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1971-02-17 - Orange Coast Pilot
7 , ... .. ,, • . . • -- Drivers ' ·On Bain·Sli~ked Coastal Highways -.. -. .. "". --.. ... . . -, Mesa Poliee · Dear· Con~s - . •' ew can DAILY PILOT ' . n • ' ~are of Traged!J JMrs. Robert Haken of Twin •Falls, Idaho, is 15 years ol d, ~four months pregnant and is ; now a widow. Her late hus- ~band, also 15, died this week. !He had been sniffing glue. . • ' Wholesale Price . index Up Again For January Outnumbered • ~ ' ~ \•i .,;,Hf I ' G'ls Battling Red Invasion SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. command,.rs rusheij reinforcements Wednesday-to out- nwnbered defenders of an American base 11upporting the South Vietnamese cam- paign into Laos. Field reports said Com· munist troops were firing from all sides despite heavy U.S. air and artillery pressure. The combat around Fire Support Base Scotch 10 miles from the Laotian border was part of a pattern of heavy fig hting in mountain jungles near Lbe reactivated U.S. airstrip at Khe Sanb. headquarters for the 9,000-man American support task force. Preliminary reports indicated at least five Americans were wounded in the battle near fire Support Base Scotch and military sources said a U.S. Army helicopter was shot down near it Wed· nesday afternoon. No _ casualties were reported in the 16th U.S. helicopter loss of the 10-day Laos campaign but f I v e Americans were killed Jn the crash of a U.S. Army Qlinook pelicopter near Hue Monday night In an Incident not related to the South Vietnamese thrust into Laos. Reports late Wednesday said element! of the 20,000-man South Vietnamest ex- peditionary force had driven 15 m i I es inside Laos. an advance of one mile in a 24-bour period. The push was described as slow and cautious. A Saigon communiqt•.e said the Larn1 force killed 500 Communists in the first nine days of the operation and f I e I d reports Wednesday incr~ased that figure by 78. South Vietnamese losses were WASHINGTON (AP ) -The govern· placed at 127 killed and 454 wounded nient Wednesday revised January's plus three killed and .!our wounded in whopping. wholesale price index · increase combat Wednesday. tU>ward slightly to seven-tenths of one Confused front dispatches on the fighting around Fire Support Base Scotch ptrcent, steepest rise in 8 year. \Vednesday did not make It clear whether ~ Bureau of Labor Statistics the American defenders -about 44 }:lrevlously had announced a prelimIDary men· -Were pinned down. The eJtimate of a six-tenths of one percent beleaguered unit w·as Identified as a increase. platoon of the 1st brigade of the Sth mechaniud infantry division stationed -..Although a 1.7 percent lncrea_st in just west of a bit ou~ropping known Wholes.ale farm prices accounted for .as "The Rockpile." most of the total rise, the upward The battle began Tuesday an hour revision was due to a four-tenths of or so before dark when C.Ommunlst gun- ! 1 · · 1 d stri I ner! opened up with mortars and small ~ percent f na increase in n u a arms rrom all slaes. As fighting con- goods, revised upward from 1 three· tlnued through the night and Into late ttnthl of one perctnt preliminary Wednesday aflernoop, U.S. Air force. ettimate. Marine and Navy fi&hter-bomber1 laced Despite the 1harp monthly jump, the-Communist positions with bombs and "'ice index stood at only 2.3 perce.nt r~kets and a company of 200 Amerk:1n ,.. re1nforeeme.nl!I moved Into the area with a~t a year earlier for the smallest more troops on the way. yur-to-year increase slnce June 1968 Tht U.S. troops· called ln artillery exoept for an identical advance for De-strikes Tuesday night and early Wed· otmber. nesday within a few y1rd.! of the Tbe BLS said th11t when seasonal fie-base perimeter. The U.S. w1rplanes flew I tak int account the January through d&ngtf'OU$ly low c~ds which or• were en o closed down to a ct:Uln1 or only &00 Wease was five-tenths of one percent, feet at times. compared with four-tenth s of one percent In Saigon. mltilary M>urces said in the preliminary e~Umate. ISet ASIA. Pap I) \ • • War ll'ear11 South Vietnamese so Id i er plays old army game of hurry- up-and-wait as he rests while awlj,iting arrival of airlift. His destination: the battle of Ho Chi Minh Trail. Drivers Collide On Rain-slicked Coast Highways Several persons were injured Tuesday night in accidenl.!i on rain-slicked Orange County thoroughrares, one a he,,don freeway collision and another a pole-ram. ming rollove r crash. Only one of the victims w.as hospitallz.. ed, however. while the othera were treated for injuries and released. Carol J. Cribbs,39, of 2998 Croftdon SI., Costa Mesa, WB! listed In gOod condition today at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital, despite a fractured right leg and possible internal injuries. She was trapped lh an overturned sedan at 6:15 p.m. Tuesday and had to be extricated by re&CtJe workers after the vehicle hit a telephone pole and flipped onto il!I top. Driver Richard D. Humphrey, 27, and his wife Charlotte. also 27 and of the is.11me address as the third victim. were treated for lacerations and released. Police said Humphrey was northbound on Fairview Road at Loyola Road In 1 heavy downpour when he braked, lost control of the car, and rammed a telephone pole which broke off. Humphrey said he wa1 driQng through •ater flooding down I.he roadway when a car passed him at high speed, spraying the windshield and cutting his vision. Two men escaped serious Injury at IS.. CRASHF.'I, P11e I) are Hearing~ • . ' ' .. •f ~ La.unehe'1 • By Senate WASHINGTON (UPI) -senate in- vestigators charged today that beer and - liquor agents plied h i g h • r .i n k I n g American officials in Vietnam with favors -such as a villa with maids -to promot' sales of J,heir products to servicemen on military bases. The disclosures came as the Senate opened new hearings into the '3 billion post exchange operat.ions run by the Defense DepartmenL Sen. Abraham A. Ribicotf (0-Conn.), .acting chairman of the Permanent Investigations Subcommittee. said the hearings would examine allegations of bribery. kickbacks .and payoffs to PX. officials from U.S. firms supplying a growing volume of products during the Ameri can buildup in Vietnam during the 19GOs. The charges or special favors to some civilian and military officials involved in the PX , programs were ,made by Lavern J , Duffy, assistant counsel for the co mmittee. He delivered a 4a.paae sum'Ttation of the subcommittee staff's Jnvestigatlo~ at the openig of the hearing. Duffy said that in 1966, William J • Crum, representing makers of Carling Beer and Jim Beam whisky, set up a lieutenant colonel and three civilia n managers of the PX system in South Vietnam in a four-bedroom house. The Villa was .decorated in "natural rush rattan" •Ith wall·to-wall carpet and came eq uipped with a bamboo bar, a cook and two maids, Duffy said The lieutenant colonel was identUled as John G. Goodlett Jr. Duffy-said Goodl,ett acknowledged in an aff~avlt that he had lived in the house free, paying $100 a month for food onlY. Duffy said Goodlett was in charge of PX operations in Vietnam, including purchases of llqupr and beer sold to servicemen ' at clubs on military base!. The three civilians -Peter B. Mason. Richard Lewellyn and Clarence Swafford (See SCANDAL, Page !J READERS RESPOND TO PILOT'S ADS It seems that everyone must be read- ing DAILY PILOT classified ads these days. They're respandiog, too; that's how we koow. •BOAT CARPENTER and FIBERGl..ASs. Ptrm. job W/frin.te benefita, LAKE r.1ARINA IPhoni numberl. This advertiser was looking ror a single applicant. He lost Count of the classified responses on the second day the ad ran. A DAILY PILOT ad-visor can help yoU get that kind or results, too. Just call on the direet line. 642-Mi78, and sit· hick. Help will be on the way. I * * * 10' * * * WEDNESDAY AFTER]'IOON, FEBRUARY 17, 1971 \'OL:. M. NO. 41, I S•CTIOHI, M ,AOll Appeals to LAFC · .S&n,t,a Ana ·-~ti~~· c, • ,. I Fightin~ Irvine Santa .Ana isn't through tryln1· to 1cut. · Ue. tbe future city of frvine. TM. .city Council Tuesday. n1eht voted to askrthe Local Agency Formation Com· mlstlon to reconsider Its approval of the proposed ·incorporation of the model clty. Distressed over Inclusion of a 933-aCre lndwtrial tract officials ol the county seat rnunlclbilify wai1* for. themselw1, the council :w1b act iunqer a m:w ala.ti statult Uiat allows iny legl'.alaUvt body to 8ppea).for ,.rte0nsl.deration. Councilman Jerry Patterson, In pro- posing· the move, said, "1 just want· to make ·Jt ab110lutely clear they thought about It and deClded aglin•t w." Richard ·Turner, eiecuUYe secretary of the LAFC, said this mornlng the commission ·had taken the -parcel, and. Ex-convict Tells Costa Mesa Police Of Holdup Spree By ARTHUR R. VINIEL , .ti! lilt 0111~ l'li.t Staff . . P..1edltathll in a 'netgbborh~ ctwch, ! In ex-coftvicl Pitole& only a "1onth ago 1pilled' SKJt .&/talc of a .. drf!klng ·f fnd robberY • spret' when J'Ol,\tinely · con~cted by Cost1 Mesi police Tuu,day ., ~ · Robert S. Corder; ~ ·who 'beoamo · 1 fret · man 'Jan,. 7 aflfr aerYtn, ia term for a~ed· robberY, ii back'. behind bars. today.. Someone sent officers to Harbor Trinity Baptist C'hllrch, 1230 Baker St., during the earlv afternoo11 w l t h a susplclou1 per~ report. · • Patrolman Harlan Pauley 1aid he. ap. proached Corder 'and asked what seemed to be the problem. The ex-Navyman employed '!IS a. fire extinguisher repalnnan Ul)tU tw;o weeks ago. -and . 1UIL drlvln.I 1 company truck -told Officer Pauley he wanted to turn himself in as·a parole violator. Meanwhlle, Sgt. Bob Goode and Officer Muk Bernal arrived on tollowup assignment& to assl&t Patrolman Pauley. "I might u well tell you ev~rythin1." Corder was quoted a1 tellltig them. "You'll find out anyway.'' He 1t1id he couldll't remember the ' dates because he w11 drinking aL tht time, but claimed to have pulled three armed robberle'1 In rtttnt daya. Corder limd the vlcttms a1 -a shoe store, 1 market ' and a fHed chJcken takeout 1hop, all in Lomita or the Im· mediate vJclnity. He 1ald be took $100 from the ·~ st9re. armed with a toy German Luger pistol 11nd C1)nvinced two w\tnessts It (See SURRENDER, Pqe I) the agreement Involving Jt, Into eon- slderation. Sanla Ana points to an eight.year-old agreement. it bad with the Irvine C.Om· pany. th.at ... stipulated tbt property in question would be annexed to that city this spriilg. The Irvine Company, pointillg out it had nolbjng , 14-, do with, lncllJll!or Ille parcel bi i/ie· proposed boo,,da\iu of the new city, bas, ·howeVu, 1malntalned ll>al. lb~•~'l!menU..no loogu In eff~· sine~ lne ·ac.tioO. Gt i oM coUDctl c a n n o a bind futUre :counc'lls> -. , · ~ 'A rtpr~er1£ative of the ~Ii to( the, Commu~lies Qf Irvine. sponiors of the incorporation move. attended the Ttlesday nlght session and offered to meet with Santa Ma officials to discuss the problem. · A~er ~s~kum1n,, E. Ray Quieley. CCI s-eiecuUve secretary. viewed , "We want to be good neighbors, but we ,don't know what we cou)d or couldn't do." · H~ polpted oUt tha( all eronomJc feasibility studies for lht new city were based on anticipated revenue from the area invol\red. A statement by Councilman J. Ogden Markle perhaps gave sortie Insight into the reallOns. fqr the CS1U.Dcll;1 action. "If we can't. win, wt c~ al least &hQw thelit)we're.men," be. Ii.kl. 1)<; ~lnat ~greemcnt .6aa been 1Jeg9haten~'l953' when Santa Ana VO)Wl- lafi!Y gavf(up elloru io innex a ~JoOt atrlP. acroas the center bf the I.rVtnt l)and! to' gel to Le~ure Wbrld In LlllUl1& mn.. Oruge Fairer skies· and cooler tWP. eratures are ,·on . the menu, fo'r Thw:sday, with· me~ readings or 58 degrees along the coast and up to the middl~. IJls· further Jn. l~d. - , · INSmE TODAY Amerk:ani impcttitM' wltll the p • cc of Vi<llwl"limtloir lii Southtu( A1ia and toitMrcnoaL •1 U.S. troop1 llllght. f41fc 'a look at Korta. PO(JI JJ, ) • -..... . =:-.,.: ......... 11 ....... ..,._ "': r ~-......... at'· -.., ,: ~ '"'' "'· ... tt .. ~...... " ~":.. ... ~ .. l: ::::...~ K-U ' . '""'"eifl'• ,... ,, ... --.. , ·' ' ' < l I l Dall 'l_!l_LDt s WfdMid...,-. Ffbruary 17, 1•71 Stt~gles To· .. Close -. '. -. ~ , =II!'· 'AIMON'.1.0CKABEY " .. o.lr ,.,.. ''"' P'"'BE~«:"1~0 'fALLAl\TA -The !Int Mailo(Jiet:Rai·to PUerlo Vallula Y,tcht n.,._;,Ned to •. c1qo4 loday .w111t Ille ~ ., Ille -lllet llrl!all!>I 1oriid the Dnlall -. . • TWtn.~'fn Ille 11eer'&a4 Onished by ' ~.~: .ibclii. . aiii!' ihrtt had dropped Olit cil the ra~ . .. . . _ Rqar;dlea of late ~lnlsl)es, the overall correetld lbne winner will be John Ho8d:a1.'t Ericsoa 35, 'AiJuariuS" from Long Beach Yacht Club wblcb flnlalled at 1:45 p.m. Tuwlay lo knock Rucal out .i .-lbe'. correcl<!I time lead. In the l,12l""lnile r.ee. : • · ·.' _ __ AqUariw · wu one of three Ericson ass in. the Oeet~ Th( other two. Freestyle. and Oid GoUple,' were CaUlht in a patk- ing ,lot some 20 miles at Sea, but were aliU expedtd 1o,finlsh l•ter today ~d noon. • . ' :-~ _.. . -~oho Hooten'i Des\iny, U (rom Newport l!irtlor Yacht Club was Uie third boat to drop out of the rice. It niotortd llllo Puerto Vallarta. The other two dropouts-were Aventura and Babe IL No, the mod haircut .and glasses belong to New York Mayor .John -V. Lindsay dur- ing visit to Provo, Utah, over weekend. . _Lindsay plans to build a cabin near Provo's 'Sundance Re.sorl One of Liberty Cellmates Files Third. Cutb_~k -, . • -::>' .. - Home Wan Rat~ • ! " --. ;; .. - Slashed to ·-' 'If A_S~G'I'QN (UPI) -Int~rest rates cut to eight percent last Dee· T arid on home loa111 insurtd by tlie £eder1!:1 fQ 7lh percent·oo Jan_ 12. ' '' · government were reduced today by one· JtonMey hiot~d '. ~t Jit th~ !O,'!.ek . Cfil: half of ooe percent to"seven perOOit illRt maoy Ienders _mtght ~f:ase. ~ -the .third such cut 1n u many moriUu. ''.pol_qts'' they ci}f.r@:e in, ad~ttoq \o *1Je Affected al'e mortgll:es insured' by ad interest rate; ·' · . · !. bQth ~ Fed,er_al Hou~ AdJ'!llnistr~tl9n . J-le said the seVe.o percen' celling ,i·may· and the Ve te.r ans /.dminbtntlon. be .. fust ahead' oC curr~ni: c~xidjHPJ!s~J9-eo\rered ,.I.re -1iot onlf ;lorn~ · i}urcha.ses Oiii: corporate bond ·M¥~t.s;, .bi.It ,with but also FHA mortgages on apartml!nt the mortgage lending inSl:itutiofis beCom~ develtlpments and other housing. ing increaaingly flush with funds, it will Announctment of the reduction was 110t be Jong before Jhe new ceiling is made by Housing Secretary George W. lully villdi.cated." -... . ·1;;,:· _.: Romney and Donald E. JobNOn, ad-. ...... t d » 'd. mlitistfii{of-of veteran affairs. . iue governmen -oes not na , ired loans. The FHA and VA assure that The effective date of the change is borrowers will repay . loans. made by Thursday. Feb. 18 -that ia, the cut private lenders. Jn the event oT a' default, applltt on applicaUom· received after ttie government m8"kts up tht! tertdti't today. loss. -' · ' ·' Romney's office said that out.standing 1n· an effort tb: 'inerea'se the tetUnl commitments for insurance would coo-Ori their money, lenderS itsUaUf · 'a'dd tinue to be honored at their original "PO!nfs"-to FHA arid '\.'A Jo-ahi~"A interest rate. "point" is a one-time payment -· ot' ori~ However, the 8{1ll0ijl)Ct:ment sai<J. percent of the 'loan ind• it dsually p1aid various federal offices lnvolv.ed. · in by· the seller inmad Of the buyer. · --· '· mortgage loans "have beeD instr.ucted Jn addition ti> the iritere)t'·rale: Oie to negotiate with lenders to seek ieduc-FHA charges a prerO.ilJni ·Of one· bait tlons in the interest rate on subsidized *of· one· percent. Thi!> :incrt&ses the -ef· mortgages tO the new lower rate fedJve rate on ~A '·I Gans ta 71k perctlTt. tf!gar~less of_ the rat~ of the of"!ginal The VA does not-make a shnilar ctiar-.: commitment... e,v The lowered ceiling-wUt trlm: a&out The new rate is the lowest in more $8 off the monthly pa)'ihenl ~on• a 125;000 . : . :Still f'raeti.,lng Man F1·eed; Questioned In Slayings FORT WORTH , Tu. (UPI ! -Pollet today arrested a m~n f.bey said very much resembled one of two brother• charged with the execution-style murder ' of three sheriff's deputies. 1'be man~ however, turned out to be • Metican national who had been questioned 24 hours before. Officers at first thought the man was Rene Adolfo Guzman, 33, who po JI c e said shot the three deputies on a Dallas river levee Monday night. Police from Dallas told Fort Worth officers they had arrested the same man Tuesday afternoon and released him after determining he had nothing to do with the slayings. Earlier in the day Dallas County Depu- ty Sheriff Allan Sweatt said he hoped Gumian had decided to flee the Dallas area because a fugitive on the run wU easier to catch. "We hope be starts running because 11 running rabbit is easier to catch than one still in his hole," Chief Sherill's Deputy Allan Sweatt said. Sweatt said crews of deputies and other officers had sought Guzman throughout tbe night and that new crews took up the search today. , \!Adil>' ~Hlnlshed by midnlsht ~ ~ Sirius JI, IW<al, Wl!lg..,,, Qutri_. Jl. ·Aries,·· Nov)a del· Mar, 'Qtwar. Y•Tut~ &Dd.Daur. . lnnoc-ent Plea \ QooOlli.y Q, Ma!lnllaQo.-, Aqua r i u" •p•chipg_. the fiD.ilh-line th1s mom---~-_ . __ _ __ than two years for government-backed home WJ\h a 25--yeaf "fnoitgage' ctn · an mortgages. '.fbe rate rose from.~~'° .to FHA lolfn, the mOnthly pA)iM:nt · for 7'h percent on_ Jan .. 23, 196~ on. lts princip::il, interest arid the FHA ·premium ----way 4:0 the .. aUime ·high-oi 8~rcent -wonJct-bl $184"T.i -·---ti-1. ~-·-""""-. '·1Jr. No'riVaod Clarton Riddle is . po ~ bis pi:act1c;ed. medicine , in DarrjQgtoo, Wash. for 42 ... years ... Dr. Riddle has been 'b.lind.for pilst IO years but still sees ~ few patients suff~ring •·He may still be holed up in Dallas and he may have left town. But we can't afford to take any chances,'' Sweatt said. • lng WU'e five more yachta, Carina, From Wire Services Kanab Bue, FrteetyJe, Sisame, and SAN DIEGO -one of two ctllmatts Od4.~:~· of the Oett will straggle suspected of strangling Cand1ettgbt Klller acroa Ute finish during the day Thur1-Robert W. IJberty pleaded innocent here day. Tuuday to charges he participated in Six' Held m' NY c.ommwUcations between the United the murder. St.ala and Putrto Vallarta has been .,,, Carl R. Riggs, 22, of Romulus, Mich., · -• J 4 19iO h' h ·i · J on sucu a 1oan. 111e -1mposcu an. . - w 1c preva1 • oid rate was $193. ' ed for most of last year. From the high mark, the ceiling wai ,. ~ches .and .pilios. Jury in Ma~'on_.Tri<il _ . - Moises Zuniga Guzman, 3~. Rene's brother, also was charged with the murders. Relatives said Rene, an u-con- vicl , is a "mean man ." ham""1d by overloaded Unu through appeared before Superior Court JUd1e Suh Ri ., · · ' · · tllt ....... u operator and only • ham Leland Nlet..in to entar the plea and way ot-.. F d F ··-c f. . t radio -t·bu been able to handle was ordered to be rehuned AprU I -·ree ro1n , o, n inemen ~1oises Gozman was arrested Monday night within hours of the shootings. A statewide search was under way (or Rene Guzman. ··He thinks he·s Al Capone," one tlf Rene 's relatives said v.·hen the murder charges were filed against the younger brother about midnight Monday before a justice of the peace. the task. Information is bCbll f~ frGm -, !or _!Jl&J:., --' NEW YORK (UPI) -Polict arrested the tlCOl't VtlHl Ploneet' to Carron • :ffe joins Timothy Dudley, 24. o( New six of an estimated 500 higfl ~I _ -... Hudson on WB6RMA in ·Newport :Beach \"pk City, on the court calendar fOf studlnts who went on a rainpag~ th~oogb £05 .ANGELES (UPI) _ The Tale : whieh is passing on· the infonn~Uon trta1 in Liberty's Jan. 20 strangulation -_a __ spbway tr_!in 'fufsday -.. afterm>on; ___ .-·_,.~al 1·ury. locked up 1'n a ho"!'. to news media. AllO an the netwoik • In addition to other homlcide courtt.. b _ d 1 k tttarei.;, u 1 ii Dave Atkinl In !Al Angelo on WIVX. both· men face. t!:g passengers an stea mg poc et· nl&htly for the past .seven months, _bas :. Liberty. 23, a former resident of .Two £ati-of .the train, .careyiog 2.ooo. • b:AAn.. fce_ed fr:om e<>nf1nement u·h.lle they , Westiniil&ter and Costa Mesa, had tieen pissengeU, had just...enterd ..tM .,~rd .1 ~<fc.:jln life or death for Charles I Hughes' Plane --in . sOlft&ry c~o ii 1ineme-n 1 ~as: .. l!. J Street 9tation about 4:20 p.m. EST 'A'hen troublemaker before his attorney won what was a fatal court order returning a student pu1led the emergency stop lod k · cord and melee began. From Page 1 'S ' G ' him to a five-man cus Y tan Ul A number of \lo'omen suffered· bloody ; Pruce oose January. He dted four day! before he and his noses and split lip& when bellteA-.. by' . -sunRENDER G • R • brl4e-Kendall A .... Bierly Uberty, M, the students. Police &8.id approxlfnately· ep1'11eve hObl be led hi! both in 30 youths caused most ()r the trouble. 1ven "'":> "' . man-w e lo .:,ere -Officer• said U)ey could )lave ~ , ·, A.·-· · ""'todf ~-·-In Co r...., wm _ . . • • . '" Was 'tt;I when they "t!hased him on i fool '{.' •\.oNG BEAOI (UPI) -_ Howard due for 8 muMer trial. . . . more ·students, but they remained at Hugh .. lodty held ""'"'"'-extension tlf The.y were cJ:iarged with killing RolJ:ert the train to heJp the injured. Some • • I A record check reveaJed Los Angeles 1. County authorities held a f•lony warrant ....... u~ 52 I J 7 d J v g of the victims refused t_?~ign arrest a lease on bull4¥lg housing the giant J. lnon, ' ast upe an 63 m k warrants for fear of reJSl!!SIS, police flying boat He~R Jias '?Jl'.W'\:l.t "~.:'~~l*t~be{~~:~~de~:g nid. • ,_ " · --·· -~ ., • . for Cclrder'.s. arru& ~tthecUon with the ...w.; --if~....,,~~~,J 1een by the pub~'ifftc.li'1Nt. -' · u -The Long Buch Harbor Commission -th a note scrawled on a wa . granted the industrialist a one year ex-rs. ~Liberty pleaded gullty to counts Fro,m Pane J tension Tuesday of the oceanfmnt pro-of manslaughter and robbery and. ?D -v He was booked ·for investigation ar I anned robbery and parale violation. i while a toy German Lu1er was con-I fiscated from the company van as r evidence. · I h '"ed Tuesday was ordered to undergo perty and the towenng meta s eau1 P!YChlah-ic tests at the' California CRASHES building. hiding the. plane. . Institute for Women at Frontera. • • • Corder, who gave his address as 10221 . Lorraine Lane, Cypress, was nervous 'i but cooperative, according to arresting officers. The giant woodtn craft "'as ~1ckn1med Both Liberty, his wife, arid the woman the Spruce Goote a1though it is actually whcise strangulation in Westminster In made of birch. It baa been stored In J 1966 launched the career of the its hangar ~e~ armed guard since Cunndei light'. Killer have a history of men-il.! maiden night m 1H7. a e • Last week the conunission denied a tal problems. request for an ezterulon of the lease nyln& It could find mart proflllble uu for the property. The denial raiMd tllt poselblllly Uiat the plane would be seen in public for the first time a1nce its flight. Hughts · pik>ted the craft O@ th.• one mile flight at an altitude ol 10 feet. The plane, -width.~ WIS designed IS a troop camer during World War JI, is as large as a Bottng 747. Smugglers Stymied BUDAPEST (fJi) • -CUsloms officials seized mort than 17 pCIWld! af Awtrlan gold coins worth ;'obout 156,llO•>" lrcm a group of departing. Yq06lavt wM' falJed to declare th~m. the ffwtgarian newa agency MI'J rt:pOlied. Tuesday •. DAllY PILOT .....,.., .... -.............. --.. -.-CMt. MtM ·· • ·· , S-Cli1t1 .. OltMH coi&T PiiiL.1~1Nc. ~,...., Airport Chief Fined for Row At Meadowlark Meadowlark Airport operator John Turner was fined t150 Tuesday in Westminster Municipal Court for dUiturb- ing the puce. He entered a guilty plea to the charge ·which stemmed from a row Dee. 28 \\'ith two Huntington Beach police officers over his airj>ort operation. Judge David Aaron dismissed four other charges -two counts or a;sault and J>alj.ery, one for re~ls~ing &rrest and ~n.e. for 'operating an ah'l):Ort without a permit -which had been tiled against TUrner. _ Tumer had been battling nearby homwowners ove.r the operation of fl.ieadowlark Airport whic)) they claim is hau.rdous and • nuisance._ l•\trt ~. YI••' Pt ......... , ... '-'1"""' Jtcli: R. CY,tey Viet ,.telldtllt 11rA. °"'ti ~ TkmM•ktt•ll 'Ille Hun\lngtl>ll Beach "City CouncU had itepP.d Into the' {eild ·and banned • night flYing· at Meadowlirli: unat certain '~ lmt>Nvemants' wert made. Offietr1 Bruce Str1lth and John Foster aald Uiey ipotted Illegal night flying 1111"'" Tho"'•t A: M111,hh1t M.,...1111 S411tf" •:ch1r4 P:·Htll 1t11!1t OAl'lft <..itt MrtW .~. C.MI Miltl• IUO W•t lty S'lrtel _ N..,ort .. 1<Jll!trifl\'•t ...... , ...,........ tAtuM 91Hf1; m ,,_,A-· Hw!ltrlll'Mll ....... ,,.,. ltiK'I ... t .... tf "'" QlrMnltl .. ~ IJ '911'11119 II.Ml · · al Mtadowlll.rk on ~: 28. They se.ld · wht.n. Ui~ talked with Turner he became 6elllg•renl and UBed prolonlty. T'urntr was arrested · Ut&t .J\1ght ind charged with assault alld battery. Tues· day. however. he was fOurid guilty only of diaturbing the ~ace. 6:30 p.m. on the ·San Diego Freeway just north of El Toro Road in a headon collision. 11,Gv"11t..,.,t1u California Highway Patrol offlctrs said 11 """'""'""'•""'""""_..,..,...,,...,"'l traffic was slowing sharply in heavy r GEM TALK rain when one northbound vehicle dciven by Garve! Stewart, 52, of Norwalk, lost traction on the wet pavement. ' His sedan went out of control and '" crossed . the center· divlder,. .. 1maslliA& into ·a southbound car driven liY K'enDe.th · Adams. 32. of 25132 Las Bolsas ·.s[, ~ ! Laguna Hills. . ·~ ff ~by Both victims were treated ·at South • .. ~ Coast Community HoSpttal and released. fl . ~.:· . A third t"'O-car accident..'.fli wh1~. all. ;l '· ~·ffVMPHIRI three victims were treated at the same i_<> ~ ,,. -~ •li.W\4."Z!'::.: clinic and relea!ed occurrtd on El Toro • ---·-~111 ~ Road at 8 p.m .. when one· -w.ent out· .i; of ccontrol and spun across traffic Janes. "GOOD INVESTMENT" Weston Hammond,. 17, of 23455 ,Du.r)lt;I! · · .... ~ ',. ,,. ' Road, El Toro, gave no reason ·why -. .•. " he lost control of the car C4fJ'Y}fll -J , , Allliough ·We ·a·µ k.n o \V that a pal, Ray Kennedy, 16, of 24'n2 Be~green diamond is a good investment, most R~1~' ~~~~nd vehicle crashed into of us. have .. ne~er real~Y.. compared a southbound car driven by Mrs: IrMe it to· some of the iriaj9r expenditures Hill, 41, of 24351 Spartan St.-; ~n Juan we-pei-iodic81ly· iii.Cui-. If. you have Capistr~,, between Leisure "'orld not made · such a. °CQmi)arison, you La(llna Hills and Laflllla C1Dyon (load. · : ~t 11 d . t . t' · · t" ·t d b From Pagel m1gu n 1 10 ere$ 1ng o o so y talting a second·look ·at~your invest- ments in cars .and"flirs: ·. . -... ~ . ASIA WAR . , , Many ol usbUy-.n eirpensive car •• , . '" h i c h \Ve khow·",\.flll\ -be almost \Vtdnesday the four-mootl\ ~the..~ worthless in· ·~-: te~\t ·yeiziis. and we clock U.S. air .ofrenslve, •!alijjt ~_.1ro .,_ seem unconeonitif if>Ou( deprecia- Cbl Mlnb Trail Ill I.las_ his ~·' . . · · · ' •t· • · out nearly 7}100 North Vletnam.es.'Jttpply . t1on , carin~ .xnor_c .... oi:-,ypearance trucks -more than one·thlrd of Kanol's and performance. And m1ny people ti.et . .' . buy ·C9SUY-l•rS.: lr.no\Ving that they The sources said this was 2.000 more ,,rill someday wear ·out·· Or go out :~ea~t!nana~~e~::::-~~:: .~~~ of style. --· ·:."·i·:. ·< tht trail lll l!le&-'10. ....~ ' ·w11tlher! Yliil're <tiikini about She~s Top Dog _ · dian!6nds I!' a S)'tltbol Of·love, or as ~n investm,e,f!i,.).1\e :Q)d·S~brase, "A diari)ond is· f~t~Ver.~~-apptles equal· · ly well; because . a. dtlJllOnd's ap- peau.nce rerMtns the:satn't, it never 've,_rs out or go'es..Out nt style; and not only does it ·ntit diP"reciale. it actually in~rta'ses Iii 'Value. a beau- Mesa Girl's Pooch D.S. Cltanlp Frt1rn Wire Servlce1 NEW YORK - A Costa Mesa teena1er tOday has tht honor of being .WP junior d<i& Ii and 1 tr in America, followlnt judging here Tucsd•y night In U.. presUglous Westminster Kenn~I Club Show. Heidi Shellenbarger. 14, or 7 S 9 Paularino Ave., wa~ picked from among .1 field of candidates 10 ·l.O l' year• old . poise In showing her whippet, Ch . Gretchen of New-porter. The Costa Mesa High School fresftm•n Is the daughter of Mr. and fl.lrs. \Yalt Shellenbarger. owners. of Gretchenhof Kennels at the Paulal'lno Avenue addre!s. The family 11 qu.Ue well·knowa on the Wut Co1st for succes!M ahowtnas at championship canine evenll. , ,. . -. ' liful and practical h•ag~ against in· flatfon! - ' ' . -.,. Diamon·as ~e. ,Qul · bUsipess not lnvestmlnt Cmlnselltll-But '"' are qpabl.• R! ,btl~l.n~ ro.u meke a good ·lnv~strnep.\ JA l . qJ~~ond: so come on IE\ • .• ·~ ~am9nd coun- seling Ls free • ·:J -···' . . Miinson a'nd three \."·omen defendants. .The deti.sion was annol.lnced Tuesday ~!\er a woman · alteroere juror . fainted ~#· f.he coUr!.f6om, . SUperi9r -CoUrt"J1,1dge Charles H. Older announced that he was vacating the ~Cler under Which the jilry members liiid been S"equi:!stered. The lockup direc- tive was ori"ginally, Issued to protect the jurofJI . from·' publicity which might affect their dCcision· in the case. ·· 1\-lanson and·.ms three female c1>-defen· dants already have been e<>nvicted of .{il"St degree murder iirthe Tate-La.Bianca kijJiogs 8Jld .~the •trml is -in ;the penalty phase to decide on a sentence of life imprisolilment 91° death ·in th~1 ,J8as chambei-. · · Mrs. Victo.ria Kamp('CUl.I}, a hou~ewife 'th· her· _ Jate' ~ 140s. lapsed into un-~nsclo~J\ess· . tti 'the courtroom after she was· p\Cll:ed tO replace the regular jOrOi;. te1eph0he· repairlnan Larry Sheely. Sheely has Uiree small children and n was Understood that his wife had appealed that 'she could not carry on alone. The Guzman brothers v.·ere accused of forcing five deputies, three from Dallas County and two from neighboring Ellis County. to drive to a secluded spot in the Trinity River bottoms where they allegedly planned to e:recute all of them. Three deputies were executed. one was wounded and the fifth escaped 'vithout injury. Froaa Page 1 SCANDAL ••• -worked under Goodlett. be said. 1be suti¢0mmittee quoted from. letters lt<,!lld crum l'fO" to officials of ·C.rllni abi! Jlm Seim io the UnUtd Sttes boasti'ng that his friends in the PX systfm were pushing throu&h otdtn for more of hi.S beer and whisky. In one J~tter, Crum was. said to have told a Carling official : "There is nothing but good news from Vietnam (beer wise, that is)." INTERNATIONAL• STERLING . ' . ... , OFF SALE on these 4 most popular patterns A wonderful opportut'lity to 611 in or Mart yoor service·oow •.• even give a very trea.rurtd gift. There's a complete open stock selection available u Well u place ltttinp. And all at great aa.vinp for 1uch pridt in owni.na or givins floe lamily sil•u. Sale Llmlltcf-Febru1ry 14 thru M1rc:h 13, 1971 . .. J. c. ' · 1823 NEWeORT BL VD., COST A MESA -· :. :·~o~VfNtfNT !t~rs IA.NKA~.E.lt,1C"'~D-/)4ASf!RCHAk61 24 l'lARS IN SAM• LOCATION PHONE 141·J401 ,, ' ' . Judges said she displayed remarkable ' Miss St}ellenblrser qaullfftd. to .enter tl'lt Wertmlnster Kennel Clu!J-ShtiW-by polnts earned In other competition th~1c~ the ye11:r. ____ _: _ _:.._l=c---:::========:--"""'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ' • I l .. • . I . I I l I . ' • I I ·I ---·--~~--· ... -11 y . . { --• Dunii .. g(o-1 B·eae~ T-.y'1 Fl••I • • N.Y. Steelu "'• ' -· VOL. 6'4, NO. 41, 5 SECTIONS, 58 PAGES ... ORAN.GE COUNTY, C:ALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, FEBll.UARY 11, 1971 .. ' ' .. .. -..... TEt<j CENTS ' . •• • . . ' Witness _. tlncovered • 1.n Fired LaW1Ran's -C.a·se By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI OI !fie Dilly 1"11111 Sllff A tttiuest to re-open the Gilbert Coerper case has been filed by Attorney Cecil Ricks who claims he has uncovered a witness who could clear the ex· policeman of charges ·that resulted in his dismissal from the HLmtingtin Beach police force. Ricks, who represented the 36-year old Coerper during the eight-session hear- ing before the . Huntington B e a c b personnel commission said the woman's testimony could ''shed quite a bit of liibt on the .entire matter.'' Huntingtpn Names Girl To Panel ~ Pat.ty Truesdell. 19, has just become part of the establishment. Tbt pert strawberry blonde was ·~ pointed to the Huntington Beach Recrea- tion and Parks Commission as the first youth representative last week. "lt's a little bit scary. I just hope It will go all right," confided P~tty who now has to tran~form her criticisms into constructive· program5. As 'the youngest person to ever fully participate in Hunt ington Beach city government. she will join 11 other com· mis:iloners -many of whom are twice her ''' -in the administration of the J:Uyt1 bu.&• park l)'slem. But it wasn't tasy. "I'm only 11 and t can't legally vote . SI] U\ey allowed an e1cepUon for me to be on lht board,'' 1hi "i>laJoed. During the next few weeks1 Patty, 1 Golden Welt College buslneu .1tudent, will be studying the accomplishments of the establishment. Then she plans to mi:ike a few suggestions of her own. "They seem to have a lot of progran\!'I for youth but not enough for college students. The students aren't interested in existing programs. They're concerned mostly with politics and they talk about the war. Nixon, the SOS and about drugs ." she said. Patty who live! at 1714 Alabama St. with her 20-year-old husband, an oil field roustabout. , said she would favor a program of encounters with city hall officials. "We need to get the figureheads and their assistants down to the schools so they can let their hafr down and com~ municate." she said. !'I'd like to see all of the commis· 1iom come down, also the narc (narcot· lcs) squad . so that we can talk about oor problems ." said Patty. "~ut they .s~ould really communicate, not iust . pa~!JC!pate In a question and an swer session. ~atty believes the commission has tc0red a big hit with older youths by going ahead with plans to develop a motorc.,.cle park in the Bruce Brothers pit on Talbert Ave. and Gothard Stree~. "This Is a big step. In fact, I think It's fantastic . I just hope they can get bwy on it and do it quicker." she said. "Right now the problem is getting out the people to register their motorcycles so the. park can be built." She finds current city plans to tum the downtown area lnto a Roaring 20's village with swanky r e s t a u r 1 n t s , specialty shops and tourist-oriented businesses less endearing to youth . "Most of the kids say they 're not going to come down there. They're pretty upset about the plan." she claims, citing the need for a meeting with city officials and young people on the subject. "I took the position on the commission because I wanted to do more for youth. They're so disillusioned. But I can assure them that I will not be a. little youth advl90r just sitting up there with the commislkln looking pretty," said Patty. READERS -RESPOND TO PILOT'S ADS It 1etrm that everyone must be read· Ing DAILY PlLOT classified ads these days. They·~ resj>Gndlng, too; that's how we know. •BOAT CARPEfli'TER a.nd rtBERGL.ASS. Perm. job \V /trinae bflneflt1. LAKE MARINA IPOOne numberl. This advertiser Wl.!I looking for a single applicant. lie lost count of the classified re5~e5 on the secood day the ad ran. A DAILY PILOT 1d·vl1or can help you get that '&ind of results. too. Just call on the dll"!d line , 642-5671, and 1lt back. Help wtll be on tbt wa)'. I . ' . The woman, Mi~ Nancy Dean, 1tepped forward after ruding newspaper ac- counta 'of the crunmia,tjon's dectsioo to uphokl the firing or the veteran lawman. "She called me after rtading the newspapers a.nd said she could offer testµn<iny . '!hlch supporti(!~. eoe~·s point of view," said Ricks. · Miss ,Dean, a formett leCJlrj.ty errfp)oye at Montgomery ·W.ard!a, ~tains store personnel' knew a!~ ,11onr·t11a1 their merchandise was not · gobif to charity activities of the Police W1ves Guild, the attorney claims. . Coerper was fired • from Illa job' u motorcycle-patrolman Aug. :~ aftlr • . -·~ ' .. pclice Investigation disclose:l he had kept marked-out a.nd damaged merchandise for himself ·and' give11 it to other people. He. was supposed to ha.ve repaired °'" items and giyen ijlem to the guil~. H11 diacharge was upheld by lilt five. man Huntington Beach Personnel 'Com- mission last w.eelr on the ground! that Coerper had broken· his agreement by giving the merchlndise away to una~ proved persons. Throughout the 32-hour lon1 proceeding Coerper claimed he b.ad been· given the toys and appliances to do with "as I saw fit." "Our declaration states that from time to time Mr. Wltitaker (lhe ionner Mon110111ery l\'•rd 5'Clll'lty c'hief) wOOJd have Miss Dean call Mr. Coerper to take away merchandise. Ofteri it was mentioned that the goods were going to a hospital or an orphfnage~ They knew they were not going lo the guild," said Ricki. · He asserted that Miss Dean lives outside of Orange County and had no knowledge of Coerper'a plight until she visited her father and saw a newspaper story dealing with the policeman's discharge . His request to re-open the proceedings was addressed to commission Chairman ·• • • Wandllyn Hiltunen. City PertOMel Of. ficer Ed Thompson 11id be would contact commlSl!!Qn members today to tstabliab a me~tioi date for conlideration of ~ request. City Attorney Don P. Bonlo said this morning the commission could re-open the case. "Any board member could move to reconsider the· case baled on new evidtrice .. Jt would iequirt a ma- jority vote to bring It about," he said'. "I hope substantial jusUce will be done." said Ricks Tuesdily ·lfternoon. "If we tould just have had Mi!,s Dean during the hearing I ·am Sur-the case would have tended lo .JO in , the opposite ' directlon . All we bad before wu Mr. Coerpet's word/' Coritlc1'd at his· home thJa mornJn1, Coerper appeored -ned by the discovery of the witness. "I hardly l;now lhe 1al. l had to really think h'1'd 'of who she wa. Thia . ii just sometblbg that fa really great," the ex-police' officer aakf. ""I hope' the board will listen." Out of work since hl11 discharae 1nd without benefit of unemployment in. aurance, poqper added, "I'm ready to sell my hOl.IM and fight thil to Superior C'mrt or the -.Appellate ·Ceurt ti 1 have lo. rm·innoccent." U.S. Troops Under Fire ·Command Rushes Rei-nforcements to Viet Base SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. commanders nished reinforcements Wednesday to out- numbered defenders of an American·base aupi)orting the South Vietnamese cam· paign into Laos. Field reporta ,1.iild Com· muni.st troops were firing fro m all Sides despite heavy U.S. air and artUlery pressure. The combat around Fire Support Base Scotch 10 miles from the Laotian "border was part of a pattern of heavy fighti n_g In mountain jungles near the reactivated U.S. airstrip at Khe Sanh. headquarters for the 9,00l).man American support task rorti!. Preliminary reports indicated at least five Amer icans were wounded in the batUe nea.r Fire Support · Base Scotch and military sources said a U.S. Army heliCopt'er was shot down near It Wed- nesday afternoon. No casualties were reported iil the 16th. U.S. helicopter loss· of the lo.day Laos campaign but f i v e Am~ricans were killed in the crash of a U.S. Army Chinook heli!,'.'op.ter !)ear Hue Monday night in a.n Incident not related to the South Vietnamese thru!it Into Laos. Reports late Wednesday said element.a of the· 2Cl,OOO.mah South Vietnamese e1· peditiOnary force had driven 15 m It es mside Lao!, an advance of one mile in a 24-hour period. The push wu described as slow and cautious. A Saigon communique said the Laos force killed 500 Communists in the first nine days , of the operation and f I e I d reports Wednesday increased that. figure by 78. South Vietnamese losses were placed at 127 killed and 454 w~ed plus thrtt killed ahd fOW' wounded "ln combat Wednesday. The u.~. troops called in artillery atriktj T,ue.!day night and early Wed- nesday within I few yardi of-the base perimeter. The U.S. wi.rplanes new through dangerously low clouds whictr closed down to a ceiling of only 600" fett at times. In Saigon, military sources said Wednesday the four-month around·the- clock U.S. "lr offensive against the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos haa knocked out nearly 7,000 North Vietnamese supply trucks -more than one-third of Hanoi'• fleet. The sources said this was 2,000 mor1 trucks than the total destroyed dutina: the autumn and winter air strikes apinat the trail in 1969-70. D•IL Y, PILOT ll•ff Pllllt · ·YOUTH Will llE SERVED rs~·i:~itpJ. ~~ue~rl'· 1", c:andal ,; Revealed Qii' 1¥lud Dump . . F . A .. N@W_·P~ Citizens . f4~:k~ . To Stud·y·b ty . -..-· · · ;. -.: · ... "' · : · . "' . · ·· ac1~ ct1on . -Se(afire Panet .CJw.ses ·. Vie&~. B,...,,_ Kic~i.c~• t · ll · ~· , WASHINGTON 1uPil -Senate Jn. hearJni• would examine ~~i!lon; or 'er.'m; represenun; ~~; .. '., ·~ . ti UhtmgtOD vesUgators charged today that beer and bribery, kickba cks a~d p~f•. 10 PX Be.tr and Jim Beim whisky, ·1et .up Charter .Revise liq uor agents plied high.ranking officials from U.S. firms. supplflng a I Jle\jte~t et1!onel an~. three c1vlhan American officials in Vietnam wltp growing volume of product& durlilc the .nianq:en of Qie 'fx syittm in Sout.IJ favors -such as a villa with maids American bu.ildup Jn Vietn&pl durln&·the .Vietnam :In a four-~rooin hous~; . ' -to promote sales <lf their products 1960s. •1be Villa wu decorated lri na,tur.a.J A citizen committee hu been appointed to study revisions of the Huntington Beach city charter, incJudtnr the· pro- posal for a full-time elected mayor defeated by voter.!I Nov. 3. to aervicemen on military bases. The cltarges of special favor& to some ·rush ra tta ri" with wall-to-wall clrpel The disclosures came as the Senate clvlllan and military offl clal.s involved and came equipped with a bamboo bar, opened new, beari.np into the $.1 billion In the PX . programs we.te in_.:!e by a cook an~ t.w9 mat~ Oufff •~i~. post exchana:e , o~rations run by the Lavern J . Duffy, assistant coun&AI ·lor 'nle lieutenant colonel •was ldentlfl~ Defense Department. the committee. He delivered a 45-pagt as .John G. G9od1ett Jr. Duffy sa1~ Sen. Abraham A. Rlblcoff (D-Conn.), summation of the aubco~ltet sfa!fis ~lett ackno_wledged ~ an affldav1~ Rtpttserftat_ives from five community organixaiioos ' will serve on the com· mtttee': Robert Dingwall of the HOME Council, Mrs-: Joan Katz of the American Association of University Women , Mrs. Connie Johnson of the League of Women Voters, Steve ·HoJden of the Chamber of Commerce and Tom Uvengood of the Jaycees. acting chairman of the Ptrmanenl investlgatio~ 1t the openig of ~ h_earing. t1'1at he had lived In the_ h&use fret, Investigations Subcommittee, II.id the Duffy 1a1d that in 1915. William J, paying SlOO a monlb for food only. These members were approved by the council Tuesday night. They will se rve wilh Councilmen Jack Green and Al Coen "'ho make up ·the council 's charter revision committee although Green pointed out TueSday night that all coun- cilmen could serve Is ex-officio mem· bers. c;:ireen i;eported th'at only. one organiza· tion, the Property Owners Protective League. headed by Joseph Ferm, a can· didate in the last council election, had fa iled to submit the name of a delegate. "Mr. Ferm ·bas been notified sevual times," Green said. "I set no reason to wait any longer~" Tbe Property Owners P r o t e c t I v e ·League wrote the ballot argment against the charter ameridment in the November election. Efforu to reach Ferm this morning were unsuccessful. The propo!al for 1 full-time mayor Was defeated by only 163 votes -with 16.138 residents voting No and 15.975 voting Y~s. ,... __,.... Sermon Served Nude Swimmer Feared Drowned Off Huntington A youth who went swimming In the nude in a bay next to Huntinglo1. iiar- bour Tuesday night waa presumed by life guards this mori\ing to have drowned. The youth, 'Richard Magovero; 21. of 21144 Baltic Ave ., Long-Beach, reportedly had been drinking heavily at ·a party In a waterfront apartment at 18910 Pacific Coast Highway. Party goers ·told lifeguards that at 6:32 p.m. he took his clothes off and aw1m about 40 feet· from the dock. "He turned back and seemed to be all right," Capt. Douglas D'Amall of the Hunti;gton Beach lifeguards aaid . "But he didn 't return to the party a.nd has not returned from his home In Loni Beach." County and cily lifeguards ~earched the area without .!IUccess Tuesday night and two divers combed the bay I.bis morn- lllg. Down to 7% Interest Rates Reduced On U.S. Insured Loans WASHINGTON (UPI) -Interest rates on home loans in!ured by the federal government were reduced today by one· half of one percent to seven percent -the third such cut in as many months . Affected are mortgage! insured by both the Federal Housing Administration and the Ve t e r a n s Administration. Covered are not only home purchases but -also FHA mortgages on apartment developments and at.her housing. · Announcement of the reduction was made by Housing Secretary Geora:e Yi. Romney and Don.aid E. Johnson,, ad· mlnistrator of vettran afflirs. The effective date of the C;}!angf Is Thursday, Feb. 18 -thtt ia, the cut applies on applications received after today. Romney's office said that outstanding commitment.I for Insurance would con· tinue to be honored at their original interest ra te. · However, the announcement uid variom federal ofUces involved in mortgage loans "have been instructed to negotiate with lenders to seek reduc>- Uons hi the· interest rate on aubsidiJed mortgage.a to. the ·new lower rate regardless of the rate ol. the .original ccmmfiment." The new rate Is the lowest in more than two years for govetnment-backtd morta:a£!S. The rate rose from 6~.. to 7\1. percent on Jan. 23, 1969, on it& way to the al-time high of ,,,,._percent -Imposed Jan. 4, 1170 -whlch prevail· ed for most of last xear. Pier Beer Bid Attacked From the high mark. the ceiling was cut to eight per~nt la at bee. 1 and to 7~ percent on Jan. 12: Romney hinted that. 1t•Ule lower ctU.. tn11 many lenden might ~rease the "pO.lnts" they charie in addition to the set Interest rate. By TERRY COVlLLE Office of Adminlstr1tive Procedures, con· vi "" e».ar P1111 11.i1 ducted the heartng this morning In the "Alc:ohcil ill a sedative, 1 dru• or Huntington Beach City Council Cham· ~ be rs. • the narcotic class.'' With this description. Several Ume.s he stopped Rev. Erny Rev: Edward Emy launched his attack short on gpeechea explainlna-. "We want this morning against the proposed Ille facts , not opinions about alcohol." of beer on the Huntington Beach pier. Rev. Eroy, witb http frQm Rev. Mfred But 1fteT 1 two-hour PUblic ~aring, • Mil\el' of the Evange1ldil •Free Oiurch nelt.ber Rev .• &rny pastor ol tbt lirR.....!.pt"Ol•t.4 •,UW'lii seHlng Mtr on lhe United Me:lhodlst. Church, or Ron Smiht munlctl>tl pier WOIJt6 increase ·p<>llce ~ who wan ta to tell the beer, knew who blems wtth the yoU\h, won. "It's lhapproprtat'e to Jell alcoholic "You'll be notJfled of the decision beverages in 1 pd>lic recreitlon1J 1re1.'' In wrttinsc by the director of the AlcohoUc he saict. Beverage Control Board." W 111 i am Both mlnistert p:iinted out that until Green . heiring officer told both men. now no alcoholic.beverage.a were •llowed Green, who wu sent by the slate on the pier or the beach. • "I think this i11 only a trend. And soon beer will also be allowed on tht beach," Rev. Erny said. __ _ Vince • Moorhouse. director of Harbor• ind Be1chtt, ·said beer •ou1d not be allowed on· the beach . ''This will be · sold only Inside Mr. Sd'llth'a n1Laurant," Moorhouse added. "Any violation and the city wW cancel Smlth) J...,:· Smith plans to convert his fre!h fish store Into a nnall undwich rtataurant and sell beer with the tandwicbea. "There will be seating for 21 peT9011.!l. Beer "111 be served on drift In m-U,s," Smith said~ "No ·one will be allowed l.o llavt the restaurant with lhe betr." He aaid the seven percent ceilinll "mty be just ahead · of currenr C9J1dltjON in the corporete bond markets, but with the mortgage lendlng lnltttUtton1 becom· Ing Increasingly 11""1 with fundl, It wnI not be long before the new ~ttlng .ts fullv vindicated.'' The government doet not .m1ke,dtrect loans. The FHA and •VA' l!llUrt tbpt borrower& wUI reply · 1oans1 Made by private lenden. In the tvent of·I def1uJt, the CO'femment makes up the lender/ a loss. · 111· an effort to lncreue the retum on th<lr -•Y· Jenden ... in~ add "'pbints" to P'llA and VA I 0 a n 1 . A •;point" Ja. a one-time payment of one percent of the lo.11n and ls uiu.1111.y paid by the aeller lnalead of the buyer. } By ALAN DIRIUN Of ""' e».ll'f l'lllt ,,.., The city of Hunllngton Beach ls taking legal action over the Steverson brothers 39-acrt .rotary mud dump. The city council win hold a public hearing at 7:30 p.m._ Marth" %2 in · the Edis6n High School cafeteria. to take evidence from homeowners who charge that foul Qdors emit from tl)e dump behind the Southern California Edison plant. The hearing was scheduled by the city council TuesdaY night oo the recom ~Uon of .the staff. · Cfty Admbtiatrator Doyle Miller U· plaiilei:I that the .purpose ot the bearing· will be to (tetennlne whether a public riuiSaitee"iiisis. The Cotii\cil' COO!d the n institute a· civil action calling . for tht <lperators to abate . the nuisance, unleu the 1 use · was tenninated volµntarily by the Steversons. ·Legal proceedings we.re pictured by J.1iller. as a she rt-term solution to the mud dump problem. A11sistant City Administrator Brander Castle. reported that among the long· range solutions is the use of dry bacteria cultures wh.ich would reduce the oily mud to a liquid. He said tests were being conducted with the tiny bugs bJ a private firm and that a proposal on cosl.a would be m1de soon to Joseph and Carl Steverson. ' Castle said the area could be cleaned up In six months to a year. Councilman· Al ~ asked why le&al (See MUD DUJllP, P11e ZI Weather Fairer skies and ,cooler temp. I eratures are on the merru for Thursday, with mercury rtadlng1 ol. 58 degrees along the coaat and up to the middle 608 further in· 1 land. . INSIDE TODAY ~rlca111 impolicnt ~ th pace of Vkt,.cnn~tion it1· So1't~tast A•ia and lui&hdra.wal ot-tf:S:--troops -m!Qhr taM a look at Korea. Poot J 1. I ' I . % ~ll.Y ~U?_T ·= ' H Wtdnttd<y, ftbnilty .17,491, -• Straggles To Gose · ~· .. Plight o~ FligJit Toi~- ' Meaifuwlark Pilots Enu m;erate Dangers : . . ' ' • • ~Y· ALMON· UlCKABEY Of ... ot11., ,llit '"" piif;Jirq' vAi).ARTA -The first Marln!+del Ray to· Puerto Vallarta yaCht race draiged.. to a clo!i! today with the la.st . ol .lhe U,boaf flt.I strugglli>& CoWard the flnlJh line. 'l\veNi"ui the fleet had llnlshed by I a.m. tod8:Y and three had dropped OOt ·of the race . · , Re&llf'd.ltss of late ·finishes. the overall corf'tt'ted time wlnntr will be: John Holiday's Erlcsop 35, Aquarius rrom. Lolll • Beach Yaclll Club wblch flllished at 1:4.i p.m. TueJday to knock Ra.seal out of the corrtcted time lead in . lbe Pair of Eagles ' A kite wllH a wtre leader was nown •In .~. Dl1b\ Pa.th over ~ealo\vlark Airport at the wee~nd, the Huntington Beach City Council was told Tuesday nigh I. Robert-Dingwall. head of the city's airport committee, said that several planes were dama&td ~eluding his 0\1.'n and urged the council to instruct the police to rigidly enforce all pertinent regulations. !;nether pilot, Fred Oennui:_io, also. reported that he had a near miss with the police helirepter palrolini tbe ·airport. He. 1ald that. two. weeks aa:o be ,.,.as coming in to l1nd at 6:05 p.m. and 1 IU mile race.-, ' · - ' Aqu°aJlua .. wu-one or. thtff Eri~ 355 in the tftet. The other two, Freestyle and 04d Coupl!t were causht ln a park- ing lot JCime 20 miles at sea, but wt.re stUI .. peeled lo finish later today trolll!d . Gordon BuUer, 18, (left) and David Force, 16, have_ ac~ieved Eagle status -the highest rating in Scouting. Both are 1uruors at Foun- tairi Vallty High &hool. Both live in Huntington Beach. They are members of Troop 555, sponsored by the Rancho View School PTA. as be wu flying over ~ i:olf course the hlHCopter went directly undernealh him. He said that the poUct craft then turned •nd chased him back to 'the airstrip. noon,' • · I . John Hooten'• DesUny ll from ~ewport Harbor Y acbt Club was 1.1\e third boll to .d~ -OQt of Ute race. It motored Ullo Puerto Vallarla. . Police Release Suspect "lt wu obvious they were tryin1 to a1greaslvely patrol that airport and in effecl knock me out of the sky," Oen· nucio said. The other i\ll'O di'Dpouts w.tre Aventura and Babe 11. . Yachts which h•d flnished by midnight 1\.lesday were 'SJ.(ius JI, Riscal, Widg~n. Querl"' u. .. ¥J!.s, No\'la del . Mir. T).orothy\0, ."!adiugadara'lq U a TI~!" In 3 Executio11 Murders Later .Dennucio. who comm.utes daily to Hav.·thorne, agreed that the pilot or the police helicopter probably didn't see tilm, "but he was trying to patrol ag+ Quasar. Y,t, :Nr)lo "'1 ll. . . , . ApprO>l!ilhl"Ult rtnlsh llbe this ioom-. tng .wm .livo .. llllltL.l'.ll:!Jts, C¢J!a, Kanaka Bug, Freestyle, Sigame, and Odd Couple. The rest of t.he Oeet will straggle across the finish during the day TbW"l- day. •• U 'led FORT WORTH, Tex. (UPI) -Police today arreste.! a man they said very ritucli ~reSembled one or tY.·o brothers charged with the execution-style murder of three sheriff's depulies. The man, however, turned out to be a Mexican national who had bttn questioned 24 Communications between ~ue n1 States and Puerto Vallarta has been hours before. hampered by overloaded lines through Officers at first tllought the man was the overseas operator and only a ham Rene Adolfo Guiman, 33, who po 11 c e radio network. has been able to handle the task . Information is being fed from said shot the three deputies on a Dallaa the escort vessel Pioneer to Carron river levee Monday night. Hudson on WB6RMA in NeWport •lleach -Poli~ 'from .Dallas told Fort Worth y,·hicb Is passing on the lnfor~at!on -offfters they had arrested the same to °'"'s media. Also .on . the network man TUesday afternoon and releued · Dave Atkins in Los Ah&dtt on W&VX. . bfm after 'determining he had nothing is to do with the slayings. From Page I Earlier in the day Dallas County Depu· . -. '' . . MUD DUMP. • • Musi cians Set proctedtngs were neces~ry if . the F C • • Steversons were cooperaUng afld· al a Or ompetitwn solution seemed possible. . gres&ively.'' Dennucio and Dingwall both urred that ty Sheriff Allan . Sweatt said he hoped thl> police enforce regulations ·. in the Gutman had decided .t? Dee the Dali as state 'Public utility codes. Denll\lc10 1sktd · area because -a fugK1ve oo -lhe-run -for cl:itlflcation ·'On + whether he· .. coutd· y,·as easier to catch. . ny at night. saying that the police pilot •·we ~pe he starts running because had warned him that night flying \Vis a runn!ng .rabb_it is ea~!er to catch tha,n illegal. . one still 1n his hole,. Chief Sheriff I City Administrator Doyle Miller said Deputy Allan. Sweatt said. . that no night flying is permitted at Sweatt said crews of deputies and Meadowlark until obstruction lights are other officers had sought Guzman placed on high tension wires around throughout the night and that new crews the field. He added that when lights took up the search today. art installed night nying will bt permit- "He may still be holed up in Dallas ted · two ·hours after legal sunset or and he may have left town. But we until IO p.m., whichever occurs first. can't afford ta take any chances,'' Sweatt" 'nlere was a round or discussion on said. · !his problem wilh Dingwall and Dennucio Moises Zuniga Guzman, 35, Rene's explaining the difficulty of determining brother. also was charged with the - murders. Relatives said Rent, an ex-con· vi ct, is a .. mean man." f\1oises Gozman was arrested Monday · night within hours of the -shootings. A statewide search was under wa y for Rene Guzman . "He thinks he's Al Capone,'' one of Planners Review Tower Proposal Rene's relatives said when the murder Developers or a proposed 17-story charges were filed against lhe younger retirement tower overlooking do"'·ntown "We need to do 30me~g mow !O ff stop that ""'·" Miller resp611c!ed. ~ '!.fni lfutingro people will not w1ot ,,thb use to continue brother about midnight Monday bellJ!e Huntiqton Beach will bring their plan.'l a justice of the peace: ;_ tq the'vlannlng commiasion for approval "-!l'he-;q,m.an 'brotllm wtre .... lliallght~ of forcing five deput ies, thr.ee f~m The high rise project. s1m1lar to the even for six months. rr A dozen ~g musicians will compete The City has bee~ ilven a ~I ion" for supl!'!l~ taq1p scbolar,11~ tooight bes.ring !flore =~~~n~m ~-... tn Uie\Bblnta1A1Vau.f Sch'oot.'Olstik:t'• residents in soul d is annual solo music contest. The petitioners clalm the ump . The musical playoff starts at '1:30 a danger to children as an attractive p.m. at Wardlow School, 9191 Plonffr nuisance a~ a health hazard because Dr., Huntington Beach. or the offensive odors. . The best musician \YUi win a two The dump , located at ~agn~a StreeJ week summer scholarship to Arrowbear and Hamilton. Avenue, as m ~~ ~!n music camp. The number two player for the deposit o{ mud fro will earn a $50 scholarship to Arrowbe.ar ' ~i~~int~or ag~:~ th~adum~ J.'!~~ while a $25 scholarshlp goes to third that recent fo\11 smells were caused place. . b wa!tes from a refinery . The dump Prlzes are .provided by the Fo~taln · y 1 II nsed for the dumping of Valley Classlhed Employees Assoc1atlon. 1S n::° ce tes These 12 talented youngsters were reC'tery A~~~ne). Don Bonfa said that selected from 113 competitors in the the 1 yubUc hearing would be necessary district's solo and ensemble featlval Jan. btca~e the city needs "substantial 30. . . . e\·idence" if it is to find that a public Su: youngsters play v1ohns : two on nuisance exists. ., , .• , · -trumpel!I, two o~ flutes , one is a tuba The March zi hearing will ~ · an player and one with a cello. adjourned meellni .Qf "1e council . so the council may··make such a _finding if it determines a nllJBric!: exists . It will be conducted as a legal p~ cet:ding with Bonfa being In charge of the case in favor of a nuisance and the property owners handlin& the ct.se against. , · A court reporter will take down the testimony. The he4rina: and use of .a court reporter wer~ app(O,ved on a 4-1 vote with Councllma'n-Norma Gibbs being opposed and May~~ Donald Shipley abYnt. DAILY PllOJ OAAHG!i'. COAST l"uiUIHCNG c:cM,AAY R•~1rt N. W11~ ,, .. 11111;111 ti'!( ....a.Mt J•c~··ic Cwrl•y Vkt ''""''"' •IHI G ... or-11 hl-'Mttr lh•111•• "''"ii IEdlltl' Th1m1• A. Mur,htft• M1n.,1111,.£d~tr Al1111 Dirki• Wttl O'•llM CWll!Y b lltr Alb1rt W. l1f11 A..-llte ff6iw H•lltl ......... 0Mc. 17175 l11ch t.w11•1r4 M•l1/11g Aidr1111:W• ·a. 7to, t 1MI OtM1 ~ Enrollment Up At Golden Wes t Colden West College's spring enroll· ment has soared 33 percent, the largest semester increase in t.he college's five. year history. Assessing reasons for the sharp jump, college oficial1 said the employment plc· ture and an increase in high school stu- dents graduating in mJd.year are llkely causes. Registration statistics from the admis- sions office show 4,S87 day student.a, up 1.049 from th! spring semester a year ago: and 5,864 evening students', up 1,470 from last 1prlng. · Combined day and evening registration Is 10,251, which is 33 percent higher than last sprinc's 7,732. ·Satellite Launched °vANDENBERG AFB (UPI) -A satellite employing a Thor·Bumer It combination was launched at· 1:52 p.m. Tuesday from this spact and mlasllt ttst cent.er. Dallas County and two from neighboring Bethel Towers 1n Costa '-fesa. is pegged Ellis County, to drive lo a ~ecluded for location .oti .the -~· tide of Adams :.9?.'t irl_the Tr:i'ity RJv@r.·t@,t~ t¥Pere .Aveouel!ietwe~t7tfi:.8Ddloflain Street. ihe·y 8.TieiedlY plan~d -to execute a)f · Although the development .was vetoed of them. Three deputies were executed, by the planning commission earlier. city One was wounded and the fifth escaped councllmen have approved the tower con· without injW'y. cept. Fountain Valley Ups Filing Fee For Developers lt will now cost developers $100 to fil e a precise: plan for apartments, com- mercial stores or industrial projects in FoMtain Valley. City reuncilmen upped the fee Tuesday night from $25 to $100 to bring it in line with neiihboring cities. A report from the planning department showed thal Garden Grove charges $150 to process precise plans, while Santa Ana and La Palma both have $100 fees. "I can assure it rosts much more than $100 to process these plans." Clinton Sherrod, planning director told the coun- cil. Precise plans show all the details of a project. Such plans are not required for R·l (single family homeS) or R·2 (low density multiple) developments. Three other cities still charge less than $100. Huntington Beach has the lowest fee. $25. Other charges are S50 'for Newport Beach and $75 for \Veslrninster. P r ostitutes· Seized In Italy 'Scorcher' ROME (AP) -Poll~ arreated 21 prosUtutes Tuesday night w a r m I n & themselves al bonfires they had built In the streets. They 'vere charged today with violating the law forbidding fires in the streets. Tonight, at '1 :30 o'clock at city council chambers, the planning commission will review detailed plans for the tower, as required by the city CQuncil. GEM TALK TODAY by "GOOD INVESTMENT" Although \\'e all kn o \V that a diamond is a good investment, most of us have never rellly compared it to some of the major expenditures we periodically incUr. U you have not made such a comparison, you might find it interesting to do so by taking i s.econd took at your invest· ments in c~rs and furs. fl.fany of us buy an expensive car w h i c h v:e know will be almost worthless in a few ·years, and \\·e seem unconCerned about deprecia· tion, caring more for appearance and performance. And many people buy cosUy furs. knowing that they wiJJ someday wear out or go out of style. LI....,. IHCll: m ,_, A.......vt CO.II MMl l I• W .. t ..... lfl'lf' '4twlltl'I •11tft1 #II llitM·fa*O'I ~N ,,,. (Hlmtflltl af-ffllfl(I ~"""! ~! . St11dents R11le \Vhetber you're tallting about diamonds u a symbol of love, or as an investment, the old phrase, "A diamond is· forever:• applies equal· Jy \Veil; because a diamond's ap- pearance remains the same, il ne\'er welts out or goes out of style; and not only ~o~s if not d~prteiate, jt actually increases in value, a beau· tlful and practical hed11 against in· flation! Beacli Kids Take Over City Hall Studtnll will cet their chance to run .... llunUngton Beach at the nfll city council meeUng. Twtnty-alx students from Edison, Marina and Huntington Be1ch hlgh schools will uawne the roles of depart· ment heada, mayor and councilmen ~fOn· day, M3rch I. The city councll agrttd upon thia dato at us metUnc Tuesday nla:ht. The ~tudtnts will arrtve at dty hall at 1:30 p.m. and will be Introduced to department heads and visit tJ1e var>ous . city officts. They "'ill be given packet s containin& the agenda and supporting documents for the council meetin& that will begin at 4:30 p.rn. The students will sit next to their counterparts during U\e council rnetllng and during the 6 p.rn. to 1:30 "P.m. break be:twttn council sessions lhey'1vlll JIO to dlnntr with the council. The Youth Coalition Comm It t t e coordJnated the arrangements for this ye11r's government day vllth the clly and schools. Diamonds are our busin tu not JnvestJ;nenl-counse1ing. But we are capable of helpinl( )'Ou make a good Investment Jn a diamond: 10 come on fn .... our dlamond eoun· .. ung ii !reel ------·---------·---- ( (' \ \Yhlt cooaUtute1 legal sunset. CJty Attorney Don Bonfa pointed l)ut that a new ordlnanCt Is being prepared whJcb will regulate night flying on the groundl of noi.se abatement. Jt waa agreed that Councllman George Mccracken and Dingwall v.·ould work with the attorney'• office in the prepar- Discussed Killing ti<in of this ordinanct. Police Chief Earle ltoblJaille tofd the councilmen ihat the -£ali£omia ·Depart·+ ment of Aeronautics had informed him that it wa s legal for a plane to fly and land at night so long as it had proptr lights. It w·as hot re\evaht whether the airport bad lights on or not. Huntington Girl Linked ~ , To Murder by Witness A prosecution wltneu today testified that Martha Rtu:s of Huntington Beach and convicted killer Robert Eugene Williams di:teussed the murder of Robert Leroy Herrftann shorUy after the event and that Miss Riggs put the gun used in the kllliftg in her purse. John M: Harding , 23. hesita.ntly told a jury in·. Orange County Superior Court Judge Claude M. Owens' courtroom that Mlai RiQa. 19, of 1124 Park St .. ask.ed Wi!Uams shorlly after he arrived at her home last Nov. 7: "Did you do it?'' Airport Chief Fined 'for Row At Meado wlark Meadowlark Airport operator John Turner was flned $150 Tuesday in Westminster Municipal Court for disturb- ing the peaet. He entered a guilty plea to the charge which stemmed from a row Dec. 28 \Ylth two Huntington Beach police officers over hla airport operation. Judge David Aaron dismissed four other charges -two counts of assault and battery, one for resisting arrest and one for optrating an airport without a ptrmlt -whkh had been filed against Turner. Turner had been battling 'nearby homwowne:rs over the operation of Meadowlark Airport which they claim is hazardous and a nuisance. The Huntington Beach City Council had stepped into the feud and banned night flying at Pi1eadowlark until certain improvements were made. "Officen Bruce Smilh and John Foster said they spotted illegal night fiying at Meadowlark On Dec. 28. They said 'vhen they talked with Turner he became belligerent and used profanity. Turner was arrested that night and charged with assault and battery. Tues· day. however , he was found guilty only of disturbing the peace. Harding said Williams replied, "Yes, I snuffed Hermann." And he told deputy district attorney Robert Chatterton that Williams, 19, of 1504 Pecan St., Huntington Beach, then described the manner In which he 1hot Hermann in the back of the head and left· the dying 19-ye:ar-old victilri In a bedroom or the Hermann home at 416 15th St., Hunt ington Beach. . - T'.1iss Riggs is accused of murder and conspiracy to commit murder. Cha(terton repeated today that he will not ~eek+ the death penalty for the attractfve de· fendant. Williams is already serving a life: sentence imposed lwo weeks a£o ~~y Judge Robert L., Corfman as W!W•"'!•. interrupted a jury trial to admit that he ki lled Hermann . Williams said he and Hennann and ri.1iss Riggs v.·ere three of rive young persons arrested on drug charges seven days before he went to Hermann's home and shot his codefendant. It was testified in the Williams -trial that Hermann was· shot because of the belie f held by both Williams an4 Miss Riggs that Hermann was a police in· former. It was also testified that 11ermann- had never al any time CQntacted police. or investigators before or aft.er his prrest on drug charges. County Approves Land Purchase Purcbase of the former Pacific Elec· tric Railway rlght-of-"·ay in Sunset Beach for· $1 ,J7S;ooo was ai>proved 'TUes-- day by the Orange County Board of Supervisors. The project ttas been under way sinct July of 1968 when proposed1by SupuvOOr David L: Baker of Garden Grove, Acquisition of the one mile long, IO-foot wide strip will allow the. development of a 1,130 mile space parking lot to allow public use of the beach. The project will be finance4 by a federal grant, gas lax money .and aeneral tax money. -lNrERNATIONAL• STERLING OFF SALE on these 4 most ·popular patterns A wonderful opportunity to 611 i.D or IWt yocr scrvicll: oow ••. even live a 'Very treuurod gift. Tbm'1 a complete optn stock H:lec:tion aYailable 11 we:D u place 1tttlDp. And all al great sav\np fir ruch pride lo ....mg or pviag liDc family ailm. S< 1Jmllld-F1bru1ry 14 thru Match 13, 1171 J. c. 1821 NEWPORT BLVD., COST A MESA CONV!NllNf TEJ:MS .. HIAME•IC>.l0-MASTE•CHA1t•l 14 YlAAS IN SAMl lOC...TtON 'HONE 141·J401 ' , , I I Coast Firn1 Fraud Case Postponed By TOM BARLEY ., .. Delly P'llM """ ... A four -week delay was ordered Tues- day in the Santa Ana municipal court arraignment or a Huntington Beach man charged with graod theft, forgery and conspiracy following inve.sligation of the now defunct ·World FinanciaJ Trends em- pire c<>ntrolled by missing atockb.roker l<aph D. Dulaney. Judge Paul· ~1ast ordered James E. Shipley, 31, of 1&951 Lowell Circle, to return . to his courtroom Marc.h 18. Shipley is free on $250,000 bail. The acUon came while district at- torney's investigators, backed by FBI agents, stepped up their hunt .. for the missing Newport Beach executive wbo, they clai.m, was seen in his birthplace of Flora, Illinois, a month ago. oUlaney, 38, and his wife, Marl~e. 31, face charges identical to those hied · against Shipley. Those charges were authorized when it was learned that the couple and their tv.·o children had returned to this country from a ·year·long aojourn in Munich, Germany. The Dulaneys left for Europe shortly btfofe the collapse of the complex World Trends corporate structure they operated from plwh oUice buildings in Laguna Hilla -known to Dulaney and investors as "the Taj Mahal" -and Seal Buch. Baitkruptcy court officials a n d rece.iven have not yet set the final tab on the losses suffered by more than 100 investors but it is believed th.at it will exceed $3 million, most of . it invested by elderly residenls of retirement communities in the area. While the Dulaneys are successfully evading mest by fe<l_eral .agents on fugitive warrants, local mv~tigators are getting some details of their return to t'he United States from Germany .. a~d what one lawman said was the life oC Riley" lived by the handsome couple in Europe. Oulaney's parents admitted .to ~n· \•estigators that their son and his wife had visited their home but ba~ . ~eft with the stated intention of v1s1tt~g Dulaney'• brothers in Flora and Xe.ma, Ill. and St. Louis, Mo. Investigators said their account of the once Prosperous couple was in sharp contrast to reports of the life of elegan~e allegedly_ n .. ·ed by the Du1aneys 1n Gennany. The elder Mrs. Dulaney said her son told her he was broke and the &tatement seemed justified in vie,,. of the couple's appearance and attitude. She told lawmen tha t her son and daughter·in-law left the Flora home in a 1962 staton wagon after Dulaney sha~ed ,off_ his .tH;~rd -"because his mother dtdn t like it. Dulaney's aged station wagon is the successor ·to the leased Cadillac left in the parking lot at Los Angeles Interna· tional Airport ·when the couple new to Germany in December, 1969. They left behind them a maze of debts that ran ge up to more tha~ $3 million on investiga~rs' add 1 n g machine!, a $167 ,000 home ln the ex· clulive Newport Shores are~ of Ne~rt 'Stach and a $50,000 vacation cabtn at Lake Arrowhead. Investigators claim Dulaney •·p~id"' for that rught with an airline. crtdit card that has been uJed tc rack up a total of $22-ooo worth of air travel and that tht ~pie. took in Spain and m~ch of the French Riviera be.fore mo~~ 00 to Munich and "cocktails and cavtar ezistence that centered on the plush Der Kon.igshof Hotel. ·The old but carefully preserved hotel 13 the rendezvous for Munich's upper class and theater celebrities and the Dulaneys, investigators said, ~ P e n t m_oney freely in keeping up with the Schmidts. :rhe German hotel still receives ~ail for the Dulaneys who left their e:rpeDSlve auite be f 0 r e Christmas, 1970 -a year after they ned from the. United States. That mail is marked in a firm German band "502 s. Mill St., Flora, ID." That Is n.tl.,ney'a mother 's home and he bu not been back to collect it since hi.I moet recent 1ddress. Huglies' 'Goose' t;;iven Reprieve LONG BEACH (UPl) -Howard 1iughes today held another extension of a , lease on a building housing the giant nf1.ng boat Hercules that haa not been Sten by the public since 1H7. . . lI'br: Long Beach Harbor Commission J anted the induslriallst a one year et.· 1-Won Tuesday of the oceanfront pro- l>'Z'ty and the towerin& metal sheathed bolldlnl hldlnl the plane. ~ giant wooden cralt wu"lliclmamed 1M Sjtuce 0-although K Is Klually rade of bird\. II hu b«n stored In 111 hangar undtt armed guard sln<e ill milden Olght In 1941. "Last week the coMmlsslon denied a T'f(luest for an o:tension of the. lease saying it could find more profitable use f« the property. ' .'The denial raised the poMiblllty that the plane would be !e'en in public for UR first time since Its Oight. Hughe5 pDoted the craft on the one mUe flight •t an altitude of 70 feel The plane. which w1s designed as a troop carrier during World War IJ, is as larae as a Boeing 747. I STOCK CASE DEFENDANT J1me1 E. Shipley 01ie of Liberty · Cellmates Files Innocent Plea From Wire Services SAN DIEGO -One of two cellmal.e.!i suspected of strangling Candlelight Killer Robert \V. Liberty pleaded innocent here Tuesday to charge s he participated in lhe piurder. Carl R. Riggs. ~ of Romulus, t.tich ., appeared before Superior Court Judge Leland NieJsen to enter the plea and was ordered to be returned April 1 for tri~. He joins Timothy Dudley, 24, o{ New York City, on the court calendar for trial in Llberty·s Jan. 20 strangulation in addition to other homicide counts both men face. Liberty, 2J, a rormer resident of \Vestminster and Costa Mesa. had been in solitary confinement as a troublemaker before bis attorney won wfiat was a fatal court order returning him to a five-man custody tank in J anuary. He died four days before he and his bride Kendall A. Bierly Liberty, 24, whom he married while both were in custody last summer in Colorado , were du e for a murder tria l. They were charged with killing Robert J. Irion, 52, last June 7 and leaving burning candles -Libert y's trademark since 1966 -beside the body along °"·ith a note scrawled on a wall. ~1rs. Liberty pleaded guilty to counts of manslaughter and robbery and , on Tuesday. was Qrdered to undergo psychiatric tests at the California Institute for Women at Frontera. Both Liberty. his wift, and the woman whose strangulatian in Westminster in June, 1966, launched the career of the Candlelight Killer, have a history of men· ta! problems. Tate Trial Jury Given Freedom From Seq11ester LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The Tate murder bial jury, locked up in a hotel nightly for the past seven months, has been freed from confinement while they decide on life or death for Charles Manson and three women defendant.s. The decision \\'as announced Tuesday after a womlgl alter11ale juror fainted in the.courtroom. Superior· Court Judge Charlea H. Older aMoWlC.ed that he was vacating the order under which the jury members had been &eque.stered. The lockup direc-- tive ~ origfnaily issued lo protect the jurors from publicity which might affect their decision in the case. Manson and his" three female. co-defen- danl..!I already have been convicted of first degree murder in the. Tate_.LaBianca killings and the trial b in the pen1lty pliase to Cecfdeol'I a sentenct Of life imprisonment or death in the gu chamber. t.1rs. Vic toria Kampman. a housewife in her 13le 40:o1. lapsed into un-- consciousneM In !he courtroom after she was picked to repl3cc the regular juror, telephone repairman Lerry Sheely. Sheely has three sm<ill children and It \\'as understood that his ...:lie had appealed that she could not carry on alone. I Htilse Addiction Told Governor . . Drugs, Liquor· 'Reduced Inhibitions' By TOM BARLEY Of 11141 °"' .... 11.tff An Orange Cqunty Medical Center PIY• chlalriat today testllled that Arthur Cralr "Moose" Hulse'1 JODg addiction to drugs ind drink reduced the Garden Grove youth's inhi~itiollll aDd may have aggra. vated what he described as a "n1turally aggre!Sive" nature. Dr. John Guido opened the third .day of the Orange County Superior COurt murder trial with the statement that Hul3e's con· duct before and after he allegedly killed Slnta Ana service stalion attendant Jerry Wayne C&rlln "waa not psycbotlc beha,v. tor. .. He Wll generally oraanlzed." Guido aald, "and he was, on the blsll· of what he tcld me, anxious and concer111ed." Guido's testimony was repeafedly ln· terrupted by objections from deleMe at- torney .Robert Green. Judge Robert Crookshank announced th la morning that he will ex"CWie the Jury rrom the afternoon session to enable law. yerf for both sides to hammer out legal argument! ·raiaed by defense objeclions. Hu&e, 11, was identified by eodefend· ant Herman Hendrick Tayloi, 171 throu&h Four More Shocks Jolt LA LOS ANGELES (AP) -Four mor< 1f1ershocks from last weet'a temblor rattled the Los Angeles area. Tuesday. No new serious damage was reported. Meanwhile, the official death toll in- creased to M and 11 quake-damaged buildings in the Los Angeles City School District were ordered demolished, In- cluding Los Angeles High School, scene for lhe television series "Room 222." The order affect! 20,000 pupils. Building inspect.ors continued to check structures in the San Fernando Valley, north of downtown, where 5,704 struc- tures were reported damaged. More than 1,100 dwelling lD\lts have been declared unsafe and residents told to v1cate them. The big quake Feb. 9 caused damage estimated up to •1 billion and more than 1,000 Injuries. It registned 6.& magnitude on the Richter scale, hundreds of Umes more powtrfu..I than the af- tershocks. The latest victims were Arthur Cahill, !7, who died Monday Ind Mabel Meyers. 87. who died early Tuesday. Cahill was a patient at the San Fernando Veterans Hospital in SylrDar, where two wings ~!lapsed. Mrs. Meyers died of com· pllcations from a broken leg suffered when she fell at her Long Beach home during tbe quake. ' ·nie devastating earthquake is becom- ing 1 scientific bonam.a to researchers seeking to predict, prevent or lessen damage from future , potentially more deadly temblor1. . ' Youve much ot TUesday'a sus.lon u tile hltchet maa ln the kllllnl wt June 1 of the Jl· year-old Carlin. Taylor,: a trmlent, hu betn promised by the prooecutlon !bat be 11111 be allowed to plead guUty to )eue.r cbargea II he testllieL for the prosecuUo;n in the Hulse. trial and the trlala of two men charged wUh the klllinl' or MIMlon Viejo teacher Florence Na"ey Brown. He lt!tifled that HulS<, wbO b charged as· an aeces:sory ln 'the Brown murder, and Steven Craig Hurd: ,20, planned the robbe'l..t Carlin's 11auon· anil th, killing of the yowig 1ttendan't befofe 'tbfy, left. Taylqr• sald Hulse. ~ked, :ear1m to death with 1 hatchet OWnid'by c0de£end· ant Christopher "GYJ>SY' Gibboney, 17, of Portland, Oregon. Orange County air thoritles will charge Gibboney wlUt the murder of Mrs. BroWn when they atra- dlte him from hJs Portland jail cell. Taylor t6Ufied that Hulse and Hurd discussed the klllini of Carlin as the trio drove back to Taylor's Costa Mesa motel room and that Hurd t0ngratulattd his young companion on the maru1er Jn which the young attendant had been murdered. Hurd, also a transient, Gibboney and Taylor art accused or the killing· less than 24 hours later of Mrs. Brown, 3•, of El Toro. It is alleged that the trio murdered the woman in an Irvine orange grove and bu.rled her remains near the Ortega Higb- w~y after devouring several portloni of her body in a' ri tualistic 'tribute to satan. Hurd is described as the leader or the garig of drifters and the man who inaisled that many of the group's activities in· elude some form of devil worship. Blasted As 'Liar' SACRAMEN'!O (UPJ) -Gov. llotllld Re.aaan was anarlly denounced 11 a ••u8f" today by the teglslature'a ltadlnc Demociatic e~pert on . Medi-Cal. Assemblyman John L. Burton of San. Francisco c heatedly disputed Rta11n'1 contention he bad no legal recour11 list December · but to cut servlct1 In the htalth care proir1m. "I say the governor"• a liar -l,l·A·R - a liar," shouted Burtaa dart.ni a news conference. Readlq: from the llw, Burton contended Reaaan acted under a section wbk:h mere!Y aDI the pemor "may" cut Kr?ktl U a deficit ll pro- jected. Reag1n's pres1 secretary, Paul Beck, later said, "We followed tbl law a · plicitly.'' . The administration projected a •tff million deficit when It made the cull. Burton Is sponsoring JeglalaUon to rescin4 Reagan's cuts in the •t billion program which provides frte be1lth Cll't for 2.f million Calilomi1na. 'lbe bill has been rushed through two Assembly committee11 but now faces 1n ·uncertain test next Monday in the ·Anembly. . Burton's bill swlt~s the Medi.cat• accounting method for this fiacal year . from an "accrual" system to a "Clah,. basis. Burton said that abould pmt,nt'. the program from nmnln1 abort of funds before the new liscal )'Ur beilm Jal1 ' I. You're in a mood to demand a lot more· for your money; Qxx.t. Chevrolet's Chevene offers you a number of ways to get rrore ·tcr 'PJf nu• 1. Big 1111' Powtt-Beam headlights. 2. Cl•~ llin)ple new grille. 3. New clean-lined Iron! bumper. · 4. Resculpturecl rear bumper with billighta ·built in.. - 5. New protective wheel opening and wide body sill moldings for Malibu. 6. New front fender lights that &erve as parking, turn signal and side marker light!. 7. New cushioned<enter steering wheel. 8. Softer new instnunent panel knobs. 9. New anti-pollution Combination ~Emission Control valve. 10. Fuel Evaporation Coot!ol System. 11. New sealed side-terminal Energizer battery. ' 12. New oelectica of interia-colors. 13. 15 erurior oolora-13 new. 14. New interior trim styling for Malibu. 15. Power-operat<d cmvertible top now standard. 16. Separate perUneter· type frame. 17. Advanced body mounting system. 18. Hide.A-Way windshield wipen for Malibu. 19. Self-deaning rocker panels. 20. Inner fenders. front and rear. 21. Bias belted ply tires. 22. Double-panel door, hood and deck lid. 23. Aluminiml echalllt system. 24. Dual IMRer cylinder brake oystem with warning light. 2S. Full door1!laa otyling (coupe and oonvtttible). 26. Curved side windows. 27. Magic-Mirror acrylic lacqU<r finish .. 28. Deep.twist carpeting for Malibu . 29. Two sius: 112' wheelbase for coupe and amvertible. 116' .I"~ II for oedans. 30. Astro Ventilatica (sport coupe and oonvertible). ·- 31. Dual-speed electric windshield wipers. 32. Full Coil suspension with computer-oelected springs. 33. Five V8 engines available. 34. I 5 power teams offered. 35. Foot-operat<d parking brake. 36. Wide-stance chassis design. 37. Quiet hydraulic valve liftt.rS. 38. Precise Ball-Race steering. 39. All-vinyl door and sidewall trip\, 40. Refined driveline design for quieter, smoother operation. 41. Seat belts with pushbutton buckl es for all passenger positions. 42. Shoulder belts with pushbutton buckles-<lriver and right front pas- senger (except oonvertible). 43. Two front oeat beau mrtraints. 44. Energy-absorbing steering column. 45. Passenger.guard door Jocks with forward-mounted front door Jock buttons. 46. Safety door latches and bingos. 47. Folding "'8! back latches. 48. Energy-absorbing padded instru· ment panel and front seat back lop6. 49. Thick-laminate windshield. 50. Padded sun vi5or$. 51. Safety armrests. 52. Two front seat belt retracun. 53. Four-way hazard warnin& f!ashtr. ., 54. Back-up light!. 55. Lane-change feature in directiou l signal control. ....... ~ "'" 56. Wide-view inside dar-nidlt mimr, (vinyl-e4ged, shatter-..--.. and deflecting oupport). 57. Outside rearview mirror. 58. Positive-shift starter. • 59. Side-guard door beam!. 60. Self-adjusting brakes and oorrcoiall- resistant brake lines. 61. Anti-theft steering column lock. 62. Anti-theft ignition key warning buzzer. I 63. 6000-mile or foor-month tfia..is lubrication. 64. Finned front and """ brake dnmli (rear only with dioc-drum ~). 65. Built-in blended-air ( beater and cle6..-1 oystem. ' 66. Body bJ F"mr. (il, Foam-. cuohiooed oeaq . 68.Cqo. guard Juua&'O compartmeot. 69. Balanad, wheels and tim. 70. Acoustically engineered insulation. . 7L 7·main·bearing llix-c:ylindor engine with fully oounter· ,r weight<d crankshaft. 1 72. All engines operate efficiently ai ~lead or low-lead gll80iinea. . Why not do younelf • !nor.' Check out the other can in Clieuello't field. Then go to your Cbemlet dealer's and see just how much llllft value Oievdle gives you fer year money, . l I \. <C D.All V rt LDT Wff,....,, Fobn>ar> 11, ltn y.ljd<~ "Another bloomin ~ load of Rolh-Royce 1hari.t• President Keynesian By DICK WJST • At a party the olhtr evenin.c an erudite ·l"OlV' dustered arOWld a bowl af bun .dip WIS discussillg Pna.idtnt Nixon'• new budget • "Do you think NiJ:on js a Keynesian?" '1emeobe uked. ' "Of course not," I replitd. "Nil on ls a Californian." Subsequent discussion revealed a misunderstanding. • I thought the other btan dipper was 'uking: wbethtr Nixon was born in 'Kaniu. It turned out. however, that lhe was asked whether Nixon had become ·, disclplt!: of John Maynard Keynes, the late En&lish economist. • (The name is pronounced "Kanz" with !a long "A." And when you say ;"Keynesian" with a mouthful of btan .dip, it sounds more geographic than ;economic.) U.S. Forces Tighten Up In Turkey ANKARA (UPI) -U,S. authorlU•s today Unposed at.rict security meuurea on 14,00Q U.S. servicemen and their families In Turkey in an effort to head off further anti-American violence. The actlon followea Monday's incident In which an Air Force enlisted man, wu abducted at gunpoint, held for almoJt 17 hours and then released. Of· ficlala aaid it wu the flnt kldnaping of an American in Turkey . In Wnir, the scene of anti-American riols and attacks during the pul several weeks, the U.S. consulate ordered servicemen to observe a midnight curfew, atay Clut of nightspots, keep their cars off the streets and avoid argume.nts with Turla. Both Turkish and American officl•LI aaid these were the lbicteat acurity orders thty could remember btin&: pl.aced on Americans in Turkey. U.S. military police were aubstituted fur Turkish guards at 1 number of American installations. This has been done in the past. No anti-American incidents we rt reported Tuesday. U.S. Ambqsador William J. HandJey has asked the Turkish government to take measures to protect AmerJcan lives and property. He took the action after a series of bombings, threatening leaflets and anti-American demonstrations and rio!S. Although Turkey is a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organliation, there h a s been growing anti-Americanism among leftwing groups in the country. Taking a Break RoU.•ROftt Talks Lockheed's Chief Goes to· Britain LONDON (UPI! -Dlnltl H1111hlon, chairman of Lockheed Aircraft corp .. arrived today to renegotiate a huge jel engine conlract with bankrupt Rolls· Royce Ltd. He warned he bad not come "with my pocktts full of money." Lockheed, itself in serious financial straits, has ordered Rolls-Royce's RB211 engines for Its Trlstar Airbus -.an order placed in jeopardy when the British firm declared it had gone broke. ··1 came over here to renegotiate the Italy City's Rioting Hits High Mark ' REGGIO CALABRIA, Italy (UPI) - Seven months of aporadic riotin1 reached a climax Tuesday nlgbt in battles between police and rio~rs protesting the selection of the rival town of Catanzaro as capital of Calabria. Protesters shot at police, who respond- ed with tear gu. Poliee said five persons were arrested and several injured in the outbreak of street fighting that followed a regional councll'a decision Tuesday to make Catanzaro the capital. Rubbish fires burned through the ni&ht and barricades thrown up by the rioters still blazed today. -contract in certain respects," Hau,bton told newsmen minule.9 after his pline landed at London's Heathrow Airport. ''But I did not say 1 would pay any more for the engine. "I don't want you to imply that I cam here with my pockets full or money." Haughton declined either tC> disclose his itinerary or to say what tactics he might take in the discussiona with Rolls-Royce. "I came over here with an open mind to sit down v.·ith the partits conctmed and try to reach a satisfactory &0lution with all or them," he said. "You can be .sure I am hcrt nn a constructive basis, or I would not be here." 12-nation Group To Try Assault On Highest Peak KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) -A 12-na- tion expedition will try to climb Mt. Everest this spring using two previously unconquered routes, a member of t h e group said Tuesday. Norman Dyhrenfurth, leader of the successful 1963 American expedition to the 29,023-!oot summit of Everest, said the 32-member team will try to scale lbe world's highest peak via the western rock: face and the south-west fact, !'! ftfOST AMERICANS, I'm sure, are •iware that Keynes, the fint Baron of :'filton, who died in 1864, was an advocate t .,. y~ .. . ' . ! I !,..: Th I ,)11 Tbe most dramatic gesture W8.!I Mon· day's kidnaping of Air Force Airman lst Class James Ray Finley, 26, of Fort Worth, Tex., who had arrived three months earlier to take up duties as a special law enforcement agent at the Balgat compound about 10 miles weit of Ankara. Finley said seven Turks took him from the compoW'ld at gunpoint, bUndfoldtd him and finally rtl•ued him. They aavt him about a dollar in chanle 50 he could take a taxi back to the American ccmpound. Tbiee tired U.S. soldiers at Khe Saph, South Vietnam, catch 40 winks during construction of airstrips at the base. The base accommodates the helicopters being used in the Laos fighting. Khe Sanh came under heavy attack Tuesday but the enemy wu driven off. In Rome, the cabinet quickly approved the regional council'& comp r om Is e decision making Catanzaro capital, giving Reggio the regional assembly but saying it also c<1uld meet at Catanzaro and Cosenza, and awarding a new university to Cosenza. The cabinet also approved plans to build new industry which would bring another 15,000 jobs to Calabria, ty.·o-thirds of them in the Reggio region. "This is the strongest team that has ever gone to Mt. Everest," he aaid. "Given some luck, the team has an excellent chance of success." Everest has been scaled five times. The expedition is set to lea ve here in IO days for a 200-mile four-week trek to the base of the mountain. There the climbers: will spend about 10 more days acclimatizing themselves to the 14,0CJO.foot alt.itude. The assault on the mountain is to begin about April 12. ··~' , e . t lJ ,. 't.: "-',' : : . IUJ<IP '. IJ~~Iile ... "They gave me bread, cheese. Cllives and tea for IW'lch," he told Turkish police. He said he was treated well but told authorities he could not identify any of the kidnap gang. Israelis Reject Pinn Reggio, C a I a b r i a ' s administrative capital until a 1908 earthquake hit it and many Clffice.s were moved to Catanzaro, has one of tbe Io w e s t per capita incomes in the country and a feeling of being Italy's forgotten city. cf big government spending I! a means :er promoting employment. , His theory became popular in England ;.after World War II, but by that lime flhe British government was too broke To Give Up Sinai Land ''This city is as old as Rome. What business does Rome have .suddenly telling us that we are no longer good enough to be the c.apital?" a restaurant waiter said angrily. The climbers come from Brilain, Austria, France, India, Italy, Japan. Nepal, Norway, Poland, the United States. Switi.erland and West Germany. o try it out. So America became tbe ,chief Wting ground. If then a U.S. President deliberately creates a deficit in the federal budget to stimulate the economy, be is called '. "Keynesian.''. (but should the defic it arise through miscalculation, he is called a "dumkopf.") THEREFORE, when Nixon brought 1 forth a budget with a built-in deficit., , there was immediate speculation that hf had become a convert to the i Keynesian doctrine. ' I knew all of this, of course. The other bean dippers, however. took my 1 assertion that "Nixon is a Californian'' 1 as a lack of eC<>nomic sophistication. So t was obliged to defend the statement. I said, ··do you guys mean to tell me you never heard Clf Don Ernesto Valdez California, the Sp an i sh economist?" There was a general shaking of heads, ' plus some expressions of skepticism. . "IT WAS CALIFORNIA ... 