a suit in court sometime next month. The basic dispute over the salary talks occurred Sept. 15 when the city council set the 8.25 percent increase rate, ig· noring Miller's recommendation and not sending him back for more talks with police or fire spokesmen. Mille.r's recommendations had been made on the basis of a 12..city survey to find what other police and firemen "''ere making. Councilmen sald they were setting the · 8.2S percent rate because. of current economic conditions. Cut Trail Commander Predicts Red Offensive V'I TtletllMll1 The Odd Co~ple Somebody forgot to tell "Foxy" and ":J u:·L~~" that they·are natural enemies. The .su,i!t, bro,vn fox and the beagle with a baritone voice Jive in the back yard of the Danny Du•ight home in Ventura. They share meals and playtime. Life is good. They even have carpeting on the floor of their A-frame home. Sirius II Finishes First In Puerta Valla11a Race By ALMON LOCKABE Y DAILY I'll.OT IM!ltll ldll9r PUERTA VAIJ.,ARTA -Bob Lynch'' 82·foot cutter Sirius lf from Newport Harbor Yacht Club crossed the finish line at 10:20 p.m. Sunday to become the first to finish i.'I the I,12S-mile Marina del Rey to Puerta Vallarta race. Second boat in the 26-foot nect will be Bill Wilson 's Rascal from Santa Barbara Yacht Club which at 10:50 a.m. today was about five miles from the finish line. SiriUJ II beat Ra scal by 19 hours which means that Rascal will have beaten Sirius n on corrected time: A large crowd greeted Sirius ll at the new Puerta Vallarta m~rina as she was eased stern to the sea wall last night. "How was the race," Lynch 'Yi"as asked. "Slow" was his succinct ansv.'er. Lynch said there was only about 2t1 hours during the race when Uiere was enough wind to move the boat anywhere near hull speed. The race started al 12:15 p.m. Satur· day , Feb. 6. Siriun' elapsed lime wa s eight days, ten hours, five minutes and 1~ seconds. Russ Ward's Aries reported this morn- ing that he was ex!)(!cting to finish some time tonight. Not more tha n a mile rrom Aries was Bob Beauchamp's Doroth y 0. One or the othe r was calculated to be lhe third boat to finish . It's Labor of Love Fo1· Postmistress LOVELAND. Jowa (UPI) -Mrs. Jona \Vood, postmistress here fr..r 31 years, worked overtime SWlday proctssing about 200 Valentine cards. She daled each one, added the "Loveland" postmark and added a stamp readinG "lowa's s1~1eetbeart to v• n, greetings from Loveland, fowa." She sa id she doesn't mind working on Sunday "one day out of the year." SAIGON (UPI) -Lt. Gen. Hoang Xua n Lam, commander of the 16,000 South '!ietnamese troops in Lam. said toda y his men have cut the main branch of Lhe Ho Chi Minh Trail. He Predicted a maj or Communist offensive to reopen it. Communist China renewed it:; warnings today against U.S. intervention in Laos. and western dtplomats in Vientiane ex· pressed concern about possible Chinese intervention in Laos. They based their Principal 3rd Trustee ' Race Entrant Elementary school principal Dennis H. Mangers has become the third person to file for the April 20 trustee election in the Huntington Beach Union High School District. Mangers. 30, joiM W estm inst er residents Edmund C. P, Sheehan. an Alcoholic Beverage Control Board in· vestigator. and Joseph A. 111izrahi. a retired deputy sheriff. in seeking the two seats slated to become vacanl. A Huntington Beach resident and prin- cipal of the James O. Harper School in the Fountain Valley School District, Mangers says he Is stressing the need for a "voice of reason'' on the school board. He said he would promise to improve communications between the elementary i;choo\1 and the hi gh school district, expand vocational programs, promote harmonY on the board and work actively to use school facilities more efficiently. "More communication betv.·een !ht l'Chool:ii and the public will restore con- fidence and prestige in the education of our high school students." Mangers sald. "We should start reading about the good programs our high schools 01:~r. rather than personality differences of boa rd members.·• Additional program~ 11-langers would like to see incorpor ated include more creative and responsible use of tax monies, Increased accountability for the effectiveness of academic programs and a comprehensive drug information effort. Mangers is currently working on his doctorate at the University of Southern Ca lifornia where he earned his master's degree. 11 Die in Clashes CALCUTTA (AP) -Eleven persons were kJlled Sunday in pre-election clashes between Manists and their rivals in Calcutta and other parts of West Bengal. Sketching Crooks Into Jail San Clemente Police Artist 'Captures' Suspects . By JOHN VALTERZA Of "'' 0111, •111i1 sutt Sandy Martin is no p0lice1nan-nevcr has been but he helps catch crooks all lhe 11.,.,. And he does It witt1 a lint metal box, pencils and s ll tlle stack of eye~. lip!! and heads he carries around 1n 1 small vinyl pouch. Su Clemente police detectives con- 1ider hJm invaluable in a major in· vestlgation. Gtve hlm 4S minutes with even • hylterklal victim or witness, they say, and ht.Ill tum out a chilling likeness of • rapl.tt, robber-even a killer. Ma.rtln, 73, the only police. artist -~ &ave for the atandard. sketchy lden- t.ik.it-between central Orange County a.rid the ?o.1exican border. The quiet, kind and patient retired commercial artist Isn't In it for the money, because he wintJ none. lie catches crooks for nothing. How he goes about ii is a fascinating trip Into the puuUng world of lbe human mmory under strus. Martin and lhill DAILY PILOl' reporter !It down rttently lo enease in a liltle excrc:ise of •1rll describe )IOU and you draw yount:lf." Save for the lack of agitation and stress, we made It 1uthcntlc. Here's bow lt went : We sat down at ~fart\n·s tlny desktop easel which held tracing pape~, And in routine fashion he unloaded his eqe and lips, ktling thtm aside for atter. e 6l8r , Instead , with the general shape of the heed and Jaws-he has about a ha.II doztn vttsions of those . One emerged as tht close$t shape 1nd we.nt under a blank sheet of tracing Pill"'· Next we worked on the hair. It went fast. "lf lt'1 Mt right. make a chance !Sc• SKETCHl R, P•&• I ) fears on Peking statements and remarks of Chinese diplomats to senior La os officials in Vientiane. There also were new anti-American demonstrations in China , this time in Shanghai where Korean War velerans called the American military ;•a paper tiger." There were similar ma ss demonstrations earlier in Peking and other Chinese cities. emphasizing Peking charges the invasion of Laos was "a grave menace" to China. SEEKS SCHOOL BOARD SEAT School Pr lnclpo1I M1ng,rs Lawsuit Vowed After Contract Given for Drai.Q Despite the threat or a lawsuit. Orange County supervisors have awarded a con· tract on a $423,000 storm drain project in Seal Beach to .the Belczac·Basin, a joint venture in Westminster . Joe Long, head of Lomar CorporatioM of Huntington Beach, second low bidder, threatened the lawsuit after arguing thal the low bidder did not list his sub- contracton on the bid forms as required. Long·s firm was second low of 19 bidders at $439,434. C.Ounty Counsel Adrian· Kuyper ruled that Belczac-Basin did not have to list subcontractors if they plaMed lo do all the work themselves. Dennis Couremarche, assistant city manager of Seal Beach, urged the supervisors to award the contract because the storm drain work was need- ed badly and as 500n as possible. Supervisar Robert. Battin wruited to thrnw all bids out and readvertlse, but he Jost 3-2 wfth only Supervisor 1\.0naJd Caspers 1upportlng • him . in the bo•rd action Wednesday. . Bench Warrant Out For Young Offici.al FRESNO (UPI) -A bencJt W81Ta.nt has been issued for the arrest of Robert Trotter:. 22. Callforn i1'1 yaungtlt tltd.ed offtcial. · Mun icipal Court..ludge Ralph ~1oradian !~sued the: werrant aner Trotter. a mem- ber of the Fresno County School Board, failed to appear in coo rt Thursday. lie was charged with being drunk, tt-- slstlng emst, disturbing the peace and battery In an incident here last wctkflnd in .a motel J)IJ'ting lot P.fort1dlan ordered 'rrolte.r's bail of ltm forlt1ted and re-set ball at S2.tl60. . ' U.S. spokesmen in Saigon said a U.S. Air Force Fl05 ''Wild Weasel" jet made a· ''proteetive reaction" strike Sunday against a C.Ommunist missile site lD North Vielnam. And in Vientiane American sources said a U.S. plane accidentally bombed a CIA·supporttd clandestine army base at Long Cheng in northern Laos, killing 10. Meo hill tribesmen and wounding 20 persons including an American believed to be (See INDOCHINA, Page t) Handicapped Kids May Get Valley School By TERRY S. COVILLE 01 1111 01JI~ 1'119r Sl.tff By this lime next year, 100 children confined to wheel chairs or walking with crutches may attend their own school in Fountain Valley. Jt all depends on how last state legislators push through an emergency bill to release more money for tbe conslrucllon of special schools. "We've been told such a bill has cleared Lhe Assembly," reports Mike Brick, superintendent of the Fountain Valley School District. His distri ct is laying the groundwork for the or!.hopedically h a n d i c a p p e d school. It will serve crippled children from seven school di!Jtrlcts from Newport Beach to Seal Beach. Two months ago plans were under way for construction of the special school district when state authorities said there was no construction money lefl for special schools. An old Jaw limits state-aid on special schools to 3.5 percent of state bond money that has been sold for school construction. "The Assembly has now amended that figure to be 3.5 pe rcent of all bond money approved. \\'hether the bonds have been sold or nol." Brick explained. "But it still has to go through the. Senate." The orthopedical!y handicapped school will handle about 100 crippled children from the fountain Valley, Newport.Mesa . (See SCHOOLS, P•ce %) Hooch Hijacked LONDON (AP) -Hijackers attacked a driver and his mate near London docks today and escaped with a truckload of wh isky valued at $104.180. Orange Coot Weatlaer Cloudy skies, which may 1 leak a liftle in spots, are the . outlook for Tuesday along the coast. with temperatures skinned back to the middle 60s. INSIDE TODA 'Y Cqnjusio1t rtignect suprem« In Britotn todau os tMt nntton tcrapptd its 80Q.'jcor·old rnone· tory system for a decimoJ coin· age like tha t UJed in the U.S. and Eurnpe , Set story Page 4. '""'' " hltl119 u C11/fltrt1la I ('-fl~ u, ' C:llUIPIMI 17•.tt CMlkt I' C,...,...,.. H Dllfll ... lie• It 01.,.rtrt 11 14l1ttltl , _ ' IRttr111n-t 1J.1' Htrttc-u I --- "'"' I..~ \I ~rrllo• LkllflMI II Mevltt , .. ,, Ntlllifltl Nt'WI ... Or•llH """ It 1-'t tl•M TtltYI• lt TMlft"' 1"1t WHll!tr 4 .,,_ ....... ,,,,, W.,M Mtwt W \ 'Z 't!.n.Y PILOT H M"""1, Ftbna'Y 15, 1~71 I Her Family, Home Gone; Now Alice Losing Health 8)' PAMALA HALLAN Of l'IM Olfly l'lltl Sl-'F Alice Case is afraid to close her eyes at nlght She might dream. The Dana Point woman once had a dream of a future full of promise for her beautiful little girl. The dream became a nightmare. Sbe once dreamt of a peaceful retirement with her hmband and a simple home In which to spend it. Those dreams brought more pain. There was no future for Alice's child. She was buried as a teenager, the victim of an "unloaded" gun accident. There was no peaceful old age for Alice's husband. He too died pre-- maturely, the victim or a heart attack. There iln't even a home for Allee. It, too, Is burled -under a mountain of legal technicalities. The contractor built it on th.e 'ATOng lot and it will be: a ruin, Alice reels, before the legal entanglement are ever straightened out. Allee Case is a lonely, bitter woman robbed or all the things most people take rar granted -cbUdren, husband, and home. "At least J have one thing to be thankful for," she once said. "I still have my health." Last week she was laid she has cancer. But maybe Alice's luck ls changing. The doctors (eel sure they caught It in time. "Actually J reel pretty good," said Alice, who is in her 70's. Her voice sounded strong and cheerful. Jt was a far cry from the Alice Case who sat in a chair, pitifully holding her face between her hands as she told her story of tragedy two years ago. At that tlme she had just Teamed tha t the contractor had built her house in Capistrano Beach on the lot next to hers. Alice had been about to move in 'A'hen the building inspector ardered her out, closed her home. and Alice waved goodbye to her life's savings. Since then she's been trying to get her home back. But the woman who owns the lot y,-on't trade her lot for Alice's identical one without payment. And the contract.or hasn't moved the house, despite a court arder to do so. Living in a small rented house that takes most of her meager income, Alice is waiting patiently for something to happen. •·1 haven't given up yet," she said brigbUy. "I still have hope." SANDY MARTIN IS ND POLICEMAN BUT HE CAN DRAW At Left 11 Composite Of M1rtin, At Right A Phot09r1ph From Page l SKETCHER ... anytime you want," he sald calmly. Next, v.·e went to the ears. "Probably pretty ordinary, aren 't they ," he asked with nary a hint of cheating. He sketched them in. Now we got to the good part. He pu1Jed out a stack of eyes ranging from average to hypnotic lo absolutely psychopathic. \\'e settled for a pair of little on the kind-of-droopy side. The master then went beneath the tracing paper and as a description flowed they took fonn 'A' Ith amazing accura cy. DAILY PILOl 0;!;-'NG!; COAST l'UBLllHIHG COMl'AHY Robtrt N. Wtt4 1'r111C11111 1rA P11_.ltl'llt' J1t• R. C11l1y Vk• ,,..11111111 1r.d Olnort l M.111119#' Thom11 K11ril IElllW lhom11 A. Mur,hift1 MIMllllJ Ell« Al i~ Oirlr.i11 Wnl Or.1101 COll~!r ldUOI' Alb1rt W. l1t11 A'IOd llt Edf!tr H1atlllftoa lffc\ OHke 17t 1!i l111h lo~l1r1roli M1 ilint Addr111 : P.O. l o1t 7,0, 9ll41 Otller OHk" L.,_ l•-t~: 2'2 ,-Oftll AllWl'l\le CO.It Mtw: 2JIO W11t ltr Streit ,.....,.,., Biid!! 2211 W..! lllMI llulwl,.i at!I ClefnttlM; aoJ NWTll El t1mlne R•I ''It helps to hive the ariginal set underneath because you can move them up and down on the face. Notice the whole face changes when 1 do it?" We got the glasses an after that, then v.'ent to the nose and mouth. The "witness" was getting the hang af il by then. Jn all, our "suspect"' took about -40 minutes to draw, and the finishing touches, wrinkles-"Don't be bashful about facial description. • .I see my face too often in the mirror to be vain'' -made the image much more alJ\·e. A few office visitors later 1aw Pi.1artin as he left after the drawing session and then gazed at the "portrait". "That's the guy wbo jwt left , isn't it?" 1.lartin had succeeded. Earlier he had explained how be became one af Southern CaUfornla'1 few police artists. About six years ago Lt. Robert Mason from the local force called to inquire if any member af the San Clemente arts and crafts club would be Interested in doing police v.·ork (Martin has betn keenly active in the group for years). "I asked around, and nobody wanted a thing to do with it, so I called back in a few days and volunleered ." lie -v.·ent to work immedlattly, 1nd has been ·•on-call '' day and night ever .since. "I've become sa Interested In the whole thing," be said, "that I borrowed stack! of police texts on interview procedures- how to make a witness at ease ; how not to ask conclusions and put sug. gesUons ln thelr answers ••• all Mlrts of interesting thlngs." be explained. And it is that very aklll-honed after dou:ns or sessions with the frightened, &0mellmes hysterical and angry wit· nessu-lhat makes the kindly old gentleman ao deadly to crlminals. "The ill.Y Is amazing ," Chief Clifford ~turray aaid rtctntly, he has that kind. grandfather manner that pull anyone at ease ti&ht away. "And when he's dont, we '\'e aot our lUSpect pegged,'' But Martin -unlike m01t artist. - doesn't swell pe.rcepllbly at the pralle. "I'm only as good as tht wltna•, .. be said. • . . • Drifting Along l'rotu Page 1 INDOCHI N4 • • • a member of the CIA. Lam predicted heavy fighting ai nce the Commwiists "have to keep their supplies open" and told television cameraman Train Dai Minh there were two Norlh Vietnamese divisions, lhe ~ and 320th. totalling 20,000 men facing bJ.s 16,000-man force . He said the North Vietnamese were being reinforced by the 304\h NV A Division \Vith another 10,000 men. Bul asked if the So uth Vietnamese force!! '"'ere spread too Lhin he said , "we are very strong here.'' There also '"ere indications tank bat· ties might be in the offing along lhe Ito Chi Minh trail. Lam said his air and ground units have knocked out rive ,.. PT76 Soviet-built tank! and a number of TM tanks in the eight-day old invasion . The South Vietnamese have lost two to enemy gunfire. . Heavy ""'inds coupled with more than a foot of new snow produced scenes like this in Rochester, N.Y., over the weekend . ..Elsewhere in upstate New York, roads were blocked by four to s1x·fooL drifts and thousands o! commuters \Vere' unable to get home since last Thursday. Many spent the four-day week· end in hotels. Despite new snow, ski resorts were forced to close because skiers couldn't get to them. U.S. milit.ary sources in the field disclosed that 10 percent of the American helicopters sup porting the South Viet- nsmese invasion of Laos have been deslroyed or severely damaged during the firsl week of the operation. They said more than 300 v•ere being used and this would mean 30 or more shol down. T\\'O more beliropters were shot down today including a CH47 Chinook. the giant chopper used to . ho~sl heavy arlillery and alher supplies into Laos. lt was sbat down in flames with unknown loss of lives and was the first Chinook Jost The official r~port of plane losses in Laos and the border areas of Vietnam was 15. $40,000 Emerald Bay Mesa Woman Rescued From Apartment Fire Fire Blamed on Wiring Heavy fighting "'as reported in bor~er areas of Cambodia where South · Viel· namese reported killing 78 in two clashes Sunday bringing to more than $00 the numbd of Communists reported killed in that incursion. There is a possibility that faulty elec- tric v.'iring may have caused a fire that seriously damaged an $80,000 Emerald Bay home Saturday night, a county Fire Department spokesman said today. The blaze at 11 Emerald Bay Drive was reported by several residents when it broke out at 9:20 p.m. Occupant! of the home, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Hall, winter visitors from Denver. Colo. had left for dinner about two hours earlier. Fifteen" men in three engine companies battled the fire for more tl'lan half an hour before bringing it under control. Damage to the house and its contents From Page I SCHOOLS ... Huntingto n Beach High, Huntington Beach City, Ocean View. Westminste r and Seal Beach school districts. No district in this area has a school specially equipped to handle students in wheel chairs, on crutches or with missing limbs. 'lbe school will be combkled with a regular elementary school. "The combination will allow han- dicapped children to intermix with others, as they must in society," Brick &aid. The orthopedic school will be equipped with special classes and special teachers to handle the crippled youngsters. It will also have an out-patient clinic staf£ed with medical personnel by Orange Coun· ty's health department. School districts currently pay for private instructi on af arthopedically han- dicapped students. The new school would greatly reduce costs while providing ban· dler facilities for the children. However. if the emergency bill hits a snag, or Fountain Valley doesn't receive any of the new money, the orthopedic school could be delayed at least two years. But Brick speaks optimistically: ••we have the support of state Senator Denn is Clrpenter (R-Newport Beach), and Assemblymen KeMelb Cory ( D • Anaheim) and Robert Burke (R-Hun· tington Beach)." Apartn1ent Unit Cutback Ruled In Sunset Beach A Sunset Beach man has been denied pennlsslon to build six apartment un its oo two lots because or a long standing agreement among rtsldenta of the area. County Supervisors. led by David L. Baker of Garden Grove. ruled that David Perrin's projecl at 19th Strttt and Pacific Avnnue on the oceanfront would have to be Umited to fiv e units. Perrin also \vas limited lo two stories, another agreement among property owners. The agreement calls fo r no more than two units on inside lots and three on corner lots, according lo count y superviS-Ors, u·ho said the lots are really too small for even two units in most cases. Howe\'er, the den sity factor has been al\o\\'Cd lo stand because of the agree· ment and because the lots were sub- div ided many years ago. The standard sttms to be acceptable to the com· munily, supervisors said. 'Happy Chandler' ~lay Seek 3rd Term FRANKFORT, Ky. !UPI ) -A. 8. ''Happy" Chandler. former major league baseball commissioner and two-tlJTle governor. announced today he may seek a lhird ttrm as governor of Kentucky. Chandler. 72. told a news conference he 'A'aa considering running as an In· dependenl . though hl' Is a Democrat. .. The candidates so far ha\'en't enthuaed lhe sfeople ..• lhey want me to run,11 Chandler 1aid. was estimated al $40,000. The two-atory frame and studcco struc· ture is owned by Ralph Roberts of Pasadena and had been rented for the winter by Hall, who county fire officials said ls a retired Army sergeant. Thief Really Filled Her Up The operator of a Huntington Beach service atation lost 1,590 gallons of premium gasoline to an enterprising thief wltb a big tank over the weekend. Sam Meli, an employe of the Shell station at 16471 Springdale Sl. told officers the thief broke the padlock on the statlon's supply tank Sunday and then apparently hau1ed away the ga.sollne in a big pumper truck. The loss was estimated at $500. Cruse to Head Residents Group Roderick Cruse has been elected presi· dent of the Golden West llomeowners Association in Huntington Beach. 11e and other 1971 officers will be Installed at a dinner at the Gold Anchor restaurant on Saturday. Also on the board will be Mrs. Rosalie Rehling. first vice president. James Tringha m. second vice president, Mrs. Pat Mandrell, secretary, and Mrs. Nancy Corcorran, treasurer. Cruse ha s pledged both new project,, for the association in 19il plus con- tinuation ol 1970 projects. including a Sl,000 donation toward improvement of Greer Park and t~·o $150 scholarships for graduates -0f Marina High School. Real Life Valentine WATERBURY. Cono. (AP) -An eight pound, 11-ounce Valentine was delivered to lo.Ir. and Mr!. Edu·ard Valentine Sun- day. His na me is Daryl -born at 3 p.m. St. Valentine 's Day in St. 1.lary's Hospital. A young Costa 1.lesa woman remains in critical condition today with bW'nS over 80 percent of her body, a!ttr being rescued from her blazing apartment Saturday morning. Jeanette Vublnger, 23. of 388 W. Wilson SL, app1rently became conf\19ed and collapsed while 1eeklng a way out, blocking the apartment door. Firemen Roger Lopossa and Jaclt Michaels braved the inferno to re1cue Misa Vasblnger, while two other OC· cupanl! of the apartment escaped on their awn. Battalion Chief Ron Coleman said Miss Vasblnger'a mother and a friend, Michael Hetrick, climbed out a bedroom windO\Y and were uninjured. Inveltlgatora tentatively blamed the $4 ,500 blaze on a cigarel dropped into the living room couch and smoldered until after the three occupants re tired. Miss Vasbinger was taken to the burn unit of Orange County Medical Ce.nter in critical condition and remained in that condition today. Besides covering most of her body, the burns suffered after the victim col· lapsed due to smoke inhalatian are severe, nurses said. Company Gives Funds for Kids Wildlife Trips Joe y, Sandy and all the at.her first graders at Perry School in Huntington Beach will take their firsl trips to Sea World and Lion Country Safari this year thanks to a Buena Park firm. Nutrilite, makers of food supplements, CQsmetics and household goods, is han· ding the school a $1,087 check to make the trips possible. Pi.frs. Margery Carter. a fi rst grade teacher at Perry. arranged the donation. 'Die Sea World (San Diego ) visit is scheduled for May 22, while the Lion Country Safari will like place aometime in April. ';Teachers are volunteering their time to take the children on Saturday trips.'' Mrs. Pepper Fitz, Perry principal, added. ''But without this donation, the trips wouldn't be possible." At least 180 first graders will see the African animals in !heir natural habitat. and the fish and mammals of Sea \Vorkl. e A MODERN UP TO DATE JEWELRY and LOAN WITli YOU IN MIND e CASH LOANS On most any artlcl•, spec::i1tb:in9 in low cost, short tarrn lo.n1. • Cambodian villagers wielding machetes report edly drove off C-Ommunist troops seeking refuge in their community 15 miles northeast of Phnom Penh. and killed several. a government military spokesman said today. The spo kesman said the incident OC· curred last Wednesday. but was reported only tod ay \\'hen Cambodian troops reached the village of Phum Chrey Thom on a search-and.clear operation. The Vietnamese Communist troops wre fleeing a government push. designed lo clear the rocket belt east or the capital across the ~Iekong River. when they entered Phurn Chrey Thom, t b e spokesman said. The villagers. fearing al!ied bombers more than the Communists, barred their wa y, and used sticks and machetes, they drove off the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese, he said. Vientiane dispatches said Communisls shelled a government outpost at Ban Na on the south\\'tst edge of the Plain of Jars during the night but apparently pulled back slightly from Long Cheng after a vicious assault before da.wn on Sunday. Long Cheng is the headquarters for Meo General Vang Pao and his 9.000 man army which is financed by the U.S. Centra l Intelligence Agency (CIA). The Laotian government ordered rtin· forcements sent toward Long Cheng to- day. Western diplomats said Yueh Tai-Heng. the Chinese charge d'affaires in Vien· tiane. told Lao officials verbally China \'i'OUld "never let lhe Americans get av.·ay with this." Diplomats said if South Vietnam cut 1he Ho Chi Minh trail China "·ould gain ('()flSiderable influence in Hanoi by helping reopen it. Minimal Agenda For Gty Council Fountain Valley city councilmen will top off a four-day holiday u·ith a light agenda at Tuesday night's meeting. No public hearings are scheduled and no apparenl controversial items are listed. an the agenda of the 8 p.m. session. In recent meetings. councilmen have chopped away at apartment units pro- posed in the city, and i11dlcated further cuts-would be made in the future. However. no apartment items are on Tuesday·s llst. SAVE MONEY ON EVERYTHING YOU BUY e DIAMONDS I. JEWELRY e MUSICAL INSTRUM!NTS e STEREO EQUIPMENT e SPORTS QEAR and Many Mora Items • Come in and we whot - offer our customers. A new micl 1111llSllCll experience In in shop pin 9 enjoyment. When peopi. In the know llG'¥• money 1t¥•ry time they buy. IOOZ mMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRS? Ratitis COSTA MESA JIWELRY and LOAN 1818 NEWPORT ILYD· PHONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MliSA -11<11_ H.rbor I. 8,....dw•y • ' Newport Beaeh Your Hometown Dally Paper VOL. b<I, NO. 39, 3 SECTI ONS, 32 PAG ES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 197 1 TEN CENTS State Rules Tidelands Rent Not Mandatory By L. PETER KRIEG Of ll!t Olllt ,.lie/ Iliff Newport Beach can . but does not have lo, charge rent for the use of city-con- trolled tidelands. the Stale Attorney General's office has ruled. The ruling, in r~ponse to a query from the City Council, could serve to reopen the batt le over the city tidelands uu fees imposed 14 mon ths ago today. It will certainly recharge the opposition to the existing fees -especially since Sirius II 1st Yacht To Finisl1 By ALMON LOCKABEY DAILY .l'llOT 1 .. tlRI lltllor PUERTO VALLARTA -Bob Lynch's 82-foot cutter Sirius II from Newport Harbor Yacht Club crossed the finish line at 10:20 p.m. Sunday to become the first to finish in the 1,12.>mile ~iarina del Rey to Puerto Vallarta race. Second boat in the 26-foot fleet will be Bill Wilson's Rascal rrom Santa Barbara Yacht Club v<hich at 10:50 a.m. today was about fh·e miles from the finish line. Sirius II beat Rascal by 19 hours ~·hich means that Rascal will have beaten Sirius 11 on corrected time. A large crowd greeted Sirius II at the new Puerto Vallarta marina as she was eased stern. to the sea "'ail last night. "How was Uie race." Lynch 'A"as asked. "Slow" "as his succinct answer. Lynch, aaid there was only about 20 hours during the race "'hen there wa! enough wind to move the boat anywbere near hull speed. The race started at 12: 15 p.m. Satur· day, Feb. 6. Siriun' elapsed lime was eight days, ten hours, five minutes and 15 secOflds. Russ Ward's Aries reported lhis morn· tng llhat he "'as expecting to finish some time tonight. Not more than a mile from Aries wa s Bob Beauchamp's Dorothy 0. One or the other was calculaled to be I.he third boat to finish. Banberas Bay was as flat as milk on a platter early this morning. By midmorning a live lo ten knot breeze had sprung up which \\'as moving the boats closer to the fini sh line. The main body of the fleet was spread out for more than 200 miles across the Gulf of California \\·ith several reporting in the vicinity of Tres Marias Islands. $5,185 in Loot Taken in ~f es a Holida y Heist Taking advantage of the long wei!kend, bW'glars raided a vacationi ng Costa Mesa e1ecutlve's home Saturday and stole $~.185 in valuables, including gold and ailver table service. A policeman's wife living l.n Ole s~me i re.a pinpointed the approximate hme of lhe burglary when she N!Called seeing \liindow shades -left up by the lamily -closed at mid-afternoon. James O. Hicks. a roofing company vice president, notified authorities o! the looting when he returned home from Palm Springs. Offi~r Jim Farley said the ransacked residence al 2980 li.1indanao Drive, was entered via 11 rear bedroom sliding glass door jimmied open with a pry tool. Pillow cases were used as bags to tarry the 11-scrvice silver and goldware. irets. plus jewelry, an antique silver u·atch . two cameras. two rifles. a .45 caliber automatic pi5tol,' radio. co Io r television set and misceltant.'Ous items. Hicks said livi ng room drapes were left open and found that u•ay upon his return. but the neighborhood witness told police she saw them closed at one point Saturday afternoon. Hearing Scheduled On La'l<-n Bowling A public heartng on the installation ot lawn bowling greens 1n Irvine Terrace Park will be held by the Newport Beach Pl'lrb. Beaches and Recre111tlon Com- missio n Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in city hall . PBR Director Cal St@wart 111Jd the hearing Is being held to determine the feelinJs about the proposal of the people who live In the area . It notes there ls somt justification for free rental. The ruling was sought last December as the council tabled a move to introduce: an (>rdinance to rescind the fees. The opinion, forwarded through thll' office of Assemblyman Robert E. Badham (R·Newport Beach). answers a series of questiom listed by City At-- torney Tully Seymour. John f\1orris, deputy etto, }f:)' general and author of the opinion, Wd the city Gotie f'ishiti' "does not have a 1ega1 duty" to charge a fee for commercial piers -altbou&b it is reasonable to do so. U it does, Morris said, "the city may • . . at its discretion, exempt private residential piers irom rentaL" A third point. on how to compute the charges, Morris said, ' ' any rell!Onable basis'' is acceptable. In asking for the ru1ing, the council had sought to determine if. as a majority appeared to believe, the &late con- • p.t.U.'I" 'ILOT Sltff l"llell Jimmy Dozie, 5, takes time off from his kindergarten classes to do a little fishing oft the Newport Harbor jetty. Some folks had to work, but lucky Jimmy was too busy to work. He had to celebrate Lincoln's Birthday, Valentine's Day and Washington's Birthday all in one week- end. And that's no fish story. Valley School Looms For Crippled Pupils By TERRY S. COVILLE 01 lh• D•ll~ l"ilDI S!l'll By this time next year. 100 children confined to wheel chairs or walking with crutc hes may attend their own school in Fountain Valley. It all depe nds on how fast state legislators push through an emergency bill to release more money for tbe construction of special schools. "We've been told sucb a bill has cleared the Assembly." reports Mike Brick, superintendenl of the Fountain Valley School District . His dislrict is laying the groundwork for the orthopedically h a n d i c a p p e d school. It will serve crippled children from seven school di stricts from Newport Beach to Seal Beach. The orthopedic school will be equipped with special classes and special teachers kl bandle the crippled youngsters. fl will also have an out-patient clinic staffed with medical personnel by Orange Coun· ty's health department. School districts currently pay for private j:1struction of orthopedically han- dicapped students. The new school would greatly reduce costs while providing ban· dier facilities for the children. However, il the emergency bill hits a snag, or Fountain Valley doesn't receive any of the new money, the orthopedic school could be delayed at least two years. But Brick speaks optimistically : "We have the support of state Senator Dennis Carpenter fR-Newporl Beach), and Assemblymen Kenneth Cery f 0 • Anaheim) and Robert Burke CR-Hun· tington Beach)." aidered Jt mandatory that fees be charg. od'. Councilman Richard Crout. a supJ)Orter of the fees, had pointed out, "The state is looki ng toward complete takeover of the tidelands,'' and noted that five . bills designed kl facilitate that takeover had been introduced in the last session of the Legislature. He said the state b insisting that Inca! governments are incompetent to manage the tidelands. Viets Morris" ruling gives no Indication how his -0ff!ce would react if the city did not charge a fee , pointing out repea tedly through the six-page <>pinion, only that tt is "discretionary." Morris. In referring to commercial fees. does say that wben the operator i'derives substantial profits, the judg- ment and care normally required of a trustee would appear oormally to re· quire the city to charge a reasonable rental." He cautions, however, '·that any such rental must, of course, be used for trust purposes. "Especially." he said, "where all or a portion of the consideraUo.n for a lease is the public behefi t, sufficleiit controls should be retained by the city in order to assure that lease operations will be conducted in a manner promottng the trust subject lo which the city bolds IS.. TIDELANDS, Page I) Cut Trail Commander Predicts Red Offensive SAIGON (UPI) -Lt. Gen. Hoang Xuan Lam, commander of the 16,000 South Vietnamese troops in Laos, safd today his men have cut the main branch -0! the Ho Chi Minh Trail. He -predicted a major OJrnmunist offensive to reopen jt. Communist China renewed its warnings today against U.S. intervention in Laos, and western diplo mats In Vientiane ex- pressed concern about possible Chinese intervention in Laos. They based their State Court May Weigh _freeway Case Roy 8. Woolsey. attorney lor former city councilman Al Forgil , an intervenor In Ole court 3Ult to block Newport Beach's freeway election. said today the CaWornia Supreme Court likely v.·ill decide whether to hear the case this week. Woolsey last week filed tus "point! of authority" against the pelilion sought by three former city officials for a writ or mandate to slop the March 9 freeway balloling. The councilmen, through their at. torney, Angelo Palmieri, took their re- quest to the Supreme Court arter a Superior Court rejected the request. The councilmen -rormer mayors James B. Stoddard and Charles E. Hart, and former vice mayor Hans J. Lorenz. are contending the election is illegal because the state has ultimate authority of freewa y routes. The election will plact two quest ions before voters. The first is an initialive matter that geeks to have the city council unilaterally rescind an agreement with the state on road closings for the future Pacific Coast Freeway. The agreement pertains only to the freeway east of Upper Newport Bay. There is no agreement on the route through West Newport. The second question ls a charter amendment that would require votes of the people before agreements could be signed for any future freeway routes. 'Holy Wate1-' Tainted JERUSALEM (UPI) -Israel Is quarantining bottles of "Holy Water" l\1oslem pilgrims bring back from Mee· ca's sacred well of Zamzam following reports the well may be contaminated with cholera and malaria, the health ministry said loday. fears on Peking .statements and remarks of Chinese diplomats to senior Laos officials in Vientiane. There also were new anti-American demonstrations in China, this time in Shanghai where Korean War veterans called the American military "a paper tiger." There were similar mass demonstrations earlier in Peking and other Chinese cities, emphasizing Peking charges the invasion of Laos wa3 "a grave menace" to China. U.S. spokesmen in Saigon said a U.S. Air Force F105 "Wild Weasel'' jet made a "prot.tttive reaction" strike Sunday against a Communist missile site in Ncrth Vietnam. And in Vientiane American sources said a U.S. plane accidentally bombed a CtA-mJpported clandestine army base at Long Qieng In northern Laos, killing 10 Meo hill tribesmen and wounding 20 penons including an American believed to be (Se.e INDOCHINA , Page %) Woman Critically Hurt In Mesa Apartment Fire A young Costa Mesa woman remains ln critical condition t.oda-y wtth blD'ns over 80 percent of her body, after be.tng rucutd from her blazing apartment Saturday morning. ; Jeanette Vasblnger, tJ, of 388 W. Wilson St., apparenUy became confused and collapsed while seeking a way out, blocking the apartment door . Firtmen Roger Lopossa ind Jack Michaela braved the Werno to rescue Miss Vasbinger, \\'bfie two other oc- cupants of the apartment escaped on their own. Battalion Chief Ron Coleman aaid Miss Vasbinger's mother and a friend , Michael Hetrick, climbed -0ut 1 bedroom window and were uninjured . Investigators tentatively blamed the $4,500 blaze on a cigaret dropped into the living room couch and smoldered Chilly Sunday For Beachgoers 1'They were determined to sit on the beach, so that's what they dld -wrapped up in blankets." Newport Beach Ii f e guard spokesman Ray Garver said today more than 100,000 people visited the beaches over the weekend, and 35,000 of lhem came on Sundity when there was little sunshine and temperature! barely got up to the high M's. Saturday was a. different story. Garver said lifeguards counted 65,000 basking in the 91'.klegree tem- peratures. The only difference betwee n a swnmer Saturday and this weekend was the 56-degree water. "We didn 't have any rescues," Garver said. "The water was p~t­ ty cold and the surf wasn 't good, so people just stayed on the beach." • until aft.er the three occupants retired. Miss Vasbinger was taken to the bum unit of Orange County Medical Center In critical condition and remained in that conclltion today. Bes.ides covering most of her body, the burns suffered after the victim col- lapsed due to smoke inhalation ue severe, nurses said. HJndwriting On the Wires? SAN FRANCISCO <UPI) -The editorial stall of the San Francisco EY- aminer is used to monitoring routine reports on f-0recasts and road and river conditions on the ir weather teleprinters, but Friday they got a real j<llt. "The earth will open and swallow us all ," clacked one of the wires. There was no preface. signature, or other identification with the grim message. The Weather Bureau and all other agenc ies with al"Cess to the circuit denied sending it. WI NTER FEST IV AL PREVIEW SLATED The DAILY PILOT -prese.nt.s. tn a special two-page spread to be published Tuesday, a preview <>f the 1971 Winter Festival. It opens its 17-day run ln Laguna Beach on Friday. The special stories, photos and ads from Laguna Beach are designed to tell residents from throughout the Orange Coast the entire Festival story in 1 capsule. Watch for it Tuesday inside all editions of the DAILY PILOT. Orange Coast Two months ago -plans were under way for construction -0f the special school district when state authorities said there wa! no construction money left for special schools. An old law limits slate-aid on spe:c.ial schools to 3.5 percent of state bond money that has been JOld for school construction. Sketching Crooks Into Jail Weather Cloudy skies. which may le:ak 11 lltUe in spots, are the outlook for 'l'uesday along the coast, with temperatures skinned back to the middle 60s, "The Assembly has now amended that figure lo be 3.5 percent of all bond money approved, whether the bonds have been aold or not,'' Brick explained. "But It still has to go through the Senate." The orthopedlcally lwtdlCapped school will handle about 100 crippled children from the Fountain Valley, Newporl.-?..1e.P, lluntingtcn Beach High, Huntington Beach City. Ocean View, Westminster and Seal Beach school district!:. No district in this area bas a Khool specially equipped to handle students In wheel chairs, on crutches or with mls.sing limbs. The school will be eombined with a regular element1ry 1Cbool. "Tht combination will allow ban· dlCIJIP'd children to intermix with nthen, u they must In society,*' Brick uid. ' \ Sa1t Clement.e Police Artist 'Captures' Suspects By JORN VALTERZ4 Of '11t Deity l"lltl Sl"t Sandy Martin lJj ~ policemaft-never has been but he helps catch crdoks all the time. And ,he dOea It with -a Uay metal boX, ~s 1nd a_, mue ttack of eyes, li1>5 and htaOS )i carries •round In a small vinyl potttih'b • san Clemente pOuce delecUves con- 1lder him inv~ ln 1 rrlfjor In- vestigation. , · Give him 4f 11\inutes With even a hymerical vlcllm ar witness, 1they 11y. and he'll tUT~t!~ .. ~. chWlo1 likeness of a rapist , ro~ 'ld!l<r· , , Martin, 73, !he only polfci artlll - ,, ' save for the standard, sketchy Iden- tlkit-!Jetween central Orange County aad , the Mexican border. The quiet, kind and patient retired mmmercial artist i~n't tn It for the money, beca1Ut he wan!.! none. He catches aooks for nothing. How he goes· about lt 11 a fascinating trip Into the puuling world of the human memory undtr strei;s.. Miqjin and thb DAl\,Y PILOT ttporttr sat down l'fJCtnUy to el'llal& • in a Uttle exercise of ''I'll de.scribe: )'OU ond Y<l!tdt•'f you,,.lf." Save lot the lack of egitatton and ~s, we made It eUlhentic. tTere's how It went : We sat down at Martln's tiny desktop easel which held tracing paper. And ln routine faahlon he unloaded his eqes and lips, atlUng them aside for latter. We &tarted, instead, with the general 1hape of the head and Jaw,_..he his about a half doz.en versions of l.hoae. One emerg~d as the closest shape and went under a blank aheet of tracin1 pa~i we worked on the hair. It went fast. "JI It's not right. make 1 .cban111 !See SKETCllE~. Pl&t !I INSIDE TODAY Cvnfu.sion reigned supremt In Britain today as that 11atfon. scrapJ>td tu 8t>O-year-old mone- tary sy.s!tim for a decimal coin· agt like that rl.!td in the U.S. and Europt, Set 1tort1 Page f . . . llrlfl1 It ... ""' tf ..._ . ~1111 Uill 1 CllUlfltf tJ..n c-k• ,. c""_,.. ,. OHll HHkti It Dlvtf'Cn '' lfilWl91 , .. , ' l!lftl""'-' , .. ,. ...,_.,. 14 Anll L•l!Wt 11 M.1t~i.t1 Llctl'ltn II MllWlfl 1•1t M1llMM New1 ... or1ri.-c ... "" 11 S#rh Sl·H T• .... Ma 11 '""'"" , .. ,. WNJHr • WIMttft .. Jlllew1 1>1• ..,,,. """ ... ) l • • ~AILY PILOT N M-, ft1>nl11J 15, 1971 Her Family, Home Gone; Now Alice Losing Health By PAMALA HALLAN OI' Iii. 011tw P'lltl Staff Allee Case Js afraid to close her eyes at night. Sh< might dream. The Dana Point woman onee bad a dream of a fulure full of promise for her beautllul little girl. The dream became a nightmare. She once dreamt oI a peaceful retirement with her hwband and a simple home In which to spend it. Those dfeams brought more pain. There was no future for Alice's child. She was buried as a teenager, the victim of an "unloaded" gun accident. There v.·as no peaceful old age for Alice's husband. He too d.led pre- matyrtly, the victim of a heart attack. There isn't even a home for Alice.-It, too, Is buried -under a mountain af legal technlcalities. The contractor built it on the wrong lot and it will be a ruin, Alice feels, before the legal entanglement are ever straightened out. Alice Case is a lonely, bitter woman robbed of all the things most people take for granted -children, husband, and home. "At least I have one thing to be thankful for,'' she once said. "I still have my health." Last week she was told she has cancer. But maybe Alice's luck is changing. The doctr.>rs feel sure they caught it in time. "Actually I feel pretty good," said Alice. who is In her 70's. Her voice sounded strong and cheerful. It was a far cry from the Alk:e Case who sat in a chair, pitifully holding her face between her hands as she told her story of tragedy two years ago. At that time she had just learned that the contractor had built her house in Capistrano Beach on the lot next to hers. Alice had been about to move in when the building Inspector ordered her out, closed her home, and Alice waved goodbye to her life's savings. Since then she's been trying to get her home back. But the woman who owns the lot won't trade her lot for Alice's identical one without payment. And the contractor hasn't moved the house, de.spite a court arder to do so. Living · in a small rented hou.se that takes most of her meager income, Alice is waiting patiently for something to happen. "I haven 't given up yet," she said brightly. "l still bave hope ." SANDY MARTIN IS NO POLICEMAN BUT HE CAN DRAW At Left Is Composite Of M1rtin, At Right A Photograph F rom Page 1 SKETCHER ... anytime you want," he said calmly. Nert. v•e went to the ears. ''Probably pretty ordinary, aren't they,·• he asked 't\'ith nary a hint of cheating. HI!: sketched them in. Now v.·e got to the good part. He pulled out a stack of eyes ranging from average to hypnotic to absolutely psychopathic. \\'e sel\\ed for a pair of little on the kind·of"<iroopy side. The master then v.·enl beneath the I racing paper and as a description flowed they took fonn wilh amazing accur~ DAILY PILOT OttAMGI! COASl J'UllLllHING COMPANY Rob.rt N. w.M P'rttldOf\I 01111 11'\fblililor J1clr k. Curley Viet PmlCl~I 1..i Gwtifl t MIMtW IECll!Of n.ornt• l(,,.,jl Thom1t A. Murphino N-port loocll Offlco 22 I I W11t ltlbo1 Boul1v1rd M0Jlh19 Ad4rttll P .0 . Bo• 1175, 9266l OtW Offlut ~ti Mltli t>O Wnl l9v Slrftl U>OU11t lltdl: m Ftrtl! ............ Hlll'lllrlptln 9llCl'I: 11&7J l•dl liwl1v1nt .. n C"'"'"!Ol I06 Nortll Ill Ctmlno ltNI OAllY l'IL01, wim W'hldl a-*""' 1'11 ,._.,.,......, It JIUM111*1 ditty t!!t_, S- Ut WI ....,.It OCIHIWlt Mt l.11111-•11tll. ,._.,.,..., WO!, COlll Miu, Hvntln;IOll •Ol'ldl .,.. "-"'" ll'•llty, •lfolf -'" rt111Mt '"'"· Or...... co.at P'lltlltll"'t ~ "'"11111 ,..Ml .,.. •I ttll w .. ••lt!Ot Jtw .• """"" lotdl, 111111 JJll w .. .. y •~t. C..11 -... , ... ,., •• 1714) MJ-4JJ1 Ct..mH • ........,~ 642-1671 c.rrlfl\t. 1'1t. °''"" Co." l'..-illtilftf '°"""""' Nt ......... 11efift, Mlvtlrllfoflt. offlOrtilll l'Nlttr ... ~lllmtnll "'"''" ,,.,., .. ,_...... lrlll\tlll 11*.ltl ,..... l'lllMIOll " .-.yffttlt -• l«tftl dt$t Pl"lfft tMI• ti Htwooft lotdl tnof l;Olll Ma•. Cllfft11114, 'ulltcrl,.ii... &t urrlfr JJJj !fltl'lf'llYI 11¥ llWlll S1)f ll'f'lllt!Jy1 f!llllltt1' ... , .... , ..... •iJS ""°""'"'· ''Tl helpa to have the arlginal 5et underneath because you can move them up and down an the face. Notice the whole face changes when I do it?" \Ve got the glasses on after that, then went to the nose and mouth. The "v.·itness" was getting the hang af it by then. In all, our "suspect" took about 40 minutes to draw, and the finishing touches, wrinkle!!-''Don't be bashful about facial description. • .1 see my face too often in the mirror to be va in" -made the image much more ali\'e. A few affice vlsitors later saw Martin as he left after the drawing KSSio11 and then gazed at the "portrait". "That's the guy who just left, isn't it?" f\fartin had succeeded. Earlier he had explained how he became one of Sauthern California's few police artists. About six years ago Lt. Robert Mason from the local force called to lnquire if any member of the San Clemente arts and crafts club would be interested in doing pollce work (Martin has been keenly active in the group ror years). "I asked around, and nobody "'·anted a thing to do with it. so I called back in a few days and volunteered." He went to work immed.Jately, and has been "on~all" day and night ever since. "I've become so in terested in lhe whole thing," he said, "that I borrowed stacks of police texts on interview proceduns- how to make a wltness at ease; how not to ask cancluslons and put sug- gestions in their answers •.• all sorts (If interesting thin.cs,·• he explained. And it Is that very skill-boned arter dozens or aesslons with the frighttntd, sometimes hysterical and 1ngry wtt- nesses-th1t makes the kindly old gentleman so deadly to criminals. "The guy is amazing,'' Chief Clifford fl.lurray saJd recently, he has thal kind. grandfather manner that puts anyane at ease riRht away. "And when he'$ dane. we'\'e 501 aur sus~t per.,.ed." But fl.1artlu -unlike mmt artists - doeen 'l 1well perceptibly al the pralst. "I'm only as good as the witness." he said. • F ro"' P •ge l TI.J;>ELANDS ••• its granled tidelands." MorriJ also says thert have bten strong argumenls delivered that would justify·trte rental for pritate piers. Morris also points out that some have contended that a law dealing with leases by the State Lands Commission pro- hibiting private pier rentals should be applied to city and county rentals. also . Secondly, he says. "it has been represented to this olficc t~at pu~llc benefits are derived from private piers in that the public cost of dredging tht> main channel has been greatly reduced by the frequent dredging by littoral owners at private expense. ''And," he said, "the private piers benefit vessels in Newport Harbor during heavy fog." He said. "If these representations are at'Curate, they would appear lo be lega lly sufficient lo justify free rental of sucb piers. at the city's discretion v.·here tilt city properly makes the finding that they are in aid of navigation and not inconsistent \\'ith the trusts." Newport Beach currently charges a Oat fee for private piers and a graduated fee for commercial uses. The county is currently studying fees for its tidelands, although it has slapped &tiff charges on commercial users. New Wing ot Harbor *·* * Roge rs Predi cts Ne\V classroom \ving takes shape at Newport Har· bor High School. \Vork on the $1.4 million building "began last September. School officials say the facil- ity will be ready \Vhen classes start next Septem· ber. It will replace portable classrooms now being used at the school, oldest of four high schools in the Newport-Mesa district. Tidelands Fee Will Be Can1ied Newport Firm Planning Sale Of Debentures Avco Financial Services, Inc. has filed with the Securites and Exchange Com· mission a registration statement covering a proposed public sale or $50 million (If senior debentures due March 1, 1971. The announcement of the bond sale was made today at the Newport Beach headquarters o( Avco Corp., parent com· pany of Avco Financial Services. The offering will be made by a na· lionwide underwriting group managed by Lehman Bros .• Inc., probably in early ~1arch. Net proceeds from the sale of the bonds will be added to the general funds of the company and 11,·i\I be available to pay current indebtedness and to carry additional receivables. Application will be made to list the debenture& on the New York Stock Ex· change. AVCO Financial Services Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of AVCO Corp.. was formerly Seaboard Finance Co. The com· pany conducts its lending operations in two major areas of the finance business, namely consumer loans and sales finance. Through subsidiaries, the com· pany also conducts an i n s u r a n c e business, in part related directly to its finan ce activities. H ei ghts Zoning H earing Slated A public hearing on a proposal to upgrade the zoning on a 33-parcel block in Newport Height.. will be conducted by the Newport Beach Planning Com· mission Thursday at 8 p.m. in City Hall. The planning staff has proposed creating single-family zoning on the pro.- perty, which is bounded by Broad Street (In the north, Catalina Drive on the v.·est. Santa Ana Avenue and Beacon Street and La Jolla Drive on the east and an alley paralleling Cliff Drive on the south. All parcels v.·ithin those boundaries are currently zoned R·2, which permits duplexes. All but three homes in the area are now single·family dwellings although, under present zoning, duplexes could be built an all but five of the lots, planning officials said. 'New Ma th' Class For Pa re uts Se t Parents dumbfounded by the so-called ''new math '' their children are \earning in school, are invited to attend a t~·G-part series or mat h orientation meetings. Nev.·port • i\1csa Unified School District and the Harbor Council Parent·Teach~r Association have set new math programs for parents at four district schools .. The session will be held from 7:30 to 9 p.m. •H the following schools: Victor ia School. Thursday and Feb. 18: Harbor View School. Feb. 25 and ~tarch 11; College Park Elementary. ~tarch 18 and 22, and I\ionte Vista on April 15 and 22. Air California Sets Flights to San Diego Flights betv.·een Orange County Alrpart and San Diego have been lnaugureted by Air Califomia . the Newport Beach· based airline annou nctd today. Dudley F. ~filler. ,·lee president of the •irline, $Aid nine flights dally will be operated over !hi!: route . which was rtttnlly approved by the slate Public l;lilil ies commission. I From Page 1 INDOCHINA ••• a member of the CIA. Lam predicted heavy fighting since the Communi5ts "have to keep their supplies open" and told television cameraman Train Dai Minh there were two North Vietnamese divisions, the S08th and 320th, totalling 20,000 men facing his 16,000-man force. He said the North Vietnamese were being reinforced by the 304th NVA Division with another 10,000 men. But asked if the S o u t h Vietnamese forces were spread too thin he said, "we are very strong here." There also were indications tank bat- tles might be In the offing along the Ho Chi Minh trail. Lam said his air and ground units have knocked out five PTI6 Soviet-built tanks and a number of T34 tanks in the eight-day old invasion. The South Vietnamese have lost two to enemy gunfire. U.S. military sources in tbe field disclosed that 10 percent of the American heUcopters supporting the South Viet· namese invasion of Laos have been destroyed or severely damaged during the Hrst week of the operation. They Admiral Zumwalt Sways Top Foe SAN DIEGO (AP) -Adm. Elmo Zumwalt's visit to San Diego was viewed today as a victory -over perhaps the most vocal opponent of his ,;Z.gram '' edicts liberalizing the Navy. After the U.S. Chief of Naval Opera· fions met with active and former ad- mirals last weekend, retired Vice Adm. L. Sherwood Sabin Jr. said: "I support him entirely in the things he is trying to do for the Navy.'' Sabin, 71. said in a speech last month that the Navy V.'BS fostering "a dangerO\lJ!i permissiveness." He met Friday with Zumv.·alt and later said : "My concern was for the fighting rifectiveness of the fleet and the image of the Navy man in the community." Newsmen were barred from the meeting. The recent (lrders from Zumwalt. 50, Included relaxing regulations to permit beards and carefully cultured long hair, mod clothing "'Orn off base and \VOrk uniforms to and from quarters and duty assignments. Sabin a survivor of the Pearl Harbor attack, retired after 44 years in the Navy . e A MODERN said more than 300 were being used and this would mean 30 or more shot down . t..' Two more helicopters were shot down today including a CH47 Chinook, the gi'°t chopper used to hoist heavy artillery and other supplies into Laos. It was &hot down in names with unkno~'ll loas of lives and was the first Chinook lost. The afficial report of plane lasses in Lao.. and the border areas of Vietnam was 15. Heavy fighting was reported in border areas of Cambodla where South Viet· namese reported killing 78 in two clashes Sunday, bringing to more than 500 the number (If Communists reported killed in that incursion. cambodlan villagers wielding machetes reportedly drove off Communist troops seeking rtfuge In their community 15 miles northeast of Phnom Penh, ·and killed several. a government military spokesman said today. The spokesman said the incident oc· curred last Wedneaday, but Was repor~d only today when Cambodian troops ruched the village of Phum Chrey Thom on a search-and-clear operation. The Vietnamese Communist troops wre fleeing a government puah, designed to clear the rocket belt east of the capital aCJ'OIS the Mekong River. when they entered Phwn Chrey Thom, the spokesman said. The vlllager1, fearing allied bombot!rs more than the Communists. barred their way, and used sticks and machetes, they drove off the Viet C<ing and North Vietnamese, he said. Vientiane dispatches said Communist~ shelled a government autpost at Ban Na on the southwest edge of the Pla in of Jars during the night but apparently pulled back slightly from Long Oleng after a vicious assault before da'l\-ll on Sunday. Lang Cheng is the headquarters for Meo General Vang Pao and his 9,000 man army which Is financed by the U.S. Central Intelligerice Agency (CIA). The Laotian governmenl (ltdered rein· foretment.s sent toward Long Cheng to- da y. Western diplomaL, said Yueh Tai-Heng, the Chinese charge d'affaires in Vien- tiane . told Lao officials verbally China "'ould "never let the Americans i;tet a11i'ay with this." Diplomats said if South Vietnam cut the Ho Chi Minh trail China would gain cansiderable innuence in Hanoi by helping reopen ii. UP TO DATE JEWELRY and LOAN WITH YOU IN MIND e CASH LOANS On most any 1rticle, ..,.cialltlng in low cost, short term lo.ns. Vice Mavor Howard Rogers this morn· ing predic'ted that, Newport Beach will repeal it s tidelands use fees. Referring to the attorney general's opinion saying the fees are not man- datory, Rogers said he feels the majority or the city council 11i·ill support a proposed ordinance lo rescind th!! fee legislation. · Rogers. the council's most vocal op- ponent to the fees, said the key to the issue is whether or not the city 'o\'3S required to charge a use fee. "The majority felt we 11i·ere," he said. ''Now that is no longer true." Rogers forecast that "those (coun- cilmen) who genuinely felt !hat It was mandatory can now re~xamine their opinions." He declined, ho'o\•ever, to name the Individual council members he think! will have a change of he#lrt. Saying he was "delighted'' with the opinion , Rogers observed. "It take.s away that cloud of the stale jumping In if 'o\'e didn 't put a fee in." Referring to Mayor Ed Hirth and Coun- cilman Donald Mcinnis, who similarly opposed the fees all along. Rogers added. ''All three of us realized the city bad the power to charge the fees , It "'as just a matter of dKl we have to." My ste ry Report Warn s of Doom SAN FRANCISCO <UPI) -The editor· lal staff of the San Francisco Examiner is used to monitoring routine reports on forecasts and road and river conditions on their weather teleprinters, but Friday they got a real jolt. ''TI1e earth will open and swallow us all." clacked one of the wires. There was no prefact. signature. or other identification with the grim mess. age. The v.·eather bureau and all other agen· cies with access to the cirtuit denied sending iL Rex Harl'isou Sued For Divo rce by 4th SANTA MONICA (UPI ) -Actor Rex Harrison, 63, has been sued for di\·orce by hi s fourth wife. Rachel Roberts. 43, to end their nearly four-year marriage. Mi ss Roberts saict she was satisfied with a property seftlemenl the couple had reached but was 'upset because she did not get custod y Of the couple's basset hound, Homer. e SAVE MONEY ON EVERYTHING YOU BUY e DIAMONDS & JEWELRY e MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS e STEREO EQUIPMENT e SPORTS GEAR ind Mlny More It.,,,. • Come in and -what we offer our custoJMn. A new B mlllSllCll 1tX!*i1t11C1t in In s h o p p i n g enjoyment. Whitrit people in the know scne money itYery tlJM they buy. 1002 mMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST Racitis COSTA MESA JEWELRY ancl LOAN ' 1838 NEWPORT BLVD· PHONE 646·7741 DoWNTOWN COSTA MESA-let-Harbor & Broodw•t ' r .. ·.~ ... • •,r .· Party's All-America -n, By George • . . • ' . • As American as cherry pie \Vilt be the decor for the annual Day of Cards sponsored by the Zonta Club of Nev.·port 1-larbor Friday, Feb. 19, in honor of the birthday or the "father of our country." The Senior Citizens Recreation Center. Ne\vport Beach will be the setting for the annual event, which will fea ture tables decked in red , white and blue. . 1'he activities' v.·ill get under way with a lunch at noon and con- tinue into the evening, including a buffet dinner at 7 p.m. Preparing the lunch and diMer will be members of the club, who are \vell·kno\vn for their culinary talents. l,roceeds from the annual event will benefit the expansion {Ind maintenance funds of the recreation center, a major service project of the club. Dedicated in 1963, the recreation center serves the Harbor Area Senior Citizens group, founded in 1955 b)I the late ~Irs. Eva Aspin. a past president of Zonta. · Planning the event are :tltrs. Eugene Bergeron and J\tfs. Ervin Campbell, \vays and means co-chairmen, and assisting are the 1'1mes. George Schoonover. decorations; Robert L. Bacon, luncheon, and Ro y Fox and Charles \\!infield. buffet. · Hostesses \\'ill be the ~Imes. Jack Reinert. Joseph Hamblet. Carlton J\lears, Phillip Rees. Donald Schoenmehl, James Graham and l\1arlin Sheely. ' Other members assisting v:ith arrangements are the J\fmes. B. \Valdemar Acker, Joe Carlos. Fred Ellis, Al Forgit. Robert Harbison, J.larry Hinde. Robert Jayred, Fred Johnson. \Villiam KJoeckner, Hobart Loud. Curtiss Phinney. James Ray, 1-larold Trapp, J\larie Ho~·es, Laura La gios and Virginia Luther. Mrs. Bergeron, 545·7382, and Mrs. Campbell. 540·6670. are ac· cepting reservations. Luncheon tickets arc $3 per person and dinner tickets are $3.50 per person. BEA ANDERSON, Ed ;to r .. , ••• u Scholarship s Supplied fo r .Students BIRTHDAY PIE -r•o1embcrs of the Zonla Club of Ne\vporl Harbor \Viii help celebrate George \\."ashington 's birthday by hosting a card party complete \\'ith lunch and a buffet dinner Friday. Feb. 19, in the Senior Citizen s Hecreation renter. Sampling the birth· Gallery Choices Toasted An exciting collectio11 of new arl v.·orks from La Cienega galleries v.·iJJ be displiiycd in a unusual gallery selling beginning al 6 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 27 . l!')sted by the Art Rental Council of the Newport Harbor Art f\.fuscum 's Sales and ReR- tal Gallery. the festive show· ing will take place during a cocktail party. Urbanus Squar1', Corona dcl f\.lar wi ll be the backdrop for jcv.·el-like collages by Tom Fricano. wat ercolors 'by Silva, lithographs by Chesney and other v.·orks by such noted artists as Altoon, S t c l I a , Albers and Lichtenstein. Nev.· homeowners ha \'I'! found lhe gallery an ideal means fo r purcha sing paint· in gs or sculpture for their 1 homes and offices. ha ving an (lpportunit y lo "try on" or ''live with" a piece or :irl before making a final decision. Busi ness men profit by lhe exchange or art possibll'! through renting. offering a new perspective to their of. rices and work. day pie {cherry. of course) are (left lo right) Mrs. Ervin Campbell and ~1rs. r:ugcne Bergeron, chairmen, and J\1rs. George Schoon· over. decorations chairman. .. • 11arbor Arca studen£s \\'ill benefit from scholarship funds \vhich will be raised by Newport Beach Ebells durin g their annual dessert card party. The event \\•ill take place Thursday, Feb. 18, in the clubhouse. Ready lo serve members and guests are ll eft lo right) the 111mes. Richard B. llodge, George Hallock and Lee \V. Jenks. The rental and sales gallery is open fr om I 10 4 p.m. \Vednesday through Sunday ilnd is located in the Newport Jlarbor Art Museum. Anyone wishing informalion abou t thl'! party or gallery n1ay call the muscun1 office, fiiS-3866. CO LLECTI ON ASSEMBL ED Transforming Urbanus Square, Coron':.c1'cf,. 1\-tar into a prestigious art gallery for an evening are (left to right) the Mnf(S. Norman B. La"•son , Robert S. 1\-finton and James H. Young. On display w.nr-&e paintings and sc ulptures !rom La Cienega galleries, for sale or rent. • • '· Yardstick Offered for Measuring Up to Earn Friendship ··: DEAR ANN LANDERS : You get n1any letter5 from people who complain because they are lonely. They \\'onder ..-·hy I.her, ha\"I'! so few friends, and the rew riends they do have don't call \"Cry often. Just yl'!sterday, a person t \\'Ork with complained to me that no one likes her. I sat down and thought about the f'rsonality and character traits that most dislikl'!. Strang@ly enough, out of thl'! 10 traits, this person had seven. Here's thl'! li5t and t hope you will print it, Ann . It m!ght help some folks to see themselves as others see them: 1. A compulsion to show off kno11.·ledgc. 2. Exaggerates to the paint tha t it's the next thing to lying. ANN LANDERS 3. Moodinl'!ss. Friendly one day. Un· rriendly the next. 4. Bossine ss. fl.1usl run l'!verything. ~. Not reliable. Word is no good. 6. Chronic complainer. Negati\·t at- titude about many things. Invetl'!rate crepe-hanger. 7. Nosy. Asks a lots of questions lhal are none of her businesi;. 8. Gossipy. Knows everything about everybod)' and tells it. Makes you wonder what she Is saying about you. 9. Says things in anger then lries to smooth it over by buying a l!Ltlc gift. JO. Always fishing for com pliments but never gi\'es any. SIGN P.1E -H·2 0 Tov.'n, S.O. DEAR WATERTOWN: I tt0pe tvtry person wbo reads this column wlll measure himself against thl'! lb:!. 1 did -and you hit me oa Nl.imber '· DEAR ANN LANDERS: Tu'o year s ago r went through a messy divorce. I \\'as depressed and miserable because I was the first. in a family of five girls to have a marriage fa ilure. Two v.·eeks afte r lhe divorce I met a man 1orho ha d beautiful hair and teet h. We v.·erc married after a w h i r I wind courtship. A few months ago t noticed my husband's hair is thinning ou t. Last v.•eek he went to a den tist who discove red a gOm condition that is threaten ing hii; le{!\h. I know this sounds crazy but lhci;e two reatures are very important lo nie. Without them he wouldn 't look like much. I'm Ashamed to tell anyone how worried I am, Can you e:ive me some moral support and 11 word of advice? -ANONYMOUS PLEASE DEAR ANON : If your marriage was held logcthcr by hair and ll'!tlh I'm surprl!led It luted t•·o yea1'1. Stop btlng foolish. If your husband loses bis balr hi'! can buy a rug:. lf he lose• bl5 teeth , he can get china clippers. Tbtse dnys experts can rebuild, ~•tori'! and lransplAnl almo~t anytblrlg. (Remembf:r, I said ALr.10ST.) DEAR ANN LA NDERS: f\.ty sister and I are good bridge playl'!rs. "'e married men who are toumamenl championship '!Uallt y. Every Friday wt get togelher for dinner and cards. 11's gotten so I drea<l these cvenlng~. The tension Is ~ terribll'!. My husband loses his tetrlpcr and cusses ml'! out if I make a mistake. P.ty sister's husband is just u bad. He got so mad last Friday he slap~ her. Is thl'!re a way WI'! can get these guys to curb their tl'!mpers? -A A/'ID P DEAR A &: P: Probably not. Throw ln the deck -permantntlv, If you have trouble gelling along wltft your parents . . . if you can't get them to let you llvl'! )'our own life, send for t •1 Landers' booklet, "Bugged by Parer. i. '! ~law to Get ~tore Freedom.~ Send 50 cents in coin with your requeAt and a long, stamped. self-addreued envelope in care or the DAILY Pl.LOT. • • ' l -' DAILY PILOT .~ ;legant Evening f:': Mastor of ceremonies Arthur Briggs and his wife, hostess chairman of the • South Coast Community Hospital Valentine Ball, in the Ney,•porter Inn, prepare ~ to depart for the annual fund-raising dinner dance. Four hundred area resi- ., dents enjoyed precocktail get-togethers and ball inspired by the "hospital with ·-a 'heart." '• • l'foroscope " .. .. ,Taurus: Look to Aries Double the Trouble When Teacher Ta I ks By ERMA BOMBECK Wbeo you'l'f: married to 1 school teacher you le1m to live with redundan cy. Educators can't help It. Anything "North saying once Is worth repeating twice and then reviewing it again for the ones who weren't paying attention the first two times. Our marriage ceremony was li1ce a script from Sesame Street. When the minister ask· ed my husband to repeat the vows after him he said "! do'' three times , then turned to me and said, '"I do sounds like two. We are I w o . Therefore 'I do' makes us one. lf that's too confusing we'll review it at the recep. tion." Maybe it is my imagination. but the world has been talking to me in one original and three carbons ever since. AT WIT'S END Take football, for e1ample. lt is incredible to me that a game which I have just viewed Is played back to me in slow motion, stop action, from three different camera angles only to be repeated immediately following t he game and again on the late sports show which follows Lhe the film which was shown im- mediately following the game. A couple of "'eeks ago. t listened to President Ni1on"s State of the Union message, followed by an assessment of It by a team of newscasters. This was followed by an ap- prai.sal or the speech by Sen. Mike Mansfield w h o s e remarks were then reviewed by anolber panel of broad- casters. Their views were rehashed by our I a c a I newscasters whose opinions In turn were summarized and interpreted at a cocktail party immediately following the newscast. I found myself knowing more about the Slate of the Union than any human being had a right lo know. "Look. look. look," said my husbaod lhe other night. ''Here is a movie you have been wanting to sec. r want to see the movie. Do you h C "bb wan"°'" the movietoo~" Cruisi ng t e an eon "Which one7" I ,1Zrimaced . ''It's called, 'Low Type Cruising aboard the AfS Skyward to Haiti. San Juan Person Lover.'•• and St. Thomas are Oeft to right) r.1rs. Ruth Penning "l don 't think so," y said. and Mrs. Louise Wyatt, both of Costa Mesa. Their "Oh, oh, Molher, why?" he week-long Norwegian Caribbean Lines cruise was asked. part of their Florida vacation. "Because I read a con---------------------- Smart Teens Review Drug Abuse Problem densation in Reader's Digest. a serialization in a magazine, a three-part series in a newspaper, \\' 11. t c h e d 75 television spots on it. heiird the star dissect it on five talk sho"'S and saw it preview· E'd at a movie l saw last Spring Flowers Bring Shower of Benefits A group of students from Gisler Intermediate School. Huntington Beach, will discuss th.e dangers or drugs and how to approach the problem v.·hen the Huntington Beach Republican Women's C 1 u b meets Wednesday, Feb. 17. All members of Smart Teens, their appearance pro- vides an opportunity for in· terested adults to hear from the youths themselves on best Aid Given Help Line. ways lo help. v.·eck." A fragrant f Io r a I al- Diretting the .!i\udent pro-"I think you'll find there mosphere v.·i!l en h a n c e gram will be Keith \\'estly, are many beneficial aspC'Cts fa shions from r.1r . Blackwell vice principal. of repetition. :imong them the during the annual luncheon It also provides fitting se-ability lo comm it tn your and fashion show sponsored by quence to last month 's presen· retention the faci lity of total the Y-\Yivcs of Santa Ana- taUon when Sgt. James Mahan recall, however tau!ological." Sooth Orange County Young of Lhe police department I looked up tiredl y. •·what \\'omen's Christian Associa· warned that if membe rs of did you say~" lion. the community didn't do Two minutes la ter. I could Spring blossoms are being something, we will lose our have bitten my tongue. flown in ta creat~ the Shower most important n a tu r a I of Flowers taking place at resource: oor youth. h I 11 a.m. Friday. Feb. 19, in The luncheon mcetinR will T etas pan the Airporter IM. begin at l I :30 a.m. in the Proceeds from Lhe eve nt will gifts and fln"•ers al'f! being arranged by the Mmes. Earl Evans, Fred Andrea, Joseph ArC1llio, Keith Gaynes and John Gray. ~1 usic "'Iii be pr~ vided by l\irs. Kenn eth Ferry. Reservatlons may be made through the YWCA office 1l 542.3577_ Two Meetings Calendered recreation center, and all in· S · I Cl b t.rested women are invited OCIO U Insure continued su pport for 1" k t th Or C t Youth activities with emphasis ,-.or a e ange oun Y to attend. Mrs. Richard Ditt-1 1 on the summer backyard pro-Cancer Dressing Station will mar is chai rman of the hos-A umnae ° Kappa Alpha be discussed by r.1is!l Lois pilality committee. 'rheta from Oceanside to gram and the Saturday Y-Oay Corcoran, chairman when .!ihe ' . TUESDAY, FEBRUAR Y 16 By SYD~'E\' O;\IARR A membership drive now 'r.lission Viejo are invited to Happenings. speaks before the Starbright C1:1uld creat e unnecessary Accent an publishing. com-ti l attend a coffee. at l p.m. Presenting the collection of Club. d. · muni·c-ti·ons. Sl.ress "ersat1·11-. Help Linc will benefit v.•hcn !n progress wi cone ude !\1ay . _ _, ·u issens1on. n • 1 wi"ih th•. club "OW di"vi"ded on Wednesday, Feb. 17. where spring auu summ er wear WJ The •roup wi"ll meet at noon C PRJCORJN De 22 J H lt t. thod the 'Vomen's Auxiliary to the " '"-Fl s l 0 A ( c. · an. ty. ave a erna 1ve me s do formation of a social alumnae ut: Mrs. orence ma es. Wednesday, Feb. 17, 1·0 the ·Arie• is said to b e headstrong. But these natives , ali{l lire couragwus. They are i lnf~Ove, natural pioneers. not • • alraJlr to take chan~s on their h -• p II tf f Orange County Pharmaccuti-into uptown and wntown 19): Accent on desires, ability at ~rN.1 u yourse out o cal Association sponsors a teams competing for new club wi!J be discussed. Chai rmen for the event are Seafaring Masonic Temple, to communicate with friends. emot1ona rut. luncheon meet ing at ll :30 a.m. members. 11 now has 121 Women interested in at· Mrs. Michael Joyce and Mrs. Newport Beach. You may be surprised by If' TODA y IS y 0 U R Wednesday, Feb. 17, regular members and 47 lending the affair in the San Robert Caverly "'ho will offer Brothers' Night wilt be touching gesture. Be glad BLRTHDAY "OU are inlro-. h ·i-associate patron members. Clemente home of ~trs. Ben. one of the guests an op-observed by the Harbfir Star without becoming overly sen· / Speaking 10 1 e auxi i;iry C. Edmondson may contact portunity to receive a special Chapter. Order of Eastern specti\'e, have abili ty lo nursr, \viii be r.1rs. Richard Mar~h. ·r b timental. ~1essage becomes teach and interpret fine points state president, and ~rs. the hostess or Mrs . Lewis g15t f~m1 M~. Ri1cha rd Nixon. Star at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Fe · 0"11 abllilles. The Aries ptrson is mentally stimulated by Geinlnl and physically at- tracted to Leo. Aries is lucky in 1 financial sense for those born under Pisces. clear during day. of la"'· You arc nol easy lor W"ll " M t I Soropt1'm1'sts r-"-·a_l_lon_f~orF:in~fo~rmRa_ti_on_. __ rr~:p:ec:ia::p:":":':·:':v:or~s~,-·ec-re·'-23_. ;;;in;;;;;;th;;;e;;;l;;;em;;i;;pl_e_. ---, AQUAR.IUS iJan . 26-Feb. I iam e yer ' s a e others to fool. but you often secretary. FAIR 18): Business, hooors, reputa· fool yourlic lf. ''ou arc due for Hosti ng the mretinii: will he Soroptimist Club of Hun- lion -l~se are stressed. geater recognition. A relation· ?-<!rs. Robert Adlt>r of Tustin lington Beach gathers at 12: 15 F••'· f•ir. f•ctu•I. Tho1• You gain needed cooperation. ship is under pressll re . lt assisted by Mrs. Francis p.m. the second and fourth th••• word i •um up *•cto .. '" One in authority grants specia l could end . Schuler and Mrs. f\1arvin Tuesda y, s In Francois 011•••"0~ 0~ '"' DA ILY PILOl •ditori•I pto;• •v•ry d•y. recognition. Obtain hint from Peck. restaurant. To lln!I ovt wl\o'• h1<:kv tor ~~u ~_""'~ ________ _:::::.::_:::::: ______ _':========== AiRIES (March 21 ·April 19): C•:;~~ ~~s~.8f::March 20): ~ .... ~·~·v ~~"· "'~·t·K,";1""";.i1n~~dn;;, GtlR(d health. Avoid extremes. Adverl1"se wares ·, let others .