1 continued, : ""'ho devised the basic course of action t the government should take when the , economy is both inflationary and recessionary at the same time . , ''He held that the sensible only thing • President could do in that situation •would be to appoint a member ()f the ; opposition party as Secretary of the Treasury. " ''Nixon's deficit budget may show ' Keynesian tendencies," I added, "but , his appointment of Democrat John Con- . n;lly to the treasury post was pure : Californian.'' The bean dippers never reccvered. -UPI Atheist Attacks Space Prayers By Astronauts WASHINGTON (UPI) -Madalyn Mut· ray O'Hair, avowed atheist who won a Supreme Court ruling agaimt prucri~ ed prayers in public schools, now want,, American astronauts prohibited from undertaking religious activiti~ on their flights to the moon. Justice Department lawyers went before the Supreme Court Tuesday to argue against Mrs. O'Hair's suit. '4-'hich already has been dismissed in U.S. District and circuit courts. Pi.frs. O'Hair, of Austin, Tex., has con· tended it is illegal for the National Atronautics and Space Administration (NASA ) to use £ederal funds for un- constitutional religious purposes. She said the Apollo 8 flight in 1968 was made at Christmas time to coincide with the religious holiday and that the astronauts read from the Bible on man's first Clrblt of the moon. Her suit aJso complained that the first astronauts to walk on the moon -Neil Arm.strong and Edwin Aldrin -engaged in religious ceremonies and deposited religious items during their July, 1969. Apollo 11 mission. But Sollcitor General ~rwin Griswold argued Tuesday that Mrs. O'Hair lacks the !landing to challenge the astronauts• activities. He said the. astronauts carried only personal religious items with tbtm which bad the erfect "of improving the morale of the astronauts and thereby contributing to the succesa o( the flight." By UNITED PRESS INTEllNATIONAL Israel rejecttd today tbe reported SUI· 1ution of U.N. envoy Gunnar V. Janiq: that it give up the entire Sinai Peninsula seized from Egypt in the 1967 Middle East war. Egypt said today it was ready to discuss peace 1f Israel would abide by the JM? U.N. Security Council guidelines for a Middle East settlement which the Egyptians interpret as calling for com- plete Israeli withdrawal from occupied Arab land&. Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban told the Knesset (parliament) in Jerusalem today that the government would continue its refusal to return to its pre-1967 boundaries set by the 1941 armistice. "Israeli's rijbl to agreed and defen si- ble bordef!: is a centr•I principle," Eban said. "Israel will not return to the armistice lines. which cannot assure Jsrael again.st aggression." He said the final borders were to be decided by negotiation and cou1d not be agreed to in advance . The Jarring initiative was reported tc bave bttn in the form of questions asking Israel if it was prepared te withdraw frClm the Sinai and askina Egypt if it was ready tc make peace with Israel. Egypt earlier announced its acceptance of the Jarring proposal. Eban blunted opposition party demands for a deb1te in the Knesset on Jarring'• initiative by announcing that Emt'1 reply had not been officially rectived by Israel and asking that the debate b< dtl1ytd, The Israeli newspaper Ye d I 1 t h Nation Basks • Ill Mild Air One Pocket of Arctic Col,d Mars Rainy but Warm U.S Callfornf# Plt'fllW Of M I MATIOflAl WllTHll SllVICE. TD 7:0t •.M. lST :1 ... , •• ,, ~.1.. lllewt'I ,........ etf 111 ....... ~ "'°'' " kullltrn c1n1orni. ,.,..., t1Mr .. ln1 to ltfr IOl'llthl but (Onllowed CllOI. Tiit IMw ltvt l In llM meut11fln1 llrt!Ht'll to t,ooo lffl Wlffl ...... IUl 'Y wlncl In ln!1nd ,,..,,. Lo.s Antt!H 111111" mot!IV l1lr 1'lt" mornln• lllowtr• 11111 with 1 cht nc• tJf to,,.. r1ln lll•DVlh 1'1!urM1¥. T-· Pl!'lturtl ctntlnut'lll ClllOI wltll lf>t 11•.,. 111ctt11 hl•ll ,, cr .. ic Ctllltlr rHChlnt •7 C°"1111...t wllfl I 17 Tllft41V IPICI 41 lllPKlt'll Tl'>llndtv. TM IOW tonifhl ... Tiit Air P1l1utloll O!llrol Ohttld , .. 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Aharonotb said Israel was preparing to clilcuu withdrawal from Arab territories and wu drawing up a map to show how far it was willing to pull back. Among the sponsors Clf the expeditioft ls the British Broadcasting Corp., which announced plans to have at least one sound tele\'ision unit on tbe aurnmit to record the expected conquest. Bush mills. • The whiskey that spans the generations gap. For JOO years, a whiskey from Bushmll/s has been \Yilh us. Charming us. Beguiling us in a smooth, polished and altogether hshthearted fdshion. 15 generations have ref1 ned ii. 15 gene rat ions have sipped i I. Theverd ici: Near perf ectron.Bush m1 I ls. Full of ch.iracter. But not he avy·h<inded about it. Fl,.ivor- f ul. But never OV«!t·pO\\'errng Bushrnrlls. II reflects the ra st \Vilh J light and lively flavor !hat is all today. '· Compare it to your present \vhiskey. You needn't purchase a bollle. One sip at yo ur favorite pub will tell you \vhy Bushm ills ha s intrigued so many aen- era1 ions. l1 i-f1 si mply, out of sl&ht BUSH MILLS IMrQRTlD FROM TH! WORLD'S OLDlST DISTILLUY. Wtd11tsday, Ftbruary 17, 1971 DAILY PlLQT 5 Combat Stresses Impaired · Calley's Thinking-Expert Kickback Conspiracg Alleged 60,000 Barbers to Get Trim? WASHINGTON (AP) -The promoter who masterminded Joan.s of millions of Barbtrs Union pension dollars. some to enterprises controlled by him and a financially plagued DuPont heir, has been indicted along with the unlon's presi- dent on charges of kickback conspiracy. The lndlcbneot clw&ed oD lour wllh COlllJ>lrinl to 1et kickbacks, fees ud com mi!stons from a Calllornll land development firm in co& nectlon with • loan from tlW pension fund. lt further chart e<I Shabe<n. Block ond C.lum bla with cc;insplriog to pa] off De P a o I a in connectiOtl with fund loans and chara:ed De Paola with solic!Una: aM receiving $29,000 in fees. kickbacks and commiaslons. Jane to Test Liberalized Arm y Code? NEW YORK (AP) -b the new Army ttally new? Is t'Omedian Dick Gregory the antiwar soldier's answer to Bob Hope? Can Jane Fonda become a G.I. pin-up if she refuses to wear a bikini? An antiwar troupe that in· dudes a dozen well-known entertainers hopes to find the answer to these questions in a proPostd tour of 20 military bases across the country. "It's bten very discon- certing for many of us in Hollywood to stt that Bob Hope, Martha Raye and other companies of their political Ilk have cornered the market" on entertaining soldiers, Miss Fonda said Tuesday. "A lot ol. us who have dif- ferent poults of view about tbe war and what's happening to thi!: country have dec ided the time has C()ffie to speak to the forgotten soldiers," she told a news conference. Dr. Howard B. Lev y, the former Army captain who was court-martialed for refusing to train soldiers headed for Viet- nam. said the first stop will bf: in Fort Bragg, N.C. on March 13 and 14. Any more questi ons? Yes, said one reporter. would Miss Fonda wtar a bikini for the &how? "Art you serious?" she scof- fed. "That's what Bob Hope does. We 're trying to get away from that sort of thing." Debt Limit Connally's First Task FT. BENNING, Go. !UPI) - A psycbialriat tesUlled to- day tbat "in vlew of the pushing that was coming from above" and stresses of a com- bat situation, Lt. William L. Calley Jr. was unable to detennlne whether order• to kill clvilian1 at My Lal were legal or illej:al. Dr. David G. Crane, 34, of Indianapolis, a veteran hospital staff member and assistant psychiatry professor at Indianapolis University, was called with the Calley court-martial jury absent to express his upert opinion. The move was part of a ' defense effort to get before the court the views of thrte Drama J18YChlatrist.s u to Calley's dim.J.nlshed mental capacity when he led his platoon during a aearch-and-de.stroy sweep through the Vietnamese hamlet on March 18, 1968. Calley Is accwed of alaylng, or ordering the slaying, of 102 Vietnamese ~ivlllans dur- ing the infantry swetp, Crane tntified on the basis or knowledge aained i n treating large numbers of Vietnam combat veterans in that country up to si.J: months before the My Lal incident. "There was an all pervading tension and anxiety among of- ficers and men," Crane said. He testified tlht because of Calle y's impaired "d@Ci.sion making process" during the on I~e Dog Saved From Cold Raft WILKES-BARRE, Pa. (U PI) -Sam, a shivering German shepherd who had been trapped for 23 hours on an ice floe, saw the friendly police sergeant beckoning to him from an islaDd in the Susquehanna River. Sam b a d inadvertantly climbed onto the small chunk of ice when it was near the shore at Waverly, N.Y ., 80 miles upstream from Wilkes- Barre. For nearly a day, Sam sat on the ice, carried along by the river's current and afraid to jump· off. Numerous at- tempt.. to rescue him failed. A helicopt er made several passes over the ice in an attempt to lift him off, but he was frightened and shied away. Police Sgt. Al bert A pollonauts Reveal Moonwalk Trozibles · SPACE CENTER, Houston Today the Apollo astronauts (UPI) -Apollo It's moon u -planned to tell project ofiici als plorers have warned the next about the ir pathfinding, nine- Apollo crew to be wary ef day mission to lhe hilly lunar the tricks the barren, hilly uplands. landscape can play on their The problem of ability to navigate between specWc places ef lunar landmarkJ;. 'I'bat was one of the key when walking the point. Alan B. Shepard, Edgar became even more apparent . D. Mitchell and Stuart A. Tuesday when two scientists Roosa made Tuesda y in a day-reported that Shepard and long briefing for Apollo 15 Mitchell were so fooled by WASHINGTON (UPI) astronaut! David R. Scott. the terrain they turned back Treasury Secretary John B. Alfred M. Worden and James within 100 feet of a crater Connally, President Nixon's B. Irwin. Apollo IS is set that was their key objective. resideot Democrat, has the for launch to the moon July They thought it ·was farther thankless chore of con vincing 25. away. Congress to raise the nationalt ,. ____________________ 'ii debt ceiling by HO billion 90!1 the government can keep paying its bills. Connally took on his first officiaJ auignment 1 Inc el assuming office last week with a scheduled appearance before the House Ways and Means Committee which must rule on a debt ceillng boost. The administration wants a $435 bill ion lin1it on what the government can borrow -$40 bllllon above the present "temporary" ceilini of $395 billion. PAltl( JUIT A I TIP P'ltOM OUlt IAST 0l1'TltANCI AT WIST IND 0, frilAONDLIA ANNIVERSARY SALE! FRESH GU ZED DONUTS RIG. 6ftc $1 .0I l__ DOI. (•r ic ... ) Felt. 16th thr• f.tlt. 20tti O•lr 135 E. 17th Street -Costa Mesa IJnt lmt of NoWJOrt ll•d.I If this underwear wean out or shrinks out of fit 1'ithin two~ of normal wear, it will be rep1ac:td FREE. And wt'll bet you've nCYtf worn underwear as comfortable as this, either. Kan1aroo Shorts and TC-28 Grand-Slam T-Shirt-both knit of pure cotton. Buy a 3-pack. We auarantee it.,. for two ycan. munsingwear. g "-""' Shrts-Sha2M6 ......... 3 ror $4,00 G..-..SW. T-slilrt-Slm:w-46 ...... 3 ror S5.0D MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED IN COSTA MESA IT'S Dl,A•TMINT ITOllll 111 o NEWPORT BLVD. HOURI t :'O TO 6 Ol'llN ,RIDAY IVL TILL t fl.Mo four-hour acUon, he Will not able to "C011trlve or pl&o" (premeditate) killing, to kill persons without justUlcaUon, to detennine the legality of orders given to him. Nineteen g ove rnmen t witnesses have testified that the nigh.t prior to the My Lai opera!Joh Capt. Eme3t Medina, as company comman- der, ordered the v Ulage ~ • , troyed and the inhabitants kille<I. "Jn V1ew or the pushing that was coming from above, Lt. Calley was not going to be ·~ considering much of anything except act and do," Crane ' 1'1>e penS'll)n fund involved tn the compleJ case has lies to one of the bigges t personal bankruptcy act cases ever fil· ed, to two other flnanclel scandals and to jailed las: evader Bobby Baker. And the nearly 6 0 , 0 0 0 barbers who are members of the pension plan faCe forecasts UPI Tt.....,. that they likely will get little NAMED IN CHARGES told George W. Latimer, the u1"1 T•i.M• or none of the retirement in-Barber Chief DeP•ola Shaheen also was cbara:e4 with gettlng from th 1 California firm $112,597 fn feet ond commlaslon!, 125,000 ii negotiable notes, two con sultant agreements w o r t ) 11H,ooo ond 100 acres of lane in order to Influence his ac tlons as the tuod't adviser. chief defense attorney. W "Also there were the basic Talh.s on ar come they were promised. Both government and private -.Joseph Oe Paola, ln- underlying stresses existing in that individual at that time." Under cros.s examination by Capt. Aubrey M. Daniel III, the prosecutor, Crane said that Calley's mental ability was 1'impaired lo at least a mild to moderate degree - his .ability to understand, reason. and consider -his decision making process was impaired.'' Sen. Adlai Stevenson Ill (IJ-llL) said Tuesday that a negotiated set- tlement of the Indo- china war is the only ~ssible outcome which Jibes with key initial objectives of U.S. in- volvement -freedom and self-determination for the people. studies say the fund wil l go dianapoli.s, president of the Russ Fish Boat broke as presently constituted. Jou r ce y men Barbers, The 36-oount indictment was Hairdressers, Cosmetologist.s Free W1'th F1'ne returned Tuesday by a federal and Proprietor's International grand jury In Chicago and Union-or Amer1ca a n d JUNEAU, Alaaka (UPI) - announced by the Juslict chairman of it. ~nsion fund . Department in Washington. It -Max Block Jr.. a New A Russian shrimp boat captaia named : Y o r k attorney who worked whose vessel wu seized wtthlJ -Thomas A. Shaheen Jr., with Shaheen. the U.S. 11-mlle limit, pleaded 38, the pension fund 's onetime -Oolumbla Financial Corp. no contest here Tue9day U investment consultant who of Chevy Chase, Md., con-a charge ()( illegal fbhinc and now lives in London, England. trolled by Shaheen and Block. wu fined $30,000. ~~-'--~~~~~-'-'--'-'-~~~ r~ .. AFTER INVENTORY-'",~ CARPET AND REMNANT ~%?PiJ!.' -~ Thurs., Fri. 9.9, Sat. 9-6, Sun. 10·5 DuPONT~ NYLON 9 PILE SALE 79 Soft ond curled down yo ~ns for dimeniionol effect. More foce yorns for long er we or,. Many lovely color available. DuPONT . 501 b NYLON Y PILE SALE 88 Sq. Yd. AU nylon foce random 1extured hi·l o loop, double jute bocking. Resi~!s fuzzing and pil- ling. fosy to moin1oln, Mony smoff colors. TONE-ON-TONE~ DuPONT y NYLON 4.9 PILE SALE Sq. Yd. Co11ti11uous filament riylon pile carpet in a deep, rich, hi·lo te11lured, to11e.on-tone pol· tern. Resi1to nt lo 1Pot1· and sto in1. Double jute bocking. Mo11y lovely colors. ROOMS & HALL CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE CARPET COMPLETELY INSTALLED ~~~~·.c;c;~, ~ 2 0 g BEDROOM & HAll UP TO A2 Sci. Yd$. --------~·:.....i~ ' DuPONT b NYLON y PLUSH SALE 95 100% con1inuous filomentnylon plush. Moin· toins fresh look wi1h liflle effort, Nylon yarns .ore tough gnd long wearing, Cleons eosily. Many lovely colors ovolloble. LARGE ROOM SIZE REMNANTS ROOMS & HALL CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE CARPET COMPLETELY INSTALLED LIVING ROOM, DINING & HALL UP TO 32 SO. YDS. ,159 SHOP AT HOME SERVICE If you can't come in, just phone ond cur repre,entotive will coll with o full 10mp!e 1elec1 ion. No obligation. CALL TODAY 546-8545 DuPONT SP~CEDDYED NYLON TWEED SALE 49 Sq. Yd. Mul1i·colo r yorn1 witA o different casiJal texture. A carp~ that imports sparkle and procticolity. Double laminated iute bock. f;ic:citing color combinations. · · DuPONT 0 NYLON y SHAG SALE Sq. Yd. 100% DuPont nylon face. Double fut• boclt~ ing, deep luxu rious pile. Eo1y tO maintain. Moth proofed and non·ollerg enic. An array of decorator colors. · POLYESTER SHAG SALE Sq.- Yd. Deep rich shag carpet mode for years of beauty and wear, So tough and durable it's fomily·proof. Lorge selection of briJ.. liont California colors. ROOMS & HALL CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE CARPET COMPLETELY INSTALLED ~~~~·.c;c;~. ,2 g I 2 BE DROOMS & HALL ' UP TO 60 Sq. Yds. ~ ................. AU !AIOI CAHiii A llflTIMI GUAUNTll · (J/rtistic Carpets ~- , 2 US! out CONVINllllT· CtlDIT TltMS \...__ ~ .... ~ 3040 BRISTOL AVE. ' . Just off IN Sao Dlot0 fwy. COSTA MESA • 546-8548 ' . I ,. I I f ' • . . I 1 DARY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Changes Are • Ill Order The appeal or the !!untlngton Beach motorcycle of· fiter fireC. for hls handling of merchandise turned over to him by a department' store will ultimately be settled In court. fbe final arbiter tn the matter of Gilbert Coerper, 38, presumably will be a superior court judge. But it does appear be received a full and fair hearing from the Huntington Beach Personnel Commission. The figures by themselve$ support this conclwion: The five-man commission listened to more than 32 hours of laborious testimony and spent ,1,465.89 to do it. While the hearing was painst.Jkingly fair, it also pointed out some inadequacies in the city's method of h~dling appeals from fired employes. The hearing. conducted in a series of three· or four- hour sessions stretched over several weeks. took far too long. It perhaps could have been more expeditiously handled in two or three full-day sessions. It was also costly. \Vhile city aides have correctly pointed out that the trial costs could easily have tripled with the addition of more legal help and a professional hearing officer. $1,465 seems a Jot of money to spend for a discharge hearing for one enlploye. Perhaps one of the more serious operational defi· ciencies in the· proc~ings was that both heari~ officer and prosecutor ·were from the City attorney~s office. Although City Attorney Don P. Bonfa -the hear· tng officer in the proceedings -handed down rulings \vith eminent fairness. the trial could easily have been prejudicial to the · interests of the policeman if a less Just man had presided. It probably was not easy for Bonfa to overrule· objections by his O\vn assistant, Michael Miller. Such a situation could lead to later friction between two men whose normal duties·call for them to work cooperatively in the same office. : A revision of personnel policy to provide a more 1;treamlined handling of appeal is in order. One alter· native would be appointing a professional hearing oUi· cer from outside the city who could hand down a deci· i;ion on his own and thus dispense with the board. Another possibility to expedite the hearing might be lo draw the hearing panel from employes of. ~ariola departments, assigning them more or leis full ttme to th_. hearing until it is completed, just as II they had drawn jury duty. · . While the commission handled the Coerper case in a judicious manner, the hearings showed clearly that some changes are in order for a better guarantee of fair· ness. Successful Town Hall Fountain Valley's town hall meetings are. off to a booming success. City councilmen talked with more than JOO resident$ at a recent meeting of the Fulton School PTO. They received more than··50 written re.sponses to a questionnaire on city progra,ms. The questionnaire responses indicated a strong sup- port of youth programs -especially for more ball parks and recreation programs. Because the meeting was with PTO personnel, those who answered were obviously youth oriented. The city has already discussed C}langin·g the sites of some. town hall meetings so they· don't. all ·fall before. school related groups. It's a wise decision to open the door to more than just one -even .though the largest-segment of the community. Several homeowners groups might like to host in· formal sessions with city councilmen and city depart· ment heads. The idea of switching the type of meeting is good and necessary. City leaders can accurately read -the pulse of the community with" a· good cross section of it involved in town hall meetings. The continued success of the town ball· idea could greaUy benefit the entire city. I -· ' •-I 1t appears t.o have been launched from that little old dead planet. What do you make of it?' H Trees Seem Smarter Than Peopw Dear Gloomy Gus: H.,nger and ..-ollution in World Speaking of trees, u l was recently, l learned 90melhing that is instructive, inspiring and charming from a new book, ';The Urbanization o( the Earth," by Jorge Arango (Beacon Press. $6.95). In his· opening chapter, on human ecology, the author asb us to observe a group of plants of various sizes strug· gling to perform. We see that "most plants keep a distance from one another. A tree never grows branches into ill neighbor if it can avoid doing so." Plant.5 Uke the sun, Arango pointa out, but at the same time like lo be In a com- f ortab l e shade. ••They Jike lo have maximum space of their own. but at the same time to be to- gether. This inter- r e 1 at Ion makes plants subordinate their growth to others.'' EACH PLANT IN a groop has it& own task of balancing its ''personal" weUare with its "social'' needs. It builds up the location of each leaf in the most advantageous position, "not only for the plant, but for the group." No humanly-devised computer could do this. As Arango says, "a prtdictiOn or timing, size, and location for each leaf in relation to the others would con- 1titute billions of equatiom changing eon· tinuously in time." In· this tiighly import.ant respect, trees seem to be smarter than people. Or, at least, the mechanism of nature is more rational, effective, and protective The mayor and councilwoman (Gus, Feb. 5, JO) were late to the realtors' award banquet not be- cause of a prior &peaking com· mitment but due to a cocktail party where the host was heard to say, "These affairs never &tart •:--" 00 w=. --0. M. G. nit. IMtw. ""'9ch .......,... \1fWt. "" _ _.., ............ -·-· ..... -rt "'"'9 la CMMtnr .... Dell1 ~Htt. than the frantic anarchy of human society. FOR MOST OF US today Jive in a man-made environment that o f f e r s neither privacy nor mutual help, and certainJy not a delicate blend of the two. Small towns are dyirig of anemia, and cities are l!ltrangling ·~ death. For the first 100 centuries of history, only one out of 10 persons lived in a city; the others used it only for trade or defense against invaders. Jn the last 100 years, however. an enormous migration began toward the urban areas. Now the cities are beginning to collapse under the convergent pressures of population, pollution, transportation, in- dustrialization , and, most importantly, alienation -the vital sense of "com- munity" has been largely lost in the modern city. WE HAVE PLANNED everything e1- cept bow to live together in increasingly greater numbers. We plan factories and highways and airports . and shopping centers -but, unlike the trees, we rudely crowd others out of the way and ruin the environment not only for them but for ourselves as well. Arango's chapler on the "'Pathology of the American City'' is a heart-breaking case· study of our ignorance, apathy and greed. Perhaps it ill time -perhap!!i it ii past time -that we took a leaf from our plant life, and subordinated our growth to the common good. A Month for Dreamers February is the month for dreamers. The weather for those who live in the cold northern states ls too sullen to go outside except for skiers and other self-destructive people. The only thing to do th makes ml sense is lo stay indoor• aih<I....__.~-.._ daydream. .' ... f Then, leaning back in the old swivel .; .:!::I\ Ill::' chair with his feet ~-,..,.. crossed before hlm I /c..A. on his desk and I \·~ ,.. ...<!' ' friendly secte .... ry keeping 1 wary eye \ \. fl/ nut for the approach 'I 01· the bos.'I, a man :: ls free to ehie rein to hls imagination. In a blink of h!J mind's eye be can start living the kind of adventurous. roguish Hfe he would enjoy U ht weren't restricted by a wlle, .1hree kids. a mortgage, a nrrutest~ amount o{ 'pocket money and nal feet . YliS, HE CAN. il be choooes to: ?t11ke a cillter\'a an'ell Pick a pocket. Find a burled each< ol Spanish doublooM and buy hll firm- 1.AJ.re a ship ashore during • atorm aod loot It. Wear a jewtl ln one eu and 1Ut \he throal of anyoM. who dared tell him that It made him look llke Mr. Clean. Travel e:verywhe.re on a flylng carpel he picked up ror a aong In a balaar In Mlitr~ " r r ' Hang his h.at in a harem of his own. Have bis department supervisor shot at dawn -and twice at aunset. just to be sure. TAKE A FRIEND'S lovely aister to lunch during National Brotherhood Week. Be made an Indian Chief the week before they discover the .mole reserve· I.ion is sinking in a vast bed or oil. Fly the coqp to Brazil !lith the office petty cash fund . Take karate lessons and become th e strongest 98-pound weakling in his neighborhood. · Grow hair on a bald billiard ball. Do card tricks at • state ball In th• White "°"'" . Persta1te a majority. PAllE AN APPLE with o clogger. Glva an enemy a poignant fttllllg at the point of a poniard. Duel with a fiendish v1mplre In an abandoned cemetery at midnight. Receive a grateful Jetter from Dr. Benjamin Spock !or curing him of the hiccups. Help a movie 1Ulrlet do her home.,,wk In algebra. Yes, only daydreams now keep a fellaw'1 tpiriL from be:ip& 1tuck: In aoowdri!ll; 'Cause 1.s Lack of Money, Not Food" To the Editor: Overpopulation is not what causes pollution and hunger. Statistics over the years Show that when a country reaches a certain level of technology, population growth level! off. The so· c a 11 e d overpopulation '"exists in the agricultural nations, where ~ith new fanning tecbni· ques enough food is and W"ill be grown t.o feed the people within the next decade. To tell those people to limit the source of their current wealth -people - is not solving the real problem, which is a lack of money. IF OVERPOPULATION were the key to starvation, why is it that In China no one is hungry, and in the United States between 30 and 40 million are considered hungry? In Brazil, not an overpopulated country (90 million people in almost as large an area as the U.S.), there is also gross hunger . The question is why? Ifs obvious. In Brazil large amounts of fertile land is devoted to growing coffee for export to the U.S., and very Utile of the land is used for growing food. In , the U.S., over 35 million acres of good soil is out of production yearly because of the threat of a falling market price. lF OUR SVSTEr.t was geared to grow food for people and not to make a profit, we would soon find out that hunger is not a lack of food (or overpopulation), but a lack of money. The non·socialist world goes by the saying, "If you can't afford it. you can't have it," which results in hunger, especially in those countries {practically all) where the land is owned by those ~'ealthy few for their benefit. Hunger ~ f' ' '· Letters from reader.s art welcome. NoNMUy writers 1hould convey their me.ssage1 in 300 word& or less. The . right to condente letterJ to fit space or eliminate libel U re.s1!1Wd, All l.et- ter1 muit include !ignatvrt and mail- ing addres1, but nome1 mov be toit#t.. held on reque1t : if sufficient-reason i.! oppcrtllt. Poetr11 wiU ttot be pub- lished. is not caU!ied ·by the +llmtt& af Natutt, but by the nature of lhe ownership and use of the land. JIM NEWKIRK Populotlou, Pollution To the Editor : Those ·that advocate "zero population growth" equate numbers of "f>eople with environmental decay and they believe that for each individual that dies only one baby should be born. As a result of this plan. they believe that the en· vironment would cease to deteriorate and those babies who are allowed to be born will be able to live the "good life." The other side of this coin would Indicate that if we modify the "good life" then more babies would nol increase environmental decay. THE MAIN ~AUSE of air pollution is the burning of fossil-fuel to obtain heat energy which is then transkirmed into mechanical energy. We~ gasoline President's Hope \VASH1NGTON -lf the optimum ob- jective of the current operation in Laos Is achieved, major Communist offensives probably cannot be carried on in Vietnam in 1972. The planned withdrawal of a 11 American combat forces can thus be completed and Presj... dent Nixon can go into the 1972 elect.ion period with confi· dence that the American p eo p 1 e will credit him with having come close enoug h to his firm pledge to C?nd the. war. This is the hope and. in fact, JI is the President's expectation. It probably will not be known with any ctrtainly until ~1ay if the operalion auccteds or fails. Unless, that Is. the Communist side is able to envelope the South Viet- nam forces in a repetition of the Dien Bien Phu 111iege whi ch ended French public support of the war in Indochina. THIS IS NOT EXPECTED. The Pres\. dent does not believe that the Communist side has the capability of doing th1t. He btlleves that North Vletnam's capability is now btlng as badly -overestimlttd u it wu underestimated in the IJ641> peHod. ~--By Gf!O"le Dear George: p!d you hll''t any expe.rience before you started writing an ad- vice column? STUDENT Otar Studtnt : Well. there was lhil redheJd ln Baltimore first , set.. and -~11ND YOUR OWN BUSINESS, NOSYI Ri .. But. win or lose in Laos , one conclusion emerges from the Prt&ktent's decision. Whatever the political con.sequences, he Jnteods to complete the withdrawal in Vietnam only when he is assured that he iii leaving behind a South Vietnam military force equal to maintaining the integrity and Independence of South Vlet.- nam. His strategy is based upon blocll.lng the supplies which have been coming into South Vietnam and Cambodia on the Ho Chi Minh trail in the largest volume of any period during the war to sustain a new Communist offensive timed to the Vietnam electlons, and during next February and March when the American withdrawal will be at Its most critical point. SUPPLIES wmcn a~ now k'pt north of Route 9 by the currtnt operation will have to remain there during the rainy season because tpey cannot be moved, and possibly through the end of 1972. By that timt, it ts>·cak:ulated; the Independent strength of the South Vlet- name!e armat forcu will have reached the point where their dC!feat by North Vietnam is out of the qUest1on. ' When one listens to an expla nation of lhf: Pr,sldent's strategy and grasps Its potentially decisive and pa:r alyiing effect on future Communist opc ralions In the critical areas of lndochlna for a year or two to come, the conclusion prtse:nts itself that it cannot be permitted to fall. On« lhe cour"1eoua dedslon h•• h<en and diesel fuel to· propel autos and trucks; we bum coal, natural gas and oil to generate electrical powe r: we burn combustible refulje becauSe in some cases that is the cheapest way to get rid of the refuse. The first and most important step that could be made would be to outlaw the building of any more electrical generating plants that bum coa1, natural gas or oil. Then after an electrical car has been developed the use of such cars should be made mandatory. These two steps woold almost eliminate all oil spills .and we would be able to breathe fresh air once again. REFUSE PLANTS could be designed and built to transform garbage into usable products and separate out those items that can be reclaimed. What better way could we utilize the scientific people that have been displaced in our aerospace industry than to turn them 'loose on the desigh of those plants? In conclusion, when someone says to me, "I am in favor of abortion and sterilization to obtain 'zero population growth' " J will answer, "You have been born? Now who is gojng to vote for those that want to be born?" HARRY B. McDONALD, JR. lll·co11celved Idea To the Editor: Planning Director Reynolds' proposal for a commuter-industrial airport in the center of Huntington Beach is an ill-con- ceived idea. Do the people of Huntington Beach want an airport: 1. That will have night flij;hl57 2. That will have flights for 250,000 people per year? 3. That won 't have jets now but "cou1d be expanded on either end?"· Where does this expansion stop? · 4. That is next to the central city park -our haven to get away from city noise and congestion? 5. Thal takes 34 acres of the proposed city park for adja~nt airport indust.ry7 6. That "replaces" Meadowlark ( a small recreation al airport.) with a large pollution-spewing industrial airport that can grow larger? r.tR. REYNOLDS FAIU to reilaze that Huntington Beach's primary appeal is as a relatively smog-free. recreational .. residential community. Any propo51I which damages the city's essential character will be rejected. l resent paying the salary of a public ofricial who is so out of touch with the community that he has forgotten the large public outcry against the Bol&a airport two short years ago. Any small advantage of the ·airport plan must be weighed against the overwhelming disadvantages. DAVID A. SULLIVAN POW Support To the Editor : I v.·ould like to commend you for the article published on the PriS(!ner1 of War luncheon, exposing the situation to your readers. This is a very important issue and further coverage is encouraged and will be appreciated by all those who care about the brutally-treated POWs. (MISS) J.!:SLEE GODFREY in Laos Operation made to do what has always been the logical thing -cut off Communist sup. plies so they cannot fight -there pro- ably can be no backing away. If t.he South Vietnamese forces. supported by American air, cannot accomplish the objective their failure would b e catastrophic. IT WOULD BE A different ve~ion of Dien Bien Phu; and. so, taking into account the President's present frame: of mind, it can be &urmis1d that he will think long before he lets lack of American involvement bring on such a catastrophic failure. The presidential frame of mind is thus of critical importance. He said to his advisers that there were 18 reasons for the opCrations against the I-lo Chi Minh trall and only one against it ·- the reaction of American publlc and congresslonsl opinion. That single reason was ea&y for him to overcome. lfe had done so before when opponents of lhe Cambodian operation Inside the ad· ministration warned him of casualties rising to 1,000 per week and a domestic explosion. Casualties did not · prove to be anywhere near 1,000 a V.'eek and the domestic r:xploslon was finally con- tained. The ultimate result gained six months lime. The port 1t Sihanoukville. through which most of tht Communist supplies had been coming. remained clos- <d. TltAT LEFT TH~ llo Chi Minh trail as the only route of supply and now the objtttlve Is to ck>se that route at lta~t for a year. U suectssful, ntilher str:ppcd up Ru11sian nor Chi nes~ suppor t would be of much use to Hanoi, It rould not nto11e the arlded ~upplies to lhl' antf':r~ of militar y optrations. Thus, what 11 going on now la un. doubtedly the most critical ope.ration of the Vietnam War. It widens the war, of course. Semantics to the contrary are a political justiOcation for a bold military operation . The attitude at the White House on hints that, if successful in the initjal stages. the South Vietnamese might move into Nor:tlJ Vietnam Is lpteresting. There is no law or nature that a coqntry v.·hich has been invaded cannot invade back. But that is not a planned part of the cum!nt operations. . North Vietnam can react. The force:1 positioned north of the DMZ could at.tack. Attention could be diverted by new or. tensive operations in Laos. Least likely of all , North Vietnam could pull its unsupplled forces back into the north. The coming weeks are extremely critical in the development of Nlzons' Vietnam policy. -----Wednesday, February 17, 1971 The editorial. page of tht Doil¥ Pfloi 1eeks to inform and 1tim- ulatt rcaden b1f presenti"g thl1 new1pope1'1 opin1on.s and com- mentary on topici of lnte~si and lignificaMe, by prov1ding a forum for the e.rpres.rion of our rtader1' opi11ion1 , and by prt11eniing tht diuer.sr view- points of informed observtr1 and tp0ktsmen o" !op(es of th e da11. Robert ll. Weed, Publi,ber • .. • . -... "' ' , 4 PILOT ·ADVERnsu D . 'B.c .-I . e ·s.s ~·rt~ . e r:ry American . ' ' ' .. , . What is more Am~lcan iban apple pit:? Cranberry. pie! For this merry .,. liltle berry is the on1y fruit naUve ·to ~erica. It has been enjortd .si.nce the , time of the Pilgrims. ~ Whal. better way to celebrate February's national holidays. than 'wiUi . hearty r1vorlte desserta f ea t u r I n J ., Aniuica'11 native fruit? · · Both th'e Winter Cranberry Pie and_ ·the. Cranberry Ayple Dumplings 'showb hut ate mllde. wjth. whole berry cran-berrY uuce: available all year long. · .But, if ~ were one of the wise onea "who tucked a few boxes of fresh "ranberries in the freezer last fall, yoU '\n bring them forth now and use them ' making lhue superb all American ·serts. ' WINTER CRANBERRY PIE package pie crust mix can (16 · ounces) tihole berry <TM- . berrY aauce ~ cu(ll seedless raisins or currant,, '1 teaspoon almond extract 1 lemon, cut into paper thin alk:ts. ' seeded and chopped coarsely Prepare pie cruSt according to package direc;:tions. Use 2/3 af tile pie crust to line the bottom and sides of a 9-lnch pie pan. Mix cranberry sauce, raisins, almond extract and lemon. Pour mixture into lined pie pan. Roll out remaining pie crust and cut Into 10 strips, Y.r-'inch wide. Arrange strip! in a lattice over filling. Fasten tnds: of lattice to edge of pie with water. Reroll remaining pie crust and cut with a cookie cutter into snla11 st.a.rs. Place stars around outer edge cf pie. Bake ln a p-ehealed hot ave n (425 degree.s) fer 35 to 40 minutes. or until ,crust is brown and filling ii bubbly. Cool thorougb1y before cytting Urto wedges. Serve with warm custfrd sauce or Rum Egg Neg Sauce. Make! l 9-inch pit. To make using frozen cranberries: Mlx l cup sugar with I/, cup flour. Stir in 1 cup water gradually. Add J cupa coarsely chapped frozen cran- berries, 2 Cups raisins and 1 small or8nge, thinly sliced, seeded and chOJl"' ped. Stir In ~ teaspoon almond extracL Use to fill 1 9-inch pie crust. Bake In a preheated hot oven (425 degrees) for 40 to 45 minutes. 0 RUM EGG NOG SAUCE t tablespoon cornstarch 2 cups commercial egg nog '"-cup. rum '' teaspoon freshly ground nutmeg Mix cornstarch and egg nog. 4 Cook over low heat, stirring ccnstantly -W!itil sauce bubbles and thickens sligbUy. !leroove from hea t and stir in rum PATRIOT·P~EASERS, SW EETENED WIT H ALL-AMERICAN CHOICE and nutmeg. Chill-until ready to serve. -can also be served warm, if desired. ; Makes 2 cups. l ·CRANBERRY APPLE DUMPLINGS lmll'CRANBERRY AIMOND SAUCE Ownpling1 (I medium siu baking apples JU. cup !Ugar 1 can (8 ounces) whole berry cranberry sauce · Peel apples and core, leaving apples -. ' whole.. Mix sugar, a:anbe.rry sauce, e:pices and butter. Prepare pie crust mix according to package directions. Roll out .on a floured board to an oblong 12 inch ,x 18 inches. Cur into· 6-:inch square!. Place I apple on eac~ square. Fill hole In apple with cranberry .sauce mixture. Wrap pie crust aver ,:PP!ts. · · y, teaspoon cinnamon I/• teaspoon nutmeg Duh cloves 2 tablespoons melted ··margarine 1 package pie crust mix Milk butter _ TuriL down corilers to ex_pose top cf or "'apple. Brush with milk. Bake in a preheated moderate oven r 350 degrees F .) for 40 minutes or until apples are easily plt.J:ced. Serves I. Almond Sauce 2 tablespooy. coiwtarcb 2:13 cup sugar 2 cups cranberry juice cocktail 2 tablespoons slivered , b I a n ch e d almonds · , . To make sauce. combine cornstarch and sugar. Gradua11y slir in cranberry juice. Cook over low heat stirring c<>n· sLantly until sauce bubbles and lhickens. Add almonds'. Spoon hot sau ce over apple dumplings. HOT CRANBERRY GROG 4 cups (l quart) cranberry juice cocktail 2 cups strong tea 6 orange slices ~~ teaspQOn fennel ~eeds, If desired l tablespoon rum flavoring 6 cinnamon sticks Ccimbine cranberry juice, tea, orange slices and fennel seeds. Bring to a boil. Remove from heal and stir in rum flavoring. Strain grog into mugs, add cinnamon sticks. Serve hot . Serves 6. CRANBERRY MOLDED FRUIT SALADS 1 envelope unflavored gelatin t l!li cups cranberry juice cocktail Va cup syrup. drained from canned peaches Evening ·Crowned With Royal Flavor Added to ' Fest ival By BARBARA DUARTE Of 1!11 01lty l"lllt 11.tt What better selection for chair man of the Laguna Beach Winter\ Festival International Gcurmet Dinner' than a vivacious restaurateur who describes herself as "unfaieable." · ,Andree Davisoil, former owner of Andree's in the Art Center. will see culmination of more than two mcnths of work on the evening of Tuesda y. F.eb. 2.1. as 110 civic and international dignitaries gather for a reception and dinner. The Swiss-born Mn. Davison, who has bandied an intimate dinner for six as well as sixty doing all the preparation henelf, baa arranged an elegant menu beginning with cocktails and hors d'geuvre1 prepared by seven area restaurants topped with a five-course aourmet dinner in Victor Hugo Inn. Consuls General and their wives from Canada , Japan, Sweden, France, Israel. Denmark, Great .Britain, Australia and the Philippines \ill be guests of ~e Art Colony during 1 7 p.m. reception tn lht grand haU of the Laguna Beach Ar:t Gallery. · Ser\.td with the cocktail coUrse and alt wines from the Ccincannon Vineyard ·will be: Swiss PastetM from Andree's: Danish canapes from Hotel Laguna: barbect)e ~reribs from R o y • I HawaU1n; toasted ravioli fr(lm La 1tz'1da; ea rolls from House of Hyun: MeJjcan canapes from La Pu, and French pale from Old Bnwels -truly an International touch. Followtnl the · cockW1 boqr, guest.< will _. Into the Fm>cb elegance of Vlc:tcJr Hugo for 1 dinner ot Consanune Princess Alice, Filet of Dover SOie, Rk:h- -d Fleuron: Boston Lettui;e $alad · with VinaWClle Dressing: Tourntdos of B'e e f , Chasseur Artichoke Francaise, PrtnceSI carrots and Dau phinc Potatoes and a desscrl cf Coupe St. Jacques. Wh~n she first came to Laguna in 1928, having decided to slay in the Unilerl Stai.es because "freedom is wonderful," sht turned her sewing talents to dressing dolls and opened a smaU shop, soon finding herself lcnown as the Doll Lady. Oni day she learned that 1 qua in1 restaurant almost next door was for sale, -and decided to take what she now calls a 20-year ning. The charming and attractive cook learned the business from tbe kitchen up -teaming how to buy, crganize ,. and get along with her crew. In mos&. days, one could find Andree up with the birds cooking all of her famoul desserts and entrees, putting the house in order and taking reserva· tions. While one of her favorite recipes is trout stuffed with crab and shrimp in a cream sauce, the dinner chairman decid- ed to stur1re an hors d'oeuvres recipr crtai,c:J by Peter Hyun as an appetite!' for persons interested in attending th dinner at a cost of SIO per periien. EGG ROLLS I dozen egg roll ski ns (thin egR·fl or · dough cut in 5 inch.by 5 Inch square i,; -pound' sllctd button mushrooms \§i pound sliced bambpo shoots 1/4 pcund chopped water chestnuts I 1ma1l broiled chicken (boned) t teaspoon salt ~ teupoon pepper 'iS teaspoon ieume oil Shread the chicten meat into 10 por· lions. Btalae mu:shrooms, bamlioo sbools and' ,water chestnut& In oil fer approxi· mately S minutes. Mix all lngrtdlents ~ gethtt wlth SU!Or'linP·•nd·plaoe .. n'f:qllal- amO!.l'lt of each square. Roll. up dough corner to comer • n d seal Weta with beaten eg. Cook egg rofla"" for 10 minutes in deep fat or unti1 cri!p. Drain In a strainer and slice. each roll Into four pieces. Serve wit~ a catsup or hot muslard sauce. ' / [ • •• ' I cup cubed. drained . canned peaches 1 Mi cups miniature mar'1una11ows Ccmbine gelatin and 1-i: cup cranbern juice: let stand for 5 minute!!. Stir over low he;it until ge latin is ·dissolved. Add remaining cranberry ju ice and ~ cu p peach syrup. Chill until mixture is thickened. Fold in peaches. &poon mix: ture Into ind ividual molds. Tep with miniature ma r shmallows. Press m;irshmallows into gelatin. cbvering them complelely. Chill unlil firm. Unmold onto salad greens and serve with a scoop of cottage cheese, lf desired. Serves 8. Menu Andree 13 no novice to aervtna: of eourmet ra re . The reclPt m•kes one dozen hors d'oeuvl'tl. PETER HYUN ADDS SPECIAL TOUCH TO GOURMET DINNER . '· I • . . " l!A AND ERSON, Editor ~ • w........,.,, ,.,...., u, tm .... • ~ i "' ' ,. • . Home News .. Tailors it . ' ·" Taking · • ' ' New Ta.t l,4 By DOROTHY WENCi: Or-~ ....... ~ Home sewing bas enjoyed • tre~· dous sur1e in popularity· in recent ye~.~ Now sewing is regarded 11 ·1 fW1 thlnt· -a me~ of creative espresalon ~· rather just than a money-sav!:nl neceai., ty. . '• Some 600 million -or lwe out ot every five garment& worn by women and children -are made at home -Y: some 45 million women and teenagen. All of these home 1ewen require ~ plies, and in 190 about • billion yard• of fabric were sold at an average pripe ai $2 a yard. One fabric whose popuJarity has increased enormously with bom1 aewen is the polyester knit. Althoulh tlliJ fabric can be tric~,lo' sew .. on, and costs more. than many fabrics, home sewers art chooltn& It because Of its easy care quallti~. It can be washed and dried in. automaUe heme equipment and come out looking like new with no ironing needed. · Polyester knit also Is very. durable and frequenUy can be sewn without cost-adding linings and underlinings. There are many different brtnd nameH for polyester knit -each fabr.le manufacturer has iU own speci•I name such as "Kodel ," ''Dacron," "Fortril'' "Trevira," etc. But they all are slmJllr an.g all will carry the family name "polyester" on the bolt end. . When buying pol~ter knit, It's wise to look the yardage over carefully lor naws befOre It is cut. This b especially · true when you buy sale plecea llUC:h as "bolt ends" and "factory specials." Some polyester knits have been Jlreshfwlk, othen have not, io it's best to take no chances and to preshrink this f8bric before sewing It. It can be: dampened thoroughly and dried In your dryer -or spread out flat lo dry. If you hang it, it ml&ht etretch. When choosing a pattern for a knit, look for a style with ease , soft lines .and a. minimum of seams and con- struction deta il. Rpglan s~Ves will be easler-ia--manage wltl\oul-p~keriflR than set-in sleeves. Pleats are not the "best choice ~cause it ls Impossible to Jlresl sharp creases with home pressing equip- ment. Do your cutting on a flit surface, bein& careful not to stretch the fabric as you pin en the patttm· and u you cut. If the fabric is off-grain, this clJ)QOI. be adjusted . in polyester, to all you can do is position pattmt._pfecu .!'ilia titlw lbe lengthwiJe grain ol the ·fabrlc or with thi fabric design. : Fer sewing on polyester, your choice of thread is very important -yOO need one that will stretch· with the fabric._ Your btst choice ls .t.lle . all· polye,ater thread or the cotton~vered polyester. These threads ate ' stronger than mercerized cctton 1s well as more stretchy and won't ¢rink ind cauae puckering when laundered. The new ball needle , which you can buy for your sewing machine, also will help prevent puckering. lf you hav@ a i;igtaR machine, use tM narrow, cloe:ely spaced zigzag stitch. If you don '\ have a zigzag stitch, support the f1bric both in front and In back of the preuei foot ·and 1lretch gently for-an even, unpuckered stitch. , __ Have your machine tension pro~ adjusted and use • moderately larp stitch -I to 11 stitChe1• pet . ~ As knits will not ravel, apeclal 1eat11 finishes are not neceasary, nor is • tape. Use • simple tailor'• hem -be~ careful not to pull the threads 1911 tighl, .. ' QUESTIONS WE ARE ABltED Q. I have a problem with z.i.ppiti puckering in homemade: 1armenll ... polyester knit after they are waahal How can I avoid tbls? ·· i A. The major reason wby zlppeft pucker is th•l they ahrink ri\ort 'ttilt the fabric when the garment la waabkl Preshrink ·the zipper by. lmmt'rs.lili' .. in hot water for a few tnlnutes Di drying It, before sewing. It h1to 4'-1 I~ ment. 1 •l · Q. What sort o( llnlnc ahou)d . eia use in a polyester knit? • A. Ideally one sbouldn'L·need tti ._ a,.. lining in polyester -~ially ·H art you lr)'in& &o 1ctuev..,.• ioft, fl* look. However, someu• \be fabrle'il so sheer thal you prefer to 1'11 a llnifta In this cue choose a rilllie ~ as washable and euy eue a tbe ;a. -a woven poly<ller ,,_ be ay cboice. Q. The nylon zlppen, w*l( they ...,,; to be usln1 on ev~ Jltooe. diytl often are allcky an& ~rd \lo -k •!lei the garment is dry eltaned. ta t.beN something that can be dine .. -.t thit' A. Tht atlcky nylon 11PP'l'I ,...,;... need a little iubrtcaun1 after dryci...,Q t? mak! them work well again. A if*,lal httle wax •tick (ot iullri<•ling .lfppei:i can be bollflhl that. wlU do lbla !tic: niceiJI without •talnln&. , • • I I ' . . .... ~ ' .... ,. I DAILY PILOT Banquet Fare Becomes Too Rich With Dates That Relate DEAR ANN I.ANDERS: I used to think you made Up ~lien. I couldn't tl«llov•e people actually gol so messed Up. Now I'm In a lulu myself. ANN LANDERS ~ • I never thought much I.bout It until now. When the birthday boy tried to blow oul the candles he couldn't quite do it, .. hi> grandmother "helped" him. It suddenly oceurred to me, as sbe stood there blowing out tbe candles with her ugly moist brtath, that she was spreading germs all over the cake. write la about a klld.ly ll'Qdmotber breatbinc oa a birtbd1y cake. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I om engaged to a boy I'll call Milton. 1 have gone with him to visit hb parenta three times. (They live in another city.) Each time he has gotten into a terrific flght with his mother. I wouldn't repeat the language be U"5 when he sets mad at her. ried? -D~ERATE DEAR O~: What kled of 1aquqe does ~1Uto1 use on your aow? Re will probably 111t lhe same lugua1e after yoa are married. It Is sboeklng: tbal the boy's father "jun stands there." But equally sbocklnc is that YOU don't 51y somethlnc. la my opinion you shonld let your boyfriend know you will not tolerate filtlriy lupage from him -to u)11ody. 1 uve been daUna: a great young l\l:Y l•.c~ it). He wants to marry me 1 have said yes. Three weeks ago each other, atrlcUy on the QT. of courae. I think we are in love. The only thing that bothers me Is that his last wife was a 21-year"kl girl his son had been dating. Junior knows rm s ee Ing somebody but he doesn't know who, He now seems very juvenile and I'm going to break up with him regardJeu. What are my chances for happiness "'ith Senior~ -FIREFLY . y-fool, Uke -Tk1I •lllllallA Nt all the elemut1 of · a Peravlu eardaqaab. My advice ls to WIWlDd 11 fast at posslble. ADd doa't ICUdale any more fattier .. oa banqaet1. trieHtls father. 11\e moment our eyes r met I · fell a sttong attraction. Senior ~hu everything my boyfriend bas -~oaly more. He's better looking. more f pollahed, more mature and more ex· 1--ciUna. 1 knew from the momenl he t looked at me that 90methlng clicked. ;Thts man is 4i8 years old, twice divorced ~and now •·at liberty .'' J am 22 but ·:I've lived a lot. DE.o\R FLY: About tbe same u a sno"ilab la TUHI. Remember there's oo fool like aa old fool -unle11 It'• DEAR ANN LANDERS ' My 4-year<>ld child was invited to a birthday party yesterday. I took him and sev.eral other yoongstera in our station wagon. Wben it came time to cut the cake and blaw out the candles t witnessed somethiog J had seen dozens of times before, but I tried to think of a way to keep my child from eating the cake but it wu U!eless. Please say aomethJng about lhb health !ward. -I.E. of S.F. DEAR I.E. OF S.F.: Unlt11 the womu bad an lalediout dlleue, it ii allkely tUt ber breatlri would be • healtk lluard. Tlaese days wu.i laclastrial poUaUoa Utreatea.lq: our very uts&eace It seems almo1t JudJcrolll that 1 pert.OD wollld What baif1es me, Ann, ls that hill father jUlt stands thue and never says a word. But the most 1mulng thing is that three minutes arter all the scretimlng 1nd fllthy language. they laugh and joke as if It never happened. My question i.!I thiJ: Will Milton use this tanauare on me after ·we are mar· Drinking may be "in'' to the kids you run with -but it can put you "out" for keeps. You can cool it and stay popular. Read "Booze and You -for Teenagers.Only." Send 35 cents in coin and . a long, sell·addressed, stamped, envelope with your request in cart of the DAIL V PILOT. ,: And now I must tell )"OU the whole ~truth. Senior and I have been seeing ' . ' . ~stick Krawe of Komus Conquerors Appear at Mardi Gras The splendor of a bygone era will be-recreated when the Mystlck Krewe of Komu.s host! il..!J annual Mardi Gru Ball at 8 p.m. Friday, Feb. 19. Conquerors Through t h e Ages will set the theme for the medieval pageantry, whlch wW include a parade of an- cient greal..!J who wtll emerge from the "mysterious mist" of q:es past. Invited to the ball by_ the nigniDg King Louis .XJV, wbclse secrtt k:lentity will be revealed as the highlight of the ball, and Queen Marie Therese (Mrs. Thomas Coad), are Eric tht Red (Robert Rapa paport), Princess Nord.rook . (Mrs. Robert Meidinger), Chief Geronimo ( L e Ro y Flecy), and Princess Morning Star (Mra. Joseph Piuata). Others appearing will bt Montezuma {Meidinger), Quetzalcoatl (Mrs. R ober t Mehrman), NaPoleon (Robert Neu), Josephine ( Mrs. nmothy Kraft), Klllg Arthur (Richard Luther), Queen Guinevere (Mrs. Thom as Sullivan), Julius Ca es er (George Clinton). Cornelia (!\frs. William Huntley) and Genghis Khan (Ri c h a rd Bcucher ). Viejo Women Rally Around the Car Still othtrs are Koatsong (~1rs. Richard Shu g t.rt), Pharaoh Ramse! ( K r a f t ) , Nefertiti (!\!rs. Jack Pina), Kaiser \Vilhelm (S. Clark Smith) and Princess Augusta (!\1rs. Philip Carreon ). ftfembers "'of the Mission Viejo \Voman's Club (left to right) the Mmes. Richard Caneday, John Kreuzer and John Carlisle rally around the car in prepara· tion for a Saturday, Feb. 20. car rally from 6 to 7:30 110,770 Miles Chalked Up Drivers' Horns p.m. follov.1ed by a'potluck and sock hop. Tickets for the Ground I-log Happening and rally are $1 and may be purchased from }.1rs. Caneday. Grand prize for the rally is a weekend for two in San Diego. Blow Host Role Assumed The historical figures will be announced by the captain of the Mardi Gras, Shugert. The queen will enter. gown- ed In white satin adorned with crystals and rhinestones, to join the king, who w i 11 be wearing a royal red velvet jacket accented with gold aJXI silver. PARADE FROM PAST -Notable people from past eras \Viii be among guests at the Mardi Gras Ball of t he Mystick Kre~'e of Komus. Ready to take their places in the pageantry are Oeft to right) Merrill G. Hastings. past king, Mrs. Jack W. Clark and ~1rs. Ha stings, past queen. The festivities \vill begin at 8 p.m. Friday. Feb. 19. Volunteer drivers for the American Cancer Society were honored during the annual drivers' a"·ard luncheon in the Revere House, Tustin. the Orange County t:nit of by l\lrs. Pearl Meyer, the ACS. Anaheim. and l\1rs. Un a Coastline Auxiliary 3536, Veterans of Foreign Wars will Following tbt pageantry, the Elganova Ballet Troupe will perform and music for dan· cing will begin after the en· tertainment. turning and ~1rs. Edward Conroy was responsible for the old world military att ire. Ladies" masks "'ere assembl- ed by Mrs. John Cochran~. lo1rs. Albert Federman, In· vitalions; Mrs. Tam a r a Elganova. stage direction; John Cochrane, lighting and special effects; Harry Phillips, logistics ; Pina . choreography ; Krall, stage sets, and Jesse Paul. mast er or ceremonies. From its beginning in 1962 with three drivers. the pro- gram has grow n to 191 volunteer drivers, according to William F. Pells. president ef Transportation musl be made available on a \'Olunteer basis because of the county's lack of public transportation. Leader of the volunteer er. fort is Mr s. We s l ey Oierberger, Anaheim . assisted -r • Mard i Gros Magic -----·---- Essex. Huntingt.on Beach. host a hospitality night Fri· The drivers made 5035 trips day, Feb. 19, in the Legion and drove 110.770 miles. or Hall, C.OSta 1t1esa. i\1embers the distance of four and one-of other VFW auxiliarie5 will half times aroun d the wo rld be guests. during the past year. Honored from Costa t.1esa The 7:30 program ivi\l ""·ere the i\lmes. J . c. feature American F J e Id Callaghan. John Little Jr. and service students from Paris, B. F. Moler, 100-150 trip!, and Norway, Costa ruca and Directing costuming is Mrs. i\t ichael Tru jillo, who utiliz.ed J . Laver's "Concise History of Costwnes." Mrs. Kraft was in ctiarge of the me n's COS· Children Others assisting are Mrs. Walter Thomas, oourt gifts; Circle Joseph Fallon. 20-50 trips. Ethiopia, according to Mrs. s Fountain Valley award win· May Buckland, American~m Open"1ng· erves ners were l\frs. Douglass Hubert and Jim Munson. SO-chairman. 8 h Conciuding the list'are Nict Paolisso. special music: h1rs. John ~leidinger, program ; l\1rs. Coad, publicity; Mrs. Sullivan. script, and Mrs. Luther, seating. Fine Arts Festival Coast Clubwomen 'Win 100 trips. and Mn;. Brad The auxiliary will sponsor H rune Winners in the F:,ine Arts The annual event look place Combs and r.1rs. Jame y an essay contest for sixth ea rts New arficers will be presen t Fe stival s~n~red b~ t~e ~1ub~~~se. Fullerton Ebe I l r· Jacobsen, 20-50 trips. graders in the Newport~Mesa to welcome pr 0 sp e c t ,· v e Orange District. Cahfomia __ _ ~ Olher honorees were the 1·-Mmes. Velma Begg, special School District, themed Why A Time tor Hearts and members when Crown Circle Federation of \Vom-en's Clubs Carnival Commuting ----·--- New Orleans' }.Jardi Gras festivities lrill overflow into the Balboa Bay Cl ub Saturct,..v. Feb. 20. and the Newport revelry promises to match or beat that in the home of the fete. Club members and guests will arrive in costume at 7 for a cocktail hour, and a Creole dinner 'Vi'ill be served at 8. Prior to the Southern-style feast, guests may enter a "shop" on famed Bourbon Street to partake of appetizers. pausing along the way to listen to the music of Ronnie Brown's Dixieland Five. Guests will be asked to unmask at mid· night and spend the balance of the evening getting acquainted "'ith th ose not recognjzed in disguise. Highlighting the evening \11ill be the crown1ng of a king and queen. who will re- ce ive specJal awards. Costume prizes al so will be given. Reservations club. are being accepted at the University Scanned La Rrionne Unlversillire en France will be discussed L award. more than 200 trips; I Am Loyal to the Flag. Flowers, fund-raising dinner 0£ Florence Cr it le nto n~announced. , Ray Walker, five years, more Entries must be received Services of Orange County The Midway City Woman's '' than 200 trips : Woodrow by the end of Febru&ry and dance will take place Friday, sb~~hr.s a me m be r s hip Club had one third place win· S · h John F winners will be announced in Feb. lJ, in the Blessed Sacra· • ..u. .. .~ mil . 15G-200: . Drake. 1 • Ill ner and the San Clemente E d J A'" r..........i.. March. First p ace winner w m t c lholl ~··-• h U .,_ I w tsh ·11 ssex an a\;A ~ame, en a c "'"w"'" 1 • mi;.. rene 8 wt open Woman's Club had three first along with Peter G. receive a savings bond and Hollywood. her Monarch Bay home for , Gaaselden, Adam A. Griffin. second and third prizes will the event Friday. Feb. 19. place winneni, one second and • d L be $10 and SS. Sponsored by Aid for Baja one third. an . G. Metzger, 50-100: Calif . 1 ~ .11 New officers who will serve An honorable menti·on and the h1mes. Helen Evans, Nan ornia, nc., proco;<>Us wi for the coming year include Graner and James Kleats, 20· provide addition1l funds for the Mmea. Russell Taylor, first place "·ere received by 50.allofHuntingtonBeach. Eastern Star an orphana1e Jn Tecate and presidenl: Harry Hinde. vice members of the El Camlno Laguna Beach volunteers 'd 1 R If d Real Woman 's Club, and FEBRUARY'S BIRTHSTONE 1ke f}methyjf h ed th M J h a medlca1 clirtic in Tijuana . pre.!I• en : on · ar r 0 • Founta in Valley \\1 0 m a n • s onor were e mes. on Hosts Meel "tng Cocktails "·ill be served at recording secretan1 ; Walsh. F. o·Ncl\l, 100-150; Tom corresponding secretary. and Club members earned three Ser~ne and. cap~ble or lnapirinr ~1a!hew and Toni Shry k 50-7 p.m. and a catered dinner Paul Dunham, treasurer. firsts. one !eCOnd Intl tv.·o ''1rtue :;and hiir;h ideali, th. loo RI h d B ocH ' \" Laguna Beach Chapter or at a. h1usic will be by Las honorable mention av;ards, An1ethy1t is the tr1ditl•n•I : c ar uss. · ~ · the Order of E"'lern Star Freema R w R I I d "" Poverellas (The S l n g l n g Two honorable me n t ion :iymbol of autho rity and ii n, · · ep og e an w1·11 meet at 8 o.nl. Friday. 11 f Ma~ Rhode ""~" Nuns)·, enler1ainmtnt by ~~·n.. awards and one third place 11t1 ound in b1shop1' rinp. '1 s, "vvu. Feb. 19. in the Masonic 'OJ" F I' ·1· I h .__ Newport Beach residents notlst Arthur Ellen and music es IVI leS were taken by Ne wport t aa .,.,en called the favorite. honored were htrs. William Temple. Host for the evening for dancing t.y the Ray Alwan Beach EbelJ Club men1bers atone or St. Valentine , who won. E F will be Mrs. Roy Piety. orchestra. p ·d B 11 and th! Laguna 8 ea ch one envaved with a Cupid, ~. Ortner. h1rs. L. G. Star Club wlll stare a F-·-•ed by the •·v. Henrv feCe e 0 W 0 m 1 n • s C I u b was The Ameth.y1t m1rk1 it.a Thlelemeier and L. K. Rogers, de•••r\ card party In the vwN Wll' ., we1ttr'WJth iln-n·~ 1-100 M A h. • -V It the al f nd represented with one second ..... ....,. v.r ; rs. re 1e Loc ... t . temple at 7:30 p.m. on Satur· e er, group r ses u s Prior to attending the an-~JOO and lotrs. \Yendy Alex· day. Feb. 27. Members and for the Me1icitn projects nual Valentine Ball, members place and l\\'O third place Win· ander, 20-50. guests are invited to play throU&h a thrift shop in and guests or Beta Alpha Xi ners. Award winnen from San brldge, canasta and other card Pi.!11dena ind other activities. 011pttr. Beta Sigma Phi will The Costa Mesa Woman's Clemente were 1'1rs. Dan games. Oranre County members have gather in th:! Garden Grove Club rtcelved a certilicate of Yeilding. 50-100, and Mn. The club ilso l.!1 asking for ~ collecting c1othlng, food home of !\1r. and Mrs. Douglas partici pation. !\1ark Afanning. 2 0 • 5 0 : articles in good condition for and buUdlng materials to build Elmer for a cocktail party. 11i"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"il Westminster winners were a rummage sale on April 10 a (irl's dormitory at the The ball, gil'en by the West !\1rs. Joe Gunderson. SG-100, In the Woman 's Clubhouse. Rancho N1zareth Orphan11e Grove Area Couocil, will tak e1 •- JJ.'eor ~our birtll1tox11 /er , ... , /aelnnl'I-afll good /orhtrtc . ! ~ in French by lofrs. ~torris Gollub, professor of French 1t San F'ernando Valley State: Mrs. Gollub. who holds an MA degree In English. also holds a French degree, the and lo I rs. L or r a I n e Hun. Those interested in having in Tecate. plaoe Saturd1y. Feb. 20. In nlnghake. 10-50, and Irvine 's articles picked up may c1 \I •Mrs. h1 lchttl Jankowski of Orange. Representing the representat ive was Mrs. Roy Mrs. Piety or hirs. Arthur Fount1ln V1lley i.!I accepting chapler l!IS valentine princess Agregatloo, from the Sorbon-11avert. 100.150. Stead. donations. is Mrs. Sidney Chappell. ne. the UnJvP.rsity of Parls1-;r:========= -ii;iiOO: .. iMi;;;;;;;;;;;;: lp;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiii•-•••••••----.,;,.,;,..iiOiii and a PhD from llUCLA in OltADUATI CORSITl(ltll F,:o:;. OP: Oil PAINTI NGS College. when th~ Alliance Francaise of the Cali£ornfa ruv1er1 mttla Friday, Fe:b. ti. The a p.m. mee1in& will ttke place In Harbor Vitw School, Corona del Mar. the field ~f French lerature. ) D'a a"d DD'• WHOLllALI wAalHOUll Prior to her academic · •• co ... re11n11. r... v.!!1' _Coifl.1:· , Ol'IN TO THI l'UlllC career she worked In French S1ndy's Fluff 'n Stuff if radio. journalism and cinema, 1 1 JM 1• '"~ 11,. , 50°/o OFF where she worked with .Jean (•II• MM•-Hlfklr ... l~v•r' ~ U\f I, •DIHOI•. IANTA AHA -~t-M)t -I P~-lu..u.ol Renoir, noted French director. ...""left o1AL1•1 wANTID PltlYATI Lll lONS " CONYl ltl ATIONAL ,ltlNCH & S,ANISH I XPlltT TUTO•tN• -ACC•IDITIO TIACHl•ts ACCU•ATI T•AMJLATIONJ SPA .. llM -J'llNCN -"ALIAM -J'O•TUOUISI SU-l7f0 541..0064 2717 f:. Ce•ll Hwv. Cer•n• 4tl Mt,_.Ph. 67)./950 • lltfllrAIMNttN e M11ttt Cll•rtt H Y .. ri Ill :&elM LKll- \. Sovth Cot1' Pl 11• l1i1ttl 11 lh t St " Oi190 F ... .,. l I ' ' ' • ----. ' ·Fotiniain V ~iley '.J'eday'•.F•••• · N. Y. siieo.z , , . ' VOL .. M, NO. 41, 5 SECTIONS, 51 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, FEBRUAR,Y ' 17, 1971 TEN CENTS " ': ~ ' • • Witness-· .. Une,overed • Ill Fired Lawiri _an'.s Ca·se ' By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI OI ""° Dall~ '°"" Slflf A request to rt;9pen the Gilbel:t Coerper cue ¥s been· filed by Attorney Cecil Ricks who daims he has uncovered a witneSll who could clear the • eK- policeman of charges that resulted In his JlliniisAI from the Huntingtin Beath poli~ force .. Ricks, who represented the 36-year old Coerper durln11 lbe eight-sessioQ. hea.r· ing , ~ewe tht ·Huntington B e a c h persoMel commission said the ·woman's tes{imony ceold "shed quite 1 bit of li&ht oo the entire matter.'' H.untington Names Girl To Panel ... Patty Truesdell, 19. has just become part of the establishment. The ~t mawberry blonde was ap- pointed to the Huntington Beach Recrea- tion and ·Parks Commi.uion as the first youth representative last week. "Jt's a little bit scary. I just hope Jt will go all right." confid~ Patty who now has to transform he.r criticism! into conr;tructive programs. M the youngeat person to ever fully participate in Huntington Beach c~ty government. abt will join 11 other com· missioners -many of whom are twice her age -in the administration of ti)( city's huge park system. 'Bui tt wasn't easy. "fm only 19 and I can't legally vot.t. So they allowed an eictpUon {or.me to be.•on 'lhe oo~ ... 1be exPained. During the next few weeks. Patty, a Golden West College business student. wjl! ~ studying .lhe accomplishm,ents of the · establishment. Then she plans to make a• few 1Uggestions of her own. "They seem to have a lot of pragrams for youth but not enough for college student:s. ~ student! aren't interested in existing program!. They're concerned mostly with politic! and they talk about the war, Ni1an, the SDS and about drugs." she said. Patty who lives al 1714 Alabama S~. with her 20-year-0ld husband. an 011 field roustabout. said she would favor 8 program of encounters with city hall officials. "We need to gel the figureheads and their assistants down to Ute schools so they can let their hair down and com- municate:' she said. . "I'd like to see all of the comm1s· sion.!I come down. also the narc !narcot· tcs) squad . so that we can talk about our problems." said Patty. "~ut they .s1!0Wd nally communicate'. nol 1ust. pai;~1c1pate ln a question and answer sess1?n·. Palty believes the comm1ss1on has soored a big hit with older youth! by iolng ahead with plans to develop a motorcycle park in the Bruce Brothen pit on Talbert A.ve. and Gothard Sttee~. .;This is 8 big step. In facl , I think It's fantastic. I just hope . they. ca~ geL busy on it and do 1l quicker·. 1he said. "Right now the p~oblem ~s geUlni out the pe<iple lo register their motorcycles so the park can be built." She finds current city plans to turn tht downtown are.a into a Roaring 20'! villagt wilh swank y r e ~ l a .u r a .n.I s . specialty shops and tour1st-0nented businesses less endearing to youth. "?tfost of the kids sa y they're not going to Cflme down there. They're pretty upaet about the plan." s~ cl~ims. ~i~ing the need for a meeting with city off1ctals arid young people. on the. subject. "1 took tht position on the commission bt4:ause I ·wanted to do more for youth. 111iy're. so tt'isillusioned . But I can assure lhtm that I will not be a litUe youth ad¥bor just sitting up lhere with the commission looking pretty," sa id Patty. READERS RESPOND TO PILOT'S ADS tt seems that everYone must be read- ing' "DAlL ~ PILOT c~asslried ads , lhest da)'J. They re resPQlld1ng, too; that 1 bow we \now. •BOAT CARPENTER and FIBERG1-\SS. Perm. job w /frln~ bf!nefit1. L.AKE MARINA !Phone number\. 11Us 1dvertiser WI! looking for I 1ftl1lf applicanl He. lost count of the classified responses on tht. second day the. ad ran. A t>AIL Y PlLOT ad -visor can help f()U gel Iha\ kind of rMults, too. Just call M tbe direct lint, 642-5671, and sll back. ,He!,p wiO be on the. w1y. ' ' .. ' ' • Ttie woman. Mis,, Nancy Dean, stepped forward after reading "'wJPiper .ac- COW'lb _of tbe comriilssion~s d~isian to ~ld;,the f~il!i of'lbhel.,.llJl'llwman. ' she: called '1r1e .rter I' re.dlDg the rlewsj>a_pers and"' sa1d ·she Could orter testimony which. supeoft.s Mr •. Coe.rJter's point Of Vie\)','' said·~~k~. , Miss Dean, * (~r· sicurifI~loye a Montgomery Wmf•1, ,maillt:ains .st'ore p<;r&0nqet , kne~ ·'!ll •lo\!i .~t , tl1elr merchandise l'U' net • gping .to charily act.iyittes of th!' PO!Jce 'WJvi:s' Gui.It!, the .attorney cliJDla. ' ; Coerper. 'was 11rred ~rrom his job as motoreycle trc>lrMn" I. . r n.-atter a . • . ,pa, ..... Uf! ••• ·-·.-". ; police investigation disclosed he had kept ma'.rked-out and damaged' merchandise for himself and given it to other people. He wa.S supposed to havt rep3ired ·the items.and given Qltm to the ·guild.•. His d.i.schar_ce. wu. upheld .by the.. five. man Huntinglon Beach Personriel [pm- mlssion last Wtf!k on the ground.1 that Coerper had•brok~ bls agreement· by giving , the merchandise away IO unap- proved persons. l'hro<lghout the ~ long, p~og Coerper claimed ht n.&d been given the toys &nd appliances · to i:lo with "as I aaw 'fit." ' "OUr declaration states that ~om lime to time· Mr. Whltaker (the for:mer Montgomery Ward securltY chief) wOQ}d have Miss bean call Mr:: Coerper to take away merchandise. Often it was mentioned that the goods were gaUig to a bospi,tal '!'. an or¢.la!u'~e. '!her, !me.flt they ~e.re DOt'.going to tile ·fllild. • said Ricks. · ~ He. asserte:CI . lbat Miss Dean liws ·outside oli°Orih{:e C.Oun~y .and had no knowledge of ~r1s plight ·until she visited }ter father and saw a newspaper story dealing With the polic;-eman'1 discharge. . ', His request to r~ thl.,proceedings was addressed to commission Chairtrtan " ' ' ·• Wandalyn Hiltunen. City PUlonnel Of. Iker Ed 'lbom-said be would con1oc1 commtsskNI -memben today to esbiblilll a meeting .date for cor.sld,,raHon -of Oie requeit:" ' ;\: '1 • .., . CJtr Altorpey Jlo!1 P. ~·· 5'id 0 lhi> niori:ilnc \ the commis&\on coWit · rt11~n · the ·ca..: ''1>l<y bOaid it.em.,.,. could rriove tO recorisider tbt cui' bastd • on new eviderice. It· would -~t.r.,ma. jority vote to bring it aboat," he 11ld. ~ "I hope substanllal justk:e-will. be done," yld ~ 1Ves-!8Y. •Lteinoon. •·ff we cOu1d jist _bave. had Miss 1'ab durlhg the hbrini i ram' sutt-the 'cue wautd-~livt tendeJ~to go lit fhe opi)oait.e · • ' ~oo. All we had 6el0re wu Mr. CperP.tr:s ~.i· , . _,.C!>n\oqted •I his \K>m< lflla Ol!l{njnJ. µ,ietper ap~artd stw1Qe4 by the dist:.lvery .of U\e wit.M.Js. · ... , liardly koow the gal. I hod lo l'uJly think ' hard of. WOO ah< WU. This i& jU.J 10methlng that -i• ru)iy lrei~" tbe ,u·poJice officer ·~· , "J bop, the ~ wUI li&ten." • , out ;,r. _ .. ,. liis ........ .. and . . "!-......... i:ie without beoefi of unemployment in- S\lrillce, 'Coe~r. added, · "l')ll• ( r,eady tq Hll my, "°'!If and light th(• tp 5~ Cj)urt ct the Appe)Jate · Court U I hive to. l'm innOc..Unt.'" • us . . . . : . ; t !_ ' ' • ' I • • • Troops Under Fire Command Rashes ReinforcementS. to Viet .Base • SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. C0111llllllldel'I rushed reinforcemeliU Wednesday to out- numbered difenders of an American base supporting the South Vietllamese cam- paign. Into Laos. Field reWU said. Com· munist troops were firit'lg from all aides de1pite heavy U.S. air and artillery pressure. The combat around Fire Support Base. Scotch 10 miles from the. Laotian border , was_ pl}'t of a pattern of heavy fighting in mountain jungles near the re.acUv1ted U.S. airstrip at Khe Sanh. headquarters for tJ;e. D.~man American support Wk force. Preliminary reports indicated at least n~ Americans were wounded in the battle nep.r" Fire Support · Base · Scotch anc:J.' fllilitary '.sources 'said a U,8. Am\y. helicopter ·was · ahot do\l{J\ near it Wed- nesday afternoon. No casualliell were re;ported in the 16th U.S. helie;9pter loss of the Uk:lay Laos ca'mpaign but fl v e . Americam were kitleO In the crash of a U.S. Army Ch,inook ~licoP.t.er near Hue tdonday night in an incident. not related to the South Vietnamese thrust into· Laos. Report! late. Wednesday said element.II of the 20,000-mill South V,ietnameie ex· . . . ' peditiOl)al'y force· had· driven l5 m 11 e:i i!Jalda . 4os .. ~. adv~e .of one, mile in ·a %fl.hour' period. The ·pwih wu described u alOw and Cautious. ~ A Saigon· conununlqut said the. ·l,iaos foi'ce killed 500 Communists in the om nine days of the Of"rltloil ·anct· f I e-1 d rtports Wednesday mcre1sed that figure by '11. Soulh .Vietnamese. losses were placed 1t 1%7 k:llled and 454 wounded ptus three killed and four wounded in combat Wednesday. The U.S. troops called ln artillery 1trikes Tuesday. night and: early W'ed· T1esday within a few yards of the DAI'-Y l"llOT l .. H ..... YOUTH WILL BE .SERVED'. Commissioner Truesd•.''*· 19 New-~ PX Scandal Reveale·d Ci.ti~ns ·P.~ T'O;Study ~ity Chartet Revi8e A•citb:en committee has been appoiltted to study revisions of the Huntington Beach city charter, includirll the yr9"' posal for a full-time elected mayor defeated by vot.trs Nov, 3. Representatives from five community organiiations will serve on the com· roittee: Robert Dingwall of the HOME Couhcil. Mrs. Joan Katz of the American Association of University Women , Mrs. Connie Johnson of the Le.ague of Women Voters, Steve Holden of the Oli mber of Commerce. and Tom Livengood of the Jaycees. These. members were.approved by the counc'11 Tuesday night. They will serve with Councilmen Jack Grte11 and Al .Coen who make up the coilncil's charter revision committee although Green pointed out Tuesd.l)' ttlght. that all coun· cilmen could serve as ei:-officio mem· be rs . Green re.ported 'that only one organiza· lion, the Property 'Owners Protective League, headed by JOieph Ferm. a can· didate in the last council election, had faile'.d lo submit the ume of a delegate. "Mr. Ferm has been notified. several times." Green said. "I see. no reason to wait any longer." The Property Owners P r o t e c t J v e League wrote Ote. ballot argment against the charter amendment in the,Novem!Jer election. Efforts to reach Fe.rm thi.!I morning were unsucceUful. Tbe proposal for a full-time mayor · was defeated by only 16.1 votes -with 16.131 residents voting No and l~.97$ voling Yes. Sert1aon Ser.ved • WASHINIJTOll (UPI) -Senate In· vestigators tliarled today that beer and liquor agents ·plied h I g h -r a n k i n g American· officials in Vietnam with favors -such as a villa with maids -to promote sales of their products to servicemen on. military bases. The disclosures came as the Senate opened new bearings Into the $3 billion posl exchange operations run by the Defense Department. Sen . Abraham A. Ribicoff (0-Conn.), :iicting chairman of the. Permanen\ lnvesti1ations Subcommittee, said the Nude Swimmer Feared Drowned . ' Off Huntington A yo\Jth who went swimming in the 11ude in a bay next lo Huntingtan H,ar· bour Tuesday night was presumed· by life guards this morning lo have drowned,. The youth. RichE-d Magovero, 21 , of 21144 Bailie Ave., Long Beach, re.por(edly had been drinking heavily at a patty i,n ~ walerfronl apartmen\ at 16910 Pac;iC'lC Coast ·Highway. · Party g'oeM. .told lifeguir<ls that at 8:32 p.m. he tOQk bis clothes off and swam about 40 feet from the dock . "He turned back and seemed to be an r_lght.'' .Capt. ~glas 0·~11 ·of .I.he Huntington Beach llreguards said .. "But he didn?t t'eturn to the· party lnd has not rehlrned.l~om his hod)e in Long Beach.'' County . •ntf city· Weguards .ae.arched the aita without sticcess Tuesday night and two divera combel Uie fiay tlUS moMi- ing. . . . . ' . . ' r • • • • ' .\t ., ~1Jrttr~' .J\'R:ickt~~; ' . htarlnp w"!l)d exOllllr!t llllep~~ ol ' brlbety, klCibticks and pa)roffa ito PX officials from U.S. firms· supplying a growing volume of products duririg the American buildup in Vietnam during the. 1960s. · · The charges of special favors to somt· ci vili an , and military officials involved in the Pi prograrna were made by Lavern J . Duffy. assistant · counsel fer the committee. He delivered a 45-pa,ce summation of I.he subcomn\itlee staff'i investigation at the openig of Ole hearing~ Duffy said that. in 1966, Wi~ia?1 J. Down to.7% qni"" ;-lll\g ....., •if -~ Ike!. ud. Jim Beam WHI~, iet .up 1 Ulutenant colon.el Ind , thrte ctYillan mana,er1 of the. PX system· in. Soulb Vielnam in a four-bedroom bouse. The -Villa was decorated .in "natur1l rush rattan" with will-to-wall carptt an~ came equipped With a ball)boo bar, a cook and two maids, Dully sald. . The lieutenant colonel wu identified as John G. Goodlett Jr. Duffy said Goodlett acknowledged in an affidavit that he had lived in the. hcJY.ae free, P,aylng '100 a month for food only. I nter,est Rates Reduced On V.S. l1isur.ed Loans WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Interest rates on ·home loans· inrured by the federal government were reduced today by one· half of one perrent lo seven percent -I.he third such cul in as many months. A~fected are mortgages ~sured by both d.ht Federal Housing Adinlnistration and th~ V. e t e r a n 1 Adminiatratjon. Covered are not only home. wn:ha.ses but also FHA mortgages on apartment development.II' and other housing. AnnoUncemint of the reduction. ,,..As made by "ff0051ng Secretary George w; RomDey" apd Donald . E. Johnson, adr mlnistratOr of veteran ar(airs. ' The enective date of the change is Thuisda,, ·Feb.' 18 -that la, :the cUt ipplfes on applications received after today; ' Romney's office said that outstanding commitments ·for lnsu:rance would con- tinue to be honored· 1~ tbdr orJainal interest rate. However , !ht · anOOuncement sal4 '1arlous federal offices inwlved In m~gage loans ... have been instruet;ed to negotiate · wtth Jf.nders to s~k tedUc· tioos in . the interest rate· on subsidized mortgages ' to the new lower .rate ferardless of the rate of the "Original commitment." The new ra~ Is the lowest In more than two years for govemmenl-backtd mortaaces. The rare rosf:" from ~·to 71,! percent on Jan. 23, 19t!ll, dn \ti viay ·to Ille. al-Ufne high of t in:.perCtht -imposed Jan,· 4, .1~0 -which prevail· ed lof mOst of 119t ytar. From the high mark, the ceiltnr was Pier .. Beer Bid Attacked cut to eight percent last Dec. 1 ind to 7i,, percent on Jan. 12. Romney hinted that at the lower ceil· Ing, many 'leiiden rni&ht tnc:re.ase the "point.a" they charge 1n .ackb'llon to the set interest fate. Bv, TEl\RY COVILLE UI 1M OfllW ,lift lltff "Alcohot 11 a sedaUve, a dru& of the. narcotic class." With this description, Rev. Edw1rd Erny launched his attack this morning against tht proposed sale or beer on the HunUngton Beach pier. But after a \wn-l'leur public hd.rinc. neither Rl:'1. Erny, J>4lSlor. of the First United Methodill ChUrch. 'Or Ron Smijl, who wants to sell \he beer,. knew who won. "Vou'U be notified of the dtclslon In writing by the director of 1he Alcohnlic Beverage O>nttol Board," Wti f i I 1 m Green. helrin1 orficer told both me.n. Grten, who wa1 tent by Utt stilt -,. Off&Ct"of Adminiatrltlve Procedures, Cfln- ducted the htlrinL thia morning In 1he HwitlnltOn Beach . City Council Cham- bers. ' ' • Sewril timer he stopped Rev. Erny abort on speecllel uplllning, 'fWe waht facts, not opinions about alcol)o}." Rev. Erny, with help from Rev. Alfrtd MiUer of the .Eval)gellcal ·Free Oiurch protested that ~Ulna:' beer on tile municipal pier would Increase police p~ blems with the y<IU!h. "It's lnapproprlatt. to aeU alcoholic beverages in a pub Uc rtere1Uonil area,•• he said. Both ministers pointed out that until now no aklohoUc bevertees were allowed on the.pit< or 0the \,.,ch. · - 1 lfe sald the seven percent ceilin1 "may "I n·ink this ts only· a trend And be just' ahead D( C!lrrent conditions In ,. ... , . ' t6t CorPorate 6o!¥l marketa .. 'but~wllh soon. bett ww also tie allowed on the . the mortaace lending instituthd IJi!com. beach," Rev. Emy satd. ing tnae.1slngly flush with funds, it will Vince Moorhouse, director of Harbors not be long ·t>efore u.._ ntW ceUina .11 ori Beochts, slid betr would not' be fully vlndlcoltd.'' • · - allowed on the beach. •:. The 'government does nOt mlkt dfrecl "'t'hts will be IO!d only l111ide Mr. loaoa. ,,,. fHA . and VA ....... !bol Smith11, restaurant." ~toorhouse added. borrowers will repay loans ~de ~Y ''Any vltiialion and tht city will c.incet private' lepden. In tht event or1. default, Srn'tth1s leue." . the pemme.nt makes up the lender11 Smith plans to coovert hl1 fresh UJh 1.... , · ', : , · ; store into a s,mall u.ndw~IJ re1t.ur1m , tn ~a-n, effort , to lncrt•seu:;rttur11 ·~ tt:U ~r wllb lhe 11ndWlche.s. on their mooeY.. lritdm ,add "Thtre w,tll bt oealll\1 for lt peroo111. "points" to' Fit\ •nd VA Io 1 • • A Mr 111U be i<rvod on. &rift In mu11," "polot" Is • OflO'tbne payment: of ooe Sm1tli ,.id, "No on• will be •lloffd perctlll of tbe lo10-m1 Is UIUlfll' paid lo le1ve ~ ~stauraht with the beer." by tht seller instead OI. the buyer. ·~ . t . -~·----.. • bue:perimeter. 1'tie U.S. warplanes n~w through dangerously low clouds whicb c!Osed down to • ceiling of only 500 feet it uinu. · 'In Saigan, · military llOW'CU saJd Wedhesdiay ~ four-rilonth ~ clock U.S. air.offensive against the Ho au Minh Tiail 1in Laos haa ·knocked out ftW'ly 7,000 Noith Vietnamese supply trucb -more than one-third of H.anol'1 fleet. .. The sources said this' was %,000 more trucks than the total destroyed during the autumn and winier a1t strikes ailinst the &.U ti\ 1969-7". Oil Mud ·-Dump Facing Aetion In Hunpngton II} ALAN DIRKIN Of Ille Dfllt ,Ylt lfl'ff The city of Huntington Beach Js taking legal action over fbe Ste.Ye.rson brothen 39-acre rotary mud dwnp. The city council will ho!d a publie hearing at 7;30 p.m. March 22 in the Edison High School cafeteria to lake eVidence frvm homeowners who char1e that foul odors emit from the. dump behind the Southern California Edison plant. 'The hearing WIS scheduled by the city council Tuead1y ni1ht oo the recom mendation of the staff. 'City Admlnistrator Doyle Miller U· p)ained that the purpose of the hearing will be to determine whether a public nuisance e1lsts. The council could then in.mtute i · cl"I action calling for I.be operators 10· abate the nulsa~e, W)]eu the: use w1s tennin'at.ed '1olunlai:ily by tlie Steversons. Legtl proceedings we.re pictured by Miiier as a short-te.rin solution to· the mud l:lump problem. Xuistaf)t CUy Administrator Brandtr castle rf:ported that among the Ion&:· rlnge'. !Olutions is the me of dry bacteria cultures which would reduce the oily mud · to a liquid. He said testa were being conducted with tht tinY bugs by a private firm and that ~ pn:iposal oti coats 'wtiuld be made IOOft to Josepb aitd Carl Steverson. Castle sltd JM ar:ea coold be cleaned up in 'sii: monthl to a-year. .Couftcilrnan *1 C".oetl uked why legal (lee AitJp DUMP, 1'.•I" ZI ' 0r .... Coan Weather'.· • " Fairer skies ·and · coolet 1emp.i erature1 are art". ·the 1menu, for Thursday, with men:Ury fe1cttn11 .~ ,sa d•i'"! •'W!s •• ~ 00111 •gd up to the middle lltl'! further In- land. ~ INSl,PE 'ioDA l' · . Amerloq"' hnpcllfhl .oi)~. ti\< p a·c·t of Vtctmtniro:b' m South•Cll• ,ul4 and.~ of U.S. l{oOI>' tn!Ph l<ike a Look a' Ko,rta. Pogi J~. · ,. ' '""'' . ...... ' . ==... l i: ~~ ... '' c.tMr C... II ---::= a.g ~·u,. ? -.c:u. .•. •:: ~ ~ ti • .,:,. • 2t 0-'! ........ • DI', 's ....... '"'" .,....,.. • • s .... ,....,.. • " ............ ··~· = J-111Nlllllf •»!J ' ,........ ... •IJIM:lt »ti Wffll>w ' t ' -.. ~ '-........,.. • w;;""i.:"' -:: • r J I ----·'· . I ~y _Pl.\!JT WldMld&J, ,,....,, 17, 1971 Yacht: Race·~ Straggles ' To Close .. ·:' BJ li.MON LOCKAIJEY . 1' ,t,,• ' Of ....... , ..... il•lt .. PUERTO VALLAl\l"A ~ Tho firll Marina dei Roy,to PuOrto Vallarta.yacht race .dri1&1ed· to a close today \fith lhe lasl ,ol tho.'6-boat llett 1lru"ll111 towa{d ~ flnilh µnt . Twelv• .in tho flffl had finished by I a.m. loday and three had dropped out of the race. Pair of Eagles · m1atdleu of late finishes, the overall ~ Ume wbmt:r · will be John Holiday's Erlalln · 35, Aquarius from Loli« Btaeb' Yad>t Cub which flllllhed at l :.S p.ro::· -1\letday to knock Ruca1 oui ol. the correcttd Ume lead ln the 1,1~ ·mHITaeJ. Aqartur. 1'11 one of ·three $r!Cf0ft 35s in the fleet Tba other two, Freertyle a~ Olld ()Jupie, -were cauaht in • park~ ing lot ·tome 10 miles at 1ta, but. were sUll espt<tecl to llnlab.iater today aIOlllld Gordon Buller, 16, nett) and David Force, 16, have achieved Ea&le · status -the highest rating in Scouting. Both are juniors at Foun· tain Valley High School. Bolh live in Huntington Beach. They aro members of 'l'roop 555, sponsored by the Rancho View School PT A.. noon ... · • ·John Hootal's Dettl!ly U from Newport Harbor Yacht Club wa1. the thlr4 6oat to drop ·wt of the · race. It motored into Puerto Vallarta. · Police Release Suspect The other two dropouts ,..ere Aventura and Babe II: · Yachta which had finilhed by midnight Tuetday Jltre SlriUJ 11, Rascal, Widgeon, Q~ :II,· Arie&, Novla de! .Mar, Doro.lflY· o,. Nadrugador, Aqua r.1 ~ • • In ·3 · Execution Murders Quasar, X~-1W_ko and pakar. . · FORT WORTH, Tex. (UPI) -Police Approaching the fln!Sh Une this mom-. today arrtsted a rii an they said Very ~na~ereB~~~ r=~yl:.ac~:~;;u~ ·-~·ch -~enlbled --O~e of -t~o ·-brothers Odd Couple. charged with the execution.style murder The rest of the fleet will strag1le of three sheriff'1 dtpuUes. The man, across the finilb durinl the day Tburf" however, turned out to be a Me1ican dalmm,unications between the United naUonal who had been questioned 24 States and Puerto Vallarta has been hours be.fore. hampered by overloaded lint5 through Officus at first thought the man was the overseas operator and only a ham Rene Adolfo Guzman, 33, who po 11 c e radlo network hu been able tq. handle D ll the task. lnformaUon is being fed from said shot the three. deputies on a a a1 the escort vessel Pioneer to._ ~oil rlv~r levee Monday night. Mudson on WBeRMA in Newport Beach Police from Dallas told Fort Worth I ~ch 11 pas1lng on the infprrnation officers they bad arre1ted · the same to news media. Alto ·on the ne~k 'man Tue.tday afternoon and released iJ Dave Ati.lnl in Loi Anitlu on W1v-'-tilm after determining he bad nothing to do with Ulf! slayings. f'rom Pqe l : ~ ·. MUD DUMP •• • proceedings were necessary if . lht stevenons were cooperating and if a solution seemed possible. "We need to do something now to stop that USt," Miller responded. 'Many people will not want thi! Ult to continue even for 1i1 monUll." . The city ha5 been llffn a petition bearing more than 300 . nlmj!J Jrom residents in soutbelJt HunUngtori Beach. The peUUoner• clalm the dump . Is 1 danger to Children as an attractive nuisance and 1 health hazard because of the offensive odora. The dump, located at Magnolia St.rtet and Hamilton Avenue, has been used for the deposit of mud from oil well drllling for more than 30 yeani. Complaints against the dump charge that recent foul smells were caused by wastes from a refinery. The dump is not licensed for tht dwnpin& of reflnery wasle1. City Attorney Don Bonfa aald that the public hearing would bt: necessary becalllt the city needs "substantial evidence" If It la to find th•t a public nuisance. exlstJ. .·, The Marth 1l htarlng will be an adjourned m~illg~f · the. council so the councll may ~ such . a ~& if it detennlnes a nuid.nct eJ.lsU. . It wiU be conducted 11 ~,legal pro- ceeding with Bonfa being In <:barge of the case In fa vor of a n~aance and the property o":'nen: ha.ndlln&. Ulf: case against. :·, · ·;· ·-· A court reporter will take down \ht testimony. The hevinl and. use· of • court report.er wel'll 1.approved on a 4-1 vote wllh Councilm8ri Nonna Glbbs being oppo!<d and Maypj: . Donald .Shipley ab~enl. " • DAILY PILOT Ou.HO'-COAST ,VKUHIH'CCIW'All'I a.Hrt H. WM ,,.,.,.~_ ........... J•c.k l. C:1rl•y • VIC• ,..-,1Hn1 •rA ..,_.t ...... Tli•m•t Ktt'lil _,: li.llllir lhe11111 A. ~wr,ltl~• M....,lrlt'l'fllw Al11t Olrkiit wnt ~"'* CWll•r l!dJIN' Albert W. t.tn Mtklllt .. lier H----171115 ....... h1l"'tf4 M•llfq A4irtii1.1..0 ..... Jto, t!MI OMitt offl&t.· E.arller in th~e. day Dallas County Depu· Musicians Set For Competition In Huntington A dozen y0W1g mwiclans will compete for summer camp scholarships tonight in the Fountain Vatley School District's annual solo music contest. The musical playoff starts at !'7:30 p.m. at Wardlow School, 9191 Pioneer Dr., Huntington Beach. The best musician will win a two week Summer scholarship to Anowbear music camp. The number two player will earn a $50 scholarship to Arrowbear, while a $25 scholarship 1oes to lhlrd place. . Prizes art provided by the Fountain Valley Classified Employees Association. These 12 talented youngaters were selected from 113 comJM!tllor1 in the district's solo and ensemble festival Jan. 30. Six yoUngsters play violins. t\\'O on t.rumpeli, two on flutes . one is a tuba player and one with a cello. Enrollment Up At Golden West Golden West College's spring enroll- ment -has soared 3:1 percent, the largest ~mester increase In the college's li ve- year history. AsseSlling reasons for the sharp jump, <!Ollefe oUclals said the employment pie· ture and an increase In high school stu· Clents graduating in mld·year. are likely causes. Registration 1talbtics from the 1dmi5- 1lons olfice. show 4,517 day 11.udenia:, up t.049 from the sprin1 semesttr a year ago; and 5,IM evenlng studeftla:, up 1,470 ~ lasl 1pripg. Combinea d1y and evtnln1 rtgistration ls 10,2.\l, "'hlch Is 33 percent higher thao iait spring'• 7,732. Satellite Launched ". V.o\NDJil'IBE~G AFB (UPI\ -A 11ttlll1.e employin1 a Thor·Burner 11 ~ .combination wll launched al '1 :S2 p.m. , Tuesday from this apace and mlulle · .teJI. center. ty Sheriff Allan Sweatt said he hoped Cur.man had decided to flee the. Dallas area-b'e'Cause-a fugitive an the run was easier to catch. .. We hope he starts running because a running rabbit is easier to tatch than one sti.11 in his hole," Qllef Sherif.l's Deputy Allan Sweatt said. Sweatt said crews of deputies and other officers had sought Guunan throughout the night and that new crews took up the. search today. · "He may still be holed up in Dallas and he. may have left town. But we can't afford to take any chances," s·we.att Said. Moises Zuniga Guzman, 35, ~e'I\ brother, also was charged with the murders. Relatives said Rene , an ex-con- vict, is a "mean man." Moises Gozman wu arrested Monday night within hours of the shootlnas. A statewide search was under way for Rene Guzman. "He think.! he's Al Capone.'' one of Rene's relatives said when the murder charge.1 ·were filed against the younger brother about midnight Moaday before a jll!tice of the peace .. 1'he Gutman brothers were aCCURd of for cing five deputies, three from Dallas County and two from neighboring Ellit Cowit~. to drive. to a secluded spot in the Trinity River bottoms where they allegedly planned to execute all of them. Three deputies were executed. one was wounded and the fifth escaped Without lnjury. Fountain Valley Ups Filing Fee For Developers It "'ill now cost developers $100 to file a precise plan for apartme11ts, com· mercial stores or industrial projects in Fountain Valley. City councilmen upped the fee Tuesday night from $25 to $100 to bring it in line with neighboring cities. A report £rom the planning department showed that Garden Grove charaes $1~ to process precise plans, while ·Santa Ana and La Palma both have $100 fees. "I can assure it costs much more than $100 to process these plans," Clinton ~i~errod, planning direc~lor loM the C<>Uh' Precise plans show· a the details of a project. Such plans ar not required ior R-1 (single f.amily homes) or R-2 {low deruiity multiple) developmenl.!I . Three other cities still charge le.11 than $100. Huntington Beach has the lowest fee., $25. Other charges 1r~ J50 for Newport Beach and S75 for Westminster. Prostitutes Seized In Italy 'Scorcher' ' ROME (AP) -Police arre&ted 28 prostitutes Tu.esday night "' 1 r m i n i themselves at bonfires they had built in the streets. They were charged today with violatiiig the law forbidding fires in the streets. L•flllll IHOll 2211 ,.,.., A-... Cod• M•• 1 UD: w.11 h r ''""" .....,.,, llHllr "''J:.':-llltlt ... ~ tell ~·: "' II Ct"*" a.J Students R11le I Beach Kids Take Over City Hall Studtnta wfll get the.Ir chanct: to run HWltlngton Beach at the next clty council ~ mettJnt. Twtnt)'.,tJ students from Edison. Marina and Hunlln&ton Beacll hlsh ichooJs wW wume the roles of depart· rnent headl,' mayor and councllmc.n Mon· day, March I· 'l1le city <;qlll!Cll agre<d upon thla d•l• at Its meeUnc Tuelday ntaht. Tbt lt\ldtnts will arrive 11t ·city hall at 1 :30 p.m. and wilt be ll'ltroduced to d~p11rtment heads and visit the v•riou• I city orf\ces. They will be. given packets tonlalnillj tbe agenda and suppartlng docu ments for the council mffilnC that will begin at f ::Kl p.m. The ttudent.s will ilt next lo thtir counterparts during the. l'OW\Cil mttUng and during the 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. break betYletll council sessions Uley 1"111 ao to dinner vdth the council. Tht Youth CoaliUon Committee coorolnated the arrangements for this year·s government day v.'illl the city and schools. Pli~ht of Flight Told . . I · · -MeadowlarkPilo~ Enumerate Dangers A kite with a .:..in leader· was nown 1n the-Wahl path ovtr ~iealo~·Jark Alrport at the we.tkend, .the Huntington &ach City Council was &old Tuuday night. Robert Dingwall, bead of Ule city's airport committee, said that several planes were damaged including his own· and urged the council ·to instruct t~ police to rigidly enforce 1)1 pertinelit ngulatloos. Another pilot, Fred. De.nnucio, also reported that he had a near miss with the police helicopter patrollnt the airport. _ He said that ·two weeks ago he wo coming in to land at 1:05 p.m. and as ht was rlying over the golf course the helicopter went directly undemeaUt him. He said that the. polic.e Crill .thtn turned and chased hlat back to tbe airstrip. "Jt wu obvious they ~·ere tryin& to aggn:sslvely patrol that alrport and in effeCt knock me out of the sky," Den· nucio 18id . Later DeMucio, who commuJ.es daily to Hawthorne, agreed that the · pilot of the. police helicopter probably didn't aee him, "but he was trylng to patrol ag- gressively." Dennucio and Ding wall both urged that the police enforce regulations· ~ · the._ state public ut~ty codes. ~nn~cio as.ked for clarification on whether he coula fly at night. saying that the police pilot had warned him that night flying ~·as illegal. City Administrator Doyle Miller laid that no night flying is permitted at ?ifeadowlark until obstruction lig1lb are placed on high tension wires around the field. He added that when lights: are installed night flying will be permit· ted twO houri alter legal sunset or until IO p.m., whichever occurs first. There was a round of diaculL'lion on this problem with Dingwall and Dem_iucio explaining the difficulty of detennining Planners Review Tower Proposal Developers or a proposed 17-&tory reftrment tower overlooking downtown Huntington Beach will bring their plaru; to the planning commission for approval tonight. The high rise project. similar to the Bethel Towers in Costa Mesa. is pegged tor .locatlon on tht aouth a~e of Adams Avenue between· J7lh and Main Street. Although the development was vetoed by the plannin1 commission earlier. city councilmen have approved the. tower con- cept. Tonight, at 7:30 o'clock at city C(luntil chambers, the plaMing l'Ommission will review detailed plans for the to~·er, as required by the city council. TODAY liy J.. C. HUMPHlln "GOOD INVESTMENT" Although \\'e all k fl o \V that a diamond is a good inveStment, most or us have never realty compared it to some of the major expenditures wt periodically ihcur. U you have not made such a comparison, you might find it intei:estins to do so by taking a second look at your invest· ments in cars and fUrs. Man y of us buy-an experu:ive car w h i c h \Ye know -will be almost worthless lh a few 'years, and we seem unconcerned about deprecia- Uon, carlhg more for appearance an,d perfoi-mance. And many people buy costly furs, kno\ving that they will someday w~ar out or go out ol styl e. \Vhethcr· you're talking 1 bout diamond1 aa a symbol ot love, or as an investment, the old phrase, 11A diamond is·roreve r,'1 applies equal- ly \veil ; because a diamond's ap- pearance remain& the same. it never wears out or aoes out of style; and not only does It not depreciate, it actually increasea.in· value, a beau· lilul and practical hedge aglinJt in· D1Uon! Diamond• tr• our busine11s ••• not investmlnt counseling. But '1'f: are capabl e of hel ping you make a good Jovestment in a dlam(lnd; so come on In ... , our diamond coun· selinf Is froel ·---·. what consiltutes letal aunset. City Attorney OOn Bonfa pointed out thlt a new ordinance ls being prepared which will regulate night flying on the grounds of noise. .abatement It wa1 agreed that Councilman George McCra cken and Dingwall would work with the attorney's office in the prepar- Discussed Killing lion ol Utls otdinanct. Police Chief Earle Robitailit. told the councilmen lhat the California Depart• ment of Aeronautics had informed blm that it wu lega l for a plane to Dy and land at night so Jong a1 It had proper lights. lt "'.&S not relevant whether the airport had lights on or not. Huntington Girl Linked To Murder by Witness A proaeculion witneas tOday ltstified that Martha RJ&gs of Huntington Beacll and convlcltd killer Robert Eugene WWlarna dlscussed the murder of Robert Leroy Hermann shorUy after the event and that Mias Riggs put the 1un used in the killlna ln her purse. John M. Harding, 23, hesitantly told a jury In Oranae County Superior Court Jud&e Claude M. Owens' courtroom that Mlu R.Jg:s, lt, of 1824 Park St., asked Williams shortly aft.er he arrived at her borne tut Nov. 1: ''Did you do it?" Airport Chief Fined for Row At Meadowlark Meadowlark Airport operator John Turner wu fihed '150 Tuesday in WutmlMter Munt<:ipal Court for diaturb- jng the peace. He entered a guilty plea to the charge which stemmed from a row Dec. 28 with twO Huntington Beach pollct officers over hls airport ope.ratloa. Judge David Aaron dis~ four other char1es -two count! of assault and battery, one for resisting arrest and one. for ope.rating an airport without a permit -which had been filed against Turner. Turner had been battling nearby homwowners over the ope.ration of Meadowlark Airport which they claim i! hazardous and a nuisan«. The Huntington Beach City Council had stepped into the fe ud and banned night flying at Meadowlark until certain improve.merits we re made. Offi«rs Bruce Smith and John Foster said they spotted Ulegal night flying at ltfeadowlark on Dec. 28. They said v.•hen they talked with Turner he became belligerent and used profanity. Turner was arrested that night and charged with assault and battery. Tues· day, however, he was found guilty only of disturbing the peace. Harding said Williama replied, "Yes, I snuffed Hermann." -: . And he told deputy district attorney Robert Chatterton that Williama, 11, 41' 1504 Pecan St., Huntington Be1ch. then, ... described the manner in which he tho( Hermann in the back of the head 8nd ,. left the dying t~year-01d.· vlcUm in a.-. bedroom of the }lermann home at 41&;.. lSth St., Huntington Beach. , 1. Miss Riggs is accused of murder anti<· conspiracy to commit murder. Cha.Uertcru.. repeated today that he ·will not •k the death penalty for lhe attractive d .... · Iendant. Williams b already serving a life. sentence imposed . two wttb aao by. Judge Robert L .. Corfman as Willlam.s:· interrupted a jury trial to admit that he killed Hermann. Williams said he and Hermann antr Miss Riggs were thrte of five younf persons arrested on drug chargu severi~ days b~fore he went to Htnnann's home and shot his codefendant. · It was ·testi fied in the Williams trial that Hermann was shot be.call.!e ·of the. belief ~Id by both Williams •nd Misir· Riggs that HermaM was a police in· former. ~ It wu also testified that Hermann; had never at any Ume ci>ntactect· police or inVesflgatoTs be.rore or after lils arrest' on drug charges. ·• County Approves·. ' Land Purchase Pul'.:chase of the former Pacifi<: Etec-•. tric Railway rlght-of·way .in Suns,,~ Beach for ,l,37S,OOO was approved Tuft:. day by the Orange County Board or Supervisors. . The Project has been under Way 4in~·· July of 1968 when proposecfby Supetvislr David L, Baker or Garden Grove. ,,- Acquisition Of the one mile long, i&foof wide strip wfll allow the develbprnent- of a 1,130 mile space ·parking lot W· allow publi c use of the beach. The· project will be financed by •a federal grant, gas tax money and &eneraL· tax money. OFF SALE on these 4 most'popular patterns • • ~ • • 0 ! ~ • .. ~ • A wonderful oppomm.icy to 811 in or attrt your ..rvica aow •. , e\·1.a give a vtry tnuund gift Tbett't a complete open Mock Klectioa availablt u well •place 11ttiDp. ADd all al areat aavinp for """'prido ID oniq 0< pvta1 too foaily ..,,.,., SaltUrnl10d-F~14thNMucll 13, 1f71 J. C. .J./.uniphrieJ Jeu1efer:1 1823 NEWPORT eL VO., COSTA MESA CONVlNl 00 TIJt:MS IANIAMllllC.A.lD-MAnlJt:CH.4.lSI 14 Yl.AJIS IN SAMI LOCATION PHONI 141·1~01 " . ,, ' • ' ' • < I . ~' .. •: ,• .: ' . I' I I I 1' I • • ' ' .. -. ' Teday'11 FlnaJ N.Y. Stoelu -. . .,, ,. VOl. 64, NO. 41, 6 SECTIONS, 6"1PAGES-, . -. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA1 ·. ~ WEDNESDAY, °FEBttUARY 17; 1971 TEN CENTS . . ~chool Officials Cite Salary Tax Rate Hike . . ly GEORGE LEIDAL Of 1119 Dally Pllet Slaff School District officials said Tuesday the Newport-Mesa Education Associa· lion's sal'ary and contract proposals \\'ou1d cos' an additional SfJ million dqllars and TtRUire a tu rate hike ol neuly $2 pu $lei>. assessed valuaUon. Ray Schnierer, business manager for the district said about half oI the items in the teac1Jel'5' contract proposal would co.st the district an extra $4.1 mill.ion. Yacht Race ~traggles ' To Close By ALMON LOCKAllEY Of 1111 011/y "lllt Sl1H PUERTO VALLARTA -The first Marina del Ray to Puerto Vallarta yacht ract draued to a close today with the last ol the 26-boat fleet struggling toward the finish line. Twelve in the fleet had finisbed by I a.m. today and three had 'dropped out of the race. Regardless of late finishes , the overall corrected time winner will be John Holiday's Ericson 35, Aquarius from Long ~ach Yacht Club which finished at 1 :45 p.m. Tuesday to knock Rascal out of the corrected time lead in the 1,125 mile race. 'ftquarius was .one of three EriCSJ?n ~ :m the fleet. The othar two, Fr"style and Odd Couple, were caught in a park- ing lot some 20 miles ~t sea, buf were still expected to finish laLer today around noon. ·Yohn Hooten's Destiny ll front Newport Harbor Yacht Club wu lhe third boat to drop out of the race. Jt motored into Puerto' Va1larlil. 11ie other two dropouts were Aventura and Babe 11. Yachts Vt'hich had finished by midnight ~ were Sirius II, Rascal, Widgeon, Querida ll, Aries, Novia del Mar, Dorothy 0 , Madrugador, A q u a r i u s , Quasar, Ya Turko and Dakar. Approaching the finish line thi.! morn- ing were five more yacht.s. Carina, Kanaka. Bug, Freestyle, Sigame, and Odd Couple. The rest of the fleet vdll straggle across the finish during the day Thurs- day. Communications between the United States and PuerUJ Vallarta has been hampered by overloaded lines through the overse.as operator and only a ham radio network has been able to handle • the task. Information is being fed from the escort vessel Pioneer to Carroll H1.1dson on WBORP.tA in Newport Be~ch which is passing on the 1nformat1on to news media. Also on the network Is Dave Atkins in Los Angeles on W6VX. N.ewport Man Given Honor A Newport B e a c h industrial lea der has received America 's highest civilian award for outstanding servi~ in the field of anti-submarine w a..r fare technology. Richard C. Fuller was cited Wednesday In military ceremonies at North Island Naval Air Station, San Diego. Tb'. Distinguished Public S e r v I o e ~ward was presented by Adm. Turner t . Caldwell. Fuller is p_residenl of Royal Industries, Santa Ana. a firm manufacturing precision parts used in nuclear power production. READERS RESPOND TO PILOT'S ADS It seems that· everyone must be read· tna; DAILY PILOT classified ads these days. They're respcndin1, too; that's how ,..e kno"lf'. *BOAT CARPENTER a.nd FIBERGL.ASS. Ptrm. job W/frinp benelil1, LAKE MARINA (Phone number ). This advertiser was lookin3 for a 1inale 8ppllcant. He lost count of the classified r,1ponses on the second day lhe ad ran. A DAILY PILOT ad-vbor an btlp you 1et that kind of resull.I. too. Just call on the direct line, &42·5'71, and tit back. Help will be on the way. .. We11 be luck; lf the total package COf09di in at less than · $8 milUon," Schnierer nkl. The prt"sent ta~ rate of $5.13 per $100 of assessed valuation for Costa Meu taxpayers.,~ ·$4.79 per 1100 for Newport Beach p~ owners WO\lld be lncttaoed by 11.10 to. raise II million in flew revenue, said Walter Adrian, director of fiscal pli1nning for the district. 'ttlis mearu: tbe owner of a $.10,000 Mme in Colt:a Mesi, fur ciample. would pay an e1tra $143 in ta1es to support !ht Newport-:_Mesa district, if the board wert to accept the entire salarv package propma.I. Such a property owner now pays about $385. Mucl;l of what the: teachers seek in their contract propobr cOuld not be paid Ollt of current tax 'revenues, Adrian noted. Voters prob"ably wouJd ht\':? ·to approve the higher tai levy in the form of an override. The board's alternatives to the salary package ''have not yet been discuss:ed," Adrtan•1afd. T~ district's estimates are based on reviews of individual Item requests presented to the board at Its Feb. 2 meeting by "the Newport·Me.sa Education Association. Bart Hake. e1ecutive secretary of the teachers group, told the school board Tuesday night that he bt1ieve1 salary proposals could be paid out of a 31-ctnt per SIOO tax ·increase if the district ~U.S. Troops would reallocate rtSOW'Ctl lncludln& con- tingency reserves. , The district Is tryinc. to shill the burden of ta.1 Increase resPonsibitity onto teachers by auaching cmta to. the pay demands, Hake argued.". • Di!itrict estlmatet Of the salary pro. posal roils were sought by school board President Selim S. '"Bud'' Franklin at ~-openlng'of Tuesday .. , boird mffling. !'uperl{ltendent William Cunningham indicated the esUmates were priliminary aod 1ubjecl to further examinatJon. Hate todly Wt! Jbe IU m!l)lop partial list of tncre.ased costs included at leut $329,750 of coats that a1rddy were budgeted. There may be other coatJ lioled as increaae:s by the district which are e:rpenaes the district would pay even without the teachers' aa.lary proposal, Hake contended. · Teachers WOll)d ret I rai.ae ol about 10 percent if the salary acbtdule were (Seo SALARIES, P• ,I} Under Fire Command Rushes Reinforcements to Viet Base Face of Trqed11 Mrs. Robert Haken of TVo(in Fa.Us,_ Idabci, is, 1& years old. fow: months" pregnant and is now a· widow. ,Her' )fie ~UJ· ml; al~ 'ta; lied 'this w1e1C; He had been 1nifling glue. . . , S'~t8'1:Aµa Asks . Irvine Cityhood Decision Study Santa Ana isn't through trying to acut- Ue the future city of·lrvine. The City Council Tuesday night voted ~ ask the Local Ageocy Formation Com· rplssion to reconsider It! approval of th~ proposed incorporation of the model city. Distressed over Inclusion of a 93.1-acu industrial tract officials of the county seat municipality want for themselves, the cOUncil will act under a new 11tate statute that allows any legislative body to appeal for recons ideration. Councilman Jerry Patterson. in pr~ po,ing the move, said, "I just want to make it absolutely clear they thought about it and decided against us." Richard Turner, executive secretary of the LAFC, said this morning the commission had takeo the parcel, and the agreement involving it, into con· s.ideratlon. Santa Ana point.a to an . eight-year-old agreement it bad with the Irvine Com- pany that sUpulated the property in question would be aooued to that city this spring. The Irvine Company, ROlnting out It had nothlilg to do with including the parcel i.1'1 the proposed boundaries of the new city. has, however. maintained that the agreement is no longer in effect, sioci the action· of one council cannot (See IRVIN~ P1ge II SAIGON !UPI) -U.S. commanders rushed reinforcements Wednesday to out· numbered defenders of an American base supporting the South Vietnamese cam- paign into Laos. Field report! said Com· munist troops were firing from all sides despite heavy U.S. air and artillery pressure. The combat around Fire Suppcrt Base Scotch 10 miles from th.e Laotian border was part of a pattern of he11vy fighting in· mountain jungles near the reactlv'ated U.S. airstrip at Khe Sanh, headquarters for the 9,000-man American support ~k force. · Preliminary reports indicated at least five Americans were wounded in the battle· near Fire Support Base Scotch an~ military sources said a U.S. Army helicopter was .11bot down near it Wed- nesday afternoon. No ca.11ualties were re.ported in !he 16th U.S. helicopter loss of the Hk:lay Laos campaign but f I v e Americans were killed in the. crash of a U.S. Army Chinook helicopter near Hue Monday night in an incident not related to the South Vietnamese th.rust into Laos. Reports late Wednesday ·said elements of the 20,000-man South Vielname.se e1- pediUonary force had driven 15 Jl'l 11 es inSide Laos. an advance of one mile in a 24-hour ,period. The ~ush wu described as slow and cautious. A Saigon 'e:>mmuniqlie said the Laos for,ce .killed 500 Communists In the first nine days of the o~ratk>n and f I e 1 d reports Wednesday mcreased that figure by· 't8. South Vietnam"ese losses were placed al" 127 killed and 454 wounded plus three killed and four wounded In combal Wednesday. The U.S. troops called in artillery strikes Tue.sday night and early Wed- nesday within a few yards of the New PX Scandal Revealed. . ' ' . . I• .,.. ~ . .. ' : .. Se~. ~~~"'t Cha~t~ _.Vie~tn Bribes,:KU?kJ>?,e~., ~ .. ' • • • t ~ j WA!HINGroN (UPI) --Senole ill· bhr!np-would enmlht a)liptJGns 'el Chm(, r_..nlln1 '~)>I;~ ~·-~god l<>day tllat beer-"l"1 .....,.,. klcilbatks ani ""~· .Jjl( • ..,, and Jim~~iMf> • l!P liquor' qeiits plied h I 1 h • f 1 n k 1 n g blllciais from U.S. firm• • ·f~int co ~ uir.-· American Officials in Vietnam with growing volumt or prdduota· dur IJe • .manlien of Px··-ijsttm' In. th favon: -such as a villa with maids Arii.triean buildup in Vtetnarfl,dta1oa the Vietnam· in a four~m bpuse, '. -· to promote sales of thtir products 1980t," The Villa was decofattd 1n "natural to ·servl~men on mllltaty baset. THe charges of special favorS to some ~b rattan" wilh wall·t~wall carpet The disclosures came as the Senate civilian and military official~· involved and came equipped With a blmboo bar, cpened oe\v "bearings into tbe '3 bllliOn in tHe PX programs were made tiy a cook and two mal<li, Duflt said. . post e1change operations run by the Lavern J. Duffy, assistant ~nsel for The lieutenant cOlonel was ldentlfled Defense Department. the comm.iltt!. He delivered a 4~page aa. John G. Goodl,eU Jr. Duffy said Sen. Abraham A. Ribicoff (D-C.onil.), summation of the subcommittee stafrt Goodlett acknowledged ln an affidavit acting (:halrm.an of the Permanent Investigation at the openlg of the hearing. that be had lived lo tbe hou.s"e free, Investigat.ions Subcommit!ee , old the Duffy said that in 11166, William J. ptyini $100 a month for food only. Interest Rat·es Reduced On U.S. Insured Loans WASHINGTON <UPI) -Interest rates on home loanJ insured by the federal government wtte reduced today by one- half of one percent lo seven percent -the third such cut ln as many months. Affected are mortgages insured by both the Federal Housing Administration and the V e t e r a n s Adnilnistration. Covered are not only home purchases but also FHA mortgages on apartment developments and other housing. Announcement of the reduction wa9 made by Housing Secretary George W. Romney and Donald E. Johnson , ado ministrator-of veteran affairs. The effective date of the cha nge la Thursday, Feb. 11 -that Is, the cut applies on applications realved after today. Romney 's office said that outstanding commltmenta for lnsuranc' "1ould con- tlnue to be honored at their original interest rate. However, the announcement said various federal offices involved In mortgage loanti ''have been. instrUcted lo negotiate with lenders to seek reduc· tlons in the interest rate on subsidized mortgages to lhe new lower rate regardless of the rate of tbe original commitment." The new rate is the lowest ip more than two yea rs for governm.ent·backed mort1ages. The rate rose from fl~ to 71A percent on Jan. 23, 1969, on Its way to the al-time hlgb of S'h-percent -imposed Jan. 4, 1970 -which prevail· ed for most of last year. From the high mark. the ceiling was cut to eight percent last Dec. 1 and to 7lii percent on Jan. 12. Tougher J>arking Laws Drafted By Commission Tough new parking regulatioru; design- ed ID ease the demand for on-street park.iii& spacea throughout the city have been .drafted by the Newport Beac:J,. Planning Commission. A public hearing on the proposal that affects all resi denllaJ ·and hotel-motel development, but h.its duple1es and small apartment.. the hardest, will be con- ducted March 4 at 7 :30 p.m. in City Hall. Ju proposed, the regulation! would require two garage ,1pece1 per unit for one, two. three and four.family homes. Current z.oning requirea only one garage per single-family house and ·one garage per · .unit in two, three. and four-unit apartments. · Cetatered ita Newport The new regulations wouJd actuaUy ealiG. the restrictions on hotel-mote.I develop·ments, reducing the number of required spaces per pest room from two to one. Bc;>ating Club Plans Bared A plan to create a naUonwide boating organlzaUon to be headquartered In NeWJ>Ort Beach and patterned after the American Automobile Association {AAA), WIS discJOled today; To be known as the Seafarers' Safety and Servict Club, Inc .• (SSS). the club is the brainchild of Reginald S. DoJJ, a M-yea r-<>ld former business eiecutivt. The first 11.ep toward realization of the club, which Doll 11y1 has ~n in the planning st8iges five yeara. wlll be the operrin& of,a major marine fuel dock adjacent to the Balboa Pavilion. Doll wUI 10 before the Planning Com· minion ThW'•daY night seeking a we permit for a 71).foot fuel dock with two aervtce &Ups. Tbe next step wi.R be rtbuildlng the former Balboa Playland atructure aO'os1 the mall , which. Doll aays. will be done in conJW>Ctlon with the propooed hi&h·r~e development of the adjacml Fun Zone property. Doll 's plans call tor a Imo st simultaneous developroent of a snnilar facility in Huntington Harbour with ad· ditional rapid etpamton along much or teh Southern California coiistline. "Each major harbor al'>rtg the California coast. and eventually lhl! Florida coast and then the northeast coast." Dell said, "'fill bf serviced by a Oeet of bo3ll With a command craft moiiitoring every lingle ft'e(1Utncy 'USC"d by pleasure boatmen.•• He said the club \viii offer aearch and rescue acrvl~t!, .with two• vessels on duty throughout the day and night In Newport Horbor alooe . In •ddlUon. ·be· said, the SSS has CM- tract.ed with a J>rlvate helicopter tel"Vice al Long Buch A~porl which will .be on 1f.hour standby. ·-J · The. club will also provide special in- surance plans and will operate a series of marine 1upp!y atore11 along the coast that will offer major di.acountl to S.SS members, he said. The navigational domain of the SSS, according to Doll, will initiaTiy e1tend from Malibu to Oceanside and 20 miles beyood Santa Catalina Island. Doll said the first e1pan.slon 1"111 In- clude tbe area. from Santa Barbara to the Mexican border. Doll said the S.SS ~ beillg fundod through private capital and has lnltial financing of slightly le• than $500,*- Among the other printipals llsl«I In • financial report 'prepared for tbc Plan- 'nlng Commission are WtJley R. Kewish Ind Dav1d C. Honey. Doll oald th< club will lnltlale Ill membership drive about M.arCh 1 and antlclpalcs 5,000 members tho lint yur, ' On large apartment projects. ·the number of parking spaces would not be significantly affected, except that all off.street .parking would have to be covered , Ellsting regulations stipulate that one space (two are required for every unit beyond four) may be open. Wtiile doubling tbe number of parking spa.cu required for small apartment.I, the proposed· amendment does ease off on aetback requirements for provi4ln& those additional spaces.. • The draft says a parkln1 apace may encroach Into 1 required side yard bt. the R-l. R~ and R~ zo11t1 pnwldod that tide yard does not abut a . street or -.lley,. other rt1trictlon1 etlpulaf• lhlt 1:0 y· encroachment for an enclosed garagei lfJIC'! ahAU not ex~ one llOrj In. height ahd II may exteod to Ille property line on one side only. oo 1 Jot h1vi111 a w.Jdth ot ao feet or lesa, the required aia of a ll\ree.car g1r1ae ma.y be ~uctd, to oot leu than 26 lee\ In Width bj 20 . ftet ln depth. ' base perimeter. The U.S. whplants Dew through dangerously low cloudl which closed down to a ceiling ·ot only MD ftet at times. In Saigon, rhilitaty sources aaid Wednesday the four-month around·the· clock:, U.S. air offtnsive against the ff() Chi · Minh Trail ill i..oa bu knockod out nearly 7 ,000 North Vietnamese supply trucka -more·tban one~lrd of Hanoi's Oeet~ the sources said th.is was 2,000 more trucko lhon the total destroyed during the autumn and winter air strikes againat the trail tn .1969-70. Vice Mayor <::1•i~jc~ Recall Bid {ij, ~ETBll 'IOllEG Of ,fM 01JIY ,lift Sltff Th~ threat of recall against an but OM inember ol the Newport Beach Ci\y Council today was blasted by that one -who said if successful, It would put Jocal government In ahambles . Viet Mayor Howard Rogers uid thi9 morning he will ask the sponsors of the movement, attorney Max Stur1es and realtor Harvey Pease, to fOrget the idea "or Include me in on lt.'1 Sturges said Wednesday be an4 Pea~ are in final stages of forming "'• recall eom"rnilttt . and will file their notice ,of Intent to circulate reCa.11 petitions next week. The recall attempt will be based on the six councilmen'• v()tes endorsing q>n- tinued planning for a multJ-million civic cenler in Newport Center. "If they're going to do it, they should put my name on the list" Rigers said. Rogers was excluded, according to Sturges, because he has repeatedly op- posed the civic center plan. Rogers this morning said the .. issue "is a council matt.er" and should not be used as the basis for a recall attempt. an attempt he said, "that will never get off the ground.'' He aald the entire COWlCil has 1'always acted In good faith. "They have done. nothing Illegal," he said. "Even though I disagree with them on the matter, it ii i council matte?-," he said. Rogers pre.dieted , the sponsors would not be able to get the needed slgnaltll'el on petillons to foree a recall election. About 6,200 slgnafures, 25 percent ot (See RECAIJ.., Pa1e ZI Ora•ge Cont Weacher Fairer skies: and eooler temp. eraturu are on the menu for Tburaday, with) mercury readinp of M deg,.... along the coast and· up to the 1 middle 60s further .& land. ' . INSmE TODAY ) Am<ricario impat{fi.t,U>ilh tho p a c t of VietMmLro:tlotl '" Sowthcas& Mia and urithdr01DCL •I U.S. trooJ)I might 14Jce a look at K~ta. Pcoe JJ. llrth• \ • ...,~ . C:.ll!Mll • ("""f.,CW. "' ....... "" 1 c .......... ~ Q = IWtft ~ °'""" f ..,..,.. , ... '"""....... M4S ,..... . .. -.. ... .._.. ~ , Mtl .. t • -·'"-.. -.. .. -::: ....... . .. ___ .. ... . ,_ .. °'· ..... 11'1t •• ,... l6 T ............. -: -... -. ::::-1 •• ::-tt~ ' I f I I. C~IJY PILO! H Fugitive Newport Pilot Not a 'Fl y by Nighter' By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of Ill• o.ur ,11e1 s•att THE OTHEJl DAY a news release from the l.41 Angeles office of the U.S. AtlOmey come over the transom. It said : "Robert L. ?\ieyer, United States Attcmey, announced today the fillng or a civil action against Ace Flyby or Newport Beach, Calif., seeking civil penal· tits ln the 1mount of $%,000 for alleged violations ol the Federal Aviation AcL "Mr. Flyby, age 151, b charged with having piloted a rented DC3 aircraft from Guaymas, Sonora, hte1ico to Santa Ana, Calif., on two occasions during the month cf March 1969, without possuskin of an air carrier or com- mercial operator's certificate. These fllgbta were perform- ed under contract with Tallmantz Aviation, SJnta Ana, ·Calif., which provided the payment to Mr. Fl)'by, and wu then reimbursed by Paramonut Studios. "THE PURPOSE of the flights was to transport memben al the production staff of the movie 'Catch-22' from location in Guaymaa to the Los Angeles area." A apokesman for Tallman ti said .Ace was· ferrying pilots and mechanics for the 9ld B-25s used in "Catch-22" to and from the movie set. (Ace Flyby is not the pilot's real name. An alias is being used to protect his identify. "Ace Flyby" was chosen for reasons which will become obvious.) \Vhat struck me about the release was the fact that 'l'allmantz. which provided the World War II vintage airmen for the movie, is not knov.rn for blrinl 61-year-old rookie pilots. It just dJdn't make sense that they would hire an incompetent or that a bunch of veteran pilota would allow themstlves to be ferried around by some· one who was less than professional. I decided to find out what it was all about. THE FIRST thing J learned in lookin·g for Ace is that tlterybody knows him, but nobody knows where to find him. including the U.S. Attorney. Deputy Attorney David Anderson said his oUice hadn't managed to serve the pilot. but added, "we'll find him sooner or later." Flyby's real name is not listed in tbe phone book and calls to Tallmantz. the Orange County Dirtetor of Aviation, the airport security office, most o( the leaseholders at the airport, Costa Mesa City Councilman Jack Hammett (a veteran Orange County pilot) and the George Griffjth Company (contract· ors for the movie set airfield in Guaymas) failed to tum up any useful in· formation . 0 "EVERYONE KNOWS ACE," people would say. They just didn 't knO\f where to find him. "He's been 1round for years," people would say. Then, about tv.·o weeks after I began investigating, a voice over the phone said, 1'This Is Ace Flyby, I understand you've been trying to reach me." Ace, it seeffilll, decided to go underground when he heard the FAA was going to prosecute. He was per!ectly willing to talk over the phone, however. To say that Ace is a veteran aviator would be puWng It mildly. He be- gan his flying career in 1925 in the last days of the barnstorme rs and since then has flown just about everything with wings. During World Wai-TI he flew with the RAF. He spent eight years as a pilot for Northv.·est Airlines and has flown with several non-scheduled airlines. WHEN HE was asked about the FAA charges, he laughed. During the five months that "Catch-22" was being filmed, he was flying for Paramount Studios. "I flew in some or the scenes in the movie and did odd flying jobs like taking the dally rushes from the set in Guaymas to Hollywood,'' he said. Ace allowed aWIQw the charges might be the result of a Uttle run-nl 1'1 had with the FAA pe(i"e a few years back in Frankfurt. He was the pilot of a charter jet which flew for a travel club that sfranded 100 Ameri;an tourists in Germany. In the subse:quertt investigation, Ace w.u promised 1mrmmlty if he-would testify for the FAA. •• ~ . ..,. ·,. / + ·-•• ••1 PttADE THE.I'd put it in writing," Ace al . '1But when 1 came to testify, they fO\md out that J didn't have anything to say that they didn't al· ready know. I think they're out to get me because of that. Before this whole thing really got sia~. they t\f4 me tb~y·a, senfq out of ,:ourt for $1.000." Ace said ·be.-. pT'armfng to Stay out orsighl unto l\farcfr'!3. "I tr'gtire 1r- the U.S. Atlroney can't aerve me by then, tbe statute of limitations will have run out on the thing." Ace explained that the regulation in question had S<>mething to do with the overall weight of the plane. He doesn't plan to hire an attorney to defend him. He says it \\'OUidn't be worth it. Be!ldes he figures he only has a month of hiding to go. SO THERE IT IS, the story of Ace Flyby and his misadventure! with the FAA and U.S. Attorneys. And who knows? While they diligently seek him on the ground , Ace Flyby could be somewhere in the wlid blue yonder where he has !pent most of the last 46 years of his Hie. Teacher Group Attacks V se of Labor Advisers Hiring a management consultant firm to advise the Newport-Mesa Unified School District on negotiaUon of teacher demands brought criticism Tuesday night from the Newport-Mesa E d u c a t i o n Association. Superintendent William CUMiflgham told school trustees the $4,000 expense DAllY PllOT OllANG5 COA$1 J.Ol,lllLISklNG COMJ'AN'I' R•••rt N. w ,,4 ~,..,. ... , ..... l"Ull!lllllt Jecil l. C11rley \11ct "l'l•kttf'll el'ld 0-11 MIMQV EdllOt Tliern 1• ICeevfl Thotr11• A. Mur,hine MMll'Jl"I Edltw l. 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Sutiilcrflt!IM ty <•,.!tr 12.H ...,.1ttt~1 01 tNH tl.11-llllft "IU!ttory 11n11nt1ton1, n .u "'*llfllf. for the advice of the Beverly Hills firm \\'as necessary because teachers have their advocates and "we need help too." Bart Hake characterized the firm of Joyner, Kelly. Jullan and Dalany as a bunch of "old retired school ad· ministrators who couldn't handle employe relations problems jn the ir ov.·n districls and now have formed a management consultant team.'' Hake said one principal ln the firm \\·as formerly the superintendent of the l..o.!I Angeles school system and another was a known ''union bwter." Hake contended such a firm v.·ould "erect barriers" between teachers and the administration. Teachers would prefer appointmen t of trultee Donald Strauss, a Newport Beach businessman experienctd i n personnel matters and knol\'lt for hi~ conservative stands on employment mat· ters, Hake indicated. "At least v.·e know where he stands and he is willing to let us know early in the game the items on which we'll never reach agreement," Hake said. From Page l SALARIES ... to be adopted. The avera.s:e. teacher's salary would Increase $1,4a0, according to the district examlnatton of tht pr!> f>Ol•I. The tot.al salary hike ~-ould amount to $1.7 million in the 1971·72 1chool ye•r for the district'• 1,195 Lt:achtra. The dlffertnce betwten the $1 million total Mlmated CO$l and the ltsa than N milUon attributed to pay hikes would be due to o th e r Items sought by teachers. These include incre11sed fringe bcnefit.s, lowertd clan sizes. Increased dck leave from JO to 15 d11y1, reading procram improvement, new teacher crtlnlnf.-provisions of substitutes ind weer teachtr ralsea recogn!tln1 long terms of suvlc:t 'A'lth the diatrlct. .... ··-· . - 7 :€andidates ' • Ill Race ~ • ' Deadli ne Nears for 3 V acant Board Seats ' . DAILY P'ILDT llfll l'lte19 SUCCUMBS AT Sl For nr Officer Br•wn Trwlet etecOoN for three seats on each ot·tbe Newport..Mesa Unified School Olstrlct and Coast Community College District boards set for April 20 have Inspired only se ven candidates to run. Deadline for filing is· Feb. 2$ and It appears the ·only "race" for a school board seal will be in trustee area t""·o ot the Coast Comm unity College District The incumbent, Donald G. Hoff or 14842 Harper Street, ~f.idway City, faces !ludent Charles F'. Dagion of J522S · Jackson St., Midv.•ay City in the April 20 election. Two other college district lrustees whose terms expire this year also have filed for · re-election. They are : WWiam E. Keltler of 623 Seventh St., Huntington Beach representing trustee area three, and Robert L. Humphre)l1, 1500 Adams St, Cosla Mesa, area four . Voters from throushout the college d~lrict decide on each area's trustee. although candidates must reside in the a~a they will represent. Coast Cbrn- munlly College district includes Newport Beach, Costa Me1a, Huntington Beach. fount.ain Valley, Seal Beach and Westminster. Only three persons ......: two of them ·incumbenta -have filed for the Newport· Meta Unified School District trustee elec· lion. Donald E. Smalh~ood. of 1981 Kornat St.. Cost.a P.1esa is seeking election to the seat being left by James \V. Pe)•ton, repre1enting trustee area one. Mrs. A1arl111 Bergeson of t 7 2 I Tradewinds Lane , Newport Beach and board President Seµm S.·"Bud '' F'ranklin of 1928 Sant.a A1i.ii Me .. COila Mesa, have filed to retain their seats represe n· ting trustee areas three and six respec· t ive!y. Smalhrood. an · attorney, is.. president o! the Mesa Verde Home.owners' Associa- tion, Franklin. also an attorney. was a mem- ber of the Newport llarbor Union ·Hi1R School board prior to unification. , r-.trs. Bergeson is a housewife who has served four years on the Newport· ~1esa board She se-rved two years on the Newport elementary board prior to unifi<.,ation. Voters from throughout the dilltricl will vole on the three position&. but canditlates must reside in the trustee area they represent. Edwin Brawn, Former Officer, Succumbs at 51 Ball Still Holling * * * Trustees Okay . ' Lawn Bow1ers Hit Anotlier Gutter High School Re111odel Bid funeral arrangements ar pending to· day at Smith's l\1ortuary for Edwin A. Brau•n, former f'.i.ev,.port Beach police officer who died Tuesday night at Hoag Memorial Hospital. He was 51. ~1r. Bra\\'D retired from the .Newi)Ort _. Department in 1960. He 'A'as a native or Buffalo, New York and moved to Orange County in 1946. He first served with the Anaheim police and joined the Newport department in 1953. Mr. Brawn's retirement was the result of disabling injuries he suffered in a traffic accident during Easter Week of 1959. As a motorcycle officer, he was rushing lo the scene ·of an accident on East Coast Highway, \Vhen he was struck by a car at the intersection of Jamboret' Road. Mr. Brawn's wife. Ramona. worked IQf the police department from 1960 - to 1962 when she joined the staff of the Newport Beach Library , where she is currently employed. . JI.fr. Brawn was a member of the Anaheim Elks Lodge 1345. He was a veteran of the U.S. Army during \Vorld \Var 11. In addition to his wife. Mr:· Brawn Is survived by three children, Candace, Randolt and Sandra, of the family home 8392 Reilly Drive in Huntington Beach. ' From Page l IRVINE ••• Members of the Newport Harbor Lawn Bowling Association are going to have to \.\'ai t a little longer for the lav.·n bowling facilities that have bcerl pro- mised to them si,nce 1962. Park, Beaches and Recreation Com· missioners voted Tuesday night to recommend the Cily Council acquire a Sile for ty,·o lawn bowling greens rather than localing them in Irvine Terra<"'e Park. The decision \vas made before a stan- ding·room~nly crowd v.·hich gave com· missioners three hours of testimony on From Pagf! l RECALL ... the registered voters. would be needed lo require the council to call for the vote of confidence. Rogers said he \viii do all he can to try lo talk the sponsors out of it. "I will meet with ~1ax this weekend" h_e ·said," "and try _lo discourage hi~. eithe r that or tell him to put my name on the list." Rogers said a recall v.·ould put cit.v government into a ··fanta stic period of readjustme"nt . 'flt is not In the best interests of the city at this time," he said. The recall drive, according to Sturges. will be directed at Mayor Ed Hirth and Counci_lmen Milan Dostal, Lindsley Parsons. Richard Croul. Carl Kymla and Donald Mcinnis. ., • ~ the subject. In t h e I r recommendation, com· missioners agreed the city council should seek a site which is not in any existln;,: Nev.'port-Mesa Unified School Dislricl park, but if one is not found in fiscal year 1971•72, the greens should then trustees Tuesday night accepted 1 low be located In Irvine Terrace Park. bid or $1.7$ million ror remodelin11 Corona T!3timony from the-c 0 mm unit v del Mar High School providin~ sj)ace members ran about 2 lO I againSt for 800 more students. . locating the greens in the existing park. Berry Construction lnc. of Upland ;as Jrvine Terrace resldenta pointed out successful bidder for the project which the greens would increase traffic, that the facility would require the installation is due for completion by open i-11 1· Of ol a parking lot and that the fenced school next fall. greens would be in conflict with the Superintendent \V illiam Cunningham open play UJe of the park. said he had pared nearly $100,000 from Members of. the Lawn Bowling Associa-the bid to bring it closer to the $1.6 lion ~emlnded commissioners the city · promised them a facility in 1962. Cur· m11lion estimate for. the project. rently there i! one green at ISth Street Board President Selim S. ''Bud'" and Bay Avenue. Franklin objected to the parings. Past Larvin Stewart, director of the PBR experience ha s shown "when v.·e cut Department, said the ideal situation someth ing fron1 a bid to bring it in would be a senior citizens park which llne with an estimate we invaritibly come would Rave two bowling greens, a clubhouse and a tennis court. back later q_nd add ii at tWice tbe "This kind of a park would not be cost." he sa1t1. . : limited to senior citizens only. but it To Cunningham·s surprise most of the would be one designed for their uses " board agreed with Franklin and for a he said. ' Stewart said informal talks have been time it appeared truslees would accept held . ~ith the Irvine Company about lhe total bid of $1.8 million. . acquiring a park site near the Southern The board was primarily conce rned California Edison Company substation that a $27.000 paring would mean con-at Harbor View Homes. struction v.·ould continue into the first Th three months of school. . " ere's a lot of hope-for this site "Is a savings of $27.000 worth the but no firm negotiations have been inconvenience to a million dollar siafl'" started ," he said. "I think it's time franklin asked. · ·' the city made a concerted effort and Cunningham indicated the school could quit bouncing the se'nior citizens around ."' v.·ork , around the delayed openfug ol he stated. ' the new construCtion with '"3ome In· The PBR staff took no position in · i.. ·11 the hearings, but Stewart said •-,., convenience lo t,.e e ucational program:• t bind future councils. Satellite Launched no~· convinced it would be a mi':iake .Truste'es finally ·accepted the ·~l'td A representau·ve of t"e Counc·1 I bid and asked that change orders· that 11 I o to put the greens into Irvine Terrace the COmmunities or Irvine, sponsors or VANDENBERG AFB (UP!l _ A Park. \\'OU!d allow reconsideration of plred the incorporation move, attended the satellite employing a Thor-Burner 11 "Co .d . th Items be brought to Uiem at their next Tuesday Jllght session and offered to nsi ering e comments for the meeting. This way trustees can look meet with Santa Ana officials to dJS. cuss combination was launched at 7:52 p.m. residents. I think installing the greens at each cut and determine whether it the Problem. Tuesday from this space and missile would probably create an intentional ,01,. l l t represents a true saving to the lal· h es ctn er. fl icl," he said. A~t er s~kesman, E. Ray Quigley, l~:::=~=========~r;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;P~•;;Y•~r;;s·~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;:;~ CCI s executive secretary, vie1,1.·ed, "\Ve M v1n111 .... nt v.·ant to be good neighbors, but we don't rt know what we could or couldn't do." GEM TALK 1' lNTERNA TIONAL • STERLING He pointed out that all economic f. feasibility studies for the new city v.·ere }: %, based on anticipated revenue from the ti" area involved. · ,,_..,..._ ({]) A statement by Councilman J. Ogden TODAY 1 1-farkle perhaps ga\'e some insight into r.t 1:.--.-f1[ J the reasons for the council's action. "If \\'e can 't \rin, we can at least by show them we're men ,'' he sald. Trustees Select Data Process ing Cost Study Firm 'l'he $400,()(() a year cost of data pro- cessing to the Newport-~1esa Unified School District will be studied by a San r-.1ateo firm selected by trustees Tuesday night. URS Data Sciences Company was pick· ed by trustees from a field ol four firms which had presented plans for taking a Jong. hard look at the cosl and effectiveness of the computer equip· ment used by the district. The study la ys the groundwork for a cooperative look at possible sharing of computer facilities between the district and the cUies of Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. Trustee Donald Strauss, of Newport Beach. some months ager had asked that the study be done so tile district would Jcnow what it is getting for lts data piycessing dollar before rushing Into sharing programs wlth the cities. Trustees selected lhe URS firm 's $7,966 proposal over the Sll.000 offering of Ar thu r Young and Company of Santa Ana. Dr. Les Shuck. assistant su perintendent for research l!nd development, rated both firms equally, but noted the newer URS firm's lower study cost gave it a slight edge. Shuck said they could be counted on to do a study of similar quality at less cost. Str•u~s. whose businesi experience in· eludes pl111ning for d3t1 processlnt. said he'd check "with computer people'' !he four firms rated highly by di!trlct stt1ff and found URS would be a "good buy'' for the dlstrtct. Str&uss Indicated if c omput er performance efficiency wert improved by only two pel'<'ent followinf the i ludy. the di~lrlct would have saved the $1,000 tab. Savings should be even mort, he added. ~ J, C. HUM,Hl lU "GOOD INVEST·MENT" Although we all know that a diamond is a eood investment, most of us have never really compared it to some oi the major expenditures we periodically incur. U you have not made Such a comparison, you might find it interesting to do so b:Y taking a second look at your invest· ments in cars and furs. ?tfany or us buy _an expensive car \V hi ch 1ve kno\Y \l'ill be •!most \\'orthless in a Je\V . years, and v.•e seem unconcerned about deprecia· lion. caring more for appearance and performance. And many people buy costly furs, kno\\ing that they will Someday \vear out or go out of style. Whether you're talking a bout diamonds as a symbol of love. or as an investn1ent, the old phrase. "A diamond is forever," applies equal· ly well; because a diamond's ap- pearance r~mains the same. it never wears out or gou out or style: and not only, does It not depreciate. it actually 111c~ases in vilue, a beau- tiful and practical hedge against in· !talion! Diamonds are our business , •. not Investment counseling, But we are capable of helpint.YOU make a good Investment in a. diamnnd: so come on In .. , our dlamond coun· seling Is Cree! OFF SALE on these 4 most 'popular patterns A -.oadttful opportoniry 10 fill in or ~t:irt your se~ now .•. C\'ea give 1 v~ry trtasurtd gifl 'There •a com pl de operi ttock 9Cltctioo available SJ wtJI u place acttings. And all at gttat taviag:s ~ •Utb pride itJ OWD.ing or givi.ag ftne family sfl•er. Sale Limited-February 1• thru March 13, 1971 J. C .J/.u1nrJhl'ie3 J eu1efert. 1823 NEWPO RT BLVD., COST A MESA CONVENIENT TEAMS ... NW.A~ ER IC A AO.-MASTE •CHA ll•E 24 Y'[ARS IN SAME lOCATION ,HONE •41-1401 I ' ' " i Wtd11,1d~~. F'bruaty 17, 1971 DAIL V PILQT $ Combat Stresses Impaired Call,ey' s Thinking-Expert Kickback 'Coupir!!Cf _..lleged ,. . 60,000 Barbers to Get Trim? WASHINGTON (AP) -The prcrnoter who mastennlnded loaN of millions or Barbers Vn.ioil. pension dollars, some to eoterpri:Jes controlled by him and a financially plagued DuPont heir, has been lndlcted along with the union's presi- dent on charges or kickback consplracy. 'Mie Indictment charged ai ·four with conspiring lo &el kickbacb, fees and eomi miulom from a Ca.Ulorm. land development finn Jn 00111 nectlon wtlh a loan from UM pension fund. It further charg ed Shal>ttn. Block and ColUJD bla with conspiring to pa] off De P a o l a in connectio11 wlth fund low and charged De Paola with tollclting and receJving $29,000 In fees, ldckbacts and commlaslons. Jane to 'rest Liberalized Army Code? NEW YORK (AP) -I! th• ntw Army really new? ls comedian Dick Gregory the antiwar aoldier's answer to Bob Hope? Can Jane Fonda become a G.I. pin-up if she refuses to wear a bikini? An antiwar troupe that in· eludes a dozen well-known entertainer• hopes to find the answer to these questions in a proposed tour of 20 military bases across the country. "It's been very discon- certing for many or us in Hollywood to see that Bob Hope, Martha Raye and other companies or their political Ilk have cornered the market" on entertaining soldiers, f\fiss Fonda uid Tuesday. ''A lot of us who have dif- ferent points of view about the war and what's happening to thiJ country have decided the Ume has come t.o speak lo the forgotten soldiers," she told a news conference. Dr, Howard B. Levy, the former Army captain who was court-martialed for refusing to train soldiers headed for Viet- n1m, said tbe first st.op will be in Fort Bragg, N.C. on March 13 ind 14. Any more questions? Yes. said one reporter. would Miss Fonda wear a bikini for the allow? "Are you suiau,,?" she scof- fed. •1111r1 whit Bob Hope doe11. We're trylnJ: to get away from· that sort of thing." Debt Limit Connally's First Task FT. BENNING, Go. (UPI) -A psycbiatri!t testified t1>- day that "in view of the pushing that was coming from above" and stresses of a com- bat 1ltuaUon, Lt. William L. Calley Jr. was unable to determine whether orders to kill civilians at My Lal were legal or illegal. Dr. David G. Crane, 34, of Indianapolis, a v et e r a n hospital staff member and assist.ant p15ychiatry professor at Indianapolis University, was called with the Cilley court-martial jury absent to express his uput opink>n. The move wu part of a defense tffort to get before the court the views of tbne Drama )l8)'chlatrista as to Calley's dimJnlshed mental capacity when he led his platoon during a search-and-destroy IWffP through the Vietnamese hamlet on Marcll 16, 1968. Calley is accused of 1laying, or ordering the slaylng, of 102 Vietnamese clvlllans dur4 ing the infantry sweep. Crane testitied on the basis of knowledge gained i n treating large numbers of Vietnam combat veterans in thst country up to ·~ months before the My Lal incident. "There wa.s an all pervading tension and an1iety among of· flcers and men," Crane said. He testified taht because of Cal~y's Impaired "decision maklng process" during the on l~e Dog Saved Fro111 Cold Raft WILKES-BARRE, Pa. (UPI) -Sam, a shivering German shepherd who bad betn trapped for 23 hours on an ice floe, saw the friendly police sergeant beckoning to him from an island in the Susquehanna River. Sam h a d inadvertantly climbed onto the small chunk of ice when it was near the shore at Waverly, N.Y., llO miles upstream from Wilkes-. Barre. For nearly a day, Sam zat on the ice, carried along by the river's current and afraid to · jump off. Numerous at- tempts to Tescue him railed. A helicopter made several passes over the ice in an attempt to lift him oH, but he was frighte111ed and shied away . Police Sgt. Albert A pollonauts Reveal Moonwalk Troubles SPACE CENTER, Houston Today the Apollo astronauts (UPI) -Apollo 14's moon ex-planned to tell project officials plorers have warned the next about their pathfinding, nine. Apollo crew to be wary flf day mission to the hilly lunar the tricks the barren, hilly uplands. landscape can play on their The problem o! ability to navigate betw~n lunar landmarks. specific places t1f That was one of the key when walking the rn e on points Alan B. Shepard, Edgar became even more apparent D. Mitchell and Stuart A. Tuesday when two scientists Roosa made Tuesday in a day-reported tbat Shepard and Jong briefing for Apollo 15 Mitchell were so fooled by WASHINGTON (UPI) -astronauts David R. Scott. the terrain they turned back Treasury Secretary John B. Alfred M. Worden and James within 160 feet or a crater Conna1ly, President Nixon's B. Irwin. Apollo 15 is set that was their lr:ey objective. J'Ui.dent Democrat, has the for launch to the moon July They thought It was farther thankless chore of convincing 1.5. away. Congress to raise the nalional~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiii/ dtbt ceiling by $40 billion so; the government can keep paying Its bills. Connally took on his first oftieial assignment s I n c e usuming office last week with a 8Cheduled appearance before the House Ways and Means Committee which must rule on a debt ceiling boost. The administration wants a $435 billion lin1it on what the 1ovemment can borrow -$40 blllJfln above the present ••temporary" ceiling of $395 billlon. ,AJIX IUST A tTI, PJIOM OUJI IAIT llllTJIAlllCI AT Wllf 11110 OP MAOlllOLIA ANNIVERSARY SALE! FRESH GLAZED uo. 6ftc $1 .0I l__ ooz. {or k M.) hit. I 6tll tltr1 Fell. 20ttt Only DONUTS 135 E. 17th Street -Costa Mesa IJnt Int •f Nft,.rt llfll.J Ir this unde,.....,_,. outorshrinb out of fit within two years of normal """1', it will be replaced FREE. And we'll bet you've never worn underwear as comfortable as this, either. Kangaroo Shorts and TC.28 Grand-Slam T-Shirt-both knit of pure cotton. Buy a 3-J:1ack. We guarantee it ••• for two years. MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED IN COSTA MESA IT'S HOU as t:JO TO 6 OPIN PltlDAY IVL TILL I P.M. DIPAltTMINT ITOltl 181~ NEWPORT BLVD. four-hour action, he wu not able to "contrive or ·p1an° (premeditate) killing, to ~ll· persons withoUt justWcaUon, to detennlne the lega11ty of orders given to him. Nineteen government witnesses ·have testified that the night prior to the My Lai operallon Capt.· Ernest Medina, as company comman~ der, ordered the village de• I · troyed and the inhabitanll • killed. t .. • • U'I T1 ..... NI o; In \"Jew of the pushing that was coming from above, Lt. Calley was not going to be considering much of anything except act and do," Crane told George W. Latimer, the chief defense attorney. "Also there were the basic underlying stresses existing in that individual at that time." Talks on War Under cross examination by Capt. Aubrey M. Danlel 11!, the prosecutor, Crane said that Calley's mental ability was "impaired to at tea$t a mild to moderate degree - his ability to understand, reason, and consider -his decision rriaking process was impaired." Sen. Adlai Stevenson Ill (0·111.) said Tuesday that a negotiated set- tlement of the Indo- china war is the only ~ossible outcome which Jibes with key initial objectives of U.S. in~ volvement -freedom and self-determination for the people. The pension fund involved tn the complex case hu ties to one of the biggest personal bankruptcy act cases ever fll· ed, to two oth!r financial scandals and to jailed tax ev~er Bobby Baker. And the nearly 6 O , O O O -.. barbers who are members of ... the pension plan faCf: forecasts that they likely will get little or none of the retirement in- come they were promised. Both government and private studies say. the fuDd will go broke as presently constituted. The 36-ccunt indictment was returned Tuesday by a federal grand Jury In Chicago and announced by the Justice Department in Washington. It named : -Thomas A. Shaheen Jr., 38, the pension fund's onetime Investment consultant who now Jives in London, England. U,1 .'ft ...... NAMED IN CHARGES Barber Chief DePaola -Joseph De Paola, In- dianapolis, president of the Journeymen Barbers, Hairdressers, Cosmetologists and Proprietor's International Union of Amertca and chairman of its pens.Ion fund. -Max Block Jr., a New Yo r k attorney who wocked with Shaheen. -Oolumbia Financia1 Corp. of Chevy Chase, Md.. con-- trolled by Shaheen and Block. Shaheen alao was charg~ with gettiag from t h t C1Ufomia firm $112,597 in feei and comml"1ons, $25,000 !J negotiable notes, two con- sultant agreements w o r t I $114,000,and 100 ICf<S of land tn order to influence his ao tlons u the fund'• adviser. Rms Fish Boat Free With Fine JUNEAU, Alaska (UPI) - A Russian shrimp boat captain wbo3e veS.'!lel wu seized wl.thij the U.S. ll·mil• limit, pleaded no contest here Tueaday U a charge of lllegll fuhlna end was fined '20,000. ... ~_,.,,AFTER INVENTORY""!',~.,.~ CARPET AND REMNANT DuPONT~ NYLON y PILE 79 DuPONT b · NYLON y '95 SALE Sq. Yd. PLUSH Soft end curled down yorn1. for d imensional effect. More foce yarns for longer wear. Mony lovely color ovoilob!e. DuPONT . . 501 b NYLON · Y PILE SALE 88 Sq. Yd. All nylo n face random tex!ured hi.Jo loop, double lute boc;king. Resist• fuz z.in g and pil- ling. Easy to maintain. Mony smart colors. TONE-ON-TONE ~ DuPONT y NYLON . PILE SALE 49 Sq. Yd. Conlin uout filament nylon pile c:orpel in o deep, rich, hi·lo fexlured, tone·on-tone pat- tern. Resistant to 1pots· and 1toinL Double jute bocking. Many lovely colors. ROOMS & HALL CONTINUOUS FI LAMENT NYLON PILE CARPET COMPLETELY INSTALLED llVING ROOM. . 2 0 g DINING ROOM, BEDROOM & HALL UP TO 42 Sq. Yd•. $ All !AIOI CAHiii A llflTIMI GUUANTll • ~- 2 \, __ 4!'-~ SALE 100% continuous filomentnylon plush. Moin- toint fres'1 look wit'1 little effort, Nylon yarns.ore toug'1 o nd long wearing. Cleans easily. Many lovelycolor1. available. LARGE ROOM SIZE REMNANTS Choose from many ~ fibers ond color1. Carpet living room, d ining room or bed· room ot this beouti· ful low price. SALE ROOMS & HALL CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE CARPET COMPLETELY INSTALLED LIVING ROOM, DINING & HALL UP TO 32 SQ. VOS. ~159 SHOP AT HOME SERVICE If you con'1 come In, just phone and our representative will coll with o fu!I 1omple 1election. No obligation. CALL TODAY 546·8545 DuPONT 49 . SP~CEDDTID NYLON TWEED SALE Sq. Yd. Multi-color yorn1 with a different cosUo! texture. A carpet thot imports spark!. a nd r:irocticol ity, Double laminated jute beck. Exciting color combinations. • · DuPONT b NYLON y SHAG .88 SALE Sq. Yd. 100% DuPont nvfon face. Double fut• beck- ing, deep luxurious pile. Easy to mointoirL. Mo1h proofed ond non·o llergenic. An array of decorolor colors. · POLYESTER SHAG 98 SALE Sq. Yd. Deep ric h shag carpet mode for y•ars of beovty and wear, So toug'1 and c:luroble i1'1 fomily-proof. lorge 1el•clion of bri'-' liant California colorL · ROOMS & HALL CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE CARPET COMPLETELY INSTALLED LIVING ROOM ' 2 I I OlNING ROOM, 2 BEDROOMS & HAll · IJP lO 60 Sq. Yds. _ • USI OUI COllVIMllllT· CllDIT TllMS 3040 BRISTOL AVE. COSTA MESA • 546-8548 . ' . . . t , ' • • • ~AD ,\' Pl.LOT EDITOBI?J· PAGE ' . High-rise Moratori~m , ' • . " ' ' • , , Mllnday the Newport Beach City Council will be asked to put a temporary halt to all hlgh·rise construc- tion along the lower bay and ocean fronl .. The moratorium on construction of buildings higher than 35 feet would affect the trea within the boundaries of Ille proposed Lower Newport Bay Civic District ' The study committee working on formation of that civic district has proposed the ban, through the vehicle of an emergency ordinance. The committee is seeking the 90-day restraint IO it can conclude its \\.'ork and present formal recommenda- tions. The civic district is intended to provide tighter con· trots on all aspects of building along the waterfront. 01>. viously, regulations dealing with high-rise construction would be predominant among those controls. The committee bas given preliminary indications it \\•ill reeommend there be some high-rise permitted. It would be carefully governed, especially in relation to ttie amount of open space that W-Ould have to surround it. It may be stretching a point to say that the entire city council necessarily supports the civic district con- cept; however, there has been no indication so far from any council member that he op'poses. the idea. It can be expected there will be some major opposi· lion to the emergency legislation at Monday night's pub- lic hearing -mostly from property owners or develop- ers with their sights set on a high-rise project in the near future. Their real concern probably wOI be not so much with the 90-day moratorium, but with the fear that circumstances \\'ill extend the moratorium on and on. suspending meaningful planning for an indefinite period. · - The council, by Ja,v. does not even have to conduct a public hearing before acting on the moratorium. Trees Seem Smarter Than People Speaking or trees, as I was rtcentJy, I learned 800lething thil 'is instructive, inspiring and charming from a new book, ••The Urbanization of the Earth," by Jorge Arango (Beacon Pri:ss. $6.95}. In hil opening ·chapter, on human ecology, the author asks us to ob~rve a group of plants of various sizes strug· glinc to perfonn. We see that "most plants keep• distartce from one another. A tree never grows branches into its neighbor if it can avoid doing 10." Plants Jike the sun, Arango points out, but at the same lime like to be in a com- fortable shade. "They like to have maximum space of their own, but at the aame time to be to- gether. This inte r- relation makes ~larits subordinate their growth to others.'' EACH PLANT IN a group has its ov;n task ol balancing its •·personal" wellare with its "social" needs. It builds up the location of each leaf in the most advantageous position. "not only for the plant, but for the group.'' No hwnanly-devised computer could do this. A8' Arango says, "a prediction of liming, size, and location for each leaf in relation to the others would con- stitute billions cf equations changing con· tinuously in time." In this highly important respect, trtts zeem to be smarter than people. Or, at least, the mechanism of nature is more rational, effective, and protective Dear Gloomy Gus: Why not turn the beach at West Newport into one big, carefree, messy, smelly outdoor rest room for dogs ? Because it already is? -S. J. G. "hh ........ "flitcft ,....,.. ....... ... -rtlY ... .. th --· '"' ,_ .... -" te ~ en. ~llY Plilrt. than the frantic anll'Cht,' of human aociety. • FOR MOST OF VS <lbday .live In a man-made environment that off e r s neither privacy nor mutual heJp. and certainly not a ·delicate blend of the two. Small towns &re dying of anemia, and cities are atranglini; to death. For the first JOO centuries of history, onJy one out of 10 persons lived in a city; the .others used it anJy for trade or defense against invadera. In the tart 100 years, however, an enonnous migration began toward the urban 1reas. Now .the cities are beginning to collapse under the convergent preuures of population, pollution, transportation, in- dustrialization, and. most importantly, alienation -the vital &enae of "com· munity" has been largely lost in the xnodern city. WE HAVE PLANNED everything ex- cept bow to live together in lncreuingly gnater nwnbera. We plan factories and highways and airports and shopping l.i?nlen -b!Jt. unlike the trees, we rudely crowd others out of the way and ruin the environment not anly for them but for ourselves as well. Arango'.!I chapter on the "Pathology of the American City" is a heart.breaking tase- study of our ignorance, apathy and greed. Perhaps it is time -perhaps it is past time -that we took 1 leaf from our plant life, and subordinated our growth lo the common gOOd. A Month for Dreamers February ls the: month for dreamers. The "eat.her for those who live In the cold northern states is too sullen to go oot.slde except for skiers and other self-de1tructive people. The only thing .to do that makes real sense ii to stay indoors and daydream. '11\en, leantnr back In the old· swivel chair wiPI his fett crossed before him on his desk and ' ' rrieridJy secretary keeping a wary eye out for the approach ot the boM, • man . Is free to give rein to his Jmiiglnation. In a blink Qf hl.!i mind's eye.lit can 11tart living the kind of adventlD'OWI, ncul!h life he would enjoy if he weren't rutricted by a 1'ile, three kidt, a mortgage, a 1hn1ted amount of pocket mooty and flat fttl. \'ES, BE CAN, tr ho -lo: fif•ke a cfUzen't arrest. Pick a pocket. find a burled ache of SpirUh doubloons and buy hl1 Orm. Lure • ship ashore durlna a storm and loot It. Wear a je·we:l in one tar and 11it the throat cf anyone who dand ttll him lh.tL iL made him loolt like ldr. Clean. Trovtl eY"l"'h<re on a Dy)ng w¢ he picked up ,for a ICllll in a balir In Marral!¢>. ____ _ Hang his bat in 1 harem of bis own. Have his department 1Upervisor shot at dawn -and tMce at IUflset, j~t to be sure. TAKE A. FRIEND'S lovely sister to lunch during National B111therhood Week. Be made an Indian dllef the week before they discover ~ whole reserva- Lion is sinking in a vast btd of oil. Fly the eoop to BranU with the office petty cash fund. Take karate lessons and become the strongest 98-pound weakling In hJJ neighborhood. Grow hair on a bald bUllard ball. Do card tricka 1t 1 etate boll in th• Whit< u ...... _P~i! a majoriLy. PARI AN APPLE with a dagger. Give an anemy a p0lgnaoL fHllng al the point or • poniard •• Duel lfith 1 liendlsh vampire ln an abancloned ctmelery al mldnlgbL Receive • sraldul lell<r from Dr. Benjamin Spock for curing 'him of the hlccupa. Help a mewl• atarlet do her bomtwork In algebra. Yea. only daydrum! now k••P • felloW'I "aPirlt flum 'belof lblek In Jl)OWllrlfla, - In deliberating the ban, lbe council must wei~b tho arguments offered against the benefits the civic district proponents say will be everlasting to Newport Beach. · ·The study committee members .say·they do not make this moratorium proposal frivolously. They say the guide· lines to .be imposed by the district would be, ii not mean· ingless, certainJy badly compromised if any high·rise construction is allowed before it is enacted. The 90-day moratorium does not seem unreasonable in view of the potential for great and lasting benefits to all from the best use or our limited water-oriented pro- perly. Perkins Leads United Fund Robert W. Perkins,. a former FBI man who now is vice president in charge of personnel for the Irvine Com· ·pany, is nowt also president of the Harbor Area United Fund for 1971. His first big tasks will be to assemble a fund drive team and establish a valid fund·raising goal for the needs of the·30 community service agencies which rely on the Harbor Area United Fund for major financial sup· port. In ass1;1ming the post last week, Perkins indicated the fund -taking the economy into major consideration -will likely shoot for 'something under $500,000. President Perkins and his United Fund team have a hard act to follow. Despite a soft eeonomy, the 1970 campaign, although falling slightly short of its $412,000 goal, did admirably well -much· to the ·credit of two very dedicated men, former President J.ack R. Curley and Campaign Chairman Robert Heild. N 1t appears to have been launched from that little old dead planet. What do you make of it?' 'Teachers' Salary Proposals Are Realistic' N-MEA Corrects To the Editor: Your Feb. 10 editorial, "Unrealistic Demands," contained a major factual error which the N~port·Mesa EducaUon Association wishes . to set straight for the public record. Also, once this · error is brought out, the entire editorial is pretty.much negated. You slated . that the main example of these. "Unrealistic Demands'' was "an $8,300 hike for the district's most ex- perienced faculty ." Nowhere in the f\1aster Contract submitted to the Board Feb. 2 is there any request for a raise of this size. As you admitted in our conversation of Feb. 15, and as we now can inform the public. this is simply a· human error caused by misreading and miscalculation. IN FACT, THE largest raise that any experienced. faculty member c o u Id receive under the tialary proposals made to the Board is '3,225, which is a far cry from $8,300. Furthermore, all of the salary proposals are just that - proposals; they must be negotiated wil.b the board and aei:epted by this group before they are put into effect. Rather than being "unrealistic." the salary proposals of N-MEA are realistic in tenns of what the district can afford and in terms of what teachers need to counter the inflation that steadily eats away at their real wages. ACCORDING TO the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the U.S. Department of Labor, the cost of living has gone up 16.1 percent in the four years since the Newport-Mesa Unified School District· came into being (1966-70 ). During that same time the average salary increase for Newport-Mesa teachers has been 21.9, percent. This means that teachers have supposedly had a raise of a little over 1 percent a year in disposable income. Even this has been eaten up for many since the Bureau of Labor Statistics' figures are an average for L.A. and Orange counties and do not take into consideration the higher cost of livitlg in the Newport Beach-Costa Me5a area. JN OnlER l\'ORDS, the teachers of this di strict -far from making unrealistic demands -have been subsidizing the cost of education in this are1 by not even getting raises sufficient to stay ahead of the galloping inflation. \ LetterS' from readers are welcome. NorniaUy writers should convey their messages in 300 words or less. The right ta condeme lettera to fit apace or eliminate libel is reserved. AU let- tera.must inclucU iignature and mail- ing address, but names may be with- held on Tequest if aufficient Teason is apparent. Po,try wiU not bir pub- lished. those that don't have iransportation enabllng; them to get to the main Post Office. across Pacific Coast Highway on Riverside Ave. I GET THE SAME money for the contract that I got nine year& ago and my little business has not increased as my 1tore is small. I fee l the 100 percent increase in the City ·of Newport Beach license fee (from $25 to $50) is just about the last straw. I live in this area and it seems we are the "forgotlen people." Our taxes have risen so much, many of the old residents are forced to sell their homes and move elsewhere. MARCIAL D. MAHONEY Warning Was Sounded To the Editor: Poor old Newport Beach. Four hundred thousand dollars in the bole at the half- way pole. Why? \Vhy? The reason is very simple. Jn the 1967-68 budget the warning was sounded. That budget was the first in- dicator that the city manager was going an an extravaganza binge. One coun- cilman refused to vote for that budget, his name will ~ signed to this letter. CITY COUNCILl\1EN who blindly follow the city manager's policy of tax and spend, ares ha 11 ow·t h In king policymakers. Shame, shame on the city manager and triple shame on the Newport Beach City Council for their buffoonery fiscal gymnastics. For the richest city in Orange County (Newport Beach has $312 million assess- ed valuation for 50,000 population) to have to borrow $150,000 from the new a Miscalculation water resource fund is· unbelievable. IN THE 1170 budget discussion a tax- payer ~to<XI before the New~rt Beach City Council and said, "This is the time to lighten your belts because there are storm clouds ahead in 1971." This warning drew only a smirk from management aRd also f el J on 14 deaf ears belonging to the seven policymakers. The ftscal chaos at city hall can be corrected. I hope to offer some common sense objective guideline.s on this subject at a later date. P. DEE COOK Former Councilman Newport Beach West Newport Dogs To the Editor: A Friend of fifan ? Why· does Newport condone loose dogs on beaches and streets to despoil (IUr city? Dog owners, with impuiiity, turn their pel.s loose to foul our beaches and sidewalks -even our lawns. A leash law is in effect, but enforcemen~ is almost nil. Twice of late we 've had to leave the beach in West Newport because of too many loose dogs and awners who become profane when we re.mind them of the law. OTHER CITIES don't allow animals on the beach t1:l all, with or Ydlhout leash, nor do «'e on our Newport Bay beaches, and this Is the only way to eliminate the increasing blight and pollu- tion of the area. The stench at street ends in West .Newport is often unbearable and the health haiard is serious. NAME WITHHELD Nudity vs. Violence To the Editor: For sorne time 1 have been amused by the "Fire House Circus .'' The thought of the Costa Mesa. Police Department's ''-secret agen ts" sneaking up on the naked girls made my day for quite av>'hile. But this folly, it seems. has been followed by quite a tragedy. Some of the girls have actually been sentenced to ·fines and imprisonment. This sentencing, I believe, Is a worse crime than the girls' dancing. These girls are actually being punished for revealing what God gave them in the first place; and furthermore, by people ~·ho dG not ordinarily atiend ·their performances at all. IF \\'E FOLLOW the line of thinking of the courts, we come to the realization that seeing dirty shows promotes dirty minds. But what about seeing violent shows? Last night an television J was subjected to five killings, four beatings. two bribings, and three cases of "justifiable homicide." Was this helping lo promote the welfare of the people? Was this teaching tha t violence is all right, while the unclothed body, which God created, is bad? THIS IS STh1PLV stupid! How can ""e condemn the exhibition of the body, wh ich God created, while condoning kill· Ing and dishonesty. which man created? I say that if "dirty shows"· create dirty minds, violent shows create violent minds. STEVE LAUilLY Ollerpop1datlon To the Editor: Overpopulation is not what Causes pollution and hunger. Statistics ov·er the years show that when a country reaches a certain level of technology, population growth levels ofL The so · ca 11 e d overpopu lation exists in the agrlcultural nations, where y,·ith new fanning techni- ques enough fo<XI is and will be grown to feed the people within the next decade. To tell those people to limit the source of their current v.·eallh -people - is not solving the real problem, which is a lack of money. [F OVERPOPULATION wcr~ the key to starvation, why is it that in China no one is hungry, and in the United States between 30 and 40 million arfl considered hungry? Jn Brazil, not an averpopulated country (90 million peop!!! in almost as large an area as the U.S. l, there is also gross hunger. The qu estion is why? It's obvious. In Brazil large amounts of fertile land is devoted to growing coffee for export to lhe U.S., and very little o( the land is used for growing food. Jn the U.S., over 35 million acres of good soil ii out of production yearly because of ttle threat of a falling market prict. l trust these facts will put a new perspective before the public when they consider the salary requests submitted to the Beard cf Education by the Newport-Mesa Education Associalion on behall of the teachers of the district. R. C. STEGMEIR Public Relations Chairmen Newport-Mes a Education Association Cruelty to Children IF OUR SYSTEM was geared to grow food for peaple and not to make a profit. we would soon find out that hunger is not a lack (If food (er overpopulation ). but a lack o{ money. The non·socialisl world goes by the saying, "If you can't afford it. you can't have it .'' which results In hunger, especially in those countries (practically all) where the land is owned by those v.·ealthy few {Qr their benefit. Hunger is not caused by the limits of Nature, but by the nature cf the ownership and use of the land. POW Support TG the Editor : 1 'l\'OUld like lo commend you for the article published on the Prisoners of War luncheon, exposing the situation to your readers. This is a very lmpoftant Issue and further coverage ls encouraged and will be appreciated by all those wbo care abool fhe0ruull)l·li'eaLtd POWs. (MISS) LESLEE GODFREY 'V"1•1r Llce1ue flu' To lhe Editor: Unratr License Fee! For nine yean f have had the Post Office contract station on...)2nd St, Newport Beach and in ora& to get the contract t had to ha ve a little 1tort1. This .service for the reslde.nls In this area hu beta • blessln& Jor As a rule. law does not like to Interfere with relations between parent-and child. Parents may use reasonable, but not excessive force to discipline their child . Teachers. neighbors. doctors, or kinfolk: often report suspected cases to the police or a welfare agency. Since 1963 the law calls upon doctors to report chlld pa\ient.s who l'leem to have been treatf!d cruelly. The law now calls upon dentists, religious practltion- ers, school nurses, or .public health enh ployees to report such cases: THF.:Y MAY PHONE or YrTite in their report lrthe police or the juve nile probation department. They should give the child's name, address, and his In- juries. In the past doctors or nurses didn't need ID report Jf to do so would be in thelr opinion "Inconsistent with the health. care, or treatment of a minor." Now thty must report all such Injuries. Reports go to the 'Slete Bureau of Criminal JdaAUfic•Uon and Investigation. Law in •ction Failure to report Is a misdemeanor. The reporter is immune from liability. No parent can sue him for slander or for interfering with his home. THE LEGISLA'MJllE requires reports from the school superintendent. pQncipal or a director of county welfare who may have noticed the injury. A court may sentence anyone for ns much as 10 years in prison if he wilfully cau~s great bodily harm to a child, TOO parent who Inflicts on a child "Ull· justifiable " physical pain or mental 1uf• fering. may face charges ~·hJch call for six months in jail, a fine. or both. No te: Californi(l 101v11ers offer this rolunu& so 1101t m"" k11010 obOllt our law.s. JIM m;WKJRK ---WWW- Wednosday. February 17, 1971 The tditorial page of thf' Do11rt Pilot setks to inform and 1tim• ulate readers by presenting thiJ tteiuspaper's opiniot13 a11d com- n~ntary rrn topics of i1itere1C and slonificoni:c, by providi ng 11 forum Jor the erpre11ion of our readers' opi11ion.,, and by prt.~enUng the di11tr$e 11lt10- poil1 t.t of i11formed ob!trver1 and spoktsmen 011 topics of the day. Roberl N. w .. d. Publisher g n y t ' . f g , II h n • I· • ' ' • n - Cosia--Mesa Today'• FhUd N.Y. St.eeks VOL 64, NO. 41, 6 SECTIONS, 64 PAGES ' . ORANGE COUNTY, c,+.LIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1971 TEN CENTS School Officials · Cite ··Salary Tax .Rate Hike By GEORGE LEIDAL CM Ill• 0.llf ,11111 St1Jt School District officials said Tuesday the Newport.Mesa Education Associa· lion's salary and contract proposals would cost an additional $8 million dollars and require a tax rate hike of nearly $2 per"$100 assessed valuation. Ray Sclutierer, business manager for the district said about half of the items in the teachers' contract proposal would cost the district~ extra $4.1 million. ll'igging It ''We'll be lucky U the total package comes In 1t less than $8 million," Schnierer said. The present tax rate of $5.13 per $100 or a~ssed valuation for Costa Mesa taxpayers and $4.79 per $100 for Newport Beach property owners would be increased by $1.90 lo raise $8 million in new revenue, said Walter ·Adrian, director of fiscal planning for the district. This means the owner· of a $.30.000 home in Coi\a Mesa, for example., would IDAILY ,lLOT Still ,...,., Nick Ziener Oert to right), manager of the Costa 111esa Chamber o! Co mmerce, is bald. Except when he "'ears his new wig. v.1hich changes his appearance considerably. ·He was introduced amid guffaws at Tuesday night's city couneil meeting as "Nick Ziener~s brother from Chicago: Will the real Nick Ziener please s.tand up?" ' ' • -• I' • Del Mar Widening ~roject Gets Delay From Council A delegation protesting the proposed widening of Del Mar Avenue - characterized by one man as the im- pending Boulevard of Broken Dreams -won a six-month delay Tuesday night. The Costa Mesa City Council concluded a long and loud public hearing on the $1.28 million project by leaving it open Costa Mesa Girl Selected Tops In Dog Handling From Wire Services NE\V YORK -A Costa Mesa teenager today has the honor of being top junior dog ha 11 d I er in America, following judging here Tuesday night in the prestigious Wesuninster Kennel Club Show. Heidi Shellenbarger, 14, of 7 8 9 Paularino Ave., was picked from among a field of candidates 10 to 16 ye.ars old. Judges said she displayed remarkable . poise in showing her whippet, Ch. Gretchen of Newporter. The Costa f\iesa High School freshman Is the daughter of Mr. and f\trs. Walt Shellenbarger, owners of Gretchenhof Kennels at lhe Piiularino Avenue address. The family is quite well·known on the We:i;t Coast for successful showings al championship canine events. Miss Shellenbarger qau li!ied to enter the Westminster Kennel Club Show by points earned in other competition throughout the year. for six months to allow further study. City Manager Fred Sorsabal said It will be scheduled for a decision before the Aug. 15 re-hearing, if imp~tient Sta~e Division of Highway offiCJals begin prodding the city. All property owners on both sides of the 8lreet will be notified in case of such action . The Tuesday night hearing drew 1 standing.room-onl y crowd, combined with citiiens present for several other items of strong interest on the agenda. A couple of speakers who stand to lose property to progress ranaed so far afield of the topic Mayor Robert 1'-1. Wil!JOn apologetically ruled them out of ordtt. Orange County Road Department plan· ning technician Hal Krizan and Newport Beach Traffic Engineer Robert Jaffe were present. since the total project will involve their agencies too. Costa Mesa city officials will confer with them on the alignment and widening of what will eventually connect Fair Drive, Del Mar Avenue, University Drive and Irvine Boulevard. Costa Mesa PubUc Works Direclot George Madsen opened the hearing with a brief synopsis of facts about the pr~ gram set for 1975 to 77, creating an ll·mile highway . The major traffic arte'ry will carry up to 44 .000 cars daily. serving as a direct route to the UC Irvine campus and intersecting with four free,vays in IJle area. Madsen said four alternatives to the current concept of taking 39 lots on Del Mar Avenue from Newport Boulevard to Santa Ana Avenue were studied. Loss of lots on both sides of the (See DEL MAR, Page Z) pay an e:s:tra $143 in ta.xu to support the Newport,Mesa dist~:~. lf the board were to accept the entire salary package proposal. Such a property owner now pays about $MS. Much of what the teacher!! seek In their contract proposal could not be paid out of CWTent lax revenues. Adrian noted. Voters probably would have to approve the higher tax levy in the form of an overri~. The .board's alternatives to the salary package "have not yet been discussed," Adrian said. The dlstrfct's estimates are based on reviews o( indivtdual Item requests presented to the board at ib Feb. 2 meeting by the Newport-Mesa Education Association. Bart Hake, e1ecutive seaetary of the teachers group. told the school board Tuesday night that ht believes. salary proposals eould be pajd out of a 31-cent per $100 tax increase i! the distric& would realkx:ate rtsources lnC!ludfn& con- tlngMty reserves. • The district is trylnr to shift the burden of tax ine11ase.reaponslblllty ·onto teacher a· by aUaching cos ta to the pay demands, Hake argued. . District estimates of the salary pro- posal coats were sought by school board President Stlim S. "Bud" Franklin at the opening of Tuesday's board meeUni. Superintendent WUJ!am Cunningham indicated the estimates were preliminary and subject to rurther etamination. Hake today uld the $4.1 million partial tl!t of increased costs included at leatt $329,750. or cost.. that already. were budgeted. The.re may be otber coltl listed as increaMS by the district which are expenses the dimict would pay even without the teachers' aalary propoaal, Hake contended . Teachers would gel a raise of aboot 10 percent lf the aalary schedule were (See s.u.ARIEa,.Pqe II U.S. Troops Under Fire Command Rushes Reinforcements · to Viet Base SAIGON <UPI) -U.S. commanders rushed reinforcements Wednesday lo out· numbered defenders of an AlJ\erican base supporting the South Vie tnamese cam- paign into Laos. Field reports said Com· muniat troops were firing from all sides despite heavy U.S. air and artillery pressure. 1 The combat around Fire Support Base Scotch 10 miles from the Laotian border was part of a pattern of heavy fighting in mountain jungles near the reactivated U.S. airstrip at Khe Sanh. headquarters for the 9,000.man American support task force. Preliminary reports Indicated at least five Americans v.·ere wounded in the battle near Fire Support Base Scotch and military source5 said a U.S. Army helicopter was shot down near it Wed· nesday afternoon. No casualties were reported in the 16th U.S. he\ioopter los.s of the lo.day Laos campaign but f I v f! Americans were killed in the crash of a U.S. Army Chinook helicopter nea r Hue Monday night in an incident not related to the South Vietnamese thrusl intO Laos. Reports late Wednesday said elements of the 20,000.man South Vietnamese ex- pedltionary force had driven 15 J'n 11 t!:S inside Laos, an advance of one mile in a 24·hour period. The push wls described as slow and cautious. A Saigon communique said lhe Laos force killed 500 Communists in the first nine days of the operation and f I e l 'd reports Wednesday increased that filllft by 78. South Vietnamese losses wtre placed at 127 killed and 4~ wounded plus three killed and four wounded in combat Wednesday. · The U.S. troops ca11ed ln artll\ery strikes Tuesday night and early Wed· nesday within a few yards of Lbe Grand Jury Indicts 8 Fullerto lffFirm CIUirgetf"'tn NCtJ lJefr'ci.Ud ·toiUpi'racy . . ' WASl\INGTON tUPl1.:.. Former Army Jn his conduct of army clubs in Germany, Sgt. M•I· lfjllillll-0. Wooldrid1e opd (It•· Ille Ulilled Stile& and SoUll1 v-. eh ot.bert .including a former Fullerton Attorney General John N. P..titche!J an. corporltion were Indicted by a noonced the indictments were ~turned federal grand jury today on charges of in U.S. District Court Jn Los Angeles. conspiring to. de.fraud noncommissioned Wooldridge, five current or former army officers' clubs in Vietnam between 1965 non-eoms, two civilians and a California and I96!t. corporation In whlc h five of the accused Wooldridge was the Army's former were shareholders were named in the highest ranking enlisted man who was indictments. stripped cf thal rank fallow ing a Senate Coincidently, the Senate Subcommittee subcommittee investigation in l!le9 which reopened hearings Wedn!Sday into th! accused him of "questionable acUvities" $3 billion·a·year post exchange (PX) op- Down to 7% Interest Rates Reduced On U.S. Insured Loans WASHINGTON <UPI ) -Interest r.ates on home loans insured by the federal government were reduced today by one· half of one percent to seven percent -the third such cut in as many months. Affected are mortgages insured by both the Federal Housing Administration and the V e t e r a n s Administration. Covered are not only home purchases but also FHA mortgages on apartment developments and other housing. Announcement of the reduction was made by Housing Secretary George W. Romney and Donald E. Johnson, ad- ministrator of veteran affairs. The effective da te of the change is Thursday, Feb. 18 -that is , the cut applies on applications received after today. Romnl!:y's office said thal outstanding commitments ·ror insurance would con· linue to be honored at their original interest rate. However, the announcement said various federal offices involved in mortgage loans "have Deen instructed to negotiate with lenders to seek reduc- tions in the Interest rate on subsidlzed mortgages ta the new lower rate regardless of the rate of the original commitment ." The new rate ls the lowest in more than two ye11rs for government.backed ma.rtgages. The rate rose from 6~ to 71At percent on Jan . 23, 1969, on its way lO lhe all·time high of 81Ai·percent -imposed Jan. 4, 1970 -which prevail· ed for most of last year. From the high mark. the ceiling was cut to eight percent last Dec. 1 and lo 7'h: percent on Jan. 12. Romney hinted that at the lower ceil· Ing, many lenders might increase the "points" they charge in addition to the set interest rate. lie said the aeven percent celling "may be just ahead of current conditions in Ule corporate bond markets, but with the mortgage lending institutions becom- 4Jtg increasingly flush with funds, it will 7iot be king before the new ceiling Is fully vindicated." HeUons run by the Dt::fwe ~p.ftlMnt. \1M Cl!Uornia ~,.~ ... ·Ila !ht Indictment was i<letune.t11 lliijiod Inc .• described as formerly ~na In ·Put· leMon, Calli. Wooldridge was one of the sha'reholdera ' . . in the company. Other. shareholders named were : M!Sgt. Wllll&m ff. Hlgaon, Redstone Arsenal, Ala .: Sgt.lie Narv1ei Hatcher, (Ret.): Sgt,/lc Sey mour Laur, (Ret.); and Theodore "Sam'• Bau, a civilian who served as a NCO in the Anny. So Far Just 7 Candidates Seek Board Positions Trustee elections for three aeats on each of the Newport-Mesa Unified School District and Coast Community College District boards set for April 20 have in.o;pired only seven candidates to run. Deadline for filing is Feb. 25 and ll appears the only "race" for a school board scat will . be in trustee area two of the Coast Community College DlstricL The incumbent, Donald G. Hof( of 14342 Harper Street, Midway City, faces student Charles F. Daglon of 15225 Jacksc.n St., Midway City in the April 20 election. Ty,·o other college district ·trustees whose terms e1pire this year also have filed for r&election. They are: Willia m E. KetUer of 62.1 Seventh St., Huntington Beach representing trustee area three. and Robert L. Humphreys, 1500 Adama St., Costa Mesa. area four. Voters from throughout the college district decide on each area's trwtee, although candidates must resJde In the area they will represent. Coast Com· munity College district includes Newport Beach. Costa Mesa, Huntington Beach, fountain Valley, Seal Beach a n d Westminster. base perimeter. The U.S. warplal\tl ftew tlmugb dangerou5ly low clouds which Closed, down to a celling of oaly 600 feet at times. In Saigon. mil itary sources saJd Wednesday the four-month around·U:te-- ckx:k U.S. air offensive against the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos bu knocbd out nearly 7 ,000 North Vietnamese supply trucks -more than one·third of Hanoi'• fleet. The sources said this was 2,000 more trucks than the total destroyed during the autumn and winter air strikes aga.inlt the trail In 1969-70. Ex-con Spills C.rill)e C~pers In Church · By AJl9aiili l. VINllL 0,. -.-;;ir; PIW Slaff ?tfed.itstlng ID a nel&hborhood church. an ex-convict RifOled only a montb ago epilled out a tale of a drinking and robbery spree when routinely contacted by Costa Mesa police Tuesday. Robe.rt S. Corder, 44, who became a fret man Jan. 7 after serving a term for armed robbery, is back behind bars today. Someone sent officers to Harbor Trinity Baptist Church, 1230 Baker SL, during the early afternoon w I t h a auspicioUI peraon report. Patrolman Harlan Pauley said. be ap. proached Corder and asked what seemed to be the problem. The e1·Navyma n employed as a fire e1tinguisher repairman until two weeka a10 -and atlll driving a comp!ftY truck -told Officer Pauley he wanted to tum himself in as 1 parole vkJlator. Meanwhile, Sgt. Bob Goode and Officer Mark Bernal arrived on followup assigrunents to assist Patrolman Pauley. "I mi ght as well tell you everythln11" Corder was quoted as telling them. "You 'll find out anyway." He said he couldn't remember the dates because he was drinking at the time, but claimed to have pulled three armed robberies in recent days. Corder listed the victims as a shoe • &tort, 1 market and 1 fried chicken takeout shop, all in Lcmita or the im· mediate vicinity. He said he took $100 from the abM store, armed with a toy German l.AJger pistol and convinced two Witnesses it was real when they chased him on foot. We•ther READERS RESPOND TO PILOT'S ADS Unfinished Bouse Only three persons -two of therri lncwnbents -have filed for the Newport· Mesa Unified School District trustee elec- tion. Falrer skies and COC>t.r temp- eralures are on the menu for Thursday, with mercuty rtadinp of 58 degrees along the coast and up to the middle 50s further m. land. It seems that everyone must be read· Ing OAll.. Y PILOT classified ads tbeH. days. They're respondini, too : that's how we know. •BOAT CARPEl\'TER and nBERGL.ASS. Perm . job \\"/frinil! bf!nefi!J:. LAKE J\IARINA (PhOne numberl. Thia advertixr w11s lookJng for 1 single applkant. He lost counl of the classified respomes on the second day tht ad ran. A OATLY PILOT ad-visor can help yoo 9et th•t kind of resul~. too. Just e111U on tht direct line. 642-5671, and tit bact. Htlp will be on the way. Saga • Ill The next installment in lbe nine.year aag1 of John Wakula's unfinished Costa Mesa house J1 to be'" continued in two weeks. Costa Mesa couocllmen agreed Tuea- day nJ&bt to de lay action on • petttion by the Marina ffi&hlands Homeowners A:s.wcialion. demandln1 tbe city t8ke action one way or ll)(lther. They ire asking the city to lmpaae a 90-day order for Wakula . of &43 Beach St.. lt1 resume work on the 1tructure at 1128 Gleneagles Terrace. If he refuse~, the nest logical 1tep '· Mesa Continues would be to schedule a hearing on whether It should be desi gnated a public nuisance and finished or demoU11hcd at Wakula's expense. Association President Norman Slatler .. of 1136 Cltntaglts Terrace, was present with 1 hddtUI of nelgh~n for the debate. along with Wakufa. First of all he challenaed a DAILY PILOT •lory about the 47-flanatllA peU· lion and 11;anted to .knoW where the information was obtalntd. Mayor Robert M. WlllOn exph1ined eommunlcatlons to the cOUneil are a t· , matter "' public ~ord and may be. examined by the press or other interested parties. "Oh, he .. id. . Nothln&: more WllS Aid ~t the pelt· lion facts. but Slatle.r questloned the list,.. ing or ·an incident at Wakl.111'1 property Mondl'1 night as a nelghb<l'hood dlatur· bance. on the police tog. He p:id a car apparently abandoned In the ,•pp1rently 1blndoned 1!1'11!. or the apparently 11\andoned ho&:e -that Wakula 1Larted to build bad 1lmply been (SR MESA. Pait 2) "' Donald E. Smallwood. of 1991 Kornat St., Costa Mesa 111 seekin& elec:tion to the seat being left by James W. Peyton, representing truMet area one. Mn. Marian Bergeson of 1 7 2 1 Tradewinds Lane. Newport Beach and board President Selim S. "Bud" Franklin of 1928 Santa Ana Ave., Costs Mesa, have flied_ to retain their 1ea.tl repruen- tlng trustee areas thrte and aiic rupee.