~" J"",.n":,0"'1e;:·o~:~ An~;::1~~ Chick tendency to take situa· 5«•-'•· 1~• DAILY P1LOT, llo• Jl.,. ~ • know what you have to offer. G••nd Ctrh1•I s1•t1"", Now var~, lions, persons for granted . Ex· N.v. 10011. pre~s appreciation l.o one v.·hp --,""''""'"'""'""""""""""""'""""""""'"":.....=cz,,;:,,,.-······-·~-... -·-···~-.-,~ performs 'p e c i a I services. ~ W-tJSJ.!W:a;;;s;:;.!.il'.!-Ll't!! l " 'lM"M'\? ·i ·) Welco~ new contacts, .i , " i , ~~//.ii c11;~~:~s (April 2~~1ay 20 1, :1 Anything Goes l ·~ ' ' irr,f'FA Obtain hint from A r I e 1 mes~age. Permil m a t e or ;,I business associate to set pace. • Orai:-:. who leache s h 11 s ~ng of value to offer. ROlfc.e this and be willing to"~en. ~1JNl IMay 21 .June 2{1 1: St~ versatilit y. ~1any or y°","flatural qualities are ap-pr~Jiited. Some who doubted vop '.now express regrets . A j,e~"'~ dependent needs special att; ion . Act accordingl y. 'CER (June 21-Ju\y 22 1: Gi :thought In request made by~ng person. Be aware of :i4rious details. Study fine pr~-read between the lines CrRf.lve approach brings best "!· Make some change~. !July 23-Aug. 22 ): A C -born lnd i\!idual plays si cant role . You are due roWccn!ade from one who ha'5fii hhe\d pralR". Gain in· dit1 through "'ritten word. ~,F~~:e~·h;~;:;,e;.:: Inv 'gate. Don 't be satisfied m • that something hap- perK.;;Get to lhe heart of maffer. Discover reason s. Give full play to ln te\lectual curiosity. LIBRA f&pt. 23-0ct. 22l: I ' I Avoid self-deception. Sec peo· , Lachasse of London says. "'An ything Goes Pie as they ,.ctuall y t>xist. ,, sill! holds for the <'oming season. ~1oney opportunity is presc~t . 1 · 1 · f You can obtain sonic genurne 1\ deepl y squared co llar of Ill~ c estj:(n . ran1es bargains. Be p e r c e pt i v e. the face and neck . 1'he simple shape ea~cs into an Anal yze your needs .'\ -and top·!ititching trims the center front sea~ SCORPIO (Oct. 2J·Nov . 211 · and collar. ~take it in raw silk. silk su rah. synthetic One ''ou respect return~ thr blends. linen or pique. compiimenl. Cycle is high : i3010 is cut in ~1isses Sizes 10-18. Size 12 re· your jud~enl is ant to ht> quires approxin1ately 3y, yards or 45" fabric .. correct. Stress Init iative and This precut, preperfor~ted Spade_a Des1g~er gre11ter independence. Your pattern produces a bette.r fit. Order 1~010; give efforts gain specia l reward. size, name. address and tip. Sl.50 post paid. SAGITTARIUS {Nov. 22· Address SPADEA, Box N. Dept. CX·l5. ~lilford . Dec. 21 ): One who hall been N.J . 08848. Books by Classification. Coats and Suits .. ' f"!'iptelally quiet now , m11kes -11 postpaid. rrestnct -Jnd feelings 1;===='=='================'il 1cnown. Emphasize \nw -key re~poose. Forcina tactics now I Harbor TOPS WHEltE DID YOU PUT YOUR KNITTING NEEDLES ? c;,.1 thrn1 nul n111': lt'J l!n1r tf\ knit ~n11r -l)ri nJ: V<ardrol1"! \Vr hln'I' I'll thf' nr1v y11rn~ ill nd fl8tlr rnJ pJUS ]OIS /1( ni'1\ \dOli5 in ~hBl'I' 11ith ;,nu. louth Ce••t Pl•1• Colt/J MtN The KNIT WIT l i i· I I ; I • l ' l t ~ I I ~~ ,.__) I ~ -~i I \ i -·--........i W, ~ ~ BEAUTY SALON FASHION FORECAST: LIGHT ' i FROST FOLLOWED BY ADMIRING GLANCES ~ FROSTING SPECIAL.19.9 0 COMPLETE ~ LET OUR STYLISTS RIPPLE HI GHLIGHTS THROUGH YOUR HAIR WITH FINGERTIP FROSTING. STRE:AKS OF LIGHTENING OR BLONDE ON 81..0NDE , CO IT WHILE: OUR FROSTING SPECIAL. TS ON ~ BEAUTY SALON• 1/2 PRICE PERM SALE OUR SUPER RI CH 1BUBBLY PERMS1 I NCLUDING CUT ftEG, 35,00 VALUE, 0 ,NOW 17.50 COMPL.t"rE REG, 25,00 VAL.UC:, 0 ,NOW 12.50 COMPl..ETE NEWPORT -. - ROBINSON'S • FAS HION ISLAND • 644-2800 LAST DAY OF SALE SALE ENDS TONIGHT OPEN TIL 9 PM Your lei+ chence to l•ve up to $100 on Sylv enie ho mt entertainment products ., .. , famous for fine qua lity end engineerin g excellence. Don't d eity . if you mi11 this oppor• +unity you may have to w•it • whole ye•r for •nother ch•nce •t b•r9 •in1 like the1e It's up to you ! Q1salc styled stereo model SC388 with 400 w1 tt1 peak mu1ic power. Superb brttkfront credenta cablnat Jn Butler· nut finish. Includes FM,IA~t plus Ft.{ stereo rad io and Garrard SL95 auto- matic stereo turntable. SAVES1QO Now Only $77 5 ~ lA ONCE-AYFAA SALE I H\JRRYI OUANTlT1ES LIMITEDATTHESE LOW SALE PRICfSI Integrity and Oeptnd ebility Since 1947 COSTA MlSA 411 E. 17th St. 646· 1614 deity •·f Sot. f ·i EL TORO 1.ocJuna Hlll1 flasa INt,, te Sa,.01111 l l 7•JIJO 4elly 10·6 M/f 10·• H1~r Schon! ln Co8i~ Mt8a i8 the loca!inn v.·hert members of TOPS H~rbor Lighters gather each Monday e11<nlng •• 6:3'1. l __________________ .J'-----------------------------., _________________ _, , l l Costa ·Mesa Your Hometown Dally Paper ' VOL. 6'1, NO. 39, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1971 TEN CENTS Sirius II 1st Yacht To Fi11ish By AL\ION LOCKABEY CIAILY l'ILOT k 1U119 Editor PUERTO VALLARTA -Bob Lynch's ~foot cutter Sirius ll rrom Newport Harbor Yachl Club crossed the finish J>ne at 10 :20 p.m. Sunday to become the first to finish in the 1,125-mi!e Marina de! Rey to Puerto \1allarta race. Second boat in the 2&-root fleet .,..·ill be Bill Y.'ilson's Rascal from Santa Barbara Yacht Club which 11t 10:50 a .m. today 11.•as about five miles from the finish line. Sirius It beat Rascal by 19 hours whi ch means that Rascal will have beaten Sirius II on corrected time. A large croy,·d grttled Sirius II at the new Puerto Vallarta marina as she was eased stern to the sea wall last night. 1'How was the race," Lynch ..-·as asked. "Slow" was his succinct answer. Lynch said there was only about 20 hours during the race when Ulere was enough wind to move the boat anywhere near hull speed. The race started at 12: 15 p.m, Satur· day, feb. 6. Siriun' elapsed time was eight days, ten hours, five minutes and 15 seconds. Russ Ward 's Aries reported this morn- ing t.hat he \\'as expecting to finish some time tonight. Not mqre than a mile from Aries was Bob Beauctiamp·s Dorothy O. One or the other was calculated to be the third boat to finish. Banberas Bay was as flat as milk on a platter early this morning. By midmorning a five to ten knot breeze had sprung up y.·hich was moving the boats closer to the finish line. The main body of the fleet was spread out for more than 200 miles across the Gulf of California ·with several reporting In the vicinity of Tres Marias Islands. $5,185 in Loot Taken in Mesa Holiday Heist Taking advantage of the long weekend, burglars raided a \•acationing C:Osta Mesa executive's home Saturday and stole 55.185 in valuables, including gold and 11ilver table service. A policeman 's Y.'ife living t_n the s~me area pinpoinled the approximate time of the burglary Y.'hen she recalled seei~g window shades -left up by the family -closed at mid-afternoon. James O. Hicks. a roofing company vice president. notlf ied authorities of the looting "'hen he returned home from Palm Springs. Officer Jim Farley said the ransacked residence at 2980 fl.findanao Drive, was entered via a rear bedroom sliding glass door jimmied open with a pry tool. Pillow cases were used as bags to carry the 12-service silver an.d gold~are sets. plus jewelry, an antique silver watch, two cameras, two rifles. a .45 caliber automatic pisWl, radio, co 1 or telev ision set and mi.llcellaneous items. Hicks said living room drapes were left open and found that way. upon his return but the neighborhood witness told f!Olice 'she saw them closed at one point Saturday afternoon. Chilly Sunday For Beach goers •·Thev were determinec1 l.Q ~it on the · beach, so lhafs what they did -wrappec1 up in blankets ." Newport Beach 11 f e guard spokesman Ray Gar\'er said today more than 100.000 prople visited the beache~ over the weekend. and 35.000 of them came on Sunday when there was little sunshine and temperalures barely got up to the high 60'.~. S11turday ...,.as 11 different story. Garvr.r said llfeguaf(ls counted &S.000 basking in tht 90-dtgree tem- peratures. The only difference between 11 summer Saturday and this wttkc.nd was I.ht 51-dtgrte water. ··\\1e didn't have 1ny rescues," Gl'lrver said. ··111,, wattr wa.s pret- ty cold and lhe surf wai;n"t good, ao f!Mple jusl slaytd on lht btach." The Odd Couple Somebody forgot to tell "Foxy" and "Musket" that they are natural enemies. The swift, brown fox and the beagle with a baritone voice live in the back yard of the Danny Dwight home in Ventura. They share meals and playtime. Life is good. They even have carpeting on the floor of their A·frame home, 14 Stand Trial in Drug Smuggle Ring in F1·ance NICE, France (UPI) -Fourtetn persons went on trial today on charges they were tnvolved in a gigantk narcotic smuggling ring. between southern France and New York. The chief prosecuting witness was a beautiful French girl identified as agent No. 00792 who became a narcotics agent after her Jover died from an overdose of heroine. The 14 persons. three of them on provisional freedom (the Fr enc h equivalent of bail). appeared before the Fifth C.Orrectional Chamber as members of a ring whose smashing by U.S. and French agents sent 150 persons to jail in several countries, 40 of them in New York City. The value of the drugs smuggled into the United Stales by the ring was not indicated. Judge Louis Kronprosl presided over today's opening session at which several policemen of the French Narcotics Bureau described how agent No. 00792, v.·ho Infiltrated. the smuggling ring, f!e1v a suitcase full of heroine to New "'l'ork so that U.S. police could arrest smugglers at the rectiving end of the chain linking secret supply routes and laboratories in Southern France to Nev.' York. 'Ilhe prosecution described her either by her code number or assumed names of Paul Rebeyrolles or "Francoise". HP.r true identity was kept secret because ber life is being threatened, police said. The defendants were Do m i n q u e Giordaoo, J ean Audislo. Edouard Garteries, J05eph Etch&rd, Marcel Galvani, Pierre Lehovary. He I en e Pietrini, Homere Filippi. Serge Contant, Rene Penino, Germain Salanga plus three persons enjoying provisional freedom: School District To Help Build 2 Ball Diamonds Jacques Bixio, Rene Serral and Gerard Fredj. The trial ls expected to last three days. Swte Court May Hear Case On Freeway Roy B. Woolsey. attorney for former city councilman Al Forgit, an intervenor in the court suit to block Newport Beach's freeway eleclion. said today the California Supreme Court likely will decide whether to hear the case this week. Woolsey tasl week filed his "points of authority" against the petllion sought by three former city officials for a writ of mandate lo stop the March 9 freeway balloting. The councilmen, through their at- torney, Angelo Palmieri, took their re- quest to the Supreme Court after a Superior Court rejected the request. The councilmen -former mayors James B. Stoddald and Charles E. Hart, and /onner vice mayor Han:; J. Lorenz, are contend ing the election is illegal because the state has ultimate authority of freeway routes. The election will place two questions before voters. The first is an initiative matter that M!eks to have the city council unilaterally rescind an agreement with the state on road cJosings for the fulure Pacific Coast Freeway. The agreement pertains only to the freeway east of Upper Nev.')>Ort Bay. There is no agreement on lhe route through West Newport. Viets Cut Trail Commander Predicts Red Offensive SAIGON (UPI) -Lt. G<n. Hoang Xuan Lam, commander of the 16,000 South Vietnamese lroops in Laos, said today his men have cut the main branch of the Ho Chi Minh Trail. He predicted a major Communist offensive to reopen it. Communist China renev.·ed its warnings today against U.S. intervention in Laos, and western diplomats in Vientiane ex- pressed concern about possible Chinese intervention in Laos. They based their Water Board Eyes Mesa Tax Drop Believe it or not, one governmental agency is proposing a r.ax elimination instead of a tax increase. The Costa Mesa County Water District Board o! Directors has i n s t r u c t e d General Manager Ray \Vallace to study Throwing out the current fou r cent whether or not ii would be feasible. per $100 of assessed valuation levy would come -if it comes -as part of a revised basic water fee schedule. •·u1e're going to try to run the distrlC'I on water revenues alone," says veteran Ci\1CWD Director Alvin L. Pinkley . The Cf.1CWD directive to Wallace climaxes a controversy originating late in 1970, v.•hen the board imposed a new series of fees on multiple residential units of all types. Ownerg of apartments and trailer parka were hit wllh " 11 per unit or 1p.ace hlke. v.·hile hoteli;, motels and hospitals were ordered to pay ~ centl per bed. The concept was to distribute cost of waler ser\1ice more equaUy among individual homeowners paying a metered rate and multiple property owners paying a n11t fee. • They responded veht!menUy and rather effectively. Agreeing inequities existed, the Ci\fC\VO voted at its January meeting to re-study the new fee structure and decide how to spread it out better, with a decision in March. Board members rescinded that action Thursday and agreed ltJ take up the matter of who should pay how much when ii adopts a 1971-72 fiscal budget in July. Water costs from the Metropolitan \Va!P.r Distri ct are now $49 per acre-foot and v.·HI rise to S7~ per a~foot by 1975, so more money must come from someY.·here. The proposed ad valorum properly tax \Ht which 'A1oulc1 leave residents simply paying a slightly higher bl· monthly fee actually Isn 't as stunning as it sounds. Tax ralcs set at 20 cents per $100 of assessed valuation when the CMCWD formed a dozen years ago have been steadily reduced through good manage· men~ and surplus fund investment. WINTER FESTIVAL PREVIEW SLATED The DAILY PILOT presents. in a special two.page spread to be published Tuesday, a preview of the 1971 Winter Festival . Jt opens its 17·day run in Laguna Beach on Friday. The special slorics, photos and ads from Laguna Beach are designed to tell re&idvits from throughout the Orange Coast the entire Festival story in a capsule. Watch fnr it Tuesday Inside all edil!ons of the DAILY PILOT. fears on Peking statements and remarks of Chinese diplomats to senior Laos officials in Vientiane. There also were new anU-Amtrican demonstrations in China, this time in Shanghai where Korean War veterans called the American military "a paper tiger." There were similar mass demonstrations earlier In Peking and other Chinese cities, emphasizing Peking charges the Jnvasion of Laos was "a grave menace" to Chine. U.S. spokesmen in Saigon said a U.S. Air Force F105 "Wild Weasel" jr.t made a .. proleclive reaction'' strike Sunday against a C:Ommunist missile site in North Vietnam. And in Vientiane American sources sai d a U.S. plane accidentally bombed a CIA-supported clandestine army base at Long Cheng in norUlern Laos, killing JO Meo hlll tribesmen and wounding 20 peraons including en American believed to be !See INDOCHINA, Pase 2) Woman Critically Hurt In Mesa Apartment Fire A young C.Ost.a Mesa woman remains In critical condition today with burns over 80 percent of her body, after being rescued from her blazing apartment Saturday1 morning. Jeanette Vasblnger, 23, of 388 \V. Wilson Sl., apparently became confused and collapsed \\1hile seeking a way out, blocking the apartment door, Firemen Roger Lopossa and Jack Michaels braved the inferno to rescue Miss Vasbinger, while two other oc- cupants of the apartment escaped on their own. Battalion Ctiief Ron C:Oleman said Miss Vasbinger's mother and a friend. Michael Hetrick, climbed out a bedroom window and were uninjured . Investigators tentatively blamed the $4,500 blaze on a cigaret dropped into the living room couch and 1moldcred Boy, 16, Freed After Alleged Sex Kidnaping A JS.year-old boy hitchhiker pickfd up in Costa Mesa Sunday afternoon hy a male motorist tol d police he finally escaped after being forcibly fondled and propositioned for perversion. The youth said he y,·as picked up on l-larbor Boulevard at Wilson Street about 4 p.m. by the suspect. in his early 30s. and &aid he was quickly ap- proached. He refused an offer to go to the man·s apartment and was then grabbed by the motorist. who wore a plaid shirt and blue jeans. according to reports. "Let me out ," he demanded as they stopped for a red light at Peterson \Va y, but told police the man grabbed his arm and pulled him back in as he opened the car door. The boy &aid he was finally allowed out of the car al Harbor Boulevard and Gisler Avenue after the suspect drove around, apparently deciding what to do. Investigators today were tracing the 1968 car 's license number in an effort to identify the suspect in the kidnap and disorderly conduct case. Burglar Breaks In, Rohs Mesa Apartment A Costa Mesa !ialesgirl disrovered someone had jimmied her apartment door and stolen $126 in valuables when she ar. rived home Sunday night. Sandra J. Johnson. of 2213 Ru tgers Drive. told police the loss Included a Westminster High School Class of 1965 ring. S50 in dimes in a tall Italian liqueur bottle and a pair of jeans. until after the three occupanls retired. Miss Vasbinger was taken to the bum unit of Orange C.Ounty Medical Center in critical condition and remained in that condition today_ . Bes.ides covering most of her bodf, the burns suffered after the victim col- lapsed due to smoke Inhalation are severe, nurses said. 2 Hippie-type Bandits Strike Mesa Station A pair of hippie-type bandit1 who like lo see service at.lion 1tt1nd&nl1 •run for their lives robbed another Costa Mesa outlet of $130 in cash Saturday night. Daniel T. Weibel told police he aaw the 19 to 20-year-()Jd stickup me n ap- parently casing Grant's Gui! Service, 1740 Newport Blvd., twice earller. lie said they passed by at 6 p.m. and B p.m., before returning at 10 p.m. to ask y.·hat time it was, the same method used in hilling ano!her Newport Boulevard station last v.·eek. Weibel told of being ordered to hand over the cash by one suspect, who wore a bushy, full-face beard and flashed a short. chrome-plated revolver. They fied after Weibel look off trotting down Newport Boulevard and a p Roohester Street as ordered. A similar robbery at a station farther north on Ne"1>0rt Boulevard last week netted about the same amount. Mesa Councilmen Take Night Off Government leaders Wi lson,1 Jordan, Pinkley, St. Clair and Hammi!tt ere going to take Monday night off in honor of the birthdays of government leaders Lincoln and Washington. Costa Mesa City Council members wil! join other municipal employes in observ· ing the four-day holiday weekend c0m- memorating both presidential birthdays. The normally scheduled meeting in· eluding a public hearing on a con- troversial $1.Z8 million Del Mar Avenue widening project will be Tuesday instead. Routine business session deliberatio111 will begin at 6:30, followed by the 7:30 p.m. legislative session. Orange Coast The Newport-Mesa Unified School District "'ill help build two basebill diamonds at Te Winkle school for joint use by the Costa Mesa Recrealion Department, but will not pay lo light them for night use. Sketching Crooks Into Jail Weather Cloudy skies, which may teak a little in spots. are tht outlook for Tuesday along the coast. with temperatures skinned back lo the middle 60s. School trustees have approvM a $2.bt expenditure lo provide backstops for the fit'1ds, Th'ey denied ll rtqu~t Wt the district ahMe a $71,000 tab to light them. KehJt Van Holt, city N!Creation direc- tor, I-Old !lit board lhe rocreaUon ~•part· ment would l)BY for the prepaf.ation of the gras.slesa: infields. Tbfl two di11monds will be locat~ on the Gisler Strttt side of the Te.Wink.If! school slle. Daytime use of the fields will be ahared with the city rtcreaUon departmenL Tnulees old they fell t.h11t lighting lhe diamonds 1t the middle Khool would not benefit the district. San Clemente Police Artist 'Captures' Suspects By JOHN VAL TERZA Of .. Ofl.., ,.., llaff Sandy .Mart.In lJ .. no policeman-oever has bttn but he helPJ catc!> croot.. •II the time. And bi doe$ It With a tiny metal bo¥, pencila:-and a lUUa stack of eyes, lips and heads he c1rries around In 1 small vinyl pouch, San Clemente police dttectives oon· sider him invaiuable ln a major ln· vutlgation. Give him 4$ minutes with evtn 1 hysterical victim or witness, t~~·e!;y, and he'll turn 01.1t • chilling S.'I ol 1 rapi.st, robber-even 1 killer. Martin, 73, the only police Miis\ save for the standard, sketchy Iden· Uk/I-between ctntral Oran1e County and the Mexican border, The quiet, kind and patient retired commercia1 Artist isn't ln it for the money, because he wsnt1 nont. He catches crooks for nothing. Jlow he goe!i about it is a fascinsting trip Into the puzzling world of the human memory under slrMa. Martin And this DA.tLY PILOT reporter sat down recently to eng1ge In a little exercise of "l1U describe you •nd you draw yourstU." Save for the Jack of agitation and s.treu, we m1de It authentic. Here's how it Wflnt : We sat down at Martin's tiny ~i;ktop easel which held tracing paper. And in routine f1shlon he unloaded h.is eqes and llp15, ll!lUng thf:m aside {or liter. We started, lnsteBd , w!Ut the general shape of the head and jaws-he has about a hell doz.en ver11ions of those. One emerged as the closest shape and wenl under 1 blank shtet of tracing paper. Next we worked on the hair. It went 11111. ··1r it'll not rlp,ht. make 1 tbange IS<e SKETCHER, P•1• Ii INSIDE TODAY CCTnfwion reigned 1Uprtm« In Britain today aa that nation scrapped It! SOO·year·old mone· tary svsttm for a decimal coiri· age like that used In the U.S. and Eatrope . Ste 1tor11 Paoe 4. t 1111K ,. ... ,~ u C•ll ...... 1• I Cltldlt"" u, 7 Clluin..t 21-lt C.mlc:1 1a CtftlWOl'f U Dtatll Ntllft• It Olvwttt If f~l .. rl•I ~Ht • l.11"rt•Htmtflt ll•lt Htrtte-u I .l!Oll L.....,.. If ,.UrrllM Lkett ... If """'"' , .. ,. N•lltlltl JI"' ••I Or•1111 Ctu~TY If • ..,,, ti.1• Ttlt¥1_,. It ,.,....,.,. , .. ,, w .. 111tr • W""'*ll't Jl9WI I »-If Wt1lll ._.... W ' ·. l l • ' % DAILY PILOT c Mond,y, Ftbtull')' 15, 1'171 Her Family, Home Gone; Now Alice Losing Health By PAMALA HALLAN Of fllt Olllr ,1111 Slaff Alice Case Is afraid to close her eyes at night. She might dream. The Dana Point woman once bad a dream of a future full of promise for her beautiful little girl. The dream became a nightmare. She once dreamt of a peaceful retirement with htr husband and a simple home in which to spend it. · Those dreams brought more pain. There was no future for Ailee's child. She was buried as a teenager, the victim of an "unloaded" gun accident. There was no peaceful old age for Alice's husband. He too died pre-- malurely, the viclim of a heart attack. Thert isn't even a home for Alice. It, too, is buried -under a mountain nf legal technicalities. The contract.er built it en the wrong lot and it will be a ruin, Alice feels, before the legal entanglement art ever straightened cut. Allee Case is a lonely, bitter woman robbed cf all the things most people take for granted -children, husband, and home. "At least I have nne thing to be thankful for," she once said. "1 still have my health." Last week she was told she has cancer. But maybe Alice's luck is changing. The doctors feel sure they caught it in time. "Actually I feel pretty good ," said Alice. who is in her 70's. Her voice sounded strong and cheerful. It was a far cry from the Alice Case who sat in a chair, pitifully holding her face between her hands as she told her story of tragedy two years ago. At that time she had jwt teamed that the contractor had built her house ln Capistrano Beach on the lot next to hers. Alice had been about to move in when the building inspector ordered her out. closed her home, and Alice waved goodbye to her life's savings. Since then she's been trying to get her home back. But the woman who cwns the lot \\'On't trade her lot for Alice':i identical cne without payment And the contractor hasn 't movtd the house, dupite a court order to do so. Living in a small rented house that takes most of her meager inCX1me, Alice is waiting patiently for Sflmething to happen . "I haven't given up yet,'' &he said brightly. "I still have hopt.'' •• ' • ~I a. SANDY MARTIN IS NO POLICEMAN BUT HE CAN DRAW At Left Is Compo1ll1 Of Mtrtln, At Rl9ht A Photogr1ph Frorn PIJfle 1 SKETCHER •.. anytime you want," he said calmly. Ne11, we went to the ears. 1'Probably pretty ordinary, aren't thty," he asked lllilh nary a hint of cheating. He sketched them in. Now we got to the good part. He pulled out a stack of eyes ranging from average to hypnotic to absolutely psychopathic. \Ve sellled for a pair cf little on the kind·of-droopy side. The master then went beneath the tracing paper and as a description flo"·ed they took form with amazing accuracy. DAILY PILOT Olt-'MOI COAST PVtUJHINO t'.:l:IM1AMY ReMrt N. Wttd Ja,\: 11:. C"''l•v Yiu l'rbi.l.nl W ~•I ""-'"" n.,..,, kt1•,11 T~lftltJ J.. M,,,fii11e M1n1~!119 Ed!l•r C..te MM• Offfu lJO Wtlf lty Strt•I M11lin9 J.ddt1tt: l'.O. le:w. 11,t, f2'2' --.,...,.,, •tfdl: nu ""'" 11-., 1tu1"""' L.1,_.. IMdl: U1 Anll "'""'" tftll'ltftt*I BMdll tmJ BNdl '':>1,0lr.11'4 $Jll ~te: JO.I N«l'll ll Gll'tl!,.. lt .. 1 DA.ILY ,,LOT, Wllll -r.ildl i. ~ 1M ....... ,.,._ .. pvlllltlleol dll!y U("" s-...... ..,.,.1 ... It ..... kt ~ "'""" ~ leDdl. C-11 ,..., ..,,.,,lllfl ... tHdl ,.. '"""t•tn 111111r. •lllr'I •'"' -"'llnll tllM-. Or ..... QIU! ""'11"'""8 ~ """"" ,a.ftti .,. tt nn w...t 11~ l:W,. ,._...n tMdl, •l'>f :aJll Wlllt .. , ,,, .... c:-t9 ~-- tal11t ••• (7141 6CJ""4Jn ca..:llM •'-"•"" 641·1611 ~. 1•it. ~ Cffll ""'"""" ClfNll.,.,. Nt -llwlef, lll111trtl1'r!lo •11tti.t -ttw ... ,,.,.,u,.~ tt.ttlll lllMJ ... f.......... wl~ 111"(111 .... '"""""' ti qirytitllt --· ._..., c;luf .. , ... M11111 •I H-' •11(111 MA C.11 ..... C.11..,nll. SWbtc~•tt.n 't' ,,,..., &1.• _,,....,1 "'mill u ,,J .....,.,,.,,., ll'llWUl'J .. tlMI""'-U.U _.,1111~. ., "It helps to have the original set underneath because you can move them up and down on the faC!:. Notice the v•hole face changes when l do it?" We got the glasses on after that, then went to the nose and mouth. The "witness" v.·as gelling the hang of it by then. In all, our "sUSJ!:£!"_ took about 40 minutes to draw, and the finishing touches, wrinkles.-"Don't be bashful about facial description. • .l see my face too often in the mirror to be vain" -made the image much more alive. A few office visitors later saw :r.tartin as he left after the drawing session and tben gazed al the "portrait". "That's the guy who just left, isn't It!" Martin had succeeded. ·Earlier he had e1plained how he became one of Southern California's few police artists. About 1i1 yesrs ago Lt. Robert Mason from the local force called to inqulre if any member of the San Clemente arts and craft.5 club would be interested in doing police work (Marlin has been keenly active in the group for years). "I asked around, and nobody wanted a thing to do with it, so I called back in a few days and volunteered." He went to work immediately. and has been "on-call" day and night ever &ince. "I've become so interested int.he whole thing," he said, "that l borrowed stacks of police texts on interview procedures- how to make a wltneu at ease; how not to ask conclusions and put sug- gestlo~ in their answers • . . all sorts cf interesting things," he expltlned. And IL la that very skJll-hcned after dozens of se.uiona with lhe frightened, &c1metimes bysterltal and angry wit· nesses-tbat makes th! kindly cld gentleman so deadly to crlmlnals . "The guy is amazing ," Chief Clifford Murray said recenUy, he has that kind. grandfather manner that put! anyone • at ease risht away. ~ .. And when he'1 done, we'vt got our suspect pegged." But ~1artin -Unli ke n1~t artists - doesn't swell perceptibly at the praise. "I'm only as good ,_, the wi:ne11," he •aid. 0.1.tLY PILOT Ila!! PMlt Frorn Page J INDOCHINA • • • 1 member of lhe CIA. Lam predicted heavy fighting since the Communisl'I "have to keep their supplies open" and told television cameraman Train Dal Minh there wtr• two North Vietnamese divisions. the 308th and 320th, totalling 20,000 men h1.cint his 16,~man force. He said the North Vlelnamese were being reinforced l.Jy the 304th NVA Division with another 10,000 men. But asked if the Sou I h Vietnamese for ce11 were spread too thin he said, "we are very strong here." There also were indications tank bal· ties might be in the offing along the }lo Chi Minh 1rai!. Lam said his air and ground unit.s have knocked out fiv t P1i6 Soviet·built tanks and a number of T34 tanks in the eight-day old invasion. 'l'he South Vietnamese have lost two to enemy gunfire. , New ll'ing at Harbor U.S. military sources in the Ueld disclosed that 10 percent of Lhe American helicopters supporting the Sou lh Viet- namese invasion of Laos have been destroyed or severely damaged during the first week of the opera tion. They said more than 300 were being used and this wou!{i mean 30 or more shot do"·n. Two more helicopters "'ere shot down today including a CH47 Chinook. the giant chopper used to hoist heavy artillery and other supplies into Laos. It Was shot do"n in flames with unknown loss of lives and was the first Chinook Jost. The official report of plane losses in Laos and the border areas of Vietnam "'as IS. New classroom wing takes shape at Newport Har· bor High School. Work on the $1 .4 million building began last September. School officials say the facil · ity will be ready when classes start next Septern· ber. It will replace portable classrooms now being used at the school, oldest of four high schools in the Newport-Mesa districL Valley School Looms For Crippled Pupils Newport Firm Planning Sale Of Debentures Heavy fighling "'as reported in border areas of Cambodia "'here South Viet· namese reported kill ing 78 in two clashe~ Sunday, bringing to more than 500 the number of Commwiist.s reported killed in that incursion. Cambodian villagers wielding machetes reportedly drove orr Communist troops seeking refuge in their community 15 miles northea st of Phnom Penh. and killed several. a government military spokesman said today. By TERRY S. COVILLE 01 t111 Oally 1'11111 Slaff By this lime next year, 100 children CX1nfined to wheel chairs or walking with crutches may attend their own school in Fountain Valley. It all depends on how fast state legislators push through an emergency bill to release more money for tbe construction of special schools. "We've been told such a bill has cleared lhe Assembly," reports ~like Brick, superiatendent or the Fountain Valley School District. His district is laying the groundwork for the orthopedically h a n d i c a p p e d school. It will serve crippled children rrom seven school districts from Newport Beach to Seal Beach. Two months ago plans were under way for coastruction of the special school district when state authorities said there was no construction money left for special 11chools. An cld law limits state-aid en special 1chools to 3.5 percent of state bond money that has been sold for school constru ction. "The Assembly has now amended that figure to be 3.5 percent of all bond money approved, whether the bond& have been sold or not," Brick explained. "But it still has to go through the Senate." The crthopedically handicapped school will handle about 100 crippled children from the Fountain Valley, Newport-Mesa, Huntington Beach High, Huntington Beach City. Ocean View, Westminster and Seal Beach schoOI districts. No district in this area has a school specially equipped to handle students Police Es cort • Girls to Diruter Father-daughter banquets can be disastrous if you don't have a daddy to take as your date. Three Costa Mesa Brownie SC-Outs fac· ed that situation in recent weeks as Thursday, Feb. 11 drew closer and closer, v.'ith their banquet scheduled at Estancia J1igh School. But people have a way of finding out about such small personal problems and solving them io novel and memorable methods. The nighl was made even more memorable, perhap!, for Annette Rankin and Cheryl and Laura Amon, whose escorts arrived ri ght on time, sharply dressed and driving shiny, brand-new cars. Cheryl and Laura were chauffeured by Police Officer Phil Donohue. Annette Rankin was escorted by Patrolman Bob Berg. Next Time She'll Call a Hippie You've all seen the bumper slicker thal says: If you Don't Like Poliamen, nex-l T!mc You Need Hel p call a Hippie ? \Veil, an 18-year-cld Costa Mesa woman called police Saturday morning fl) rom- plain that her Jong·haired former hus- band had been knocking her around. Patrolmen Dennis Hossfeld ind hiark Bernal arrived at the woman·s 'apartment and , instead of ordering the 23-year-cld former spouse cut, arrested the coople. They were booked into jail 011 suspicion or possession of marijuana, and a small quantity was con(lscated. Hooch Hijacked LONDOi'i (APl -Hijackers attacked 1 drlvtr and his mate near London docks today and escaped with a truckload of ~·hisky valued at iuM,160. I in wheel chairs, on crutches or with missing limbs. The school will be combined with t regular elementary school. "The combination will allow han· dicapped children to intermix with others, as they must in society," Brick said. The orthopedic school will be equipped with special classes and special teachers to handle the crippled youngsters. It will also have an out-patient clinic staffed with medical personnel by Orange C.OUO· ty's health department. School dislricts currently pay for private ins truction of orthopedically ban· dicapped students. The new school would greatly reduce costs while ·providing han- dler facilities for the children. llowever, if the emergency bill hits a snag, or Fountain Valley doesn't receive any cf the new money, the orthopedic school could be delayed at least two years. But Brick speaks cplimistically : "We have the support of stale Senatnr Dennis Carpenter tR·Newport Beach), and Assemblymen Kenneth Cory ( D • Anaheim) and Robert Burke (R-Hun- tington Beach).'' CHART to Hear About Project Serving as 1 sounding board for city officials. the Citizens Harbor Area Research Team (CHART) will be briefed on Costa :r.1esa's Downtown Redevelopment program Thursday. Anyone interested in the large-scope project geared for the 1980s may attend the 7:30 a.m. breakfast at the Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club but must make a reservation. They may be phoned to 834-5814 until Wednesday. Vice hfayor Willard T. Jordan, Plan- ning Director William Dunn and represntalives of the Wilsey & Ham planning consultant firm involved \\'ill participate in the panel. Avro Financial Services, Inc. has filed Yo'ith the Securltes and Exchange Com- mission a registration statement covering a proposed public sale cf $50 million of senior debentures due March 1, 1971. 'J'.he announcement or the bond sale was made today at the Newport Beach headquarters of Avro Corp., parent rom- pany of Avco Financial Services. The offering will be made by a na· tionwide underwriting group managed by Lehman Bros., Inc., probably in early March. Net proceeds from the sale of the bonds will be added tc the general funds of the company and v.·ill be available to pay current indebtedness and to carry additional receivables. Application will be made lo list the debentures on the New York Stock E1· change. AVCO Financial Services 1nc., a wholly owned subsidiary of AVCO Corp., was formerly Seaboard Finance Co. The CDm· pany conducts its lending operations in two major areas cf the finance business, namely ronsumer loans and sales finarice . Through subsidiaries, the com· psny also ronducts an i n s u r a n c e business. in part rela led directly to Us finance activities. Tliief Really Filled Her Vp The operator of a Huntington Beach service station lo!t 1,590 gallons of premium gasoline to an enterprising thief with a big lank over the weekend . Sam Meli, an employe of the Shell station at 16471 Springdale St., told officers the thief broke !he padlock on the station·s supply lank Sunday and then apparently hauled away the gasoline in a big pumper truck. The loss was estimated at $500. e A MODERN UP TO DATE JEWELRY and LOAN WITH YOU IN MIND • CASH LOANS On most any article, speciali1in9 in low cost, short term loanl. The spokesman said the incident oc· curred last Wednesday, but was reported only today when Cambodian troops reached the village of Phum Chrey Thom on a search·and-clear operation. The Vietnamese Communist troops wre fleeing a government push, designed to clear the rocket belt east or the capital across the Mekong River. when they entered Phum Chrey Thom, t h e spokesman said. The villagers. fearing allied bombers more than the Communists, barred their \\'BY, and used sticks and machetes, they drove off the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese , he said. Vientiane dispatches said Communists shelled a government outpost at Ban Na on the southwest edge of the Plain of Jars during the night but apparently pulled back slightly from Long Cheng after a vicious assault before dawn en Sunday. U>ng Cheng is the headquarters for Meo General Vang Pao and his 9,000 man army which is financed by I.he U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). The Laotian government ordered rein· forcements sent toward Long Cheng to. day. \\'estern diplomats said Yueh Tai·Heng, the Chinese charge d'affaires in Vien· tiane, told Lao officials verbally China would "never let the Americans get away with this." Diplomats said if South Vietnam cut the llo Chi ~linh !rail China \\'OUid gain coosiderable influence in Hanoi by helping reopen it. Air California Sets Flights lo San Diego Flights betv.•een Orange County Airport and San Diego have been inaugurated by Air California. the Ne\lo'port Beach· based airline annou nced today. Dudley F". t\1iller, vice president cf 1he airline, said nine fl ights daily "·ill be operated over the route. \Vhich 'vas recently approved by lhe state Public Utilities Commission. e SAVE MONEY ON EVERYTHING YOU BUY e DIAMONDS & JEWELRY e MUSICAL INSTRUMINTS e STEREO EQUIPMENT e SPORTS GEAR ind Many More ltltnl • c-in and -wliat we offer Olll' customers. A new and un-1 experience in in 1 h o p p I n CJ enjoyment. When people in th know scrve money rtery time they buy. 1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST Ratitis COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN 1838 NEWPORT BLVD· PHONE 646·7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -BtlwNn Htrbor & Broadwty j \ • Saddlehaek Your Hometown Dally Paper V~L. M, NO. 39, J SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 197 1 TEN CENTS Newport's Sirius II First to Hit Vallarta By AUfON LOCKABEY OAIL Y l"ILOT kttlllt Ectll1r PUERTA VALLARTA -Bob Lynch·s 82-foot cutter Sirius II from Newpor t Harbor Yacht Club crossed the finish line at 10:20 p.m. Sunday to become the fir st to finish in the 1,125-mile Marina del Rey to Puerta Vallarta race. Second boat in the ~foot flff:t will be Bill Wilson's Rascal from Santa Barbara Yacht Club which at 10:50 a.m. today was about rive miles lrorn the finish line. Sirius II beat Rascal · by 19 hours which means that Rascal will hav• beaten Sirius II on corrected time. A large crowd greeted Sirius U at the new Puerta Vallarta marina as stle was eased stern to the ~ea wall last night. "How was the raa," Lynch v;as asked. "Slow" was his succinct answer. Lynch said there was only about 20 hours during the race when there was enough wind to move the boat anyy,·here near hu11 speed. The race started al 12:15 p.m. Satur· day, Feb. 8. Siriun' elapsed time wa s eight days, ten boUrs, five minutes and lS seconds. Russ Ward 's Aries reported this morn· • rive .........uts • ·1 ' --A MARINE CAPTAIN ESCAPED WITH HIS LIFE IN CRASH DESTROYING CAR With Only Minor Cuts, C•pt .. Ml'CMlster Estim•ted Loss Af .AbOut $3,000 Capo Panel to Disc·uss Special School Needs A program designed ror parents whose children need special education will be presented Thursday al. 2:~0 p.m. at Marco Forster Junior l-f1gh 1n San Juan Capistrano. Tht event is jointly sponsored by the Capistrano Unified Council of J>TA's, the Laguna Beach Unified CoW"1c1l of PTA's and the San Joaquin School Di.strict. Included among the panel or speakers will be Dr. Sidney Adler of Anaheim, a neurologi11t specializing in pediatrics. He ls a pa st member or the Orange County Mental Health Board. Also on the panel will be Evelyn Ericson coordinator for Special . Educa· lion for' the Physically Handicapped in Orange County. The third speaker will be Dr. Kathleen Morton, a pediatricla_n who is the ~1ed!cal Director of the Regional Center for the Mentally Retarded , Orange County, and Assistant professor of pediatrics, UCt. Mrs. Clayton Parker, special education chairman of the Capistrano Unified Coun· c1J, will be moderator of the program . DT. Adler will attempt to explain the term "brain damagt?d" and in particular describe what is meant by cerebral palsy, orthopedically h a n d i c a p p e d , aphasia, educable mentally retarded, trainable mentally retarded and autistic. Miss Ericson will explain programs currenUy ill existence under the public school system in other areas of Orange County. Dr. Morton will explain the benefits of the early tducation and or training for these chlldren with "special needs.·• She will streslll how family crisis can be avoided, human ecology ·Is improved and the community gains econonlically. The program wtll end with • question and ansWer &euion. Two Youths Held In Tool Thefts Marine Captain Injuries Minor After Accident A Marine Corps captain escaped with only minor cuts and bruises early Satur· day morning wben his spo:-!.: car struck a guard rail in Laguna Canyon, "completely di sin te grating'' the fiberglai;s body of the auto. Lagu na Beach police said John C. MacMaster, 27, of 1076 La Mirada, was heading to·Nard home at about a. a.m. when the mishap occ urred juct north of Sycamore Flats. The Marine ap- parently lost control of his C'ar, officers said, and slammed !nto the newly·in· stalled guard rail, He estimated the loss at about $3,000. The fiberglass car body shattered on Impact, but MacMaster suffered only a cut lip and a few bruis--....s as a re sult of the accident. He apparently was thrown inl.o a field. Hooch Hijacked LONOON (AP} -Hijackers attacked a driver and his mate near l.Dndon docks today and e.sca.ped with a truckload of wbisky valued ~t,$104,160. Pendleton Eyes Action Over Blaze A special board of inquiry at Camp Pendleton resumed it! probe this morn· ing to determine if a young Navy Hospltalman should face formal charges in last January's barracks fire which injured si1 men. Hospitalman James F. Zipf II, was named last Friday as an •·interested party" in the probe ordered by the t>ase Commanding General G e o r g e Bowman. SpokeuutJ:J al the base today gave neither an age, nor a hometown tor the corpaman. They 1J.go declined to elaborate on the young man's asserted role in the costly blaze which 1utted the large frame barracks during the dinner hour last Jan. 7. They did. however, detail Zipf's le gal counsel in the inquiry -Col. Gordon Gary. One goal or the special Inquiry is to determine ii cha rges should be filed in the blaze. The fire struck the World War JJ.vin· lage barracks while most of its 269 occup ants were awa y at a bowling tournament and dinner. The few men who remained behind were either burned or cut during their escape. · Several vaulted lrom second-story win- dows to nee the explosive blaze, which originally was thought to have started in a boiler room. Three officers will l!iit on the panel of investigators. Base spokesmen could not say when • deeision would be reached. Teen-age Pelters Of Train Nabbed Stealthy railroad agents for the Santa Fe ca ptured a group of San Clemente boys who aJlegedly pelted a passing train with rocks over the weekend. The boys, turned over to police for action, range in age from 12 to 16 year1 old. The original rock inci dent occurred last Thursday as 1 passenger train pass· ed through San Clemente. Flying rocka broke out one window of a passenger car, police said. Then, during: the weektnd, railroad detectives placed a stake out in the area of the beach and Bu'ena Vista and assertedly saw the four boys throw rocks onet: again at a passing train. The boys were released to their parents later, pend ing possible action in juvenile court, eflicers 1ald, ing that he was expe<:ling to finish some time tonight. Nol more th.an a mile from Aries was Bob Beauchamp's Dorothy 0. One or the other was calculated to be the third boat to finish. Banberas Bay was as flat as milk on a platter early this morning. By midmorning a five to ten knot breeze 0 Down the Mission Trail Dana Statue Set For Discussion MISSION VIEJO -Les Re mme rs will be guest speaker at the Tuesday, Feb. 16 meeting of the Saddleback Valley Cha,mber of Commerce al noon in the Mission Viejo IM. Remmers has been spearheading a campaign t'o provide 1 statue of Richard Henry Dana for Dana Point Harbor. Al!o on the agenda will be the In- troduction of Lynn Exner. the new ?.1iss Saddleback Valley. e Rifle Classes MISSION VIEJO -A junior.senior rifle club and a hunter's safety program will be offered to members of the Mission Viejo Recrealion Centers at the Mon· tanoso Center. Participants I I years old and up may receive information by c11Jing the Mon- tanoso Center at 837·4084. The rifle club will include lectures on shooting safety and the handling of guns. T-.1embers ~·ill take written e1· aminalion.s . and eventually join the Na· tional Rifle Association. The sa fety pro- gram will be offered tD children under 16 years of age. e Baseball Deadline MISSION VIEJO -Pony and Colt League ba seba ll registration has been set ror 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 20, with a second chance on Feb. '!l, league president Dale Moffitt said. Registration for both days will be in multipurpose room "A" or Mission Viejo High School. The leagues are open to Saddleback Valley boys, including those from El Toro and University Park, who are 13 years old as of Aug . 1, 1971, but no older than 18 that day. The fee is $15 per boy up to $25 for any one family and includes uniform and insurance. e Ecolog11 Talk LAGUNA HIL~ -"The Problem of Ecology and Pollution and What We Can Do About It'' will be the topic o{ Saddleback College science division chairman Frank 0 . Sclarotta at a 4 p.m. program 11ponsored bf the Geneva Presbyterian Church. Laguna Hills, Sun- d8' Feb. 21. The program will be held In the church, 24301 El Toro Road. Subdivision OK'd By Supervisors Police responding to a sllent alarm arrested two Santa Ana youlha Sunday as they assertedly left Dan Gurney's All American Racers plant carrying valuable tools. Sketching Croo·ks Into Jail A new subdivision just south of the San Diego Freeway has been approved by the Board of Supervisors but with strict sound proofing conditions atlached . The John Klug development of 598 homes near Yale Avenue and Moulton Parkway was rezoned from egricultura\ to residential use. Planners required thal sound proofing be provided because of the property's nearness to the Santa Ana Marine Corps Air Facility. The supervisors added a unique con· diUon that the structures must adhere to any new sound standards adopted by tht county in the future. This condition would have 1 llmlted life. however as it would be tnloretd only whtn either the tract map or con- 1tructlon permits for the 1ubdlvlslon were approved. I The company spokesman uid the tools were to be flown today to Argentina where they would be used by pit crews servicing two of Gumey's racing cars. He said if the tools bad not been recovered the cars could not have been raced . Arrested were Stephen A. Lmnett, 11, and Scott E. Haller. 18. LeoneU WIS a formtt employe of the Gurney firm which is located at 23.14 S. Broadway, Santa Ana. ' 11 Die in Clashes CALCUTTA (AP) -Eleven pmons wm ldlltd Sundoy In pr ... 1..Uon cl11he1 between Mar1111ta •nd their rival1 In Calcutta and other parts of We!t Ben1al. I San Cleme1ite Police Artist 'Captures' Suspects By JORN VALTERZA Of ltit 0.111 !'ltM lleff Sandy Martin is no policeman-never has been but he helps catch .:Tooks all the um .. And he does it with 1 tiny metal box, ptncils •nd 1 JitUe stack of eyes, lips and heads he carries around ·in 1 mall vinyl pouch. San Clemente police detective& ct1n· aider him invaluable in a major in· vesU/Btion. Give him 45 minutes with even a hysterical victim or witness, lbey 1ay, and he'll turn out a chilling likeness ' of a rapist, robber~ven 1 killer. Martln, 73, the only police artl.sl - '! save for the standard, sketchy tden- Uklt-between ctntnl Orange COUnty and the Mexican border. The quiet, kind and patient retired commercial •rtlst isn't in it for tht money, because he wanl"i none. He catches crooks for nothing. How he goe:a 1b6ut It ls 1 fascinating trip Into the puzzling world of the human mtm0ry under stress. Martin ond this DAILY PILOT reporter 11l down recently to engage In a Jlttle exercise of "I'll describe you and you draw yourself." Save tor the lack of agllllion and slress, we made It authentic. ' Here's how it went: We sat down at Martin'& tiny de!ktop e•.sel which held tracing paper. And in routine fashion he unloaded his eqes and lips, stiling them aside for latter. We started, instead . with the general shape of the head and hi:ws-he has about a half dozen versions of thole. One emerged as the closest shape and wenL under a blank sheet of tracing paper. Next we worked on the hair . It went fast. "If It's: not right, make a change ISee !IARTI!i, P•a• Ii \ had sprung up which was moving the boats closer to the finish line. The main body of the fleet was sprtad out for more thaf\ 200 mile3 ao."0!5 the Gulf of California \\ith several reporting in the vicinity of tres Marias Islands. • ra1 Red Chinese Renewing Warnings SAIGON (UPI) -Lt. Gen. Hoang Xuan Lam, commarider or the 16,000 South Vietnamese troops in LaO!, said today his men have cut the main branch of the Ho Chi Minh Trail. He predicted a major Communist offensive to reopen it. Communist China renewed its warnings today against U.S. intervention in La05, and western diplomats in Vientiane ex· pressed concern about possible Chinese intervention in Laos. They based their fears on Peking statements and remarks of Chinese diplomat.a to senior Laos officials in Vientiane. There also were new anti-American demonstrations in China , this time in Shanghai where Korean War veterans called the American military "a paper tiger.'' There were similar mass dfmonstrations earlier in Peking and other Chinese cities, emphasizing Peking charges the invasion of Laos was "a grave menace" to China. U.S. spokesme n in Saigon said 1 U.S. Air Force Fl05 "Wild Wea~!" jet made a ··protective reaction" strike Sunday against a Communist missile site in North Vietnam. And in Vientiane American sources said a U.S. plane accidentally bombed a CIA·SUpported clandestine army base at Long Cheng in northern Laos, killing 10 Meo hill tribesmen and wounding 20 persons including an American believed to be a member of the CIA . Lam predicted heavy fighting 1ince the Comm unists "have to keep the ir supplies open" and told television cameraman Tra in Dal P.1inh there were two North Vietnamese divisions, the 308th and 320th, totalling 20,000 men facing hls 16.000.man force. He said the North Vietnamese were being re[lforced by the 304th NV A Division with another 10,IMXI men. But asked if the S o u t h Vietnamese forces were spread too thin he said, "we are very sttong here ." There also were Indications tank bat. ties might be in the offing along the Ho Chi Minh trail. Lam said his air and ground units have knocked out five PT76 Soviet·built tanks and a number of T34 tanks in the eight-day old invasion. The South Vietnamese have lost two to enemy gunfire. U.S. military sources in the field disclosed that 10 percent of the America n helicopters :iupporting the South Viet· namese invasion of Laos have been destroyed or severely damaged during the first week of the operation. They said more than 300 were being used and this would mean 30 or more shot down. Orange Coast Weather Cloudy skies, which may leak a llttle in spota, are the outlook for Tuesday along the coast, with temperatures sk:lnned back lo the middle 60s. INSIDE TODAY Can.jW1ion reigned 11.1prtme in Britain today as that nation :icrapp«d it& 800..yaar-old mo11e· tary system. for a decimal coin.. ngt likt that used in tha U.S. and Europe. See :itor11 Page '- s rmt ,. IMll,,. fJ c:1u,.,~i. • Cfltc;l"" u, 1 ci.n1tltd ,,.n (Mtlct M Cr.t-P'd H Offlll Ntlltn It DIW1'1itt 19 l411'fr1tl ..... • •11ttrt1lflPMft1 1•n IWro.c.-u All~ L..-...n ti MlttltM l ie .. .-It Mewlft 1•1t N1llllltl Ntw1 W Or1-Clwollty It S"'11 ll•N Tilt•""' 11 T'llttltt\ l•lt Wffltltr 4 w._••NfWl 1).1t W.rlill .. ,..., ... ' I i • • I ) z OAJLY PILOl SC MOfldQ", ftbruv1 15, 1971 !!!_ County Hills Pat1·iotism Hiker Survives Honor Goes 42-hour Ordeal 1 To Countian A 15-year-old Anaheim boy was home u.re today after a 42·hour ordeal in the mountains near Saddleback Peak. Richard D. Connelly swvived a 20-foot ran down a waterfall and two hours of se.nti-consclousneu during his wan· derlngs after he became lost from a high school hilting club outing Friday. "1 never thought I would not be found and I kept praying," the boy v.•as quoted as saying. He regained contact wlth others Sunday morntng when he came acron an off-duty Marine ftshing ln the Bear Springs' area. · Richard became lost while on a planned one day hike with 17 members cf the Magnolia High School l'll-Ountain club. lt was his first hike with the group. "I slowed down and began to fall behind a bit," the bey explained "I kept seeing glimpses of them around the bends but 1 couldn't catch up and finally lost them." He told ol h<arlng people talking and !leelng helicopters but effort! to make his whereabouts known failed in every instance. Satunlay nigh\ he slept In a ditcll he bad ctua. covered wllh leaves. $5,185 irt Loot Taken iri Mesa Holiday Heist Taking advantage of the long wtekend, burglars raided a vacationing Costa Mesa executive's home Saturday and stole $5,185 In valuables, including gold and illver table service. A policeman's wife llvlng ln the same area pinpointed the approximate time of the burglary when she recalled seeing window shades -left up by the family -closed at mid-afternoon. James 0 . Hickl, a roofing company vice president, notified authoriUes of the looUng when he returned home from Palm Springs. Officer Jim Farley said the ransacked residence at 2980 Mindanao Drive, was entered via a rear bedroom sliding glw door jimmied open with a ilry tool. Pillow cases were used as bag1 to carry the 12-servlce 1Uver and goldware sets, plus jewelry, an antique silver watch, lwo cameras, two rifles, a .45 caUber automatic pl1tol, radio, co I o r television set and ml1cellaneous Items. Hicks said living room drapes were left open and found that way upon his return, but the nelghberhood witness told police lhe saw them closed at one point Saturday afternoon. Magazine Given By Birch Group The Youth Chapter of the John Blrch Society of San Clemente has donated .a one year :rubacrlptlon to American Opinion magazine to the San Clemente High School Library. Other glfta to the high school include a set of Harvard Classics and four miscellaneow books donated by Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Stova\1 and four display cases donated by Peter Le Gakes. The C-Oncordla School PT A donated $400 to their school for supplemental equipment and materials. Dr. Herman Sobel has donated a violin to the district's music depertment. All the gift. have been accepted wllh thank~ b:v the school board. DAILY PILOT M..,.n .. acll Hntf.,t .. ..... i..tne ... ,. .. ...... ,.., C ... M... hlCI ... OIVMGI C.oAIT ruaLllHIMQ CCIMPAKY R•bert N. w,,4 Pr•lll1111I erAI ,,,,I.,,... J ttk K. Cvrl.., "'" 1"tllfwll tM O..tl Mtnttu Thtll'"' Kttvll ~lltf' 7lio111•• A. Murphl11t M-glnJ Edit« ttl~tiatd P. Ht U loulh Or•• (Ollnl)' l'ltor ""'"' cn11 MIM I "'..,,, •• , l tNtt ,,...,.,. 111'1'11 nn w.1 .... , aoultYtri • ~ ... Cllt ftl l'-1 A_. "411111'"'""' ~I 171,I ... ell louNwrC $111 Cltmtl'lttl at Nttn. 11 C:tmln!I JI.NI • • ' A uscue team of Sherill's deputie.'I, county firemen and U.S. Forestry person· nel covered more than 60 square miles in the search for the bey since Friday. Newport Fir1n Planning Sale Of Debentures Avco Financial Service!, Inc. has filed with the Securlte1 and Exchange Com· mission a registration statement covering a proposed public sale of $W million of senior debentures due March 1, 1971. The announcement of the bond sale was made today at the Newport Beach headquarters of Avco C-Orp., parent com· pany of Avco Financial Services. The offering will be made by a na· Uonwide underwriting group managed by Lehman Bros., Inc., probably in early March. Net proceeds from the sale of the bonds will be added to the general fund s of the company and will be available to pay current indebtedness and to carry additional recei\1ables. Application will be made to list the debentmes on the New York Stock Ex- change. AVCO Financial Services Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of AVCO C-Orp., was formerly Seaboard Finance Co. The com· pany conducts Its lending operations in two major areas of the finance business, nam ely consumer loans and sales flnan~. Through subsidiaries, the com· pany also conducts an i n s u r a n c e business, in part related direcUy to its finance activities. Bathers Beached By 01illy Spell The first half of the weekend -v.•hen sunny skies and high temperatures in the 70s graced the South Coast -lured summerlike crowds to San Clemente's beaches. But the throngs dwindled Sunday as a chilly overcast settled over the area. San Clemente lifeguards said totlll beach attendance last Friday and Satur- day reached 29,000 on city beaches and those in county territory patrolled by the city servi ce. Water temperatures In the mid 50s. however, kept most of the beachgoers out of the surf. No major rescues or other Incidents were repOrted. Sunday's total attendance dropped con· siderably to 9,000 persons. who enjoyed only a few hours of sunshine before the cloud cover moved back In. 'Sorry Frank' -$59 Returned to Victhn RICHMOND , Va. IAP) Franklin Harder, 37, was working on his car Sunday when three men grabbed him from behind and robbed him of 161. A few minutes later, he told police, a man he"d never seen before walked up to the car, threw $59 on the front seat and said : "I'm sorry, Frank, 1 didn't realize it was you." The Odd Couple "' ' '>- " • Drifting Along ' J U"I T1._..l9 The act of defen ding the f I a g has earned a Santa Ana re11Jdent · lhe Freedoms Foundation George \Va.shington Award and $5,000 presented today at Valley Forge, Pa. Bill Pierson, Navy veteran. Is to be cited for standing off a chanting mob of 150 students nearly a year ago on the Cal State San Diego campus. Heavy winds coupled with more than a foot or new snow produced scenes like this in Rochester, N.Y., over the weekend. Elsewhere in upstate New York. roads \Vere blocked by four to six·foot drifts and thousands of commuters were unable to get borne since last Thursday. Many spent the four-day week· end in hotels. Despite ne\v snow, ski resorts were forced to close because skiers couldn't gel to them. Then a student at the t'ollege, Pierson was walking to class when he saw the flag being raised and lowered b)! student11. Some wanted it flying at full &tali, others at half mast. Raising it to the top, Pierso n, a six·foot. three inch, 250 pou~uarde<I the nag for more than three hours. The citation accompanying the award reads: ··for loyal pa1riot1sn1 so clrarnaticallY demonstrated when, for three and one· half hours, he stood alone a o d defenseless. defy ing a screan1ing, heckl· ing, menacing group of di ssident students bent on tearing down and destroying an American Flag. Valley School Looms For Crippled Pupils Admiral Zumwalt Sways Top Foe SAN DIEGO (AP ) -Adm. Elmo mv.•alt's visit to San Diego was viewed ay as a victory -over perhaps most vocal opponent of his "Z.gram" "For ilis simple statement. "l w a s born under that Flag ; I foug ht under that Flag and I a1n going to college because of what ii stands for. 'fo me !hat Flag is a symbol of everything my country has stood for in the past and everything it will stand for in the future.' " By TERRY S. COVILLE Of 1111 01111 ,.IJl;I U1H By this time riext year, 100 children confined to wheel chairs or walking with crutches may attend their own school in Fountain Valley. It all depends on how fast state legislators push through an emergency bill to release more money for the construction of special schools. "\\'e've been told such a bill has cleared the Assembly," reports Mike Brick, superintendent of the Fountain Valley School District. His district is laying the groundwork for the ortbopedically hand i capped school. lt will serve crippled children from seven school districts from Newport Beach to Seal Beach. Two months ago plans were under way for const ruction of the special school di strict when state authorities said there was no construction money left for speci al schools. An old law limits state-aid on special schools to 3.S percent of state bend money that bas been sold for school construction. "The Asser:nbly has now amended that figure to be 3.5 percent of all bond money approved, whether the bonds have been sold or not," Brick explained. "But it still has to go through the Senate ." 'fhe orthopedically handicapped school 'Yill handle about 100 crippled children from the Fountain Valley, Newport·Mesa, La g una Artist Lecture Slated Laguna Beach artist Vincent Farrell will give a lecture·demonstratlon on oils and acrylics for the La ke Fore st Associa- tion of Artists and CraJl!men Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the Lake Forest Beach and Tennis Club. Born in Santa Barbara. Farrell has spent most of hi s life in his native stale. exhibiting his art work in many invitational shows. A me mber of the Laguna Beach Art Association. he maintains a studio in Laguna and is a Festival of Arts ex· hihitor. Hunti ngton Beach High, Hunllnglo ts liberahzing the Navy . Beach City, Ocean Vi~w .. Westminster AfU!r the U.S. Chief of Naval Opera· arrd Seal Beacll school districts. tions met with active and former ad- No district in this area has a school mirals last weekend, retired Vice Adm. specially equipped to handle &tudents L. Sherwood Sabin Jr. said: in wheel chairs, on crutches or witb ''I support him entirely in the things missiog limbs. he is b:ying to do for the Navy." The school will be combined with a Sabin, 71, said In a speech last month regular elementary school. that the Navy was fostering "a dangerous "The combination will allow han-permissiveness." He met Friday wlth dicapped children to intermix with Zumwalt and later said: "My concern others, es they must in 1ociety," Brick was for the fighting effecUveness of said. the fleet and the imafe of the Navy 'fhe oi:thopedlc school will be equipped man in the community.' Newsmen were with special classes and special teachers barred from the meeting. to handle the crippled youngsters. Jt 'The recent orders from Zumwalt, 50, will also have an out-patient clinic staffed Included relaxing regulations to permit with medical personnel by Orange C-Oun-beards and carefully cultured long hair, ty 's health department. mod clothing worn off base and work School districts currently pay for unllorms to and from quarters and duty private instruction of orthopedically han· assignments. dicapped students. The new school would Sabin a 1urvlvor of the Pearl Harbor greaUy rtduce costs while providing ban· attack, retired after 44 years in the dier facilltle! for tbt children. Navy. However, if the tlmergeocy bill bits a snag, or Fountain Valley doesn't receive any of the new money, the orthopedic school couJd be delayed at least two years. But Brick speak! optimistically: "We have the support of state Senator Dennis Carpenter (R-Newport Beach), and Assemblymen Kenneth Cory ( D • Anaheim) and Robert Burke (R·Hun· tington Beach)." 'Holy Water' Tainted JERUSALEM (UPI} -lsr&el ls quarantining bottles of ••Holy Water'' Moslem pilgrims bring back from Mec- ca's sacred well of Zamzam following reports the well rruiy be contaminated with cholera and malaria, the health ministry aald today. Doll Delivers! Pull a Zipper and Out Pops Baby PARI S (AP) -Children sated v.•ith si lly dollies who only we! their pants or croak •·mama'' got a very grownup new toy ?ttonday: a pregnant doll that turns anybody's S.year~ld into an obstetrician. The child just pulls on a zipper running along the blue and v.·hite trou sers of the "future mama doll ," and out pops a baby. lt is pai nless childbirth. The doll, de11crlbed by its manufac· turers as the first of its kind in the world, was unveiled at the Paris Toy Show. "ll's an educational Uly. de11igned to demystify childbirth," said A n d re e Ges sct a spokesman-for Pintel, the manufacturer. "We've found that abeut nine out of 10 people who've seen it think it's in good taste. ''The rest complain that It's not necessary for kids W know where they come from, bul our attitude is that v.-ith men on the moon, you can't keep saying that Jacques' baby brot.Mr was left in the cabbage patch by a stork,'' he added . The baby. 1,1,·hose father is not named in the sales brochure. is a unisex chiltJ which loois reassuriJ1gly Uke the smiling, blonde mother. She v.·ears a bright pink doll's maternity dress over her trousers. Once in the cruel world. the little baby doll cries If you squeeze it. Mrs. Gesset said that most children v.•ho played with the dolls "considered the whole arrangement with such naturalness that it shames any adult who is troubled by the notion." The doll. which probably will be el· ported, sells for .9. • A MODERN UP TO DATE JEWELRY and LOAN WITH YOU IN MIND • CASH LOANS On moat any •rticle, sp.cialiting in low cost, short term lo•ns,. Pierson, a native of Oklahoma City ls a Navy veteran with service off Viet· nam. Among others who have received the Freedoms Foundation George Washington Award are former President Herbert Hoover, Walt Disney, FBI Direc- Uir J . Edgar Hoover, astronaut John H. Glenn, Jr. and Gen. Harold K. Johruon, fonner U.S. Army Chief of Staff. Nine others from Orange County were commended by the Freedoms Foundation today, including acU>r John Wayne, of Newport Beach who was given the Na· tional Service ?t1edal "for consistent, unaba&hed loyalty to America and Its ideals. The citation accompanying Wayne 's award continues, .. For heroic movie ex· ploits which have inspired American fighting men ; his visits to Gls in combat zones and bis support of the younger generation 'who have taken more interest in society than we did'." others commended today include: From El Toro: Marine Corpl Maj. • Don&ld M. Babltz, an Honor Certificate Award for his spee<:h given Dec. 3, 19'9. From Fullerton: Daniel H. Poole , George Washington Honor Medal for his magazine article "A Young Patriot Speaks His Mind." From Garden Grove: Miss Tyler DeHaven, Honor Certificate for youth essay "Our Constitution -Ordained by Free Men, Sustained by Free Men." From Loi Alamlto1: Hugh Brainard of the Naval Air Station, George Washington Honor Medal for his Armed Forces letter "Freedom -Privilege or Obligation?'' M ore more From l\lission Viejo : Judy A. Headlee. 26892 Preciados Dr., }lo nor Certificate for her magazine article "Patriotism: To Be or Not To Be."' From Santa Ana : ~1arine Corps Private George E. ~1ichael. Jfonor Certificate for his Armed Forces Jet ter ''Freedom -Privilege or Obligation?" Santa Ana C o 11 e g e, Distingu ished Service Award in the college campus programs category. From Tustin: Re v. Harold F. Le~strna . George Washington Honor f\.1edal for his sermon "The Foundations Are Strong ." Others honored at today's Washington's Birthday observance are former House Speaker John W. McCormack. joupiist Victor Riese!. businessman H. Ross Perot and radio newsman Paul Harvey. • SAVE MONEY ON EVERYTHING YOU BUY e DIAMONDS & JEWELRY e MUSICAL INSTRUMINTS e STEREO EQUIPMENT e SPORTS GEAR and Many More Items • c-in and Sft wliat - offer our CU1tomen. A new and 1111-1 experience in in shop p I n 9 •ntoyment. Where people in the know SGYe money "ert time they bsy. 1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • RND IT HERE RRST Somebody forgot to lell ''Foxy" and "r.fuske t" that they are natural enemies. The swill, brO\\'n fox an d the twagle with a bar itone voice live in th e ba ck yard of the Danny D\\•ight home In Ventura. They share meals and playtime. Life is good. They even have carpeting on the floor of their A·fran1e home. Ratitis COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN 1838 NEWPORT BLVD· PHONE 646-7741 DOWll!TOWN COSTA MESA -lotw-Har._ & l'°"dw1y I I ,, \ I 1 f ' ' Laguna Beaeh j EDI Tl'ON Your Hometown Dally Paper VOL M, NO. 39, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNI A .,. MONDAY, FEBRUARY IS, 1971 TEN CENTS Vedder Vows 'New Era' in Playhouse History Former Laguna Beach m1yor GleM. Vedder wa.s: elected president of the Laguna Beach Community Players at a special meeting of the new Playhouse board Sunday. Ruth Osgood Salyer, president of. the L,tguna Beach School of Art was named vi~ president, with stockbroker Robert Rascal Next L. Marvin, treasurer. and Everett Davis, Newport Beach land de v e Io per, secretary. "We are beginning a new era in com· munity theater for Laguna Beach:' sald Vedder, \li'ho also serves on the. board of directors of the Festival of Aris. "Only the community can bring it into • full reahzation. We \!!'ant and urgently require full community participation. Everyone is part of the Laguna Players and we need and welcome volunteers for every area of theater work." Vedder callat a special meeting of the new board for Feb. 20. Ten vacancies on the 12-member Playhnuse. board v.·e.re filled when the official slate of candidates presenled at the general membership meeting in the Playhouse Sunday afternoon v.·as ac· cepted without change. A combination of resignations and ex· piring terms hed left only two board members, attorney Gerald Brown and Mrs. Salyer, remaining in office. rive ..........uts Elected lo the board were incumbent director Tulley Brown, who ran for re-elect ion: jow:nalist William H. Beatty; longtime players member Otho M. ·"Son- ny " Budd: land developer .Everett Davis ; Philip Davis, president of KWIZ radio; Keith Gaede, president of the San Joa· quin Associates; Kent Johnson, director 0 • Sirius II Wins Race to Mexico By ALMON LOCKABEY DAIL.Y f'IL.OT .. '11111 1.it.r PUERTA VALLARTA -Bob Lynch's 82-foot cutter SiriU3 II from Newport Harbor Yacht Club crossed the finish line at 10 :20 p.m. Sunday to become the first to finish in the 1,125-mile Marina del Rey to Puerta Vallarta race. Second boat in the 2&-foot fleet will be Bill Wilson's Rascal from Santa J!,arbara Yacht Club which at 10:~ a.m. today~ was about five miles from the finish line. Sirius ll beat Ruell by 11 hours which means that Rascal will have beaten Sirius II on corrected time. A large crowd greeted Sirius 1 at the new Puerta Vallarta marina II she- was eased stern to the sea wall last night. "How was Ui.e race," Lynch v.·as asked. "Slow" was his succinct answer. Lynch said there was only about 2ta hours during the race when there was enough wind to move the boat anywhere: near hull speed. · Costa Mesa Girl Rescued From Apartment Fire A young Costa .Mesa worn~ remains Jn critical condition today with burns over 80 percent of her body, after being rescued from her blazing apartment S&turday morning. Jeanette Vasbinger, 23, of 388 W. Wilson St.. apparently became confused and collapsed while seeking a way out, blocking the apartment door. Firemen Roger Lopossa and Jack Michaels braved the inferno to rescue Miss Vasbinger, whlle two other oc- cupant:!! of the apartment escaped on their own. Batta1ion Chief Ron Coleman said Miss Vubinger's mother and a friend. M~chael Hetrick, climbed out a bedroom window and were uninjured. Investigators tentatively blamed the $4;500 blaze on a clgaret dropped into the living room couch and 1moldered until after the three ocxupanta retired. Miss Vasblnger was taktn to the bum· unit of Orange County Medical . Ctn~· In critical condition and remained m that condition today. Besides covering most of her body, the burns suffered after the victim col- lapsed due to smoke inhalation art' se'vere, nurses aaid. Chilly Waters Rout Vi sitors More tha11 16,0Ckl sun-lovers flocked to Art Colony beaches Friday and Satur· day, but the. chilly water ten:iperatures kept most of them on dry land. Llguna Beach lifeguards reporl Lifeguards said the only rescue made during the two-day heat wave was that of two Newport Beach youths whose boat engine had failed Friday evening. The. 20-foot craft, being piloted by Mike McGinty, of 1309 Marine Drive, broke down off Victoria Beach and llfeguatd Lt. ;Eugene dePaulls assisted 16-ye&N>ld McGlnty in anchoring the boat u.nUI the Co11st Guard arrived. , The craft was then t o .., e d bid: to Ne..yport Stach where McGtnty and a companton, Biii Boyd, were united with thtlr worrlfd parents. ri • The. race started at 12:1$ p.m. Satur- day, Feb. 6. Siriun' elapsed time was eight days, ten hours, five minutes and 15 seconds. Russ Ward's Ariu·reported this morn- ing that he was expecting W finish some time tonight. Not more than a mile from Aries was Bob Beauchamp's Dorothy O. One or the other was calculated to bt tl!• third !ml to finish . Slot Machine Scandal Hits Army in Viet WASHINGTON (AP) -The Army plans to ban slot machines soon from its' clubs in Vietnam. But · senatorial investigators still intend to determine how the devices got there in the first place and whether the mlllion5 of dollars put into them have contributed to widespread corruption. In makinJ its announcement late last week, the Army said it is removing the more than 2,700 slot machines from its bases in Vietnam because it is n-:it practical to maintain them in a war zone. But some members of Congress see the machines as the front of a climate of corruption they gay has spread throughout the management of the military services' annual $6-blllion nonap· propriated-fund activities which are sup- ported through sales to Gis and their families. Slot machines generated more than $27.5 million..ln revenue to Army clubs alone in 1161. Hearings opehiflg before the Senate permanent invesUgalions sub- committee Wednesday are expected to flroduct rnon dtmJnds they be banished from all rftlliWy bases. Sen. Edwan! · J . Gurney (!!.Fla. I. rtportln1 to lbe subc1'mmlttee on a trip to Vietnam last Novembef for the in- vestigations pantl, is the latest to make that demand. "From Augsburg, Gennany. in •he early 1960s to Vietnam in the early Jt70s, the presence of 'one-armed ban· dits' has bun an lmportant contributing factor in the corruption that we fOUJ'\d,'' Gurney reported. ·- A MARINE CAPTAIN ESCAPED WITH HIS LIFE IN CRASH DESTROYING CAR With Only Mino r Cuts, C.pt. MacMaster Estimated Loss At About $3,000 $40,000 Emerald Bay Fire Blamed on Wiring There is a possibility that raulty elec· tric wiring may have caused a fire lhat seriously dam aged an $80,000 Emerald Bay home Saturday night, a county fire Department spokesman said today. The blaze at 11 Emerald Bay Dr ive was reported by several residents when it broke out at 9:20 p.m. OccupanL'i of the home, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Hall, winter visitors from Denver. Colo. had left for dinner about two hours earlier. Fifteen men in three engine companies battled the fire for more than half an hour before bringing it under control. Damage to lhe house and its contents Hooch Hijacked LONDON (AP) -Hijackers attacked a driver and his mate near London docks today and escaped with a truckload of whisky valued at $104 ,160. was estimated al $40,000. The two-sLory frame and studcco struc· ture ls owned by Ralph Roberts of Pasadena and had been rented for the winter by Hall , who county fire officials said is a retired Army sergeant. WINTER FE STIVA L PREVIEW SLAT ED The DAILY PILOT present.!, In a special two-page spread to be published Tuesday, a preview of the 1971 Winter Festival. lt opens Its 17-day run in Laguna Beach on Friday. The special stories, photos and ads from Laguna Beach are designed to tell residents from throughout the Orange Coast the. entire Festival story in a capsule. Watch for It Tuesday inside all editions of the DAILY PILOT. Marine Captain Injuries Minor After Accid ent A Marine Corps captain escaped with only minor cuts and bruises early Satur· day morning when his sports car struck a guard rail In Laguna Canyon, "com pletely d I st n le grating •' the fiberglass body of the auto. Laguna Beach police said John C. MacMaster, 27, of 1076 La Mirada, was heading toward home at about 6 a.m. when the mishap occurred just north of Sycamore Flats. The Marine ap- parently lost control of his car, officers said, and slammed into the newly-in· stalled guard rail. He estimated the Joss at about $3,000. The fiberglass car body shattered on impact. but MacMaster tuffered only a cut lip and a few bruis~s as a result of lhe accident. He apparently was thrown inlo a field. Sketching Crooks Into Jail ·Laguna Hearing For Bus Line Funds Slated The Laguna Beach City Council has set a March 3 date for the requ ired public hearing on Its proposed appJi. cation for federal tundlng of the city bus line. . San Ckmente Police., Artist 'Cap tures' Suspects By JOHN V ALTERZA Of .... Dtlty , .... SI.ti Sandy Martin is no polltf:man-never has bttn but he helps catch crooks all tbe time. And he does it with a tiny metaJ boi, penci!s and a liltle stack of eyes, lips and htads he carriu .around ln a arnall vlnyl pouch. San Clemente polict detec:llve1 con- lfdet him invaluable in a m*r ~ vtsU,ation. Give him 4$ mlnute1 wllb evtn a hytterical victim or witnes1, they 11y, and he'll turn out a chllllna llkeoe11 of a·raplst, l'Ob~ven 1 killer.