- lively. · · • . Smallwood. an allomey. \J prerldent of the Mesa Verde Hameowners' 'Aslocla· lion. ' Franklin. also an attorney, was 1 rnnn- ber or the Newport Harbor Union Hli\> School bbard prior to uni!icatlot\. Mrs. Berge!Oft IJ a hou!ewlfe 'Who bas 1erved four yean on the Newpon.. Me11 bolrd. She served two yeart on the Newport elementary board prior to unlficaUon, " '~ ' • ' I Z DAI\. Y PILOT _ _ c widmd11. f.•bnl111 17, 1971 Yacht Race Straggles To eto~e By ALMON LOCKABEY J i,. • • Of ... O.!IW l'llltl Slaff • J;'.UEl\TO VALLARTA -Tho f~st Marina del Ray to Puerto Vallarta yacht race dra11ed to 1 close today with the 1ut ·of the 26-boat fleet struggUne lowarcl th< llnllh line. · Twelve ht lht Oett hid finished by t a.m. today and three had dropped out of the: race. ' Regardless of late finishes. the O\'tta\1 corrtcted Ume ~·lnner will be John HolJday'1 Ertaon "· Aquariul from Long Beach Yacht Club which finished at 1:45 p.m. TutSday to knock RaliCal out of the co~ time lead in the 1,125 mile race. DAILY lllLDT Si.If l'~ti9 Aquarius was one of thret Ericson 35.s ln the fleet. The other two, Freestyle and Odd Couple, were caught in a park· tng lot some 20 milt! at sea, but were still expected to finish la ter today around noon. THE NEIGHBORS ARE UP IN ARMS OVER JOHN WAKULA'S UNFINISHED HOUSE Costa M11a Man Says He'll Finith It When Neighbors P1y for the Broken Windows John Hooten's DesUny U from Newport Harbor Yacht Club was the third boat to drop out of the race. It motored into Puerto Vallarta. The other two dropout& were Aventura and Babe 11. Yachts which had finished by midnlghl Tuesday were Sirius II, Rascal, Widieon, Querida II, Aries, Novia de!_. Mar, Dorothy O, Madrugidcif, -A q u a r i u s , Quasar, Ya Turko and Dakar. Approaching the finish line this morn- ing were five more yachts, Carina, Kanaka Bug, Freestyle, Sigame. and Odd Couple. The rest of the fleet l\'ili straggle across the finish during the day Thurs-- day. CommunicaUon.s between the United Stales and Puerto Vallarta has been hampered by overloaded llnes through the overseas operator and only a ham radio network has been able to handle the task. Information is being fed frorri the escort vessel Pioneer to Carroll ~ Hudson on WB6RMA ln Newport Beach which is passing on the information to news media. Also on the network is Dave Atkins in Los Angeles on W6VX. Satellite Launched VANDENBERG AFB (UPI) -A satellite employing a Thor-Burner U combination was launched at 7:S:l p.m. Tuesday from this space,and mllsilt. test C'e!lter. From Page l MESA HOUSE FLAP . •• pushed into the street by juveniles. Sig Fidyk.e, of 1132 Gleneagles Terrace, confirmed the neighbors' good intentions. "I'm a hard man and I run a tight ship. I live right next to that dump. --1 can take care of eight or 10 people,'' Fidyke declared. "But I just called the police to get it on record." Condition of and events occurring on or around the property at 1128 Gleneagles Terrace have frequently come up in munic ipal and police reports in recent years. "When you start taking a man's private property you've got to go slow," ob~1.rved Councilman Willlam L. St. Clair. "Granted, maybe we 've gone too slow ••. " he added. Wakula himself took the podium to respond to questions about the state of the property where he began building wilh the vision of a view overlooking a marina on the Santa Ana River . "Are you the property owner?" he was asked. "t represent the property o~·ner. who is young -3 years old," said Wakula. ~·ho didn't identify the young owner further. He went on lo complain that his buUding was suspended about 21h years aio. by tuJ qwu reckoning, due to van- dalism by netghborhood children. "When did ,YOU stop?" he was asked. ''When the damage got lo be $1 ,000. I can finish it in 30 days. It's no public nuisance," \Vakula replied. He said he v.•i\I get . back . to work when neighbors chip in $1,000 to pay for broken windows and other damage. No one leaped to the offer. •·1 am not responsible for babies," Wakula continued, in reference to juvenile vandals. "I cannot keep up with the damage. As lo~' as that continues I cannot afford to .•. "What about that hundred grand you brought in from Canada. John?" heckled one neighbor, as Mayor: Robert M. Wilson emphatically shus hed him. Wakula was detained by U.S. Customs agents last month in Minnesota over a mailer involving 20 pounds of hashish assertedly found in a briefcase on the seat beside bim as he entered . fro1n Canada by _train . "The dog residue is that high. . . " Wakula continued, ignoring the remark about his recent misfortune and gesturing with his hand just above the floor. Dave Ba\ough, of 2743 San Lucas Lane. }oined Wakula at the podium when neighbors complai ned about the allegedly ·abandoned car. He said. he has brought potential buyers to see it but charged harassment by ne ighbors drove them away. ~ Teac1ter · Gl'oup~Attacks "'8alough was asked about ttfs role in -the corrtrover!la~ property and the house that John Wakula started to build and has never finished. He said he is a part owner. V se of Labor Advisers "I thought you said the property was owned by 3-year-old," snapped Coun· cHman Alvin L. Pinkley. "You don't look 3 to me." 11iring a management consultant !i~ to advise the Newport-Mesa Un1f1ed School District on negotiation of teacher demands brought criticism Tuesday night from the Newport-Mesa Education Association. Superintendent \\!illiam Cunningham .. told school trustees the $-4.M expense for the advice of the Beverly Hills firm was necessary because· ·jeachers have their advocates and ··we need help too."' Bart Hake characterized the firm -.of Joyner, Kelly, Julian and Da\any as a bunch of "old retired school ad· ministrators who couldn't handle employe relations problems in their own districts and now have formed a manag~men\ consultant team." Hake said one principal in the firm was formerly the superintendent of the Los Angeles school system and another was a knov.•n "union buster." Hake contended such a firm would "erect barrier~'' betv.·ten teachers and the administration. DAILY PILOT Ou.HG&. COAST l'Ual.1sHtHG t:»Ml'AMY Ro~trl N. ·W-' f'ralllwrTffllll"\llll"!'!'I' J 1ck ll. Curley Tt.•111 11 ICe•ril Ecli!Or Tho1T1 •1 /.-Mur,hfn• M-tlnl Elltltor C..t8 M ... Offic• lJO w .. t l1y Str••t M•lli~g ""'''''' ,,O •. ln 1160, t!624 ' . OtW-Ht'lllpOrl •••di: nn w.1 ••M• ~ l••-aucll: m ,_, Av..,ut H~nllllffM •••di= 1ms hf<li to.oi.v••ll Saft ~It: al Nd E (llt!'llnt tltMI ,...,.._ cn •t .. 2 ... u1 ca..:RH A""'1f1 .. Ml·M" c.tr1911'. mt, °'"""' C-.t """"tMiil ~!ft. .... ....... '*'*· """"' ..... .. l>orl.tl ,...,Mr .,. """"'""*''' ....... _, .. •ffll'OOllllWll Wl"-11 .,..... ,... mlN1911 .. apyrltftt -· ~ tllU .. , ... "91d •I N~ lfMft -~ Ctlt1 "'-· C111ttt~l1. """'°'"'"" W -c1rr1w J1.tl -111i.1 ~• "1111 u ,n -t11171 mlMurr •t1UM1*"-. JI.» -11111. Teachers would prefer appointment of trustee Donald Strauss, a Newport Beach businessman experienced in personnel matters and knO\\."TI for his conservative stands on employment mal- ters, Hake indicated. "At least we know \\'here he st ands _ and he is willing to let us know early in the game the items on which ~·e'll ne\•er reach agreement," Hake said. "I have an interest in it," Balough repeated, but declined to elaborate. City ·Manager Fred Sorsabal \vho ha s an MA degree in public administration sa id he was unprepared for the un· fini shed house issue. which originated about the lime he ~·as a sophomore in college . Councilmen \"Oted unanimously to lake up the matter at their next ·meeting. because -after all -what's another t"·o weeks after nine years? From Page l DEL MAR HEARI NG ••• existing street and critical traffic safety problems to residents left led to a June, 1969 decision lo run .it along the north side. Madsen sald. • · "The county approve . _ . 1hey have set aside money for the widening from Tustin Avenue on," he said. One critical factor is the time e\emenl. because the state Division of Highways must dec ide on a Del Mar Avenue overcrossing alignment on the Ne"·port Free"·ay. He said prelimina"ry construction as far south as Arlington Drive al the northern boundary Of the Orange COWlty Fairirounds ls due this summer. A series or speakers who addressed the planning commission thrte v.•eeks ago before It recom1nended approval of the widening, as now proposed, then approached councilmen. Ben Gockley, 264 Del r.tar Ave., ques· tioned proposed costs and pa;ymcnt for property. "J wish you gentlemen could tell me how you came up ~·ith $946.000 for 39 homes,'' be snapped. Madsen said the figure is tentative and \V&S developed In the past. so 8J> praisals later·wJU doubtless be higher. Harold J, Jak, 2612 \Vestminsler Place, charged that freeways caused v.·hat he letmed stnu\ and smog and begged coun- cilmen · to c«>nslder tile displaced bomeo~Tiers. t'J ple_1d with you. I cry with you, J went house to house and what did T find? Retired people. Ladles and gentlemen, like the cotton out or your ears and put this on the ballot," he implored. "We're getlln& off the subject" remarked M1yor Wilson. '·You don 't like rreew11ys. This Is a street that will bt-ro"lblY 84 Jett wide." Garden Grove city employe Harold Lundell. 2608 fRirway Place, ciled thal community's past widening projec~ which have fallen 1hort of predicted traffic now rates as ttason ror caution. I •·1 don·l think that many people (44,000) will use it. You're going to have the Boulevard of Broken Drams going dO\\.'n this route ," he said. Lundell also suggested location of a busy service station, a major apartment co1nplex and the corporate headquarters of Tic Toe l>1arkets on the south side of Del Mar Avenue are a key factor in the northerly alignment . Theodore C. ''Ted'' Bologh, 286 Del r.1ar Ave.. joined him in this thesis and rapidly expanded it. "I appeal to you in the name of God. of The Flag and of The President. Save us from hoodlums. nar cotics and apartments," hf' declared. "Sig Heil!" Bologh concluded, flinging a derojt:alory salute at the pensive panel after describing the five members as acti ng more like generals than elected councilmen. '"I must say 'he' has a novel ap- proach," remarked Newport Beach TrAf· fie Engineer Jaffe. Desmond Naisrnilh. 108 Del l\1ar Ave .• suggested that. if ll1e free,vay overpa ss is al issue . it might be possible 10 place il at ?-.1esa Drive and n1n il through the undevel!1ped fairground s. City Allorney Roy June ruled thi.~ virtually impossible. The county Road Department's Kri:u1n guvc ll brief accounl of detailed analy sis t1nd plans ttlal are still in the "·orks in his office. "f think "'ith all we'\'e heard lonight "'e could hold th ls O\'er." said i\1ayor Wilson. "I was surprised to hear you v.·e:ren 't farther alonR with it." Councilman JaC'k Hamn1ell movrd for I ~ six . montl\ de lay, but stipulated the hearing would remain optn in the mea n· lime . Richard M\Jnson, who said he lives RI 3.'l4 Del fl.tar Avenue. University Drive. Fair Drive nnd Campus Drive clcsed the talk~ v.·ith a quip. "I wonder if you cou ld ~u.itgest 111 uniform name for the enllre length?" he said. Plioenix Offered $5 After Rape, Witness State:; A 63-year-<ild llouston, Te)(as. woman today testified that convicted rapisl Gary Harold Phoenix of Costa Mesa raped her eifht years ago while he \tas on parole from a Kansas prison after serving time for identical offenses. Mrs. Mary Davidson. the third wihtess to appear for the prosecution in the Orange County Superior Court penalty trial of the 29-year-<ild bachelor, said the tall, husky PhoeniX forced her into her bedroo1n ttnd compelled her to participate in acts of sexual perversion. "And what did he do then?" asked d<'puty district attorney Michael Capizzi. "\\'ell'' the obviously distressed woman replied. ''he wanted to go to bed and do the right thing." "I was crying and trying to talk hin1 out of it," Mrs. Da vidson said. "but it didn't make no difference. He did \\'ha t he wanted to do and he offered n1e $5 al the end." Capizzi is asking the jury of eight women and four men to vote for the death penalty follo"·ing Phoenix convic- tion last week en multiple rape. robbery and kidnaping charges. He told the jury today of Phoenix's long record or rapes and sex offenses. a record that includes hi s incarceration in a Kai:isas prison on an almost iqentical convittion . Phoeni.x.. Mlo•.was the assistant mana- j:!'.er of a Huntington Beach health spa at the time of his arrest last July 27. was convicted of attacks on eight Orange County "'Omen in a 28-day spell last sum- mer. The jury which convicted him on 30 out or 33 felony counts is now being urged by !he prosec ution lo recommend !he ga s cham ber for the blond defendant. A~v1Nlsem1111 GiM0 T~~~l by J, C. HUMPH Rl!S "GOOD INVESTMENT" Although \l'e all 'know that a dian1ond is a good investment, most of us have never really compared it to some o! the major expenditures \ve periodically incur. If you have not made such a conlparison. you might find it interesting to do so by taking a seeond look at your invest· n1ents in cars and furs. ~fany ot us buy an expensi\'e car \V h i c h \Ve kno\v u•il\ be almost worthless in a fe\I.' years, and ,,.e see1n unconcerned about deprecia- lion . caring n1ore for appearance and performance. And many people buy costly furs, kno\ring that they \\'ill someday \Vear out or go out of style. \\lhether you're talking about dian1onds as a symbol of love, or as an investment, the old phrase. ";\ dia1nond is forever,'' applies equal· ly \veil: because a diamond's ap- pear1nce remains the sanle. it never lrears out or goes out or style: and not only dots it not depreciate. it actually increases in value. 1 beau· tlful and practical he:d2e -against in· flation! Diamonds are our business ••• nqt Investment counseling. But \\'f! are capable of helping: you make a good investment in a dian1ond: ~o come on in , •• our diamond coun- seling ls frei?! • AJ!peals to LAFC , ; • I. Santa Ana Still ' Fighting Irvine Santa Ana isn't through trying to scu~· tie the future city of Irvine. The City Council Tuesday night voted to ask the Local Agency Formation Com- mission to reccnsider its approval of the proposed iOCQrporatiOll Of the model city. Distressed over inclusion of a 933-acre Industrial tract officials of the cow1ty seat municipality want for themselves, the ccuncil will act under a new state statute that allows any legislative body to appeal for reconsideration. Councilman Jerry Patterson, in prc>- posing the move. said, "I just want to make "it absolutely clear they thought about it and decided ag1inst us."' Richard Turner, executive secretary 1 Year Sentence In Buddy Killj.ng A Costa Mesa man who shot his buddy "'ilh an anUque rifle after a day-long drinking bout that ended with an argu· ment in a neighborhood bar was senten· ced Tuesday to one year in Orange County Jail. Orange County Superior Court Judge Claude M. Owens also placed Dennis J...e- roy Jefferson, 36. of 2132 Harbor Boule· vard on five years probation for the slay- ing last June 15 of Geral d Hess. 45, des- cribed in .Jefferson's trial as the defen· dant's rriend of two years. A jury found Jefferson guilty of Invol- untary man!laughter after hearing de-- fen5e witnesses testify that the boat build- er was "hopelessly drunk" when he w~nt inlo his home to take an ancient Italian musket off the wall and use it to k i 1 I Hess. Jefferson personally tesllfied !'hat Hess folJO\\.'ed him all I~ way home from the bar on the night of the killing and per. sisted in his arguments. lie told the jury he was drunk and could not remember shooting his drinking chum . FruHt Page 1 SALARIES ... to be adopted. The average teacher's salary would increase $1,480. according to the district exan1ination of the pr<r posal. The tolal salary hike would amount to $1.7 million in the 19il-72 school year for th~ district's 1,195 teachers. The difference belween the $8 million total estimated co11t and the less than' $2 million attributed to pay hikes would be due lo o the r items sought by teachers. These include increased frin ge benefits, lowered cla ss sizes. increased sick leave from 10 lo 15 days, reading program improvement. 11e1v teacher training. provisions of suQstitulcs and career teacher ra ises recognizing long terms of service with Lhe district. of the t.A~~c. said this morning the c;.")mmission had taken the parcel, and the agreement involving it. in to con- sideration. Santa Ana points to an eight-year-<ild agreement it had 1\•ith the Irvine Co~· pany that stipulated the property uf question \VOUld be annexed to that dty this spring. . . . The Irv ine Compan~. JK!lntlng. out 1L had nothing 10 do "'Ith 1nclud1n_g the parcel in 1he proposed hounda_r1es,. of the ne1v cit y, has. however, ma1nta1ned that the agr"eement is no longer in effect , sillCf: the action of one council ca n DO I bind future councils. A representative or the Council of the Communities of Irvine , sponsors of the incorporation move, attended the Tuesdav night session and offered to meet With Santa Ana officials to discus.t the prOblem. Mishaps Hurt 8 on Slicl{ Count y Roads Several persons "·ere injured Tuesday night in accidents on rain·sllcked Orange County thoro1..:ghfares, one a htadon freeway collision and another a pole-ram- ming rollover crash. Only one or the victims was hospiUliz- ed, hoy;ev,er, while the others were treated for injuries and released. Carol J. Cribbs, 39 , of 2998 Croftdon St., Costa l\1esa, was listed in good condition today at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital, desf>ite a fractured right leg and_ possible internal injuries. She was trapped in an overlurned sedan at 6:15 p.m. Tuesday and had to be extricated by rescue workers after the vehicle hit a telephone pole and Oipped onto its top. Driver Richard D. Humphrey. 27, arid his \Vife Charlotte. also Zl and of the same address as the third victim. wert treated for lacerations and released. Police said Humphrey was northbound on Fairview Road al Loyola Road in a heavy downpour when he braked, losl t'Ontrol of the car. and rammed a telephone pole which broke off. Hun1phrey said he was drifin)i( throush \\'ater flooding do"'" the road1.dy when a ca r paMed him al high speed, spraying the windshield and.cutting his vision. Tu·o men escaped serious injury at 6:30 p.m. on the San Diego Free~·ay just north of El Toro Road in a beadon t·ollision . California Highway Patrol officers said traffic was slowing sharply in heavy rain \11hen one northbound vehicle driven by Garvcl Stewart, 52, of Norwalk, losl traction on the \\'et pavement. INTERNATIONAL· STERLING OFF SALE on these 4 most popular patterns A wonderful opportunily to fill in or start your ~rvict rt ow, .. C\'ert give a very tr ea.sured gifL 7bcn:'1 a complete open stock selection available a~ well as place seH.irtgs. And all at great aavinga f« 1uch pride In ov.·ning or giving firtc family s.ilvcr. Salt Limited-February 14 lhru March 13, 1971 J. C. .J.Ju1n1J'1rie:1 Jeu1eler:1 1823 NEWPORT BLV D., COSTA MESA CONVENllNl TllMS IANKAM EllCAll:O-MASTllCHAltC.l ' ' 1:4 YEAllS tN SAMI lOCATION ,HONE 14t -J~O I ! Jane to Test Liberalized Army Code? NEW YORK (AP) -b the llnr Army really new? Is c:ome(jjan Dick Gregory the anUwar soldier's answer to Bob Hope? Can Jane Fonda become a G.I. pin-up if she ref~ to wear a bikini? An antiwar troupe th.at in- cludt1 a dozen well-kllown entertalnera hopes to find the answer to these questions in a proposed tour or 20 military bases across the counlry. "It's been very discon- certing for many of us in Hollywood to see that Bob Hope, Martha Raye and other companies of their political Uk have coriiered the market" on entertaining soldiers, bfJss Fonda said Tuesday. "A lot of us who have dif- ferent points of view about the war and what's happening to this counlry have decided the time bas come tO speak to the forgotten soldiers," she told a news conference. Dr. Howard B. Levy, the former Army captain who was court-martialed for re£uslng to train soldi,rs headed for Viet- nam. said the first stop will be in Fort Bragg, N.C. on March 13 and 14 . .AI'ly more questions? Yes. 1ald one reporter. would Miss Fonda wear a bikini for the &bow? "Are you serious?" she. scof- fed. '"Itlat's what Bob Hope: does. We're trying to get away from that sort of thing.'' Debt Limit Connally's First Task Wtdntsd•Y. Ftbruary 17, 1971 DAlLY PILPT $ --\ Coml>at Stresses lmpairetl, Klelibach ConsplrflCfl Alleged Calley's Thinking-Expert 60,000 Barbers to Get Trim? W ASH!NGTON (AP) -'nl< promoter who mutennlnded ni. 11\dlclment ch1r1ed an lour with conspiring lo 1d ttckbacks, fees and com mlsalom rrom a Gallfomll land development !inn In cono ntcUon. with a loan frarn UM pension. fund. lt further chart ed Shaheen, Block and Colum bia with conspiring to pa] off De P a o I a in comectlon with fund Joant: and charged De Paola with tk>llclting and receivJng '29,000 In fees, kickbacks and commissions. FT. BENNING, Ga. (UPI) - A poychiatrbt teslllied loo day that '4in view ot tlle puohing that wu coming from above:" and at.rases of a com• bal sltuation, LI. William L. Calley Jr. was unable to determine whether orden to kilt civilians at My Lai we~ Jegal or illegal. Dr. David G. Crane, 34, of IndianaPolis, a v e: t e r a n hospital sta!f member and a.ssistant psychiatry professor at Jndianapclis University, wu called with the: calley court-martial jury absent to uprm his ezpert oPinlon. The move was part of a defense effort to get before the court the vlnra of three • Drama p<ychialrisls .., lo Calley's dlrniniJhed mental capacity when he led his platoon during a search-and-destroy sweep through the VJetnamese hamlet on March JS, 19118. Calley is accused of slaying, or ordering the slaying, of 10:2 Vietnamese civlllau dur- ing the Infantry sweep. Crane testified on the basis of knowledge gained i n treating large numbers o! Vietnam combat veterans in that country up to six months before the My Lal lncldent. "There was an all pervading tension and anxiety among of- ficer1 and men," Crane said. He tesUfie<l taht beeauae of Callty's Impaired "decision ma.king process" during the on l~e Dog Saved From Cold Raft four-hour action, be wu not loans of millions of Ba.rber1 able to "contrive or plan" Union pension dollar1, some to enterprises coot.rolled by (premeditate) killing, to ~ f" him and a financiaUy plagued persons without jusUficallon.. DuPont heir, has been Indicted to detennine !he legality or along with the un~'! presl-orders given to him. " ~ ba k Nineteen g 0 v er n m en t f dent on charges kick c witnesses have testified that conapiracy · the night prior .to !he My , ~ Tile penS'lrln fund Involved Lai operaUon Capt. Ernest ln the complex case has ties Medina, as company comm.an-to one or the biggest penonal der, ordered the village des-bankruptcy act cases ever ril- troyed and lhe inhabitants ed, to two other financial killed. scandals and to jailed tu "In vtew of Ute pushing that evader Bobby Baker. was coming from above, Lt. •• "' 1 And the nearly 6 0 , 0 0 0 Callty was not going to be barbers who are members of considering much of anything . .i the pension plan face for«asts u'' "•'-""' except act all\! do:' Crane • ~ I. w ""'""' 41 that they likely will get little NAMED IN CHARGES told George W. Latimer, the u'' T.....,le or none of the retirement in-Barbtr Chief OePtol• chief defense attorney. T I'·-W comt they were promised. Shaheen also was char1eid with getting from th 1 Calllornla firm $112,517 In feet and commla1oos, $25,000 i1 negoUable noter, two c:ron sultant agreements w or t I $144,000 and 100 acr<s of Jani In order to Influence his ao tlons u the luod'I adviser. "Also there were the basic a n;.a Ob •r Both government and private -Joseph De Paola, In- underlying stresses elisUng in Sen. Adlai Stevenson studies say the fund will go dianapolis, president of the Russ Fish Boat that individual at that time." Ill (D-lll.) said Tuesday broke as presently constituted. Jou r n e Y rn en Ba rbe:rs, Under cros.s examinaUon by The 36-count indictment was Hairdressers, Cosmetologists F w·th F. Cap!. Aubtty M. DaJJlel 111, that I negotiated set-returned Tuesday by a federal and Proprielcr's International ree l lDC the prosecutor, Crane said tlement of the lnde>-grand jury In Chicago and Union of America. and JUNEAU, Alaska (UPI) _ that Calley's menlA.I abiUty china war is tile only announced by the Justice chalnnan of its pension fund. was "impaired to at least a V,?SSible outcome which Department in Washington. It -Max Block Jr., a New A RU!Slan ahrlmp boat capt.ab mild to moderate degree -Jibes with key initial riamed : York attorney who worked who.9& veuel wu seized withiil WILKES-BARRE, Pa. (UPI) . -Sam, a shivering German shepherd who had been trapped for 23 hours on an ke floe, saw the friendly police sergeant beckoning to him from an bland in the Susquehanna River. his ability to under1tand, objectives of U.S. in· -Thomas A. Shaheen Jr., with Shaheen. the U.S. 12-mile limit, pleade<! Grabowsky, 36, was off duty reason. and consider -his volvement -freedom !8. the pension fund's orieUme -Golwnbia Financial Corp. no contest here Tuesday U ·Tuesday when he heard about decision making procesa w~ and sell-determination investment consultant who of Chevy Chase, Md.. con-a charge of. Illegal fishina and lbe dog, still 40 mi I es impaired." for the people. now Jives in London, England. trolled by Shaheen and Block. wu fined $20,000. upstream. Grabowsky and his1 --------------'---''-------------'--=------'----------------- brother, John 25, went to a small island in the: Sus-. quehanna near Wilkes-Barre and waited for the dog. Sam h a d inadvertanUy climbed onto the small chunk or ice when it was near the shore at Waverly, N.Y .. 80 miles upstream from Wilkes- Barre. For nearly a day, Sam sat on the ice, carried along by the river's curr~t and afraid to jump of(. Numerous at- tempts to rescue him failed. A helicopter made several passes over the ice in an attempt to lift him off. but he was frighte1ted and shied away. Police Sgt. Albert When the ice floe came into sight, they began coaxing lhe dog to jump off. Sam took a chance, leaped into the water and swam to the men. . "He was scared," Grabow. sky said. "He jumped up on this ice cap wheer my brother and I "'ere. I got down on my knees right by him and he came right over to_ward me and he wasn 't afraid any more." Sam was taken to a shelter to await hJs owner. Mr. and Mrs. Marion Baldwin of Waverly. A pollonauts Reveal Moonwalk Troubles SPACE CEf\'TER, Houston Today the Apollo astronauts (UPI) -Apollo I4's moon e:i-plaMed to tell project ofticlals plorers have warned the next about their pathfinding, nlne- Apollo crew to be wary ()f day mission te the billy lunar the tricks the barren, hilly uplands. landscape can play on their The problem 6 f ability to navigate between 1...,.i!ic places ef lunar landmark!. ,.. .. That was one cf the key when walking the m • on point.! Alan B. Shepard, Edgar became even more apparent D. Mitchell and Stuart A. Tuesday when two acieotists Roosa made Tuesday in a day-reported that Shepard and DuPONT~ NYLON y PILE SALE ,.,.,.w" AFTER INVENTORY ·-.-,~·'· CARPET AND REMNANT bi'.:MPrnJ!: .~ Thurs., Fri. 9.9, Sat. 9-6, Sun. 10-5 DuPONT 19 DuPONT 0 · NYLON y Sq. Yd. PLUSH SALE -95 SPACED DYED NYLON TWEED SALE Sq. Yd. long briefing for Apollo 15 Mitchell were so fooled by WASHINGTON (UPI) astronauts David R. Scott, the terrain they turned back Treasury Secretary John B. Alfred M. Worden and Jame!! within 160 feet er a crater Connally, President Nixon·s e. Irwin. Apollo 15 is set that was their key objective. resident Democrat, has the: for launch to the mOon July They thought it was farther Soft ond curled down yorn1 for dimensional effect. Mor• fac• yorn1 for long er weer, Mony lovely color ovoHoble. 100% continuous filament nylon plu1h,Moin· toin1 fr•1A look witA li11l1 effort, Nylon yarn1,or• tough and long wearing. Cleons easily. Many lovelycolor1 ovoiloble. Multi-color yarns with a different co1Uol texture. A carpet that Imports sparkle ond practicality. Double IC!.mlno t1d ;ut• boclc. th~kless chore of convincing· 25. away. Coilgress to raise the national:iiiOiii0iiiOiii0iii0iiiOiii0iii0iiiOiiiOiii0iii0iiiOiii0iii0iiiOiiiOiiiOiii0iiiji/ debt ceiling by $40 billion so' the government can keep paying Jts bills. Ccnnally took on his first official assignment s I n c e assuming office last ·week with a acheduled appearance before the House Ways and Means Committee which must rule on a debt ceiling boost. Tile administration wants a $435 billion lin1it on what the government can borrow -$40 billion above the present "temporary" ceiling of $3951 billion. • • PAii.iC JUSr A tTe' Pl.OM OUlt IAtT INT.ANCI At Wll1' IND 01" MAONflL/A ANNIVERSARY SALE! FRESH GLAZED DONUTS RIG. 6°' SI.Of l~-DOZ. {or k M.) '-b. ''"' t1rr41 PH. JOtti O•lr 135 E. 17th Street -Costa Mesa ,J .. t 1 ..... """'""" ltwl.J Iotrocluciag anderwear lhat ktur •ot wear Giit. ~ First time ever ••• a 2-year Guarantee oo Munsingwear's Cotton Kangaroo Shorts and TC-28 GrancJ.Slam• T.Sbirt If this anclmrear....,..outorshrlob /.~.ft"-out of fit within two )'Call of normal wear, it will be J'CJ)lac:ed. FR EE. And we'll bet you've never ii<' '!l.t'\<\. worn undentar as comfortable asthis,citbcr.K.anproo . Shorts and TC-28 Grand-Slam T-Shirt-both knit of pure cotton. Buy a J..pack. We auarantec il .•• for two years. munsingwear. I ~ Knproo Sbot11-Slzet 2M6 __ .._3 !or $4,00 ~T-&!tt-Sl..,34-46. ..... 3forS5.00 MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED IN COSTA MESA IT'S D"IPARTMINT ITOll 1816 NEWPORT Bl VO. HOURS f :JO TO 6 Ol'IN ,RIDAY IVL TILL I 1'.M. DuPONT 501 NYLON PILE . $ 88 SALE Sq. Yd. All nylon foce random leic fured hi-lo loop, double jule bo cking. Res;,,, fuz:r.ing ond pil- ling. Eo1y to moin toin. Mony 1rnort colors. TONE-ON· TONE b DuPONT y NYLON 49 PILE SALE Sq. Yd. Continuou11o t1loment nylon pile carpet in o deep, ric h, tii-lo textured, tone-on-t one pot• tern. Re1lstont to 1po11· ond &loins, Double jute bocking. Mony lovely colors. ROOMS .& HALL CON1 INUOU S FILAMENT NYLON PILf CARPET COMPLETELY IN STALLED ~~~~·.c;;;.~;, $ 2 0 g BEDROOM &HALL .... U.P·T·0·4·2·>·q .• Y.d., ......... ~~: ..... -t-!!!!!!I LARGE ROOM SIZE REMNANTS Choose from many $ f ibers ond colora. Carpet living room,- dining room or bed· room ot this beauti- ful low price. SALE ROOMS & HALL CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE CARPET COMPLETELY INSTALLED LIVING ROOM, DINING & HAtl UP TO 32 SQ, YDS. . $159 SHOP AT HOME SERVICE If yo1,1 can't come in, ju't phone and our representotive will coll witli a full 1ompl1 1elec1ion. No obligation. CALL TODAY 546-8545 Exciting color combinations. • · DuPONT 0 NYLON y SHAG SALE sq. Yd. 100% DuPont nylon foci. Double fut• bock· Ing, deep luxurious pile. Eo1y to maintain. Mo1h proofed and non-oJJ ergenic. An orroy of decorator colors. · POLYESTER SHAG SALE Sq .. Yd. Deep ric h shag carpet mode for ~ors of beouty and w1or. So tough ond durable It's fom ily-prcof, large selection of bri'- liont Coli fornio colors. ROOMS & HALL·' CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE CARPET COMPLETELY INSTAllfD ~~~~ ~c;,c;,~, ~ 2 I I 2 BEDROOMS &HAll UPTO 60 Sq. 'Vda. AU lAIOI CAHiii l llflTIMI GUAIANTll I~ (J/rtistic Carpets , 2 -,_~A ~----..--US! OUI CONVINllllf· (HOIT TllMS 3040 BRISTOL AVE. . ' . . J ... off ••• S.. DI• Fwy. COSTA MESA • 546·8548 r l -·' • • ~.tq,y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • · Good Guys Are Great • • ' ~ . . ' · Good Guy• made a week of largely dark new1 and bold, black headlines -such as earthquake deaths and devastation -a bit brighter in Costa Mesa. • ' ' ' • There were eight of them, all recipients of Good Guy Citations, those new tickel&in·rev~se handed out by grateful policemen. • Good Guys get cited for helping lawmen protect public safety and property, with "tfckets" written on the spot and good for $10 and lunch at a later date. The concept. developed liy the Costa Mesa North Kiwanis Club. received 'Such enthusiastic response that it will doubtless carry on as a local tradition. An article tentatively forthcoming in a national magazine for men 'in law enforcement will encourage similar Good Guy Citation programs throughout Ameri· ca. Policemen aided in the field -it may be in a bank robbery clue or through a simple, thoughtful bit of 1er· vice -appreciate Good Guys in our society. \Vhat qualifies a person to be so designated? A group -<>f four .Jioys, all 14, spotted windows left open and summoned :police to a school campus to pre· vent a possible burglary or malicious mischief raid. One man, 18, was instrumental in capturing a tel· ony hif..and·run and felony drunk driving suspect after a girl was struck on her bicycle. He was·just off proba· tion for a similar 1967 offense. No injury was involved in a second, similar case. but a woman. al so 18, was named a Good Guy (technically a Good Gal) for provid· ing information on anptlJer hit-and-run i~denL And a boy, 13, helped a lone policeman move a Trees Seem Smarter Than People ,Speaking or trees, as I was .recently. 1 learned something that ls instructive. inspiring and charming lrom a new book, ••nie Urbanization of the Earth," by J orge Arango (Beacon Press. $6.95). In hiJ .~ a.pter, on human ecology .. the authbr Uks us to obsen-e a f'OIJp of plants of various sizes strug- gling to perform. We see that "most plants keep a diltance from one another. A tree never grows branches into its neighbor if it can avoid doing so.'' Plants like the sun, Arango points out, but at the same lime like to be in a com-r o r t a b l e shade. "They like to have maximum space of their own, but at the aame time to be to- gether. This inter- r e I at lo n makes plants subordinate their growth to others." EACH PLANT lN a group has il3 own task of balancing its "personal" welfare with its "social'' needs. It builds up the location of each leaf in the most advantageous position, "not only for the plant, but for the group." N() humanly-devised compultr could do this. As Arango says, "a prediction of timing. size. and location for each leaf in relation to the others would con· slitute billions of equations changing con· tinuoU!ly in time." Jn this highly important respect, trees seem to be smarter than people. Or, at least. the mechanism of nature is more rational, effective, and protective Dear Gloomy Gus: r just got lost behind •nother cloud· of black smoke from one of lhe trucks of our well-known local garbage service. Can't anything be done about it? -V. E. S. n1t ,..,_ N'flKft ......,,. .._ "' _....,.,, """' .. "" ---· s.. YMr "' ,_.. fll SlllM!r .... Dl/tf .,Ill/, than the frantic anarchy of hllman Mciety. FOR ~1081' OF US today live in a man-made environment lhat o f f e r s neither privacy nor mutu1l heJp, and certalnlY not a delicate blend of the two. Small towru; are dying of anemia, and citie& are strangling to death. For the first 100 centuries of history, only one out of 10 persons lived in a city; the others Used it only for trade or defense against invaders. Jn the last 100 yean, however, an enonnous migration began toward the urban areas. Now the cities are beginning to collapse ~der the convergent pressures of popu1ation, pollution, transportatkm, ln- dustrializ.ation. and, most importantly, alienation -the vital sense of "com· munity" has been largely lost in the modern city. WE HAVE PLANNED everything e:r· ccyt how to live together in increaslngly greater· numben. We plan factories and highways and airports and shopping centers -but, unllke the lrtts, we rudely crov.·d others out of the way and ruin the environment not only for them but for ourselves as well . Arango·s chapter on the "Pathology of the American City" is a heart-breaking case. study of our ignorance, apathy and grted. Perhaps it is time -perhaps it is past time -that we took a leaf from our plant life. and i;ubordinated our growth to the common good. A Month for Dreamers February Is the month for dreamers. The weather for those who live in the cold northern states is too suUen to go outside ucept for skiers and other self-de&tructive people. The onJy I.bing to do that makes real sense i..s to stay indoors and daydream. TheP, leaning back In the old swivel chair with 1ti:ls feet crossed befott him on his desk ~nd a friendly Secretary keeping a wa'ty eye , out for the apprcN1ch V of the bos31 11 man . . lg free to arve rtln to his lmaa;ioalion. In a bttnk of his mind'a eye he can 1lart living the k!nd of 11dvenhu-ous, rogui~h.Jile he would enjoy if he ~:eren'l restricted by a "1!e, three kids. a mortgage. a Jin!lted. amount o( pocket money ·md nil Itel Hang hia hat in a hartm of b1I own. Have his department supervisor shot at dawn -and twice at &Wllf:t, just to be sure. TAKE A FRIEND'S lovely i;ister to lunch during National Broth~rhood Week. Be made an Indian chief the week before they disoover the whole reserva. lion is sinking in a vast bed of oil. Fly the coop to Brazil with tht office petty cash fund. Take karate lessons 11nd become the strongest 98-pound ~·eakling in his neighborhood. Grow hair on a bald billiard ball. Do card tricks at a &tale ball ln the White HO\IK. Pusecute 1 majority. YES, HE CAN. H he c:hoos<s to : Make a cttl..,,'r WT'Oll PAlll!l AH APPLE with• dagger. Pick a pocktL Give an enemy • poignant feeling Find a buried cache of Spanl!h at the point" a poniard. . doubloons and bey hll flt1n. Du.I with a liendi311 vamplr< In an Lure a ship ashore durin1 a atorm abandoned cemetery at mJdnlght. llnd loot il. ReceJve I ll'lteful letter from Dr. Wear ,, jetA·el 1n Ont.-IW' ...and Jlit--BenjamlQ_SJIOCk for curln& h!m ol the the throol of anyone who dared tell hiccups. " him thet it madr. him look Ute Mt. Hele_ a mcwle 1tarltt do her homework Cle.an. In aJgibra. Trav,1 everywhere on a "'flyfftl carpel Vt11 only daydreanu now keep • ht picked up for a aong tn a buUt f1llow'1 spirit from belnJ stuck in in~. · snow61ta. ' stalled, abandoned car out of •·major thoroullfare at rush hour be.tore it could cause a ma1or accldenf. The idea is not to set a price on publJc service, but to reward those who never hesitate to perform,. swiftly and freely. Kiwanians dig t.nto their own pockets when fil)ed for good-natured club infractions -to finance the program for recognition of su~h service. But they dig deeply for a positive cause In this case. ,.; P erkins Leads United Fund Robert W. Perkins, a former FBI 111110 who now is vice president in charge of personnel for the Irvine Com· pany, iJ now also president of the Harbor Area United Fund for 1971. His first big tasks willrbe to assemble a fund drive team and establish a valid fund-raising goal for 'the needs of the 30 community service agencies which rely on the Harbor Area United Fund for majcr financial·sup- port. In assuming the post last week, Perkins indicated the fund -taking the economy into major consideration -will likely ,shoot for.something under $500,000. President Perkins and his United Fund team have a hard act to follow. Despite a soft economy, the 1970 campaign, although falling slightly short o! its $412,000 goal, did admirably well -much to the credit of two very dedicated men; former President Jack R. Curley and Campaign Chairman Robert Heild. c 'It appears tD have been launched from that little old dead planet. What do you make of it?' ~Teirehers~ Sa"lary Proposals Are Realistic' N-MEA Corre.cts To the Editor: Your Feb. 10 editorial, "Unrealistic Demands." con tained a major factual error which the Newport-Mesa Education Association wishes to set straighl for the public record. Also, once this error is brought out, the entire editorial is. pretty much negated. You stated · that the main exampie of the5e "Unrealistic Demands" was "an $8,l)O hike for the district's most ex- perienced faculty." Nowhere in the P.faster Contract submitted to the Board Feb. 2 is thue any request for a ·raiae of this size. M you admitted in oor conversation of Feb. 15, and as we now can inform the public, this is simply a human error caused by misreading and miscalculation. IN FACT, THE largest raise that any experienced faculty member co u I d receive under the salary proposals made to the Board is $3,225, which is a far cry from $8,300. Furthermore, all of the salary proposals are just tllat - proposals: tlley must be negotiated with the board and accepted by this group before they are put into effect. Rather titan being "unrealistic," the salary proposals of N·MEA are realistic in terms of what the district can afford and in terms of what teachers need to counter the innation that steadily eats away at their real wages. ACCORDING TO the Burtau of Labor Statistics of the U.S. Department of Labor, the cost of living has gone up 16.l percent in the four years since the Newport·f'<1esa Unified School District came into being (1960-70). During thal same time the average salary increase for Newport.Mesa teachers has been 21.9 percent. This means that teachers have supposedly had a raise of a little over l percent a year in disposable income. Even this has been eaten up for many since the Bureau of Labor Statistics' figures are an average for L.A. and Orange counties and do -not take Into consideration the higher cost of living in the Newport Beach-Cost.a Mesa •rta. tN O'MIER WORDS, the teachen; of this district -far from making unrealistic demands -have been subsidizing the cost of education in this area by not even gelling raises sufficient to stay ahead of the galloping inRaUon. Letters from readers arc welcome. Normally writtrs 1hould conve11 tMir m<S$flQ'es in 300 wordi or less. The right to condense letttr.s to fit ipac1 or 1Hminatc libel ts rtsnwd. AU let. ter1 must include lignatve mu! mail- ing addrut, but names 'Wl4U be with- held on Tequest if suffidt'n.t reason is apparent. Poetrv will not ·be pub- lUhed., by the "Fire Houst Cir911." The thought of the Costa Mesa Polfce Department's "secret lgenUI" sneaking up on the naked girls made my day for quite awhHe. Bui this folly, it Rems, has been followed by quite a tr1gedy. Some of the girls h•ve actually been sentenced to fines and imprisonment. This &e11tenclng, I believe, is a worse crime than the girls' dancing. These girls are actually being punished for revealing what God gave them in the first place; and furthermore, by people wM do not ordinarily attend their performancea at all. IF WE FOLLOW the line of thinking of the courts, we come to the realiiation that seeing dirty shows promotes dirty minds. But what about seeing violent shows? Last night on teltvision I wa.1 subjected to five killings, four beatings, two bribings, and three cases of ''justifiable homicide." Was thiJ helping to promote the welfare of the people? Was this teaching that violence is ail right. while the unclothed body. v.·hich God created. is bad? Tms IS SIMPLY stupid! How can we condemn the exhibition of the body, which God created, while condoning kill· ing and dishonesty, which man created? I say that if "dirty shows" create dirty minds, violent shows create violent mind!!. STEVE LAUBl. Y Overpopulation To the Editor : Overpopulation is not what causes pollutk>n and hunger. Statistics over the years show that when a country reaches a certain level of technology, population a Miscalculation growth levels off. The s o -c a 11 e d overpopulaUon exists in the agricultural nations, where with new farming techni· ques enough food is and will be grown to feed the people within the next decade. To tell those people to limit the source of their current wealth -people - is not 10lving the real problem, which is 1 lack of money. IF OVERPOPUU.110N were the key t.o starvation, why is it that in China no one is hungry, and in the United States between 30 and 40 million art: considered hungry? In Brazil, not an overpopulated country (90 million people in almost 811 large Ill area as the U.S.). there is also gross hunger. The question is why? 1'-'• obvious. In Brazil large amounts of fertile land is devoted to growing coffee for export to the U.S., and very little of the land is used for growirlg food . ln the U.S., over 35 million acres of good soil is out of producticm yearly bec1use of the threat of a falling rriarket price. IF OUR SYSTEM was geared to grow food for people and not to make a profit, we would !OOn fi nd out that hunger is not a lack of food (or overpopulation), but a lack of money. The non·socialist world goes by the saying, "If you can't afford it, you can't have it," which res\,llU in hunger, especially in those countries (practically all) where the land is owned by those wealthy few for their benefit. Hunger is not caused by the limits of Nature, but by the nature of the ownership and use of the land. JIM NEWKIRK Pop11latlon, Pollution To the Editor: Those that advocate "zero pop~lation growth" equate numbers of people with environmental decay· and they believe that for each individual that dlel only one baby should be born. As a result of this plan, they believe that the en- vironment would cease to deteriorate and those babies who are allowed to be born will be able to Jive the "good life." The other side of this coin would indicate that if we modify the ''good life" then more babiu would not increase envirorunental decay. THE f\fAIN CAUSE of air poll~tion ls the burning of fossil-fuel lo obtain heat energy which is then transformed into mechanical energy. We burn gasoline and diesel fuel to propel autos and trucks; we burn coal, natural gas and oil to generate electrical power; wt burn combustible refuse because in 90me cases that ' is the cheapest way to get rid of the refuse. The first and most important step that could be made would be t0> outlaw the building of any more electrical generating planu that burn coal, natural gas or oil. Then after an electriea1 car has been developed the use of such cars should be made mandatory. These two steps would almost eliminate all oil spills and we would be able to breathe fresh air once again. REFUSE PLA1''1'S could be designed and built to transfonn garbage into usable products and separate out those items that can be reclaimed. What better way could we utilize the .scientific people that have been displaced Jn our aerospace industry than to turn them loose on the design of those plants? In (:9nclusion, when someone says to me, "I am in favor of abortion and sterilization to obtain 'zero population growth' " I will answer, ''You have been born? Now who is going to vote for those that want to be born ?" HARRY B. McDONALD, JR. POU' S11pport To the Editor : t would like ID commend you for the article published on the Prisoners of War luncheon, exposing the aituation ID your readers. This is a very Important issue and further coverage is encouraged :iind will be appreciated by all those who care about the brutally-treated POWs . (~USS) l.ESl.EE GODFREY Inevi table Towanda. Pa., Review: "Jt was in- evitable. 11an, the deliberate 'j)olluter of his environment lhroush bending nature to his will, has now been identified as an unwitting natur(ll polluter as well. Soviet researchers have discovered that l trust these facts will put a new perspective before the public when they consider the salary requests submitted to the Board of Education by the Newport.f.tesa Education Association on behalf of the teachers of the district. R. C. STEGMEfR Public Relations Chainnan Newport · r.1e1 a Education Association Cruelty to Children such exotic substances as hydrocarbons, alcohol. ammonia , formic and acetic acids and acetone are expelled into the atmosphere by the human respiratQry system ... llere in this capitalistic socie· ty. with its glut of mouthwashes, bruth fresheners. antiseptic chewing gum11, et al., we may at least iroprove the effect 1\' 11dlt11 vs. Vlole11 ce To the Editor: F'or Mme time I have been amustd .---By George ---. Dear George: rm curious. Exactly whit dots a public relations man do? CURIOUS De•r CUrioUa: Shhhh. big mouth! I've got a lot of Madison Avenue -type rtaders, and if you start asking , questions you'll blow thtir whole r1cket. (George will solve your problems in les!i time than it takts to 1ha.ke a sheep's tall. However. we don't thlnlc he has that e1pression eJ• actly ri&hl) As a rule. law does not like to interfere with relations between parent and child. Parent$ may use reasonable, but not e:xcessive force lo discipline their child. Teachers, neighbors. doctors, or kinfolk often report suspeded cases lo the police or • welfare agency. Since 1963 the law calls upon doctor~ to report child patienl3 who seem to have been treated cruelly. The Jaw now calls upon denli$tl, religious practition· ers, school nurses, or public beallh em· ployees to rePort such ~es. mEY MAY PHO~"E or write in lhtlr report to the poliCf: or the juvenile prob3Uon department. They should give the chlld's name, address, •nd his In· juries. Jn the past doctors or nurses dldn·t need to report If to do ao v.-ould be in their opink>n "inconsl!tent with the heallh. care, or treatment of a minor ." Now they must report all suth injuries. Rtport.s go to lhe State Bureau of Criminal JdenUfJeatJon 1Dd InvesligaUon. Law in Action Failure to rep<>rt h; a misdemeanor. The reporter is immune from liability. No parent can sue him for slander or for interfering wilh his home. THE LEGISLATURE requires report, from the school 1uperintendent. principal or a director of county welfa:rt v.·ho may have noticed the injury, A court ma y sentence anyone for as much as JO yeiirs In prl.wn if be wilfully causes great bodily h•rm to a child. The parent who Inflicts on a child "un- justifiable" phy11ic•I pain or mental suf· ftring, ma y race charies which call for six mon th! in jaU. a fine, or both. Nott: Calfforn la lawytr.t of/tr thl.t coh11ru1 so yo1t mnu kllow oboul our laws. l on our immediate environment, if w1 don't cure the basic polluUon." --.WWW- Wednesday,February 17, 1971 Tht tditorlcz pcge of tht Dail11 Pilot 1eeka to inform and stim- ulate rtoder.s bu presenting thts ntwspcper's opinions ond com .. mento:rrt on topics of intf'!rest ond significoncc, by providin g G ·for1,1.m for the ezprtssion of oMr rcadtrs' opinio11i. and by ·µrtS'tltting the dtvtrse vie1v- polnts of hiformcd observer3 atid. ,,:poke:.tm1n on toplci of the doy. Robert N. Weed, Publisher -VOL. M, NO. 41, 5 SECTIONS , 58 'PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 197'1 TEN CENTS . " l . . Public to ._. u ·s~ Sa.It .:Creek Beach . by Summer Publlc use of Salt CreU Beach by summer is seen by Supervisor Rona1d Caspers following approval of a tentative agreement between lhe county and AVCO Community Builders. The aa:reement is subject to approval of appraisals of land for parking Joi... AVCO amended a proposal of last ()ctober to indude additional beach area • and rtStroom sit.es. The October J>nlllO"'l helded off a county law.Wt lo g1in public acces.s to the l)eado between Monmh Bay and Dana Point. _: - Under the -terms .the developer will don;i,te two lct'eSS mites .to the belch and grade.s one oL 1he routes; aetl the county 11.4 acre:s-of belch at. $30,<0> DAILY P'ILOT Sltlf""" El Toro "Rd. Crash Three rersons were injured Tuesday night in t~o-car crash on rain· slick E Toro Road about 7:30. They were the driver of· Datsun shown, \Veston W. Hammond, 17, 23455 Dur.yea, El Toro; his passenger. Raymond Kennedy. 16, 24722 Bel Green.-El Toro: and driver~{ other car not shown, Irene Hill , 41, 24351 Spartan St. San Jua,n Capistrano. AU were given medical treatmenL Officers said crash was "nearly headon." Council Selecting ~roup To Push Clemente Bqnds By JOHN VALTERZA Of l~I O.lly "llol ll•ff The loose strings in the pending April !O San Clemente parks bond issue are expected to be tied into a total package Wednesday as city councilmen appoint a ~man ci lizen's commiltee to promole the million-dollar proposal. Along with the citizen·s promotion croup. councilmen will probably formally accept the working drawings of a new. $400,000 community clubhouse wh ich will be-one of four major projects listed in the bond issue. The three others are beach aceess and facilities improvements, purchase and development of neighborhood park.! and the development of a youth recrea- tion center. Among the routine legal ques~i~ns which remain unadopted are the h1r1ng of a financial consultant service. the formal statement of the city position 00 the matter and the passage of tbe formal ordinance calling for the bond election. . The bond issue-actually the offering of four separate votes on. the f~ur-part package-will be combined w1~h the trUstee election ballot of the Capistrano Unified and Saddleback Community College districts. No other revenue measures will appear on Ott: ballot, bul 16me critics of the bond issue already have pointed out that mid-April is the season for taxpaying. -Ah<! the residual anger overpaying tax- or .. ge Coast Weather Fairer skies and cooler temi> eratures are on the menu for Thursday. with mercury readings of 58 degrees along the coast and up" to lhe middle 61ls further in- land. INSIDE TODA\' A mt:rica1J3 impatient with the p 11 ct: of Vit:tnam izoiion in Southeast A.!Ul and withdrawal o.ft U.S. troops might tokt: a Look a' Kort:a. Page II . ·-• ..... • ...... • Mtfl Ill ...... k, " (.allft"'lt • ~-... <•,..., t.,11tr " M~lll•I ........ n ....... .. ' NtltlMI """" ... ci.uHIN U•M O•-C-tf • ""'"' • ... " c ......... u --ll·lt .... Nltllll ' rior. s~ " -ff ' SIKI! ,,,..,_911 n.tJ ............ ""' ' T•llvfM .. lllt+'11lfllft4'l'll H·U ........ U·U ,.,,_, U·U Wtl!Mr • .,_ ... " W-·• Htwt tf..Jll -,,_. • Wlrlt "-•• -. . .. - . es could rub off onto b41Jol.s ,April 20. they warned. Other action facing the council Wednes- day night include : -A letter from Melvin G. Harbert, owner of an auto parts business in the old city hall property, informing the council that he will move out in April. leaving the building empty and up for sale. --Consideration or appointing a n architect for tht: design of a new fire l'ieadquarters building. -Evaluation of private bids for a new pension plan for public safety employes. The report and recom· mendation will come from a special committee of city department heads who have evaluated private bids for the pension plan, compared to another pro- posal by the State's Public Employes Retirement System-preferred by lhe city employes themselves. -Specific plans for the construction of a new rest room building at Linda Lane beach. The pro}ei:t would be built on land leased to the city by the Santa Fe railroad. and completion is planned before the start of the summer season. The nearest existing restrooms to the busy beach are a considerable walk downcoast at the municipal pier. ---C.onslderation of a claim by San Clemerite apartment owner William R. Broughton for $21,$00 in damages assertedly caused by a city storm drain which clogs, causinf floodin( to nearby properties. The city already is In litlga- tloa wiU! the man on another claim for damagea: caused by the aame dra in. Senate Prohers Charge Payoffs -By PX Peddlers WASHINGTON (UPI) -Senate in· vestigators charged today that beer ind liquor agents plied h i I h • r a n lt J n g American ofliclals in Vietnam with favors -such as a villi with maids -to promote sales of their products to servicemen on military bases. The ·disClosure:s C1111e as the Senate opened new bearings lnta the "1 bUHon post exchange operaUona run b)' the Defense Department. Sen. Abraham A. Rlbieoll (0.Conn.), acting chairman of the Ptnnanent lnft!llig1tions---SUbcoly1mtttee, sa~ the hearings would examine allegaUons of bribery. kickbacks and payoffs to PX officials from U.S. flrms supplying 1 growing volu~ of pi-ndu& durlnr !he ·American buildup In Vietnam during the 19'0>. u acre; aell the copnty 11.5 acru to part 1,650 can at a fair market \lalue to be determined by appraisal. Teh county will be responsib~ for de\lelopment, maintenance and ·control of the parting lots and ~ch areas. .Additiooal area at the 2().foot leve1 above high tide will be sold by AVCO to the county for $60,000 an acre. This will be used for public restrooms. A county negotiation ~am of Roa.d Commissioner Al Koch, F~ Control Egnineer George Osborne and · Real Property Services Director Stanley Krause has recommended •that Kenneth Sampson, dirtclor of hatbors, beacht:s and parks ·now take over control of the project. utnutn The proposal calls for county ac- quisition not later than Ju1y 16, tfll. Salt _Creek . Beach waa lhe subject of •. COl!til)u_ing up".'ftr during .19(i9 a.nod 1970 bet:a~ develOproents by AVC0'1 predece-. the Lall\INI Niguel Corpor1. lion. threatened to dlt off all puflUc access to the beach. Tr.h controversy dtteloped over ·the • ' . ·er·e deeding of a toUnty-abandoned totdwat to the corporation by the county. Advertistmenla were placid aeekin&: names of persoiu who hid used tht beach without permission 1D put yun. nie County Counlel's office reported enough response to ftlml the bula of a lawsuit claiming the publlc:'1 rtaht to use the beach. s • e nvas1on 1st Valley Quee11 Lynn Exner 'a Bit Nervous' Lynn Anne Exner, the first Miss Sad- d1eback Valley to enter the Miss Orange County Pageant, ~ getting a little bit nervous about the competition. ... a \"!)tters' wheel and cooking.· She wal a Mission Viejo High School homecoming princess and was once voted the most beautiful ·baby of her et1mmunity. The Chamber is invltitlg Saddleback Valley residents to support Lynn iturin& the competition Friday. -.. ----·-.. "But rm really having a wonderhll time ," she told her spc;insors, the Sad- dle back Valley Chamber of Commerce, Tuesday. LyM, a 17-year old senior at Mls.sion Viejo High School .J&..Jbtlt dauldllc . pt_ Mr\' and Mrs. Bil!\ l:ltir of ~n Viejo. She fills her time workllla at a local pharmacy "about 30 hours every two weeks'' ad in }\er spare time prac· Ucea her varllty cbeerlelding. Tht judgin( will take place Friday, Feb. 25 in the AnaheU:n· Convention Cent.er. Ticketk are· fvlilable ,frolLTom. .· l'I. o1.=· L•k in l'J""""" ' ;.:, . Late1y, ahe"1 been devotin& her energies to btr dance routine which she will perfonn during the talent por· lion of Friday's county pageant. Lynn enjoys armnastlcs, tinkerina with ·~ -, {~ OV'?iM '--• · !s &1 aponso • m anu M P'inancial ConsultanU,. Royal Savings and Loan , Newport National Bank and t>ewey's Rubbilh Servic.. "I'm -proud to tetve as Misa Sad- dleback Valley," .s.lM said. 1'J'lJ. be at- tendin& . Saddleback Colle1e nei:t year. majoring to phy1ical education,· and I'll hive lots Qf time to fulfill all Of my duties." Rain Triggers Crashes On County's Highways Several persons were injured Tuesday night in accidents on rain-slicked Orange County thoi'oughfares, one a headon freeway collision and another a pole-ram- ming rollover Crash. Only one of I.he victims was hospitaliz.. ed, however, while the otaers were treated for injuries and released. Carol J. Cribbs,39, of 2998 CroHdo n St., Costa Mesa, was listed in good condition today at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital, despite a fractured ri ght leg and possible internal injuries. She was trapped in an overturned sedan at 6:15 p.m. Tut:sday and had to be extricated by rescue workers after the vehicle hit a telephOne pole and flipped onto its top. Driver Richard D. Humphrey, 27. and his wife Charlotte, also 'J:1 and of the same address as the lhird Victim. were treated for laceratlona and released. Police said Humphrey was northbound on Fairview Road al Loyola Road in a heavy downpour when he braked, lost control of the car, and rammed a telephone pole which broke off. llumphrey said he was drifmg through water flooding down the roa~ay when a car passed him at high speed, 1pr1ying the windshield and cutting his vision. Two men escaped serious injury at 8:30 p.m. on the San Diego Freeway just north of El Toro Road In 1 headon collision. California Highway Patrol officers aaid traffic was slowing sharply in heavy rain when one northbound vehicle-driven by Garve! Stewart, 52, of Norwalk, lost traction on the wet pavement. His sedan went out of control and crossed the center divider, s~ashing i:1to a southbound car driven by Kenneth Adams, 32, of 25132 Las Bolsas St.1 Laguna Hills. Both victims wer~ treated at South Coast Community Hos pital and released. A third tw.;car acCident in which all three victims were treated at the same c\inlc and released occurred on El Toro Read at 8 p.m., when one went out of ccontrol and spun across traffic Janes. Weston Hammond, 17, of 23455 Duryea. Road, El Toro, gave no reason why he lost control of the car carrying a pal, Ray Kennedy. 16, of 24772 Belgreen Road, El Toro. Plis northbound vehicle crashed into a 110Uthbound car driven by Mrs. Jreoe Hill, 41, of 24351 Spartin St .,' San Juan CapistranO. between Leisure ~orld Laguna Hills and Laguna Canyon Road. Co1nputers Wrecked TOULOUSE. France "(UP!) -A i!'OUP of youths sacked the office of Interna- tional Business Machines Tuesday night. destroying four computers, police said. DAILY ll'ILOT 11111 'Mte MISS SADDLEBACK VAL.LEY· Lynn Ann• Exner Varied Agenda Facing Board Of San Joaquin Decisions ·on unification. food 'services, architectural services and the use . of vacant schilol 11te1 may be mack at tonight's meeting of the San Joaquin Elementary School District board of trustees. The meeting wilt take-place at 1 p.m. in the district administrative annex, 14600 Sand Canyon Ave., East Irvine. Trustees Invited community leaders to present their views on unl(lcation during a workshop last Wednesday. The board has indicated It will decide tonight which direction the district should recommend to the unification committee. The choices Include unification along the eiisting boundaries of the. 1\J.stin Union High School District, splitting the high tchool di.5trkt into three separate entities or keeplna the status quo. The board also will decide whether to aagln invtstigate the pmslbillty of limit- ing food services in the district. A cafe. teria operating statement wlll. be presen- te dto show If the curierit aystem is pay• Ing for ll>eU. · Also on the •11end1 will be the adoption of a criterion for selecting architectural firms to build the district s$0ols and 'a decision ·on whether or not vacant school sites should be used by Little League baseball tearris. Dock at New Barbot• Base Camp Near Laos -· Reinforced SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. commanders rushed reip.forcementa Wednesday \o ~ numbered defenders of an American base aupporling the South Vietnamese cam- paign into Laoe. Field report.I 11id OoP"" munllt troops were_ firm& h'td ·.ii 1ldt1 despite heavy U.S. air and artllJery prqwre. The combat around Flrt Supporl Base Scotch 10 miles from the LaotJan border was part of a pattern of heavy ·flghlinl in mountain jungles near the reacUvated .,. U.S. airstrip at Khe Sanh, headquarter• for tbe 9,000.man American support task force . Preliminary reports indicated at least fiv' Americans were WQ\ll1ded in the battle near Fire Support Base Scotch and military sources said a' U.S. Anny helicopter was shot down near it Wed- nesday afternoon. No casualties were reported in the 16th U.S. helicopter lou of the ltklay Laos campaign but f t v e Americans ~ere killed In th' craah of a U.S. Army Chinook heUcopter near Hue Monday night" in an incident not related to the South Vietnamese thrust into Laos. RepOrts late Wednesday said elements of the 20.000.man South Vietnamese U· pe<!itionary lorce bad driven 15 m t I es Inside Laos, an advance or Ont mile in a !4-bour period. The push was described as slow and cautious. . A Saili:on rommµnique said the Laoa force· killed 500 Communists in the first nine · days of the ope.ration and f I e Id reports Wednesday increased that figure by 78. SOuth Vietnamese lossea were placed at 127 killed and 454 wounded plus three killed and four wounded ln combat Wednesday. Confused froot dlapatche:s on the fighting around Fire Support Base Scotch Wednesday did not make it clear whether the American defenders -about t4 men -were pinned down. The beleaguered unit was identified ..., a platoon of the 1st brig~de of the Ith mechanit.ed infantry div1slon 1taUoned jl'.lst west of a bis outcroppiD1 known as "The: Rockpile." The battle be-gan Tuesday an hour or to be-fore dark wben Communist aun- nen opened up with mortars arid IDllll arms from all aides. Al fla:hting ~ linued through the night and into lite Wednesday afternoon, U.S. Air Force. Marine and Navy fighter-bombers llet!d. Comlflunist positions with bombs and. rockets and a company of * Americall reinforcement• movtd Into the area with more troops on the way~ ' ~ADERS RESPON.D TO PILOT'S ADS Jt seems that everyone must be read· ing DAILY PILOT clasailied ads thest days. They're respondJng, too ; lhat'1 how Wt know. Fishing Slated for Dana +BOAT CARPENTER and FIBERGIASS. Penn. joh W/fringe bentfit1. LAKE MARINA fPhoM numberl . This 1dvet'tiser was looki.na.for uln.lle applic•nt. He lost count ol lhe class\fled' responses on the second day the ad r'11. ~ A DAILY PILOT ·1<1-viaor. •on htlp ~ get thJt kind or results, too. Jult call Ml the dluct "lint. 842.s&78, and 1lt l>ick. Help will be on the way. Public use of Dana Point Harbor will begin In mid-May with the. institution of sportflthing from the new port It "U-f'V~',11 f\>t 8ord-Of-~I .......... 'ti! .. -,.,...,,.... . '.lore ~-i. s119ri't1shlng, Inc. •11 ictnltd kJ ~Jjerate from the new harbor beglnnilll! iii' May. The nnn wlll i• under the title of Dana Lind.Ing SporUlshin& and opera!& from the luelina dock temporarily; The re1111lar aporifl!hlnr dock wlll be ""dy by July. In tw11 other tdkions ·by the.,upervilor11 ·tll(-bloomlnf of-the port Into, ~ ~- ICene was Indicated. , ~ J~aH: (Of tl)e Matlna Inn, 1 J.-•tory. 71-unlt inotel In the hirbor was approved for Gn¥ilr Western Hotel• • headed by Robert GoodJn4n., The hostelry ls ,ex· pected to be reedy (or cue•ls by wmmer. " ) The motel leue coll• lor ftvo IM!n:ml o( the grosa recelplo to lha .coun1y flt the, first five Yun and MVtn percent fjlei'eafter . •• -thli'll iCGOii' .. -.IQo ll>r•. --' I•-·Ol, tha 1(>0~ fldli,,' - 11tended to June f. Norlh Ailio:ricin ' Bullding Technology Inc. plans f•CIH~ 1~,. aportlbhing 11\Cl cb4rter boot oper .. lion, .a aph! level rcstturant •nd bu and ~ retail village. ' .4 , ' J D~LY PILOT SC .W"'"'ldt1· '"'"'If! 17, 1971 Hulse ~ ·Addiction Told. . ' . - .. Drugs, Liqu0r 'R educe d Inhib itions ' . . . By 'tor.lo BARLEY of 1t1e o.Ur "llt! Sll>tf An Orenge County Medlcal Center psy. chlatrlst \oda.y tesUlled that Arthur Craig ~'MOOllC" Hulse's IOt1g addiction to drugs and drink reduced the Garden Grove yout.b't 1nblb1Uooa and may have aacra· vated what he described 111 a "naturally eggr:esslve" nature. Dr. J.~hn Guido opened the third day of the Or•nae County Superior Court murdtr trial With the ltl.temem that Hulae'• con- duct bdort and after II< alle1edly killed Santa Ana service station attendant Jerry Pown to 7% Waynt Clrlln "w11 not paychoUc btbav- lor. "He w11 generally organJud," Guido said, "aud he was, on the basis of what he told me, anxious and concerned.'' Guido's tesUmony was repeat!dly in- terrupted by objectlon1 from defense at- torney .Robert Green. Judge Robert Crookshank announced this morning that he wlll excuse the jury froril the arftrnoon teuJon to enable law- yers for both 1lde1 to hammer out legal a.rguments raised by defense objecUocis. Hulse. 16, was identified by codefeod· ant Herman HendrJck TaY.lor, 17, thrGlib much ol Tuesday's 111:1loli as the hatchet man ln the killing tart June I of the 21· year-old Carlin. Taylor, a transient, has been pro1nised by the prosecutlon that he wlil be allowed to plead guilty to leuer chargea IC he testifies for the prosecution in the Hul~e trial and the trials of two me n charJ1;ed with the killing of Mission Viejo teacher Florence Nancy Brown. He test,lfled lhat Hulse, who 11 charged 11 an accessory Jn the Brown murder, and Steven Craig Hurd, 20, planned !he robbery or Carlin's station and the killing of the young attendant before they left. Interest Rates Reduced Taylor uld Hulse hacked Carlin to death with a hatchet owned bv codefend- ant Christopher "Gypsy" Gibboney. 17. of Portland. Oregon. Orange Countv IU· ltlor-llles will charg~ Gibbonev wtth the murder of Mrs.• Brown when they extra. dltl! him from his Portland jail cell. On U.S. Insured Loans Taylor testified that Hulse and Hurd discussed the killing of Carlin as the trio drove back to Tavlor·s Costa Mesa motPI room and that Hurd congratulated hi1 )-·oung compan ion on the manner in which th'!: young attendant had bePn murdered. WASHINGTON (UPl) -Interest rates on home J~ . ln~ured by the federal government were reduced today by one- half of one percent to seven percent _ the third such cut tn as many months. Affeci.ed ' are mortgages insured by both the Federal Housing Administration and the V e t e r a n s Administration. Covertd are not only home purchases but also FHA mortgages on apartment develoPmenti&na other liOWing. -··-- Announcement of the reduction was made by Housing Secretary George W. Romney and Donald E. Johnson, ad- ministrator of veteran affairs. The effective date or the change is Thursday, Feb. 18 -that is, the cut applies on applications recelved after today. Romney's office said that outslandlng commitments for insurance ~01.dd_ ~on tinue to be honored at their or1gmal interest rite. . However, the announcement -D~d various federal offlces inv?lved m mortgage Joans "have been instructed to negotiate with lenders to seek red\!-C· lions in the interest rate on submlized mortgages to the new lower . ~ate regardless of the rate of the or1gmal commitment." ¥ ule Decorations Winners Honored l ri LagunaJBeach Thts winner• of the Laguna Beach Jaycee'• Christmas decoration conte1t were presented plaques Wednesday for their hoUday adorned homes a n d businesses. In making the presentations al the Hott! Laguna, .Jaycee Bill Higgs noted that the winners were probably the best on the enUre Orange Coast. He said since Elguna Beach had been judged the most decor&led city ln the Forty Miles of Christmas Smiles, the Lagunans could well be proud of their efforts. Residents winning awards were: Mr. and Mrs. George Plelts for most difficult display: Mr. and Mrs. K. t.t. ltti\ler · for be:st presentatum~· Mr. and Mrs. David Kushner for moot orig:nal: Mrs. Ann Met.zleur, third place overall; Ray Carroll, seco nd pl~ .everall and Dr. Eleanor Fri!er, first place overall. Win- ners of the sweepstakes award were 1t1r. and Mrs. Rudy Burton. \Vlnnen1 In the business category we~; Laguna Federal SavJngs for most dif- ficult ; The Potter)' Shack for be.st presentallon; Russ Hind Jewelry for most orlginal; Eschbach Floweri, third' place overall; Duke's Burgers, second place overall and the Chicken Little Emporium, flrs:t place oyerall. DAILY PILOT fl•-.,.rt ltKll Ml• ....... C"'9 M$ , llW.lwttea .._. ,..: ... ,..,. ..... cs.-. OJl'-NO£ COi.iT ,UIL1lHING COM,Afl'f' Ro91tt H. W ee• 'r•~llfll lrA 'Mllll'ltl' Jeck. ~. CVTl•v Vk1 PrtJlCltnl •r.4 G1'r*•l M.ll'llCtr TI10111•1 K•f\'11 l!:•li.r 7110111•• >.. M1Hplilfte Mllllllrot ldltor l lc.,•t' r. "'II 5lu1h Or1ntt CMllY l•llW -· c .. 11 Mt111.»I Will .. .,. Sit ... H'"""''' •••en: m l wn1 ••""'• •wtrnN • Lit~ ••1c111 m ,...,.., A...,.1111 Hlll'llnoton IH~ll1 11llJ ltt(ll .... llYIUI S4ifl OllMllll: • Horii! IJ Cl'"IM JIM\ ... The new rate is the lowest tn more than two yeal'I for 1ovemmenl-backed mortgages. The rate rose from 6% to 1Y.. pei'~nt on Jan. 23, 1969, on Its Vt'IY to the al -lime high of 811.i-percent -imposed Jan. 4, 1970 -which prevail- ed for most or last year. From the high mark, the ceiling was cut lo eight percent last Dec. 1 and toJ.lh per_cel)t._qn.Jal). 12. Romney hinted that at the lower ceil- Jng, many ltnders might incr~ase the "points" they charge in addition to the set interest rate. Ile said the seven percent ceiling "may be just ahead of current conditions in the corporate bond markets, but with the mortgage lending institutions becom- ing increasingly flush witb funds, it wHI not 6e long before the new celling 11 fuJ}y ·Vlndic1ted." . Tht 1 govei'nmtnt does not m1ke dlrtct loanr. Thi FHA and VA auure that borroWeri wllr repay loans made by Pi;IY•~ Je~e~. In the event of a def1ullt the ·ro.Yemment Jnakes up lbe lender'• loss. In an effort to increase the return on their money, lender• usually add "point&" 14 FHA and VA lo a n 1 . A "point" 1s -• one-Ume paymt nt •ot one per<enJ cl lhi ·loan •nd IJ UJUally paid by the 1eller Instead ol lhe buyii'· _ln addl/ion 14 ·lhe intum rate, lhe FHA cliargu a premium. of one half of one · perctnt. ThJs incrtases the ef- fective rate on FHA loant to 7~ percent. The VA foe• rl!t rnake 1 1.lmllar chlr1e. . 'l1le ·!Ow.red ' ctlllng wW trim 1bout $8 off the monthly payment on a '2$,000 home wltb a 25-ye.a.r mortgage. On Jn FHA loan, the monthly piyment for prlnclpal, inte rest and the FHA premium would be •184.75 on rucb a loan. The old rate was •t93. Last Rites Held For L.E. Taylor Funersl services were held Tuesday for Jong time Laguna Beach resident Lyiiwood E. Taylo r. Mr. Taylor died Thursdsy at the age of 77. He had lived In Lagun a Beach for 43 years where he owned a building contracting business. Mr. Taylor ls survived by his wife, Mary, of the family home 1t 8a3 Catallna St.; three brothers, Elmer C. Taylor, of Idaho, Theodore Taylor, of Watson- ville, and Ralph Taylor, of Costa Mesa; a si&ter, Dorothy Bradley, of Anaheim ; six grandc;hlldren and one 1 r e a t • grandchlld. Services will be held at 11 a.m, at Pacific View Chapel, Corona de! ?-.Jar, with Pacific View Mortuary directing. Hurd, also a transient, C.ibboney and Taylor are accused of tAA killing l!!:IS thl'ri 24 hours laier of Mrs. Brown, 31, of El Toro, It is alleged that the trio mu~dered thf! woman in an Irvine orange grove and buried her remains near the Orteji!a High. way after devourin~ several portion~ of her bodv in a ritualistic tribute lo satan. Hurd ·i11 described as the leader of the ,rang of drifters and the man wh o insisted that many of the group's activities in- clude some form of devil worship . Winter Festival To F eature Nine Travelogue Films A series of nine trav_elogue.!I featuring slides and moVies taken round the world wlll be ·featured at the upcoming Winter Festival in Laguna Beach. - The shows, to be presented on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 1:30 p.m. and 3 p.m., will be narrated in the Festival Forum Theater by the traveler who made the spectacular trip. The series begins Feb. 23 with an ''Orient Tour" by Dr. an d ?-.trs. Verner Obon, pastor and organl!t of Laguna Hills First Baptist Church. Tbt OJ.sons \viii take vtewers fr.om the turbulent P111anj8n Falls of the Philippines to Hong Kong's "street of steps." Following the Olson.a, Harry Lawrence of Laguna Beach will recount hls recent -tour of the Soviet Union J with slides -of the scenic aiid hl11tofic grandeur of Ru:ssia and Siberia. On Feb. 25, Henry Bess will show movlea of bis fast-paced trip to Spain he recently made with the t:athol!c Pres!! Council. Bass will be followed by 0. 'V. Price wtlh slides of South America, t1howin g scenes from the Inca ruins to colorful Rio de Janeiro. A special show will be offered on Feb. 26 by Richard Marriner featuring slides of his recent camping a.od hikil'lg trip lo Monument Valley in southeastern Utah. Other slide and movie sho"'S plan- ned for the Winter Festival include Alex and Jean Thomson on the Middle East, Ted Cook on the South Pacific islands, John Wfld' sharing his adventur~ 'in Tonga and Harold 'Vichersham \Vith a slide show of America. British Army Chi ef Stricken in Ireland BELFAST, Northern Ireland l/\P) - Lt. Gen. Erskine Crum, Britain's ne'v commander in Northern Ire land, is in a hospital after a heart attack, the army announced today. It gave no detail& of hia condition. Crum , a S2-year-old Scot, took com· mand of KCurity forces in the troubled provinct Feb. 4. Santa Aita Still Fighting Proposed City of Irvine SanLa Ana lin'L lhrougb tryln1 14 acut- tle the future city of trvtne. · The ·city C'.ouncil Tuesday ril&ht voted to ask the Local Agency FonntUon COm· mia5ton to reconsider 1ts approval o( the proposed Incorporation of the model city . Distressed over inclusion of a 93S-tcre Industrial tract officials of the counly seat municipality want for themselves, tf'le. council will act under a new state statute that allows any legislative body to appeal for reconsideration." CouncUmlUl Jerry Patlerton, In pro- JIOllr'li. the move, said, "l Just 'l\'ant to mike It ablalutely clear they thought about it and dt:<:lded against us.'' Richard Turner, exttutlve Sttrttary of the LAFC, said this morplng the commission had taktn ttfe pettel, and tht agreement involvinc it, Into con- .slderaUon. Seta Ana polnt1 tn •n tlght·ycar·old agretment It bad with the Jrvln• Com· pany that stipulated the properly In quuUon would. be enne:red lo thJt city lhll-..,..lng. Tbe 1rvlne Company. polnUng out . ll had noiht"C m do with Including the parcel In the proposed boundaries or the new city, has, however, maintained that the agreement is no longer in effect, since the action of one councU c a n n o t bind future counci11. A represtntatlve of the Council or the Communltle1 of Irvine. sponsors of the lnfporatlon move, attended the Tu!!osda night session and offered to meet with Santa Ana officials to discuss the problem. Another spokesma n. E. Ray Qulglev. cc1·1 executive secretary. vte"·ed. ''We v.·ant to be good neighbors, but "·e don·t know what we could or couldn't do." He pointed out that all «'anomic feasibility 1tudies {or the new city were based on anticipated rtvenue from lhc area Involved . A statement by Councilman J. Ogden it11rkle perh11ps ga\·e some insight Into the reason .. for the councll's 1ctlon. "If we can't win. we can at least show them we·re men," he said. The origin11l agreement hlld been negotiated in 1953 when Santa Ana volun-- tarlly g11ve up efforts to annex • :JOO.toot strip across the center of the Irvine R11nch to get lo Lelrure \Vorld In Lagun1 Hiiis . • • ~ Yacht Race Straggles To Close Dy Al.MON J.OCKABEY ' 0, "'' OUlw Pn11 ,,.,, PUERTO VALLARTA -The first Marina de! Ray to Puerto Vallarta yacht race dragged to a close today with the last of the 26-boat fleet :i:truggllni toward the fin ish line. Twelve in the lleet had finished by 9 a.m. today and three had dropped out of the raCt'. Regardless of late finishes, the overall corrected time winner will bt John Holiday's Ericson 35, Aquarius from L<lng Beach Yacht Club which finished at 1:45 p.m. Tuesday to knock Rascal out of the corrected time lead in the 1,125 mile race. rlAILY PILOT llell P~ll A MISSION IN MEMORY OF ACTIVIST DANA ~im Bi9rlitn •nd s,,.ak1r LIS Rtmm1r• Aquarius was one of three Ericson 35s in the fleet. The other two , Freeityle and Odd Couple, were caught in'-. par~~ ing J.ot some 2.ll miles at sea, but ·wtrl still expe<ted 14 flniah later .lodaf aroilnd His1ori~ Cause n'fohn Hooten's Destiny II f~m Newnnill HarbOr Yecllt Club was the tl\lrd'..~i to drop out of the race. It motored into Puerto Vallarta. -\ Funds Soug ht f or Statue of Dana The other two dropouts were Avtnlut• and Babe JI. . i Yacbt& wblch had finished by mlllnighl Tuesday were.Sirius II, Rascal, Wid&ton, Querida II, Aries, Novia del Mari Dorothy O, Madrugador, A q u a r 1 u I , Quasar, Ya Turko and Dakar. By PArtlELA HALLAN Of Ill• btil'/ Pilot Sit/I Fund raiser Les Remmers ot Dana Poirit 1s'"1.leglnnlili;to··reer1me ·lne-lifilFd pied piper. But he only wishes his voice were as hypnotic as the piper·s flute. .., hate to raise money.'' he confided to the Saddleback Valley Chamber of Commerce Tuesday. "Yet here I am, ask.ing you to contribute. just as I've asked the Kiwan is and the Rotary and the Lion~ and everybody else." Remmel'IS' •·Gaby" will someday stand sev~ feet high at the end of the mall In Dana Harbor -a bronze statue of a youthful Richard Henry' Dana as he mig!lt have looked when he first gued·-at lhe rocky point that bears his name. For a reluctant fund raiser. Remmers }\_a~n't, ctgne too badly, but he still has a long way to go. "We will need SIS,000 for the statue," he said. "Half has been raised already and if those who have promised would get out their checkbooks. the figure would be closer lo three quarters."' "If I've learned anything in these past few mooths it 's that a cashed check i.9 worth 15 promises ," he added. Remmers nevertheless goes after those promises as eagerl y as he describes his project. l~e has so many speaking engagements that his appointment book is beginning to resemble Spiro Agnew's. The Dana Point resident has also filled his hours doing research on the young Dana and the tin1es in which he lived, information he wllilngly imparts to any and all who will listen. "'Dana was somewhat of a rebel.'' he said. "He was expelled from Harvard for leading student revolts ." Advtrtl1fmrnt r ;rr W &>,ilKilt! 't W.W•·IE&i.W;I i." GEM '~ALK r. 1 TODAY "GOOD INVESTMENT" Although ·~'e alt kn o \V that a diamond is a good in'vestment, most of us have never really compared it to some of the nlajor eXpenditure!I we periodically incur. U· you have not made .!!Uch -comparison. you might find it interesting to do so by taking a second look at" your invest· ments in cars and furs. J\tany of us buy an expensive car \V h i c h \Ve kho\•· wUI be almost \vorlhless in a rew years, and we seem unco.nce.r,ne d abOµt deprecia· li on, carlni ~re !or appearance and performance. And many people buy costly furs. knowing that they 'viii someday wear out or go ou t of style. . \Vhethcr yo u're talking about diamonds as a sy1nbol of love, or as an investm~qt, the old phrase. "A diamond is forever," applies equal· ly \veil: because a diamond's ap· pcarancc ren1ains the same. it never \\'ears ou t or gees out of style: and not only docs it not depreciate. it actually increases In vallle. a beau· tiful and pr1ctical hed~e against in· flation ! Diamondi; are our business ••• not invc11tment counseling. Bu t \\'C are capable of tielpin~ you make a good Investment In i diamond; so com.e on In ••• our diamond coun· sellng Is Crea! "He didn't like the way studen ts were tluted tn those days, particularly cor- poral punishment. He pursued this theme while a sailor and hill classic 'Two Years Be.lore The Ma!!!' went a long way in upgrading the treatment ol sailors and doing away with flogging." Remmers described the hides trade and the economic conditions in the United States that brought eaetern trading ships to the West Coast. '.'Dana's ship carried 40,000 hide s to trade in South America," he said. "Since there was very little market !or the meat produced by herds ol Spanish cattle in .California, the cattle was slaughtered for its by -prouduct s , particularly tallow and hides. .. Estimates have been made that in about 27 years 5 million cattle were slaughtered. Some of the descendants of the Indians who traded with Dana's contemporaries still live in San Juan Capistrano.'' Remmer1 added that during the 27 years that the hides trade nourished about $20 million was made, a healthy figure for that day and age. Remmers is confident that he will be able to raise the money needed to erect th! statue. But he admits that the statue won't be cast until the sculptor has his payment. 1'he monument, whose model ac- companies Remmers wherever he goes, will be . cast in Italy by John Terken or New l\/orlt, a sculptor of international reputation. ' .. The monument will include a pedestal, a landscaped ar.ea around it, and bronze plaques bearing the names of individuals, organizations and school classes that have contributed more than $100," he said. · Approaching the finish llne this moml lng were five more yachU!, Carina! Kanaka Bug, Freestyle, Slgame, anq Odd Couple. ~ The rest of the fleet will 1tr1ggle across the finish during the day Tbur.:- day . Communications betwwi the Unile4 States and Puerto Vallarta has be~ hampered by overloaded lines through the overseas operator and· only • haJ?I radio network bas been abli:. to handl' the task. Information is be ing led from the escort vessel Pioneer to Carroll Hudson on WB6RMA in Newport Beach which is passtng on the information to news mediil. Also on the network is Dave Atkins in L<is Angeles on W&VX. 'Spruce Goose' Given Reprieve LONG BEACH (UPI) -Howar4 Hughes today held another extension of a lease on a building housing the glint flying boat Hercules that has not been seen by the public since 1947. The Long Beach Harbor Commiuion granted the inc!ustria!Lst a one y~ar ~ tension Tuesdiy of the oceanfront ~ perty and the towering meta) sh.eatbe\t building hiding the plane. :i The giant wooden craft was nlckname.4 the Spruce Goose although it ls actually made of birch. It has been stored In its hangar under a~d guard 11in'1 its maiden flight in 1947. INTERNATIONAL· STERLJNG OFF SALE on these 4 most 'popular patterns • • A wonderful opporturii1y 10 fill in or start your ~n>ke now ••• evtn givo a v•ry treasured gilt. Thcr•'a 1 complete open slocl; selection 1vlilable -"well u place tettlags. And all at great aaYinp for 'ucb pride i.D owning or giving ftne {.mily silvu, Sale l lmlttd-Febniary 14 thni M•rcf'I 13, 1971 J. C. fiumphrieJ Jeu1eler.1 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVfNl(NI f'llMS I ANICAMEAICARO-MASTEllCHAllG! 24 Y'!A~S IN SAMt LOCATION PHONE 141-1401 .. • I . ' ' • 7 -...-v• -• ' . • • • • , . Tela,-'• M~J . ·1'.~. s~k. . VOL. 64, NO. ~I. 5 SECTIONS, 58 'PAG{$.'· TEN CiENTS I \ • ' '. ; • Laguna rt~ \ · ~r is tling t. .. ' ! Over b orr's .. By BARBARA KREJBICB Of tlle O..lly 'il•t Sl1ft Ecology-conscious Lagunans who follow lhe advice of councilman Edward ·Lorr and Install compost piles in their garderus may have to go one step further ·and put in an SPCA-approved Have-a·Heart cal trap to discourage investigatiye felines. lra16 Arch Beach H~ghts neiehbon of f.bi..eouiiCUman recenUy complalrtd to n~peMi that their cat.a have been disappeJring-apparently into a cat-tAp in J..ott.>s backyard. • :; Some ·at the cats were retUl'{lfd ~to ... _ -.. . LAGUNA CAT TRAPPER Councilm1n Lorr Gov~ R~an . . . ' . Called Liar· On Medi-Ca1 SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald Reagan was angrily denounced as a "liar" today by the Legislature's leadin& Democratic expert on Medi.Cat. Assemblyman John L. Burton of San Francisco heatedly disputed Reagan '1 conte ntion he had no legal recourse last December but to cul services in the bealth care program. . "I say the governor's a liar -L-l·A·R -a liar," shouted Burton during a news conference. Reading from the law, Burton contended Reagan acted under a section which merely 1aid the governor "may" cut servi~ if a deficit i1 prc>- jected. Reagan 's press secretary, Paul Beck. later said, "We followed the law el· pllcitl y.'' The administration projected a $140 million def icit when it made the cuts. Burton is sponsoring legislation to rescind Reagan's cuts in I.he SI billion pr_ogram which provides fret health care far 2.4 million Californians. Tht bill has been rushed through two · Assembly commillets but now faces an uncertain teft next Monday in the Assembly. Burton's bill -switches the Medi-Cal accounting method for !"ls fiscal year from an "accrual" system to ~ "cash" ~Is. Burton said that should prevent the: program from run ning short of"funds belore the new fiscal year begins July I . f\eagan charged at his weekly news conference Tuesday that the Burton bill is ai~d a.t leaving the slate "oo choice" but to lncrease taxes. Computers Wrecked ' fOULOUSE, France (UPI) -A group of youths sacked the office of Intema· Uonal Busines.'I Machines TueM:lay night, deatroying four computers, police said. READERS RESPOND TO PILOT'S ADS ft seems that everyone must be read- lnt DAILY PlLOT clauified ads these da)i. They 're responding, too; th1t'1 bow we know. +BOAT CARPENTER and FIBERGLASS. Pmn. job \V/frin&e ~Mfill. LAKE !>tARINA <Phone numberl. This advertiser was looking-for 1 rincle: r~!ic2nl. He lost count o( &be classlfttd ,.taponses on the &ee0nd day the ad ran. A DAfl.. Y PILOT ad·visor can help you get that kidd of result.s, too. Just call on the direct line, 642-5678, and sit back. ·~elf) will be on the way. ·1 • thek. """"'•· ~It, the ",,..port;, but ot11en ·,.....pj1:llecl ,p,-bf ·the SPCA and were· no I-· 1$ Ille ammal ·shelW wben,o~ went to 'look for the"m.. COW'lc:ilman l.oti,.1lild Tuesday he does !ndOed malnWn ii:~ In his 'backyard t• ~ .hb -~ from maraudinc animals,· nollb1y .~ !Ind an· occasional ground squirr<I .. : • • . . 1be a>ntr1pUotr;· ~ a, HaYe;.t·,He,art. trap because it eaptfiieS the animals without hurting themi 1$ 1Yail1ble oft loan from the SPCA· for '.a small deposit, he uld. · . It is a metal ci.ge ~iUj a . door th.at ! We t .RQ<;ith ' Ca us e8 . . Inju ries .. • Several pen0m ,..,. lnjtlred ~1 nighl Jn aecldJ!lls '° raJn.ill~ tlraoge County thorougllfarea, cw: a hudon freeway colllsl991 and another a poiw&m· mini rollover cruh. . Only; ooe Ot .the_ victims.was hospitaliz. ed, h9wever, while tl;le . ~Lhers were closeJ autom1tlcally when the animal eriler1 to look for food placed inside. 'I had ID get the trap ID bop, my pfWerty from being ovurun with cat.I," Lorr 1ald? "'rht problem b.1 been getting worse since last aumti:ie.c._ •nd I've hail up to 10 or 12 cats in the yaid l{1 one day. They dug up my gardtn and campletely destroyed my winter trop." - Lorr sa><S the attractlqn apparently ISt-the soft loose soil he malntaihs by uie • M compost. "They like to scratch in" it, and they dig up all the plants too." he explained. )t a recent ecolo&Y meeting, the coun· ) ' cilman &aid· all tht kitchen waste ln ~i! household is recycled ~Y l>ein&" run through a $100 shredding machine and returned to earth via a compost pi_t in his yard. . An SPCA spoke&man said it is per.fect\y legal for a property owntr to trap any roamirll animal that invides bb yard, proylded It ~ not burl. Trapped animals-picked up by the SPCA att held at the sbelter · u n t i 1 soiMOne offers them·a home. One Arch Betch Heights man· said . Lorr had c.Ught Doth his cats at one · time er anolhtr, but bad returned them -.. • safely, with the request that they be kept "under bette1 control. "My cats were collartd and tagged," the man said! "but niy neighbor wasn't so lucky. He ost twO cats1 inCiudina: ·a valu1blt Sllmese tfrat 'apparently found •.I borne right away from the shelter. "However," he added, "Utt: trap seems to have gone from Lorr's yant" now. so I'm not. complalnin4 un)HS the whole thi~g starls·atafl·" . . · . :. Councifman Lorr uid he ii thinking cf getting-1 small do& to deal. with the marading cab.· "I thTou&ht aometbl(ll like ·a .scottle would . be , aood for ·ti>< ~·.omm1ss1on -.. -· ..'. -·. ~_Olllll ~ <• I job." he muled. The COW'lcllman said one neighbor wbo came to Complain about the cit trap said his· pet had been missing for three weeks, but :admitted be had not· looked for it~at the SPCA shelter~ · "11 I lost 1 pet that 's the tint place I'd inquire," said Lorr. · A min whose pet had disappeared said, "l don't know what hlppitned tG It. but ~I'd be afraid 1to ,geJ anotbet with this cat t r a p business going on: If it's true Mr. Lorr hu a· trap I don't think It shows veey inuch un- dtrstanding of people and th~ needs." aw treated for iiljurles and reldse{I. . Carol J. Cribbs, 39, of 2198 Crof~on St., Costa Mesa, was 'listed in good condlti® today at eoata· Mm Memorial Hospital, de.spite a fr•ctu,ed . ri&ht lea and possible inU:mal injurtea •. She was tnippred in l:Jl overturned sedan al 1:15 p.m., Tuesd~y and had to be ex.tric~ted by retCUe wbrkus 1fter the vehicle hit a ' telephone pole and filpped ·onlD ita IDp. Lagunafrins By Phil lnterl<indl Heig~!.,·i!~itation Re.comlne,ided Driver Richard ~-J!Umphrey,. ~· and hb wtte <Jharlot~,' ·" '11d •ol the OJ ~ _._.., ..... ,,. .,... tii1Ied tOr f1cei1 and releued. " . Polloe Mid HIUDphrey wp northiound ·~ Fairv1tW •~d 'it LoJola Rold in • hea " . ~~ ~ Ii{ blike<I, lo•\~ OO!li!oV .,, . tlia en, .an.t ralnmecl , telop"""" ·pole whlcli brolte-off. · -r y ,-. , Hiimphrey "ld be WU ll!illlll throup water flooding down the ro1dw1y w~ff a car ~ased him at high speed, 1pr1y~ the windshield alfd cilttlog hiJ vision. 1 1 Two men ~ aeiio~ injury ,;.t 6:30 p.m. on the:San ~iqo Fret•ay jwt north of El ~ Road :in a headon collisioo. California ~ghway Patrol pfficen iaid trllfic was alowing sharply in heavy rain whtn one northbound vehicle driven by GRJ'Vf:l Stewart, 12, of Norwalk, lost traction on ·tlle wet pavement. Hla sedan 'went out of control and crossed the cinter divldtt, ~ashing into a southbound ~ driven by ,Kenneth Adams, 32, of 25132 Lu Bolus St., Laguna Hll\J. ; I : J • ' ! ' '. . l. • .. 1 lhir4 ~·)le .... !·· f1 . ~ •.·\Jlftl.U.1 • ~· aeb ~.· t;em•'iil« ·=~* '.~, .. ~ . .. . . . liil!lll!li.ll!libt to . ' Jn· the ~w vote, . .pm;.-~ CMJniia1 William ·Lim~ Jlme. ~bmlti ariil .&blrt Hial!liia. 'jup. Ported ,the .lO-foot ,m a :rtmlum~1 wlth • prorlslon lnaerted hy Uastjnp ·to· Urnlt ho"ttt room ule to 40 feet of the structure, ff.lei'vinl onf: Door for reataurant, con· ference roonr or other noh·residenUal . ' use. ·• • Commlsslooer Carl Johiil!O\J held 16 Illa lqrlnef · j)l'oposai' tho! ,two ,.... bO crtated, with th< 50-loo•hfj&ti~permltted only ~whtre it now Is allowed, In pro- perties zoned c.i. The. e11sun1 . »foot· lill'lnt ·•b!>Uld be mlilltalned •llewhert~ Johnson tald. . . '~ · j"l'w commiss ioner Jack E!schbach joined Johnsoll ·in tht tninOrity vot'e 1'up- porting the two-ione·~appi:o~ch. , . · .. · _The C R. (~mird&l-r~sider'ftill) ordinance. now will· move lo .the City ·&th vlctimt weie treated at South Coast Community Hospital 1.Dd released. A third two-car accident ia which all three .victims were treated.-~ the 1ame clinic and rtlelSfd oct'llrred:on El Toro Road at I p.m., when one went out " Ameri cans at Viet Po st Cauncll where an ~ddltloital public ~ar .. Ing . must ·be beld · before. the council actaonit. ~~· .. _ '. II the Plannifll Dep~t complete• Its re-dralt of the ordipince, wlU, charges agreed upOit" by . the PlaMl"l! Ccim· mis1IOh, in time for the counCil'1 M"arch 3 mfft.tnr~. a . public" Nei.rlnr co'!ld ~ set~ for March .. 17. A'ltemaUvely.. study aessions eo~d be set a1l'f . th~· bear~&. . of ccontrol and 1plQ1 ICf'OU traffic lanes. Weston Hammond, ~i1, of•23455 Duryi:a Road, El Toro, f•'ve n6; ~easori. why be lost control o the C!f' carrying a pal, Ray Kennedy, lj · ~\ 24772 BelC""n Road, El Toro.. . , ~ . · His northbou11;!1 ~ crashed .into 1 southbound car 1lrtwt -by Mrs.' Irene Hill, 41, of 14111 s~ st.: San Juan C1pistrano . between Leisure Wcirld_ Lacuna Hills ind f,tl"'!" Canyon lioad. . J Sch ool's Jeep Ap precultes After 20 Ye ars People buylnc can ~ them "' depreClate ln value over the years, but the Lacuna Beach Unified ·School District is 9'lJing · an old · Jeep for · tMoe the prict paid for,it in 1957 .. · Tht Wrlcle. 'l'lntage 1951, wu purchas- ed by the 4iafMct lor l!Oll IS port of • pacbi:e 'Of aa~emment aurplus car• and truck.a. The rugged auto hu a:lven the distrld more thin IS yun ol falthfuJ service, ~ b noW aoliig !O be aold to the hlghelt. bidder. Becautt "the m1intenanct upense hu been. mort lh•n can be justified." , District butlneu 1awperi~nt Dr. Chat~ Hea' .. ya ht ba1...itnd;y recelv· ed an olltr ol l20ll !Or the 'vehk:le. He AY• the ~ "needs loll of work.'' • lt won't iu.1 In HO)Od ~£. aod the front end Js bid, but • ,.adbd. mecha.Uc could put K back' into pd Condition. The dlllrlcl IJ now · l<CePllnl bids lot the vehicle. · · • . - ' • Wage _Battle for -Li ves SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. corrut)anders rushed reinforcements Wedneaday·to out· num~ed ddendfra of 4TI American base supporting the South Vietnamese cam- paign into Leos. Fjfld reports aaid Com- mW'li1t troops were firing_ from ~ll skies · despite beavy U.S. atr and · artillery pressure. . The combat around Flre SUppOrt Base Scotch lO :iniJes from the Laotian border waa ·part of a pattern of heavy fighting tn mountall:i jungle,, near the reactivated U.S. airstrip at Khe Sa.nh, headquarters for the 1,000.min American support task force. ... Preliminary ·report.a indicated at least five Arpericans were wounded in the battle near Fire Support Base Scotch 11nd military sources said 11 U.S. Anny he;icopter was shot down near it Wed· nesday i rttrnoon. No c.11siialtles wei-e . . reported in the 16Ul U.S. helicopter lou delayed unt an·April,~.alf:,, , ·of the 1G-div Llot cam~ilD. bui f l.v e JD •d~ti!in to·paring ·dawn the~ 7 100.root .mlllmdm height. tile' co11" ....Americans were killed the crash of mission agreed upon a number ol minor a U.S. Army Chinook helicopter neat chan,ges incJUdiJ!I ,ellm1Jl4.&lon. ol •the ~ue Monday night In ~ lncldtnt· not J\elsht 'fic)D{ fioni 11'<1,, lltat COl>~l be. related· Ill· tho South Vlttna~ tllr)l>t permitted 'hy cOnditionli u... ~t · lnlo t.aoa,.. -· ' · • '1djultillerit Jn ·~ldeyi(d ,,;oilsloni' and Reportt-l1te -Wednesday said element. a mU!muin · bUllding width of ·llO Jel~ of the 20.000.man SOOth Vietnamese e•· rather thln-'200.-' · ' · pedillonary fo"" hid drlvenrll nfl I es . if. at -~°'!' he~ .only hotef mside Laos, an advartce . o One. mile. ownen Loren Hlifellne l:fliflfarry \)'iData: in a 24-bour period. The-push wa1 siiOPOrttd tht' ordin1nce. Hl!\'Jine aaid described 1s stow and cautious. ISot& Lafuna and Le Jolla n0w ar1 A Saigon communique said the Laos too ~I to.pz:ojeel a. viU,,p lroa1e, a1kin1.- farce killed 500 COntmuniN in the flirt. "Haw .do )'OU ft all thole· su • statlon& a int days of the operation and; f I e I'd a~ hot q ,~ into,.a vn1i,e lma;t?'' reports Wednesdfy lncrea~_that figure H!J'-~ ·I proposa~ tater dropped, by '18. SOuth Vietnamese tosses wen th1<:-.e: percient rathet "''" 50 pe;rce,,nt pl~ced at 127 klllf4 and 4M woondod · of .Partlni be ' coverid 'wcf p,.W...d. plu. thr,. killed and lour WOUl!ded lJf • • · ..>.. ' .i. · combat ·We'dntsday, ' -• • ' 1;.r w 1-l · · • Electi on P etiti ons High Rise Foe$'·~o· Hu.dd·l~ . A kick-oft meeting for persons In- terested io citculatinr petiUons sup. portln1 -tht-lnitative .. to limit building heJchl · In Laguna Beach will be held TuesdlJ, March 9. at I pjn. ln tht Womap's Club, • St. AM'I Drtve. . ' . Nollet of )i>teot ID clro11late .th< petJ. lions WU publlJbed by 'lbe Village Laguna Initiative Cominlltet ,Saturday and 21 days must elapse before circuta~ lion begins. On!~• reg'istered voters of the. city of • . -. . . Laguna Bta~ may cil'(U}a.ta. or ii&n ·· Uona bow""illOw 1ucb a.HJpt: · ! \he _1!1tltlona., ; '. o :!'1, , .. -When tl!I ilpatures•or l,r.io,res{at.rid me o<dinance proposed' by !ht lilllaUv1 La,W.. voten · haY• been oblaJped w would llmlL bulldiJICa thrlJ!lll>oul. lbe, city verliltd, tho oiy OQwlcll "~ittd to lhrte l\Orte.t and a .muunum· 9f 1 • • • 7 , . 31 reet~a\P!µqo nle:aaured O')>ql tile • by la"' either ID ooact Ille · 1...,. higJ\a!'pOlnl of'rnile. • or to call~ apeclal tl«:llool oo·, tho The. ordlnUce wool4 not 1ncteaie .ny lssye. ., • 1 • ~ existing hellht llmltaUoo "16~ 'b)' · II tho lllitlaUYe ordtnanct 11 pMIOd , 1ooin9 orilln n<es but wiiuhf prohlbjt.C.O-. hy the cooncll. or by J10PU\¥ vote It slructlon Iii bulldlnc• hlchor llwl three• cannot . lo . the IUturt be rtpealed or irories pr 1J feet ,wber~ z.ooln& i:oiula-anito~ exctpfhy a vote of tlie,pooplt. ,. • • 41. .A.! • • .. ~ . !~Yi!'l• would be "Jlralty 1114 "'" ~" *'Ill ~ an}" ~tnalty ~n sa11n1, ' lle111ity IJ the ~ ·ot ~ P"l'• fwni:lally." . . \Vµilti i'dttrated hl• objection to the ~ of.o 'U,., li<m1~hlli· rift./.' ·sayJnc pa -1• 'dmi1111v. to bi blah, r1 ... llul /!arnl!le. that Liicun• wlH become "adlet ~anhJttan Beach" lf it-.IQetin't u~grade it,,: tourist facilitlu. Art 'dealer and former Chamber of cOmtnerce , president Ht nry Lawrence cited the record of the business com- ~iinlty In the interest Of Laglma be'.autµJcatlon •. urged legislation to cor· rect.. inequitable zonillr !awa an_ d avoidance of a "wall," 'and ~ thlt the· City Co!J,ncll appoint a fP'eCtal COJ!lmitt_ee to stqdy al) f:COJlOtJ'liC ~ado~ pe'rtaiJllng to the hotel zone ordinance. Civic .· Le•gile · apok.esman 'J-,o 1 e p h Tomc;bak Hid. be would support 1ucll • ;tudy, noting, "Many Jacts have been d!\'elo~d ·by the opfionenil of hlgh·rlse ·~ '1'1. have been dl!apJ>Olnl~ that ~ proponi!nis, hive not appeared' ber't. ~ town aetms to bt. overwbebnlngly oppbsed ID any !\eight above 3'I feel reCommended by ttie Civic League." · The people 'WID support an lnillative to .thb effect )\t wafn~- "The Ma$p have been a travesty on· the democratlc. process," chirged resident Katy Haven. "The p?OP.Qn.enta are ao confident they don't even bother to .come' h~e. nie ,outairpe; must ·have been:decided In so~e smoke·filled fOOm prldr ... to the City Council election. You ha\te lieard '5!!0 people and dozens of Jetter1. There seem to be no more ·than 10 peopJe In favor of the, ordinance. Do your job!" . · Another irate apeaier uld, "You 1it up• there, like some .board of directors tellfng ua ',a bOtel with leu than : toO roOnu c4ri't make · money. 'You are UJt tfiCr~ ' to.':\ r~present ' u1,. ~ to waqy ab6tit' woethtr 100 rooms make money or inotl" Weatller .. Fairer 1k1e1 and cooler, t.m.J>-t eratures ·are On ~ rneau 'for Thursday, with ~ert'W'Y reacfinis- ol 58 degrees along the_ coast and up to the middle. 881 further .jn.. land, L' . . ' msm &. 'i.'9P.4 ' ; • 2 D~ll Y PILOT ,, 0 • 0 SC Wed11Hd11, f~ 17, 1'71 Itltlse ; A1ldiction· To.Id - • ·-... :. Il"mgs, ·Liqu6r 'Reduced Inhibitions' Jll TOM BARDY I Of ,... Dtlly l'1IM llatf AQ. 9fa'll' County Medlta! Center psy. thlatrlst· lOd:aY testified that Arthur Craig 11Moo.en·H~l lon1 addiction to · drugs and·~~ tedUetci the' Garden Grove routh's inhibitions and may have aggra- vated What he described -as a "naturally agareulve" nature. Dr." John OuiClo opened the third day of the Or~ County Superior Court murder trial Wit.ti ~ atattriterit that Hulse's con- duct before and flier he allegedly killed San~ Ana eervfci station attendant Jerry Down to 7% W1yoe Clrlln uwu Dot ptydlol.lc beba\'. !or. "He wu gentrally ora:anlzed," Guido said, "and he was. on the basis of what he told .me, anxious and concerned." • Guido's testimony was rtpeatedly in· terrupted by objections from defense at- torney Robert Green. Judge Robert Crookshank announced thit morning that be will excuse the jury from the afternoon seS!ion to enable law- yers for both sides to hammer out legal argument.a ral.sed by defense objections. Hulse, 16, was identified by codefend· ant Htrmao lltndrlck Taylor, 11, through much ot Tuetday'1 session a1 lbe hatchet man In the killing Jert June 1 of the 21- year-old Carlin. Taylor, a transient, has been-promised by the prosecutlon that he will be allowed to plead guilty to lesser charges If he testifies for the prosecution in the Hulse trial and the trials of two men charged wilh the killing of Mission Viejo teacher Florence Nancy Brown. He tesUfled that Hulse, who is charged as an acceuory in the Brown murder. and steven Craig Hurd. 20, planned the robbery of Carlin's station and the killing of the young attendant before they left. lnierest Rates Reduced Taylor said Hulse hacked Carlin lo death with a hatchet owned bv codefend- ant Chri!lopher "Gypsy" Gibboqey, 17, of Portland, Oreg9n. Orange ·Countv au. lhorilies will charge Gibbonev with the murder of Mr~. Brown when they ell:tra- dlt" him from his Portland jail cell. On .U.S. J.nsured Loans Taylor testified that Hulse and Hurd discussed the killing of Carlin as the trio drove back to Tavlor's Costa Mesa motP1 room and that Hurd congratulated hi• young companion on the manner in which the young attendant had beP.n murdered. • . DAll Y ,llOT llalf l'MHI A MISSION IN MEMOR Y OF ACTIVIST DANA Jim Bierlien ~ Jpe•J<•r Les Remmers WASHINGTON (UPI) -Interest rates· on home Joans Insured by the federal government \\."ere reduced today by one.· half of one percent to seven percent -the third such cut in as many months. Affected are mortgages insured by both tht Federal Housing Administration and the -Vet e r ·a n a AddllnistraUon. Covered are not only~ home purCllues but'IJ.sO FHA mortgages on apartment developments and otber. bousing. -- Announcement of the reduction y:as made by Housing Secretary George W. Romney and Donald E. Johnson , ado minislrator of veteran affairs. The. effective dat.e of the change is Thursday, Feb. Ill -that is , the cut applies 00 spplica Uons rtttived alter today. . Romney 's office sai d that outstanding rommitments for insurance would. ~on tinue to be honored at their or1gmal interest rate. nie· new rate Is the lowest In more thaii twq years for government-backed mortgages. The rate rose from 631t to 71A percent on Jan. 23, 1969, on Its ~'ay to the al-time high of 81,!z..percent -imposed Jan. 4, 1970 -which prevail- ed for most or last year. ,from the high mark, lhe celling waa C9t to ~ight. percent last Dec. 1 and to 71,2 percent on Jan. ll. ~ Romney hinted that at the lower ceil· Hurd, also a transient. f1ibboney and Taylor are accused of thl': killing less lhi>n 24 hours later of Mrs. Brown, JI , of El Toro. It is alleged tha11the tr!o murdered lhP. woman in an Irvine oraagP. ~rove. and buried her remains ne~ the Ortega }figh- way after devourin'l' several portions of her body iJ\ a ritualislic tribute tG satan. Hi:rd Is described as the leader of the Jang of drUters and the man.who iPaisted that manY ol the group'J ·act.i vJtiU ~ elude aome ferm or ~11-wOl'-sliijl. . Histo .. i~ Cause Fu1ids Sought for .Statue of Dana . By PMi1ELA lIAILAN "He didn't like the way students were 01 ""' oarry 1>J11t 11111 treated in those days, particularly cor- Fund raiser I.es RemIDe~ Qr Dana. poral punishmenf. lie pursued this theme Polnl is beginning to. feel.Jikf:.lhi Jabl.ed. while a sailor and his classic 'Two pied piper. Years Before The Mast' \\.'ent a long ing, many lenders might increase the But he only wishes his voice were Way in upgrading lhe treatment of sailors "points'' they charge in addition to the Wi'nter Festi'vaJ as hypnotic as the piper's flute. and doing away "'ith flogging.'' set interest rate. "I hate to raise money," he confided -'Re.mmers de5crtbed the hides trade lie said the seven percent ceiling "may lo the Saddleback Valley Chamber of and the econo'mlc conditions In the United be just ahead of current conditions in To Feature Ni'ne Commerce Tuesday. "Yet here 1 am . S1ates that brought eastern trading ships k. t "b · J' tO the West Coast. the corporate bond markets, but with as 1ng you o contn ute, JUSl as ve th 1 asked !he Kiwanis and the Rotary and . "Qana's Ship ~arrled 40,000 hides to e mortgage ending institutions becom~ T } Film the Lions and everybody else." trade in South America," he said. "Since ing increasingly flush with funds, it will ra,re og ue S Remmers' "baby" will someday stand there was very little market for the not be Jong before the new ceiling is seven feet high at the end of the mall n1eal produced by herds of Spanish fully vindicated." A series o{ nioe travelogues featurir.i~ in ·Dana Harbor -a bronze statue caUJe in California, the caltle was The goveniment does not make direct slides and movies taken round the world of a youthful Richard Henry Dana as slaughtered for Its by · proud u ct 11, Jo · will t>e featured at the. upcoming Winter he might.-.have looked when he first ; particularly taUow and hides. ans. The FHA and VA assure .&hat Eel!!.Y.al.in Laguna Bea·ch. gazed .at .the rocky point that bears ' "Estimates have been made that In bOrro_!lers ~ill repay loanB 'made · b·y' The shows, to be presented on his· name. • abdut' 27 y-0ars 5 rtlilliori cattle were private lenders. In the event -Of a default, Tuesdays and Thursdays at 1 :30 p.m. For a re luctant fund raiser, Remmers slaujjhtered. Some of the descendants the -government makes up the lender's · and :r p.m .,· will be narrated in the -hasn't done too badly , but he still has '.of the Indians "A·ho traded with Dane'.!! Yacht Race , : Straggles· To Close By Al.Ji-ION LOCKABEY ot tn• D•U1 1'1111 11111 PUERTO VALLARTA -The flrsl Marina de! Ray to Puerto Vallarta yacht race dragged to a close today With the last of the 26-boat fleet 1trugglln( toward the finish line. Twelve in the fleet had finished by 9 a.m. today and three had dropped_ out of the race. Regardless of late finishes , the overall corrected time winner will be John Holiday's Ericson 35, Aquarius from Long Beach Yacht Club which finished at 1:45 p.m. Tuesday to knock Rascal out of the corrected time lead in the 1,125 mile race. Aquarius was one of three Ericson 35s in the fleet. The other two, Freestyle and Odd Couple, were caught in a park· ing lot some 20 miLes at sea, but 1'trt still expected to finish later today around noon . John Hooten's Destiny II from Newport •Iarbor Yacht Club was the third boat lo drop out of the race. It motored into Puerto Vall.aria. The other twO droµouts were Aventura and Babe n. . ;-, Yacbts which )1&d. finished by mldnlghl Tuesday were Sirius JI, Rascal, Wld&eon, Querida II, Aries. Novia de} ·)lar, Dorothy O, Madrugador, A q u a r l 111 , Quasar, Ya Turko and Dakar. Approaching the finish line thiJ morn- ing were five more yachts, Ctrlna. Kanak.a Bug, freestyle, Slgame, and Odd Couple. The rest of the neet will straaale across lhe finish during the day Thur .. day. Communications between the United States ~ and Puerto Vallarta bas been hampered by overloaded lines through the overseas operator and only a him radio network has been able to handle the task. Information is being fid from the escort vessel Pioneer to Carroll Hudson on WB6RMA in NewpOft Beach which is passing on the information to news media. Also on the network is Dave Atkins in Los Angeles on WfVX.. However, the annouru;ement sa~4 various federal officfl: · involved m -. mortgage loans "have been instructed to negotiate with lenders to seek ~et;mc· tions in the interest rate on subs~Q~d mortgages to the new lower . ~ate regardless of the rate of the or1g1nl,I commitment." loss. Festival Forum "l'beater-by the traveler a long wav to go. contemporaries still live in San Juan 1 who made the spectacular trip. ~e wilt need $15.000 for the slatue.'' Cepistrano." 'Spruce Goose' n an effort to increase the return he said. "Half hes been raised already Remmers added that during the 'rl on their money, lenders usually add The series begins Feb. 23 with an and if those who have promised would years thal the hides trade nourished "points" to FHA and 'VA 1 o an s, A "Orient Tour'' by Dr. and Mrs. Verner get out their checkbooks, the figure would abOut S20 million was made, a healthy G' R ' Yule ''point" is a one-time payment of one Olson, pastor and organist of Laguna be closer to three quarter's." 1 figure for that day and age . lVell epneVe D t •0 .;,..o pe.rceni pf the loan and is usually paid Hill.I F1rst Baptist Church. The 018ons ''If J've ·learned anything in these pa st I Remmers , is confident that he will eCOfU f, lita by~s'!lerinstead.ofthebuyer. v.'Ul ta~e . viewen fro.in~. UJ;bulent few months it's !hat a cashed check be. able to raise the money needed to LONG BEACH (UPll -Howard , _i{-~ditton to the . irlteres~ ,rat~ the Pagsan1a'1 {F.~ of the Pf1_!!1PPlD~I to .i.!1 wortb 15 promises," he added . erect the -statue. But he admits that Hughes today held another extension o~ W • ff ..., ·"' ·~-'? ~ + ~ i:I. one--halt • Hc>ng Kq s street of steps. Remmers nevertheless goes af~r those I tne,st~tue· .WOf!'~ l}e. cast until tbe sculplor a lease on a building hou.sing the g!_ant lnnefS OUOfe of one percent. This mcreasea the ef-Following the Ols?ns• Harry 1:-8-wr~ promises as eagerly as he describes has his payment. fl ying' boat Hercules that has not been · fecUve rate_• FHA IOllll to 7'12 percent. of Laguna Beach will recount his recent his projecl. He has so many speaking The monument, whose model ac-seen by the QubLic since 1947. La ' -B ·-_J .. 4 The .v1 $10f!.S. not ~ke.a,slmllar <:farge. ·1 toar of the Soviet Uniop -with slides cngagements··µiat"\lr4J:lpol,htment book coinpaftles Rerilmers wherever he goes, The Long iBeach Harbor CommiMian' In gu~. e1J.1.J~ ~))'I'M . (o.ty'ted ceiUn& 'will ttittri abOut .• lll,. the ...... scMle . ~ hlstOrlC .• panaelH"• ... ti1M!jin~ttig1o t'6emM'e"Sl!ffo Agnew's. will be casl in Italy by John Terken granted the industrialist a one 1'D.J'·tl· -a $1 Ott the monthly payment on a $25,000 of Ruula and S1ber1a. . The Dana Point resident has also fiUed ot New York, a· sculptor or international tension Tuesday of the oceanfront prc>o Ttk: winners of lhe Laguna Beach home wJth a 25-year mortgage. On an On Feb. 25, Henry Bass. will sho_w Jiis hours doing research on the young reputation, perty and· the to\\.·ering metal .sheathed Ja}•cee's Christmas decoration contest F~A . Joa~, the monthly payment for 1 mov.ies or his fast:paced trip t~ Spain Dana and the limes in which he lived. ·''The monument will include a pedestal, building hiding the plane. · ~ were presented plaques Wednesday for principal, 111terest and the FHA premium he. rtc:'nUy made_ with the Catholic Press information he \villingly imparts to any a ·landscaped area around it, and bronze The giant "''ooclen craft was nicknamed their holiday adorned homes and would be $184.75 on such a Joan. The Council. Bass will be followed by . 0. and all who will listen. . plaques bearing1the names of individuals. the Spruce Goose although it is actuaJly businesses. old rate was $193. W. Prlce ~llh _slides or South America , "Dana was somewhat of a rebel,.. organizations -and school classes that made of birch. Jt has been stored in In malting the presentations at the showing scehes fro~ the Inca ruins to he said'. "He was expelled ~[Om Harvard ;havt contributed more lhan $100," he its hangar under armed guard 1inct Jtotel Laguna , Jaycee Bill Higgs noted colorful Rio de Janeu-?· for leading student revolts. said~ its maiden flight in 1947. that the winners were probably the be~t La st Rites Held A special ~how will be offered .on 1-;:;;;;;;;::;-----------;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I on lhe entire Orange Coast. He said F~b. 26 b~ Richard Man:tner feat':ll'~ng I u,.J.""=":>''c-.. '-..,.,.,. _____ 'i' , :;ince Laguna Beach had been judged sh.des of his recent camp.mg and hiking Ill the most decorated city In the Forty For L E T } trip to Monument VaUey 1n southeastern GEM TALK ?i.tiles of Christmas Smiles. the Lagunans • • ay Of Utah . Other s~de and movie.shows plan- could well be proud of their elforts. ned for the Wmter Festival ~Jude Alex Residents winning awards were: Mr. Funeral services were held Tuesday and Jean Thomson on the Middle East, and Mrs. George Pletts for most difficult for long time Laguna Beach resident Ted Cook on the . South. Pacific island.s, display· Mr. and Mrs. K. 11. P.lil\er. Lynwood E. Taylor. John Weld sharing his adventure 1n for be~l presentalion;. ·M+: and P.trs. Mr. Taylor died Thursday at the age T?nga and Harold . Wichersham with a David Kushner for most ot1ginal; Mrs. slide show of Amer1ea. Arm Metzleur, UW4 e!ace_ overall; f{ay of Tl· Carroll, second place . n_verall and Dr. . He had lived in Laguna Beach for Eleanor Fraser, first p1ace overall. \Vin-43 years where he o1'·ned a building ners of the s1'·eepstakes award were contracting business. Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Burton. Mr. Taylor is survived by his wire, Winners ln the business category "'ere: Mary, of the family home at 683 Catalina Laguna Federal Savings for most dlf· ficu1t; The Pottery Shack for j)e!t St.; three brothers. Elmer C. Taylor, presentation; Russ Hind Jewelry for of Id{tho, Theodore Taylor. of Watson- most original; Esch~ach Flo1'·ers, thlrd viUe, and Ralph Taylo r, of Costa Mesa; place overall; Duke'~ Burgers, second a sister. Dorothy Bradley, of Anahelrn; place overall and the Chicken Little siK grandchildren and one grea t • all grandchild. Emporium, first place over · Services will be held at 11 a.m. at Pacific View Chapel, Corona del Mar, with Pacific View Mortuary directing. DAILY PILOT B ritish Ar1ny Chief Str icken in Ir ela nd BELFAST, Northern Ireland <AP) LI. Gen. Erskine Crum. Britain 's new commander in Northern Ireland. is in a hospital after a heart attack, lhe army announced today. It gave no details of his condition. Crum. a 52-year-old Scot. took com- mand of Security forces in the troubled province Feb. 4. NnpMtl• ................ 1-pM htidl "9..if'111 ,..,. CMN M... _ -S.. Cle.._ OJIAHGI! COASr .fllll(ls:H tHO COM'AN'f Santa Ana Still Fighting 110.,trt N. Wt14 f',.lldt!\t .,. .. l'Wl>lhllltt J•ck k. C11.1lty Vic• l'rnle*ll t r.cl °"'*'! Mtfllltr Tllo'"'' Ktt.Yl.I EdlMr 7t.o"''' A. 111.;,Jirn e M1flltint 1.cllt« ft iclitr4 r. H•tl 5M11h Ortntt c-17 lclllW -· . Cflll Mt.llt IJO Wftl ltV S!~I Ntwpttl INcft: :lfll W•I a1 .... l•lt'111111 ·-l.Alllftt lff•~ru·m ,._, ..,_ Hun!l,.trotl 1Htn1 l111J l "UI lf\l!fo'I-,.. $111 (Jt1Nnl11 1U H1rlll •I Camino ll;NI • · Pr~posed City of Irvine Santa Ana lm't through trying to 1cut· tie the future city of Irvine. The City council . Tuesday nlaht voted to ask the Local Agency Formation Com- ri'llsslon to reconsider lls ap'proval of "the proposed Incorporation of the model city. ~ Distressed over il'\Clusion of a 933-acre Industrial tract officials of the county seat municipality \\•ant for themselves, the council will act under a new state statute that allows any legislative body Co appeal foi'"'t''konsideration. Councihnan 'Jrrry Patterson, in pro- poSlng the move, sakl, "I just want to make it absolutely clear they thought about it and decided against u_,." RJchard Turner, e.s:eculive aecretary ol the LAFC. said this morning the commission had taken· tne parcel, and the agreement tnvolvtns it, Into con- sltltratloo. Santa Ana polnt.a to an eight-year-old tgreement lt had wJlh the Irvine Com- pany that stlpulattd the property ln question would be annexed to ~t city th!J aprlna. "The Jrv)ne Company. poinllng out ll had nothlnl to clo wllh Including the ' parctl In the proposed · boundaries of the new city, has, however, maintained Uiat the agreement is no lo9ger in .effect. since the .action of one council c a p no t bind future councila.. "'-representative llf the CoW'ICll of !he Communities of Trvlne, sponsors of the incorporation move, attended the Tuesday night session and olfered to meet with Santa Ana officials lo discuss the problem, Another spokesman. E. Ray Quiglev. CCl's executive secretary, vie1''ed, "\\'e \\'.&nt to be good neighbors . but we don't know what we could or couldn't do." He Pointed out that all et:onom.ic feasibility studies for the new city were based on anticipated revenue from the area Involved. A statement by Councilman J, Oaden ~lark.le perhaps gave some insight into tht reasont for the council's action. "If we can 't win. we can . at least sh'l'v them \\'t're men," he said. • The original 11greement had been negoUoled In 1953 \\'ht:n Santa Ana volun- tarily g11ve up efforts to annex "a 30!$toot strip actoss the ctnttr of lhe lrvine Ranch to get to Leisure 'Vorld In Laguna Hill3, ' .··.TODAY ·,by "GOOD IN VESTMENT" ' ' Although ~we ,all kn o \V that a diamond is a good investment, most of us have never reaU-y compared it to some of the major e:x.penditures \ve periodicalJy ·incur. U you have not made such a comparison, you might find it 'intere~ting to do so by laking a second f-Ook .at your invest· meDts In cars an,d furs. l\:Jany of .us buy an ex-pensive car \V hi c h \Ve know \\•ill be almost \vorthless in a few years, and v;e seem unconcerned about deprecia· tion, caring nxire for 'appearance and performance. Arid m3ny people buy costly furs, knC)\Ving that they \vill sbmeday~'t'ea'r · ou:t'. 9r go out of ~tyle. _\Vhether yol!'re talking abo ut dian1onds as a symbol of (ovc. or as an investment, the -.old phrase, "A diamond is forever,"· applies equal· ly \veil : because a diamond's ap- pearance remains the same. it never \Viar$ out or goes out ot style: and not only does it nOt depreciate, it actually increases in value. a beau· ti!ul and practical hedge against in· flation! Diamonds are· our buslne~s .•• not investment coun1eling. But \Ve are capable of helpfri~ you n1akc a good investment. in • diamond; so come on ln : •• our dt+mond coun· scllng is freer ; ----------- lNTERNATIONAL• STERLING .........,_,,. OFF SALE on these 4 most popular patterns ' A M>Oduful opponunity to fill in or start your itctYice DPW ... even give a very treuurec:l gif1. There's a complete open stock selection available u well as place acttinp. And all it great saviap for auch pride in owni.nJ or Jiving fine family silver, Siie Umltod-Fobruary 14 lhru March 13, 197f J. c 1823 NEWPORT BL VD., COSTA MESA CONYENIENl l!RMS IA.NICAM ERICARD-MASll~CHA"(,J.( 2• YEAll:S IN SAMf LOCATION ,HONf l•l-3401 • I r ' .. . • ' San Cl~mente Ca istrano EDIT.ION .N.Y. Steeb _,.:> VOL. M, f\10. 41 , 5 SECTIONS, 58 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNiA WEDNESDAY, FEB~UARY. 17, 1971 TEN CENTS . . Public to Use Salt Creek Beach by ·.Summer Public use of Salt Creek Beach by summer is seen· by Superviior Ronald Caspers followit~g approval of a tvitative agreement between the county and 'AVCO Community Builders. The ·agree;ment is subject to approval of apPr.alsals of land for parking lots. • AVCO amended a proposaJ of l4st Octobii ~ include add.Jtlona1 beach a.tea • and Ieslroom silel. 1be October· proposal headed off. a county tawsutr to 1at11 .putilie~ ·~ to the bUcb 1Stt\teen MoDll'cll 1'ay and Dana Point .• Undu the t8mll the developer wil:l ~., •. ,,,.~...,.., :1o-t11e 1> .. ch uflii~ oiiQEtlii"ijiilei~' .. u Di< county-Jl.4-~·qfo~ at IJO,!O ~ R. --· -· ' -...... DAILY Pt LOT lltff llllttt El Toro Rd. Crash Three rersons were injured Tuesday night in two-car crash on rain· slick E Toro Road about 7:30. They were the driver of Datsun shown, Weston W. Hammond, 17. 23455 Duryea, El Toro: bis passenger, Raymond Kennedy, 16. 24722 Bel Green, El Toro; and driver ~f other car not shown, Irene Hill , 41 , 24351 Spartan St. San Juan Capistrano. All were given medical treatment. Officers said crar.;h" was "nearly headon." Council Selecting ·Gr,aup . . ' . . To Push Clement~ Bonds lly JOHN VALTERZA Of tl'I• D1Hy l'tltt Stiff The loose strings in the pending April 20 San Clemente parks bond issue are expected to be tied into a total pack.age Wednesday &S city councilmen appoint a 25-man citizen's e.ommittee to promote the million-dollar proposal . AJong with the citizen's promotion group, councilmen will probably fonnally .11ccept the working drawings of a new, $400,000 community clubhouse which will be one of four major projects listed ln the bond Issue. The three others are beach access .11nd facilities improvements, purchase and development of neighborhood park:!! and the development of a youth recrea· tion center. Among the routine legal ques!i?ns whict\ ttmain unadopted are the h1r1ng of a financial consultant service, the formal statement of the clty position on the matter and the passage of the formal ordinance calli ng for the bond election . . The bond issue-actually the offering ol four separate votes on. the f~ur.part package-will be comb1ned w1~h the trustee election ballot of the Capistrano Unified and Saddleback Community College di stricts. No other revenue measures will appear on the ballot, but some critics of the bond issue already have pointed out that mid.April is tM aeason for t.111paying. And the residual anger overpaying tax- Oruge <Aas& 1''enther Fairer skies and cooler temp. eratures are on the menu for Thur!day; wilt\ mercury readings of 58 degrees along the coast and up to the · inlddle 603. further In· land. INSWE TODAY A. mtricona impatient with the pace of Vietnamization in Southmst Asia and toithdrawal of U.S. troops migh& toke a look at Korta. Page l J. IMlllM• ' ,,..,. .. ht'rkf 11 Ml'llM l+U Mii...+ ,..,.. u Nft!Mtl Nd'• M a. .... '-" ' l'TA tt '-" 11·19 Of. Sl•lllt"""' 1' slfdi M•t111th n-tt Ttlffi..... ti TltMlitn t""ll Wt•ll1tr • w-•• Htwi t141 WIM'lll ""°._' W es could rub off onto ballot• April 20, they warned. Other action facing the council Wednes. day night include: .:...A letter from Melvin G. Harbert, owner of .11n auto parq business in the old city hall property, informing the council that he will move out in April, leaving the. building empty and up for ule. -Consideration of appointing a n architect for the desi&n of a new fire headquarters building. -Evaluation of private bids for a new pension plan for public safety employe.!J. The. report and recom· rnendatioa will come from a special committee of city department heads who have evaluated private bids for the. pension plan, compared to another pro- posal by the State' a Public · Employes Retirement S)'!tem-preferred by the city employes themselves. -Specific plans for the construction of a new rest room building at Linda Lane beach. The ·project would be built on land ~ased to the city by the Santa Fe railroad, and completion ill planned before tbe start of tht summer· .Wason. The. nearest existing restrooms to Ule busy beach are Ii cooslderable walk downcoast at the municlpaJ pier. -Consideration of a cJaim by San Clemente apartment owner William R. Broughton for $21,.500 in damages assertedly caused by a city storm drain which clogs, catulng 'flooding. to nearby properties. The city already ia In litiga· lion · with the mlJ'I on another claim for damagu caused·by 1he ume dratii. Senate Probers Charge Payoffs By PX Ped«Jlers .I Wi\SHINGTON !UPI) -,Senate In· vest.igat.on charged today that beer and liquor agents plied b I g h ·r an t ·J n g American officials ·in Vieln&m with favora -such 11 a villa With maids -to promote Illes of their products to servicemen on m!Utaiy bau.!J. 'Ibe diaclOIW'el came as the Senate opened ,,... be•rlnp Into the p billion post exchang. operallons run by tbe DeleDH Departmen\. ' Sen. Abrahlm A. Rlbic:oU (D.Coan.), acting .chi:frman di. the · Pttmanent InvestigaUons SUbc'Ommlllee, said the hearings would examine allegations of ry, kickbacks al'ld payoffs to PX als from U.S. firms 1upplylng a in& votume of products durlnc the rican buildup in Vietnam durln1 tht 1960!. an acre ; sell the coun'Y 16.5 acres to park 1,MO can at a fair market value to be detennlned by appraisal. Teh county will be responsib!e for de:Velopment, maintenance and control of ~ parking lot& ud beach areas. Additional irea at the 21).foot level a&ove high tide wW be sold by AVCO to .... lhe county for $60,000 an acre. Tbls w.ill be used for public res~ms. A county negotiation lelm of Road Commissioner Al Koch, .Flood Control Egnineer George , Osborne and Real Property Services Dlrtctor Stanley Krause bu recommended that Kenneth Sampson, ·director of harbors, beaches • and parkt now take over contJ:9J of the proje<L e 1st Val·Iey Queen Lynn Exner 'a Bit Nervous' .. Lynn Anne Exner, the first Miss Sad· a potter11 wheel aod cooking. She wu d.leback Valley to enter the "Miss Oranae a·Mlsskln Viejo Hith School homeeominl County Pageant, ii gettirtg 1 little bit princeu and was once voted the mos\ beautiful -baby or her.community. nervous ,about the competition. The ~amber is '4nvltina Saddleback "But i·m really having a wonderful Valley resi4el;'ls to l}JppOrt .LyM .d{trin& limet" sh!! told her sppnson,, the S~d-Ult competition Frid•Y . The proposal "calls for county ac- quisition not later than July 11, 1971. Salt Creek Beach wu the subject of a continuing uproar during 1969 annd 1970 becauee developmenb by AVCO'• predeceaor, the Laguna Ni«uel .COrporJ.. Uon, threatened to cut oU all public ac«M to the beach. Teh controversy developed over the deeding or a county·abando~ ·~~Q' to the corporation by the eouply. Advertistment.!J were pliced .eekin& names ·of ~raons who had uied the beach without ~pmniuion ID put years. The County CoUN<l'I offp repqrted enough response to form the basis of a lawsuit claiming the publlc't right to ust·the bead!. • ,n.v~SIOll ____ ,..., ---... ·=::.r -.:i: -~-. ·--·~· Base Camp Near, Laos Reinforced SAIGON (UP!) -U.S. commanden rushed reinforcemeats Wednesday to out,. numbered' defenders ~f an American bue dleback Valley Chamber ol O>mmerc., The l"4sN· 'fill tW. plaoe . ~1· Tuetilay, ~-~· ..:,::...,. ,F,t>., ~ i::lh<,~,qq~-"' 1LJ11111, 't .,.;_,.,~or #1~ :r ~J-1llCW.af!~~·~~· . \ Viejo· High School iJ the dauJhh1r .. f " Winget at Mission 'Bank 1D ,Et Toro. ' ' sqpporllng \be ~lh Yiebll..,,. Cl"" plign Into Laol. Field reporll 11ld Com- mun.ill lrOOfll were firing from au ' 11det d~ltt hetV)' U.S. •Ir and artilltrl' pr ....... Mr. and Mrs. Btu-Exner of M.111ion LyM'I ~al 1ponson: art M and Viejo. Sbe fillJ hi< time worklria "it!O. M Financial ConsullanlJ, Roy"i,=•lnl• ~ .. ~ .. ~·~p~e~= ~w'e'::"'a!~...!'r .·.I?' Uces her varsJty cheerleadJng. "I'm proud , to siervt .u MW Sad. Lately, she's been devotihg her dlebaclc Valley," ahe saMI: "J'll be at~ energies to her dance routine which tending Saddltbi~ College next year, she will perform during the talent por· majoring in plly!lcal educ&tion, and I'll tion 'Of Friday'a county pageant. have lots of time to fulfill all of my Lynn enjoys gymnastics, tinkering with duties.'' Rain Triggers Crashes On County's Highways Several persons were Injured Tuesday night in accidents on rain-slicked Orange County thoroughfares, one a Madon freeway collision and another a pol:·• am. ming rollover crash. Only one of the victims was hospitaliz· ed, however, while the others were treated for injuries and released. Carol J, Cribbs,39, of 2998 Croftdon St., Costa Mesa, was listed in good condition today al Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital, despite a fractured right leg and_ possible internal injuries. She was trapped in an overturned sedan al 6:15 p.m. Tuesday and had to be extricated by rescue workers after the vehicle hit a telephone pole and ffipped o_nto it.s top. Driver Richard D. Humphrey, %7, and his wife Charlotte, also 21 and of the same address .11s the third victim, wert lnl&!ai for lacerations and released. Police ·said Humphrey was northbound on Fairview Road at Loyola Road ln .11 heavy downpour when he braked, Joat control of the car, and rammed a telephone pole Which broke off. Humphrey said he w~ drifing through water Doodlng down the roadway when a car passed him at high speed, aprayin& the windshield and cutting his vision. Two mep escaped serious injury 1t 6:30 p.m. on the San Diego Freeway just north of El. Toro Road in a beadon collision. California Hia:hway Patrol officers said traffic wa1 slowing sharJllY . ~n h~avy rain when one northbourwt"lehicle driven by Garve! Stewart, 52, of Norwalk, lost traction on the wet pavement. His aedan went out of control ·and crossed the center divider, smashing Into a aoulhbound car driven by KeMelh Adams, 32, of 25JS2 Lu Bolsas St.1 Laguna Hills. Bott\ victims were treated at Soulh Coast Community Hospital and relea~~. .A third two--car accident in which all three victims were treattd ·at the same clinic .11nd released oceurfed on El Toro Road at 3 p.m., when one wtnt out of ccontrol and spun 1cross traffic Janes. Weston Hammond, 17, of 2.1455 Duryea Road , El Toro, gave no reason why he Jost control of the car carrying a pal, Ray Kennedy, 16, of 24772 Belgreen Road, El Toro. His northbound vehicle crashed into a 10uthbound car driven by Mr'I. Irene Hill, 41, of 14351 Spartan St .. San Juan Capistrano, between LeilUl'e World Laguna Hilla and Llcuna Canyon Road. Computers Wrel)ked TOULOUSE, France (UPI) - A group of youth! sacked ttie office ol Intel!'a· tional Business Machines Tuesday night, destroying four computtn, police said. DAILY "ILeT•ll•ff l'llffe MISS SADDLEllAC~ VALL!Y Lynn Anne Exner Varied Agenda Facing Board Of San Joaquin lflit~ -ilw_'lllPporl1Baie • ~ 10 mites IOln!'the tiollln border wtl-patt1of a ·pattern of heavy flghttna in mountain Jungle.a near the reicUvated U-.S. airstrip at. Khe Sanh, headquarters f<ir the 9,000.man American support task force . Preliminary reporta indicated at least five Americans were wounded ln the battle near Fire Support Base Scotch and military sources pid a U.S. Army hellCopter was ahot .down near it. Wed- nesday afternOon. No casualties were reported in the 16th U.S. helicopter loss of ~ lo.day Laos campaign bµt f I v. e Americans were killed in the cruh of a· U.S. Army Chinook , helicopter near Hue Monday . night ln an IDddent not re.lated to the. South Vletn.11mese tbruat Into \.IOI. Deci&ioas on unification. food services, · arc:hltectU1al Hrvices and the use of vacant school sites may be made at tonight'11 meetine of the San 'Joaquin Elementary· School Distz1ct' boafd of trustees. Reports late Wednesday' uld elements of the 20.000-man South Vietnamele e:z· ~iUonary forc.e had driven ti m I 1 es inside Laos, an advance of one mile in a Z4-bour period. 'The -push was desciibed as 1Jow and cauUous. A Saigon communJqu.e said the Laos force killed 500 Communists jn the first nine days of · the operation and f I e I d reports Wednesday 1ncre·a.!Jed that fl~• by 78. SOuth Vietnamese los'ses wer• placed .11t 127 killed and 454 wounded plu! three killed and four ·wounded in combat Wednesday. The meeting will take place al 7 p.m. in the district admlnllltratlve. annex, 14600 Sand Canyon Ave., East Irvine.· ·Trustets 'tiivlted community leaders to present their views qa unification during a workshop last Wednesday. The board has Indicated It will decide tonight which dlr~ction the district should recom~nd to the unification cotnmlttee. The choices Include uniflcaUon ·1ton1 the exlsffng boundariH of the Tu!tlh Union High School Dlstrlc't. splitting the higQ school .district Into three separate entft.le1 or k11pl111 the statw quo. The boord •lio wlll de<lde wl>ethft to aagjil lftve!tlgate the posalbility of limit- ing food ·•ervlces in the district. A cat~ terja operating statement will be .~sen te dto shbw ii the current 1ys~ ia pay· Ing fo< Itself. Al!o on the agenda Will be UM 'adOption of i criterion for 1elecUng aN:hltecturaJ firms to build the d~rlct tc~h: and a decllllon on wh'et.her or· not vacant school sites should be used by, LitUe Leaa:ue ~~ball teams.· Confused front dilpat.ches on tbe fighting around Fire SupPort BIR Scotch Wednesday did not m.11ke tt cletr whether the American defender.!! -about ' 44 men -were pinned down. The beleaauered unit was idenUfied ¥ a platoon of the 111 brigade of the' 5th mechanized infantry djvilioo 1~Uone.d just west of a bla: outcroppfng bown aJ "The Rockplle." The. batUe began Tuesday an hour or 10 before dark when Communist sun. ntrs opened up with mortars and small ainu from alt aides . A1 figbtlna: con. Unued through the nfaht and into late We.dnesday afternoon. U.S. Alt force. Marine and Navy flthter4>ombtra· 11ced Com!"unlal posttion1 with bc\ml>s ·~ rocketa .11nd a comP:tJ1Y of 7.00 Amficai1 ulnforcemenll moved into ,the ana wttii more troops on the way'. READERS RESPOND TO PILOT'S (f DS Doek at New Barbor \ It 1eems Qlat everyone· must be read. inc l>~ILY PILOT classified ads thesa daya. They're responcfin&, aoo; that's bow we -know. •BOAT CARPDfJ'ER and" FIBERGLASS. Penn. Job . W /rtln&e bebefits. LAKE • MA.JUN~ fPhorit number). Thi.I adviertisu was looking for a 1ina:le •ppj.icant. He lost eount of lhe cla111IUed responses on the second day the ad rt1n. A DAILY PllpT ad<Yi'°' can help· you g~t that kind .of resuJU;. too. Just c4ll on the direct line, &42-5678, and sit 'beck. Help wlll be on the way, ,. , • • Fishing Slated· for Dana Publlc Ult :of Dena pOfnt'll•rbor w11! bop In mid·M•y ·wilii tbi ins!Uutioo· ot 1portfishlng from the -po(ll.11 was reveaJed to the Bord or SUpervilor1 Tµesday , I S•n ·'aem.nte SporlfWllng~ Ioc, wu llcenlll!f lo ~per•tt from the n<w, blrbor bej:lnnlU lh •May. The firm ,wi~ 10 under "'!he Utle of Dana ,Lllll'Klin& 6portfi•hln& and oporate from. ~ fueling ' .... I ,, .. dock k,Jnporlrily I . • • jb., motel !mt .... tli'I\ ' -.. ~ ttflll•r oportflalllnl .dodi •llL tie • of• the ll'Oll ~ 'W--Jlle ...:;-:, reaijy by July. . the first five yan :w:-,. Percent . la.boo other tcUons by the superv!mr, lbert•fter. · --- !ht blooming of the port Into 111 ICl!vo • In the third oct1oo 111 il>tl•n to. ..,.,,. WH Indicated. . le... of the •t>Orlllebinc foc Ill • A Jem ror ~ Marina rnn.• l.t&.•tcVY .... extended to JUM i. NQfthltC. A tr •11 '13-unlt motil In lbe harbor WI! lpproved Building 'N<:hnolo11 Int. pllno = for Orta~ We!tern !;19tel! bead~ by tor a 1porttlshi~and charter boat " Robert Goodman. The hostelry fs ex· • llor\, a split level re1t11ur1.nt andope:- pec:ttd to be ready for 1Uests by aummer. and a retail viltace. ,. • • • ,/ • 1.:t''Doll\.Y ~llOl SC \litdntsdu, f"'-17, 19n HUise -·Addiction Told ·~.~ •. ··r., ~ ' . . . ·., ~!J.rugs, Liquor'' Reduced Inhibitions' '.. ·a,..n.i BARU:v °' .. o.t1r r111it J:•tf An Orange CGw!ty Medical Ceoter psy• chio!Tllt todty teoUfled that ArthUT Croig -'MOOR!' tlala'a 1°"1 addleUon to dnlgs and drink reduced the Garden Grove yaatb11 tnhlbltiont and may have: aur•· vated mt· he described u a "naturally aggresatve'!, natw'e. Dr: John Guido opeped the third day of the 0ra,.e Counly·Superlor Court mutdOf trial with the statemem. lhlt Hube's co .. duct before ud after "' allegedly killed Santa Ma service station •ttendant Jerry Down.-. 7% . . . . . . . w~ CUUn ''Wu not PfYChQllc ~·-i«> . '!He wu. generatly or11nlzed, '' Gui& .aid, "and he was, on the basis of what he told me, anxloU1 and concerntd." Guido's testimony was rtpeattdly in· turupted by objections from defense at- torney Robert Green. • Jud&e Rob«t Crookshank announced thiJ morning that he will excuse the jury lrom the afternoon .euJon to enable law- yers for both 1ldea to hammer out lesal arguments ral.sed by defense objections. Hulse, 16, wu identified by codelend· Interest Rates Reduced On U.S. Insured Loans WASll)NGTON !UPI) -1pteresl r•les on ho°" Joans ln!iurtd by the federal govemmeat were reduced today by one· half ·or one percent to seven percent _ the ~ IUCh cut in as many months. The new rate ls the lowest In more than t~o years for government-backed mortgagee:. The ralf rose from 1%. to 7'2 percent on Jan. 23, 1969, on ·its way to the al·llme high of !~-percent -imposed Jan. 4, 1970 -which prevail· ed for most of last year. ant li'"1!an Handrick Teylor, 17, tlliou1h much of Tueldly's auion u the hatchet ma11 In the killing lat.t June 1 of the 21· year-old Carlin. Taylor, a ~ransient, has been promised by the prosecutJon that he will 'be allowed to plead guilty to le11er cha.rges If he: testifies· for the prosecutil)n in the Hulse trial and the trials or tv.'o men charged with the killinl of Mission Viejo teacher Florence Nancy Brown. Ht testified .that Hulse, who is charged a1 an accessory In the Brown murder. and Steven Craig Hurd , 20. planned the robbery ol Carlin's station ·and lhe killing of the young attendant before they left. Taylo r said Hulse hacked Carlin lo dt"ath with a hatchet cnrned bv codefend-ant ChrJ:;:topher "G.YP$Y" Gibboney, 17. of Portland. Oregon. Orange Countv au· lhorlties will charge Gibbo11ev with the murder of Mr1. Brown when they e1tra- dJ~ him from his Portland jail cell. Taylor testified that Hulse and Hurd discussed the killing of Carlin as the trlrt drove back to Tavlor·s Costa hfesa mOiPI room and that Hurd con~ratulated hi~ young compani9fl on the manner in which the young allenda nt had bePn murdered. Hurd, also a transient. Gibbone.v and Taylor are accused of thfo killing !11:ss th;iri 24 hours later of Mrs. Brown, 31, Df El Toro. It ii alleaed that the trio murdered the woman in an Irvine: orange grove and burled her remains near the Orte,l!'a High· way after devoorin~ several portions ot her body in a ritualistic tribute to satfo. Affede4 are mortgages insurtd by bolh the Federal Housing Administration and the Veteran i Administration. Covertd are not only home purchases but also FHA mortgages on apartment devtlopmtntJimd-oihe·r housing. From the high mark. the ceiling ~·as Hurd is described as the leader of the> cut to eight percent last Dec. 1 ind iang of drifters and the man who insisted to 7~~. percent on Jan. 12, ~1hat t'll!lnY .9f .JJle g:i~o·, _activities in;, Romney hinted that at the Jov.·er ceil· elude some form of devil worship. AnnoUncemtnl of the reduction was made by Hou.sing: Secretary George W. Romney and Donald E. Johnson. ad- ministrator of veteran affairs. The ef(ective date of the change is Thursday, Feb. 18 -that is, the cut applies on appHcaUons received after today. . Romney's office said that outstandmg commitments for insurance ~ould_ con· tinue to be honored at their original interest rate. . However, the announc~ent -aa!d variow federal oUices 1nv~lved tn mortgage loans "have been instructed to negotiate with lenders to seek reduc- tions in the interest rate on 1ub1ldiied mortgages to the new lower . ~ate n gardless of the rate of the original commltmtnl. '' Yule Decorations. ~ .• -l L_ ... , Winners H o~iored Ing, many lenders might increue the "polnts" Ibey charge: in addition to the set interest rate. He said the seven percent ceiling "may be just ahead of current conditions in the corporate bond markets, but with the mortgage lending institutions becom- ing increasingly !h11h wUh fund•, Jt wJll not be .lonJ befora the ..,.. celllni 11 fujly vindicated." !lbe· government dots not rnab direct loans. The. FHA and VA aisure that bo~er1 ".fill repay loans made by p~yate J~ndef!. ln_the ~ve:nt of a de!lult, the government mates up the lerider's loss. In an effort to increase the return on their money, lenders usually add "pointa" to FHA and VA Io a n 1 . A "'point" ii. a on6-llme payment of oue -. ., , !bl ',io.!I atld Is uaualf,y pakl by the selkrJniteid of the buyer, • ''.·.llCl~jp<'.tlle Jliterftl(tala, ,tM FHA charges I premium of one half of one pe~ This increue:s the ef- fective rate On FHA loans to 71Ai P.4!rcent, In Lagulia"llJetic"li '"'lh~t\t:.r~,,~~·::::,t · S8 off the monthly payment on a $2$1000 The winners of the Laiuna Beach home: with 1 25-year mortgage. On an Ja cee:'s Chrtatmas decoration contest FHA loan, the monthly payment for we~e presented plaques Wednesday for principal, Interest and the FHA premJum their holiday adorned homes and \vould be '114.75 on IUCh a loan. 'Ibe busl.nesses. old rate wu '193. Jn making the presentation• at the Hot.el Laguna, Jaycee Bill Hlgs noted that the w1.Mer1 were probably the best on the entire: Orange Coast. He said since Lacuna. Beach had betn judged the most decorated city in the Forty Miles of Chrtstmu Smiles, the Lagunans could "'ell be: proud ol. their eUorts. Resldeol! w!Min1 awards were : Mr. and Mrs. Geor1e Plett! for most difficult display; Mr. and Mn. K. M. M11ler for best preaent.a.tSDa;:.. ·Mt. and Mrs. David Kushner for mo!!ll original: Mrs. Ano Metzleur, tllird .place overall; Ray Carroll. w.cood plaQt overall and I?r. Eleamr Yrasu, flnt place overall. W~ nen of lbe: 1Weqwt.0e:I award were: Mr. and Mn. Ruey --\\'inntn In tbe busineu c.at.elDfY v.·ere : L&guna federal ~!ii!IS. ror most dif· !icult; Tbe P.aa-y Shack for best prnent.ation ; Russ find Jnre!ry for most origtoal ; Eschbadt l'lowen , third place overall; Dub's Barcen. 5eCawl place: overall and tbe Cbldtu Uttle Emporllllll. flnt place .. .,all DAILY PILOT Last Rites Held For L.E. Taylor Funeral servicea were Mid TueM!ay for long Jlme Laguna Beach resident L,fnwood E. Taylor. Mr. Taylor dled Thursday at the age of 77. Ht had lived In Laguna 43 years whtre he owned contractlng business. Beach for a building Mr. Taylor is survived by his wife, Mary, of the family home at 683 Calalina St.; three brothers, Elmer C. Taylor, of Idaho, Theodore Taylor, of Watson. ville, and Ralph Taylor, of Costa Mesa; a sister, Dorothy Bradley, of Anaheim; :iii:t grandchildren and one gr ea l · grandchild. • Services will be held at 11 a.m. at Pacific View Chapel, Corona del ~tar, •kb Pacific View ~tortuary directing. Winter Festival To Feature Nine Travelogue Films A series of nine travelogues fe aturing slides and movies taken round the world wi ll be featured at the upcomirig Winter Feslival in Laguna Beach. · •· The shows. to be presented on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 1:30 p.m. and 3 p.m.. will be .narrated in the FesUval Forum Theater by the traveler wbo made the spectacular trip. The series begins Feb. 23 with an fl0rJent Tour" by Dr. and Mrs. Verner (){son, pastor and organist of Laiuna Hills First Baptist ChW'th. The Olsons will take viewers fram the lw'bulait FqHn)>n Fall•. of the P.hilipplnlf to Hong Kong's "street of steps." Following the Olsons, Harry Lawrence of Laguna Beach will recount his recent tqur of 'tjie 59.Jlet I/roof '1'#9 .ill!!a , or the 'scenfc aild· tiTS(o~C grandeur of Russia and Siberia. I On Feb. 25, Henry Bass will show movies of ~ fast-paced trip to Spain ht recenlly made with the (;atholic Press Council. Ba11 will be followed by 0. w. Price' with slides of Sou th America. sho,vlng scenes rrom the Inca ruins to colorful Rio de Janeiro. A special show v.•HI be offered on "Feb. 26 by Richard Marriner featuring slides of his recent campillg and hiking trip to ~Ionumenl Valley in southeastern Utah. Other slide and movie shows plan· ned for the Winter Festival include Aleit and Jean Thomaon on the Middle East, Ttd Cook on the South Pacific islands, John Weld sharing his adventure i.n Tonga and Harold \Vichersham 1,11'ith a slide show of America. British Army Chief StI·icken in Ireland BELFAST, Northern Ireland iAP) - Lt. Gen. Erskine Crum, Britain's nt\v commander in Northern Ireland, is in a hospital after a heart attack. the army announced today. Jt gave no details of his condition. Crum, a 52-year-old Scot. took com· man d of security forces in the troubled provi nce Feb. 4. "....,.. ................ ... i.e. ......... ..., c.sst. ..... .. ct1 l OUfi!Ot: COMT l'USLIU41MO ccw,;,...y Jl:•~•rt H. W .... l'f•lltnt ........ Wi« Jtc~ I . ~::!t'J· \Ike l"nllflrll WA Mt,...., Tlltll'l•t tC1r1ll Santa Ana Still Fighting Proposed City of Irvine •lflltr Jh•'"'' A. Mi.tr-'iltt M-f1"9 llfltif Jl:lch1r4 r. ,.,u '"'"' Or•• Ctwttr 1.i1tr _ .. C.11 Mt .. :.a. ... t f.tY ltr ... .. ....,.,, '''"': tf'fl Wlii ..... l•lfWf'lf • L.,._ SHdll n:t l'•nt'A- lo4111'1tl"'IM &Hc:ll: tnl'I IHd'I IWltvlN 1111 Cltnw>IM: aJ 1111"111 I I Clt111M ll•I I Sana Ana L•l'L through lrl'lni to SCUI· tle the future: city Of Jrvlne. The City .Council Tuesdly night voted to ask the Local Agency Formation Com· mission to reconsider ill approval of the proposed incorporaUon. of tbe model city. Di.stressed over inclusion of a tsl-acn Jnduslrial tract officials of the county seat municipality v.•ant for themselves, the council will act under a new st.ate statute that allow:ii any legislaUve body to appeal (or reconsideratkln. c:ou.ncuman Jerry Pattefson. in pro- posing the move, said.~ "I Just want to make lt absolutely clear they thou1ht about It and decided 11galnst us." Richard Turner, eiecutlve. secretary of the LAf'C:t. said this mo rning the commission had taken tfle pa rttl, and tilt agreement lDvolvlna it, lntQ con- alderaUOn. Santa Ana points to an eight-year-old agreement Jt hid with the Irvine Com· pany that stlpulatod the property In quest.ton would be annexed. to that city thb spring. The Irvine Company. pointing out It h,d not~!Mg to do ·with lncludtnc the parcel In the proposed boundaries or the new city. has, ho.,.,·ever, maintained lhat the agreement is no longer in effect since the action of one council c an not bind future councils. ~ ,A representative or the Council of the Communities of Irvine . sponsors of the: incorporation move, attended the Tueiday night session and offered to meet with Santa Ana officials lo discuss the problem. Another spokesman, E. Rij Quigley, CCl't -executive secrttary, vle,~ed. "We wai:il to be good neighbors. but v.·e don·t knOw what we could «.couldn't do." He pointed out that all economic reaslblllty studies ror Ule new city were: based on anticipated revenue from the area Involved. \. A statement by «ow1cU man J. Ogden ~farkle perhaps gave some insight Into the reasons for the council's action . "I f we can't win. we can at least show them we're men." he. said. The original agreement had been nt"got\ated Jn 1953 when Santa A~ volun- tarily gave up t"fforts to annex a 3'JG..foot strip across the center of the frvlne fuln ch to get to Leisure \Vorld tn Laguna !11115. Yacht Race Straggles To Oose By AL\ION LOCKABEY Of lll• O.Uy fl'li.t 11aff PUERTO VALLARTA -The first Marina del Ray 10 Puerto Vallarta yachl race dragged to a close today with the lasl of the 26-boat fleet S1rugglin1 toward the finish line. 1\1.'elve in the: fleet had finished by 9 a.m. today and three had dropped out of the raC't". Regardless of late finishes. U1e overal1 corrected time v.•inner will be Jobn Holiday's Ericson 35, Aquarius from Long Beach Yacht Club which finished at 1:45 .p.m. Tuesday to knock Ra!cal out of the corrected lime lead in the: 1.125 mile race. _ DAIL'!' PILOT Sti ll, ..... Aquarius was one of three Ericson 35s in the fleet. The other two, Freestyla and Odd Couple. were caught 1D ·ii ·,park· ing lot some 20 ni.iles @t ~·, bpt ~er• sUll erpected to Jini•h,liter tocjay .arouod noon. A MISSION. IN MEMORY OF ACTIVIST DANA Jil')'I BJtrll-.n an:d Speaker L11 Rtmm1r1 , Histori~ Cause ~ofio.Hooten'a Destiny II from Nnport Harbor Yacht Club was the third ·.boat to drop out of the race:. It motored , ' into Pilerto Vallarta. - Frinds So~ght for Statue of Dana The other two dropout! were Avenlura and Babe It ' , Yacht! which l1ad finished by midnl&bt Tuesday were Sirius JI , Rascal. Wid(eon, Querida U, Arit11. Novia dtl filv,, Dorothy 0, Madrugador, A q u 1 r I u 1·, Quasar. Ya Turko and Dakar. By PA~IELA ):)AU.AN . 01 Ille D•il~ ..ii., ·Sl11t Fund raiser Les Remmers of Dana , Poliit is beginning to feel like thi fabled· pied piper. But he only wishes his voice were as hypnotic as the pipers flute . "f hate to raise mone y," he L1:>nfided ,1 to the Saddleback Valley Chamber of Commerce Tuesday . "Yet here I am . asking you lo contribu te, just as I've asked the Kiwanis and the Rotary and the Lioll.1i and everybody else." Remmers' "baby" will someday stand seven fee' high at !he end of the mall In Dana tlarbor -a bronze statue of a yi>iilhful Richard Henry Dana as he might · have looked \\'hen he first g&Zed It ~the rocky point that bears his name. .For a reluctant fund raiser . Remmers h;µn 't done loo badly, but he still has a Jong way to go. "We wlll need $1 5.000 for the statue.'' he said. "Half has betn raised already and if those who have promised would get out their checkbooks, the figure would be closer to three quarters ... .. If l 've learned anything in these past ft.w months it's that a cashed c he ck is worth 15 promises:· he added. Remme rs nevertheless goes after those promises as eagerly as he describes hls Project.-: He ~~~\ ~ny speaking .in1ageru11t1 Ow.to bM/fappolntment book is beginning to resemble Spiro Agnew's. The Dana Point resident has also filled his hours doing research on the young Dana and the· times in which he lived. information he '"illingly imparts to any and all \\'hO will listen. "Dana was somewhat of a rebel." he said. "He "'as expelled from Harvard for leading student revolts.'' "GOOD INVESTMENT" Although '"e ·all k n o \V that 1 diamond is a good investment, most or us ha\'c never really compared it to some of the majo.r expenditures '''e periodically incur. U you have not made such a comparison, you might find it interesting to do so by taking a second look at Your invest· ments in cars and furs. ?.lany of us buy an expensive car w h i c h ,,.e k'now·· Will be almost worthl,ss in· a few · years, and we seent unconCei:n~d ~bo.ut deprecia· lion, caring JOOre ror .ppearance and performance. And many peopl e buy co.stly furs,·kno\l.•ing that they will son1eday \Vear out or go out or slj'le. \Vhether you're talking a b o u t diamonds as a syn1bol of love. or as an investment, the' old phrase. ".-'\ diamond is forever," applies equal- 1}' 11.·ell ; because a diamond's ap- peararu:e remains the same, it never v.•ea.rs out or goes out or style: and not only does it not depreciate. it actually increases in vllUe. a beau- tiful and praclital h'Nlge against in· fiatJon! Diamonds are ·our bi.isiness ••• not Investment counsell~. But \Vt are capable of helpint you make a good investn\en( ih a diamond: so come bn in • !". our diamond coun· ••ling Is free! ••ffe didn't like the way students werf: treated in' those days, particularly cor- poral punishment. He pursued this Iheme while a sailor and his classic ·Two Years Before The Mast' went a long \1•ay in upgrading the treatment of sailors and doing away with flogging ." · Remmer1 ·described the hides trade and the economic condltions in the United States •that brought eastern trading ships to the West Coast. · "Dana's · ship ·carrled •o,ooo hides to trade in South America,'' he said. "Since: there was very litUe market for the meat produced· by herds· of Spanish catUe in ·California, th e cattle was slaughtered for Its by-prouducts , particularly tallov.· and hides. '·Estimates ha\'e been n1ade that in aboul 27 years 5 million cattle were slaughtered. Some of the descendants of the lodians who traded with Dana's <:ontemporaries still live in San Juan Capistrano.·· ReJTimers added that during the 27 years that the hides trade nourished about $20 million ~·as made, a healthy figure for that day and age . Remmers is confident that he v.·ill be able lb raise the money needed to erect the statue. Bui he admits that 11\ti statue'l\'Oh't be ca!! until the sculptor has his payment The l)lOnwne.ot. whose model ac- rompanies Remmers whereverr he goes, \viii be cast i\1 Jta!y by Jobn Terken of New York, a sculptor of international reputation. "The monument \viii include a pedestal, a landscaped ar.ea around It, and bronze plaques bearing the names of Individuals, organi z?tions and school classes that have contributed more than $100,'' he said. , Approaching the finish line this morn- ing were five more yachts, Carina, Kanaka Bug, Freestyle, Sigame, and Odd Couple. The rest of the fleet will stra11le acros.s the finish during the: day Thur• day. • Communications between the United States and Puerto Vallarta hu been hampered by overloaded llnel through the overseas operator and only a ham radio network has been able to handle the task. Information is being fed from the escort vessel Pioneer to Carroll Hudson on \VBORMA in Newport Beach which is passing on the lnfonnallon to news media. Also on the network i5 Dave Atkins in Los Angeles on \VIVX. 'Spruce Goose' Given Reprieve LONG BEACH <UPI) -Howard Hughes today held another ~xteoaioo of a lea~ on 1 building housing the giant flying ho.at Hercules that has not been seen ~y t~ pqblic since 1947. • ,. Tbe Looi ll"a<h Ha<hor ~'°" gr&Dted lli! ill:llistriall!t a oqe: YMf. er· tension 'l\lesday of the oceantro-Qt )>~ perty and the towering metal sheathed building hiding the plane. The giant wooden craft was nJcknamed the Spruce Goose although it is actually made of birch. It has been stored in its hangar under armed guard since its maiden flight in 1947. lNrERNATIONAL· STERLING OFF SALE on these 4 most 'popular patterns A wonckrfuI oppdrtunity to fttl Jo or start your iCnic. now •.• even jive a vt.ry tRuured aifL lbere'a a complete open stoc:k 1e1ectioo available as ftll .. plt.ee tettlngs. Aod all at grtal NYinp far 1ucb pride I.a owning or giving 6oe tam.Dy eih'er. S.11Llmltld-Ftbruary14 thru March 1a. 1971 J. C. .JJunilJhried• Jeu1eler.1 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVINllNT TER¥S l•NXAMfll(CARD-MA SllRCHA ROI 24 YEARS IN SAM l LOCATION 'HONI 141·J401 • 9 PILOT-ADVERTISER WtdMsdl)', February 17, 1971 WtdntM111y, F'ebr11ar7 17, 1971 DAILY PILOT JJ When Yo·u r Joh Moves Out of Town--Find Another One -. ~ ~ ) By JOYCE l.AlN KENNEDY SAl..F.S APPROACH. '"The lhe liame selling techniques as to create a desire for I.hf' ••. successfully present your job clinics but I was unable v.·i\Hng to provide the know-dress am 1bove). The 11rvlce ~ Dear Joy~: The organiza-Cooncil "'arks on the theory." used lo market a product, produt>I," Astwood said. abilities ... ask for an d get to find a llsling or more thi n how, aDd help you get it oU operat.es on• n1tl0011 basis . ..:: lion for which I've v.•orked Ast wood says, "that anyone to selling the man. THE \VEEKLY AtEETINCiS the right compensation , , . a few. This would be an ex-the 1round. Contact Henry It has a CO\lple or hundred ~ the past 7 years is mo\'in& looking for a job is pe rforming "We all know that to st-II and booklet are designL"d to prepare for intervie'>''s • . . ctllent service project for Astwood for more details. job openings on tile right now. • .. to anothe r city, For personal the same task _ no matt~r a product successfully it is show lhe job seeker how to compile 1 list of prospective 1dvertising clubs. s e r v Ice If you're looking for a start reasons. 1 can't make the necessary lo first know the do just lhis. and include such employers . . .follow up the clu~. chambers of commerce JOB CLEARING llOUSE. in the sales-marlteuna Held move and have to find inother what level of job is sought. selling points or that product topics as how to: wri te it prospective employer and get and Jaycees. If you belong The Sales Executives Club ol ... or a sale1man looking for job. What can you suggest lie is out ~lling a new and tho roughly .•. as well a1 the good resume. . . ha n d t e the jQb. to a club wh.ich is interested New York also provides a frte a better job. . .or a ule.s I do? _ S.U., New York unknown product (himself) to customer's needs for the pr1; yourself \\'hen you lose a job in conducting a job clinic to source of jobs for sales people executive striving to adv1nce. a potential customer. The duct. .. and then to presen t •. , select your next job . . . SERVICE CLUBS in a few help the unemployed. the Man through their Sales Manpower get ~ cop ies of your resume Your entire letter was too Council recommends applying these po ints in.such a (1shlon plan Ml adequate job campaign otfier cities also conduct free l\.1arketing Council says lt's Foundation division (same ad· on file With the club. long lo print. but it indicates,-=--'-'-'-'--.:.C.-'-~--_;_ ________ _:_:..:_=.::c:..::.....:.:_ _ _;__: _______________ ;:_ ___ _;_ _________ __c_-'------------ you plan to use the mart obvious jobse1rch channels : news paper ads , emp_loymenl Car e er C o rner serv ices and d i r e c t .JP- plication. But I wonder if you're aware or one of the most laudable public service ventures goinc ... THE MAN MARKETING COUNCIL The Council, in operation for 38 years. is New York's oldest free coope rative employment co unse l ing service. It has been sponsored by the Sales Executives Club of New York since its in. ceptlon, and provides help lo anyone -man or "'·oman - office boy or company presi· den t -who has lost his old job, or who is seeking a better one. NEW YORKERS a t l e n d evening meetings once a "·eek where they learn job hunting skills. The Council's director . Henry K. Astwood. says that during the past yea r. more than 1,500 men and women have attended these 'veek\y sessions. and the majority have a I r e a d y successfully landed jobs. BY MAIL. I asked Astwood how job!eekers in the rest of the U.S. could benefit from this not-for.profi t program. "It's ava ilable in a 68·page booklet, 'How To Land The Job You \Vant.' " he said. i For a copy, send $3 to the ~1an Marketing Council Sales Executives Club, Roosevell Hotel. Suite 1920, 45th Sl & '-iadison Ave., l\'cw York. N.Y. 10017.) Vie'\\' Homes No Lon ger So Prized People ~ere ~illing to pay a lot of money to live at Playa del Rey, where th e view of the Pa ci fi c \vas unobstructed and the beach was almost as close as the front yard. For this they were willing to live with the constant reminders of megalopolis at their back. the shattering overhead roar of jets from adjacent International Airport. The planes grew larger, noisier, more numerous. 'I'he airport fed ill need for more space by gobbling up chunks of the surrounding residential areas. Finally , the only houses left along the coa.st west of the airport formed an "island ," with the sea to the \\'est, airport land on the other sides.' And now, that island will become an airport pa rklng lot. Many of the 373 homeowners who must leave In the coming months are resigned to it. "We don't bother to fix things any more." said Donn Cochrane . "We just sit here and watch the cracks gel big· ger in the pl aster a n d masonry. It's the vibrations from the jets that do it.'' Coctirane . a UCLA teacher. accepted the city's offer of 162,000 this month for his four· bedroom, three-bath house with swimming pool and a ,.,..t house. "The y indicated the price would be enough to duplicate our pl ace elsewhere,'' he said. "But we've been looking for two months since we found out for sure ~·e'd be leaving and not many places have the desirable qualit.les th is has. tt looks like it may cost us $20,000 more-" Cochrane said he thought About lighting for his piece of the island. then realized it aoon wouldn't be ""'Orth fighting for. "If there .,.ere any hope that the 7471 and the other new jumbo jets wouJd even- 1uaUy leave this airport. I'd have fotJiht," he said . ';We've lived here four \."ti n . It wJSn•t so bad before lhe 7'7.11. They may not make as much noise. but they're psychologk:ally overwhelmir\I bcctuse they 're so low and l•rie." One owner sold his house to the city for $75,000, and didn't bolher to lock the door when he left. The pslnt l5 J>Hllni-Windows are broken. Family Scott BATHROOM Tissue 551 S1111t l1lls W~ilc an• C1l1rs. Sav-11's l•• Prier 11. 41c ltr Pak 1t 4 ONE GALLO N Clorox 1LucH rar ttiase loogh ta·t~t· . ool sl.iins! · · Sar.11's [ftl'J•ay l•• Price ilc ANTISEPTIC K1iis &~m> oa Cllllla~1 ... tiee-;:s br~lh Ire·~ l0r t-~ur~. ~J-an·s [ftry•11 l•• Price 1.1! Tumbler :~TCHo• Hou1NG Ten 13 oi. ~:"' lumbli:rs bealltlfully Gesigl'll'd. I~ hJndsome Spicy Bf'tlrin Color. . Sfr41'1 [flf)'Qy L1w h ic11.11 1.00 SIHl'I ["'Jl1f1 PUSTIC Lt• Prit1 1JI . !r~~~. ~~I~ 2:3 0 A't'DCda tolOf. • DRUG STORES PllClS Pl lYAIL TNI U SUNDAY, fll. 21ST by ALLADIN Your Choice 10 for 1.00 PAK OF 2-PlASTIC Ice Cube Trays ~=~· lbWble, ufl. 2 s; $1 Sn -11'1 [ffrJ'IY • Llw P11c1lk Label Maker 9,;Rh! 5ell su,k label' v.11~ ~'" ~1tll:y Prin!. C.ea\ ta ind1Yidualilf: per. SM.al p(ISSe5Si:IM. Sa,-11'' E11ryily Llw Price 1 JI -- 6°ieemu]t TOOTHPASn F111rllt f11'111l1 Sat·••"s lttry~ay L•• 'rite i Jc 12 o •. Maalox PET FOOD Chun~ Bttl W1tll [J,r:, f.le;itime or Whel. Pup. S1r-11's E•trJUJ l•• Pritl 2 ,.,. 5k "Tampax" f111P•ll -ror total freedom at1d comfort Sn -11'1 £nrylay ltw 'ric143c BAGGED Candies o •• lb. Tht 111-~me 18\'0rites! ()angt Slices. Gum Dfops or Spice Droos. 5,, .. ,•s ['llfJUJ l1w Prlc13k 3 ~$1 Gtlin Tiblets. f« relief of f BoWt ol 1111 ILSJ'. 5 8 1 siJIPle aches aod pal11S. O SaHl'I ['flrJPJ I lnPrit12k 2 LB. JAR of KEIN'S ~~=~~try 2:$1 Sn-t1'1£ttrfiq LnPflc1 lk NOUHllOlD HELPER • ~~~~~!~ 4i$1 50 Leia! Size. f Sn-ti's £ttn'UY lnfrk14lil'l'k • .; ft DAil V PILOT SC Wtd"""7, Febno.vy 17, 1971 Ll!GAL NOnCr: .-nta t1P ""9f1Dft TUttUt•l------"tlOI• ,....,, OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock List llcTtOltl ,_,. AHO '4IM. C•ltTllllCATS O• •ICTITtoUI u......-1HA •u•t••t• A.MD •1n1•1.s1 ...... 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" fllll u" firm II aimot-1..t of 1111 NOTICE S HERE&V G VEN TO THE Ylll lnl 11111 11 .... .lttt C'td !f."" '~ 91,, IC"l 1 n 111 idA Mu 5 U I 01 Amtl<'k 601 l' 11 \ 1J1'o H Conl CDP lilt foOcrwl,.,_ C<ltJOOl'lllon. who-. •tlncl"I lilt N .,...,,,.., ~·"""'Ill CrrO !Ort cl Vinet £ Ot n<1ton m111e Sr 11 11 A:::f P11 ~&1' 2:1.\lo Btrll Gtll 'S6 7 U Y Cp 1119 ll 61 -.MF rK l'O 1 01 JI JO 1 3Gno -~ COii t Corp J •IK•oftlwlnl<slsat loto"" S111t1.U. C1l'-lln"1 Too•>o-, ·•-· -·o>oo•• iddn.i 11 nc1 Hue 2t ~Jl. Ex •Von &lilr Fd IU 1.Sl Yt llH1•51Arntac .JO ?6 ?,'" 41,~ 4.,~+~Cl(p plA1.50 T """"" w ·-"' .. ,...,.. '"' "' • d ,... I oblft M ,, " 8Ql'ldslll '.. 1 °" IF Fd 'ao 'n ""'" Inc 61 19) 'I .... ... + " Ct CP Piii! so Stvol!t• el Stutller11 C1llfor"1 Ill(. A .. wnen JOI P1lm Strnt 81lboH tt66l. CounlY ni Ctlrll JO 1~.ltOHon 9 • 9n l!o.tori M Ill tOJ F Gh 559 IOl....,.oc:o .Oto ,H 2~ ~ ~-ti,Con!M~ , ... 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Otted Feb u.,,. 11 1911 Ll•dv Cl' 1' I ~· T ''" Gii Siio Sh IOICOPll • "10 tc P..::f Flld , 11 • ., -.t~lon .. nd I !7 ~ 11 ' -~u lllfn 2! ~. -,-c:I,",';!_ l!XtlraJ to111 Johll R our o .ri C1>1 '~I l' TIC C11t" >o J_\.o 1.'MGI Ill l~ l 1; s: ~ V ~t¥ 10 ~: : n A CvE 1 }i JI 11 ? ll o -; ummr:n 11 "o O -, .. >O"""' Jim~• Atldrtw Ml 1 11'0 Tu1ctnY T 1,.111 eo , " ,•, 14\.1 1S Trl'Cnt G lt~l 70 r > tnn Q At CE pl5 !7 ti ti t • ... ~unn 0 U9 • .. ,. ... ews ll 13~ T'"'" 0 19\I~ G!"S !O ~"' 5J • Miii ,,. ., ... Ri;lild! ,, '. ~· It•-' IO ,.ubl 1htdl .Or1111e Co•ll Oii! I' P IOI A~t I" 1Y1 0.I ReJ C• llorn 1 ff; I !\01a11 R Ou O Cb 1v o I l Mcb H S:\.I 6\lo Cw Ill AB I II l S6 l'h I 1( 6d 16 01 -.r Rell PIJ )~ tl O 6 O ~ 60 CurtWI 1. ' " 10112lM ch:J.lm 11lfrt 01vld -.n1lllWen1tld 141 1!•1lw T•n1ltf1 all Cd~ '• 2~Trco PO J6V..l1~C:whC 111 I ierm tlflOIO At Rdl"IJ lA 10 1~ e t t•f.! ;oo )tlrvtrv •r ,. ICC lre1 Clllforrll1 f?~lt Pub! ihcd Otan1e C111sl Da y 1'1 Cl Cl'J Et n I 1 "-l ldllt '"' J Comp Al f 1~ 0 •l I' !If SI 11 tt 1 •2 Al Re~ al? 10 1 ' J i l 'I C>ck-o 'IO ,....,, .. R1vmorld 1111 lttr Ft'bru• y 11 1'11 W.11 Yncll c "'' 26 '''°" Fd 0 lot.I Coml>f' t 'IO ) Sol Of' E"' 151 11 At It Chem 1 ' 2~ I 21 • Hit. -Cn•r us M" LEGAL NOTICE oni.s Arllltlcl w11,.1t1C1 Id GEi IS•• t' ft I lum 11"0 Ult Conic Bd '•I 10 2' °" Flld IJ Jl 1J 6t -.11~\ Cll<'P 111 J , l • l \ ·-···-· ... ,,_ <on~o-Mii II.Uy 1\0 • u" McG r Ht .... romo f:d IJCJ O"I •• ,. .... lOt• '" ATO II( o"" ,, , • 1~ , ...... "'"' '"" .• _, LEGAL NOTICE Coni1tk ' ) I to P119 111 11 f'l 1112 Au or1 p oo 14 9 , e , t NOTICI: 01' MARSN&L S SAL• W!nltm Allred F11r1 Concord 1 "' l'fl p ce Fund A\O om O•I~ ,~ 49\t .. 1 , ... • H Nichols P'lll"llll "" D I( MelYlll Cll uclt Bold !If CO"K<> II 11 l1 1 11 Cirwlh 25 OJ 15 05 -.u«itn!" lld 1 6 61~ I ~ 6 ~ - Ollclml" lrld C N ~ OtfetMl111I J•l'nH A .. tew Ml e< NOTICI 01' OISSOLUT ON 01' ,-.,., I '-11 I '12 ! fr' N E 1 10 OS 10 OS Avco Co p :171 11 • Hlo 6 + No 115 D7 Stilt ol Cl l'°"rill 0rlll9t Coun!~ ll•RTHlillSHI,. r.,,,t G!h f f'l 10 IU N ttor 21 J6 'II J6 Avco CP wt lll ,i, •I. I D~l1 P oe.,, !v v!ri.,. ~ '" e~tcll'IM s~\IO'd Of' o~ l'ttwu•rv It 1'7 b• ort me ,.ub c "° ct h ht ebv g ve" '!la K II F' f"Cfp Ld IS 16 U I.\ I ro Port! I Of I 15 Avco Pl » l1 ll\\ ' • f?O.:. -0 vcoCn ' J•mll,Y 19 1911 b'/ lllf SU-IOI' C1111rt o HO<o-···""l'A lo Ind tor II d Sit le Dollald J Dtv dlCn 1n<f Pete 8 F tell 0 < 1rm Cll y Ct,o l? r' 13 ·.~ P OWdnl 5 00 5 4t Avery Pd :0 l! l•.\ll 3410 lilt -> 01vro 0 j 21 O S I (;II I " ""'"' CnWOv I I 6 P ud SVI 10it 11'6Avne! nc 2JI> 'l ' 1l Jl.t -tDevtnHud SD Countr ol &flllt '''' c • o"' • perlOfllUY 1o..e1,td l'rH °" ll lYmond tlerwtO'lort dolt11 buslroeu und~r lhl' lie 5,'.0,'r'O,~I A'? ri ,: H Putnim Fund• ~vntt ,",",~, 6 6• 15 -J , °""'~DL 1 o upon I IW.....e~I •n • Id In tivor <>1 Rlt!1r DIV d A,nokl We "ltld F1ut~ 1/ld l llou1 I rm "'"'" en<I I v t of SEA •;._• " ;., C ou~ E<iult I IS 111 .,vQll 11:! t " l'lh to -1 ,., R-"lolC J 90 •· M l'tlcho1 •1 ludllmtnl credlllll'1,1c1c1"non l•nsdowne Wll•m -.tfrtdTOOl ANO MF G •t US w 17th N v ""c~11r1 111101, Geori UfilJllAzKO 1ll 10 .n IS\• UV. Plp0148 Ind 1g1ln'I 0 I( OudlMll ltld" C N Ftlrl Mttwlll C 111Cit 8olcl 111 Ind J""'t' Str ... t Un I C ( V of Cosl1 Mttl ames ee O•lwr l l Mi 14 'l G rt 10 U 1 ot -8--8:fm'.f8 ~ 12 Oudm•n ll lud~rr ""bier 'IO"..-"" Afldrew Mii t kMW~ lo me a be CCIU"hl cf Or1ntt ~tll• Of Cl lo n I p OtUI 1 •1 I 0 lrKOPll I lt I ti 8~11(.~W !IC Ml ll , J1 ,1 • .._ 3• ~Mite I IO • l'ltl IMtfn(I .. S2 m K I Cl\111 ... due "" --""""' "'""'' I e sub t bed Oki M !ht 5111 dtv el Ftbrutrv •11 Ood1 Cox 1< J) lS S1 lnYH I 7 St I JO 8~~r0 , ~' ,, ~. lO X' -• 111 r so "" ''tdl luotmenl r.i llW dltt cf Ille 111 ... w !tit" hulrvm.tnl 11111 1clcnow eOt-bv rnutu1I con~n o ~lC ve Ill• s•id l'>r•x• 1 lJ U 13 Vis • 111 t 1!1 l\a 1 ot flt <o l !O 11 , 1 11 , I ~ "' lssu•nc• of Mi.I t•"'{'~ i.-... ' ~·v~ trv tel elf .,,.. t•Kllftol '"' .. ,.... p1rlMrVI' •lld It m "• f th•. rt • ons 8 '" Fd 11 13 1] :it Vov•t 1.17 7.SI II• I G ~· u ,200 •1 ' •2 I •1 ) +11'> nn M II 60 1r1111 11t Ille ,~ Ill ••"'!! •t• I (DFFIC-.LSE .. Ll ••P•'"''lt>eren T N p t •vt Lv 1l "'6U01Ae.,.re 101711 1,Bar>eo Punt I) llo 11 '1 11.-• nnMfcoll .r wdll""•menl debl~rsl"llle•r<:Oertv JotlllM lll!191ktl Sid b>JIMU n Ill• 1 u ~ w be Q C'" OS E•Ofll.Ho'.IAd Rnf1t 1JSJt5)Sftal\(IP Pl 1 I 2"• 1•h 2•~•+' n:ZD':lnt°l' 111 tile c-tv ut o """" s1.ie 01 T P.~ ~n fl.I r '' Sc~u~l• 15 9117A Ilana o .l5 • 11 1~ i,.._ -..,, rte11 01 .., (I fo n!i o-c• bid •• lol ows Hol• 1 Pub c Cl lorn I c!llldvcttd by l 1u 11 Oout as T!11~rd G wtll 11 d '' Studde< Funds 8~ olC~ J' ,,',' JI • ?f •" , ++ "" Oe•-o DI 1 Lo• .. Bloc-lJJ err ·~ Like T IC Pr MIOI O!llce ft ""'" w • OIV •llCI d 1(~1 Vt e 111111 'ri ln(O 'TI ~ ~ ll " nv ,. ,. • Sl 1e~k"' NY 1 '6 .... o;;s ... D<r ...,.,. KN'ded ~lock 1 Paa• 01n.111c111m • tnd n•bll cf r~· 1 m •nd rKrv• A new addition to !he Don ~"~\ 9;.; ~: ~~cl ii'I~l~la!"~T 2 1e' 56 63 62 12 -1 ~t~J,rK\•~~ lJ crr Ml.ct l ..eo\n ,,.,,,, rteo df My comm "~ E•P fl A mon •• l>IVlb . to ht I m "11" I 1 l I "I Corn s 0 21 10 11 8• d CR ,~. ,g :11• ~,,: : + \ I Eo II S.50 ol Or-t COl<ntv Ct l~r" I f"d tom. -.ot t 1'1t Fu ~ r "at Ce S ~· tbY o vpn lllll Koll Company COrporate Staff E111~1 11 ti 1• ~ St u v Funds lie tit Inc IO 9 • • U WI~ l.1 montv know" ., ~ Snh St tlewPOrt ITl!AINI o•oss AN O MOORE !f\t Und! I IMd w I r.ot bt 9SPOnl be Fm a Sc • ~ Eqvlv J Jt , n Baste II 2 SC I AO Jt' J'J,,,, Jt(~ -:!.~" 1 :g B••d'I c 111for"11 u ni 1111 W~lttltr •*"'• from lh 1 div C11 or 1nv ob aat ftn JS Everett Davis who as vice E11•r9 v 1l 111311 nv~t 1 n '" Bar,1 Mfo Joi 1 • 14 • -~ 1m Sto•m 1 NOTICE IS t4EllEBV f:tV£H tlll,I Wl'llftllr C1tlft!'fli .. tt6CIJ Incurred bv l1urll Oou11•~ Tn•a ""'d I 11 • ., l l l ~~u"'tv' ;~1~;; •• u~r1•m ,',','>o's"ol:~~I ~!~ ~ J,: ~ J!;:;: ~~ISSh01"o>.20' '" Frkltv Ftbru•rv ,. 1m " 10 OI T•....,.,,. •tW16J In h 1 own name or ~ tM ,. • ..,, p. ~s1 en WI wrec a i::oi, <' 111 t 04 "' 1s:-... s..tt~ JS tl 11 •I l'"''n ., '~ u , 1..1 6S _ "" c1tol'lont e 10ck AM ti l'r&11I "' CouMl\l>llU Publlihld Or•11-. Co.st OI ly fl IOI cf tllf nrm h f h {)o I Eou• Pro '11 • 5" SoM>ll Ci ~ I 51, t 24 1 '"'chlb 14 7• S , S• , S , -It bo di ~ ~1 Wttt ltlll s1111 Cho of C""1FH>ru1rY 11 21 1n.1 M•d! l. 10 o-.1Eo AT Hu11""0" "''ch pases O te n Kol Com F1rfo 10 ~•1 Shllm Fd lllJll?IB'L~b 11 1rs 'l?' :it '-u. Glooo.IO """ GolmlJ al Orl l'l<lt Sii. of lt ll 1$-11 Ctl for"'' ""'' s" dtY cf Ftbru1rv Ft m Bu rn '1 IQ "t~htt All 7' l l l? 15 8 y~ ( Q SC • II IQ ~ !Ml ~11a Eou e C11 re ... 1, 1 w u 11 • 11 pub c 1ud on 1t1 p&n)' build t.rsud program F10 Ott1 1 J11 s" oean Ill , JJ B• r~• n ' u 'i .... RI ......,,. 4 '" !hi II lh"! bidder tor (IS.. 111 LEGAL floi011CE Don• d J DIV d1M be F t:a r G "".;', , s dt • 1J lG 661l:~1 t;,~1 ~ j ,·.: .~ •• • '~ ~,', _+., ,1 ••• .:.b c~ 11,,. 11""'u1 mc>nPY el 1111 Vn t<I 5!•tt.1 l'elt• B F teo lween the four permanent F:s1tx 119 , • 11rna Funn, 11"""~"'~" " , r, t ltlt rip~ I • •~" • ,., ol ll'-,11rls P11b siled Ot1n11t CClol!I D• y P ot Fv •I 1 • 1 Cea ' 16 10 14 e~ o ck ;o J 1 • '• •l u + • or1~•v w u ld llldflmt"' 011:>1ors 1,. ,~, •bW• , u ''' Ftbuary111111 JsJ1 off1cesof thecompanylocated Foa uH 1166 ~~•11 1,',',,',",B"C~ftr ' ,•, ,•,, ,•, ,', •"i•'•','f.,' '•" ~HC:rlbtd •rooulY or Ml "'u ~ Ille,...,, Cirlnl,IC .. TI! Gii' DllCOH IN .., lo;;p;;::;;r;;;;;;;;::;;--:;;;;;;7-;r-:=;ol Pur " 1~ • u1 fl ltoPt SOC) ! •' ....., be ...ctu•rv to i•t dv uldl Of' usa ANO/OI All.NOONM•Nt "l1 at Irvine San Dierro Santa ~~ e,., s , • • Sm! h 11 t 10 t 10111e rr~ 1 60 l 2r, 21 , ?1 • + , ~M u J1u " Int t o• ,,CTIT ous NAM.a " T .. ncr ''rl )6it1Sw1 n~ un•v•ll B ~ rH 6,., I ""' r . 72 + • Ptooer 36 f'.JIKVll ... w'llll l ccrw ··~ Intl THE UNOEll~ GNEO l\tft'llV Cfr1 fy 1 000. OF OIL PAINTINGS Clara a d H I T F ~"'et p "" Sw "'" er untvl ll .... H'lW 11(1 I) ,. • • • • ~ •Mf'I • 0 ems n DUS on exas °""m , t2 , n '>.Ne In• ll • 14 11111· 11n r.r o• 1J 11 , FM "" D1!!4 11 co111 ~1 C1l lem 1 lllf! t HKtlvt Feen.1,.., ' 1'11/Whoi.e WHOLESALE WAREHOUSE D th nd 1 J.., , "ISPK a 1 02 1" fie"'~ co '4 t 1 10 1t , i '• •lloN •t Ftllrwt"l' I ,.,, .... nc o• 1l1a err bl/1 "t'lf 11 13'.! OPIN TO THI PUILIC av1s a 1rd generation IM:om s .. 6 5.1 s F m GI I/Ill~• I 8end. 1 '° 1 ' 3" • Jl. ] -1 ii'c Co 33 Cll"'110Wfll;sen N"NPOrl.llld IU!t,llCONA Pl.(K ~ Vn • ,u,tattS "U•6tcl 8~Y~f l Ill 31 S"l.._1 •011't~ M1•1MI LTO • C1 u~rn • (l)•PC"r• on Newco t OFF land developer brings to his 1 Fs F Y• H ll 2 'Id\ t•Om#n Fu/'1111 I BP~!I co o !~ Htl-s1~ -"Co ~is , unklHI coutl Bt1c/'I o ,.,.e c ..... 1, c~ for1<1 c181e<1 SQ0/0 "• " o • • 0 0 ~ Am "" Ju • 10 B-QI" o o 1n 11 .,, 1 1 -3 1 8....;:c~ 1 .8 0-1-C1111r1tv re do but nen uMtt !!'le I ct 111111 i rm job m ore than twelve years Fu 1~c;.,. 1 0 • ~ I A•i.a F 1 • 1 n Bent f ! & t1<11 ,1: L 60'"' '•'• 1 -. '~ reu l"d ""' H.lrbor Jlldk ., 0 II er n•mt ti IM l.GES 1S I CllV s rtt Ult I EOINOI• s-.NTA ... ,.. e. I s ~ 0 ' " F clue 110 71118!rttcf p n y nt I 0 '2 e., c " Goodlw!" 'lo. 1 1-1un1 "''on B11ch C•I ioon • '"''" •»-"°' e:xperlence 1n construction and ~1: M 11 ~ ~~ : ~ s ~; Rot 1fU 1, ~· ~~~u;,1>1 1 ~ 1i32 3l ! 31., 33~ -\1 g ::1 5P c~ 21 s .... ,.~, wn ch bu! llflt "''' COll'll'Offd ol "" , ........ -f OEALllll WAN:TIO F'1 "' • SC !t C•o °" 'ni • ~ 'l•r>PU~I '" ' • • I ~ ~· OU~t Pw 1 Ill MQ10111• T w• •MT 1o1 ~,,. ot lCtl --.'ll01t ~~m• " 1u,,; 1:::..:_:::::::::;:::,;:-::::.:::.,,c__:_I real estate pnncipal!y as v1ce1e ~ ~ ,, oc:k lJ •s u "I A~ kev """' 25 , !.: • 1,• ,·, Ouk• Pff 10 •11 N ~ •NI 111Ct ot n11Clrnet • t •• lollOYos r: • Fl'ld S St >UO~rv •d Inv l\'t II S 1.111 •·· • .......,., cen.....,11 t21tt 1~..,11 pres1d"nt cf the I rv 1 n e c ~ c: ~ s ~ ~ 1' Grt~ '1• 1 t6 "a T1>r•• Mr ' • • •• 1 ' ou1o.• r ~ 11 PlllflfWt'&A"°'"'" Ctm,../PKll 1.ld 1 Cillforll l U/11 "'r.d G~ •SC 1 91 $urrh 1n10 1r:i1B1c'o D~.P 1 ~ ~~ 6 ... D~"Bnl 1701 Pub!IMH or_. C..s1 o.w ,.101 ..,.,.,.., .-J.U NowPQl't ecu•••rd suue Industrial Comple!t' for lhelFf'G::;~11 1 r '°;o'M • r•~~~h G ~!'1t'! =~~,r;.~,·· ~l 1"• ,~: ,~•-;:._ ·r~" :11 '*"'" l.10. U lf1l 2'1-ll 711 Ntwl>Otl ll~c~ Ct for 11 I lh d h I th Irr..,.. I '1 1~ f MA AP 17 6 U Il l"' ~"::I l l • 1 "' 10 1~ ' -•~Pon pu ~ Ct f1c1t• "" ........ c. Ol'I .. bu1l~1 ree ) ears ur1ng \V l(' I e No~ ~ I,. '~I 1f~tf.I\ ' Jn ,., 10 •1 I . Be ;o )h "' ,. 1 -\ duPMI r". r EGAL N~·~ "' , '" , •. ,, .,, ,..,, .... ,A.. s~ '.., 1~ •~ ,_... , ,, , ,, oOb~ e k• "" 1 • 11 ' ... _ L< " v 1 ''"'"' u • • "'' " ·-"" Industrial porks btgan an ~x "011 o io !l 1 Jl r;;;;~~ ra ,, 1 ,~ ,, 1~ r>11 co '° ! ' ,, • :n • " 1 ' ou;llr •rrt , ~---l•lld8~t cf Pwb uton 11\trtol It on r-~ G • lnwr A Jl s•i 1 ,1j 0~ •• )Jo l I I ' "' ••'o -'' cv,.0 f/'111 NOTICI! TO CllOIT01111S ~t 0 ~n~:• c:!nc; o!...,~: 1~ou; 'av~1:.,~ pnnsl\ e gro.,..til from 26001 p1o1r~ ~ ~ ; ' Ir in < ~ 1., 1 , I e=M•~o 1 11 ,~ , 2 ·~. ,f -'• 1>vn1m Am :~:~:1::c:~t~fo".:~!:: of !tco~ 2'61 °' 1ri. C• or"• cvu acresto4300acres ~n.,, ~'! ~.~i~~•EF~ 11i\'1"~~'...\1 :~g~,1 '<1,5 1 s ,11 ~' i-•+l.o. THt: couNTY Oil' o•ANGI CCII• The Don Koll Comp·•n• IS r:o 1 1 ~ ~ 10 1t iwnc c; '" l lt ~o ,,. ~• 411 ~ 1 ' ,,. , ' ::;: i f•o •P," ~. Mii -.-41u• 0.Ttd tti1 1Cltl lflJ .r Fl!iiUIY a F "Cl "Ct;-T•f'C nc •~' lU ll<11fdl ,4. 1l 1' ••>o ]'I '> 'ffSCO 0 Eslllf of MILTON MY!.IS BOOHE• 1t11 located m thl! Ir\ tne lndustria~ '•"•' • '• •• A 111 1,~ f,' :, ;,• ·.~~ ~ f',!!. II r " Ill ... 1 ' 1 l\• = ·~ e!.IG~ t k.r Oe<1......r Comm l'f'clc Ltd ·· ·-... ·-ll lS U I IS _. it E11t Utlt 1111 .. TICE ,, Hl!•EIV GIVEN fll tlle •• ,,,,_' ••.• , Complt!t' as a part or the1 I 1 T d ' ·~ u Ur Q~ S•C <: 0 B ·~' -.irw 'J II 101'o 101.I -"i , ... ' "' --Th f ~ I P 'at i .... Br"'1~ u 11111~" B 1oos1 1 «ta '1 '1 '> IO • i1o.i. + '-•i 1 1 .,..:l!Oh f1I 111e '"°"'" nam..s CSKtdtlll ""11o.., I •near n 0\1 n A •.......,rt I n d u ~ t r 1 a I r:u•d Am 1 • •"' N.r nv , f~ • .. A 11• Mv 1 20 211 61 , ~ a.1o, + ' '1°"Y1 1 "11 fi'lft 1,11 _...,., N¥1nt ,.,... •a•"i' Pub1l1"td 011'1ft C1>11t 01 1v l"lol p Tb .. ,,., Ir:•" "• .,.. un r30 tll1~1t BrtM• 1117 t ,,., 41'> "1vt-'-i U1lnM1 ... s2 ....... ~ dllf(tffnl •rt rt1111 td hi IMt f rbtutrJ II ,, llld M1rdl i. 10 1p••· 0 accos Comple!t' the first or many Ir. ... S•c ,~_,1 l~J· Whl•~ 17 "Utl " I .. ,1 ,,.. , .. 11 "' 11 • II ' +"' ckerdJ A lhtm wltll tllt fll«IUIY \OOIKrter• " 1t11 3tt n ff ,. nr• tr 1-111 15' u~ ..., F~n•h !I l'el ~ tJt l' 1 ~ 11h ll 1 ° ~lrci 1 '"" omc. of !ht tl'1k el ll'lt •bcve And G1~S industrial and O tct parks Groi o s •c -.ccm 111 -Ml 11,dwv "' !.. 0 lJ 19"' 3' :l'Vi -~ G G 10 .. - -''""" " d ,.,.. ~ • , .. •···-'' ••~"" dw1H• .,, 6S 50 "'""' ol'lt~ +"' l«t Anoe ""'111 fW '" prise~ w n LEGAL NOTICE SOUTH COAST 'L .... A v.h1ch ha\e M<!n construcle B• F~ • ., • ,, s~i;;· 7 ll I u 8 kw• G '°• I& lOI ]I ' ' ~ \o M•m M., tllt ftKff;Mf'Y veuch•t1 II Iha vn. ,,... u h c I f (OM 51 11 i • V1n~ '~ ln' ak ynUG n I 2 111~ 't ~ ~ii~ !-"' E MM11 f' '",",,!.~ ·-· ... ,,-;+c: ~NMc.' !oi"°~~? ,......,, Lewfl' \.eftl }n>llg out a I om1a GrmFo A • s-'lt UFd C1n 7 :II I 01. ·~ •• ",. "• '•1 . J ,, ,•,' "· 11i1;lCN~ I _,, "'" M-n. M., C• D I I C d f r.rth Ind t~·~"'~V•ut Llrttc F<J "'""ro ''" ''K 1 ... Centtr Orf¥t Wnl S.1111 Alll C1I for~ I tl!ATll'IC&T• 01' l UllNIJS. &VIS reSIC es n Orona e Gurrd" H CJ 1t 03 Vil u 11 1 r5 1 ~1 gwnSllOe l 50 •I r t 3" ~ :U't'J -"' . LP •v :"J.e~~tt111,.•:~·,::"~·1:~· Th• ~~~!:!,l0~ ~ ... :~ '""" .,, Phone 54()..1262 1.tar \\1th his wife, Sul' andHH,:1'°" 1 1! sit.,~,~,, i;; !':B~~~1J. i~ ii-tt~ P,,,.4'!~m ,l~ ~·1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~,1 (';~ In... . ... AU(d Co ,, 1~. 1•"' 1•~ +It ll'll'n'ArF I ttlnl"' to 1111 ..,.,,,. .t ultl e1te..o.n1 ~.-11.,. • tMlntH ti eo1 7st Mu,.. t ree c 1 ren IM•nill• •., , It nc-•S -er 1, ,', , ,, BUCld co 11 S" 160 1s ••<lo .,. ~ _ h '""'" 1 XI wllllln • "'"""" .,,... , ... II " iou&I tll>On 1111.ion lltlCll. Cl lflml• 11•• ""' '" • BUO•f: ot 60 t ' ~ 11. 11 ... -\io EmpOhl \Ji Ol ltl/1 r.otlef !lllout II"" lll!M of SI.FE DllVER t<l.C: Fd l7 n IJ ~' •ntrl ''' ! 1 BllCl!ret ll'ld 11 ,... ', t~ -v, Ernl>lrt GIJ 0•11• Fttir\11,., a, 1'71 O SC:OUNT COMP-.NT 11'111 t111t 11ld tl!.'i. ?;'; 1: ~ 111: y,., lldP 4 M S 11 SuttFOf'OI I 10 IJ l 111._ "" -h E"911!M" 411 Om• H111t fl.oolllr '"" 'ccmllO•td " ''" tollowlllt "'"""'' Helf~• 10 •s 7 00 ~ n• "'IV8 I 8UIO••W '° ,... n • " ' 1"1""' e,,. M Pll.25 ExK\ltrll "ffit w It or wholt """" 1n !\Ill IN l ll!ff et D I p y B"ll I ~..-!lot '\l '1• • SI '" .... 10~· llwn-AtPll<I nt n~. 11 \o Hit -~ l!"nll BUI l2 t MMe11"lj6116'!:\we ~~ul'~1U,.!yMR~l'4 S1:MI lJ :it ~<111 I G1,XI l"IRKAL•~~~r'M'r.tldt!.f(lerlt rnl~ .. ·d·1 ·~~tow1'1.tn P•ellc COii! on ay our I s. "1f'-::.'";;" .. 1 1~ ~~w~Y.~'" r;•oo,:, l g~r\N;o\1110 11:1 ~l :01'4 :~~=1:11g~~.~~~ ~!Ir •tt CWlt c ..... °""' Wftl H thwt Y No 6t. Hunll11•lo" 8t1ch I G1oup ...... 1 ~"' ' .... I~· fl:w d ~ • " 1 l 71,0 .,. ' 1s• Jnc I'° lllflfl AM, C.lltlnlle ft NI (1111 "64. IC1!Met!O A ~t"r~ ""', G""!ll 1 OS j '3 ~\o'I I~•\ 11 .. 111 !l<IY 111 16• 1'\ ))loll I"° + ~. lOU!rt )I Tll1 f7MI ~1 "•<Ille CCll•I Ml9h_, N1 "' l+\Hlo IOICOM ',, •• , TICllV • I) 8w r9~• 60 )ll Ill-'< in .. ,,3 .. _,..., tit.II Int '1'0 ,1,~ "' .......,,.. '""Ion leldl c1111 "'4 Tr ,., t '\°' 1111 Tn .. 11 " • ..._ Bwlll un v 1 U 11 ~ 11\.t -V. Ht~ on M ~ °"'"" Cotll 011.., i-n°' 011111 FP 1 1tn LET CHC '"NAGEMENJ, INC DO IJ, Tr uni! J• wf'I '' "~ t:trt -C-fr.W:l.Jn' 0l: •l•l>"•O>> •-• 0 ,.,.,.... lmt1C111t4SIO;tl\l•nn lWI'" I • F.,_.,. .. -,,_,, iu .. ,.,,., rnoG.., 1s1•1Wnctt 1~1111~tt~tbo1C1 1'D 1-C..S•u••u o -..:.111 p,.ci IC•ll ......... Frrk IOI( F"dl 1°" In •• , '"" ~ ... I., _,Ind JI 10 •• 10 Uf' tJa LEGAL NO'JlCE ll•I• 11 C1rlfon<l1 Or•ntt c .... nr., PERSONALIZED Bill PAYING llld•',... • H $,, ..... "' \ 4-j c JJ II F "'" '' ' 1"4 l\o -' "~"'" " '° "" "•~I~ 1' 1t11 ..... ,. •• •,•, ·-· • • • • • IHTG,M 'lf 10" Y!ftflt.. ' ( ' I !.!.·:~uM~ :: ltn • ~l • li" t 1 ~ :~~ 11,} .,_t Nal1rv .,,.cn 1M M ••• "v a•U .. 1 •,., Fd ""'7""'" 10 )l,J.i\l~l'-lclOrA60b "''°"'lty tlPllA(f O••ll:I I! l'lft ll!dl t11v O 1-1 • •• I "'I 'I ~ ',.. • • tmP Sii 1 HI 1 • JI '1 _1 !'l~ll Cim c 1 1T1,1e.t.T• o,. susu1111 tci 1hlffll A ir11k '110w" 10 ..,, 10 H or• , 'ow ,1 works 1111111J "°' 11•1urtre1.,. lo n 11 >4 c~sG":.:' ~ 13 1.. 1.,. 114 _ , , r H 11 l:ioi lltcl'mow NAMI bt 1111 ""°"' •Ill*' n1rnu •rt ,u111c111>-n I 1111 p11; 3f '~ 'J 10%• 10\• _ ~ •ltmp~I I Tiii lllldlnltnH 4oe ctrfffV 11111 flt td te 1'hl wlllllft tn1tr\l!llfllt 1rld y Dll p 11\J } \ 70\0 11 1 1r1tfll h COlldU<.lfJ'll • ""'11'1Pt •• i-o •ctil'ltw!td.., tMv u.eu1tt111w .. ,.,. A ban k •cc ount 11 •st1l:tl11h1d 1n vour n•m• ou 9 1ve 1NR 101 nu, 11~ 1fl.l,-\l.f'.am 1vr• M .._. 21°" M~ hedl. C•llfornlL 10,.,,,AL sf!-.L> I b 'll Th 11 1 -.u ,.. 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Mvcll !. ,.,, .,, f "'''' 1111 dtcllrtct or Hid '° t1r 11111 :'~•11~.. 1~ tl~ •'•t ?f ~=~::j. .. u"'1nofoll tf-1(1!, to H ,.lltlltthtcl °''-CMtt 0•11• ,. 1ot b11l1 c•n be p••d on t 1m• •ntl y ou can b, ft•• o fhe mr t10 ....,ltr r111 rtl """""' on flkck 11, ;,:{ •'°' ~!N _ ._ ~ .. 'i',, ~ o.1111J1m15_!'.!.._2100•,•~. ~bt~•tVlt t1 24 MirchJ.lt71 mn worry•·' book woi' y0 .. ,,. •l•o bi '""'"" moniy 1ttcurnu•rtc1111vl0t1111t (dl Nkl 11t1 •ff"Tr 1.20 ' '"•~· <ft ,,<;11 Ii; " " "11' Yflfl (II <1111lllU•1!«!<1Ill1nnu1I ~/eCfloOl)I •S Sito~-ra'~ Ill :,t.~~,c~'i:triiNIAo LEGAL NonCE -Autom 1 tlc1lly 1'1111 ''"' tt«k dllY~ndl 1111 111' "'" ecoCo t. to ·n~ l\tt 1v. = ~ ldt.,r r11tt11,11,"\• Oii JlflUlly "' 1m ....... 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U11 19 1 '°" + \\ 11 ~It I ti, "°'trl' l'ull!lt CtlllOr* "' "'°'hi st .. kl!~ A111t Cillf tt~~, CHC MANAGEMENT INC tel aw!M 1i.urw It lrtt!lon In .,ll'tU frl S"' SW.t 2 15' "Ill • • tr~ " ·~o ~flncllll Ofllcf llt ,,,~:~IJ c'::' ,,:;: l"lllH I 41 tol1C1wln1 f fl,lrf • ft.Cl~ In tSl!llt ~l'nl $ov• 1 1Jf Jl .. !'t 1 Jf:: + ~ 'l!J fr1 /JM Or"tnfl Cou"., ' • "' , .. uclff "'I 01 lol1•1nt rlM~ Lo ffKlloft '" 1~11111 ~.'", ·'°' .l '' >• + ,f bch ~ NY CJimm ""' l!i"l!•tt .,.~!'..i-:;" nl Ill IMlf• fl ltlllcrwl"I l\1111rt It lr1ctlon ~if.j lttOIOblC !! 1t\o w.! ~ .! ~ ,..1:~cll ,f N" ~ 1 nn ~ Pl.. ,...,.,i 1..., 0r-c0tn O• IV J>11et 450 l. Chopn.on A•• Oro191 Cent 92666 111 11 ~.. c"' t0 "'" ' ,. • 2•·~ ;p,. -• I'' sc1 "'*'"""" r , • r · I< " , • .,111.Y fl 11'11 F'tbl"\ll ..... l. le 1' .i.-.. -................................................. -.. -.. -..: C~l~~Al, "° • Ml It . N -.. Ill "' 1• #;j"""' 11 • f J lW II flt 1'1 71 ,; • '% CFI J IOI I '°; 19 1' -Ill ltm M .JD • - I I WtdntMU1, F'ebtu.11y 11 l~n Wednesday~s Cl~sing frices Complete New York Stock Exchange List sa... Ntl .,. .................................... , 1 ..... 1 Mltfll L-('"' Cllf. f• tt r~ 10 :u • JI U • ,. " ·~ . ·~ ' • '" ,tl " Jn. -5- Stocks Show Low In Heavy Trading NEW YORK (UPI) -Pro!it taking turned the stock market lo\ver in heavy trading Wednes f1mP1-I H l=:i!lt.. ru~ i:to TaETr• I" Tr~~•T "'' l•O Sul M '*"•' 111111 111 ;;_-,.11m' ., T1~1G ...... 1 ~~~ c;r,~ ,,.,,.. "" ! .. ,, •120I '~··r.· • rn1oic .«1 fflam tt 1 IM Shortly before the iinat bell, decllnes were lt::::J~ 1, ~ leading advan~s. 811 to 571 Standard & Poor s 1ft_~,1' ,1! 500 stock tndex was off 0 41 at 98 25 The Dow i:M1~ ... TllMW!lr 50 day Jones Industrial Average wa.s oil% 19 at 887 87, al jl:.\rtot 1f. though It had been down more than 6 points during o111nPU Mi the £ll'St hour of trading i;,i2 l.C A vol ume or aro tUld 18000000 shares compar 1~2~ t' ed with 21350 000 shares traded Tuesday ~~:;,:tw-'...~ , ~,,_.,w,~<••-•"'"'" TrnwAlr Pl -l"'WFln o 12 t ''-t U. ~ r1rumr1 55 lO'I t2" • ._ 4110 = 1-J T~:=l'I" I~~ 1 71'" 111.. 711.!i Trani1UM '9 ll »!,.) 3'>.lo Tr1ve" '° n, ',',',' ',"-' J l\1 + VII Tr1vtlrt M ' l• \ J\fo 23 1 Trl<:on 12" ll70 14U UM l•b -~ !'ICOol Pn i10 3/ {iu N~ ,•11 ~ :t 1": ~··~~::: ii) ll ;~lo Miio 2•'h -Vt TR;'; 11'1< 11 210 '1\lo '°'• .Oh -\ TR;W ~· 50 " 'jfil ~I• 4Sl<o -~ TlllW pf4«1 ., 4 n .u +""ruu11GE .n lD l~ !F"' lt~ -'\ TW~nl ~nf n i ffi• + \lo Tritt Coro 11 \lo ,,. ti 4H~ .Uo +~ nt 2 t,1'1. 2~11 + ., UAL 11'1< 'l lf.l f;~ ~~:!:1~U,\L 111«1 ll 1 ... I~ 111• + ~. UAR;CO I 10 11 2W. 1h -liUGl C1 l :lt 14 11) lll014 111 -J UMC lnO 72 :it 2411 :JtU. J.1111 UMrto *I .. im Jtt ~h Un~ Ltd ~ ,. J'" !''