· Martin, 73, the only police artist - save for the 5tandard, sketchy Iden· tikit-between central Orange County and the fi,fe1ic·an border.' The quiet. kind and pitlent reti red commercial arUst bn't In It for the money, becaU$t he wanta none. He catches crooks for nothing. How he goes about It ls a fascinating trip into the puzzling world of tbe human memory under stress.. Martin and thb DAll,Y PILOT reporttr sat down recently to engage in 1 little exercise of "I'll de11eribe you and you draw your&elf." Savt for the lack o( agitation and 1tress, we made lt 1uthentic. Here's bow it went: We ut down at f.1artln's tiny desktop easel which held tracing paper, And in routine fashion he unloaded ltls eqe1 11\d lips, stiling them aside for latter. We &tarted. instead, with the general shape of the head and ja\ls-he has about a half dozen versions of those. One emerged as the closest shape find went under a blank sheet of tracing paper. Next we worked on the hair. It went fast. "If It's not right, make. a change (See fi,fARTlN, Pa&e J) The U.S. Department of Transportation will fund up to two.thirds of the cost of establishing the bus line under the Urba n Mass Transportatlon Act of 1964, city planner Al Autry advised the council last week. Fifty percent of the net project cost Is funded initially, Autry said, with the balance to be refunded at such time as the city has complied with re- quirements for cooperf!tion In the regional tr11onsportation network. This, he said, should be accomplished by October. The city, tn cooperation with the Festival of Arta, "°Ill operate the local rvice with a fleet of four new vehicles . of Newport Beach Cablevision: stockbroker Robert Marvin: actre.u Betsy Paul and former mayor Vedder. A record turnout at the general membership meeting applauded the awarding of life membershipa in the Players to Howard "Hap'' Graham and David and Betsy Paul, favor:ltes of manr. Playhouse productions througl+. the years. • ra1 Red Chinese Renewing Warnings SAIGON (UPI) -Lt. Gen. Hoang Xuan Lam, commander of the 16,000 South Vietnamese troops in Laos, said today his men have cut the main branc h of the Ho Chi Minh Trail. He predicted a major Communist offensive to reopen it. Communist China renewed Its warnings today against U.S. intervention in Laos, and western diplomats in Vientiane ex· pressed concern about possible Chinese intervention in Laos. They based their fears on Peking statements and remarks of Chinese diplomata to senior Laos officials ln Vientiane. -~-Then! also 1\'a'e new anti-American demonstrations in China, th is time in Shanghai where Korean War veterans called the American military "a paper tiger." There were similar . m a a • demonstrations earlier in Peklng and other Chinese cities, emphasizing Peking charges the invasion of Laos was "a grave menace" to China. U.S. spokesmen in Saigon said a U.S. Air Force Fl05 "Wild Weasel" jet made a "protective reaction" strike Sunday against a Communist missile site in North Vietnam. And in Vientiane American sources said a U.S. plane accidentally bombed a CIA-supported clandestine army base at Long Cheng in northern Laos. killing IO Mee hill tribesmen and wounding 20 persons including an American believed to be a member of the CIA . Lam predi cted heavy fighting since the Communists "have. to keep their supplies open" and told television cameraman Train Dal f\.1inh there were two North Vietnamese divisions, the 308th and 320th, totalling 20,000 men facing his 16,0QO.man force. He said the North Vietnamese were being reinforced by the 304th NV A Division with another 10,000 men. But asked if the S o u th Vietnamese forces were spread too thin he said, "we are very strong here." There also were Indications tank bat· ties might be iii the offing along the Ho Chi Minh trail. Lam said his air and ground units have knocked out five PT76 Soviet-built tanks and 1 number of T34 tanks in the eight-day old invasion. The South Vietnamese have lost two to enemy gunfire. U.S. military sources In the field disclosed that 10 percent of the American helicopters supporting the South Viet· namese invasion of Laos have been destroyed or severely damaged during the first week of the operation. They said more than 300 were being used and this would me.an 30 or more shot down. Orange Coast Weather Cloudy skies, which may leak a little in spots, are the outlook for Tuesday along the coast, with temperatures skinned back to lh1 mlddle !Os. INSIDE TODAY Ccm/11sion reigned supreme In Britain today a.s that ·notion scrapptd ii$ 8D0-11tt1r·old mone· tary system for o. dtcimol coin- age like that ustd tn tht U.S. and Europe, Set $tory Page 4. ,,,,,.. ,. 9"1111t 1J CtUferlli. I C11«111.,. Ut ' Ci.wt... Jt·» c-1c• 1• ,...,_,, .. DMlfl NMlen lt OIWtcft 11 ••llwlt l ,.,, f 1.11i.rt•l~P11tlll 1•1• ~.... 14 AIHIL.~ ti ,,_.,rl ... Lltt11M1 1t """'" , .... N&lllllt l ...... 4-f DrotM• C.Vll!Y ,. IMrtt n-H TtWtitlll 11 TIIMttn. , .. ,, w-. ..,,..., .. ,...., .. 1. Wttll NIW\ U j • ) • , z DAILY PILOl SC Mondi], F1briw1 15, 1971 It• County H i lls Patriotism Hiker Survives Honor Goes y 42-hour Ordeal 1 To Countian A 15-year.old Anaheln\ boy v.·as home safe today after a 42-hour ordeal in the mowitains near Saddleback Peak. Richard D. Connelly survived a 20-foot fall down a waterfall and two houri of semi-consciousness during his wan- derings after be became lost from a high school hiking club outing Friday. "I never thought l would not be found and I kept praying," the boy was quoted as saying. He-regained contact with others Sunday morning when he came across an off-Outy r.farlne fishing in the Bear Sprlngs area. Richard became lost while on a planned one day hike wllh 17 members of the Magnolia High School mountain club. Jt \\'U his first tuke with the group. "I slowed down and began to fall behind a bit," the boy explained "I kept seeing glimpses of them around the bends but I couldn't catch up and finally lost them." He told of hearing people talking and seeing helicopters but efforts to make his whereabouts kno"·n failed· in every instance. Saturday night he slept in a ditch be had dug , covered with leaves. $5,185 in Loot Taken in Mesa Holiday Heist Taking advantage of the long w~kend. burglars raided a vacationing Costa Mesa executive's home Saturday and stole $5,185 in valuables, including gold and silver table service. A policeman's wife living in the same area pinpointed the approximate time of the burglary when she recalled seeing window shades -left up by the family -closed at roid·afternoon. James 0. Hicks, a roofing company vice president, notified authorities o( the loot.Ing when be returned borne from Palm Springs. Officer Jlm Farley said the ransacked reside.nee at 2980 Mindanao Drive, was entered via a rear bedroom sliding glass door jimmied open with a pry tool. Pillow cases were used as bags to carry the 12-service silver and goldware sets, plus jewelry, an antique silver watch, two cameras, two rifles, a .45 caliber automatic pistol, radio, co Io r television set and miscellaneous items. Hicks said living room drapes were left open and fowid that way upon his return, but the neighborhood witness told police she saw them closed at one point Saturday afternoon. Magazine Given By Birch Group The Youth Chapter of the J ohn Birch Society of San Clemente has donated a one year 5Ubscrlption to American Opinion magazine to the San C1emente High School Library. Other glfts to the high school Include a set of Harvard Clas.sics and four miscellaneous books donated by Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Stovall and four display cases donated by Peter Le Gakes . The Concordia School PT A donated $400 to their school for supplemental equipment and materials. Dr. Herman Sobol has donated a violin to the district'• music department. All the gifts have been accepted with th anks by the school board. DAILY PILOT Nnrpert h acll Ui•N ... ,. C-te Mn• OllANGI COAST l"Ull1MUNG COMl".U.Y loberf N. w,,,. Pre .. tt1I •rA l"vll!IWr Jock It Curlty Vk l '1111dtt1I •r.d ~rtl M111t;(r Tho'"'' K,,,a Editor 7ftoll'lll A. Murpliin1 Ml"'llfll Efll<>r fl.ich1r4 P. H1U Sou11'1 Or•llllf Clu!I!~ EdllO( Offk• COiii Miii: :Qt W .. I S1y S"'°'I Ntwpol'I a .. cft: 2111 W•I Sl..,1 twltwi"d • lll-111<111 :H1 !<-it AvtnUI ~U<'!!MllOl'I •••di! ,,,,, ••do l!l!M,>l .... 1rdl .5li11 Cltm4111tt: ;)OS Horii\ El C:llTllNI Rell I A res~ue team of sheriH's deputie.,, county firemen and U.S. Forestry person- nel covered more than 60 square miles in the search for the boy since Friday. Newport Firm Planning Sale Of Debentures Avco Financial Services, Inc. has filed with the Securltes and Exchange Com· mission a registration statement covering a proposed public sale of $M milllon of senior debentures due March I, 1971. The announcement of the bond sale was made today at the Newpor t Beach headquarters of Avco Corp., parent com· pany of Avco Financial Services. The offering will be made by a na- tionwide underwriting group man aged by Lehman Bros., Inc., probably in early March . Net pr~eds from the sale of the bonds will be added to the general funds or the company and will be available to pay CWTent indebtedness and lo carry additional recei vables. Application will be made to list the debentures on the New York Stock Ex- change. AVCO Financial Services Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of AVCO Corp., was fonnerly Seaboard Finance Co. The com- pany conducts its lending operations in two major areas of the finance business, namely consumer loans and sales finance. Through subsidiaries, the com- pany also conducts an i n s u r a n c e business, in part related directly to its finance activities. Bathers Beached By Chilly Spell The first half of the weekend -when sunny skies and high temperatures in the 70s graced the South Coast -lured summerlike crowds to San Clemente's beaches. But the throngs dwindled Sunday as a chilly overcast settled over the area. San Clemente lifeguards said total beach attendance last Friday and Satur- day reached ' 29,000 on city beaches and those in county territory patrolled by the city service. Water temperatures in the mid SOs, however, kept most of the beachgoers out of the surf. No major rescues or other incidents \\'ere reported. Sunday's total attendance dropped con- siderably to 9,000 persons, who enjoyed only a few hours or sunshine before the cloud cover moved back in. 'Sorry F r a nk' -$59 Re turned to Victim RI CHMO N D . Va. IAP) Franklin Harder, 37, was working on his car Sunday when three men grabbed him from behind and robbed him of 161. A few minutes later. he told police, a man he·d never seen before walked up to the car, threw $59 on the front seat and said : "I'm sorry, Frank, l didn't rtalize it was you.'' Tlie Odd Co11p le ' • • Drifting Along ' The act or defending the f I a g has earned a Santa Ana resident tht Freedoms F o u n d a l i o n George \Vashington Award and $5 ,000 presented today at Valley Forge, Pa. Bill Pierson, Navy veteran. is to be cited for standing off a chanting mob • of 150 stOOents nearly a year ago on ule·cal State San Diego campus. Heavy '"inds coupled with more than a foot of ne'v snow produced scenes like this in Rochester, N.Y., over the weekend. Elsewhere in upstate New York, roads \Vere blocked by four to six·foot drifts and thousands of commuters were unable to get home since last Thursday. Many spent the four·day week- end in hotels. Despite new snow, ski resorts were forced to close because skiers couldn't get to them. Then a sludent at the college, Pierson was walking to clas.s when he saw lhe flag being raised and lov•effii by students. Some wanted ii Oylng at full 11taff. others at half mast Raisb)g ii to the top, '4rson, a .,1!x·fOOI. thrtt inch, 250 pounder. guarded the nag f9r more than three houn. The citation accompanying the award reads: "For loyal patriotism so dramatically demonstrated when, for three and one· half hours, he slood alone and defenseless, defylng a screaming, heckl- ing, menacing group of dissident students bent on tearing do"'n and destroying a:n American Flag. , Valley School Looms For Crippled Pupils Admiral Zumwalt Swa ys 'Top Foe SAN DlEGO CAP) -Adm . Elmo Zumwalt's visit to San Diego was viewed today as a victory -over perhaps the most vocal opponent of his "Z.gram'' edic~ liberalizing the Navy. ''For his simple statement, ''l w a s born under that Flag; I fought under that Flag and I am going to college because of what it stands for. To me tha t Flag is a symbol of e\•erything my country has stood for in the past and everything it will stand for in the future.' " By TERRY S. COVILLE 01 lht DlllW Pillot 51tll By this time next year, 100 children confined to wheel chairs or walking with crutches rilay attend their own school in Fountain Valley. It all depends on how fast state legislators push through an emergency bill to release more money for the construction of specia l schools. "We've been told such a bill has cleared the Assembly," reports Mike Brick, superintendent of the Fountain Valley School District. His district is laying the groundwork for the ortbopedically h a n d i c a p p e d school. It will serve crippled children from seven school districts from Newport Beach to Seal Beach. Two monlhs ago plans were under way for construction of the special school district when state authorities said there v.·as no construction money left for special schools. An old law limits state-aid on special schools to 3.5 percent of state bend money that bas been sold for school construction. "The Assembly has now amended that figure to be 3.5 percent of all bond mohey approved. whether the bonds have been sold or not," Brick explained. "But it still has to go through the Senate." The orthopedically handicapped sc hool will handle about 100 crippled children from the Fountain Valley, Newport-Mesa, Laguna Artist Lecture Slated Laguna Beach artist Vincent Farrell will give a lecture-demonstration on oils and acrylics for the Lake Forest Associ a· tion of Artists and Craftsmen Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the Lake Forest Beach and Tennis Club. Born in Sant.a Barbara , Farrell has spent most oI his life in his native state. exhibiting his art work in many invitational shows. A member of the Laguna Beach Art Association. he maintains a studio in Laguna and is a Festival of Arts ex· hibitor. . ~· lluntington Beach High, Huntington Beach City, Ocean View, Westminster and Seal Beach school districts. No district in this area has a school specially equipped to handle students in wheel chairs, on crutches or with missing limbs. The school will be combined with a regular elementary school. "The combination will allow han· dicapped children to intermix with others, as they must in society," Brick said. The orthopedic school will be equipped with special classes and special teachers to handle the crippled youngsters. It will also have an out-patient clinic staffed with medica l personnel by Orange Coun- ty's health department. School districts currently pay for private instruction of orthopedically han- dicapped students. The new school would greaUy reduce costs while providing ban- dier facilities for the children. However, i! the emergency bill bits a snag, or Fountain Valley doesn't receive any of the new money, the orthopedic school could be delayed at least two years. But Brick speaks optimistically: "We have the 5Upport of state Senator Dennis Carpenter (R·Newport Beacb), and Assemblymen Kenneth Cory ( D. Anaheim) and Robert Burke (R·Hun· tington Beach)." After the U.S: Chief of Naval Opera- tions met with active and former ad· mirals last ""eekend. retired Vice Adm. L. Sherwood Sabin Jr. said: "I support him entirely in the things he is trying to do for the Navy." Sabin. 71, said In a speech last month that the Navy was fosterin g "a dangerous permissiveness." He met Friday with Zumwalt and later said: "l\1y concern was for the fighting effectiveness of the fleet and the image of the Navy man in the community." Newsmen were barred from the meeting. The recent orders from Zumwalt. 50. included relaxing regulations to permit beards and carefully cultured long hair, mod clothing worn off base and work uniforms to and from quarters and duty assignments. Sabin a survivor oC the Pearl Harbor attack, retired after « years in the Navy, 'Holy Water ' Tainted JERUSALE~1 (U PI) -tsrael is quarantining bottles ef "Holy Water" Moslem pilgrims bring back from Mec- ca's sacred "'·ell of Zamzam following reports the well ma)t be contaminated wilh cholera and ma1aria, the health ministry said today. Doll D elivers! Pull a Zipper arid Out Pops Baby PARIS (AP) -Children sated with silly dollies "'ho onl y wet their pants or croak ''mama'' got a \'ery grownup new toy Monday: a pregnan t doll that turns anybody's 8-year-old into an obstetrician. The child just pulls on a zipper running along the blue and white trousers or the "fu ture mama doll," and out pops a baby. It is painless childbirth. The doll, described by its manufac- turers as the first of its kind in the world, was unveiled at the Paris Toy Show. "It's an educational tQy, designed to demystify childbirth," said Andree Gesset a spokesman for Pintel, the manufacturer. "We've found that about nine out of 10 people who've seen it think it's in good taste. "The rest complain lhat it's not necessary tor kids to know where they come from, but our attitude is that with men on the moon, you can't keep saying that Jacques' baby brother was left in the cabbage patch by a stork." he added. The baby, whose father is not named in the sales brochure, is a unisex child which looks reassuri11gly like the smiling, blonde mother. She wears a bright pink doll's maternity dress over her trousers. Once in the cruel world , the little baby doll cries ir you squeeze it. Mrs. Gessel said that most children \\'ho played with the dolls "considered the whole arrangement with such naturalness that it shames any adult who is troubled by the notion." The doll. which probably will be ex- ported, sells for $9. e A MODERN UP TO DATE JEWELRY and LOAN WITH YOU JN MIND • CASH LOANS On most any article, specl•li1ing in low cost, short term lo.ns. • Pierson, a nati ve of Oklahoma City is a Navy veteran with se rvice off Viet- nam . Among others who have received the Frtedoms Foundation George \Vashington Award art fonner President Herbert Hoover, Walt Disney , FBI Direc- tor J . Edgar Hoover. astronaut John H. Glenn . Jr. and Gen. Harold K. Johnson, former U.S. Army Chief of Staff. Nine others from Orange County v.·erc commended by the Freedoms Foundati on today. including actor John Wayne. or Newport Beach who was given the Na· tional Service Medal "for consistent. unabashed loyalty to America and its Jdeals. The citation accompanying Wayne's award continues. "For heroic movie ex- ploits which. have inspired American fighting men: his visits to Gls in combat zones and his support of the younger generation 'who have taken more interest in society than "'e did'." Others commended today include : From El Toro : P.1arine Corps ~1aj. Donald P.t. Babilz. an Honor Certificate Award for his speech give n Dec. 3, 1969. Fr°"' Fullerton: Daniel H. Poole. George Washington Honor Medal for his magazine article "A Young Patriot Speaks His 1'-1ind. '' From Garden Gro\•e: Miss Tyler DeHaven. Honor Certificate for youth essay "Our Constitution -Ordained by Free Men. Sustained by Free Men ." From Los Alamitos: Hugh Brainard or the Naval Air Station, George \Vashinglon Honor r-.1edal for his Armed Forces lelter "Freedom -Privilege or Obligation?'' l\l ore more From J\1ission Virjo : Judy A. Headlee, 26392 Preciados Dr.. Honor Cert ificate for her magazine article "Palriotism; To Be or Not To Be." From Santa Ana: t-.larine Corps Private George E. ?i.1.ichael, Honor Certificate for his Armed F'orces letter ''Freedom -Privilege or Obligation?" Santa Ana Co 11 e ge, Distinguished Service A"'ard in the college campus programs category. From Tustin: Rev. Harold F. Leestma. George \Vashington Honor Meda l for his sermon "The Foundations Are Slrong." Others honored al today's \Vashington's Birthday observa11ce are former House Speaker Joh n \V. t.1cCormack. journalist Vktor Riesel. businessman H. Ross Perot add radio ne"'sman Paul Harvey. SAVE MONEY ON EVERYTHING YOU BUY e DIAMONDS & JEWELRY e MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS e STEREO EQUIPMENT e SPORTS GEAR and Mlny More It.ms • Come in and see wliat we affer our customers. A new and unusual experience in in shop p in 9 enjayment. When people In the know serve money every time they bvy • 1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRSi Somebody forgot to tell ''Foxy" and "l\luskel" that they are natural enemies. The swift, bro,vn fox and the beagle with a baritone voice live In the back yard of the Danny D\vight home in Ventura. They share meals and playtime. I .. lfe is good. They even have carpeting on the fl oor oC their A·fran1c home. Ratitis COSTA MESA JEWELRY ancl LOAN 1838 NEWPORT BLVD· PHONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA-Iktw-Horb!>r & a,.,.Jw•y \ , s r r ' ., s ' I t San Cle1nente Capistrano VOL. 6'4, NO. 39, l SECTIONS, 32 PAGES EDITION \ ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFQRNh' Y~ur Hometown Dally Paper MONDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1971 TEN CENTS Newport's Siri·us II First to Hit Vallarta By AL\10N LOCKABEY DAILY '!LOT 1~•111111 lidl!tr PUERTA VALLARTA -Bob Lynch's 82-foot cutter Sirius II from Newport Harbor Yacht Club crossl"d the finish line at 10:20 p.m: Sunday to becoriie the first to finish in lhe 1,125-mile It.farina ' del Rey to Pum"ta Vallarta ract. Second boat In the 26-foot fleet wlll be Bill Wilson's Rascal from Santa Barbara Yacht Club wh ich at 10:50 a.m. today was about five miles from the finish line. Sirius JI beat Rascal by 19 hours which means that Rascal will have • beaten Sirim II on correcttd time. A large crowd greeted Sirius 11 at the new Puerta Vallarta marina as she was eased stern to the sea wall last night. "How was the race ," Lynch "·as asked. ''Slow " was his succinct answer . Lynch said there was only about 20 • rive A MARINE CAPTAIN ESCAPED WITH HIS LIFE 'IN CRASH DESTROYING CAR With Only Mino(' Cuti, C•pt. MacMaster Estim•ttd loss At About $3,000 Capo Panel to Discuss Special School Needs A program designed for parents whose thildren need special education ~·ill be presented Thursday at 2:30 p.m. at Marco Forster Junior High in San Juan Capistrano. The e\'ent is jointly sponsored by the Capistrano Unified Council of P!A's, the Laguna Beach Unified Council of PT A's and the San Joaquin School District. Jncluded am ong the panel of speakers will be Dr. Sidney Adler of Anaheim, a neurologist specializing in pediatrics, He is a past member of the Orange County Mental Health Board. Also on the panel will be Evelyn Ericson, coordinator for Special Educa- tion for the Physically Handicapped in Orange County. The third speaker wiU be Dr. Kathleen Morton, a pediatrician who is the Medical Director of the Regional Ce{ller for the Mentally Retarded, Orange County, and AasiJtant professor of pediatrics, UCI. Mrs. Clayton Parker, special education chairman of the CapiJtrano Unified Coun- cil , will be moderator of the program. Dt. Adler ·will attempt to explain the tenn "brain damaged" and in particular describe what is meant by cerebral palsy, orthopedically hand icap ped, aphasia, educable mentally retarded, trainable mentally retarded and autistic. J\.1iss Ericson will explain programs currenUy in existence under the public school system In other areas of Orange County. Dr. Morton will explain the benefits of the early education and or training for these ctilldren with "special needs." She will stress how family crisis can be avoided, human ecology is improved and the community gain1 economically. The program will end with a question and answer session. Two Youths Held In Tool Thefts Marine Captain Injuries Minor After Accident A f\-1arine Corps captain escaped with only minor cuts and bruises early Sa tur· day morning y,·hen his sports car struck a guard rail in Laguna Canyon, •·completely di sin leg rating'' the fiberglass body of the. auto. Laguna Beach police said John C. MacMaster. 27 , of 1076 La Mirada, was heading toward home at about 6 a.m. when the mishap occurred just north of Sycamore flats. The Marine ap- parently lost control of his car, officers .said, and slammed into the newly·in· .stalled guard rail. He estimated the loss at about $3,000. The fiberglass car body shattered on Impact , but MacMaster suffered only a cut lip and a few bruises as a result of the accident. He apparently was thrown into a field. Hooch Hijacked LONDON (AP) -Hijackers attacked a driver and his mate near .I.Andon docks today and escaped with a truckload of whisky valued at $104,160, houn during the race when there wa1 enough wind to move the boat anywhere near hull speed. The race started at 12: 15 p.m. Satur- day , Feb. 6. Siriun' elapsed time was eight days. ten hours, five )Jlinutes and 15 second s. Russ Ward's Aries reported this morn- Pendleton Eyes Action Over Blaze A special board of inquiry at Camp Pendleton resumed its probe this morn· ing to determine if a young Navy Hospitalman .should face formal charges in last January's barracks f¢e which injured six men. Hospitalman James F. Zipf 11, was named last Friday as an "interested party" in the probe ordered by the base Commanding Geoeral G e or g e Bowman. .Spokesmen at I.hf: bafe today 4ave neither an age, ~or a Jtometown tor lhe COrpm'l&n. Tbey also declined to elaborate on the YOlllll rrian's asserted rote In the costly blaze which gutted the large frame barracks during the dinner hour last Jan. 7. They did, however, detail Zipf's legal counsel in the inquiry -Col. Gordon Gary. One goal of the special inquiry is to determi°' i! charges should be filed in the blaze. The fire struck the World War 1I·vin· tage barracks while most of its 2b9 occupants were away at a bowlinl tournament and dinner. The few men who remained behind were either burned or cut during their escape. Several vaulted from seeond-story win- dows to nee. the explosive blau, wbiCh originally was thought to have 1tarted in a boiler room. Three officers will .sll on the panel (lf investigators. Base spokesmen could not say when a decision would be reached. Teen-age P elters Of Train Nabbed Stealthy railroa d agents for the Santa Fe captured a group of San Clemeote boys who allegedly pelted a passing train with rocks over the weekend. The boys, turned over to polict for action, range in age from 12 to 16 years old. The original rock incident occurred last Thursday as a passenger traln pass- ed through San Clemente. Flying rocks broke out one window of a passenger car. police said. Then, during the weekend. reUroad detectives placed a stake out in the area Of the beach and Buena Vista and a-"frtedly saw the four boys throw rocka once agai n at a passing train . The boys were released to their parents later, pending possible action in juvenile court, officers said. ing that he was expecting to finish some time tonight. Not more than a mile from Aries was Bob BeaucMmp's Dorothy 0. One or the Other wa.s calculated lo be the third boat to finish. Banberas Bay was as flat as milk on a platter early this morning. By mldmor,!llng a five to um knot breeze 0 Dow1i the Mission Trail Dana Statue Set For Discussion MlSSION VIEJO -Les Remmers will be guest speaker at the Tuesday, Feb. 16 meeting of the SadPleback Valley Chamber of Commerce at noon ln the Mi55ion Viejo lnn. Remmers has been siw:arheading a camp_aip to providt 1 statue.el,~ Henry Dana for D&lla Point Jlarrti«. Atio oo the agenda "ill be tlM: ln- troducUon of Lynn Exner, the new Mia Saddleback Valley. e Rifle Chu1es MISSION VIEJO -A junior.senior rifle club and a hunter's safety program will be offered to members of the Mlulon Viejo Recreation Centers. at the Mon- t.anoso Center. Participants 11 ye ars old 111d up may receive information by calling the Mon- tanoso Center at 837-4084. The rifie club will include lectures on shooting safety and the handling of guns. Members will take written ex- am inations, a.nd event.ually join the Na· lional Rifle Asaociation. The 1afety pro- gram will be offered to chlldren under 16 years of age . e Ba1eball Deadline M1SSION VIEJO -Pony and Colt League baseball registration has been set for 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 2il, with a second chance on Feb. 'll, league president Dale Moffitt said. Reglatratlon for both day1 will be in mulUpurpooe room "A'' of Mission Viejo High School. The leagues are open to Saddleback Valley boys, including those from El Toro and Universi ty Park, who are 13 years old as of Aug. 1, 1971, but no older than 16 that day. The fe& la $15 per boy up to m for any one family and includes uajform and in1urance. · e Ecolog11 Talk LAGUNA IULLS -"The Problem of Ecology and PolluUon and What' We Can Do About It" will be the topic of 5addleback College stlence division chairman Frank O. Scfarotta at a 4 p.m. proaram sponsored by the Geneva Prt>byl<rlan Church, Laguna Hllll, Sun- day ·Feb. 21. The program will be btld ln tht chW'Cb, 2-UOl El Toro Road. Subdivision OK'd By Supervisors Police reapGl'lding to • silent alarm arrested two Santa Ana youths Sunday as they assertedly Jell Dan Gurney'• All American Ral'efs plan t carrying valuable tools. Sketching Crooks Into Jail A new .subdivision just south of lhe San Diego Freev.•ay has been approved by the Board of Supervisors but wilh strict sound proofing condilions attached. The John Klug development of 598 ho mes nt:ar Yale Avenue a!Kf Pt1oulton Parkway was rcroned from agricultural to residential use. Planners required that sound proofing be provided because of the property'& nearness to the Santa Ana Marl~ Corps Air facility. The 11upervisors added a unique con· dition that the structures must adhere to 1ny new .sound 1tandard! adopted by tht county in the future. This condition would have a limited life however 11s it would be tnforctd only when either the tract map or con· 1tructk>n permits for the 1ubdlvislon v.·ere ipproved. The comp~ny spokesman said lhe tools were to be flown today lo Argentina where they would be used by pit crtws servicing two of Gurney's racing cars. He said if the tools had not been recovered the cars could not have been raced. Arrested were Stephen A. Leonett. 18, ana Scott E. Haller, 18. Leonc:tt was a former employe o( the Gurney flnn which it located at 2334 S. Broadway .. Santa Ana. 11 Die in Clashes CA.LCUTrA (AP) -Eleven ptrsons \\'tr.e kUled Sunday In prt-t.ltcUon cluhes between Mltliltl and their rfv1b. ln Calcutta and other parll of We5t Bengal. I San Clemente Police Artist 'Captures' Suspects ' By JORN VALTEl\ZA °' Ille Ot4ly flfttl Sl.tt Sandy M11rtln .1J no policeman-never has been but he he\ps c1tdl crookl 111 t.be-timo. And he doel It' with I 1Uf!y metlJ bot, pencils and a llttl1 &ttck o( eytt, lips and heads he carries around ln a mull vinyl pouch. San Clemente pollce. detectives con· alder him tnYeluable in. a m1jor in- -ve.sUeatlon. Give him '5 minutes wtth even a hysterical victim or wltnefl. they ·af.)', 11nd ht'll tum oui '-cbU1iDa UhneM of a r1p\1t, rpbbtr-tftll 1-idiir. • Martin, 73, 1hl <mly poftet mlJt - ' save for the alaJMlard, aketcby Jdtn- Uklt-belw«n central Or111re Cowtty Ind the Mui.CM border. The quiet, kind and p1tlent reUred commercial artlst 'ian 't In It for lht money, becaute he wants none. ~ catches trooka for nothing. llow be goe! about lt Is a fuclnallng trip Into the puzzling world of the human memory uoder stress. Martin and this DAILY PILOT re))brttr aat down rtttntly to tng11e ln a lltUe exercise of "I'll detcrlbe you and you ~raw yourself." Savt for the lack of agitation and atress, we made tt 1uthentlc. • Here'a how It went : We s~t down at Martin's tlny desktop ea..i whlch•held trHlnf piper. And In routine ~hlon be, ,unloaded bis tqOS Ind llpc, .. ltiDf' thtm .. ldt for latter. ., . •~\ • We !tarted, lnste•d. with Jhe ctneral ' shape at the htad ·1nd javtf:-he' has about a half dot.to veliians ofthoae.. OM emerged 11 the closest shlipe and went under' a blank 1tieet 'of tracing poper. , Next we wof'ked on the half. It went (HI. •1u It'• not right·, make.·• ·~s:e !See MAl\Tl!I, Plt1e II • had sprung up which was movinc the boats clo.ser to the ftnish line. The main body of the f)eet was apread out for more than 200 miles acro&s the Gulf or Ca!Uornla -Y.ith several reporting in the vicinity of Tres Marias Islands. • ra1 Red Chinese Renewing Warnings SAIGON (UPI) -Lt. Gen. Hoang Xuan Lam, commander of the 16,000 South Vietnamese troops ln Laos, said today his men have cut the main branch of the Ho Chi Minh Trail. He predicted a major Communist offc:mlve to nopeD it. Communist China renewed its warnings today against U.S. intervention in Laos, and western diplomats in VienUane e"I• pressed concern about pogslble Chinese intervention in Laos. They based their fears on Peking statements and remarkl of Chinese diplomata to senior Laor Officlall in Vientiane. 'l'h«e ·afao were new ~~ dc:mOMtrationa in China, this lime in Shlnghai where Korean War· veta-1n1 c~lled the American mllltarf "a papu ttger." The rt : were similar m a s 1 demonstrations earlier in Peking aqd other Chinese cities, emphasizing· Peking charges the invasion of Laoa Wat "a grave menace" to China , U.S. spokesmen in Saigon said a U.S. Air Force FlOS ''Wild Weasel" jet made a "protective reaction" strike Sunday against a Communist missile site in North Vietnam. And in Vientiane American sources said a U.S. plane accidentally bombed a CIA-supported clandestine army base at Long Cheng in northern Laos, killing IO Meo hill tribesmen and wounding 20 persons including an American believed to be a member of the CIA. Lam predicted heavy fighting since the Communists "have to keep their supplies open" and .told . television cameraman Train Dai Minh tllere were two North Vietnamese divisions, the 308th and 32tlth, totalling 20,000 men facine lilil 16,000-man force. He said the North Vietnamese were being reinforced by I.he 304th NV A Division with another 10,000 · men. But asked if the S o u t h Vietnamese force• were spread too thin he .. itid, "we ar1 very strong here ." There also were lndlcations tank bat. ttes might be in the offing along the Ho Chi Minh trail. Lam said hill air and ground units have knocked out five P'M6 Sovlet..b1.1ilt tanks and a number of TU tank.! In the eight-day old invasion. The Sou th Vietnanrese have lost two to enemy gunfire. U.S. military aources in the field disclosed that 10 percent of the American helicopters supporting the South Viet-- namese invasion of Laos have been destroyed or severely damaged during the first wetk ol the operation. They said more than 300 were being u.sed and this would mean 30 or more ahot down. Orange Co alt Weather Cloudy skies, which may leak a little jn 1poll, are the outlook for Tuesday aJong the coast, with temperatures skJnned back to the mJddle &Os. INSIDE TODi\l:' Cunfusion rtigntd supreme 111 Britain todoy °' that notion scrapped ils 800.year·old mou· tar11 1111cem for a decimal coi,,.. OQ<-Uk~ lh4< ."'1~ In. the U.S. a.nd EtmJpt,.JSt1,1b>ru~Poot 4. l lrllll .,, • .,., '"''"' u ·-. CM>dllfll u. ' CllMlffH t14t C-tc1 N '""""""' 16 o.1111 MMkM ,. Ol'IWftf , • lflflH'Nt ..... ' 1111.n•lll-t , ... ,. -" .t.1111'-t......-\I ""''™'" '-k-1. ~'" , ..... 111•1""' ,..._ .., °''• (Mllff 1t s"'" '1·tt r.-w-'' """""' , .. ,, ..... , ' ~" .... 1).1' WHill Ill... N ' I ·' I' ~ DAU. V PILDl SC • In County Bills Pat1·iotism Hiker Survives • Honor Goes j To Countian 42-hour Ordeal A 1$-year-old Anaheim boy was home safe today afttr a 42-hour ordeal in lhe mountains near Saddleback Peak. Richard O. CoMelly survived a 2Q.foot fall down a waterfall and two hours of semk:onsciousness during hjs wan· derings after he became lost from a high school hiking club outing Friday. "l never thought I would not be found and I kept praying," the boy was quoted as saying. He rq:alned contact with othen Sunday morning when he call)e across an off-duty f\.tarine fishing in the Bear Springs area. · Richard became lost while on a planned one day hike with 17 members of the Magnolia High School moun tain club. It was his first hike with the group. "I slowed down and began to fall behind a bit.'' the boy explained "I kept seeing glimpses of them around the bends but J couldn't catch up and finally lost them.•• He told of hearing people talking and seeing helicopters but efforts to make bis whereabouts kno\vn failed in every in stance. Saturday night he slepl In a ditch be had dug, covered with leaves. $5,185 in Loot Takeri in Mesa Holiday Heist Taking advantage or the long weekend, burglars raided a vacationing Costa. Mesa executive's home Salurday and stole $5,185 in valuables, including gold and 6ilver table service. A policeman's wife living in the same area pinpointed the approximate time (If the burglary when she recalled seeing window shades -left up by the family -closed at mid.afternoon. James 0. Hicks, a roofing company vice president, noUfied authorities of the lootlng when he returned home from Palm Springs. Officer Jim Farley said the ransacked residence at 2980 Mindanao Drive, was entered via a rear bedroom sliding glass door jimmied open with a Pn' tool. Pillow cases were used as bags to carry the 12-serVice silver and goldware sets, plus jewelry, an antique silver watch, two cameras, two rifles, a .45 caliber automatic pistol, radio, c () I o r television set and miscellaneous ltellUI. Hicks said Jiving room drapes were left open and found that way upon his return, but the neighborhood witness told police she saw them closed at one point Saturday afternoon. Magazine Given By Birch Group The Youth Chapter of the John Birch Society of San Clemente has dona ted a one year subscription to American Opinion magazine to the San Clemente High School Library. Other gifts to the high school include e set of Harvard Classics and four miscellaneous books donated by Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Stovall and four display cases donated by Peter Le Cakes. · The Concordia School PT A donated $400 to their school for supplemental equipment and materials. Dr. Herman. Sobol has-donated a violin to the dislrict's music department. All the gifts have been accepted with thankc; by the school board. \ DAILY PILOT ---........ ...., -c-OllANG• COAST PUll.l~ING C0M'AM'I Ro~ett N. W1•• Pmlllfrll l'r.l9 P11Mllhtr J1clt ft. c.,1 • ., Viet Prn!l.,,I lr.d CO-ti t Mll'llftr Tho"'"' K,,,u Editor Jho'"'' A. Mur,.hl110 MIMflnll' Edl!ot tu.herd !', Hell 5ou111 Or•net C-1)' Ell!Or -C.lt Mtu: UI W•l l ty Strwf H..,.,.., a .. d'I: ml W•t l1111t1 ltultYIN • l.of""° lltcPI: 2H F-t """'"'* )luntlnOIOli Btldl: t"'S ttKl'I hulovo1'111 hn Cicmtnll; JOJ Norlll El C•mlnO 1'.111 A rescue team of sheriff's deputle.c1, county firemen and U.S. Forestry person· nel covered more than 60 square nliles in the search !or the boy since Friday. Newport Firm Planning Sale Of Debentures Avco Financial Services, Inc. has filed with the Securltes and Exchange Com· mission a registration statement covering a proposed public sale of $50 million (If senior debentures due March 1, 197 1. The announcement "r tk bond sale was made today at theN'eWport Beach headquarters of Avco Corp., parent com· pany of Avco Financial Services. The offering wlll be made by a na· tionwide underwriting group managed by Lehman Bros., Inc., probably in early 11arch. Net proceeds from the sale of tl1e lx>nds will be added to I.he general fund!! (If the company and will be available to pay current indebtedness and to carry additional receivables. Application will be made to list the debentures on the New York Stock Ex· change. AVCO Financial Services Inc .. a wholly owned subsidiary (If AVCO Corp., was formerly Seaboard Finance Co. The com· pany conducts its lending operations in two major areas of the finance business. namely consumer loans and sales finance . Through subsidiaries, the com· pany also conducts an i n s u r a n c e business, in part related directly to its finance activities. Bathers Beached By Chilly Spell The first half of the weekend -when sunny skies and high temperatures in the 70s graced the South Coast -lured summerlike crowds to San Clemente's beaches. But the throngs dwindled Sunday as a chilly overcas t settled over the area. San Clemente lifeguards said tot.al beach attendance last Friday and Satur- day reached 29,000 on city beaches and those in county territory patrolled by the city service. \Yater temperatures in the mid 50s. however, kept most of the beachgoers ()Ut of the surf. No major rescues or other incidents were reported. Sunday's total attendance dropped con· siderably to 9,000 persons, '11ho enjoyed only a few hours of sunshine before the cloud cover moved back in. 'Sorry F r ank' -1$59 Retur ned to Victi111 RICHMO ND . Va. (API Franklin Harder, 37, was v;orking on his car Sunday when three men grabbed him from behind and robbed him or 161. A few minutes later, he told police. a man he'd never seen before \va\ked up to tbe car. threw $59 on the front seat and said: "I'm sorry, Frank, l didn't realize it was you." .. • -~ •• The Odd Co11p le • Drifting A long 'I'he act of defending the f I a g has earned a Sanla Ana resident the Freedoms Foundation George Washington Award and $5,000 presented today at Valley Forge, Pa. Bill Pierson, Navy veieran. is to be cited for standing off a chanting mob of 150 students nearly a year .ago on the Cal State San Diego campus. Then a student al the college, Pierson \\'BS walking to class when he saw the flag being raised and lo\\'ered by students. Some wanted it flying at full stalf, others at half mast. Raising it to the top, Pierson, a six.foot , three Ileavy ""inds coupled with more than a fool of new sno\v produced scenes like this in Rochester, N.Y., over the weekend. Elsewhere in upstate Ne\v York, roads were blocked by four to six·foot drifts and thousands o( commuters were unable to get borne since last Thursday. Many spent the four-day week- end in hotels. Despite ne\v sno\v, ski resorts \\'ere forced to close because skiers couldn't get to them. inch, 250 pounder. guarded the flag for more than three hours. The citation accompanying the award reads: •·for loyal palriotisin so dramatically demonstrated when , for three and ()ne· V alley School Looms For Crippled Pupils Admiral Zumwalt Sways Top Foe SAN' DIEGO (AP) -Adm. Elmo Zumwalt's visit to San Diego was vie .... 1ed tOOay as a victory -(Iver perhaps lhe most voca l opponent of his "Z.gram" edicts liberali1ing the Navy. half hours, he stood alone and defenseless. defying a screaming, heckl· ing, menacing group of dissident students bent on tearing down and destroying an American Flag. ·'For l1is si1nple staten1ent , "I wa s born under that Flag ; I fought under that flag and I am going to college because of \\'hat it stands for, To me •hat Flag is a symbol of everything my country has stood fo r in the past By TERRY S. COVILLE Ot tilt O.llw Pllll 5111l By this time next year. 100 children confined to wheel chairs or \\'Biking with crutches may attend their own school in Fountain Valley. It all depends on bow fast state legislators push through an emergency bill to release more money for the construction of special schools. ··We 've been told such a bill has cleared the Assembly,·• reports Mike Brick, superintendent of the Fountain Valley School Dist rict. His district is laying the groundwork for the orthopedically h a n di capped school. It will serve crippled children from seven school districts from Newport Beach to seal Beach. 'I'wo months ago plans \\-'ere under \\'ay for construction (If the special school district when state authorities said there was no construction money left for special schools. An old law limits state-aid on special schools to 3.5 percent (If state bend money that has been sold for school construction. ·'The Assembly has now amended that figure to be 3.5 percent of all bond money approved. whether the bonds have been sold or not," Brick explained. "But it still has to go through the Senate." The orthopedically handicapped school '1'ill handle about 100 crippled children from the Fountain Valley, Newport-Mesa, Laguna Artist Lec ture Sla ted Laguna Beach artist Vincent Farrell \l'ill give a lecture·demonstration on oils and acryl ic s for the Lake Forest Associa· lion of Artists and Craftsmen Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the Lake Forest Beach and Tenn is Club. Born in Santa Barbara. Farrell has spent most of his life in his native state. exhibiting his art \\'Ork in many invitational sho,•;s. A member of the. Laguna Beach Art Association. he maintains a studio in Laguna and is a festival of Arts ex· hibitor. Huntington Beach High, Huntington Beach City, Ocean View. Westminster and Seal Beach school districts. No district in this area has a school specially equipped to handle students in ~·heel chairs, (In crutches or witb missing limbs. The school will be combined with a regular elementary school. "The combination will allow han· dicapped children to intermix with others, JtS they must in society," Brick said . ' The orthopedic school will be equipped \\'ith special classes and special teachers to handle the crippled youngsters. It will also have an out-patient clinic staffed with medical personnel by Orange Coun- ty's health department. School districts currently pay for private instruction of orthopedically han- dicapped students. The new school would greatly reduce costs while providing ban- dier facilities for the children. After the U.S. Chief of Naval Opera- tions met with active and former ad· mirals last weekend, retired Vice Adm. L. Sherwood Sabin Jr. said: "I support him entirely in the things he is trying to do for the Navy." Sabin, 71. said in a speech last month that the Navy was fostering "a dangerous permissiveness." He met Friday with Zumwalt and laler said: "My concern was for the fighting ef!ecliveness of the fleet and lhe image (If Ole Navy man in the community." News men were barred from the meeting. The recent orders from Zumwalt, 50, Included relaxing regulations to permit beards and carefully cultured long hair, mod clothing worn off base and work uniforms to and from quarters and duty assignments. Sabin a survivor of the Pearl Harbor attack, retired after 4t yean in the Navy. 'Holy Wa ter' Ta inted and everything it will stand for in the future.' " Pierson, a native of Oklahoma City is a Navy veteran with service off Viel· nam . Among others who have received the Freedoms F o u n d a t i o n George Washington Award are former President Herbert Hoo11er, Walt Disney, FBI Direc- tor J. Edgar Hoover, astronaut John H. Glenn. Jr. and Gen . Harold K. Johnson, former U.S. Army Chief of Staff. Nine others from Orange County were commended by the Freedoms Foundation today. including actor John Wayne, of Newport Beach who was given the Na· tional Ser11ice Medal "for consistent, unabashed loyalty to America and its Ideals. The citation accompanying Wayne 's award continues, "For heroic movie ex· ploits which have inspired American fighting men: his visits to Gls in combat zones and his support of the younger generation 'who have taken more interest in society than we did'." others commended today include : However, if the emergency bill hits a snag, (IT Fountain Valley doesn 't receive any (If the , new money, the orthopedic school could be delayed at least two years. JERUSALEM (UeJ.) -tsrael is 7 From El Toro: Mar ine Corps Maj. quarantining bottles =..Of ''Holy Water" Donald 1'1. Babitz. an Honor Certificate But Brick speaks optimistically: ''We have the support (If state Senator Dennis Carpenter (R·Newport Be:ach), and Assemblymen Kenneth Cory ( D • Anaheim) and Robert Burke (R·Hun· tingtoo Beach)." Moslem pilgrims brlng back from Mee-Award ror his speech given Dec. 3, ca's sacred well of Zamiam following 1969. reporb the well may be contaminated FroJD Fullerton: Danie l H. Poole, with cholera and malaria, the health George Washington Honor Medal for his ministry said today. magazine article "A Young Palriot Doll Deli'1ers! Pull a Zipper arid Out Pops Baby PARIS (AP) -Children sated \\'ith silly dollies v,·ho only \\'el their pants or croak "mama'' got a very grownup new toy Monday: a pregnant doll that turns anybody's 8-year-old into an obstet rician. The child just pulls on a zipper running along the blue and \\'hite trousers of the "future mama doll ," and out pops a baby. It is painless childbirth. The doll, described by its manufac· turers as the first of its kind in the v,•orlr:I, .,.,·as unveiled at the Paris Toy Show. "lt"s an educalional toy, designed to demystify childbirth ," said Andr ee Gesset a spokesman for Pintel, the manufacturer. "We've found that about nine out of 10 people who've seen it think it's in good taste. '"The rest complain that it's not necessary for kids to know where they come from. but our attitude is thal ,1·ith men on the moon, you can't keep saying that Jacques' baby brother was left in the cabbage patch by ! stork.'' he added . The baby, whose father is not named in the sales brochure. is a unisex child \Vhich looks reassuriflgly like the smiling, blonde mother. She wears a bright pink doll's maternity dress over her trouser~. Once in the cruel world. the little baby doll cries if you squeeze it. Mrs. Gesset said that most children who played wilh the dolls "considered 1he whole arrangement with such naturalness that it shames any adult who is troubled by the notion." The doll, which probably will be ex· ported, sells for $9. e A MODERN UP TO DATE JEWELRY and LOAN WITH YOU IN MIND 8 CASH LOANS On most any artlelt , specializing in low cost, short term loans.. Speaks His Mind.·• . From Gardea Grove: Miss Tyler DeHaven, Honor Certificate for youth essay "OUr Constitution -Ordained by Free Men, Sustained by Free Men." From Los Alamitos: Hugh Brainard of the Naval Air Slation. George !Vashington Honor l.1edal for his Armed Forces letter "Freedom -Privilege or Obligation?'' 1\1 ore more From l.lission Viejo: Judy A. Headlee, 26892 Preciados Dr., Honor Certificate for her magaz.ine article ··Palriotism: To Be or Not To Be." From Santa Ana : 1'.1arine Corps Private George E. i\lichae\, Honor Certificate for his Armed Forces letter '"Freedom -Privilege or Obligation?" Santa Ana Co 11 e g e, Distinguished Service Av.·ard in the college campus programs category. From Tui;tln: Rev. J~arold F. Leestma . George \Vashington Honor Medal for his sermon "The Foundations Are Strong." Others honored at today1s \Vashington's Birthday ohservance are forine r House Speaker John W. McCormack. journalist Victor Riesel. businessman ~I. Ross Perot and radio newsman Paul Harvey. 8 SAVE MONEY ON EVERYTHING YOU BUY e DIAMONDS & JEWE LRY e MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS e STE REO EQU IPMENT e SPORTS GEAR and Many More Items • Corne in and see what we olfer our customers. A new Giid unusual experience in in s 11 opp I ng enjoyment. Where people in the knaw save money every time t!My btry. 1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRSi Ratitis COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN Somebody forgot to tell ''Foxy" and "~luskc l " lhat they are nat,iral enemies. The swift. bro\rn fox and the beagle \\'ith a baritone voice Jive in the b;ick yard of the Danny D\vight home in Ventura. They share meals and playtime. Life is good. They C\'Cn have ca rpeting 011 the floor of th eir A·framc home. ' 1838 NEWPORT BLVD · : PHONE 646·7741 DOWNTOWN COST A MESA -lklwH n Harbor & Broadway ' • I I ' I SANDY MARTIN IS NO PO CEMAN BUT HE CAN DRAW At Left Is Composite 1rtin, At Right A Phatogr1ph KIDNAP. • • anytime you want,'' he said calmly. Next, v.·e went to the ears. "Probably pretty ordinary, aren·t they," he asked with nary a hint of chea ting. lie sketched them in . No\v we got to the good part. He pulled out a stack of eyes ranging from average to hypnotic to absolutely psychopathic. \Ve s-ettled for a pair of liUle on Lhe kind-0f-droopy side. The master the n v.·ent beneath the tracing paper and as a description flowed they too k form with amazing accu racy. "It helps to have the original set underneath because you can move them up and down on the face. Notice the whole face chauges when I do it?" \V~ got the glasses on after that, I.hen v.•ent to the nose and mouth. The "\vitness" 1vas ge tting the hang of it by then. In all, our "suspect"' took about 40 minutes lo draw, and the finishing !ouches. wrinkles-"Don't be bashful about facial description. . .I see my fa ce too often in the mirror to be vain" -made the image much more alive. A few office visitors later saw Martin as he left after the dra wi ng session and then gazed at the ''portrait". ;.That's the guy who just left. isn"t it?"' l\1artin had succeeded. Earlier he had explained how he became one of Southern California's few police artists. About six years ago Lt. Robert Mason from the local force called to inquire if any member of the San Clemente arts and crafts club would be interested in doing police work (tt1artin has been keenly acUve in the group for years). "I asked around, and nobody wanted a thing to do with it, so l called back in a few da ys and volunteered." He went to work immediately, and has been "on-call" day and night ever since. "I've beeome so interested in the wbole thing," he said, "that I borrowed s~cks of police texts on interview procedures-- how to make a witness at ease; how not to ask conclusions and put sug- gestions in their answers . . . all sorts of interesting things,'' be explained. And it is that very skill-honed after dozens of sessions wilh the frightened, sometimes hysterical and angry wit· nesses-that makes the kindly old gentleman so dead ly to criminals. ''The guy is amazing," Chi ef Clifford f\.1urra y said recently, he has that kind, grandfather manner that puts anyone at ease right away. "And when he's done, we·ve got our suspect pegged.'' But Martin -unlike most artists - does n't swell perceptibly at the praise. "I'm onJy as good as the witness,'' he said. 'Death Car' Clnims 3 More Victims in Iowa DES l\10 1NES. Iowa (UPI) -lt's a junker, a 10-yeat-Old car that probably is not 1vorth $100. Six people have died in it in the past four months, all ol carbon monoxide poisoning. The bodies of the latest vict ims, three Des f\.toines teenagers. were found Sun· day inside lhe car at a drive-in theater. Another youth who was in the car re- mained in the intensive care ward of a Des l\1oines hospital tod ay. Dallas County Medical Examiner Kieth Chapler said the three young people died of carbon monoxide fumes. He identified them as Pamela Sue Barnes and Roxanne Lynn Harmsen, both 16, and Gregory Fetters, 17. Chapter said the car was the same vehicle in which three Des Moines residents were found dead of carbon monoxide poisoning early in November. He said the bodies of William L. Mitchell. 36 ; Mrs. Janet K. Tiedtke, 26, and her daughter, Donna Kaye, were found in the car along Interstate 80. • I l Her Family, Home Gone;· Now Alice Losing Health By PAMALA HALLAN Of !flt Dlllly l'lltt II.tr Alice Case is afraid to close her eyes at night. i She might dream. The Dana Point v.·oman once had a dream of a future full of promise for her beautiful little girl. The dream became a nightmare. She once dreamt of a peacelul retirement with her husband and a simple. home in which to spend it. . Tbose·dreams brought more pain. . . '1bere was no f·~:e for Alice's child. Sht was buried as a teenager, the victim of an "unloaded" gun accident. There was no peaceful old age for Alice's h111band. He too died pre. maturely, the victim pf a heart attack. There isn 't even a home for Alice. It, too. is burled -under a mountain of legal technicalities. The contracto r built it on the wrong lot and it will be a ruin , Alice feels, before the legal entanglement are ever straightened out. Alice Case is a Jontly, bitter woman robbed of aJI the thlngs most people take for granted -children, husband, and home. "At least J have one thing to be thankful for,·~ she once said. "I still have my health." Last week she was told she has cancer. But maybe Alice's luck is changing. The doctors feel sure they ca ught lt in Ume. "Actually I feel pretty good," said Alice, who Is in her 70's. Her voice sounded strong and chee rful. It was a far cry from the Alice Case who sat in a chair. pitifully holding her face bet\veen her hands as she told her story of tragedy tMI years ago. At that time she hacl just learned that the contractor had built her house ln Caplstrano Beach on the lot next to hers. Alice had been about to move in when the build ing inspector ordered her out, closed her hQme, and Alice wa ved goodbye to her life's savings. . S~ then she's ~...n trying to get her home back. But the woman who owns tHe lot won't trade her Jot for Alice's identical one without payment. And the contractor hasn't moved the house, despite a court order to do so. Living in a small rented house that lakes inost of her meager income, Alice is v.·aiting patiently for something to happen. "I haven't given up yet," she said brightly. ~1 :itill have hope." More Quakes Recorded But Dam Not Damaged LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Two minor earthquakes jolted this area early today but no damage was reported to the Van Norman Dam, which was weakened by the disastrous tremor last week. The first tremor occurred about mid· night and measured 3.5 on the Richt er scale, compared to last Tuesday's 6.5 quake. The sep>nd came at 12 :40 a.m. and was . es\imattd at· a slighUy less intensity althoug~ot officially recorded. Officials said that a quick inspection of the dam, which is being drained, showed no new cracks. As last week's damage was still being tolled, sightseers poured into the earth- quake area and police ordered the arrest of anyone who doesn't live or work in there. Police established a perimeter control around the communities of Sylmar and San Fernando and posted no trespassing signs in attempts to keep out the thousands of sightseers who wanted to view the rubble where 62 persons died in Tuesday's temblor. Traffic Sunday at San Ftrnando Veterans Hospital -where 44 persons died -was so heavy officers erected barriers. "You should see the people trying to get in," !aid Frank Caringelia, a Southern Callfornla Gas Company offici al who was manning a hospital command post. "l don 't know-about thest people. They go to church and Sunday breakfast and decide, 'Hey let's take the kids up and see where all the people died.' " Two resident. in the immediate area whose homes were dam aged put up their own signs. One read, "Sightseers please go away. You cannot get within 200 yards of the tragedy even after a 1.4 mile hike uphill." The second sig n was more blunt : "Sighlseers keep out. Violators will be shot. Survivors will be prosecuted." The Red Cross reported to the Federal Office of Emergency Preparedness that prelim inary surveys indicated about 80,000 ·fam ilies suffered some type of Joss in Tuesday's quake. Preliminary eslimates totaled '300 million but county officials said they could top the billion- dollar mark. PINE MOUNTAIN • • • • • • • • • • • • • No k indling required .•• just touch a match lo the outer "·rap and watch it bum with & comforting hearth-wanning flame ! One log burns so Jong •• , watch the flames dance for hours! And be glad you shopped El Rancho! !We will be dosed Man., Feb. 15 ... it •stmm of the lleW Nltiolid Noltiy) Stewi11g Chicke11 ... ;39~ Ora11ges .... ; .... 6: $1·00 King sized , .. so f resh f California grown t.-0 be plump and tender f Compare the size ••• the quality ••• then COD1Jm'e the value I L ·d B . ·1 $J 49 ()II ()II r()I .......... • Pri<u in c(/ed. T•a . & Wed., Feb. JI!, 11. No MJ.lt1 ta dMle~. Hearty beet ... so tender a nd juicy.,, compare the 1·al11e: Chopped Sirloin Steak ...................................... 99~ So very lean ••. and fresh , , . easy to ser,·e, great to eat! Beef Braising Ribs .............................................. 59~ Sn much meaty goodness! Serve with buttered noodles ! LAGUNA BEACH HAS CROWNED A LOVELY NEW QUEEN Frances Cotterell, 18, Will Reign Over Winter Festival Queen Crowned Frances Cotterell Miss Lagu1ia A Laguna Beach High School senior was crowned Miss Laguna Beach Frida y nigh t aflc r being selected from a field of nine lovely young ladies lo act as Art Colop y hostess fo r the con1ing year. Frances Cotterell, 18, will begin her official du ties as Win ter Festival Queen when the 17-day event begins Friday. She is the daughter of Mr. and ~trs. Robert Coltere\I, 1267 Sta rli l Drive. ''l was just aslounded," she said later, •·al fi rsl I thoughl they had left ou l my number when readin g off the Queen·a Court." .. The reason I ran was that I didn't have any self-confidence and my l\1on1 thought it would be good for tne. And 1 \Yon the darned thing," she added. The lovely young lady will grad uate from high schoo l in June and may ·atten d Orange Coast College. She says she has hopes of someday attending medical school.· Young Lagu11a Musician Beaten, Robbed of $700 A Laguna Beach }Jigh School student negotiating the purchase of a guitar amplifier Saturday evening was robbed of $700 by the would-be seller of the equipmenl and then beaten by the thief. Police said Richard C. Ensign, 17. a high 'school se nior who lives wi th his parents at 3137 Alta Lag una Blvd .. had telephoned an acqua intance Saturday afternoon regarding the purchase of the sound system. He left home at about 5 p.m., telling his mother he was going to meet th e ma n at a local market to make the purchase. Offlcers said young Ensign met the amplifier owner and \vent for a ride in the suspect's car to discuss the purchase price. When the price was agreed upon, police said, the robber stopped his car in an alley and grabbed the n1oncy from the youth's shirt poc ket . Young Ensign was th en dragged from the car, where the suspect knocked hi m to lhe ground and kicked him in the stoma ch. police said . The bandit then sped away with the mon ey. The youth is a me1nber or s rock band and had worked all summer 10 earn the money for the sound amplifier. Police said the youth hnd had business dealings ~·ith the suspected thief In the past. Sliced Meats .... 35' Ba<ld ig's ••• wafer thin •• , save 8c on each 3 ounce packag~ Sc.,tt T ()Weis ..... 2t Jumbo rolls ••• choice of '"hit£, colors or decort1.led. Weldl's Grape Jam........ .. ................... 39~ Jam. Jelly or Preserves ••. your choice ... bi&' 20 oz. si:r:c. S1nshine Cooler Cookies ..................... lr· Apple, Cherry or U!mon .•• 10 07.. pnckagc of W>Od ne~ ! . . . .. . . : ~ :"". . .. ARCADIA: PASADENA . SOUTH PA SADENA: HUNTINGTON BEACH· NEWP.ORT BEA~.~f ~ i?ii"iiewport Blvd and Sunsel and Hunlir.glon Or I[ Rantt·o :l ''' :I' .... t ;,",, · : , . '., ,·,; JO<I Hc"I" '"" Di ;i,., ..... : .~'., ,. p,, . 2555 Easlblull Or.\(~.astb.l uf,f ~lage Ceffer) I 1. ' • • • r ' .f DAILY PILOT Mortdv. Ftbn1111 15, 1971 Wlefu Birthday By George By DICK WEST \VASHINGTON CUP!) -Radiant with Intellectual curiosity, my son George burst into my study where I wu an· notating an anthology of lhe best loved poems from the Congressional Record (1933-66). "f'ather," he said. "why are ~·e ct'lebrating \Yashington's birthday on Feb. 15 this year?" '·Because Congress has made it legally impossible to celebrate Washington's birthday on \Yashington's birthday," l replitd. ··1t set the third P.1onday of February a~ the federal holiday, \V here as \fashington was born on either Feb. 22, 1732, or Feb. 11, 1731, depending ()n ~·hose calendar you use. ''But neither Feb. 22 nor Feb. 11 can fall on the lhird P.1onday of February, regardleS! of whoee calendar you use. Got it?" "Right on,'' said George., blinking his eyes. "Very "'ell. \Vashington himself figured he was born on Feb. 11 because that was the dale on the Julian Calender then in use throughout the British Empire. ··but in 1750 after he had celebrated his 19th birthday, the British parliament adopted the Gregorian Calendar. And things were never again the same. ' . ' The ILIJqol.H1'ir1EIJR ., Sicfe .. "The big difference was that in the Julian Calendar, New Year's day came on hfarch 25. But in 1751, after the adoption of the Gregorian Calendar, the year ended on Dec. 31 rather than March 24. Therefore the days between Jan. 1 and March 24 were omitted from the calendar, making ·0ie year only 212 days !Ong. "However. the period from Jan. 1 lo titarch 24 was dated 1752. Do you follow me thus far?" ··rm with you," George said, picking himself up off the floor. - "Good. As you can see , Washington w3.!S 19 on Feb. 11. 1750, but his 20th birthday ""as on Feb. 11, 1752. Now here's the hard part: "'Since the vernal equinox had been displaced by ti days in the Julian Caler.· dar. the Gregorian Ca lendar tried to make up the difference by removing JI da ys rrom September. •·Jn 1752. there were no days dated Sept. 3 to Sept. 13. Which made it necessary to add 11 days later to com- pensa te. So in li5.1. \V a s hing ton celebrated his 21st birthday on Feb. 22 instead of Feb. II. All clear?" "All clear." said George, crawling out (rom under the desk. "Okay. So now you know why "'e .ire c:elebraling Washington's birthday this year on Feb. 15. And always remember that you can never learn anything unless you ask questions." -UPI Jews Spurn Peace Plan By Jarring By 1.IDlt.ed Press l.attrn1tlo1al Israel bu Ignored a peace lrUtiative by U.N. Envoy Gunnar V. Jarring in an apparent difference of opinion with the UrUted States over Jarring's role in the Middle East talks. Prime Minister Golda Meir's cabinet issued a statement aft.er a meeUng in Jerusalem Surxlay saying IsneJ would continue talk.s only ln line witb its own proposals. It made no reference to Jar· ring's suggestions. The statement appeared to rtalfirm Israel's stand that Jarring is authorized to act only as a go-between and not as a mediator presentina: proposals. But Joseph J. Sisco, 1.1.S. assistant secretary of state. said in Washington S!mday both sides in the Middle East conflict "are committed to aid by whatever procedures Ambassador Jar· ring decide& to pursue, and no procedure is barred." Poli tical sources in Cairo believed Egypt would accept the Jarring proposal calling for a statement of intention to comply with the 1987 U.N. Security Coun· cil resolution on the Middle East. The resolut!0111 cail for I s r a e I I withdrawal from occupied Arab ter- ritories, and Israeli ne,vspapers in· ttrpreted Jarring's proposal as an effort to put pressure on Israel to withdraw. Yugoslav President Tito, who is urging Big Four pressure on Israel to achie\'e a settlement. met with Egyptian Presi- dent Anwar Sadat in Cairo today. Sadat eiplained details of Egypt's pr<r posal for a "partial" Israeli pullback from the Suet Canal and a reopening of the canal in an interview 'vith Newsweek. Sadat said by "partial" withdrawal. he meant a pullback to a line behind El Arish, 90 miles from the canal. He said his propos11J included free pa!sage in the Suez Canal and Strait of Tiran of Israel ships. with an in· ternat..ional force to be stationed at the fortress of Sharm El-Sheikh overlooking the Strait. Yank Servicernan Taken Prisoner By Turk Y out/is ANKARA (UPI\ Four Turks overpowered and kldnaped a U.S. Air Force sergeant in suburban Ankara to- day. police and American authorities said. They said Sgt. James Finley, 25. or Fort Worth, Ter .• fought his abductors but was subdued and taken away. Turkish security ofricials said the kid· napers probably are extremist leftw ing students wbo have been attacking and lhreatening the American community in Ankara recently. The security men said the four Turks jumped Finley as he aat in a U.S. military pickup truck, doing patrol outside an American v.·arehouse in the capital's Dikmen district. Police found the truck at the bottom of a cliff nearby. It \\'as damaged badly and apparently had been shoved over, they said. ' Police said their investigation shows Finley apparently tried to fire his weapon -he was armed for his guard duty -but was overpowered too quickl y to pull the trigger. Finley was a law enforcement specialist with Detachment 30 of Tuslog. the U.S. military group handling supplies and transport for American service units in Turkey. U.S. Am bassador William J. Handley. upon hearing of the abduction, asked the Turkish Foreirn Of!lce to track down the k.idnapers and return the sergeant. SEEKS NEW VIET STA NCE Dove Sen. Frank Ch urch Dovish Senator Asks Ne'v Sta11ce On Viet Pullout \VASHINGTON (UPI) -The only serious flaw in President Nixon's effor L to pull U.S. troops out of the Vietnam war is that no provision is being made to win release of the prisoners of war, Sen. Frank Church (0-Idaho), said today. Church admitled lhal the troop withdrawals, averaging 3,000 men a week for the past 18 months. are neither trickery nor tokenism, but "a very substantial withdra'ft'aL'' "Now the question is how can that "'ithdrawal con tinue without making some accommodations for lhe prisoners of war," Church said in a recent in- terv iew. ''Clearly there's only one way \re can acco1nmodate the needs of our prisoners of war. and that is to reach an agreement \\'ith North Vietnam which will produce their release. "\Ve like to applaud and pump the ta ble and wave the flag every time you organize a Flash Gordon altack lo reach and release some prisoners of war,·• he added, "but so far those attacks have produced not a single prisoner of war ... not one has been yielded up and no doubt the attacks have lerl the prisoners of war in greater jeopardy.'' Church co-sponsored a 1970 amendment v•hich banned American ground combat troops from Cambodia. But he said at~ tempts to legislate a specific end to the war are not worth pursuing. "In recognition of the realities. I think that we ought not focus any more on try ing to impose an end date, a final date, on the President, trying to legislate an end date." he said. "[ think we should rather recognize that that isn't going to work. And I would prefer to call upon the President to negotiate a final date for the completion of the withdrawal of troops." Church said that policy should be ex- pressed in a resolution which would set total withdrawal as a national goal. Such a resolution, he added, could break lhe ire on the prisoner of war front. Itali an City Rocked By Bloody Fighting REGGIO CALABRIA, Italy (AP) - Bloody street fighting exploded in this embettled south Italian city today in erpectation lhat a rival city v.'ould be named regional capital. A 16-year-old student 'vas struck by a tear gas grenade and seriously injured. Dozens of policemen and demonstrators ,1·cre hurt in clashes that ranged all over the city of 140,000 -from the large squares to tiny alleys. Local residents said it was some of the worst fighting since the people of Reggio began agitating last summer for · their city instead of Catanzaro to be named capital of the new Calabrian region. Winter Storm Retreating Backlash of Front Still Felt; Rain and Snoiv Heavy California I Y UHITl'D ,Rl'SS INTl.•HATIOHAL Lectl fot tnd tl•IY .....,.,. '" O•llllt tit-I'd io.1111 w ct16n1 el Soul"-'" CtlllDt'lllt If! lilt et•IY "°"'" on •n nlhfonolJf ltl• QI'. l111tdllt' U<lltn~ w1r1 coelt• i nd wlnd1. lOt Anttltl 1t1e t~H•l•nt>!I 11•11' '°' •nd •rlnlt ci.trlnt b1 1lttrnno" It 1 •rtcllclecl Civic Ctll!tr ll•~h <1! •1 com11trfd Wiii! I 11 $~ndt¥. 't'ltf llltll t~HCled Tutld-11 ,1 11t1n ,..., ""' 1ow ion11111 Jt. Llthl lo .....teno~ '""'" In !ht N Jlll wit l'l'Mrtn t11 ttlt Air Ptlh1ti.~ C'Olllrol Oltlflcl. Vltlb!lllY Wll 11'"1114 .. ,,.... ,.,... ,. '"'"' 1111111 Irr htlt. Tiit wtltelt tllr0\1911 f"tkltl' I••"" -Nt lltlltl W•tlll•r ierl'lct W••l tor notllllUH COOlll'lf t M •ttltlli. clouClll>fH. •••(l'ltA '~' .,...,, cleudY '"" '"'" 111 lht '"'°"'',. Cltttl"' to "''" 111 ffll •ll•rr-'1 with 1 111111 If .. INI l~f •tter J1, LOS AHCif!LES AHO YIC IHITV - Ni.rt' t l'IG "*"'"" ..... clwll l flO lot wlll! '°""' "''" Wtl,,,I,. ltl •I• """"'°"' ""'"611' 1M T v t 9 I • " . °""'"11nt ..._, ,,..., JS. 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" \~ <I .01 •J /1 ~ " ,, 11 )I 11 )J •1 .51 1J " ~ '' 11 -11 .n " " " ~ ·" ... I •1 n .ot :1 ,. " n <I ~' 11 ,, " . . .. 35 JI . " 11 J\ ,, ,, ~ " l) 'I T It's D-Day Britain· • Ill 800-year System Re placed by D ecirn <ils LONOON {UPI) -Britain "went decimal" today. Lord Fiske, chairman of the decimal currency board, pro- nounced the switchover a success. But clerks found customers asking what the prices were "ln real money.'' Al midnight, amid widespread predic- tions or near.chaos. Britain scrapped its MIO-year~ld pounds-shlllings-pence money system. In its plact went a new dollar· and-cents style decimal money, similar to those in the United States and con- tinental Europe. The Republic of Ireland changed over, too. Lord Fiske. who was named by the government to mastermind the switch, conc:eded the real crunch would not come until "Mlursday or Friday, when Britons do their first heavy buying after "0- Day", as decima l currency day was dubbed. In some big stores cashiers hlid un- dergone intensive advance training. Stores were relatlvely uncrowded because It was a Monday morning, so few lines formed. "Perhaps that's a good thing." said Jean Osgood, 20. a supermarket cashier. "A lot of our customers seem rather hazy about it all. They keep asJdng, ·what's that in English money?' or, 'tell me what lhat is in real money?' " Department stores had experts to help out confused customers. One big store called them ''h-1iss Decimal", another "Decimal Dollies". But they said they had not had many inquiries. For BusiI1ess or Home ... Sears Electric Multiplier Adder • Li ;,ls JO t·o lu111n :0. 101als 11 ; o'er t·a1>aci1y ~afely feature rqual key \I.il l not llt•prc:-s ~hcr1 )UU ~c c~ ans~·cr O\'Cr JI d igits • !\on·add key for cod inr; and tlat ing; lock-dmm repeat levrr • 1-lcavy du ly hi gl1 i n1 1)act pla ~tjc for years of hard wear Banks1 closed since Wednesday night to convert 20 million accoWlts, reopened to deal only in decimals. Despite a $3 million last n1inute publici· ly cfl1npalgn by the Detimal Currency Board, mauy Britons confessed they were confused . Mrs. Susan Toorncy. 30, a \Vest London housewife. said "1l is difficult trying to convert. I'm (ioing n1y shopping early to avoid queues and confusion.'' Mrs. Sheila Parness. 21, another housewife. sald, "! don'I undcrstaftd the nev.• system yet though I spent all \reekend studying o conversion chart." But ~l iss Pearl \\'hiteman. 18. a florist. said she had to learn all about the new system for her job. Sears 179~~ _.\J,I., t\llOut Sear; t~o n,·e nicnt. Credit Plan, SAVE $15! Home Electric Adder •Add ), rubtncl!i and mulliplir! • Ll6ll i column~. total~ & •Combination r:ntry lr.r-~' Credit Balance Adder Regular S?9. 9j 5995 ..... .. •••• Mtlllltl' ,,. ,_.,,, H1t11t ""'-r11• S•"• Jtloo••• T ides IN IOW <loudl ..... .... ... '""""" t . Hrllt ltr I~ ttlt,_ L/ffllt -~OHDA'I' ..,,,.,,.. tll•-'"""' 1tw , s~n 1.m. 1.J MOUHTAIN AltlA! -Y•~ t~ TUSJIM'f ~Ill.It mo1tll' ltr """"" 'llftWl'I ,.lrtr 111111 ..•• 11.001.m. 1 5 ~:~;.t':..:~.:i: =~' ~';:;~ :!;~~.,;·::.'"' ·· ,;'.~!:Z:: ;~ f', lift wll'lft• '""" •flft1led ll'llO Ctnldl t!ttr IPIOV!llt Ull ""' ... lltnt~ llttn S11111!f '· 11 -•l<I 1~••111tl1t •t in ti-tMlltl 1tctittl1 1116 Cl~'"ltcl llM YY I-1"11.tNI OYI< ll't lnlt,lf<. t1ct11111 tfll'(ll o• int '"''111 W9rt 11m l>tlfll ltlll -D• 1111,,lt l I -! Oii tllt .. 11tr11 Orta! Liii.ti l!"t 1116 0,.. 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'·"'· Jf to "' Mtofl "!ttt !&:If 1.11'1· Strt I ff t m, l ( S.tll L•l<t CllY Ji n Ol"<t '•" 11111\(ll(fl SIO!lt nt • • . " }\ S! S) • ,1J "'' 11111•"'· ........... ""· f J.\0 .... ,. •110,.M., s..n, 11 W-.. s PA "'klll"""'-.... _,,., ,_ ...... ., l.U.M Diggittg ltt Surrou nded by live artillery shells, an Americ an soldier neor the ~tagi n g base of Khe Sanh South Vietnan1 digs into a can of C-rations. This is' one or the last photograph s made by veteran UPI nev.rs photographer Kent Potter before hi s helicopter \Vas shol do\vn ov er Laos. He and several others are sti ll 1nissing. l(iller Storni Makes Exit i11 Northeast By United Press Interna tional The latest 111 a string or \'icious y,•intcr s\orrns 1noved ou! of the [':orthcast todav, !raving one Lo two feet Or new snow. Six men died Sunday in 1hc Pittsburgh arra while shO\'CI· ing eight inches of ne\v sno1v. A r-.1 aryland man \\'as ki!lrd in a tv.·<rea r collision in upstate New York as visibility dropped to zero because of b!O\Ying and drirting snow. Syracuse, N.Y .. mayor Lee Alexander declared a snow emergency and continued it ·when ice-coated lree limbs fell and cut major pll\\'er lines. affe<:ting 10,000 area residents. A 134-milc stretch of the Tlvo Pennsy Executives Under Fire \VASHJNGTON (L1PI) - Baltered by charges o f 1n ismanage menl and financial chicanery. the !'('nn Central Jtailroad has come under al- lack once again. New York Thruway "'aS c]OS• cd Saturday night \1·hen the sno1vfall 1vas at its peak. The Huffalo-to ... 5yracuse route was not reo pened until late Sunday morni ng and other high\\·ays in the v.·cstern part Of I.he state remained closed most of the day. A snowmobile rally near Syracuse v.•as canceled beca use there \\'as loo much sno1v and many churches call· ed off services. Thousands of motorists 11•cre forced to seek tempor;i ry shelter as gusting v•inds drifted highw ays full of snov; nea rly as fast as plov.·s opened lhcm. Occasional snow still "'as falling late Sunday, Yt'ilh lhrce incbes in a six-hour period reported al Syracuse. Further v.·cst, the Boston Common looked like spring had arrived as couples strolled leisurely, walking their dogs. 'J'he sun shone brightly and fog and rain earlier in the 11·eekend had melted most of the vdnter's accumulation of snov.·. floffa 58; Renie111bered A congressional committee Sunday accused two to p of- ficials of the railroad. whi ch declared ban kruptcy last year. LE\VISBURG , Pa. (UPI) - of manipulaLing the company·s J immy Hoffa observed his assels as colla teral for a 58th bi rthdav at lhe fede ral private iO\'CStmcnl club. penitentiary .he re Sunda y and Backed by the presumed a chartered plane with a trail- fiscal strength of the nation's ing banner flew overhead to larget ra ilroad , each member m11rk the occasionn. of !he Pcniihil lnvest mcn~ ''Free Hoffa Now, \Vrite Club v•as ab!e tn parlay a Pres. Nixon," the banner $16.::.00 c<1sh investn1enl in to rfad . $83.500, ::iccording lo a sl;iff Prison offici11ls would not repo rl or !he House banking say if Hoffa saw the airborne comn1il\L'l'. greeting but a spokesman said Behind the clu b. occord ing the exercise yard was open In the con1inill<'L'. were two to inn1ates when the plane Walkouts Hit Three Can Firms Cambodian Chief Rests In Honolulu llONOLULU (UPI) -Cam· bodian Premier Lon Nol was reported resting comfortably today at a U.S. military hospital. The SS.year-old prime minister, who suffered partial paralysis of his left side from a stroke last week. was in the care of American Arm y doctors al Tripler General I lospital overlooking Pearl lfarbor. A medical bulletin issued by the hospital Sunday said Lon Nol had slept "in· termittcntly and comfortably" and was "alert, cooperative and cheerful." His doctors said his vital signs, including blood pressure. were normal. The ailing ruler is a diabetic v.·ho has also suffered from kidney ai lm en ts and hypertension. senior company figures -PAS~~d . David C. Rc\';.in . J'cnn Ccn· ,.-_, ... -...;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;.o;Oi"'iim'ii _________ ;;;;;;;;! tr11l's ch ie f financ ial officer.I and Charles J. !lodge. a Ne Y• York invcs!rnenl banker and financial <Jd viscr lo l h Cl railroad. Neithe r is s l i 11 1 associated with Penn Cent ral. ----,........,..., ______ ___, I DISTRICT FINALS r-~ifl l Go\P9l t~ EVERY TUESDAY AND THURSDAY FROM 4 P.M. TO CLOSING IS 'BUCK' NIGHT AT GRANTS Chmpionships MONDAY FEB. 15 FAMILY SPECIALS $ 1 ,., ... ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER (ACROSS FROM DISHEYLAllO) RJNr:iS10E $5.00 LOGE 2.50 GENERAL 1 .50 TICKl!.TS OH SALE AT CONY£NT!OH CEHT [~ I OX OPll'IC£ MUTUAL • L l9ERTY AGl!.HCl£S. SPON SORED BY HOLLYWOOD JAYCEES AND ANAHEIM Y.F.W, POST #3173 YOUR CHOICE: * Roast Turkey Dinner * Golden Fried Chicken * Roast Beef Au Jus * Ham Steak Hawaiian Witt! pototoes, choice ef •'tft•ble •r ''""'' col• 'low, roll ottd b1i11ter. Monday ind Wednesday Ev•nlngs Only BRADFORD HOUSE STEAK DINNER Strvtd with toned gr"n nlad, pot•toe1. hot roll end butt•r. 2 '" $300 , BROOKHURST & ADAMS HUNTINGTON BEACH DAILY Pll 07 5 QUEENIE By Phll lnterlandi WorJ~ ota Holiday Astronauts Scan ''TM~ ISTHE'l CHEAP£ST OUTATIN 1llE WORLD E/eclrlclly I• vita/ lo your way ot lite . So Is a healthy environment. We're working to bring you both. Photos of Moo11 er • • ion Nuclear power plants can help close it. In Southern California, the need for electric generating capacity has more than doubled in the last ten years. It is anticipated that public needs for electricity will continue to increase. To meet this growing need, Edison must build additional generating plants now. Otherwi se an electric generation gap could occur by 1976. One of the ways we plan to avoid a pmver shortage is by constructing • additional nuclear power units at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station near San Clemente. Although now underway, the first addition will not be ready for commercial operation before 1976. But some people oppose construction of these units. One of their concerns is radiation. Actually, radiation is a natural phenomenon. Background radiation is everywhere and always has been. It comes from the food you eat, the air you breathe, the materials used to build your hom e. The San Onofre nuclear plant is a source of som e radiation, too. The question is, how much additional :radiation are people exposed to li ving near San Onofre? The answer: so litlle that an elaborate monitoring program for the area surrounding the plant has yet to deteet any additional radiation from operation of the plant. Anoth er concern may be the warm water released by ntlclcar po\ve r plants. At San Onofre, sea water is used to cool the plant condensers, and then the warmed wate r is returned to th e sea. To determine wh ether this harms the mai·ine environn1ent, Edison commi ssioned an oceanographic company of national stature to monitor the offshore waters both before and after the plant was built. Resul t: nin eteen reports, comp iled over a seven.year perio(l, reveal no signifi cant changes in th e marine environment. And that's after three years of plant operat ion. In addi tion, the California State Department of Fish and Gam e made its own study of th e same marine area in 1969. The Departmen t concluded that th e nuclea r uni t's operation did not appear to have had an adverse effect on tl1e near~shore 1narine environment. Based on these and other facts, we believe nuclear plants are a safe and sensible way to generate electricity. Clean, too. Since there's no combustion in a nuclear reactor, no by-products of combustion are released into the atmosphe re. At Ediso n, we plan to rely more and more on nuclear power to meet the growing need for electricity in the 14-county area we serve. sCE Southern California Edison I , '• ... I 1 DAILY PILOT EDD'OBIAL PAGE Where Those Taxes Go Americans old enough to remember the Amos and Andy rad io program in iU Depressi on years prime will recall the guffaws from Andy's grandiose money talk: "E.ight million ••• nine million ... ele ven1t1Ullon ••• " Nowadays the reaJ life. talk is in the scores and hundreds of billions -SUITll so huge as to boggle the mind and make the figures seem meanin gless. It is possible, ho\vever. to break the billions down so the average taxpayer can find some meaning to whit's happening to the hefty load be shoulders. President N ixon wants Congress to vote for his budget totaling $229.2 billion dollars. Percentages are available to break this down into 14 components, show· ing what a typical -not necessarily average -family \'t'iU pay for each item, using just the federal in come tax. A mar_ried ma n earning i9 100 a year, with a wife a~d two chtldrcn. has approximJtely $860 withheld from his pay for the federal tax. This is how his $860 will be divided by Uncle Sa m: DtCense ('<'·ar and preparations), 33.Si;c, ............. , ..••......•.•••...•.. Spatt nsearch and technology, l.f':P ........ .. War \'tlerans' btntflts, f.5% . , ... , .. , , , , •••..• Foreign aid and propaganda. I.8% •••.••••. , , . Interest on debt. mostly to pay I nus IZ.Of .3UC U.4' for pasc war1, 1.5% .. .. . . . . .. . . . . . • .. .. 7J.H (Thest fh·e lttm1 total Ml!. 7t, about tiaU tht tolaJ.) Old age pensions. welfare. otbtr social 11ervlce1, ZG.$%. .................. 22'7.M Housing, urban renewal. commu· ntty programs, 2% .......... , .......... . ReaJlb un·tces lnclucfing medlcart, rtsearcb, consumer protection. di sea~ pre\'tnUon and bo1ptlalt , T'.l~ .. . Education aid, Z.7% .......................... .. P.tanpower training, I.15"o .... , ................ . Prlct 1upport11 for farmers. rural tlectrUlcaUon, conservaUoa , %.51' ....... . RIYers. harbors. parh, environment, etc., 1.1% ....•.................•••.•..•• ' 17.%0 .. .• o 1.1.zi I.fl %1.58 llM Airport•, llfcltwayt, m111 tn.1u1t, mall 1trvlce, ltelp tor 11111U b11slae11, ett., ti% . . . .. . . ............... 41.%1 All other federal c;oYerameal acU,ltler, L3% .......................... llJI Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . •. . . . . . . . • • . . . . . . . • ' Ho.II This is where tht federal income tax money goes. State and local taxes are on top or this total. However much a taxpayer may disagree with speci· fie allocations, he could accept the burden with more equanimity if he could feel his money were not being \vasted by the huge bureaucracy. Unfortunately, this is not the case -and there seems little hope that Presi· dent Nixon (or any President) can bring the giant to heel. Vulnerable Freeways? Although accurate estimates of the total ~roperty damage resulting from last Tuesday mornings earth- quake won't be available for some time to come, one thing is certain: The damage to freeways will be among lhe. most costlx -l}Je greatest single roadway loss in United States history. lo this fact lies irony. After the Long Beach earth- quake of 1933, the Legislature passed the Field Act. This so tightened construction standards for school build· ings that many a school district has reached a point of bankruptcy trying to comply l''ilh code requirements. But now the adequacy of earthquake resistance ~tandards or the state's vital f~eeway system bas come into sharp question. The question must be raised: given a temblor at peak tr'affic hours instead of at 6:01 a.m., ,~,o~ld the major frt:eway interchanges in the Los An geles basin have been the scene of niassive loss of life? U the answer is yes, why' has the state permitted inadequate standards in its own construction? And wh at corrective action must be taken? If the answer is no, the people of Southern California need -and deserve -that reassurance. Denaocratic Aspira11ts Vie to Go ••• Washington's Advice ls Vital Toda)· Billions Up o·n President WASHINGTON -The Democratic presidential aspirants are vying with each other to go scores of billions up on Presiden t Nixon. Senator Muskie would spend S25 bill ions to clean up the rivers. Senator Kennedy wanu 70 billions for h e a l l h insurance. Senator Bayh wants m o r e billions for something or other along v.·ith several constHutional am· endments. Senator McGovern claims ad. dilional billions lo feed the hungry. Sen· ator Humphrey ls wa rming up a big &pending plan of ht1 own. Along with th e Keruiedy.Johnson economic adviser, Walter Heller, the leading Democratic political spokesmen are thus setting a tone to carry through 1972 on the inadeq uacy of Nixon·s already de ficit-ridde n ex pansion of social services by the federal government. This raises an unavoidable question on how far ren1oved the ambitious Democratli may be from the mood of the American people. G 0 VER N 0 RS REAGAN and Rockefeller, far distant in I heir aims and purposes. reflec t in openin g their new adminislratioll! the ove rv.·helming concern of people everywhere with the burden of taxation. the C06t of . welfare. !he insurficiency af local serVJces and police protection. 'The exces!es in \\1ashington of politically -inspired remedies thutci carry v•ith them a buill in reaction. This " Rich_ant 'wi w · ' ' ... .. ........... _._ -····"'··~--~. ractor alone may In the end make Nixon ·s far mort moderate proposals, revolu· tionary as they are from .lht conventional Republican point of view, the voice of moderation which will 11ppeal stronger to the public mood. Nixon may ha~ ccoonted on that contrast and, if so, his rivals in the Senate are not dis1ppointing him. It becomes increasingly clear that pressure groups which could not innucnce Nixon are finding their spokesmen among the De)tlocratic presidential·aspiranta. NIXON RULED O\TI' compulsory na· tional health insurance ; his Senate rivals are getting behind it. Nixon ru led out multi. billion dollar crash programs on pollution ; his Senate r ivals are getting behind that. Nixon ruled out for now fancy new revenue raising schemes; his rivals are now thrashing around in· tffective!y in that field . Thus, by contras!, Nixon's revenue· sharin g proposals, his forthcoming family health insurance plan, and his alternative lo "·elfare through an income Ooor· ap- pear modest and workable. He is moving into a position to say that his opposilk>n in Congress ignored his practic11I pro- posals to pursue \'Ole-getting and ir- resporLSible schemes beyond the ability of the federal government to fina nce. He may pertinently argue that the last chance for reform of welfare· is rapidly passing. At the present rate of growth the wel far e rolls may impose on the nation in only a few years a cost much greater than hi! proposed income noor withoot then any prospect of bringing it under et1nlro\ short of lhe most drastic measures. Every year. boom or bust, the welfare problem grows to the ·same dimensions as if the nation were in a big depress ion. NIXON'S DEMOCRA nc r i v a I s ' however. are not COO!trained by the responsibility of balancing the na tion's needs and priorities. The.y cu: sing the ir own song. do their own thing without ever totting up the COit of doing everything. The ri!i: they do run is creating a total im•ge of such daring .Democratic prolligacy that the public mind boggles. It would be an interesti1g experiment if a total Democratic altematlvt to Nix· on'a new revolution were to be offered, but that, of course:, is imposs ible in practical tenns because the Democrats cannot agree even on how to reform their own party procedures. They are presently bemused by the idea that Nixon is a one tenn President and each am. bitious man must therefore move two years in advance to succeed him lest he be lefl behind by his fellow candidates. In this atmosphere ind i v I d u a I Democratic proposals without relation one to lhe other are likely to proliferate. Tht desire to capture the headlines and the TV spots is universal. The resulting confusion and disorder might conceivably be the factor that would assure Nixon a second term. Two Powers • in the World Thought$ at Large: Those \\'ho still believe that any ulli1nate good can be achieved by (Orce \\'OU!d do 1~1ell lo ponder Napo leon's con. rlusion in exile : "There are only tv.·o po'>'·er!'i in the world -the s"·ord and the spirit -and e1·entually the spirit must a\'>'·ays be viclorious.'' . .. ... Incidentally. there ls another fine Napoleon • in • exile quotation. on the same subje<:I. that hardly anyone rec· ognize$: :·The more r sludy lhe world. the more I am con· vinced of !he lnabil· fl y of brute force lo create anything durable." • ; . . ~ ~t ' . A r:ertain amount of monotony is es~ ~ential to life. and lhose who always l.ry to flee monotony are really dilling lhemselvea of! from a life-giving force; -----Monday, February 15, 1971 The tdltoriol po.gt of the Dofly Pilot 1eekt to jn.form and 1t1nL· ulote readers bu presenting this 11twspoPfr'1 opinions and corn- mentat}' an topfcr of l!"lt~rest n11d afantfiCQ.ttct, b11 prov~d1no a forum. fO'J' &Ju: t.tprtssron af our rta&rs' opinions. a·nd. bu prtatn,lnu tl1t dir1ersc v1tw· pmhu of informed observPr! and 1poktrtr1tn on topic1 of t11c daW. Robert N. Weed. Publisher I it is the monotony of the. sun's rising ?very morning th at makes variety pos· sibl e. • • • Some day t would lovt \o be cha\nnan Clf a metting and introduce the final speaker as "Last and a1lo least.'.' • • • t.fost of us lake it as a eomp\lme nt when an old friend te lls us ou r looks haven 't rhansed much In 20 years; but J would construe it I S an insult , for I want my face and bearing to show son1e signs of the struggle for self· mastery over the years. • • <II • \\o'e tend to judge others by analogy with our own character. which is wt\v the Innocent person see11 mort innoctnce in the world 11\8.n there really is, and why the crooked perllOn sees fir more crookedness in thlnp . · • • • Peciple with affectations art not vain. but suffer from a haunting ense of infe rk>rity; an affectation is a confession that you do nClt consider your natural selt to bt good enough to be displayed in public. • • • Some people are so congenlt1lly unf1i r· mlndtd th.It ~·hen they dial a wrong number they gel mad al the \'Olce thit ans"•ers. • • • <II The phrase ''lo hem ind haw" Is tt liUle masterpiect of ler5t dt1erlpllon that could not be better s11\d In a fat paragraph. • • • What convtnUonal schoolin& does malr>- Jy is rtpl1ce curiosity with confonnily. \·jtality with docility, and honesty with hypocrisy -and what is 10 su rprising is that young people didn't rebel agairLSl this distortion of the educational process generations ago. • • • It's an inviolable law of human nature lhat the same ma n who complains about "too many laws" always knows of ont more that. if passed , would make all the difference. • • • Prosperity is that period in ou r economic life when we accumulate debts that cannot possibly be repaid if limes get a liltlt worse. • • • Peciple who glibly equate the ton· fesslonal chamber with lhe psychiatrist'• couch are as Innocent of thecilogy as U~y are Confused about therapy. • • • \\'hen we buy objects. v.-e respect them and pay more if the~"rc foreign·made: but In the market of idea5, we hold all 1'alien'' contepts cheaply. Dear Gloomy • Gus: t v.•ish one of those sad charact· ers v.·ho alv.·ays sv.•amp the poliet: v.·ith calls after an ob.,·ious earth· quake v.·ould plea.st explain why in ti letter lo the. edilor. I could never understand !his infantile reaction. -M. l.. n 11 ftttwrt """"' ........,... ..1.... ""' lltcttMtllr .,,_ .. rM ---· ...... ,_ "' "'"' " •'-"'' ..... DtHY rr1tt. ' . .GuClllt Editorial ?i.tany stories hav e been told about George Washington. ?i.tost are probably not !rue. So far as is known, he did not chop down hi s fa ther·s cherry tree. !hen confess by saying : "father, I cannot tell a lie.'' He probably ne ver threw a stone across the broad Rappahannock RJver. But 1uch stories show that people wert willing t.o believe ahnost anything about his honesty and his great strength. ONE OF WASHINGTON'S officers summed up the way Americans felt and still feel about Wash ington : "First in war, fir st in peace. and first in the hearts of his countrymen.'' Although we du ly c ommemora l e \Vashlngton's epoch -making .ac· complishments for our country, it is the sterling qualities in his characler that merit greatest admiration. His piety. courage, indomitable self-control and principle! of freedom and justice. He relinquished a life of v.•ealth and tase to direct the destiny of our flag. IDS ACCO~tPLlSHMENTS as Presi· dent were enormous. He came to office "'ithout a government; within a year ht had a system set up and working. The depa rtmenl!I had been organized, a revenue service established, federal courts formed, the postal ser\·ice taken over, and a num ber of other functions of government set in motion. By the close of his administration he had established the relationships that continue to exis t in large measure today between the branches ol government. TODAY THREE words whose meaning ls cheri!hed by Americans a r e brotherhood, Christianity, democracy. These \\'ere among the basic teachings of the Father of Our Country. We have long hoped that the idea embodied in these words would be a c c e p t e d univer3ally. In his fartwell Addrtss. Washington urged : "Promote the general diffusion of knowledge .•• enlighten public opinion . • . observe good faith and justice toy,·an:l all.'' How vita l is his advice today. THE WORLD IS in a state or constant change -just as the spirit of liberty -or a kindred spirit -mo\·es through continents and sweeps the earth. Only by enlightened cooperation in human affairs throughout the world can \\'e hope to preserve unity and the American Way of life. 1\frs. Thomas Becky,·ilb Fairy Story Press Commen ts ' Bto1'11svlllc, Pa .• Tele1rapb : "Don'l know why it Is, but every time we hear 111 c1ndldate tell people he is going t[) cut state taxes tr elected. we feel he should stlrt his talk by S.)'ing, 'Onct upon a time. . . ' That i3 how mosl fairy stories start out, isn'I it?'' Cbelck, l\'lsc .. Altrt: "'Ttcn-agrrs art upse\ these days because they're living In A world dom inated by nuclear weapons-and Adults are upset because they're livln& ln a -world dominated by tttn·aaera." ·..,~':' ..-'-·'· /(..';•· , I Use of Jargo·n Obscures Ideas It oflen seems as if one of !he rules ol scholarly discourse in philosophy and the social sciences is ne\•er to use simple words if you can find learned and preten. tious v.·ords to use instead. If you \\'rile so that everyone can understand, you are called a popularizer -or more like ly, a mere populariter. friendly col- leagues v.·ill say it more politely. Your ''iews. !hey "'ill say, are "simplistic and reductionistic." On the other hand. If no one can understand what you "'rite. your scholar· ly reputatio11 be- t."Omes immense, like that of the German philosopher H e g e I or the existentialist l'\tartin Heidegger. and thousands o f students from Heid· e1berg lo Princeton to Ber k eley lo Bombay will busl !heir heads trying lo understand you - and mar1y "'iii even imagine that they do. AT ANY Tt!ltE IN academic life there are \VOrds that become the vogue, as lhe "'Ord "parameter" is at present. ''Parameter" is a mathematical ternt meaning "an arbitrary cons I ant characteriiing by each of its particular values some particular number of a syste m , as or expressions. curves; surfaces. functions" (\\'ebster's New Jnlernalional Dictiona ry, 3rd edition). There ls a considerable jump from U1is technical definition to a usage such as this: "The curriculum in humanities must be designed ""ilhLn the para meters establi shed by university policy." If you can subsli lutc for "parameters'' simpler "'ords like "guidelines" or "limits,'' and the sentence n1a kes better sense as a rcsuH , you can be sure the speaker is suffering from academic jargonitis. The word ''lltur\stic'' means "aidin g or ~uiding in discove ry: designating an educational method by \vhich a pup il is stimulated to make his own in· vesl igalions and discoveries'' (funk and \Vagnalls Standard College Dictionary !. For example, one may properly say that a cer!ain hypothesis. while lln· provable. can serve as a heuristic tool. BUT "Hf.U RJSTIC" has also become a jar~on term through misuse and overuse as a kind or modest disclaimer. half·'ll·ay taking back 'il'hat one has just said: "I am merely ofrering this idea for heuristic pu rposes." This means, to translate it inlo another ki nd of jargon, "l'rn just running it up the nagpole to i:cc \\'hO s11lu1es." After reading one day (1vc or si~ pnpcrs submitted 10 a soc111 I science journal v.·hich I '''a!{ servtns as an edilorial consultant, I decided lo write 11: soclological p;iper of my own, ob5erV· ing all the rules or scholarly propriety. Htre 1t 1s: THE KALL!KAKS AND THE SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS : AN INQUIRY INTO THE fOR~IATION Of AirlTUOINAL SETS By S. 1. llayaka\\'a, Ph.D. On !he basis of preliminary studie! 11 v.·ould SCfm a reasonable hypothesis that among the 51tuallonal fa ctors predlspaslng 11\e Kallikak family towards !how!ng pronounced psychcloglcal 1dtn· tlflcatlon \\•i1h the San Francisco Giilntl'i over all otl'lcr b11.scb11 ll teams is the ract that the Kallikaks make their domlcllc in San Francisco. T ff E KAl.J.JK AKS' atliludc in th I! rt.Spec! would seem to confirm tile fin· dings of Glutzberg (195.1, lll60i and t~c Havakawa , _... earlier researches of Plotz (1947), whi ch established that in the case of any given sports fan. his place of residence tends, \1•ith certain parameters yet to be con· elusively defined, lo correlate with hiJ team preference. lp other words, San Franciscans 1vho Identify with the San rrancisco Giants v.·ould seem to constitute an impre~sively large proportion of the baseball fans of that city. The same appears to be true of Cincinnatians, who lend to iden· tlfy with the Cinci nnati Reds . The situa· lion in other National League cities hai: ·been touched UPQn tKloepfcr. 1965 >. but thorough studies have yel to be un· derlaken. TO RETURN. HO\VEVER, to the Kallikaks. it would be going beyond the available evidence to suggest that their place of residence is the sole, or even the most important. factor determining their strong attitudinal sel in preference for the Giant.s. Preliminary psychometric and sociometric stud.ies of members of the Kal!ikak family disclose certain areas of atypicality \1•hich \\'ould suggest that othe r factors independent of place of residence may enter into the determina. lion of their team preference. The idenlific ation of these factors. ho"•ever. awaits thP development of .'I conceptual framework adequate to deal "'ith !he full complexity of the intra· and interpersonal , cultural and con· textual variables involl'ed. \\'HAT HAS BEEN said here in 300 words can be said, if J'OU have ''s implistic and reductionistic'' habits or mind . in less than 10, thu~: "Peopl e generally root for their 11ome town teams ." Of course some \\1rllings are di!ficult because !hey dea l with difftcu!t and mind-stretching ideas. One thinks of Sig· mund Freud, of John Dewey, of Alfrtd Korzybski. ot Karl Popper, of ~fartin Buber. each of "'hom has a style as novel as his ideas. But \11hy do "'e have to endure !he. academics v.·ho insist on makini; verbal mountains out of inlellectual molehills? ffov,r can our sluden~ learn to think clearly, confronted with this cnslaught of verbiage? Dy S. I. lfayakawa President San Francis co State College 811 6corge ---, Dear George : What should J do 3boul my neighbor's dog. which birk.!I all night? Y.V. Dear Y.Y.: Offhand. I wouJd say that depends on your basic attitude - na1nely, whether you like lo hear dog barking or not ttll nii;:ht. You could Applaud. if you wish. Cauld you write back and give me some furt~r Insight inlCI lht fa scinating workings o( your mind ? Dear George: 1 ·m looklnr:i; for a job. Do you need an nsslslanl '.' WANDA De:ir \Vanda : Does 1hls rJdiculous do·nothin~ racket LOOK like I netd an assist.int? ltow many people doc1 it take to Cr~load r r f ' t f • f • n t d d n • ' I , k t • t ' CHECKING •UP• Ever See Glass es On Birds? By L. ~t. BOYD A PRISON DOCTOR who ministers to female convicts contends his observation over the )'ears indicates you just can 't trust a woman with triangular fingernails ... HO'V ~1ANY phone calls did you make last year, young lad y? No notion? Exactly 745 is the national average. That's coun- ting every man, woman and unspeakable child, however ... A N 0 T ll E R KITCHEN STAPLE that got its start on the American ma rket years ago as an exotic health food Is the graham cracker. JUDG E A WOI\lAN by her mind. not by her appearance. Such was the advice of that \\'ise old gentleman named Aesop. Our Love and \Var man can't agree. You get a fairly accurate fix on a woman's character, he claims. by how she dresses and puts on her makeup. But certainly nothing shows her up more clearly than lhe way she fumi shes her house. For in· stance, a woman who props brightly colored pillows all over her 1ivingroo1n tends to be highly sensuous . S he craves rom a nee . That's generally known. CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q. "Can you train a sheep?" A. 'To do \Vhat? Follow you 11round maybe . Sheep are prelty stupid, but they know \\1hat they like : chocolate ... (}. "Arc there many fen1ale forgers?" A. Only a few. The j!irls kite checks and overdrav.· their accouats \Vith abandon, lav.men say. but they rarely actually forge phoney signatures. A ~1AJORJTY of molhl!rs. hy no means all. jusl a ma· jority. bear no more children after the age of 26. Rightly enough. the usual mother is capable of having children for another 20 years or so or her lifetime. But she does11't nowadays, not if s h e ' s average ... WHEN ANGRY. the nctopus turns completely purple. \Vh en amorous. it blushes red all over. I knov.• a man who catches octopuses for a livinii;. He has ~een them turn purple many times, but they don't usuall.v get red "'hen he's around. Too bashful maybe. YOU KNOW THOSE new micro1vave ovens? Conk an egg in one of then1 . If you poke the yolk , it will explode . OUR LANGUAGE r'olAN says bit. shabby. chap. cab ;;ind kidnap all sta rted out as slang words unlisted in any dictionary until recently .. r.1IGllT ASK you r doctnr \\•hat he ,,·ould prescribe for sternutalion. That ought lo send the old boy back to his books. It's sneezing. fN THE ANli\li\I. WORLD. l[,'s the bird 1vhich has the be~t. eyesight. that's definite . Remember the ancient debate about whether a robin find s <t \vonn \1•ith its eyes or its ears? It \Vas long thought the robin hears the \Vorm . Thal'.~ \1•rong. It's now known the robin secs the '''Orm. And the \\'Oml that doesn 't volunteer never gets chosen. \V ould like lo do a "'hole philosophical column on 1 his But not today . Yo11r questions n·11d com· me11ts nre 1ve/comed and 1oi// bl" t1s1!d in CllECKING VP wherever possible. Ad· dress let ters to L. M. Boyd, P. 0 . Box 1875. Newport ReacJ1, Calif .. 92660 . 1AO!lday, F'rbruA.ry 15, 1~71 DAILY "LOT 1 • Furniture sale! rug sale! That's Presidents Day ~ • Save •t.35 at Penneys. Sale 15°/o off Everything you need for com1ort. Two medium 1ens1on inners pr ing manresses. two upholstered sola bases on casters. A pair of handsome filled covers plus a pa ir of zippered wedge bolsters ... and a textured walnul·f1n1sh !able with laminated plastic l op to lal\e ro ugh treatment . Penney's furniture price s Include delivery within focal ar ea . S1vt •4.85 Boy&' •toJagt corner group. Reg. $299. NOW 254.15 French Provlnd1I c;orn•r group. Rog. $329. NOW279.65 Save 53.IS Medilerr1ne1n ator•t• corner group. Reg. $351. NOW 305.15 S1ve 51.35 Modern bolster bor corner group. ~.,. $319. NOW330.S5 Sale s52 Reg. $~2 9 X 12' ·supreme' room alzt rugs fo r luxury on a budge!. Cut and loop texture gives a.deep sculptured effect in long wearing easv-care nyton. Foam rubber backing for extra comfort underfoot. hl '4 colors. 6 X 9•, rog. S34, NOW S21 Avail1blt on lfMClaf order: 12 lC 12', rog. SH, NOW $75 . 12 X 15", rog. $109, NOW $92 12 X 11", r19o S121, NOW $109 s.i. prlcu onoctlvo llltoudl ......,. Value. It still means something at Penneys. ennelfl Furniture ond rug• •••il.ble at the following •lores: FASHION ISLAND . Newporl .Center, HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington B .. ch Buy it on Ponnoys Time P1ymenl Pion ' • ' ' ' •' 8 OAJLV PILOT le Tax Hik e See11 F 01· Qual{e Repaii· SA0RAMEN1'0 (UPI) - Those earthquake--toppled bridi;:es and cracked frecwa\'S In Southern CaHfornia coiild cost motorists an extra penny addrd on to the state's 7-cenl· a-ga llon gasoline tax thl'y already pay. (;ov. Hona1d Reagan and ' 111·0 key sena t?rit say they ,1·ill support a ~st 1r it is ricrded to pay for repairing lhl' roads, Y.'hich s I a t e highy.•ay officials say v.·ere damaged to !he lune or $30 million. Sen. Tom Carrell j 0-San 'Fernandol, chairinan of the Senaie Transportation Com- n1i1tee. said over the wel"kend he \\Ould introduce a gas tax hike if one is not tacked on as an amendment to a pending disaster relief bill. ''I think it v.ould be very timely." the la"·maker said. ''.\1osl of the darnage is. in m.v district.·· Carrell hin1sel f suffered a S.100,000 IO!'S when the quak e des!royed the building housing his new t:ar dealership. system used ·to distribute the $700 million a year California collects in gasoline taxes was made today by Chairman Wadie Deddeh or the A s s e m b I y Transportation Committee. The Chula Vista Democrat said it would make "the most effective use" of ~as tax revenues . used exclusively for road co n s truction .and 1naintenan~. Deddeh 's plan w o u Id distribute funds to regional areas rather than to each of the almost 500 l o c a l go\'ernments as is now done. R e g i o n a I transportation groups maqe up of local go\'ernmen! representatives "1luld detern1ine priorities "'ithin each region. • The governor during his tour of the earthquake.damaged San F'ernando Valley area lasl "'eek lent support to proposals to boost the gas tax to repair the roads. "It has \\·orked twice for California: and it can work again," the governor to ld newsmen , adding that whether he pushes for the hike v.•ill ··depend on the extent or damage to streets a n d highways." The Senate this week is ex- pected to act favorably on Auto Rams Bc~ch; T"'o ~ Lose Lives LOS ANGELES (UPI ) Two persons "·ere killed and three others se riously injured when an auto swerved out or control Sunday and smash- ed into a bus stop bench. Pollce sought the driver of the auto. described as about 22 years old. He fled from the scene on foot. Witnesses said the car was traveling at a high rate of speed when it went out of control at Alvarado Street. careened off a building and slammed into the bench. llp 7.2% Hike in Personal Income Reported HOT WHEELS RACING 6-8:30 P.M. TONITE Atn ... 12, Fln•I• S•tatunl•y, f•brv•ry 20th Tr~ln and HundrMt of Prl1e1 Wlnn•r• en.I Parotnt1 S.nt t• Sagln•W, Mlchlt•n Soatll l"oast ?lau EVERYONE LISTENS TO ANN LANDERS SAN FRANCISCO (lJPJ) -:1ltuctlon fell 5.6 percent to Cali!omlans are 7.2 percent $9.91 billion, and mining re- richer than they were a year mained constant at $1.01 ago, according to a Bank or billion. California survey. 1--;:========::====:::::;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;:======:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;======:;---The bank reported that ln·f -------- crease in average personal in· con1e in the state over the past year. Part of the increase was on paper only, however , because the bank noted that with the deduction of personal tax payments, savings and consumer interest payments. there was just 5.5 percent increase in terms of money available for spending. The bank reported these other California e c o n o m i c statistics: -The state's total pro- duction of goods and services (the gross state product) rose 3.86 percent to $113.47 billion. --Go\'ernment s e r v i c e s soared ll percent lo $18.09 billion, making it the largest gainer. -Manufacturing fell 2.5 per- cent to $25.2 bUlion, con- 6. 99-7. 99 reg.10:00-11.00 YOUTHS' AND BOYS' BOONDOCKER BOOTS Just the thing for your all-American boy, Rugged oil'tanned leather upper.; on long-wearing rubber soles •• , terrific boots fo1 school 'and play. Youths: 8Y2-12 and 12Y.i-4, reg. 10.00, 6;99. Big boy>: 4Y.i-6, reg. 11.00,7.99. Not all sizes in all stores. 7. 99 reg. 12.00 GIRLS' CHERRY-RED STRETCH BOOTS Bright, lickety-slicked boots of aillk!e patent So fashionable. So fun Chairman Ra ndolph Collier of the Senate Fina nce Com- n1 it1ee has endorsed a gas tax hike. The Yreka Democrat said the Legislature enacted increases to help fix road s darnaged by floods in his district. and he wants lo an Assembly-passed bill to ----------- Observatory Threatened to wear. Side-zipped for easy on and easy off. Little girls 8Y.i·12. Big girls 121'.i-3. Hurry ••• at return lhe favor . , declare Los Angeles County eligible for state and federal disaster assistance. In a related development. 11 propc.sal to revamp the ANNIVERSARY SALE! FRESH Sl.01 DOZ. GLAZED DONUTS REG. 69' (or 6c ••·) Ftb. 16th tfir11 Fib. 2Gtli 011tr 135 E. 17th Street -Costa Mesa SA-LE! TWO WEEKS ONLY! Washington 's Birthday Special: Large, lovely 11x14 portrait of your child incredibly priced at 95 ONLY Here'5 your opportunity to h1Y9 a fine 11lC14 professional Salon Portrait of your child (or any~ one In the family) for just •2.95. Come In now end remember ... you can charge it at Penney's I l\nneq1 . lllULL•ltTO!'I ~1lr c.ti• w Not. rn-4lJ ffVfft1•0TOll U•C.M Hunl"°'O""' C...•ll 1!'111 ''°°'· .., mi er.... -r,,. c.,.,... ~.,., I Nll!wt>OftT •I •C"' "'"'~ "''"" !NI ""'°'"· ~l!t POLICE LOSE DRUNK TRUCK LOS ANGELES (UPI ) - Two police officers were preparing to put t w o transients into a police drunk wagon Sunday when another man allegedly got in and drove the truck away. Officer Richard Kocar yell- ed at the suspect, J-larold Jiogers, 29, and lhen fired cne shot which hit Rogers in the leg. He was arrested when he pulled into a parking lot. SANTA CRUZ <UPI I - Scientists rear the University of CaJifomia may IOl!ie Jts pro- minent place in the field of astronomy because the glow of lights at night threatens observatory operations. Robert P. Craft, chainnan of the UC Santa C r u z Astronomy Department, has predicted that within ID years UC astronomers will be unable to study galaxies, quasars, and other fain t objects because lights (rom the boom- ing Santa Clara Va 11 e y obscures the night sky. Abusive Mortgage Practices Charged SACRA~1 ENTO (UPI ) -fam ilies, particularly in urban Abusive mortgage loan prac· ghettoes who must borrow by !ices have trapped many poo r taking out liens and mortgages families '·in a v.·eb Or endless against their h om es, 1 • debt." Sen. ~1ervyn Dymally Dymally stated. or Los An geles said today. Abusive practices could be St:1tc la ws to protect the reduced by better funding of JX)Or fron1 suc h practices anti-poverty lawyers who "ha\'c fa i I e d miserably," could advise the poor, he said . Dyrna!Jy said in a statement The subcommittee report accompanying a 60 page was the work of special con- l'eport hy his subcommittee sultant Leo Bromwich, a Van this price they'll go fast! • Children's Shoes. all Sloreos , 1/ .. . 7 • 9 9 reg. 12.00 MEN'S SOFT SNEAKER RACES INTO SPRING For active sports ••• or just for comfortable casual hours. You'll want several pairs fo r year round wear at this super saving. Sizes. 6Y.i-12. SALE MEN'S FAMO US BRAND SHOES Our finest! By E.T. Wrigh~ Bally, Free- man. Good selection of slyles and colors but not all brands in all stores. Reg. 23.00-48.00, now 18.00-34.97. on human needs. Nuys attorney. Newport, #1 Fash· I l d N t C t e 644 2 1'hc Democratic lawmaker -----=-------'--'-.:.:..::...:::.:...:...:::.:::.10::":...::5::.3::":.:::.·..:..::•::w:.<p:o::.r:..:::'"::.:::":.'-=..::.:.:.·..::'.:2'.'.00".....:•:..'.M~o".'n'.:..,'...F'.:.r~i::.•_:l~O':':O".'O'....':'ti~ll_:9'.:.:3~0'._';_'0:'.'l~h:"er1:._'1d~ay~s'....1.IO~til~· 1~~::()30 said the report documented ··Ho1v powerful mortgage broker firms are vio lating and circumventing the st a I e ' s mort gage loan brokers law or 1955." He explained t h e statute is aimed at setting limit s on (ees and com- missions charged by brokers and at requiring lenders to disclose terms of such loans. The State Division of Real Estate was hamstrung by a lack of personnel for en- forcement. he said, while il:~gistalion lo plug loopholes h<1s failed to pass. ·•Primarily arfccted are the thousands of low i n c o n1 c Girl Falls To Deatl1 LOS ANGELES (UPI) A 17·year..old girl fell five stories to her death during the v.·cekel)d v.•hcn she tried to escape from a stalled eleva tor 1n !he Job Corps' downtown center hert. She tried to climb through a l6-1nch opening to sa fety and apparently slipped. Syh•ia Guerra, Fresno, was \\•ilh four other persons in lhe elevator Saturday \vhen It stalled above !he fifth floor . ~flss Guerra, a .lob Corps student. v.·as pronounced dead at Central Heceiving Hospital. NOW! LONG BEACH IS SHORTER TO NORTHERN CALIFORNIA. (~~~ round tos.~ Now you can fly PSA from long Beach Airport to San Francisco. Four times a day. More on weekends. More flights than !ny other alr!lno. Connections to Sacra· menlo. Or, avoid the freeway and fly to San Diego. H you live any place south al Long Beach to San Francisco $!8 including tcuc. Leave Long Beach : 7:•0 am 10:45 am 1:30 pm 4:30 pm Mon lhru Th urs & Sal. More fl ights Frl & Sun. ~~~~~-~--' Los Angeles (Orange County, Palos Verdes, Wilmington, Torrance, etc.), l ong Beach Is like having your own private airport. You don'! have lo fight the tree· way traffic to L.A. Internat ional. Th ere•a easy pa rking. And the crowds haven't found ii yet. Next time you head north (or south), head tor long Beach Airport by way of your travel agent and PSA. PSA IMS JIXl • lfC. I DAIL v PILOT D Not Permissive Cliild Psychiatrist Advises Discipline Highe1· Bill s for Fuel Oil \ Artificial Teeth Never Felt So Natural Before , Hit All Pa1·t s of Cou11t1·y I Now .•• Plastic Cream Discovery Revolutionizes Denture Wearln1 By DZLOS Sl\11Tll NE\V YORK {UPI) -Peo· \l ie \vho a ss ociate p erm 1s s i ve n es s with psychiatry should hear the ad· \'ice a child psychiatrist is giving fan1ily doctors about ··re-educating" parents i!: the science of child rearing. Dr. Jerome D. Gooclman·s first poinl is that "freedom involv es responsibility and young people need disciplinary guideli ne s in order to beco1ne productive cilizens.'' His seconrl poinl is the im- portance of ''basic privacy :1nd n1odesty within the home'' and of parents: particularly lathers. expecting c hi Id is h conduct to be based on reality rather than on impulse. '·There are still n1 an y parents Y.'ho have the misguid- rd notion that things of the body are best left natural and that phy sical modes ty is an outmoded concept." he said 1n the journal. "'An1erican Family Physician." I le menti oned parents con - 1 inuing to bathe children unti l they arc 8 to 10 years old. "parents who are not averse !o the ir son"s con1pany in lhc parental bed"' and parent~ \\hO JX'rmit 111 son and a daughter to share a bedroon1. "These permissive attitudes toward modesty" are to him "parental attempts to ignore the sexual aspects of the body and often represent parenta l needs to infantilizc.-I he children." But "the most con1· pelling reason for a return to more Victorian standards.·· is that children now re;ich puberty at earlier than text- book ages. he sa id. f\lany p1:1rents also need ----------- n1edical .. education in ad- ministering diiicipline. ·· he wrote. "\Vhen I recom1nend spanking to the parents of a recalcitrant child, they v.•ere nabbergasted and sputtered, 'You, a child psychiatrist. could say that!' Ne vertheless 1he child was spanked at an appropriate lime and respond· ed to the dem onstrat ion of parental concern v.·ith lovl' and improved behavior.'' His guidelines I'.' e re · '·Discipline should be ad· ministered after the act rather than before it has occurred : lhe parent should not threat en to make bargains with a child about fut ure beh avior : children shoul d not be give n a dccision·making role l0t1 early: discipline should not hf' deferred." Japan Tells Bomb Toll lJIROSH lf\1A. Japan (UPI \ -A total of 70 persons died last J'Ca r from effects of th l! a!o1nir bomb dropped on Hiroshima in 1945, the city's Gembaku !atomic bombing ) l·lospital has announced. The number of deaths in 1970 was one fewer than !he 71 recorded in 1969. the hospital said. but lhe numbe r of persons treated for ato'llir bomb effects in 1970 increased by about 900 lo 4!1.578. l\fost of the deaths were caused bv cancerous tum(lrS and 1rukemia, the hospital said. WASHINGTON (AP) Final figures on 11wollen 1970 fuel prices paid by electric utilities indicate a growing trtnd toward higher electricity bills for the nation 's con· :sumers. A nationwide survey, con1. piled by the American Public Power Association . sh°"'s that c-!ectric utilities in all regions of the country paid soaring prices for fue l oil. coal and natural gas to operate their generators. In many cases. an Associated Press spot check shows, the higher costs have been passed on to customers as rate increases, or will be passed on soon. i\'fost of the utilities involved in the survey are mun.ici pally operated. They have been hit h<.rder than many privately ovned power companie s because t'hey frequently are prohibited by law fro m negotiating long-term fuel c.'On- tracts and therefore are more susceptible to nuctuations in fuel prices. Industry and governn1ent of· ficials say it is impossible lo gauge at this time just how much rising Fuel bills have cost in increased electric bill.~. but many nf the in· Air conditioners now? Yes, if you want to save 10%! No payments 'til June. Thru Sat. Only! Sale 12595 Reg. 139.95. Pennc,..,8l0 S,000 BTU elr conditioner wrth 2 speed fan and cooling. Quick-mount kit for easy insl•lla'joo; adjustable Joovers; 10 position thermostat control. • Reg. 209.95 Penncrest • 10,000 BTU air condlll-Sale 188.95 Sale 206 95 Reg. 229.95. Penncrest• 15,000 BTU air condllloner with 2 speed fan and cooling. 10 position thermostat control. Tilt·out Scott foam filler: adjustable air directors. Reg. 319.95. Penncrest• 24,000 BTU air conditioner Sale 287.95 enne1f1 creases ha1·e been greut enough that custoniers Ill".! con1plaining. "'The a\'erage rate increase here has been $2.10 11 month and our customers aren't t:1 k- ing it \'Cry \Vell at all," !'lllit Ludovic Long, superintendent been held In 6 to 7 percent. but more arc in lhr offuig. "There is certainly the pro· mise of mon• increases to co1ne," Gullck s:1ld. "We're going to be n1aking rnonlhly re\•isions in 01u· ful:'t Hd- justn1enl t:l11use." lh'.! lt~gal )"Ot the f1r~l iinlf". loCIC'llCC" u:tlt" 1 !)l:i.~I!( c1r.1111 lh;il hnld' •ltroru1'h a11 thrfvr nr1'rr liern hdd hc-IOJ"e uornl•lln da•llC n1en1Ur~11r 1ha1 Jo•lf>.1 Jwld >"''" dt .. lotl•> /u t•c 11u/111~ll1.j• IUIS of Y<Jll1 l/IOitflt ll"t ll re"olutJunarv d•<.f(l\rrv rlllled F1xno~Nl6 101 daily h<.1mr u"": (LI~. Pa1en1 ft,(Xl:I,~\ I· 1."'>W~NT hold' denture-~ (1rmer .•• '""' ''""' •'1Hffll•/1111. r nu maw h!lr h•f(kr, chew tieuc-r. eat mo1 r OlltUflil)' F1~nof.:-. 1 la•ls loc houB. Rn111 • mo1•lur1: ll•:•lh.orr~ th•l fit are t•· ..entrnl tn hr11lth Sre your d1ntul rcgut•rly. Cc! "'Y·tO-U..'C l-'1,,;ooc:-.i· Derllur11 /\dh~:;.-t Crea111 al 111 !ltug eaurl\cr~. of electric ut ilitic!! i n t~rceport, N.V. ~~reeport 's fu el oi! l·osts rDll1' 162 percent in the last sevf'n 1TlQnths of 1970. fro1n $2 O"! to $5.62 a barrel. rneans n):tn} 11t1l11il's havl' oi i~-----------------==---=;;:..-, passing on !ncrcasing f11cl ;,ll's ridiculous." Long slid in an interview. ''You rnighl as well buy gold." Long said he v.·as lold earlier by several oil com- panies that prices v.·ere goin1:: up because or a severe .shortage of Fuel oil ··No\11 they're telling us - now that the pr1 cr is w.iy uµ thert> -that thcrf' isn't too much or a shortaAC any more,"' ht> said. ""Hui !ht:\" say wr'll hr paying !hes~' priers for at least five years ·· The Glendale. Calif., Publ il'I Service Department wa.~ hit with fuel oil price increases! that hiked prices lo 252 pet· I cenl of what they were a year ago. So far. according: 10 Assistsnt C.eneral ~1anagrr Howard Gulick . ronsumer.;' electricity ra!r increasrs ha vl' (·osts to 1:us1nmt•rs 111 ratr -"· I In Vern Ut•;u.:h. Fl;1 , 1hC' n1unir1pal utihl)' ha~ no fuel adjustn1cnt cl..use, bu t is cou-j sidering in\•oking onr . City ~lanager J:imes Pride ~ays1 1970 fuel 011 eosts were up1 30 percent and n:itura1 gas prices up 20 percent. '"\\'e h:i\·c.-n 't gol the legal n1eans to pass it on in util ity ralr incrl'asei-, so we'vt> JUSt had lo l'al 1t.'' Pride said ' ··Bul if thf'Sf' incrrHscs con- l1nul' n1uch longer. 1>asl Ju ly, ..,.e"ll have to ask for a fuel adJustn1c 11\ cla11sC'. \\'c 1.:an·1 t•:il these cu~t.~ forever." 1,000'1 OF Oil PAINTINGS !' WHOLESALE WAREHOUSE I OPEN TO THE PUILIC 50°/o OFF U l' E. EDINGEll, SA NTA ANA Pl'IO~• IU·4'0I ~ -OEALEllS WAHTEO -- I See by Today's Want Ads '~'r..,/'c::~ e "'K,\• k in !ht• !o\add\it!- \o;:.nn"' ~·~~ \\lr ll. lr you 1\:1111 11 rl'ni 11C'11.I, thi.11 \\ "''''ru i.;<1nd1r 1s Jnr ~ale / loll' "nly ~10''~ e rr )"11 :11·r a i.:ood.Jook1ni:: 1•h11 k. 1hr 111Q11rl type, hP1·r ·~ 11 hrr+' you ~I art u111r r;i1,-.r1· , .• ··nn1· r~•~1H'~ ,t po1·1fol1os r.u· S:\5 ,\ 1lp. • l.ooki11~ fnr 11 h111c r >;lrit Jnron1r·• '? J~n't every. nnr! '.: Chrck ou1 our hrlp w 11 r1 ! r <I c·lassification. You'll hnd 10111 ot idt'a~! ! I Now hear this stereo sale! • • • ' Sale s14s Reg. 189.95. Sawe 41.95. Penncrwt• 3 pc. 8 lrack stereo component a1stem. AM /FM-FM stereo tuner, 8-lrack . stereo tape player, 4 speaker system. , ' ~@ Sale s12s .,, Reg. 149.95. Sawe 21 .95. Pe11a91t !. 4 pc. slereo comPonent syslM'a. Solid state chassis BSR. m1n1 c hanger. two 6Y2• ful l range s peake rs. Two speaker cabi nets wilh swivel bases. Sale sea Reg. 99.95. Save 11 .95. Pennerest - 3 pc. stereo component system. Solid state chass is, BSR mrni changer, two 5" tun range-speaticers. Sale s14s Reg. 179.95. Save 31 .95. PenncrHI• 3 pc. stereo cassette component 1y1tem. AM/FM-F M stereo tuner, 4 track casset1e recorder/player, lwo 6112" lull range speakers. • Avtileblt at the tt l uy ii on P'""'Y' Penney stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Cel'!ltr, HUNTINGTON CENTER, Time Payment Pldn '1vail1ble at thtte Pe l'!ney ,fores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Ce"'*•r. HUNTINGTON CENTER, Hunt!n~ton leach Huntin9ton Bea ch Buy II on Pann1yi Time Paym tl'll Plari I • -· • ) • ' I f ' l I I I ' ' ' ' ' I .. JO DAILY PILOT For tl1e Jtlarriage Licenses C01TA i.<E U. '-Villlll"Gt: LIC'E~~l 1-A.S "EGA.~. "lt'V ..... ,. .. ~, 1.c-.1 lu-...... lnclVO• RAMOS "llLL$-.J•n )1, li'u3f" A<I•"" ll •"<I JCl•c• ""'""''" :'t OC•fl o• Mu1>'1f''"'" Bf.Cl> .. \ ... TSUMOTO.LOH ... -r.o I ... y .,. •l>CI Oorotflv F , •· Doll> OJ f <••m!f·n Vlllf• SIEGMlt."IN·F'OWELL~F~ ' l"r~. :" ~· ("'!• M"• •11<1 D•I""• (hl<IC!'f ]6, ot N 0 ..... 11• TOl..SO ... ·ll't'll"'ES l'to ' ~C·> [ ~ '"° L•n1> G )! I><"~ ' "" ""''"" 8f"'"" ("•~M.Cllil•WFORO Fto "°''~ l 1' I"" Jl(QV•I ~ /1. '>(·'" r• Wp~tr•,">'f' COO>ee ••NTE.11 Frt '""r'•' J"ePf\ !l 0i GI 0." G· v ~~,, L""' '.'•~•_., C' Cl HW" "'II' - 6f1(f\ Jl•V Bll•U~ '"•o '· <thlf' l ;, l"<l 8f•IM lJ. l>.:Hf\ ~· ""M,"1j•:n lh•C~ SCt<'.V"'li'lE< .. li'•!l•E '""' P~·r• Luu J; o• C«I>"• 0•1 "'•' •no s~'~"~• 11 of !.I·••""' Ga.'..E·'"ILO,,.EV ftt> J Ill•"'<'"~ ;s :1 i-<"""""''"" fr•~" '"" littll"".• .,,,,~ ~1 o• G.• ~~ G"h<' CLE ... •r~ ~Al>HAEL "~o l E~· l 4J ""' Ill•'"" G. ' l>O'" <' H""'·nf'"" tlo•c" V.,.Hf·L".'UC .. ~ ~f'O l ..... C.•'"· l! Cf (0>!1 IM.., • ...., ••••r !,<.; r . , ,, r,,, '" l fE-OLS"'"-rro • l•"••""• ,. o: o• ... in••.,, ..... s..,,~ """ ~··"" D eallr ,\otictt.f DEAN ~ •• ,, [woo• DI'•" 1,!•1 l• ~. ••, ~l>I..<''• r Vi ltf D•lt ~' <>•••• ~'''"''"' '7 ~J•v •N C• ""'<. µ,., l°"' De•• V'r, 0•• ~ o•~~n·o• ~b<I·• o~rt/\1·, '·" ''" '.'•· v,•9' 0•1" 5•"1 ·•1 '<>· oa •. "'""~"' 10 A~. l>o(~ FaM • c. REYNOLD\ l <••·• I.• g,,,o.c• .o.;o o• '"G ~tm~lf l•"•C.l L~~ur1 8r~r, 0•'0 ~· ~••t~ ~ro•ud'• !) 5o••·•'"<I ~Y 1 •re•·•· I•~ Mf\ J<>r>" M<Artr <°'"'" I""""' l/.1"t>' J•"'•• Muloutt" al Co""'"' s1.,tr1 •••rr1! n•t<P> IT'D rro~tw• lloou••"1 ''""· v.eo .. u.01v. 11 ,...,., S• ca'""""" ... ~ ...... ~ COll'OI•( '"''"' L1oun1 s •••• ,.,.,...,,,.. Cou»e" D·ull•. 1~,..11 "''''' J"'«• L.•~una Bt•I" "'o"""" 0"~<1~· RICK '~"~' f••"<' g.. tl"t "' "~··· """"'"~·• 11 q,,., ~• o' 1·1 E 1C" ~' J>.o' I c·.11 "'U• < ·~·•fO ~· • /!•• [ '"f •'.c> n o no• 'I" F ·~·<• P.;, <' PNl~~cn. "" (n~rott J• to ,,...n~&l!I~ 6~1cn b•o•~•· GtO•O• II•<• ~ ... o . .,..c: •·••e·~· "'" <ic•• 11 '''" !•~ 0 r90 1"<1 M•• Bt•'~I ~w·n M.1'~'0<'0. ~e ••• ,.,, T11t\OIY, , lO PN. Boll B•o•o- ...... en-• '"'""'""' Pie'' V·•~ ~··­Noro~I ""'" 6tl< Broaa .... v "''''"•'•· SCHW .f.tjTES t<1•·" C ~(n..-1~•n •~• f:' c• ,,., f' 'no.,, T~•hn 01•• 01 oe11n F•~ I• '>~••••'<I Df "''tt .Ohcf J, \.On JIJ"'"' II G'""""'~"-t<ua1on 1na.1n1; •~o <1•11gn'•"· M••• a F1rM1m t," •·; J•1~ F L•no••n<11, o! Nt· .. PO•T 1•,->•~r '""" 9•1n0tn1l<1•pn: INC 9'•~' qronnrn I· 1>•~n. S••••(P>. Wron9s<1••· I PM P~c·• r Votw Cnacet '"'"'"'~~'· o.,< •·r """ Memor!1I Pa•k O"•<tt<I D• P1,d1C V ·~ t •I"•" ,..,,, sc ... a~-!9Ji I B•OO• ~,, •. I, So !SQ, Hun1ono!c" 8t•("' D~•e o• ce•ln. F•Orue" ll Su••'""° O• nu\IMn<I. l~O"'· •" d•11oh••" lrtnt 611•~0••<. <1•01n••, 1-lenrv o>11~1. c~e O••tlOC"•l<I Se•••tt•· \V..antl.oa•. 10 llJ AM, Pff~ F~m·•v Cot- on.11 Funt'll "'O<"" TINLEY ""'"'" T, l •nlt• A9t &1. at 'l'llH·A 11""6• r,,.~•o~. t1ou"• Ho!l\ 01•t o• otton, Fe~ ... ~,. 11 Su• .. l•..O OY Nt1e. ~ul~; -· Te<r• r.~···· t>• LI ,.. ... ..," "" ~·•MJ. ·~·•<l<en G•l•t••Oe •t•••ce' TueWI~•. 10 t.M, ••cen1.on C•..,U•ry MrCormocl Lt· ouni R<!ICh Mo"ut•Y, O"eCIOtS VAlllGA$ l >n• v~ro91 10166 ~cll>urn 0.. Hu~.,,.~. '°" D••Ch O.lt or .. , ..... ~tO•~· .. ll 'ur~•V..O bV •ln><l•UVM..,, E E L•ntl"' lloN••n<I ltos•••· T ........... 1 )Cl PY.. Pttl!, I •m•IV ColGn!li Fu~•.i Hom.,. BALTZ 1\10RTUARJES Corona del Polar . OR 3-!~56 Costa t\lcsa mi 6-!424 • BELL BROADl\'AY l'llORTUARY 110 Broad\\'&~·-Costa \lrsa LI 8-3433 • 1\IC'COR'.\11 CK LAGUNA BEACH l\IORTUARY 1;95 Laguna Canyon Rod. 49.t-!1415 • PACIFIC VIE\\' 1\IE'.\IORlAL PARK Cemetery P.lortuary Chapel ::500 Parific View Dril'f' f\e1o1 port Beach, Californ ia 644-2700 Record Allt!lt. U, .. N-1 l•~" PHllLIPS-OllGEll-'eo ~ 11.1,.,..n A '' ano G••• 11..-, 11 o-J'" "'t'<lll• ~ .. liOSS-llOV6EllG-FtD ) C • • • i.<.c-l' Incl W11e<>f. (1«>' 1<. l,;;t'h ol >l11nton9l0<t Beach Vll.f:El.Ao"-10.-WI NTEll-Ffb ). w.~~•tl ••••• ll ot ,,..,,._, a~~·"· •"" ,. ........ l"'''"' .. :lll. (II """'"'11'"" s •• ,,, PAJlto:E ·BEL LES-F~o. s. Jtl\•I c· •S. al l<l~!ll G~!t Incl Vitti 0UVt, u o• Coron• <M"I ~' HA JI V EV ·TlllLLINGHAM-Feb, I ~I" Vor>Cff\I, "'· al l~11ln Incl ~•'fl'Vfl Jrin, l!, 01 Wf11"'1"'>1t• ~ELMAN·lllJNl-1--•ll 6. lh>al U ~ ...i s..>no•• J•an, 16, o.>tn o! w~""''"''"' FORBUS PICKl!EL-F<o 6 [••I ,a.1 .... ll ot LO> a-.oeot• •n<> '"""! o'""'· '/'I ol LOYU1\ll ...... &0."<L~S·fEUE1160Jl"-I f • D ''-tn••I Dilt 19 o• "V~''""'"" s~'<'• """ wano•• 11, "' ~"""' ... , .•. lHOllSPSOlo.CAllllEON-Fro • E••' " ;1 o1 w~~''"''""M •"" L•no1 O~·C"' n ot E• fCJ'O BOt.1G,.El!·S•MMON 5-~<D < II•• ..-~a (fl") ;ol) •n<I S</wn C#lof ti 1><>'" 01 1-<ur••ne'°" 6•1<;n f.'{)ll(,AN·ZIN$MEYEll-Fto • Ito"' ,,; : <>I A-ra<1·1, l<ICI L•"'11 fo:I> · o• ""'",;,;-r• s.~.~ l .. uvNS·W.aSSEl!~'AN-F•D I .... i;,r..,.11 n .,,,, f"t',ew ""•"•· Ii. ~'" c! Foun•1on Valle~ S;.t.1Eli-G!lSON-l't<1 6 A'l>r" E. l'· o• NewPD<'I Be~'h 1no Ehli11t'n O o! l~'~" (OfA-OOW"l"l.G-~H> f JOflnn• .01. •-'0 1~1'• V••9·n•I l6 1><>'~ at """00" !.tltn I_'( LEN00"1-L0WE ll-F•~ • Crt~fl!• ,'-f•!tt c• DI CX•1n••J1< ...... LO\!•~ SI ...... .,,1.nv1"" Bt•<~ B irtlis SOUTH CO.t.ST C 0 MM UN I T Y' t40Sll'ITaL J•JI. ti /, ~no ~\r• B l!Y O Dun~. •It~ C•lle Ju...,, s~n Cle"'e"'"· <>••! Jan. l'I !/• f~o M,. G~r1111 B 'N~u., 9019 ~am">•T•, LO; l>.f\g•l•1. G•rl J•n. lO I.I•. ""° M•!. ll:~rl C Qvf• :C'>A $. '1AlllJI••. ~•nll .An•. l>OY Jin. Jl !;1 •nO M". fmMe!! C Mon•coni-••. 11) E Es<il~•-.t>. $1~ c1.,,...,r.••· -Ftll. l /,•• 1nO M•• ~~·•' C Jon-<If ""'"'"~' CCH"on• s.• M~r 0"' Fen l '.' • ~-~ II'•-J111ro M~r• ~·•· 1&lll S•n•o-~>.O. M••l•O' V•e•o l>O> Feb l •rl<I 1,<r, 6 .. an V <~•'-Ill Cane C<!I c~g1 !~n Cltm•N• bO~ F b. • ,_,, .,... f,•,. c'~-n S~eft 1SO•: f••c·on ,',I• l.OOU•I Holl,, bOV II• •"<> """ Jor> Vlr>t 1~ V. E><•IOne!.. Sin Cle ... ~lt. O•d Feb s f~• Ind n .. 1 D<l'\fld J l•~""'· "''S'. Cal~ llaMOn1. (IOP<lrft><I Bea<~ <1"1 Dissol11 tio11s Of Mn1·1·iffge F"~ F•br111rv , p, •'>rr•~•o (~ral N ~n~ C~~rle< L. ~ .,,_ en·•~• ,"o cn~,1~ L•e fo:•I!''· tjo••ne J>~n~ ano Rot>e•t B •n.•• l• Va•, "•"<• M ~n~ M••1 n l-l••o•d B"'""" Barlla•• (nl""""" ""d Donald Rooer WM~•· Jane Cla"e aanC l1"'ma1 M~ft~~·~ ... ., A """ lulo I~ M•'"•o•~, 11n•oontt1r Mamo ""d Joh., Wll'iam Johann"'" l• li''nt B"<I Jlooe" E ~~;.~",.~;-.,~ ie.u:~"~:r~~ot~~ r-~••?, ~n·• Ma•v a!'>d Vi•lor M•.,u•I Ml'ff.<ns. 0oro1n~ A inc crov .. C...,rles (•'"'-·· 00"'"~ ln<I "'"" p N•lllt, Wal'"r William •no li1m~e • W•""e• r.,~,, .. ~, MV! Jglon .. nu-r•• N~"'' ~"<I '"'"'~""<! I>' c....,...u,. <>1mela J •~a L•~"•n(• • l....,...., M•• •vn 1J an~ r.o-r<1• E ~ ••n,•r """"~-,,rn O•<'~~I • L•"~"°"" Allan ""'"'""' anc Jvd·'~ D~•''"f M•tc""' J.,...n W•"~" ~nd Do-In• llnn G••• .,.,...., F•!>r"•"' I 11 .... ICH"I> q,,,l\f' •"II F!~" )fJI! G·~~"'· lie,.. C""rvl •flll Oootal11 •• c ..... '11 Cl•<>I .o •"" Ril"hl•d t. lnl~···~ (,,,..,.f!<I •nO j""rt "'"•"•"·'" c.,~ ... L •'1<1 Geo<o• ~ «••• S•(!r,f"' G •'I<! H~'•n Sw•cl•t G•r•l<l•"t M1ro•••• •"<! '"~·1 .. ',,. f"•••Q"· W"'·•.., a"d o,., •·• '"" '"'"""" '"""'"'' r. ~"1 "''• 1 ~ <"•!' •~n, (••~• hnn 1 nrt f""" ( V••••• fl .• ,.,, "'•ul o•·~ f••••• J••" ''"'~~· l ·~· <' a•o Qo,,., •. r '-''"'""'! C:ln.•••e r. ,.~ .,,,.~ l•m~J ""'"~·~ .. (~rn• J •"ri "o"•-' N M•'h'"• Gltn~ V111~m, 1na Lonom~ ~ .. ~. l-'••11 /'"'"''"" >r1 ~'"'''" ""'"' N ""''"'"'~ f lot•nt~ L •no Hovi• • S~•·<I Donni Loul\O ona W•I"'" ~ .. 7,.,.ie /::co~;1 0 Jr 1n<1 ..,,~,.~~ ' "" lr utlP"•-r>•b<:>••" Su••"" Len v S '"""''"-(••n•••n C ••1 J•n; J•v Oua•m~•. p., .... J .... MICh,e\ H . "'""""' H•rala Vl•ll1•m 1no P•'"' • Looi<' (lb'-' Go"~ J ·~· ••,pt• I' tNTE '"'.n (UTC'llY tlECllEEi IF;•1fl'ftd '"b'"'T'< • l:IY•I• M••lllf Jo ord P•!e• l•r••"'' 1, •ni..,,., l•couel,.,e S •"O M,<~••I ~~\,.,,,.,, Ev•<•n H ••!! M'~• V s~•~•.•. Haro1<1 O<'•n """ B•••"Y Jar• '""'" '""" Lee •n<> ~"••on Lou"""' p,.,,h ' (:.-gl /A_ ~·:j T~Q"'•' A•t--n p •.,..\ Arfl AQll,.. ~no 11 ..... d ~11-•<•w J~n·•-G•"•OC W•!I••"' .,... " •• Anne l•'<•o•n• l"'iNio a;d PW>-•1 II /~u''· JI""• L. f•O G .... rot 0 "'·"•••!. Fraf!tto P••••ll ~nn 114•"'""~ 5u""" Brron W&H•" 11>(1 P~I••<•• .... ,1 .... • PEEK FA\llLY COLO\f.\L FU~Elt\L HO\IE -. ""'''"· O•w'I !..f• •"<I Al•n An<1re1 "r·~., Co"•"<>""' ••a S•·~·O 1-1•••., on t 1,,... """ 1-10 ... ~·d ;sot Bolsa A''· '''e~tminster 89::-::~~:; • S\llTHS' l\\ORTUAHY 621 i\laio SI. Huntington Dearh 536--6539 .. C•• r"'""• J•a~ •n<I _,·...,m· 'Ir•~." •, · ..,,_,.,a 1/l••~Clell "-'· a"" W•lh~m .,;-;;_ ..... ,,..~~~ •nO t ;·~·· (~ ....... '·'·Cc•~"·" o.,,., M lnO "'"llt<lt .. < •. c~ C••~· Ma• ~"d •··~•·• r •w,n ' ·-·~ ( "" 8 •·~ l\"V•''~V l'-11,."r· °"''' (lf&'1or end "'<"bald y,, ,. M-''~• ... •-t.n<"•~ Jo and E<1w1rd Ktn ... "'"" C®o!•• G•6nl end Oo'"e" r.10,. " ' .• c~r''IOO''"' ~~\M> • 8"<1 Eowa•O " !.l'"""" Cna••oH• 1-l ""d (na•le' " . r.rassle Hassle UC / Ca n't A fford Robes By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 .... Dlllf l"Het St1!1 IR\'INE -A shortage of funds may strip L'C Irvine professo rs of {he colorful garb they y,•ear lo a ca d e m i c ctren1onies. It se('O\S Uie !lowing <1cndem1c robes. to which are :11lal'hed gaily colored hoods an d tassels denoting the pro- fessor·~ rank. college. and <1eaden11c specialty. are about to go the \l'ay of the Stutz Bearcat and the raccoon coal. L'nless so n1ebody antes up . "\\fe\·e reached a point \\here the University no longer can underwrite the Si.000 to $2,000 11 costs to provide <icademic regalia 10 professors \\ho do nQl 01o1·n their own."~ sa1 d Dr. Bernard Ge!baum . chairman of !he L' C I Academic Senate. Gelbaum outlined the pro- blem las! week for his acade1nic colleagues during a senale meeting. The 11·earing by faculty 1nembcrs of academic regalia <1t commencen1ent exe rcises and Other ceremonial evenis is a tradition vf long standing at LTC campuses. But. in re· cent limes. the trend has been for JUnior faculty members no1 lo buy their own caps <i nd gown wich currently go for S300 to $400. Too expensive, they argue. s1nC't' the garb is only 1o1·orn once or !\\'ice a year. Besi des. 11 \1'e are required to take pare 1n a ceremonial affair. lhen the University ought to rent the garb. the argument go<s And so it has been Predictably, Gelbaum's air· ing of the problem brought mixed reactions from his col· leagues: '·Do ay,•ay 1o1· i t h com· mencemenl exercises altogelher," suggested one. "Get paper gowns biodegradeable ones," quipped a biologist. Richard Regos.in. cha irman of UCJ's French Department, urged !hat faculty members be al101o1·ed to particiPate in academic processions wearing ""'hacever they like." He quickly explained that those oy,·ning their 01o1·n go1o1·ns would wear them while those professors nol owning lhem could 1o1·ear street clothes. Dean of Humanities Hazard Adams interjected I h a I . all.hough the matter 1o1•as the su bject or much levity before the senate. ·'i1 is a serious question." "I feel the cost or prov iding go y,'ns is prelly cheap public relations." opined Lamar t<.f. HHL an assistant professor of history. ~le urged faculty members to adopt a motion calling on the L'niversity to continue to pay for rented acatremic garb. The matter finally was tabled. A footnote : Some historians consider rommencement e.."C· crcises among the first public relatiQns gim mi cks employed in the U.S. They fall under lhe caiegory of ''stage d event s .. , And among the first press releases used in the U.S. were those plugging com· menct!ment exercises a t King 's College, New York Cit y. in 1758. Arraignme11t Slated For 2 Bribe Suspects TL'STtN -Ty,·o men ac- cused of atte1npling to bribe sheriff 's officers investigating the botton1less bar t hey operated in the Tustin area Carpenter N o\V 011 Five Committees SACRAi\IE NTO -SI at t Scnnto r Dennis E. Carpente r 'R -Ne1o1•por1 Beach l has been assigned to senate comn1i ttees on Elections a n d B.eap- p or Ii on rn en l. \V ate r ll.C'saurces. Natural Resources and \~'ildlife. Education and Insurance and F i n a n c i a I lnstilutions . Carpenter. y,•hn i~ also !he Republican Slale CC' n I r a I tommi1lee Chairman. noted the Elections a n d Reap· porlionment Committee \\'Ould be or special importance in 1911 because the Legislature y,•J!J be reapportioning !he ~' a1e 's Con~ressional. St atr ~~~::i~ts and A s s e m b I y j Who Cares? No other ne1\•spaper in the world cares about your com· munity like your community duily newspaper does. It's t.t.c DAILY PfLOT. have been ordered to face arraignment Feb. 17 in Santa Ana municipal court. fyJorton Gold. 49. and Terry House, 29. bolh or Garden GrO\'C. also face charges of suspicion lo rommit bribery. Both men are free on $1.250 ba il. Sheriffs invesligalors said the bribery attempt rollowed a t1vo-week: investigation of the Tuscan Room. a Tustin area bar operated by both defendants. Two officers said they y,·ere nftered a substan· tial sum of money "on the installmenl plan" but rerused lo reveal the basis for the alleged bribe. Three bottomless dancers "NCre arrested a week ago at the Tuscan Room . The ar· rests brought to more than 20 the citations Issued to bar entertainers. most of them on charges of le1o1·d condu ct. A civil laws uit filed by Dislrict Attorney Cecil Hicks against the Tuscan Room is pending trial in Orange County Superior CourL ADVERTISEMENT More Security With FALSE TEETH At Any Time l)(>n't be so &!n!d that ~·11ur f•l-MI teeth wUJ come IOIJ!le or dr11p Ju.tat thP. wrong tlme. For more ftCUr!ty and comfort. 1prt111:..le FAS'l'EtTH• Of:ntun Adhet1l~e Powder on your ttlAtM. PASTEETH bolds denturQ nnnet longer . M•tes e11Unii: ea.tier. FASTErrH IJf not •cld. No gummf· glX!fly, Pll8tY t.astt . Dentures tbtt It are ea&entl•I to bNlth. see yqut dentiatkrJul•rir. oet e&•J·to·Wi• f'AST at t1l dJ'UI COUDtett. Roti••1. r •<f'Olfn O and Aaor1 M Lani<. Pr~nv t.nn 8T'd Douol~> P·--~============='"--------- PLANS SPEECH Nixon Aide Klein Navy Leag ue Hears Future Of Services Hearing Set for 2 In Forgery ORANGE -A couplt ar· rested on forgery charges aftu police allegedly found forging plates valued at mo1t than $1 million in their Orange home have been Qrdered to face prellminary hearing Feb. 17 in Santa Ana municipal court. Sterling Edward Ney,·combt , 44, and Darlene Coi.art, 39, were booked last wetk on !!Wlpicion of'intent to commit forgery. Both are held in Orange County Jail in lieu of $1%5.000 bail for .Nev;combe and $31,2SO bail for Miss Cozart. Arresting o!ficers said a search of the home revtaled a quantity of plates alltgtdly used for printing falSt drivtrs licenses, identifications, com· mercial checks, money orders. Herbert Klein. director of San Diego County and Los communications for President Angeles County pay v.·arrants, Nixon, is scheduled to speak Department or fltotor Vehicles on lhe future of the u. s. car registration slips and im· Navy , Coast Guard and migration cards. Orange police were aided fllarine Corps under the GOP in their investigation by Costa administration in an address ~1esa and Anaheim police and al lhe Newporter Inn, Feb. agents or lhe State Depart.-- 20. ment of Motor Vehicles. Klein 1o1·ili speak al a lun-Investigators said arrtsl of tbe defendants tnded a Jong cheon meeting of the Western inquiry into bogus documtnts Secliona l Conference or the circulating in the Orange ~avy League. Delegates from Coonty area. states west of the Rockies. ;==='==========.! including Alaska and Hawaii will auend the three-day con- ference. Non.members of the Navy League are invited to attend the luncheon. Reservations can be made by calling 54> 56i6. mo.BREN LIKE UNCLE LEN Beauty Bulletin from Penneys: Fashion cut special. Come irfMonday, Tuesday or\Vednesdayfora fashion cut by one of our experts. Only 2.24 \\that a beautiful idea. --°" ....... c.,iw w ,_., m .oo "UWTntQTOlt lliAC.M Huntlnatart C.-f..- -flclor , m77TT 0.-..,.. ''nte CJty-.,,.,,,., Custom decorating sale. Last week to save 20%! I [ I l ' Have cust om made draperies, ~-1'· slipcovers or re upa holstery. Choose from our entire collection of fine decorator fabrics. Gall today ... and save a big 20% on fabric, and an additional 20% on our finest custom labor during our February home sale. 20% off on our finest custom decorator rods. Simulated carved wood in square, round or octagon designs .•• all reduced 20%. Call Collect (714) 523-6511 for our shop-at-home service, free. lks.~· o-.i. now. u .. Penneya ume 1111mentplan. Q Mondi.)', Ftbruary 15, 1971 OAILY PILOT J,I Presidents Day sale! Great chairs and tables. Fit for a president. Sale prices effective through S1turd1Y onlyl • • " . ~ " ' ' 1, ' ' J ' ' ' t • I ' •' '· Campaign style recliner has military metal trim. smart atyiing. Black vinyl cover. Rtg. $219, Now $189 Spanish style reclirier tias expoaecl .hardwood arms, black or green vinyt cover. Reg. $149, Now $129 Modern style swivel rocker in scoop design. Vinyl cover In black or avocado. Rog. $139, Now $119 Early American style swivel rocker with handsome hardwood wings. Black vinyl covering. Rtg. $149, Now $129 Matching ottoman, Reg. $65, Now SSS P•nrMY'• furniture prices . Save $201 Heat/vibrator recliner Is a treat to si nk into. A vibrator unit for instant massage and a • soothing heating pad built into the b&.ck. Sturdy vinyl cover in black or gold with handsome tufted back. Reg. $129 Sale 5109 Matching ottoman, in black or avocodo, Rog. $80 Now, $50 Early American 'Birch Manor' step table of solid birch with grooved tops, aprons, hea\'ilY turned le~s. Reg. $75, Now $85 '1 'Intrepid' contemporary style end table. Walnut finish veneers over hardwoods, with chrome ac~ents. Reg. $55, Now $45 'Intrepid' hexagon commode. Contemporary styling in Sovo $101 'Intrepid' contemporary style commode. Pressure laminated plastic top. Walnut finish veneers and hardwoods with doors tor on·the·spot storage. With chrome accents. Reg. $85 Sale s75 Early American style 'Birch Manor' octagon commode lri Brown Salem linish on solid hardwood. Reg. $120, Now $105 'Campagna' commode with classio Italian styling. Hickory veneer . top over hardwood. Rog. $100, NGY 'fd Early American drawer commode. From our 'Birch Manor' group with brown Salem finish, heavily turned legs. Reg. $85, Now S75 walnut linish veneers and hardwoods, with cllfome accents. Reg. $80, Now $70 Early American style 'Birch Manor' end table, brown Salem finish on solid birch hard- wood. Reg. S95, Now SIO 'Campagna', Italian style commode. Hexagon shaped hickory veneer top over hardwood. Reg. $90, Now 171 Modern style recliner rocker with tufted back. In bl•ck or green easy care vinyl. Rog. f12t, Now f109 ,_ Early American style 'Birch Manor' oval cocktail table of solid birch hardwood. SC\lem finish, turned legs. Reg. $70, Now sao j 'Intrepid' contemporary style cocktail table, walnut finish veneers and hardwooc!.i with chrome accents. Reg. $55, Now SCS 'Campagna' door cocktail table. Classic Italian styling with burl and rosette treatments. Reg. $135, Now $120 Value. It still means something at Penneys. 'Campagna' style cocktail table. Carved legs, lteli•n style. Rog. $80, Now $70 Include denvery whhln local •re•. ennetfJ Use Penney• time payment plan al these stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Geni er, HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntingto'h Beach Shop Sunday, too , 12 lo S p.m • MOtlda7, Felwa'J 15. 1971 f'AMll.l' CIRCVS by Bii Kea"" "I got one wrong in the history test. They asked -when wos Georg e Washington's birthday e nd .~ said February 15th." Nutrition Survey Government to Study How We Eat in America \\1ASHINGTON /UPI l The government "'ill be gin a dress rehearsal next month nf a nationa l nulrition survey designed to tra vel from city to city during the next t"·o :years to sa mple America's eating habits. The try-0u1 of the SS billion survey. being cal led the most exlensi\·e of its kind in the "'Orld. will begin in Ballimort". Jt will officially open in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh 1n mid-April and will tour 61 other cities and suburban and rural areas by the time it ends 'in St. Louis in 1973. At each point the survey "'ill contact a cross section of citizens selected by the census bureau to examine them for eating too little, eating too much, cho\es1erol levels and other data. About 30.000 individuals will be ex- amined. "\\'e want to make su re "'e are never again in the ig- norant state we were in 1,1•hen the hunger story first broke ." &aid Theodore 0. Woolsey, director of the National Center for Health statistics, which •i'ill coordinate the survey. However. serious reserva- tions about launching another Space Life Envisioned PIERRE, S.D. <AP) - Former astronaut F r a n k Borman says man wi ll find intelligent lire in our solar 1ystem and will someday "A·alk on ~1ars. Borman said, " ... in the distant future ~·e will en- counter some other intell igent life in our solar system." Borman, now a vice-presi- dent "A'ith Eastern Airlin es. "as command pilot of the fir~t spacecraft to orbi t the _mnon. Borman said the L1nited Stal es shoul d continur "'i1h 1 gnOO space program .,..h;ch "'ill develop a space sta tion and eventually explore other planets. survey "'ere ra ised b y participants in the rollow-up \\'hite House Hunger Con· ference last Friday a I Williamsburg. Va., and by Sen. George S. McGovern (0- S.D.J. "That money could be better spent." said Dr. James P. Carter, a panel chairman at the conference and Vanderbilt University pediatrics pro-- fessor. "If they really want to stu d y somethi n11 ~·orthwhile. they ought to study roadblocks (to ending hUJ1gerl at the local level." "There ought not to be any surveys unless there are pro- visions for follow throu11h," said William D. Carey, a public relations official who headed another panel. "1 am frankly disappointed the administration has re· jected the recommendations i>f its own conference regarding further s u r v e y s . ' ' said McGovern. chairman of a Senate Select Committee on nutrition and related human needs. ''I don't see why we should start on another survey of mostly mid dle c I 11 s Americans when we haven 't even tabulated the resullS or an earlier survey of poor Americans." Woolsey told UPI the new study does not provide ror follow-through on the nu tri tion problems it uncovers. "ff somebody faints durin1t the examination. of course we would do what we could." he said. "But there is not going to be a foll ow up in every case. We are not there to take patients or treat them." Results of blood and other tests given in the n1obile laboratories. however. will be passed on lo family doctors, he said. The survey will employ three 16-member teams of docto rs. nurses. de n t i 5 I s . technicians and interviev•ers who will work from mobile trailer clinics for aboul a month in each of the locations. The st udy will concentrate on the nutrition of pre-school children. the poor . women of child·bearing age and thr elderly. Woolsey said. Fairy Tales Attacked Wom en Libbers Asl{ Snow White Be Freed LONOOi'-' (AP) -Sno"' failingly brave, rich and White is being libe rated, to handsome. "A'ilh a habit of toil in the mines with the overcoming enormoll! odds . Seven D"·arfs rather than slay So far the ~1erseyside group home washing the dishes. has completed only I he Members of the Women's re"'rite of Snow White and Liberalion Movement in the is looking for a publisher. Merseyside, Liverpool area Jn the new version the Wick- lhat give the world the ed Queen doesn't envy Snnw Beatles, disclosed that they White's beautv. it's her are going to rewrite ~ome liveliness and ·happy nature of the m11le-0riented fairy that. drives the queen up the tales. wall. When the prince decides to The hunler sent to kill Snow marry the princess. she ought White spares her because of to be able lo think ii over his humanity and concern that and maybe answer "no:• the she make something of her militant females think . Ma ybe life. In the old story her girlish the princess "'111 rescue the beauty made him merciful. prince in some C)f lhe liberated The Jibc rate:t Snow While tales. Tbc group says ihe heroines and her prince work with the shouldn't alwsys bt> young, dwarfs in the mines. build beautiful and potenli1llly rich. a cottage together and live they should be ~hown lo h;1ve happily ever after -"working .-nual opportunities "A'ilh !he together. sharing their lives ~" and their love." m~n~r !lhould stepmorhers. Marriage doesn't come into sisters and wllches always he -=;='·==========;! ugly, e.vll and wi cked. Jiow r about a prtitly wil ch once in FAIR I while! Ft1t, ftir, ft ctv •I. Tluu• The lib l11dlr.s compl11in lhHI 11 .... wordi 111"' 11p f••fort hi f11lry laJe h@rolnes are sex op•1 ~+le1t 1111 the DAILY P'll01 objecl.!, bcaullful but dumb, "=:·'='='',,'',,•',,•,,',,',,',,',,",,''='="=·==='I while the he.roes are un·.;;; \ knit pantsuit has a trio of zi ppers Specially priced! Tuni c plus panlS. Zipped for •hiny accent. Yoked. Packeted loo. In navy or black acetate knit. At savings, 10-18. value 24.99 19.99 may co boulev;ud dresses 95 .. .~ l f ·, f ' ·: ... ,, ! · 11 ' . ' " ' fa mous pantsuits in pure polyeste r Such SJvings! On knit pantsuits of pure textured polyester. Just one from a collection of styles.. With belts or without. Sizes 8· 18 . value 38.00 2 6 , 9 9 , . ....... I \ t ' v ! wrap pant-coat is soft, cotton sued e Great styling at a low price! Princess line fit. A back to shape and flare. Belted. Per- fect over pants! l_n brown or antelope. Jr. sizes S· 1 S. ••lut 34 .00 2 9 • 9 9. m.-iy co junior co.-its 24 i' ·• '/i . ' • : : I l' .:j , . ;. ' .'/ I! • ' if ' ·1 · ·r 11 ' ., ' /'I I ' ; ' ~~~!