• + ~ \J11llrlv l :Ille 11)1 s s -~\Un(.mp I 111 ,,.. 2th ))'h -\li un. '''I"' ' 2 .1111 .sn~ !7\li Union crP ll 1~~ !JV. lJ ~ -~· ~~ i1Koi1 ': -f -un011c11 1'° 31 i.ll• l!" ll'l t 1,li UOC•I l lJ ~ U.14 1~2~, Un P1<C1J 21' ,,~ l'"' \5' + "I Union P1cll 1 !l I llVt 1"-+ \l Un PKPI jol) •• V 't 21\11 2nli Unlonlm l tO " ,,,. ., n _, i U11ll'Oll'1I 10 It 24~ 24 24'~ Unll'O't'•l 111 I 11 '" • ' •• -• I.Ml"'°" olO 20 4d 3''-.00 + \lo Uni! Air lM 7l Jiit• 31 t 3110 + unar1noi ..» Ui ~ 27\'t jl •-'!llUBnl Pll20 1 11 • 1u 1 • u B•d on 20 • 11 H 11 +1 Unlt(p 2~ 10 17 1' I II\~ Un!I Fin Cll SC Complete Closing Prices -A111erican Stock Exchange List Sties Htl tMt I Hltfl \.-Cll .. C111 S•lff Ntl IW..l "ltfl L"" CIMt Cft1 • DAIL V PILOT J :J • • • • t4 DAILY PILOT UIGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTtCE LEGAL NOTICE ' UCl 's Loring Conducts History Talks • 7:00 IJ C1$ .... W11tw Clonklt .. C!J m "IC llli&it!J lllft Dlvid 81inkl.ty, frant McCH. Joh~ Chtn· c1lk11. a wars "' liiit! QJ ~(j)I Law1 lttCJ Ill-• It Dt'lt AlldllnOll tM W11h1 Brandt H Mil. m DewW FM SlloW Gu•h: fOft) R1nd1H, C.rol Ct11n11int Jad M., Gowr111. m'""'""' fll lrt1I ~ llrM9 M.ecMM S.rits •bout tM ~•rlout 1spect1 ol life 111 COllftftlPOl"7 Mlerb. I!> ,...,. ,., lMtc t:OO 11 S ()) llfldlcal Ct!ltlr The hitfl cost al mldk .. 1 cart t•lr.u ib toll al 1 dMp11ret1 )'!!Un& m•• (lllt!I --"'-"' l'etM Sll'ILlll) Whl lllts out: It , · sl11t 'lltrtn he c1n't PIY IHI wift'I F' hosPif1I bills, llrooM l11ncly 111..U ~ IS tht t ilint Wifl. JllH1 Desmond. Btll}'I: Attrtrm111 1ppe1rs I S lllutM Mtnll. O Alan Kin1'1 World of * Aur•••llon 1on;1ht 0 on KRAFT MUSIC HALL 0 @001111"'" -"". "Al111 Klnl's ~m!trful Wofld ti Aurav1ti1111, 1'1rt Ill,'" Nin Kint Ir ' ho!t to l1n1 Hornt, James Cocl • 11N1 Jtrry Simer and Al!nt Mt1r1. e Th F•attitt 0 llll CD Ill""" "" '""" Lindt Ronst.111, J1mtS T•ylor, lollJ .lot Wllil1. Albert lroob 1fld Niii Vo11n1 ind ttlt Oill1rds. ".lohn117 Clth tn C1mpus'' •11 t1ped 11 "1Chool1 ill ll!t fl•slrtill• lrtl. tlJ I 18C!!L I ~I Sidi If Ttllle A Yi"Sit 11 1ttt Wild sidt II T1Jlot with • lit¥)' ti lle•utia: $30 Mi111t.• £1>•Nc\t t :!O G ttn.w ~..,. ti llllliull/PttW• .... CEC..-1 MA•...- "Bill Y THE KID" RECALLED AT UCI Eugnff Loring and Holly Howard in 1940 TV Review \Vhile the American Balll" Theater perrorms Its 11· performance series In the W Angeles MU!ic Center, Orange Coast residents tonight ~Iii have an unusual oppof\~J..V· to review the history of ,tie· company with two of lta ~ ding members. • Eugene Loring, chairman. of the department of dance •Ji. UC Irvine. will provide a filoi· version of his "Billy the Kid:.": a v.·ork still performed l]Y: ABT. for use in a ltt~ program, •·American Banet: Theater; Its History .aiMt Repertoire," at 8:30 p.m. in: the Fine Arts Village Concut Hall. • Olga Maynard will diSQOf: the 1939 rounding of the ~ pany and its development mt.~ one of only two major t1.S:' ballel companies. Loring choreographed 'Ind narrated '·Billy" and danced the title role. The film to be shown \\'as made as a t~levi~ion :ipecial under ~ direction. . · . ! Dimitri Romanoff, like •W- ing a charter member of ABT, also will join in the prese,..:. talion on the dance COQ)pany'•· past. . The public is invittd to It· tend the lecture and ticket• are available at Sl.SO. Stereotypes Mar Drama fli) firil1 .... Willi1111 f. l udl1y, 10:00 D 9 Cf} Mlnii f;.G Ntff E Cln'ill: .. liwilll w~ P~in1 • 111urd1r, stalt pofict if,. • Yes!•t•lor SfM McC1rr1tt !tams 8EI lhmfil ht his 11t111 1 victim et 1 hotx. Em Si ........ Mllil Vera Miles 1utsts II Flart Whitin1. LEGAL NOTICE "·41Jll CE•'Tll'IC,liT( '011 'Tl!.,liNU.CTtON 0' (lll'TllllCA'TI! O' I UStNf.IS I USINf.Sl UNOI• "IC'TITIOUI NAMf. "ICTl'TIOUS NAME lME Ut(OEllSIGNEO Don ~lftbv 'T~t ul'ldt!r1it111ed do O:trlit'r '""' ••e ·<..,hh· lf••t ,,. I~ conductlnt 1 Ho•Pltol concluctln1 • bu1ll'M'1• 11 ... 0. l a• 4613, ''"~mlni•1r11lon .t.ovl~ Stl'lllce buslnt>t trvlM. C1lilornit, ~tr lnr lidi!lou1 LEGAL NOTICE I0<.11"° 11 33' E. 11Tll Sl•tt', eo.11 llrm nunt of GLENOAICS "11:0 ,.EllTIES l------~------- 1Mft1. Orlntt Count,, Ctlitornl•. m11. Na. I. I nd fh11 Hlcl firm ;, com.O!ed •.t.• JIM •tJ!ldf"" Tiit riclltlou1 tirm n•n" o1 of IM fol-I"" ,,.._,,, wnost "1mn SU,l!!JllOlt COUtl1' 0' 'TNf H.t.YSLI, ENTEl!.Plll!ES •nd ttlll 11;11 1tt fuN """' .i1ces Of te•ldenct l rt STA'TI!! 0, CALl"01NU1 llrm i• tamPO$N of Ille ta!\DNlnt ,,.,111n, I I follows-L , '"""' .,, , ' ' '011 TN I! COUNTY O' OJl.t.N•f ""'OW n1me in lull i nd oloc.• o! lfobtrt .. !nMr. """' • t .. 1 t v1, Mt. A"""4M ·t••..,ence '' ·~ 1011.,.,..., 1~w11· f'8Wn Verdes Esllle~. C• .• '°274• 111~1 NOTtCll 0, Hl!AllMO 0' "l!'TITtON Andr"'° T/\amo• Hoy,llp. 1111 1,..int 311-4112., lfllk F. lruntnt . '"11 Ur.d•rh I ,01 "ltOl•'TI: O" WILL ANO ,01 .t.v~n~. HfWPOr! lelCll Cl lttarflll LIM, Huntl111~ lt1dl, Ct. "2t•7 LEnl:ltS 'Tl!!ST•MlNTAltV .-iMO • 0 14) l'6·2lH. O"ltll!d E. l rt\1 Nonfl• Estt lt of JAMES e. CllUTCHFIELD. w1tNess "'' noll(! tn i tun ,01 C. "'•th. 11ln Ur.derllllt L•""· HUft-Dtt•••'d •f Fetir lfY Hil ' lint'cfl l~ICh. Cl . t1W (1\0J 1-11'-ltlO. "10ll(E 1$ Ht ltEIY C.IVEN th11 ~na · T H 1 ltoteo-t M. tncl Cllorlell• ttc>wtrll. Holl Tt.t Fir'! NtllCtlll Ion~ of Ori no• rrw • ''' 1 'Tllornlon AVl!.. A111~im, Co t !IOI ' o •1 1 I" Stile el C11l!o•nlo 1 ''''' -•• ,, Do•"•< '. o-• ,,,_ County. I 111llon1 1n n1 1noc I 1on, c O "' • .. ,.,. ·-ll•s !II-cl h1r1l11 • 11tltlon lor "•obl!e °i)""' :~ •lnM 1} ','01 O.t H1utl. 10•~1 ~l\1dow ,,\1. Jld., 1'11lnu1, of WIH i nd for lsst.llnct' of Llllt'" n •u••Y ... • "'" ~ (I. tUtf 12111 ""'""rnl.. O•vid "· T I j p 1111 -' In• Undersltnfll. 1 N011ro "uD•..; '" i nd Lindt c. Hilltl. 12l" Clltrrw-ood. ,0~1.:;,7di"1!':..10: for etur1~';·,1;11i~1e1n,~~ •nd tor 1110 Si.t,, rl!'S"''"' lllff•ln. CtrriloJ, Cl . "'.1101 (11J) IU-75'lll:. 1!1211 I nd !~at tne ""'~ .,,d Dlltt of h~arina tlwlv comm!tslone<I i nti •-rn: •e•~ll• A. Trot!•• 1M1 EYelvn M. ,.,alter, l~t ••mt II•~ toe.!n •et fer Ft l>•u•rv •1>1>t••e<l Al'ldrtw T~ll<l'I•• 1-11,.111 kMwn !'1~( Grttnl>Orl J..w.. II e w 11 n • ·a, un. •I t:lO 1 m .• In rt'lr courlr<lD"' lo me lo ~ !kt "''W>fl wnoi1 n1mt H•llllli!, Cl. t17•5. Gv.•1...,•yn F. al DtPlrlmt nl No. J el 11ld court, It •ul> .. rllH;d t1 lllt w!rt'lln lnl'lrume~I. Lttvftt. ls:!n Nc1rt Olmo 51 .. 11 100 Clvlt Cen!~r Drlvr )'/Ml. In •nd 1ck'lllwlttl1"" lo "'e rt'lll ~t e•ecufor<I l'/~lmlnllor. C1. "1Ul. n.1 Cl!y DI a•nt1 An1, C1lllernl•. tnr tlmf. 01tM Otttmi..r ll. 1t7d Do!ed Ftbrucrv t, 1t71 Wl!nen my lltnd Ind tUlcl1I ~tit '"lb*rt W .... ntler..,n. w. E. ST JOHN I O~FICIAL SE ... Ll Gt~t•ll "•"~" Counlv C!"k Cn•it ... ~1 HOll"'I" Slltf .r C1l1tornit , D'lntf C01Jn1v· COOICll.Y, SCHUM•Cl'lllt, COLIMAN. Holt rv f'ul>llc-C1!ilotn11 On Oectmbtt 71, ltlO. Delart me, MINY.t.ltD AND HOWAID Ptlnci111I OUlct In t NOll r"I' "uOllC In Ind for uld St1!1, IU 'TltWft 1M CIMlftl" ltHll Or111" Co.intv 1tntftlltv IPHtred Albttt W. And.,14ft, Ori1191, C•Hftr_, f21H Mv Commluion e •• .,., l''"'"" lo ,..,, 10 t>e tht iN1<>n w ~ e H Tiii. J4r.s111 M1rd'I "· ttn ....... It •ub1'C.flbed "' "'' IOTI~;" In· Alttr""• fw "•lllleMr ""ltll"'" D•t "ft CoeSI Dl llf "''"'· "......,."' ..... -ck""""ecl'" ht e-Kuted "11111111\H o ...... Co•ll 0111¥ .l'ror11•1Y 11. 71. ""''"' l, lt. l t11 m.11 '~• 11mt. Fol>l"ul rY 11. 12. )1, lf71 lOFl'ICIAl SE AL) LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL N011CE Ch .. ,,.r :=t..,..i! S..li~. 11 'Iott•• 'uDllc.Ct lit<trni1 ll r!ncltll Of'lia Jn Clll'Tl .. ICATI: 0, •UllNlll o,1,.0 Covnt'r 011,.IC• O" TMI SMl!:l!.1'11, "ICTl'TIOUS NAME 't• C'"'mi!liOtl t:•t ;.u COUNTY 0" OIAt(OI. TM IH'IOfrsltnM • crnlty .... 15 0.:loOtr J. 1t7T NO'TICll 01" SALi. UNDEI' CO!"MhlCI;,,. • butlMiS It 1Tl'2 '•liUoOeo. •u!llil~N Cr•~ .. ((Miii D1hw "'IOI Dt:Cl!.111 D' ,01!.l:CLOSU•l ttwd, ltd., S1nt1 Af'll. C1ll!Orlllt , n7U7. Ftto"l.llrY 3. !~. 11. )I, 1'11 151·11 lt:OIElt'T I . NEUNUEI EL, "!1in11t1, """"" !tie llctltiou, flrrn MIN of EUE'I v• .... LI.EH 0 . SMITH, •Ill, Dt!tnd1nt, m ..... ••• a iD CI! m F.r-•.o...: T•• l'sydllnrilt "SUch Civil W11 i~ 7:30 IJ /3 (I) ilh1 It ..... Dri matic My Lcwt 1ttd' H1t1.~ lrtndl Vsc- setits wit• 611111d S. O'lourtitan, care IUllf• 11 fJSh lloyil, •D Robert Fon-Mh, Shlilt llrbn 11,,,. If l1il11re 1s 1 wom1n th111I· ~:!rd~:id pl:n· 1 c~:;.st•~tt~~~ ins ttlt witty of her thildrt11. whom McNeil dtltnlh on 1 111urdtr 0 111 S ""'9 c111111. Q !D:I (])ED Tiie Y1•1 L•'ll'Jlf1 C!J ~ CIJ m n1 Miii ,, .. JM. "Tht l 11db11!")' W1r." Atron S!lvtr· IH "flllht• From M1mo!")'." lu111u m1n's l111in1 in lov1 •ith I clitn1 ll4er1dillt, Tish• ~lfrlint ind Rob· rtsalt1 i11 his bein1 11ked to rtsi1n ert Funw t11t:lt •• t m)'Jtuy drl· hem" tht fllilf!bo1hood l1w Office. m1 al 1 lluuliful ~ridc·to-bt •ho J1net MlflOtin 1u"1·1t1rs •s Celi• 1uffen seweft injuries whMt •PPff-Br1db11!")'. lfltlJ t1ttin1 from her wtddin1. 0 Im. War• Htw1 0 Ylqilil tr•• a.. Guuts m News ''°rlt Pulnu11. art Yinoant l'rict. 011M1 Mtn1ll, G) V111'*" "Gran• TelonJ.M A Glori• McOHmolt 11111 Meltn Gurley Yisil to tllt IMI: henli« If Amtri· lfo•n. ~t·s Oltl WK!. 0 llll rn m C-rWliit " 141Ni's f,D ...... ,ila lh1b"1: Tiit f'1ut fatlltr "The ltntli W..Und." A Ot11td>ill1 "fll1 l'rotnt1nl Wind .. romanet, butinua tt111rttrlci11, i nd fE1 TY llllliat Otutf a11 wnu:Pl(ltd we1klrNI 1u11t com· m1 pJic.1le To111 Co1b1tt'1 lilt wflil1 ....:1 Ttl.Cill11111 [JpeRtl Eddie ii •••Y 1t u mp. 10:30 OW. C. f"lll•• W-. "It's 1 0 Miflioll' $ Mme: '1•• Ft1111 Clft" (comed1) '3~W. C. fields. MentMln ti Ill ~ (dr•· B•lli l~. A rrocery stou owner m1) '62.~lenn f&rd, lnl!id Thu· wilh • Jttl tar tflntn inhtrils 1 lin. s~s tf German l1tlltr ti1hl lort~n1. for tti1 fl1zi1. m l ill WM ""' m Ttllth • ~111Ct1 m 111C11tti .. •br• II) tt T1k .. 1 nitl m Cillttlt so 1:ss m c..tilll • s.,.. "'' o a7J mm-121 IDT•ftltlleTnflr ED Tttt fllld CW "Str1wbe r!")'I Saufllt Jor Dmlrt." Juli1 Child! thows vitweis !low ti prtpart this dtlicious •isl! i nd •ork ii intii 11 lllMd without Jllviftf I MfYCIUS t11 111,.. I lll)TIM -m ltldl1 !Ar• l :DS iB Ti .. ,. M ~ 1:10 11 a oo T• .... W!tll t .... Grandp1 l'ruitt'1 llllWI "llolM·lrad· in(' bltnts C:OIM Ill ht nd}'-in I round 1bout .,.,_hen his l•mily IKei widio!I beclm lll1ir llom1n 1p1rtmtnt ~ildin1 ii •boat to bt tarn 4owft. o•m fJ Qll (}) aJ TIM s.--,,..., "AH tht Good fle i1hbors." CindJ ind loll Sll!llh Mflit11d hippies •llO "*" h1to tilt OOl'tl11111rrity, •ut tht irqioritJ of ruidtfttl ••nt Dtt. St!. Chtd Smith to bM action qtinJC !MM. Walter lraoh IUl.Sb u .. u am m-a @ oo m .... Dal""" 0 MIYit: .. ii C1N1wR-(Jl'ul.· 1rn) '68-l" Yin Ctelf. GI M•: ., W11 I M•I• •• lridt" {COIMtb) '49--Ctry 'Ant. Ann Stterill1n. Q) MHM: "Wltilptri111 S.1111 IL StoU1N Ylfr {mystery) '52 Rith1rd C.1111111, Gr1t1 6)'111. fD E111m Wi116t11 •M MN1111 lilt 'Tiit Lift of Ztn.H IJ:IO 8 5,(1) .,..,., l riffitl Olymp11: Ch1mpioni' Nistit. o ID CiJ m wn~' c.r.. Pni· 1r1m o'41ln1t11 In llurbtnl. C.!1f. Schlduled 111tsh: Jack Btnftr. Ot· 'id Sl1inbtr1. Liiy Tomlin. o m H c.wtt MM•Y .tmter· 11'1m •1111 Col. !1ndt11 111131. 1:00 II MIWi1: "Se1111r" (drtmt) 'I I- Gear11 Mo11t1om1ry. Gi!btrt 1!:611nd. OD•• QI All-41ilflt --= "l.M frM I Str111•," """911 Clwlrill• 11'Hf "Wll6clb .. ... ltldt.. l :.JO II M.w. "l.111~1 MW' (d11· 1111) '54-W111d1tl Co11y, M11p re! lettwood. F9'Tllt l udt1. ,POGHOUSE •NI ll'llt w it! lltm 11 ftlnl· N~. 3111. •-----------------~ OI IM Joll-!nt1 --· .,._ LEG" NOTICE t, IM """'"!1nftl, J1mn A. MuJlck, nt mt In h.111 •""' t ll<t "' •t:lit«to(t IU..o Shtrlff·C'9r1n..-Ceunl'r cl 0•1n9t , Sltte b 11 ftlllows: of C1!1lo•nl•, do ~t•tl>v ctrllt-1' 1h1! Eves Coll Int, 2111 "•llsMtt 1111•.. ,.~17 DY v1rtv. "' DIC•N "' ForftlOIUft Th d a "Wl11• AM• ... 1........iJ-• Stnll .I.Ill, Ct llhlrnll '11'1. Cllt'Tl,.ICll'TI 011" I UStNllSS •nd Slo\e In 11\t Mun•da11 Court ti Uf$ ay -- D•lld F.0.-UlfV 11. lf11 "•CTITIOUS NAMI. "''South o ..... t JU!l ltlt l Dl1!rlct. Cot.1nl'r (dfll!l l) '5&-!11111 '"" Cllristoptier E.,.. Collins 1 ~.f -•1!t"'d M tertlty fht¥ "" OI Or.-.te. St1M ol C11lklrnl1, enlt•M "llfnllltl. Stitt el Cillfornl• or..," Count'r• C'Ml:ludt"" 1 M ln.,u 11 ... 0 . ecx .. IJ on No..,.mlllr t. 1t7G, In "" "'""' • . 1 ... 1 ..... (1Hfornl1, Ul\Cltr Ille fl(!lt!iw1 •nll!lfl! t cllon. W~t••ln ltOIEll'T I . ,.. .. YTIME u~·1ES m "City " ~ (tfvtrrlun) Oii l"N. 16, 1'71, Nl«t mt. 1 Nolt ,.., firm n•M• of GLENOAICS "Jl0f'EllTIES NEUNUEIEL lttt t bl>Yt n1Mld 1l1lnlltt, ..,. Vt' •55 _ Yidw M"o~. •-~1 .. o "ullllc ,In -'Mii lor Mid llite, Mrto111l!v NO. 3, i nd "'"' "Id llrrt1 Is c.mllottd elllt lllt'd • ludtm•nl tnd d•<'ff DI ... &,.. ,..,n •-•red Evn Ce•lln• know" 1111 "'' of I~• fe•lowlnt °'"ons. wno1• n1,.,..1 '°'''IO!."'• 1nd 111e •e•ln1t ALI.EM t:JS IJ "hi• 1eicf1 n.r," (comtdy) C1owi.,. i. bf lflt """'°" -t ft,•-, 11 wb1crlb In 11111 t l\d '"''' of r11ld1nc1 •rt O. SMITH. IAlllAllA T. IMITH, JOHN .,, ,,,,, .. ,., ... -IM~- 1 1 1;00 m "II Ml ... ,,.. (d'''"') '31 ...i t. !tit Wlllll" nl rumtlfll Ind 11 klllcwt: D. GUYEll Incl DIAN• G. GUYElt --.... I ....., '"'" ~-...ti •tk110wlH!oeG lllt ,.eai~ Ille 11mt. '•ulln1 LHV•tt C.l!nM. 311~ "•<Ille dtl~ml1n1t. tor "'' 1um ol ,._ fllouttnd "'MijacllH"' (ld\ttnlure) '50--Jlm -Cerol1 lM1b1fCI, C.ry C:111nt. IOFFIC;t'.~.,.s~~,;1 Morton ~~·j~;!, ~~f~,;,!,. ~;;, ~h:1~; ::'1~,"~u7:,.';'ut ·;,~"';"';0 th~"·:i:J OIVil. M1f3tl1 »1111. I Z:OO G "Th War lMt" (dr•m•) '52 '«lllrv l'11blle-C1llfornl1 lsl1nd. (A. t1UO. Wlllltm J. Wll1~. 511111, 1flll ltv vl1tut ti on Otd1r ot1 f:)O Q .... ._,. (dflllM) '"-Gltllll ~11\'t McQwtR ~bttt Wttntr ,.rllltl••• Off~ In 57'7 Sci111110 Mwnt11n 111., S..n 0 1..0. Soll 111tl •tllMI l11uNI en Doctmbo!r foN Dllllni Rffd luUt 111111•• S'l~ I I•• ' ' °'"""' Cwntv CA. t1lt? 7i, 1f10, 1 '"' commtnded to Hll • • • '"" · Mv Com,..1u1on 1Ex1!rt1 Alt>trT w. AJ1<1•rton. ~II '"' 1rcP•''~ 1n lt.t County of Ortn•e. ' Aprlt •• "" Gel'M'tl l "'""fl' S!l!t DI C1llfar11!1, dtKr!bld IS follow.: l'uDllllled Ort!'I .. Ceut 01l1J "llot, S!1!e of C1lltornl•, Ort""' Ce<ontr. t.ol 3 I" l lock "A" ti "Mcknlthl'llH ,.•IW'u1r¥ I,, 2.1 Mtrdl J. II, 1t11 lJJ.11 On Ottembf• 31, ttto. tle!Olt "''' A8dl!IO!'I. Stctlon "J.H to L11un1 Cll!I,, --------------1• Not•r"I' l"11bUe In l lW tor tlld St11<', •s sl'lllwn on 1 m11 "''"'ot •etord'11 LEGAL NOTJCE Hrre111llr DHlrft l\lbtr1 "'""ttton. In •ao1< I, 1111 "' ot Mltt1U1nttut - ______________ ,._" to "" to lw ""' M<l<l~ Wl'IO... ·M111. fK0111t DI Ori.... c ... ,.,,, ftlttol 1, weauibttl '' ""' W•lllln In· c1111orn11, '""'""'"t~ ~-•• t i1 1'46* llr\lll'let\f •llCI 1tk""''"'" Ill ••e(Uftcl (lltl Or•vt . l•ttJnl l~l(fl, C1!ifo•nl1. llF~~~~~~~~:~~-~:::=~==:~~;;:::-i; Cl!ltTlll"ICAT• D, OllCON'TINUAlitCI '"' ''""· Tottllllr wl"' •!I 1no •h•.ullr tf\t 0' USI .llNO/Olt AaANO(Nllllll•NT (OFFICIAL SfJ.LI te<>tmfnl1, ~t•ldlltrnPfll, 1flll •• l•lbe.i ,enln1ul• • 67J...4MI O, "ICTITIOUI NAM• CMeS'Tl!llt FlllltELL l•LtS8Ul'I' •u•lt111ncn lhertunlt t>tltntlnt Ill' 11'1 '•• ,. 'Ii ~ ' Tflf Vt(0 f:ll'SIGN'l!l0 dO ........ et"11'¥ 11 l~VWll.f 1eterlll"I"". e 7 ~· e • • lfltl, lifKl!vt F-.1rv J.1Jn,,.,. Cf6Hll NOit ,.,. ,.Ubl1C.C.!ihlr~ll "UILIC NOTtCIE IS HIEltt:IY GIVEN 1 1 - lo 1111 -l"fSt _, fllt fldTflDUI tlrt" ~tlnd••I 011kt 'Tflll .,, 'T~11t1<111w, M1rcfl 1, 1•11, "'I -ot 11.t. 'TOOL ANO MfO, .t #I W. Orl nft COllnlJ IO·• •'clock, A..M. of tl\11 dt w 11 11T'O II . U~ll C. CMll Miit , C.U,.,.ldt, M'I' Clll'f'lmlUIOfl ~••irn M1ln LttltlJ, C1111rt"°"'e. 100 Cl.-1< C~fltwr ,..,.om *1...,, .,,, ..,._., .,......., el Odobw J, lfn l)ttV"I W111. cnv If S1nt1 Ano. 'I """ lel-1nt Ote•\Ol'lt. -'-.,"'" lft "111 "vbUrllltl Ot•r.o C111u Ot lhl •11.r wilt HU !Ill! •bow lt scrlbtd 1,_rt'r. l nl "4f(H of ... ldfftel -I I ....... F•ut r"I' J. ) .. 17, 14. lf7l 'U•ll llndtr 111~ Wfl! I M dtCrot. tr M t .. w\I • J:;;;;;;;;;;;;;~/tnuefl 11\tr.Of I \ !'!\IV lH ntet• .. ,.,I Oof\1'8 J 01•1f'°". 3117 II~ l trtel tt ,..lltt'r 11141 !"'°"""'! WI!'\ lnttrtlla .. ~ n.. c.e.11 M•••· c.ia.,.11. '"" n.11. '' ""' ~''"'" bltt.:r••· lltf1 ,_ I , '"'"· ,,,,,. •11111 AM. c•·~ lfl llWllll m-• OI "'' U~l!-cl Co•ll M•11. <.ll'!1trnl1 Wh Ciris? s11rH I C•rl111w 1• tor "•ns.Cllipl flf b~tJNU 0 01ted 11 $tn•1 ilfll. (1ll!crnlt , J1n~1ry Ufldt• ltw ·-· lll.litlall Ml,,.., """ u; th ,.., In th ?f, H11 I •"•d1vl1 "' -!(11"" TlltrM(. 1rt en n 0 Ou1!f nfw!plptr ! JJ..ME5 A MUllCI(, flit in .... ettk• .r 111• e..,,,.. c1ten: world carts 1bout your eom· s~t•lff·Coron•r 9' 01•"'• (-ty, .,,...,. 11',. ,,...,_ • It (cut11' of OTIMt. (lll•or"lt ,, "1:11o11 , ... °'"" Cl•H c... munity like your community •w c. A. 1t1n111 11, °'"""" ., ~·:.,;!!.!.. r:,•, 11-1 11111 ''" '"' dally ntwapaper does. 11'1 I :,~:':' ~~ ,":::: Am•,lt•~ 11111• o.n11t1 J o.-"'"" the DAILY PILOT. C1Mr1 ,,.. A"""'" • '°'-"' I ,,_ 1111 9.,.,..,.11111, C1llt, Hiii "'19111f1M 0.1nt, C.0.•f 0 .. 1, "li.f L'lllt11llH'1 Att-J J •-vt"' I?, 24. .... 1!11•1111 1 ... l'ulllllfl .. l.ttun• 8tldl Oi-01t~ l'llo! ttn Ul.ft ,,,..,,,. .... t. tt. II, 1tn IJJl·11 • THI llGGIST 2·FOl· 1 AIRPORT -lllRT DWI WICAMR . •Amr JEANSEIERG J1COUEUNE llSSET New-la:clu1lve lnt•t•l'Mflt H•hl 0...er Jnl l lt W1•kl 5HOW IN TOWN!! By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD <UPI\ ABC-TV's very pop u I a r '·Movie of the Week" series Tuesday night offered,an am· bilious teleplay about a runaway girl l\'ho returns to her suburban . respectable family after a fling at hippie life. The film had an attraclive title, "r..laybe I'll Come Home in the Spring," and starred Sally Field !or ''The Fl ying Nun" series) in a sensitive performance as the girl a youngster. not ove rly in· teliectual. "·ho is trying to set her life in order after failing to find peace or mind with either her family or the hippie existence. She has been through a lot \1•hen \l'e see her returning home at the start of the film , and she is eager to please her parents to show her best intentions. Unfortunate!v, she has not come horrie Lo paradise. Her younge r sister envies her hippie experience and is anxious to emulate her -partly for the same reason that dtO\'e ~1iss Field away: the lack or understanding or communication from her parent.Ii. In addition. fhe fat~r and mother, portrayed by Jackie Scott Still Won't Take An Oscar GRANADA. SPAI N <AP)I Actor George C. Scott, twice nominated for an Cooper and Eleanor Parker, run a very tense household, and seem lo have learned lit· Ile or nothing from their ex- perience with their runal\·ay daughter. And here "'e ran into both the drama and the ques. tionable strength of the Tues· day night play. In the first pla<'f, one must give credil for the film's attempt at a contemporary story v• i I h something lo say -a tale directed with a good deal of \'erve and shrewd use of flashbark material to dra\v the contracts be t \re en suburban and hippie life in the mind of ~tiss Field as ~he tried to make peace with herself and her parents. The girl"s role \\·as most effective because il showed the subtle and not-so-subtle pulls o[ both sides in her mind. and avoided being O\·ersimplifled. The envious sister also "'as neshed out convinc ingly by Lane Brad· bur~·. )'et the parents · once again \\'ere those stereotyped. black·and-white sub u r b a n villains "·e see repeatedly in video drama. Of course. there are such people. many of them. And, in television drama, they make for easily explosive con, frontations bet1veen vouth and the middle-aged nemesis or authority . Yet when you go ror "types" rather th~ n multidimensional characters, you sacrifice the opportunity to delve into the subtleties that make drama less predic- table and thus more revealing and compassionate. If there are indeed such characters ar Cooper and 1'tiss Parker played, there are also others in suburbia <v•hich is really not all that bad) who might ha\"e been more flexible, and therefore more "·orthy as pro- tagonists . Not too many years ago, \Vhen movies \\'ere first trying to exploit the youth craze, there "'ere a lot of low budget quickies that obvious I y employed two rules : avoid sho"•ing any rigures that might represent authority tQ • youngsters f espec iall y: parents): but if you do use : them. make sure they are : portrayed as black·and·white : one-dimensional idiots. ~·1avbe ''1'11 Come Home in the s·prJng" had much higher ambitions than such nonsense, and succeeded at some of them. And if the parents' parts \\·ere fleshed out for more credibility, and thl!: story \\"ere expanded a· bit, it might \\·ell be good ~ enough for theatrical release. Stereotypes don"t help, though. \'It'll never get any"·hett that way, on or off the screen. RAUCOUS BAWDY COMEDY Moliere's I OPENS FRIDAY I "The Imaginary Invalid'' '€!? Jbuth Coast Repertor;' Academy Award and a good N REPE bel to be named again this 1 Reservation1 I I RTORY year for "Patton ." says h• 646-1363 Mother Earth still isn ·1 interested 11 n d "·ouldn't accept an oscar u itf~~~~~~~~~~~ he ""On one. I "I would rather not gol ;n-XWJl-Dl!!Ji! vo.lved in the v.•hole business," I Q AT THE ENTRANCE TO FAIULOUS LIDO ISLI said Scott. I - -T~ 43-year-old actor i!! in "cwroar IEACM • ot.MIM Spain making ''The Last Run.'' about an over-lhe-ll.i\I gangland rhauffeur caught up in one la st comeback allempl. Michael Cain• .. GET CARTER" , ..... "THE VIRGIN GYPSY" Now thru Tuesday ;;,•:.~::~; N 0 W P LAY I N G I ALSO -TfilS MEMORABLE FILM STARTS NEXT WED. EXCLUSIVE ILL/On GOULD MAllCIA RODD ''TH ~ umf MURDERIR5" I I I ' I ' w"'"'""· ,....,. 17, 1m s OAILY l"ILn ,. JJeflf!h pan Claarged Health Co11nsel Clemente Council to Bear. Judge Po·stpones Laguna Gets County Representative • LquJll Beach now bu Ila Ol'll Nllilation malten. He may be reached . Progress on Palm Pro1eet npttMDlalive from the COWllJ'• Deport. by phone al city ball dwiJli the U!led Forgery Hearing mu! of Envltoomeolal Hullh. office houn. City Mw..,. Llwreoce llooe an-The ""'ice b,provkled by; the, county A San Clemenle city """""1lDwl Under tho ptndln1 ,llt,000 conlract ....-'llludly lhll COUnty oantllrlln 1t no -to t!wi dly, u an extension lonight will report to his !ellowa on bttween San J;lemenle •ndf tho E. L. Gtol'lt Skellb will maintain omc. houn of ·tt. public health operations, Rose hia •ucctaa In 1hUling eow>ly 1tllldardl Whlle Compuy, the etty · ...OW poy in clty ball from a a.m. to t a.m. old. to allow ·• stand CIC old palm trees about fD each for the lransplantbi1 aM from 1 p.m. io 1:30 p.m. dall)' The city, which does not have its to slay where they are, Instead of being procea. Each of the trees woWd be By T0~1 BARLEY Of 111• Olllf Pll•I SllH' ' A four.wee k delay v.·as ordered Tues- day in the Santa Ana municipal COW't arraignment of a Huntington Beacb man charged with grand theft, forgery and conspiracy following investigation of the now defunct World Financial Trends em- pire controlled by missing stockbroker Joseph D. Dulaney . , · Jud~e Paul P.1ast ordered James E. Shipley, 38. of 16951 [.()y,·ell Circle, to return to his courtroom l\farch 18. Shipley is free on n50.000 bail. The action came while district at· torney's investigators, backed by FBI 1gents, stepped up their hunt for the . . STOCK CASE DEFENDANT J1mes E. Shipley '~~~~~~~---~~~~ Bun on Beach jSiated Sunday ~ One of the first events of the 1971 1;vinter Festival will be the beach run, . .&cheduled for Sunday at I p.m. on the ~ain Beach . . The run's six mile course extends '.nver three loops of lhe Main and Cress 'fitreel beaches and is open to participants 11f all ages for a 50 cent fee. • Registration will begin al noon at the ~Main Beach lifeguard station and at ~2:45 p.m., a tour of the course will 2>e conducted for entrants. 'The run is 1ieslgned to be both competitive and ·casual, as each runner who finishes tvill be awarded a 1971 Beach Run patch. : Participants shoukl be dressed far· the event upon arriving at the beach. A low tide i! forcast for the afternoon, 1neaning bare feel or athletic shoes wouJd De feasible for the tight sand. HONORED BY ENGINEERS J. R. L•st1r Boyle mis.s!ne Newport Beach 11ecuuvt who. they· cleJm, was 1een in .h1a bltthplace bl FlOra, IUinob, a month 8'0· rlwaney, 31, and bis wife, Marltne, S.1, face clwiea I to -filed against' ·Shipley. char111 w•e autborlzed when wu learned that U.. .couple .and . two children had reLl.irllf.d to.tbJa from a year·loae ..,joufn in MUDich, <le.UWIY The llulaMya left I Europe lhortly befcre the colllpse of Ju World Trends corporate ltructuN they operated on wtetdays. own bea11b officer, bu heretofore used traR!plant.ed along a 1ectlon of widened moved lt feet away from the •11ttlna Outllde the omco houro, he will be the ,.,,,ices or the County Health Depart· Camlno de Estrella. curb. enppd in rtlular and special field me.nt on a message pickup bl!ls, with Thomas O'Keefe, who won1a two-wttk O'Keefe't Idea ii to keep the trees lnapectiont in the am utend1ng from a county officer calling in at city ball delay In the award of a .contract for and curb intact and use up the wide South Lapna throu&h Corona dtl Mar to check on inquiries and complaints the major widening of the• roed Jn the center divider of the roadwiy to 1Dow and inland to the Orance County Airport. while on his regular field inspection palisades area, said he would· CO to county for double lanes and tum pock.eta to In addltlon to routine tnspec:Uona of tripa. road olUclals and seek a change in asaist In access to a new, major sboppln& food handlinl eervku Skelth will be Skeltb bas previowly been employed roadway design standards to that the center in the area. avalllble for comuJ.tation with cltiiens in the Ccist.a Mesa ma by the c:ounty trttl wou1d not have to be transplanted. But City Engineer Phil Peter nld .. a wide -or pubilc bealth and Health Deparlmenl The request was granled by the reel that would require a total devlalfoa from of the council two weeks ago. 1be panel roadbed width 1tandards set by lbe coun- agreed to hold off awarding the city's ty for major arterial bJi:hways . share ol tbe contract (the county will If O'Keefe reports DO IUCCtll with assume ball Uie costs) until O'Keefe the county the COWJdl tool&ht will pr~ tried hi• plan. • babiy award the ""'tracl [« the job. At issue b the stand of 0-ye&Mlld Four More Shocks Jolt LA from plum olllce buJidinp In Lal\lll& LOB ANGELES (AP) -FOlll' more than 1,000 Injuries. It regi!tered u date palms, a type of tree which some experts say i! dillicult to transplant. Laguna on Stage Auditions Open Hills -known to Dulaney ~ investors aftenhocb from 1ut week's temblor magnitude co the Richter scale, hundreds as "the Taj Mabal" -and Seal BeaclL rallied the "Los An(elet area Tui!ldly. ol tfmes more powerful than the of. Bankruptcy court olflcials a 0 d No new serious damage wu reported. tenhockl. Escaping Prisoner receiver•, have not )'It set the final Meanwhile, tbe offlclal death toll in-'nle latest victims were Arthur Cahill, B lab on the ~ 1uflered by more .... -to 114 IDCI 11 quake-damaged 57, who died Monday and Mabel Meyers, Stuck Between ars than 100 investors but it is believed bulldlnga in the Loi Anplea City School 87, who died early Tuesday. Cahill was Performen who missed tbe ••tend that it wW exceed p million, moet Diltrlct were ordered demolllbed, in-a patient at the San Fernando Veterans PLYMOUTH, Mass. (UPI) -Stanley auditions for the Winter Festiv'-1'• NJ.a. of it invested by elderly residents of c1ort~! ~ • .,.~ ... eJes __ ~lgh .. ~Room· ."'m"'... Hoepltal in Sylmar, where two wings R. Bond, a self-styled revolutionary ae-guna On Slage" tnay still apply, ac- retlrement COmm .... ~. In the •• ,., -1C1 .a 1 colla-ed. Mrs. Meyers died of com· cused of killing a police officer in a h 1 ---The~ ·•r~-211 ooo n. ~ s 1 be b k bbe r-.. n"' cording to Ed Van Deusen w o wll -.... .... ~ -.a i=o.;y , pup...... pllcaUons from a broken leg suffered ep em r an ro ry, was vu.uu r•v While the Dulaneys are auccesafully Bulldtnc 1nspectorl continued to check when she fell at her Long Beach home Tuesday wedged between the bars of duce the Mareh 5 variety show in the evading arrest by federal agenta on strudurel in the SU.Fernando Valley, during the quake. hi! prison cell in an escape attempt bigh school auditorium. fugitive warrants, local investJ&ators are north ot .downlon, where S,704 strue-Sheriff Adnah Harlow said Bond had Entertainers also are lnvi~ par. getting some details of their return to tur. were reported damaged. More than The devastating earthquake is becom· cut two bars rrom the second-Door win, tlcipate in the informal Stal~'.• pre· the United States from Germany and 1,1111> 4welllnc unit.I hive bf.en declared ing a tcienUfic bonanza to researchers dow Jn his Plymouth county house of sentations on the Festival "* du.r· what one lawman a.id wu the "ill• unaafe and reskMnll told to vacate \hem. teekinl to predict, prevent or lesien correction cell and tried to wriggle free. ing the Winter FesttYal run. ' t of Riley" lived by the handsome couple The bic quake Feb. t caUltd damqe damsge from future, potentially more "When I saw him, he wa1 stuck like Individuals or groups may ~ in Europe. estimated up to fl billion and more deadly temblon. a bird ," Harlow 111ld. Van DeU5en at 494-010. Dulaney'1 parenta admitted to In-I.;;;.;;;;;;..;;..;;:;..;;;...;;;..;;;:::;.;;..;;;;;;..;;;;;;.;_;:::;.:...:::::::::.:: ________ .:.:::;::...;;;:..:::...;;;:::;. ______ _;..::;..::;;=:::..;::..;;;.:.::::;:;_ ___ _ vestigator1 that their IOll and hi• wife bad visited their home but bad left with the stated intenUon of \lisitina: Dulaney's brothers in Flora and Xenia. Ill. and SL Louis,.Mo. Investigator• aaid their account of ttW: once prmperOUJ couple WM in aharp contrast to reports of the lile of elegance allegedly li\led by lhe Dulaney• in Germany. The elder Mr1. Dulanty said her JOn told her he was broke and the statement seemed justified in view of the couple'a appearance and attitude. She told lawmen that her iOll and daughter-in-law left the Flora home in a 1962 1taton wagon after Dulaney shaved off hia beard -"because his mother didn't like lL" Dulaney's aged station wagon is tht successor to the lea.std Cadillac left in Uie parking lot at Loi Angeles Interns· tional Airport when the couple Dew to Germany in December, 1969. They left beh4Mf them a maze of debts that raJlie up to more than $S million on in\lestlga!On' add in c machines, a $167 ,000 home In the a- clusive Newport Shores area of Newport Beach and a $50,000 vacation cabin at Lake Arrowhead. tnfesUgaton claim DWIDI)' "paid'' ror that rugbt with .. airline lredil cord t bas been used to rack up a. total of $22,000 worUi of aJr lravd and that the couple took in Spain and much of the French RiV!era before moving on to Munich and "cocktaill and caviar" txistence that centered on the pluab Der Konigshof Hotel. The old but careMJy praerved hol<l ls the rendezvous for Munich's upper class and theater ce1ebrltiu and thl Dolaneys, investigators ll.ld, 1 pent money lreeiy in ke<ping up with tho &hmid1'. The German hotel still rectives mall for the Dulaoeys who left their npenaive suite be f o r e Christmu, 1170 - a yur alter they fled l'rom the United Slates. That mail ii marked in a firm German hand, "502 S. Ailll SI., Flora, llL" That is Dulaney's mother'• home and be bu not been back to collect It llnce bll most recent addreas. Boyle Engineers Feted for Work On Water Project For planning the water supplies for southea!l Orange County, a Santa Ana engineering finn will receive tbla ye1t'1 Engineering Project of 'Ille Year awlld. Boyle Engineering wUJ be pruenled the award •t the Orange County Engineering Counc11'1 banquet, Fib. II, in Disneyland Hotel, Anlheim. J. R. Lester Boyle, president and Edwin H. Flnlter. vice preaklent. of Boyle Engineerlq will be llonond I« their [inn •• wort .. COlllUilfnl .....,..,. to the system which provides for water needs of a haU-million reoklenb of a SOO-square mile area Including Lquna Hilb, Laguna Niguel, South lquna, Sin Clemente, Dana Polnl, C.plslrano Jlelcb and Mission Viejo. .. ' Planning for the project, Involving three quortera of the public and private agencies serving the ma, bq:an in Stptember, 1161. Boyle Engtneerl111 provided r ... lhWty reporll, aid in negotlatlonl and HnancinJ and detailed pi1111 and specilicatlonl. &cenl developments In COlll1rucllon have been water ator11e reservoirs in the El Toro area, two water fiJtraUon plants, a feeder Unt to the Lapna Beach area. espansion of terVicl to all developing attu and four ncl1maUOn projecb. The firm will be cllld for amklpatln1 ecological need.I for reeyclln& of w1ter. Gurdon 1H. WaWes. p-etldenl of the Englneerfnl Council, 1ald. Other tcU\lltles during the Engineer'• Wtek observance wlll lnc1ude the n1Uon'1 first conference on environmental tthlcl for engineers set for Feb. 23. -' , -... Yru're in a roocx:I to demand a lot m>re for your rooney. n. Dua1-spm1 electric windshield Wipers. 32. Full Coil suspension with computer-selected springs. 33. Five V8 mgines available. 34. 15 power teams offered. 35. Foot.qlerllted parking brake. 36. Wide-stance chassis design. 37. Quiet hydraulic valve lifters. 38. Precise Ball-Race steering. 39. Al~vinyl door and sidewall trim. 40. Refined driveline design la quieter, smoother operation. 41. Seat bclta with pushbutton buckles for all passenger positioos. 42. Sboalder belts with pushbutton buckJes.....driwr and right !root pas- senger (CZA%pt cmvertible). 43. Two front 111!3!. head restninta. 44. Energy-aboorbjng Blttring oolumn. 45. P...enger-guard door loW with forward-mounted !root door lock butlOns. 46. Safety door latches and binges. 47. Folding eeat back latches. 48. Energy-aboorbing padded inotnJ. ment panel and front eeat back 1opo. 49. Thick.Jamlnate windshield. 50. Padded IUD vioon. 51. Safety armrests. 52. Two front °"'t belt rettactor!. 53. Four-way buard wamina flasbor. 54. Back-up Jigltta. . 55. Lane-change feature in dinoctxal . l <mtrol. Sf." Wide-liew inoide dar-nilht mimr (vinyl.edged. shatter-<esistant .- and ddlecting llUPPOl't). 57. Outside rearview mimr. 58. PooitivMhift otarter. 59. Side-guard door be3ms. 60. Self-adjusting brakes and ax1uaion- resistant brake Jines. 61. Anti-theft steuing oolumn lodt.1 62. Anti-theft ignition key nfJling buzzer. 63. 6000-mile er four-maith ddia• llil lulxication. 64. Finned~froot and rear brake dnlms (rear only with disc-drum brakes). . 65. Built-in blended-air beater and ddrooter eysUm. 66. Body br Y.._. fil. Foam-,- aishioned oeatinc. 68.C...,. ruardNaat!e aimpartmeot. 69.Baianad -andtira 70. Aautic:ally --'---' • lation' .... u..rno;u JJ'Jlll_ • 71. 7-main-bearing six.qlimdtr engine with fully counter· ,r weighted crankshaft. I 72. All mgines operatl; elliciaitJy an o:>-lead <>; low-lead gaoolin<o. Why not clo younel( a lwtor.' Oteck out the otper cars in °'""""" field. ~go-to your Cbm'lllet dealer's and ""' just how much Jll<ft value Oievelle gives you for !'OU< money. I ' 4 DAILY PILOT Wtdntsday, FtbrLIM'Y 17, 1971 'l"ic.I<~ "A nother bloontin '. load of Rolla-Royc11 1haru!• President Keynesian By DICK WEST At a party the other evening an erudite group clustered around a bowl of bean dip was discussing President Nixon'• new budget. "Do you think Nixon is a Keynesian?" aomeooe asked. "Of course not," I replied. "Nixon is a Cillfornian." Suhlequent discussion revealed a rnisundefJlomdig. I ~ht the other bean dipper was uWng whether Nilon was born in 'la.nPS. It turned out. however, that he was uked whether Nixon had become a dlsclpfe of John 1\1'.aynard Keynes, the late English economist. (The name is pronounced "Kanz" with a long "A." And wh'en you say .. Keynesian" with a rnout.hful of bean dip, it SOW1ds more geographic than ~nomic.) l\10ST Al\fERJCANS, I'm sure, are aware that Keynes , the first Baron of Tilton, who died in 1864, was an advocate of big government spending as a means Gf promoting employment. U.S. Forces Tighten Up h1 Turkey ANKARA <UPI) -U.S. aUlboriUes today imposed strict security meuurtS on 14,000 U.S. servicemen and their families in Turkey tn an effort to head off further anti-American violence. The action fOllowed Monday's incident in which an Air Force enlisted man, was abducted at gunpoint, held fOr almost 17 hours and then re.leased. Of· ficials Aid it WU the first kidnaping of an American in Turkey. In lml.ir, the scene of anti-American rlots and attacks during the past several weeks, the U.S. consuJate ordered servicemen to observe a midnight curfew, stay out of niabtapots, keep their cars off the streets and avoid argumenls with TUrks. Both Turkish and American official• said these were lhe strictest security orders they could remember being placed on Americans in Turkey. U.S. military police were substituted for Turkish guards at a number of American installations. Th.is has been done in the past. No antl·American incident! w P r 1 reported Tuesday. U.S. Ambassador William J. Handley has asked the Turkish government to take measures to protect American lives and property. He took the action after a series of bombings., threatening leaf]ets and anti-American demonstralions and riots. Although Turkey is a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organii.ation, there h a s been growing anti-Americanism among leftwing groups in lhe country. The most dramatic gesture was Mon· day's kldnaping of Air Force Airman 1st Class James Ray FinJey, 26, of Fort Worth, Tex., who had arrived three months earlier to take up duties as a special law enforcement agent at the Balgat compound about JO miles west of Ankara. Finley said seven Turks took him rrom the compound at gunpoint, blindfolded him and finally released him. 'They gave him about a dollar in c:l1ange so he could. take a tui back to the American compound. "They gave me bread, cheese, olives and tea for lunch," he told Turkish police. He said he was treated well but told authorities he could not Jde@ lny of the kidnap gang. Taking a Break Three tired U.S. soldiers at Khe Sanh, South Vietnam, catch 40 winks during construction of airstrips at the base. The base accommodates the helicopters being uaed in the Laos fighting. Khe Sanh came under heavy attack Tuesday but the enemy was driven off. Israelis Reject Plan To Give Up Sinai Land Roll•·Royce Tclks Lockheed's Chief Goes to Britain LONDON (UPI) -Daniel Hall&h«>n, chairman of Lockheed Aircraft Corp., arrived today lo renegoUate a lmge jet e~ contract wUh bankrupt Rolb· Royce Ltd. He warned he had not come ''with my pockets full of money." Lockheed, itself in aerioua finaneial straits, bas ordered Rolls-Royce's RB211 engines for il.s Tristar Airbus -an order placed in jeopardy when the British lirm declared It had gone bn>lle. "I came over here to reotgotiate the Italy City's Rioting Hits High Mark ' REGGIO CALABRIA, Italy (UPI) contract in certain re~cts,'r Haughlon told newsmen minUtes after his plane landed at London's Heathrow Airport. ''But t did not say I would pay any more for the engine. ''I don't want you to Imply that I cam here with my pockets full of money." Haughton declined either to di5close his itinerary or to say what tactics he might take in the discussions with Rolls-Royce. "I came over here with an open mind to sit down with the parties concerned and try to reach a satisfactory aolution with all o( them," he said. "You can be 1ure I am here on 11 constructive basis, or 1 would no;, be here." 12·nation GrouP, To Try Assault On Highest Peak Seven months of sporadic rioting reached a climax: Tuesday night in battles between police and rioters protesting the selection of the rival town of Catanuro u capital of Calabria. Protesters shot at police, who respond-KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) -A 1Z-n1· eel with tear gas. lion expedition will try to climb Mt. Everest this spring using two previously Police said five persons were arrested unconquered routes, a member of t h e and several injured in the outbreak of group said Tuesday. street fighting that followed a regional Norman Dyhrenfurth, leader of ~ COWlCil's decision Tuesday lo make successful 1963 Amer ican expedition to C.tanu.ro the capital. the 29,02.8-foot summit of Everest, aaid Rubbish fires burned through the night the 32-member team will try to acale and barricades thrown up by the rioten the world's highest peak via the western sWl blazed today. rock face and the south-west face. In Rome, the cabinet quickly approved "This is the strongest team that has the regional council's comp r om i & t ever gone to Mt. Everest," be said. decision making Catanzaro capital, giving ••Given some luck, the team has an Reggio the regional assembly but saying. excellent chance of success." it also could meet at Catanzaro and Everest has been scaled five times. Cosenza, and awardlog a new university The expedition is set to leave he re · to ·Cosem.a. The cabinet alao approved !n 10 days for a 200-mile fow--week plans to build new industry which would trek to the base of Uie mountain. Ther• bring another 15,000 jobs to Calabria, the climber! will l!lpend about 10 more two-thirds of them in the Reggio region. days acclimatitlng themselves to the Reggio, C al ab r I a' 1 administrative 14,000-foot a1Utude, The assault oD the capital until a 1908 earthquake bit it moWltain Is to begin about April 12. and many offic-es were moved to The climbers come from Britain, Catanzaro, has one of the Io west Austria, France, India, Italy, Japan. per capita incomes in lhe country and Nepal, Norway, Poland, the United a feeling of bWlg Italy's forgotten city. States, Switzerland and West Germany. His theory became popular in England after World War II. but by that time the British government was too broke to try it out. So America became the chief testing ground. Atheist Attacks ''This city is as old as Rome. What Among the sponsors of the ex:pfdiUo11 By UNITED PRESS INTERNA110NAL Ahuonot.b said lsrael was preparing to busineM does Rome have suddenly telling is the British Broadcasting Corp., which Israel rejected today the reported WI· dilcasl withdrawal from Arab territories us that we are no longer good enough announced plans to have at least one Space Prayers By Astronauts a:u:Uoo of U.N. envoy Gunnar V. Jarrinc and was drawing up a map to r;bow to be the capital?'" a restaurant waiter soond television unit on the summit that it give up the entire Sinai Pen:bwala i :.ho_w.:....f1r..:..:.it:.w:.as.:....willing.:....".::...t:.o.:.p_ull:.b:.•:.c_k.:.__ ___ •_li::d..:an::::gr:.ll.:.Y·:.__ _________ «>_r_ecor_d_th_e_e_;xpec'--ted--con....:.qu_es1. ___ _ Jf then a U.S. President deliberately creale3 a ~licit in I.be federal budget to stimulale the ecaoomy, be is called a "Keynesian." (bu& should the deficit arise through miscalculation, he is called a "dumkopf.") THEREFORE, v.·hen Nixon brought forth a budget with a built-in deficit, there was immediate speculation that M , had beeome a convert to the Keynesian doctrine. 1 knew all of this. or course. The other bean dippers, however. took my assertion that ''Nixon is a Californian" as a lack of economic sophistication. So I was obliged to defend the statement. I said, "do you guys mean to tell me yoo never heard of Don Ernesto Valdez California, the Sp an is h economist?" There was a general shaking of heads, plllli some expressions of skepticism. ''IT "'AS CALIFORNIA," I continued. "who devised the basic course of action the government shouJd take when the economy is both inDationary and rteeSSionary at the same time. •·He held that the sensible only thing a Pffiiident could do in that situation .,.,-ould be to appoint a member of the opposition party as Secretary of the Trtasury. "Nixon's deficit budget may show Keynes;ian tendencies," I added, ''but his appointmenl of Democrat John Con- J\ally to the treasury post was pure Californian.·· Tbe bean dippers never recovered. -UPI WASHINGTON (UPI) -Madalyn Mur· ray O'Hair, avowed atheist who won a Supreme Court ruling against presaJb- ed prayers in public scboola, now wanta American astronauls prohibited from undertaking religious activities oo their flights to the moon. Justice Department lawyers went berore the Supreme Court Tuesday to argue against Mrs. O'Hair's suit, which already has been dismissed in U.S. District and circuit courts. 1'1rs. o ·Hair, or Austin, Tex ., has con- tended it is illegal for the National Aeronautics and Spa~ Administration (NASA) to use federal funM for wr constitutional religious purposes. She said the Apollo 8 flight in 1968 was made at Christmas time to coincide with the religioUS' holiday and that the astronauts read from the Bible on man 's first orbit of the moon. Her suit also complained that the first astronauts lo walk on the moon -Nell Ann.strong and Edwin Aldrin -engaged In relia;ious ceremonies and deposited relia;iOU5 items during their July, 1969, Apollo 11 mission. But Solicitor General Erwin Grl.!wold argued Tuesday thal Mrs. O'Hair lack.!! the standing lo challenge the astronauts• activities. He pid the astronauts carried only personal religious items with them which had the effect "of improving the morale of the aslronao.ts and thereby contributing to the success or the OigbL" sei%ed from Egypt in the 1967 Middle East war. • Egypt iald today it WU ready lo discuss peace if Israel would abide by the 1967 U.N. Security Council guidelines for a ~tiddle East settlement which the Egyptians interpret as calling for com· plete lsratll Witbdrawal from occupied Arab lands. Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban told the Knesset (parliament) j n Jerusalem today that the government would continue its refusal to return to its pre-1967 boundaries set by the 194& armistice. "Israeli"s right to agrttd and defensi- ble borders is a a!nlral principle," Eban said. •·Israel will" not return to the armistice lines. which cannot usure Israel against aggression." He said the final borders were lo be detided by negotiation and CGQ)d not be agreed to in advance. The Jarring initiative was reported to have bten in tbe form of questions asking Israel if it was prepared te withdraw from the Sinai and •Ulna E1ypt if it was ready to make peace with Israel Egypt earlier announced its acceptance of the Jarring proposal. Eban blunted OJ'PO!ilion party demands for a debate in the Knesset on Jarrtna'a initiative by announcing that Egypt's reply bad not been officially received by Israel and asking that the dtbate be delayed. The: Israeli newspaper Y e d I e t h Nation Basks • Ill Mild Air One Pocket of Arctic Cold Mars Rainy but Warm V.S €•llfo1•1d• 11:1111 tMwe<'S t1"Nd Mt tlll'llUtll ""'SI of SGlllM"' C.llforl\li ..... ., tl .. t• I"• ID f1lr loni.111 llul (Ollf"-d "°4. ,,,. ·-, ..... 1 111 lllt t'l\Ollllllllll ~-19 •.OOO ..... Wlltl -~II'/ wllll! In lnl1nd .,..., Lo. An111u w11 "'°'"' 111• 111tr mornln9 11>1w•n lluf wllll I ch•- nl wmt r1ln ~ TPlurtdtl'. Ttln· Mrlh!tl> tOl'll!lvto:I CODI wllll IM Ol'l- Clkfed 111111 1! Clvk CMllW r11clllr,. 6t ttlmPlrH wllll I ff TlltNI.., Ind •2 IXl'ltled Tllv•Mll'f. Tiit low tonlotht ... Till Air "ellutlell Glf'll•" Dllttlcl ,.. _,td f\11 ""'°' '" fM l• ...,...,,. ... 1 ... Tiit llv .... ., 1-tf t""'"'1 So#fldl'I' ••• fOr ' If -ttnl cf\l lK9 "' ..... Tllu""'9r • .,. 1 .i1tllllY 11..-dllnC• frlcllV. ,. SOUTHEll:N CAL!l'Oll:NIA -MMH'I' c:loucttr wltll r1l11 1"41 cfllflCI et • ..,_ ~ _, llOl'llitl ""-"' ..,..._.._ klttlfed """"" 111 destrt\. "1rtt.I tltlr1119 allt,_ 11'11d tvirnlM -wltll flW Kt11tl'M ~ "Miit' t~ Tlwrlfff'. hff'I' wtlllls 1!'1f - lll!lltd ctOI. ~ M "'""''.._ ........ s.• '"'· MOUNTAIN Altl .. -DccttilMI fllfl ....... •nf ............. ~ ...... ,1N1r tlluf'I' Wllll I ffW ~11'1 WHnc•ll'I' ni.M. klM'f If lmt• Trtur"9r, °"*""'" IM . .,,..... * ind 30t. Hltftl 2' M ... €01Utal $(:11tt-.d ~· ICMllY. Lllllt Vtr l• tbM Wlflds ,.,.,,, "" "'°'"'"' ..... ,. btc.tmlnt WHllf1'¥ ,. ... k!Mlll i.. t flt,_. "'61Y Incl TIWr ... r. Hftfl ""'" ll .. u. Cflltltl i-ttvre ''"" l1'tm i.2 -JI, ll'lil!MI "'"""'lvrll """ ........ 52 19 '1. WtMr '9111HrtNrl U. Sun, Jtloon, Tides WIDNllDAT hclOnd 1111~ ........... ,.oo '·"'· , a Sl«ll'IO tow ,,00 11.'"· JJ V.S. Summ•ru t r UNITID , •••• IHTlltJl$ATIDtlAL A11'1M11th IMllk_..,.. "''"' "'"""' ~-1 ... IH !llMI If "'9 111llfrt looMJ, t IOdlt! .. Arclk t it Ill 11" ntrtlltllf ........ Prttllht ••-l'lhlffl ,,.,... "'' "'""'"""'"'' """"'•lr>t .. "°'""'" NM IE11tltnel. "" 11rl'I memr,.,. PtmMtll\lrt 6' S bflqw 1-"I rtCM'de4 ti MIAI,,,., N.Y. lttlll ... , ltHttd tf:._I ,.,, Mlrtl't• w111 ''"' rt!n '"" 11111w 1'111 In !"-MrtMrn Gr11t l•klt 1r•. A ,.,.. lflurldfr~wtr1 l•ltnffd IOVll!wtJI lt11111 '"' Grt1! Lt~tl. r-•-turu II' UNlft9' 1'1•tt lllTl:lt.UT10t!A\. r_,.,.111,.. •N 110t1Clfo1t11i... fir tflt2'4lol.lr..,....~1t•1.1¥1. -N~ '---,rte. Altlln'I' 1' &3 AIM-. " U At1a1Y11 U •1 ••k•nf!tlof 69 ., 8111T!lrtk •l ,JO hit• " l• ... ,.,,. 31 :IO •utttlO lt u Qil(tlO ~ l6 Ci"'lr>ntll lt U Clr..t11ftd ll 15 0.1111 ti J1 °"""' 56 2J Dlt Mt-1..u ,. u Oth'oll 3CI ,. Htt-41 14 lnf11111Mlll lJ JI KtMll City U l1 l•• v"'' 1,. " lwl1¥1ri. a u Mtm .... !1 I' M Mlfml )• t1 MllwtWkN U JI ,M MIN1ttPOlll ll J7 p,lft Ol'lllM 1) •1 New V.,. 3' t1 0.1•'-'"• Cltr 11 V OrNllt .. )0 ''j'" $"'1nt1 ,. SJ ""l!Mlltllllt 111 ,4 "*"°"'!• • M f'lthbvr111 " n 1'1•!11...,, Ort. J1 JI i11;1ok1 City 47 " ·-.. u Jl!c1'"*"4 .ii ,, .sushmills. The whiskey that spans the generations gap. . ' For 300years, a whiskey from Bushmills ha s been \vlth us. Charming us. Beguiling us in a smoolh, pol ished and altogether lighthearted fashion . 15 generations have refined it.15 generations h.lve sipped it. Theverd ict: Near perf eel ion.Bu sh mills. F ul I of character. But not heavy-handed about it. Flavor- ful. But never over·powering. Bushm ills. It renects the past wi th a light and lively flavor that is all today. Compare.~t to your present whiskey. You needn't purchase a Dottle. One sip .at your favorite pub will tell you why Bushmills has intrigued so many gen· er.ations. It is, simply, out of sight BUSH MILLS IMl'C)ITtO FIOM THE WORLD'S OLDEST OlSTILLEIY. THURiOAY jl:l.flt Ill.,, . -··----I.fl t.m. l .J S1cr1rne11i. St 4 .'9 St n l.tk~ C:I,., s1 ti s ,I lltMOOf !OGJi !~1$11 wtOINll-H HOOf.-IOfH.lO IH 1•tuHO. Tl!(JOI, 6.1.AAlAU CO., 11.1.W TO.lilt, LY. 81111 P'lrtl IOW IO·G '·'"· l.f $1. lW!I .!ol) U IHTllttOlt ANO Olllll:T ll:IG!ONS -C1111fder•blt (liDudlMM 1"lltl ICl"'!'9d ,,.,...,., '"'lnh• 1ttll!ld l'llltlftftlflt. f1lr 11 Hrtlr <~ w..irit.otr nJtoM •!!Cl TI111rtdtr. Gvtl'I' w!MI 15 tt J> ml'h lot t llfrMMt. Slltohll'I' ~· ""ovtfl WMIMtdtY: O'l'lfni.ltt '-tJ II 4f l!lthlr ~•Ii.vs U It d •-• w utvt. Hltfot # ,. d l!llfll' 'l'llln'I U "° " io..r '111trt. '"'" ..... •·.,' "'· ..... s:• •·"'· ,lllOM 11#1 10 02 t .m. f'ht Httlonl l Wttll!tr Strvl1t POl!td t 11v1r1 lllu/>ftrelorm "'''lll"f Ir! r>Ol'lllt•n ••~11>111 ltlt TutMt'/' » 1 11 ... el ,,,,,.....,"tffl>. _ .... ttll'Wlf'f "'"""" l"I. lmlth tPl(I C:/\tfltJIOll. St~ O'"°' 7t e "" Stn illttMltto 56 SI M -·-~--------'---------------"'-------------------- \ I t ·: I DAILY PIL('IT 5 Combat Stres~es I mpaired Ca lley's T hinking-Expert K,lekbaek Conspir acg Alleged 60,000 Barbers to Get Trim? ' '"1e Ind ictment chaf'Jed al four with conspiring to &el kll:kbackli, fees and~ oom misstons from a California land development finn In con nection with a loan from UM pension fund. It further charg ed Shaheen, Block and Colum bia with COn!p\rlng to paJ off De P a o I a in COMectic• with fund loans and charge( DI! Paola with aollciting anc receiving '29.000 In fees kickbacks and commissions. Jane to Test Liberalized Army Code? NEW YORK (AP) -Is tlHo new Army really new 1 Is eomedlan Dick Gregory the antlwar toldier's answer to Bob Hope? Can Jane Fonda become a G.I. pin-up if she refuses to wear a bikini? An antlwar troupe thal in- cludes a dozen well·known entutainers hopes to find the answer to these questions in a proposed tour of 20 military baUJ 1crou the country. "Ifs betn very discon- certing for many •or us in Hollywood to stt that Bob Hope, Martha Raye and other companies or their political Ilk have Cilmeted the market" on e.nttrtalning soldiers. Mias Fonda said Tuesday. FT. BENNING, Go. (UPI) -A poycbi1tri.lt teslili<d I<> day that ''in View of the. pushing that wu comln1 from above" and stre11e1 of a com- bat 1llwlllon, U . Wllli1111 L. Caney Jr. wu unable to determine whether orderi to kill civilians at My Lil were leiol or mesa!. Dr. Dovld G. Crane, Sf, ol Indianapolis, a v et e ran botp!tol aWf member Ind uailtant psychiatry profeuor al Indianapolis University, w u called with the C..lley oourl-l!llrtiol jury 1bs<DI lo -hil aper! opinion. The move wa.s part of a dtfeme effort to 1et before thr court the views of thret Drama peychlatriltl u to Calley's diminished mental capacity wben be. led hit platoon during a aea.rch-aDd.dalroy sweep throurh lhe Vletnameae hamlet on March 11, 1961. Ca.Dey ts accused of alaylng, or ordering the 1laying, of 103 Vietnamese clvlllul dur· Ing !he lnl111try oweep. Crane testified o.n the basis of tnowledp: 1ained I n treatln1 . large numbers of Vietnam combat veterans in that country up to a1z monlha before tbe My Lal lncldent. ''There wu an all pervading tensJon and anxiety among of- ficers and men," Crane sak!. He testified taht became ol Ca1Jey'1 Impaired "decb:ion makin1 process" durinl the on lee Dog Saved From Cold R a ft WILKES-BARRE, Pa. (UPI) -Sam, I ahivor!ng Gmnan shepherd 1'ho had been trapped for 2S boun oo an ict Ooe, aaw the friendly police sergeant bec.konini to him from an island in the Susquehanna River. Sam had inadvutanily climbed onto the small chunk of ice when it was near the shote at Waverly, N.Y., 30 miles upstrtam from Wilkes- Barre. Grabowtky, 36, wu off duty Tuuda.y when he heard about the dog, 1Ull 40 m ii es upstrum.. Grabowsky and his I brother, John 25, went to a rrnall island in tht Sus- quehanna near Wilkes.Barre and waited for the dog. Wh61 tht ice flO! camt into sight, they began couing the dog to jump off. Sam t90i a chanCf:, leaped into the water and swam to the men. "He was scared,'' Grabow .. four-hour acticn, he was not able to "contrive or plan"., (premeditalt) killln(, !• kill ptrsofl! without justlDcaUon, to detennine the legality of order'! given tc hbn . Nineteen gover"rnent witnesses have testified that the night prior to the My Lai operaUon Capt. Ernest 1 l.1edina, as company comman- der, ordered the village dt,,. troyed and the inhabltantl killed. "In v1tw of lhe J>'BbJJ'll that was coming from above, Lt. Calley was not going to be considering much of anything e1cept act and do," Crane ~"'•~--· toki George W. Latimer, the U,I Tilt,._ .. chief defense attorney, "Also there were the basic underlying stresses ezistin" in that individual at that time." Under crosa examination by Capt. Aubrey M. Daniel Ill, the prosecutor, Crane 11id that Calley's mental ability· was "impaired to al least a mild to moderate degree - his ability to undersu.nd, reason , and consider -hla decision rn,akl.ng process wu impaired." Talks on Wa r Sen. Adlai Stevenson Ill (D·lll.) said Tuesday that a negotiated set- tlement of the lndcr china war is tile only P.?ssible outcome whieh Jibes with key initial objectives of U.S. in· volvement -freedom and sell-determination for the people. V'I T•IWflf .. NAMED IN CHA RGES Barber Chief OeP•ol• -Joseph De Paola, In- dianapolis , president of the Journe y men Ba rbets, Hairdressers , Cosmetologist.s and Proprietor's International Union of America a n d chairman of its pension fund . -Max Block Jr., a New Y or k ettomey who worked with Shaheen. -Columbia Finanelal Corp. o( Chevy Chase, Md., con- trolled by Shahttn and Block. Shaheen also was charg" with geUing from t h 1 California firm $112,597 In feei and commt.ssiom, $25,000 iJ negotiable ootes, two con sultant agreements w o r t I $144,000 and 100 acres of Ian~ in order to influence his ac tlons u the fund 's adviser. Russ Fish Boat Free With Fine JUNEAU, Alaska (UPI) - A Russi.an shrimp boat captair whose vessel was seized withir the U.S. 12-mile limit, plead!ll oo contest here Tuesday tA a charge of illegal fishina: am was fined $20,000. ,.~~AFTER INVENTORY'''"'~.,.- CARPET AND REMNANT "A lot of us "'ho have dif- ferent point! of view about the war and what's happening to this country have decided the lime bas come to speak to the forgotten soldiers," she told a news confertnce. For nearly a day, Sam nt on the ice, carried along by the river's current and afraid to jump off. Numerow at- tempts to rescue him failed. A helicopter made several passes over the ice in an attempt to lift him cff, but he was frighteaed and shied away. 1ty aaid. "He jumped up on ... this ice cap wheer my brother Dr. Howard 8. ~vy, the former Army captain who was · eourt-martialed for refusing to train soldiers beaded for Viet- nam, said the first stop will be in Fort Bragg, N.C. on March 13 and 14. Any more questions? Yes, said one reporter, would A1iss Fond.I wear a bikini for ~ show? "Art you serious?'' she scof· fed. '"l'flat's what Bob Hope doet. We're trying to get away from that tort Of thing." Debt Limit Connally's First Task Police S1t . Albert and l were. I got down on my knees right by him and he came right over toward me and be wasn't afraid any more." Sam was taken to a shelter to await his owner, Mr. and Mrs. Marlon Baldwin o f Waverly. A pollona uts R eveal Moonwalk Troubles SPACE CENTER, HOU!ton Today the Apollo attronaull (UPI) -Apollo 14'1 moon u-planned to ten project officials ploreri have warned the ne1t 1bout thelr patbfindlng, nlne- Apollo crew to be wary cif day mlsalon to the billy lunar the tricka the barren, hilly uplanda. landscape can play on their • The problem flf ability to navi1ale between --lflc placu ef lunar landmarks. That was one or the key when walkin1 the m •on p&int! Alan B. Shepard, Edgar became even more apparent D. Mitchell and Stuart A. Tuead1y when two ldenUsts Roosa made Tuesday in a day-reported that ' Shepard ind long briefing for Apollo 15 Mitchell were IO fooled by WASHINGTON (UPI) astronauts David R. Scott. the terrain they turned back Treasury Secretary John B. Allred M. Wordt.n and Jamn within 160 feet af a crater Connally, President Ni1on's B. Irwin. Apollo 15 la set that wa1 their key objectJve. resident D!mocrat, hu the for launch to the moon July They thought it was farther thantleu chore of convincing 25. away. " Congras to raise the national.,. iiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOi:;;;;;iiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiijij debt ~lllng by $40 billion 90:1! the government can keep poy!ng 11.s bU!s. Connally took' on h.is first official assignment 1 I n c e assuming office laat wffk with a ICbeduled appe.araoce before the House Ways and Means Committee which must ruJe cm a debt ceiling boost. 'lbe admin.iJtratlon wants a '43$ blllion linalt on whal the aoveminent can borrow -$40 b!Won above tht: present "temporary" ceilln& of $395 bUllott ,,.IC JVIT A .,.., ,.OM out IAIT INfltANCI Af Wllf I NO • , 111A•N•llA ANNIVERSARY SALi! FRISH GLAZED uo. 6fk DONUTS t1.M I __ DO!. (er &c ... , PH. ltd! dln1 PM. JM Ollfr 135 E. 17th Street -Costa Mesa ~ ....... _ dlat.Hlur•-""'- First time ever ••• a 2-year Guarantee oo. Munsingwear's Cotton Kangaroo Shorts and TC-28 Grml-Slam• T-Sbirt Ir this undmicar-. aat oubrinb out of fit wilhin two ,.... of norm1l war, It will be roplaced FR EE. And we'll bet you'vc DCYU worn Dlldetwear u comfortable u thiJ, either. Kantaroo Shorts and TC28 Gntnd.slam T-Shirt-both knit of purecollon. Buy a 3-paclt. We 111antntee it. .. for two years. munsingwear. I ~ .:....,.. a.ts-s-2l..t6 ••••• .-••• l ro.. $4.09 Gno• Sl•T-&lrt-Sl•J4.46. ..... J lorS$.OI ' MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED IN COST A MESA IT'S I Dl,AITMINT ITO •I 1116 NEWPORT ILVO. HOU•I t :M TO• OPIN PttDAY IVL TILL I P.M. ~MW.A J!.'.Jt#l'' .~ Thurs., Fri. 9-9, Sat. 9°6, Sun. 10-5 DuPONT$ NYLON 79 DuPONT$ NYLON Sq. Yd. PLUSH 95. PILJ SALE Soft ond curled down yorn1 fo r dimen1ionol effect, M0te face yornt fot longef wear. Mony lovely color ovoiloble. • ·DuPONT 501 'NYLON PILE SAlE 88 Sq. Yd . All nylori face random te"tured hi-lo loop, double fule bocking. Re1i!ll fvizing ond pil- ling. Eo1y to mointoin. Ma ny smart col ors. TONE-ON-TONE' DuPONT y NYLON 49 PILE SALE Sq. Yd. Conlirivou1 filament nylon pile carpet iri a deep, rich, hi-lo te1tlured, tone·On·forie pot• lerri, Re1i11ont to 1pot1 a nd 1toin1. Do uble jule bacli:ittg. Many lov.ty colors. ROOMS .& HALL CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE CARPET COMPLETELY INSTALLED ~~~N~·.~~. ~ 209 BEDROOM &. HALL UP TO 42 Sq. Yd1, . ":...-1~ AU !AIOI CAHiii A llllTIMI OUAIANTll , SALE 100% continuous filament nylon plu1h.Moin- toin1 fre1h look with lilrlt efforl. Nylon yornt,ore tough ond long wearing. Cleon1 eo1ily. Monylovely color1 ovoiloble. LARGE ROOM SIZE REMNANTS Choose frorn many ~ fiber1 ond colors. Carpet living room, dining room or bed· room ot thi1 beoul i· fvl low price. SALE ROOMS & HALL CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE CARPET COMPLETELY INSTALLED LIVING ROOM, DINING & HALL UP TO 32 SQ, YOS. ,159 SHOP AT HOME SERVICE If you con't come in, iust phone ond our represen101ive will coll 'with o full 1omp!e 1elec1ion. No obligation. CALLTODAT 546·8545 DuPONT NY(~N10. $ TWEED .SALE 49 Sq. Yd. Multi-color yarns wilh o different casual le-"lure. A carpet !hot jmpor11 1por~le ond practicali ty, Double laminated jute bock. E11citing color combinations. • · DuPONT 0 NYLON y SHAG SALE Sq. Yd. 100% DuPont nylon face. Double jute boclt• ing, deep h.111uriou1 pile. f osy to maintain. MotJ, proofed and non·allergenic. Ari orroy of decorator colors. · POLYESTER SHAG SALE Sq. Yd. -. Oeiop rich 1hog corpet mode for yeor1 of beouly o nd wear. So tough orid d vroble i1'1 family-proof. Lorge 1election cf bril· liont California colort. • ROOMS &HALL CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE CARPET COMPLETELY INSTALLED 2 BEDROOMS g~~~·.~~. '$2 I I & HAll UPT060Sq. Yds. ~----USI OUI COllVINllNT· CllDIT TIRMS \ . .__~A 3040 BRISTOL AYE. Jat off th S..,DI,.. fwy. COSTA MESA • 546-8548 . . • DAR.Y PILOT-EDITORIAL PAGE ' • Parking Plan Needed M Laguna's summer Festival of Arts has grown year by year, its parking problem too, b.., multiplied. There just isn't room In all the Art Colony's lots for the thousands of cars that come into town during the f~Uval. Lacking any alternative, the city has let them park on either side of Laguna Canyon Road and on both sides of the median strip Jn the vicinity of the festival grounds. This is convenient for the customers, but it reduces available traffic lanes at the mouth of the busy canyon. creating traffic jams and posing a threat of serious de- lay lo emergency vehicles. State highway officials, who have the authority to , control parking on the roadway, have adopted an °und~r standing" attitude. hoping Laguna and/or the festival would come up with a solution. But formal complaints have bee~ lodged by concern· ed citizens and there's no \\'IY to tell how long this toler· ance will last. To avoid having the rug pulled out from under the makeshift parking arrangement, the city and the festival shouJd make haste to get ¥>me plan at least in the works. Last year's tram episode "'IS evidence of how suddenly the ax can fall . New Community Vitality Two major developments will be completed in the northern portions of San Clemente later this year, prol>- abl) exerting the greatest economic impact ·on the city In many years. mente long before the nationw1de economic slump. The hospital's humanitarian benefits, of coilne, out shine lta benefits to the area. No longer will residents needing health seriicos have to ·maie the trip upcout for treatment. And the potential !or savint lives and e..,ing sul!erlng IJ' Im·' measurable. · Planners setUnc up master plans for the 'ciiy an'd nearby communiU.. had predicted the new tHnl1t' of growth in the lerracits above the palilades years ago. TheY were righl · Winter Eestival Blossoms · 4guna's panacea for the winter doldrums, the \Vinter Festival, gets under way this week for an extend· ed run. In its bfief lifeu1"e, the \\'inter Festival has blossom· ed from a small Weekend<eelebratlon to a full week, then t.wo, and now we find 50 ·events jam7packed into 17 busy days. . The \Vin~t Festival's ·ar~arenUy nonchalant, all· over-town format, i.!I the resul of almost a whole year of careful planning ·and thousands of hours of effort on the part of volunteers numbering i;nore than 2,000. A true community enterprise, it's-strtctlj' a rlon· profit affair, 'aimed at' enfertaining natives and visitors alike with a. smorgasbord of activities in what used tp be the.gloomiest menth·of the year. . Widely advertised, the Winter Festival brings lots of people to town, which Is nice for the local merchants, and sends folks borhe happy, whether their interest is in arts and crafts, gourmet eating, catamaran racing or • The projects - a multi·mlllion-dollar hospital and the area's first major shopping center nearby -in es- sence signify a new vitality to the communitr.. Probably the Iarg.St Impact will be ·m jobs -11 least 400 new ones' -which Will serve as a tonic to a harbor market which had been depressed in San Cle- dart shooting. . · It's.a fine example of community enterprise, with everyone getting info the act to r,rove that beach re- sorts don't really ~have .to Pibernate n winter. ·S . 7t appears to have been launched from that little old dead planet. What do you make of it?' Trees Seem Smarter Tha·n Peop"le Speaking ol ! .... , lS I WU rtcenliy, I learned aomething that is instructive, Inspiring ond charming from a new book, "The UrbaniUUon of the Earth," by Jorge Arango (ilea<On PreSS. $6.95). tn hll openq chapter, on human ecology, the author aaU us to observe a lf'OURi of plants of various siw atrug. llfnl to perfonn. We IN that "JD01t pl.ants keep 1 distance from one another. A tree never grows branches Into its nt:ighbor U it can avoid doing so." Plants like the sun, Arango point.I out, but at the same time like to be in a com· (ortable shade. "'Ibey like "to have muimum space of their own, but at the same time to be to- gdber. This inttr- r e 1 at ion makes plaals IRll>ordinale lbeir growth to ~ ... r:.ACll PLANI' IN a groUp has its on task of balancing its "personal" welfare with it.s "soda.I" needs . It builds up lbt location of each leaf in the mmt ai'.h"aat.ageous position, .. not only ... the pilnt, but "" the group ... lio bumonly«vioed compuler could do ttm. Al Arango says, "a prediction a( timing. :silt, and location for each Jell iD relation to lhe o!Mn .,.,ouJd con· ttiblle billiona of equations changing con- ttrmr..zsty in time.." la this bigb)y important re:spttt, trees _,, to bo snarler than people. Or, .t Jeut. lhe mechanism of nature Is ~ rl'IJomL effective, and protective Dear Gloomy Gus: Tennis tycoon Jack Kramer la slated to vl!lt Laguna'• Irvine Bowl courts aoon. In view of many complaJnta OVll!'r monopolliing. play there by a certain group, with casual outsiders e1cluded, J w~ der how long Kramer would have to wait to play If he were WI· heralded. Advantage OUT. -A. F. Tllh ......... m..c.. ,....... w...... .... _.._.u, ...... • .. _..... ,... .,_ "' ,.....,. .. OIMfllr On. k llr Pflfl. than the frantic 1narthy of bwnan society. FOR MOST OF US todly Un tn 1 man-made environment 4ba:t o ff e r 1 neither privacy nor mutual htlp, and certainly not a delicate blend of the two. Small tow111 are dyina: Of anemia, and cities are strangling to •th. Fol' the first 100 centuries of ·hiatory, only one out of 10 persOns lived in a city; the others used it only for trade or defense against invaders. In the last JOO yean, holfever, 111 enormous migr.t.ion began toward the urban are:u:. Now the cities are beginning to 'collapse under the convercent prtSSUl'll of population., polluUon. transportation, in.- dustriallWion, and, most importantly, llienatkm -the vital 1ense of "com· munity'' has been largely lolt in the modern city. WE RA VE PLANNED everything 11!'1'.· cepl how to live together in lncreulngly greater numbers. We plan · factories and biilhways ond airports and shopping pnters -but, wilike the btts, we rudely crowd others out of the way and ruin the envlromnent not only for them but for ourselves aa well. Arango'a chapter on the "Patho1o1Y of the American City" ii a heart·bre.aklng case. study of our Ignorance, apathy and (T'ffd. Perhaps It i1 time -perhaps It" is put. time -that we look a leaf from our plant Ufe, 1rnf subordinated our growth to the tomm0R a;ood. A Month for Dreamers 1'ebnm)t is tbt month for dreamers. 'fbe waUwr for UK:llt who Uve in the cold nortlMn> .Ul<S ii too sullen to 10 oul5lcle except for •ID<n ond other .. u.--1ve poopie. 'lbt only thin& to do lblt -r..i ...... i5 to ltaY ~ llDll claydrwn. Thtn, leonine -In the old ,.. t•Jvel chAlr wllll IU i.ec' crossed befft. Jlllll on hla deilc Md.-a _.... friendly secm.y keeping I Wlr"/ eye out (ti' the 1~h O( lhe boss, I mtn ii free ID give rein to ~ii bm!lkollloo In a blink of his mind's tYt ht: can Mrl iivlrig the 'IW>d ol -1ll'Ollll. roplab Ifft he ....id -eojoy U he ""'"'t mlr!d<d by I 1'~t, three kJdl, O ""'"'""' a llmil<d -ol po<Ut _, and ft1t feel . YD. m; CAN, U he choilsel to ' MIU a clttien's arrut. Pick •·pocket. Find a buried cache of SpanWI --ond buy hil firm . I.An a ahlp uhort during a storm and lool IL wur a Jn·tl In one rar and slit the throlt Of anyone who dared tell Mm lbll ii mode him look Ilk• Mr. Clnn. Travel ••orywi>ere on • fiylng carpet 111 p!cJted :" !or a IOOI in 1 buur .It .... ,.. .... 1 .. a.11. • Hang hb hat in a harem of hil own. Have his department IUptrVisor shot at· dawn -and twtoe al sunset. jll!t to be sure. TAKE A FRIEND'S hJvely 1ister to Jwteh durtni Nitional Brothtrhood Week. . ' Be madll!' an Ind.Ian chief lhe weet before they discover the whOJe reserva~ Lion Is sinking in a vast bed or oil. Fly the coop to Brull wtlh the olfk:t: petty cash fund. Take karate leasons and become the stroog.,l II-pound .... kUng in hlo neighborhood. Grow hair on 1 bald billiard ball. • Do card tricks al a state ball in the White House. PerHCUte a majority. PAllE AN APPLE wHh 1 dagger. Give on <na1iy 1 polinlnl feeling at Ille point ol a poniard. Duel with a fiendJsb vamplre in an abandoned cemettty al midnight Receive a lflllelUI 1eller from Dr. Btnj1mln Spock for curing him of the hiccups. Help a mov-le 1tarlet do her homework Jn 1lgebra. • Yes. only daydrtanu now keep a fellow'• opf{il . from being 1tuck in •••lfll. . . . A Beautiful P.orto -Fino or a Ruined Torre JHolinos? , Laguna Beach Is at a Cros.sroads To the Editor: High rise in Laguna Beach js 1an emo- tional issue .-W>derstanda~Jy ao. But emotion and reason mate reatleaa bedfeUows. There are many corwlndng-·ra· tionalizaliou in favor of high rise 'in any seaside community with go6d re9ort potential.· With fewer and fewer placef: to go and with more and· more people on the go, men with vision Jlrp]ted to dollar-making rt:spond to an Jrresist.Jble 11rge to e~loit 1ucb an obviou1 com- bination of condiUons:. CERTAJNL Y, aa. ii fa "11/> illdlvflfulli, towns that do not 1 ~. J'efl'f:ll. But progms-cl°" not neemarily bavo to. mean the dtJtructlon of thole In- digenous aesthetic values that, from the beginning, havt made Lal\llla Beach unique among the 1boreslde communJUes of the world. There are pro.,in alternatives to the unthinkable extremes or hemmin1 . in our town with a IOl'l "of "Miami Beach Barricade" of high rise:· hotels and apartments on the one hand, and the certain stagnation and atrophk:ation of our lovely village-city that will reault from trying to maintain the status quo on the other. IN EUROPE DOZENS ol ""l'parlhle towns and villages have fOund .aeceptlble compromise!. Porto Fino in ·1ia!y is one such. There are few mort deJJchttul seaside villages on earth. r The Italian government declared . it a state monument city many yean:· aa;o. It· is forbidden to make any alterations in the character of · its ·exterior . •P. pearance. An architectural cominbllon must approve any changes., eztalor or Interior, although .one may. renpvate and be u modem u one pleases l~oors. The Spanilh' govUTunent has applied the same prtnciple· lo a nwnber of its villages. Deya tnd FomalUl On·the Island of Mallorcl are two such that we know well.' IN MEXJCO · THE aovtrnment his prestrved our popular sister art center, San Miguel de. Allende. Alamo& and Guadalajara's "El Centro''· ire slmllarly protected although they Sol to the lalttr • bit too late. Jn each cue the 1ovenunents, working wilh far-sighted merchants and civic groups, hive perceived that because of locatiOR, climate, cultural acUvitles ind historic importance, the to w n s themselves had become lt••I W«ll• ti ..... . 8ERE IN LAGUNA Bt1ch the prJn. clple is the same. So It the. problem. AU 1 that dtfftn Is 1uperltclal-dttalt. But the· Important thing to~, ni;nember ls thlJ:. Jn the case of the Eutilpean towns, by the very act of preservlna: Ulelr natural beauty, the unity of terTain and Mructure, those resorts have become m~u for thousanils of discrimtnaUnl tourists. and the year around bomt5 of many hundreds of Uie world's mO!l able crtaUve peoplt. OUR VILLAGE of Lqulla 'Stach 11 It I CrD5I rood -DO I""' .lij\lltdedi We can opt to become the . Porto Fino of tht Pacific or we can listtn to lhe bl~ls and thrt11i DI• the hlih ri-. and allow om-eommuntty to-fol10w • Ille tragic paUi ol tlie once be1uUfui ·---•• Gnrwe ---. • Dtar George. • Did you hive any uperlenct ~fore you started,, wrltlng an ad- \'ltf column? STUDENT Deir Student : Well, there w11 ltd• redhead In Baltimore flr!t, let, ind -MIND YOUR OWN B!IJ!INESS, NOSY! .. and consequ..ently have a good deal of 1 time to obser:ve .. park happenings." Dog lovers use this small stretch of park as a dumping ground for animal waste. 'Lettcr.J from rtaderi . OTll!' welcome. Norman; writcri 1hould conve11 t~ir muiage1 in 300 words "' less. The right to conden1e letter1 Cojit space 01' eliminate libel ii reurve . AU ltt- ter1 mU1t include ii~rc and mail- ing qddffu, but nanie1 liiay be with- held; on ttqut1t if IVf/fdent rtcuon i.J CJ>JIO"Tlnt Podfv wltl twt b1 piib- lbhid. • • village of Torn Molinol OA Spain's Costa del Sol. ·A decade ac<> it wu a charming old filhing pott and art colooy. Then it was ·discovered by the •developers. It is destroyed now -comp~lely penned in fro~ it. magnificent beach by Uers of high rise 1partmeta and hotels atan- dinJ balcony..(o.baloony along the strand. (At first .the.town fathers promised am-- pie open space ·there tool} THERE II NO room to park. 'No room to lit OD the beacll. And there is hardly room in. the . water even if one wiShes to.brave. the bncttsb, uriDOUS broth that once .wu the clt.atat. cleanest water a1ong . the MedlterrWan. After many years away we, returned three ye.an: ago, We lhall never pus that way again.· " ~The moral aeemS .simple : Sound ecology and. IOinid ·economy 1rn.ab very cotapatlble bedfellon 11 it too much, the.a,·to ask our local·higb~O..Orlented mn. keepers to 11dopt a·~ent credo! We -would Hie· to su£gest that Jt might be ' "MAN DOES NOT LIVE BY BED ALONE." THE LEI!! COOLEYS Bi91t Rlae Taz l11con.., To the F.ditor : Proponen.11 of hi&b-rise hotels do not claim that the hotels will add to the beauty of Laguna Beach. They only say that lhe hotels will not make it too uodelirable to Jivt here, and lhat the tu revenuea from . the hotels 1ra necessary to meet our future needs for community . services. Fine!-tet · the p~ spectiv. high-rise builder put his m6My where 1111 mouth is. · Let the builder ' estimate the bed ·tax lrom hil higl>rile 'hotel fw Ille fi"t 10 yem of operation, ind lei him pay that U I permit fee. One tenth of tlie r.e eo11ld then be dedaeled from each . ot the first ten ye•n' bed·tai: ~IJits,(sorry; no. cash refuods). SOME SUllCllABGE ~id be ldded to bed taxu that tJcted. the esUmN to encouraie the builder to give the mulmum UUmate. The amoont of thia atlmate would be a conelderatto1r 1n decldina whether or not tO permit a particular high-riae hotel 10 be built The bed lai: that result.I · fi-om full uUllZIUOn of the-cumnlly proposed CR flOfte should .. be ·•t least three times tht current city budgel Tba bed tsx lrom onr •Ingle. bolt! in this aone should be nled proporllonaltly. 'lljtn the 111 income f!D<•I ht;h-rue bot•~ win cer· t1lnly •meet the . city's nteds., and alto pi'o'lkle for the' lncrtased cost.s of city -.lblt Ille hotels· will require. If wt must prostitute Laguna's beauty; then let us at least be ctrtlln th11t Wt Will be paid. PATRICK S. SPANGLER They bring lheir dogs to UUs little park in singles, twos, and threes to deposit waste. Jn fact, more dogs use lhc park than children. WHA'P l\'OULD DOG owners do if this park wasn't here? Take them downtown? On weekends the grass in lhis park (Heisler), v.·hich looks so in· vitlng to unsuspecting hwnans, has been ·thoroughly Mt upon and defecated upon during the week by many dogs. The: dog loveni who bring their dogs to this park to dump their animals' waste don't have to lie in U, walk in it, or 11mell it. They leave the waste behind for others to put up with. NOW, RECOGNIZING the fact that there are a goodly nwnber of dog owners in Laguna Beach, and lhat their desires should be considered, I suggest that the city of Laguna Beach build a special park for dogs where they and their oWners can romp, talk and play together in privacy. The park should have an aUendant on duty to keep it clean and to insure itJ uae only by dogs and their owners. Some may call this segregation and . me a segregationist -30 be it. OR vi3, EACH dog owner woukt have his property taxes increased so as to finance the building and main- tenance of this very special park. The name of thi park could be decided upon by a citY-wide contest. You'll have to admit that wilh a park built especl'ally for dogs, Laguna Beach would have. another uhique attraction for it.s tourist trade. Such .a park should keep the dog lovers happy and allow the other parks to be used by vialtora .and their families without fear of con-. taminatlon. M. J.·MQNAHAN Ollupopulatlon To the Editor: Overpopulation ia not what causes pol\ut.ion and hunger , statistics over the yean show that when a country reaches a certain level of technology, population growlb levels off. The s o • c a 11 e d overpopulation ei:lsts 1n the agricultural 1\&UoM, where with new farming techni· ques enouafl food is and will be grown to reed the people within the next decade. To tell those people to limit the source of their cumnt wealth -peoplt - is not !Giving the real problem, which is a lack or money. JF OVERPOPULATION were the key to 11t1rvation, why is it ttJat in China no ooe is hungry, and in the United States between 30 and 40 mllllon art: CON1idered huncry? Jn Braill, not 111 overpopulated country (90 mlllion people in almost u large an •rea as the U.S.), there Is also gross hunger. The question is why? It"1 obvtous. In Brazil large amounts of fertile land is de.voted lo (TOWing coffee for t:lport. to the , U.S., and very little of the land Is used for (!'OWlng food. In the U.S .. o~r :IS million ams of aood aoil ls out of product)on yearly because of the thrtat of 1 f1Uing market price. rr OUR SYSTEM w11 geared to grow food for people and not to make a profit. we ~·ould 100n flnd out that hunger Is not 1 lack of food (or overpopulatklnl . but • lack of money. The non·~lallst world goes by the sayina . ..::11 you ~~n·t afford It. you can"l have It," which resulU In hungtr, e1pecillly in U>oae aiunlri<• (practically all 1 where the land is owned by those weallhy few for their benefit. Hunger is not caused by the llmil!J of Naturt, but by the nature of the ownership and use of the land. JIM NEWKIRK 'iUegoloctopus' To the Editor: The proposed master plan for the development of the virgin shoreline between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach into • residential and hij;h-rist commercial deveJopment by the. giant developer Irvine SttJM to have found great favor with our city council, which is cause for concern. They appear to be outpacing the jack rabbit&• in their efforts to please the company. Raymond E. Watson, Irvine executi ve vice pre~ident's anticipated plan to annex a valuable, 3,500-acre parcel of coastal property to the cities of Laguna Beach and Newport Beach must first serve the interests of the Irvine Co., the benefits the cities will derive othlr than it will serve the business interests ar• not mentioned. After numerous mulings, Councilinan Roy Holm said of the Irvine Co., ''They seem very anxious to have the land incorporated into two cities; ' that puts us in a good bargaining posi· tion." 1N THE FACE OF the many discUssions, I'm puzzled as to why Mr. Holm hasn't learned the reason for their anxiety. Irvine policies seem to play an important role in shaping the altitudes of our city officials. Mr. Watson at a precise time had advance lnfdrmation of good things to come to the clUes when tbe Laguna Beach plannin( com· mission is aettlng high.rise limit§ in an air of public Indignation. There is nothing to be galflt:d by either city in this plan of population encroachment. It dQes not take a graduate economist to understand the purpose for the proposed annei:alion. \Vhat will result from such 1 ·plan by this giant commercial developer, the cit.it!: of Laguna Beach and Newport Beach as adjacent comrnunlUa: will become suburbs and in time · auburbr berome urbanized, made part. of a main city forming a metropolitan aru. IN TmS SEA OF hwnan fiesh am! confusion we will struggle for •an air, water and elbow room. From llill human enslavement only the commercial profiteers emerge the victors and the abuse of this natural great resourct will become another "Megaloctopua." If we are to preserve our beauUful Southern California coastline, the Ume is now. It can only be accompl1'bed by the people, particularly by -with qualified ability. I SPERO JANISE --~ Wednesday, February 17, 1971 T11c editorial po.Qt of the Daily Pilot 1eeM to jnform and itfm. ulctc rtadtr1 by prt1tnting tllit newspaper'1 opinion.t end com- mentary 0'1I toJ»es of intert.tt and 'figni/icanct, bv providing o forum for the 11!'%prtsrion of our rtadtrs' opinions, and br presenti11f 111e divtr1e t1t"°'" poin t& o informed obccrt1tr1 011d ipoke1111en on topici of the day. l!Obert N. Weed, PublWler ' ir " " tal en • • an co '· ne ve Si• ny r. ir ay .. at on " m· in by on • n. by be rt ill b• in nd an lh E i I ~ I I I ·, -----. Wtd"ndly, Ftbnllty 17, 1971 DAILY PILOT 7 ' QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandl A~ahs~~· J~ws·~ :_ Puhii~ity r ~ 1 Jarring {a~~s . . ";$·-•. k;;:<-"~ · --N-':'' ~,,,., .•i -=->:',~-........ . . ...... . .... ' .... ,' .~~ I 1'Who1s ~y? I just want to ma.ke it big and fut . and iret out Qf the buainess. ~. · I llN ITED NATIONS (IJPij• -~ Gunnar v. Janina's man, date·, to setk Middle East peac, goei on under the ex~ tended cta•fire even thou&~ hi.$ deslre for Qwet diplomacy h11 Ions Jincf: been broken. .. , J.arr l na. named by semtl1Y General 11>111t .. a sped.al eQ\l,O.'( 1under the stcUrl.ty councll'1 ~lMT nsolu- llon followln, tft·e sp;-ciay Mid- ct)t Ea9t. war, ts.i~let Swede! wilo Insists 'to.( doing his diplomatlc wart· wltho/01 fon-fare .. ' ', ·, · But' !ht demise ·of· Secrecy wrr<NJDding hi~ . ,in f 11 I o ~ ... ••• : started.lasl.nionLh i1,a i/Jck.le i · Tht :,\ra~~.;u ceas&cflrt Wben, after f 'ru s t rated (p~vldlng -wOnnauoii 11Ways ol inform~Uqn "1~ fot • ~giQ1)ly .Jas wo__rked oLLt .bY. . ~lier_f{forts, _be began anew ~ ~i~l._•!t'n_ qu~~b.Je. publication in unlikely places the Unlted St.ales last sum· tils pea~e mlisTon _late.' lut Eitly li1 .riiiuary, Jarring year, the United Nallons turn-accepted the government's In- and ha1 1rown to a diplomatic mer. The U.N. interpretation edits $8 millioo·a·year p:.iblici-vitaUon to go to Jerusalem public rel•llons ex~rfise· cqn-a~way& Ras ~n that m~ fy · machine loose to keep any and' rtctl'Pe from ;:its top ducted through Ui6, o{tici.,i ~e~ of .the ceue-tire b<is of his activities from bteom, leaden Israe1'a peace pro- chaMels Of. the · lklalioft' noffilng 1lefally tO do with Jar-• ing ·public. Even an· p<>&a{J. Security ~ncil ltaell. · · rin&'• pt~.i .rnl'-'ion. nc>Qncement of JarJing'11 a~. Soon . therWter, the leaks The Couftclti1_l967 ,.:-.1U!laft · ·.J•rrln& .• took up his pt pointments was verbOten . begin -i drop of the lsraeli asked Thap~ to dealp~e ·a: ln ,,Noveinber, 1967, f i rst Thfs brought a predictable pro-posals pu~11Ute4 here and special repreaentatlve ' • to establlshliig · headQuarters lo .rash of U.N. dis p .a l c h e 1 a 4rlblet eJstwhere. . · establish and main~i11 -poo-·Cyprus ~-he · could euily quoting "highly pla.ced in· When. the New YOrk Ttrnes' tact.! wi~. ~e. S,tates; ;~o:--· tr~ve!. ~w~ \l!'ael~ a~ formants." "reliabl~ ,sources," James R. Reston pubUs!\ed cemed in order: t; pro~tt: Ar•b-capitaje. He. .continued "qualified diplomats" a nd on Jan. 13 tJ¥er a United &lfetment and as.!list efforts his· task sporadically ii\ lhe similar devi ces dlpl~rr\ati~. N_atlons aatetint a detailed ex· to achleve a peaceful and 1c-Middle East and al the United correspondents abhol-' but use poa:itlon of Israel's purporttd cepted setllement•• oi the Mid~ ,.Nations for the next two in au~ circumstan~es , i{ they .P ~o p o s 1I1 . EI y pl I a "n dle East conflict. ~•·1-:~ ._ •·11. ~ ~e1~1-, · t I ··~ •. ·' , ! h~ to keep open p1~lines . .Ambamdor Mohammed H. . ·.·-. · aue . El·Zayy1t eiploded. He aaid everybody had a1rttld that the deallng1 with Jarrin& should be confklenUal. He called lhe Times dispatch "a matter to be rfCfett«t" and said lhat if the le11•s ·.a>qtinued, "we wu; have t.o· think or a coune to foUow." The Arabs carried out their ouw jnvesUgatlon and came to tM ~luslon that the aource of ' the leaks was Israeli. Sever;i.l . days ·later, the Magazine JeW\e. Afr i q u • published a ll-)>0lnt documonl It ~.id w~ the proposals (iven Jarring by Israeli Premier Goida Meir. CHECKING It still 'rneans ·'something ·at .. Penneys. These :great·buys prove "it~ -· · - •UP• Gal Visits Folks Most Frequently By L. ~I. BOYD STATISTICALLY, it's seven times more likely a wife will visit her parents than a hus- band will \'isit his .. SO FAR UNEXPLAINED is "'hy a disproportionately I a r g e number of girls called Karen marry al such an early age ... SPEAKING OF a long time between drinks, some spiders can go 17 months without taking any nourish- ment . . WHY 00 YOU suppose that fine fellow nam· ed Byron Barr ~hen he took up acting as a career decided to label himself Gig Young? . . , OOUBT EVEN MANY Southerners know the Al'tM!rican M a r d i Gras ~ origiriafed not ln New Orleans, bu j in Mobile. .. ONCE REPORTED you can tell roughly how long an . • oldt imer has worked in a shingle mill by counting the number of lingers be has lost. And a seasoned • bricklayer winds up without a n y fingerprin ts. And a house painter develops a peculiar 1 callous on each shir1bone where the ladder rung~ hit· be!o·w the kriee. And if you v.•ant to get rich, tie up the trouser concessiOn for the carpel layers' union. becaus'e these professional gentlemen wear out more pants than \ anybody. That'.s among men. Among seals, an Alaskan trap- per will tell you he can always pick out the !>ic~elors betause the marr ied males get scarred up with teethmarks. THE PROFESSIONAL GAMBLERS at the Nevada casinos would rather see a lady customer show up in· Dal! than in hith heels. They took some hidden-camera surveys recently. The averaa:e woman in high heels cuuld only play the slot machines for two •nd a hall hours at a stretch. But in fla ts she could stick il out for four hours. . · . TIIE Rl!CORD SH 0 W S George Bryan Brummel, that Englishman knoWn a.! Btau. upon ~U~?I\. gu.!sied up his bathwater 'by"tossing In the ,, yolks of 100 eggs. Doesn't make sense. No doubt he iieeded a bath alter his bath, Brummel was a liUle pecu liar, howev-er. He was the old boy who always shined the soleg or his shoes. CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q: "Is it true that naturaJ blond~s will be extinct • \n the next 100 years~" A. Some scltnti~ .so aver . Your qwstloni and com- ment.! ore welcomtd ·oftd wilt be med jn. CHECKING UP wherever pos1ible: Ad· drt.!s lttte rs to L. M. Boyd, P. 0 . Box 1875, Newport Beach, Calif., 92660. , Minorities Rallying To 'Union' Banners . STANFORD (AP) -Stan· ford University s~dents are c lobbying against Polish jokes, counseling Mexican·Americari youn~ing I r is h ballads, performing .nonsacrlficial druidic .rites, carving African masks and Eampling Arabian cuisine. • _ These activities are not part ·or the academic curriculum on this I J .500-student campus r-but have become the cen- : . 1ral focus of some 20 et.hnic ....-.and sociaJ minority groups that have materialized on . campus. The ra oks include a Mexica n '' American Student Association. Sino--American B u d d h I s t Association. Radical Jewish <;)crrimunity. _American Indian · ·Organization, Celtic Society, Chattagua Union. Black S~· dent Union, Polish Student : Union and Gay Student Union. The Oiinese. Ja~ese !_n· dfah ana Arab sti:ideiita hav't had ~ llMOc:fatlons for ' many .. yd.rs, 'but they are 1!11mar\Jy soc;lef end cu1tur1r .! while the newer assocJaUons of American minorities are increasingly political. The OrganitaUon of African Students at Stanford i s dedicated to changing American knowledge of Africa gleaned from "Tarzan and juitgle movies." said Robert V:oudi of the Congo, a g[-aciuate student in the school o( education. pletely satisfied . They want a noble Indian profile to be adopted for use on letterhead and T ·Shirts. "Why did the Polish students rorm a union at Stan- ford?'' qui pp e d Peter Antoniak, president of the Polis h Students U n i o n . "Because lhey're tired of hearing Polish jokes." Antoniak. a. graduate Slu· dent in civi l eiigineering, said : "A lot of people havt: be.en uptight about deg rading 'Polack' jokes. and some have even di savowed their Portlh de$cent. "We'rt trying to promote pride i n Polish -American background," he said. Movlmiento Chicano EJtu· diental Atzlan, an association of Me xic an -American slud~nt..s, has persuaded the university not lo buy lettuce unless picked by the United Farm Workers Or1aniiing Committee, a predominately Mexican-American labor union beaded by Cesar OJevei. The group runa a counaeling proaiam for Chicano ·yoUngsters and acted as mediator between school ad· minls trators and tile Chicano community during a school dispute last ytar l" ne arby Moimtaln View. The Celtic Stude"t Unioo. open to .!tudents of Irish, Scot- tish. Welsh, Breton a ad Comish background , h • t spoMOrtd Jive bagpiping and Irish dancing. The !~member Gay stu· dtnl Union. which mtttl off ' ·' , .. ' ... S•le price• eflecUve through. 1i1turd1y, ontyl, ., ,:. ·_ ' . · · · 'La n ·· w ·_ F!aintsale . ' c_ --· w . mo . ers ... Your choice -2.99' $ale priced.· 1 gallon , - ·- P>IP.nalft9~ fntertor Latex. Goes.ori. , smoothly witn eitt1er brush or roller~ and dries in cnl'f , 20 minute$ to a beautifu~ washable-tinist1. To~a and hands clean easi1¥-wit h , soap •nd water. Ctioose frl)t'JI . Jigh1 s~Y .. blue, light sand, $157 Reg. $177. P•nncratt !I HP, hor\J:ontal ah•fl tiller with llrll!ertlP thrQltle end clu.tch contrtils. · · , -. willOVf g~ or white. '9ftncr•ft• ....a llOrtQI btl? 4 • s1 .. 1 ptntll •re chemicerJr ;. treeted tor rust rulltlnc& Chalet •tYling. &1erior a!zt:-9'5"W x 8'9"0 . ' 11900 ' . Reg. 3.99;-:I.It • ·. I . ' ; • ·"' I, ~ "' . ' : . · PetlJI~~ TO\ure Flftl .... la ..... tttdt1 cracks .nd hol" .on brick, ~1!Qrd .~r plaster. It's .lhiCI\ ind crtamy 1 , ~ ... -)Ou ctn i:ioflli.le ~ lh• je.xtu,..: )till ' · 'W.fnt wltPf a rolltlr, bru•h or lA0o9t.• · ' . Dr1~t: to a w11hebl• mer-retl11entfln\1h. '· Reg ....... ~ ..... .. . ' '· .. .• . ' . 1 ' .•' ' ,. ' . ' - . I. ~ t .' •. ' .. •.' .. .... ~ . i .. , .. .' .. . Rog. 1~-'9· Pfnncraft prtmJum ~ HP, 11" power . prcipo!19d rHf mow•~ Ora• catcher included. ~:,. ...,,,,,. .. . ' Reg. 11.M. Penncrl~ 64" 20" rotary lftOW1r •Ith ntoll starter. Ensilne. lleg.7•.ft:1'o-controls en handle. 21·· rotery ..., W1tti .J ·.' ' .. ,_ a ftO aij]ust Olrbutet6r." ' Throttle, contl'ot on 1 . : .. .: • .. • 139" . ..... 11Ut ,.,_oft. ,...,.._"'SM: Hill,.21.1 Pow•r ._.....,._ · 4 oytle engine and front whHI oe1i'ed drtve.. . '104.99 R1g.11i.lt'POnncnt1 pr1111lum 3\\ HP, 21'" rotary mower wlth die cest 1luminu"' declc.. Grm ~atchitt inclt.IMd. Grtll catcher • fncludod. hlndfo. -' ... ·, 99"·. 1491 . M0.....-2HP edtlrMI ••11 -Failures -..f91y clutcll. .doPI~ control ~ .h.andle. ~·"' .... ,.,,.....,,,~.