· 'l sweater jackets are all ca refree Treat yourself. To a cover up pretlily patterned or smooth ly styled. We show you one of three sty les. ALJ washable acrylic knit. 5-M· l . v•lut 22.00 1 Q, 9 9 ' , I FINAL 'DAY TODAY IS THE LAST DAY , Savings saJute to Wa shington and L1ncoln! Shop today, Monday. 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Bring the kids ... School is out! soft, suede jackets to pair with pants Sportive elegance •.. you rs at savings. Jn th e soh, smooth tailoring of suede jackets. Bold notched collars. Contrast stitching . Poikets too. Great shapes over pants. Come. Indulge yourself. They're on sale now at May Co. Choose in chocolate or fawn. Sizes 8· 18. .. were 80.00 69.99 m.iy co misse!.' coats till . " ... may co south coast plala, san diego fwy at bristol, costa mesa ; 546·9321 •hop monday thru Mltllrday 10 am to 9:30 pm, sunday noon 'tll 5 pm MAY CO ..... .il -.- ~men BARABARA DUARTE, 494-9466 .~r. ,...,,.1 .. ttn • ..... u In the Bag Teens Trek F.or Trash lt all started the day \Vendy Taylor, chairman of Ass isteens, a junior auxiliary of the Assistance League, Laguna Beach, and Lisa Syfan, vice chairman, rode their bikes up Pacific Coast Highway to Corona del Mar Appalled at the amount of litter along the high· lvay, the girls decide to do something about it -and Trash Trek was organized by the Assisteens. \Vilh gunny sacks in hand, the girls walked the str etclt · of highway cleaning up v.ihat they feel is one or the prettiest stretches of highway left along the coast. Assisteens coordinator itrs. Patrick Randall con· sulted Jerry 1'1axJA•ell of the California Highway Patrol to obtain safety rules before the man:h was under way, now scheduled as a monthly project. Trash Trek is the newest \Vay the Assisteens have exhibited their interest in community welfare. For the yo unger set, the girls stage a Kiddie Kan· teen every Saturday morning in the League Ho use for children from the ages of 4 through 6. It's a great Saturday morning break for tired mothers as the girls spend two hours with storytime, music apprecia tion and participation, drawing and painting, games and refreshments. There's lots of room for more children and the cost of 75 cents per child is channeled back into community projects. Mothers liiterested in ha'1ing their children partici· pate in Kiddie Kanteen from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. on Sat· urdays may call ~iiss Taylor at 494-9365. ASSISTING NATURE - Assisteens Oe!t to right) Chrl• Syfan, \Vendy Peacock and Erika Colt pick up trash along Pacific Coast Highway. ~1embers o! the Laguna Beach club walked the stretch between Laguna and Col'ona del ~Tar cleaning up litter and restor· ing the vista to its beualifu! natural stale. Art Comes to Life In Sight and Sound Art will come to life through sight and sound as Arul Raj pre- !ients a watercolor demonstration \Vith the aid of color movies for members of the Niguel r\rt Association on Thursday, Feb. 18. Ra j. born in India into a family of artists. \Viii shO\V tech nique.!!, c:olor tones. color blending and dra\ving \\'ith a brush during an 8 p.m. meeting in the Cro\vn Valley School, Laguna Niguel. The artist \\'as graduated from the Governn1ent School of .~rl!I and Advanced Pain ting with diplomas in fine arts and advanced paint· ing. His first one·1nan show \vas in f\e\v Delhi in 1953, sponsored by Chester Bo\vles, former U.S. Ambassador to Ind ia. In 1960, the artist made hi s first exhibition tour of the United States and has been featured in sho\vs in India and Europe. The public is invited to attend the program. 'fhose interested In either programs or \Vorkshops may c:all ~1rs. David Graham, 495· 4622. WATERCOLORIS T -Arul Raj. a I~aguna Beach artist born in Ind ia, will present a \vatercolor demonstration for the Niguel Art Association on Thursday night. l-te has been recognized by India as one of the leading landscape painters of the country. Yardstick Offered for Measuring Up to Earn Friendship DEAR ANN LANDERS: You get many Jenera from people who complain because they are looely. They won<k!r v.1ly they have so few friends, and the few friends they do have don't call \'try often. Just yesterday, a peMIOll I work with romplained to me that no one likes her. I sat down aod lhollght about the l"rsonality and character traits that most dislike. Strangely enough, out of the JO trails, this person had seven. Here's the llst and I hope you will print it, AM. It mlght help some folks lo see themitelves u others see them : t. A compulsion to show off 'knowledge. 2. Exaggerates to the point that it's lhe next thing to lying. • ANN LANDERS 3. Moodiness. Friendly one day, un· friendly the next 4. Bossiness. fl.lust run everythinf. S. Not. reliable. Word is no good. S. Chronic complainer. Negative at· titude about many things. Inveterate crepe-hanger. 1. Nosy. Asks a loUJ of qu estions that are none of her business. I. Gossipy. Knows everything about everybody and tells il. f\lakea you wonder what she is saying about you. 9. Saya things in anger then Irie~ to smooth it over by buyinR a little gift 10. Always fishin1 for compliments but never give• any. SIGN ME -11-2 0 Town, S.D. DEAR WATERTOWN' I llope every penoe 1'bo rt•ch thit column will measure lllm1elf 1t1lnst the list. 1 did -and you bit me on Number 4. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Two years ago I went through a messy divorce. I was depressed and miserable because I was the first in a family o! five girls to have a niarriage failure. 'l'wo wee.ks after the divorce I met a man wbo ' had beautiful hair and · tetth. \Ye were married after a w h I r I W l n d courilihip. A frw months ago I noticed my husband· 11 hair is thinning out. Last week he went to a denilst y.•ho discovered a P.m condition that is threatening his teeth. r know this sounds crazy but these two features are very important lo me. Withoo\ them he wouldn't look like much. l'm e.shamed to tell anyone how worried J am. Can you give me some moral support and a word of advice? -ANONY~10US PLEASE DEAR ANON: If your mbrriage wa11 held 1ogether by hair and teeth I'm surp rised It lasted l"'O years. Stop being foolish . If your husba nd loses his hair ht can buy a rug. If he loses his teeth , be can get china clippers. Tbese rlnys experts ca n rebuild, restore and trans-plant almost anything. (Remember. I 1ald AL~tOST.I DEAR ANN LANDERS: ~1y sister and I are good bridge players. \Ve married men who are tournament championship quality. Every Friday Y.'l' gel together for dinner and card!. It's gotten so I dread these evenlr.gs. The tension Is terrible. ~1y husband loses hi s temper and cusses me out ir I make a mistake. r-.fy sister's husband is just as bad. He got so mad last Friday he slapped he r. Is there a way we can get these. guys to curb their tempers? -A AND P . DEAR A & P: Probably not. Tllnw· In the deck -permnnenU,,. • .. If you have trouble geUing along wfu.. your parents ' . . . if you can 't ci.:: them to \el you live your own li(J!; send for Ann Landers' booklet, "BuQed: by Parents? llow to Gel ~fore Preedom."" Send 50 «nts in coin with your requesc and a long. stamped, self.addressed: en velope in ca re or the DAlLY PlLO'l'. • • .. DAIL Y PILO r Elegant Evening Double the Trouble When Teacher Talks By ERMA DOMBECK When you're married to · a school teacher you learn to livt: wilh redundancy. ... Educators can't help l t . Anything worth saying onct Is wqrth repeatN twice and tbe.n reviewing ,. it again for the ones who weren't p1y~g attention ~ first two times. Our marriage ceremony wu like• a script from Sesame stnet. When tht minister ask: eel my husband to repeat the wwa after b.i.m he said "I do .. three times, tben turned to mt and said., "I do sounds like two, we. are two. ·"'I'herelore 'I do' makes ua ',,Ont> If lb.It's ioo confwlng .we11 review it at the recep. tion!' P.taybe it is my imagination. but the world has been talking to mt in 1ne ~riginal and three carbons. ever 1ioce. AT WIT'S END Take football, for eumple. lt is incredible to me t h a t a game which I have just viewed la pJ(yed back to me in slow motion, 1top action, from three different camera angles only to be repeated immediately followln& t b e game and acain on· the late sporu show wbich follows the the film whicb wu shown im· mediately following th• '""'· A couple of weeU •10. l listened to Pmident Nixon's State of the Union meuage. followed by an useasment of It by a team of newscasters. Thia waa followed by an a~ Smart Teens Review Drug Abuse Problem WIYI to help. Directing the student pro- gram will be Keith Westly, vice princ ipal. proi11l of the l)J«Ch by Stn. Mike Mam~ld w b o 1 e remark! were then reviewed by another pantl or btoad· ca5ter1. Their views were rthuhed by our 1 o ca I newicuters wbost GplnJons in turn were summarized and interpreted at a cocktail party' immediately following t be oewsca.sl I found myself knoWing more about the State or. the Union than any human being had a right to know. "Look. look, look." said my husband !ht other nighl "Here is a movie you have been wanting to see. 1 want to see· the movie. Do yoo want to su I.he movie too~" "Which one?" I frimaoed. "JI'!· called. 'Lo" Type Person Lover.' " "I don't think so," I said. "Oh, Gh, Mother, why?'' he asked. "Because I read a con- densation In Reader's Digeat, a serialization Jn a magaz.int, a three-part series In a newspaper, w a t ch e d 75 television spot! on it, heard the star dissect it on five talk shows and saw it preview- ed at a movie I aaW last week." t ~1astor of ceremonies Arthur Briges and his \\i.fe , hosless chairman of the South Coast Co mmunity Hospitl:t Valentine Ball . in the Ne\l:porter inn, prepare to depart for the annual fund-raising dinner dance. !'.our hundred area resl· dents enjoyed precocktail get-together_s jiid ball inspired by the "hospital .with A group ol atijdents from Gisler Intermediate . School, Huntington Beach, will dilCW!l the dange~ of drua:!l and how to approach the problem when the Hun ti n&t,oo ·Beach Republican Women'• C I u b meets Wednesday, Feb. 17. All membel"!l ol Smart Teen!, their appearaoce pro- vides an opportunity for in· terested adults to hear from the youlb! themsel ves on best It al.Jo provides fitlina: ae- quence to Jut month'• prtun. tatlon when Sgt. James Mahan 'Of the police department warned Uuit if members of the community didn't do something, we will lo~ our most important n 1 t u r al ~sour«: our youth. "J think you'll find then! are many beneficiaJ 1spects of repetition , among them the abil ity to commit to your retention the facility of total recall. however tautologic1l.'' J looked up tiudly. "What did you say~" a heart." · · ~~__:_.::.::::..::_~~~~~----"~~~~~~ Two minutes la~r. l could have bitten my tonrue. ~ j • ' ; ~ ' • Horoscope Taurus: TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 16 By SYDNEY -O~fARR Look to Aries could c re a t e unnecessary Accenl On pub1ishing , com· dissension . mu nication s. Stress 11ersatili· Aid Given Help Line Help Line will benefit when CAPRICORN !Dee 22.-Jan. ty. Hav e alterna!h•e methods the Women's Auxillary t~. th~ 19 ): Accent On desires, ability al hand,.· Pull younelf out of . Orange ~n.ty PharmaceutJ. to communJcate 'with ·rri"ends. emot ional rut. ..till ·Associat1?'1 sponsors a Aries Is said to be · luncheon meeting at 11 :30 a.m. headstrong. But thesr nadves You may be SUl)>ris!d ·by· IF TODAY JS Y 0 UR Wedllesday, Feb. 17. also are courageous. Tbey ire tou:ng ges~e. Bel glad BIRTHDA Y you are intro--Speaking to the auxiliary ln,·entil't . nalural pio11eers. not "''it 1 becoming over Y sen· spect1ve, havl! ahifity to nurse. will ~ Mrs. Richard M.!!rsh, afraid 10 takr chances on lhrir timental. .\1essage becomes teach and inte rpret fi~ points stale pruident, and · Mrs. o"·n abilitiH. Tbt Aries persail clearUdurinugsdayJ. . r b of la"'·· Vou arc not easy for William ~feyer , state is mrnt.ally stimulated by AQ ARI ~ an. 20-e · othe r!" m fool. but you ofte n secretary. The luncheon meet.int: will be1in at 11:30 a.m. in the recreation center, and all in. ttrested women are invited 10 attend. Mrs. Richard Ditt· mar is chalnnan ol the hos- plt.ality committee. A membenhip drive now In progress will conclude May I with the club now dividtd into uptown and dowutown teams competing for new members. It now ha! 121 ttrular members and 47 as&0eiate patron member1. Soroptimists Thetas Plan Social Club Alumnae of Kappa Alpha Theta from OceaMde to 1.fisaion Viejet are invited to attend a coffee, at t p.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 17, .where fonnation of a soc ial alumnae club will be discussed. Y.'omen in terested in a~ ltnding the affair in the San Clemente home of Mrs. Ben C. Edmondson may contact the hostess or Mrs. Lewis 'Vallon for information. FAIR Ge min i and phyC.tally at·. l8 ). Business .. honqrs. repula~ ·fool \'OUTSl'lf. You are due for Hosti'ng the meeting will be Soroptimist Club ot Hun· tracted to Leo. Aries is Jpcky lion -these are Slressed. gealCr recoenition. A relation· htrs. Robe rt Adler of Tustin tington Beach gatbers a.t 12 ; 15 '••t, f.;,, ftitu•I. ll.01• in a financial sense for those i:oil giiin .oee9ed-cooperaliDn. · ship ·i's under pressure. It ·assisted by Mrs. Fra.ncis . p.m.-the second ·Ind fourth +II••• w•rttl• •111t1 "' f•ct•"' 1• "-•n ""d•r r •·ces. On~ in' authority gra nt.,s special · co-uld end.·· s-"uler and Mrs. Marv in Tursdays in Fr an co i a • .,.,•ti•• •• tli. DAILY PILOl uu .,. UJ .lllit.ri•t p•9• O•or, dty. t recognition. Oblain hinl from · · .~P~e~c~k:_. ________ _:__':'"':"'~"".'~'"~':_· -------'============'II 'To '"'d ""' ..,..o's ln<kv filr vou '· •RIES i\la•ch 21 ··\ori·l 19\·. Capricorn message. . 1 .. mo""Y •rut 1ov1. "'d'' ·s•dtll• ti • I' Om•rr'• booklt 1, •'So<•t! Hl"ll '°' • r. " h 1 h A ·rl 1 . PISC&S. CF'eb . .19-March ?.Ol:. "''" ~,.. w-.. W"1 '*'-tao _,usru ea 1 i·oi ex rcmes. Advertise ware~; Jet others •,~ ••• " •. ,,','"~,,,•o., g;r-,~T. ,',',"",'~,.,'. ChE'ck 1enrlenc1" to take si tua· " "' " hons. persons ior granted. Ex· know \l'hat you have to offer. ~·;nan1of1~r11,.1 $!at1on, New vor>.. press apprec1at1on 10 one "'""ho . performs s pc c i a I services. \Vr!rom~ new co ntac t s , .. '~ ..--.~ ... ~ challenges. TALIRlJS I Apri l 20·\lay W \ Obtain hint from A r ies message Permit n1 at e or busi ness associate lo set pace. 16 One v. ho teaches h a s something of \'alue to offer. Rea liU" this and be wi.Jling to listen. · GE\ll\I 1\-lav 21-June 201· Stress \crsatilit y. \-lany of voor nat ural qualities are ap. prec1atM Some \l'ho doubted ~ ou no\I express regrets A pet or d('pPnden1 needs special attention .\ct :1ccorl11ngl~. CA\CER rJune 21.Ju!y 22l: Give thought to request mfl<ie by yrung person. Re ;i"'·arc fJ f \'n riouc; detail~. Studv /inc print -re:id betw!"cn the linec; Cre.!ltive ;ipproach bring~ bc•l rcsu!t.c; \lake ::-0me thanlle~. LEO I .July 2.1·Aug 22 S. Cancrr·bom indh·idua! pla\ ~ .c:ignillcan! role v.,u are r!u" fo r accol acfe from on' .,,,ho has withhe ld prais::o r.ain in· dicaled lhroufo"!h \I ntten \l.Otd. (a!ch up on cal!s. cor· respondenC't'. \llRGO !Aug. 'IJ.Sept. 22 1· f ind out the "·hy of {'\'ents. lnvestlgatr. Don"! be s;;i lisfled merely that somelhin~ hap- pened . r.rt lo the heart of matter. Discover r e a .~ o n s . Give full pJiy to inlcllectual cu riosity. LIBRA l&pt. 23-0ct 22 \: Anything Gqes · · Avoid self-deception . Sec pen· Larhasse o( London says, "':\nything Goes' pie as they ac tually e.xiit. still .holds {or the comin g season." f\1on cy oppor1unity i~ presr~L 11 f t • d · f You can obtain ~onir gentune A d~e ply i;;quared cn ar o l 11s cs1gn . rames bargains. B~ p c r re p 1 i \' c , th~ race and nC'C k. ·rhe !'nnplc shape cases into an Analy7.c you r need!-1\ -•and top-stitching trin1s the center fl'ont sea111 SCOR PU) fOcl . 2.1-Nov. 21 \· and collar. ·Make· it 1n ra\\' silk. silk surah. synthetrc One vou rc!l pect relums the blcndS. ·linQn or p1<1ue. · . · comphmen1. C'yclc is hi.Rh: 73Dl0 is cul 1n ~·lisses Sizes 10·18. Size 12 re- vour jud,11mrn1 1~ ant 1'1 br riuires a pproximate!~' 31.,. yards of 45" fabr ic .. Correct. Stress in iti ative and This precut. preperfor~led Spadea Des1 g~er greater indeprnrlencr. Your pattern produces a better fi t. Order 73010; give effo rts ,t1:ai n spe<'1 al reward. siz e name, address and zip . $1.50 pos tpaid. SAGl1TAHI US I N". 22-• . 'Address SPADEA, Box Ii. flep l. CX•J 5. Milfor d. Ott 21 1: <int v.ho has *" t'\ J. 0'8848. Books by C1 assificat1on: Coats and Suits I I' " " ,.._ P"{lally quirt now mal t& ;~~S~l~pos~l,:P::;•·~·d~.=:;::::;::============i! prr(r net -and ftP hnlt -- ' .. •• ; •' ' ' i ,, BEAUTY SALON FASHION FORECAST: LIGHT FROST FOLLOWED BY ADMIRING GLANCES FROSTING SPECIAL, 19.90 COMPLETE LET OUP\ STYLISTS RIPPLE HIGHLIGHTS THROUGH YOUft HAlft WITH f'ING!ftTll9 P'ROSTING 1 9T"EAKS OP' t.1CIHT£NING Oft &.ONDE OH BLOND£. DO IT WHILt OUR F"09TING SPECIAL. IS ON~ 9tAUTY SAL.ON . 1/2 PRICE PERM SALE OU" SU19EA RI CH 'su1a.v PERM•' INCLUDING arr RtG. 35.00 VALUE. 0 0 NOW J7.50 COMPL.rl°C ••a. 2s.oo VAUJE ••• HOW 1250·COMl'Ln£ O:SLO ~ Cruising the Caribbean Cruising aboard the 1'1S Skyward to Haiti , San Juan and St. Thomas are (left to right) 1i1rs. Ruth Penning and ~1rs. Louise Wyatt. both of Costa !iiesa. Their week·long Norv•egian Carib.bean Lines cruise was part of their Florida vacation. Spring Flowers Bring Shower of Benefits A fragrant f loral at. mosphere will e n h a n c e fashio ns from Mr. Blackwell during the annu al luncheon and fashion show sponsored by the Y-Wives of Santa Ana. South Orange Crunty Young Women's Christian Associa· lion. Spring blossoms are being flown in to create the Shower of Flowers taking place al 11 a.m. Friday, Feb. 19, in the Airporter Inn. Proceeds from the event will Insure continued support for youth activities with emphasis on the liummer backyard pro- gram and the Saturday Y -Day Happenings. Presenting the collection or spring and summ er wear will be Mrs. Florence Sma\es. Chairmen for the evenl are Mrs. Michael Joyce and ?tfrs. Robert Caverly who will offer one or the guests an op- portunity to recei ve a special gift from Mrs. Richard Nixon. Special prizes. favors, secret gifts and f!o"'·ers are being arranged by the ~I mes. Earl Ev ans, Fred Andrea. Joseph Arcolio . Keith Gaynes and John Gray. ?t1usic will be pro- vided by ?t1rs. Kenneth ferry. Reservations may be made through the YY/CA office a~ 542-JS77. Two Meetings Calendered \\'ork at the Orange County Cancer Dressing Station wil! be discussed by r..1 iss Lois Corcoran. chairman .,.,.hen she speaks before the Starbrigh l Club. The group will meet al noon Wednesday, Feb. 17, in th e Seafaring Masonic Temple, Newport Beach. Brothers' Night will be observed by the Harbor Star Chapter, Order of Eastern Star at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 23. in the temple. SALE ENDS LAST DAY OF SALE TONIGHT THE OPEN TIL 9 PM Your l•st chtne• to s•ve up to $I 00 on Sylvan it home tnftrt1inm•nt products .... , ftmous for fin • qutli ty o11 nd an9in••rin9 axctllanc•. Don't cltlty. if you mi11 th is oppor· tunity you may h•v• to waif t wholt ytar for t no ther chtnct at b1r91ins like these 1t'1 up to you! Oa.Sc styled stereo model SC388 wllb -400 watt.a peak mu5ic power. Superb b~Ufront credenza cabinet in Butle r· nut ftnbb , Includes FM/A.\1 plus F~t stereo 11dlo and Gamrd SL95 au lo· matlc stereo turntable. SAVES1QO Now Only S77 5 ffJRllY1 ~ LJMFTIDAl'THESE LOWSl\LE PRICES! lnt19rity tnd Dependability Since 1'147 kfl"'.', Emph1~zr lnw-k.~ r!Spon!t. Fnrc1n1 tacdo now WHERE 010· YdU P~T YOUR KNITTING NEEOLl:57 ,; H•rbor TOPS Gt>t thi•m nut nn\\' It's 1Jnu• •o knit Y.'~r i ~DAVIS· BROWN · u ~prlni.: \\1trdrnhr' \\',. h,.\,. ,111] thir IV'\\ ya.rm: •nd 1lllttrrn~ phi~ 101s of nt"' 1~11" COSTA MESA IL TORO Harper S<'honl In Coft!<t ro 11har• v.lth yn11. ROBINSON'S 41l I.17th St. LOCJUM HUh Piao Me.s1 ii the ln<lllon wh"• The KNIT WIT '":,~.~,.,, '"'"" Sn·O•I . m<mhtr> of TOPS Horh•" NEWPORT • f.A.SHION ISLAND • 6'4·2800 '"'"" '°"' M Sot.•·• llMllO • .,,, ,,., M/f "" Llthter1 p Wr ""rh Mond ay l__•_h_• .. __ ,._•_·_''_'_' ______ <_•_••_•_M_''° ______ JI __ _:_ __________________________ • ____ .... ____________________ ., ev.en1111 Jl 6,30 t I FRENCH REGENCY -~1rs. Fl orence Berkson of the Opera League (left) and l\1rs. Lois Paul Outerbridge climb an iron circular stairway beneath a skylight. The home, designed by its o\vner, is furnished \vi th antiques and museum pieces. Opera League Features Homes of Varied Moods One or the highlights or Laguna's \Vin tcr Fe s Ii v a I V>'hich covers everything from concerts to shoot outs is the Home and Garden T o u r CdM Ceremony sponsored by the 0 p e r a League of Laguna Beach. Under the chairmanship of ~irs. \Villiifl'l H. Bruggere and rilrs. Jay Oliver Py I e, Pamela Gin ther Wed Communily Church Cong regational. Corona dcl Mar was the setting for the nuptials linking Pan1cla Marie MRS. R. L. LINO Anaheim Home Gint!Y.!r. a former Newport Beach resident, and Richard Lee Lind of Anahe im. The Rev. Dr. Phillip 1\1urray directed the vow and ring ex- cha11ge for the dau ghter of i\1rs. Rosalie Ginther of Anaheiin and Henry B . Ginther of Pico and the son of i\lr. cind i\lrs. Vern Lind of Fullerton. Malron of honor \vas Mrs. S. K. f\1cGee, and bridesmai ds were !he fl1mes. J a mes J\:larsden and fl.1rs. Dennis Ginther. the. bride "s sister~in­ lav.·. Best man \vas Carl Post, \l'hilc ushers were L c e Thompson and Ken Moreland . Dina Lind and Shelly McGee were flower girls and Mark Lird \Vas the ring b::!arer. Fo lk.wing a Hawa iia n honeymoon, the newlyweds wi!l reside in Anaheim. The bride attended F u 11 e r l o n Junior Col!ege where she v.•as vice president or K a p p a l..ambda. Her husband at- 1-;?r.ded Buena Park High Sdlool. TRY OUR NEW SASSY SHAG members of the league will be hoslesses at eight area homes \\'hich will be open to the public from 11 a .m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday , Feb. 21. Serving on the committtt for the tour will be the ~lmes. E. R. Tamblyn, 8. Dewayne Hurst, Farrell E. Smith, C. Sidney Johnston. John C. Nichols, Wales Wallace. Jack M. Lyons. Robert Myers. Robert H. Crowe!! and Stanley Eichstaedt. Tickets including maps at a cost of S2 may be purchased at the Lyric Opera Association office or the Chamber of Com- merce. Bus service from the chamber wil l be avai lable. I fomes to be shown include a French Regency home in Einerald Bay owned by Mrs . Lois Paul Outerbridge: the oriental reside nce of Mr. and P.1rs. John B. Northcott in Irvine Cove; the Emerald Bay home or fl.1r. and P.lrs. Donald H. Teetor desi11:ned b v architec.t Paul Williams. and a modern multi-level Three Arch Bay home ov.·ned by Mr. and t.1rs. Robert \Varner. Completing the tour are the homes of fl.1r. and Mrs. Robert Linderman. a contemporary resi dence in Three Arch Bay "'il h oriental touches : the Three Arch Bay home of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie fleald. a J apa n ese estate with brcathtak inR view of the rocks below : a Polynesian residence in fl.1onarch Bay owned by f.!r. and 1'1rs. Leo George Clar ke, and a storv bo ok charm home ov.·ned ·by P.1r. and fl.lrs. L. H. floyt of Laguna Beach. we'll cut it •.• curl it with a RESTOR permanent l 7.50complete 24.00 volue The Sossy Shog i~ short, ~mort ond eosil'/ brushed into n1ony flattering s!y!es. V/t-'11 shopc ii just for you then gently perm ii for jus! the rlghl a mount of wove or cur!. Bfoou•y 5tucho Mo~•curl!1 • p .. o,, ll•!\ • El•·•·.:::y~~ • f oc.ia1~ V11•t our f:l,robl!'th A•de" R:ed Door ,i foc•ol l!oom ••• l-011e o late treotlfler\f . , go owoy w•!~ o brour1f1JI !'le-... "'Ol:e'4.lp, 10.00 I ~ Mood.,, rtt.u.., 15, 1971 DAILY PILOT Jlf Bea·ch Church Students In Tune Naval Chapel Scene Of Nuptial Ceremony . . Rite Setting ·The. Rev. Elmer Thyre of Holy ero.s. Luthrran Churcb, Los AlamJtos, will be the 1f18~tr when Class Mount.aln lllfl. Jnc., rnteta at I p.m. Wedonday, Feb. 17, in the Veterans OwitabJe Foun- dation buUdint, Santa Ana. Home In Huntlniton Beach are Richard War.ren F.dlDOnJOn Jr. and his bride, tJ>e l<rn1<r Catherine AM Stanley who were married In the Loi ' Alamitos Naval Air " Huntlng1oo lltach wW be home for JoM Greig G1rland and his bride, the former 1i-1arlene Kennedy, who e1- changed wedding pledges and rings during a ctremony performed by the R e v • , Charles L. Rose. The Community U n i t e d Methodist Church, HWltington Beach was the setting for the early afternoon rites Unking the daughter and son of P.fr. and Mrs. Ronald W. KeMedy of Huntington Beach and P.tr. and Mrs. John Garland of Buena Park. Escorted to the allar by her father, the lride was at· tended by Mis! Donna Tobias, her cousin, as maid of honor. Bridesmaids were M I s s Sharon KeMedy, sister ol the bride ; Mrs. Danny ~fira and Miss Heidi Neimeyer, her cousins ; Afiss Denise Stof- fregen. n i e c e of the bridegroom , and Miss Elyse Goldman. Flower girl waa Desi Garven and ring bearer was Billy storfregren, nephew of the bridegroom . Candlelightei·s v.·ere Glenn Hollyfield and Jack Neimeyer, comins of the bride. William Stoffregen was his brother-in-law's best man, and MRS.' GARLAND Exchinge1 Rl1:111 ushers were Robert Fair, his cousin, Daniel Fuller, Craig KeMedy, brother of the bride-;' Bobby Jackson and Donald O'Donoghue. The bride is a graduate or Huntington Beach High School and her husband Is 1 graduate of Buena' Park High School and attended Fullerton" Junior College. . He ·IS widely known for his youth organlzation which in- dlld.. both !\Ip IChool Ind college otud<nts. A youth cOmbo from this group will lead GM! members ln ppel slnalnr. Glass Mountain IM, inc. Is a nonprofit «1anlution work· ing for the housln1 and employment ·of physi<llly disabled adults. Santana Lanes, Santa Ana, is donaUJll lanes each SUnday for use' by the newly formed bowling · team of G M 1 • Interested new membera may enroll durinl the meelin(. Newlyweds ·'Select Mesa Home stlllon Chapel with Chlpllln llf.1.;.t ~~,,. V .. B. ·Dobbs officiating. The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mn. William l\ a t p h 5t111ley o( Hunllnpn Beach. was given in marriage by ber flther. Suvinl as matron of honor wu Mr1. WIWam R. Stanley Jr., the 'bride's siste.r.in-taw, arMi bridumakls were Miss Michelle LaMont.a,ne and Miss Annette Stanley, the bride'• aimer. The b~evoom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Warren F.drnMson ol Huntincton ~ach, asJced ~Jack Cady of Burlingame to be his best man. Ushers were RonaJd Schntlbel and Michael Frank. The b_ride is a iractuate of Aftrina High School and at- t.pcb Golden West College. Her husband is a craduate FV Rites MRS. EDMONSON Home in HB of Crestmoor Hlgh School. San Bruno and Orange Coasl College. Sandra Monroe Wed ' . . Musical Welcome Paul Willemsen · and Betty Homsveld , both of Costa Mesa, exchanged vows and rinp before the Rev. Dr. Qarles Dierenfitld in St. Andr.W'I Chapel, Newport BelCll. Sandra Susan Mon r o e became the bride of Kevin Leroy Brown durlni rites In the First Chr!Jttan Oiurch of Fountain Valley read by the Rev. Arthur Reese. Associates Attuned The bride l1 the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hanlt Homsveld of Costa Mesa and her husband is ~ ton · of Mn. Antonia W illemaen- Ste.kelenburg of Holland and the late Mr. Paul WllltmJen. Parenta ol the bridal couple are Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. Monroe of HunUngton Beach and Mr. and Mrs. William Brown, fonner Huntington Beach residents now o f Chatsworth. In honor of new member& and guests, a musical pr~ gra m featuriAg: Dr. Maurice Allard, baritone, ud Laurer.::: Gordon, pianist, will be presented by Irvine Terrace Philharmonic Associates. The luncheon meeting will follow an 11 a.m. social hour Thursday, Feb. 18, ia the Balboa Bay Club. Board members who will serve as hostesses guided by hlrs. Thomas Riley, chairman, Vows Said In Newport Our Lady Qu<en of the Angels Catholic C h u r ch , Newport Beach was the set- ting for the double ring ceremony llnkin.it: Frances Duffield and Robert E. Hef- fernan . The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Duffield of Newport Beach, was given in marriage by her father and attended by her sister, Mrs. John Gabriel. Her husband, son ol Mr. and fl.frs. Thomas E. Hef· fernan of Santa Ana, asked John de La Forest to be hi! best man and his brother, John Heffernan to be an usher. The new Mrs. Heffernan, a Children's Home Society debutante . is a graduate ol Ne\\'PQrl Harbor High School, and Stanford Un iversity and earned her teaching credential at San Francisco S t a...l e College. Her husband Is a graduate of Mater Dei High School and Stanford. Joint Meeting \":;terans from Orange Coast Coll ege will be guests of honor v.·hen the American Legion and Auxiliary 455, Costa ~ meet at a p.m. Thursday, Feb. IS, in the Legion Hall. include the Mmes. Charles Stephens, Cora P e g g y Wallace, Jessie Curtis, Lyman Belz, Angus Wright, Edward 1ifayo, A. Cattel English, Stewart Coulter, K-e n net h Holloway, Wendell Jone s , Claude Patterson ,Rlid Wa.sso1 and Mark Walker Jr. Altendanta were Miss Carol Longtin, maid of honor: Henry HGrn.!Veld, best man, and Michelle Homsveld, Oower lllrl. The bridal couple·will reside in Costa Mesa. Miss Kathleen Monroe at-· tended her slster as maid of honor and bridesmaid was Mrs. Patrick Kailey. Heather Monroe and Michelle Brown, alsten ol the bridal couple '":ere nower girls. William McKinney was best man and guests were 1eated Associate professor of music at UCI where he also Is choral conductor, Dr. Allard has ap- peared in operas, oratorios and concerts and has perfonn- ed extensively in this country anl Europe. HB Auxiliary by Steve Kleinfeldt. 0 ..,. ..... Twice a month the Ladles' Auxiliary to Huntington Beach Veterans of Foreign Wars, Post 7361 meets at I p.m. The first Friday of each month they 1ather in Odd Fellows Hall for a business meeting and the third· Friday they IOcla1t.ze .in various Joci:. tion.<1. Fur t be r tnfonnation may be 1ecured by · calling Mrs. LeRoy Hermann at """" 3$80. The newlyweds are MRS. K. l . BROWN He mGst recently performed as soloist with the Irvine Muter Chorale in Vaughn Willi&mJ' ' ' Hod i e ' ' and Hande.1'1 11Mwlah." The meeting is open to all committee m em be r1 of Oranp County PhJlharmonic Society and their gu .. ts. • for our big eraduates of Marina mgh Exchanges Piede- School and attend Golden wesi1.---------... College. They will reside in Westminster. B'nai B'rith Orange Coast Chapter ol B'nJI B'rlth Wcmen cather the lint Thursdays It I p.m. in the Security · PICl!lc Na- tional Banlt bulldlne, Costa M<sa. OTERY m •· '"" ''· C:•lh·MeM • ... WI • anniversary event .... Fancher sales again I • TRADITIONAL "TALCY" COLLECTION A. CONSOLE /DESK S•r•n•ly •legont, fronl•d with porqvet weed pon•h1 fini1h•d off in th• richn••• of ook, t~I• tw•· piKe fr••·•tondint unit 1to11d1' high Ol'ld lovely on corv•d cobriOle legs. Tollr about hldd•l'I tf•o•· ure1, it "'ooicolly open• inta o writing d•slr. log. $«4,.. Salo $269 The Sale to Believe in Is 8. STORAGE CHEST Tite long and th• 1hort ef it is o cabinet .1.,anc• you con use with a decorator'• •y• ••• for holl- wey, "4rooll'I, tludy. lift·top ace:••• for 1pac•· .. 1.,in9 rterote.·Wolnft finish, ••qui1itely detoll•d to Its lost' Inch, c11ttoll'I hotdwore. leg. $269 ... Sale $169 NOW • • . at All 3 Stores! SANTA ANA Mo;• 0111 .... 11>-.5•7-1621 IMN AN. '""' 0.-Mltltlllr ,......,. PASADENA Colora'Cfo ot El Molino-792-61 M POMONA Holt, fast of Gor.,.....29-3026 • '1ew port, •I f•1hion "'hl•nd, Newpart Center e 0~~-2200 e Me n .. Fri., 10:00 till 9:30: Oth•r d•yt 10 till 5:30 ; ' l • . ' • • : . . II DAILY PILOT Mond11y, Ftbruary 15, 1971 Trips Packed With Good Times If Travel Tips Taken 1 1 ,tW1 OP OIL PAINTIM•I WHeUIAU WARIMOUll OPIN TO THI PUILIG By BARBARA DUARTE 0t t1N DtllY l"llel lt1ff Remember the good nld d1ys when a Uny dilapidated car pulled up in the center circus ring and out piled a dozen IX' more multicol ored cklwns? perience l to find "''oman can camp man. oul H a without a She diSC1'.l~red not only is it pcgsible. but by informing park direc1ors she and her f t m a I e cOOlpanion were maleless. they received spec- ial attention and encourage· ment. br1ng1ng in the cows or just plain resling for mom and dad. One of her favorite trips is a covered wagon ride in Kansas. Even ltlOugh it takes some doing to get used to bouncing along in a wagon, the camaradarie of our coun- try's earliest means of travel was a revealing experience. is easy. if it's done right," But , even if you pack a in the first five minutes -''It's whal,4, Wide l ha l so•/o OFF &he e."p\aintd while .so doing. mf'55y aµitcase. have restless the m01t impcrtant advice Mlnts; atart \with • 1mll•1 1•11 •· ·=~~T• ••A Pack in la yers with hea\'Y -~chl~ld~re~n~or'._'s~uf~fe~r~a-b~l~ow~ou""'.1_'c.1~m~e~lhr~·~ou~gh~lo~u~d~ancl~~cl~ea~r~.-~a~nd~kee~p~s~m~ilin~·~g~.'~!,'<---_1!~a~s~!'o1~•~•~"~'~""''"'"'.'.."~"~!!!'!' items such as shoes and travel\ iron at the bottom. Put coordinated items together and things in things, such as jewelry, gloves and stockings inside a purse, face cloth or showercap. Clothes should be folded and placed in layers keeping (olds toward the h11ndle of the ~uit.­ caes. Foil also can be placed between folds to prevent creasing. Keeps tbil!ll!J cl without effort, eliminates bath t~IS • • Even tAou1h It's not the same trick, Miss Carol Lane, "'ho travels 70.000 miles a year unco\'erina tips for trips, pulled enough clothes and AC· assories out of a small suit· case to bring the thought to mind. Miss Lane. sharing her travel kn o wledge wilh members of the Woman 's Club of San Juan Capistrano, breez· ed through all facets o( tr1ve l -departure \always done \li'ith a smile), riding, cam· ping. tourettes (small Jaunts' and the extended \'acation \1·hich ruled out USE' of the vulnerable cloth suitcase . "It's important lo take children on \'acations for both recreational and educational purposes," she pointed out. \\'ilh stops spactd alon g the way to give children and ad ults a break, the family can see American hist()ry and literature come lo life through hisl()ric landmarks. Al the close or the r i d e, on a Sunday, wranglers sel up an old organ in a tree-shad- ed glen and delivered "' sermon on "God's doorstep'' that made a visibly dewey. eyed impression on the wagon train familie s as the y gathertd together . With basic costumes In mind. a scarf. blouse and gloves can be placed on pellon dividers with handle~ so anv costume can be lilted out without disturbing other con- You Work Less You Save Money ' '-'\.. Soap and clothing list lqer .. ' ATTRACTIVE TRAVELER The attractive and stylish represental!1'e of Sht!ll 011 Company is dauntless in her efforts to find exciting travel ide as. For instance. if you're driv- ing through the Hudson River Valley, remind the little ones here's v.·here Rip Van Winkle doztd Off for 20 years. OPEi\ FAJL\1S Or, for camping addicts, Miss Lane described hundreds of farms across the country which open thei r doors and acreage to vacationers who may stay in the farmhouse. pitch a tent or stay in the camper. Suggesting vacationers can travel in off season1 not only to save money but also avoid crowds, "-1iss LaM offered a number of remedies to the nerve wracking "Are we almost there?" tents. NIGHTGOWN GOES OUT Nightgown, robe and slipperi; come last as they 're needtd 'first -and Miss Lane's bright 1\tAKE REST STOPS . tittle belted nylon nightgo.,..·n Sti:'P orten and plan potnls has been usetl to double as of interest ahead, ca r r Y ..,.a casual dress. snacks and games. make ~p Necklaces. pins and scarves g~mes and bring a favo:1te change the look of the basic pillow. A warmer plugged 1ntb dress coordinated with jacket a cigarette lighter can be used and swea ter. to make tea or coffee or warm All these !ips and hundred s the baby's bottle . more have been recorded b}. But. back lo the suiLcase. the wanderer as she conducts the veteran traveler pulled a territorial explorations in the tw<rweek wardrobe out of a western half of the United ,, .. , ~ • DY ; -.,.a::,. Ask Ai>out Sears Convenient Credit Plans Complete Installation Available! Just Ask! I Sears I ---So. Coast Plau 3333 Bristol St. Pb. 5CI 3133 B11ena Park 8150 La Palma Ave. Pll. l!MtlO Sula Ana 1716 So. Mahl St. Pb. 5'7-&'ll One such outing was an ex· cursion in a half-ton pic kup camper {a new driving e.x· !\1eals are served In the main house and everyone is Invited to participate in daily activity - gathering eggs, $4.9S plaid suitcase. "Packing States. ·-~~~~~~~~~~.:....~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'-- Healthy Future Their Goal Daniel Bro\vn, adm inistralor of South Coast Community Hospital. points lo special details of the expansion progra m now on the dra \ving board . Taking notice are /left to riiht) Mrs. Grover Hayes and Mrs. Herbert Sutton. president of the Laguna Beach So roptimist Club which recently paid off a $5 ,000 pledge. Seal Beach Campaign Club s Jo in Recy cling Participaling in the cilY"'ide program recommending the recycling of lrash Y"ill be members of the v.·omen's clubs of Stal Beach. Mrs. Clell Ramsey . .!lcnior garden. conservation and en- v; r o nmentat responsibility chairman . has been represen- ling the club at meetings of the c i l y '!I En\·ironmental Quality Control Board and Seal Beach People f o r Ecology . Recyclable trash including aluminum cans. foil and pans. clean bottles of all kincls and newspapers may be taken to .!l. colltcUon "depot at the rear of 21 6 Main St. where the city has provided drums for the Hems. Carlos de Avila presently is providing transportation of the collection to Californi<l SI.ate College at Long Be.ach for reclam.!l.tion. A city.,..ide Reclamation Day i!; planned for Saturday, Feb. 27. The Seniors will mtet at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, Feb. 17, in the !ilarina Community Cent.er and follo.,..·ing a bu&ineSl!I meeting. will be hoRored during a luncheon prepared by the Juniors. Mn1 . Ramsey will present a planl sale with proceeds tagged for !he Pennies for Pines project "'hich aids in the re storation of forest artas. Committee. Schedules 'Longest Half-hour' !\lrs. !\1ickey !\1cDonough is luncheon chairman assiste.d by the !\·Imes. Ronald Adams. Adam Hildebrandt, D a v id Sloan . Lee Risner, Dennis Holstein. Ronald Be n n e t t. !\·like Knapp, Kirk Wilson. Rf'no Loren z. \Vill iam Cran· dall. James Francis, Bruce Taschner. Ron Jes s n er , Charles Sickler and Charles Simmons. Keith Houdyshtll , member of the Long Beach Community Player~ and president of the Seal Beach Chamber of Com- men::e . will speak on D<rit- your-self Psychiatry. The Longest Half-hour in History "·111 be prorrammed v.·hen members of the Alta Bahia Committee of t he Oranee County Philharmonic Society mee1 at IO a.m. Thurs- da y, Feb. 18. ~1rs. Edv.·ard Schumacher will open her Newport Beach home for the luncheon Beach Pair Sav Vows , Cathrine Atwood and \Vayne A. Asher l exchanged vo ws before the Rev. Gabriel M. Ashie in SI. Luke's Orthodox Church. G a rd en Grove. Parents of the newlyweds are Mrs. Bill Gibson and Mrs. Bruce Holder , all of Huntington Beach. Attendants were M J s s Roslyn Atwood . the bride's siSt'-r who served as maid of honor: the Misses Diane Naylor. Kimberly Hane! and l.or raioe Penne y , bridesmaid!; Steve Anderson. bclit man, and Rich Berry, Randy Pennfl'y and Michael Deems. uJJhers. &th the bride a n d bridecronm are grllduale1 or Huntin;ton Beach High School. meeting and Mrs. Ralph Tan- dowsky and Mrs. R a I p h Holden, well-k.nown in the are.!!. for their original songs, will present lhe program. Songs will be. sung by !\\rs. John Kerr and Mrs. Rich ard P.1a ilander while Mrs . Tan· do.,..·sky accompanies them on the piano and Airs. Holden n1rrales. Assisting !he hostess vdH bf' the Mmes. E. Aiorgan Qu inn. James L. Gaines, J . Donald Jo'erguson and John Croul. Guests au invited to atlend the committee's meetings tak- ing place the third Thursday of each month. Further in· fnrmat1oit may be obtained by calling Mri;. RI ch 11 rd Franklin. memberShlp chair· man. Alums Hear Operator Westridge Alumnae To Meet !\tr!l. John KillPfcr ~·ill open her Corona del !\.1itr home for a luncheon meetin,e: f(lr Orange County ;ind S;in Diego ntum- nae of the Westridge School of Pasadena . S~..ak ing ill 10:30 a.m. Thursday. Feb. 18, "'ill be Mrs. Elizabeth Herrick. head- 1nistresll who will rlillcus.'I the curricular and st r u c l u r a 1 changes that ha ve 1aken place. in !he last If'"' ~ear~. Servin,c: 1s lunchf'('ln ro- hostess will bf l>irs. Lee Sam· mis of Nt"·por t Beach. Mrs. Halleen Huitter. chier Da nce Club operator at CBS-TV Studio.'!, Square Riggers S quare will speak at the first monthly Danct Club "swings out" meeting of West Coast Trade rvery Wednesday al 8 pm. Sclwols Alumni Association . in the First Method ist Church. The. mttLing will take place Costa Mesa. at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb.::::==========.] 18. in the Anaheim schnol. Entertainment will be pro· The DAILY PI LOT- 1 vidod by lh• Madrigal•. ' Th t Ono That C ar•• chorJ1I group from Peralta Junior High School. Orange. ~========...o.· I 1 I I l • '• • t ,.. , , .. \. . ' "' f ' -. '' ~ " .. ~ ' . . ' ·' • ' . ........ v . '."c • • •. <, .. ,. We've made.tracks. From grape country to Baja. jJp and down our Golden Stale. And now, Imperial $avings ls Cal iforn ia's s1ronger new O fo, !a'vings. NOw we have 27 offices throughout Californla, with more on the way. Total stren<)th over 1.4 billion dollars. ' . . . ~ . So what does al l this mean to yOu? • ,, I I I I ··-IH ' :" lmPERIAL SAVlrtGS • ~ ............. "' , ... _ ... eo.-.. -.. ""'~ 01!1 and loan associat ion of N11wpcrt ·P1 aden a ' Newport 1111boa S1vlnoa' MW n1rne EJ:e<:u!ive OHlce 3366 Via Lido, Nawport Buch, (714) 17~130 Main Ollice 61 Soulh Lake Avenue, Pas•dena, (213) 795·8441 Corona del Mar Oll1ce 550 NewpOfl CeolM Orh1e, Newporl Beach, (714) 6'4-·1461 3$TO East Foothill Boulevard. PasadeM, f213) ?'95-0447 13' North Glendor• Avenue, Glend011, (213) 33&40C3 Wood t1n<1 H11t1 Otflca 19900 Ventura B1vd,.,WOCtdland HUis. Cal[!., (213) 346-3920 I • • • • ••• .. ' .tr • . ' '. ' . ' • " . ' V• ' ' ~ ., .\ . ' ' .. ' .. '' . ' • ' • Monday, Ptbi-uary 15, 1q11 DAILY PILOT J 7 Battle Ag,ainst Hunger Waged on Many County Fronts Uy JO O~ON 9f "" INll'I' Plitt Ili ff Feminine 'Hand' Sailing Champ South Shore Sailing Club'1 <;:rewman-of-the year award lot 1!170 went to a woman. 'the Steve Fuller Perpetual Trophy for crewman-of-the- ytar was presented Saturday night to Donna Reed of Covina at the club's annual meeting. h1rs. Reed is the official foredeck hand on the family yacht Aloha II, a Santana-27. Others In the regular crew are the couple 's 14-year-old son, Steve, a first-year college nei&hbor Bob McGee 11nd l!lnother neighbor friend . Bob Dudley. t.f. Handling the foredeck in racing requires skill and strength as it involves hoisting. lowering and jibing the spinnaker. When tacking tn weather Donna lends a hand on the jib sheet. She refuses to take the tiller -that makes her nervous. covers. During panic parties In ' races Donna often yells and f threatens. according to her • husband. "But usually she is 1 · f so far forward that no one · pays any attention. We pre-g tend we don 'I hear." "' On several occasions Donna J: has been hoisted off the deck • whlle jibing a spinnaker in a breeze but always lands on her feet and continues the job. Donna's racing gitrb In· 1 eludes knee pads. a strapped- on hat and sun glasses among " other sailing gear. ~ •I~ ~sdd~~~~.'~n~:~"~.~~'., SUITING AND LINEN· She oc<oas;onany nned ;n on I LO 0 K WEAVE FA B RI ( th e race committee last year f • and organized the club·s Dana p. Point Stampede and Small ; Boat Regatta. , If there is any doubt about r Reg. 74C yd. c 3 D1y1 C LA.lllllOL I KINDNESS• HAIRSETTER 16.54 Our Ro;. 19 .67 3 Days On ly Beautiful ha ir in seconds \Yith K indness® Instant f Ha irsetter. 20 heat· at· once rollers: 6 jumbo. 10 large. 4 small. l.otnpact ra ~e \Vilh convenient carry· ing handle. 6·fl. cord. 120V J\C. Charge it. ' I I.':"."" ;~ ' ,§'..IJ'_f.:ml ( GIRLS' TRIMMED SLIPS • • ' • I " ' 11. I L SOFTIQUE®BATH OIL BEADS 58c ...... Our Ro;. 78< 3 O•ys Only t I~uxurious balhing thal protects and softens your skin \.Vi ii come bubbling out of this 17-oz. • can of Softique Bath Oil Beads. \1ou save 20c iI you pur· chase during this double discount offer. • • .. ' i ' • i I ' Donna w1s taught her rac· ln1 skills by_her husband. Glen IS years ago. They have bttn r1ci111g ever r;ince -first as a twosome and now 1s a f1mi· ly unit. Donna's capability as a ~ roredec~ hand. the Aloha_ Tl's f; record 1n 1969-70 would di spel j: it. The boat placed first in (, 17 races. second in four races ~~ and look thi rd in two. • Y"'J I ! our 11.;. 97< 98 3 D•y• Onl y # I C ~ OUR REG. 4.97 3 DAYS ONLY Their first comptlitive rac· lni was in a Pengquin dinghy. Later they moved up to a Cal-25 for four years and more recently have been cam· paigning the Santana·27. Besides her foredeck duli's Donna packs sack lunches for racing and does the cooking on cruises to Catalina and other channel islands. Donna al so occasionally doubles in sail repair and other palm and needle work . She has sewn up the working jib. the spl1naker, the stays'! and has made all the canvas Dacron® polyester blends, miracle blends, light and medium weight suiting. 44/45" "'idths in fa.sh· ionable prints. checks and attractive solids. Save 30c a yard. sew an attracti\'e spring \\'ardrobe. 2· lO·yd. lengths. Steve Fuller. donor of lhe ~ trophy. is a 23-year-<1ld Viet· ~ nam vd.eran who has bee" 111 a member or SSSC since 1967 it and has been sailing most ~ or his life. ;· •iw-i 111t. , ... The trophy !s 2 by 211 feel ~ --.-, -·--~~:• In size. made frnm monkey r :::..1 ;;a;,;~S"IAC!!Y'.~-=:­pod wood and has five hand- carved pictures de pi r. ting i crewmen wor\:ing aboard ship. r~ The trophy'was h11nd-carved ._ at Subic Bay in the Philip-'I pines. The silver work was j done in the mountain capitol of Baguio by student.. at a ~ Catholic silver school. ~ Crowning Glory beauty salons NYLON SLEEPING BAG 1266 ' ' R•g , 19,66 3 boy. Only f. Hte vy nylon ~l,.,.ping bA~ \.\'Ill nol s11i; or run \\"11 rm flannel lining. W~igh t 4 lb~. I PERM SUPER SALE! • $20 MAGIC CUllL • $25 GLAMOUR CURL $ 9.50 $11.50 $14.50 ~1 INTlRiOR LATEX .. • $30 REGAL CURL BUDGIT PERM always $5,H (Normal Hair) SPECIAL SAVINGS! SHAMl'OO·SIT STYLE-CUT s1y1111 ttltn ••leflttv llitll•~. SOUTH COAST ,LAZA l•··· ltval-H•rl t• s •• " ...... 146·711• 0,.11 '"'"";,.,, ...... r ..... wM 2.95 1.50 L....,W..t 3.45 2.00 267 L 17tli tT., COSTA MIS4 ....... 141·tflt O''" l•t 11l1191 & S11~J1v 3 ,, 3.9 ~.1. ~ Rig. 4,97 l D•rt \\'11.~h11.hlr f\11! flnl'h lwilnt for 1ntrrlnNI, Orif'S n an hour. \\'hit r and ~ d1'f'nr rolor~. I • ~ Girls' slips of KodeJ(ii) pnlyester /coltnn. daintily trimmed for a truly fem inine look. Delight her \\'ith several styles in a wide choice or pretty colors. 4·12. Save on each. Charge it. .. --·r--l·· -. .. f '. ' ~ \Vestern style for all casual \\'ear. Made or sturdy t· polyester/cotton. they'll take rugged treatment, give long 'vear. Reinforced at all points of strain. Se.ason's ne\1•est colors. 28·36. • .1 • I .. l ' WOMEN'S SANDALS REG,· 4.96 NOW 2.71 RI!;, • J ,97 NOW 1.71 A \"anPIV of l11di"l' ~hnr~ f"llllS 11nrl lr"v hr,.I~. ~T .•·lrs. 11iirl rri1or!'. 1.lmft,.d !'i7.P.( .• 1 rllly( n nly! M1orted 111" Scheclult Do·lf·Vot1r1ell. All you need is one weekend and a couple ol lools {like a shovel '"'d a hacksaw). 01 course you may need s.ome questions· answere;, too. Bui that's Why we "re here. P.v.c. PIPE "A" • 10' Lentrh ................... . ,, , ..... 24¢ ... J/4" Schaclule "A" • 10' Ltft9lh ., ., ............ 33C ... CHARGE IT AT K-MART ' 1. • " KMAIT LAWN & GAIDIN Hoe-Rake· Shovel USl,UL GAIDIM IQUll'MENT FERTILIZER 3 DAYS 1 67 3 DAYS 1 87 ONLY • ea. ONLY • ), ~11 \·e on loni::-hand!i>d ~ar· · M "· ••• tf ltt1ill••• l•r .,.,. j drn h,.,.,, Inn~ hanrl !rd I••"•· 111•<1• '''''• '"'"'""'· > bf>\\· r11kr. rnund point tlt'111• '"° nN91•, ctflrl J.11111 ·~, n. 1 .. R -.... sh11vf'I \I 1t h long h11ndlr. GOLDEN YIGORO LAWN FOOD 15 Lb•, 3 48 l Days Only • . -...,.,. .. ........ ...... --~­--- S LB, AZALEA RHODODENDRON CAMELLIA FOOD •' l Thr "-llY In l'ln oul1t!lnd· ~ r lnJ: i:rf'<'n l!l\.\n \4.ilhout , 'dftr'I!:"'" nt burni ng. Iron ij 3 01y1 Only 64¢; , 11ddt'd. \...awn re1ponds 4 10 6 d11y11 le.ter. I Gl't i:;rtl11·in J,:" 11·i1h nu~ 3 day llpCei11l • F'nr 1;trong, hea llh)' C\1;"·cr1. ' ' f i I I• J8 OAILY PI LOI Mond•J. ftbfuar1 15, 1971 -- TV DAltJ LOG Monday Evening FEBRUAltY 15 6:00 fJ lit "..., Jtrry Oun11lly. 0 XflllC NtWMfYiu Tom S11yder o n. Allf:~ Dow 0 GARY COOPER-"TEN * NORTH FREDERICK"! o Si1 o·aou Mtvic: "l•~ Nortti f rtdftici" (dum•) ·~ -Garr Coooe1, SUlY P11kt1, Gu1Jdint Fitz. 1er1ld. Min. domin1led br bis ~­ b11lous and selfrsll 'flil1, seek~ rt1u11 ~n 1lcohol ind kwt cf 1 )'OWlltr woman •lltr his POliliul 1spir1tions 111 1uintd by 1 sund1I. 0 Did ¥11 l>Jt• ID TIM ninWo11tt ID@(ilSta1 Trek ED Art Studit "Puppth :' l · m fillltr r11111llr al Ntticitrt 34 ID Winp II AdVt nilH I Gl) l1 H111 F1111i!i11 ctft C11uu11t (DIU'lM Nin 1:15 fD Ct11rtlt's P1d l :JO 0 Clndid ti''"" (0 TH Ftyin1 H~11 tD HM11Pid11 ltlll• EE)Slltttall Fll1111/M11iu lt m Tltt Rlnert Rtpert ai) LK 0Md1de1 tiI)AIC Nftt 1:001J 9 ((J MitJMnJ l.f.O. Coobtr Ii i•ll1d lft 1 11mblln1 u!d on 1 pokn '""' 1ft11 ~m nomin1t11 him 10 bt 1 dlurth tldu. 0 "CHRYSLER PRESENTS * The Bob Hope Special with an AU Star Cast" Q QJi:IJ m•s•reEE~JllH ... ,. Sh•• Cutst Stirs Bini CIMbJ, f't!U· II Cltfk Ind Jo """' Wo1l11 loll !ob in 1 corMdy·nritty /\our. Min. 1c by Les 8"*"n •nd his 8•nd Ill Renown. O TH f1111ti" o !i1J rn m ut """' wn "St. V'UelltilMl'I llJ MISllCI' .. (d11m1) 'i7-Jasoa Robirds, .If• Kiit, .loseph tamp1111ll1. Chic.lilt 11ndtrwotld bou, N CIPOllf, plob 11) kill Burs Mor1n ind lhe t1mo111 SI, V1!en1int's RliJ MIUICfl in whicll s"r" of Mor1n'1 mtft 111 aunned d(lwn In 1 wud1oosa ii retreated, ID I IPICLi~ I WtHtlHll 1'1rt1 Cr11ist This pra1r1m is Ge"1:11ed 11) th1 newest Sou!hun C1!ifo1ni1 fad loi lwin1us-lhre1 d1ys of fun 1nd sun on th1 hirh HIS. tD Rulitit1 •'f1t1 lo f1c1: M•d•· lyn Murr1r O'H1ir ""· 01, (dw11d 81um1n.'' €I1)30 Millllt« OJHOJ Cl!) f111t1W t :lQ f) ~ (j) Doris D11 RIC Udo Moll· 11lban 1uut 1t11J 1s Rit111rd Cor· dov1n, lither of BillJ Mutin's ~rr, hat 1irlf1iend i nd 1 str1n1er wilh whom Bil/1'• molhtr, Doris, sl1rts 7:00 fJ tlS Evtnilll Nrws W1J!u t1on. I feud. kilt. Q tlRlfid C.Mtll 0 iD Nit flitllttJ flltn Da~id fl!) Mtsiulr/,ulll"s Desk BnnkltJ, John Ch1nullor, fr111~11 fl) tldu1 dt A11t1uli11 McGee. 0 Whit's MJ Line? I D;OO 6 9 {j.J CJrtl Burnett Sh1w I Ken Bury and Toti1 fields 1uesl. (D @(J)I Lt¥t Lilcr O !il @ m l ll'ICl.t\I Purt m Dr•tntl I Gtldi1 Go!dit Hiwn l!etdlints llfl fD Tiit World Wt Liff In "How . lirst 50n1. dinct and comedy spec. Old rs Oldr' Throu1h lh• eyes Ill iif wilh 1uest s11rs Rulh Buui, 1 child, 1n 1nliqu1 d11 le1, 1 1eolo· .lohnny CarJOn. 81)b Disney and 1isl. and others, wt stt how man I~• Muppt\s. C<imtdJ hithlilhh deals w1!h lht question of 11r. r11cludt • llyinc 1evue 1bo11d 1n El!) Cllrist lllt Livint Woi• €IJ Jltsario fl!) Simpltn11ntt MW aJMo~it C1mt 7;lO l)Cif(i)C11n111olt ! O QJ@ El')Rtd Sktlt•• M1rth1! Raye 1uests. 0 V'll'zin11 Crah1111 Sh" Guetl stars are Jttk Jones, Annt Baller. Dr. Jamu Dolin, comedy !tam ol Kennr Solme1 1nd Gaif Parent andl 1 phon.t c1ll from Jtanne OirDn. o @ rn m L•r• ... , DM1 O Mill• $ M"il: '1.•nz h(1, J1urnry IRtl Ni111t" (drama) '62- Katharint Hepbu1n. m fn1th II ConNqUUICll outsi.zed 797 1irliner. 1 mlni·mU51· cal spoof of "Crime and Puni$h· men!" and 1n unsucceWul 1tt1mpt lo lnnslorm Kermit th1 Muppet fros in!o a handsome prinu. 8 l iz S Ht•s Ktvin S1ndtrs, B11ney Morris. 0 laitt1 W11d t1 .. 1 m !'llWI Georre Putnam. Hal fish · man. m TrUS•lt "MIUICl t on !hi RicMlie11.' tD I iR{Q4 I Kt1ll Ti111tt M tilt c..try A stlldJ of ttlt dttlint of rural Alneriu, 1Wn1 lllOd t'OSU, and lhe frus1t1tions ol tonsumtrs. fl) Luutil.I CE T1lr.eint1111 Arztftlt11t ID II T1krt • Tllltl 10:30 0 W. C. fields Mtti1: ~l'oppy" tD t itJ W1\thrn C<i·hosts Ch11lts (te1med1) 'J6-W. C. Fields, Ro· Ch1mpli11 1nd Art S1idenb1um dis· thelle Hudson. A cirnival b1rke1 CU!S how !his SHies. •hich focuses PIS.St! !)If his JOl!nl Wlfd I! Ill on h1ppe,nin1s in l.A., c1me into heires.s. bein1. m l in )ohns Jhn mi Ci1111111 30 m lnurtid11mb11 fl) la D11en1 11:00 f)Qj; (!) im News 7:55 m Cuution dt S111111do1 I 0 '" 00 ED Ntn 1:00 0 !iJ 00 fD L1111h·l11 Dan tilt! 0 al Ntws Ditk • MW positiGn-in lront ol 0 Mt¥it: "JCiPl111ar• IA th• Sun~ 1 lirint ~u1d. Mr. Slilll1n111 spits (myslelJ} ·~John Due~. on [rnatint and Plll)f:nici1 11 the m Mo'lit: ...... Ttn" (dr1m1) bowhn1 alter ind Gtntrll 811(( '"40-.Chrk G1ble. S~llW lrlQ. Ri1M retu1ns. ID Ml'rie: "Jtnnifrr" (dr1m1J 'SJ 0 @ (J) a> Ntwly.wM C111t Bob -Ida lupino, Howard Dull. fublnks hDsls. fil Wtild l'trss ID T1 TtM lllt Tr11th tIJWkld l'Jtis ll:lO l)~Ci)M1r• '1ilti1 A SPK1al show Gn !he subconscious, wiU1 At-EID Men ti Yi5ioo thu1 Ellen. hypnDlill.; and DeS1inte ml Musiu 1 tttrtll1s Colombe, h1ndw1ilin1 1n1ly1t. 1:05 Cl:) Aq111 Tin '1tin11 0 @@ a;'! Jo•n11r Carson Pro· 111m ori1in1tes in Burbank, Ca lif. 1:30 I) a Cl) Ken's l1cy H11ry tels Walter M1tth1u, M1. tnd Mrs. Jim· h1mseil 1 ~ •hen a ~teamsh!11 mr s1ew1rl. J~ck l1mmon, Di1nt line nttds 1 t1uls1 dirttlof !or fts Riaa. Gent SheldDn. and d1chshund ned trio to H1w1li, and llltJ' t1lks rict1s •rt fealured. him lnto t1k1n1 her IS Ill 11sist1nt D m Die): Ca~ett Ttnt•H~dy 1n lhls lwo·plrt episGdt. schedultd auest L' lorrner RAI 0 /lllYPO Commander Peter TGwn~nd, 1u O @CIJ tE The lltll C1m1 J1tk lhlN or "A Duel of Ea1!1s." Bury hosts. m DIONNE WARWICK l:DO 0 Movie: "l•d••n's Tenit•rJ" (western) '46 -R1nclalph Scott. * WITH DAVID stnt Brodie, An11 Rich1rds. m ~ Frtsl Slln Dionne WU· Q 0 Mos wick Ind Lesli• U111ms IUtll. tD CiKO lid Q) ftlMJ St!-" 2:30 6 MO'rit: ''The ~tr1n1r ,fJl111 ti (I1) ,ltt.R flf LM~I I UllClt Ha rr(' (m)llllJ) '4>- (1!) Mi111tlil1 Y116U Slit• I Geo11e Sanders. Tuesday RhGndt fl1min1, [dmond D'flrltll 0 NHootenany Hott" (mullc11) '63-P1\t1 Breck. Rull Let, Job) DAYTIME MOVIES ''1"· m UO,.rttitn C.111lln11r" (dr1ml) t :OO O "Lid T11il 11 M•drkl" (dr1m1) '6&-Georre Addison, Heline Ch1ne1. '37-Dorothy l1ma11r, l1w l\yrei,1 .. ~•Ii" ('omed)t} '41 -Cltudettel l:Ol)m '\)'di•" (rDm~nce) '41 -Merlt Colbert, R•J MH!ind. OberGn, Joseph Colten, t :JO D "Tiit Jltclkl4 i nd U.1 ei>w. t:OO O "ltuUM YtY'fl Nine .. (mu ii· btJ'" (wut1111) '51--Glenn Ford, c.I) '52-M11io l•lllt. e JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS e NEWSPAPERS Out il ty Pr lntin9 •nd Otpend•ble Ser•ic• for more th•n • qu•rt•r of • century Pll OT PRINTING ' u 11 waf "''-'°• are .. WIWP'Oln' 1ucw-••.t-4tt1 I' Cashing 111 on Sport OIL TV Slio ·ws Athletes Finding Horne l D4U. Y' rlLOT SUU rMI• · Slaari1ag Affectio1a Saundra r.-lathews·Deacon cups the chin of hubby Hal Landon while stroking the proboscis o.r her lover. Reginald Rook, in a scene from So uth Coast Repertory's "The Imaginary Jnvali d," opening Friday at SCR's Costa Mesa theater. Fox a11d MG1'1 May Merge, ' But Do11't Hold Your Breath By VERN01\I SCOTT own kid -as Zanuck d id earlier -is a tough character. Dy RICK OU BftO\Y HOLLY\VOOO tUPI) Despite recent exp05c-type books demolishing the mythological approach t o sports heroes. the glorification of athletes actually seemll to be increasing because of television and its busines.s tieup wilh leagues and Learns. As' a frank partner in athletic · events In the sense that it wants them to be sue· cessful. video for the most part still is more interested in promoting sports than cover· ing them with the tough im- partiality of those with no stake in the proettdings. From a coldly commercial. very,crau viewpoint, this at- titude is paying oil more and more handsomely for television. In the first place, many experts agr ee that video's live presentation of sports may be the best thing it does because these evenL'I are real, immediate and ex· citing. In addition, whereas broad- casting has truly built up minor sports and leagues Into enormously popult1r national institutions. the athletes who have been glorified now have become big television at· tractions in themselves -on entertainment shows -and are thus. in a way. repaying vide<l's business interest in them. Just check the networks almost any night. and you will see thal sports idols arc hol video properties, in the same way they arc a big item In c<>mmercial and set· ting styles In the ''mood" fashion industry. Joe Namath. for instan~e. has hosted NBCTV's "To· night" show, and Bill Russel! Piaf Stor y llOLLYWDCD iUPll -JI there is a me rger between 20th Century-Fox and ,_letro- Gold~·yn-~1ayer studios. ii ~·ill be a shotgun marriage. Jim Aubrey, head of ~1G~l. ls discussing merger 1,1•ith dissident 20th Cenlury.fox stockholders ; an altogether different matter from talking turkey with 20th·f'ox manage- ment. United States. Until the U.S. government is consulted ll is only talk. r..IG~I has had the financial delirium tremens for the bel- ier part of a decade. Fox. on the other hand. has pro- duced such hits as "The Sound or ~1usic. ·· .. Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid." '·M-A· S-H." "Patton" and some other big winners. And if he chooses to fight HOLLY\VOOD CUPI) -The Aubrey and such Fox life story of French singer malcontent stockholders as Edith Piaf. "Th~ Lilfle Spar- David ,_·lerrick, it \Yill be a ro\11 ." will be [i\med by major scrap indeed. \Varner Bros. with Ke n Studios, once a!l-po11'erful, Russell producing and direc· have lost their con tract ting. players and the determination ~ of professional life and deathj - o Y e r producers, directors, writers and all the rest. 'The situation might be c<>n1- pared with a u n i I a t c r a I decision by Uruguay Io become the 51st slate or the A merger between the two con1panies is possible. l l may even be probable. Bul not until and unless Darryl F. Zanuck gives the go-ahead. Any n1an who can fire his But they still own the real estate and sound stages and1 lechnical labs 1,1·ilbout which 1 rnotion pictures cannot be 1nadc. 1 '"Sesa111e' Seed~ In the pa~l quarter century ' llollywood has seen t h c den1Jse of RKO Pictures, Republic Pictures, Eagle Lion. J\·lonogram, All ied Artists and other marginal operators. Style Inspires I 1nitutors Bul Disney, Co lu mbia, \Varner B r o s . . Universal, Paramount. ~IG~J and f ox a frequent conductor and ar-remain valuable cnliles in ranger for the Ed Sullivan entertainment. I By JERRY BUCK XEW YORK (API •·Sesame Street.'' which began life by frankly Imitating the commercials. is oo~· being im- itated by commercials. Show and other nel11·ork varie· JI is at these studios that ty programs. most movies-for-television arel ... .. .. ····· .......... . • ~O.ST "W•. •1 )UU•l"U• ll•O. o ·~llll'IHO• 1-l•~ ...... .01lo0 NOW EXCLUSIVELY! ""-"'00 .. ~D .... l. COiTO, l'fl .. -10 .. Jln ____ ..., ____ ., __ _ Exclusive County Run! Nol only are the com- mercials beginning to pick up the program's slyle, but the lyrics and music for the show are inspiring a nev; sound from Perth Amboy, N.J .. to Perth. Australia. ''I felt the sound of the made along 'll'ilh video series. 1 shO'll' ought to be as com· independent films and, of mercial as possible.'' he said. course, studio products. I "Children will listen lo ~1uch of the old studio anything as long as they aren't overhead, superfluous back ' ,,;iiiiiiiiii prejudiced. \'ou kno11', you lots, poor management and shouldn·t listen lo rock, you \\'aste has been eliminated. Jn 1 .. Rubber Duck ie." a best- !;elting record here a fe11• nionths ago. is a current hit in Australia. .. Bein' Green." the song !hat Kern1it the Frog sings. has been recorded by F r a n k Sirtatra. D a r b r a Streisand 01:.ens her night club act '"'ith "Somebody Come and P\<1~' .'' originally 111ritten as the background for a filn1 on shouldn 't listen to the blues. the process new faces have I "I don't feel children shou ld c1nerged . be fed vanilla, as music The industry has traded educators do. Peed thcn1 older businessmen for younger ehocolate and slra\vbcrry -tirlist-executives who are at- any music as Jong as it's tempting to srrcamline 1novie- good." 1n11king. Raposo's ehoice uf a \Vide \Vhether t\IG~1 and 20th varie\\· of music has earned Century.Fox merge will be of1 him ··some criticisrn fron1 no great consequence in lhe1 n1usic cducalors. but he $Bid, future of i1o!ly1l'ood. The "Givr children a brick, don 'l talent. tcchnic ia ns,1 give them pap. Give them laboratories. stages a rt d a brick and maybe they·n thousand variety of special monkeys. . . builri a hovel and n10ybc equipment are localed in An ar1t1persp1ran\ com· thcv'll build a mansion.'"'' Hollywood. mercial look s and sounds like;;=='-· --'"---'""===-==============.'I an extension of the Sesame 1 nu1nbcrs song -and ;11.1 NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES tentlonall~ so. It has the same FEBR,UARY ............ t.O·~~~~~~~~~~~~············- voice. :ind the animation came 4 ;1uT OAJS TO CATCH UI' 111 ALL fHE MD'l'JCS rOU'¥E lffll driving rhythm and strident ' ,~ , from the same San Francisco\ • • PLANlllM5 TD SU lf NATIONAL GENERAL TM EAT RES. shop that does animation ror\11-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;:::-_J "Scsa1ne Sl rect... \ "Certainly. we 1,1·erc in-~· • - rluenced by ··Sesarne Street." ""TIB•D II has come full circle." said '"!1 '. -J2Qln, Daniel Kellv. creative director ~ .. ·~.-r()_ T.an-v-.. ,. .Q. ror lhl' Chicngo office nf "' -:"l.;J ..J.J 1~. l ~ Foote. Cone :ind Belding. 1!1" •dver11s1ng "'"•Y •h•• """"' A···u··a .. Rrv H[PBURN ·RfX HARRlrnN lhP com1nerciiil . I ll ~ Kelly said. "\\'e lhought v.·r l'Ould get our point acro'lS effectively by using lhe tech· niauc ~imllar 1o "Se~o n1e Slrcel." We adn1ire the shO\\' very much. 1 \\'OU\d ~:iy lhal -- everyone on our crrative staff has takPn n look at ii." Joe RApo$0, !ht' ITill.~iC'ol ! direclor for Sc!same. said hl'j has dele<"led lhl' ti:ho\1''" J1tvle 1 and a few of hill mu$ico1 notes In other commerciJ1I$. I "One gu)' "'ho "A'rilr~ mu~ic for commercials told me l\e copies from us and I llnid. ~rent. bttAusc r u.~ed to cnny from you for years." he s11id. One rtaMin for th c distinctive sound nf lhe show I~ because of lhr> !llrong opin· lil~Daru · ~111 raoo TbercWB8 a crooked men ... •-"THE WILD BUNCH" "ARIOtil l l\10, AT WILSON ST, COSTA,. NlS,\ 6"Cl·051l 2 NIU~ SOllJll Of Mlt OIEGO FWY. HOLIDAY MATINEES FRI.· SAT.· SUN.· MON. HAlllOll: l lYO. AT· tlll,SON ST. COS1A NlSA '44o~1l 2 NIU$ IOUTM f SNI OIJGO ~. SPECIAL HOLIDAY MATINEES FRI.· SAT.· SUN.-MON. IN MISSION VIEJO EDWARDS CINEMA VIEJO S.t"I 01iGO FViY AT lA l>Al tvRNOFF ~JO 69'10 Sptci•I Holicler Mlth11ts FRI.· SAT.· SUN.· MON. .. ncwi11-"imCbrtl1 -··-· .. ·-----.. -····· 00 1911• ·-· ·-.... "'" ... ,, 1st AREA SHOWING • HOLIDAY MATINEES • FRI.· SAT.· SUN.· MON. • EITEITAllOINT > h.:is filled in for ABC. 'IV's Dick Cal'ell. Johnny Bench was a large hit on Bob Hope's recent No . I-rated special about his annual Christmas season visit to troops overseas. It used to be that shov>' business personalities, 1nany of whom are big sporls buffs, used athletes as guesls, and that was just about that. Nowadays, however. t h c ballplayers and nther sports heroes are often I a r g e r ce!ebrit i es with the public-because or television, For the week ending Jan. 10. as an example, CBS-TV's "Super Comedy Bowl." an hour special 1,1•ith top en- tertainers and athletes. came in a potent filth in the ratings. As another example, r-."BC. TV's Feb. J "Kraft Music Hall '' featured Don Rickles and a number of star athlete! -among them, Alex Karras, \BOOg Powell. Joe ~~razier, f0n1' Ccngiliaro, Victor Had · field ~k.d Bi.II Russell . who is now 'vet1red from pn1 basketball'~ Boston Celtics. The show ":obs titled "Locker . ,. Room Follies .... ,..... . Sports figures L'Gt1~ue: of course. to get guest v1dcn roles. Lew Alcindor and .lir'. Goodrich. did 1,1·hal comes naturally 4portray basketball players) on the Feb . 13 episode of CBS-TV's priva t(• eye show. "~•llinnix." Bud Harrelson has appeared 0•1 Cavitl's series, as have John· ny Bench, Tom Seaver, Bot) Griese and Gale Sa~rs. 'The sy ndicated v i d e o market also is fertile ground for sports idols. ' ' S po rt s Challenge.'' fur instance, Is the title of a new quiz pro- gram in \\•hich lwo teams of farnous athletes compete over questions based on film clips of memorable events in pro· r-essional sports. Thr first show pitted former Yankee greats Joe Dimaggio, i\.1ickey Mantle and Tommy,. Henrich against ex-Dodger stars Duke Snider. Don Newcombe and Don Drysdale. Nifty Theater Plans Two 011e-act Dranias Augusl Strindberg's Swedish classic ''!\1iss Julie" and an adaptation of Franz Kafka's ''The Judgment" comprise a double bill of one-act plays lo be offered in J\1arch at the Nifty Theater in Hun- lington Beach. "Miss Julie" l.!. described as :i gripping drama Ol'er\aden with psychological and social overtones. ··The Judgment" is an expressionistic encounter between a father and son. adapted from Kafka's o;hDrt story by Ge<lrgc Betar. Appearing in "~1iss Julie .. will be Carol Dunlap in the title role. \1•ith G a r .'{ Domazllcky and \\lilda \\lest. Con1p rising the cast or '·The Judgment'' wi!l be Jeff Isaac and Gary Domazlicl.y. Elliott Fried. CO·prcJucer of the Nifty Theater, \\'ill direc! both plays. \\'hich \1·ill be presented for three weekends only, opening !\1arch 5 a: the theater, 307 r..1ain St., Hun- tington Beach. Perlormanc'! days \\'ill be Fridays and Saturdays. "'LOVE STllRY'IS A PHENOMENON! There has been nothing ~ke rt in a generatioo r· -Tllll ..-C-Srtrf 1-1II,11n -=~ .... 1 Ali flltc6rn • lyn o·•• AMR0 6 111~·1Rll:(!Hl(lf~Pt~ , ~-Joiln M1rl1Y l In Mill,.d iii; ••l ~I I DUSTINHOff~ "LfTTL( 816 ~- CHllF DAN GEORGE-FAYE DUNAWAY """"""""""""'"""""' BREWSTER: MCCLOUD,...,·..., BUD SALLY ® '° COITT KELLERMAN COLUMBl.A PICl'URES •-• u IH\'ISG AU.EN PRODUCTICI:\ 0--llDeli' TICMHICOLOa•/PAl'IA\'lSION• !! ~ t >C:t.USIWt -l"""'"t'"'""' NOW S !jOWINGI STARS RICHARD ALEC HARRIS • GUINNESS 'Sellers is tops! Goldie shines!' . A FRAMKOYOl~TOt -JO"N SCHU8t:CK PETER SELLERS. GOLDIE HAWN AOC" ~•'ii'ibf.l/;&.p! (R) • 2nd GREAT ATTRACTION• Gregol)' Peck • Ric}lard Crenna •David Janssen "MAROONED" 2nd OUTSTANDING • Walt Disney Feature "lltERC WAsA c~oolud M AN ... " II ~ Jons htld by R11poso. l'llso1-=--=='--'::..::==--=---==--------.....::===================~~~~~~~~~=-• ' • f l ' ' ' • TV Revle'" 'Ben Hu1·' Loses Spectacle Reduced to Sniall Screen By CYt\'TlUA LOY.'RY NE\V '\'O RK (API -The entire und;iy evening lineup of CBS television had a nu:~hl off as the ne:tv.•ork broadcast rhe 11-.\'ear-old fi lm spectacle, ''Den ll ur" Four !iolid hours of action drama set !n the days of an- cient Rome "Ben Hur" is an extraordinarily JlOOd mo\•ie - v.·as a treat. of course. Bnl \'ieY.·ers arriving late at 1he1; set. had problems catching up u•ith. the plot and 'coun· terplots and there v.•as a temptation 10 gi\•e up id sv.·itch channels. A big splashy motion picture £XClUSl¥E ORANGE COUNTY ROAD SKOW ENGAGEMENT NOW SHOWING Weekend MotlnH 1:00 & 4:30 P.M. Reserved Seats Now At Bo xoll ice And By Mail G~tnD11t~ 1211Gt~t•9pm SKOW TIMES & ADMISSION ,~ICES­ fR Olfl CllCHlSTRA fSJ ,,O . Sl.ooi OllCHESTRl [Sl.DG lo SJ,,0) Ill SUN. TH~U THUR.at:S. f:DG PJ", !SJ.00 lo St'!iiJ All FRI. lo SIT, (VlS.-l:JO P.14. ($l.OO lo SJ.50) MU IHllS \li't 0.-1 :JD P.M. !SZ.)0 l Sl.001 SIT.-l:JD l 5:00 P.M. (S J..SD 1.U ,00) SU/I -1:00 ' •:Ill P.M. ($3,llO I SJ.$0) fll. n ' 1s-u.i1s Tl!RU 1 1:00 ' 4:Jo nz.~ 1 SJ.OO) CALL 'JS·7111 fOll IROUP RA1£1 designed to be shown on big screens does suffer by transfer to the small television screen. Th ose imprt>ssive ''Ben Hur" mob scenes in· eluding triumphal prOCt'ssions. sea \l'arfare between galleys, manned by sweating slaves , even the famous chariot race, Inst sorne thing when the parlicipants \\'ere reducC'd to the sizo of ants. And, since ··Ben Hur " was designedly huge and colorful, it was con- siderably I es s impressive \\'hen vie\\'ed on a black-and-7 St'!. A rr !·life drama of the day "'as r "indup of NBC's tw~ ay co\'erage of Bob Hope's Deserl Clas.sic golf tourna· ment as Arnold Palmer 11:on by dropping a long putt at the end of !he first hole in a sudden-death playoff "'ith Ray Floyd. !~do Nf'N"°lf l lAOI -.. tM ••I>•-.. •ot..leu 114• lole •• Qt . l-l l!O PAUL NEWMAN JOANNE WOODWARD LOYe it or looYeit -ALSO J!- POllEll:T REDFORD "LITTLE FAUSS AND BIG HALSY " Aho Walt Dl5'!ty'1 "BOA TN I KS" Co11tl•uous Frl.·Sot,·5u11.-M1111, from 12:00. ,lt'.JSSl(J"ll[J_....,. AIR PD RT BURT LANCASTER• DE.lN MARTIN JE.lN SEBERS •JACQUELINE BISSET Now Showl119 Erc1u5lvtly at A 111.'l[ISU. M llll • ltCILODI• • l'I....., ii Jgoc).JiG • fi'i] "'-'-·-·~ ~ '-··--~ CBS' Saturday night spccit1I \1·as another in Its well -recei\'• ed series or National Ge<:irgraphic Society shows, th is one a pl easant. low.key exploration or the beauties and slarkncss of lhe ~Io j a v e Desert. It was a sort of overall view. including time-lapse photography sho"'ini: I he blooming of the vivid desert fl owers and night shots of the animals. The audience ac· companied a naturalist ex- ploring Death Valley and were beside a brash young man blasting tungsten out of an old mine. There 'v e re delighUul shots of shepherds \l'ith their• flocks that seen1ed to come from another age and another place. There was even some change of pace with a look at ghost to11·ns and some eccentrics who still live in this harsh area . Jt was a nice, quiet hour tor the annchair travel cro"·d. "They 've killed President Lincoln," on NBC Friday night. was an exciting and illuininaling reconslruction of the assassination at Ford"s Theater. The style wa s reminiscent of the old "You Are There'' series. \Yilh the extra l'lsual advantage of us- ing lhc authentically restored Ford's Theater itself as the principal scene. Also used were archive photographs. The script, ask- ing many questions about coincidences and unexplained circumstances su rrounding the death. Y:as written in a brisk journalistic style. Charactf'rs in the tragedy were po rtrayed by actors belonging t o \Vashington little the at e r groups and trey were amJz- ingly good. Famil iar though the general story may be, this meticulous re-enactment with its specia l attention to small significant detail was more gripping than fiction. Stanto11 Man Ne'v Head Of Chorale Charle!'! f\.1aynard, of Stan- ton, is !he new president of the 90-voice Golden \Vesl College Community Chorale. one of the area's largest singing gro ups. A frequent tenor soloist with the chorale. f\.1aynard will lfad the organ ization during the 1971 season. fllaJor pubhc concerts for the spring semester include a festival mass and an evening of music Americana. featuring music lore. folk and religious songs of early America. Dates will be announced. The chorale has SC\1eral openings in the men's section for tenors and basses. Audi· lions will be held ton ight from T p.m to 10 p.m. in the music building. Cal State U'I Ttl11't10Ho UNDAUNTED PAULSEN TRIES AGAIN Pat Primed for Presidential. Push , Can't Stand Pat Paulsen Hat Back • Ring lit By VEll\"ON SCOTT llOLL\'\VOOO !UPI) -Pat Paulsen, still s1narling from his razor thin loss to Hichard i\1. Nixon in thr 1968 presirlen- lial racr, "'iii enlrr the Oregon primary in 1972 for another crack at the \\'hite. House. "Nobody really knov.•s how close the vote v.•as ," Paulsen said furtively. "l on!y lost by !6 or 17 million \'Ott's. l\faybe a little more. I may have iusl the elec1ion for Hubert. llu1nphrcy, but things "'ill be differenl in 1972." Paulsen's press conference was. typically, poorly al- !ended. Nol surprising. in· asmuch as Pal's pc;!itical ac- t1v1lies are best described as c1uiescent. nol to s a y thoroughly dead. "In 1912 I'm going lo get a hard hat conservative IG run v.·ilh me as vice president to balance the ticket ," Paulsen said . .. In 1968 I tried to get ~lin­ nie Pearl lo run with me to get the South:>.rn vote. That didn't work. unless you count the fried chicken that filled our war chest." Paulsen's crushing defeat l1as not changed the man an iota. He contin ues lo be shifty. eyed. underhanded, and a past master of the half-tn1th. all of "'hich he conside rs definite assets f0r any politician. "The trouble "'ilh my last campa ign v.as that nobody took me scri0usly," he added seriously. "E1ery time I'd sa.v som~lhing peopl~ "·ou!d laugh . "So I \\a s let dO\\'n by the America n people very harrl, and very ~uddenly at the polls. Hut I could turn it all around In 1977. if the politicians in office followed the principles of the spirit of ou r founding fa thers.'' Paulsen's voice rose weak ly but filled "'ith passion. ''The idea wa s fur a 'All Out' Role ALSO PLAYING "DARLING LILI" TV Acto1·s in College 'Hamlet' • l tonl119 Julle A11drtwi BILLY WILDER'S THE !P~ LD'E or SBERLOCK HOLMES ,. "-..,~ill' ROBERT STEPHENS · COLIN BLAKELY BILLY WILDER '~R D AMDND &i!M"""' I'< ,,..It'*' .,,.,....,l'IBILlYWlwi:; ro!LA.L I ....a!lll'w111iU1aJi""'OO!U PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT! SHOWING NOW! 1P'oc lflc'1 Hwy 39 Driv•ln & l11h•1rrls Hunt in1ton Ch1111n1 "l•••Ulillt .1,." ,,.,,. tM '"''°"et w·•·•·H I M ..Clll hotfl11TIOll • ,WVISlOh" lllfT~OI' (fl,ott Gould "ff\OYE" '" ......... ,. .,,_a._ , .. , ... 51" IZlf Co·M11 At Huntinvton Only Fronk Sinatra "DIRTY DINGUS MAGEE" A Shakespearean c\a~sic fe aturing a prominent television actor in UJe litle role will be staged at Cal State Fullerton . '· H am 1 et . '' \\'illiam Shakespeare's tale of murd er and reven ge in ancient Dfn- mark. is now in rehearsal at Cal State and "·ill open for a seven-performance, t w o weekend run 1'1arch 11 In lbe Litlle Theater. Appearing in lhe title role wl!I be motion picture and t elevision star Monte tlarkham, seen this season on the "Hawaii Five-0," "The FBI," ··~ien from Shiloh" and "Dan August"' telev isio n series. Ve rnon Wedd I e , another professional actor, will appear in the Cal State production :is King Claudius. Upon complcl Ion of lhe run of "lfam\et,'' the entire stu- dent acting company of thal production wlll go back Into rehearlal to open April 15 in ''Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead.'' Since this new Tom SloJ)- pard comedy is dirfctly based on char11cters and ~11uations in "llamlct." Cal ::itate hnpe:; lo offer thc1tcrgoerl' a heller understand ing and enjoyment of both plays, hi~torical and conte mporary, by utlllzlng the aame cAst, costumes. and set~ tina.,. The Stoppard play slso Is se t for a seven·performance nin In !he I .ittle Theater. -PRE PARING FOR CAL STATE 'H AMLET' Actors Mont• Markhsm, Vernon Weddl• Monday. f~bru•ry l.5, }q71 Wo•·ld Prenaiere r,Caesru~, Rubicon' /Drama of Decisio11 P·IU. ,1CT1TIOUS IUSINf'' /IAM! STATIMfNT l'~t l~l'°"''"V P<!t.On lt dGlllO bll\ll>t!I •l: 5~NOY'!t FLUFF 'N STUJ=F, no "9" E 111n St. Co<.11 Ml<\•, C1hlcrn1~ ~•ndv C•"'""· 1•• lt .. nvtOt> L1nr, Co•t1 Mt•I• C1lllo""" TM1 butln1u I• t>e•nQ ~ucto:d tw t n lncl!Yldll41. Stndy C1rlYJn "ub1;1nl!d O'"""' C~11! Frbn1•rv 1. I. is. ll. 1911 DAIL V PllOT J 9 I LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LIEGAL NOTIC• NOTICE tS "4EREIY OIVE"I t•\11 1111 l~lc"''"" 11111"1 of twnd or M"'9d /H"Ol'l•IY ~~~t ~ n•I~ b¥ t,,,. Polk' 0•1>1rt,,.ftn! ~• '1'1• Cllv el Co1!t M'• I I~• • llff•M In l'll:Ctn ~· nln•IY {tel ~ .. Tll•ft en1t b.~, •• -''"" bl~" two .aid llill~,. -bll'(~ tll\•, "'t b•~t• t~•or 1111\"°"""· -Fir. IEJO ' "01/lt••t NOnce •S "UPTMIEll (;1Vlll .,,. 11 nti ~,.,,., '"""•" •"" 11rew1 11i. -""'" of 11\t •r-•t~ wllflln MV~ (1\ d•V• IOJIO#l... ll'e PUO!ltt!IO/'I ..,,,, N~llc•. ·~• 1111<t lhttekl ..ri111 w fll ,.,. ,,~, jl ,,..,, l!e -· ... Ill ·~, (l!Y o• Cott• ,,..,.,., 111 .. ,,1 .. t•1t tlM llr-•IJ i••ll flt tola ,, 11ubl•C •~<flM t i • 11,,,. I ncl 11111 111 ~-l"~Ollft(.-1. OAT'D F111f.wv 1J, 1'11. " C. Nl'T ~ C."41ilf. 0' •OLIC I! 'ijb\l1~tcl Or1~1 Co.II DfllV ,_11!1• r,b....,uv 11. !f11 Jm n %0 OAILV PILOT t.tondu, Ftbr11a11 15, 1971 Youthful Hangups 'Belatedly Noted' . PRINCIPAL DOES NO-NO Pesticide Producers Admit 1.------in Its 21st Yea•-----., SYDNEY. Australia (UPI) -Dr. Paul Hanna, professor emeritus o! education at Stanford University, believes the American people have al last realized that there is a signi· ficant mental problem among American youths. WAYNESBORO, Ga. lAPl -Pickney Love says he is being ousted as principal of \Yaynrsboro Elementar y School because he removed pictures ol Robert E. Lee and Jefferson Davis .from the wall of the schoo l auditorium. Tests on Human Guinea Pigs Investment Course ORANGE COAST COLLEGE No Admission Ch1 r9• Professor Hanna. who is in Australia to observe Austra· lian methods of rehabilitating the mentally disturbed ,said a (>'rcentage of American youth was "self-centered, had never had iesponsibility, and never matured through any kind of suffering." "I'm not blaming them," he sald. ••As a society we've made it more and more diffi~I~ fo~ y~g people to have an Important and visible parhc1pahon m the v.·ork or tbe v.wld." 4 ·B Conies to City Harlem Citizens See First Chickens Hatch NEW YORK (APJ -On a barren street in Jlarlem, v•ith scarcely a tree or blade of grass let alone a farm. a croy,•d stood Jn the cold to watch chickens struggling into life in an incubator. "Are they dead?" asked a "'Oman v•ho saw the scraggly chicks, still wet and ·weak from their fight ou t of the l'gg. laying still. facilities and v•orkers in tl1ese group! to offer bis programs. How do you bring 4-H to city kids? "I looked over the program~ and crossed out those that wouldn't apply." A ~1 \vood said. "Surprisingly re are a lot left." Love said the school board·s refusal to renew his contract resulted from'' po Ii ti ca I pressure." He said be look dov.•n the pictures of the Confederate heroes because they "looked bad on the wall." School officials d e c 11 n e d comment. WASlllNGTON (API -Two pesticide manufacturtrs have conflnned 1 public interest group's charge they used fann workers, including women and children. as guinea pigs to test poison chemicals. But the firms disputed the allegation by the Agribusiness Accoontabilily Project that workers suffered ill effects from the experiments in Califoni.ia's Tulare County. "Only paid volunteers were used in the test anl each volunteer indicated his un- dentanding and agreement to the test," said &b Dammans, corporate secretary r o r Chemagro Corp. in Kansas Ci· ly. ''The test was under com- plete medlca\ supervision al all times but no illness resulted." he said. "ln fact, the conditions were not unlike nom1al worker conditions .•. " A spokesman for l'~MC Corp .. in San Jost. corporate p<irent of Niagara Chemical Co. of J\1iddleport, N.V, said th.e experiments were con- ducted "under the dlrcclion of lhe California •1 ea Ith Department." The accusing g r o u p , associated with consumer ad- vocate Ralph Nader's Project on Corporate Responsibility, charged some of the 49 laborers in the experiment suffered ~erious feels. An inlrod11c:lion lo th• btti< f1111d11T1•nt1lt of in•t ~lin') i11 Corpor- •I• tloc.kt, lorHh, M11l11•I Fu,,t:h, Go¥''""''"' lo11cli. B..,ildin9. & Lo111 Ano<ietlo111. lnt111d1d lo t i•1 pr1clic.1I l<nowl1d91 of 111• v11i1,.1nh ind 1loc~ 1xth1n91 op1r1lion1. • WM. L O'BRYON, Instructor lt41h1nlnt Ftb111ory 17th For 5 wH U-Wod11•Mloys 7:10 to t :JO p.111. '°'' ll11ff Sc"ool 2627 Yl.ia dol Oro N•wport loocti ll•thter •' tM Lect11ro "HANGING W ALLPAPIR" Wed. .• felt. 17, 7·1,... A11oti.l111 Thw1., •eti. II, 7·1,... fo1,111tol11 VoHoy Door ,,.l1e........aof,.1h-t1 ~ ..... 11 .. :1 :o '~"'" ""'"'" •< lhe otuo• ~! teo<"O bt °'ltrhoH .. ,, ....... "They're not dead ," a man ansv•ered. "They just have to "'a il until they can get it logether.'' His offerings inc I u de "'oodwork.ing, e l e c t r i c a I training, auto care, home economics, conservation. leadership and such seemingly simple things as leamins the trees and flowers that grow in the city. ..... ef25 PLASTIC GLASSES Iola Meet HetlOred T1or0"'9h We4., foll. 17 DICHONDRA SEED A boy or about 12. a pencil :i;luck in lhe back of his Afro haircut and school books in his hands, stood for half an hour in the subfreezing rold. staring without a word at the beginning of life. The incubator, in a bank lv:indow. is part of an unlikely national movement. The 4-H • programs, long identified with rural kids, cows and corn, is moving into the cities and is establishing a toehold in a New York City area that is synonymous wilh urban problems. "The image of 4-H is rhang· Ing," said Donald As\\\.'ood, 4-H coordinator in the New York City area. "Once it dealt solely with. rural and farm kids. Now, because of the movement of people lo the cities, farms are all but a thing of the past. "Now 4-H is focusing its attention on urban areas." Astwood , a fonne r schoolteacher, said more than 800.000 of 4-H's n a t i n n a I membership of fou r million youths are in metropolitan areas. The New York City program Is relalively new and Astwood is working through existing organiialions -youth clubs, church, civic and community groups. He will use th e ''Kids can learn there Is another part of life beside apartments, lamp posts and hydrants," Astv;ood said. Asked what 4-H can do for urban kids, Astwood said, "It can get them off the streets for a start. I find there are as many kids outside the agencies I've contacted as in. Obviously these programs are not being made relevant to them . The kids want something else. We have educational things they have not been exposed to ." The incubator in the Harlem bank was an eUort t o stimulate interest in 4-H. From the crowds it attracted during its three-week exhibit, despite bitter cold, it seemed a success. More than 100 persons, young and old. stop- ped to watch the chicks in one hour. "We've never had so many people looking in our win· dol''S," a teller said. Evelyn Weilstein, manager of office services at the bank, was unofficial "mother hen" for the incubator display. Juan Wyatte, a bank custo- dian who had raised chickens before. was head midwife for the brood. turning the eggs and providing food and wale r for the chicks. Crop . Fungus Alters Course of History SAN DIEGO (AP) -A botanist who has studied the problem for years says lungus infections in the world's crops hare changed the course. of hi story many limes and can do it again . Take the Engl ish custom of tea drinking. "They don't drink tea over there just because they like it," Dr. James V. Alexander said Tuesday. "The English drink tea because the patchy orange coffee fungus ate up all their correc beans." The San Diego State College professor and researcher told a semina r on "The Effect of Catastrophic Plant Epidemics on Man" that a fatal coffee rust fungus started I he English drinking tea a century ago. "In the mid-1800s t he English had a very successful coffee plantation and export system in Ceylon," Alexander said. ''They were exporting 100 millions pounds of coffee a year." In those days the English were some of the biggest cof- fee drinkers in the world, he added, but along came U1e coffee rust fungus. "By 1890 the coffee exports from Ceylon had dropped to r.ero." he said. "It was im .. possible to grow coffee, plan. taUons had gone broke and even lhe big Oriental Baok "'·ent kaput." So UM! English b<gan drtnk· Jng tea. Reaching farther batk Into h1story, Alea:ander g~ve his version ol Russia's fa1lurt to Jaunrh an attack on Turkey In 1121. "'Why couldn't Peltr the Grtat eel hls armies lnto Turkey? Becauae ol lhe <r~ot rye ftn11UJ," he explained. 'It altac~ the grain, Ptltr lilt Great ltd UM! gr1ln lo Ille 1niop1 and horses. '!')le troop• and horlel gol atrlOUtly Ill." Now the CQffee rust fungus i.s back, Alexander warned. "It is already in Brazil now and could eat its way through the coffee plants of the Western Hemisphere," he asserted. "The only way I know to stop conee rust is to replace plants." Bu t such replacem e nt across South America could cost millions. he acknowledg· ed, and could bring the price of a cup of coffee in California to one dollar or more. Alexander said the ergot rye fungus that stopped Peter the Great's giant armies is also affecting current history as it is a required ingredient in the drug culture's recipe book. "The very same fungus "'as the starting base for l..SD - it provKles the alkaloid with "'hich LSD is still made," he said. ''All I.SD has to start with the ergot fungus . so it is still a historical problem." 2 Students To School In East Two Pomona Col le ge students from the Orange Coast area will participate in an exchange of students with Swarthmore C o 11 e g e in Pennsylvania and will spend a Mmester al the Eastern school. J ohn Groening. son of Jo.tr. and ~1rs. llaris G. Groening of 454 · Cabrillo St.. Costa Mesa will continue hi.s senior year Philosophy studies there. Llza La\\·son, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard B. Le~·son, or 122tl W. Bay Ave., Newport Beach. Is a junior majoring In h~Jory. The two art part of a group of 20 student& parliclpaling in the student u.chana:a pro-- gram ln lta 'nlnlh ye•r. .. ,..., s,... •• ,. ,. y_, l<tfettolN119f" • u .. --'*II ... lh .......... ,.. • trydol c*' pi.dlc- 1ff10 ........ a09. 49c 37! .. at2S Gr"4e No. J BARE ROOT RO~ES ''Create A Rainbow fn Your Yardl'' ' •Gr.ode No. 1. 2-yr. olds- Lln·Brook's finest selectlon. • Choose bush or climber types- guaranteed to grow. Reg. $1.19 ••••••••clrecl OZITr Your Choice BAnERY BONANZA! ''Tune In and Turn On To Savlngsl" • Your choice of transistor radio or standard ''D" size batteries. • Buy a bunch at t~is low, low price. Reg. 1 Sc 7~ .. 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"I stood there al the presentation ceremony and I saw people who have been following me around for 15 years and they were crying . It gives you a feeling ... well, I don't know how &o explain it . . " It was the Mith tour triumph for the Caddy Ha s Last Wo1·d · Fo1· Arnie PALM SPRJNGS -A man identified es a dismissed caddy ran onto the presentation green at the conclusion of lhe Hope Desert Golf Classic Su nday, shouting , "It was fixed. it was fixed ." As he approached winner Arnold Palmer and tournament host Bob Hope, he was subdued by PGA Tournament Director Jack Tuthill , a foriner FBI agent, and a Marine guard. Sgt . Dennis Froeming of the Riverside County sberilf's office identified the man es Robert Zirbes, 31 , of Bismarck, N.D., y,·ho started the tournament as caddy for former U.S. Open champion Orville ~1oody but was dismissed Saturday, Moody wasn't available Sunday to give the reason. Zirbes, waving a putter. was knocked to the ground and immediately taken W nea rby Indio in custody. Froeming said the man was first taken to a hospital in Indio and then transfered to the county hospital .in Riverside for '12·hour observation in the mental ward. • BERLIN -Christa ~1er1en of West Germany became the "'ortd·s record holder ·for the women's 1.500 meters with a 4:17.9 clocking. shaving 2.6 geconds off the l'lld record held by i targaret Beacham of Britain. • LOLnS\rJLLE -Army captain Mel Pender flashed to a yard victory over defending champion Jim Green in a world record lime of 6.8 seconds in the 70-yard dash al the Mason-Dixon games. • HOUSTON Wisconsin's two-mile telay team was timed in 7: 19.8 and set the world indoor record for the event at the Astrodome·F'ederation Na· .tional Indoor Championships. ' And Villanova, sparked by Marty Li· ,quori's 3:57.4 mile. bettered the world·s 'best in the distance medley relay with JI 9:31.5 clocking over the Astrodol\)e's 'huge five·lap track. Houston set the previous mark of 9:34.0 last year. most popular player lhe game has l!ver known , but the first in 14 months. the longest drought he has suffered in 16 years. "It "'asn't easy." the 41.year-0ld Palmer admitted. "But then, nothing ·"'orth"·hile ever is.'' He won it in dramatic fashion , rolling in an 18-foot birdie pull on the first hole of a sudden..(jeath playoff with Ray F'loyd alter squandering a three-stroke lead in the 91}-degree temperature. Floyd shot a rinal round 67, five under par, to catch him. Palmer managed only a 70 and blew · Monday, 'ebfouary 1.5, 11f71 DAILY PILOT 21 Everything .I Had--Palmer a chance to win It out-rlght when a poor chip shot killed his opportunity for a birdie four on tht -th hole o[ the five-day tournament. "I stood there thinking-, 'Yiell , is it gonna happen again again , . .' " said Palmer. "I've been in position to win 10 or 12 tin1es in the last year or so 11nd either through my own mistake!' or somebody e\se·s playing real good. I lost. That sort of thing has to enter your thinking." Both drove into the left rough. Flo~'d rame out about 15 feet from the pin . Palmer was ~hort. about IS feet . He stalked the putt carefully -and knoeked ii in. "It's all a question of confidenc,," he said. "I just gave it everything I had. "I had a leehng that if I didn ·t make ii, that Ray would nlake his. I felt that if I didn 't make it, tht chances of going to the next hole were pretty slim. "I guess that 's what thty mean by sudden death." Palmer, who has made a fortune from the game and shrewd investments picked up $28.000 for the victory, putting his all.time money winnings ovtr $1 3 million. It was a two.man race all the. way. Floyd, playing In the group just ahead of Palmer, took a two-putt birdie on the first hole, rolled ln an ti-footer on the seventh and caught Palmer with another birdie four on the eighth. Palmer birdied the eighth with a 10 foot er -pulling him I~ under on the par li ves -and regained the lead. He scored from 18 feel on the 12th to go In rront by two, but Floyd caught him again with conseculive birds on the 14th and 1$th. They parred in the rest of the way -Palmer 'Javing par with a kt'y, four.foot putt on the !$th -and went to the pla yofr. Win Worth $4 8,000 Pit Crew Praised For Petty Victory DAYTONA BEACH. Fla. !APl - Richard Petty takes pride in a pit crrw honed to perfection . the mechanics adopted "11wilt kick mechanics" as the key to hi11 $48,000 victory in lhe Daytona 500 Sunday. "When we slopped on the green light toward the end. a gas line valve stuck.'' he report«!. ''The crew had lo raise the trunk and hit II ~·ith a hammer.'' "IL probably cost up 10 or 11 seconds 11nd il would have been the difference in the race if A. J, hadn't run out of gas," Petty said. The tall , confident winner of 120 races -far more than any other driver on the major National Association of Stock Car A u t o Racing circuit -said A. J. Foyt's Mercury was the fastesl ca r in the ral'e and hi s own Pelty·blue J>lymouth the second fa stest. As the !iee-saw race neared l!nd. Foyt ran out of gas and coasted lo his pil, but an engine starved for fuel had to be primed through the carburetor to get it restarted. The !ilop lasted fl3 ~conds compared to 11 normal 20-25 seconds. He finished nearly a full lap or 4$ ~econds behind Petty in third place. Second place Buddy Raker in a Dodge ~·as one of 11 ~·ho led the race at various times nip and luck with team- mate Petty until a las~ ·pit stop. He finished 10 seconds or half a mile behind. Winning !he wortd ·s richest stock car race for the third time hasn't taken any of the eclge off ii. Petty said. "This time is three times better than the first time," he said. "If it h ad come down to a nose-to-nose duel between teammates Petty and Baker, the faster car would have been the one to win. Petty said. "We were supposed to draft each other taking turns if we were both about the same speed," he said. "I was a little faster and was handling belter so I headed the draft toward the end." What did it mean, the handsome team- mates were asked, when crews flashed •·Yes·• signs to both of them In the closing miles? "It meant we were to keep going as ~·e were," Petty said. ''It mean 1 hang onto everything you can" Baker answered. If he'd seen a •·no" sign. what then~ Pelly replied in his North Carolina drawl, accompanied by a friendly grin that said he isn't used lo anything but first Richard had a close call last May when his Plymouth wrecked al Dari· ington, S.C .. Speedway and broke the racing giant's collarbone. Those whn witnessed the massive crash said Petty was the luckiest man alive to come out with the minor injury. ··ru be racing as long as its fun and as long as I'm still fighting tbat wall:' said Petty, who skims within inches of the concrete retainer while runnini;: 18.~ miles an hour. "Once that goes, I'm gnne. Until then, I'd like to keep on winning.'' Pacifi.c·B Routadup _,_Wooden Says Close Wins SJ1ould Mal<:e Us Better By TH.E ASSOCIATED PRESS Liquori then cam' back on Saturday night and ran a 3:57 .2 mile. the third fastest ever indoors. LEW A LCINDOR, ATLANTA'S HERB WHITE BATTLE FOR REBOUND. MILWAUKEE WON, 124-88. Those people who lefl the game wilh fnur minutes left, claiming "H's over," are wondering today how UCLA does ii. So, in fa ct, is UCLA basketball coach J ohn Wooden, the man possibly most responsi ble for his team still being No. 1 in !he PacHic-8 conrerence race. In other game!I, California showed power with twin victories, 90-}2 over Washingtnn State and 92-RO o v e r Washington and Stanford roared back from deficits two nights in a row, losing to the Huskies 81-80 but beating WSU, 77-70. • Brazil Bolafogo and Atlante of ri.1exico . hauled tn a 2·2 Ii' Sunday in an in· t'rnatlonal pro soccer match before a crowd of 9,100 at the Coliseum. • DETROIT -Rookies Tom Webster • and Tim Rutherford and old pro Gordie Howe combined tn give the Detroit Red : \Vings a 4·0 victory over the Los Angeles ·Kings Sunday. : Rulherford stopped 32 shnls including '13 in the third period. for Detroit's : first shutout of the National Hockey League season. whi\' Webster scored i his 21st and 22nd goals, with Howe assisting on both plus another by Renald LeClerc. • , LENINGRAD. Soviet Union -Steve •Smith, a 19-year~ld student from Long , Beach, set a stadium record Sunday 1 with a pole vaulL of 16 feet 6 inches al the Izvestia Cup indoor track meet 1t Leningrad Y.'inter Stadium. Dodgers Remain Unbeaten, Untied And Unscored On LOS ANGELES (AP) -Thi Lns Angeles Dodgers shut out the University of Southern C.11ifornia Troj.1ns Z.O Sunday before a rerord Dodger exhibit ion crowd of 31.000. Officials said it ~·as the largest crowd ever to witne:ss the annual rive-inning \\'OrkOUI between the Dodgers and USC. , Pitchers Jot ~1oeller, Bruce Ellingsen end Phil Ketler held the T'ro1ans hitle~s for four innings but gave up one hit in the last inning with two outs. The crowd roared during batting prac- tice whtn new Dodger Richie Allen was lnfroduced and walked into the bitting ·cq:e. Allrn blasted the (irsl pllch by udP O!lleen lnlo the left field pavilion 11nd hit two balls into the p11vilion 1n West Plag11ed ' By Cold Spell, But LA Wins LOS ANGELES IA Pl -\\'hen was the las! time Jerry \Vest has been that bad a shooter'.' "Ifs been eight years since l'vc had .11 cold spell like this," said the Lns Angeles Lakers' All-Star guard. "I don't ha\'e them very often." Jn leading the Lak,rs with 22 points and 12 assi!'ts during a 125-113 \•iclory Sunday night over the Cincinnati Royals, \Vest was able to hit only 9 of 26 sholS from the noor. ~1eaning he's hit nnlv 13 of 51 shots from the field in his -last three games. "He 's gelling tireh." sairl co11ch Joe f.1u1laney before Sund11;y night's game. "It's been a long season." Despite exhaustion, \\'est took ad- vantage of Sunday night'~ game to b<'come the all ·time leading Laker sln,i:le - ~eason as!'ist man with a l\l7l total of 56$. The man he beat was none other than Jerry West of last year "'hO had 5~4 . The game ~·as all Los Angeles from lhe middle of the second period as Gail Goodrich and Happy Ha irston. com· binin g for 37 nrsl·half points, paced the Lakers. Los Angeles · U!'«!d ils ~aond team most of the second half and the Royals closed to make the score respectable. The Laker~ take today off and face New York·.s Knicks 'here Tuesday night. (1N(ll•INATI LOS •NGll.IS • ' ' • ' ' .. •tl'lllO • " " E•do•" ' " • ..... ~. ' • !G ,, i'+ll"'" • " ,, Lot<t• ' ,., ' C""'b!" ' . " "'•" .... ' •• " Wti• " " .... ,,i. " " " God•I<~ • " " AmlP"O ' •• • Mtfff1 ' ' ' ' IJ!.i(;l ' " ' Mc(tl• ' .. " P1111I-• .. • McMlllfl " " ·~· .. • ... " llllt• '' ' w 111 .... • .. • lt~Dt•I~ ' ,., " l"'•" • 1'·'1 11 l To•~l1 " !•·II "' C lfl<l""~!I " " " U-11) '"' A<IO•I•• • " " Jt.-111 .. .,., ..... °"' ·~· ro111 '-u" -(I~('""•" " '" '~e~•·1 ,, A -U,lU F1·anulovic Captures Title From Graebne'r NEW YORK (AP) -Zelko Franulovic of Yugoslavia took advantage of Clark. Graebncr's serving troubles and ~·on lhe $5.000 first prize Jn th(' $.10,000 Clean Air Tennis Classic with a &.4, 6·7, 6·4, 7·5 victory Sunrlay . Franulovic. 24, utilizing a powerful overhand and accurately brought strokes, "'as 1n control mos! of the way 1n the rinal at the Vanderbilt Athle11c Club. Graebner's only momenL<> ca me when he took a 3..0 lead in the first set and rallied from a 5-3 defi cit in lhe second. Franulo\'ic, sixth seeded. qu ic k 1 y recouped in the opening set with st rong n('l play for a !'r4 lead as Graebner game. He had 10 douhle f11ul!Jl in all . In the second Graebner <!f New York won the tie-breaker 15-1) with two ·power. ful serve!' and F'ranulovic 's first double fault of 1he match. Franulov1c wasted a service break in the lhird set when he led 5·3, but came back when the fifth-seederl Graebner had trouble l!:elting his first serve in during the 10th game and the steadier Yugosla vian passed him consistently. Graebner, who won $2,500 saved three great poinl'I in the fourth set. but his serve deserted him again and two double faull.!! and two nne forehands by f'ranulovic ended lhe match. In the consolat1on, second seeded Ilia f\'astese of Romania 'arned SI ,750 with a 7.fi, 44i, 6-2 victory over Thomas Koch of Brazil. The Bruins, lop-raled in the n a I lo n , h:1ve had a harrl time the last few weeks proving they are that good bu!, miraculously, they have proven -by four, one and two point!! in succC6sion -that they can stand pressure . In their latest tests, the Bruins surviv- ed a pair of determined Oregon teams, hel ling the University or Oregon, 69-68, Friday night when guard Henry Bibby became a hero, and then taking ad· vantage of a break to top Oregon State the next night, 67~5. "I lhink two close vitlnries like that on the road have lo make u~ a better learn,'' said Wooden. "But lhe thing I'm happiest about i! thal we 'll be playing five of our last seven conference games at home .'' Two weeks ago, the Bruin! beat ri\•al Southern California, 64-60, on the Trojans' home court, the Sports Arena. The Trojans, however, used two Oregon victories to ketp pace with lhe Bruins in the Pac.fl race with the rest of thP teams now considered onlookers. USC spurted for 11 consecutive points In a Saturday afternoon affair, beating back Oregon, 93-78. Newcombe Lobs Top Laver PHILAD ELPHI A rAPl John Neu·combe won the 162.500 Philadelphia lnternalionat Indoor Tennis title Sunday, snapping fellow Austrahan Rod Laver's 17-match winning streak 7.fi, 7-6. &-4 . It "'as lhe first tournament defeat of the year for La ve r. !he "·orld 's No. 1 tennis play,r. seeking hls third straight Philadelphia championship. Laver appeared to have trouble with hi8 usually reliable ser\'ice -especially the first serve. Newcombe won the first twn 54;tS in a 12.point tie.breaking game. NewCombt said he was able to beat I.aver for the third time in 13 meetlnfs beceuse he played a steady R;&me, volle)'ed well sod was shal'J) enough tn take any openings the lrrt:pressible H'>cke1 gave him, lie fell he broke Laver's tempo by feed ing him a die I of high lobs. "He j Laver) prefers .1 hard, straight gan1e. Even though he was putling the lobs away, he doesn 't like that slow game," Newcombe said. Newcombe, 26, broke through in the first tiebreaker by laking two points on Laver's second service series for a 4-2 leAd. The score went to 5-S and Newcombe took the winning two point! on hil! own 11crve as Laver drove the bitlJ twice Into the net. The tltbre1ker was brought intAJ play again when the two Australian11 deadlock· ed ar 6-1. This time. II took only 'ight points for Newcombe ln wrap up the .'!et 7·1. In the final set Newcombft broke Laver's machine-like attack in the first game and the two then followed service to the end of th' set. In the final game, Newcombe led 40-0 only to have Laver run the game to deuce. I.aver staved off one. match point before Newcombe delivered a seQPe jhe Aust rali an rocket couldn't rtturn tO close out the match. Newcombe earned the $10.000 fir~t pri1.e for hi~ week's work of beating Roy Barth, RoRer Taylor, Tom Okker, Cliff Drysdale 11nd finally Laver. Laver boosted his c1rnings for the year by $5,000 to $95,000. lie reacMd the final by delcallng Ray Rurfels. John Ale1ander, Brian Pairlie and Arthur A~he. A pal[ of 15-point spurts by the losi ng learns Salurdav night in the state of Oregon marked the Bruin-Trojan vi1c· lories . In the VSG-Oregon game, the Trojans led 69·6Q with 12 minutes to play and the Ducks were cold. So center Stan Love took over and scored 0 r e g ti n ' 1 next \!i points, keeping the Duck.'5 Jn the game . Troy finally broke things open on the shooting of Paul Westphal and Ron Riley, who finished with 22 and 21 points. Love had 34. In the UCLA-OSU contest, the Bruins moved to a 7-6 lead aHer I 1h minute:ii but the Beavers scored the next 15 for a commanding 21-7 edge. OSU held the margin much of the way in the first half before the Bruins closed lo 35-32 al halfUme . Then , when UCLA rallied to lie the game ~·ith 26 seconds left on forward Curlis Rowe's two free throws, the Beavers' fine guard Freddie Boyd drop- ped the ball out of bounds, giving UCLA the chance it needed. All-American forward Sidney Wicks got the ball and made the 18-fool basket that spell'd defeat for the Beavers. .. ROD LAVER • 22 DAILY PILDT Sunset Cage Odds All-Orange Cage Teain SoCal Impressive, 101-80 Favo·r Oilers, Vikes cclt'brated a return to actu>n (In w r runnlng game and it night in Riverside a t Champion Sonora dem1nated "ith the varsity for the first paid off tonight. That press· California Baptist Colle&&. the official All-Orange LcaRu~ 1..os Angt les Baptist College unie th is season 'A'ilh 3 23. ing. full-court defense still Next home tilt is scheduled By UOWARl> l.. 11Af.-1ll\' or 1111 0.111 1t1111 s11u basketball team as selrctcll may have uppropriateJy had JXlint output. bothers us somewhut bot I i"riday night with U C by I.he Orange Co u n 1 y the Hl'avens and the Lord thought our players handled Riverside in the bandbox The final ~·eek of Sunset League basketball in on .tap this week with JlunUngton Beach. Marina and Newport Harbor knotted .,.,. 11 h lG-2 marks . And \Vednesday ·s salvo of Jopslded matchups should see all three contenders for the 1971 crown advancing into the final round Friday with iden- tical 11·2 marks. Several rombinations are possible berore the du s I clears. "'ith the odds favoring a stalemate between Hun· lington Beach and J\farina. JC Baseball For that to happen , however, both would have to get past dangerous rivals in the last night of action. Newport is at Huntington "'hile Marina hosts Westmi n· ster Friday night . Huntington ripped Newport llarbor by 33 points in their last confrontation and J\farina did in•Westminster by six. But Newport is a hot and cold outfit that can come on S;_lrong if its outside shooting game (Taras Young and John Kazmer) is clicki.llg. And Westminster has been PiratesNipGWC; Gauchos Clubbed All three area junior college basebali teams hit the tourna- ment trail this week, following last weekend 's action . In a pair of games Saturday, Orange Coast ou Is I u g ged Golden West, 8-6, on the win· ners' diamond while Sad- dlebacl was pounded by host Rio Hondo, 16-4. Coach Barry Wallace's OCC Pirates, 1-1 for the season, tra vel to Cypress Wednesday, then pa rticipate in the f.ft. San Antonio tournament Fri- day and Saturday. Meanwhile, Fred Hoover's Golden West Rustlers try for victory No. l Tuesday al Santa Ana. then trek to Santa Marla for the a11nual Allan Hancock tournameat Thursday through Saturday, Saddleback is idle until Thursday when it begins ac- tion in the Imperial Valley tourney at Holtville. ln Saturday's OCC-Rustler game, the Pirates' Chock Peart singled in two runs in the last of the eighth inning kl break a 6-6 deadlock: and give the Sues the win. A single by Billy Po.,.,·ell, 1 sacrifice, a walk to Steve King and a y,•ild pitch set Bucs LOse 21st Game, Tie Mark NORWALK -After tying a school record for most losses in one se ason . Orange Coast College's basketball team has three more chances to get a victory as the 1970-71 campaign rtravts to a close. Coach Herb Li vsey's Pirates fell . 82-57. to host Cer- rikls Saturday night in South Coast conference play, mark- ing the 21st loss in 24 games this season. The 1965-66 OCC team com- piled a 6-21 record. The Pirates have ly,•o games at home this "'eek against l-.11. San Antonio (Wednesdayt and San Diego Mesa (Satur- dayl. before concluding the slate al San Diego (Feb. 24). In the loss to Cerritos. it \1·as again a case of poor shooting by the Pirates that put them behind early. Orange Coast failed to hit 11 bucket in the first 7111 minutes or play (missing 11 altemptsJ and as a result Cer- ritos jumped to a 26-5 edge. Livsey's crey,· y,·armed up considerably. hill ing the next JO shols and trailing the tail Falcons. 39--37. at the half. the scene for PeJrt's winning blow. Center fielder Pete Pijl was the batting star for the Pirates with three hits in five trips Lo the plate. Pijl now has collected six hits in nine: limes at bat, including a pair of triples. OCC's DallJly Clark and the Rustlers' Pat Curran had a pair of doubles each. Orange Coast managed l'f hits off a pair of Golden West pitchers with Clark getting a single lo go with bis pair of ty,·o baggers. At Rio l!ondc Saturday. the Roadrunne rs pushed across nine runs i• the sixth inning to completely outclass Sad· dleback. The Gauchos were only outhit by a IG-8 margin, but a bevy of walks led to the loss. Terry Boyles and J i 111 Campbell each banged out two hits for the Doug Fritz<oach- ed Gauchos. Campbell. Gary Jackson and Doug P..1itten stroked trlples ll'hile one of Boyles ' hits was a double . Gllffll Wnl Ii! .. ' ' '" Jim Hcrg111. ti ' ' , (rfflt , t • ' • c~rrtn, rf • • , • lttlltf', ]II • • • • au1Un1, If ' • • • Kltftr. 1D ' ' l jal'tn H09111. u ' • • Adlm1, lb ' ' ' • H1mllhln. lD , l l • lltrr. p ' • • • a.,..,,, • ' • • To!•ll • • • Or111tt C11u tll .. ' " '" fliil"d ' l ' ' Cit .·lt\, • ' ' ' LtlYY, 11 • • ' • HtWlt, 10 • • ' Powtll. lb ' • ~nrdtr, < • ' • Kint. II ' , • Rtmlrt I. rt • • ' • Lovt , pl! ' • • • Btlley, • • • • • Oul11nDtrrv, P ' ' ' • ""''·. l • • Tor1l1 • • " ' 5<1r1 I>~ 111111n11 ' ' • GOldlJfl Wnt llO OOCI Ol'6-6 • ' Orl ntt (Ol11 202 200 Oh--1 14 ' 5fHlt'Nclr (41 .. ' ' '" Jlt~lll". H • • ' • 110~111. :lb-lo ' , , • Hoy!, ti • • l • CllT'PDlll, r1-l0 • • ' ' smnn, c ' • • • BoYll , 1b·1b • • ' • H1r1n, P·ID·rl l • • Ml!ltn, d • ' ' ' &. HolmU, 70 ' • • • Blt tlllldot. r> • • • ' Btrt 1. r> ' • • • Tol1l1 " • • ' IUt Htn .. ptl .. ' ' "' F IC•fl, lb ' • Hie-um, t ' ' • Wtll1, rt ' • ' Gulla!tl. H ' ' ' TP\omPton, II ' l ' Novle, d ' • • AlvtrtJ, JO ' ' ' Wr!tl'tf. 111 l l • Noyt r. 1 ' ' l Pl!ol, I ' ' • 101111 " " " " S<lfl DY llllll"tl S1d<llt bl C-000 Olll :JOO--• ' l Rle H"""o 100 ,., 01~-li 10 l Sportswriters Association. on Its side but Southeni But •t "'35 the early, can't it well (or the most part. &.Cal gymnasium with tipoff highly impressive In its last The Raiders plaCed thret Culifornia College or Cosla miss shooti ng of S.6 foN·ard "There's no question about at 8 o'clock. Scats will be four start.!. a period that in· players on the tw o tcan1s, l\tcsa had a pair of Paynes Ted Harper that put the game Jim's return helping us. He at a premi um long before this eludes a 72-64: thumper over including player of the year :.ind a H::irp ter, lo cuunt('r-act out or reach of the visiting was our le ading rebounder last hour with the sudden Interest lJuntlngton Beach. Dave Meyers . .,~1ho averaged the si tuation Saturday night. Mustangs almost before it year and had to sit out the in the SoCal team, One wv. or the other, the 21.7 per outing. SoCal Colle1;e 's basketball startl'd . fall s"?mester because of !he soc11 co111" 0111 survivor or the Huntington Paul Bush was named to;1<·h tea m rotnptd to a 101.80 vie-l!arpt:'r had 17 points at in-draft . I think he w11s our '' " •1 1~ Beach-Newport clash y,·ill so of the yea, after ou 'd' h' t · · t t H .. ~•· 9 1 u 1 b 1 111S is lory over the Newhall visitors ermiss1o11. arge Y on Jumpers rl'bounding leader tonight." c;rm 1 a 1 to the CJF AAAA payoffs, team to an und efeated loop rronl LA Baptist College around the key and his uner· o. P•Yn• • j 10 as the outright chanipion _ season . ring accuracy gave him 25 Jim not only gives the ~1n~er ~ J J 11 h . t All.Ori"•• Lt<1•~• before :.1 standing room only Southern California College Hotfm1n o o o o or as a co-c amp1on w lb d · h l' foi the n•gbt. M111er ) • i 11 J"l•11 T•1m trow in l e compatl ton 111es t b' 1·1 · b'd f Marina. •11y1r, S<llolOI vr. earn a 1g 1 t 111 a 1 or s1veo-1~t~ o o 1 o M 1-1i. A~•-of 1he Vanguard gym on The return of Jim Payne NAIA 1 off be th b t H o ' o 1 Should it end without upsets o:~-;:~~;:'~1.... ~;·. "'1 "' J1omecom1'ng n•'ght . has broughl a switch in the on pay r u J.~~~ne 11 1 7 ?J il will mark the fourth time 11110" s-. "" ~. '' "1 he will be around again next T~t••• ,, 21 ll 1c1 in the last five years an Elmer Ecllfv• .. 11, v1ien<•• Sr. ~:~0 :~ ~ Claude ll ~avens. a 6--0 guard offensi.,·e pattern ol the year to join brother David. Loi A"''1e1 11P11!11 ~~1 •I 11 JDMS, '''' >•. s.10 1i , and Dennis Lord, a 6-10 Vanguard) of coach Paul ph · th · Co robs-coached Huntingkln sttalHI '••m a so omore, in e opening l<)r~ • 1 13 Beach team has ~·on or shared M•r,...1010. v11..,,1, Jr. ''° 10_. center, ~·ere in the LA Baptist Peak. lineup. '•~lo• ' J 21 a league title. ;J~:1• ,sicldi-c1o. ~r. ..1 11 i opening lineup and between •·\Ve \\'ere among the top With six games remaining ~;:'!,,1 1 ~ 1! ' r Oot100 Sr. ..s 11 ~ th ed 20 , I d f . h And il y,·ould mark lbe se-Hor'°"· Sancr1 ~·. ,.1 11 1 em scor po1n s. e cnsive teams in t e country on the regular schedule. the w11"°" l ' • J W rc!1, Vilf<!cl1 • S•. J• II I Dav id pa y th . th NAIA t h' v d h d s~tNAicl'> • 0 ' 12 cond co-championship for P••~•r o1 ttie YN• _ N.tven, So'IQ•• n e • e in e ear Y l is anguar s ave a I~ recor . Dunkin ~ o o 10 f.1flr·na The Vikings w COien a1 '"° Year _ Piui B~•n. Vanguards' 6-3 center hit for .season," he explained. Four of the six are road Toi.11 lS 10 '? to S ' ·Le h .ere Sonori. · 20 and h>'s brother J>'m "But th'-· week we worked game beg· · T d "1111•me: Soeil collew "·LA •• ,.. unset ague co-c amp1ons•------------_:::_,...::~.:__::::__::::::~_:'._'.'.'.'._ _ _.'.'.:'.'.._'.'.'.'."'....'.:'.'.'._~_:"',"~~~~s~~mru""'~ng~'--""~e~s~a'.'..:y_:,~•·~· _:n~. --------in 1967. I ,. Here are the Big Three's re- maining schedules : Huollnglon Beach 110-2) Wednesday -Anaheim. Fri· day -Newport Harbor Marina (10-21 Wednesday -Loara. Friday -Westminster. Newport Harbor 110.!) Wednesday -Santa Ana. Friday-at Huntington Beach. Baron Five Top Pick For Second Fountain Valley's Barons have performed like genuine thoroughbred! in their last two Ir-tine League bask et b a II outings and coach D a v e Brown 's bunch appears to have the inside track for the loop's second CIF playoff berth. Los Alamitos has already clinched the No. I spOt with a lG-2 record but the real battle is for second place. with the Barons t7-S J. Costa Mesa (6-6) and Ptiagnolia (H) still alive and kicking., Fountain Valle y v Is It s cellar-dwelling Estancia Wed· nesday night t7 ) and then closes out the campaign at home on Friday night against unpredictable a r c h r i v a ! Edison. I Coach Emil Neeme·s Pt1esa crew, meanwhile, has to en· counter Edison Wednesday night (also at 'i) on the Charg- ers' home court before ventur- ing-into Santa Ana Valley's chartreuse haunted house. A Joss in either tilt would be fatal for 1he J\.1ustangs. Magnolia goes down the homestretch with a pair of home games but the Sentinels have to stop SA Valley \Ved- nesday night and Los Alamitos on Friday evening in order to keep lheir fli cker ing hopes in good stead. A Fountain Valley \•ictory in either of the final pair of confronlations y,·ould cinch no worse than a tie for the Bar ons and would automatically qualify them for the ClF slot. The Barons have already dumped r..lesa and ~l agnolia l\\'ice each and \l'Ould con- sequently get the playoff an d in case or a final deadlock . The contenders' re1naining schedule: Fountain Valley 17-5) -at Estancia (\Vednes day. 70.55 '\, Edison (Friday, 6.'J...75'). Costa fi.lesa 16-6) -at Edi~on ('\'ednC'sda y, 89-76~). at SA Vallev (Friday. 60-81 •1 . r..tagnolia (6-6l -SA Valley <Wednesday, 61..fl5•1. Lo s Alamitos IFriday, 55-58°). 'Indicates firs! round srores. Pre-Season Auto Air Conditioner Sale $ Sears 95 Tire and Auto Center Regular $239.95 • Pre·cool setting cools your sun~baked car in just s~conds $ i:'rices Eifecti ve Sun. 2/14 thru Tues. 2/16 •Automatic thermostat •Features 3-speed blower •Mounts under dash • lnstallatioa available Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans \' c· Sc•r\ it•c• anfl l(t•1)ai r \lc» ... I l :<t('lc»r~ l11 ... 1allc·cl ancl SPECIAL 5·POINT AUTO AIR CONDITIONER CHECK·UP ( •rigi11al l·:c111i1,111P11I \tile» \ir ( :.,nclitit•n<>r" Sears Lo,,·, Lo"' Price! •Check and tighten your belts 88 •Check refrigerant and add as necessary • Check oil compression level and seals •Check system for leaks •Clean your condenser But Cerritos canned the first seven points of ilie second 20 minutes to put the game far out of reach. Gauchos Meet Chaff ev OCC finished y,•ith a very respectable shooting percen- tage \47.6). caMing 20 of 42. Cerritos hll 33 of 65 for 50.8 percent. The victory kept the Falcons In a first place lie with Fullerkln ~·ith the two teams scheduled to battle for the conferenct! title. Saturday night at Cerritos. OCC's circuit mark is now I..!. Of'lt1 .. Cu11 0 1! ,, " • " """~ ' ' ' ,_, l l ' " W•llttl ' ' ; ' Gou,11..., ' ' ' ~'-' • ' ··-• • ' • _,,, ' l • S1Jl1'''" ' • • ' "'" • • • "ft!t ll • " " " ,.,,J ... «•I " " • .. l1Ut • ' • w.,ii.,., ' ' l ,..,. • ' tt M-1ro ' l " c~,1, l l " F .. Mtrt • ' • lt•n:• • • l • ... ' l • ' c"" ' • • l "follt1-' • ' • "''"" ' ,, " " H1'llt1M C,,•lto1 :If. Or~•~, '~••111 " Following 64-52 Wi11 CHULA VISTA -Despite the fact that its leading scorer was held to just six points. Saddleback College's basket- ball team put together a balanced attack and turned back host Southwestern Satur· d1y night , 64-S2 in Mission Conference. action. The Gaucho s' Eric Chrl!itensen was limited to just six points. bef ore injuring his left leg and fOt11ing out early In the second half. It was the first time this season that Christensen had failed to hit In double figures. His prevloU.'I low ror one game was 11. S•dd leback next m e. l' t s Chaffey Wedntsda y night on the Panthers' court. Chaffey ls currently tied for the con· ference leed y,1\ll Riverside and San Bernardino. In Salurday night's win . gua rds Steve f\Unton and Tom Gardner , along 11·ith center Pete Henderson sparkC'd the Gauchos to an early lead and they maintained it th e res t of the y,·ay. r..1inton finished w-ith 18 points to claim scoring honors for Saddleback y,•hlte llen- derson and Gardner tanked 14 each. G1rCIM< EC1 .. 1rn H""'~"°" Cl'rl'll 'tnlt A M inton t.!fley ... ~. 1111111 '"""~·(), !ti ) ''""'' ' • ' ' • ' • • ' ' • 7• ,, l ,, ' . , " ' • " . ' • l I• •• SllwlftWtltlf" Oil ic:llwlltr "" ·~· W'llltntl CI Mu•llll• LI~-' '''" •tnl\411 Tct111t Mlll!lfl'lf. "'" u It ft fl I• ~ I I 11 1 0 s ' I 1 ~ I I J Jt - ' . ' ' . ' ' , ' o t I ( n • 11 11 1 Slelallo.t<-11 kllrtt.wt •! SA VE 20% to 50%! OFF Regular Prices Prices start at 9.88 Some Demonstrators-Some Floor Models 4· Track-Cassette -8·Track-Cassette with Recorder ._..,._8-Track with FM Multiplex ... And Many More • •••• Hurry for this BIG BUY! Quantities arc I~imjted ! tUll"A P.tllt (Af"OOA r,t,1111 COVIHA U ,.ONTI "OUTWOOO INIWWOOO PICO U•H,•Dll<\O ,,.8.,,, <O"'"°" OUHO._U l01'10 HACH •AIADIJolA IAH'IA ANA .,.._, Nltfth Mo"' 1hrv S.r, 9::10 ,\,M. lo ';30 ,.M., l11"ff7 11N•-1• S P.M. "Setllfooi .. O..,...,,..•.,. y-._., lei;lt" UNTA n S,.IMGI tANTA MONICA iOUTM COAIT r\AU lllOU.AKO OAll'.I TOllAHCI Ul'LAHI VAUO' VlltMOMr I Alter 71·59 Loss Mo11a1·cl1 s Battle s ,vo1·dsme11 Next HAGIE HE IGHTS - Bishop A t High School used the san1e ne-two combination in basket all it used during the footba campaign to rout illater Oei' f\1onarchs in an Angelus Lea e television en· counter Saturday, 71 ·59, in aC· lion at Los Altos High. Pat Haden and John f\lcKay, the quarterback and splil end Nicholson T, ]{ace for th.e Lancers, combined for 48 of the 71 points for Bishop Amat with McKay again on the receiving end of Haden passes and closing with a 29- point total. Haden hit 19. The victory assured Bishop Amat of at least a tie for the Angelus League title \Yith. a 7·1 record while f\iater Dei is struggling in third place. one game behind Servile in a battle for a playoff berth. Two games remain on the league schedule for all teams and Mater Dei must win them both to remain \l•ith a chance at a playoff berth unless Servile falters in both of its games. !\tater Dei is at home Tues· day \lo'ith St. Paul's Swordsmen and closes the season at SI. Anthony Friday. 1\1ater Dei held the lead at conclusion of the first quarter. l&-15, but fell behind in the second and third stanzas. 1\teKay accounted for 10 of the 16 Lancer points in the lh lrd quarter. Both teams hit a high percentage of fi eld goal at· STAY "OVER THE BALL" DURING BACKSWING The golfer in illustration i 1 has made the common mistake of "moving off the ball '' during his backswing. As a result, his upper body has swayed to the right. Now the problem is this: To compensate for the swaying mo- tion ·during the backswing, a reve rse sway must be applied during the downswing, This back and forth lateral move· ment makes it very difficult to consistently return thecJUbhead squarely to th e ba ll. It is, like· . wise, d iffi ci.Jlt to fu lly utilize the large muscles of the body. The ideal situation is 5hown in illustration 12. You see me staying "over the ball'' during the backswing. The best method of accom· p1i5 hing lhis is to place most of your weight on the left foot at address. At the.)same time, you should feel a slight down. ward press ure on the inner porlion,of your righ t foot. Mond•Y Ftbr11ary 15, ltf71 DAILY PILOT 23 Burlingham--All-roundAce ll) HO\\'ARD L. HANO\' 0 1 1"4 D•Ur '"'" S1'H 1N;1:\~~~l~~ay ~o~ 3 a~~ b~~ his loss is basketball's ga in <.1t UC Irvine this seaSQn . Big Ed Burlingham was not onlv a baskelbalJ star at Jaines ri.1ooroe High I n Sepulveda during his high school days. he y:as also a three-yea r letterman in swim· ming and placed third in the L1\ City rneet In the 50-yard freestyle as a ~enior. llt' still didn 't change his n1ind when he 90l out his WJlhomorr season al UC I an er playing f re s h 1n a n basketball for his r.:urrcnl .my coach. T1n1 Tift. happy to be playing a . 1 wanted to C<JTilt' here because it Is a small sc hool and also becau se 11 ls close to the beach." F.d reveals. He 11·a., also sought by the Univer sity of Paciric and San . Jose ~late as a basketball player and has an older brother. Robert. on the s1vin1· n1ing te.:im at San Diego Stale. C:ln you in1agine the e1n· b<1rr:lss1nent or a young man who ts starting his rirst gan1e as a freshrnan for hls high school 1cam and so mething goes a1niss? ED BURLINGHAM read~ to go up for one, 1ny S\1 eat pants slipped down and l rel! do11.·n in;;tead of goin~ up for the shot." Ed recalls . \\lhile this ranks as his ino."t frnbarrassing 1noment on \h~· CflUr\. Ed has come a long \Vay since that time. ··He plays the ga1n(' very hard. He ha s irnproved to the point where he is a goorl. solid basketball player,"' TifL says. son1e games \\'here hc ap· peared to be misplaced. "Ed shoot!! 11.ell , 1s o;urpr1s· lngly fast for his :.1z1· arid makes very few misl<!kes. lie is a good dcfcns1vfl playl!r and after starhng ll:e }'car as our sixth man , has bc~'o•nt· a valuable starter. "\Vhen he was roniing off the bench , things started hap· peni ng when he cn1crl•d lhe games, His great quickness and h.is lack af fear for &ny opposing pltiyer 1nade hint a starter." Ed recalls tlu.· opening UCI game at the U111versit y of Nebraska a year ago when a teammate (Keith Bean) \\as mixed up in an altcrcalion on the floor. "Phil is sneaky on lhe boards and bi more or a go-ao talker type Jeff 11.as quiet." 1'he soeu1l science and psychology n1ajor is currenlly doing son1e student tearhing at Laguna B~ach High and would like to coach basketball and teach. lie is taking enough courses and will ha\•e enough units to graduate this June, Bul he hasn"l petitioned r 0 r graduation and ft.>els it wi ll help him to add an extra ~'ear lo his undergraduate career to play b<asketball for UC! ne>.:l season . Calendar Tl/Holli Swimmu>9 -la~twood •' ,......,_, '· r was sitting on the bent h t>: Ill. !i.oull• co.11 coo1 Rtl•1~ ., at the tin1e,"' he savs ... I S•G'.!;f"~ 12ln..,, ,, Gol~n W•I! ran over to help -Ke1ih and <2~enn1~ _ c.1 ~,,,, !F1111erton1 11 people began coming do\\'n °~::w~r~ '2;.,....., w1~, .i $ani. from the stands. \\'e \\ere :~1 uc 1rv1ne •1 uCLA 1ilo1~ •1 lucky they didn"t get invol\'ed ---- in the fracas. That was quite an experience." In analyzing tln.o; year';; tean1, Ed is reluctant to corn· pare Phil Rh yne \1•ith Jeff Cunninghum rro1n last year's squad. GOLFERS Good plowert ha•c 11 1011d 1h1111 911l'!le -Yaw '011 toe -wltlll prCKt\,e AT THE NEWPORTllt INN PAR J GOLF COURSE Dennis Nicholson \\'armed up for a starring role aga inst the UCLA Bruin baseball team in Westwood Tuesday \lo'ith a two-inning tour of duty Satur· day against th e Southern California All·Slars, a group of young minor league players liviog in this area in an ex· hibition ga1ne. tempts during the action, the & c 1"0 t-1An.. ..._ '1!', ... 1\1onarchs getting 22 of 41 at· L...------------------~-' During the backswing, be certain that any movement of weight does riot go beyond the L .....I.. __ _.., inside of your tight foot.· Ed kno\VS all about ~uch circumstances. "\Ve were on the floor tak· layups and just as I \\as "\Vhen gan1(' llllll' rolls around . he 1s there to pl11y. Early in the season, 11·hcn he \\·asn·l starting. there \\"l'rl' "Phil Is not !he driving. twisting type Jeff was . He is a diffe rent type of shoot·~r. I have to feel they both re- bound about the sarne and each has finesse in his O\\'n WITH THIS AD. Nicholson and the UC Irvine Anteaters copped a 7 -4 decision "'hile playing er· rorless ball behind five pit· chers. The expected ace of the Anteater mound staff gave up a pair of first inning runs on two hits while striking oul l\\"O. He whiffed two more in the second giving h.im four in t"·o frames. When the UC! team 11·as launched in its inilial season of 1970, UC Riverside wa~ the perfect hosL ror a double header and the Anteate rs won a pair of decisions. 'foday these tw o te;tms are nieeting-on the UC! diamond to gel the officia l season under "'ay 1vHh Tom Dodd and Bob . Barlow, a pair of sophomore righthanders. going for the hosts against lefthanders Jim Schmidt and Steve Robertson of UCR. Skip Redondo. the lone left- handcr on coach Garv Adams· UCI staff. \lo'as cred.ited "'ith Saturday's victory. S•. Clllf. A1!·51fn (0 .. ' • • ' ' , . Frallkl111, II Jenn. cf K1p1no, lb Ford, lb Sanoerson. lb Ret'd, 11 W~than, e Stol!mevtr, •I lluddell, o Jack'IOll, ' To11ls , ' • ' ' • ' • • • ' ' " • UC lr¥1nt 17) F1rr1r. II Ss>anlkl, If Srtor1, )II Cr1l9, cl S~nc:e, lb M1llt>0ft. lb S••k•, rl Te<ie.co, •I G•e,11.,11, U·~b coron•OO. 7b H•nwn. u !tnelln,, c ,.n<ler..,~. c "lichols.on. p ScMnl . Pr Welller. e Ae<i-,11 O'Connor, o Ptn~lngt°"' p Talfl> .. ' ' ' • • ' , ' ' • ' ' • ' ' .. ' ' • ' ' ' • • • ' • • ' ' • ' • • ' . ' . " , Scort bJ tnnin'' • '" ' • ' • ' • ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' • • • • " • h rbi ' ' . ' ' . ' ' ' ' ' . • • • • • • ' ' ' . • • • • • • • • . ' ' ' ' . • • ' ' tempts. Ntl'IO"• K11l!lln K O<tlPI'' HfuPl'rJ Kltev Frl11 Roti.r11, To1111 Pu room M. 11.ot~e O'lta•w Haden McK11 Maler O'i (ff) It u ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' ' . ' ' . ll lJ l iV.611 Am•! tn I '' n ' ' ' ' . ' ' . " ' " " ' • ' " ' ' ' ' ' ' ' " • • " " .. " ' ' ' ' ' " ' " ' ~ 0 . Rod''" To!al1 0 1 l l l• 1J 16 71 S<or1 bY ~~•rltr• Mater Oei 16 15 10 11 -It s .. ~oo Am11 is 21 u n -11 UCI Do,vns UC lr"Vlnt un Ull GelCltn west IOO ml<ll.v relaY -UCI \Gtrd~r. Cool>f-•. Cam1tian, Dtc~m1nnl. J:U.U. 1,ooa !•tt -1. Eich (!;), 7. Ovel 1GI, l . Wlr !11. 11 :•9.t. 200 lrH -I. M•rlln CIJ, ?. Llo11<1!dl !Gl. J Fer1u1 (I). l :d .1. !t11 !•H -I. Purri"ll...,. iGI, ' i; • .,dner (I\, l. Oic~m1nn (I). ll.1. :ioc (11(11. Mt<llev -t. Eason 111, 1. Nel""' (11. J. Mtclnlrn (G). 2:01.1. 1 meter divJ,.. -l. Penni IGJ. l. $1an1.,.. IG). 3. Dunc1n ll). ND -· :ioc btJNtrllV -1. Camal"t.lln !II, 1. ~ler• IGJ, l. EICll CGl. J:0-1.&. llll lrtt -1. Eison 11). 2. Don1k11on lGl, J. l"erou• (0. '9.1. 200 c.c~slrolle -1. l lDl>Clld! {G], Ntl•on (!), Felnber1 {I\. ff.I. !OD !rtt -I. Mlrlin (ll. '· ADI! (GI, l . Noa~ (Gl. t;!9.2. ioo brt1sl1!ro~e -I. C°"""r (IJ, 2. Aren• (!). J. Maclnlres fGJ. 2:2'·'· J meter diving -1. Pennv (GI. ~ Slanli:>n lG), J. O...nc•n p>. No 'co••· lOCI !rtt rtla~ -I. UCI !Carna~an, Dickmann, Marlln, E••Onl. J:'1.S • UC l,.,lnt 1471 f6oll CSll ..00 medley relay -CSLB. J:U .C. 1,000 lrtt -l. Whlte (l). '· ThOMP"''' {L). 3. Sale (I). ':U.6. 1110 lrH -1 H1rvlJI {l), 2. Marlln Ill, l . Fergu1 (IJ_ 1:'-1.t . .l.Q !rtt -l . .t.!-in• fl). 2. Pu•r!1111er IL ). J. Dicmann (!). :!:l.O. 200 Ind. mN:lle1 -I. E•'IOll II ), 1. "lellll" (I), J. Fltld IL). ,:01.1. I mtl•r ollYl"9 -1. Direller (l ), 2. Oi.lnc•n (t), no !hire!. No score XIO oonerttw -1. Carn1h111 111, 1. But11 !l). l. Th<lfl\OM>n !LI. 2:04 ~- 100 free -1. H1rvill !LJ, 1. E•.Oll fll. l. Puttlo"ller (LI. fi.S. 100 b.lc-•lrolle -1. Nei.on !11, 1. Whllt Ill. J. Thorn1><on Ill. J:Ot.~ 500 l•e-t" -1. Wh11e ft.l, 2. M,rtln fl), l. Sny~• fl). l :!.1.6. JOO b•ta1t11•oke -1. Smirti Ill, J mfler <l!vin9 -I. Dlrett~r ILJ . f'lu• fed. (,.To~ Sl.l.C de,.-nding on 1i1e 7.60·15/8 .45-15 $18 Plua '•d. fr. Toi S1.~1 10 S2.10 p•• ,;,, ea. deponding on ,, •• r h • 1 Ouncan io."" thl•d. No .co••· Glas· Belt -Sli9hr Blemishes* So C~l-511rl 700 200 ~· 1l ' 'IJQ !rte rtllV -I. UCI l(a•n•h~ll, 7 Barth IL). J. CODPer H!. 2:17.7. ~ u;~,-;~~~ ';·~~··;~·; -: FASTR~!!EACH ~ $1445 MOST F71-14/7.7S-14 F71·1S/7.7S·1S OF LIFE! GOLF INSTRUCTION Class "A" Instructors GROUP LESSONS on MONDAYS TUESDAYS WEDNESDAYS THURSDAY S SATURDAYS 7:00 P.M. 10 :00 A.M. 10 :00 A.M. 3:00 P.M. 10 :00 A.M. FREE USE OF CLUBS AND A GAME OF GOLF $9 FOR 6 LESSONS .,.:..._•·_· .... ·.:J. 1~1::J~ic G71.1!1~~f~!.·!~ to.G~~;1~0s;,•i;s-1 s t -···-10 ,1.11 oltlpo•d'"~ oo '"" $27.45 EACH ~~""·'!:I· • each H71-14/l .SS -14 H71 -IS/l .SS-IS J11.1 s 11.1s.1s A78-13 Plus f•d . Ex. Tax $1 .90 per tire ~I"' fe<I, (•.loo po•'"" S1 t l JOIN THE RADIAL REV~LUTION UNIROYAL PRIVATE LESSONS -$6.00 ""' °' $30.00 10< 6 TPI:.~ 1~~~21~,~ $ 28 9e~ for American, European and Japanese cars 165-13 1 r Installed FRIE! way. 6.50-73 Pio, Fed E each No · J(.roJ(or.s1 TR•or ·9B Peri· :.l ,.. ·IN N rre • ..,.~ .. ·.·rl'rl'.•.•.•.m ............ rl'... EEDEo ~ GET QUICK-STOP ACTION TREAD DESIGN OF RETREADS ON SOUND TIRE BODIES lb!t~!U:\lf~ ANY SIZE Tubless Whitewall or Black New One free Security's Guara nt ee I! I S1<11dlf Tho •tlfH4 l•il1 111 1nJ ,. .... ,..,,. ,.,..,,~11 ••n<lu•• •• •~U" •kilo 1161h 11 •• ••<k 1! !•H4 ""'.'"'· ••• t •I o ••• ,. • ..... ,, .. FREE saso .. 1,. FRONT ENO ALIGNMENT with the purchase of two lire1 MOST .t.MfUC.t.N CA•S FREE RACING POSTERS (2'x3') One post er with the purchase of any tire or service • , . al any store! • j I. Golf Equipment Sale BIGGEST EVER ~~'WITH THIS COUPON ONl Y1'· 9!!ll!p~~ WITH THIS COUPO~ ONl Y __ • . ~WIT H THIS COUPON ONl Y''l!'!!!!!ll!OO CLUBS-25°/o to 50°/o off LADIES SHO~ WE HAVE THE Vflues to $3 2.00 NEW INSTOMATIC NOW $14.95 CAMERA STOP-ACTION See younelf Jn action ~~·BB in 1 minute $2.00 SKIP MAY"S COSTA MESA GOLF RANGE '2717 NEWPORT aLVD. S4S·9tt3 At th1 Or1tng1 County 11tir Ground• --.LSO- SKIP MAY'S NEWPORTER GOLF COURSE 1117 JAMIORE.i RD. . 644-tfll At tht Newporter Inn WHEEL BALANCE * MICRO-PRICISION * (INClUDIS WllGHTSJ Reg, $2.00 for Only GOUl'OH G000 UHllt IUllOt U . 1t 11 BUY 3 SHOCK FRONT END ALIGNMENT ABSORBERS 7 0 ~ o .... , .. , .,. • .,; .. """" $ s s s BRAKE RELINE ALL FOUR WHEELS At Ow l•erydoy ... ,... l'Tl<e IU'f' l fer $11.2S each C · co1!er. •o"'bt•, !00 l" ond loe· • out 10 mo,.~lo<lu•••'• oroginol I •1>1cllicotl01t1, w•l"ll lh• "'o•I [; mod1r~ P''U"0'1 •quopmcnl. , .. Get the 4th for only '•mou5 lrtnd Shatk5 I MOSf AMllllCAN CARS ~~I~ flit tNtl.t.ll.JTtOll _I~ CO\I"°'" GOOO U•fTll -•CH )1. 1971 ~~~.,...,.~-~~~~iiii:Miil!Miliiq;;;~ ANAHEIM 1961 lllOOKHUR.ST ,_., tlfrt(OIN! 63S·1170 SANTA ANA 121 1 W. WAllNEll: AVE. (WAllolll Al 8RIS!Ol/ S40·1646 WESTMINSTER WESTMINSTER AT aoAR (' •tOC•S ~ O/' GOl'l£H WESlJ 893·3S21 GARDEN GROVE HAWAIIAN GARDENS 'HUNTINGTON BEACH 1601 MESTMINSTEI 11973 CARSON ST, 19.Cll IEACH l lYD. (6 llOCKS t .. }I Of IEA(H) llCTWl(lj ,1Qt<l(!l I. NOIW.t.lK) [YJ /lllll NOl lM (If .t.0AM$1 l•l·3.59S 965..0227 S36-7S71 TUSTIN COSTA MESA· CORONA SAN CLEMEN~E lJI (.1st STR([l NEWPORT BEA CH 136 W. 61h ST. 927 N, El CAMINO ll(Al llM •lo!O "D" ST I 322 (AST 17th ST, 4•2·SS43 S44·94Jl 64'2·4131 73S·6010 , OPEN 8 -7 DAILY I 8-S SATURDAY SANTA ANA 11 5 H. HARIOlt !Ml,IOll AT I ... 139·3700 ' .. . . . . ~ • t4 DAIL V PILOT Monday, ftbr111ry 15. 1971 Anteate1·s Face Trojans Start Pro Cage, Hockey Standings Cage Sunimaries F o,. Area T earns Basketball Standings LON G BEACH -'l he l'C Irvine tennis team v.·armed up for a malch \\llh lht CSC Tro1ans Thursday ciftc·rnoon by defeating hosl Co.I Shtlt' 1Lo11g Beach) Saturday, 7·2. J10IOfl\i'! tUCO dtl •·I j.l Ptll'lcll lll l, .. ~ Ye :ir 50\ITH COAST COH,l•l!HCE t •• ,..,rcuqn C\JCI) tlfl ~"°· Cll), Juftltr V1ri.IY C•IJ Oll I ii-lmll F !12l 51trl"~ F 10) Ht•t"O C Ill F~n• St""'"" 1uo• Co1t1 Mflt -l(tl1 l'lt 1. MIVI l, N•wlilt • COM -(lf•I!, ' Htllhmt W l l'F l'.t, (trro1~ O I II~ t:l Fullt•lcn t fl) 111 8 I t ( "•tl!t nd ... 6·) _,., E11gi11es! Hou/gate 11111tf' Doi .. 1rol0 11'1 Myroto¥ [I) Cutullc ! 11 POl't!ft'I HI ...,cElw••n Hl G !i i F0Uotr1•0 G l!f Guanlt 'A VllltY Mtll (I) eo1<.05•v toll N11lull0 fl) 011••• l'Xll Dt11"" !!II 7J-1ll UJJ • ' ' " G CUI F1'w"ttlft 1J1l1ty 1111 8u•n• 1101 Sulllvtn tll S. l!DDUt~ Ill Sw1n1Gn (10) tlt•fltlO M~ Ditto MtU. I J ll• Ho St" 01.ao l I 1/1 )'()] S1nt1 .t.na .s ..,1 •~s UC !•YI ... Cl! n• Cl 1..11111 fl••<n C'IU~•ll ind C•lct CUCll de! flfll •.a Pe1n1! Jl81,tl.14 by Deke ... I!••'"" c ..... , ..... Allelllil Dl•l•iot~ w ' "''· GI .~' 5corln11 1ub1· Mlltr Dt<-l(ll•v i. ••Ill 1. Min••• J. &l.r-•m•t·-Sttn lorO l. JIVtf1 • .... trn.JnO•I I M.iHlff>t ' M1t•r Doi :If, 8••nOP Al"IAt 10 M1. Si n .t.nlot\IO 2 ~I ~st OrtA~ C:W~1 I f }If •?2 511wrlll11'1 S(O•ft Ctrril0$ fl, Ottngt COii! S1 FwlltrTon '8, Mt Stn An!onlo Al Sin 0 1-IGS, Stn11 "'n1 9f l1ntl•1 Cns-11 CUC!! d'fl. Slf•mt• (l.'S .... •·• llrol ll8l de! O•I• fUCll, 6-:, 110 Ja~'onll<l 1no 1;trn1nd !UC:I) O!'!. "•?"ulCn 1nd ~·••mt~ !l8). 6-J, .. 1 O•o!rlc l!, enc S1...r1 IL91 <Ill, 091• 1nO ~·~"!Nn IUCI ). 6-o, 6-J. .·~··---"'··"""'-Lloyd Ruby's one.lap rlw1·d or in.567 1n.p.h. at Ontario t.lotor Speedway n1a y stand !or a long time lo C'Ome. despite lhe inc\•ltable increase 111 efficiency of Indianapolis-type racing f'ng1nes. Deller tires. finer chassis tuning and more familiarity '11th the track by top drh·crs. Rubv himself 1s the man who said it. He believes lhat speeds fur l111s ~·ear's Ca lifornia JOO 11·1!1 be sl o1.1·er du e lo the aging of !he track ··Traetion is better \.\'hen a tr<1.ck is ne" ... Ruby said during A Firestone tire test last 11eeJ... "'The 1rack has slowed dov.·n :.inee JI has matured ·· Al Unser. testing his car at the same time. agreed. f)(unted out that drh·ers have had the same experience al d1anapohs Speedy,·ay, each time any ponion of the track is pa\ ed. re- tnscr. Rub~· and another driver 11ho tested last v.·eek. Joe Lronard. ha1·e had laps in the 178·1i9 m.p.h range at Ontario. qu ite a bit raster than anybody else has gone. Last week in tire Lests Unser's best laps v.·ere just over 174 m.p.h. and most of the three dri\·trs lapped in the. 172·173 m.p.h. brackel. Don 't gel the idea that Ontario's expensive pa ving job is rrumhling due to old age. As a matter of fact. it is not as likely to sho"· acing as the tn1ck at Indianapolis. because it does not hal'e to endure the cruel \\'inters of the Middle \\lest. But secretly Ruby is pleased that the record he prizes so much -thl' riistesl 10-mile qualifying effort in national champ- ionship racing history -may survive at least one year's attack by lhe fastest. bravest men in the sport. 'fl11·el' \letert111s Also Test Cars Also testing "err Ca tt \'arboroui;b. Georgt Follmer and Ray Elder. L1n1tr and Le<inard. of course, wtrt drh·ing their familiar blue and yellov.· Johnny Lig htning Colt s. Ruby and NASCAR 1uper speedway hero Yarborough "·ere testing Gene \\'bite'1 iotar i;pangled i\longoo~s. All of these are Indy cars. Follmer. on the other band, "·as testing bis Ford1JO•·erl!d formula 5000 Ion the 3.Z..mlle road course I for the Questor Grand Prb: at Ontario next month. And Elder. winner of the year's first !':ASCAR Grand Natk>nal at Riverside , was testing his '7D Dodge fo r lbe i\ti ller SOO stoc k car race '"'o weeks from no"·· How Yori< •1111e••l•lll• eo11"" a ulf1!0 " " " " ,. " tt ., Ctntr~• Dl•hle~ l i ,. ,. J• " . .Sii ,., • 111 .Ill .Jll .l1! "' ••• " " 11• .. Si n (l*"ltftk CUI UJI Ktttllt Sl•llen~on 119) Nt« Ul "''""V !II\ Corn!orr" Ill Oo«llnf 11 •1 ' ' ' G G (f) OIW~ !111 Gllb•rt l!U Hll!ntt !10! 81n1oc~ed !•I snu101rn ~ccrlne 1uD1 Son Clement• 8•u1• fltlrlftl{"' Clnc;l-11 A!lf~I• Cltvt ltll4 II 56 IH 71 I. IC.ltellt -Htn<ler1on s H1U""'• S1" Clemon••· Jl·11 Wtll"~ Ct11tt •1n<t Mi.wtll Ol¥1tlH M il•1uk1' 11 !I Ot"o•• ll 7J c111<1t o Jt n Piiat"'" JI 1• l'lllflC 0 1¥11;.11 Lo• Ant l lll JI II SI" F•1nc:11co l • ll S1" OllfO 1' l1 Sttltlt U l6 Portlt"" 11 lt "' "' .~• ... .~· "' m ••• ·"' Jllfl .... ,'I ll"Wllt Molw1uktt IU, Allon•• .. fltll\"'O"' 111. P11l1101li>J'l1 101 e "''"" no. Ot!ro\t IOI Cnlcogo IOI. Clrvt111111 IJ p,_.,11 IOI. llulll!a ti lot .t.nt•i•• 171. Cl1w:ln~1ll 111 StllHt , ... $1n Frtn<l•«i 101 OnlY ''"''' i.cl'l.Oultd l6'111r •t G1mt1 >10 t•m•• ocnHlultd. ... Virt•~•• O::on•uckv N'" Yor~ C1r01ona FlorlOl.,.1 Pll!IDUffll u11n tridl1n1 MtmP~" °""""' fl••• t:1t! Dlvotil'ft w ' •l IO • » " " ]I l l " . ll )t Wu! Di¥111t n ,, ,, ,. ~ JI ?I " " 1t •I Pct. ... .Ill .. , "' .I ll ••• ••• "' ·"' ., ,Jll ,,,, 101> " M1ul•n Vittt (U ! (10•11rfn I'\ ~ Wi1•en>Or1 [I \ ~ N1>fm1ndor lllt ( l1cal• !HI G fl•..,ntn (~I :;. l!I) V!llt l't •I l!•l "'nOer1on 1101 Focr"o t•! Limon <lll ...... ''"' 1l1 sc~1u koring •Ubl M•H•On 11,ttO-MIUf' •. ViUI P1n-T•m1r •. lt'cM•llfn 1. lu"'ll"•um l. MCN1m1•1 6 Ht!ltimt MoH101> V1"0 JI. V•ll• p,, .. 10. M1ri11<1 OI J CSl! Hunl•'lt !t11 8111 (II f nu W'l•I• Fore 111 f •.i G~rl1NJ ~ ... inion IU! ( (IJ C•lrell! 1!0111•• (2•1 (. Ill A •• 1 ..... l01m1 (ti G U! Oron•t• M•'ln1 \UI> ~ot•<I Ill HB \Ul>i N••ll 16!, A.1Mora U Hl•b•n (!I, H•ltlJmo Ml•l~I. ll-1t !41! CtM Enatte• 41 11 GI 0.1met (1 1 ' ' ' '· l6l Grog1bv •li 1 wn1r•o" ISi C••l>•t> I/) Conrov flOJ lowere1 B•ownl"' (II 10 Horii 11)1 "· 1--" 11" 11•1 r -. G •. ~co•jnf l-lilH l. ~toulvtOt • Htltllmt : Foun11.n Vtllt• 21·11 • Ell,.on !Uf Ull s• V1llt¥ M\llS Ill F {J) JtCk>0'' >"l1;•n•on ('\ f. (I) fl•ll Wtl~ ... OOt ( •) C (Q) Wrlo~I Wfinllf'~'' (11) G ()'::! Pllilllp1 Fr11t < 1:1 G llf W•ll1c• ~,o,,no sub,. Ed!M>n--He•ntl\(lel 1. Wll>O" l. z .. t1e1 11, wnitt J, S"OOr t. ~· 1J1111v-Cl•rli l. HAlfr.mt E<lllOn II. S .. \Jfll•> t £doM>n l•ll 1111 Lii .o.11m•1o• ScPoOtr 110! F llf Coe.-. Wiit°" 111) F tlll LHI• ForO OSI C Ul Ston 11/llllr-P l r. /Ill kT!moll l1r1>e! llf ) C.. lllf N«>ro i<O<•nf wbo; Loi .O.l1.,.l10,__Pltrct 1 .. ,11!1mt fO!"°" 'll. Lal AJtm •tOI U IOPltomO•t N•wMrl tl1t1Mtr IOI (tO) .t.n•~tl"" Scnmoa1 i.1 ~ Ill (u1>nmoh1,., WO<ld•••a 101 r nci loon.., l 1"9 UI r Pll llrld• Al!mtn f\11 <. 117) Anton l01tvler 1•1 G t71 Cl,,Dll Sc0<ino \ub~ Nf.voort "''bor -Col<~• 10. ~·.._..-r-.. - Wtdn•1•11·1 Gtmtl Ml. St n .o.nton!o o! O•t nlt Cot1t Cttrltot 11 51~11 ~"' Sin 0 !•90 11 Sin Oitoo Mut MllUOH COHFElllNCI (~llf~y ' J 10 lllVffliO<" l l 13.i Sa" f11rnt•dl"" 7 l ff;S Cll•"' 6 i'I Ptl.,...t r ~ U• S•aOltOI<~ • Ill ~OUT~w~.i•·n I ~31 Gro~•mont + 9 .u '•lurll11'1 S<!Prti !MtOOltblC~ 6•. 5outnwtSlt'" U C~lf1•~ 9•, Ci1tut 17 , • ., ......... olno to, G•OUtfllln! u Polom•r iC. lll•e11lde II w..ine1a1,·1 G1mts s...do1,11~• ,, c~.1~, C:ll•u• 11 G1oismon1 Sout~W1'•1••n 11 Pllema• Stn 8trn•r0ino U llovf r1'o• ANDEtUS l E ... GVE fl•I"-....... 1 J I •l• S0t~•'• ) l u• • ' ; • ' ' .. '" "' ' . ~ll~tdfY'> Scott &•ll>OP Am•! )I, M1t1r !)to \9 51, "'~1non~ ~I. Paul . " l!HtOfY'I Ot1T1'> ~· Paul II Mii"" O•i ~,.,,e 11 $t . .t.nt11<1n• lli!hO<> Arr.11 11 Pl~i X. ··~· ...., .. 'l ··--· ' ,., "' "' "' •It' .. , ,. "' '" ~ .,. •• "' '" i Why It Pays to Know ~ SAFECO INSURANCE BOB PALEY If vo11 ho~ • 10901 p•oble111, h wo11·r pov vow to eon on lob l"olt r. A !t9al eo9lt ht is 1101. Ht'l rhe type that think\ whe11 o lowytr p~porH • briirf. he 1(n~ our llh 11ndtrwear. He eo11ld11't 9t t Yen111 d• Miio off on • p lekpoektl rap. lnswronet, yo11 I.ff, 11 lob's bog, 011d In thi1 area h• wlll prep11rt !hi! 11ron9t'll casir l111a9hiable for 11ro119 , solid p rote<tlo11 at !lit lo•- "'' co1t po11ibl1". If yow 11011d accwwd of poring too mweh lor lao 111111, or if yo11'•• 911ilty of ri1•l11') yo11r f11t11re for a small 1oyinq todov. coll '" lolt Paley. What's vow! allbl? Ht '1 cloi.e bv at 414 E, 1;111 St., Coua Mt1a. Call 642·6500. ~--.--- su11111,•• lllt1w1h Ina""' 1i.. Mrmon•• Ill. V••Qlnl1 u t , Kt~lucl<Y uo N•w '!'0<1< lU. 0.nYer 111 f1oridl1nt IOI, (1•oli11<1 10. Ut1ll llt. Pl!!.OU•fn Ill Ttlil J'I G1mtl tit.,. 'f'o'11 I I Ullll Pltn.ou··~ WI, FIOtoC1i1n1 •• J1c~i.on· Fa:qt_ast.ic 'fire ,Offer , ylllt, l '111• t i Ntw Yo•~ Dttroo! V•n<O<J•« l110lt n1 "" 11!•11 Dl•ltflft WLTl'tt .G,G• •0 1 7 1721010 JI I] 10 11 I... \]o 11 11 II •J 1" I ~ a 11 • 60 "' its It lO 10 a 113 '20! \I JI I IQ ISi 'l'(IJ \I l1 ! lf l!O l(;J ' tolffi CHOICE • • ... I It is significant that thret kind s of raet ca rs were usio~ the track at tht samt 1i1ne. Th is smacks of the effect5 of !ht bu 5t- ness recession on auto racing. wn! O!vhl•" W L T l'!t. 0' Gl JI U610 l'Ct llo 11 11 u 11 no . . Sears ·AT .ONE LOW PRICE • ' .. 41.J ,. • • A company spokesman said that some t.'onfusion resulted hut less limt \\a~ wasted due to equipment not btlng ready to run. ... ,lonty is tigbler with tht rubber co mpanies. just like It ill with everybody." be !laid. ''Y.e just consider ourselves lucky to ha\•e a facllily like this (Ontario Speedsyl, where ynu can t.esl all tbest differenl kinds 01· cars at lbe samt time.'' Renegade of Aulo f11d11•tr11 r\obody goes Lo Bonneville these days without picking up lhe lelephone and calling a brilliant. highl y opinionated renegade of the automobile industry -Alex 1'remulis -to find out what he thinks or the project. Trc1nuhs 1s a pnvatr automo11ve consultant living in \'C'n· lura \1ho designed Preston Tucker's revoluntionary Tucker ·rorpedo in the early po.st"·ar years. His safety eng1nf'ering ideas are finally bcmg taken off tht i;he11 and dusted off 1n response. to public demand for saler aulo- n1obiles. A quarter century ago Tremuhs designed th.-first modern rear-engine car. the first fail-safe brakes. three headlights tthe middle one turned in the direction the front v.·heels tumedJ and interi(Jr crash padding. llis 1946 cnr had disc brakes. recessed door handles. a col- lapsible steering 11'hecl, .salety bells and 180-deg. vision out of 1hc rear ''iew mirror. 1\fter the unhappy demise of the Tucker Car Compan~·, Treinulis turned to the fascinating salt beds of Utah to experi· 1nent 11lth speed . He had earlier been attracted by the love nf ~pttd to DuesenberJ.t. Auburn and Cord, rompanies for "'hon1 he also 11orked as a designer. Plrt1burtn Ml"""'°'' Pl'lll1e•lon•• l o• .t.Meln (.,ilfof"l1 If 11 IJ !I !ll 1' JI ll ~l IJI 1'111•!0'>!ll<I II ~ ll IJ 119 u ll l l~ ll • S~nilt1•• llllWl!t N .... 'f'!ll'k l. !I. LO\tlt I Bot!on S, 101oro10 l M!nne>0•1 S. P!1h1Nren I D•!•oi! ~. to• l n11lt1 O fl uf!olo l. Pnll10tlohl1 1 C~lt1ff l. Vln<OY"'' I Ont~ Jll "1tl Kf\tclUlt<I T .. 11•1 Gu"'' No wmo• iclledult<I. Collegiate Basketball Wl'T USC t l. Ort11on 11 UCL A 41, O•Qon SI U C111•or.,11 t7. w .. "1n,1on to ... '" '" '" ~· ~· ~•onloro n. Wu~'""°" Slllt JO LOYO" , .. N•••a• (llltnol ,... l)P•cooral•>O ll. >l••l<I• llt l Vee•» " C1l St IL8) 10•. )t~ Jo•t 51. S•n DltQo St. 104,t F"l"O l t, U \'A!l•v St. 1•. UC '""•'l ldt tl Occla•ntol I!, llodl•pW IQ "''"'' P1tltlt n , fl lolt /0 C61 S!llO !F~tl••!(l!ll 100. tn1P.T11n " Ptt•ti< al. USF 11 El ST "'•nnatT•n I•. Hol•"1 11o11 ·•\\'hat did I tell vou aboui the Blue Flame'.''' Tremuhs ask· cd exc11edly. "hen "C spoke for the first time in months. c;ar~' t;abehch in tht' illuc Flan1e rocket car set a new land speed record uf 6~2 in p h. last October at Bonneville. I'd forgotten "'·hat Trernuhs had told rne about the car. PfOV«Hnt• II. St JoH•n ' (Pl l ,. Pfnn St. n. NI•• n l•mPlt ff, N'!'U ·~ '-'•n•<~u••11• n. CO<"nf(tlc"t U Columbl1 I I, 011tmout~ ll '"Those rear "'heels." he continued. "They t-o.st Gary at least 100 miles an hour. He'll never gel over 700 in that car the way it is. The people at Reaction Dynamics {the l\1ihvaukee com- pany v.·hich built the earl agree with me now .'' Tremulis" idea of the ullimate speed \'ehicle is somethin~ bullet shaped on lv.·o "heels. "'ilh the addition of a gyroscope for stability. pov.ered by anything from a liny motorcycle cng· tne to a jet or a rocket l rmv 11. Goo•o• W1•~ln11on 61 llu!Ot" Y. Gttt•oetown 10.C i SJ Hl'"l•O llO. Cor~ll 60 Svr1cun 101, w .. 1 Vlr•1n\1 90 1-1011v Crou 11. F1!rll•lct 70 P•nn '1, '!'1!• 11 St. Bonl•fnlur• 11. ~·•on 1-1111 '' C1nl1tu1 7S. 11n0<1r ltl1...r 8' •U1g1r1 '°· lon1 IS l1S1ll• ll. VU11""'' 6• Hol• c ..... I I, Vit1•n•I '° ~! Pftrr•1 (N '!'I Ill. 51 Fr1n<l1 lN., ) 10 His molln is "T\\'O "heels are bcller than four '" Trcmu· hs envisions a nation on l\vo \\·heels. \\'ith everybody riding in gyro-stabilized cars, trucks. evf'n trains. Princeton )•. fl rown ~ 110.,on C~l•ot 110. fl0\100" U 11 MIOWllT Nortro 01me 101. O• P1ul 1' O~ln S! '1 llllnO•I )) M<1ml (0~•0\ ''· O~lo U J1 ~'i(nloan !I. PurOu• '' SI l<"•h 60. O•~lo.r 6) Trout Li11iit Cha1ig«~ Temporarily Tricky w.t~•!I S• ·~· lovol1 rc.~•CIVO \ 16 " lni01n1 I.I>. 1ow1 u low• St 19. K1n11• $1. 6' (ln(\nn1tl 101. 010 Oomln•on •1 M.nne•o•• •1. Mlcnlo1n SI 11 Non~wf!'"'" 101, w 11con>ln " fl,,..11"9 Gr•rn 11', M~•1n1ll" ....... SI n. Toledo ,, "'•b•••k• II. M• .. ou•I n l~otouenr It. Of!•ol! 1• Somctunes ~1mphfica t1on c:an get pr e11y con1plicatcd. And a case 1n point is the f'.imphllcat1on of So u t he r n (~ahforn1a troul limits 'ol'hich. along with Cahforn1a·s ot her 19il sport fishing regulations. become effecti\'e r-.1arch I. For the remainder or fcbruar~· thr 1970 regulations ren1a1n in efletl. and the ch<ini::co\rr this }'ear is go111i; tO be S\ltky vice versa v.·ill be on the samr r10,;aa ,., Ko!~~:.".1 dates throughout Sou l her n Oukr 10. ~·•r¥•Ara 1• O•vl<l•o~ IO Rltl'l"'o~~ In California. Thr limi1 \\'111 Ix-•u~u•n •1 •1aiwm1 11 10 trout from ~lay 1 throuj!h s ,r·~••1• '''h •l. Nt"~ < ~·c1°n• No\' \fl and five trout the '""~'"~' u. Gto•q•• •I r \'I~•• For •,1 ·~. "'"''nt1 11 reSI 0 the year. W••lfrn l(tnl\,lt-V 61, TennrUf r I!(~ But tn this ehangc·ovrr n rvrm1" II. \Jlt'I ,. ~ear. here is how il \\'Orks l North C••o!ln1 u . c"'''"on " V\r1ln" Ttt~ 101. l ult nt IJi out. V•nOorDlll 11. LSU IS Orange and San Diego Goun· Loyal• (New O•I••"" t7, MouJIO'l h .. lies -i\ow throug Feb. 26. Miu1t11011 st. 11. Mlt1•n•101 •' rive trout. Feb. 27 and 28 •-•1<•" u. n. Mltml 1r".1 " J tck'°"w!!I• "· T•l"I"' fl t• 1 11 lJUSI two days). 10 trout. IOUTKWllT ,, h I h h • '\ '" f' SMU 117 .t.rktn,11 " 1 Clf!.' I roug ,..pr1 ""· 1ve i.: ... 11, u. o"•"-' s1 )O lrout ~fay I through Nov. c.i,,._ '' '' A.iron• " l to•i Tt<~ n TCU I I 15. IO trout. r--:ov. 16 through N•• M••lco 11 ,. .... ,.~ the rest of !he year. fi\'e trout . •• • .,,.,.,. s• 1, .,,.,...,,,... ., Rest of Southern California fl••"'' " ,,,,, 1· -i\ow through April 30. fi\'f" ""V 111. w .... •:: ... ', ····~I I rout. ~la v I through NO \' ••• F.,,, "· ).,.,.,.,., <.~ ... oo ~ummcr limit of 10 troul on 1fi. 10 tro1it. Nov. 16 through •lo. ..... , u. O..••"-'• C•"" I mosl Sout.hland y,·atcrs the rest of lhe )'Car. five troul. u1an ••· Tt••~ •E• ,, ..... E d Ctlo.r•O(t "· 0 _1,...,..1 t• There 1s no eloo;cd sea.son t1n trout fi!hing 1n the righ1 t·ount1e~ of ~outhern C.:a11fornia. but there 1i: ::i v.·1nter hm11 (Jf five and 11 xcept1ons are a year-roun 1-~ ______ _ limit or fivr trout 0 n Cachuma. Casitas. Legg, Pud· I dingstone. trvinr. Cuyamaca. Jennings and l\lurray Lakes. and a year-around limit ()f 10 trout ()rl thr C<llorado River. The t'f)mpl1r:itlnn s t" m s 1 from the fac1 1hat. for years. in Orange 01 nd San Diego <.:ount1es the ~ummer \Jmll of VW BRAKE SPECIAL ltellfte 4 WhMlt Meehl"• 4 Drum• Overh1ul 4 WhMI Cylinlier1 )t.,MI MUt UM .... 11 .... o! GWtffftltO (llOl r•O.lllATIOI $39.95 10 trout has gone into effect vw SHOCKS ... ... $7.•5 Jnstall•d earlier 1n the sprtng. and the l J00,000 mi le iu11ra11tf'f'd 1001 11•1'.l·ratcd•. v.1nler limit of five ha s gOMC \VE 00 Al.l. FQHE IGN CAns ~nlo pflect earlier In the fall , •. • DISC llltAKI 5 '1CIALIST . ~ lhAn 1n the other six coun11es.1 COSTA MESA STO•E ONLY Under I~ 1971 regulatlons :1111 Harlt•r llvd. - the ba g limit change-over 549-4022 •r J4t·22St from 11 inter to summer 11nd i....;,,;~~~~"'!'"'!'"'!'..;,,;"'!'..;,,;~..;,,;..;,,;~..;,,;~~"'!'"'!'"'!'"'!'"'!'~ 'l'i rc an~) Atrlo Cc.nlA"r ~IZI·: .... 1~1.. I _ __ _ •"·•~• I· .E:r. 'i 't It !i l_._ .. :~~t t..\(:h \\' .\1.1.-- -11,;;u"< l'I I I f•.lli --1. 7,,- _:.:;, 11 -1·-:.! l.lt7 --..:.11 - _H.:.:l, I I _ _ -~I .Hi---~.:t.:! - _ ·r1 1~t:1.1·:~s ,,·11 rri:u· ''~'· _,,.-,n,1 :-=-1=1·1.11:-~ :_1~ _:-.1 ;,1 1_._:.::tR; __ ::.0 1- _:.:-.xlt :.!l.1:7 :: 11- ::.:::., 11 --,-·•7 H----.,'., .. -------. ' -· -•. ·-'' L I • _ ....... , -; .1-1. __ ...__::.-.11 :.:-.-.,,_-, I :.!f•.H7 ::.lh -----_::.l.i/H.:.!.i, I; _! __ :'.'I.~:' ::.'i:' --4-11. 1 i/tt ·,-;,I "i ) :l.!.H:' .:.1H - M10x t:~ 1'ubcl,.~• Ill ack"~ll· Plus 1.:6 F.F..T. And OldTi<c Al.IS fATE l'i\S~t-::\Gt-:R 'J'ire c;uara111cr- G11ar<1ntH'(I Acain11: AH ltrC' f~1lu1C'' 1wm nnrm~I rn..d h.u-rd~ or Jtft'\.1• in m~IC'f•~I or'°'°'~ m.•n•h>f'. I nr llow Lou1: ~nr 1hc h!<' ot rh<' 011~·.,;I t«••l '\1 lo•t :;..,., V.ill IJ.,; ln , ,,h.ni;e I•·• rlu · 1"'"· ri:-- r • •• ,. 1 •. • hAr .11.i n~ Of1 ly tor r ht rrn1~" 1 ion • .t , "'" n1 n d1 n)o: rr"c rlu' I (•dt·r11! I '' .. r ·1,, 111.• rcr"•" "'Oh .r.-.J "'"'I. R<"r~•r .... 1 I'"'" HJ!t' al 1•1• h;r~<". 1.,..,,.,11.,.•l A.:ai,...r: 'j '""I"''·" n tt. I or llnw Loni: Ilic 11uu1I"-' ,,1 11~>fllh\ 'r"N i1 •t•,l '\1 hal ~''"' \\I ill f).,; In f'\<h ·n~,. I ...-1h•· 11n·. rc- 1·1• r 11. • hJrJ:,.11::: t llf' £11f•tn• -..·lhne, I''''~ I 1\ IT(Jf'l'.il 11.1,,c 'J.u:; l~s uie toilo9.1n.i:: ~li1>1'.1ro,c: ,.l<>nili~ f:u.~rlnlf'('J All""' "'ll r. I !I !() i !I'',, :'.} 111 :C•J • II " •O r r;H"C. l:ffrrli\e :/J t thru :!/lh/il . " Special Seat's Di1coun11 Ontario lllt9ulor l"rl•• ,,, .,, .,, " S•oro Ol1<••11I .,,;c., '18 '13 '10 '6 '· SIAlllS rAMllT DISCOUNT l"lAN '"' l•r T,.\ot •• 1 • .,1.,. P'rltt ••• Gott All41,;.,.,1 Th \•" •' ,.-.1., .,lw•) 1..-ONlr '' ._ _., Cllikl lt , ... , ~· u~•· ..f :ck .4 bout Sear& Con ceniPnl r.rP1I it 1~1 t111 .< Sear.s I UIN• ''"f (QYIHA NDl~TWOOD Ol l flA"( & totO Oll~ ••IAOOtA •1(0 '0 "'0 Hl JINTA lNA ' t •o+Oc;A •All( U MCINU lo+OUWOOO "", .,1, •, COflA'10 N (iUNOlU IONO UACN w.., N'thti Mo&. thl• S.t, t :JO AA. •• t:.) Q t .M., S...-.7 12 NH11 M ) I" .Jli. SU•t • If 1•11'11;' 1•N11 flA 0 "1C4 ~OUlM tO•tt •lAl4 IKOU, .. NO OA~' :.!.:r; :.!.4JI 1o•••"lt1 U•lAf'ft V•lllT Vll,..0 "'1 . . ~ . ., . . . . Florida Regatta New Speed Mark Marred by Wreck ST. PETERSBURG. Fla. 1 UPI) -The 33rd annual Southland Sweepstakes Regal- 2 Clubs Hold Valentine's Day Regatta Sailing under fa ir v.·inds, Lido Isle Yacht Club and Bahia Corinthian vacht clubs held their annuai Vale ntine Regatta over the weekend. <is par{ of the Angleman serit·s. Results of inside rlas~c~. sponsored by LIYC: llda A-hi. BJH McCord. 8YC; '""· G••td Sml!ft, llYC; 3rd, O. StroueMon. svc. l ldo 8-h l. Tony P1r.,, BYC ; 1r>d Oon ll•rfz. SSSC; l rd. Ood J ICorJI, BYC. ICJTES.-ltl, 01roll Sml!h, B'l'C. S•Dol A-hi, Mitk C•udlo, NHYC ; 1na, Bill G1ultcM, l IYC, l rd, Mill AJllOfl1, LIYC. S11lor 11-8. 8ll11borough, 8CYC, Sl bol C-hr, M1rk Alllon1. LICYC ; ,r>d, Grtv l-louu, SSSC; l•d. Jlcl<!• Fr1nco, LIYC Ouhldt cl1ue. 110led Suna1y uno•r !ICYC : CL.ASS A-1. l1ls1tz°F1lrt, Roel SchlPtl l!ICl'C); 1. Odin. Don Pin<~ CSSC): J, Mlllhl1>I, Jlck llostw!ck. !BCYC!. CLASS B-1. s11r ShlM. 11111 ~on IClt!nSm•d. fNHYC!: 1. lmoulo.e, Ed WtN• ltlYC); 3, Aloll• ti, Gllllll A.Hd CSSSCJ. . CLASS C-1. FrOlk, J1y 5NtJg111 !YYC)1 ~. Wind (/Illa, Ltt Armll~ fY't'C); 3. CommollM, Alcurnbr1c & 8ul!er, fNHYC J. P CAT-I. No W1y, Tom Omohundro illCYC)/ 1. Df•a Elld Kid, P•ul Allen <BCY(j1 J. Bite~ F in~. Elltort OIJon (CYCI, l\'lan Survives Cr f Plun"e " LOS ANGELES !UPI I A 25-year-old Los Angeles man who fell 1,000 feet down a cliff in lhe Angeles National Jo~orest was listed in critical condition at County-USC Medical Center today. la ended Sunday with a world speed record and a dramatic: accident. The speed record w a s established by Willard \Vilson Jr. of \V i!minglon, Del., who raeed his 14.>cubic i n c h hydroplane. Lil Le c I r o n , around Lake ti1aggiore's l.6- m1le course at an average speed of 74.938 miles an hour. This 11·as almost 2 m.p.h. bet- ter than the record he .set two years ago. Glenn Bre11·er. a Navy sub- marine officer from San Diego, 111as the \'icti111 or a freak accident that sent hiln lo the hospital 1o,rith multiple injuries. He 1vps reported in satisfactory condition . Brewer. piloting a ISO-cubic inch boat. ran over a marker buoy between the first and second turns in the Sweet Six· teen. a five-day feature race for boats 16 feet and under. Flying debris k n o c k e d Brewer unconscious and he slumped over 1o,rith his foot jammed on the accelerator. Jlis boat. traveling at more lhan 100 m.p.h., roared into a patch of saw-grass a quarter mile off the race course and cut a lQO.foot path through the grass before it came to a hall. slamming Brewer against the windscreen. He suffered a broken jav.·, severe lacerations of the lips and multiple bruises. Brewer \\'as executive officer of the nuclear sub Sea Dragon v.·hcn it became the first vessel to reach the North Pole by traveling under the Arctic ice pack. The Sweet Sixteen race was called off when the ac- cident occurred. NEW ONE BY RANGER -The first Ranger-29 launched last 1nonth in Newport harbor glides through the \vater \vith spin naker full and drawing. Tht: new yachl \Vas designed by Gary l.full and is produced by Ranger Yachts. Ranger Yachts Plan New Sailbocit Class A new class or sail~at started plying the waters of Newport Harbor in January v.·ith the launching of the first Ranger-29 by Ranger Yachts. 3090 Pullman SI., Costa 1'.1esa. Designed by Gary 1'.1ull, the Ranger 29 is being produced as a racing-cruising yacht that can compete under either the 1nternational Ocean Rule or the Cruising Club of America measurement rule. The boat measures 28 feet 7 inches length overall, 23 feet on the ~'ater!inc. 9 feet 31h inches beam, 4 feet 5 inches draft and displaces 6,700 pounds with lts ballast of 3,130 pounds. Sail area is 399 square feel. The hull is one piece hand- Jamlnated fiberglass with teak interior. It is powered by a four-cylinder gasoline engine and has a 12-volt electrical system. It holds 15 gallons of fuel and 21 gallons of water. The five bunks below decks have lhr ee-inch foam cushions. The cabin sole is carpeted. The galley in cludes a stainless st.eel sink, 50-pound icebox. formica lop dishrack, drawers and cupboard. The enclosed marine head has a stainless steel sink, water pump. There is a hang ing locker and am ple slorage under all bunks. FEBRUARY SAlEI ~l'I N'llDN CORD 4· f Genera\.Jet • Rubt>er'Tread -• ouragen d Oe519n ED • ou•' lr•• E NEED NO 1R~D OP Size 6.5().