~ • Reg.111.M. Pennetaft C..ldOO :M ~ 11''-· ;iopotlod !Ml _,_ Clutch with remote con6ot on handle. < ' . . . •••• ., .. I • Pressure fro mthe fledgling s J an f ord Amcrica~-tnd~a~ Organizafion led the un1vers1t) to drop variQUs I n rl i ~ n calljc&tures connected wlth its mascot -the Stanford tndhi.n. campuli, is preulng f o r , ~ :--»wt thecfMliens are nek'Om-"" ~~~~·i;.i:t ~':!ru';ii~; c~ Buy it pn Pen~•y's tir!l• e•Y!'\'nt-.P.1.~ •t_thlost 1tores::FA~HIO~!~LAND, !:!~or! e.~r. HUNTJNGTON CENTER: H~tinglon Bt1ch. ~liop Sun.'. ,o,;, 1.2,to..S - a aicknesa:. . • . ...... l • . . " SF~yor ·Will TeD ' l . . ·u:~·s·d " .. ~. Ji e • I : ' ~· ~nu: (AP) -San ;.l"Frabcilco Mayor J o a e p h Al1o\O. a prtndpa) · (lgure In a $1.11 mUllori fee $j>lllting cue!'~' to tellUfy here Wectn.9dly befott: a federal grand Jliry. .~to was expected to ~ '"sf:I sllcb of ex· blbJb'~ to newsmen in a con-.I~ pr!O. · to . hla ap- peatance•before the jury. I . ~ _nw'Qr _ a'rrived here .. Tuesday evening, checking Jn. , to the Olympic Hotel, one . block from the federal ' courthouse where the grand ~ jwy has convened. Alioto has uid he paid former Washington Atty. Gen. ·• John J. O'Connell $530,000 and George Faler, a former special assistant to O'Connell, $272,000 for their legal work · in helping settle antitrust suits .,Yled11Hdo1. Hbr111r1 17,' 1971 ' ' ' '~ :' . No Justi~e~ eh? . ! . . . . . . • Tliere' s Always Russia EL CENTRO (UPI)'-Temnce P. Q' .. , :13, an IJ!I· employed farm worker, convicted of fallun to provide for hb famUy, was quot¢ In a probaUon. report that "lhere l!n't any ·J~" In Ibis c:oontry. The report alao quoted Craig u uylng, "I intend to take my family out of thll country within ar year and to renounce my American cltilenahlp." When Craig calne up for sentencing Tuesday, Judge . Hllgh Keating aaked the defendant, ~·Do you want to &o to Russia!" . , "Well, there would be mo,. ju.stke then than \ie have in Ibis ·country," Craig replied. "I'll \.tl1 you what I'm 1oing to do," said Kea Ung, known as a m,verkk juda:e. "I'll donate $$ right now to go into a pot to send you to Russia wHen you gtt out of jail." The Probation Department ....,.,.,,,...ied I 9'><fly sentence for Craig. But Keating, aayinc "You won't find me soft-hearled . like the probaUon office," meted out a two-year jaµ sentence. The judge saJd he waa partkularly iriitated' by the accusation that Craig had Separated from ~ 17·yur-old wife, Deborlh. 'shortly after she became preenant and then was.. reunited within a weet aftu she give birth. The judge noted that Mra. Craig obtained 1~1211.21 In we~ fau benefits in the interim; Craig said he woWd appeal the conviction. ,. • Experts Questw1i Reauli'n ; ·:,r,;·~;~ o· .:ittfEs-r;81)p Goal Not to Ra~ J;lii~~,, 1 !t·~>.; Old Cars Pollution 'C~prits' SACllAMENTO (mi,) -. JfC!alatrw UAIYll-\'1'-Alan ~ \,r1i~ ~y' J.age tbelrp""1. ~terul rato .,.,_ Gov. Ralllld Reaauli . m.~· Pool."·· . · waJ"agnatlo.vtotbepeopl•"'i1'11oB ..... •~- SACllAMErffll (AP) _ ststonce•heo can . baliill:O' tbe ·~ 'Jfou~o n . 1 aetually involve4" it would not _.o(.~.'1·•~. v. ~ -' eati:•ri. aayi budatt 'wlthoUt a t.ui,lbcreUe i· 1 • ' i..!69 v..e1: Y revenue.!" · • • ~,.,,,.'el ,a.,~ .. Go ~12 _,d R · -.lite'• earthquake-tllrutebtd . ~· .ild f'o\..' ••.. · J 11mal411Nly ~.affeqt stale ''TfiCA(~t ~'tlie C.t lfll<>l.rldljell .Calllornla may waaaer ..... ly~~y 1'di!lftl ~r.tl~"l .. '·· «.-~.: But,~semblyman7 Joe A. ~~lfil'l"'!I"" ,....,,.... IO!lltday haVt . ,\0 pay par by flsc.al ,Upelu in t-,.o. q~Pe ,· Wf'l!~-"" • 's . GonsalVea (0.La "'lr-ada) -~~~:\'~·the O'Aoner•' to · 'tate · polluUop-, br1~ofgov~· '. ~~-1 ·r.·1 · cti:aJnn,u~ .Qf.,:q.e, House .~en1:N•t .le.aal · belohia& old -clunllera olf the Doubta wtte rllliid' ov,eo : Reaiola,1oonfh . ,~Id Revenue ,llld .lfanUon Com-Qajl~ .~ :Qlf : :f~, 1'1Jll . . ......... ... ..jf ~--~ .t. b n . m;~ ~be hU been 'Jlliik.· . '' ' .... ' roads. ....... ·-.w.. · was·-~ .o.i .. 'l\i>adJ!T. •• · " wd. &·: lb! St.Ito. Fr~ · Ail' weiO 'i.;iiowbii !Iii' 11a11 "One <( the· great problema ed, is anli<lpatiog 1 f~ still~ tht.'1 I Tax .!...~ 'that lht' Ibos of •·•T ~...,. •·"""" · · ' In p.Jee tar. revenue u C11JUr-_ .gw.fu , -·, • , Ul ,.a....., .. ~ . . . In California is that we have q\laU v\dims buy. l!lf.torialJ gram can 11' balan<e4 ~t ~me tu 1ie<ause of the, Tb< ~ rai, .is JM - a higher percentage d. o1d lo· repair, damaged property. tapplnc OOlfomlins for eaithqP.4\e could r a-n.c e givtri banU" malt fa, .... can on our hi&hway1 than TM~w11'tbtjump ano~rtu~ase,.... anywbet'.tfrom~O~.to ... ..,~J61:WltlPPL in most other states." Reagin in sales tu revenue· will not Rea&an Uid that. 'ltbough $50 . mil hon. . . · :ii told his rqular· news con-otrset the decline in income • ' : ' •. : •. • , ~~-I :, ': I ... rertnce Tuesday. tax payments which will ruult ' .. ' ·: • \ .. .':. ''Our salubrious climate out from,pel"IOM deducting earth-; here mai.et them last longer." quake los!ies. , , • ;· .,_: ;• ·. About o,n e · f If th of Reacan's $6.7 billion budget •· t •• Calilornia'a 10 mi 1 J Io n proposal for the fiscal year · /. • 1 ~ • t , 11 ~::i.r:=::i~~.;; ::t-~~ banr.~Juzith 1 : Sha"st An~,h~r• ne>w~ more than 10 ')'ea?.5 old, the razor-thin surplw of onJy $1.9 ~ ~~ °':;.brleot of Motor :~~n:1' .~'ryii~11~uv~ • Come -and get. '·.ejfif :5: "I have qften wondered at enactment of massive welfare ~· .. .. ' against electrical equipment v manufacturers. L,.,,,:,,.;o---..,--,..,--"'-----------' Umes if we aren't going to and Medi-Cal cuts. , Brlng.ln •your rioor·me•1uremerit1 come to a point where we "When you've got ,only $1.t for a ftCH>bHgatlon carpet e1ttm1te. { !.( ' : . .. .. The mayor said b o th payments came from thl $2.3 million fee he rece.ived for ' collecting settlements totaling $16.26 million. An original fee of $1 million was iDcteased to the larger amount by O'GqnneU, .. who •cted as at· tomey general. ~ Both O'Connell and Faler helped him as private al· tomeys in the caM:, Alioto has said. At the time be had not been elected San Fran-- SIIESl TO 14 , . . WIDTHS I TO'JlEE · . . , , ' seafrent Crac~down Height Limits Set For' SF Skyscrqper are going to have to take million ln surplus -and even a look , at the posslblllty of that is qUtsUon.&b!e • -any funding and junkir!J cars o1dei-alight tu lo.s1 would throw than a certain ap," Reagan It out of b8lanct.'' said said. '"The preaent·da y automobile is emitting only a fi'actlon of what the earlier oaes. did." W. C. Fields Son Dies'.. In recent tlght·m90ey time1, new cara sales have dropped, while ..iea <t !'"rls to keep 'SAN niANcisco (AP):..... Joseph Alioto and labor old °"" nmnlng have In-,, S Fr · cre.aae<f according to retail SANTA MONICA, Ca U I. ha~= vo'ted~>tC:Tuii~ unions. sales r~es from the. State: (UPIJ -W. C.•Fields Jr., height limit to . 8 WJterf~"f Tueaday'a. vote came after Board of Equalization. a prodilnent 1.411 Anleits cor· ·~ us s•··I Co a to.minute d<bOte tdurln( Tom Carrell, the 1tato porate attomeif and 'tlie only area· WUl:Tlll' • • ~ rp. was considering a 551).foot which Supervisor· Robert Senate Transportation Cbm-son of the famous comedian, skyscraper. Mendelsohn aald, "A SOO:.foot miUee chairman and an a.uto died Tuesday following 1 long 1be 6-4 vote Tuesdly im-building on the waterfront is dealer, satd "getting those old illneu. He was S6. . ba . dead. Jt'a Ume to stop playing cars off the road, In my view-Fields, who p h y 1l.cat1 y poses the liqul on the ystde games with the U.S. Ste e I point, ii the .only way to solve resembled his late lather, died pier area between the Ferry b Building and the Bay Bridge. building and start looking .for the pro !em. I'm sure that at St. John's hospital, when: another lite a.way from the 50 ·percent of the auto smog he was admitted, Feb. 2. The U.S. Steel building pro-waterfront.••· ia from those old cars." Raised by lrls mother, Har· posal stirred eontrovmr {Of' · di Ded. ~h · t H h FlaJ•-~ the put year, with opponentl Carl Atkinson, • U.S .. Steel Wa e P. ~ , chairman r1e ug es u: WJ, U11: at.- claiming it would d--.. the spokesman, said the firm still of the As 1 em b l·y tended Columbia Unlvenlty .,.. .. ", ls Interested Jn a w.6terfront Tr ansportaU6n Committee, after 1 boyhood in New York city's v1sual balance and ·bar de~lopment ·but "a 17$-foot said Reagan's suggestion "is City. His parents separated the pub~ lrom tlie waterfront pro}ect just doesn't look a step in the rilht direction. a few years after he wu area. ~cally feasible." Let'• go." born. Supporters claimed it would __ .:.;;.;_:_ _______ _:_ _________________ I 'provide needed job.s and money to the financlall~ pres- ted Port Commission. The onfinance provides a a:eneral height limit of M feet, but allows 10 percent of 'the site to be used for buildlnp not abcWe 1~ ffeL · . ' ' ., 5" sq. yd. installed ' .. ' " . .. . ' .. .... ' . . ' ' J l ' ••. ~ .. •· Chateau"'. continuoi111. J if •ment hYfO~a. 1nstaUe'cl over'."40 oz. rubP.r orJot• ~-.· ' . .. : ~·· . ·. .. , .;; , Tho clly ' Planning ;t:<>n> ,mmfon faar rs.pt. 1& ~ to alfoW 'U.S."Steel. to buDil u hli!h ... 550 :feet, 'and !be' pro. -1 WU aupported' by the Port Commis&ion, M 1 y or· ·.They'd rat~er be right ·than be President. ., 8411 sq: yd. Installed ; .._ . ... ,'\ij.:Y,• 1 1 .._._ .. t ·•.t 1'Sfiag~:r!lma" nylon pil• •D•O: ... ;:. ''·· ln~,t~ll"'! li""' f~ ;<'f!ubber or juta P,9d. .... __ --.. . ' SUIDf CHUKKA BOOT s12" OPEN DAILY 9:J0.9 SUNDAY 10·5 • • Mrs. Lyman Joins March At Stanford STANFORD IAP) -About 2,000 persom:. including th t wife of Stanford Univenity Pmident Richard Lyman, stage4 a peaceful campus rally and marth through downtown Palo Alto Tuesday expressing opposition to the Indochina war. Dr. Sanford Don!nbusch, pre1i~t of the Academk: Senate, told the rally, ''We'rt: · hert .for a different kind of body count against this evil •.. war." 1 Dean R. Davis Napier of I the Stanford Church Yid in ! the invocation. "Pray that ,this nation may come to It! senses -that its leaders may be brought to their'..· senseJ ... to stop this unconscionable proJWU..e.f death and deslruc· tiori over\field and fmn in Southeast ~ia." It was ahtounced th.It about 400 ant.brop>logy and mtdrcal students have organlzed to raise funds for medical Sill>" plies for North Vie\nam, tbe Viet Cong an~ lbe Palbet Lao. 'There were about l 0 0 monitors, a third ef them Stanford faculty mtmben. No inclden_ts wen: "'ported. I See by Today's Want Ads ~::;t:;;O~~·flt)I'! Ii iQn VAN"thlt ya want to aell ? Well, runnlnc or . not thtre'• somf!One Wbo wtti pay top SSA for any kind! • Now 1J the time for all ll't•t hOmeownen to come to 1he aid of the fr houM! I ~ it be brick, block, concrfte, or houle Jeff.I· Ing, this Ucented conrrac. tor can do the Job tor )'OU , • .Rellev~r Pleased? Wetl~''Wtlt 'tll )'OU bear, •·no Job too amaU. • .« 1'1ftl" . . . .. Specl1I for Pmldentl D1y gas MMl'tendi.cl•' Sw ... tnOVlntlht watChillnlotaof . tlnlefy JIY.I• 1nch1dlng drfi!tal, and day ond date walohot. $omohaYOcofond • facet. IWNP ucond hinds aftd more. • Whlt1or.yellowgold- 10n0.-Motalor 'Vlnylal-· l\nnelfl - fin• jewelry . . ' • ' .. \ . ';. ' ... .. ' ·• . ' ' ..... ' ' --.!·-·- lwllllble at tht&e Pel'll'lt)' SIOl't11: CANOGA PARK CARLSBAD DOWNEY FASHION VALLEY· SAN DIEGO FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH L.AKEWOOO . MONTa.AIR NEY/POAT BEACH ~NGE "THE CITY" RIVERSIDE VENTURA CllllVO it. • • . . : .. .. .. ·~· . " . . ' ; ., I ... ... '. . .. 8" " "'Intrigue" _poly·u~r .pi19.. i~ . : . ·. . .. ·ovef 40 oz. rub~ror jute pad. . 1 • ' ' . . 'i • . . : . ' " , ' . i sq. yd. lnstalle-d. ' .. . ' • • ( •• f • .----......;.--···-~ -~-......;.~..:. .. ' . ' :-~·' I " Do It yourself . •nd ••V'il . · ·r '. t ... Sh•Q carpet tiles at a 1 surprisi'ngly l,ow pPce. 1 Nylon Mag pife tikts have self·ltick back. Just ' . . press them down.-ilQ . eq u i Pment .ne.edec1 .stve those installation cpsti.! ' ... \ .... ·I • -. . . . '. .• ' 1 , • ·. . ' • • '•' ' . : ~ . .. ' ' ··'---"-' . .. ~ _ ......... . ... " • ... .•. . ... -" . -· .. .. t .• . : ' . ' ... J ... . ,, ~.,., ... '1.0.••. ' . . ' I I ' ' ' . . ' ' ' ' I I ·' .. --::;:. .. .. ... . ,. . ' I I ' l t: ' . r I I ' I :.ii' f l I I r I I ! I . '• ~ " ' ' I " . ' ' , { .. . I I f '1 ' '· 5 BP Eco'homy •·· ·. Outboard Motor . ' . .·' -· ... • Aile A"°"' Secu'• Co1twn•le"' Creml Plans I ~·Jed~~ .. Feoruary J,l, 1971 \ ' ' DAJLY PILOT Irvine Docto1· Gets UCI Post .. ~-;;;!~==:·:·-~'--:-·:;.::::::.:·:·-~,-~~;·~~·:;:.:-,._ ·~~:-~. -_. ·--··-'"_·--·_· ... _ ... _. __ _:~:.';:;::;;;:-;.;.~:.· -::·:."·_;-:::o_:·_~.=...:: ... ~--.'.).~ • '. So Llghti.eig!it .•• YO.. Can e;.n.,:11 on Top of· Your C3r! ' . • ' •. 1 -': ·-.~A VE'20onSI?9.95 . ~ l .. . ' ""l2~fL Fiber Glass Jonfisher ) . . " .. --'\, ' :·l 7 995 ' . ' ... , .... '. · .. -t-h--Fi-ibe~:.~.Glu.--..... ,, Boat• are.Sean • • S1ahte, 11 hallow-:·drifr--- •'' boat ' -' · ·~'ti 'E1ff-'Lo citre for -111\ _,: ~-.; ~: ~ ·.111.'l11,.d!ng-w>•i nt il\i o_r (:aulk1ng ' r 11·:.,.~ ,• ~' .(. \\· -~1· ,. • ~F,9-,m flol•lion, 111L.id ··:'.• ~·-·.•.t·~~1l.9ntfloor 14-ft. Semi· Vee Welded Alup1.lnuoi 16995 • 3 1n1n welded temi·vH alun1inum r i\leled (or 11afety, long life h ' • Foam OotaJon ' Beol ••• Here'• Why 1 I. NoriffiU&r.e•"'•'• leak. · 2. You ne•er~eto Nnd, c:auJk Or paiftt. J. <;<,oler-baln..ll~lh into eenl~ teat for .mfin1 bait, d&ch and refrethlfte'9lt• 4. f oam-0.,...•• 1jllOeU 8 .1.A r~•tt- almoal inipoQ..,,._ • -10 capeitrt. · ~. Seat-top d.tlbfa .. • cotlins.boatd. 6. Even h•• biailW• tiah· me•IUi-,~111tf., ' t•"'" AllA •I 1·1~1' ~ t. t, tUf'I,\ Pl ,,. ..... t•••NI I .. "' ... _... . ...,,, ..._ --~- t I. t I J f . DAllY ~llOT WtdlltSdlY, F.tbruary 17, iq11 ~limate Control Possihle--Is .It Goo.d or Bad? E011'0R'S NOTE --Man to give up rain early, prtvcn-M A • D H • z islanda" caused by expanses melt the polar ice caps and .,,..,n Dtlr lulflllJns l!l lge-ting formation or hail. an ttains r eam esitant y or beat-absorbing Hpbalt Ind raise the oceans several hun• O'fl . dr'.Nm -~tlflCally But many weather scientists coocrtt.e, reatrlction to air dr.t feet are countered by ~ ~ wUtber. He say results of exper1menl8 flow by tall building• and heat prophesies th at increasing mt)")!e cbaDl\nc the wealher have been overrated. at precisely the right place One of the most dramatic precipitation as much as we from man'• acUviUes. Clouds dust. smoke and clouds will ~ltUMlY. bOwever, through "No analysis has ever and time may permit chan-e:iamples of the effect of air could hope for if we set our ascend over the heat island, cut sunlight, cool the earth poUutloD.. la .uy event\ the satisfactorily shown whether nellng storm energy in ways pollution on the weather was purposely to do it," Stanley gtvlng up their moisture as and brlng the onset of another Id~ world ls 91>llt Over cloud seeding has actually desired by man,'' n r. discovered at La Porte, Ind. Changnon, a meteorologist rain or releasing heat that ice age. wbe.tbtr control ovtr the ca used a net increar.e in Fredt'rick Sargent , professor Meteorologists with the Illinois with the water survey, said. could trigger a lhunderstorm. Predicting global cllmate ellmate la I good or baj thin g. precipitation or only a of human eeiJ\ogy at Western Sa te Water Survey found The popular theory is that Air pollution also J1 cutting change is tied to the earth's Here it a report on the situa· redistribution," Dr . Helmut Washington State College , told evidence that air pollution at air pollutants -dust, smoke, sunlight over most cities by heat budget, the delicate 1r. uon. Landsberg of the University lhe meteorologists. Gary, Ind ., 30 miles upwind , soot, che micals -act just at least 15 percent, more in balance between e :i erg y ~ By BllJ.. STOCKTON of.Maryland wrote in a recent '·But until it is fully un· has been substantially In-like cloud seeding agents. many heavily polluted areas. radiated to the earth rrom -+'" sc.._ ..,,.,., issue of Science masazinc. derstood how and why the creasing La Porte's rain, hail Lead from automobile ex· And re~rch has shown that the sun and energy radiated SAN FRANC!SOO tAP ) Inability to predict the out-nRlural inputs of energy set and thunder for 40 years. haust, for example, may be although some levels of back into space. If the balance 0n· a recent flight into San come of their efforts is off particular . sequences of During each of the six steel combining with iodine already pollutants increase precipita-is dbturbed, the planet's Francisco, an airline captain. weather scientists' biggest "'cather. it w o u Id be production peaks at Gary in the atmosphere to form tion. heavier concentrations temperature will change. A encountering fog, announced handicap. Attempts to in-precarious to intervene e·c-between 1923 and 1962. rainfall lead Iodide, which a c t s cause too many Ice crystals change of only a few degrees the fll&bt was be-in& diverted crease rainfall in a small perimentally. That Rir pollu-at La Porte increased cor-similarly to silver iodid!!, a to form, decreasing precipita-rould cause profound resu1ts. • to Loi Angr.les because the valley may unknowingly be lion appears to have initialed respondingly. Between 194fi favorite cloud seed i rig tion. Carbon dioxide, a product wtathennan had made a changing the weather hun· alterations in small-and large· and 1967, La Porte receivt'd chemical. But theories adval)ced so of combustion, has increased space. Some a c I en t I 1 t ~ mistake. dreds or even thousands of scale weather processes <17 percent more precipitation Such chemicals may be in· far about the effect of air about 15 percent since 1860. estimate that It wou1d take Aboard the flight was a miles away. seriously confounds t he than areas upwind of Gary. c re as i n g cloud cover pollution on world climate are The gas acts like a one·way 400 years for the amount ol delept.e.to the annual meeting "The forces within iA'eath~r systematic development of a "The most striking thing throughout the world . speculative. Predictions that "'·indow, letting sun 1 i g ht carbon dioxide to double, ra is· Meteorological Society con-systems are delicately balanc· technology of we a the r about this is that man. by Scientists also know ttiar increasing levels of carbon through but preventing the ing the earth's temperature vening in San Francisco. He, _ed_a_nd_a_s_u_b_u_e_tr--ig::g:_•_r_•::PPc_l_;ed __ mod __ i_fic_a_ti_o_n._" _______ so_m_e_acc_id_e_n..ct,_1_·s_io_cre_•_•i--ng::......c"_'b_a_n_ar_e_ac_s _:a __ r_e:__v_a--st_"h:::•:::•c_l _d_lo_x_idc.e_w::ill:....:b:::ea:.t:....:th:.•:....:•::1r:.:th::•:_"-P:."::...'.::of:....:r.::•d:::i::•t::lo::n:....:b::ac:::k:....:i::.nt::o_a::bo:::.:ut:....:4.:d::•gr:::.::ee::s::.. ---- took out a business card,1-J scribbled f1Jt wasn 't me" on the back and sent it up to the crew. A 1 ~ h o u g h meteorologists 1 probably alWays will en· 1. rounter difflcultle.! predicting J. each quirk of the weather. sudden airplane-d iverting fogs 7 aoon ma y be a thing of the ·• past. Scientists have learned how to brierly dispel certain types of ground fog by seeding ' them with chemicals. And : airlines are rinding: it cheaper to pay for seeding to get a ' flight landed than to bear the ,. expense of dive rting it and a c commodating in-t convenienet:d paSSC!lngers. Dissipation or fog is just one of the techniques weathe r scientist.a: are mastering as they stand on the threshold of an era or weather manage· ,. men t. They hope it will be possible to take the lightning and hail from thunderstorms. , dampen the fury of hurricane wind11 and increase snowfall • in mountains and rainfall from ' tropical clouds. , , But the new optimism that , man soon will manage the ~ weather, even il only on local ': or regional 11acles, is tempered by mounting evidence tb1t air , pollution already is changing the weather. It even may be altering world climate. 11'lt spectre of weather modification., planned or ac· .cidental, has raised a ,host of ecological, soc.ia1, economic, , legal and political question s "' that have sparked a spirited , debate among scientists. For instance, weather scitn- tisUI are split over wllat the ;.. results of weather mod.ifica- ' lion ei:periments m e a n . : Ecologists warn that even the 1 most innocent-looking weather • modification project c o u I d wreak havoc with the en· vironment. ''It is clear that we as scien- tisls ha ve developed a primitive but probably real capability for manipulating ' certajn kin ds or atmo.5pheric processes and as a result we are entering a new era, an era of weather management." Dr. Robert White. acting director of the National • Oceanic a n d Atmospheric Administration. told I he Amer i c an Meteorological Society. The new era had its l.>egin- ni ngs in the tale 194tls "'hen scientists discovered t h a t ·: sil ver iodide, or dry ice. ca us- .,, ed growth of ice crystals in supercooled clouds -clouds in which moisture rema ined unfrozen although the tem- perature was below frttting. The ice crystals would attract ne~rby droplet! of moisture and turn jnto snow. The discovery was seized upon' b y drought-plagued ' rt31denls of the West, and • a new generation of rai n· makers sprung up . Their results. at best, were in- • conclusive. Cloud seeding and ' the dreamed-of abUity to con- ' trot the weather fell Into disrepute and many researchers Jell the field . Thole who remained entered ! period of cautious research t with the emphasis on gaining ' a better understanding of the ' complex procuses at work in a typical weather system. The research Is beginnl1g to •pay off . ' A recenl projecl ·1howed that seeding hurricanes can r'duce t h e I r death-deallng winds. Hurricane Debbie's winds In 1969 were cut (rom 15 to 30 percent -substanUal 1 reductio ns in a 1torm In which Winds exceeded 100 milts per 'hour. &lentiat.s have learned how tll spot winter clouda in which seeding Is likely to lncrea1e snowfall. The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation has begun Ji flve- ytar, IS million project In tht San Juan Mountain.!! of Colorado to lncrtase the tnO'Np1ck and the sub~uent sprln& runoff In the Colorado R.lver, which &erves parched artu of Arlt.on•, Southern C.llfornla and M<!xico. Erptrlments to !Qlppre:M hall and rflduce llghtning in U'lunderstotms slso h 1 v e ahown enoouraglng rt:sults. By ~Ing 1 b rtw l ng lliun· dlr1torm, x.ientlsts force 1 \\ ' !'11 I' , \ I I 11 ' ;. OPEN DAILY 9;.9 SATURDAY 9 'tll 6 SUNDAY 10 'til 5 *ALL STYLES! * KENNINGTON *MALER *CAL-MADE *CAPRI * SPECIAL GROUP * ''Our Most famous lrand'' REG. $10.00 MEN'S FLARES "RED TAG SAVINGS" REG. $8.00 TO $12.00 $ $ ~$ • R •tt· sn.oo .. 'I fir sn lot. Slt.00 . 2 '-• S12 lot. SIJ.00 .. 2 i.i S1J ltt. Sl•.00 ... l l•r 11• ~-!f. SIJ.00 ... l kt SI J .... $16.00 .•. 2 .... ,,, OVER 400 PAil IN THIS GROUP All Sizes & Lengths 28-38 Solid Colors & Stripts GALS FLARES & STRAGHTS $ 88 Values to 514! "RED TAG SAVINGS!" Valuesto $J400 • Sizes5to16 famous Maker DRESS FLARES COTIOll FLARES Off.white or 19·g·t·h·t·lf···. •a Sitts 32.38. REG. $11.00 . /, ·I 'I. " j PLENTY OF FREE PARKING IN OUR N!W LOTI USE YOUR CREDIT AND SAVE MORE TOOi • Master Charge • lankAmerlcard • "largest Stock of Weste rn Boots In Or1n91 Cou nty'' NEW STOCK JUST AltRIVEOI Mr. Legg's Quality DRESS SHIRTS *All Slze1 * Solidi & Strlpos 11 COTION SUEDE fl.ARIS Wttr th1 "leather loofl:" •9 Slits 30-31. REG. $15.00 ....... .. FtMOUI Dvttnt• ... ,. '" th• ltltlf Ii wt1!tr11 itrlt. "ltuth .. ut'' ltttMr for ru11•il •••r. Slr11 6 t. 12. RIG. s422 $6.00 Permanent Prei s IODY SHIRTS FLARES lru1hed cord, patch ., o pocket front. REG. $14.00 .....• trom •11 $2.11 • l lut Chln\btty • Sitts S-M-l. RIG. $6.00 ....• •422 Wed11esda,r, ,tbnw'Y 17, 1971 !Janking o•• Rece1at Cha•age i1a Values U.S. Takes Calculated Gamble in Laos Venture By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Special C.rrrspondent When the American decision to back an incursion c:I eastern Laos i3 U1rown against the backdrop of U'le sharp changes or the last decade in Southeast Asia, the suggestion of a big 1amble seems to emerge. porlant now. Ten years ago chal'ICellerits around the world regarded the danger in Laos as acute. President John F'. Kennedy and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev 1net and managed to agree on the imn1inence of the danger . 111ey arranged the 14-nation meeting i n Geneva which was intended to dampen the fuse. In the '50s the Unlted States got into Southeast Asia by trying to help the French re- tain Indochina. Ten years ago, the area 's resources 1nay have seemed vital to American in- terests. Ten years ago. free access to certain air lanes and wa terways may have seemed essential to Western security. treme im~tance to their na- tional intereru. They ha ve less reason today to become en· tangled to the point of ex· treme danger. The Russians, interested In influence and trad e, are hard- ly likely to consider the returns worth the risk of a nuclear showdown. threat of American use of nuclear ~·eapons in Asia. But it is unlikely to believe that propaganda itself'. The Red Chinese regime in all pro- bobility is well aware of an A1nerican dread or further en· t.Bnglement on the Asian mainland. Chinese, and that sprawling, populous nation has moved out of Communist reach. The question to be asked now might be: At what point do the wars in Indochina become illogical (or the participants? DAILY '1LOT 11 Suppose-just suppose-the operation opened up an avenui' to peace that had not seemed to exist previously . There appears to be less chanct these days of an enormous international crisis over Laos than there was a decade ago. Things have changed. V a I u e s have changed. What might have looked extremely important 10 years ago may look less im- The Geneva meeting which brought about the accord of July 1962 held off the world crisis. But the agreement ~·hich was supposed to guarantee the independence and neutrality of Laos, was honored only in the breach, and crisis was lo follow upon crisis. The resources or Southeast Asia no longer seem so im· portant, and this is the age ol the superplane and the supertanker. The Suez Canal has been closed almo.st four years with only m in or repercussions. The Chinese, with their vast population, the current hostili· ty toward the U.S.S.R. and their continuing !solatlon, have plenty of problems without borrowing more. '"' any case, Southeast Asi a can hardly. these days, be regarded as anything approaching a ricebowl for China's miUions. Southeast Asia no longer is the ri pe plum it once seemed. It is much stronger and more viable than in 1961, much more able to cooperate on a regional basis for the com· mon welfare. Suppose the Laos operation should cut the Ho Chi Minh trail effectively. The trail b the main supply route to North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces in South Vietnam anti Cambodia. The attempt to in- terdict the flow by air power alone had cost the Com- munists a quarter of their supplies, but three.quarters got through, and thal was a lot. cut, seveu shortages ol men and supplies could mean a Sharp setback. The Com- munists might try to respond by atonning , across the demilitarized zone into South Vietnam, but that could be enormously oostly. They could contemplate overrunning all norther LaQs, but that would not solve the problems of sup- plyiflil South Vietnam and Cambodia . ---------- OPEN DAILY 9-9 SATURDAY 9 'Iii 6 SUNDAY 10 'Ill 5 Ten years ago the Russians and Chinese may have con- sidered Southeast Asia of ex· The Peking regime now is making much noise about a Indonesia, which was almost in Peking 's pocket a half dozen years ago, turltd the other way virtually over night after a 1965 Commun ls t debacle sparked by the Red If the trail were effectivel y It seems doubtful th e Chinese are interested in tum· ing Indochina into another Korea with swarms o r "vohmteers." It seems unlik~ ly that the Russians want to continue indefinitely financing Hanoi's costly war effort. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ PLENTY OF FREE PARKING JACKET SALE! '' srrw Of JAClfTS 111 sroc11 Our famous lrand Jackets (We Can't Mention The NamelJ llYLOll Piii UllED "Trail ChJrgtr'', WlltrprHf, ••g. $23 . ACIYUC UlllD COUUIOY "'Cknm1ron", grttn, llf. $2.S ... , .... SAIAll STYll UlllD "Hunt•r", 1eryUc ,u., ltf. $30 ......... , .. PWD 'WOOL COATS "Wlncl&or", brown ind rust, ltg. $30 .......... . COUUIOY COAT "Homllton", Krfllc II'"', Ro9. $30 .... WIT-LOOK JACKET "lvl1tor", Sh1rp1 llnt4, coll1r, l•g. $40 ......... . $22 88 s2288 $22 88 $3288 Af THE GRANT SOYS YOU'LL ALWAYS FIND ••• Pllf lt1111 •••u. ~lu ...... •ot· 11•.H . .. ............................ 111.• '4 lUllnt HISS (O.lt, ... , .. ••II••, I ... S21.9J ............................. 122.aa COIOUIOY J.lClfT, ...,I 1fflt, lot. lit.ff ..•............•....•.•.•... lll.11 llYlDll l lllED JACll1, •ttt•, ,. ... , •••Y, l•t· 111.91 ..•..••.•...•..•.....••... If .... <OIDUIO'f (OAJSI S.f•rl 1tylllltl It .. 121.JO ............................ 11• ... SWlllSll Offl(ll (o.&1, M'1'1k ltott1 l tt. 5tt.tl ............................... S11.U ltMITOICYUI Jt.ClfT, IMIMt, •lie", .... 14t.tJ ............................ Slt.U MOTOla'(ll J.t.CllfT. INllHot, H.H, lot. SM.ti ...................... , . .. .. Mt.II * EVERY SIZE! * EVERY STYLE! * EVERY COLOR! lEVl'S3 IOR GMSI *LARGEST SELECTION *LOWEST ,-""'· PRICES ~ ' LEVI'S® CORD FLARES Thi took 11 Widt 111d wild In midw1l1 cot1011 corduroy. AU lht new colors in 111 1i111. l11k j11n1 con1tructlon, s9so DOUBLE-KNIT LEVI'S '"' SLACKS ''CAUTION" •.. lt•i'11 111w knit 1l1ck1 mty lit "h1bit formint." Y111 -11'1 "''"' 111ythinf 1111. TIM Gr111t loy1 h1r1 111 the colorJ in tlriptl ind 10Hdl. All 1ii11, tot • , , tf cour11. LEVI'S® SUSPENDERS L1yi'1• "l1t11t" lt1111. Choo11 fro111 red, lllut, $600 10Ud1 ind 1trip11. Tht IEtl IOTTOM l1vl'1 look i11 t rvt1•I hom11pu11 wt••t 1h1t 111Ytr 1111d1 ironh19. Gr11t 11ltctlo11 of troory col1r1. SII•• 27·•2. '10 Lev rs • XX JEANS SUllEl-TOUGM J11n1 • , , World's tou1h11! d111 f111, r1i11!1rc1d with copptr ri•1l1 1nd 11itch1d 11 111y. $698 Slits 27 to SO lamous Maker SKI PARKAS WITH SIDI ZIP~IR $12·· Rog. $17.95 ~ SKiWEAR Widt Solid Coler k1rf Reg . $6.50 ......... $J.2t Witch c1, Rev. 98c . , , , , 77• f1t1 M11k Witch C1, R!9 . $2.98 ....• 2.44 to111 T1111I K11it ea, Reg. $2.98 ......... $2.•• lt1bltlt Fvr Ki t Rfl.l. $10.95 .... '.' $f.ll lttbltlt fur Glor11 Reg . $10.95 ...... $t.ll ll1ck l11thtr Gl1r11 with 1•lr1 le11her in ptlm, nv!on lined . . . . . . ....... $6.tl Alttr Ski IHlt front zipper. Men'' 1nd Women'1 blttk. Reg. $5.95 ......... ~.II Nyl111 Afttr Ski lo1t1 Men'1 •nd Women's. Color blu e. Rei}. $8.95 ......... $7.77 (If Mulf1 R1d1whit1/bluet bl1ck. Reg, S 1.98 .... $1.2' St1r1 & Stri,., k1rf Rt11. $5.95 ......... $4.11 l•dl•1· Tkfll'ltl U11l1rw11r. loy1' Th1rm1I U11dtrw11r $1.3t 11. JC. l1y1' CPO Shim V1rie!y of 1olid1 & p11t1r111, 1iz1s 8 to 18. Reg. $7.9S ...... $5.11 FAMOUS· BRANDS AT BIG SAVINGS! LEVI'S "' FAMOUS · DENIM JACKETS NOWI (U111i111dl Tht famoua l•vl's• dtnim j1c~1t•,~ I pr•·shrunk to 111•. You'll find the 111• you ttttd 11 Gr1nt'1. ILANKET LiNED ••• ~$13 IOY'S SIZES .•••••. $7 lOO's from "'''"' S.ltdlott .. , ... .,., from 100'• U.S. Hand In Korea Fading Out ~ Bv PmL NEWSO~f u;.t ll'ltl'el•11 M ... AMllVtt Americans lmpaUent wit/\ the pace or Vietnamization ol the war in Southeast Asia and the withdrawal of American troops might take • Jook 1t Korea. For most o( 21 year! American troops have been .standing along a line divldinC South Korea from Communist North Korea. Each year a few of them died as the Com· monists probed the line otl sent Infiltrators southward to disrupt the government of President Chung Hee Park. M or June 30 all that comes to an end. The American Second Ami'/ Division which has b 1 ·e n gua rding an 18-mile stretch along the classic invasion route to Secul, South Korea 'I capital, Yd\I be brought home and disbanded at an an.. ticipated saving of some $500 million a year. It is part of an agreement \\'hereby lhe United States wiU reduce its authorized strength or some 63,000 men in South Korea by 20,000. Henceforth American troops will be responsib le only for guard duties at the tru-:1 village or Panmunjom, that symbol of the longevity o[ Asian wars which once en• t.ered are difficult to escape. The South Korean.. agi:ee4 to the withdrawal only reluc. tantly and then at con-- 1iderable prkt. Vice President A c n e " underwent bis baptism of fire in Seoul last summer, leamin1 just how tough A s i I D bargainers can be. President Park and his aide! made it clear that whlle they had faith in Americans, they: wa nted American promlses in writing. F'i r st they so ught modernization of the Korean forces, much of v.·hose equip. ment was 20 lo 25 years old. The y so u ght pubflc assurances that further cut- back! In U.S. troop strength now would be deferred a number of yea rs. Over a five-year period theJ sought new equipment worth between $2 and S3 biUion doUars. What they got is some •too million worth of supplies to be left behind by lbe departing Americans, plus about JOG American military in. stallatlons, a promise of $150 million in military aid In ad .. dition to regular military ald coming to about $140 mllliort this year, and continuing •id for the next five years. The United States agreed to shift a wing of ~ Phantom F-4 bombers from Japan andpplace them on permanent station In South Korea. Included in the military aid would be an u n spe cified numbe r of radar surveillance aircraft to protect t b e and place them on permanen• more Phantom F -4s for South Korea's air force. The U.S. economy move ii not e~d to lnlluence t"9 continued presence 9J.. some 50,000 South Korean troope in South Vietnam which dirtctly or indirectly benefits the Korea n economy by more than $100 million a yea r. \Vhile the Koreana agretd to the move, It dJd not alt.tr the fundamental dlu.&reemeot between the two sides. The United Stat.ts &rlutl that North Korea cannot at. tack the south again becauae n<llher o( Us chlo( allies.-Re4 China anc1· lhe Sovltt Union, wish an armed conruct. wlth lhe United Slalu. 'lbe IOulh IJ'IUU tbit the U.S. move wtU be interpreted u a •ian of wu.knesi and lhat lhe north not on1,y can, but llllib~ altack a&ala. CllllDREN LIKE IINCLELEN - ' .. ------- II DAllV PllDT WtdJIHd&J, Ftbnirt 17, 1' l'AMIL'l' CIRCVS hlf Bil Ke.,.e • ''You didn't brush your teeth I I can't smell any toothpa1te I" Fight Among Selves Irish Republicans Battle Unity Split SOLEDAD. cam. (UP!I - One of California's most troubled prisoru is about to begin a radical new program of conjugal visits for some of it3 inmates. On Valentine's Day tv.·o minimum security inmates at Soledad Prison will leave their cells for a 48--bour visit with their wives or famlly in tv.·o apartments about 100 yards from the 12-foot fence that encloses the prison. It's the first time that in· males In a C.Ufomia max· imum security priaon will be allowed to have conjugal visit!. "We're doing this to help the men adjl13t better to live here," Prison Superintendent C. J. Fitzharrb said. Fitzharris emphasized that the program i11 not for con- jugal visits only, but will in· elude visits by parents or other relatives or inmates. ''Thls i! being done to Iden- tify the family and not just sex,'· Fitzharrls said. Soledad has been one of the most violent prl.sons in the country. Two guard! and five inmates were killed there last year. On Feb. 2, two more guards were stabbed, neither serloll!- ly, when they were pushing food cart.'I to prisoners in a wing, the-maximum security wing where most of the trou· hie. which ls mostly racial, ls festering . The stabbings have been so bad in the past year I.hat s o m e prisoners reportedly strap thick maga'Llnes to their backs to guard against knife blades. But Fil2.harrls insists that the racial tensions and stab- bin gs stem from a small group of troo blemaken and that the new conjugal viJlt plan i! no Lost Couple Found Dead REDOING <UPI ) -Shasta County 1berilr1 deyutil!S have found I.be bodies of a Los Angeles couple missing in the rugged mounLaln country 30 miles west of here since ThanUgiving. The remains of Herbert Herrin, 51 , and bis wile Mn. 49, were found about five miles apart by a loagtna: road leading Jo tlltir property. attempt to appeue prtsoner11. ''None of thue people caus- ing trouble would be ellltble for tbt villtl," Fltzb.uTls Kid. lnltead, Fitlbarril I a J d Soledad II bq1nlllnl lhe visilltlon program becautt of good results at Tehachapi Prison, a minimum security facility without walls near Bakersfield,· where lnmatM have been getting weekend passu for the paJt two years to stay with their wlve11 in apartments on the prison ground!. Tehre are about 2,200 prisoner• housed at Soledad, and Fitzharris 1aid about fiOO of thtse inmates art clau·fied as minimum security prisoners, which means they would be eligible for the visitaUoo pro&l'am. The prisonen and their visitors will 11 t a v in apartments in a bulldina: just outslde the fence surroundlna: the prison, but within the 92- acre compound. The apartments are near housing for prison s t a l l work.en , but Fib.barrlll aald no guard will be posted where the inmatel will be ltlying. "We're going to bave pbone.!1 in the apartments to they can check in at certain t1mt1;" he said. The apartments have a llv· Ing room, dlnin& r o om , bedroom and bath: F1tzharri11 said he hopes to have amall beds or cots for children. "They (the relatlvea) must have their own way to get here, bring their own food, and do thelr own cookin11 when they get here," Fltzharr111 s11id. Wh<n the program begins Feb. 14, Fltzbarris said he hopes to have thret familie1 per week for visits. If lt's .succusful, more apartments may be added. Since priAoner.s are con- stantly being evaluated. lt is pcwible that some muimum security prisoners could have a change of heart tn order to participate ln the visitation project. Authorities at the institution -Y.'ho have been 11tru1111lln& with a tense .situation for nver a year -would certainly welcome any changes. "We hope theaprograms for the minimum security prisonen will be an incentive to inmate! to earn thal c I a 11 if i c alion," Deputy Superintendent Jerry Enomoto said. Cheap but Ni£e Mass Weddings Lessens Cost tfONG KONG (AP) -young man several years' Chinese tr11dltlons m11ke wed-salary. As ht has bis own livln& dings a costly allair in Hong expense• and cannot nve all Kong. bis ntary, be must exerclse Most parentl of bride• de-persistence, frugality and pa· mand from I.be bridegroom's tience. He abo needs luck lamlly a weddln& banquet ol if be is l•inl to keep hll ~ table.s -180 {o 200 guuts f1ancee. _ that costa $1 500 or more. lf be cannot wait, he can ' , -bind blmstll financially for If the young man• fam Y years to 1 money-lender wDl· cannot finance IUCh • fut. lnR to ctve him a hlgb-lnterut n la up to him to find UM" loan mentY U he wanta to wed N~w a t a I I o o I er in the rlg)lt style or• f~ neighborhood auocllitlon ha• quently, if he wantJ lo wed come up wllb a plan for mus 1t aU. BIChelon In their 40I •eddlDll and nctptiom tn are not . unc;."Ommon becalllt which couples could be m1r- tbty c.D't railt the ·money. ried for about flfrS. 1be banquet m1y cost u The talfong anodatlon of much u tbe n eraa:e youn1 s b c k k 1,pmel Reatttlemtnt -· wllh • l!IOlllhlY •al aty Est.If, 1'blch bo<IMJ poor ot aboW 1100, earns tn II refupet from Communl•t moolhl. ETtn af\er c.ub eon-China 11y1 each couple wOJ.lld trlbuOont as wedding gifts he have three tables seatln& 24...10 II Jlill benllY In debt guest" 1bt .-eddln1 feaat. plu! lhe The .uaociaUon chairman, .,._.. ol lhe b<lde heraelf Yip Tsun-yln. plant Jo •I" I« 1 rutonable home and. proodl lhe ~nt In lhe if pegfb", '" f!Ul...,f-town hope ff feltlnr .ttlclal _. ._,::gmr.. C&D cost tbe'· oort. • 1n ... polyester knit pan.,uiH take on now, cool spring hues trs the pantsuit era. You've joined it. You love It. So we've gathered some of the best for spring. They're belted. Pocketed. Or criss-cross seamed. With neckline flattery and Pan ts U j ts textury softness. Really perfect for the California way of life, sizes 10-18. 23 .99 a. zippered front pantsuit in waffle texture, belted, cherry, blue, mint green, navy SP r ·, n g-'b r ,· g ht b. cowl neck pantsuit, criss-cross detailing, flowery texture, white, mint green, navy c. ottoman stripe textured pantsuit with pockets, beige, cherry, aqua, mint green boulevard dresses 95 - knits may co south co11t pla11, 11n dl~fwy. et brl1tol, co1t1 meH, 546-9321 thop monday thru Hlurday 10 1.m. to 9:30 p.m., 1und1y noon 'tll 5 p.m. ., . ','·. - MAVCO • JI •ILOT-AOVDTISEO c Wtdntsdly, rtbfuiry 17, 1971 WtdntSdar. ''bl~ 17, 1971 OAIL Y PILOT JS Orange Coast Area Men in Service Around the World Coast Guard C•Ott Fourth Class AlleD B. Jlua:be1 Jr., IOll or Mr. and Mrs. Allen It Hughes of 4021 Morning star Drive, Huntington Beach, was recenUy named to the Superintendent's List f o r ou.Utandlng proficiency. Staff Seraeant We.Ddell R. Hone•. son of P.1r. and Mrs. Robert ,V. Honea, 5 7 71 Vallecito Drive, Westminster, -..bas 1raduated from the U.S. Air Force Noncommissklned Officer Leadership Scbool at Robinll AFB, Ga. Sera:unt Honea, who was trained in military manage- ment and supervi11ion, is an aero&p1tee systems inspection technician at McClellan AFB, with a unit of the Air Force Logistics Command. K1rta Leslie 8 Ir II: s, daugh ter of P.fr • and Mrs. 0. M. Birks ol 2479 Fairway, Coata lwJesa, completed ten weeks of basic training al Recruit Training Command (Women), Naval Training Center. Bainbridge, P.1aryland and was graduated during a military review held o n January 22. 1971. Navy Seaman Apprentict Tbomas J. Hunter, son of litrs. Adah B. Hunter of 954 Oak St., Costa Mesa, w a s graduated from basic training at the Naval TrJinlng Center, San Diego. Hunter is a 1968 graduate of Estancia Hi&h School, Costa Mesa. graduated from basic train ing at the Marine Corps Recruit Dtpot, San Diego. Navy Seaman Lynn 0. Stratton, son of Mr. and !llrs. Everett W. Sherrill of 1645 Samar Place, Costa Mesa, was graduated from basic training at the Naval Training Center, San Diego. Stratton is a 1969 graduate or Costa Mesa High School. Costa Mesa. f\tarvine Pvt. J o h .a a y Reichardt, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Reichardt of 19852 Lexington Lane, Huntington Beach. was graduated from basic training al the Marine Corps • Reeruit Depot, San Diego. fNlll basic training at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot, San Diego. Marine Pfc. Larry E. Trox· eU, son or Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Troxell of 8701 Hastings Circle, Huntington Beach. is atending A v i a t i o a Elec- trician's litate School at the Naval Air Technical Training Center, Jacksonville, Fla. of Mr. and 111rs. Philip R. Maurer of 325 Diamond. Balboa Island, is serving aboard the Coast Guard Cutter Resolute which returned to Saa Francisco, following a two week search and rescue patrol off the northern Ca!Hornia coast. training at Lackland AFB, Tex. He has been assigned to KeesJer AFB, !lliss., for training as a pertonnel specialist. Airman Miller, a 1969 graduate of Huntington Beach High School, 1ttended Orange Coast College, Costa Mesa. lit, %107 JJ9mona Ave., COsta Mesa, hu araduated at Lowry AFB, Colo, from the U.S. Air Force munitions speclali!t COUl'le. The airman, now qualified to load, assemble and dispose or explotive munitions, is being a~lped to Misawa AB, . ' Navy Ueuteoanl (jun Io r grade) Jftne1 C. &'plUman, son of Mr. and ~trs. William J, Spillman of 15052 Capetown Lane, Huntington Beach, i.s now serving with Helicopter ComOOt~pportSquadro n • Seven at the U.S. Naval Alr Station, Atsugi, Japan. Commander Bruce H, Tech n l ca I S er I ea n t Japan, for duty with the U. S. Air Force Major . • A Paclfic Air Forces. r--Ashley, son of Mr. and Mrs. lAWl'Uce H. Fletcher, aon of .....,,rce W. L. Krueger, son · John H. Ashley of 335 Heather Mrs. Lillian I. Remillard, Airman Silva is • 1970 of t.1r. and Mrs. Charles A. Airman Theodore C. Paull. Place, Laguna Beach, was 10146 Ascot Circle, Huntington graduate of Estancia High Krueger, 211 W. Cristobal son of Mr. and Mrs. Gustave presented the Meritorloll!: Beach, has sraduate·d from the School. Ave .. San Cltmen1', has ar- W. Paull of 835 W. 15th St., Service Medal at the Naval U.S. Air For~e senior Non-rived for duty at Camp R. Newport Beach. has com-War College, Newport, ft.I. comm Issi one d Officer Airman First Class Marti• M. Smith, Hawaii. pleted basic training at He received the award for Academy al Norton AFB. G. Fkr, son of Mr. and Mr11. Major Krueger, a Jogistic:r Lack.land AFB. Tex. He bas meritorious service a.s Com-Sergeant Fletcher, w h • Jack M. Fjer or 10062 Puct plans officer with a U.S. Air been assigned to Chanute manding Officer of Fleet Com-received advanced mllltary Drive, Huntington Beach, L"i Forte special activity unit. AFB, Ill.. for training in posite Squadron Ten at Guan-leadership and management 1 member of the Slst Military previously served at Robins aircraft maintenance. Airman tanamo Bay, CUba. training, Is 1 penonneJ tecbnl-Airlift Support Wing that has AFB, Ga., and has also com· Paull is a 1969 graduate or cian at Sheppard AFB, Tex., earned the U.S. Air Foref: pleted a tour of duty in Viet· Estancia High School, Costa Airman Cbrlltopber R • in a unit or the Air Weather Outstanding Unit Award for n am. He ho Id s th 0 ~tarine Pvt. Richard R. Marine Pvt. Craic: · B. Mesa. MU~. 1011 of Afr. and Mrs. Service. •sixth time. aeronautical rating of senior U.S. Air Force Captain Joh.a RadclUfe, son of Mr. and Mrs. George. son of Mr. and Mrs. ~ Robert C. Miller or 9322 A!rman Fier Is an air navigator and was com-e. Fonttr, son of Mr. and W. E. Radcliffe of 3054 Cresta William E. George of 316 Lin-Coast Guard Seaman Ap-Mala!llne Drive. Huntington Airman S.muel R. Sliva, son transportation specialist at missioned In 19f>5 through the Mrs. George C. Fon~r of 1 _w_a~y;';;;;La;gun~a;;;;;B<;a;cll;,;;;;w;a;';;;;d;o,;;;;Bmamlbomam,;;w;a';;'~';adu;;a;~.d~prmemnmtimcemcriiiiiia~~··w···M•'•"'•°'iiiiii·';';niiiiiiBmemacll~,mhmasiiiiiicomm~plmetmcdiiiibma.m;mciiiiomfmMmr .• a.nmdmMmnm.mJmohmnmRm.mFmemiiiiliiiiKmadmemnmamABiiii.mOmk;mnamwmai.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiamvm;ail~i· niiiicaidieml~~ioigrmaim:.~-San J uan Capistrano. ill on duty at Phu Cat AB, Vietnam. Captain Forster, an AC-Fr Phantom aircraft pilot, is assigned to a unit of the Pacific Air Forces. Before his arrival in Southeast Asia, he ~erved at George AFB. U.S. Air Force Major John H. w.Jte Jr., son of Mr • .and Mrll. J. Howard White. 1170 Temple Hills Drive, Laguna Beach, has graduated from the Armed Forces S t 1 l f College at Norfolk. Va. The five-month Department of Defense school is operated under the direct supervision of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and prepares students Io r positions in joint and com- bined commands that involve more than one country or mililary service. Major White has a total ol 12 years service and bolds among his decorations two awards of the Air Force Com- mendation Medal. Navy Lieutenant Robert M. Huaon, husband of t h e former Miss Suaan Somers of 1709 E. Bay Front, Balboa, has returned from an eight month deployment to the MedilerTanean Sea w i t h H e I icopter AnU-Submarlne Squadron Two abo1rd the aircraft carrier USS Independence. Upon arrival at his home base of Imperial B e a c b , Hanson wu presented , ~ Meritorious U n it Coin~ mendation Ribbon for his performance of duty witb HS-2 during the deploymenL His Squadron received the Meritcrk>us U n i t Com- mendation for extensive operations in the East.em Mediterranean during th e Jordanian Middle-Eut Crisis Jut September. San Diego's Old Ferry Not Wanted AJ the pride of San Diego's ferryboat fleet, the North Island chugged over and back to Coronado for 40 years. The scene aboard was timeless as people on the peninsula floated to S an Diego's stores ••• workers went to North Island Naval Air Station and back home afterward .•• lovef"ll escaped briefly from the noise and 11trlfe of the city. The $50-million bay bridge ended the 75 years of ferry runs and, one by one, the old boats were JO!d. The North Island's buyers gave up a plan to turn her into 1 floating restaurant. Universal Studios leased her to act as a backdrop in a motion picture, ' ' S a r g e • ' ' 'Vhen the moviemakers tried to retum her to San Diego Marine Tennln1I, the shipyard didn't have room.' By then , the owner was out of the country. A federal judge ordered the North Island sold ror repair liens. Sometime earlier, her engines had been moved to a YOWllU boat. At I U.S. marahal'1 aucUon last month, ahe WIS told to Unlvtrnl Studios for 'L The Navy agreed to let the North Island it.ay a while at Broadwa y Pier, near downtown San Diego. but military shlps forced her to move to National Steel & Ship- building Co. Now, thlt com- pany says the North Island mu.it go. Tired, unwanted, the fer· ryboat whc:>u name brin1s nostalgia to San Dlegeos can't find a place to dle. FAIR F11t f,;,, f1cl111I. TlMit• thr11 .;.,,, t llr!I 11p r ....... 111 .,1,1tl•1t •11 th• DAILY PIL01 •'it1ri1f ,., •... ,ry , • ..,. INVEN10R '\TAX: SALE . UP , TO ~ J .- OFF 0 ••ICll FROM 1?:-...TO 12'!,._ DuPONT NYLONTRJ-COWRSHAG 100% DuPONT NYLON PILE. DEEP, RICH, DURABLE SHAG BEAUTIFUL NEW THREE COLOR DESIGNS. LOW FIRST TIME OFFERED AT THIS 1 SAU •l PRICE 99 SQ. TD. SAVE $3.00 COMPAIAILI Ill.AIL •••• , ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••· ••••••••••• $6. 99 Cadon· THEllWCEDNYLoNnoM MONSANTO THE CLASSIC PATTERNED CARPET 99 Codon® carpet' fiber provides outstanding carpet performance, longer wear,· greot res iliency, luxury feel, rich, permanent colors, ond it's easy to toke core of. ~··· NOW SALE PRICED AT •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COMPARAill RITAJL ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $7.99 SPECIAL TRI-COLOR · SHAG SALE! LOWEST PRICES EVER!! KOBEL TRI-COLOR SHAG DEEP PILE "\• Cl.eLANEsE• ~RTREL TRI-COLOR SHAG 100% KODEl POLYESTER PllE, RICH, DEEP, LUXURIOUSLY THICK PILE. MANY NEW HI-STYLE DECOU TOR THREE COLOR • SHAG TO SELECT FROM. RE SIST DIRT AND SOIL STAINS. Ttoo , ..... -......... AND HAID TO SOIL STAYS IEAUnfUL WITH A MINIMUM Of ~ LOW 99 100% f0111EL POLYESTER. LUSH, D!fP lONO.WfAllNG 99 c.... VUY lfStllANT. lfAUTlfUL DECOIATOI THlff LOW COLOI SHAG. , FIRST TIME OFFERED AT THIS SALE SCI. TD. SAVE 13.00 FIRST TIME OFRRED AT THIS SALE COMPARABLE RETAIL ••.• .'9.99 PRIU l PRICE COMPARABLE RETAIL ..••. 18.99 (..._.,....., .. ....._. .. ,.., ................. DuPONT NYLON SHAG 100'!. Nylon fiber_ Dee p, rich. du rable shag. Btout1ful new co:ors. 2!?. SAYE ..... COMPARABLE RETAIL •••••.••••.•••.. $5.99 • POLYESTER SHA 100% Polyester Pile. Beou11ful Htovy Shag. New colors lo selec: from. 99 SI. 'D. SAVI SI.II COMPARAILI llTAIL ................ $5.99 KODEL PLUIH 100% Kodel Polyester Pile. Rich, dttp, luxuriously thick pile. New decorator colors. 5" UYI .. .. COMPAIAILI llTAIL ................ $1.99 DACRON SHAG~~~~ 3Y2'' 100% Dacron Polyester Pile -Beautiful 6" new deep shag with o full 31/2'' pile. Many new decorator lri-colors to choose S:.::· from. NOW SALE PRICED AT ., .. COMl'ARAILE RITAIL ••••••••••••••••• $ 13.99 Cl.eLANese' .RTREL CARVED The 1es1ed nome in fiber s 5" 100% fortrel Polyester Pile. Popular two-level pollern. Combines beouty SCI. YD. ond durability. Distinctive but subtle :::: tweed colorotion. COMPARABLE RITAIL $8.99 DuPONT NYLON SHAG l 00% DuPont Nylon Pile. T ru/y one of the lh ickest. heaviest shags ovoiloble. SI. TD. 899 NOW SALE PRICED AT........... ::: COMPAi.AiLE RETAIL ............... $14.99 INDOOR·OUTDOOR CARPET FINEST QUALITY NAME BRANDS I " §xl2 ••••••••••••• 24•• 1,000'$ OF IEMNANTS , Ideal for family rooms. ploy rooms, dens. st. TD. SAVI COMPAIAILI IRAIL. ••••••·••••••••· .•••• , ••• $4.99 11.ot COMMERCIA&:·CARPETS CONTllACTORSI BUllDERSI HDMEDWNEISI 2" Your Choice! • Nylo• • Ntrculon .._YD. ..... COMPAIA.ILI llTAIL ••••••••••••••••••••••••• $4.99 COM,AUILI llfAIL ••• MALL _ .... .;;. .... ""·w.~~=~~::=~=-i ~~i;~~. 60 % i~::~-~-80 % LIVING ROOM, HALLWAYS, DINING ROOM, BAT~S. BEDROOMS CARS, ETC. lltllG Toua aoOM MIASUHMINTS • ... Mn• tr!UUI • CllllllllJll t:IQll IUllS 1111 .... lllll UllUIU • Clll,. 1111-11-lllllCI • lllllM--llPI. NDITH HOUYWOOD WEST LOS ANGELES' ANAHEIM MDNTEBEUO lDNG BEACH PASADENA GRAND Mt I , l1cll.t St. • 11141Wlldlln11¥4. 7007'""1= 71S W. Wlllttl., 11"1. JCIOl ltllft1wtr llM. 26 .. I. C.tM'He It••· 4n·JS2J '"''''4 11¥4.-tlJ. Son Diego Freewoy to W.wiire 2 blocks Horttl of Son1n Ana ,,...,,, 421-ltU 177·1 ... OPENING \ Hort)"M)Od frttWU'f IO SMrmon Turn-eff. " Blocks Wist Cll'I W~-ff"H'NOy on £uclid Acros' from Comet of Monrtbello 5on Di1oo FtlllWO';' to ltliflowtr (oiofodo llvd. ot Wvt Eo11 to Lourwl Conyon lltvd. shirt. Colifomio ftd«ol. ond WltiUitr Blvd. Blvd. Tum-offHorthonBtllflowtr. Son Gobriel Blvd. CANOGA PARK WEST COVINA HOLLYWOOD ~ VENTURA SAN FRANCISCO TOllANCE ' COSTA MESA 211H .,_ w.,. 112& L We,._ A"· • lllS I. VerMHt l•t • Ull LMlhlSt. 4214 ArffNt ""· 1714 NtWllOrt 11 ••• HM•n MIUllAE M7·2"4 Son lllfl'Ol'dino rrwv. 10 (il1'1.1$ -74SS -· Mutt•· Vfl'lllJrO fret'MJY 10 (Ofl090 Avf. 2 blocks Horii! of Holl't"lfl'OC)d . l block!. W1s1 of J2lllC.lilelt1I "I block lott of Howtho«ot 645-3020 North to SNnncm Woy thin n;ht. St. 2 block' N. on (itt'\11 to Work· IML Oft V•nnont frvt Poitits on Ml/wt &ti-USS llYd. en Atrttlf Newport Blvd. at I 71h SI. mo• • ' \ " -· . 14 DAILY PILOT Wtantsday, Ftbr~arr 17. 1~71 Unobstructed Vie'v The famous Morro Bay rock now has no competilion from ugly telephone poles after Pacific Telephone grounded the lines recently. The before and after pictures dramatically illustrate that spectacular scenery and utility poles don 't mix. Doctors Put Severed Handon Man Poker Player Initiates First World Card Meet • Congress V • • ~ 1ew1ng. '1sk Congress' Prograrn Slated for TV WASHL'iGTON (UPI) -and delivering the program three breaks for local an- Congress may be on the air plus the actual cost of the nouncements. soon with Its own television half-hour videotape at $80 Cott called the s e r j es show. (which becomes the property historic. r..1a1iagers ot the It will ~ called '·Ask of the station.)'' House recording facility Congress" and its answennen The show will run 2512 agreed it appeared to be un- wlll be key House members. minutes , allow~ng tiriie for precedented. starting with speaker Carl•-------'------------------------- Albert. Television stations are being offered details of the weekly public se rvice show to which they can subscribe at bargain prices. The show will be videotaped in the subsidized House recording studios. under direc- tion of Rep. Lester WoUf (D- N.Y.) a former television and advertising man. and Ted Colt, a New York lelevision productr. Wolff told a reporter 22 sta- tions had already exp interest in buying the show. tion managers, on a house of representatives letterhead, Cott says the half-hour weekly program will feature the Speaker, committee and sub- committee chainnen, and their Republican o p p o s i t e numbers, answering questions sent in by viewers. ';The questions to be. used will be selected by a rotating group or newspapermen and broadcasters aivering t h e Congress,'' Coll said. "The programs are being offered on a nol)-1)rofit basis with each station being asked to pay a nominal fee of $50 . and Sacramento (or San t froln Al • ' ~-. Ol11Wl19 San Francisco $18;Sacramento;$21 Tiiis ~~~ San Diego S8(all include tax). More flights l"Olmd CID S.F. than any other airline.PSA glYeS yoia a lft. SANTA ROSA (AP) - A surgical rarity, rejoining of LONDON fUPI) -Gerald a hand completely severed Fernback bluffed his card com- by a power saw, has launched panion.s out of a big pot with Charles Cooper on a promising a pair of deuces. It was at new career as a builder Clf that momenl of euphoria that scale models at the age of the idea came to him : simply for points in favor of chips backed by hard cas1}. But he has rejected them. In an offering Jetter to sta-on Friday. There will be seven for actual costs in producing players to a table, each ------------------------------------------- 51. The sublime art of th!' poker Aided by the damaged but player deserved a greater useful left hand, Cooper has arena than somebody's smoke- just completed a detailed filled dining room. model of the old Russ ian F'rom that i n s p i r a I i o n chapel at the Fort Ross state Fernback, an energetic travel park, which burned to the executive .. created the World ground last fall. Poker Federation which is The model is being used holding its first world cham- to raise public and private piOiiShiP at the Cai'lton Hotel funds for restoration of the in Cannes Feb. 21-26. "Give historic building, but that is us a few years and it will only one of Cooper's projects. be in the same category as He is working on models other big time international of homes, apartments, recrea-sports."' he said in a lional land developments and pretourney interviev;. industrial and commercial Despite a crippling British C<lmplexes, with queen-sized mail strike, Fernback expetts dol\houses as a sideline. at least 60 contestants to com- He does all the work bimsell pete for a silver trophy-no in his apartment in Sanla money. There are demands Rosa or on its patio, and he drop the idea of playing "We'd like to keep the pro- fessionals out," he said, "though we may not be able to do so. We're aiming for players, not gamblers." Femback has promises or participation from half a dozen Americans, some Cana· dians, Australians and South Africans and a major con· tingent from Britain mostly drawn from the renowned Curidn ~louse Club where gambling is a way of life. "I'm su re the Americans will be there." he said (not naming any), ··But due to the mail strike we haven't heard from them and they. of course, haven ·t heard from us." The championship rules call [or five days ol preliminary play with the seven top scorers meeting in the finals starting with 1500 units. At the close of play the units will be tallied and carried over to the next day. "By Wednesday the real bluffing ought to s t a r t , ' ' Fernbaclt said, "because by then many players will realize they must win a few hands or fa il to qualify." Each table will play five rounds, one round each of five card draw with the high hand winning, five card draw with the ICJW hand winning, seven card stud high hand, seven card stud low hand and a ro und of dealer's choice. "We've had so many offers of sponsorship that the World Poker Championships are cer· tain to be an annual event," he said. "l estimate we'll have 1,000 players by our third year." he does use small power tolls, 1-------------------------------- even though It was a radial arm saw that cut off his hand when he was employed in a builder's shop in June 1968. After an emergency opera- tion at Santa Rosa ~1emoria\ Hospital by Doctor's Stephen Cary and John McDonald, he \~as taken by helicopter to Stanford University hospital for further surgery by Doctors Donald Laub and Robert Chase. Now, 13 operations and \y,·o and one-halt years later, Cooper says he uses the restored hand extensively in his work. "I lost the ring finger and since then another finger had to be removed ," he said, but otherwise the hand is fine . '"I can't pick up small things, but I do have a thumb- and-finger grip and can hold small parts. ··1rs a lot belier than a hook, and I am optimistic for lhe future. ''I am righl·handed. and naturally do most work with my good right hand." Used sewing machines! Having worked as a grocer. ship joiner, lumberman and cabinetmaker, Cooper said he had fooled around with model making "in spare time and on a limited basis"' before his accident. Recuperating he has formed B.&.C. Enterptises -the "C" tor Charles and the "B" for Bert, nickname of his wlfe, Alberta. who does landscaping for hi! models. The Coopers have two grown sons. Also in the business is Len Gotshalk of Sebastopol, who hnd to give up his trutking business because of a leg in- jury. The men met while going to the same therapist. Cooper ls now working Cln a mod<I of o projOctelf $,OJIO. acre developnient. 1t a 5Ca1e of one inch equala tOO feet: 1 Only1 eachdayat thls prlce,Mon.$ 9·9 lhru S8L! Hurryin while lhey lastl PLUS other used machines at great savings-most by Singer. some other brands. Some in cabinets, others as portables. $19.99-$29.99 and up. Ftsl!lo!! Mate• porlablesewing machine by Singer Ii'! its own handy carr;ing case. Sewsfo<wan:I; reverne; mends and dams. or ha\'9 ltln a handsome cabinet for very little morel •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SAVE '18 TO '34 A SET ON OUR'78''SERIES LOW PROFILE TIRE FOR LATE MODEL CARS OFFER ENDS SAT. NIGHT! -GOODYEAR'S FINEST 4 PLY NYLON CORD "ALL-WEATHER 78''TIRE • Tul1yn rubber compound for tread wear •Angle Grip Tread • Low prof He for stability and handling • Our be1t 1elling 4-plynylon cord lire FREE MOUNTING ON AU TIRES "" .... ••i. '"' .. .. ... 11. Tu ,... ... ''ll:" Prlc• Prlc1 ~·tt l'l"lc• P1rTlf1 ••• .... .... '"' "" llt Tl"lllt 11.UWtll ll1dlw1n '#ll!trw•ll WIOU1w1ll """' 6.00-13 -$23.35 $18.61 $26.70 $21.3fi !l.60 7.00-13 -$26.20 $20.98 !29.55 $23.64 !1.95 E78-14 7.35-14 ~·'° $21.92 $30.75 1124.60 $121 F78-14 7.75-14 .00 123.20 $32.35 $25.81 $2.38 G78-14 8.25-14 . 1.75 $25.40 $35.10 $28.01 $2.55 H78-14 8.55-14 $34.85 $27.18 $38.20 $30.56 $2.74 F78-15 7.75-15 .00 ,,, $32.35 $25.18 $2.42 G78-I5 8.2>15 1.75 $25.40 ~5.10 $21.08 "" H78-15 8.55-15 $34.85 uJ.81 $38.20 $30.56 12.0l J78-15 8.85-15 $39.40 $31.52 $42.75 $34.20 $2.96 usr OUll It.I.I N CHrCk P'JtOGllAlof B«aUM of 11'1 ••pecl9d h11vr ... rnand fol Goodyeer lira, -m.r run out ot l(lme 1IZ9S dur1n1 thl1 °"91'" but w1 wlll be lltppy ID order your 1i11 Ii,.. 11 llM ~v.rtiMd prlt4: MCI i11111 )'OU• r•ln cheek lor lulu,. delivery ot IM men:htndlM. 3WAYS TO CHARGE ~ .. ~~ 1.~J 2.f.13·[' I 'f'I - - Now Av•llabl• GOODYEAR DOUILI EAGLE WITH STEEL TREAD ·'This includes mounta}Ds, streams. 2,700 trees, a thousand buildings, everytbing to seal•." he sa;d. GOODYEAR-THE ONLY MAKER OF POLYGLAS.TIRES "f carry lhroogh from cul· WATCH"SINGERpronn!S BURTBACHARACH" ...., __________________________________ _. •• nng the · lop o • -I he IN COLOR SUNDAY. MARCH 14, 9 PM '"''"'" - topographical el~a-;., r----------------------::~:~:.wn lo the final FO'-esscllhoSinQerSe<Oro SINGER'llloSlngor!Jtl§'CredttPlln I YOUNG & LANE TIRE co INC I "I think this should be C'Aimeroeerast)'OU.&ee'M* hefPI you hlYe thele mtehinos "peclally b'" e r; ci al . to f>aQes""""5'~COMA\N'f. · --wllhln l!!llll' budgeL I • • I developers. Instead of building 'A-dT><ESINGEAC:O'"""" LAGUNA BEACH COSTA MESA many home! in a tract. whlchlr----------... ~-..... ~ .............. -~ ... ---..................... -,11 I i~ costly. they can conJJtruct. COSTA MESA COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON ORANGE GARDIN GRO't'l 482 OCEAN AVE. e Phone •94-6666 IS96 NEWPORT BLVD. ty,·o or thret and 5how pro-ariirtl a ....,,_ 1»1 H1rw. ''""· l!ACH )I Sh111N11 r111 •n1 (M,,..•11 • Phone 548-9383 ~peel" b od I "' 'nt1 t:""""" " ..... " so-n•1 ,,..~11 I I repll~;: nr u~~;;ere~t d:lg~ *"' ':!:' "'"'' t1.,..., ·<"''" H111111~~.~,:4~,.t11 "'~• c11r" or•11•• c'""'' ,. .. 1. ALSO THEODORE ROBINS FORD-2060 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 642-0010 '"'''' '""''' and the Wllol• trac:I." 11,. __________________________ _,1_ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -• .I I • I I I I .. Wtdntldly, Ftbnwy 17, 1971 DAILY PILOT J5 -Growing Russ Presence at Sea Sparks West Activity , DJIBOUTI, Ea&t A f r l c a ~ (AP). -Juat how does the \Soviet navy stack up against Western warships in the Rtd Se• and Indian Ocean? 'l'here may be as many answera u warships. For ezample : Some describe the Island of Socctra in the Gulr of Aden as a Soviet refueling and communications base but journa11st! who new over ll recenUy say II appears empty. Others call the Somali port of Berbtra, opposite Aden, a ••potenUal military base." Two years ago an Assoc iate d Pres.!J cor· respondent visited Berbtra and rffported on lhe Soviet community, radio factlltles reaching Pacific neet head- quarters, and repair facllitles, as well as a vialt by two Soviet destroyers. Estimates of S o v i e t warships in the vastness of the Indian Ocean range from 20 to 30. The United States and Bri- tain are planning to build a $19-milllon air a n d com- municatioru: base on the remote Island ol Diego Garcia in the Indian ()cean. Britain has endangered relations with black Africa by discussing plami to sell new arms to the naval base at Simootown, South Africa. Both moves are to counter the Soviet buildup. The French navy and army have been here since 1866. Some S,000 troops a n d paramilitary units , backed by Ii ghter-bombers, transports and helicopters, guard this French territory and Its 'J>Orl Every day planes keep tabs on ships passing through the Babat Maneb Strait at the southern eod of the Retl Sta. Radio facilities hel'f' enable Paris to maintain unin- terrupted contact w I t h French vessels in the Indian Ocean and French possessions there, which include t h e Comoro Island! and Reunion. Western warships, Including those o( the U.S. Mideast for<?t, refuel and relillpply here. The airport, capable of handling Boeing 707s with ease, maintains a vital link beh\'een Europe and Indian Ocean points. ''The pessimists say , keep the Suez Canal closed and kttp the Soviet· navy out," a high Jl'rtnch offic ial ob.served. Shopkeepers along t b e shores of East Africa and sou thern Asia have a different view. So, apparently, does Paris. France would like the canal opened lo revive the e.xcellent port facilities here and brina some income into thla city. Commerce, faced with in- creased shipping costs follow· ing closure of the canal, would welcome les1 expensive rates and an easy way of 1blpplng fruits and veaetables from Ethiopia, Kenya and Tanunla to Europe and the Middle East. A year ago, before there was much public concern about Soviet naval expansion In the Indian Ocean, French officials in this ·•Unbaked notch, acr08.! rrom the former BriUMI strategic naval base 1t Aden, said their main purpose was to keep the peace between Somalia and Ethiopia. Ethk>pla wanll the French terrliory, if France Pulls out. The Franco-Ethiopian railroad from DjlbouU IO AddiJ Ababa is vital to Ethlopla'1 ~y. Somalia, made up of the former ltallan and British Somallland!, also c I a i m s Djibouti. It was once known as French Somallland. A war between Somalia and Ethiopia would pit Somalia's Soviet-trained army and aili force a11lnst Ethiopia's U.S.· trained and equipped forces. P'ttnch officials say rumor1 Uiey .. m pu11 out by '1170 are unfounded, but concede that much may change in nine ye an. Emperor Halle Stlass!e of Ethiopia will be 7t this year . SomaU1'1 mUllary tt:glme If.Ill !lncb corrupUOn, trJbalilm and mm unemployment. .Meanwhile members or the French Foreign Legion guard outposts aeroM this area of 11,500 squ are miles known to- day as Terrilore Francals des Afan et du: Juas. A double fence with a ' mine field; en.. circlel DjlbouU. Personal service at llutual $~Ylogs . •• '*'· ,~, •• ;: 11 ·~ ! ,,f i. .... .. ' ' • J • • " ,, ' . '' • •. , I : : I ' I : ; i , ·F.INAL STOC.KS! ''" " '•'-' I • ~ . 0 • '· ' ' , .. " • -. '. ' ' ' . ' < " ., ~-•: -,. " '' ·' '" • ' .. . -lo';: .. , ... , ..... i~ ). .. ' .. . -~ , . ' . " .. • _, .. • ,. . . ' -'\ .. .. • ' I .. • ' i' . . \' ·-• + ~· • • • .. . . .. ...... , _ .. , 'J> .... ,.. ' ...... ' o\. ., .. , • ' -.... " " ' ' " " .: :.'. ~: ' i -0-, " .. ''I' j \l•I' •' I -t ,. . ~ I.~. •1.,,,..,, , .. ,T' .Jill ··~. --... . .. .. ' '. fa ,• I: " .. ·•· ,, ' . ~' • ,1 .... ·~ .J ' •. · -~1 ,t ;,;.1 1 ...... ,1 ;,,,~ ... · f " , ll ·,i ' ... ::-'· "· ""' ... ·~· c ·; /", ' ' .. ·~ ... , :: I . ' ,. The Big M is big enough (over $434,000,000) to pay the nation's highest Interest on Insured savings ••• 5% to 6%. But equally important-cares enough to give you very per3onal service. "' Cerone .. .._Mlot: •1 lllt Colet HJfhw1y /IJl-5010 Ot.'"•r otfieta i" Govin&. WHtArcadia, Palldtn•and Gllndll• ' :vr ,.T-l,h r • S!oi·i-: ·~ J is i ··~ 'l: ... ' , , ., .. '• ' ' ' " . ' ..... •• ,.,. ; ... , ! ·• ·• ··<ii ..... ' ,,,_, ...... .... ,• ., ~ .. ,,._ -···· -·' ·'•11· . ,\ ' • • '"•·r "" I ,.r&(,..,,1, ... ,., rt, .... ,... ,., .. ...... "'' -~"" ,..,. ,, ...•• .... l .1>1~ '·~ I''· '-,,· -.... ' H-~ • + .. j " ' .. • ' " •.. ,.:·;I.~,~'.·' . ',; ., " , .. . ., .. " " " " , , .. .. , . I ·' ..... ; ,, ... , ~· • • •'" '• . I • ' -.. . . )'' . >i'h '~;) (~, i: I t ~i~;', ....... .. ' . . 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" • • I ~ ' ' ,~~ J. ltel•er,1111) MD :-Speak ·a b • u t unpleasant 1edori ind most people feel ettended. The)''d nther-hear ·about or1n1e bto.uom1 and s.rf\lme11. It's 1 natural, 1.bum1n 111ction. Yet.. we c.-n't nm away from prdblems th1t intedery; w.it~ OW' j\Ormal way of life. TV ads, for example, 1 b o .u t f'tmedles for bad breath underline the immeraity of the probiem. And letters. from r:eaden: who llffk relief. Dear Dr. Stelncrohm : I've ·tried practically everything. but I'm plagued with bad bruth that ruins my bu$iness . and aocial life. Whenever J 1peak to someone I avert m~ DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE head or hold a hand ov'er my mouth, I always Bet em· barrassed. It has made me very seU-conscious. Can you givt me any information that qUght help me ? -Miss )f. OOMMENT: Oh, to have the fresh , sweet, pleasant breath of a young child. There's no superior perfume . Unfortunately, u we grow older, some of us begin to have breath that iJ Jess pleasant. Jn some cases, ac- tually disagreeable. That seems to be your pro- blem, Miss M. You say you have tried all kind1 of remedies. J suppose ,you ·refer to mouthwashes, gargles and aimilar concoctions. In mild: cases. perhaps they · help. But when bad m:eath becOmeS a major iss~. then more detailed study and treat- ment may be required. Have you consulted a nose and throat s p eci alist? Anyth ing in the nose that in· terferes with breathing -and accentuates mouth breathing -may cause bad breath, such a.s enlarged turbinates ar deviated septum. Do you have large tonsils and adenoids? Decaying food. acted on by b11cteria, may be lodged in the crypts of tht tonsil.!!. How are your teeth and gums? And here Is an Important (I point often overlooked: the condition of the tongue. It may be badly coated. Especially way back where there are deep groove!! that contain decaying particles of food. Many of my patients have found great relief by brushing the tongue vigo rously two or three limes daily . After you have taken these steps. to evercome your p~ blem . Mi ss M .. then you can tum to a coosideraLion or which mouth wash or tablet or other medication seem• to help. too. "1EOTCALETI'~ (Replies to Readers\ .For Mrs. T.: I wish I mlghJ give you 11 specific remedy for your ~year-old who grinds. his teeth pracli cally every night. There is none. Most children get over it in lime. But 1hose who overcome ll early are those whose parents realite that the child is less likely to grind his teeth - or have bad dreams and night terrors -if he is relaxed before bedtime. This takes planning by parents. He shouldn't be too stimulated. or go to bed in a house filled with tension. Re"view these suggestions and see whether they make a dif· ference. I. would try sedstives only ¥ 1 list resort. • • • Dear ·Dr. ~'telnertln1: This concerns your cormpenl In ·I rttent column on whether" throwing a baby In the air and catching him Is bid. My conviction Is that it is so very b,11d it haa resulted in death. My roommate . ha,d left his ~ick wife and baby sO~ wllh his parent:i: in MasssichUsetts. The grandf1thtr Would ~come home from' watt, pki \f µ.. toddler, thrOw him qqkkly high abo" hl1 -· TM-~b)' would laugh II t'li/•. Cr1ndf1ther dtd k Met too often. The child died m IOI ann1. The 1tteo<llnC pbylldan .. 1d that the child 1....,,..i so hard the 1lr was auddentY cut off. Can you e:s:plllm? - Mr. B. COMMENT : I can 't eq>l1ln because J don't \.now all the clrcumstaras Involved. AU I tried to get over In that column Is that parenL, and other grownups should gu11rd against too much horseplay with small c hildren . Somellme1 they may b e terklusly Injured If physical play gets oul of hand. - Wednesday, February 17, 1~71 l'ILOT·AOVERTISElt 3 H.1.VE YOU VISITED OUR NEW STORE .AT1 ..OUNTAllll \l'ALLIY -17904 M..,,·111 St. It T1 IMr1 ~OUNTAllt \l'ALLIT -16U1 H••llO• alYd .• 1111n11r IL TOlllO -II Ton fl lllodlfi.wl Road tOITA MIU -lJDCI Hl,...,r 111/d. 11 Wllwl St, COSTA MlLl -1.U I!!. 11tll St. ~ # NUNTIMOTON I EACH -tlll Adtfl'll fl I~ HUfrfrlNGTOtt llACH -l..ell I E.d~ HUHTIHITOjll IEACH -Wln'ltt .. Spri.ii. '5881 Wafner it Springdale in Huntington Beach HUNTIHeTON llACH -2112' llKll l lvd. f l All.ill SANTA ANA -I.e. W. f.dll'lltf" Ind lr .. tol St. WllTMIHSTIR -6W' Whl"llfltlff tt GoldMI Weal I ~ Manager's Sale! Our Manacer's SaYlnca Spectac1lar Brines Yo• Todar's Beat Bir• ~ , ... ,... • Jhtlfty o,.,. •11d Dl1ctunl S 91'9 ""'" 1t1 o,.n 7 D•p • w .. 11; _ ..... L.t• ••• ,, .... fw l'IMlr Sh9"itl"I C9"Y9tto Mftft. S•lt tl•rt• t..My threvth T11t1doy. ,Al Thriftrl Dlscoanls 01 Everything For Your Famllr .And Home! 'il .. .... ~ Compares te others sellillg SSS morel . Reg •. 'l21 Sayelle® Knitting Yarn 39~.0ven-Fresh Jumbo Cookies Pou~ -Animol, Ceramic . 40" Table La,m~ . 5" -i7" Values Wall & Door Mirrors ~~~p~:iJ:'V'h:r: ·$333 Solid State 12' Pocket Radios 4 Ply .Acrylic-4-oz, shin Choco1ott Vonillo YMr ~c• Oupl., ,;,.,.,.,,,: 3, 79' Highly fired glo.zt & matte fini1hes In cft. corotor colOI' bot!_i, whit• *iodes. 3 • woy 1wlteht1. s7•1 With """'°"'· botto.y, $354 N1.ds no blocklng. Mo· chirit woth, fol.t cot0ts, mothproof. Block, Whitt, Novy, B•own,.JMw spring i;plors. . . . $3.98 Value! ,;In" ,~!~l!~"glaY.H l"O popul" A•~· $197 tor with metol flmi · Thrihy '°"' price. un· Uc ·'1"50Ft.x l/2 ln, Vinyl Garden Hose !1-pl'r' ~ fMIU~ $1 '' top quoli1y ~form- onct (;, tesrtd mote- ~iols ~r long life. "Mirror-Fin- iih",oll bms~c~lings. ,.,. S I0.00 · S39.95 Value! Huffy 20" Dragster BikH Fw ltyt 6-Girh N•• Btr.dix pO~liYe Gol4 Colw 0-c Ii o l'I brokcs, Kl'IObby re o r tires. polo M>d- dle. -/~--- ~ .. __,,,', ~~£~. S 13.19 5 Pound Fiii Sleeping Bags W • o tht nuipped ~ Hti2vy cotton CIOO· $966 lln ccw.1, flonnd. lonl'lg, IOO•• 1ip- p.e<. J] .. 75" $6.91 I O·Plece ...._.,,H1lr Cllpper Sets tv•ryhiino nttdtd $ 5;,, for , proft11ionol ~ _ "ho1rCvt. P4Y1.jor il- l .,.lf. Seri• $.1 .. 55. ' s I" Values larreHH aid Hair Tin Rcptlle, Tortci'lt, '""' c~ Si.ttdf, Wood, othtr 66" borrtttts! Yorn • Holr Tift Ct S.11 l'ltot l'onvtoll Tits. - e$. 1.4 -or. Animol, O Lemon, Ootmeol, lty glon. Complete with corry cos.. Grcot tont- old foshiori.d co· I coonut, .sugor lu7Jt•4M¥t.Jlc cookit~ Fig Bon. >ionger clips. Terrific • 'i'Oluet. brirogs l'1 most 1totionl. Save $1 .45 in Big Solt! '311''Real Girl' T1ssr Eyelashes Rool .hol• ,,.. $11, trimmed in bose strip of i"visible ' nylon. OiK. pkg. . • tic: Due fr•l•th .A4hniT• .. , ...• , 77c Cleor or new Dork Torie. Reg'. 11111 Regent Baseman's or Catchers' Mitt S1v1 s 1.11 $9'' JallaVodka or Castle Gin 3911 Value! Grape 4g; Avoca•• '3::, 1 Q1art Spaghetti Cooker Tho "'Y wovto $29' Swag Lamps Glassware Sale fifth Gallon y ... a. .... $277 Thrifty exdu- siv• ond bttt sellers! Offtf' 1 ::;: 1~~·$19'' of gropts! 81~ Gr•tn or Lime/Green. Assembled. • t • ,,.it l•wl .. • 7" C•"'r 1-1 • Dl•l4M, 1..a IMI, f.ttff. Cen4y Di1h... Serving pit(I$ to blend wilt! mo$t toble Wllingl. 27! boil &. droin ony bulky food. Jn- se t elimlnotn boll•oYtr. Sove 70c now. good for a lim!t.cf time only1 -$4" Olympic Stripe Sport Shoes Sporty vinyl 1.1ppt.°r1, non-s!ip- solt1, full cvshlon lnsoln or.d orcht.s, podded tongue. $3'' $3.98 Women's Mo-Iron Spring Shirts 2~$7 Pcrmo Prtu Styles! • Othtt Lent si...,. Shirt• •. , 2 fff $5. P•r m o Prt11white blo..;:r.es, print '11 soli d skirts. 1i1e 7 to l .c. ....;...."'--~--:--Boys' Flare Leg No-Iron Jeans Fashion Stripes G~y "''"In $398 new col0t com- bos. 8to1 B. $5.95 Women's Mini Wrap Dusters 2 for S 1.18 Stalnless Kitchen Helpers IAYl Your 2 ~771 Cl1 ChcHc• a • 5,,,.,,. • llfttw k•ift t"4 S11ttr S...-11 • 1,..k,.,1t, St .. k b H .. hl• K11iw1 • GNvy Lt4ho • Tell Driflk !,.efl • M"'91 Btoutiful Imperial ttuin1ns steel fjrya (T work liOVtn. 1 ~ 8.19 Metal s511,." 16-Pc. Dinnerware Set Folding Table ;"'""'' " $6'' Hot Oronve/ Doi.,-decomtion. u. shaped tvbfle11 I t t t I leo1. 24x60". S1rvic t ....... $3" Cups, souc•n, dlnnfl'". brtod 't1 but- ttrplotes.. $1795 Value! I Occasional ::.:: Tables Reg.1211 Disney Character Wall Plaqun • C11~t • CKkttiif . ""··-~h~r,. $11 •1 Conttmporory kl• ble$ with M.d!ter- roneon motif fin- i$htd in Sponisk Ook. N-beauty for your home! Mewl 2 Foot All Wood Step Ladders Rl!f. $1.1 9 M1t1>'1 • y.,_1111 99' Baseball Caps •• I ,.,. 211 Reg, Uc lox of I DD Stuart Hill EnrtltpM 6 ¥4" stondord •z• ·with mint floYOred MOI, Stock Up. 27' C er D Slit c k. of Z MaHorJ Flashlight Batterltr Ptck tf . '" '"" 2 :, 21· gomn, ftolh· lights. $8.15 Val. 4-Shelf · I Foot UtllltJ U.nlh SllYtry shelvt1 with ptbblegl'Qin f inish .t:4H rtsist flolt.ing, Nit~ "f lng. 30'' wide ond ,, , · . 12" dttp. ' SI.II If Ptrleot! Factorr Smoker Cigars • PilfftetM • lh111h • ICi•tt • , ......... , ..... ,. l 1.tN1 111pt 1rrtp11n •f -'-"· s2•• Cl'I liJf MIU ...... II ~ 1111111 ... • tl(llt. .. ,., ., .. IAVE 2et Reg. lie Checolatt Pound lrldgt Mix ~ ·~ 59' UYI Ila Reg. 12 for s I .ZD Ice Crum SandwlchH Stoclr. 119 ,,, freeitr. 12 198' ' .. ·. , Wtdntsd11, F'tbt'IW7 17, 1971 West Apologizes After 130-115 Romp Moon Golf ·- Is Ont of LOS ANGELES -In lhe aftennalh of a Los Angeles Lakers victory, Jerry West Y.'BS apologizing for h i s performance. ''I feel I didn't shoot well," said the I.alters' all-pro guard. "The shots were being forced. I just bad a goed streak In .the third quarter.·• West's third quarter statistics showed a missed shot -his 45lh in 59 tries -and then seven straight baskets and 19 points in the quarter as !he Lakers overtook the defending National Basket· ball Association champioa New York Halo Aces Hold Out; Fregosi Inks Short-stop Ji!n Fregosi, I as t of the original Angels. has signed with the California baseball team, but General M8I)ager Dick \Valsh still has plenty of problems. Alex Johnson \Von the American League batting championship and he hasn '.t signed. Neither has pitcher Clyde Wright, who woo 22 games in 1970, or Tony Conigliaro, "•bom the Angels acquired in trade with the Boston Red Sox. Fregosi, a 10-year veteran with the Angels. signed for an estimated $'75,000, his best contract, following hls best year ·with, the American League club. The 28-year-old infielder, six times an AL Ml-Star including 1970, hit .273, led lhe team in home runs \Vith 22. and al.so had his best year in runs-bat· ted-in with 82 and runs s c o r e d with 95. Fregosi also hit a career high in doubles with 33. His fielding average of .973 was his besl ever with the fewest errors - lll. Freg•i was selected by California In the txpanslon draft on Dec. 14', 1960. Last season, he ran his career home run total lo 110 and his runs-batted-in to 513. , A high sChool star at San Mateo, he entered professional baseball upon graduation. The ~root 2, 19&-pound short-stop col· lected his 1300th major league bit last Aug. 22 at Baltimore when he won the game for California, 3-2, in the tenth inning. Walsh. who announced Fregosi's sign-- Ing Tuesday, said, "It ts the best 'contract to which 1 have signed a player since I have been with the Angels." Walsh has held his job two years and made frequent tta'dt! yet Fregosl remain! a solid fiKture lvith the Angels. Seattle Star's Future Shal{y After Ruling s.•N FRANCISCO (AP) -The Na- tional Basketball As.!OClatk>n has a federal court go-ahead to penalize the Seattle SuperSonics i! they play Spencer Haywood again, and a Sonics attorney said the big forward won't play in SeatUe tonight against Portland. Just when Haywood will be able to get back on the court is . u~rtain. Also uncertain is what penalties. 1r any, the NBA would impose if the Sonics play him without court protection against league sanctions. r..1e1 Monheimer, an attorney for the SuperSonics, said in Seattle Tuesday night following a 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruling here: "We are not going to let Haywood JJuit up. Jn fact, he won't even be on the playing court Wednesday night." Haywood, a 6-foot-9 former Olympic star who broke a six-year contract with the Denver Rockets of the American Bastetball Association to sign with Seal· tle Dec. 28, has played 23 NBA games. He has .averaged 19.6 points and 12 rebounds a game, but says the t'Oll· troversy over his contrad has hurt his same ahd kept him from adjusting to \he new league. · The other NBA clubs have protested Seattle's playing HaywOOd, Jl, on grounds league rules forbid using a player before his college claS.'1 graduates. Had he re· mained at the UniveM:ity of Detroit, Haywood would be graduating in June. But last month the Sonics got a tem- porary injunction in U.S. District Court at I.m: Angeles preventing the NBA from tmj,osing sanctions on Seattle for using Haywood. Then in appellate court bert Tu£sday, Ult NBA won a ruling staying that preliminary injunction onlil Haywood 's cue is tried in the lowtr court at Los AngeJes March J. }ligh Schoo l Five Wins by 137 Points • lJNlONTOWN. Pa. -The Albert Gallatin High Scttool basketball team defeated West Greene High School, I~· alj 'l\Jesday night behind the 5+po1nt t~ing of St.an Boskovlch and 37 poinls l~m KeMy Va\enclk, both junior•. Tbjrteen player• scored for Gallatln, rive In doubles figure«. The halfllmc tcorc "'as 1~17. KnJckerbockers and went on to a 130-115 victory. West Jelt early In the fourth quarter with 31 point.s. His running male at guard, Gail Goodrich, added 27, including nine straight In a 21-6 surge in the last period as the L..akers put it away. Laker coach Joe Mullaney praised Goodrich "the key to our win" but downgraded the victory, the Lakers' 11th straight at home. "Let's face it, Willis Reed was not himself,'' Mullaney :$aid ol tbe Krucks' center, who led hls team with 23 points but had only nine rebounds in 38 minutes. Reed had mia.wd, two games wilb a knet Injury, · '.l'he Laters dOminaled the bowds, Mo 41, with Wilt Chamberlain cOUecting 21 rebounds to go with 19 points. The stumping Knick.s had only Dave Debusschere's 10,<XX>tb polnt, a fadeaWay jumper from the key, to cheer them as they lbst their seventh in eight starts and saw their Atlantic Divisio n lead pared .to three games qver Philadelphia. ARKANSAS' VERNON MURPHY {14) LEAPS INTO TROUBLE. TCU's Jim Ferguson Attempts to Defend. TCU Triumphed, 92-86. Stanford's Bowl Conquest . Still Reaping $ Harvest lt is not unusual (or people or groups who seldom taste success to forever relish their few noteworthy achievements many moons after they have transpired. Take, for instance. Stanford University -an institution that has been eligible to play in every one of the Rose Bo\vl football games since the New Year's classic began 69 years ago. Stanford entries have been in the Rose --------WHITE WASH .._. ____ __ Of.INll WNITf Bowl twice since 1941 -onl"C in • 40-7 hwniliatlon suffered at the hands or JJlinois, the other the 27-17 upset or Ohio Slate less than two months ago. The latter has been cause for con- linuing jubilation ilmong the ranks of Stanford friends, followtrt and especially the grads. The grads have been granted tht privilege or getting another look at that 1971 cooquut o{ Ohio Slate via the marvel oi color movies. Naturally such occasion is the scene of much socla liilng, some exaggerated story ltlling and thtn lhe screeni n' ol lhe Rose Bo"·I \vin. The latt.er continues to provide in· spiration for those who \vaited so long for a New Year's Day victory and thoughtful caretakers of Stanford's finan· cial future are careful lo take full ad· vantage of the situation . They ask for donations. One Ind ian alum -not known generally as a benevolent felto~ and surely not a philanthropist -'''as so moved at what he saw on the screen he. pledged $100 lo the Buck Club (which raises funds to help support Indian athletics). A few days later when his ecstasy had subsided, lhe donor suggested he had been brainwashed and that thi;y "-'OU\d have to run plenty fast lo catch him -and tbe pledge. * * * You begin to ""·ooder bow much looger UCLA's basketball team c:u keep palllag not !host seemf111ly lmpo15lhle wins. If the Bruins somebow win tbe Pacific.a and tbtn extend their miracle by wlnnln& anotber NCAA trown. coach John Woodett 1bould bf given a lite p111 lo fleaven. UCLA'• last thrff \ltctorle1 could all have beea lulles ·aod many observtr• fed Otey lhould b1ve bee• rtl'er&als, In re~ptd to ,.•hat trant plrtd nn the c:ourl. ---~---·------~ The Lall:ers extended their Pacific Division lead to S'f.i gamu over Idle San Francl.!co. They tall:e today off, then travel to Portland Thursday. Tbe O.kers outrebounded New York, SS-CJ, with Wilt Chamberlain grabbing 21 \o go wllh ~~ 19 points. Keith Etlck!on helped out with 13 rebounds. Oebusschere joined lbe 10,000.polnt club with eight minutes to play as he hit a short jump shot from the key. The game was stopped, and a charter member o( I.be 10,000 and 20,000-polnt clubs, the Lake t I• EI & ID Baylor, pre1ented the ball lo ilelJulleber<. NIW YOlllt · Loi M .. Lf.1 1tft tft .. """' 4 .t-s 11 wes1 · 10 U011 :s1 Fr.Jltr • J.1 11 Goodrkll 11 Ht t7 lltMd It W U CMll'lbefl•lli • "1. It Dt8wdltte I >J Ii Erkk-t M 4 8rHl1y t ,_, tt Htlr11o!! f 1if )!) l'Ulll'IDA ) 0-0 ' M«•rfll, s M: ' ll ... JI I 2·1 4 MCMl'»P S t..+ 1-ll ll-111 J 1·1 11 HIQ:1I , t .. t St.ti/wtr111 o 6-0 t llllsf t ">1 a ~I • N 0 ft.-,._ .l H 4 Prlc:1 JMt • 111111 • 2wt llS Tot•!• U t .. # UO H1w 'fllftl: tt tf fl 31 -Ill 1M Alltt'ltt U V JS 41 -!Ji 1'•1111 M -MOM. . T1l•I lwl• -Nol* Yfl"k 20, l.-. """""' Z1. .. ~ -11M6. • --, Sheriff Lo·vellette Switches to TV TERRE HAUTE, l"d. (AP) - A &.foot- t, 2.W-pound sheriff y.·ould probably have inspired fear in the worst of the Old West badmen. But former Vigo County Sherlff Clyde Lovellette generally gets a different reaction from his prisoners. The .fO-year-old ex sheriff is a well· known former professional basketball player and a lesser-known television and radio personality. lie is now· back in TV and radio at a local slation here. Lovellette. a tw0-time All-American at the University or Kansas, 19$1-S2, played in the National Basketball Association for more than a decade. He was a standout center and forward who played In Minneapolis, St. Louis and Boston and on three NBA champklnshlp teams. He was well known for his pleasant disposition and sharp elbows, a not-too- unlikely combination in pro basketball. Lovellette, a Republican. was the vic- tim of a Democratic sweep in this western lndiana county ln the November electiorui, losing by 844 votes to a county sur.veyor. So on Dec. 31 he left office after one four·year term. "A lot of the prisoners recognize me. They know who l am around here. The one medium they have to watch In prison is television and they watch a Jot of sports." said Lovellette. "Being sheriff was a fine experience. Before I became sheriff, I sold TV time and did the color on Indiana State University football and basketball games. 'fhat's what -I'm going back in~' he ad- ded. · Lovellette is nO newcomer to lbe media . He said he was a Sunday morning disc jockey on a St Louis raruo station while be was playing with the old St. Louis Hawks. He said he hasn'l seen too much Sports ht Brief pro basketball since the Hawks moved to AUanta several years ago, although be does get to see some Indiana Pacers games. "The NBA today is a kit meeker than when I was playing," said Lovellet· te. ''The game is a lot faster and there is a little more finesse today. They are a lot better shooters. "We drove more and the battling on the boards was rougher. We played a lot to Ute middle man." "When Wilt Chamberlain came into lhe league (NBA), I held my own against him. I played with George Mikan an all-time pro great and the first of the "big men" and George in his prlme could have held his own with lhe!e kids today." As for the newer American Basketball Association, Lovellette called it "a lot like the old American Basketball League~ That folded four or five years ago, but the ADA is a lot stronger and they 'play pretty good basketball." Lovellette began refereeing high school and college basketbaU two years agb. "I decided It would be a good way to stay in shape and I knew the1 game. Also, I've given a lot of offJcial1 a lot of hell. I thought It was a lot easier than t.hey made it. • .until 1 got into it. "lt's a tough job to oirJciate a game the way it's played today. The game is faster and everybody is on you a11 the time .•. the fans, the coaches, the players,'' Lovellette said. "I've never been offered a coaching job and I don't know if I'd like it. But r w o u Id like tb ofnctate In ' the pros. 1 don't know if I'm too old or not, but I'd be interested." Savage to Pilot Eagles; , Wells Gets Fine of $125 DETROIT -Swede Savage. auto rae- lng's most heralded young driver, has been officially named to pilot the Olsonlle Eagle on the USAC circuit this year, succeeding internat ional driving star Dan Gurney of CQsta Mesa, who retired at the erid or the 1970 season. In a joint announcement, sponsors of the Olsonlte Eagle. and All-AmerJcan Racer!'I, Inc., Santa Ana , builders of the Eag le racing cars, said Savage would compete in all 13 of the !'1Cheduled USAC races, including the Indianapoli!'I 500. In previous years. Gurney limited his ccampaign with the Olsonlte Eagle to USAC road course races and the In. dianapolis rioo, although he did run in the inaugural 500-mile race al Ontario International Spee<lway last September. • OAKLAND -W id e receiver Warren Wells of the Oakland Raiders was fined $125 in Municipal Court Tuesday after pleading no contest to a misdemeanor hit-run charge but faces a more serious court challenge Wednesday. Tuesday's hearing was before Judge Robert Friborg, who imposed the fine for an accident last December In which \Velis allegedly hit a parked car and then left the scene. On Wednesday he is to appear in Alameda County Superior Court for a hearing before Judge Leonard Oieden on revocation of probatlon sterruplng from a charge ot attempted rape. If it should be revoked, Wells could face a prison term. Jn addition, he faces hearings later on two charges of drunk drlvlni. in San Francisco Jan. 31 and the following day in Oakland. • In Tuesday night's college basketball games, Ohio State, rated No. 20 in the major college pol1, rallied to b .e a t Wlsconsin 7~71, Teias Tech ran away from Texas 70-.55, Purdue nipped Illinois · 73-70, Indiana routed Michigan Slate 90- 76, Duke coasted by Davidson 64·55 and Geor~town edged Boston College 67-66. ·• ' ' This World NJl\V YOlllC (AP) -Driving a in>l; bah, Oil Ibo .-would be very eX· h1J1r1Ung ·but'-put ling would drive ypu craz:y, the former administrator Of the National A,eronauUcs and S pa c e Admini$tration says. 4'The~ 'fOU.ld be. a. lol .of aeVen a;oo elghtJputt greens and no . grMn to putt on,;" Dr. Thomas Payne added. "lt woold be , almost impossible ltf sll'ik · a put1 on the moon. It wotikl he like puttfpg underwater.'' · Dr. Payne descrJbed possible golf ;On the moon alter rtctlVing a trOphy frOm the MetropOutan GQll Writers ~lation . , ' in the name o[ aatronaut .Capt Aliln. B, Shepard Jr., the first man to ~t a golf ball on lhe..,.,,.t ~"°"'' ' .. . . ' . Shepard,-~tp q?'_raot~:.r..i:a •. u.:n a b l e . . ' . •.. . . . 'What'• yours taate like?' to ~pt the award tn person. Tbe hastily conceived award ll'as calJed the "Mulligan Trophy," n~.ed !or the practice common to duffers taking a second !hot of! the tee alter mu!fm& the first. Shepard, using a six.iron head attached to one of hi!'I craft's instruments, took two swings on the m~n and commented afterward!; "It goes miles and miles.