-13 Fifs most compact cars. No Trade Needed 4roi14 4ro~84 4ro~94 2 rur 838 90 Sizes 7.75-14 & 7.75-15 Fits mo:,t Intermediate cars. No Trade Needed 2 ror s43eo Sizes 8.25-t 4 & 8.25-15 Fils most s!andard cars. No Trade Needed 2 ror*48 80 Size 8.55-14 Fits many larger cars. No Trade Needed Tubeless whitewall prices plus $1.78 to $2.SJ Fed. Eic. Tax per li11 depending on sfie, SIZZLER VALUE JATO SUPER·1DD CAMPER 3-PIECE GOLF BALLS TRUCK WIND 'N • Ouralon cover for RAIN SUIT long, cut·liee 1o!e AHO • HOOD • JACl((f 1 Energited "PB" • SLACKS c;e n'er gives great I s1~?T distance PASSENGER CAR • u11r.1-h!gh-lwX>n 3 iorS'J33 winding TIRE CHAINS Loweat Prlc• Ewr l doz. for $5.25 • Wind llld rlinpoof Llmll 1 Doi. • Hit:f'l·wisibl'Uty htftY 6uty Pl•lit -~ Charge it at General Tire ti-11. ~ -.i: Priced IS ttlown -4 Ge11ettl Tire Stores. Don Swtdhtl'lcl COAST GENERAL GENERAL TIRE TIRE 585 W. 19th., Costa MeMI 540·5710 646·50ll .. , ,.,. I .. .......,-· CompeUtf'lllr prfced al lndeperidl"t dla/9'9 dllpllll'lng the General sign • AVERY GENERAL TIRI SERVICE 16941 ltGch lo1devord, Huntl119ton ltGch 847·5850 • YOUR SAFETY IS OUR BUSINESS----------- Midwinter Regatta ConringUp By ALMON LOCKABEY ••tlH l'tMf The waters of the Paclnc Ocean will be alive with sailboats Friday and Saturday and Sunday as the Southern Californ ia Yachting Associa- tion stages it& 42nd annual extravaganza known as I.he Midwinters. Pt1ore than 1,000 boats which normally participate in the event make il the largest single regatta jn the ..rorld. Nine yacht clubs will bt required to host the giant regatta , including the Hun- tington Ha rbour Yacht Clu b of Orange County. Los Angeles Yacht Club is lhe <>nly one of the clubs which will conduct races on Friday. The other clubs s~·ing into action Saturday and Sunday, LA YC wlll host the large cl ass sailboats and the ocean racing handicap c I a s s e s . Sched uled for starts at LAYC are Ocean Racing A, B, C, and O (CCA): Ocean Racing TOR, and a special class of CCA ratings with certificates of Dec. 1: Cclumbia-50, PCC, Cal-40, Cal-36. W6. K,1, K-40. K-38, Ca\-34, Columbia-36, Rhod es-33 and Shields . Other yacht clubs and th e classes they will supervise: ALA?o.UTOS BAY YACHT CLUB -Soling, Dragon, Star, Cal-20, Cal-20X, L i d o. 1 4 A , LidD-1 4B, National One: - Design, Tempest, Finn and Flylng Jr. CA BR!LLO BEACH YACHT CLUB -(I) P-28, PC. tl!ercury, Thistle, FI yin g Dutchman, Pacific Multihull, 110, Gerr y-18, F I r e b a JI . Tornado, 5'-'5, and Small Boat Arbitrary, CA L IF 0 RN I A YACHT CLUB (Marina de! Rey) - PHRF A, B and C; Schooners ~'•Ketches, P-Cat A & B. HUNTINGTON HARBOUR YACHT CLUB -KJte, Senior Sabot, Sabot A & B, Windward Sabot and Guppy. KING HARBOR YACHT CLUB (Redondo) -Ericson- 26, Challenger. lnternational- 14, Coronado-IS, Snipe A & B. Cal-20, Cal-20X , Enterprise OK Dinghy. ' LITTLE SHIPS FLEET - S-Meten, Venture-21, Santana- 2!, Columbia-22, Rhodes-19 Ludera·16, Gladiato r, D 1 Y Saller. LONG BEACH YACHT CLUB -Cal-2-30, Cal-29, Cal- Monday, February 15, lq11 DAILY PILOT 2$ 4 ply nylon cord tire. Unders11. Foremost• Reliant 4 ply nylon cord tire. 95 plus 1.76 fed. tax and old 111e 650·13,blackwall tubeless. Whllew1U1 only $3 more 3 daya only! Wheel alignment. Mon., Tuea., Wed. Here's what we do: adiust torsion height, camber. caster and toe in. e18ckwall lubtlt11 Size Fed. t1x: Price 775-14 ............ 2.14 .......... 13.15 825-14. ........... 2.32 ........... 15.15 855-14. ........... 2.50 ............ 17.15 775· 15 ............ 2.16 .......... 13.15 815·15 ............ 2.37 .......... 15.95 845· 15 ............ 2.48 .......... 17.15 Plus Ftd t1x 1nd otd ti,. Service gss * * MOit AlM1icftl UN • 2.8, Santana-27, Ca J • 2 5 Coronad<r25, Endeavor'. Ye,, you c•n shop 12 to S Sund1ys, too •f 1ny of these Penney Auto Cenfersr Thunderbird, Excalibur-26. · SEAL BEAC}I y Ac HT FASHION ISLAND, Newport Center, HUNTINGTON CENTER, Hun tin9ton leech CLUB -MORF, Newport-30, Use P1nn1y1 t ime p1ymenf pl•nl Columbia·26, Mark II, Cal 2-24, Sabre, Ericson-32. Diagnostic Center · for car check-ups . .... fl Penneys Scienti fic Testing Center 'L-dl can help to point out weak spots o0 0~ in certain vital areas of your car. ~ In less than one hour we out your car through a "Series of scie ntific: z-tests (212 of them). Steering, engine, brakes, transmission, ~ electrical and cooling systems. You watch the resulls come out on an electronic typewriter. The written report shows the results of the tests. It indicates what tested parts of your car are weak and what parts are strong . A trained diagnostician will go over !he report with you. If you wish, he'll give you an estimate of any necessary repairs costing big money. There's no obligation to have any of the work done. You deci de what to fix and where to fix it. The COS\? Only 9 88 Not bad for a check·uP theae days. Penneys Scientific Testing Center ll.n'l.f.'1• -. Charge 1t at any of these Penney Auto Centers: BUENA PARK 1o ranve1horptst Va11ey V1ewl CARLSBAD FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH ORANGE "THE CITY" Olagnoatlc l1n1s op1n Monday through Stlurdav . •• 1 ;al pAll'l' PILC.T ' • ( .. ' I . ' , , I· .. I' t " 1-- 1~ . -. ' . : . . . ' I - ' • " I . • ' : I ~ ii ! . ' !·· • I ~ I - ! ! . ,, I; I DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS •' '" MUTI AND JEFF SHE GAVE ME UP RJR l'HA'T, ™A'T-· HE'S OLD ENOUGH 'TO SE HER 'FAil-IER! JUDGE PARKER PLAIN JANE "',,.., ......... -- • I, ;, if MY! Vv\lAT A 1lWIN' !1AY! ... VfRIL~ I i'INKl'l7 61\lf Ul' ME LIFE: O'CRIMIO 'TWAS IT NOT FER VA TREMENll'!OUS RE5FOOSlillLl1Y I 60T,AN' ALSO ME INNAri; HUMANITARIAN INSnN~ .. ... ,., ·'' , .......... _-... ~ .. ~·-"-.. Chester Gould .. By Tom K. Ryon By Al Smith S Y GEORGE, SRING ON 1'>1E- Cl11CKS! By Harol.d Le Doux By Frank Baginski DO YOU REAL\2£iµAT Ii: 'WEW'EQE ON !HE t'IOON,VE'D 'WE161-l oNLV FaRTY PCll.INDS. APlECE!J ~;;;; i I DAILY CROSSWORD : •• by ' A. POWER I PERKINS . • I ·' . ' I -' .. I . : _ .. i ·~ : . ~i ' ' ' . . I . " ,.. I ,. ' " ' I . 1-, ' i ·, ' •• ACROSS 1 -Crue t ~, "'·Iii . ~T ake 111 Oilth • lntligue 14 Approx · imate ly: Abbr. lS 111 ajor l b Entoura9t 17 Kind ol hairdo 19 La nd lflil~S sunoundtd by Wilttr 20 Ermine 21 Compact 22 Sp1n!sh llrticlt 21 Gl impse 2.4 Essent1i11 oi! 2• Body of land 29 Bomb 1111! li1\ls to t t:p!odt )1 H i9hball ingredient )2 Mr. Jannings ll ScufHt : Stang )f., Irish 38 Tempor vy lash ion in dltSS l• Dr1w ing i111pltrntnls •l Fish 41 Fled 44 Mr. H1 rr 1soo 4• Over· l)OWtTll'lg le;u 47 Russian n1me 4~ Na l1¥t of 5ufli• 50 Sight 51 Simple 52. Si1ul 's successoi 54 State or btlng: Su fin 5& ••.. GIO'y bO Opoos1lr of ''Jnr." &l Bthavt badly 2 wards &2 "As ---··": Gt nt1all). 2 WllfdS ••''Pasl hnptrfrcl'' ~uthor 2 words f.,& S11ptrn~tural creatur e ii7 John . .•.. · us !11duS !tiil1S\ &8 The fact Slang f.,' Augmt1ttd 70 WAde ii m1S\A~t 71 -d/eCl>V~ suf!t• 00N'1 I Vai••sh l A.ss1~1s 3 Barbrr s i tc rssory f N .111CIW •oe1dtn !.lrJo S Unnatu<illly ~~le ' ' l ••• • ' • ' " ·•. " •\ " " "' " " ,, fl@~ " "' ,,. " r ,. " .. . .. .. .. v -.. • ~ " " " ·-~ -... -.. . '" Sat u1day's Pulzlt Solved: S U 11 $ l C IN( ANN( TA RE f ~CUSP 15 11 ( s l E 0 & Po11it111g upward 7 Ak"1 on Hit tathft1S side B Goes back o~er 011e 's sltps 9 Apply a ceit!ng la R~gion of Fran<:t 11 T It~ 2 word~ I~ Consu,..t d 13 All:.• 18 h1te111a\ion~I d1StltS'lo • 1g11al 2 *Ords 2t Rtlaring to glandular tissue ZS Conntc ted by k1nsh1p 27 lnstrurntnl 28 Ancestor JO Prepos ition )) Fab1lc fl)I" curtains • ,.¥' " ~}' 16 i " " " r;;i " J1 ' 211s111 34 Long fllf JS Was a · swin9er; 2 words 37 Th1 ee-s11ot 40 Declare void" 2 WOfdS 42 Soak 45 One who makes th1n9s smooth 48 Feminine namt 53 Wotkft who .:ipplirs stain to goods 55 A day 's !!larch S& Lazy ···-- 57 (lhausted 5q Act &l Madr ii hole-111--an t ii Z Tur kish tltle &3 -·-Cro~s f.,5 E t i SI " " " Ji Ii " " " ,. ,. " ,, .. " ,, "' • " ,. " " " " " .. ,. _ .. -t 3 !' . ' MISS PEACH HEU..0,tAA, MY i;.ooo Fft..ISNO.' STEVE ROPER Huo MS fllOHl5ED 7U CONSIOE~ AIKH1!'5 OfHWJ f()R A 8166£1? ~ vr FR(}llf THF RUSTl !Wt; WHEIV HE 15 JOLTED 8'1 A PAllTING Rf MARK/ 1-,r PEANUTS ~--.... couu:i wu L.e/\JD ME ONE OF VOUI< MANY PEI-IC/LS ? WHY OON'T YOU BU Y YO U!< OWN, MA"CtA !f U'L ABN& SALLY BANANAS GORDO He'/f MAUTIFVJ.f 'SfltUT, Rf"4JZ!X',J .rl« NO( RJcJ.•~f I 1M""""''"'• /.JJPITAf MOON MUWNS -~---~,® so THAT'S YotJI< SEO?eT! ANIMAL CRACKERS Ler'S ~e:-1: &Jet> Bl'eAD, MILK, t:~~ (<;OO<*!) jf;W()IJD 8El:F(~)-~" ,,-----~ 0 By John Miles By Mel FOi< YOUI< INF"'™A'T!ON t PUl<l'CffLY P'IC:l<80 YOU NI A ~IENP TO SPAltli M\'$0'.lF 1'HAT e~PEN50'. f By Saunden and _O_!•rgard SEE -T SOMETHIN6 HAmllS · TO Hlld/-)(M.J MEAA ~-8£FORE HE FIHPS fT/ By Chorles M. Schulz rr----....---. 1\IE Flm9l1ll CF ~ 15 A1.Jil.W5 •aaAf aw ·! ., \(<@' ~b. . 1y Al C:.pp By Charin larsottl A~ -MR. .. By Gus Arriola rrt• •'WAN, "..---r~~ • • By Ferd Johnsan Nor Me' .. r WA'S LUCllY 'TO G~T'TH~OUGH G,T_!< Gl<AD!: 'TH!: f/ISTllMI!! HACI<! H~! 1 couGM! COFl'j· ~ACHMH.1 couGM! tUa· .By Roger Bollen -~. t/eAll· AAll> J.~Of' 06.An:m ;s . THI SllANGI WOILO -MR. UM 0 • • DENNIS THE MENACE • .. ' • • " I r • I l • DAILY 'ILOT 27 1 Everyone Has Something That Someone Else Wants DAILY P-ILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Wont Ad The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results l~I ..... _-_ .. _w.__,i~ I -1 .. w. _ ...... I~ .__I -_ .... _ .. --JI~ G eneral General Gener el Gener el Costa Mes• i:==::=::=l========[==EA:;;;sy==J"~*;:--~*;:--~*;:--~*;--~*;--~* BARGAIN HUNTERS!! oflnJa !J.j/e ,~;!\~};:,~.m J AYLOR (0. 4 BR·FAM RM./ A DUMP. "'' 1·0""" model I DESPERATE OWNER home is In t<'rr1ble conchUon I Huntington Be•dl -Farr,,_. .;.;,- 2629 Harbor, C.l'it. 546-8640 Thinking of SELLING? Let ua help, Yi'f': "'ill buy your house today for its full value. TbC only ad- but c11·ner y.•ill give rarpel PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES !.oca1'd c1° .. 10 LINDA ISLE -$250,DOO $19,500 shopping and A truly luxurious 5 bdrm home w /fan1. r1n., flllow11nce ar\tl allow IBA 4 BR, 2 BA, crptJ ~ d.,. or VA financing. Heavy lhruout. l\1odel condition. sh11ke roof, hardv.·ood noon. submit on terms. au bllnl5, dhle detached KRAFT REAL TY 8 Linda l1le Drive Spacious 3900 sq. ft. 4 BR., 41h: bath home. Din. rm., !am. rm., study & 38 ft . water- front !iv. rm. 2 Frplcs. Carpeted & l and~ scaped .•............................ , '167,840 For complete information an •II homes & lots, pleese cell: prict'<I below marke:t formal DR & 41;2 bath s. Elegant wool cpting l Bedrooms, 2 baths Enclosed yard & beaut iful drape s. Aic..cond. Pier & slip. Excellent Terms Only $26,950 1 '0ur 26th Year " WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 Sen Joaquin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 And sohd as a l'Q{'k. Only 6 yrs. )'0Un£. MOdern con. 1·e1uences. ram1ly sizf'd country kitchen, Latest elel'. built-ins. 4 good sizOO bed- garagr. family room, 3 111n Beach Blvd., Hntrn Beh bedroon1s l.i -2 balhs. Ex· 842-1418 Eve1: 96U424 t't'llrnt res1den1ial arPa. DIVORCE $19.9j() or !'>lake otft>r. Call ~5-&42-1, South C 0 a I t Realrors. rooms. 2 lavish ba1hs. \\'ood 1 -.R=E~D~U~C~E~D~$~2~000~- :;:;;11~~~i' ~;~in~~~~~ 3 hr on approx 1; aert ocean For~ sale, ntar-new S BR. 2 BA., Ayre• built home, bilns, df'PI, crpt1, ftplc, blck wall, heated POOL. land. sc1ped, 1 mi. to ocean. A-. 1ume xlnt loan. $32,99(1, 968-2929 Bkr. ditional char&e is l 'i~ of REALTORS the selling price. No II )~~ .... --"""""'"-""!'~ ... -'!"'-----"' SINCE 19-I:; . Bl~L GRUNDY, REALT OR 833 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.8 , 642-4620 G!r•I * * IG•!•I * ·*1 Room for boat. CUl-de-51lc view 101. C\.r.l-de-iic. near R('llools. $25,000. Qy,11er. area. Flexible lerm!, \\'here &J2_1122 e\•es: or S484192 in tht' v.·orld ran )'OU flnrt a NEW 3 BR 2 BA, ..., dlo dayl! gimmicks and no addi-General I <;;entral 6 73-4400 lional expense. We need 11-------:--o---------------1 ~========:::! RURAL CHARM $27,000- FHA/VA QUIET CUL-DE·SAC I Rtdecoraled in and out. F'our 1 Bch'n1s., Dining roon1, fan1ily roon1. two ba1h h0n1e 11·i1h sp11 rkling gas kitchen and loads of cabinets. Double garage, large 22'x26' CO\'er. ed, enclosed and well light- starrrr bargain like this! =""-,.,,.-~----.-c-1 rm or 3d BR. crpts, dtp11 8f'ttrr hurry! Call i7l·U i\TESA Vel'de lll'ta, 2 sty, ram rm w/fpl. Ldscpd. 96~. 4 BR & den, 21, ba, bltng, New rates avail. 842-1516 h•uffll Jl doesn't cost. PRIDE .. OF MAJESTIC SPANISH • anythlog to call '"d foxl NEWPORT HEIGHT·s out • you mii;ht even Large Custom Bujlt Fot1r HlRlST F. OLSON $39,:.00. By 01\·nr, aft 4 ~I ~--~~----~--1 546-1158 New 11mall 3 br, den, 2-car ,c....-...c_c_~------1 garage, bltns. Fenctd A sa.<!! Bdrm, Two both .horn. "' "SACRIFIC£"-POOL in the rustic charm or·NEW-• • Macnab-Irvine Realty Company ATTENTION SPORTSMEN I Thru a rt1stic ~pllt rail ga.te this 11·agon ~·heel t'harmer has 3 big bdrmii., coun!ry kitchen, sep11rale knotty pinp rumpus roon1 big t-nough for pool ta\Jle, lol6 ot fl'tlit and shade 1rees on large grounds -priced lo sell. ... llCAI. TORS Dover Shores landscaped. $225. 138-6291 1---------IHuntlngton Herbour *ELEGANT VIEW* GET 3 IEDROOM DIRTY IARGAIN POOL • $24, l 50 · 5ff this to believe it - a 3 bedrm hon>e located in Costa l\lesa ·a easl!iCIP with 17x35 heat~ & ·filtered pool. La r g e covel't'd enclosed patio, oversized lot. It's dirty but nothing a little paint v."On't solve. Hurry -al $24,150 no money down ii l'i'On't last! ACTION EXECUTIVE HOME 18 MOS. OLD Thta Beautiful Sandcastle hotne has been upgraded in every way. J ob transfer forces sale. No\v vacant lhe owner \Vanis action. 4 Kini; s i z e ~ms, 2~1 tiled baths, &ep. f&m. room wilh brick fireplace. Sep. form. din- ing room. Open a i r e&thedral Cf!iling. ~luxe shag carpeting in all rooms. Floor to ceiling cuslom drapes included. Profeuionally landscaped a.ll for $43.000. No down PORT HEIGHTS. High beam ceilings, complen1ented by ·lull height, r.1e:dcan \\'hile marble fireplace. Beau!lful- ly carpeted and draped thru- out. AU of the exlras create the homeruakez=s dream of a n1odel hon1e. Call for an ap. point.ment to drt>aipland. Evenings Call 54S-3265 Seller losin~ home. Behind in payments. Enler via Spanish arched verand~. -I huge bed- roo1ns. Unique fam. rm., F'OR.\IAL DINING. Cozy floor. to ~eiling rock !.ire· place. 3 Balhs. 0 e I u x e maid's kitchen. Lovely 35' pool. '-2 mile-to beaches. Re. ducrd $3,liOO, UNDER ntAR. KET! Pick up payments and take over 6~o annual % rate GI Loan. Submit! llurry - Can 'J last! cau (714) 962·~ FORL\T E Ol.SO' '"' Exttllf'nt Dover Shores ·1oca. tion. fmn1en5e paved area for camper and boat ('()n.. cealed from street. Cathe'- dral beamed ceiling in large living room and entry. Spac. ious family room. 4 bed· rooms. Asking $7!1,500 - A REAL BUY. Macnab-Irvine Dial lTI41 6"5-0003 fORl:Sl E OLSO\ .•. R£A£ro11s 2299 Harbor. Costa lileu 642.J235 67S.321 r.l-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii . $15,950 FIXER UPPER FOUR·PLEX r.cl !lor e,·ening entertain-19131 Brookhun;t Ave, nu•nO custom patio. Avail-ii0iii1ii1ii""iiliiioiigiitoiioii8"i0iaiiciihi0iiii Eset'. Secluded Conternp. SACRIFICE $89,000 - Ideal for en1ertaining. Old f.1a&nlficent 4 br. 4 ha. iiblc: wi1h ~'HA-VA TERMS, 111 a bargain price 01 on1y If You're Tired ) $33.9:,0 VACANT . l:\l~IEDI-of looking at INFLATED ATE POSSESSION. PRICES, make a date with l\'Orld chann! Hi reilings, \\'alt'rfront home in Hun- lrartect windo11·s, bri c kl tington Harbour. 10 l ' 1\1'0ught iron. :i.ooo srt fl , 5 "-aterfront 57' dock. Ca.II ba '~. 4 car gar, $169.500. 213/592--1601 for apt, Prin- 5-18-72·'9. cipal!! only. us anrl M't' what $11,800 11'ili buy_ 3 Bedrm, "l bath. fam· Fountain Valley Irvine r=-.1 1 ily roon1, dble gar.. bl!ns, c.rpts & drps. Near ,hopping POOL TIME WEND YOUR WAY Evenings Cail ;)48-326.i NEAR HARBOR HIGH & schools. Good ternu. For Assume 6':1i VA loan pay11bJe Do11'n a curving, tttt lined details call IDU51, lopen S2IO pt'r nionth including street lo your own Meditt. '•'~'~"~·=------, 1 ta."e~. f'"ull price $33.500, 4 ! \'illa, \Vrought Iron 1ate1 S Bedroom 2 bath formal 1 open to an inviting court • He00r0~0t0a,,ge living ~m y.·ith brirk fin'-) yard, Jigh1ro by amber ~ place, upgraded hltn kitchen lamps. Relax In the aeclud- appllanc:eii. 62xll6 Lo!, pa-ed patio or perhaps on I.he 2 Bedrooms .\ family room, large corner lot. Dble car WORKSHOP Very little "''ork. Very good garage w/boat door. Bl!n DOVER SHORES ' 1· · · 190 Beau1ifu1 "mOdel like" 3 bcd-19131 Brookh"r.<t '"•· 1nanc1ng -a month eltc kitchen. Room 10 build View home. 1118 Sa ntiago Dr. " " d bl ·• roon1 hon1e on cul-de-sac h£A1.r0Rs tin, dble 11;arage, carpets. balcony of( the m1tr. Bit. drapes, 1an«scflped. \Vhy not 0 w n e r trans. ~ san. have a pool for the ,;a.me "SELL"! pri ce?? Ste today, good Jo.. INCLU.DE Huntinglon Beach spen 8 e .... ter expenSH. on Best buy. spac. 5 RR. 4 b11. D Good hi V" • i;treet close to all schools k assuma e-~ .. Joan. Adap1able noor pllln for * * * O \ I d d · 1· I •ho"piog. AU new car""ls, . n y cas 1 nee e lg a itt e Newport •· · .--couple or [ge. f11n1lly. Newly Fantastic 3 bedrm i\Ie-sa MRS. A . W. KLARE over seller·s cost. Now is drapes & paint. Large side dl"COrated. By app'I. $91.000. 903 W. 17th St. the 1ime. Hunj. Dial (714) at yard tor boat or trailer. It's Bill .Grundy, Realtor Verde home on quiet tree lined cul-de-sac. 2 1\fassivti fireplaces, beautiful mini· mum upkeep ya.rd, ,sparklinf:: interior. au bltns, 2 baths & large master bedrm. Abso- lu!e must go see at $32.950.1 Caij :tt5-St24. Cost. M... .' • 0303 Just nev.•Jy listed ~o be first ;,.. · Fairview 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 6"2-4620 You are the \vinner ot to stt. CALL NO\\'! $36,950. 2 t'icketa to the 646-8811 20 AC. Orange Grove. River- Western National ~ COATS ~ide ai·ra. 6 Yr. old trees. Boat & Marine (anytime) &. r.ood inron1<'. Xlnt C0111cr Show · WALLACE Joe. for futu~ Appreciation. at lhe REALTORS S.1crifirr $70,000. toi:e IJf>v.·n. A,NAHEIM 2299 HARBOR, COSTA l'>IESA ~ ... ~Q.£""('"Y-....(" -~141-bal. ~yrs. f.tay trade. O\VN- CONVENTION -Ulf.5·J. Y~"' (Open Evenings) ER 518-3263 • CENTER CATCH YOUR 2164 ELLESMERE * NEW LISTING * February 20th thru 28th BREATH! 4 Bed.rooms HONEYMOON Stt"ps to ocean. 3 BR, 1~6 ba. Please t'all 642_5678. ext. 314 the panoramic view of har-Beautiful pool COTTAGE! Bltns. 2 Car garage. Good cation, nice neighborhood. I' 1llage Real Estate "2-44711r.::1546-llOJ Boat or Trailer? (ired hill REALTY Univ. Park Cenlt'r, Irvine Call Any1ime IJJ..0820 Lot~ of room for them on rhiii \ •---------•I CORNER Jot. Lovely 3 BR, 2 Leguna Beach ba. wl!h BREEZE\VAY. Low, low iol looo or low VA/FHA I LARGE FAMILY7 lr1·m~. [This is the b:lme far you: HAFFDAL REALTY 1100 sq_ ft. on 'A acre, pm- to Vets. See It no\v! I·----------betv.·een 9 and 1 pm Ul claim bor, peninsula &; oceah is New CAJll'ts/pa1nt 117;900 PRICE oonrlition $26,000. k breathtakin ... Scenic boat ac. l""°'c BBQ CAYWO.OD RE•LTY 842-4-105 Eve!!: 5'11-2446 fes.~ionally landscaped, Pool BY O\VNER, $25.~50. 4 BR. !able sized family room with 2 b;i, bllm, lrplc, covertd fireplace, wet bar I: 1pac- palio, fncd, nr adlools. ious deck. Family 1ize kitch- 642--1264 en. Musive atone fireplace FASTER your tic ell!. (North County ""' · Please. nev.·l)M'l'ds or serond "" tivirv J"Ust below, 3 BR., d'", p ti "~ IV C I II NB toll-free number is 540-12201 '3 ace5e er honeymooners only. Older 2 """" · oa11 · wy., * * * tam. rm., 3~ baths! $185,000 Treei; bedroonl home, bu! cute as 548-1290 F .H.A. 6V2% LOAN ~ s4z.500 a. bug·.~ ear! Large SO x 150 :B,-a"lbo-a-.,-11-_.l-and-.,----- $20,500 PRICE ~ ~ BUY IT! Jot for future expan!ion. f'orest E. -Olson Inc .. h:t~ a 1 TOTAi. payrnent for 1 h I .!I Coldwell,e.lkM' C.'hoirf': Eastside Costa !t1esa. SlO"'T dn . eld own -car 1st. large number of spe1·k.hrn; sharp 3 bedroom home is ....._....,.,._ . Submit your !erms. Don't 3 Br. 2 811, fl'fll -I· gs! hse clean Fl-IA-VA . 3 & 4 Bdrm. Sll6. Subject 10 FJ-IA Loan miss this one! w/ ~. ba. Nr wal., pat. homes ready for }'OU. Take I v.•i!h 6~i annual percen!age w lk r & Lee 673-6267. advantage of the oew JOI\' jn. rare. All appliances such as 833-0700 644-2430 1 =====~==== a e Bayshores tercst rate. Come make one washcr. dryer, refrigerator •'!!!!~'!!!!""''!!!!-""--•I R 1 F•irw•y Special ea 1ors LGE 2 BR, t ba, corner, your own, • •II ol"' included. \VHY HUGE FAMILY 2-II bo Bl d I Ad DIAL ••-•~3 Tculy a magniticcnt large '"'-' ar r v . a ams mom to enl11r_1:r. Asking <rt.rwu RENT !t vnu an!1. Submit • 1· o•~ O · 9 P" HERE'S THE LOW DOWN Huntington Be!ch __ _ FHA 221·D2 in living room. Double lat· 11.ge. 4 Bedroom1 & 3 beth&. $49.950. Ca.JI • AO/an ~ REAL ESTATE SECLUDED conAGE $100 DOWN $20,500 Located In Costa Mes11. you'll finrl a real doll house, and for $100 do\''" and normal closing costs it can be yours, you cton"t have to ht-a Vet1"'tln. It's In exef!llent condilion. So see it before its gone! 2 Bedroon1 2 bath, V('ry clean and nicely decoralf:d. \VaUed Condominium. community poot and clubhouse farilities. i\lany exli-a~. \Vasher. dryer, cl~ blln rang!' &: oven, re- fr\grrator. $650 Move in. Carpets. drape~. forced air hcar, palio. $1!1,900 Full price. ,-ROOM cusiom tri-levl'l on the l7U1 ;, ~ iu.> pen 111 "' }tl,jOO or olle1".' &1&-7378 your down payment · SELL. fairway 0 , t.1esa Verde I•'"''"''"''"'""'"''"'"'"'"'' I ;~;;;;~;;;!i:,,-;;;-----1 ER ANXIOUS. ANYONE The most outstanding: value Country Cluh. 3300 Sq. ft., 5 Corona Del Mar Corona del Mar If 1llage Real Esta te 1190 Glenne)'T'e St. 4!M-!M73 M9-0316 100· VIEW or ocean & Calalina. Small but hulldable-lot in Laguna. $7,500 full pril'e. lnw dn k 0 .\V.C. wllow monthly parments. Bkr. 493--1153 or 494-6632 e\'es. FROM QUALlf'lES! on today·ii market in a Jwc-bedrms, dlnin.1: rm &: over-PLEX * Walker & Lee "'~ l'"'ady l!>lil ,q. It.) 3 ''"d family rm. 3 Cor ''"I * DU *OPEN DAILY 1-5 * H2-4471Ir.::J546-1103 HERE'S YOUR FIRST HOME _ >lorbor, "-·ra .,, •• [ R•allo-bedroom home. Consider a11;e. 61.~% Financini:. One Cute older home and 2 5!ory 1927 Sabrina Terr. REDUCED $2100. ~"'" ....,,, ,. .... ,., Uiese features: large separ-block away from pools It. bldg with guest apt. \\'alk (Irvine Terr.) '1 Bdrmii., 3 BR, 24x24 tam rm., study, $1500 BARGAIN 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams ate family room l'ioith wet tennis courts. to tov.;n & iw>ach. Needs pool; Very clean. Xlnt \'iew brick frplc. big, big kitchen, 3 UNITS '\'alking distance to be1ch. 121 l bedroom,, l studio. $31,9M. Call • For $23,500 you get one of nl~'t 3 bedroom homes in the area. Nev.·Jy black topped driveway, cal'pelS. &: drapes in- cluded, plus a spacious back yard for the kids. Close to school' & iihop- ping. No money down to Vets. call now. That"s how anxious this 01vn . er Is and has priced this 4 bedroom. 2 bath beauty un- der markP.t value. Ff.RE- PLACE, step-saver kitchen 1vith EXTRA cupboards, childttn's playhouse and ex. tra goodies. VA or FliA Terms or assume $1:>9 pay- n1ents. Trade your home! ;tt:;.9-191 Open 'ti! 9 Pl'>f bar, form11.l dining, 2~~ baths, some TLC & fix in' but H's or bay. ocean & jetty, Lovt-hui;:e brick patio. Jovcly Jnd- nearly new shag carpet, ~ !>46-5110 priced right aL •• , ly p.t!io &. 1,rees. A cuslont scpg. An."ious ov.·ners. $28 • .iOO FARROW Walker & Lee DUPLEX + Owners Separate Hom• All 2 bedrm. FHA apprail!a.l Sl9,500. 10~0 Down to 90'/o loan (FHA). Newport EXCEP'TIONAL Realtor.• VALUE 768'l Edinger ti Feirvlew 646-1811 (enytime) Thls large 3 bedroom, 2 f714l 842-4-IJ..3 or 54().:il-IO bath home sho1vs real II•'"''"''"''"''"'"''"'""'"'" :~~ti~~ .:.: ",: r ~~ ',~ Near So. Coast Plaza I CAMEO SHORES carpeting. Built-in k\1-4 Bedrooms, 1 bath~. flre-1 Ocean View/ Pool ~n. Brlc:k f l re pl 11 ce . Forced air heat. And a pla~. bltn range & o,·en. -4539 Fairfield Or. 20 x 20 finished n1mpus Carpel!i, drapes, patio, dble 1 Open Set/Sun/Mon. 1-5 room. Il"1 located in the aarage. $27.750. Spat'lOU5 4 Br. 3 Ba. 3 Cat Hidtctt:\f area of Costa Roy Mc C1rdle Realtor gar.IDin Rm/L~la nd fire- 1'>1eu. (No. of 88ker, E. 1810 Ney.•port Blvd., C.)I. I place. Beau!. landacap'g/ of Harbor, \\'. O I 541-7729 . aprlnklera. Newly painltd/ fairvitwl. Ch,·ntr asking 11::=~==:::~::;:~~;:1 d I I I 1-,ooo to VA or FllA rea y to mo\'e n at'cesa o "' prlv8.le rove~ & beach. buyen. i\1akt ollcr! LIDO WATERFRONT 582.500 REALTORS EASTSIDE J IDRM 2 IATH full pr\cs on lhlJ home 11 $23.XIO and you 'd better hurry • double %8rtlfl - fOl't'f'd 1lr hl1f. No down tn Vf'ta , t..ow dO'A"n IO anybody! 2629 Harbor Blvd. 546-8640 OPEN EYES. 11LL 8:30 APTS.-320 LI DO NORD Goosst'n & Clark & Assf'IC. $140.000 Price with 7% ht 673-1576 637-5617 ·r.o. 6 Beaut. turn. units: , , ___ .,..,. ___ ,... 6 tar a:arages Ir: util. roon1. ! ~ 80 Ft. on swimming beach. -=-\\'ill oongidt?r lrade for boo! -J:..j " mulmum SS>.ooo Igo. • Newport Heights BR,. house. Biii Grundy, Rltr. 833 Dover Dr .. N.B. &IZ-4620 . ' MAKE A DATE. Tc see 624 RafTl(;na, lrvint Terrace, Cd:\1. 2 Bdrm1., drn, pool &: VTl-:\V, SPOT- LESS PJo:RfECTION. App·t. 011ly. CURT DOSH, Realtor 6{2-6\il Eves. 673-S46S 1730 w. Cout llta-hWly G.I.. FHA fERMS 3 BR. 2 &. Lge. fam. rm. &ttene-d lanai, Coriwr lot. FORTIN CO. &42-5000 A real prlrle of oY.'nefl'ih!p "cu11om buUt'' 4 bcdl'oom 2 bath hon1e. Gl<1s~ islld!n11; door to patlo and garHRe off 111\cy. Priced to 11el1. $:17.j{)O. ASR'. F'OR ~1ARY GRACE KEN'NDtAN fil;).-1930 2 OF A KIND Jufit listed. large sl!e!. rus. lom Nt-Wpor! Bch ll rt'a. CUl- de·sac $20.000 ,ellt'h. PETE BARRETT RLTY 642-5200 I !The "YtlJow Pa1:11s"' ot For fhAt II.Pin ~f $50 /•\ 2619 HiJ'bor. C.?.I. !'.IA&!ilieil ' .. Sll-.'i67R -I try !he P..nny rlr'Ch~ 1-.;;;,,;,;.. __ _ heavy shake roof. Only 10% !1k,\IL,,..EG'"E..,.RE-A'.TY $45,000 hf'auty. Call 847-1221. THE REAL ESTATERS AdlllaltKIMl',CM Realtor down. SJl.500. Call 673-8550 1o DON V. FRANKLIN MOM AO/an STILL STANDINGll e 673-2222 e so )'OU know it'!! a fi<llld buy, T?.ANSFER THrCK shag carpets. fresh YOUR PROBLEr.t REALTY COMPANY FIXER UPPER paint, 3 queen.sized bed-tc. SPECIALISTS Special? 3 Bdrrn., 2 bath; 1 roonts, and VA or F1-IA Property Management 642-1771 Anytime blk. to 1he bearh. Need15 lots .Term~ 11\·ailable. $23.jQQ and Real Estate I!!-----... ~~'!!!!!! of work! J ust reducer:! only $184 ~r nionth. Trade STEPHENS & KAYE BIG FAMILY $5,000. Owner ~ailing around your present hornt! 645_0122 ANYTin1E _JUST RIGHT !he v.·orlrl & 1•.:ant~ action! Walker & Lee , __ ..,....._...,.....,... $44.9:\0. M'k• Olfor! Realtors 7682 Edinger 11141 S<IZ-4455 or 540-5140 4 BEDRM. 40 FT. POOL $27,950 3 ha!hs. large rooms thruout_ Huge (amily rm. entry hllll. Park like yard. Large sw im pool + det'king and patio. ~0-1120 TARBELL 2155 Herbor BEACH HOUSE- 2 BR. +. 2 Blocks trom ocean In N•rit. Beach. You own the lanrl1 $24,9.'i(), NEWPO.RT SHORES Cana\ fmnt lot. $20.000 Georg• Wiiiiam son Realtor 67J..4350 645-1564 Eves REPOSSESSIONS 1: $35,500 Delancy Rul E1talt B/B * 5 bedrooms 2828 E. Coas1 llwy., CdM Z2 YEARS or * 2 balhs 64-1-7270 REAL ~STATE SERVICE • Large Separate lamily * 421 ORCHID * JN rnE HARBOR AREA room One or the bt-11er bl;)'I In Baycrest Beauty * Earing an!a in kit chen IOY.'n. 2 BR. home on R-2 4 BR. ;'\ ba. 24 Fl, paneltd ""·I " t I Ca d p * ~ .. -...e-!oac l5 ree lo!. rp. & rps., 11111. a. den w/flr. to ceil. frpl. Huge • Profe~sionally landscaped ho, nice yard for lhe child- kitch. w/l)<-!<fst. area. Ea.sy * \Vould you believe V.A. ren. Offered for S32,500. term~. $62.500. App. $35.500 MORGAN REAL TY ~75·3000 * Call "4<1·'-113 673-6642 67S.6459 --' m11·''° ,\ 111:., .. 11 ni:.u:l'l •~t:. I EST 1Q1'1 61~ 1000 j ' ·----- HARBOR VIEW HOMES TIJE REAL E.5TATERS NEED 3 Licensed Rea.I Estate Salefi People • right away~! W. E. Lachenmytr, Rltr 1800 N!"V.·pon Blvd., C.M. Ca.rt &16·3928 Eves: 6734577 Hate Gingerbreed? Good! \Vork off your lru~!ra­ tions on thi.~ duple11 , Glngrr- breadie 2 BR, -t ollice, l~l ba. home + rieat .I-bdrm. apl. $·18,500. UNIVERSITY p,\RK 3001 E·. Ciit. ""'Y· 613-6510 Co1ta Mesa A beaut. S BR. home: v.•et bar, lovely shag cpta::. !lllf- cleanlng ovens: re1uly 10 PRIME VIEW DUPLEX, $.11,500. Income move lntn! $59.~ . Includ-Dtosigned to lllke 11dvan1age $3780. 2 BR, Incl 11a!lo, In& the. land. ol !he Virw. Ivan \\'tlls ne1v, S1ove, refric. ~ar, rpt/drp. CORBIN--IBR.lBA,pwdrrmhOme Ownrr 2'l38-A St•te, ST1A.rkJinJ: clean homes, !ICme in Dovt'r Shore11. Fam r m 64:>-4058. newly painted It. carpeted. 2, MARTIN w/[rplc It wtt bar. Seclud-PO=P=ULA~-n~=,=10·,·u·cc~n=,-,-,,~u :. 4 &: 5 bdtms. Som•·with fd pool, Rey J. Wa~. Rltr., l lt'wl modc:il 2 + 'l. den, poo11, NlA-VA corw. terma. _,_ .... 7662 1 103.l Marlnen. ~l.MO. open ~dult section. Rte: & pool from Sl7.000 to $40,000. REAL TORS ~ daily. f11cll. s22,:ioo. owner. Collins & \Valla lnl'. 1--======--1 5«)..1·1$1 8843 Ad•"" A.,, 962-5,;2,1 PICTURESQUE , , c~:~N!,D~L"~~vn "E7A""sT"'."'s 1'°'0'"<.~ •. """'3"""'ll<1"rm-. $23 500 You own the Ii.I'(! lircpl1cr, h1u'dY.'OOd f\oo111, . • 4 BR. 2000 aq_ fl home on }.lnt te.rma. S.12,500 nrw c1trpe-u1, drapts 1' I ''DOLL HOUSE" b0n.1t'r or ~\/ey,·port ll elghts. Hom• Show Reeltors pri int . l.a~t' lerl(td )'d. !\harp & clta.n. 3 Bedrm,, $38.300. 1 1 ,, $23,500, &IS..76Z7 full dinin' rm. bu 1h-in'.· .,._ IEAN SMITH, RLTR. "Armcilair lou.~hUnt ng "~~~ E C H Cd'.\t IM :O.IAC. 3 Bil + dctat'hed tura l birch ldlt'hen {':itnnels. 400 E. J7!h St., c .... f. 616-32;);) ~ · oa..~t "'">'·· · rec. nn ollcre Park >l().17~ 675-7225 ..., heated pl'lt)I tjoJn1r F'rnl,. ,t TARBELL 1955 Herbor re. RESULTS >"'-• cttn 0.. l\NY Or.)' 11 tnt BEST day to l'x!r11c '"'' • DIAL dirtet 64.i-M7S, G'h.arge )'tlU1' ad, then all back and Listen kl the phone rtr\I[! pend on, Ca.11 tM SUpe-r nin sn ad! Don'! Sa I e 1 m • n .. Dally Pllo! dflsy_ .call today, 642-56711 Clusitied 642-ti673 _ place Items "1th eue, u&e-Dill)' your ad l.i cha.rie II! I Pilot Classified, 642--567! • f''y I ll • , • 2 II)', J BR, 2 ba, m~n) Xlrlll!, [11nd~Cpd, $34.~l(}. !>4~17t 11141 Beach Bl\'d., Jltgn Bch Open 'ti! 9 p.m. ASSUME 51/4•/o LOAN This 3 bedroom home wJth shake roof. brick tlreplace. 1\·H!J to wall carpe!lng, CUS· lorn draperies, large cover. ed patio a.nd fenced yard show.~ pride o( ownership inside and out. $27.900. Phon!' 842-25.Jj for details. THE REAL ESTATERS Handy Man Special 4 BR. :Z full batilii. panelled liv rm, huge yard, cor lol, lg encl patio. close 10 every- thing. $25,500. Cali 847.1221. 17141 Beach Blvd., Hlgn Sch Open 'tll 9 p.m. $1 DOD Under Market For quick ,sale. 4 BR, 1% BA, like new cond. FHA . VA . Conv. 1erms. Won•t Jut, call Collins &; \\'at11 962-5523 c & w REAL ESTATE 1190 Glenneyre St- 49-1-9473 ~6 DIRTY FACE 3 &Inns. 2 ba., bHn R&O. F'rplc. Clo~e down location. Needs p11int & repair. Otferf'CI as 11 4 $31.950 1\tISSION REALTY '9U7'31 Lido l1le =-----NEW EXCLUSIVE Bayfront, sandy beach Immaculate 3 BR., den, 3 bath• Shown by app't. onlt JJ 35.000 LIDO REAL TY INC. 3377 Vie Lido 673-noG * BY OWNER-REDUCED! $69,9.lO. 3 br, 2 ba, «I' lot, Jg_~ patk>. 203 Via Mentone, Lide. tale. Open all d1y Feb 13 14 & 15. Call &'Jl..»I or" 5-l>-2512. Me1a del Mer MESA DEL MAR 3 bd rm. 2 hath, Jge kitchen a fam rm wilh buUt-ina, W/W carpeting, drape1, trpl, COV• ered patio. 2 csr 111r. $11.500. Owner ~elling by appoint. men1. 557-7315 Mesa Verd• ----·----SUPER lcca tl&"•1511 NO 00\VN I<> vtterans or Jl,fyrtlewood. 3 BR, tam, f'"'HA lerm.s avallablt. Pric-frplc. rHA-VA ptndlnc. ed. lor Immediate &ale-.a.t $27.SOO. Owner 499-1901 or W $25,000 -b1·inl( your paint I 4!)6..39.19. bru~h. f'11ntutic trtt lined "'-'-"=-~-~---1 rt~ldentt111 al"f'a ind quicr. I Newport leach tn1rfic-h-cc loct1!1on. Good 3 BALBOA COVES btdroom 2 h11lh home • RONT muiit bt ~Id?!! Call WATERF :i-1~2-1 Slu!h Coast Prime loc. 3 BR. 2 ba, aJnai. Rr!lll(I,..;. 81.0ry. Newly dttor. P'enced . ''"'H\\' lk lo . ytt. ~ rt . boti.t 111p~ $'75.500 • .~1.,.~lul"f'. ~a~,':: Bill Gr undy, Realtor lun1lll rm. 714 ~ 833 Do\•er Dr., N.B. MM6a> loan f'.>r I f n1ncc. $36,500 I TllE SUN NEVER srn ·' hm1 f!.1•· 1!.-.:i. 1 Pllot Oas.cUitd I 1 " .. ' , •• '. • • ~ • "' u, ,~,,~~DAl~~~Pl~LO~T~~~~~~M~ood~q~,~F~d~....,.~~15~,~19~71~~~~~~,~~~~~~~~,:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,~~~~~~~~l:~~~~~~~l ~~~~~~::~l ( ,_,,.,...,_ J~ I ~1' l!il I i-Nn<lol I~ I ---I~~' -~tor~"';;' ~' jl!~1;, .... ;;;-~lw;;llonl~'~~1~' ......... ;;;;;;"'-~][!]~1 ;' ;;-;;;;b;;;lor-;;:l[!];;;• 11 Apo<tnwnb tor Ront I[!] "'(o"1.;..•_fo'""r-'-So._l.;..e ___ 1_10_1Money to Loon 240 MoUMS Unfum. 305 TownhouH Unlum. 3'5 Aph. Furn. 360 Apt. Unfum. 365 Apt. Unlum. ~ ~Ai:P':;.·..:U:::"::.'":;;'.;;n:... __ .;.3'_s_ 1 Newport Beach L<i Qu!nl.a C1pi1tr1no Bt1ch Huntington Beach Cost• M••• Corot\11 dtl Mar Ca1t1 M111 -, BEHIND IN eo Cl b 1 t TD l ---==--Co•t• MHo PAYMENTS Goo;eou':"':;1rw~y lo~ s oan l BR bullt '--3 BR, m BA. -& * DELUxt; l BR " * FREE ~ d Sacr!llce ' ·um, n e w P11tto, blf·lM, w/w crpts Bachelor apts. S$S wkly & RENTAL SERVICE LRG. % & 3 Br ..... vu. rps, $23,000 FULL PRICE i % INTEREST carpttlng. & drps. Avail 3/10tn $200 up. F'urn. Incl utU, Monthly . fre~hly rainled & clean. Shon dist&nee to ocean and TED o~~~~R~or&OfSsoc. 2nd TD loan 1·$=-IJS_M_•·...,..,..,,,•96_.2_3l!l_•_fl_• mo. bl, , ... & clcanin& tonns avail. 99.! El C.mlno. -;.a;~ C:O.ta M .... H""""'""1 Kids ok. 64&--0627 or ¥h0pplng. 3 quctn·s!zed bed· Corona dtl Mir tee. ~l!Kl5. 546-GCSl .., Beach • Newport Beacb 642-63-H. tooms, ma~tcr broroom has _u::;:,n'=vO:i.~u,,_,,d0;.:·~'c.""c.8500'=o-1.i.3 RR APTS. ;:~cc.·.~===-==I l"X""'°"' p-•\·••tc billh. Ideal < r'C"~·~y Jors. Blue Tenns hu ed on equity. Irvine 1 BR $120 &: $125 Spacious Mk about our DISCOUNT WALK to shopplng center. &o'; pJu11 ~'ith tols of room. s~;~:c~i;n, Harbor Rest 642~2171 54$.0611 SPLIT·Levet frOnt duplex. !;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I Adults. Pool. ideal to; ON TEN ACRES PLAN. Call 636-02'JO. 2 BR up~r. ne"'1Y dffi:>r. ~. id rial p k $ 7 o o Set\'!ns; li11rbor area 21 yt'S. Lge. 4 Br. 2~' ba.. $400 Mo. Bachelon 5-1g..9633, 1993 l & 2 BR. E'um. & Unlurn, txtra spacious, new crpta. '\.lpgradtd c3rvets 81 ~~75· ar ' S•ttlt r Mort"•"• Co. Wesley N. Taylor Co. 3 BR 2 BA Church ' Fittplaees / prtv. pauo.. VILLA .MES~ APTS. bltns, color appli&n<'e1, bar. tna!chlng drapes. Sl8,li0() 336 E. 17th' sfreet 6+1·491.o & Family beautifully d~r. Pools Tennis Contnt'l Bktst 2 BR, Priv patio. Htd pool. Older child ok. No pets. \·,\ Loa.11 "'!th payrnents of PRIVATE Party v.1shes to ·~---------1 -..,-..,.-=c-~-c-.,.,.--,.,-1 ated lush C"""'li"" & drap. FURN B•chtlor & I Br. en... ~A. , ---CdM .,. ~11· i 2 car encl'd gar, Children •150, 5.J!J-3643 or ~961 aid Bay :-* • 3 BR on double lot. ' ~ .. ~ ''b E pl" II · I """.:x: •·•••.ue ......... v ~ $\jtj per rnonth. Aru1one can sell large Erner Mortgages, Crpts, drapes, dbl garage. es. Minimum care land&ca.p. xce ion• y nice (MacArthur ~ Coast Hwy) welcome. no pets please! 2 BR. 2 BA Townhoulie. buy: CAU. -vi~.,... lot. 494--9968 T ru1t Detd1 260 $275/mo. G. H. Roberoon ing, ~hort walk 1~ school, 2110 Newport Blvd., CM $165 mo. '119 \V. \Vil.son. patio, lrg yard, No pets, Walker & Lee Mountain, Dt11r t, Realtor. 67>-2«0 shopprng, pool, tennis &go!t. LRG l BR. w/w crptg, PARK Your car & walk 646-1251 1 citlld ok. $150: ~1882, Re1ort 174 14o/o YIELD 2 BR, l BA, close to town, $340 per mo. bltns, 1 adult, no pets. $132. nr ocean nr shopping Ne~ \VILSON GAP.DEN APTS. t.1gr. 1048-A M1ss100 Dr, , nealtors At-.'TELOPE Valley 40 A;:.e-;. I.st TO on prlme 3 ac pal'C(>i. adults, $185 pe:r mo. Call i d h•11 Yearly. 64~ apts. 2 'BR, 2 ba, ·bea~ 2 BR Unfurn, Newly dee. CM. ?i90 Harbor Blvd. at Adams I Sell/trade Close to free\V&y $35.000. AU due 3 )T'S, inC'L agent 642-1771 re I SPACIOUS 1 hr furn apt cei~ing, frplC', many xtras. Ne\v cpts/drps. spa c NE\V Spacious 1 It 2 BR, .115-0165 Open 'ti! 9 p:.r in Acton: Contact Staley 9i:h inr. San Juan Capls. -=-''--,~~------in quiet ~ast-side 4-plex, $23a & $250 at 3 3 O grounds, Adlt.s, no pets. bltns, crpts, drps, garare. trano. I5'7t discount. Bkr. Coit a Mesa ........ ac. •130, "'"1517 Ma""'•erite, 6 Ta-t 8 7 J, $140/mo. 2283 Fountain lmmed. occun•""Y· 541).1973 Pride of Ownership 213-436-9151 or 439-3i09. ,,~-• .......-••M W E (H bo tv ~·- 493-11:>1 or 493-1706 eV<'s. COW.EGE Park area, 3 BR, . REAL1'Y . * •15 ~, wc•k u P 548-798.l onayWil,.· o). ar r, turn · or 545-2321. Duplex, 3 BR. 2 h&. each unit. Real Eit•te WantR 184 ~ ... ~ .:;:.~::.=:C.::.:-----1 f'1nt Joe. Steps to oeean.1_________ 1% BA, crpll, drps, bltns, Univ. Park Center, Irvine w/kitchens, $25 per W"f'k * COROt.IDO APTS * East Bluff Son1e viev.'. HOMES NEEDED $17,000 DISCOUNT frplc, avail r.1a.rch lst. $250 Call Anytime 83.J..0820 up Apts. MOTEL. 548-9755. 2 Br, studioa & s~t levels, LA COSTA Call : 673-3663 54S-0715 E\'es. ~lo. 1st & last + $100 clean· $115, 2 BR trailer, no Sl85 & up. Penthouses $220. NE\V l & 2 br. Bltn.!i, swim- associated URGE;>;T: Choice TD pays ing. Call S45-66n owner or children or pets. Dshv.·hr, frpl, dbl carport. ming pooJ & garage, All For transferees. \Ve are the $2,67-1 per mo. at 9~ for a 548-7729 Realtor. 1/Wl *Call 642·3375 *' Pool, 673-3378 utilities paid, $150 to $170 NEWPORT BEACH Villa Grenada Apts. BROKERS-REAL TORS J:OJS W 8alboo 67J·l66J exclusive agents for a na. 3 }T period. Guaranteed v.o/ LARGE Ranch type 3 BR NICE 1 BR. Dplx. Quiet. UNIQUE '11'li 2 or 3 Br. mo. Adults, nD pets. DI tional corporation, Call loc;I full TI'C'Ourse A·l bank ref's, & family, !rplc, fully crptd, ~-------· Sep. by garages. Adults dbl ba. Cpts, drps, 2 car Avocado St., Ci\f, &12-9708 Four bedroorru: with balcon· ies above & be.low. Gracious llving & quiet surroundlnc for family \Vith child.rim. Near Corona del l\tar Hirh School. Fireplac1>, wet bar l built-in kitchen appliance11, 835 AMIGOS WAY 644-2991 agent before you lisr-847·6Gl-. 1 (il~J 32s-n5.l today or e\'es. ou!door BBQ & covered over 30. No pets. S48-lo21 gar. $285 mo. 673-6904, ~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii lLEASE on. house (any cond_I. 16". YIELD patio, $225 mo. Perron Apts. Furn. 360 67~ SHARP 3 BR, 2~ BA, 1600 /I t bl f bl"-4J " Rta.lty 642-17il A'ITRAC. 2 Br apts. $15.'i. ' It Stud" t 1' I I ' \\' ot sui a e or U& 3 ~ d 1 1-,. d··-ouol Adult• 0-•y. Nr H•rbor & l BR unfurn lor lvorking sq. · '° ap • crp • e Ocean ront Dup ex "-·1. 1213) 281-"~01 1 vr uue 8 e. J '0 1"~ • LOVELY ho 3 General ., •u drps, nr So. Cst Plaza. ~ l BR. & 2 BR. Right on the on C, 0 C 1 BP., 2 Ba, Dbl gar. bltns, 1 · . * 837.294 7 * mo. Drive by 97a Valencia. !~~~~~~~-~~~~I prime 1st TD of $40,000 nr-new me, • _..;..-"--------\Vilson. 67>8181 btwn 8-5 person, open beams, Fflllc. ....,.,, sand! Terrific pro,P('rty and on -~ ran~e nty par:_e · Quiet, Lse. $245. 64.2--0506, I-IOLIOAY PLAZA DUPLEX r Br furn, qu1et.1.,,-,c-.,-------Call 545--0nB Mgr. owner is anxious! II •I ~::;,· 493-1153 or ~93-1106 1 642_z;53. . C DELUXE Spacious 1 BR no dogs. Neu shopping. Co1ta Mt1a Ou' Coldwell, Banker &: Co. 'MORGAN REALTY financial .,~~.. turn apt $135. Heated pool. :;.is-21ai I-;;;::;::;::;::;;;;::;;;;= 1et Adult Living 2 BR house 1n court, pts A J '" N h.ld ,10:"":,,C:.,..,=~----l~ 2 BR. Shar cpts, hltns. beaut, 673-6642 675-645~ UP TO $50,000 I & dfllS no pets 1 or 2 ntp e par,..ng .• 0 c 1 ren SUNNY 1 BR Garden duplex. * * * * J.ndsc:Pd. $170. incl all util, Managing Agent 541-5221 TO\VNHOUSE • (}.vner'~ -4 Br, 3 Ba, also 2 Br, 2\1: to buy or loan against TD's. sm children. 201i Wallace. • no pets. l!l6;i Pomona, Quiet, mature adult. Ref's. El Puerto Mta• Apta Adib only, no pets, NO DOWN G.I. Business Call Russ Hatle 545-1~15. &16-2719. CM . $115. Call 5'iS-S007. * *' * * 241 Avocado St. * 646-09'19 Ba. Patio!. Encl car. 67~5033 Open daily 1-5, 2056 Tustin Opportunity 200 I ~~~~~~~~~I BACK BAY, lrg 3 Br. 2 * CUSTO~I FURNITURE ATTRACTIVE E-side Studio 1 Bedroom Apt1. AR O Ave. 1 ?t1in. to sehOolsr Lge. I;:, Ba, bltru, fencd, trple, cul· RENTAL. See ad class 810. apt, 2 BR. 1~~ BA. POol. H B R GREENS •l BR. + family rni. olf I H--.. f-Ront If l'l!l j d ~1 h 1 $265 Call 5'18-3481 No pets. 646-fi/310. $130 up incl. utilities, Also GARDEN &. STUDIO APJ'S Fountain Valley AIL NEW VALLEY PARK APARTMENTS kitch. 2 Patios. Vacant & CUT THIS . ...... "' . 6~~~ or ~~2661.' · CHAT EAU LAPOINTE SI2f) 1 BR, 166:0 Newport furn, Poot & Recreation .SaC'h. l, 2, 3 BR's. from $UO. ready! AD OUJ.1 4 Br, 2 ba, family rm. Mesa DELUXE furn 2 Br. apt, Blvd, All util included, No area. Quiet Environment. 2700 Peterson Way, C.?.1. Scenic Properties V<'rdC'. Children ok, S~ Pool. Close to shop&. $150. pets or children. 646-8883 eve OH street parking. No child. 54!Hl370 -.x;m 6tl·4016 This can be tlie most Houses Furnished 300 Adult ·~ ren no 1 "°""'"""===.,..-=,... , •. opens new doors for mo. ~25TI. s, 00 pe...,. $155. SHARP 2 BR. • pe 5• BEAUT, Country Club Villa . 11 UNITS, Ne\\'mrt Shores, important advertisement of G I 1941 Pomona Ave, C.M. llcat•d Pool. Adult,, no no•• 2 BR, 1% BA. pvt patios, • • • YOUNG FAMILIES 2 BR. Apls $160 •·-your Jife-beecause it may entra 2 BR. 1987-B Charle St. ,.~..., Close to beach. Full title. change your economic pie· ----------Sl.35/mo. No dogs. Call Balboa Penin1ul• (teen ok). 642-9520 1959•1961 Maple Ave, crpt, drt>s, bit-ins, $261) ll'lo. Eicecllenr yea.r around in· ture. from "bleak" lo LANDLORDS • O\\'NERS &12-2259 or 64S-70I7. Costa 1.lesa For further info call Jeanne 2 BR. Gardon Aplf $175 2 BR. Townhouses $115 3 BR. Aportment $210 come of $1600 mo. 14 "bright." I e $25 ~'K-OCEANFRONT $115 l BR. Furn. Util's pd. Edwards 968-6323. ga.rages, Only 8 yrs old. 0v.'ners who 00,v service PROPERTY r<JANAGERS NE\VLY dee 3 BR hse, Lovely Bachelors, 1 -BR. Nr._ &tores • Quiet adult. FAIRWAY $135,000. Try 20 r,i d n, Ui1 vending machinrs are \Ve will refer tenants to you deposit req'd. 2622 Santa !\laid servict. Pool. Util. 198J Pomona, CM. 548-0728 &1~2-11~ Graham R!ty. gl'O\\'ing from parl·time to free of charge · · · !lfany Ana. $150. 962-5050 e 67>8740 e S?.1ALL Bachelor apt, $80 pe:r 1...:c:.:.::.'-:'..:.:::=:::..:.:C"-:..-=, I full-time operators \V'lth desirable tE'nants on .our VILLA APTS 1-BR. sharp & clean. 306 Company's financing. .,...ailing list. 3 BR & fam rm-Nr schools OCEANFRONT house by mo. Incl. util. 532 Center • Catallna Or. Cpts. drps, As little as S600 t o $1500 ALA Rentals. * 64s.3900 & shop'g, $235. No pets. week or month 2 hr 1 St., CM. 540-0623. Gai·. iltature c-ple. No pets. investme.nt in UII profit ==~=~--~~-i33-3139 after 6 pm ba. 4!Mi E. Ocean~nt. 1 BR. & 2 BR, 11h BA. 2 & 3 BR's ''°"Mo Brokcr 0 '"2414 produ-'n" v•nd•."" ma-HIDE-A\VAY xlnt location, 67'°°"! Pri . •uJ 1 • v=-· ..... .,. 'Ob Dana Point ~ Cpts, drps: nr sbops: pool. vate patio, pool • indiv. chines can grov.·. fncd yd, garage. $140 --------*223 OCEANVJE\V Ave for Tin1e requirement is 6 ALA Rentals e 64.5·3900 Corona dtl Mar Uti: pd. 1884 11onrovia. laundry fac. gale by o"'T1er. View of Bay to 8 hours PE'I' \\'eek along For lease.6 yr old home. 0 P • Near Orange Co. Airport & & Ocean. 54.S-7983. with a serviceable car. No LAGUNA BEACH 4 BR. 3 Ba, lam rm, cov BACHELOR apt, l'I ear ana oint UCI. Adults only. Mewport· Heights personal sales calls. The $100-util pd across from bch patio. Quiet st. in Dana shop'g. Pri~ !1a1 io. ~dull~. SINGLE, TV, pool, pets ok, 20122 Santa Ana Ave. •:-machines do the selling for $130-util pd nice 1 Br quiet Point. $290/mo: 493.3729 or $ll;i/mo. Util incl. &16-409;i. S25 &: up. \\'kly. Dana Mgr. Mrs. Joachlm, Apt 3·A CHARMING two l! tor y you. Just give good service! $150 • Lg l Br. patio, gar. 492-3051 BUSINESS !llan, Bach. apt. ?\farina IM, 34111 Coast 546.6215 pre~·;~e home \\'llh .a ll:m' - - - -$200 · 2 Br, frple, pvt bch, ~0~0-.-.-,~S~h0-,-.-.----No cooking. Avail now to Hwy. i;par'.:ling pool. 4 bdrms, 2 D·l NATIONAU.Y Blue Beacon * 645-0111 r.tay 1-'ll. $25 ...,·eek. 675-4859 LH~u-n~t~i-n-9~10-n~B~e-1-c~h---I EL CORDOVA Apts ba .. large kitchen ._...!th all ADVERTISED BRANDS PRfVATE Beach, 2 BR 4 BR, fam rm, den, bltn iB~A~C~H~E~L~O~R~.<a'>,,.;;;::';ro;;'-ibc;;;;a<~h~.1'.!~~~~~~:'._--I bltns. Fine c Pt s Id r P s · division of UII o iv/EVERYTHING in Laguna stv/ref. Unobstructed view. Pvt pallo, Re.trig, Hot plate. BEAUTIFUL FURN. APJ'S. OPEN HOUSE SAT/SUN ss,),000. See this today. 12i5 Profit Drive Q .$200 Pool, $950/mo. 646·2130 673-l96J. $140-$165. Quiet, pr iv, patio, 2077 Charte St, &12-4470 646-2~1~ Graham R!ty. Dallas. Texas 75247 LA R l e 6,. 3_ • B h 2 wardrobes, •-Jc, dressing REFRESHMENTS served in ram interested in n1ore \n. A enta s · ;,. ;>\IV Huntington eac Costa Me1a ..... l' S.n Juan Cepi1trano rm, locked 5<'p. gar. Pool. recreation room. Be sure to formation about making $160 • Nice 2 Br, Bltns, CID money in the vending busi· h d ti $550 -Hunt ington Harbour REl'tlARl<ABLY Sauna. Rec rm. see these Channing 1 & 2 3' BR., 2.ba ., fam. rm., blt· ness. I ha\'C a car and 6-8 \\'as er, ryer, gar. pa 0· 11'aterlron!, 3 br, 2 ba hom e UNBELIEVABLY 17301 Keelson Ln. (1 blk W. BR Spanish &IYJe, prestige lns, cptg, drps, db!c gar, hours per \\'eek spare t ime. Blue Beacon * 645-011 l w / 5 u n deck &. dock. EXTRAORDINARI Ly of Beach Blvd, on Slater). apts tor adults. Extra Jrg fC>ncedyd., $225. mo. 493-1264 ( ) I can invest $600 in BEACHCOMBERS HAVEN Lease/option. 644-4132 or BEAUTil1JL * 842-7848. Jiv rms, shag cpt'd & drp'd ~n~versity Park ( ) j :~tf~vest $lSOO in Only $135 incl util 644-2260 Val D 'itere Garden Apts $1.25.$135. LGE. modern 1 br throout. Dwhrs, spac dos. llu l Ef1ate, !.el a route. ALA Rentals • 645-3900 2 BR, crptl!, drps, bltns, Adults no pets I ~h~r~oco~~'"~:~crp~ts~,~d~rp~'·~·t~o •. 1 :'~''~·~"'~·~ut.:"poo;::I:, ~·~""::"";;:::· Balboa Island panelling, 2-car gar. $180. Putting gree~. waterfall &I · 409 Cahf. 536-4261.. 84.7-5169 Name ........... -............ _ .. _,... Avail 2/20. Nr l!iChl & stream, flowers everywhere, l BR, $135 per month Park-Like Surroundings Address _ ........ __ , ............... 3 BR + guest rm, Avail shop'g. 51~2207 or 213: l!O 4S' pool, rec. room, billiards including utilities ~~IT"3·~EL~ City ........ State ·-···· Zip .... Feb thru June, 0 pen I='=-'='="==~~-~~= BBQ's Sauna, furn.-unium: Tradewinds Rlty 847-8511 · S General I L--:.e...=---...J Acreage for sale 150 -Sat I Sun P . !\f. 220 SPOTLESS 3 br, bltns, l~l. SingleS, I BR, 1 BR + den, DELUXE Bachelor Units • Also FURN, BACHEWR Phone ( l .... _ .................. _. Amethys t, B.I. 67~196. ba. Panoramic view. Lease 2 BR. 1''rom $135. See it! \Valk to Ocean. Util pd. Np.,, hoppa~os * AHdultd Pool 1 • e 6 Acre Ranch Depl •3836A $21.'i mo. By owner. Refs 2000 Parsons Rd .. &t2-8670 LINDBORG CO. SJ6.2579 rs g * ls on Y Corona del Mer req'd. 847-7979. Benveen Harbor & Newport, Lido Isle MARTINIQUE APTS * 2 BR-Furn. Fireplace. Love· TRANS .. must move by ear-2 Blk N. 19th. l'BEA""~CH""~A~p~.,~. -rurn==is~~~.a~1,1 1777 Santa Ana Ave, CM ly pa1io & yard. So. of !y f.1arch, nu 3 bdrm., 2 CASA de ORO Br.. & _Bache_lor. Garage, f\1gr. Apt 113 646-SS42 Ih l'ational Forest East ol * • Capistrano. An ldeal land ALAN McKINLEY investment and week-end 426 San Bernardino hideaway. Unlimited polen· Newport Beach 1 tial for future development You are the winner of and capital gain. S3!1,500 2 tickets to the With terms. R. s. Brown Co. 493-4774 Western National Boat & Marine Apartment1 for sale 152 Show e 4 UNITS, near So. Cst. at the Plo.ia.1\Ioney maker. Prime ANAHEIM cond., crpts, drps, fenced CONVENTION $7380 yr incom<'. Lo\v do"-'n, CENTER good terms. Ibur Star February -2fil.h thru 28th 1 _R_o_al~ty'--,8_30-4_4_72 ___ ~-r Please call 642·5678, ext. 314 LIDO ISLE • :O.!ur.t sacrilice, betY:een 9 and 1 pm to claim 6 b<'ach apts. All Jur11. 6 your 1ickets. fNonh County ciu· garage, 7% loan, Lcasc toll·iree nun1bci· is 540.12201 land lo yr, 2018. O\\'llt'l'. * * * !·[\\')'. I.ease, Adults, no ba., blt·ins, crpts, drp!, $200 $225 $2.50 320 N rd pers. $265/mo. 673-1953. $265, 536-7332 or 827-3445 CASUAL Ca.Uf, Living in a 714 : &U-4097 ' o . INDMDUAL PRlVACY Newport Beach 4 BR, FA!ll RM, 2 Bath, \V::m Msedite1o,,....'"1atmOS· N . port a_ h ADULT LIVING sunken Roman Bt1.th. P11.,;e. pr ; us co.or CO· tw ~ac -~--Lrg dbc 2 Br, l~) Ba w/gar. BALBOA 2 Br, 2 Ba house. *Call 53&-3825* orcbnated apts -designed & OCEANFRONT -on the & star. Park-li k e at· Avail now until June S. 3 BR, 2 BA. Dbl gar, v.'aik furnished Jor !t,yle &: com-beach. 3 br, 2 ba, magnHi· mosphere. Fncd patio. S150 Incl util's. 675-4020. to bch. ?ttany extras. Cpts, fort •Heated pool • Kitch. ttnt vie\V w/garage. Off. Cpt/drpstbltns. \Valer pd. 1213) 332-8181 eves. drps. bltns, $2J5. 968•347::: en \V/ indirect UghtJng • season rental, util incl, 63'.i-4120. 3 BR. 2 Ba. Baysliores .Doll Deluxe RIO. Adults only, No S250 mo. 548-4757 or 6464833 2437 Orange Ave. (0) $15S House. Avail. to June l.5th Laguna Bta~~-----I pets. 2 BR W lk t be h 2619 Santa Ana Ave (C) $155 -1 BR ·S175 tum upper - a o ac ·1--~====,---- <tt bargain pr\ce. $265. Beaut, 3 br, 2 bn. UTil.ITIEs INCLUDED $250 incl util. Yearly. Avail EASTSIDE Home Show Realtors 6'&7225 custom bit. Bea..ms, frplc, 365 \V. \Vilson 642.19n 3/1. 213 / 447-9443, Brand new 2 BR, 1 BA. $175. OCEANFRONT 3 Br, 2 Ba, view. lmmaC'. 832-7449 eves. LGE 1 BR apt avai! Feb Crpts, drps, dwhr, selt clean. cpt/drps, dlx. \V ntr. S250. LOVELY 3 BR, 2 ba, nearly 1 :R $30 ~~I~S & UP / 5 thru June $175 mo: ing gas oven, all Wlr & gas Adlls only, no pets. 673-8088. nel\', Cpts & drps, Frplc, ·or . furn w TI-1/521--0988 * '827-8000. pd, Htd pool. 324 E, 20th $240 mo. 546-14:19 or 832-5800 compl. kitchen {all elecJ. . . St. i46-9148 Houses Un furn. 305 Free linens heated pool air. BACH. No cooking. $9a n10. 1 642-4097 days. I Units (J.2.2.21 Baii;1t1n at $55,iSO. 10"' down. 8.13-8090 2~ hrs. Bkr. Lido lilt ' ' . inc utiJ. 1809 \V, Balboa SEACLJFF ~1anor Apts. 1 DJSrR.IBtITORS NEEDED Genera l co.n~, 'IV & m!Lid service Blvd., 673-2223 &: 2 BR, lV. BA. $140-$160. 1----------3 BR, crpt'd, bltns. patio a\ail: .$30 mo\·e in allov.·ance + HU'.'JT'S • \VESSON • Ne\\' 1 BR ptiv cott u!il pd •• ~80 & ftplC'. Lease. Adults. D~y &. t-fonthly r ales Apt. Unfurn. 365 teg. discount Crpt.s, drpi;, 2 BR 1urn trailer Qt •• $110 S.100/mo. Call 673-4063. 2080 Newport Bh•d., al 21st I patio, pool, infant ok. 1525 multi • million do!h1r ad· e 642,,.. Gtntra 2 BR klds/pe1s OK •••• $12'5 • ....,u • Placentia Ave. 54&--2682 Commercial \'e1·tised i;nack pack pro-Newport Beach B/A · ard • M/Ch * * 1SI ducts. NEED NO\\'! Reli. 3 BR big !ncd lot for kids $130 :.;c..c.:;.;.;.;........;... _____ I menc arge * MESA VERDE 1-~P~r~o~p~e~rty"------able men or v.·omcn in your 2 BR horse ranch 1 acr · $165 PIER k FLOAT -takes lgt> NEW LRG DELUXE APTS DONALD GORAK 2 BR, cpts, drps, bltns, wash/ area to St"rvice fasl-movlng 2 BR horse ranch CM·· $175 site boat. Lge 3 BR, 2 BACH-furn $139.50 16542 Coper Ln. dry atti.ch. Locked gar & EARN 15°/o $!00,000 Cash Down s1: () Loans at 7%-8% · .AA" TENANTS lJ,00,, sq ft . 0C Airport W.R. DUBOIS INC. * &15-7166 * coin operated products in STAR*LET 776-7330 BA ho1ne, extra Jge patio. 1 BR-unfurn $1 40 Huntington Beach &tor. Lrg closets. Nr. ahp'g, company s<'eurPd locations. VERY CLEA:\' 4 BR, 2 BA s-ioomo.637-0624or67:)-3435 2 BR·unfurn $1SO You are the winner or $150.0wner540-5599,548-3209 comm"'rch1 l or factory, Parl home in a pnme arl'.'a, Ful!y PARK Lldo 3 BR, 2\.1 BA. FURNISHED AVAILABLE 2 tickets to the or ftil\ time. 6 to 12 hours crptd & drpd. Large f('nced C1·pts, <!rps, bit· i n~. ADULTS ONLY, NO PETS Western National per v•el'k. oo ~elHng. CASH yard, S225 per mo. Cal! Firr.place. $275. 642·11797 1760 Pomona &42-20J5 Boat & Merine REQUIRED •6(1() to •t,497. agent 5-16-4141 3 BR d 1 ti I 1250 Show • ~ · · px.p Y· urn · *Stud'10Apt$110 NE\V 2 Br. apt. No children or pets. 307 E. 18th St. Call 5-8 pm, 645-1574., \Vrite for .more information: RENTER'S DREA:O.t 2 Br 3 BR. Home S275 at the CHARilllNG Laguna &<tch Instant Food Supply, P.O. lrg yd, enc gar, xlnt Joe, Cayv.·ood Realty 548-1290 * 1 Bedroom $130 ANAHEIM t BR, bltins, !rplc, crpts, drps, patio. Small yd & pri. garage. 847-5306. NE\V 3 BR owners unit, frpl, all bltns, shag crpts, drps, closed garage. Jmmed. oc· cupancy, 5-4 0-1973 or 54~2321. * 2 BR. elec bltns, lock. ga.r, Mesa Verde area. Big closets. $155/mo. No pet.s. 5.57-8400 * BEAUTIF1JL l & 2 BR. Contemporary Garden Apts. Patios, frplcs, pool, .$145 • $160. Call 546-5163 SHARP lrg 1 &. 2 Br. cpts/drps, bltns, quiet bldg. No pets. lnfant ok. $130 & $150. 540-9722, 547-2682 ATfRAC like new 1·2 BR. Lg pool, cpts, drps, displ, utl pd. 1884 !'Tlonrovia. 548-0336. * BEAUTIFUL 1 & 2 BR. Contemporary Garden Apts. Patios, 1 r p I ca , pool. $145-$160. Call 546-5163. Pre-school center. Adult pool, Children's pool, Prlv patios. Elec kitchens. \Vall to wall closets & carpets. 2 play. groMds. Carports & &tor. age. 17256 S. Euclid St. (jlltit oouth of Warner in Fountain Valley! Phone (714) 540-4715 Huntington Beach NE\V LOVELY GARDEN APT. Lrg palio & encl garden. 2 BR, 2 BA. Shag CflltS, drps, bltns, encl gar. Near beach, 21 6 6 2 Brookhurst SI, Apt B. 640--0841 OCEANFRNT Vu. Sundeck. Beach. Smog tree. N""-er dlx 2 Br, bltns, cpt, drps, patio, lndry, &"at. Nr shops &: pier $165, Adlts, baby ok. 536-2131 *FRESH AIR A'ITRACT. Like new. l BR .. Dshwhr, crpls, drps. bltns. Hid pool. All ulil pd. Only $150. Inquire: 307 Avocado Apt 9. 645-0084 \Valk 3 bib to Beach! 11:"20~.~-~Lrg=~. ~,7107,-,~,~.~,-.~c~,7~-. I Beaut. big 3 BR apt. w/w crpts, drps, bltns except drpS, re frig, range. Gas & refrig. $225, No pets. sa&.1711 wtr pd, No pets. Over '33. 543-2407 WALK TO OCEAN -*-2,,-~B~R~. ~l1"30~/7m-0-.~,...c-1c. I l BR. Crpts, drps, some w/ Conv. shop'g, No children. !rplc & patios. $120.$150/per 313 E. 17th Pl. 548-6532 mo. Adults. $175 2 BR, 1* ba studio, redec, cpt/drps, adj shop'g 548-8301, 213/592-5227 U NOBORG CO. e 536-2519 3 Br , 2 ba, 1rplc, crpt, drps, bltns, air rond, gar, pat. Close 10 schls, shops: &: park. Kids OK, tl() pets, $200. 830-1548. 3 Lg Br's, 2 Ba, new cpts, drps, no pets, children ok. Av! 15th. $165/mo. 54~7245. 2 BR .studio, l~~ be, patio 3 J~e br, I 3/4 ba. $165, 2 & yrd, encl gar. Wix pd. cl*dren ok. Sl50 mo. l child ok. Call alter 4 pm, 545-3215 842-4549. $160. 1 Bdr. Dt"<. Bit-ins . .:.cW:..A,::Lc:Kc...,T_O~B-E-A-C-H-1-1-I Cpts/Drps, Pri. bale. Gar. LOVELY NE\V 1 & 2 BR. like nu, xlnt Joe. 962-4180. Crpts, drps, Dishwashers. • 2 BR. apt. Adults only. 70'.J Palm * 847-3957 No pets. BEACHBLUFF Apt1 Call 64~7~37 aft 4 pm. NEW 2 BR, 2 Ba, dishwasb· 2 Br in court. Stove. crpts, ers, pooJ, pati&. 8231 Ellis garage. 2 children, no pets. 8-12-8477 or 847.3957. · R<'fs. $145, 548-6031. $l40 LG 2 Br, l~ ba studio apt, ASK about our <liscr>unt plan! no pets, families only, Priv 2 BR d bl"·-1 , crpts, rps, wi;J, car. patio. 726 Joann St. $140. Port. S2i Move.Jn Allow. 2 BR, 1~~ Ba studio. $175, ance. 725 Utica.: 536-2462. u!il incl. Patio. 339 Cabrlllo. CHEZ ORO APTS ;.14s-sso3 or 8-16-3648. 8234 Atlanta, l-2 BR. pool, * * QUIET 2 BR. gar pri\'ate garage, \\'ashen, & pool, Cpt.s/drps. Adults dry<'rS. 536-8038; 5.36-2727 only, no pets. 642-8042 NEW 2 BR from $135. CptJJ, $150 • 2 BR, 1 ~a BA. Cpts, drps, blt.ns, patio, fam see- d rps, stv-dwhr, gar . No lion, play area, Nq pets. pets. 766 \V, Wilson. 642-i95S 846-7277 • ~tores & apt. on Coast H11»" Ho:< 3155 Torrance, Calif. Children & pets ok. $1 35. NPT Island 2 BR tircpl. & r.fAPLE ST NEAR 19TI! CONVENTION Lot 8()' X 105' to <1UC'y., 00:.05. Jnciuoephoncnumber, ALA Renlals e &15·3900 i,, • CENTER 2 BR, closed gar, pe.tio area. J BR, crpts, drps, refrlg., 3 BR, 2 BA. Condo. 2 car Fully leased. Ow11t>.r \1•1\l \V\NTED· Good k' F "l k SC>p, rec, 2 sm. J'(l(lms 1,.-: 645·0349 February 201h lhru 28th Children & pet OK. bllns, $135 mo. incl uli!. garage. Pool. $225/mo, Call finance at i .5';(. Bkr. I , . ~ . ood 1· . h""•'mo1;: 311.BkcDRyaMrd .•. Cao';'ttay,•1'"',,.··. Kp~~s Ba. gar. $295 yr, 673--0883 FR.EE HA.l.F MONTH RENT Please call ~2-5678, ext. 314 olli4il'-'==~~~=Sl:2:·8365===Tr=•:d:":'°:'"':•::R:lty=Sl=7-"="1:1:::::5.16-::7:72:3:af::to:r~5='30;p~m~.::::::;;1 "·alooom\cs Cocp. 6i~700 pariner, v.· inis 1 · " " S J C • I · Q t PRESTIGE 1 BR f n t.'-~----~----1 1nx & .... 'OQd bleaching OK, brk .• $200amonth.NO an uan apis rano uie ur behveen9andlpmtoclalm Condomlniuml stl'\'ict. Remo\ling old linlsh FEE. 5'10-1720. 3 BR., 2 ba., Jam. rm blt!-ns, ~00i;1' ~i~~ ~~~I~~ your tickets. {No.rJi County Clfi\l'"O Jl"'\.. '-_ f) "C ~Q.\9 for salt 160 lrom interior & exierior 3 BlJR...\1. + family rm., full cpti;, drps, clble gar. fenced 2831 SO. BRJSfOL, C.M. ;olI·free num:r 1s 540·~ \:)~ l.'Q'U ~). ~ J.Jq• V $2.l""" LA RGE 3 BR C d I \i'ood"·ork .. Homes, business tlining mt., built-Ins., brk. yd., $225. mo. 493-1264. 546-8791. ,...,,.. on ° bldgs, niarine vessel s, f'tc. $390 a month. NO FEE, -;;;-,::;:;.=,....,,...,,,-.--J=--===;;;;;;;-The Purzfe wilh lhe Bui/f .. fn Chuckle wlbltn hunk beds, prf\'at' \\'ork orders on hand. Lll Newport. 54~1720. ,u;;n;i;;•;;•;;';;'i;;t;;y;P;,;•;•~;:;;;;;;;;~ SINGLES $130 all util. e.'Cc('f)I patlo, dble garngc-"'i!h bhn I ovC'rhead, clear SiOO n10. , ~lee, ntodern bar. etC'. storage. Immaculate 1llru-Slj(X) req'd to en t c r Sl!i'J • La11:una BeaC'h 2 Br, 2 BR., 1 bath ....... ,,, $22j Adults c-nly. 1975 Parsons RENTAL FINDERS out. c!tablishl'rl bu~lnrs~ of 22 RIO. C·'D. Child /pet/sngl~. 3 BR., 21,J bath& ...... S2S5 fcorn('r Fordl, ~fgr apt. No. Frtt To landlords ~'n. :\lonry l'elundC'rl ,, mo Blue Beacon* 645-0111 3 BP .. &: din, nn .•••••. S325 -'''-·~~~~~-~=I 645-0111 "TffiLTRON " He!J.~1rs. l.ar\•o'ln Phone are,. code 71~ BEACll HOUSE 2 Br fl.-..:cr. 3 BR. & fam, rm ....... $325 .$l•IC l BR . .Sli.i . 2 BR. B "I B I h • ( ~-18 · ~"" 4)JW.1ttti-,C .. t• M"• uh . uy c ieaper' an ne"'· ;s!I-~""" <'XI · anyllme upper, avail no\v $175 4 BR., 2~ baths ........ S.uw Util pd . jik>oL Garden Liv.l!!~!:::"==o..~-~--1 , (>-pin :_:,~.Jll!, p11.t!os in, move. GLASS Shop. 8 u t 0 ·C 0 m· ALA Rentals • 6~l.J900 4 Bdrms., 2~' baths, vie.,... In!;'. Adlts. no ,Pets, 740 \\'. Just for Single Adults "'" rnPrMl\.I. High grot\'lh, gre11.t $l25. Gul'St L'Ol!age, Ull pd. Turtle Rock .......... $360 lS!h St .. Cl'tl. SOUTH BAY CLUB Larwin Realty , 1nc. • M!t•nUal, So. Oran,;e Cnty ttleal \\'Oman lv/ 1 ehlld. Pool 7 BR .• 4~ balhs ........ $450 $30 \VK ~ 1 per, wl kit APARTMENTS 21562 Brookhurst ,\\'c,, 1-1.B an·il. A nstural f or Blue Beacon* 645·0111 $35. l.1aid ~er, linens, TV ~5411 anyt ime (111 ner /op <'r11tor. $9000 _ & telc. Sen.lark l\.fott'I, Newport Beach 1-...:..:.:.:...'-..C:..:'-~1-'-~1-l!\(.·rl's inl'entorl.,.5 & t>qlilp. illtNI RANCH-StO\'<', refrig, 2:\0l Np! Blvd, 646--7445 880 lrvir.e Ave. pOPUI..AR ~tonlicrt 0 ~Jl 11 Can iuTange terms. 645--0962 • fam ilit's "-elcomt. $14~ f Irvine 11nd 16thl level model 2 + 2 '1tn. e.ies & v.knds. ALA Rt'ntals • &l;i-3900 QUIET. 1;1ud\os $115, l BR's, (714) 645-0550 adult i;ect\on. Ree L pO<I! -I S12j. No c:hldrn or tx;!g.1.-,=~-~~--~-1 facil. $22.~. 0 \\' n c r . Gt::\ERAL OX SAU: LI· Sli'5 • 3 Br. 2 Ba. BllJ'lS. C D 213;1 Elden Ave. C\f, sec 1 BR. Crpts, drps, elec bltns, 5W·l481. Ql:OR LICENSE \\'ANTED xar, pool. Kids ok. "SINCE 1~6" mgr Apr 6. heat, hOt "rater, pa!io, Orange Counly h0n111Idc Blu• B•o11con * 645-011 1 1st 'Vestern B11.nk Bldg LGE . 1 carport $1.20. Adults. 7892 res:tnurant. 714/&39-67'10 ON THE BEACH S""-clous University Park niC't? Y furn 1 BR. 11.pt, Ronald Dr .. H.R. ,... SI3:i. Closed l?ll~(', No .J IJ'Nfl'S, 1 )'T old. Col·ner ~M;on:;:•:Y::t:o;;L;;o;•;n;;;;;;2;;4;0 f Bachelor. $125 utll incl. Oeyt 833.0101 Night1 nien, ro per~. lnqu 1920 $180 N~ 2 BR apt, bltns. Jot, J-3 BR. 2 IS;\, lrplf. • Al.A Rf'nt"'l~ • &15·3900 ~"'""'"':!""'""'""'""'"""" "B" \Vallare <lr 8 38 ,,hag cplS, drps. p11xio, iar. 2-:? BR, 2 BA. 1 nice!} c h f t I I HORSE LOVERS! Houses F11rn. o r 1 • LRG 1 BR . "Pt. All ne.v.· 356 E. 20th, 01 &12'"1900 ~':rn. c~ ~1~· Jss~A~o~ 1~1 as as • 3 Br ...,., lrpl, full ac sn.; Unfurn. 310 rrpt~. drp~. tile & paint. Balboa Island ;li..11,950 J>. 0 .. Box 212, OOo1 l it & 2nd Trust Dteds 4 Br. 2 Ba. 1 3 a(' $~ Cost• Mts1 Rltnll. Sl4?/mo. !>46-0451. 2 BR. Frplc., balcony 315 Blut Beacon * 645-01 11 998 El Canuno. C,:\t. E. n-. .• \\'lntor -t•• 11~ LUOO' "ll", S duple.xcs + tREE APPRAJSAl..S ..,..., ... •;J Inc.om• Property 166 1·r1·1'l'l'l'I b:o.'-ra. w/te.n~d yd, J."Uc. Costa Met• lnveitment SPACIOU 3 Br, 2 Ba, CI D. CUTE Co!lace 2 BR, frpt, AVAIL now, 2 BR turn. Pool, monthly, Yearly avail. In· "' • h~,.,,. rtoa. JS<;' 148-nll o~t ime R/O Childrtn ok. lliS. l•m rm, 1215 ""'""'· $250 Roo rm, Good 1°''t~n. No ""'""opt. No. C, 6l3-!52l SCRAM0 LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFIED 700 fin .tll ti~l At:l 61'3-8989 ALA Ren!11lr. • &J,S.39("i0 fum, Avnd 2/15. tH2-3&15. pets t1r l'hildrcn. 646-SS~. _•_r_;<_S-_m_•_•_L _____ ~ ---------------------------.;.... __ .... UNSCRAM&lE LETIOS I V •OR ANSWfR . I I I I I I I I • Monday, F'tbnlar)' 1$. 1971 DAllV PILOT i~--•_b'°'"""__,[!1 1 [ ....,owomfor""" ][~I I....,,...,'°'-l[!]l -'°'-lrtJ[ ....,_'°'""" 'l!l [ -h l~I .,._,_, 1~1 1;;;"';;;'""';;;-;;;][S];;, .....,..,...,., ,[5l l•Ap•,•. •u•n•f•u,•n•.•••36.!• I Apto., I Apls., Aph., Apts., -~~~,1~Aro;;jnou;;jnmcm•mmmemnmls;;j:.:.5~00;:.:Aro;;nmoumnmcmemmmemnml1;;;.:.;50l.;;.i LCKt 555 I C•rpenter I L•pun• Beach Furn. or Unfu rn. 370 1 Furn. or Unfum. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Grttn pu11.ktet '°'t in vie j CARPENTRY - H t' t 8 ch H tln9ton Beach Newport Bei1ch WANTED Btrmuda. litrsa Verde an:a. r.IINOR REPAIRS, No Jab SOUTH Laguna ·New 1 br, General I un tnp on •• un "\'r'illie". f>-1~ Too SnWI. C.bfMt tn Pl" ~I block from ~ach. Heat@d .,.. & 0 th 0 r cabinet&. l I l 1-;;=========i * NE\\'PORT Island 1 en. poo . Al'"'~''· Compl"'I ' cf. Q .J.J. dupl.x •Pl °" w""· OVERWEIGHT/LADIES ""1'15 U no .,,..... l<&V< kitchen. Year round lease PALM MESA APTS • l ll!±'.J m.tl at 6'6-2372. H. O. for $169.50. New bed & dln-' a Utn a ermo~a $175/nlO. 871-7013 att 6 pm. lns•ruc:Uon Anderson ifli set for sale at $1lj BACHELOR & 1 br apts. · or unfurnished. Avail ~larch l BR unturn .•••.... Sl~.oo Casual est ate living. Enter La Quinta Her-Nr Hay. Eves. tiT0>-7876 or For weight r educin g progra m to establish statistics for r apid {>ermanent weight loss, conducted by qualified physical culturists. Must be a m inimum of 20 p ounds o ver· we ig ht, have transportation and not current· ly under doctor's care. All inquirie s com · plete ly confidential. REMODELING & R.palr Sptcl.11llst, Comm'l. re1klen. tlal. Pane:lln1, c a b 1 n e t 1 , rnarl!te. forrnlca. 644-7598. t. 497-1906 or 673-22~ l BR furn ........... Sl49.50 mesa's lush green atmosphere & stroll tree-~94-22.50 Schools & ln1truc1ion1 OCEAN front spectacular Bachelors Furnished lined walk \Vays to your apt. villa. Huge rms. 3 trptca. from $1'10. ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED ----------575 Beaut i:I'nds $600 hlo. I 2 BR apts $17:i mo. 1 BR. Unf. $150 -Furn. $110 494-4653 mo.Imo. OK 2 BR. Unf. $180 -Furn. $210 I~ Discover a Orei1t New Career With The Cerpet Service Lido l1Je i : ~~A 3 Spac. fir. plans, decor. furnishings: live • JACUZZI \Vithin r oman tic 5eltin g w/fun or privacy. AIRLINES Diamond Carpet Cleanlni Ava: 1iu room S8 Repairin& &: installatkln1 •BA~~RS • J.j6\ 1\t~a Dr. Santa Ana Ter raced pool, pri. sunken gas BBQ's W/ ASK FOR MISS POWELL-537-5414 Lra: llv rm, din area, kitchen, seculded seating comp!. w/Ramada & Foun· !-'URN &. unf w/bath &. A natural for youns people Free Est. &lSo-1317 Room a 400 kn.r iZ bdrm, refrig, sltlve, Coste Mes• ta.lo. kitchen prlv. Pvt home. who want excitement plwi! cpls/drps. Ulll pd. $160 * Color co-ord. kit w'/ indirePclt lihghlhin9. ~~~~.rsl & Adami ai'l!a. r------~ Ticket A(ent? Air Fre!Pt! Cement, Concrete ---•• CONCRETE. Beat Tht Bad \Veather! FI o or a . patio!!. Reas. Call Don 6'1~14. 6T.>-1892. LRG l & 2 BR. apts. 10 * Deluxe re n9e & ovens * u1 s •CJ crptg. I Station a Ee n t? J\eaerva. lcMco-e-sa-,V"""•-rd'e-----1 min from college, ocean & * Bonus storage space * Cov. cerport SLEEPING rm. $60 ~r mo: R1nt1ls Pertontl1 tlona! R&rnp or travel could walk to shop'g. l{as * Sc ulptured marble pulllnen & tile baths Priv ~ntr & ba. Adults, no ';;mmmmmm~-~ agent? \Ve'U tiain you for I 2 BR upstairs. Gar. Ne~·ly laundry fac., carport&. pool . * Eleg•nt recreation room. ~ts. 2135 Elden, C.'J. See • lhese and mott, dAy or nite. decor. Child ok. No pets. Rent llt1m SI30-Sl5.J. Ask 1 FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY tilgr. No. 6. Personels 530 \Ve include placement as- CONCRETE, brick, stone, tile etc. PatK>~. walkl:, drive5, dec:ks. Free est. ......... $150/mo. 557-8400. about our 1iscount. 18-16 Blk from Huntington Center , Sat\• Diego SLP"G rm for steady work'g Office Rental 440 ---------·I slstance. Newport Beech !!!C::'},~ia ~fgr. Apt H. Frwy .• Golden west CoU el!e. older man. ~I() c;:ookini;:. By * EXECUTIVE Suite of ot. FOR ladies only, $5 massaae 1 -;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;,;;;:;,I ;~~~~~.,.,,:------San Diego Fr\vy, to Beach Blvd., So. on mo only, $JJ. 154J ·Orange, fices, lJ.lj "'e\rport Bl\·d, ~p<>eial $5. 11434 Beach Est. 21 Y?l'I. Approved for t• Coste Mesa Beach 3 blks. to H olt; \V. on Holt to . C:>.1. N.B. Call 64HJ..15. Blvd., H.B. &17-9213 Veterans. Eligible in!titution CE.i.\IENT. Drives, patios, custom mlabs, etc. Alsn, ac~ rre1atP. over exl1lln& alabs. 539-94.jl) MARINER SQUARE APARTMENTS Annotinces the availabilily of 2 & 3 BR units !or adults desiring to live amidst beau. ty by the sea. in !he pres· tigious \VestcliH area ol Nev.'}Xlrt Beach. FROM $230 for information phone l\lr. Robert l\t. Buckley, htanag. er, at <TI4) 645.02::>2 or \\Tile 10 The Office of lhe :l\l;i.n. ager. l\Iariner Square Apts. 1244 livine Ave, NB. Cal. 92661. EASTBLUFF 2 BR. 2 ba. view apt. All bltns, carpe!ed & dra~d. l year old. $235 !\lo, 816 MIIGOS \VAY La Quinta Hermo sa 714: 847-5+. I NICE lge room Jor man only. 1670 SANTA ANA AVE C\I A,.,-L~co""u~a~w~c~s-A°"oo-'-,y-m_o_u_s I under the federally insUJ"P.d ~======--==T7"========i $12.50 v.·~~::k. 1789 Cre51· From 300 sq. ft. 35c 'aq it. Phone 542-7217 or \\'lite to student !OtUJ pro1.,..m, mont Pl C l\1 Call 548-8119 P.O. Box 1223 Costa r.tesa. A I A I • · ·1 • 675-2464 or 5"11·5032 Ai'rli'n• Schools P1c1'f1'c Bf'.k'\'D NE\V UNITS all with P s., P s., or 557-3149. beam ceillngs, paneling. pvt , __ F_u_r_n_. _o_r_U_n_f_u_rn_._3_7_0 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 . 3700 NE\VPORT BLVD, NB 610 E. 17th, Senta Ana ,. ----------Good location.Pvt congenial e ON THE BAY • ![SJ 59 patios, frplc, all rec facil· Coste Mes• home. i\ilchen J!rivlleges. 675-24&1 o1· 541·5032 lo1t •nd Found 543-4 6 ities. Adults, no pets. Huntington Beech 1-5 ''' <~o PIANO 'ESSONS • Bachelor 0 ~ ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;li~'~·<';"jj··~·m~':?~~!"rll5 NE\V oUlces, 17877 Beach ';;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;1Your home ... Cer ti fied • I BR -m •140 • YNG college or working tirl Bl. Lo\1·est rents 8-JZ..2525 I u v ' NEW NEW NEW Balbo J I · TV F d (f d ) 550 teacher~. 1\lusic Systems. • 2 BR from fl65 • ON BEACH I a s . Kit & rm or 213: 394-0015 oun ree • I !\Ir. Halchrock, 64~1368. • tele. S55lmo &. up. 675-3613 Business Rentel 445 BAY MEADOWS APTS. PATIOS, ~'alks, drives, in. stall ne1v \a\\·ns, aaw, break, remove. 548-8668 for est. THE very best in concreta "·ork now avail able, Free , e!timates. 673-L195 aft 5 . CE:\ofl!:NT WORK. m job too small, reasonable. Free Estln1. 11 . Stufilck, 5'S-81115 381 \\', Bay St ( bhvn Harbor & Newport Blvd, ~~ mi N. of 19th Sil. CAU. 646.0073 VILLA CORDOVA _ * Sl:t PER \Veek • uro1 ---------- .. l Bdrm ........ ·••• S~ \\'/kitchens. SZ> per \\"eek SUITES available. ritedical 2 STORY • SAFE e LOVELY . SPACIOUS e 1 & 2 BR Furn or Unf From $140 Util pd. * 2 Bdnn • • · · · · • · from S2~ -up Ap!s. 1.IOTEL. 5.1g.97a;:, proressional blOg, I 7 612 1r 3 Bdnn ......... ••••• $37.> · · n-h Bl d II B P k' BLACK & v.·hite cal, 11.bout 3 n1o's old, some black under chin, n1ale, wh. f1-cnt stripe on tun1my 646-8106 nr. llarper Sehl, c.:i.t.. [ IGif=l Contrector s ...... '"" ..... ._ ~ I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I :?313 Elden A\'e, Cl\t 64~0032 ' '· ·tu A ·1 bl 1'~UR;\"ISHED ulil pd 1v/k1t ~ac v . . . ar 1ni;: · wrn1 re vat a e ' ' ' I d fl · . . female only. Close to OCC, A r con : eating CHl'J)t'\s.drapcs-chsh\1ash~r SiO per nio. &!2-S.'120. Carpeting: Janitorial ser.• healed pool-saunas-tennis 430 lnquire Suite 8 or call rec room-ocean views Rentals to Share :>ID-5724. • Shadylane. Bebysitting ;\IEDIU~1 SIZE Cocker mix I--"---"-----• I n1ale, brn & blk. Nr \\'ii.son COSTA MESA ROBERTS REMODELING CustQm Remodelin& For Particular People Balboa l!Je 673.9212 1 Br.. furn. $130. 2 BR furn $15.i 2 BR unfum. $153. Pool. Bltru., crpts, drps. no children, no pets. 325-J E. 17th Pl. Of. 548-:lrn Huntington Beech_ patios-ample parkin&: . _ APT & OUice Sl50/mo, Security KUards. \Vorkingo lady betv.•een 3.l &: $45/wk. 800 sq. ft. 2376 HUNTINGTON 50 10 share home nr Gar. Ne\\"J)Ort Blvd., Ci\t. &. Placentla. Hit by car, PRE-SCHOOL under treatment at Animal 18th & l\.1onrovia., % day +I l'!!!!l!!!l!!!!!!!lJ!'!l!!ll!!•[!lll!IJ!~: Sheller, Sanla Ana. For info full day &essions:. Planned I: • DELUXE l & 2 BR's. 2 Br $15.l UP-3 BR $180 PACIFIC ~.'.'9866& Brookhurst, Reis. 5-18-915.i. 675-6050 ' Furn or unfurn. $145 &: UP. up. Patio, pool, childten ok. ""' ===,.-,,.,..,-.,.,--;.,-:-cc _. ... ...;.;..;_;;;.;.;;...~ Pool. Gardens. }77 E. 22nd I lnq. rental bonus now . 711 OCEAN AVE .. H.B. BEAUTY Salon tor Lease, WIU llAJWHtiMT Cl,.UIC. _s_c._. _c_,_1 ._•_•~2-_3~"~'~· -~~-: l\10RA K;\T 1\pts. 18881 C714) 536-1487 . \~:~E2D b~~att~i;~. :~~a~a~~ ~~l~~er~q~~~~~n~~ 49~~~ng !>19-3562. program, hot lunches. Ages ROOM Additions. L. T. 2·6, hrii 6:30 Ai\1·6:00 PM. Con1trucUon. Sina:le story or $18 \\"k.COMPARE! &j2-4050 2. Estim., plans .I: layout. BRO\YN & 1\•hite Chihuahua mele, nr Gotden~-est And Heil St., Hunt. B t' h. 847-630-1. or 8J8.52!7. 847-1511 PARK NE\\'PORT -care free !il'g overlkg !he \1'ater. 7 pools, 7 tennis CL'!. $750.000 Spa. From $17::> 10 $450 - Bach. 1 or 2 Br. Also 2 s1y TO\vnhouses. Elec. k!., pri. pat or bal Subtrn parkg opt mail ser cp!s, drps. Just N. of Fashion Isl at Jamboree & San Joaquin lill!s Rd. 644-1900 tor lC'as· ing info. 12.)0 sq If lg: :! Br, 1 1~ ba. l\lora l\a1 Lane, 1 ~ blk E. Ofc open 10 am-6 pm Daily .... 'OOd in NB .. •.;;;inc:! util . uU rm for v.·h/dr. patio, or Bf'nch, of[ Garrield, \VlLLIAl\f \\'ALTERS co. · .· .,. · · 400' STORE, shop, office. CllRISTIAN morher wi ll GAR., util or storaae bldgs $4 ,75 per sq ft. (400 sq babysit )'OUr child days. ft min) Reiid, apt&: comm') J•ull or part time or OC· at comparable co 1 t g • ca.sional. Fenced Yar d · 642-5997. gar, cpt/dp. $16:i. 546-8688. 962-89!1-I. "!"""""~""""""""""""liiiCii•l-,!~6lii20·.,•1~':'':;;;;;;;;-.;;;;w;I S9:i. 2340 Ne\\'J)Ort Blvd, General General Generel RELIABLE ""t1man 40's·51J"s C.ill. ~~7544 •. 5-18-8333 -------------------------------1 to shan> lovely home, Industrial Rentel 450 FOUND 1n Laguna, young, black, 1nale, 1errier.typc doi::. 491·3465. Apts., Apt5., Apts., preferably nurses aide S·IOi---------- Fur n. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370i~"'°~· _54_>-~36_18_· --:-=c,.--~I SMALL UNITS GERlllAN Shor l hair pointer.Young male, Vi c HB ranch on tilaln St. 536-8991. Q)mpanions. 50c hr. • $4 1 ,C,C..-'C~---,,,..--,.--1 day. 548-1395 MY \Vay, quality home !' repair. \Valls, celllnr, floors 1 BABYSITTING iny home, A New Wey To Live in Newport Beech OAKWOOO GARDEN APARTMENTS On 16th S1ree1 b!wu Jivinc and Dover Dr. (714) 642-8170 STUDIO apt: Park Newport. Avail mw. View. Gym. Pools. Tennis c 1 u b s . Activities. $195. 871-3232 x 2370 days. 64-l--0089 eves & I \Veekends. . * BA YFRONT * ~ Di:'!luxe newly dkor, new 1 draperies. 2 BR's, 2 BA"s. S37:i. 3121 \\r. Coas1 l-l1vy, Npt 3 BR, 2 RA, r r p l c, rrdecorated, D\V, ~250 n10. Adults. Nr Hoag J.losp. lm· 1 nird occup. 642-4387 or . fH2-liil. \VESTCLIF1'~ 2 Br, adull!,' no ~ts, cpts/drps, bl!ns, 1728 Bedlord Ln. $17:1. 51~7533. SJ-IARP Bluffs, 3 Br., 11~ ha. Nr. pool. Avail no"" S32J !\lo, lease. A i t . 6iH930. 2 BR"s. X-lg, nr bay & ocesn. $175 ye11rly. r\ewly dec. Adults. 67:>-4li2 afl 6 pn1 &: ~·knds. LGE 2 BR studio, l'i BA. crpts, drps, bltns & D\V, Near lloag Hosp. $190. 642-4387 fH2-177l. LIDO ISLE • Bachelor5 only Lgf' 1 BR apt, all utU'1 pd. $160. mo. 675.1892 Sen Clement• nELUXE 2 BR., 2 Ba .. hl!ins, dsh\\•hr. rec. room. Adul!s only. $180. 492-22::.9. Sant• An• VILLA MARSEILLES BRAND NEW SPACIOUS 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apt•· Adult Livihg Furn. & Unfurn. Dishwasher • color coordinlll· eel appliances . plush shag carper • choice of 2 color scht"n1es • 2 halh5 • slall shn\vel'll . mirrored ward· robe doo rs . 1ndirf!ct Jlght· Ing in kJ!chcn . breakrt1s! bar • huge private fenced put10 • plush landscaping • brick Bar-B·Q"1;. large heal· ed pools & lan11i. 3101 So. Bristol St. (ti ti!!. N. ol So. Coast Plaia) Santa An• PHONE' 557-1200 Your next move ... , ' '1 •• should be to · luxury . '. liVing ! HUNTINGTON BEACH -Adults Look Into ... OPENING SPECl!l-1 BEOROOM FROM $141! CASA del SOL Near all beaches • Private Terrace • Rec Suildinr • Sa un1s 2 Pools • Billiards • Gym • Puttinr Green and Volltyball Built· in Kitchens • Dishwashers • OispoS1ls • Carpe!J/Drapes Close lo all shoppint •Private Pa1kinr and Storare ALSO: 2 Bedroom w/rireplace F1om S105 216'1 Brookhurst, Hunlin1ton &etch-(714) 962·6653 HUNTINGTON BEACH -Adull and Family Seclions .. The posslble dream ••• 1 Bedroom f rom $135 -2 Bedroom, 2 Bflhs fram $155 HUNTINGTON GRANADA Private Terrace • 3 Pools w/Caban11s •Built-in K1tch1ns Dishwashtrs •Carpets/Drapes • Walk· in Closets • Oressinr Rooms Close to Shoppinf, AU Beaches and leisure Areas 17111 Golden W&I St., Huntin1ton Beath (714) &47·1055 (Just South Of Warner) COSTA MESA $95. &: $167. Per l\1onth \VILL share r11y 2 BR, 2 ba apt. pool, \1•/11·ork"g girl , age 25-35, Newpt Bch. 642-8971. Jmmedlale Occu_pancy 1----------New 6500 sq. fl. unit, 18th & NEE.OED, female roomn:iate \Vhlttier, 110.220 po~·er, 18·2::>_ to share . beautiful, plenty ot parking. spacious, ocean vie:w 3 BR See: Robert Natfl•e,;s, Rltr. house. 497-2CH7 Costa Mesa 642-1485 SHARE Charming ~al. Isle. NE\V bid 1728-2300 fL Bayfront home, F e m a I c 1 g, _ . . sq 4()-j() 67:\.-028' Nr Baker & F a1rv1ew. 1 · • ' 1 · )r. lease. Sullivan, ~~29. Ger•ge1 for Rent 435 L -Rentel1 Wanted 460 FOR motor home~. trailer, boat, etc. 1652 Npt Blvd, Ci'.l. LIKE QUIET PEOPLE 642.2821. 642-5106. THAT PAY THEIR Office Rentel 440 RENT??? 1----------ICouple w/l child no pets. * * R. C. SLATON ... Both "tlrk. Husband same job 8 ytars. Xln't pas! rent· Al references. \Ve need a 2 br unfurn. house or condo. Rent lllUSL he $140-$1::.0. \\'ill ,;lay on long 1f'rm, 642-38~4 eves & weekC'nd~. S.\1ALL gr<.!y & sil\·er female dog, Vic. or Bullder .!i Emporium, C.Y!. 557-2327 Lost 555 Grey & wht Siamese-Balinese cat w/blue f'yes lost vie Brookhurst & Adams, Re- 11·arrl. 962.1161 LOST: Small white labby female cal ~·f'aring plastic collar, ''Nemmy". Vlc: 47th & Seashore. 673-8400 all 6 pm. 1\IALE Irish Seiter "San1," sllghl hmp righl forepaw. no collar. Last seen at E!ilanela HI. 548-3539. GREEN & gold Floren!in" l\lesa de! Mar, any age etc. No job too small. , v.·elcome. Xlnt play facil., 547-0036, 24 hr ans. serv. hot lunch""· c e r t i Ji e d WALKING Deck CoaU1111 of tf'acher. 549--0726 all types. Lee Rcolln& Co, \VILL babysit your child tn 1 =C~.M=. ~"-"-.""=="":--:-'~"~·:-=:::I my licensed homr, ages 2 ROO~t addltion• lz. concrete 1hn1 :i. l\lon thru Fri. slabs & remodel1 . 549-i038 * 847-6333 * BABYSITIER, all ages, 24 Uc'd Contr. Remodelin& hour... \Vann meal1>. big Additiorui, Plans, Layout back yard. M2-1Y.n, C:\L Karl E. Kendall 541531 NEWPORT Heights area. Lrg Additions * Remodeline yard sand box. Balanced' Gerwick &: Sons, Ltc. lunch. Xln't Catt. 6-15-2754 673-&141 * 56-2170 : NEEP your haby well It Furniture happy, incl baby food &: ---------- Pampers. Xlnt care. 64;>.3788 FURNITURE Str l pp t n1. Also, boat parts. Wood & PRE-school are. 5 day "'etk. metal, In our 10' vat: Brookhunit &: Adan1s area. 64 Z..3445. key car;e v.·/keys lost nn 341h Gardening SI. beach. 675-0857 or CHI LD care my home. Pre.1 -----=------ H.B. 968-3051. 67=>-7230. fer 2 yr~ or older. Fairview AL'S GARDENING GOLDEN retriever male pup, k Ad11ms. C.~1. 549.0752 for gardening lz. 1ma 11 vie C!HI Dr., LagunR. An. Loving care In my home. landscaping services, call !>\\"ers to "!'hammy." Re· Fenced Jn yard 540-5198. Serving Newport, 3 BR in Bayshore or Lido ~·ard. &l.l-l2JO, 491-!92!1. • 645-4031 • CdM, Col la 1t1eu.. Dover ,1 th.. art'R for .June, July & Au~. Shores, \Ve1tcliff. 18728 Sant• Cermel Fountein Valley You are the v.•lnner of 2 1icke1s to lhc Western Netionel Boet & Merine Show ANAHE,IM \Vritc: l\lr. Chan HasSl'.'tt, Lady's small blue "'a\ch on LIC'D Ch\ld Cal'l!, my home * LANDSCAPING * 169 IV C••nolb••k p•--"ox· ••Id chain losl vie C.~I. any hours. Hot lunch, fenc-CO~VENTION Arizo~a. '" ' '""'" ' post office. 64;;.3042 ed yard. S48-3834. New 1a\Vn1, 1prlnkler1, CENTER drains. walls, .11rbors, pa. . 2 CAR Gar ge in Costa For best rerultsl 64z..5678 White Eh?p1'anl Dime-A·Line ,;~ 1 , · 'd tr Jl February 20th thru 28th l\·lcsa. To used for uvio, encea .... 1c con • Please call 642-5678, ext. ~14 storage. C Terry, The * yrs Joe. exp. 536-1225. bet\'.·een9and l pm1ocla1m Real Estat"111 2313 * * * * *P ROFE SS IONAL malo- your tickets. !North County M l R .,5 ten&nce, pruning. ~work, -f'+!.uJ,,,. numher i1 540.12201 1;...~•~c~.-'-'~·~n~t:...: ___ -.c:.:c sprlnklera:, pe1ta, disease. * ~ * ,.-enc Wt'!e<l control. Clean up jobs. suPER-DELuXPi::Q,UALITY '" , ,. ... "''"· Trader's Paradise T"·"'·· ""°"'· ......,,,_ 1·2-3 room, up to 3~.r~~~c.J~l~64~2~~5W~~~~ EXPERT J"a pane s e ft. office suites. lmmed. oc-gafdener. Complete 1arden· cupancy. Oraflj:e County. Ii nes ing .. ~rvlce. Free e . t. /.irport Irvine Commerc· 1 Personi ls ll•l 64~5. Complex, adj. Airporter AL'S M.ndscapln&. Tree Hotel & Re&tauran1. banks.I ~;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;! t1"meS remova.I. Yard remode11n1• San Diego & N'pt Fwys. !I Trallh t>ri.uling, Jot cleanup. UNCRO\VDED PARKING Personels 530 Repair stirtnklers. 673-lleG. LOWEST R ATES 1---------dollars PRUNE-WEEO.Clfr 1.hvner/mgr. 2172 Du Pont Dr. 1'~ULLY LICENSED * ,,.\ Rrn g Ne\\-port Beach Renowned Jtindu Spiritualist We Cater to Your Every 833-322.1 Courie~ to Brokers Advice on all matter~. \Vish. 545-6173 morn. or INTERIOR ~coralor'11 of. Lo~e, Ma~iage, Busines! 3 BR, 21,,. ha Baycrest. \VANT HOME, or one or ,,,.,.o eves. f. 1 1 !~" B Readings given 7 days a mobi!o home!! • for 2 BR NEW LawruJ, re-&eed. Comp! ~ce or rrn . OllU week, 10 am • 10 pm. S10,000 eq, For: lols or land, lawn care. Clean up by job ~v.·por1 Blvn. Good locR· 312 N El Camino Real, rD·s, "'aterr rnt or ? $18,000 )Cean view own . YoUr -own or mo. Free. est. For Wo !Ion. SlOO Per n10. ,V. E. San Clemr.nte bal. at 5~i:';O assume. Will 1pt1rtment. Roy J . Arntson, 897•2417 or 846.0932. Laf"henn1yrr, 1~60 N~\\·port .i92.9136, 492.0076 ::lr Jn for rite deal. 673-7784 Realtor. 494-72ft0 E X p ~ R 1 E N C E 0 Rh·rl. C.l\I. 646-3928 or -• -k G l l u"l1""e1 ~5-3-183. ADVENTURE lCapeCoraJFlorldaw111er. '""'e regory 0 • u" • Japanese-Am eri c a n 1 SAILING CRUISE !-"! Joi• •PP" $6>1 1969 paved road. Want T.D. Or· .-~"·,., -mp. g-~•nl"• FOR Immediate occupancy • . rn·~DE 'tor ~ew. Bosto~ ange property. Time R.E. & ..... cl:"an.up~'isJ.-01 50~" in 01·ange County"s mos1 l:,O It. 3 tnast Square Rigger. · 83>2~ or ask for Audrey lovrly garden comm'I con1· Leaving J/]:;/71 for 3 Wh&Jer-Sklpjack or income 2896 EXPER. Hawaii.an Gardener pl<'x. Comm'I prof"ssional mon1h11. t.1en & \\'OmCn want. property. 5"!S.l936 S38-• Com p I e t e G a rd en i n r ' & mt'dlcal suites, in San <'d "'/desire for adventure \Vanl nlOblle home, nr. frade equity in beautifully Service. Kamal.llJll. 646-4676 . Juan Capistrano adjacent to & travel & ability to share coasl; have clear 3 Br. 2'~ :11.red·for '70 Landeau l\lc> GARDENING and I aw r1 ' Bank of America. 8~033 expenses. For lnformaUon ba. home, $-15,00J eq., blk. tor home, 23'. sleeps 6, for care, Y."eek or month, trtt call P11m Reynolds, to ocean. Balboa Bay Pro[>-late model Sta. Wag. Load· e1t. 536-4385 aft. 4 p.m. DESK SPACE 222 Fo rest Avenu~ Loguno Beoch 494-9466 DESK SPACE l-=~~"~'~31=318~·260,.,.,;=~-ltrtles 673-7420 !d w/xtn. ~lS9l. S4l·9250 Husband Busy? Call r.foose PALM READINGS 10 acre& level f11rm !And I BR. 3 BA, 2100 ft. W<lilf, 545.-08~ a.lier &-Repair CARDS nrar lake & river by Lov~ Dover Shn: .11~a. NB. l\1int Bulld-Serv MO!lt Thinp lak, Nev. Jnter5eclion H\\'Y :ond. Trd $2'..ll\I eq, conw'I, RAil'! Guttera In 1ta11 •d. Ancitnt Sand Readings Spiritual Reading9 697-9272 • 10 A.'1·10 Pl\f ,10 & 50. Trade for cll.r. Ind. prop or Units, O.C. Dy Quality \\'Ork. Reuonable. !'limper or ? M().2311 ll2·'l300. eves/\\•kds &I~ Free est. 96&-mfl JOS No. El C•mino Re•I 210 \V. \\rhi(rier, La llabra 3xl0&.9x12Prc·warChlM5e HAVE 21 Acre nut ranch H1ullng S Cl Next to La H.abra Theater 1 h o ·~ ~ SANTA ANA-Adult and Family Sections an.. emente Oriental ruas. beaut colnr & wil 1 ouse, regon . ..,,,,vvu EXPERT HAU LINO 4g:z..c'120 SYMBRA'E'T'TE, the miraclt' good cond &: Lowrey elec Equity. W11.nt local income. TRASll & Garaie clean.up, Break the monotony... CORONA DEL MAR bra -Small bust increa~ organ. COAi $1400. Tr•de for r-.111d1:c D11vl1 Re!l}tor 7 day1. $10 a load. Free est. ba cup i;ize, Ire bu~! :i;upport .... r or '? S45-J974 &12-7000 "-•• ""~! OPENING SPECIAL-1 IEDROOM FROM $1371 2 Rm suite, pvt , pvt en tr. & comfort. 4 atyl"s in· ..... 1 ,,,"°'~v"u'"m"•c-· -~.,..·~=:-' -.,,.=-. PARK PLAZA Prkg, crpt/drp, ut\I pd. eluding 1he "no.hrs" bra. \Vint HI l>tSP.rt Calif-out· Have Newport Beach du· l\.IOVJNG. Garage cle:a.n-ttp $145/mo. Owner. 673·67S7 For personal lllllng, cal.I of-state:. health. Jlave a pleit, $20.~I eq: want Desert &: Ille h1.ulln1. Reu::mabl•. NIT BE BEAT Private Patios • Rte Buildin1 • Slunas • J1cuui • Pool LUX pvt offc, own ent &. 968-0l5S corner 90xl.l? :z bids•. Eq 1101 Springs house or -sub-Free estimates. 6'5-lli02 CA Bui115n Kitchens . Dishw1~en;. Ca1pets/Dr111u at 1ddr Wesl tlilf Dr l~xl7. SWEDISH MASSAGE $4V.1. F.P. $6&\f inr. $445 mJt. l\ladij:e Davi.I. Realtor. Hou1ecleanlng V Near outh Coast Plata • leisure Atus • Fretw1ys Cpt drps $85 ulll pd. AND SAUNA mo. 0-.vnt'r C.l\1 . 846-8558. &4.2·7000 STNGl.E STOR ALSO: 2 Bedroom/2 Bath from Sl67 ~~9386. Ha\'C $80,000 Ft C plus SUN Brite 1-falnt Carpeta, South !'ca Acniospherc lownHousew/l\IBathsFrom Sl7S ·°"'===-""'==-o~clTralncd itch. for relaxation. • Have 8 unit• Belmont 2 BR .• 2 BATII "'E\\'PORT BEACH Civic Prlvalc rooms. 1 ;homi, Long Beach. WANT Sl~.000 tq. + $8"F,000 PtlJ>tt Doon, windowa e!e. Re1kl'l 3900 Southflow1r,SanUAn1-(714)!AS.3Zl4 c 1 300 11 1 1000 11 •O 24 h • ,,•~mo.1Yont •••0 uolr l comm'!. 1'rM e•t . ea-111 & drpJ rn er, 0 . . pen ours 10me er more units J.asuna --Ai;'Coooulo"Cd (2bloc.kse1stof 8ri~tol1ndM1cArthur} An1w. &: Secretarial . 2626 N Bl d 9,.ach. Reva0IsonR.ltr213: motel, ~f11dat D•vis, Real· 5.17~.11. Prl\•ate Patio'J 6i>l601 ewport v • 1131 4329 or 59&-5779 lor. 6"1·7000 HOUSE OF CLEAM HE:ATED POOi.. 5 NE\V offJc.1, 17877 Be•eh COSTA ~l&SA 6i5-0860 • . Equity In 3 br, 2 ba house , Complete House Cleanblc Plenty of tawn .l\1anagc-d By: Bl. Lowest rents. ca 11 SINGLE? WIDOWED? \.\'hat do you have to trade? in Tustin. w u1 trade tar ~-~,o64c.H.!Uo.,ccc-~~,- canicrt • Stcrage &42-25:15 or 1213} 394.0015. Divorced? Over 21? 141•t It here -ln Ortnre car. C*mper or? Bay A Beach Janitorial HI DDF.N VILLAGE HAftlOft MANA&EMENT CD .. INC. AJR COND., OCEAN V1EW '" • oeli •"1>14114'°"" "'" ~"'Y'• 1.,,.,, r<ad .... Call Crpl•. w100o ..... lloorl •tc GARDEN APTS. U50rled &\tea, &hop center sa1e 24 hr11 a dAy call Ina posl.642-5671 54().2333 Re1. A C.Ornm'l, ~1401. 2500 Sou!h Sa.llll San Clemente 492-2979 496-4801 or 541-9991 11.ft~a Cleaning Strvic.-. Santa An• ' f,; s.IA.l~~ I f')r thll Item under $50, DA.ILY Pllhl' for action! I * * * * * *I Carpets, W\ndow11, noon ete . .,.,...., ... _,...,.,...,....._ ----------------------------lry the Penny ?lnchf':r Call 642-5678 &: s.wr !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Re1\d, k Commc'I, 541-4111 • , '1 ~il!~~bM~L~Y~~~l~OT~~~~~~M!o...t~~!'!~~W~Ul~~~l~~~l!97!l~~~~~~I ~~~l~!!!i!!!i!!-!!!i!!!!i!~~ I -..... ,.., I~ I -·-J[Il] I ·-·-· J[Il] I -"·· J[Il] I --J[Il] I --l[Il] I --· J[Il] I _,_ l[Il] 1 ;;;1 _., .... _, .•. ,.~]~[Ill 1:1.nciioiimiioiiTii•ii•iiiiiiiiiiii;;:.~ Holp W•nto<I, M & F 710 I Job Wo nted, Melo 700 I Holp Wontocl, M & F 710 Holp Wootocl, M & F 710 Holp W•nlod, M & F 710 Holp Wonlocl, M & F 710 Holp W•nlod, M & F 710 Holp Wanted, M & F 710 Smiley Tax Service • 13th YEAR LOCAUY e QualiJ1ett _ Reasonable \\'. ;\. SMll.E!'t' Cerlilicd Puhlic Acroun!"t !H:Z-rl21 an:-,.thne 64&-9660 Central BusU1rss St-rviC!C's I eTHE TAX ADVISORS Perm. offi('('·ftl·.11s Rates 328 ?'o, Nell'port Blvd, Opposite Hoag lloi;pitd.I }'or Appl. Call 645-0400 INCOME TAX SERV $4 k up. 9 am·9 pin 11·kdys. O~n cve~/...,·knds. Appts 11.\'aJI. ~S-0:>88-1&U Ne1\'PQH, I C»t. I Gordon N. Warren_~·A: Slnc-e l~jl. 61.l-Jl.l::i I Ironing IRO'.'\i'.'\G niy home, $1.2j pf'r hr. '\'our hangers & sta.rch. f11,st! 962-1887. IRONING my home Sl.?5 per •hr. Brmg O\\'n hangers. 54~7641 Landscaping L>t.'IJDSCAPING: Iriclu~ing 1· patios, decking & Iencmg. Reas. 837-!ll'.IL I CO\IPLE'TE Prof. Se r v . I State lic'd contractor. CaU 968-1928. Painting & Paperhanging PROFESSIONAL Painting.' Exler. 1 story, low as $200 ...,·/gd paint. Avg rm. $18. Accous. ceilings sprayed 2- 1 coats $15. P.oy, 847-1358 * E.\.'TERIOR-1:'1/TERIOR * \\'on'I be underbld Cusrom \\'Ork, Jinest paints. Free I est/color consulting. P.eIB. Ii .... bonded. F~ll? fin~ncing I avail. 492-.)338, 54,,...5()8j YOU SUP PLY TliE PAI~T \\'ill p<unl any rm $10. Int / ex:ter. Free es t ·15 }TS exp. ~\lso carpenter .... ·ork, any kind. 5-10-70-16, 5j7-8638. LESCO Painting Contractor j Inter & Exter. 2 Story ' Specialist. Also, accousl I spraying. Lie & in s . 64~239'J. No Wastin~ * WALLPAPER * When )'OU call ";\1ac" $4.S.1444 646-1111 PAL.'\'TING/paper1ng. 18 :-,TS j in rlarbor area. Lie & bon<led. Ref s furn. 6-12-2356. P . I ll'T & Ex ter. a1nt1ng . Lic'd, ins. Free est. 30 yrs exper. Chuck. 6-l.'>-OS09. CUSTO\f Paper Han1;.ring, in· 1er/ex!er. pa 1nong. S3\'e on paper. 531-'i9'Jl. tXTERIOR & cxterior pain· ting. Average 2 BR apt SSj labor & material 548-1546. PAlNTL'\G. prolessional. All \\'Ork guarn. Color srecialist. 6-IB-7081: 547-14-11 FIRST Class Painting & paper• -hangini;, Free ~st. Call 54.~~59. I PA1i'OTING/papering. 18 yn; in Harbor area. Lie & bonded. Rers furn . &12-2356. Plast,r, Patch, R-;pair' -. PATCH PLASTERING AU typPS. Yree eslimates Call ~0-6825 [ Plumbing PLt:~1 BING REPAIR No job too 5mall • &12-3128 • LE\V TAKAS & SON S CO\lPLETF. PLL::'-!BING 1~ HR SERV. &i6-R3-10 Plurnbing . Elect · Repair 1 Si.SO f>('f hr I IH2-2ill &12--0506 Remodel & Repair I GENERAL liome Repalr "' carpentry, cabinets. doors, screens & misc. 492-26.>l Roofing LEE Roofing co. Roo lini;: of a.JI lypcs . fif"(.'Q\li>r, !'rpairs. roof c::oa1tngs. Lie/bonded I i;ince '47. &12-7:222: EASTER'.'\ Quai.ity-\\'e~1.ern I Prices'. All types Rooting. Lyle. 673-79M. T, Cuy Rooltng. Deal OH'tCI. I rlo my 0\\,\ work. &1;i...2rso. :i.1s-9;ioo. Sewing/ Altera t ions A LTERATIOXS, re5!yllni:. E"pert fitter, Top rcl'i;. N.B. area. 616-270-1 Cal1 Ruth Call. I ORESS)IA.KING, cu i; to m work . Altrrations, rippers, etc. f\1rs. KrouSl', 89~--l(l,t~ EUROPEA.~ dressmaking all ~U5torn lillf"d. Very reason. 1 able 673-1S49 I Alterations -642-5845 Neat, accurate, 20 yt'ars e...'CJI. I Tiie 1 •Verne, Tbe Tile )·Ian ~ Cust. •"Ork. Install & J"f'P<llN. No job too itml. Plt111ter ()ltchina:. ~3klnit ~hOwtr t'fpair. St7-1957/8·t6--0200. CERArt.tlC Tile new & remode.L Free f'sL Small jotis •~lcome, 5 36 ·2• 2 6. ;.""8885. Trff Servtce 1-'-'==-----TREES. l·l~gt:s, Top, Trim, cul remo\led, hauled. Ins. &1i-fo3o Big .John. Upholstery temporary personnel proud to be an american glad you 're a girl?? register with american girl invest your time & talent wisely & be your own boss! of american girl you will find exc.iting temporary to fit your & needs. positions $thedule WE NEED TYPISTS CLERKS STENOS SECRETARIES PBX OPERA TORS ASST. BKKPRS. ACCTG. CLERKS american girl needs YOU 2172 Dupont, Suite 12 Newport Beach (Nr. Orange Counly A lrportl * WAITRESS-EXP'D SCRAM LETS I ElXCTRONIC ~nginttr tor * INSPECTRESS * MTST Opr $395 $600 SECRETARY !\lust bt O\'er 21. r\O PHONE • Beuy Bruce limited flf'.ld ~·ork, in-plan! Lovtly S.A. ofca,· xln'l stable Exeeul!v~. 1...oca.1. Call Ann, C\LLS. Apply 111 person, m 6 ad1nlnlstratio11, !ialea & With e:irperience preten'1!d, co. Some prev. tll:pt'r, Cali 6-15-2170, 'Vestchff Pe~on~I Suri & Sit'ioin, 5930 \\', Coasi ANSWERS , M"tvice ol industrial f'lt'C· for first class llotel, and f.ti.ss Connie. Agency, 2043 \\'estchU Dr., Hwy. N.B. t.:1.1 ,xec tronlc in1trumt'nls l.nvotvlng pleasant ...,·orking condlllohs, N.B. · 1 E 'd P integrated <"lrcui11, digital ALSO • Ni""'t Mald, (714J Traffic Clrk 10 $550 \Vilitl't'ss for d9Y ~111 t· xp , .... 1 "UNERA'... tecuniques, ""'""" resu111e to 644·1709 Ext. 575". Co. P""' !••. X'l•'t co. mo·'· , . .. ... Ambush-f'ugut>-a~r -_A .. · ~-M-' 61' SECRETARY Apply Vikin"' SmO""'JSbord, ~01"' )' -s-• ~ C"·slf' d d N 73 o ·1 l;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•I ...., .. "" " • ?tlajor Southern Cahforn1a 11-, E. J9•" o1, c .. ,I. Co · • I "I'll I JI a (!/1.Cll ....., ie a o. • ai y ing to llOW S.A. olC1. Tntck• "' " m1c s apo ogy: e (J d Pll t p 0 Bo 1560 Cost Land Development Co .. has ~IEDICAL ASS'T you how I got this ma1erh1.I. 0 • · · x · a Inv/Order Clrk $SOO Ing, moving or 1tea11uhip co unusual opporiuidly for the \VANTED: -• . · 1 emt·ee. at FtJNERALS." f.tesa 92626· Exper, req'd, gd cw;lomer exper. Call i\olis1 Dotti. right penon with a secre-ror busy N.B. 1nternu.t So~1e . . . Acctl R"eivable EXPERIENCED i\10LDERS phone contact, accur. l>'Pisl. 5.37-6122 . . lllb & xruy exper prcl d. l\IAN \1 /adm1n1strauve ex· GC'n'J AcclJlg, bank ieposits, and TR..\INEES, days or Gd benellLs. Laguna, Abigail Abbot Personnel tanaJ I accounting back· Pt-rln1r. A<>e. 2~:t'.i. Salary per. In anibu!arory & l"On. 1 collect!o11 lette1·s t)pe 50-60.1 nights, 1\facCregor Yacht Airenc:y, 230 \V. 'Varner, ~nd as weU ~~ an 11~',·1,.co~m~1~n~"~"~u~r~~1iieiiii;Jii8-ii3io7ii42ii.iii \'alesd'nl hon1es, 111!«> all · ' I C 1631 Pl f c M o qua.intenance \Vlt.1 o ic 11 phases of bookkeeping &. r_ ) orp., attn ia •. 1 • Sec'y/Recept. $425 S\lite 211, S.A, n1gn1t, procedures. Job in-WE NEED YOU I I · · 1 .. ,. 0>eCretary Esc ...... ., '--k ... ·nd helpful, Sil If-& 1·-, Job•) I d lrol f c ass &.na ys1s 1n n!anu .,.;. • . , FURNITURE •v> "" o• "'"' '" cu es .inventory con. o L•'ce"'"d '"'" '''' \\'Onicn !or ''I'"''•" 11 .. , 1,..o \V, 9lh s1.. ·':ioung, Ju.st out of sec Y · typing, trnt otc appear. NURSES N d d for · 1 l I hi d q p , 1 "~ " • " ~ 1 SALES ee e pr1va e urns ngs at.> .e ui m. ".· , •• ,,, geoier•i Re•! Estale SA C•ll c,,_;;-,Q ••k for school. Can be inexper enc. --d I RN' LVN' Pr I E II k d " • " I ~.Ir.· 0o",,,."' "" ' ....., . ed. Gd typing & SH, 10 key For local dept. store NEWPORT u y, s, s, ac · .xcc ent \ior ing i:on 1• ort1ce covering Newpot·t Har--• • TOP COMr.nSS!O~ Aides. All shifts/Ylust have tiOns & l'U benefits. . 1 Job Wanted, Female 702 adding. Personnel Agency l't'f"s. Ph any hr 642-99jS cAI:L &W-3258 bor, liunungton Be a c i, • CO. BEt-.'ErITS 833 Dover Or., N.B. Lescoulie Nurses Registry l\tonday thru F'rid<iy, Fountain Valley. Top con1- 81·111·ng Clerk Quality llne to sell ~ 642•3870 n1ission, Excellent \1·orking ELDERLY v.·oman \\·ants NURSE AIDE TRAINING 8 to 12 ONLY day work ('\'Cl)' other \\'ed Type 50-rio. r-.1u~t have exper. t:~~~. i;:~:;n l'l'!~~~~~~"."""~'I A health care oppty , =sE=R=v~I~C~E~~E•,~1.~b~'d'.-:r=u1~1~,:rl ~;."~~~~sA ~tl~~;;~h~~~;: .~ ('Very Fri. 642-0539 all. I Oi·ange Co. Airpoi·r. W T GRANT CO JANITOR.S-Exp'd only, v.-ork Em p Io y men t offered. Brush rte. $12"'~$175 \\'k. to 2 F . """) "039 all 4 ' • • Beach Cilie•. 140l Kra•m•• Pe I n. L II H F.V. Olive English 962-300 ' & "'oery r1. """"""" . Secretary Personnel Office "" N Brsonne v.:p oag asp. st., also pl. lime 54fr5745. 524·9670 or eves. 675·3051. Blvd. Anaheim, Calif. REL!Ef nu1"S1ng 8 hr $1~. To bank exec, Fi'Ont ofc hvy 9811 Adams Ave., Grant Plaza liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio 1--:i:· ~·ru~ii'leiinoO<':i:-I *SINGLE needle p o \Ve rl"""""""""""""""""""I or can i;!ay \l'eekly at $65. I• . . 'SH Brookhurst & Ada.ms, * OPERATORS * machine operators Also WOMAN Xlnt re 'ls; Pleas an 1 I public contacl, iyping & ' Htg. Beach ~A.RY Single needle, Experienced lraintes. Teaching experience prefer mrll-age., Car. !136-4380. Secretary An equal opportunity on!y, top pa~. ROLF'S r-.ITG, I ~1.D. l\1ANUFACTUR IN9 _ bai:kgrnd in home ~conom· l'ldt'rly care or famlly care. • T . g .:0 accur. I ~!!!~~~~~~!'"'!!!!I Ph: &46--0308. 'SHARP legal sec'y 01· trainee i!Jg. l\1ust be sharp, alu-ae· AIDES For """"""""· To p, . ., SH ood bUI not •mplo,er r 'la~ 86.> Producuon Pla<e, N.B. N"'-""'" &l2""56o b , .ewmg" pallem mak· Homernakt"rs, 5'17-6681. necess. yp ing 1 GAL FRIDAY PAPER BOYS I wanted by Attorneys in li.B. t)ve & fashion oricntl'd. \\"c I Good organizer. NliRSE-CO:'ltPA:'IJ!O:\'-Variety, Iota!. Call Loraine, '-~ NEWPORT BEACH Beaut office & pleasant sur· arc a young rapidly gro1v- COOK. \VILL TRAVEL Mail Clerk Westclill Personlll'I Agency. ~~111..'4 Routes open in Ne\vport 1 ~und~ngs. ~ typing & ing Co. offering a challeng. S2.50 llr, 646-18?2 2043 \Vestcl itt Dr., N.B, -.. Ml""-Beac'-for boy• •&• 1n 15. I d1clat1on_ skills 1 n e c e s s · iiig future to the rig h1 ap. Acct. Trainee " .,.. u d 3 962-66 1 Help W.nt.d' M & F 710 N 645-2770 Call Circulation Dept , n er J, · plicanc. \Vrite Iully. includ· 10 Key adding, type 45. o a I~~==~~~~--·! EXECUTIVE GENER AL J\1ain!enance 642.4321. Stenographer ini;: telephone nun1bcr to deblt Jrom a credit. · so · p·1 :r.tan for HOTEL LAGUNA. PERSONNEL PAPER BOYS Gassif1ed # , Da ily 1 01. A Belter Position Call f\Igr. for appointment, FOUNTAIN VALLEY V , .... P.O. Box 1560, Costa ~1esa, 494-1151 AGENCY arian Data 1>lacn1nes, Calif. 92GW. T "' •GENERAL r.taintenance & Routes open in F.V. for boys located in the Irvine Jn. 1~~~~===~==1 age ll:l.5. Cali 642-4321, Cir-dustrial Complex. has an X ·RAY TECH NOLOGIST, culation Dept. imn1ediatc requirement \V[!h or 11'ilhou1 special pro. foi· a stenographer to ,cedures. South Coa.~I Con1 · -~:·· ,J Delivery. $195 per hr. Call KEYPUNCH OPR M0-4511. (2nd Shift) ;i BO/\ T CARPENTER . or CAB INET J\lAKER. Ex· perienced. Perm. job, fringe hene li 1s. LAK E AR· ROWHEAD MARINA, (714) 337-2j(}l PROPERTY MANAGE,\IENT nuuiily Jl ospilal, ~1872 Coasl 11•ork Jn its Production "Gld F'riday" • Secretarlal 3-5 Yrs exper w/026, o29. pay. Experienced, mature rouple: & bookkeeping duties. i\Un roll, payable5, receivables nianage & maintenance of l/Z IH:/\'Dtlf..f • ,.,,,on•tl ilt•n~1 4100 [on1 p•1 Dr.• S 1-/'(}rl /J"J<~ I .-l"Ql> /•o'" Or~nf~ CoMnr~ Alrpolt Pho11t j46.2JJ8 2 yrs exp. Call 642-7306 etc. apt. complex, c:-.1. Salary HAIRSTYLISTS wanted by + apl. Call collect {714) Stat Typtst/Exec Sec'y, mfgr bkgnid Sec'y l.o pres La Dama Coiffu res (ne1v I Other Keypunch Positions 776-9840. :1~ BODY & PAINT r.1AN, for ownersl, Call 5 4 0-50 71. Avail. Dayshlft. Lite exp. I ~P~R"O~P~. ~M=gm=t.-,C',-,,-.-,_-,-c,, •600 used car lot. r-.1u~t have 842..fiOlO, 830-1302 or 410 W. Coast Hwy. exp'd Leasing Cirls. Ph: S.:.oo own equip"n\t, 646-11598 er 495-<Kl20 Suite H ' N .B. 557.7952 Tues & \\'ed, Feb. D Hwy .. SO. Lil~una. t7111 Control epartn1ent. ,19~1311 E:\L ;ij6 XTRA INCO:'llE is our business-:0.lake it you l's . Free training. Earn v.·hile you lea1·n, flex hrs. For appt call K-Korp 827-2420 or :l30-a333. I Elec Sales O!'d Dsk Rccep!. type 60 Stat T,vpist. So Lai;: S3;')0 aftr 5 PM, 557-45-10 * HEAD \VAlTW;-;SS.. 6 Da 645~2716 16 & 17, 1 to 4 Pill. '.' '" 's-oo~K-KE~E~P~E~R~. ~lu~ll~c~h-,-,-,,-, 1 ll'k. Dlnncr 1-louse. Perm.1 ,.,,.."!""!""!"!!!!!!!!!..,..,..,,, I iIB<:Ei>riffiii!S'i'/S.mia.:Y: I ~ 9 2 I' RECEPTIONIST I Secretary. $6,,-1 machine ,.. b shop. Ne\v lnterviewr; to 1 noon. e LAB T EC H N ICIA N G' I • 1 . 1. Requirements include a minimum of 2 !O 4 years clerical experience, pre- ferably in a production or n1aterial control depart. ment. Experience in an Electronics l\lanufactur- ing Con1pany is neccs- sa1)'. Young ATTORNEY 10 ll'ork in small 15 atty '1 J do11·ntown Los Angeles of. lice. Good si:holastic bkgrnd req'd. $13,200 per annum. Tel :\Ir. Butterworth (11.31 627-3141 I &-c'y Srk r-.tkt cxpcr Rec<'pl. So. Lag. Sec'y Engrng °'>I'S SEAFOOD I 6 2 7 8 " " tr Ylltu P easing persona 1ty $.',.\O facility, Irvine complex. ..,,., Licensed. Part time in lge. k b p ·r H H B h fo ...,·or \\ith uslncss execu. ..'-IV\ I \Vritl! Classified ad No. 12, aci ic wy, unt. c • Pediatric Croup. 646-0:>15 . Typ' . bkk <f-""' lives. 1ng, lite pg., S-lOO Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, HAlRDRESSERS, increase J\1rs. \Varren. one girl ofc. Send complete Typii:t 80 w.p.m. Gen'! ofc, lite hks $-1.)(1 1 Costa J\.1ei;a, Ca. 92626 your salaries 30~. Booth LEGAL SEC'Y r esume tO; Oassified ad No. rental. l'\1ust be xln't typist Some 68, Daily Pilot, P.O. Box * * Call For Appt. OPEN ~IONDA Y AGENTS • Exp'd lns. Guar. salary & comm. Contact J im \Vilcox 6T::>-6383 APT. 1'>1GR·OLDER COUPLE minimum duties for partial rent. 642-9320 aft J pm. ASSEMBLERS & TRAINEES I Sheet Metal/Wood l imnicd. openings for tall young n1en ...,·/agility. some "xpcr, desirable. Top pay. 01>1.'nings n1u!'1 be lilted 1his .... ·eek. Call Now! 9 am to 9 pill. ORANGE COAST EMPLOYMENT AGENCY 124 Broadway, C.M. 6'15-3111 A-RESUl\1E pul your np· plication on TOP. \Ve con1- pose & print 50 coplf'S - ONLY SE.1.00. Call fl"l6--0S:J-l 1 for appo\r1ln1enf. ASSE'.\lBLEP.S for can1Jl(>r faciory, '.\Iajorv.·ay, 869 ,V , 18th SI , Costa illesa Clerical RUTH RYAN AGENCY SPECTALIZll"G IN OFFICE PERSONNEL 1793 Ne\vpo11, Costa Mesa 64048>1 17931 Beach Blvd., HB 847.9617 COASTAL AGENCY SEC'Y TO PRES Gd PR Gal }'riclay to run 1 girl ore. SH. lype & lite bkkpng rt'q"d. S600 11::1 siar\. Call Sally Hart. * CALL 673-82"';)() * exper. probate . P i. New. 1560, Costa Mesa, CaJiL 92626 • . ttAIRSTYLIST-Exp'd. port Center Ofc. \Vrite Clas. RELIABLE \\'Oman for Some following pref'd, Ph: sified ad No. 62, Daily Pilol, &16-1343. P.O. Box l'""n, Costa l'\fesa. cleaning & ironing, l\1on, JW Wed & Fri, 9 to 3. $2/hr, HAZEL -WE Calif. 9262G. S36/wk. Permanent. Own NEED YOU! "L~V~N~,,-,-,-,-,-,-.,~if~ie_d_P'_"'_n_.iet~1 transp. Lido Isle. 673-6112 If you can drive, cook & tor dra\ving blood in * R N SUPERVISOR in OR. keep a family 1v/ 4 children laboratory. South Coast to be unit l'\1gr. Hi-rating running smoothly, then you Olmmunity Hospital, 3187? hospital corps, re t. ire e, n1ay be just the addition to Coast Hwy.. So. Laguna. exp'd in OR technique. our family \\'e're looking for, (714) 49!}--1311 Ext. 356 South Coast Community Salary nt>i;:otiable. 644.1408 LVN -All shifts, full time. Hospital, 31872 Coast H11')'., S.j. Personnel Dept, H aag ~-Laguna (7l~l ~~1311 • HOTEL· DESK CLERK }lcavy experience • APPLY IN PERSON e NEWPORTER INN Hospi1al, N.B. Ext 356 * LVN • 3:00·11:00 shift.* ROUTE Sales $130 wk to st. Park Lido Convalescent· Take ov estab Fuller Brush Center 642-8044 rte in Laguna. Xlnt pl time MAID, Live-in, $30 \\"eek, No )•'•'k""!al"'°~'='"~liil.=P~h~. ~542-~7ii5ii730i. cooking or laundry. J\tust be 1horough. 842-1983 SALES REPS Exciting career, xln't Jalar. 1107 J a1nborre Rd. i\fAN wanted for early A"'I ies lot men & v.'Omen. Long Nr...,·port Beach ne\1•spaper delivery, Ne1v. estab. repUtable nalional }I OUSEKEEPER Wanted: port Beach area. ilfust have firm. Earn $200-SZ';iO " v.·eek Part time about 3 days dependable. car and be re· a frer 2nd v.ttk. Oirec1 ]('ads SERVICE SEC'Y a \veek. no' rooking, no serv-liable. LA TIMES, G42-4800. on all clients, lNot <foOr 10 No wan·an!ys &. claims. ing, no children. C'.'-11 ~nd J\<IAKE full time \\'ages, part doorl. 60'/; l..'Ofllm. \\'ark \\'arn1 salt's personality, come to 5tt about n1te JOb. time be a distributor of f'vea 5:30 'Iii 9:30 aflrr 4 hte typing. Start $3j(), Call 1121 Bayside Dr., 673-1051 pure' organic cleaners, food day n-aining orlrnlation fol· Helen Ha)ies. AFTER 10 AM supplements & rosmetics. lov.·ed by eltet'tive 5 11·eek WHSE FOREMAN JiOUSEKEEPERS & i\fAI DS 637-4006 or 673-20&I daily advertising !raining B trained and placed (no lee\ '.ltechanic P""'"'"nl 1rhil• ...,·orking al X Drill Sergeant 1ypc. Y· 1 r f .~,,, ... lingual. Lead 12 man Cl't'\I', a so schoo tng or young IMPORT night. Family oriented pro. Sta11 19100 \1·/1his tC'rrilic brides. Surfside Domestic Mechanic Wanted duct. Xln't benefits. Great School. Call us 646-8911 gro\\'!h co. Call Dr. Rand, I ;-c==o-;==::-::::'.::-:=IToyota & Volvo, experience people, ne11• offices. HSKPRS Emp!yr pays fee. preferred. Must have class NEWPORT Dulle~ \l'i!J \nclutlc lyp- ing, Iihng, light short. hand, and srime dra1ving of charts \\'hich !'cC[Uire the ability to handle de- tail "'ork. Good starting salary and I'--_"""'_'"""·_,!~ 802 benefit program, includ-Appliances ing 12 days vacation dur. j-:.C..-------- ing the 1st year of en1-E L E C T R I C rangr ployment & a slOCk pur-Homestead. s/s, 2 brnr chase program. ,\'iarine. i'\ew $ 4 0. 0 0 . varian data ""-0342 • REPAIR man has clean machines late n1odcl \\'aShcrs ,i;, A VARIAN SUBSIDIARY dryers, Rsnbl, gi.1ar. i\Iastcr 2722 Michelson Drive Chg OK. 531-8637 (San Diego Freeway KEN~10RE auto washer, o1t Jamboree off-ramp) late mod('!, Xlnt rond, S65, Irvine Calif. 92664 guar. & delivered . .:..16-8672, Equal op~rlunity employer 847-SlJj STOCK ROOM FOR 5,\LE' Cold<pol 1' cu It che~t type lreeier. Xln't cond. S250. 837-861).i. \rarian Data r-.IachinC's, JoCated In the Irvine ln- dus1rial Complex, is seek- ing an experienced stock clerk. Requirl'n1ents include a mini n1u1n of one years experience in an elcc- U"Onics production stock roon1 . Rela1ed expe.rienc~ in the commercial elec- tronics industry is man. datory. LGE refl-igcr3to1· S35, also Dbl door refrig S1li * 6-l&.78?0 * SEARS \\'ashing :O.lachine, JI~ yrs ol<l. 12 cycle, SUO. Call Sa t ,I;, Sun 673-1029 \VHIRLPOOL auto 1vasher. x!nt cond S·IO. Guar. ,t; delit'C'red. 5-16-8672, 8,li-SJ Jj Bui Id i ng>• ';ja te r ia IS 806 MEDICAL FRNT /BCK George Allen Byland Agne! A license. Xlnt company ben-Personnel Agency \\'ork \l'/top Dr. Re('E'llt l iilii06-iiiiBiiEii.iilii6iilh~,iiSii.Aii.ii>liiii7--0iiii39ii'i·I erils & profit sharing. 833 D D N B Good starting pay and Di'. expcr. To $~50. Call over r., · • benefit program, 12 days Call Ray \Villiams, 646-9303 642·3870 vacalion during !he 1st Sally Hart. DEAN LE\VJS IMPORTS year of employment. 'DOORS INTER/EXTER 100(l's To Choose rrom 10-.i Daily, 11-4 Sun. MILLER-DRAKE SALES TRAINEE TOYOTA & VOLVO SALES -Excellent romm. Fan1as!ic oppor. working i;;. :O.IED. TRANSCRIBER -r-.t.F'. FuU, P t. Simple 10 Varian «fata 2406 So. :\lain St., S.A. (Ne.~1 to Standard Brands) 546-1032 EXECUTIVE PERSONNEL AGENCY \\'fShRl"fJ challenging .. ~ ·-.. 3-11, rull lime. Personnel sell. Bus., Home, 496.3572, machines 'I I s rt s-100 + ~ I 499-'XHn CAB I NETS, complete \1•110 esa crs. ta J -:' Dept, Hoag Hosp, J\'e1~·p1. .. .,...,. A VARIAN SUBSIDIARY k' , Ra c · SARA~I <;ov"ntl'Y needs _fl. 2722 Michelson Drive Beautiful & reasonable. t>xpense acct. Call Helen B h I 1tcuen. ngc, oven, f'1c. Hayes. # l\liddle Aged woman, 30 or or pt time . help .. No J~· (San Diego freeway 616-53n3 MGR TRAINEE over, neat appearance for vestment \Vilt tratn, min J bo ff i r ~-~.~-----~~I ACCOUNTANT · I"'." NE PERSONNEL ASST r-..tANAGER TRAfNEE. age 20 54~"'36 &· 839-7568 at am ree. 0 •ramp Furniture 810 Greal oppor. ror right ~VI Irvine, Calif. 92664 To $10M person. \Vork ln the bf'st SER\IJ(E5¥-AGENCY Starting salary $32j mo. In. * S ECRETARY· -Ex· Equal opportunily cniployer SACRJFJCE -10 rms. near of surrvundings. S!arl $·l7:i. quire in person, PA'\'.LESS perienctd & familiar \\"ith nC'\V i\Jedit. furn inc. s · 'l'oung dc;:-1'ct'd acct for xln'1 N.B. hnn. :-Olin. 2-3 yrs e:<- p<.•r. Prefer<1bly wis!atc tax , bckgrud, Call Sally Hart. SHOE STORE, Z2'l1 Harbor medical tern1s, part lime. SUPEP.VISOR • Direct &lies. black nau~all)'de sofa & Secretary Blvd, C.l\t, South Coast Coinmuni!y You may be one of the lovescat, never uscrl, $1 JO. AAA COMPANY Out~ing, ,pear!~. oriented, l'\t ODELS-Composlles & Hospital 31872 Coast Hwy .. :t key people \l'e seek lo Bu11k IX'ds, 5· coffee lable, \\'ill train :-,.-ou to a$$$ I varied \\"Ork acllVJ!y & good portlolio11 photographed. S~ So. t.aiuna til4l 4~1311 cl('vclop and lrain a s 2 end con1niodf'S, 410 W. Coast Hwy. I Suile H N.8. 1 \lay or ('arnini:: Career, skills. Bank"g backgrnd & up. For appt call John 'Ext 356 I d J stribu!ors }hgh·int"Otne hide-a-b<'d. Spanish Kini . ~~" 1~:vncJ: ;r~rial~r;geca~ helpful , s p ar k ~, A ssoc l ate The . ·:Yellow . Pa~~s" of ';11~~;~al :pl~an~~~;:'cnol~ b cl rm. v er Y l's n b I , 645-2716 fun, I Photographers. &12-1427, class1J1ed , •. 6-IZ-5618 I \Vomen 54~5960 1~'=''~"=2="--'=62_2_. ----- ' r-.l in. '.'> E;:r:i~r~'~!cklit'nd. Help Wanted, M & ~ 710 Help Wanted, M & f 710 SUPERVI SOR LVN ll·7:30 ~\~!i~tC'~~~~:~r~~~~r~:~ IKKPER PERSONNEL * * * Sharp woman \\'/kno .... "I ol engrg pN'f'd security clear. a.m. rel. sh .. 11·k ends. king hC'AdboarU & ni(c h lptui" Park Lido Convale5ccn! st11nds, custon1 ch a Ir s, LESLIE HARRISON air & alp. ,\fedical ins. 2270 Chanel Rd. forn1s. Typing :JO \\',p,m. '"" ' . If Your Raise Was Turned Down I c'""' 642-""_! leothoc top desk W/<ha .... Balboa Start S~50. Call llelen i·ou arc the wlnner or llaye.!I. 2 1lckcts to 1he 540 6055 Weslern National • Boat & Marine Secretary Bu~· boss needs, rnfg'g, n1rk\'g, or sales backgrnd w / good .skills, lo handle challenging busy job. show 2790 Harbor Blvd. Ht the Sec'y Bookkeeper ANAHEIM Costa Mesa ~harp girl 11'/50mt'l bkkpg CONVENTION exp. Good Typin~ & con11non CENTER 1 COOKS _ i\1u~t knO\\' good I sense! i\larvelous co. FebrulU")' 20\h tllru 28th I soups & sauce~. \\lorking S 1 O d D k Please call 6-12-5678, l'.'<L 31~ hours 6 an1 to 2 pm, J\1on a es r er e s l'>etl\'rt'n 9 and l pn1 to clalni thru 1~r1. All holldays off, Prtl'. c'<P dealing w/ phone . your 1ickcts. (Nor1h County pai<l med irnl insurance, 2 orders. Type j(), Sharp girl! toll•t'.ttt nun1Wi· Is ;,IQ.1220• \l"CCks vaca!!on. Ca 11 • • * ~""""""'==~~~-.,-,­BABYS!TIER. Lh·c·ln, li!t. COS~tETIC Sales. Salary hou~ekC'eping, i\lature / de. s:uarantcc. Call a1ter 4 P1'1, Acctg Clerk Type 50, 10 k••y addrr &: some atttg exp or schooling. 557-2103. pendohlc. 9fiS.$.2:IB l\rt ~ pm. Receptioni1ot BEr:INNINV n1odel, 110 <'XP. CONSULTANT. Gen'! food1 needs 7 ...,'Omen for Vl~U.ne Bu5y ph0ne11. i\luiu be ralm I afh:1•noon a "'<'rk, Grta.t \\'oodard Cosnietics. '"e A pleasant, Bkkpi exp help. fli'-Y, ll!rlcUy lor hin, &n~l train. Exec pos's avail, am ha:. dl'sc:rlptlon (picture U po.~~,. I I' 0 0026 inv. ~i-1464 blel 10 . . Blx I . G h ' A ti t San1a Ana. e DENTAL ASSIST'AN'I' • rap IC r S , Desk only. Dental <'·'P. nee. Ocw'tl" or 1\'0rk ~XI> ft'Q d. ln.t .. nccl '!! t'C"C .. sornc Sat'1J. j 1~ut't on ~rchn1que1, de:I F11nge bon's. H.B. arc#!. sign & lay-out, b.8.slc dra,\- TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 • 1 Call 8Am·9pm. 8"6-3.Wl. ing . \\'Ork. T~p L.A.. lirm mov1n,z to 1111~ al"l"a su1n. ESCROW GAL niC'r '71. . t:nu~UBI oppo11unity. Call 1-<>- rairw, 613-2770, \Vt.1l<'l!U ,m £. l"tnonnel Age n cy, 2CH3 \\'~tcliff Or., NB . 11th (111 trvlncl 642-1470 C.l\t. Because "times are bad," Maybe You Should Be Working Where "times are good" 'rin1es just happen to be vrry good in our industry. Ht-Bl cs1at1>, In fart. they've ne\·cr befon better. There an1 a Jot of hrli;:ht. l\'ill. ing people launchlnii: Tl('ll' careers every dny in land lnvestmen1. Reca.usr thry \\'f:t'e tired of 11t>arlni; that "liml.'s \1'el'e b11.d." They just chuckC'd 11'ha.tCl'l'r ii 1111s lht'y \11"rc doi~ nod Jo1nPd f1.1r('('s of a skyrocket· ing indu!ltl'y. 1-fo\\' sbcut youi Arf' you bo~ by rxeu~r~ and tr11nql1ilirt'd by ft dr('l\ry job? i\.la.ybc \l't' should ~It dov.•n and talk. \Ve'rc a multi· miltion dollar land in- Vf'~tn1f'n\. comp11ny that need~ i;:()od indi- \'lduals, \\' (' need solid n1a npo1\'cr · to kl'f'Jl up 1~·ith our J<:rowth. 11 doe-s n't mllttcr 11·hn t your p1·esent job Is. All rou n<'C'd are t he Jt"U lll Bnd rlC'sirc to 1·h11.ns;e your Hre for t hr better. If you'l'r the right pe1"011 \1·r 'll 111.ke-care of your trninin1:. Thr monf'y ctin be ~rrRI, lh" lx'ne{ils a1'(' f'nol'mo11s llnd 1 he ('ft• reer potential Is t'nd· lrss. call us. Right 1101\", LCOA INVESTMENT AND REALTY, INC. A $ubsldla1·y of Land Consultanis of Amtrlca. Jnc. Or•ngt County Aru -17141 ll!-l233 Rlwtrtkl:t Art• -(714) 7f3--l.SIO Los An1e.lt1 Aru -1213) &724620 THEATER MGRS. ~°'~._.~'00~=~~­ Ham tops & Drive ins. F' R 0 ST· f REE rein~. Sa1. Gabriel Valley and Or. ~ar'l('s\. tahlr, 1 t•h111rs. angc Counly, Fast J:fO\l'i ng Ne1v ~11·1n brrl n1a11rcssc~ . & springs. JOO.I '.llcrccdC'S Edwards Cinemas. R('sume 673-93.'H af! :i · to: E.T.C, 140 \V. Valley [,;.,.:,,:.:,,-""'__: ____ I Blvd., San Gabril·1. BO~J..:CASE ht'Ar1b(111rcl. bo,..; =~-~~~-=-~·cl .~pr1ngs and ni a 1 I r rs~. TOP notch Rubber .c.hcnll:~I l\la1ching clrrsser and n1ir· Req : must be prohCl('nl Jn ror. Conten1porary ~lodern. rubber con1poundlng ,t,, de-Ask ing $50. 81i-7U!7 Yelopn1en1._ \l'ilh a min. 3 yrs:_ i\IUST !)!IC nnugahvde ~ol:i exp. in this area. r-.lust be & 10,.,,,,1 II"" · k. · "· . d .. .~.. 1ng~1~.c mgmt. onente , s11arp & ag. bed ; ga1nc lahlr: .\led!t ~s1\'e. Cont~ct ~Irs. Gon. sola. roff<'e & encl !ables, zalcz at 4!12-11:J3. 714/892-5683 *UPHOLST'ER. ER or TRl'.11· LIKE n.,•w: :'-lart111 " 1 'lf.R E d p Cua r. " ~ xper tence · rrin, $75. i ' Dan\~h n1odrrn Job, lrlns-~ bene!lts. LAKE L'OUch $1().i, Call 833-31·18 ARRO\\'HEAD i\'IARI NA. to sp~ ~714 1 33i-2501 1 ... .,o;~-,~~-,.,...~~1 I . . 8 SOFA, ne~·1·r usrd, qllillcrl * WAITRESS · Expe1·1en~, flor;tl. ~c:otchguardC'd Sl:li food ,II,, cocktails, da;.·s. Fioo '.\l<tlt'hing IOl'Cseat s·· I position for tight girl. A5k 7>.1.).J!}j.j •J. for \\'ayne 833.01121 ;-;co;~o:=::--==--,-i I Rancho S<ln Jo1'qUln LAR~E loul'lgt' charr. r '(fnl Golf Course C115hl011!!. dark golf! ('n!r.r, 18021 CuJ~r Road 1·r1)' good t'ondition $40. Jn·ine, nr U.C.I. ~7.=,.,--c---,...1 ... \VA IT RE SS.OT Ni\ER * * sor,\, ch111r, ~'OJICt' 1t0US8 Exp'd·food k. table. SIOO ~-C!OCkt.all~· J da \\' k 6i.)-1(Y,\J In!er\'IC\.\'S 9 to 12 noon. 42" Rouni1 i;-11mr-1'°'•0~1,-&'I ~Al\'l'S SEAFOOD. l62i8 4 uphot. chah"' SlOO. l!iclea. Pscitic H"·y, Hun! Sch beU $100, 67J.499j t!\'r.~. ~1ond11y1 Ftbruary 15, 1~71 DAIL V PILOT :ll FEB.20·28 See The Big Show 'lltSlfRN NAllONAI. FREE BOAi -- Find Your Hame, If your n1me ls li1t1d Jn a 1peclal 1d-it could 1ppear under any cl111lflc1tlon, so look at thtm 111-phont 642·5678, Extension 314, btitwffn 9 1.m. and 1 p.m. to mike 1rrangements to pick up your tickets at any convenient DAILY PILOT office. Be The Guest of the DAILY PILOT Ow CUSTOM LUXURY I OFFICIAL SHOW INFLATABLE 57'COlUMBIA Oft BOATS ••• THE .l~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;~~~I HOUSE• SKI · MARINr fK'l _, .. ;or_, BOATs:eoATS ACctssoR1Es r:&:1 Jr:::.l I Jr,::;i J& ~' iiiiii""iii-.iiiiiiiiiiiiii~Jjiii~~· :'11 ~ }b~: FEB. 20· 28 ~r_ .. _""_"_'"_'"_)~ ~[ _...,_,._""_"'_' _ I ~ .__'_"'_" ""_"'_•_ t!!J I~ l Merchandise 810 I Miscellaneous 818 Office Furnitur•/ ~M C:0i~-i-i:°R WEEKENDS ,~~~~~ ~~~KOAYS 4 PM Mobile Homes 935 Trucks 962 Autos Wanted 968 Equip. 824 WIO Wlll KlllUU. A'lt.,ilAllEIM, CAtlFOllNIA. ADULTS Sl.75 • KIDS (6·1217~ Furniture ·-~~~~~~-! l ~~~~:;:;:;:;.:::-;~:1~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;~~~~;;~1·"ii~~iii~~~iii~ '69 ECONOLINE Super Van WHY BUY I * ~~;!!~~ * MODEL 'C" Ex"""" IB.'d ,.-----~ ~ [ lil u:t?iul?!!l•l•ll™J ~~ .. ~~::.m!'."'.".;r.·~ FURNITURE?. &Appllance~ typc~·riter. c_ompletely ! freetoYou lriiil I M~"!' .. t·.~-I ·}If T13nspOrlation irh green paint, Stlngray Auctions rriday, 7:00 p.m, rebuilt . $250. D a Y s: . _ ~ . ..... -"'".... Y. L------~ ml Finest Adu~ Pk buckets, stereo, panelled. Windy's Auction Barn 962-6607; Eves: 53t-6960. IN SOUTHERN· CALll''. $4000 invested, sell $2600. Be Flexible! p · /0 an 826 64.>-4687 Rent mo, to mo, ,,.,.,, 2075~\! Ne\l'pol't, Ct.1 645.8686 ianos rg s FREE to a good hon1e Boats/Marine Cycles, Bikes1 • 18 yr min. age !or h ha'-~ S Mir la 'I '59 CHEVY 11,;, ton stake looo/• Purchase Option Behind Tony's Bldg. ?tfat'J. lovable lk/br short u..;u Equip. 904 cooters 7~ m1 Y CLEARANCE combinalion Beagle & min. __ _;,_;._,o _____ le Spaces from $81.50 body-dump. A-1 mech cond. WE PAY TOP CASH for used c11" & trucks. just cal\ us for tree estlnlates. GROTH CHEVROLET Ind. item selection BOAT t f •--~ ta "· I 1150 M7 5002 pars: nuutuu n..,,, SALE Shep, 15 weeks hsbrk, shots. * * * * * • 105 floor pan · - 24 Hr. Dely, Jack Cole bucket seats, Xlnt disp 54&-6326 211.5 * JAMES NEAL e Orange Grove Heaven '67 DODGE pick.up. Auto., Ask for Sales Manager CUSTOM props for ~tercury SO hp Over 100 Pianos & Organs • ·G 00 J. C. PRUDEN 9628 La Granada Ave. e $300,000 club facility VS. small camper iv/boot. l&2ll Beach Blvd. Furniture Rental -125 hp. Controls, cables, · FEMALE · Shepherd a ut 435 El Camino del Mar Be Reduced for muned, sale. 1j mo old to a good ll<lme. Fountain Valley • S1naU pet approved $1600. 536-305.1 Mr. ~1yer Huntington ach Ji7 \V. 19th, c.r-.r. 548-3..J,ql i;ingle lever cont r 0 Is I Buy Now & Savel 893-8800 2115 Laguna Beach '{au IU'e the \l'inncr of • Coif. Car wash, l.a\VO bo\VI ';,() Cff.EVY % T, dual hubs, 847.6087 Kl 9.333.1 A'lahelm 774-2800 11' i ndshie!ds, !nstrutnents, o~ 0 .1 10 tu· 6 'l'ou are the \1-'inntr ot 2 e ~Iove in Today! t WE PAY CASH etc. Barg"in•. "-"' ='"' .,..n ai Y VERY cute female cbocola!e tickets to the :<tra heavy dty, Ca I Lal-la bra 694-3708 ---~"-c" =~~-.-~=~,__--~· 10 9 * s 12 -2 1lckets to the W N I I "'"1816 r ,-; · un .a color poodle puppy. Wants es tern at one S.A. F\\y to .JeUrey Rd. '".,.., . FRENCH Prov. t\l·in br, * SPRING COAST MUSIC ioving home. 548-6801 2/16 Western National Boat & Marine Offramp In Irvine fsoul)l) '53 Dodge panel truck-Runs dresser chest, 2 area sz WARDROBE * NE\VPORT & HARBOR YNG adult ca ts-Some Boat & Marine Show good, FOR YOUR CAt:- oriental crpts, Encyclopedia sizes 5, 7, 9, 16, top labels Costa ?tlesa * 642-2851 neutered 546-7308 or Show ""\. at !he * 714/832·8585 * $150. *** 675-4.136 Britannica, 2 .French Prov. bells. sports wear, sweaters, HA.\t~tOND, Steinway, 548--0813 2f15 at the ANAHEIM THE BEST OF Auto Service, Parts 966 CONNELL Joveseats, kngsz \Vhite dresses, coats, loads of ac.. \:amaha. New &. used AKC dachshund male 2~~ ANAHEIM CONVENTION BOTH WORLDS 1vicker hdbrd, single tw in cess. Sl·S15. 675.&922 piano~ of most.make,s, B:st yrs. good ivith adults or CONVENTION CENTER For a beautiful honie, tow J!J.10 FORD PARTS: Dl'!luxe CHEVROLET bed, dresser, desk, chait', NE\V Heavy Duty Ski! Saw buy~ in So. Cahf, at Schm~dt older children. 546.!450 2116 CENTER Februal'y 20th lhru 28th malntenancl! and architacur. hood, grill, starter, Genera-2828 Harbor Blvd, dbl bed, bx-sprngs, matt, No. 55-1. 8\l" ball bearing ?t1usic Co. 1007 N. r.1a1n, February 20th thru 281h Please call 642-5678. ext. 31• aUy impressive design, See tor and a.tuminun1 he.'.\ds for Costa Mesa 546.1200 111etal bed frame, French $83. Ray Ban amber trap Santa Ana.' ~; Sian1ese 1i Russian Blue Pleas,. call 642-5678, <>Xf, 314 lhe eXCitin" .new "Villagr y• D•t h••d. All pn·o-•l--'CC.--'--------'-'--1 Prov. rum .ta ..... e, droplral ~hooting glasses $10. 1.13~ l"E h 2L & ••d cat. I yr playful and adap-benveen9andlpn1 toclain1 House" by Levitt r.Iobile .... ,,, ""~12 d .. , " .. bet\\·een 9 and 1 pn1 to c!ain1 "' -o " ..... TOP DOLLAR bl 2 ·~ ave new U= t 2 ·~ your tickets. (North Coun!y ~".:;=~-;=:.~~:;c----.-,., kiL ta e, chrs, m11ple Newport Blvd, Costa Mesa pianos and 10 new & used lab e 645--0137 f.., your tickets. (North Coun!y toll-free nuniber is 540.1220} Systems on display now at -; 964 1 ..:'~h'~'-c'~4~d~ra~"'="~· ~"'~"-~53='='~·--1IRVINE Coast Counu-y Cltib organs, all on Special Sale i\1ANX kitten. 4 mos, to toU·b·ee nun1ber Is S.10-1220) * * * BAY HARBOR Auto Leasing :\JOVING : All like new, fa1nily membership tor sale • Some at .or near dealer's home that \Viii spay her. * * * MOBILE HOMES beautiful 8' sola $100. Com· Jrom member. For in-1."0st. You are sure to !ind 536---0476 2116 Boats, Power 906 ~ 1425 Baker St., Costa r.fesa modes $35 'ea, ?t1r. & !vlrs formation call 67?r9131, ?.tr. \Vhat you want at BEAUTIF1JL i,t l\.Ianx cats THINI Jwil S. of S.D. F\\y at Harbor chajrs $65 ea, game table, I cS~m~t~th~~~~~~~-I WARD'S BALD\VIN STUDIO 10 n1o. o!d. 540-2333 2/16 ----------714/540-9"170 $150, custom quilted sofa, i'ttAPI..E bunk beds. BJue for-1819 Nev.1>0rt Blvd, 642-8484 3 P.UPPIES pt. Shep. pt. YACHT broker or salesman HOND' a dark pecan cocktail & com· mica & chrome round table. ZER . . • Unusual opportunity, Call ~ mode, Kng & queen bdrnl WURLIT spinet p1a.no, terrier 8 weeks, free to a Bob Henry, Anter 1 can sets, lamp•, 2 desks $45 5 bll11'el chrs. 3 corner Ible full keyboard. Sp o t I e s s good home. 53&-7633 2116 Yachting Associ11tion. 714: Nu Holl)">vood bedlrame v.•alnut finish 1\Iust see. $475. -----645-5212 & $125. 968-0061. &12--2690 962--6521 FURNITURE returned from ~ JNT'L compressor ladder, Studio Grand I ll~l 18' Hudson River .Pack4'.'t, dt toy ,,,-0 mod t ho Pet1 and Supplie-1 Classic bay launch, glass sp s 1 s, e m. etc. :<el up for painter $565.1 5d'6~'i",iX~O~n~t ~oo~nd~·~'~'•=k~e~o~l~l•~r-.1 I~;;;;;;;;:;;; e;., decorators cancellation. ~s-o516. 2569 Santa Ana, Pvt pty. 9SS--2&lS hull, teak & oak. Gali, rig, AU Brand New CM sail, 3[) HP inboard, .$3250 R D FURNITURE ""==-=-~~~-!Piano, small grand iv/bench. p ts General 850 , ~'~'5-~ll~"-· ----,-.,-,----,-,-,--= \VANTED: A~1 I FM Re-•tahogany. , -'-''-------" 18•• Newport Bl C M " ,.. LOOK new. ne\'er used 11.J .... ., • • ceiver, used & in working * "" 9432 M n Th • F · ·r·t 9 $350. * * .,..,. 7' Boa Constrictor hp Commando w / 14 ' o ., ur. or n 1 546-5710 or 61;,.-1345 alter \\'ed., Sat. & Sun "Til 6 6 P.M. Sporting Goods 830 Beautiful. $60. 642-6847 runabout & ttlr. First $350. SU ''fRIEDlANDER" NOW OPEN CDNTEMPO. LAGUNA HILLS 23301 RIDGE ROUTE DR. (Corner o[ Moul!on Plrny) LAGUNA IlILLS COLDSPOT re fr ig, frost ·free OH~Y~B~R~I~O-;:-" R;;.,:::;--;-11~· 0=,=m=,~ .. ~50oo;: 1 _:_:__..:,.~' ------1' cc~HiiitC~KEITNNOS,---'d~"~'~"';,-,~,;;rtiil.il, I ~"'~~-'°"=='="'°'-----,___,,-,,.,,,., $12'5; bed box spring & mat-for forty, 65c for sb:ty .. 27G Remington m<>del 760 eggs & cages. 20' CABIN Cruiser, sleeps Triple Wide Cornell tress $35. 646-3198 Crawdads for caUlsh, l.J.-Sl. wlth '\leaver 2.S x 7 power 540-2333 :.!, head, twin Johnson ele1_-. Continental • Paramount variable scope, 2 extra tries. Trailer. $1 6 5 0 . 0 WE LEASE ALL MAKES & MODELS BAUER BUICK In COSTA MESA DIVORCED m1111 must sell 546--6481 aft 5:30 clips, 5135. Also .243 Savage C•ts 852 646-9568_ 841Tington • Unl\'ersal ney,' contemporary furn inc! DRAFTING desk \1-'ith tilt-9'lF · h IV K A Flamingo e General 23-1 E. 17th St. model "''1_1 eaver -. p URE BRED Burmese 41' CHRIS 1959 tr' b. 8176' color TV. Call M7-2818. top. Drawers, locking, hoth 1130 5 7 73,~ i--ea in &.roadmoar e Star Costa Mesa 54 -:;i scope · J -w. .spayed Jemale kitten. Also Lo d d $20 500 O Garage Sele 812 sides. All metal \l•ith s\.vivel a e · • · Hillcrest •Cambridge . ~~---chair. Good. SSS. 549--0530 TV, Radio, HiFi, ntutered British DCdltue. ~fit~ 644-H32 1969 Ka\l·asaki 90, dirt bike. CHAPMAN ---~L~E~A-SE • BICYCLES • Stereo 836 10 months old. M. \...l;UJ Boatsi Rent/Chart'r 908 Expandtion chan1ber and MOBILE HOMES LEAVING State: Household goods. 8011 Sail Cr, H.B. 531r7648 Household Goods 814 6'5-3193 eves only. many extra parts, Like ne\I·, A NE\V 19n All types. Gd. cond. Nicely \VANTED; A~t I Fl\1 Re-D 854 32' Twinscrew Chris, fully StTPER CLEAN $325. ~ ~4;~[~~ ;A. PINTO painted. Reas. 642.1272 ceiVl't, used & in \\'Ork!ng1;:.~og~s'------equlp'd, Fishing or Cruis· .8~36-~56~1~2~---~--1--0f;i0i;;-i¥'f.j;-C,;,n;tt-$50 OQ mO SY:\1BRAETI'E: The 1,·ork-condition. Under $50. Call 1 Female silky, 2 mos, Show ing. 548-2434. -,70 TRIUMPH 500CC Triple Wide Cornell (~ mo.) • ing bra, Custm tilted in 546-j710 or 61j..J34j after quality! Little black toy I C""--'-~s""·i"-----~9=09 Ur-.'UER 1600 ,,·JILES Hillett!I • Flamingo O""n end REFRIGIFREEZER comb., my home. "~7 "151 6 P.M. male poodt., 21,~ mos. 3 B c~o_a_t•~·--•-• -----Paramount 8 Universal "" r.k 2-d f t "" '"" -DRJVEN JUST ON STREET RENT 1 e new, r, rost-ree; '-~==~-~=~= GARRARD record-changer-toy-mini poodles, creme, 1 LATE '10 Hobie Cat, in Ban1ngton • Broadmoor Couch, ne\vly covered, dov.·n e SPECIAL UT IL I T y I 1900 Co . _, S A NE\V 1971 filled, xlnt cond. Bureaus, SHELVES, 8X6. Folkerts, player, Diamond stylus, reg. male, 2 fem. 6 black1 min s. \.valet g times, tr11iler never MUST SELL 646-2384 Genth1enta..H.,ll tar PINTO 893-1 -12 139.50, s""cial $27, New At-646-0142 .3ll E. l th St.. used, stored inside,_ Better ="",.C:-'--=:=.=..c::;,c._I neral e i crest headboards, TV, drapes & ~ .. -1966 Triumph 500. Good cond. A MA $4 DAY lamps for sale. 675-6461, Sat • DATSUN 510 4 used I 01~"'~ti•o,_:M~"~'~1'~445;::..E::;,. ;17cth::;... cl;~C;;.',-'·-::=;---;:::-::<;:-;::;-.,-1 than new. cost $lS50, sell Ne\.v chroine Cerlani racing CH p N & Sun 9 to 12 reversed chrome wheels, BRAND nrw 18" GE color THE n1ost beautiful st.1 cl~l~085~--· -"'-.-5-16-c-81_=-o---:c'.7 forks· $600/oUcr 96&--0JOS, MOBILE HOMES AND radial tires noo. 968--4323. TV in closed style cabinet Bernard you've ever seen. LJtx) 14 No. 20&!, fbgls &16-B523. 12331 Beach Blvd., G.G. 4¢ MILE wlstuniy wood stand. Only Must sell. 9 mo old male. boards, North ~Us & cov. ;'i;i"'°ii~w;p,;----;~;;;;;;;;;l-~~*':,21~1'~';530~-29~30~•~~-PUT A LITTI.E POWER mower 1~ Slim WE Loan-Buy-Sell Bnythlng $295. 497-1006 or 673-2259. Sho\v dog ""!papers, Xlnt Xlnl cond. Ready to rn-ce: ''70" TRIU~!PH. Extended BA YSlDE VILLAGE ~u Coas~ Pa\\'n & Auction. 2426 _ wlchildren. $250 or best of. S46-3S24 front t'nd. Xlra chrome, -· . KICK IN YOUR Line Console TVS.IO. Rt'frig Neivport Blvd. 642-8400. ALTEC A7:500 s p ea~e r fer. 'Sl;,--4J05 , custom pai'n! $ll50 or bes! 302 Lexington Circle. 2 ~'" LIFE! $25 4 pc red1\·ood patio set LlKE new Sears color. TV system. 19561 Roder 1 c kl"G~E;R~M~AN::..::;:5~h-h_rd___ CAPE COO CAT BOAT l -~'~"~"~·~>~t6--0'.;5~28~· :;;:;--,,n;;:--l~2~B~•~· ~R'!:,C'°~"~"~'~· ~to~l~9.~95tl_. THEODORE $15 Old rocker $10 Chest Lane, Huntington BE'ach. ep e pups, 18', fbrbls, (213) 834-3883. $3,800 Eq. 01\'Jler 675-0968. ROBINS FORD Sl7i 8xl2 green carpet, bred 5 ks Id al 1969 Yamaha 250cc \v/dra1\•ers $7 7-.enith color ood d ~"" ""' "113 21' COLOR TV RCA $95. pure , "' . o ' m e Boats, Slt"ps/Docks 910 o· _, I SPACE Rent $5j, 42x8', cor-"""" HARBOR BLVD .• TV-UHF $98 No'" "••pet g con · .,.,., . ...,"'"" . & female. Father from 1rt & Street n1""'c t d tt k T ·~ • ... • 119 M ne Balboa Island ner, poo , a u par . op COST , ESA remnants. Electronics. 56 Miscellaneous ~ri ' · Cha1npion parents. Light & t?OO n1ile~' $400 cond. Shag orptng, $2900. A ••I ~ T. '''"' Chrvy truok Wanted 820 I ~~P~h~• ~S3~5-6~!~'6~~~~:~1J'~'~'"~gb~•;'"~t~if~"'~~m~•;rk~ing:s. 15 TO 2 5 FT. slips avail. e 835-1492 e 642-0010 • 0~ • I .64 for power boats. Private 1 -.~;i~;;;;;i'if;.'i;;;;;;;;;-l7l~56tl<;tJ_P~l~•~c<~'~"~''~· ~"'~'~'~M~g~'·=c I 7--=-C'"o'---= $350 Jake's i\Ierchandise 117 •-.---------$~ & 30. 8.13-01 lagoon. \\'atet· &,.elec. avail. ;68 Chopped Triumph Motor Homes 940 Autos Wanted 968 E. 18th, C~I I \\iA.NTED: A?tt ( FJ\I ~e-I[' AKC SILKY TERR IE R Bayside Village, 300 E. $850. A!! 5 pm & wknds: cc1ver, used & m y,·ork1ng free to You PUPS READY TO SPOIL Coast Hwy, NB ___ _:63=~~18=91c_~--IYOUR "second home" on WE PAY TOP DOLLAR YOGA condition. Under $5(), CaU I ~-----;;-~~;1 YOUR LOVER. l\lALE $125, ---~~--,-p-to-60=. , • 1970 HONDA TRAIL 90 \Vh e e Is. Comp le te l y FOR TOP USED CARS :;.1&-5710 or 67j...J34j after I I FEi\1ALE $17:i CA LL ~!-~~~D~a~it Best ref's. wlhelmet. $73 & T.O.P. s e U.-conlained bcnutifully If your car is extra cl4'.'an, Miscellaneous 818 for CLEAN USED CARS See Andy Brown THEODORE ROBINS FORD 200() Harbor Blvd, Costa Mesa 642.0010 INSTANT C{\SH for any V A.l'i running or not. 1945 Harbor BJvd ., C.M. 646-9448. Autos, Imported 970 AUSTIN HEALEY 1966 Austin Healey Sprite $600 or Best otfer • 835-1492 • BMW '69 Bi\l\V 2002, Ar.-t!FM radio, mag wheels, De\~· tires, $2150. 49&-Z762 DATSUN New '71 Datsun 1600 OHC, Pickup with camp. er. Sale price $2099 dlr. , f # Pl..521452270) \Vilt take ' car in U'ade, \Vil! linance private party. Call 541>-8736 or 4!J.t.6811. '69 DATSUN PICKUP Equipped \Vllh •8" Paris Val- ley Camper (YNW 287) dlr. \I/ill take car in trade nr t.in-1 ance private party. Call 494-6811 or 546-8736. DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAYS 18335 Dea1.h Blvd. Huntington Beach 842-7781 or Y.0-0«2 Roadster LOVES YOU ! 16 PM. 2 i\1ALE pups _ sm. mLxed 644.4806 AFIER 6 PM. 842-1397. cared ror '70 Landau Motor see us first. The Science or Vitality & \VANTED: One four.dra\\·er Beagle -Ten·ier. 7 wks. old SHIH Tzu p"ppies, AKC, The: 675-495()· -'---'--'"'---------Hom c, Dodge-powered BAUER BUICK d t B t Speed & Ski• 911 '70 HONCHO 90, 2000 mlles 234 E 11th St Piece or i\o!lnd! Free de1non. file cabinet an one arge ch11mpagne & \V hit e _ Jet St>! pet, shaggy, little, oa s, __ ·rap shape S250. Also boirup automatic 23-footer, sleeps · • · FIAT stration hfon at 8 P:'vl & office desk, boplh used. 968-62S3 9111 Cllristine Dr., China dolls, $125 up. Cham-17• BELLBOY ,69, lo hrs. parts 10 sell 642_53fi6. 61Rclrig. runs on gas or Costa Mesa 548-7765 Tuesday at 10 fu\1, \'oga ;;40-2279 alt 5:30 i\1 J-1.B. 2116 pion stud service, 894-6313 120 l\terc Cruiser, IBIOB, clec., range & automatic IafPORTS WANTED I -,6-9--1-2-4-S-"_O_R_T_C_P_l-I '66 Dat~'Un 1600 HT-New cond, $W:t * * * Ce nter, 445 E. 11th St .. C.1\l. CASH for furn, appliances, LOVABLE inale beige and VALENTINE poodles, 2\~ HT, elect gauge~. muny '69 SUZUKI 500 Xlnt, 5.COO oven, forcl'd air furnace, Orange Counties 1- 8" I · · 1 mi., '1 hp, \\'arranty maint., 1,-. •-]d;"g ta"k b•'g TOP 646· l. too s, & misc 1 ems· \vht terrier n1ix 4 mos. med mo old, Apricot, Chocolate xtr11s. New !rlr. $285(), Tel. ,,.,__ "'" " " • $ BUYER 642-1015 or Alt 5. 548-4227. 1 bred. Loves children. Needs &: White. S50 & S75. 642--0326, eves. 642-9367 $600, Sl&-4755. \\.'ater lllnk, 0 v e I's I z e BILL MAXEY TOYOTA Ai\-1/FM, '1 ~peed. d!r , Ra. SACRI1''JC'!:: 2 Goodyear FURNITURE WA.i'JTED, 1 good home. >16-3562 art l 673-9357 S 912 HONDA '68 4:10 Scra.m bler. gasoline tank. Ready lo roll . 18881 Beach Blvd. dial tires. (YBY 132) r.tust G70 x 14 11ide ovals on itemnrhousefull.\VEPAY PM 83b-4493 2/16DAC.:HSHUND pups, Boats, forage 4000 mi·~. Perlect $650 or Extras include r11cks and If.Beach. Ph.817_8555 sell, Will take tradeorlin- new chrome reverse rin1s best o!fer. 968-8726. ramp for hauling two Hon-ance. Call 494-TI4t. t C=A~S=H=·c.::53=6-4..:::.tH~I--~== I 6 PUPPJES beagle size 6 miniature, AKC, Black & * * * d•• O" •o••. Se• the '' W l-11 TE ELEPHANTS" S85 1-lurst 3 speed shi ter.,. d d 4 BRUCE WILSON HARL"Y r • '61 " '"' .. Musical lnstruments 822 \veeks ol \veane · tan & mahogany red . r. cioppe., package to appreciate it. oven-unning )-'Jur house? '6~ F IAT, 124 Sport Coupe. and Chev, !rans $45 348 blk/wht 2 blon(.!e. Male, TI41633-4018. 2027 Altura Dr. engine, xlra transmission & Offel'ed by owner belo\v "Cash" .. sell them thru 19,000 miles. 26 MPG, 96 Chev eng. tripo,ver, cani, e i'ilAGNATONE Amp, two female. Good "ith children. Corona del M.ar HarlC'y parts, phone 4!12-7!111 tttall, $10,j()(), 1971 Ile. fee Daily Pilot Classified HP. 5 spd. AM-FM. 5411--00U inore $2'76. s93-6460. J2" ~peakers, rev er b, 642-6878 2116 * DAL\IATIAN·Powerhouse y,, •re lhe \Vh111er of '68 TRIUM P~r 500 alreody paid. Phone 'i:'C'-=-'-ii'C..:::=::::::::..~9"8°"0 Autos, New 980-IIEALTH Ct b '· hip 2 h t C'.:~:'.".'.·~~~~~7"i'I male. Sho\.V home prtlerr~d. Autos, New u mem'-""rs rren1elo, c annc s, cover, 2 adorable' ti-I & _F blk & * 642_1937 * 2 tickets to !he Best offer Must Sell! 968-1891 or 54l-92j(). --~----------''-------for sale. Also Cedar like nev.•. Best offer . bro\vn shepcrd inix pups, Western National • 54S-.7890 eve,• V.'&rdrobc, $75. Call 54:>--09B3 1 838-3500 N•·" l•-'""'d y·•ds. "'~".7181 STANDARD Poodles,, ~oc.k, ~-:_:c:__cc_:__:__:--=-~ 1!170 MOTOR Home -Sleeps ,_.,,.. ""'-"" ;,J,,);J f AKC h Boat & Marine 1970 YAi\TAl-IA VS CJ, 200 6, stlf<"Ontained. 16' Chevy MUST Move. \Vasher & dryer DRUi'il SET. complete, $200. 2111 emale, • c anipion .sir. Show cc, street scramh!er, 1200 G cyl. Must sell. $3500. 1813 ;75. Dineue set $45. Exctllent condition. Ideal for I cM_A_L~E,-~P~«l~i~gre=e--;Bo;--,:-•-,~,c,~,;11_•_d~. _A_lt_r_r_6~p-m_.~49~~~'~""~~ at the ml. Xlnt cond. S385. M2-7967 Viola Pl. C.M. ** 497-1224 ** advanced s!udent. 548-5148 hound 21.J yrs old, tri col-e MINIATURE POODLES ANAHEIM --'--'-'-~(\ir-cANTE-==:D"----"l,T~r=a=i~lo~r=s-,~T~r~a-v-e7l-~9~4~5 For best results! 642-5678 eve or \veekt'nd. ored has papers free to 7 "-'eeks * B!ack CONVENTION 30j or 2";)()cc Honda Scram. Miscellaneous 818 Miscellaneous 818 a g~ home. 968-7379 2/16 Sl:5 * 962-4:;43 CENTER bier. Running or not. 549.1690 NEW '71 Nomad 19', Sips '' LIGHTING FIXTIJRE SALE to 80% Reduction On All Llghttng Fi)(tures, Wall Brackets & Etc. O TH IS IS OUR FIRST SALE SO COME IN & SEE OUR SELECTION OF BAR· GAINS. Safe Starts Tuesday, Feb. 16th MATTHlts & SON LIGHTING 2904 W. Cout Hwy. Newport Beach Need loving hon1es fol' • 1 -1'~emale Teacup pocket February 20th thru 28th 6, compl \vlhitch, etc. d bl B"' t nli•· pups Poodle. AKC register. Pl•••· ••ll 642-:.678, <XL 314 YAMAHA_ 25() Enduro, Ex-$2595. Scott's, 914 N . a ora c se " . 54fi 2093 yf '"'"" tras. $49J. l-larbor S.A. Need fenced yards. l-892.JS:l'l ;,. an ime betwel'n 9 and 1 pm to claim * 546-9453 * • or 836-4493 2111 • ELEGANT Afghan Pups, your tickets. fNorth County NEW '71 Nomad 26', Twin FREE 6. tall Fan Palm tree, AKC. _Black masked sliver. toll-free number is 540.12201 •7o Bullaro Matador 250 CC. or dbl bed model. Campi Be."' & h"atthy, ,.0 , dig 962-6956 aft •· * * * Ex. co. best offer. wlhllch, etc, $3500, Scott's, ~ 675-0793. 914 N. HArbor. S.A. from fr ont yard. BASENJI pupPies AKC, I 96S-9004 2/14 male, 5 females, Call *'70 Yaniaha 125 l>1X NEW ·n Nomad 14', LCVABLE '•• d•c"-h"~ ,,,·,~64~6-4'-"6=98~·---~~-c II•) Top condition. Never raced. "'lloilel room $12 95 . ,.., "" 1-Trarts;portatfon XU'as! $425. 673-2002. Scott's, 914 N. H1arbor, S.A. chihuahua brown female. SCHNAUZER pups-':\tale at Veru aUettionate !o good stud-Grooming. '64 Honda Trail 90 $100. '69 Trailers Utility 947 ., 846--0!39 Schwinn 10 sp, $65. Bothl"'-""-"',;,;.'_.;.__..:_ __ _. honie. ;,,.;o...2333 2116 Cam-r1, Salo/Rent 920 d T I r· in good cond. MB-6883. 14' Tan em r.ai er 4 CATS 3 fluffy and 1 orunge PO:\IERANlAN-Black male, MINI BIKE \Vlth 4 wheels. All steel weld. striped good h 0 m c s . 6 mo, AKC, a.II shots. CAMPER 548--3762 2116 J~ousebroken, $85. 847-4909 $ OPEN. 897,7365 cc< construcUon, %.'' Steel B d• II M" _ Blk deck plaUng. S-iS-4361 or GERMAi'l Shep. AK C Horses 856 CLEARANCE SALE an it 1n1 e 642-5845 \Viii eeU Or trade 53/l-2265 2116 WESTERN GO KART Mc 6 "''"tiful with rhfldren . SADDLE 1 ,1:15~-~~~1Ca~l][546-~3:208:1~fo~r~p~loku~· ~··~~· ~~ 1 1 YEAR old \Vire llaired l~~f~o~r~gaJ~'~· ~!40~.~-~~~~ LArre 11elecllon pre '71 Call 897·7365 ' • Mobile Homes 935 Autos for Siie ~ Terrier needs lovable. home Campers Now Slashed t<> I I§] w/chlid,..n. 962o!M1 1 ...,.,.. Jr.*'1 $49 O E ~~~~~~~:l~miiiiliiiiliiiii~;-~ 3 ;~~c~"~"~.b~t•~c;k;;--,;k;l ~"~'~"~' i:.;M;•; ... -•••• ~~;t,f;; :A~:RLY '\ESALE Bargains Imm. 5;'1i-ro93 2/15 INVOICE Pos. Long Beach, lfun-G l tSO tington, NePt, Co~l es, enera I SUNNIES 10 good home, Call SHOWCASE after 6:30 Pi\t 493.389.t 2115 General 900 DEALER SaAn, T\ls, Org. BEST offer l'ot111tan.ir Fstbck FOR Call RED & MBG Both xlnt cond. BANTA:\f Roosten:. beautiful, PRACTICALLY new 12' vte· 6 mos old. 545-1682 2/16 bOttom, 1dumlnum boat. 6 KI'M'EN 20 v.-·eeka tabby. HP. motor. car top carrier, 93 2/16 boat cu.~hlont, oars, all ac- tree . 1 CC5SOTIC!S. $3ZIO. Call 642-1892 i lANX, to ripecia home, btwn 9 am.J pm. very sy,·ce1 . "436-7730 2/16 WEL.\1ARANERS. ftmalt, Boats/Maririe ,\Jvtr & rro . 49-l·W 2116 Equip. 904 SELLING Your bol\l! "List" 7 HP ChryslettOB. New, with us •. sell It fast. Dally nevor nin. Cost S36S. sell I Pllot Oa1sl!led. 64UG78 $250/best oUcr. 557-2690. ELDORADO CAMPERS &t>~~!ed Mobile l-l~2961, i ..::'~'"::'.':..:.:"::j'~· ,:;646-M,;.cc:'°:;--· -~ THEODORE COSTA MESA Antiques/Classics 95j ROBINS FORD C.ffllAt Mobtte E•tttte Llv"g JOIO FORD PARTS . °'"""" ~HARBOR BLVD, Nt: 12, 20 &: 24 \Vlde Model~ hood, grill. staner, genernt. COSTA MESA 642-0010 Now Cln dlsplav In !I Star or, and Rlumlnum heads lor SAVE MONEY GREENLEAF PARK v .s fl•I h'8d, All pl1<:ed SEE l'll'i() 'Vhilller Avenu..) 642-1350 reas. 336-567l SCOTT'S SELLING Your boatT "Ust" 1957 T-BUtD FOR YOUR NEXT CAMPER with Ull .. Mlll H fnsl. Dnlly Black. Xlnt tond. $2500, 91-4 No. Harbor, S.fl. Pilot Classified. 642-5G78 6~ llLL TAYLOR l'M USED CAR MANAGER FOR JOHNSON & SON And I Really Feel "USED UP" After Our BIGGEST USED CAR MONTH EVER But my boss isn't happy, he wants a Bigger February, So Here We Go! THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS '66 FORD Sta. W911. R&H, r.s .. 11000 '68 CAMARD Coupe. A•t•. trc11S., r.s .. Ale. '1950 IZUM740J '68 MERCURY Mo11teto Z Auto. tra111., Air. f05llSYJ '69 COUGAR " Auto. fr-.., P.I., Air. IXSRSl6) 'IR PONTIAC j '69 CONTINENTAL rand Ptlr. e11te. tro1t1. 2 D HT p 11 p Al ~&~, P,S., P.I., :,w,, Air leat~r l~~do:. sj]7§ 1nr:61 331!0 1X"-'6Jt1 Fnr A Good "USED CAR" Thol's Not All "USr,D UP'', See Us Tod,y! JOHN SON & SON 540-5630 642'0911 ' • ( 1• ... , • Mond;Q, Ftbnlll'Y lS, 1971 ~=,.;;;;;;-;;"';;·~~~~-~ ... ~-~l~~~1'!I ~-~,,,~ .. ~1~§1~1~~""'~ ..... ~-~=~~11:1~Au.~ .. ,.,~ .. ~l§J~~, l..--..... -..... -----1§) ~I ~-~,,,~ .. ~l~~:~I ~ ..... ~,,,~s.1.~l§]~l~1· ~-~ ... ~ .. ~OJ~§J~1 •· Auto1, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 I ;.A:.:u.;;to:.:';.' ;,;lm=po:.r_ted:._ __ 9_7_o1_A_ud_o1-',_1_m._po_rt_od __ ,_1_0_1A_u1o_s,'-U-sod ____ 990_\ I Autos, UMCI 990 • RAT JAGUAR I TOYOTA VOLKSWAGEN CAMARO I I MUS'(1'NG MICH.AEL '* ~!UST sru .. 'Gl XKE C'f'le,, TJlE ALL NJ:1'\' 1600 cc Larqe Selection '67 CA~tARO -Auto, pov•rr / l ·fi6 !\1VSTA.f'\G -8 cyl, Air I liUpE'rb root1 • 4. spd, ~l('rt'O, COROLAS, Of YW C f'\'erylh ing, fa rt air. radio. l'Onri . pv.·r str's:. pvt ownu. ANDREOTTI W\l'f' y,•hll, lo ml. 644-8197. 4. SPE'EDS & AUT01\1ATICS am~ers, Gold w/blk ovinyJ lop. Xlnl 67~ stereo, 4-spd, close ratio. Brougham Cpe. Sll95. Call ~S-7111 20092 Crown Reef Ln. KARMANN GHIA TIJ E ALL NEW Vans, Komb1s, '°""· $14i0. c~t '44-2778 CONTINENT'&L Moohon;,·, guoc~nto•. By lrop AT Tfl E LUXURY U NE OLDSMOBILE Hunt ington Be ach A orlh 0"'ncr. S2695· 497-1906 j Be1tutituJ blue bermuda mist You &N' th.to "'inn<"r ol I e ·.cr. COJ\''VERTJBLE, nc\1' CORONA JIT CPE Buses New & Used '67 Camaro SS, Runs very 1---;;::::;:=:;;;-;;;---· J ,~"~67~3-~2259~~·--~~~~ Iinis.h "'ilh dark blue la.ndsu ""' 4 SPEEDS & AUT01\1ATICS I d' I I D 1• litroJ11'. $3600 Invested, must I snow Car-'64 All. ,..., ....__d CU ~ "~ I l tickets to the paint & uphoL Good motor S VE ON mme a • e 1very scll $2800 ~49 0 r w r w stom """ ...-...r. roof and interior. Completely Wettern National & tu't"~. Br11ozil bound, must A CHICK IVERSON 644-1680 11sk for !-'rank. Black Parade Convt. Xlnt cond, I owner. $T75. I equ ipped y,•\th all the Juxury 1964 Oldsmobile, r.xcellent condition, ~oocl rubber, new paint job, po"-er brakes & steering, radio, heater, $475 or best offrr. 54& r.78. 8o•t A M•rint ~II! 838-3500 1970 DEMOS VW CHEVROLET-Afhso!utely 1.concou~. ..~11 fi44.-0684 or 548-7729· fratures. Auto tr1u1s. Afo.f Show II.Clary op 1005 11ova11 tru-U '66 FORD Gahucie 4-tfr HT. FM ,,.,_ '''"· heater, '60 Ghia, '62 eng, big bore, l '68 · I d' I F'M E C "" Al the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER stroker crank, new clutch, "llAM llri.:.1 ~!l-30ll Ext. 66 or 61 inc ra ia 1• · & · 352 engine, factOry air, P/s, powt>r s!et"rlnJ:", power t4Ul t4UW 1970 J{ARBOR BLVD. '67 CHEVY " Must S<!e to believe. 67~8770 new paint. S'Nf.i. !14~7635 brakes, po.,.,·t'r windows, 6 PLYMOUTH M$550E.R5-1Ct>-E31Dl8E. S BENZ I TOYOTA COSTA MESA CORVAIR '"'or wknd•. WAY ""'· fao ,;, rood. -------'63 VW SPORT YAN 1---------1'65 FORD Econ 100 Van 24()... completely ~rviced and '* * February 201h lhr>J 2lnh Please call &12-5678, ext 314 bet~·ttn 9 and 1 pm tn cll11m your dckets. fNorth r'nunty tnll·frtt numbrr 1s .)40.lZl()I * • • Orange County'5 Largest Selection New & Used Mercedes Be11z 3000 tnlles on new engin". '61 CORVATR \VAGON six, Good cond, Asking malnralned, new points GORDON SUTORIUS ll96fi lfArbor, C.M. 646-9303 SQUAREBACK automatic trans., excellent t1\fGP4861 Xlnt shapP. SlOOO. 64>45c98 1 plui;:s, 4 111.'W !il't'S, el See B '68 TOYOTA SEDAN !OZX 05.q) condition. •6705. Terms 11vail. See at 1945 JEEPS and drive this beaur' I car 3b~. ~:?:t' $499 $1799 I '<'H•arl>o='=B'.,'''i>·_c,,"::'::· &:-1&-r::>t::<Sc. I---------I today. YCP 936. Johnson k )'ou are lhe winner ot '53 CORVAffi Monza Conv. Son, 2626 Harbor Bl., Costa 1 'hei;;:.· (~~~~~~c, radio, CHICK IVERSON CHICK IVERSON Xlnt cond. Orig. O"·nrr. FJ~~p. ~Ji~l :nd~de '67·V6 r.fesa. ~5630. we!t~~~e'NZti~;., VW VW S350 673--4818 ca.u 546.3208 1970 MERCURY Boat & Marine Jim Slemons Imps. ~ ! BIL(ll.;ATES 1970 HARBOR BLVD, 549-:mt Ext. li6 or 67 '63 CORVAIR !\lonza. Good l ---~~~---1 MARQUIS CPE. Show "THINK" ====' 1970 HARBOR BLVD. bolly, new tires &. interior. LINCOLN SHOWROOM TYPE OF CAR h I MG I VOLKSWAGEN COSTA MESA COSTA MES• 1100. "'"'"' 1---------1 rnm MILES ANA"H'E'1M rJ '66 VW BUG --~~====--1 1969 4 rlr Continental Green. . • San Juan Cariis1ranct '66 CAPRICE ·v/'A·ht vinyl top. All Xtra! mis t finish "ith whirl" inter. DB ~' 328.\2 Vall• Ro.d 1--,=-===~--1 CORVEm All"'";" mod'"m '""""''" CONVENTION '67 CORVETTE Xlnt Cond! S3.800. Dys ior 11nd landau roof immac· CENTER .'FRIEDLANDER.. ~l !,MIG",, I RJ7-4800/493-4jJI/49!J.2261 ~ SfX'Cd , radio. hPaler. dlr. 83.'l-2640: Ev£"s 67>-7979 F•h"''""' 20th rhru 2Sth • ----------\ 1 RJB 8731 \\lilt tak• rar in Black interior. Au1omaf.ic, air S!ln"'''Y 4 •pd AM /t'M ra --~=~===--1 ulate! premium f'qUipped, '" . ., 2 ~7 314 ILL l\IAXEY .. .., · ' ' -MERCURY ,,,,0 1,,.,, am Im '''''' 1 Please call 64 . ...., 8, rxl .. B rradr or l1nance private par-cond., power steering, rllr. rJI.-, post !raclion rear end " _,.. I cl ' ·.., ' -------radio h•ator power ,1el?r-heh\'f'f"n 9 ilrru pn1 10 IHm , ty, Call 49~-S!tll or 546-8736. Po"·er w1ndow!I, vinyl lop. Selling pnce ~ --~ · · k (N h c ty 1l1501H•...,•a_c,H,11LYD. ID !TIOIYIOIT IA! , '· Loaded! f1TV 191) Must,1111.c-$1575 1970 Mercury ing. Power brakrs, F'ac air your tic rts. 0.rt oun 66 Vw GHI & M I C t'bl •o•d'ttlon. Truly 'potlrss toll-frf.e number is 540·1220) 893-7566 !i.17~ ''FRIEDLANDER" I ~ r1fice at "'l'lolesa!e blue Kelley Blue Book "'holesale on erey onv•r 1 e .. .. * * * NEW-USE.0-SERV. 18881 BEACH BLVD. 'i'ellow \v/hlk :fftrtau rop book~ $1100 full price. Call price S\950. Blue Chip Auto TI-IE SPORTY ONE and like nl'w 4 near ne1v I uno ll!ACH (HWY. :n1 h 7.,555 Ne1v valve JOb, XNN654 494-7744. Sale!!'.. 2145 1-larborBlvrt, CM . This lhishy tulip yellow with lirrs Ptc. ~ce and ask for '67 BARRACUDA ~ 893-7566 e 537-6824 Hunt. Baac 14 $1299 1~,6~8~M=A-L-IB=U~W-A~G~O~N &12-9700 * 5404392 black top and in1erior auto. demonstration. 9Hi SEQ.I I NEW USED SERV I rm N. of O>ut Hwy. on Bch mohile ha., been driven only John~on & Son, 2626 Harbor V~ automatic dlr air eond '68 FIAT 850 ~ .. ! '67 LANO CRUISER CHICK IVERSON Automatic, Rsrlio, Heater dlr. '67 CORVETTE 12000 mi and must be seen Bl., Cosla 1\lrsa. ;r1G-3630. I ~"·er s!eeri~g. 19.ooo mllr~'. S R ~ YW Fastbark • "427 ", 4-spt>ed, and driven ro 11-pprecia1r. 1969 MERCURY Like new! 193.l BSW) WiU1 PYDE IX.IJ 15'1\ Musi Sell. \l'!ll A!\l/F'i\f radio. New poly. Fu lly equippM "·ith 11.uro MARQUIS 4 DR HT 1ake trade or !in11nce privart ·&i :\llDGET. runs good, !:).)() 4 "'heel drive. warren hubs, 5'1!1·30.11 ~XI. 66 Qr 67 Tr.ido or finan ce. Call I E It -n•. ,adio, h<ol••, pow<r I RDSTR. Red with black in- terior. Like fX'W. YQ\'834 I b"-d'-T k I r: ass tires. -xce ent con· "" ~· BEAUTIFUL A\VARD n"' ... Y· Call 494-6811 or or hes! offer, 536-1024 afler ne w ru .,.,r, u. a e c ear J970 HARBOB RI.VD. 4"'-7741 · b k r '"" .,.. d1rion. Drivrn r.asy. sleering, pG\\"er ra es, 11c \\'INN ING STYLING Zt46-l!736, $899 CHICK IVERSON vw 6:30 11rck-days or anytime car !n trade or small down. COSTA J\1ESA -~~~=~----~--$2850 air cond. ere. 4 near nf'W .::.c.:.::.~~==~-~= wk -rnd• fTRR 332! Sacri hcr ~ Call'-=~======--'li6 )o{ALJBU Stn \Vagon, -Attractive light Ivy, yellow .68 P'Y'.IOUTH Fu-rnl ' '68 SQUAREBACK P S PB •0~ 01 A k I 'I G · ~•s ~·o tire~. Ask for demonstration. ... " .,, 19&1 :'llG1100 SEDAN Ira !.10-3100 or 4S.1-7jOJ aft l\Ulo, I • I . 'IOJ'JI . s or "r. rannts ;;--. . .,,.,.. 7fr.i AZP . Johnson & Son with dark i\'Y grec'n interior, I Convt., R/H, Good mech $J7j Good condttlOn lll A .~I. fE'r, _ 1 .sg Corvelte Classic, !10o'O 2626 Harbor BL, Costa Mesa: black exterior and landau cond, $750. &12-8953 * ~7:;..IAA!} * 1nps Eleet y,indow~ dual roof L u x u r y """Uip""' I + + 4M-35,l8 '* '* '4 ~ TOYOTA, R/H, auto. Radio & !{rater. fXEV-1571 · • 199,. 54-0.5630 ' .. .., 1969 PLYMOUTI1 Fury 111 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA ~iESA t 30000 .. 1 $l535 1970 ~iONTE Carkrerf'en. qu11.<ls. auto. Clean throud. gh~t. Au10. trans,1 4 dr. Po~•er i;teerina:. r11.dio.1 '65 MG 1100 ' mi ~7J-;~7r. Buckel5 & all extras, lo M!.2882. 1970 MERCURY . ra IG, ,,.,.11.te r, pov.er steer-heater, air conditioning. Ex· S·IOO. Call 6ij.588l * 1 '* m1 . S3400. 644-4132 or ---=D~O=D""'G""'Eo---MONTER EV 4 DR HT 1ng etc. This excellent r:.ar cellent condition. 0 n e HONDA I OPEL TRIUMPH , _-_22611_______ TOP STYLING AND l't'fi('e!s very cal't'ful miiln-O"·ner Under 5 yr war· I----------':16 CHEVY -Xlnt ('()nrl 'f.3 DODC:E Good QUALITY AT SAVINGS t!!naoce. Driven only 24000 ranty .. ~lusl sell net.,.,,'. '67 HONDA RARE 5600 '67 OpPI l<arlert, xln'• cnniL '71 SPITFIRES 18711 BEACH BL. 8424435 37,000 actual ?1~·" Ne"' 11ulo transportation ~aar~·$400. or The very popular and attrac. milf'5. See and drive ro ap-5.16-3645 A~"'ume h11.lance. 64&-3.S IS NOW ON DISPLAY HUNT INGTON BEACJ{ trans, r&h. 67:>-:)J.'\ll. hest offer. G42-42l9. til'r Arclit· while "'lib bur· preciate condition . \VYB 923. ---p=o=N~Tl=A""'C""'--Con\'erT. 20.000 mi. Nl'll' f\1 ichrlins. Xln! l'rinrf. Slli.i, &12-6.qlO 9 AM 11) I P:\I '69 YW BUG 307 V8, stit•k on floor, Disc ""ilh au10 tr11ns. r11dio, hrar-Bl., Cost Mel!ll. 54Q.51i,_l() ----------, S300. 53>-1167 ask for Don Looking for a car? a11 5·P300p "R"SCHE I CFnR"''ir'z" 'w"A'R'R"E' Ndt',ISve! '70 NOVA -SHH undrr v.·arr. '6.1 Dodge Dart deluxe GT. jl'.andy intrrlllr. f~quipperi Johni:on & Son, 2626 Harbor ENTER brakl's. $1995. 642-61!47 D er. powrr s1ccrini;:, powrr NG JAGUAR SPORT CAR C or :i\•e hrakcs, air oond, plus murh EASY '----------l'67 POn.-;c:HE Targa 912 -710 E. ls! S1. S.A. 547-076<1 •I ~peed, radio. rl!r. Heater. '6a ~\IALIBU Super Sport. 337 '"'n PO' 'RA ,1 ~ ..... •n-P/h, --+-------!Coll A"to Referral h<e of ,. , IYPT ~no •8 .1 . PIS P/B 1.9• 1m ._,,, -ur M'U more 4uu•ar new tirf's, driv-.6, M f' lb k N 1 JAGUAR F'ull.v f'quiriperl. 4\,000 mi. 1 Open daily 9.9; closrrl Sunday 1 ;:..,.,) ,.,usr sacri ice. C6~§17"22r~ • 83 ,,9 · 6 ;) ;). 11u to, air. Xlnt cond, $1450. rn onl.Y 14000 ml and main-.J ' u ang llS ac · ew Y chan:-e. We have ~Uers X!nt rrind. 540-1991 I ----:--68 T · h TR <A XI \Vl I take car in U'ade or fin. 1;>-~; evPs :J • .,. I . :0.lusr sell. 962--0842 tunNI V!i -m 4 bl., ne\\" waitinh. All types & prices. HEAD""UARTERS • nump · nt ance priva1e party. Ca 11 fa ined like I'll'"'· Hurry on front disc brakes, factory 'I' I' f SUNBEAM cond, Ai\-f/f"M, S J~ij(). Afr '6•1 EL CAY!INO :127 I FORD rhil! and save. 147 AZH. Sellers also \\lelcornt. G .i46-8736 or 49-l-6811 . 4 sperrl, 4 Anseo mai;:~. air conditioning. over--all &12-4431 The only authorized JA UAR 6 pm : 675-7726. ----------.Johnson & Son, 2626 Harbor, 2ood originAI owne.r CQl1- dealer in the entire Harbor 1 'fjj SUNBEA:O.! TIGER 19i0 TRIU:O.IPH TR~ elk hlue ·~us~Wsel~ugj ~~~r R~~i X!n" ronri . £!3-6986 arr S r ·71 LTD 4-flr. 400 r.i., Full C.i\.1. 54(1.56.lfl. <iilion. 6.5,000 mi I es . Are-a. Con\'!, Xlnt cond, Trrms roads!Pr . \\lire ""hls, lo mi. ' · ' ' '65 ll\IPALA ~ :i:n 1•oupe. p1\'r, Air, \'1nyl roof, 4400 1968 Colctny Park 9-pass Well-takrn care of and Auto Refe rral Service RAMBLER Comp!<!, 1 A\•atl. See at 19-lJ Harbor s-.1.·,_ ~A•_.tl32 0,. r.••""""' service record,s, \\'ill take Auto !ran~. full pDl\f't' p SJ ll" II · nd I S94" p · I 1 ~" <>'•., • o-.. .-''"" , d Call N< k w "26! mi '!<. vt ply, ;>. wgn . Fu power, air co . c ean. a. r1va e par).'. SALES nr call 646--9448. ra "· -~ c :_ v •o-v s.'175 *** 4!'!'-30\1 64' 0 ·-7 VOLKSWAGEN d 'll 300 If .. ·";>"' 675-1134 Perfc-ct conrl. 74,729 ml. ..--u~r . 'GJ RAMBLER \11GN. SERVICE Now'S THE "'·' --~'' ' r.m. ~=~·~~-==~ _:_::_::::.:_;_:..:_:_::.:::.:_::._1 ---,WAMo~r---'fill NOVA 4-dr I.tke l'IC"'· '&1 :"ORD Hardlp tPMPCl14) S24JO. 67>-:m.i. '67 GTA-Auro trans., full 6 Std. shi ll, rebuilt eng. nd- PARTS TIME FOR '69 V\V. Xlnt cond. Ne•v WANTED ,_,,mi, I O\\'n;r. R~l trr:!· Air t·onrt. runs ii;ood . "64 1\-1ercury {QVl.!1761 $299. pim·rr, air, chrome whcels,1 !r, tran!', nu brks, H. D. BA UER tires, brakes, tune-u p. '71 I'll pay top dollar for your R11rga1n. &12-3...i\S:ior67.i-5711:1. Trrms avail. Sre al \945 Terms ava il. Sf>e at 1945 Cobra rngine-. slill in ~·arr. shocks Si93. &12-5.lfifi. BUICK QUICK CASH lie. R/1 1. T/\V, $1595 or \'OLKSWAGEN today, Call ·1>4 !\1ALIBU-C,nf'l(j lookini::-. llarbor 81\'d, C.M. 646--9448. H arhor Blvd ., c .~t . $1375. 846-&124 T-BIRD IN THROUGH A br!'•. ~6--7Zll anrJ ask for Rnn P inchol . ~ ryl, p1·t o"ner. $72J. ·.v.i FORD $300 or BF:ST OF· 646--94-18. ;-65~.~,~'"-'_"_n_g_ro_n"1-. ",-.-,0-.. -V~Sc. COSTA MESA VW '69 Snrf Xlnl oond . 549.3011 Ext. 66-67. 673-0900. Call :i.t!l-711 1 !-"ER. Xlnt ronfl. 35,000 mi 1969 )lARQUIS i;ta ws:n. 10-Good cond. Moving. $700 or DAILY PILOT Cobalt blu. Extras, $1575. '6.l VW Sedan-Ne•'" pa in!. ··\V I{ IT E ELEPHANTS'' on nu eng. &12-.'1930 pass. Loaded. Will M!ll at off,r. &U-499'!. '60 T-BIRD IDLR87041 $100 full price. Term! avail, See al 1945 Harbor Blvd, C.M. 646--9448. 234 E. 17!h Street 54S-ii65 WANT AD Call 67:\-11721. tin"s, rnginc. ovcrrunnin~ your houS<'~ ·a9 RANCHERO, auto, good "'hc)le,11ale. S3095. 1133-1149 '65 Mustang, sharp fastback, Srll the old .stuU Buy the SSOO. 4!17-1.Jfil "Cash" .. !'ell thrm thru rond itinn, $.1.'iO. Sell Ki ie items now! Call I VII, #289 rng, metallic We'll help you sell: 612-5678 642-56 78 new i;tuH 'AA V\V Auto, in a hurry. Daily Pilo! Classifif'd * Call 642-116.i * 1 642--5678 Now! _, hronze, $995. 496·4413 arr 5. For best results! 642-5678 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Auto1, N•w 980 $1250. 536--3107 Autos, Uted 996 I 0A-u-to-,-. ~Uffd 990 Autos, Und 990 Autos, Used 990 Auto1, Used 99\ 1 :::::.:::.c.:.:::::~---:.:.:.:.::.::.:.:.::'-c:.::::_ ___ .:::::..:::.::.:::.c.:.::::: ___ _:_.:.:.1s<o1T1A>RPiiP-;v~wV"•e""~'·-,h~h~";-:''l ·--'------;_.:.:.:.::.:.:.:.:.:..;:.:.::;_ __ ;_.:.;:..::.c..::..:.::.:.::.;:;:.:. ___ .:.;~.================================-:::::::-:: JOHNSON & SON 1st BIG DEMONSTRATOR SALE!! 1st BIG CHANCE TO SAVE $HUNDREDS ON '71's Here Is. ~.Sample of The Large Selection of Demonstrators 1971 Lincoln Continental 2 DOOR COUPE Gin91• Moond u1t M 1l~ll ic l1<1lhtr witfl Vinyl ln!e,.or, Ok, Brown Vinvl llool. No E•h •u•! Ell'in •on Sv1te"', H;gh1 r R11;0 11,,,. Awle, W/S 'W Mich,lin 215 -I S BLTD y;,,,, Power loc ~ ll1 l1et1 G•~up. Tilt Str. Whl., 'Wf -S••l. W P•u Rtcl<ner, Frnt. 9.,,., r Gu1•d1. AM FM St1r10 11 •.• PW An l, lnle•m•1•1nt W111d1hi11d Wip1ri. Appr•r•nce Pro+. G1011 p, C1011 Cntry, Ride Pk9. IYllAl201- 99 I. Die~ John1on'• p1non1J c•r. $6875 1971 COUGAR XR7 2 O•. HAllD70P' Bright red J51 -4V, Now ••~•u•I '""11ton 1y1!1m. Stlec!.thif! i r1n1· mi11ion, F70 • +.i WSW '"'· Con· ve,.i1nc1 9'oup, Iii ! wh1e! s+eeiino. power 1l11rln9, power fronl d isc bi••••• 1i• co11clition ••. AM .FM 1+1r1e •edio, Spo•h co,.101 • ... 1th cloc~. t11t1r,..1I wi .. d1~01ld "''f""· •PP'''lftCI p!Olt clofln 9reu11 lint• ed 91111 -comp1•1• power won- d owt, •lyl11~ wh11I,, $'f425 tFtlW505 t•I 1971 COMET 2 Dlt 510. G r~v Golcl M1 t8Hic VOnyl trim, No~ E•h~utl Eminion Sv1l1111 , S,lecf. Shift Tr1n•111l11ion. WSW 87,•1 4 B•llecl Tire, Power Sl11rin9 , AM fl · dio, Eit1rior Decor Group. $2625 IKJ I FSO~l49 1971 Marquis Brougham " DR. HARDTOP' lvv G11rnour M1t1llic, !win cor11o fort lo11n9• 11111 . No1·1~h.u1I emi1- 1ion 1ytl11r+, Co•n1ri119 l1mp1, WSW, H-71•15 b1lt1d li t~1, till wheel •'•~r;ng, 6·w1y PWR •••+ dri•er 1id1, R1t;linin9 1'""'"9'' 11~1. Pow1u door loc~. Au!e.,,<1!ic +,,.,. p1r1fur1 conh ol. AM-FM 1!••10 ••· dio, Pow•• 81\l•n n<I, lnt1r•1I wind · 1hi1!d wip1•1, OLX ••~' & PRT 1hould1r b1lh, ,..,pp1tHtnc1 protec· 1;on group. R1moh1 CTL ltft fiend mirror, finftcl 91111 -compltlf, 1111110!1 Cont.al 7•un~ Re\1111, lw .. 11"1 wht1I C01'1fl, Cron counhy •ide p~c~~g•. $5388 11671(5 1))75 ALL CAlS ~ TAX I LlC. Johnson & son LINCOLN CONTINENTAL •MARK Ill e MERCURY e COUGAR ( "'hire. :\1us1 srll. $2700. FM ra<lio. 4!lfi-0112.'t 1964 VW Squa.rthark -Goocl t1rf'~. r"blt l'ni;:. Good cond. $700. 499-4197 1961 VW VAN 1970 \l'\\I Campmo hil l' "'/pop-!op. Xtnt cond. ;ij7-26.17 ·59 \!\\', 2ood mechanically, '63 V\\' Bu2-N"w !IN'S, hrad- er sys1rm. ne\\' taGS. Xlnt ronrl . s.;oo 6--16-3726 -.=-, =v=w~a~,-,--­ Goorl mnri. '.\lu.•t 51'11 ;,,if:-40:ll afl('r ::, P:O.I e 1!11:7 V\\"-Xlnt crin<l. NPW pain!. $i9J or best offer. fi"/5-01~4 '6:'. V\V, ~unrool $3.lO. U>av. 1ng co unt ry n1us1 ~I'll . • i\!17-6067 • VOLVO All 71 's Are Here 1.\2 • l·M -1 4~1 • 16'1 • lAAll E I SPEEDS S.· AL:TO\lATICS 1970 144 SiED1\N DEl\10 RAOTO. HE1\TER, AUTO:\IATIC • ~i11'l $2899 OVERSEAS DEL. SPEC. ~ean Lewi& 9 VOLVO 19&6 l{arbnr. C.:0.1. l.l'U"Ll'l.M.I THINK ~"fO~l "FRIEDLANDER" 111H •aA(" !HWY. aJ 89.).7.ififi • ~7-6824 NEW-USEO.SERV. .............. AutoJ, Used BUICK '6.1 Bu1rk Skylark Mo\•)n2, n1usr M>ll, Bf>sr olfcr. Ha1i 1 ~rl a/p rhrm "·hi~ in gd 11 rond . &1;,.-011\.'l. ·5;. Bu Irk Gran Sport-Air, 4 ~pd. Clr11n. """ CADILLAC- 1!1&1 C.&dililic, new tires, l C)"•nr c, $9W · cash. caJI ~ .. :w I \Ve'U hrlri )'flllM-1F612..;;i;11 RIVIERA power, f•clo<y •ir, AM -FM 1ltreo ••dio, winvl roof, r1m1ining f•clory warr1ntv. I 794AFVJ $4395 '70 BUICK GS STAGE I V8 . 1ulr11111lic, r4dlo, h11l1•, 1111 w•r 1t11tin9, power br.k,t. (100671) SAVE '70 BUICK LE SABRE CUSTOM 4 Or, H.T. VI, 1utom1tic, r•dio, "······ power , ... ring a br•ket, fie-. 1ir. fftc . w1rr•n+v . ISS7 ,..,0N ) $3745 BUY WITH CONFIDENCE at BAUER BUICK '69 BUICK ELECTRA CUSTOM Cp•, Fr.ill power, f1clory 1•r con• ditionin q, winvl roof. I XYZ577 ) '69 BUICK SKYLARK CUSTOM 2 D•. H.T, VB, •Ylom•lic, ·~dlo, h1~l1•, P.S., P.B .. r~ctorv ,;,, vinvl 1oof f•clory w•r•tn+v. lYXU2 bO I $2895 '68 BUICK SKYLARK Cu1lorr+ Cpe. VI, 1ulom1tic, r1dio, ~11l1 t, power 1f11ri"9 I br1k11, Contol1, vinyl roof, !WEF9!71 $1995 '68 COUGAR XR7 VI. 1 uto,.,~tic, ttdio, fle•l•r. pfl w- '' 1l111in9 l br1li•1, f1c+o •v .;., .,.,, •os2j95G'"' '68 VOLKSWAGEN SQUAREBACK 4 t p11d lr1ntmi11ion r1dio i nd h11l1r, !WXE915) ll1d uc1d to '67 THUNDERBIRD LANDAU COUPE Full power, f•clory 1it, •inyt roof, 1old l 11rwic,d loc1lly. !TSX t ~•l '67 CADILLAC SEDAN DE VILLE Full pow•r, f1c lo•v pir, AM -FM 1+1 •10, c•ui11 control, t ulo. clim1t1 """ 0 '$24 95 '66 BUICK ELECTRA CUSTOM Or, H,T, f ull power, f,t;forv 1lr, ~inyl roof, imm •cul1 t1 . low mi!11, !SMC588 ~ $1695 '68 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 4 DR. H.T. I own1r, low mil1191. VI, •wlo., •1dio, h11l1•. P.S., P.I., f1 ctory eir. l VCL94 11 $2295 '69 BUICK ELECTRA CUSTOM '68 BUICK SPORT WAGON SPORTS CAR SPECIALS • Or. H.T. Fyll po ... t t, l•clory •"· AM -FM r1dio, "invl roof, etc, Low mil1191. I YCL2~7 > VI ,' 1ulom1Hc, •edio, ~11l1r, powt• 1l•1ring & br•k11. roof t•c~. l ie· lt11v ,;,, (XOZ296l '69 MERCEDES 280 SL COUPE AYl0,.,1tic power 1f11 ri nq. •I• con- dlflenln9, 11111 und•r f•(lorv w1•· ""''$6995 UICK_1N COSTA ;,)9 JAGUAR XKE COUPE 4 1oe1d, r•dio, h1•l1r, 1lr condi. tion •nq, chrom• wh11 l1. !XXD260) 234 E. 17th St. MESA 548-7765 "SPECIALIZING IN QUALITY" • " •