·· Dr. Payne,. who ·oversaw all manned flights to the moon prior to leavlng NASA last year for a v1ce presidency wilh General Electric, said Shepard (lid not exagi:Uaie too mucn. "You can figure that the ball wif! travel six times ' as (ar as it would on Earth because the gravity is one· sixth that of the gravity on this planet,'* the aeronautics expert explained. "The ball would fly straight and far and • it would be imposSlble to slice or hook beca~ there is no resl!tance. "Also, the surface of the moon is like small bead1. The ball, once it has landed, would hit and bounce f.or many more yards, so one can get a great deal of distance." · · This, however; would •be all the fwi that a golfer could derive from an el· cursion to the. moon, Payne said. "When you start to putt, the ball would' do all sorts · or crazy thtn:gs .and likely would skid and go rigbt past lhe hole. It would lake a lot of thots to sink it," he added . Phil Strubing, president. of· the U.S. Golf As.wciation, announced at the dinnu he was immediately su.spending Shepard from amateur golf. · "Shepard Said he was given three golf balls by His club pro back in Houston," Strubing said. "That's ·a viola. lion of !he rules. That makes him 11 profe!SionaJ." And the-Royal and Ancient Club of St. Andrews, Scotland, militant guardian of the sport, !8.id Shepard should be penalized for not· replacing .tUs divot. "This is a violaUon of ethics;" the R and A insisted. But it was Bob Hope, the t'Omedian, golfer and golf promoter, who •lllmined up the meaning of Shepard's feat to lhe average Earthbound du.Her. "I aiwaya wandered -what was wrong with my golf," Hope said. "Now l·know-. it's gravity!" Newport Athlete Killed Funeral services are pending tor former Newport Harbor High alhlett Ron T~oyano, who was killed in action Feb. 7 while serving with the U.S. Anny in Vietnam, The 20-year·old ex·1Vewport ~port3 ace was reportedly killed while on duty near the Laotian border. Troyano was the son of Mrs. Carl Troyano, 418 Snug Harbor Rd ., Newport Beach. 1Us body is en route to Oakland, where it will then be escorted back to I.he Orange Coast am by one of his high school teammates, Ron Leavy. Ron Troyano was a baskeball player, baseball outfielder and football quarter- back·tallbact for the Sailors. An~ he ls _re.membered by his coaches: AL HACKNEY -Basketball: "Ron y.·as on the Bee team Thad thal went 21·1. He was a sophomore starting guard and later came up on my vanity, although he didn 't start. "My players were all very close and wbeit J was told he had been kJJled l felt tears In my eyes. It was though I'd lost my own aon. · ''Ron would do anything for you -he was a very coachable peraon." Hackney's Bee team was tremendous, !COring over 100 points on eight oc- casions and chalked up 118 in a game with COsta l\.f~ . ANDY SMITH -Baseball: "He was one of the best compeUtors I ever coached. He was a tremendous hustler, a true athlete. He was a very heady player -always knew how to re11.ct in certaln situations and was an out.standing base runne:r. "He was basically a sweet ll:ld who tometlmes put on a tough exlertor." WADE WA1TS -FooibaU: "He was a key quartt~ck and liter • afngle wing tallback. He could throw fairl y well, run fairly well and played defense. He had 11. lot oC all·round ability, which 11 demonatrated by the t1:cl he w11 Jn three &ports. 10 ----~---- RON TROYANO 'E•·Ar•a f.thla~ • . Jf DAILY '1LDT WtdntSday, F"tbfU.lry 17, 1971 Mater Dei Has Shot At Playoff By ROGER CARI.SON Of HI• Dollly ,.lltl Sll H ,. Miter Dtl Hlgh 's Monarchs are suddenly back In the run· ;-1nlng for 1 berth in lhe CJF -; buketball playoffs, thanks to 'a couple or events w h I ch .~ .. transpired Jn the Angelus i-Le1gue Tuesday night. ' First, Miter Del 11lammed · Invading St. Paul, 84-61. . Then St. Anlbony staggf'red · Servile, 51-M. The latter result , · enables Mater Dei to tie ·.Servile for second place in .~the loop with ont gamf' left. If the two finish the circuit • ·.campaign deadlocked for se- • --eond, there is a possibility - • • both woo kl be admitted to th~ playoffs. League champions and run .. \--nersup from 14 leagues will t autom1tleally 10. then teams , tied will be given con· ! tideralion for the other four : vacancies. : St. Anthony's spoilers will : provide the opposition and the • gite for Mater De.i Frld1y. • • Tuesd1y·s debacle was little : mort than a workout for the • • Monarehs , who finally got un-~ tracked after thr1?e straight : Ange.Ill! loM~s. ~ The host! could do little wrong in any phllae. of th~ir game. Tardie had said earlier that • his team 's m1jor problem of •-Jale Wll simply the in1billty to hit from the field. But that probl~m nevtr came Into focus Tuesday as the Monarchs ripped the nets on 33 of fill occasion! from the field for a sparkling 55 percent. And the rest of !he attack seemed tn ease with Bob fi'aupert sleallng lhe ball end DA1LV l'llOT l'i..lfl 111 11 1ch1 .. ll:••hltr direoctlrlg traffic, Riek Kniffin WILD SCRAMBLE -San Clemente's Steve Kalata pictured (left) are Diablos Steve Rudisell, Steve Ash- and Steve Kemper controlling goes over the head or Mission Viejo's Craig Citro cra{t and Rob Ferguson and Tritons Howard Valore the boards, Steve. Fritz and (11) to grab the basketball in 60-43 Diablo win. Also and Brad Mccaslin (52). Ptle Roberu hitting with cOn----...C..------------------------------------1 sistency from the ct1rner11. Only in the opening nine minutes of play did t~ Swordsmtr'! 1ppear lo have an even ch1nce for an upset. Roberts 11tarted Miter Del off early in the second quarter with a 12-footer. then the Monarchs tallied 15 more: While St. Paul was managing four and when Roberts ended the skein with 1 21J.footer the hol:l.ll had a mmmandin~ 39·26 lead with 2:29 to go in the half. Aller that it seemed only 1 matter of mopping up. Tardie replaad the lest of his regulars with 4: 17 llitill to play and the reserves ran the score to 84 -the highe!it point lotal for Mater Del this )'ear. Four Monarchs were in dou. ble figuns with Kemper 1n<l Fritz: leading the way with 18 and 11. M 11tr 0 .. '"' .. " " Fr Irr • • • Kniffin ' ' ' ICIPllN~ ' • ' HIU9fr! ' • • •• IClllY ' • • ·-· • • ' Nt""' ' • ' J. 1(11 .... • ' ' i9«111fft ' • ' T11ot1 lt • " .. Telllt " " • l l. '•~I ftl l .. " " OMl tt • • l:ldl ... , • • ' .,,~ • • ' W~n"•~!•• • ' • l(lt~ll!"'" ' ' ' Ml!U•~ • ' ' ,. ... ~ .. • ' ' ··-• • • ~1tnd\ ' • • 1"&1tt1 ,, " " Stt" IY Outr!tri Mllll' ... !J2.51f~ ,, l"tul • t !J 11~1 JC Eve nts Postponed " " " " ' • " • ' ' .. .. " " • " • , ' • • " Two junior college athl@llc evtnt.s were rained oul Tues- day. Golden West anrl Santa Ana Colleges both lonk infield practice, then wall~d abou! 20 minutes btlore umpires decided t.e call o(( their baseball encounter fln lht lat- ter school's diamond. Tht game ,has bt!:en reset lor Thursday, feb. 2S al 2:30. And Or1n11 Coast College's h1nnis match with Cal Stale IFullertcn) w11 also poalpon- •d. Rain Halts UCl-Bruin Encounter WS ANGELES UC lrlline ·s baseball team kept its unbeaten record Intact Tuesday al UCLA -primarily due to !he elements. The game was called after 31;2 innings or play with the host Bruins leading, 4-3. The two schools will try to reschedule il lat.er in the season. Thus. coach Gary Adams' Anteater~ will go i n t o Saturday·s doubleheader 111 San Fernando Vi1!ley Stale Ydth a 3--0 mark . Valley State iJL: the defending NCAA college division champion. The opener or the twin bill is scheduled lo get under way al noon . In Tuesday's tilt with the Bruins. the Anteate:rs streaked to 11. 3--0 lead. The.v got two runs in the second innin.11: when Mike S11ska singled and M I k e Sheline homered two ouls later . t;C Irvine went ahead 3.0 one frame later on a walk lo Mike Sykora. a force out by Rex: Snyder and Jeff Malinofrs double. The Bruins collected a!J four of their runs in the third in· ning on a grand slam homer by former Cerritos College stir Ron Oiggle. Oiggle, an all -South Coast conference first teem selection hist season for the Falcons, pll'lys centf'r field for UCLA. UCI pitcher D e n n i s Nicholson didn•t allow a hit until the Lhird innin~ while Bruin pitcher GreR Zail , an ex-SI. Paul baseball and fOol· ball star was in c;onstant trou· ble. Center fielder Rock~· Craig. who hit at 1 .358 clip last se11son. is sidelined \\'l1h a di11locafed left index finger and a bruised knee. Barons Bid for CIF Berth Against Eagle Fi ve Tonight Fountain Valley Higlfs bid ror a first-ever berth in the CJF AAA baske!b11ll playoffs is squarely on the hnc ton ight when coach Dave Brown's Barons trek In the confines of Estancia for an Irvine League encounter. Game lime, as in lhe case of all four loop contests, is sl at ed for 7 o'clCM:k. !n n!hcr action vital to Fountain Valley's p I a yo ff chances, Costa ~1esa is at Edison and Santa Ana Valley tra\'els to Magnolia. Champion Los Alamitos ( IG- 2) is al Corona deJ Mar j5-7J. FountRin Valley (7·5 ) oc· cupies second place in the circuit, a game ahead of Costa Mesa and Magnolia. a pair of outfits that the Barons have beaten t ~·ice in le11gue play. Thus. a victory tonight would appear to give Fountain Valley the inside track to !he playoffs with only Friday 's loop finales on lap ~fnre playoff competition begins Tuesday. Brown's crew has come on strong recently, winning three of four, bebind lhe brother duo of guards Gevrge 11nd Pete Gerber. Ken Shibata, Ed Pitts and Rick Power have combined to give the Barons a balanced attack . No Fountain V111Jey player i11 in the league 's top 10 in scoring. And. with Seo!! Reider fS.9 ) AY;ii\able for dul\', the Barons appear to havt the advantage againsl Estanci;i. The host EaglC'S have no one over i;.1 in their st arling * * * 1 ..... 1~· Lt1t11• ,,.,1"' ~llytr • " • ••• 1. K1vt1. ~· v.11,v " '" 13) , Ortlll. [•l•n{lt " "' '" l. Ovl~n, Loi 41 " "' " ' • lt•c~i~. ... " •• '" ' 51t,.I•!. Mo~ " .. '" • Grloi~v. C~M " "' ". , M1cL11n, CM " ·~ ". ' Slto>"\Cl<1, CM " "' '" • MOD•t, E,1~nc•• " 11.1 " . lC. 01'°"' SA v1111y " ' " II .I lineup and have been on the wrong end of the score seven limes in the last eight gemes. three limes by a margin of three points or less. Coach Gary Carr's Eagles depend on the scoring antics of forward Gary Orgill, who is second in the loop race with a 22.5 average. Coach Emil Neeme's Costa Mesa quintet 1 6-6 l is al Edisr.n \5-7) in a crucial contest for the former. The Mus!angs arc th e highest scoring unit in the circuit with a 67.8 norm. Leading a corps of outside shooters are <15.6) and (12.3), Doug Tom Maclean Sampson Edison·s role as spoiler began last week when coach Dave. M o h s ' up-and-down Chargers slapped Magnolia, 68-56. Coach Tandy Gillis' Corona del Mir Sea Kings, who have been involved in seven one· point verdicts in .league play, battle host Lns Alamitos in a matchup of the lowest scor- ing team in the league !Corona del Mar at 47.7) against the leegue's best defensive team (Los Al ~·ith 49.4 points allowed). Crucial Tes ts Co11front Su11set Cage Lead ers Rrund J3, ll set of thr-ee Sunset Le a g u e basketb;il! breathers before F rid A y ' S showdown, i~ on tap tonight when cl).Jeaders Hunlinglon Beach, J\.1arlna and NewporL Harb-Of (all 16-2) face a trio of advt>rs11ries with a com. binerl record of 5-31 in league play. Thafs haw it stands as coaches Elmer Combs (HUn· tington Beach ), Jim Stephens ! ~1arina I and Dale Hage~· !Newport Harbor) seek ways to not allow their players lo fall \'ictim to the upset bug. Hunti ngtpn Beach plays host lo Anaheim !4-8 l. Loara (l·ll ) is at Marina and winless Santa Ana trek~ lo Newport Harbor ~·hile host \Vestminster i7·5 l and \V~st~rn !6-6 ) light it out for fourth place. All games are slated for 7 o'clock. Huntington Beach \\'ill be trying ~ put the pieces back together after falling by 20 t.o ~1arina last "'eek . The Oilers me!"\ Newport Harbor Friday night. ln l1rsl round action the Oilers swamped Anaheim. 62· 38. Com bs' forces lead the league in scoring "'ith ;i 70.8 average ;ind !he leading fa ctor in Iha! area has bcC'n hi.ll:h posl Steve Brooks, a junior who has averaged 19.4. Steph~ns· f\1arina Vikings have come on stronf!!; with si x s1raight Sunset "'ins and ap- pear lo be sh<»ios against Loara . The V1kes O"'n the most impressive defensive record in the loop, having allowed only 49.0 points per opponent while clicking a1 a 70.0 rate of· fensivrly -a dJUerence of 2LO per issue. In first round play lhe Vik· ings pummelled Loara by 36. Rustl~rs, LA Harbor Clash And ~·ith the imposing front line of Kipp Baird t6-5) and Dean Bogdan (6-6! coming into its own, chances for a Lot1ra upset appear slim. i\lar1na is the 1'ln. l r11nked prep team in Orange County \vhile Lo1ra's overall record is 3-18. Gold<o Wal Coll•&• upecll te pl1y tbe w1itlrl1 came roniiht when lhf' RustJcrs trav1I 1t LA Harbor In a crucial Southern C1llfornl1 Conftrence b1&ketball t 11 t , Game Ume Is I. 111 two other games tonight . citeult crt1wn with 1 victory toolght against Harbors slow down t1clics. A victory by Harbor 1$--4) would put 1l jusl one back ot the Rustlers with t"·o tilts remaining. East l.A !6-4) holds down the ucond place •pol. • Harbor out defensively in lhP second 2tl m1nutf's, eventuall y a!ln"'ing Golden "'e11t 10 play its o~·n game. The 70 points y:a s tht most allowed by Harbor in con· ference play this season. Coach Jim \\'hite's club h11s 111ve.raged 47.J ptr fluting while giving up 48 I prr !ill. los5es In one season. fo.11. SA C deff'ated tht Bucs by a,n 88·80 count earlier in the season. Hagcy's Ne,vport quintet mu st keep pace "'Ith a ~·in ton ight and off p11st rernrds., lhe Sailor~ arr lopsldtd favorites tn hand Sanla AnA il.S 13th straight loop defeat. Leading Newport's oflen!il't barra11e art Taras Young and John Ka1.mer. I IWllHI L1lt\lt Jtl<'lftl ~!1¥tr , ,. •~•· I. !Ir~"· HI 11 Jll It• Scorching Diablos Shell SC , 60-4·3 By PHIL ROSS 01 tM Ol llJ ~11•1 Si.II The quick threesome enab!-paced the winners' scoring ed Mission Viejo to pile up with 22. 14 and 13 points. ''" (llll'llftll (4l) Sizzling Mission V i e J o scorched the nets on 7f.l per· cent of ils field goal attempts Tuesday night in downing the San Clemente TriWns. 60-<t.1, In a Crestview League basket- ball contest in the winners' gym. a IS.point first half lead before the Tritons weathered lhat ad· " " " " McC•1ll~ , • ' • vantage to 37-32 with 2:58 left Elllll(Or • • ' • Kll~li • ' ' • in the third quarter. Ann•"C<I • • ' • However, San Clemente Sell tr• • • ' • All•-'e ' • • , went immOO!ately into another Va lo•i • , ' " The host Diab\os of coach Pat Roberts, who close out the campaign Friday night at home ag~illBt Foothill, shot only 2i tunes from the fie.Id but canned 20 of thoae to post their incredible percen- tage. cold spell as the winners outscored the visitors by a 21 ·11 count in the final 1011:! minules with Citro dr iving at wW. Ferguson hitting well from the top of the key and Price also linding the range from the out:iide. Prict, Citro and Ferguso n Pf!tr ' • ' ' "~ • ' • ' To1111 " Mlulin Vltlt ( .. ) ' " " " " ,, " A1"cr1t1 , • • • Pudi1rll • ' ' ' Fereu1011 ' ' ' " Prlcf • • I " Colrn • , , " Ev•"• • , • , !Oll lJ .. • " ~ Sctrt by Ou1•!•" Sin C!emt n!t ltlit-0 MoH10fl Y•t io 161l:t 11)....M1 The win pushed the Diablos into sole possesslon of filth place in the circuit with a 5--8 record and dropped the losers. into sJxlh at f..9. Coach John Baker·s San Clemente quintet. which shot only 36.7 percenl (18 of 49 ) from the floor. gets a final chance to redeem itself at El Modena Friday nigh!. Southern Cal College Nails 79-6 4 Triu11iph San Clemente led only once, 2-0 on Brad McCaslin's eight· footer in the first minute of the affair. After that it was all Mission Viejo as the hosts used a three -guard type offense to perfection while barely relin- quishing any space. df'fensively with a floating 2-l ·2 zone. Senior Richie Price. junior Craig Citro and sophomore Rob Ferguson were the three backcourt performers who started the contest for Roberts although Citro spent much of his stint out of a comer slot. And it was the above trio which sparked the fired-up Diablos all evening long. RIVERSIDE -Southern California Colle11e overcame a seven-poinl halftime deficit and went on to post a vital 79-64 basketball victory river Cal Baptist Tu~s<lay night in its quest for an NAIA pla yoff berth. The conquest gave coach Paul Peak's Vanguards a 16-6 overall mark . and they·11 lry lo improve on that Friday night when they hcst t;C Riverside. Ted Ha~ Jed the second hair uprising for sec. scoring 15 of his g1me high 17 point~ in the last 20 minutes. Bui il was Jerry Rinker's layup with 7: 15 remaining !hal put the Invaders Into the lead. Paul Mlller·s three-point play wilh 2:57 to go broke ii up. giving the winners a 69-62 lead and Cal Baptist was unable In pare the margin to less than seven aft!"r that. The V11nguards' 2·3 zone defen se limited the losers to 26 points the second half. SWl!ltrn C•ll!Grnfl Cet1111 17'1 0 PIY"! M!!!er RI,,..•• 5iW!rl5t1' GrttQ To•1l1 e~,..tt S"IPIO• Lfl!rotl!tr Morfl•lld 1(1~1 W•'l••m• To!•IJ 1-i•llrlmt ' ., fl •• ,. • 1 ~ 11 s 1 J n 5 J l u j J 0 1J , 1 0 ' 1 j 0 • 1 1 l J 1 l 1 J Y.I 19 u 1t Ctl l11t!1I /U ) t1 II pl Ip !1 JJ14 1 c ' ' 1 J 5 11 ~ ! I t 2 0 3 J . ' . 1'6,l M C•I 61PtlJ! JI, !CC JI. Tirt$fOnt CAR SERVICE OFFER Set~ u s f or f ast , expert car s ervice at low prices ! GUARANTEED BRAKE RELINE GUARANTEED 20,000 MILES OR 2 YEARS Wt guarantee our brake lining !or the specified number of miles or year1 from date of jnsta.Jlation, whichever comes Jirst. Adjustments prorated on rnileege and based on prices CUJTent at lime of adjustment. Here's what we do: •Replace linings and shoes on all 4 wheels with new Firesrone linings. •Adjust brakes for full drum contact. •Inspect drums, hydraulic system, return springs and grease seals. ONLY $ 70 Mos! Fords, Plymouths, Chevys, American compacts and light uucks. Othe1s slightly higher. Dist brakes excluded. Front End Alignment Precision aliirunent by akilll!d mechanics uaing the JbOlt modern equipment. s 88 T~,I ~OUPOI! Pl<l)I'" F•D. 11. 1'11 Extra ch1rga for c1r1 with tora!l)fl b1ra or 1lr conditioning An ...,.nent battery. Fii. moet 12-volt ""'· Or1111e Coul bofltt Ml. Sin Antonio In a Soutl\ Cout Conference tilt whlle Sid· die.back 1r1vel1 lo Chaffey In t.1isslon circuit 1ct1on. coach Dick Str lckl t n'• RusUers. i ·2 in conference 1e· lion. can claim a tlt for I.he Golden West playl!d one of It! bes1 games (If the season a111inst J{artKlr in lM first round meeting. do14'11ing !ht Seahtiwks. 7()-60. Jn that ont the Rustlers spurted to 1 l1vt· point h11lftime lead. forci ng hte:tn"'hllc. Or11nge C,.oast will be seeking ~·in No. 4 of lhe season 11111Jnsl 21 lo~scs. A selback by coac.h Herb Livsl!\'S OCC Plr11tes woulii e~l1blish a record f11r most Saddleback hopes to play the spoiler role In its R,ame with Chaff Py lonlghL Chl'lffey is currently lied "' i t h Rlvcrsldf' and San 81:1rnardinn for the circuit lead. All have 7.3 records. Coach Roy S1evl'.n~· St1d· d!eback crew, 4~ In the con· fere.nce. dealt Chaffey a 75-74 overtime Joss in first round play. J 'l'OU~t. ,..twilOfl \) ,lt la 0 , I<•'"'''· N"' n ''• 1• 'I Cetta Mew ,.lre1ton• Ster• I 1°'0 ... 1•, I-I I I) 115 !! I J s1111vv1. •ft•ftt l"' 11 u1 ,, 1 01 1. 11111 11 -""'·1•u A Mt l1t~~tl"'"· W,., !) 111 U 1 I 11,ltlt. Mt"~' 11 !!ti U •I MOU~lt Me"" ltr1., I •.11'1, l'I I •. 11'1. Huntlntton l•1ch 'lr11tol'\• St•r• 1t1fl l•ACN ILV0.-..•1•'°81 MOUIS! Mtft .. ~r1., t 1,M l'I I 1.rn'.- Co1ta M11a-Jtrry Hill tlU NllWl"Ol'I' ILVD.~Mlf 1 HOUIS. t ·JO 1.11t. l'I 11.tft. \11., I 1 lift. It l 1 !It, Sat ~ I 1 "'· tt J ~.lift. •. •~&4t•1e"' •~•~•IO'll 11 !I~ llGI ' """'''· M~,,~. 1) 111 ll ~ ltt .. I 1,11'!. ht I I"' l! 0\ll'ln. WH'•'~ 11 l'l 1111 __________________________________ _, _, • ' Basketb all Standings For Preps ANGILU$ LEAOUI WLP,PA l l'llwAmll M1!trO.I I 1 S..1 191 , ~~·~~"'°"' S 'Ol .. 1 ,,,11~ ' J •10 4112 Plu, X It. P•ul J • ,,, 511 t1•1'S5f Tffldat't S<ef•I M•••r 0.1 .,, SI. P1ul " $1, AlllhOl>J SI, S1rvl!1 n (O!l l llhopAmll 6J, PlU•X jf Frld1r'1 G1me1 Mtlff" Del t i SI. Anl"°'1Y 11111-Amil 11 SI. P1ul Pl111 X .r S.Nllt Cllll!ITVIEW LEAGUI w L IC1ltll1 " ' 0•-• • Tu11111 • • \llHt Pt~ ' ' M lu lon Vl1!0 ' ' S111 C1em.t111t • ' El MOIMl'le ' " footlllll ' " TutMll W'I ICttH Tu1!111 17, Vlllt Ptrk ~ Or1111111e IO. Foolll\h 11 .. '" •• •• "' '" '" "' ... Ml11lo11 vi.kl ta, 5111 Ck!menie •l Ktltlll rt El Moatna 10 FtldtY't Gamtl fDOllflUI et Ml11Nln Vltlo \11111 Ptr~ ti Ktttllt °''""" ti Tustin ''" Clerntntt II El Mocle111 GAltDEN GllOVI! LEAGUE •• w • • "' "' on "' •• '" Jlt>IC~G ol.ltml!GI f'IC1flc1 W L Pil PA 10 ' tll 1'40· LI Ql/ln11 S1nt11110 Gtrclen .Grove Le>1 o1.m1toS Bolu Grinde 9 2 115 601 I 3 llJ 695 S66A622 ' 1 1S1 761 2 ' 655 151 1106119\\ T"""'''I 5c- Jl1..c:ho ol.1aml10I IQ, Paclf\c1 61 S4inllHO tl. !10!11 Grinde .a L• Qvlnlt fl, Los ol.ml;os '2 Frldll,'1 GlrMI Lt OVlnla 11 S1nll1110 LOI Amlll>I 11 GtrOen Grove P1clfle1 11 11o111 Gr1not f lllEIEWol.V Lt Htbrt '·~ , ....... Sunny 111111 Lowell Blle'NPtrll. Fullerton Kennedy Lt:ol.GU£ W Ll"Al"A 11 1 'SI I~~ \I 1 '21 .. , 1 6 ..... , 1 6 I03 192 5 l tN960 t 121 1M 4 'm m 31D1Slll!1 Tv"61Y'I ScOI'•• Fullerton S5, llutn.i Ptrk 54 LI l11br1 11, Ken""'Y ,, Lowell I!, Sav1nn1 11 Trey 10, Sunny Hiiis 61 'rkl1w'1 Ot mn ll u-P1rk 11 Sunny Hills Fullotrton 11 Trav Kenfltdr .i S1v1nn1 '""-tll •I LI H1llr1 Area Briefs ~~A~mf:.~ TURN HEAD TO FREE SWING The common advice to keep the head "steady11 du ring the swing is worthwhile to follow. Ttle less you r head moves, the less likely will be chances for moving your swing out of its proper groove. The "steady" head," however, can be carried to an extreme. So me' golfers unnecessarily restrict thei r swings in an effort to keep the head motion- less. If _you r sw'ing feels too "tig°ht," especially going back, I suggest you let your head turn slightly with th e tUrning of you r shoulders, as I am doing in the illustration . This tu rning of the h ead will not affect the plane or arc of yo ur swing, so long as you take ca re not to let you r head move either laterally to the side, or up and down. Sc.ore in. spite o! traps, bunkers, rough 1nd do\llnhill lles-\llhh the help Arnold P1lmrr otters you in his booklet. "Trouble Shot~." A copy is yours lor 204 alone \llith 1 ltamped, s1\f. addressed envelope sent to Arnold Palmer, in care or thll 11e\llS• paper. Bucs Place 2nd Behind Fullerton Fullerton Junior Co 11 e g e captured three of seven events and placed second in two others to win the South Coast Conference S'>''irn relays title Tuesday at Orange Coast Col- lege. The winning Hornets totaled 70 points while seco nd place Orange Coast had 64. Coach Jack Fullerton's OCC Pirates also won three events. The Bue quartet of Steve Schwer. Chrill Gammon, Bill lluff and Paul Ibbetson clock- ed 3:26.9 in capturing the 400 freestyle relay. Cag·e Tilt Set Gammon and Schwer tean1· ed with John Blauer and Dave Bannon to win the 800 free relay in 7:46.l "'hile 1he foursome of Ibbetson. DeHufL Gammon and Joh n Recg clocked 1:33.5 in capturing the 200 freestyle. The second annual stale basketball classic at Oakland will be held July 1 following the approval of the NCAA certification committee. Orange County basketball was represented In the in- augural clash last year when Katena·s Rick Aberegg and Sunny Hills' Frank Dehn com- peted at Oakland. Selections for this year's South team '>''ill be made by the United Savings -Helms Athletic Foundation board and will be announced In Apr!\. The contest. which Is sponsored by lhe Catholic Youth Organi1.a!ion, d re \V 4,no fans at the Coliseum Arena. The NCAA requires that rontests of this sort net 40 percent towards charity. Final tabulations found the first game making the margin by JC, Prep Wrestling Oald111 Wn t n n lltl ll:lo Hon-. 111-Beck CGl won bJ for!tll, 1J6-BtelltY (GI dee Ktmplcrd !RI •• IM-Fost IGl dee Pndllll (Rl 1'l·I, U2-MCD8nnold (G) wen by 11\1 •ver Fox (R) 1.01. l~llbeck CR:J won bY tor!ell. lsa-No tonlnl. 111-No con!rtl. 171-Noble CG! dee O'Sh1nn (1111 "· 1~1111.,.d CGI c1ec H1Ydofn !RI ,.,. H\;f-Rlnl<er (II:\ won llY !Ol'lelt. V1ntl'Y c-• c1e1 ""' Ot l c1n Lil o1.11m1'" 91-'°"'' CCI "'°" bJ rarltlt 106--Sttll CL! Plnnt'cl Biker CCI, l:JO. llS-Dorler (Cl drtw wlll1 B1~•r (LI, 1-2. 121-W1de (Cl plftnld Quid IL), O''J. l»-l!ll1npled (CJ de<;. !11ktr !LI, S-0. llll-HO<nlll ILi -"" dl!ltull OVI• Cl1mP1 CCI. 1'1-Cltrll. !Cl dee. G1l11thlr tll, 4.1. 13-Julltn CL\ dl!t. $1111411"1 IC), ~1 U7-Cttll'll! CCI pinned R1abe fl), f :'I. 16'--C1HJ ICJ olnned Josw•ll Cl), 1:23. 171-T. ll1n11tl !Cl II«. Fl1!Clltr lLJ, ll•l. lU-Rk:lltJ CCI dee. Bl1d< Ill, '"-2. HV'l'-GrNlri (Cf wen bY fori.11. • J1t11'9r V1t1ll1 "' C-1 dtl Ml • ,., (I) '"'' Altmltn --No ml!Cll, \01-81'1<n1r (Cl dr9'W w!!h WllUI,,.. ton !L ), •·I, l15-JOMJ CCI !'!nnt'd 8r1nd1I IL), J:OS. l?J-J. !llndtl (() WOii bY forle1\. 1Jl-Wtrrtn !Cl pinned Smit~ fl), l :IS. , 1;M-Gr111tm CC) t lftned &.rlh (l), l:SS. Hl-B1rlt'll (LI dK. Hltll1rcl ((), 1-J. 14-f'llfl ((:) ~1nMd Llvf /\.), J:2-. 117-JIUIOll !() die. Hol-IY (Llo ••• Ut-f'l••1n (LI IMC. G1rn tCI, S-4. 17~11ltY (Cl won 0V lorttil. 1U-ffo mite~. lfyy-HO mtltfl, GOLFERS AT THI HIWPORT l l IHH , •• J GOLF COUISI he4 ,,i..,en lteft • 'fH4 •heft I ...-_ '" ... tM -wlttl ........ $1 WITH THIS AD. $25.17. Managing director P a u I Gaddini revealed that the game will again be tield in Oakland, but that a second game in Los Angeles may be in the offing in the future. • The recent earthq u ak e didn 't have any appreciable effect on busi ness at the Orange Coast area·s three ma- jor sportfishing landings. Davey·s Locker report-; very good biting on its half-day and all-day boats off DDna Point and Sall Creek with only a small amount of bay fishing being done. Davey's rock cod boat didn"t go out Monday but Sunday·s venture resulted in 540 catches for 34 passengers. Bonito have been biting like mad for customers on Davey·~ vessels v.·ith bass, barracuda and halibut close behind. Art's Landing rep or I s business picking up some v.•ith the bonito biting well in the • medium-tYJ>C weather which h3s prevailed the past few davs. The horseshoe kelp beds have been the prime location for Arfs boats with larp,e rock C(lrl C'lUl'l'I and fa ir halibut landings being reported. Down at San Clemente Sportfishing. an~ling slacked flff over the w1>"\c"nd ho •' 1hn management didn't altribute the dropoff to the quake. • El Dorado and Valencia high Fullerton won the 4 O O backstroke (4:12.5). the 400 medley (3 :55.3) and the 400 butterfly (4:01.0 ). The only other event -the 400 breaststroke -v.·as won by fl.1l. San Antonio in 4:43.9. Cerritos College was the only conference team failing to participate in the meet. Orange Coast returns to ac· lion Friday and Saturday, participating In the Gold Coast Championships at UC Santa Barbara. Friday's events get under way at 2 w i I h Saturday's program scheduled to start at 9 a.m. The Pirates have tv.·o dual meets slated next w e e k hosting Long Beach Cit; College 'Thursday and Santa Ana Friday in lhe Souih Coasl Conference opener. Both begin al 3:3:'1. Fult.rton 11e1. Or•n•• Cotil U41, ~1nl1 "'n• !Mil t.\I, Sin "nronlG haJ "1i0 b1tk>lrOkf-I Fullorlon. 1 O"•nQe '""'' !Ot"'u1•, fl>Dencn. !ocn""c' 1~~ A~~~:.ro'.l'rl~P" ~:~;·, ol.n1, •· Ml. ..00 lrtt11vl~-· Ora;..,-( oe l ' ISrhw•r. Gam<t10fl. OeHull end b-btlsonll 2. Ful'P•la"' l. 51~'<1 An~. '· Ml, An llnl&nla. TLMP' J :,0.0 .00 mcd!~-1 . Fuller!or'I, 2 Ml. ~In Jlinro"le, 3 So":" Jlina, • or;n " ~o:it~rl~L{'f:i.'e':' 3~s\~1~n, Themas and llCO bulttrlly-1, F11ll1rr0<1. ' San11 An~. Time: ,,0110 !only two en!•le<l IOO lr~lyle-. Or1n!lt! C<Nlil !Cam-mon. 0'''!cr, S<~ •· .~' (!· 1 Fullttl<Jn, 3. SAn1a Ane, •· Ml. Sa" Anl~n·a. H"'e' 7·4' 1 .00 bra1~1•1rak.e..:..1.· Ml ' San Antonio. ' S•n!• I"~. l ~ulltrln,, i. Orl"O" E~~l11J~tl~~' ~J~f~'.' Wlrnltke tr.cl • ..00 lr~stvle-1. Cranna CMIS• {lb· t-1:'""· O~•[urt, Gtm,,,,,n and Peen\, ~ y11~-;r~ d~~~-11~1r.i:-"ii~~n, ,:,~J,""10· Gol f Resul ts l.IC lnrln• IU) fll) Or1M• Cot•f schools will clash tonight at ~~n c~1m1>er!I" cucn del. T11m Fullerton Junior College in a Sch111..,.111r 1oc1. 1.c. Gary 51-r (l.IClf Ml. Jolin Frees playoff game to determine the !OCi. ,.1. Orange League's No. 2 Outtt H,,.,..1 ... 1oc11 elf.I. sr1vt Kent representative in the CIF AA 1011c~~ t~vtn 1uc11 c1c1. 0ov9 smtth eliminations. 1oc1 • .,,, Bab lllltn ll.ICll clf.f, TDm Pet/ch Tipoff is at 7:30. Both teams coc1. s.i. compiled 7-3 marks behind o.n Blbtl1 1oc1 11e1. c~•ls v111;hn (UCO, J·l. champion Sonora. M.otll11 -Chembolrlln, n. ------- February Service Specials llp~olo1•1on<"V n<"w op"ro11.,,nal ..,cthcl'h ftiton Oranq11 County'• N(o 1 l in<olri M•···!•"Y d,•.,lt•P """" oflc•" focto•v aut~O,;ll'd ..Or'. .,t,· 01 P""'.' <O'"l""··.!>1, '" ·~~,,. c~orqcd by ""vict •totloiit ond C·•~cr "o"»p<·••ol;,. . ..; Pf'i>CI• ~~n it·" 5rrv1tt by Pppo)nl- m<>ftl ·,a•r' ,r.c 1,,,,h,., .. ,,,.. o•d ~·on•·y REG. $2.50 LUBE 99, ....... -.$1.51 l11c1vct.' •11 1ttYict1 of l\Otfl'ltl 6.000 milt body lui.1. CALl '°l APPOINTMIHT TOOAY I nEG. $13.50 999 ....... $3.51 PIOHT IND ALIGHMI NT iftcludtt complttt r1lit"m•n+ plut l irt r1nd itrali1 in1ptcflon CALL FOil APPO INTMENT TObAYI SANTA At_,A LINCOLN MElt CUR Y 1301 NO. •uSTIN AVE. SANTA ANA 547·060 "WE APPRECIATE YOUR I USIHESS'" '·· JC Nines In Action Pairings for three junior col- lege baseball tournaments lh is week involving nrca teams have been announced. Golden \Vest battles LA Valley at 1 1'hursd<iy in the optning round of the Allan Hancock tourney in Sanla Maria while Saddlebuck faces College of the Desert at 2 in the first salvo of lhc Imperial Valley affair in Holtville. h1eanwhBe. Oran~e Coast clashes with Rio Jiondo at IO a.m. Friday at South Hills liigh in the flr~t round of the Mt. San Antonio tourney. lf Golden \Ve st winll its Hrst round tilt the Rustlers v!'ill play again Thursday night al 7 aitainst the Hancock-Santa Barbara v.1inner. If the Rustlers lose. they are slated to play al 10 Friday n1orning. Ht•t •rt the llri1 rwncl p1lrlnv$ lor the r1vtt rour"f'¥1: lllli\n H>"'fl'k UOP brac~cl> H~ncacl! Y~. S.•nM (l~rb<lr• a1 H~n· CQ"I< Call~ (10' a.m. I Golden we" Y$. L" vallfY H El~~ t-"lct~ o ~ m J !lowe• br1ckel) Ce,,lte1 VI. P!er<:e ~I Ell\• Field (10 •.m.\ Moo•P•rk vs. OtAl\l~ •t Hencoc-(1 p.m.J Ml. Sin ol.lllanlo (111 10 1.m. •amesl MT. SdJ\ An!Dn•O "'· ~an eern•rcllna '' Ml. SllC dlamonO' No. 1. ~'"" ;.n.o V•. Cltr~s •' C1trvs El CimlnG vs. R1veril0'1 '' Welch Park In Pomona Orange Co.i"! •• RHl Hondo 11 Soutn t<lll$ Hlgn CM!k\' "'· (ypre>S I! C•I PolY (PolnOfW) Ea•! LA "'· Fulier1a11 •I Ml. SllC diamond No, 7 ltnHrill VIHIJ 1•11 J p.m. •1m••I tt"" br•ckell Ml. Sall Jaclnlo vs. Y1va~•l, llrll. ~dteback vs. CGll~ al l~t Desert (lowtl' brlckoll VlC1GI' Valley VJ. w"' Hllll 1m.,.r111 V1Uorv "'· &trirow Wt:dM!.dttJ, r nruary t1, 1971 OAILV PILOT Jt Edison Swimmers Triumph; Sa ilors Fall to Lakewood Prep GoH I Aces Shine Orange Coast area prep golfers made their mark over EW.00 lllgh's team rolled to a S\Vimming 71·12 dual meel victory. over invading Long Beach Wilson ·ruesday while host Newport Harbor was losing to tough Lakewood, 51-34. The trio of Mikl' Braun, Bob \Vurs tcr and Hon Bukoff posted double viclorles for Edison. the weekend In s e 1 t c & 1. H. Hv•11 ILi t Du<t1n Ill. 100 1n.s. m..i.-1 L11111 11.i 1. Jl!hMOOI tournaments with Estancia'• T!mt! 4:3'.l (L), 1 OO!Wit Ill. Tlmt: 1:111.9. 100 br•1•111ro1r.e -1 Cllffilo tLI 100 bllt!~flY-1. MUl!lhlll"r (EJ, Terry Knight and San 2. vooa1,,,1 Ill J, Kllnoentmltfl lflij. ' no Y(Dnd OI' lhlrd. Timt• \;'11.S. No time. uo trP.Hl¥i.--1. Lwn1 1~1. '· Ennli Clemente's Bob Volga leading .00 Ir .. ••ltY -Llkt~. INtwPOl'I (LI J. Meeow•n IE), Tt"": "·'· the way. dl..w1Ut!ld!. No u..... .jlQ(I fr-!Ylt-1. Mufo llllllJet llfl, er..., '· Flllnut ILi, 3. !rktt.llQtl n.1. Tlmt: KniP"ht fashioned a 71 at l'Mw'trt 141) t:M! Ll kNllMll 41!2.J, h N I ~t•Y rr18y _ 1. Lll~-wOO<I. Tlrnt: 1eo blcki••akt-1. H!n'9!1 ILJ, '· t e oga es High tourney at '.'' Plc-tor<I 1a1, l, Sw1rt1tr1Utltr tEI. o· d ' · ,, 1 1amond Bar, good for sccon 100 lr••S!Vlt -l. G1111tr (H), t. me; :ll.J. !le(k !NJ l. Fait•r IL). Tl-··. ••.i. 1110 11re11111•o1t ...... 1. Joi.-fLJ, t. place overall, and along with ''" ,.. D. Gr1~1m !El, I'll! ttlln:!. Ha lime, .so l•ff1•YI• -1. 01111..-tNJ, 2. «tO 1r" r•llr-t.on. ht<h wi110n. mates Sieve Ryan and Mark Tamblln \Ll 3. Star111 INJ. Tl..,.; .. , 14 1 • moii ~'13·6· c... Les, the Engles placed secWld. 100 1na. """· -1. 1t1ch'" n.1 l!dl..., 1•1 "') L ... , hadl w111H Estancia's Steve Robert.on ,_ Rf1;1n (N) J. F1ttcllm1n (Nl. .. ' ··--V6'111'p No 11m1. medlt!Y-• Ed...... CM•rl<.llim. (75). Ryan. Kn;ght and '"C " " .......... •• Helnta. Pord Ind Sullonl. Tlfrot . 2:11.1. I.A: 1w1N11t --r 1 ... 1 UI) L•kewt04! 5~ bu'1'f..'r' -I Rt."'" <•> •· ~I G b. ed · h "' "' ""'"1 .... 1. ,..,. <LI. • .•.. ,_ c owan com 1n to win l e . mf'll'Y rt1•Y -1. L•~cw~ LI J. Feircnm1n t•I. Tln11: .., ~· ' I sol (If), J. ,._...._. Ill. Tlm11 J:fl.f, N ~ I I . omer : . 1: .} 50 1rtt11Yle-1. MMt.Mm IEI, 2_ Orte ViSl..il nv tahoaal in 'lCO lrttsly!1 -1, ll•llt tN I ~ 200 lrNs!Yle -I. Timblin ILi W d Gorkln ILi l . wowrrinskl Ill. Time; 7. llN'k (NI 3. wall tNl. Time; ninH CLJ, l. Htn11lbtrt 1£1, Time: Riversi e. 1·~•.i ':°' 21·'· Dave Hall was second In •o I ' I ' ' • .. ICO Ind , tnfd.-1. Hf'lnto. (El. t. . rttl ~ t - . ref'• INI l. ..~cllllrol<e -l . C~mPbtU lLI Vtn Orutt (L), J. GulleY (Ll. Tim.: • d. ·d I II h I ( Evrrdl (l ) 3. llur;e !Ll. l•m1: 1 G•s1on Ill J. B1rrt"lt (N). Na l:I<' In IV! Ua Ca a an pay 72) ')' rlrre ( E I · · 100 Ind mH -1 H•·rleY IL ) $0 Drtet!Slrolle _ l. Rldlltf' !LI 50 tllrltotrlh<-1. Fctrd !El, '· Krtlltrt Or S SOCla, ' , 1 cr1, ""1hlrd. Tlmf: tst. "· Cl I • y I I k . ull'I !L J. Wtll !H). No lime. 2 OUYnd•n tNI J. Htnni CL). ffo 100 1,....!lvle-1, 51\lnl< (ll, 2. Su!lon .,..,n l'men e S 0 j!a 00 !CG bu!IOrllv -l Fryrll~I~ IL) lime. E C thi ' I · lhe ind. ·d'· I '· StlPPH CLI !. W11I (NI Na lome, Fr~ rtllV -H __ , tBtell. LGl'd, I > 1 ~ ... (LI. Tim•: 1,0$,1. ro pace In IVl ua I QO 1 F 1._ SO bite-s:rolce-'. Gallt<I CL\, 2. 1· · I h N I lrH\1Jt -1 t.r,..r (Nl 1. t1•~m1na...:1 Glatltt!.Tllnt!;l :'1.I Mt•klltm CEI, J. Inlow tll. Time: compe1!10n a t e ~aes G•""n ILl 3. F1,,er CNl. Time: Vonu, SJ 1 Edtson 1n1 flU ..._ !l•K'll wihln :M.J. setup with a par 72. A!Ong HIO b1ck1!rGkP -1 Gor~ln Cl l 700 mfdlt¥-I. Ecl•ton Wllrller, "' breiitslrdle-l. Hflnn CE I l. with mates Richard Bernard 1 WllCOJI /NI l . Cltrkwn (NI. No 8ullrlt, flukafl Incl Brevn1. Time: Wtllllt'I" (l), 3. V1nDrv!f (LI. Tlmt: Hme. J·SJ·'· 3'..J and Jay Olson, the TritOns ..ell !ree!!Yll -t A•ht tNl ,, 1etl ltff'l!Yi.-1. Wes! tE), ], 2CIO lrN ••l•Y-1. L-eeicll WllloO<I, I ced f"fth F1v,'IPlcl I.I 3. eu1h CLl. Time: Erlc~wn {l), J. Pepi iE1. Tlmt:i~';'m;';';';'M;.;'·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~p~a~;;;l~·~:i~~;;;;;;, ':~S.l 1:09.S. I ltO b•r81l•lrolo;t -I CrP~" !~1 !~ 1r...,1tvle-l. llrlun !El, 2. Hurley IL) J. Whl!e (N). No PA•k~ur.t (L), J. L. G11h•m !El, 11.,.,~. Time: 1l.I. •CO Ire. r•lav -Ntwroort tGrff'r. IQO 11:<' med.-1. Wur11fr CEl ] F~rrrr. Smllh and l.~hrl Trmr· J:i1a 8ud1ls (1:c). ""llllrd. Tlmt: 1:16,S. ·~· Nowpor1 Hlrllor Ul) Clll L1kew00d 200 medley -I. Ntwuorl !O'Ellw.., Kllnv~"~mllh. Ke"von &nd llt1cllr11Pr). lm1e: 1.SS7 m 1r,..~1Ylt -1, R~rrson 1Nl ?. Farmer INl J. l5tcc..,.. (Ll. Tim'= ~.r7" J.0 !•.,.•ly!f -811Cllftler IN\ 2, Lonarcrh \Nl ). ~•ndfrs !NI. T!mt: l).1 1«1 Ind. ni.td. -1, llli!on!ll IN! '· Seib~ !LI l. Kenvon !NJ. Time: •:cs, I~ bU!l('t"tlv -1 Kreb• tL 1 l . !lllllng1 INI l . KenYO'I tNJ. No llm<I!. 100 lrent¥!t -I Flfmer !NI ! Krtbl. Il l J. Yaun; (NJ. Tlf'M· ~· too l>K-1+roke -I D'£11i.eu IHI ' Ouonn (JO l-Selby IL!. Tim~; l :C..4 -«IO lrttS1Vit' -l. Robe•tson (N) IQO bul!er!lv-1. Buko!I t£), 2, WP" (El. no third, llmt: I ·O•.! 100 frt~SlYlt-1. Braun (El,'· Wll1on (E), J. lo-fll1r !E). Tlmr: l-6.i. I lOQ badutrolcP..-1. Wu•sttr lE), Prpl tEJ. no !~1rd. Time: ''oS.6. m lrteslvle-1. llukolf Cfl, '· Erk:i.on CEI, 3. L. Gr1~~m (el. Time; ~;19.1. 100 btt1sl•l•olle-1. !ludtll !El. '1. Part.hurst IL!, J. WU1on (E). No H'"". ~ frH •elav-1. EdlllQtl CWtll. E.rlCSOl'I (El, J, l. Gr•klm (E). Tlmt l -10.2. ·-£dlsan ID) CUI Lfflt l udl WU..,. 700 medltY-1. Lonv !IN<.ll Wlhon. Tlme: 2:03.1. %00 lrttSIYl-1. F!llrwk !L\, 1. 0Wd1 IE\, 3. CDrOnt Ill. Tim.: J:lJ.1. I ~ 1r .... ry1e-1. McCowa" tE!, 2. White (L J, S. Sw1rrr1uber !El. Tlmf: a.< II • VW BRAM E SPECIAL Relln• 4 Whe•I• M•chlne 4 Drum• Overh1ul 4 Whnl Cyllr1d1r1 M,DOO Miii Um:tnOJHotnfl Gu1r1nlH (NOT ,RO-RATl!OJ $39.95 VW SHOCKS ··-·····--·-···· $7.95 installed · 100,000 mile guaranteed (not pro-ratl'.'d}. ' \VE DO ALL FOHElGN CARS. e DISC BRAKE SPECIALIST e COSTA MESA STORE ONLY ~1 11 H•rbor Blvd. 549-4022 or 549-2259 Believe it. A ply nylon cord tire er ~1. For campers, pick-ups and vans: Furemo ~· C<:r{!omastcr SL Tube type Size Price Fed. tax 6)0· 15/6 .......................... 22.95 .......................... 2.40 700-15/6 .......................... 29.95 ...................•...... 2.85 600-' 6/6 .......................... 22.~5 ...................•.•••.. 2.39 650-16/6 .......................... 24.95 ......•....•......•..•.... 2.61 700· 16/6 .......................... 29.95 .................. : ....... 3.00 750-16/8 .......................... 32.9S .......................... 3.68 Tubeless Size Price Fed. tax 670-15/6 ......... . . .... 25.95 ... . ........... 2.70 Foremost® Reliant 4 ply nylon cord tire. 95 Blackwall tubeless PN• Fed. t11 1nd okl tire plus 1.76 fed. tax end old t1r1. 650-13, blackw11l tubele11. Size Price Fed. t•x 775-14 ........................ 13.95 ....................... 2.1 4 825· 14 ........................ 15.95 .........•........•.•• 2 .32 855· 15 ........................ 17.95 ..•....•...........••. 2 .50 775· 15 ...••..............•.... 13.95 ....................... 2 .1 6 815-15 .............•.......... 15.95 ....................... 2.37 845-15 ................... , .... 17.95 ....................... 2.48 \Vhllewllll". ,.-···~ .. -ore. Special Buyl Mini 1lze 8 track stereo tape deck. 42 .22 Modern style tuning controls. a track 1tereo tape c1rtrtdg11. Choose your favorite artist or group. 3.22 Saal cover 11- sorl mt nl. Low price Includes a palr of tl!p-on head1esto.1&.88' . ........ Ye., you can shop 12 lo 5 Sundeys, too, •t •n'lo of lhese Pennay Au to Cenlers: FASH ION ISLAND, Newport Ceritor0 HUNTINGTON .CENTER, Huntington Beach - Use Pennoys Time Peyment Plan • I • RUGGED SPORT -The new inflatable river boat by Abon is built to witb· island the ishocks of rapids, rocks and other hazards in the increasingly popular sport of white water river running, London Bridge Regatta Lake Havasu Race Gets Another Name LAKE HAVASU CITY, Ariz. -Yachting 's Jargut inland sailing series will bt changed in name th is year from the Desert. Regalia to the Lodon Bridge Regatta. The change is being made to publicize the reconstruction and reassembly of the famed English bridge which was bought by th e McCulloch Corp . and brought, piece by piece to the desert spa. Robert P. McCulloch Jr., regatta director announced the dates of the three·race series -now in its eighth year - will be April 24-25. At the same time he noted that the classes in this year's regatta will be confined to the catamaran classe. - Pacific Catamaran. Hobie Cal- 14 and Hobie Cat 16. lnvitalklns are not being ex- tended this year to the Snipe. Jnterlake and Coronado-15 classes. McCulloch explained I.hat the total count o f 1ailboatl in the regatta was becoming so large that scoring was becoming a major p blem. "In tile past, so many classes were entered that the rare committee boat -after starlin g them in order -wa s finding it difficult to reach lhe fin ish line in time to catch the first boats acro ss ,'' l\icCulloch explained. However, he added, the Lake Havasu Yacht Club is conaidering a second regatta on another date for tbe Snipes, Interlakes and Caronad~ISs - and perhaps other monohull c!ases. The London Bridge Regatta Y.-ill be sailed under the Nort h American Yacht Racing Union ru les. Don l\1orden af Los Angeles, and David P. Shay, Lake Havasu City, will be co-chai..nmn of the race . Two races will be sailed Saturday, April 24 and a third an Sunday morning, April 25. Winter Olympic Races Set by Florida Club The St. Petersburg, Fa., Yacht Club will inaugurate a week-long Winter 0 I y m p i c Training Regatta March 28 Gil Gilbert Race Winner LONG BEACH CAP) - Compass failure delayed Gil Gilbert of Beverly Hills, bul didn 't prevent him from win· ning the Long Beach·Cata\ina Island race for offshore powerboats. Gilbert, after stopping in the middle of the Catalina Channel to get direcUons from a pass- ing sailboat. was the fourth to finish Sunday's second-day, 40-mile leg !ram Avalon to Long Beach. But he built an adequate lead Saturday in the 60-milc run around the island, averag- ing 61.5 miles per hour overall. , Bill Vogel of Arcadia, was second at S6.7 m.p.h., followed by Rudy Ramos of Gardena, iS.S. which it plans to bold annually /or all classeJ now eligible for the 1972 Sailing Olympics. The regatta will continue through April 2. Yacht club officials said an intense schedule of com· petition would be sailed over regulation Olympic courses on Tampa Say with every aspect of racing and other activities adhering as clo-sly as possi· ble to conditions and re- quirements of the actual Olympics. It is anticipated that the regalia will attract many con- testants in the various Olym· pie classes which annually hold their midwinter cham- pionships in Florida, thereby making it possible to include more high-level competition while owners have their boats in the south. Past commodores J a c k Clark and Charles E. Morgan Jr. are in charge of pre para· tions for the regatta. Further information may be obtained from the St. Petersburg Yacht Club, St. Petersburg, Fla. 337tll. N eftr Insignia Coronados Blue on White C.Oronado Yachts of C:Osta Mesa has ann0W1ced a brand new sail lnslgnla and cor- porate logo mark for Its boats. The new insignia will be. a distindive blue--on-white silhouette of explorer Fran- ciJco Ccronado's famous con- quistador hat with lar;e red numeralt to identify t h e particular model. The previous double triangle was being crowded hard by slmil•r looldng ones, company officials said. Tbe old inaignia wilt gradually be replactd by means of frte "Retrofit kits" containing d&cron gait Jn. 1l1nias and complete In- structions for attaching-them to the sall. Netc Rafts Available Like White Water River Racing? Planning to do any white water river running soon? 11 you are, Avon Jnflatable Boals or Great Britain has two new models of inflatable river boats -one for the daring amateur who w a n t s lo go it alone. and another for the professional river guide who organizes junkets (10 such. rough y,•a ter streams as the' Colorado and other western rivers. Avon is best known for its inflatable dingh.les and yacht tenders up to 12 feet. The new river boats are 13 feet for lhe Adventurer (amateur) and 15 feet for the Professional. Both are con- siderably larger and more rugged than the ordinary in- fl atable in other respects. The 13-foot Adventurer has a 6 foot 6 inch beam. weighs 95 pounds with 17 -inch diameter buoyancy tubes. two inflatable thwarts of 14 inches diameter each. five separate air compartments, tubes and floor of heavy duty nylon cloth The inflatable river boats and campers. nla by Stagull f\1arine Sale.it, proofed with Hypalon. are becoming popular with ad-Avon inflatable boats are 3t07 \Vashington Blvd., Venice, The 15-foot Professional has venturers, fishermen, hunters imported in Southern Callfor-Calif. 7 feet 6 Inches beam, welghs \ir~::~~~::~:::~~~f~~==~~~~~~~~~=~· 152 pounds with IS-inch tube s. 14-inch diameter thwarts and FEB 20 28 WIN A BOAT a D·•y six separate air compartments. • • '1 " " The floor is constructed -0f double thickness n y Jon . W . Afi"JE ' Hypalon sandwiching on~-ESTERN NATIONAL ANAHEIM • 1 quarter-inch thick unicellular B I AI f\~ COf:IVENTIOIJ neoprene. \_ i CENTC Both boats have strong · ~R br<>nze bow and stern securing ,'! f points (handles); four nylon \vebbing ca rrying handles an the sides: 16 steel •·o" ring& on the sides for tying rowing frames and ·wa terproof gear ba gs. The sides -Of the boat! are protected with thick rubbing slrakes mounling beckets for adapting a motor bracket; They also come equipped with a high capacily foot be!IOYo'S and a slout duffel bag. Also included is a repair kit with leak stoppers and a pressure gauge. & MARINE SHOW "QUEEN Of 11iE SHOW" CUSTOM LUXURY 57" COLUMBIA . . . HOUSE· SKI BOATS: BOATS 800 wt ST KATE LU AV£., WllCIM, c..t.tlr~NIA OFFICIAL SHOW OF t THE I / ·-cv INFLATABLE BOATS -.. MARINE ACCESSORIES OPEN DAILY 10 AM TO 10 PM t .S0.13 C78-13 {7.00) E71-14 (7.351 F7S.14 17.751 f78.15 17.7&) 078-14 11.215) 078-1511.261 •• WIRfSET J88 1l·'Xl1 1 WH'I' WAIT7 USl YOUR ·-~ CAIOIT CAAO OR YOUR ........ , AM~AICAlllO m 1397 1497 1597 1697 1897 2097 . 1697 1797 1897 1997 2197 t397 ...... 11.97 ..... 12.97 i .55 1.!IZ 2.21 2.38 2.42 2.55 2.64 14.97 1S.97 ROOR MAT f 66 .... lhn IJJI " .... ~•fo,. .... -., ......... ;, ..... -"'-. .. _ .. o11. ... 1 .............. _ .. ___ ., o "''"'..,. _o_,. <o <k a<1•M ..... -. , .... .,_ '" ............... .. ..... ll'_b<,ol,. .. llt,•.llM_.,. .... 1t ... u.. .. r--.1 T,t:.0.11 J.ln c;:1J,\li/tTt:I ··-~··-··· .... ·-·""-...,.,,. '"'<"''"' -·' ---o .. ublo ·-'""• -··--loT ~m.,LI •I '"' lomo "bU• l rtt·---~· '"'""'''-' """".....,,,.~or •• ,..., ..... ~~·~··· ''""' ...... --- ·soo· SPORT GRIP 2!.!-The new 8111 Tript><i<JJined Corooado-.!$ wlll be the first model to come from the fac- tory bearlr!i the new lnsl5nla. Conceived by the 111tionally known dellin !Inn of Rick Runyon Auociates. the Jn· signla readily meets the de1lgn requlremtnLI -It Is easy lo spot and recognize. Jt also a:lva an lmmedlale vbual ldenUty with lhe class aDd compar11 name. Adoption of the new lnsignia marks the launclling af an aggressive drive by COronado lo retch the forefront of the indiistry. the company said. During the pru;t lhrte years Coron•do has climbed from 10th place to fourth in the in- dustry. BUENA PARK BUENA PARK COSTA MESA SANTAANA ~WESTMINSTER Besides domestic planu In Casta ~lesa and Porl.~moull1. Va., tJie company also has assembly plants In Japan, Awtralla, Spaln and Canada. a...h m..i. et Laltw•ilor SlOl I-it llvd. S2l-l040 • Lincoln ot VoUq Vint 5815 UKOM A"•· 526-5100 • HarborllYd.otWlhoo 2200 Harbo< Jlvd . S4t0 20l2 • Ed1"cjor S""' ot lrb~ 1400 Edf .. .,. S44-71lZ • leoch Blvd. crt McFadclt11 1 5440 l«Kh llYd. 192·208I • \ Wedntsday, F"tbruary 17, 1971 Wednesday, Ftbru.t.rY 17, 1971 DAILY PILOT 2! 9 ~!\OT -AOVCRTISU When Yo·ur Job Moves Out of Town--Find Another One ~ . ~ By JOYCE LAIN KENNEDY SALES APPROACH. "'l'he the same selling techniques as lo create a desire for lht •.. successh1lly pttsent your job clinics but I was unable wllllng to provide the know-dress as above). The scrii<:e "' Council. works on the theory ," used to market a product, product." Astwood said. abilities ... ask for and aet 10 fiR .. a listing ol more ,.,; n how, and ht.Ip you get it off operates on a naUonal balls. ~ Dear Joyce : Tbt. organiu-11 • 11~ "'" ~ tioa' for wlllch I've worked Astwood says. "that anyone to se Ing lhe man. TllE WEEKLY P.tEETINGS the right compensalion , . . a few. This would be an ex· tbe ground. C.Ontact Henr.)' It has a couple of hundred ~ the pill 7 ye:an is moving looking for a job is performing "We all know that to sell and booklet are designed to prepare for interviey,·s . . . cellent service project for Astwood for more details. job openings on fUe rigbt aow. " to &nOtber city. For personal the same task _ no matter a product successfully it is show tbe job seeker how to compile a list of prospective advertising clubs, s er v I c e If you're looking for 1 st.art rtUOft!, 1 can't make the necessary to first know the do just this, and include such employers. . .follow up the clu::ts. chambers of commerce JOB CLEARING HOUSE. in the sales-marketing fleki move and have lo find aoolher what level of job is sought. selling points of that product topics as how to: write a prospective employer and get and Jaycees. If you belong The Sales Executives Club of ... or a salesman lookina for job. Wbat can you suggest He is out selling a new and thoroughly ... as well as the good resume. . . hand I e the job to a club which ls Interes ted New York also provides a free a better job ... or a sales 1 do?_ S.U .. New York unknown product (himself) to customer's needs for the pro-yourself when you lose a job in conducting l job clinic to source or jobs for sales people executive striving to advance, Your entire letter was too a potential customer. The duel. .. and then to present ... select your next jOO . . . SERVICE CLUBS in a few help the unemployed, the Man through their Sales Manpower get 20 copies of your resume COUncil recommends applying these points in such a fashion plan an adequate job campaign other cities also conduct free Marketing Council sa,ys it's Foundation division (same ad-on file with the club. ton& to print, but it indlcates: 1 _______ _::.:_.:c__::_ _ _:c_ _______ :_ __ __:_ _ _:__ _ __:__::_ _____________ _::_ ___ ::__ ________ ..:__ ____ _:c ______ _ you plan to u1e the more obvioUs jobH1rch channels: newspaper ads, employment " Caree r Corne r services and d i r e ct ap- plication. But 1 wonder if you're aware Clf one Clf tbe most laudable public service ventures golnf ... THE ~tAN MARKETING COUNCIL The Council. in operaUon for 31 years, is New York's oldest fref; cooperative employment counseling servl<:i!. It has been sponsored by the Sales Executives Club or New York since Its in- a!ptlon, and provides help lo 41nyone -man or woman - office boy er company presi- dent -who bas lost his old job, or who is seeking a better one. NEW YORKERS attend evening meetings once a week where they learn job hunting skills. The Council's d1rector. Henry K. Astwood. says that during the past year, more than 1,500 men and women have attended these weekly sessions, and the majority have a 1 r e a d y succasfu11y landed jobs. BY MAIL I asked Astwood how jobseekers in the rest of the U.S. could benefit from this not-for-profit program. "lt's available in a 68-page booklet, 'How To Land The Job You Want.' " he said. (For a copy, send $3 to the lifan :P.farketlng Council, Salts Executives Club, Roosevelt Hotel, Suite 19ro. 4:ith St. & ~fadison Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017.) View Homes No Longer So Prized People 1i1Fert ~illing to pay a Jot of money to live at Playa del Rey, where tht view of the Paci f ic was unobstnJcted and the beach was almost as cl<>.!le as the front yard. For this they wen. willing to live with the constant reminders of megatopolls at the.Ir back, the shattering overhead roar or jets from adjacent International Airport. The planes grew larger, noisier, more numerous. The airport fed its need for more space by gobbling up chunks of the surrounding residential area!. Finally, the only houses lert along the coast west of the airport formed an ''island," with the sea to the west, airport land on the other sides. And now, that island will become an airport parking. lot. Many of the 373 homeowners who must leave in the coming month! are resigned to it. "We don't bother to Iii things any mort.'' said Donn Cochrane. "We just sit here aild watch the cracks get big· 1er in the plaster a n d muonry. It's the vibrations from the jets that do it." Cochrane, • UCLA teacher. accepted the city'• offer of '62,000 thi8 month for bil four- bedroom, thrtt-bath house v.1th swimming pool and a guut boll!<. "They indicated I.he price woutd be cnot11h to duplicate our pl1ce els!!where," he aaid. "But we've been looking for two months •Ince we found out for aure we'd be leaving ind nol many places have the desirable qualities this has. Jt looks Jikt it may cost us no,ooo more." Cochrane said he thoueht aboUt llghllnc for m. pt.u of the island, then realized it soon wouldn't be worth filbllng for. "If thert were any hope !.hat the 747s and the otbtr new jumbo jets would even· tually lt1ve this 1lrport. I'd bovt fou&Jlt," h< said. 0 We've li•ed here four yean. It wasn't so bad belort the 747s. They may not make as much noise. but thty're peythologic11ly overwhtlmlng becJUR they'rt so low and llrgt." One oW"ner sold his house the city ror $7~,000. and clldn1 bother to lock the door when ht lelt. The Jlllnt Is petlillJ. Windows ate broken. J family Scott BATHROOM Tissue 151S~11t1111$ W~it1 II~ C111rs. S1,.11's ln P1ie1 t i 41c 111 Pak11 4 ONE GALLON Cloroi aLEAcH for thast too&h to r•i oot stains~ $1,·ll'S· ['trJ•IJ LI• Price &le ANTISEPTIC !<ills l{flnS on COA!liCt ••• Kw,.s brolal~ Ire• h !Of tiour~. Sn-ti's E'uy•1r Lt• Prict 1.19 PRINCESS CHARMEEN Panty Hose "'~~• I~ "' coolort 2 $1 111 day Ion,. Sil!S tor I'll" lo 5'8" allli OVl'I". PAii SaH1's EtlJJlllJ ln P1\c1 ttcPr. T ~ 13 oz. sin hlrnb!ers beilttlfally desigl'll!d. kl '3tldsor. Spicy Brown Coto1. . Sn41'S (rttJCaf ltw Ptttt1JI PLASTIC by HOUSEWARES ALLADIN m t1 n Pei lee\ t1111£ to ~toe~ up on handy plr;t1r, ~1rrtn f "'" tom a comol•I• '"'""'"!. Choose t<om :i , Ctlor, G! Whit•. 1 • Tulllblers ,. oz., 12 oz., 1 oz. •Mlg • foad-SIDr Ro1111d ~'ii." • Connd Bowl 1" n oz. • Food-Stor Square 12 oc :::--iJ ~ • Faad-Stor Square 1 r111 ,.--~ • Food-Stor Square 11Ht. • food-Stor Square o.11t___ '@ ~ &$ •Bowl 1• oz. ~ • Batter Dish ~ • fly Swatter• Soap Box ~ ~ • lceClbeTray ~ f' V1 l,,slre11 15c to3Sc Your Choic• PAK OF 2-PLASTIC Ice Cube Trays ~· 2i$1 f16illlP, sllcbblt, t11rakable. S1HR'1Ettf)'UY l•• Prlct llc Label Maker Bn~ht st.Jl·slick label> wi!:1 new litk1 fl'int. Grtat lo 1nfifidu1liir )lei· lllM ~ssessl)n. $1,·••'s Ettryl!IJ Law Pric11.&I 6°ieeiTilAD: TOOTHPASTE Fluorilt Form1l1 Sn·11·s E~111UJ l1• Pric1 Ile "Tampax" T111111s -For tclal lrtemm aid comfort. Sa, ..... [,.~,, l•• Pritt 4lc 1~• 1tl-time favorites! OraftR! Slices, 6um Orvps or Spice Oroos. Sa, .. •·s Et1~ay tn Price 39c Box of 10 s •• ..,. aRANo Aspirin 2 LB. JAR of KlllN'S Strawbeny PHSERVES s., .... , lflfJllt LnPric1 7k MOUSIMOUI HlLPER ~n~~~~~~-4 = $1 lO lq1I Slzt. : SJt.11's l••11W law Price 4Jc l'n -. .. • • •' • • • ' JI DAIL'/ PILOt S \"ltdntMlar. F"tbrvlty 17, 1971 OVER THE .COUNTER • • } February ' 1911 DAILY ,ILOT . . I ' ' ,,. ___ _ .. Jl.f DAJL Y PILOT LEGAL N011CE LEGAL NOTICP. IAlt '"2 S\ll>Elt!Olt COIHtT 01' TMI" !T .. TE 0" CAltFOlfNIA 1'011 TllE COUNTY 0, OltAl+GI ..... A-4.MIJ "IOf!CE OF MEAlllHG 0" "l"TITION "011 l'ltOIATE OF WIL.L ANO LIT- TIEI:$ TESTAMIUtTAIY E•ltl! of A. MILTON GltEEH, .U .t.LY.l.H MILTOH GREEM. 0..:Nwd. NOTICE IS HEltE8Y GIVEN tt11t N. KtlftrYn G•Hn lwl! f!IHI Mrel11 t P"mlen lfW' Probtlr Ill Will t nd tor lu U1n<:t of Ltl"e•I Te,i1...-n11ry to Pt•lrloM•. rtftrt!ICt to wt.Id! fs mt iH •o• h1rttie.• "1rtlu111rs. '"1111 '11111 tM !imf ttld 1111cf al h1.o•!ll9 fll., u me h•I t..fn WI IGI' f tbrlltlrY :H, 1'71, •I t · lQ '·"' , In lht tOllr!•llOITI of Oeo1rt~n1 No. ' of u fd court, ., llXI Cfvlt Ctnl•r Orlv~ wut. in I~ c11~ or S1n11 1on1. (1111.,, .. 11. Ot!ftl l<fbr\ltN t , lf11, W, E. $T JOHN Cwnl¥ Cler~ COOKSl:Y, SCHUMACHllt, MINYAltO AHO H01¥Alf0 11$ ,_ ...... CwnltY IN• Ortll'Jt, Ctlllwfllt nut T•I. 5'7·1111 AllW,,.,..1 '9r P1Htie111r l'YDllsh~ Ort n11 '"'' Ff'b•uar~ 11. II. 1,, 1'11 D11f\r "!fat "'" LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE • 'Billy' Ballet Heliveil VCI's Lori11g Conducts Histor y Talks Wednesday Evening f'nltUARY 17 .......... ""' D1.HIPh1. G MIC ••••1ia T• $11Jdlr. an. .. .. D Iii: l"a.ct ... it: .,. ... , tiM lll&ft lirf"' Conclllllu. (c»n'I· tdy) '64 -TOllJ' turti1, ~atal11 Wood, Huwy f'.orH!1, Laum ltcall, ............ .,.., ,,._ e liJJOO •r"' IDM .._ "Ponr1it1 ¥1 ." 111- stn.ictillftl ·1rt l ilM Ml lllirl( I ltlt 11tn te m••• • .n llf!rtnit tn 1 mirror. ll!l 1hk Flllifr lll-14 mwaHenlltll Cl!J La ..... fl.., .. CHIM!• Ill lll'UI - 1:15 m c..tit'• "' l:JOQ~ t.«s .,..,_ ... m_...., ms... r11.11111Ma1t llll"'--I!!) loo -aJAIC It.., .. p... A.olftra aftlll W11'11 lrlMt ...... . • 11-w frlllt ... GUiits; TMJ Rllld1!I. Ctret Ctltftflina, Jla MIC- '°""'· ........... ··-...... ._ ..... Strits about "" .... 1,,.ctl ti lilt It '6nttf1"411f1 Wrica. IDP...,_ I., liM& , .. •a CIJ ·-....,"" '"" COii fl ilMcllcal Uri \Mn Ifs •II '· .. I illHlltntt )'OUllf NII (...,.,. httf Stnm) • .. out .. 11:111 ..m"' II• c111't par hil .tt•'s hospit1J llina. llVOti• l1i1ndJ 1Ullb !1!'1""1""" It tflt tlfifll •ift. ,lulit DorlDnd, ~;;;:;;;;,;o kttJt Acttm1111 .,.,..,. " lftlllt '! M111h. D Alan kine'• World ot * Aur .. ltion lonllflt on KRAFT MUSIC HALL A 8 ID Cil ll """ "'"' .. . »' · ".-.i,11 Kin1'• Wendttfol 'World t( f .. ",·. ~·~ Atrr•willon. '-rt Ill." Altn llin1 It : 4 "'!':·~ llOlt t. LW Horne, J1mn Coce ' ' ": •rill .llrlJ' Stilltr 111• Anne Mutl. 8 DI f1aitiVI u ID!()) Ell""'" c.. ,,_ Lindi lon:sttclt. J1111«1 Tt)'lof', 1'ot17 Jot Wtiite. Albert lroolll 1nlll Mli1 Yfu1t1 111111 tM Dilltm. ..Johnfl) C.lh "' Clmpus" wn hlltll tt 1Choo1S Ill tilt flntrril11 tf'M. • While the American Ball{· Theater perfornu its 11· performance series ln the Los Angeles Music Center, Orang e ·Coast residents tonight will ha ve an unusual oppc>rtunity to review the history or the company with two of its foun- ding members. Eugene Loring, chairman of the department of . dance . ·~ UC Irvine. will provide a film version of his "Billy the Kld.'r a v;ork still performed bY: ABT. for use in 1 ledore: program, "American Ballet Theater: Its History and Repertoire." at 1:30 p.m. in the Fine Arts Village Concert Hall . Olga P.laynard will disc!WI the 1939 founding of the com- pany and its development into one of only ,,,.o major U.S. ballet companies. Loring choreographed and narrated "Billy" and danced the title rcle. The fi lm to be ghov.'n was madt as a television special under his direclion , Dimitri Romanoff, like Lor· Ing a charter member of ABT. also will join in the: presen- tation on the danct companY • past. 1:• 8 CIS ... W11tw Cn11111ite. om nc "'"'HJ "-' r11~ Bri11kle7, rn.11t MdliH, .W111 Chin· cello1. • I IHCW I flrillciitt We 14 TaMe A Titit it; tht •Md lidt If TtllM .ttt1 1 Mo.y If H1utitr. an 11111• "BILLY THE KID" RECALLED AT UCI EugnH Loring o1nd Holly How•rd in 1940 The public i~ invittd to at· tend the lecture and tickets are available at $1.SO. lllil""'"' t:llDC.lliiil ta.1n ··-, ........... ·-·-TV Review Stereotypes Mar Drama 1:5!i m c..tt.11 • ...,.,.. '"' U liJJ CD 11-m m T4i Ttl a. Trwtti tJll nt ff'Mdl CMf ''Stnwberry' Soufflt for Deawt." .tuli1 Child 1111'111 ~ IMlw It JWtptrt this 1111riaous 4ish w wort 1t m. • IJll!lll witllol/t •Mftl I MIWIUt t.elllpat. m M rt .... n.n: Tiii Pint ChrdlMI 'TM ,rattlhnt Wind " en....,._. D lttlil: "Iii '"'"'91'" (•eat· trll) 'il--l• V111 Clttf. mllltwit! '1 w .. I 111111 Wlf ., ..... {colllfllly) '49--CllY C:n11t. AllR ~·"· • l&Mir. ......,,., S.lttl .. ~ Ylt#' (111y~ef'/) 'st ltithtl11 C.rbH. i;rtt1 GYfl\. mr.a.. ....... _. ..... lh '7>!1 Litt ti ZN ." ll!I"' -lml9tli1 lilln lll:JI ID 9 (j) Mw •nlfll Ol)'l'll9ic Ch1111plolll' H!fhl. l:llSG')TIIMfit .. '-'1• 1:3011 IB ({) Tt ltMt Wit• LIM Gnndp1 l'nlitt'• '"'' "hol'll-frld· i!fl1'· b!t'llts Cll!llt ht li1n~1 I IOllfld lbiut ~n hil f1111ily fKtl wietioll Melis-ttltir bfn.111 1p1rtm1nt ~illlliRt it tbout .. H ........ . ..,,. 8 ID 00 111-<-. "'· 1f1111 orltln•tes In Burf1111k, Clltl. Scl'l1Cul11f tu•tl: lick 1111117, Dt· 1id Sttinbt1t. Lll1 Tomlin. D m 1111: c...tt lllor11 Aflfattl· 11111!1 IN c.I. St"dtra fUfJf. l:tODllllM:,,..... (lllnma) 1l- C-1t Mo11"9IM1Y, Giibert Ro!lftf. By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) ABC-TV's very pop u tar "Movie of the \Veek" series Tuesday night offered an am- bitious telepla y about a runaway girl who returns to h e r suburban, respe ctab! family after a fling at hippie life. The film had an attractive Lille, ''11aybe I'll Come Home in the Spring." and starred Sally field to£ •·The flying Nun" series) in a sensit ive performance as lhe girl a youngster. not cverly in· JellecluaJ, ·who is frying lo set her life in crder after failing to find peace of mind with either her family or the hippie existence. She has been through 11 lot \\'he n v.·e see her returning home al the start of the film, and iihe is eager to ple~se her parents to show her best intentions. Unfortunately, she has not come home to paradise. Her younge r sister envies her hippie experience and is anxious to emulate her -partly for the same reason that drove ti.1iss Field away : the lack of understanding or communication from h e r parents. In addition. lhe father and mother, portrayed by Jackie Scott Still Won't Take An Oscar Cooper and Eleanor Parker, run a very tense household, and seem to have learned Iii· lie or nothing from their ex- perience wlth lheir runav.·ay ·daughter. And here we ran in1c both the drama and the ques- tionable strength of the Tues- day night play. Jn the first place, one must give credit ror the film's attempt at a contemporary _ irtory w i t h :romething to say -a tale directed ~·Hh a good deal of verve and shrewd use or flashback material lo draw the contracts be I w e e n suburban and hippie life in the mind cf f\fiss Field as stlt tried to make peace 91·jth hersell and her parents. The girl's role was most effective because it sho\,·ed !he subtle and nol-so-subtle pulls or both sides in her mind. and avoided being oversilnpJified. The envious sister also was neshed out convincingly by Lane Brad- bury. Yet the parents once again v.'ere those stereotyped. black-and-v.·hite s uburban \'illsins ~·e see repeatedly in vidto drama. Of course there are such people, many of them. Anrl. in television drama. they make for easily explosive con· fronlafions betv.·een youth and Uie middle-aged nemesis of authority, Yet when you RO tor ''types" rather than mullidimensional characters, you sacrifice the opportunity to delve into lhe subtleties that make drama less predic- table and thus more re vealing and compassionate. If there are indeed such characters 11 Cooper and ~1iss Parker played, there are also others in suburbia ( v.·hicb is reall.v not alt that bad ) who might have betn more flexible. and therefore more v.·orthy as p~ tagonists. Not too many years agn. v.·hen movies v.·ert first trying to exploit lhe yoo th craze. there were a lot of low budget quickies that ob vio u s )~ employed tv.·o rules: avoid sho\~ing any rigures thal might represent authority to youngsters I esp e cially parents): but if you do use them, make sure they are portrayed as b!ack-and·whlte one-dimensional idiots. 1faybe ''I'll Come Home in the Spring'' had much higher ambitions than such nonsense, and succeeded at some of them. And if the partnts• part.s were neshed out for more credibility, and the !tory "·ere expanded a bit. it might \rell ht good enough f1tr theatrical release. Stereotypes don't help. though. We'll never get anyv.·bere that way, on or off the screen. RAUCOUS BAWDY COMEDY Moliere's OPENS FRIDAY "The Imaginary :;,-;-: Jouth Coast Repcrtor;· U liJJ(J)f!I"' ,. .. ''"" "All ttle '-I Ntilf\hon." Cindy oa- 11 Mt-«iait ai.r. .,,..,. ,,.. • "'11p',• "'-blll ClirtriM.. IN "'WiWata ........... GRAi'lA.DA. SPA IN (AP) -Actor George C. Scott, lwic~ nominated for an Aeademy Award and a good bet to be named again this y•ar for "Palton." says h•/ 646• 1363 );till isn't interested a nd, ... ,... \\'ou\dn't accept an Oscar il1-••' loll S.ittl Ntritftlll hlpplts wti. ..... iflt9 lt!t tofl'lntUAllJ', llut th• 1N1jority ti Ntidub 1(lflt Ott. Sit Dill Smit#! l't ttkt -.:tion tttillll: ....._ Wtltet 1,..-pnts Thursday DAYTIME MOVIU t'.>I 8 Mllilc "laq•1111 AMI'" (llltt· 1111} 'S4-W1"dtll Cort7, Mtrt lf•I LKhoolll, re""' Tucbr. ht "'·on one. "I would rather not get ln-' \•olved in the whole busin,ss,", said Scott. '[ Tb~ 43-year.()!d actor is in Spain making "The Last , Run." 1bout an over-the-hill i G...., Acr.. Hit lM"itM_.. gangland chauffeur caught up l (df1m1) ~lutf ..._ CMtttophw l'lummtr. · in one last comeback attempt. GI "CllJ " -· !""'tu•l 1;:::=======::;;;::.ll t :t5 e -... • ._. .,.. (Cl&llMldt) c,..i,y, '42-ct1udtt11 Colblrt,JMI McCr•. l:tOfD ., • ..._ ....,.. (lfttr111) ·35 ·55 -Vld1t llld.ta1t11, •ttt1!•11 - •ttiied•lll" (•MIHufl) '50-Jhn' -Caro!t le111ll1r'-Cary lilt111l Otvis, M1rsh1 JoMs. I Z:IO IJ -ni. W• LMr" (dnm1) ''2 ~ 1;300 .. 1111..., (ctr1m1) 'M-Cil•n--stm MeQu1111. Rolltrt W11n1r, "'""' 11.11-.1,.. 11,1~1w." 1k Fen, Oofin• ••. lllli1 Mleist11. tMritf 1111111. Michael Ca in• "GET CARTER" ·~ ''THE VIRGIN GYPSY" • •twrolT IUClt • ... ,..,,. Now thru Tuesday ll~I <§1 "touchocl w;th •-•rrri< magic and two remarlreW• . end aff.uin1 P9rformenc..t' -o..;i,. °""""'"'· ...... ,.... Jason Katharine ..A. Robards Ross 9' r,,,,iitc!t -G-"" ~..J.JJ=' . -m! ;:::.~!;:: N 0 W P l A YI NG I ALSO-THIS MEMORABLE FILM -'"""'"' "'"""'"·: ~J STARTS NEXT WED • IXClUSIYl li.LIOTT GOULD MAllCIA JllODD "THf llnLE MUlDHUS" DAllY· PILOT ZS 1Jieater Notes ,, SICOND 110 ,EATUll . ·'• ~ By TOM TITUS ot tll9 Diii~ l"Ott S .. ft · In -the rec.Im or living 'lttel(er Costa Me5a ls richer Wft' Ynost communities, with :bolh'..SOUth Coast Repertory and the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse within its borders. Both were organited in the Silme year, I~. and both have grov;n in prestije and popularity over the years. TAKE THAT -Carol Faulstick pummels a struggl· ing Gene Bel')edict while Joe Del Rosso watches be· \1ildered in this scene from "Here Lies Jeremy Troy" at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse. Westminster Sets ~Cast for 'Carnival' ~Jean Anouilh's ''Thieves' Cµnival." a French comedy \l'il.h. a farcial twist. will be ~e nexl production of the .)\'eslminstcr Com m u nit y XJ"ie.ater, opening Feb. 26. , .Sondra Evans. a veteran ol iM · professional, comm unity a?ld collegiate theater ranks, ti directing the play, wh ich l ri c I u des award·winn ing performers Sally Crowley. Burt Warner . James C. Smith aild Bill Cullen. ;~Others members or the Westminster cast are Arvid l-';ttnaa, Jeffrey Newman, Pat W-'rner, Valorie Harries. Dick Taylor, Noel t.1cdai/le, Joseph ~Coming Feb. 20 . ' l.aws, 'Judi Harr Ing lo n, Katherine Gordon, Neil Heich, John Monroe and Alice Reich. Heading the backstage crew are l...e<Jn Crowley as pro- duction manager and Burt Harrington as technical direc· tor. Alice Reich is stage manager. Joan Hagerty prl'>- duclion coordinator, Barbara Harries set desiRncr and Doris Allen choreographer. "Thie\'es' Carn ival'' will be presented for four weekends. Fridays and Saturd;i ys through March 20, al the Finley Schoo I auditorium, Ed14·ards at Trask avenues, W e s t mi n s I e r . Advance reservations may be acquired by calling 892-4985. • Family~ekq ·. ,. ,.,. .. •• .,. ' .. Although SCR has been twice Randy Keene d 1 r ec ling . ~iouhon Pll1yhouse , with lrvin ings Friday and Saturday and I as active -56 productions Berna.rd Simon, Steve Uhler, E. Kimber directing the vi n· a 2:30 matinee on Sunday. to the Civic PI a y ho u 1 e 'I Anne-Eva Newstead and Jay taiie Cole Porter musicid . Cris Timmons is directing 27-both the repertory com· McCormick are the principl1Js Blanc"" MickelSOfl. B 1 11 and. choreographing the pany and its community In the WillUuu Goodhart, com· PoweU, Robert Engman. Lana musical, with Ken Jones and theater colleague have given edy. Reservations 536-8861. Shirley Williams In the star· i "" 1y FRANCOIS TRUFFAUT ~STOLEN KISSES" [!} COlOR ~ °""" H-..-~ll N:•l ~IOI , I I ! I 1, r~( f J ' I I ',I I I ··111.e ,,,;1d cl1.itd•• <mta Mesa a lwl).pronged William lnge'•s 1'A 'I.Ass ot Walker. Joe Wilson and Eileen ring rvles at Jordan High boost 1n the cultural world. · Roses" is the heavier fare Fiahbach. are the mainstaysl:~Sc~h~ooJ~•~"diiitold~"imi,i6lOO~~Ajtl~a~n·~1~~~~~~~~~~~~iiiii~~~ Thls Friday, Cotta Mesa's at the Nifty Theater, 307 Main of the La1una production. tic Ave., Long Be a c b . two theater groups launch St,. with perlormances·Friday Perform&mjeS are staged at Resf!rv11ions (213) "32-7926. their latest efforts, and bo)h and ,gjturday under Tom the playhouse, llOG 1,.aguna Can- are designed to r e I i • t}.>r Tttus' direction. Heading the yon Roa'd, Laguna Beach, mi1htlly on the lau1h.,. meter, cast of thcJ mlc:twestern drams tonight through s a t'u rd a y. '.'1'*'*11111111111 1:11111 1111'rggruuurrJ South Coast Reperlar\' bows art Beth Titus, Gary 'Sad"up Re,.rvatioru 49'.o74J. PREMIERE EN6l6fMENT! SHOWJNB NQWI . " •. llu1h:d A1•h:.IH in wJth Moliere-; ''The and Rulh Wagner . Reserva· Three final perrormancell of lmaginary Invalid," while t.he tions 557·729'1 ' Meredith Wlllson's ·•The CIVic Playhouse counters wtth ' ·* fl.fusic Man" wind up the Long a ._PtW comedy, "Here Lies . "i\nything Goes" kteps on Beach CLO production this Jeremy Troy." · 1 the L, gun a weekend , with evening ,,,,. ror SCR. "Invalid" marks ~go~i~ng~~·;;~~~~~~~~~;:;~~~~~~~ a relurn lo an old , familiar !;: style of production, the com· NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES media dell'arte which in·l'-~:;;;;;~~~~~~;;;~~~~~~~~~;~~I traduced the company to coastal audiences in the form of "Tartuffe." R o n a I d Boussom makes his debut as a direclor with this romic treatment o r exaggerated hyperchondria. Hal Landon takes I.he title role ol the bogus bedfellow, with SaWldra 'Mathews-Deacon pla}'.ing his roving w.ife, EJ.ai~e Bankston as the hery D\lltd and Janis Mor rissette and Cameron Young as the young lovers. i Completing the SCR cast are William Verderber, J e ff Mitchell, Reginald Rook, Phil Oertl.r. James r.tcKie and Boussom himself. J a m e s dePriest is set designer with music contributed by Toni 1 Shearer, whose ··Mo I h er' Earth" continues to pack the Third Step Theater. "Invalid" will be offered on Fridays and Saturdays, with "Mother Earth'' slated Sun· day. Wednesda y and Thursday of the nert two weeks at the theater, 1827 Nev.·port Blvd .. ~LLIOTT GOULD Wffk~IYI• "Wit•" J & 1t1M, "Cr9Ul'f•l1" 110 111tr1 111. 'I '""·' "'WIN' J;1J.J.1t1Jf. Mc ............. 1:•1 & 1•4S II<~ DA\llOl WOLi'(~ ,...,v<flon "I LOVE MY ... WIFE" -.i.1- "NUN AT THI c•oss•oAos·· Costa Mesa. Res er\'ations 646-li~?.~~~~~~~~~~~~:::~::,~::~11 1363. * The Civic Playhouse's .. Here EVE SHOW STARTS 7 Lies Jeremy Troy '' marks Orange County's first look at CONTINUOUS SHOW .the Jack Sharkey farcial com-SAT. AN D SUN. FROM 2 edy being staged by playhousc1 BARGA.IN MA.TINE[ technical director R i c h a r d "Andy" Anderson. EVERY WID. , ~.M. Gene Benedict plays the title They •load together to c aim a dream! role of a high school dropout WALT who becomes a lawyer without D N' y benefit of bar exam. and Carol IS E Faulstick is cast as his wife. PRODUCTIOMI Joe Del Rosso is the bar· rister's blackmailing buddy, Bonnie Ebsen a fetching young model and Alan Hart the big boss or the law firm. .,,,.,.,. . ()°!!.'! '. FORREST ~' ., J llCK I ·• , ELAM f ' . \ \... ~··YERA1'[1LES '-"": I ~ ...;,,-,,L, Friday's opening night is reserved for patron' associfl· lion members · only, while subsequent performances will be given this Saturday R!"ld Friday and Saturda y of the next two weekends at the l Community Center auditori um ! on the Orange Co u ~ t y1 F ;i i rgroonds. Reservat1011s 834-:>.103 days and 6.'4-5391 evenings. ·~~;RSE ALSO ,....~,,..,,."' * STEf'.A.h'JF: POWERS ' PHTL SIL1'ERS Two other arra theater WALT DISNEY T HN groups will be raising their:ll~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ curtains f'riday night when I HOWAR!l 6.Ml~Silv.IRlllUR HllllR Pioduchon John Marley & Ray Milland [RICH sEGAl iii'HuR Hlll[R HOWARo G MINSKY OAv10 °GOloEN f RAN~S LA] 1 P1••~w~1~,~: lft [ lll.ll'lllll~l!P~~l&IU ON h.U'tiJIJll tlctloM j m: .. !;":'.'.::"::..• .__, . ,,, "LOVE STORY" shown at 6, 8 & 10 p.m.; Fri. & Sat., 6, 8. 10 & 12 p.m. ~·W..VER~ ~~ MtC..0.0'-... ll.O ((JlT $.IUY~ • t.l0¥LL ~ "l r•w1ter MtC1oud" Sht1\\'!l 111 81i.m., "Mov1" S ho\\n a l 6:30 &: 10:15 p.m. Box Office O[l('n 5:30 Shoy.· Starts 6:30 p.m. Mon.-Tutt.•WM.·Thura. "lov• Stor(' 4:45-7:15-9:15; F'rid1y 4:45-7:15-t:IS.11 p.m. MATnleE"'til1t~··''"·''" •" ·"'·' .~~L°ovEtsTiiRv:,5 A PHENOMENON! PREMIE RE ENGAGEMENT .... ...::. ........... (0&16 IOfl'--Ut-1!fl --......... ___ ,... ___ There has beeft nolhing lilt! .it in a generation r· -n.t .... c-si.,,--,11,ltfl -:r_:ws Ali k&rn • lyM O'llul & !llMl!l ,. M"l ·Aflll.l 11.l!I ~~ -Jtlltt Mml ta Millu• 00< DUSTIN HOffMAN "UTTll 816 MAN" CHiii' OA.H GlO-GI -l'ATI DUNAWA Y ~ the Fullerton Footlighters open the drama ''The De1!h and Life of Larry Benson" 1 and ''Ring Around E!iiabeth" bov•s in al the Long Beach Community Playhouse. EXCLUSIVE COUNTY RUN 2 , 201' Ceoto"t'" '"""t' JAMES EARL JONES. '°' JANE ALEXANDER • II ' • l ~ the Launch Pad: POLLUTION 'DETECTIVES' Former aerospace eng ineers who were forced out of work by NASA cutbacks have found o gp chollenge in the field of environmental ..... : . eA911n1er1ng. , This Is the second story in FAMILY WEEKLY's 11 ri1s on en vironmenta l pollvtion. , • iitor FOR SISSIES -Hockey is no game for , Cream puffs and, if you need more proof, It's ' the players. themselves, who object to recent moves 'to make the game safer for its profes· siona1 participants. e THE LADY IS A LADY -Peer Oppenheimer ,. ~s lunch with Joan Crawford and shares con· ersatiooal tidbits from the glamorous and "'i:racimts lady \filb bis readers. • ·. ' ~ . AfI Comwg Saturday in the I DAILY PILOT I • •·Larry Benson" is Reginald Rose 's television drama . first aired on the old "Studio One,"! adapted for the stage by Kristin Sergal. Jay Conklin \ directs the story or a you:ill soldier's return to a homcl that does not acknovl'\edge him, with Donald Carr cast as the 50Jdier and Bobbi Micek.! Bill Feeney and R a n d y 1 Wcehrmann taking the roles or the family. The drama v.•ill be 1taged for th ree weekends , Fridays and Saturdays. at I he Muckenthaler Center. 1 I 9 Buena Vista Ave .. Fullerton. Reservations 527-4415. On the Lighter side is Long Beach's .. Ring Aro u n d Elir.abet.b." the story of a ha.r· ried mother hit by a case o( amncllia. Directed h y James Brittain. the show features Laurella. Lucy and Cathy D.a gg et t, Gle.an Eckenroth and f'rank Rutherford. Friday and .Satu rday performance art 9Cheduled. through the end of March at the playhouse. 5021 E . Anaheim Ave .. Long Beach. Reservations (213) 438--0536. * Else where on the theatrical circuit. comedy and drama are being offered at l:f\ln.. lington Be;ich"s two the1ten with ••Generatlon" at the !fun· tington Beach PJ1yhouse .and '·A Lo.u of Roses" a.t the Nlfly thc11tcr . And musle11 comedy Is Ule order of {he d!!y at the Laguna Meulton Pl~yhoust ("Anything Goes .. ) and the lAng Beach C:lvlc Light Opora ("The Music P.fan"). "CeneraUon." which Is g'ner1t1ni:i a lot of traffic: 11 the box office. goes on F'rid:iy and Saturd&y at the PllEMLEllt: lNGAGIEMIEMTI AH MacGr~w I •11 n O'NHI "LOVE 5TOllY" IOP) SUI!.· 1nur• .... •:N •l :IO -lt100 ,.1 .. , ••. -• · • • , •. lJ •·"'· U""'r 11 M',11 Ir Witll Prr1n1 •llTTll FA.USS .. 110 HALSY• •!ua Utt · Ann M•r9r1I • Jiit N•mull "C.t , & COMPANY~ (fl I ·····~······························ lA(•lf .. ~• Ott~•ln IMWlfltl JIMn 11 ... fllJ ... ,OOLS" 1•1'1 "t111 e Cllll .lt ... rl•• "tHAltLYu ·······················~············· Erclll1lft Ot1• .. I• ,.,.._11111 U""tr II M111I t• WUll ,,,.,., "I LOVI! MY Wll'••• l•I "'lit • IK .. 1• C•ll1' l'rthl'I "NUN o\T THE CltOSSllOAOS" (0"1 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ·•·•·•·······•··•·· ... ···~···~·· AM ""' lxdvtlVt Dth•I• Jllno1111 V..it '&MtMY ,._.. "THI WILO tOUttT•Y" 101 """ e ••'"" Mfr ... "II Sltlrtn .,TKI tOATKllCS" (II \ --li•Cllft"'9 Df"f"'I" IMW!fltl -• 11 ...... 11 M1.-1 tt WI!~ PtrHll -.... ''fK•1• IN TH• t•LU•" 111·~1•• """' • c11r••i.-,; .,.,... SJ.to Pll CAILOAD "THllll IN 1'HI ATTIC" t•I ~"r-:::.-:o==-r-~~~-'\ rfil'l 1' The Great eoior White Hope" Plua--Y\'ea Montend ·Irene l'•ptl • Je•n-Leula Trlntln11nt In "I "-Jletff (GP} PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT '"'"' 8RIWSTIR: MCCLOUD' BUD Sl\LLY l!il- CXJRT KEillRMAN lttd Hit-lorMr• H..,114rr lit ''THI 1.AITMAllll" llJ ' ALSO AT BOTH TH&ATRES Robert Redford and Mlchael J. Pollard UT'T\( FAUii •RD 116 HllUY , ... ,w.- A.1.._.lcher4 Crenn1 ·Gene Heckrntn -Oret•r'J' Ptck In "MAROON ID" EXtLUS!VE ENGAGEMENT ***' HllHESTW. IN H II Ol!'SHO""'NC CENT!!! * 1-flinY.,.>Ot MJ...,_• C0Lt;M8JA PICI'URts ....- .. JR\'JSO AUL"I f'RODUCTJOS . Oonuel• TICMKICOL0••1PAl<IAVl!llOM• I •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• playhouse, 2110 Main St., "''itb•J ="---''-===----"------_;;::"-----t-== I • • I J G DAILY PILOT Wf'dntsday, Ftbr11ary 17, 1971 . BELIEVE ou·R PRICES AND TERMS ARE THE BEST AVAILABLE. IF YOU CAN DO BETIER ••• ,.1SHOW US! 1971 DEMONSTRATORS ·1971 T-BIRD 2 DOOR LANDAU l1J8-4Nn 63941 ' . . I U 15fll41194 I BRONCO WAG.ON SAYE $ $3185· . NO~ ON • ''""'" "o'"" SALE . . FORD LTD Country Squire Wagon cu16N13s2861 SAVE '66 CHEV ~~;.~ $1377 · "~:-::::~'i:'c':.::K '68 Cortina ~ . . · ·. $CJ~7 '&9 M t · · · · COMVT. · · · '64 ooo·cE 2 OR. ·· -· $s11·· ~~~.. . -~ : '68 Mustang ~~~ $167 '69 FORD iI7:.::-~ $2977 '68 FORD ~!ir:.:..,.., $1477 '66FAIRLANE ~:f-::~:7::? 377 '67 MERC~~--$1577 '67 Mustang g.~ 51277 '65 OLDS ~~= $1377 '61 CHEV ~~ ~77 '67 FORD ~'i'~~ $1477 '63 CHEV : ~.~.~.!~60 " '66 PLYM~~~.t~~! . '-5877 '66 LTD ~-~~;~~~~~~:::;. s1077 · • f'ldit OtfY20I foctorf II' (ondirilnil'lll· RSW270 rvof. EYX6 70 ,+-'" -,_,-... ~ .... ~~ " " WtdneKby, FebrUtt1 17 .. 19 11 I Desserts 'B I I . • ... erry American Whit ii more American than applt pl,;;-_ cranberry pio(t Fcir this merry nilie. berry la the Only lrilit native Ip Amefl?· It has been"'Mjoyed since the timio ·cil the ~lgrlms. Whal be1ter w~ to celebr~le February'• natlonal holl~"YI· than with ~ favorite deaaerb . featuring Amerie•'•· native •fruit? , . · . • Both tthe• Wint.er ·Cranberry Pie •and tlle Cranberry Apple DumpUnp llhown herl· llH .Jllll)e with whot. berry cran- 'beny ~d\:t; h "illlbt. all year looJ. ,lltat;1: k• -yon .we~ one of ult wrse •• p tUck.ed 1 few boxes ol freab crtnberrlt!' in the freezer last fall. you ·an ·bring them forth now and use them h. tn.akinl these auperb all American ·wts. WINTER CRANBERRY PIE · · p1ck.age pit crust mi1 : can (11; ounces)· whole berry cran- ' " bei'rJ UUCf: :.· cuPs seedl'ess rajslns or curranta ·,teaspoon almond extract .1. Iemon, cut into paper thin 1lices, • rleeded and "Chopped coarsely ,?rePare pie crust according to package 4ffect_lona. Use 2/3 of the pie crust to ti¥ the bottom and. sides of a I-inch plei p&n. MU cranberry sauce, raisins, aJiq.o¥ ertract and lemon. Pour mixture tntO.Jlned pie pan. ~ out re(l'laining pie crust and .cut hi.to 11 strip!, ~-inch wide. Arrange 1tHp1 in a lattice over filling. Fa,sten ends of lattice to edge of pie with w~tu. RtroJI nmaining pie crust and pd. with a cookie cutter into small ND:. Place slaMJ around outer edge of-pie. :Ba~ In a preheated hot o v e n ( 425 '~ees ) for 35 to 40 minUtes or until mj!t Js brown and filling is bubbly. ~ ·thoroughly before cuttin• into 'Wedges. Serve with warm custard sauce ci;. ~ Egg Nog Sauce. Make,, I 9-inch pit. To make ustng froien cranbtrr~: Mb. 1 cup sugar with 1/• cup no\ir. slir. tn 1 cup water gradually. ~dd l CsiPs coarsely chopped frozen cran- • berties, 2 cups taiain1 and 1 smad oil.nit. thinly 1Uced, seeded and t:hoJt- p64'. .Stir' in ·i,2 teaspoon almond eilracL UR to fill I ~Inch pie crust. Bake ilf' i preheated hot oven (425 4tlf't:el) for .40.to 45 minutes. 1RUM EGG NOO SAUCE ··1 tabltipOOn corruitarch 2 cup11 coinmercial egg nog ·v, cup rum Ji9.taa!poon freshl y ground nutmeg Mil cornstarch and eu Mg. Cook: over low heat, stirring consl&nllJ tmW aaua bubble1 and thickens slightly. Remove from heal and stir in rum 1¥.' nutmeg. Chill until rudy to serve. vcth alJO be IU\led warm, il desir ed. Mites 2 CUI»·· CRANBERRY APPLE DUMPLINGS wrrR.cJIANB ERRY ALMOND SAUCE Domplin11 ·1 medium size bakinf apples ' 1/4 cap· augar . 1 can (I ounces) whole berry cranberry · llUCe v, teaspoon ciJulainon V4 teaspooit· nutmeg i:>uh cloves i tablespoons melted huller o r · niargarine 1 package pie crust mil Milli: Evening ' . PATRIOT·P~~Jl.SERS-SWEETENlD ·WITH ALL·AMERICAN CHOICE Peel 11pplu and core, leaving apples wbole~ MU ~.IU~ar, ci:anberTy sauce, ipiett and butter. Prepare pit crust ml1 according to package directions. Rall oUt 9f1 a floured board to an oblong 12 inch x 111 Inches. Cut into 5-inch Aquartfl. Place I apple on each .Mjuare. fill hole ln apple with cranbt:rr.y sauce mixture. Wrap pie crusl over appltJ. · ' Turh.' down corners m expose top of 1pple. Brush with milk. Bake in a preheated moderate oven 1350 degrees F. l for 4() minute! or until apples are easily pieictd. Serves S. 'Almond Snct: • 2 tablespoons cornstarch 1/l cup sugar 2 cups cranberry Juice cocktail . , 2 tablespoons slivered, b I a n ch e d almonds . , To make sauce, combine cornstarch and sugar. Gradually ·,.rur . in «anberry juice. Cook over low heat stirring con- st.anlly until sauce bubbles and thickens. Add almonds. Spoon hot sauce over 3pple dumplings. HOT CRANBERRY GROG 4 cups ( 1 quart) cranberry juice C<!Cktail 2 cups strong tea 6 orange slices ~. te.aspoon fennel seeds, if desired t tablesp00n rum Ravoring 6 cinna mon sticks Combine cranberry juice./tea, orange . slices and fennel seeds. Bring to a boil. Remove from heat and stir in rum fla voring . Strain grog into mugs. add cinnamon sticks. Serve hot. Serves 6. CRANBERRY MOLDED FRUIT SALADS I envelope unflavored gelatin 11.1 cups cranberry juice cocktail 'fl cup syrup, drained from canned peaches i ..... I cup cubed. dra ined, canned peaches ~t~ cups miniature .m~R4tmtn,ws ,,.. Combine gelatin and 1f.i (llj ·cranbtqy juice : let st;ind for 5 ·minlites. Stir over . low he.at until gelatin is dissolved. Add remaining cranberry juice and V, cup peach syrup. Chill until mixture is thickened. Fold in peacheii. Spoon mix· lure into individual moldii. Top wiLh miniature marshmallows . Prel! marshmallows lntb gi!lalin. covering them completely. Chill unti l firm . Unmold onto salad greens and serve with a scoop of cottage cheese. if desired . Serves II. Crowned With Royal .Menu Flavor Added to Festival By BARBARA DUARTE Of Jiii Dlll'f Pllft ll.tf ~Whal better 1ele<:tion for chairman 'fl. 1 the Laguna Bt~ch W!nter Festival ~ernational Gourmet Dinner than a \.tvacioui· rutauriteur who describes herself as "unfauable." · ~iiree · Davison. fimer owryer of Aftdree·s· in the Art nter . will see cutmlnatiort of mor~ t an two months of work on the· evening of Tuesday. !.eb. 13, as 210 civic and~nal digftilari" <her for I ~ption and .djnner. "The Swfss.born Mra. Davison, who bu "'7td1ed an Intimate dinner for ail' 11 ;well as, li:J:ty doing all t.be preparation .hineU, has arTaaged an elegant ·menu beginning: with cocktails and hor11 ·d'biu•rt• prepared by seven aru . rutauranll topped with • five-course . purrnet.diilner in Victor Hugo IM . .. -~!'General and their wives from .·Qinada, .Japan, Sweden. France, .I!f'ael, ~fllllai"k, Grt:at Britain, Austraha and ·Oil Phlllj>pinu will be guests of ~e · ;\it COiony durin& 1 7 p.m. reception fl ibe liarid hall .of the Laguna Bach ;:! Gallery. · Served with. 't~ cocktail course ·and $:~wihtft horn the Concannon Vineyard ~ 'be Swiss Pasteten from Andree11: 91.rusb canapet •from Hotel · Uguoa : 1*rbecue .reribs fron\ R o y a 1 R.iwail•n:' to11sted ravioli lrom La ia9da: OU rolta from Hou,. of Hyun: ilaican eanape1 from LI Pu. and Pitndl· pata lrom Old Bnmelt -tn/IY 111 latematlonal IDU<h. • ~oBowtnc the cock&.ail hour 1 1ueal.• Wdl move into the French· eleg~ of Victor Huao for i dlcner ol Comommr i'riiioess Alice. File! of Dover SOie, Rich 'rlmd Flelll'Oll: Boston Leltu<;e Salad ·.,.ilh Vlnaliveue Druaing: Toumedca c r >li.e• 1 Clwstur' Artkhoke fr•ncai><. Prince~ Qarrots ind O..:u,i,hJ:i:? Potatoe~. and a dusert of coupe St. 3•~11"'· Aftdrtt 111 !WI novice.' tb tervilll o( fourtMt fare . When she first came to Laguna In 1921, having decided to stay In the United States because "freedom is wonderful." the turned her sewing tale• to dressing dolls · and opened 1 small shop, soon finding herself known as the Doll Lad y. One day she learned that a quain! restaurant almost next door was for sale, and decided In take what she now calls a 20-year fling . The charmin g and attractive cook learned the business from the kitchen up -\taming how to buy. organize and get along with her crew. In most days. one could find Andrtf' up with the birds coolting all of her famous desserts and entrees. puttin~ the house in order and takln1 reserva- tions. While one of her favorite recipes 1.0 trout stuffed with crab and shrimp in 11 cream sauce, the dinner chairman decid- ed to shart an hors d'oeuvres recipt' cre,ted by Peter Hyun as an appetb:e for persons intere.sted In 11ttending U· dinner at a COit of $10 per person. EGµ ROLLS · 1 doien ea roU •kins (thin egg-no· doilgh ~t irl'l·incb by 5 inch square I! pound sllcelM>ulton \llushrooms '11 pound 1Uced bamboo shools v, paund chppped water chestnuts I small broiled cbl.clu:n (boned) 1 teaspoon ult II teaspoon peppet \t teaspoon Klllbe Oil Sb.read the "chicken· meat into 10 por- tions . .Bratse mu9hro0m., 1bamboo.lhoots and wat(r ct,utnuts ln oil for appror.i- matdy $ minutes. Mix alf tngr!:dient.a to- 1ether .wit)I seasonlna:s and place an equal .mount of eacn squart. Reill up dough ~mer to corner 1 n d .eal ends with ~aten egg. Cook egg rolls 'for 10 minutes In deep fat or unl it crt.cip. Drall'I In a strainer and sllce eac h roll intn four plecea. Serve wit h· a ca!l'Ul"J or hot mu.~l.(trd •euce. The tecipt makes one dozen hors d'oeuvres. PETER HYUN ADDS SPECIAL TOUCH TO GOURMET DINNER ; • • I 6men . BEA ANDERSON, Edlt.r ···-· Home News Tailors Taking New Tack: By DOR<YrRY WENCK or-~--...... Home sewing hal enjofed a tnmtn· dous surge In popularity in, recent Yt:':f'S• Now ·sewing is regarded ae a fun tlun1 -a means of creative ·upreaslon - rather just tha-n a money-saving necessi~ ty. Some 600 milli\11 -or l't!O out· o( every ffve garmenta W1'.lnl by 1".0mtl'I and children -are made I.I. home. b)'. some 45 million women and teenagers. All of· these hc?mt luweni ~uire' s~p plies, and ln 1969 about a bilbon yar& of fabric were sold at an averag.e -prke of $2 a yard. Ont tabric whose popularitj has, increased enormously with -tlome seWers iJ":the ,i><>Ji$Mer knit. ._ AIU>ough .this lif,,rtc can be tricky ta sew on and com . more "'8-n .m~y fabtb, borne sewers are ehooaiDI j It because ,of ill easy care qu4lltie1. i i' can be washed and dried in automatic home equipment a~ come out looking like new with no ironlng needed. · ., Polyester knit al!o is very duratUe and frequently can be sewn wlthotil cosl-adding linings and underlinings. There l!l:f: many different brand namet for po·lye1ttr knit-each f abr .lc rpanufacturer hil ib own special name llleJi as "Kodel,'1 "Dacron," "Fortre1,'~ '-"!'nvira," ~tc. But they all are 1imila~ and all will carry the family name "polyester" on the bolt end. .,;. When buying polyester knit, it's wt In look the yardage over carefuliy fOf flaw.1 before it ls cut. This 11 especially true when you buy sale piece• such 11 "bolt ends" 111nd ·•Ja~ specials." Some polyester 'knitl have beeft, prWuunk. othera.lllve not, IO it's but to take no chances and lo preshrlnls' this fiiWk before. sewing It: II can be dampened Omroughly and dried fll your dryer' -or spread out flat ti;i dry . If you hang it, it might stretch . When choosing 1 pattern for 1 knit, look for a style with ease, soft lines and a minimum of seams and CM· struction detail. Raglan sleeVes will bf easier to manage wi!houl pUckering than set-in sleeves. Pleaa., are not the best choice becau5t it is impossible to prtSI sharp creases with home pressing equ1p- ment. Do your cutting on a nit aurfaee, being careful not to stretch the fabric as you pin on the pattern and 11 you cut. If the fabric Is off.grain, this cannot be adjusted in pojyester. IO all YOll can do is position pattem pleetl witlt either the lengthwise grain of the fabrle or with the fabric design. · · For sewing on polyester, your choice of thread is very importao.t -you need one that will stretch with tt>e fabric. Your be!lt choice ·ls ttte all- polyester thread or the cotton-cnvereti polyester. These threads are atmnger than merctrized cotton as well as mort stretchy and won 't iibrink and caUR puckering: when laundered. The new ball netdle, which you can buy for your sewing machine , also will help prevent puckering. 1! ' you hivt a zigzag machine, UM the narrow, closely spaced zigzag 1titch . ·If you dOn 't have a zigzag stitch, support the fibric both in front and In back of the presser foot and stretch 1ently for 1n even, unpuckertd alitch. Have your machine tension properly adjusted and uae 1 moderately large stitch -I to 12 stitches per inch. As knits will not ravel, special seam finishes are not necessary, nor Is stl11' tape. Use a simple tailor's hem -btin& careful not to pull the threads too tight. QU~nONS 11'.E ARE ASKED Q. I have a problem with !.lpper1 puckering In homemade g1rments Of polyester knit after they afe . wAsbtd. How can I.avoid this? · ! A. The major reasOn wt;iy z.lppe.fl pucker Is that they 1hrlflk mort than the fabric when the garment la, ·waahed. Prestvink the zjpper by lntmenlng . Jt in hot water for 1 few millltea and dryin1 it, before sewin1 it lU the 1ar· ment. · • Q. What sort of linin1 · should OM use in a polyester knit? A. Ideally one ahouldn't ne«l+\o izst a lining in polye ster 7 e~lally If are Y.ou trying to achieve • soft, lluJd look. However. sometlmea Ulit Jabric, ls so sheer that you prefer to uae ·1 ltnlnr. In this case choose a Jabr.k; equally as v.'Jlshable and easy care 11 the knit -a woven polyuter wouJd be. my ehoke. Q. The nylon zippers, whk:h lhey Mll!m ·o be using on everyUUnc t.hete daye, •1ften are sUcky and hard lO· work afler the garment ls dry cleaned. b there something that can bt. doDt about this? A. The sticky nylon lippert ailnply n~ a little lubrtcaUng after dJ'Ytle1nlhg to make ~m work well llflbt A·speclal little wn itlck for lubrx.tln~, lipper• can be bought that wllr do Utll Irick nicely without stalnln&. • I ( ( • ,, I DAILY PILOT Wedneulay, F"tbruilry 17, 1971 Banquet Fare Becomes Too Rich With Dates Th.at Relate • DEAR ANN LANDERS; I used lo think you. made up Jeuen. I couldn't belie,•e peoplt> actually gol .so mes.std up. Now I'm in a lulu myself. ANN LANDERS ~ I never thought much abour u until now. When the birthday boy tried to blow out lhe candles be couldn't quite do It, ao his grandmother "helped" him. It suddenly OCCWTed 10 me, as she stood there blowln& out the candles with her ugly molst breath, lhat she was spreading germs all over the cake. wrUt lD about a klodly crudmother brealhlag on a birthday cake. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am engaged to a boy I'll call MUtoo. I have gone with him to vi1lt hi1 parents three times. (They live in another city.) Each time he has gotten into • terrific fl1ht with bis mother. I wouldn't repeat the language he UleS · when he 1ets mad at her. ried? -DESPERATE DEAR DES: W1m illlld ol I ... ~ does l\tiltoa use on yow uow? He .di probably use the s1me languace af*" you are married. oto a youac fool , like ye u. Tbls 1ilu1tioa has all lbe elemut1 or • Peruvian etttbquake. My advlct Is It uawlnd as fa11 a1 pos•lble. Aad doo't .Uedale any more fatber-IOD buqueti. tt lt 1bockln& lhal the 001·1 fa~ "just stands there." Hui equally sbocktN: ls that YOU don't say somethlDC. 1' my opiniop you should let your boyfrltnd know you will not tolerate flltby lldlfU .. rrom. him -to anybody. I ba\'e bttn datlna a great young guy (age 241. He wants lo marry me and I have said yes. Thret "·eels ago I met hls rather . The moment our eyes 1oe1 I felt a strong attraction. Senior has everything my boy£riend has - only more. He's better looking. rnore polished. 1nore mature and more ex- citing. I kne\\' fro1n the moment he looked at me !hat something clicked. This man is 48 years old, twice divorced and nO"' •·at liberty." I arn 2'l but 1·,,e lived a Jot. each other, strictly on the QT, or course. I think we are In love. The only thlng that bothers me is that his last wife 1vas a 21-year-old girl his son had been daling. Junior knows I'm s e e I n g somebody bul he doesn 't know who. He now seems very juvenile and I'm going to break up with him regard1ess. Whal are my chances for happiness \\'ith Senior? -FIREFLY DEAR FLY: A.boat tbt 1ame as a SDO\Vfla.kt la TahJU. Remember thtrt'• DO fool llke ID old fool -unlHI It'• DEAR ANN LANDERS: My 4-year.old child was invited to a birthday party yesterday. 1 took him and several other youngsters in our station wagon. When it came time to cut the cake and blow out the candles I witnessed something l had ' seen doz.ens oI times before, but I tried to think of a waY to keep my child from eating the cake but it y,•as useless, Plee.se say something about this health hazard. -I.E. of S.F. DEAR J.E. OF S.F.: Vnle1a tbe woman bad an lnlecUous dlstau., tt ts unlikely that btr brtaU. would be a t.ealtb hoard. Tbne d1y1 wlU1 indu.strtal pollution threaW:nlag oor very ubceoce ft seema almosl ludlcro111 that a person would What baffles me, Ann, is that his father juit stands there and never says a word. But the most amazing thing is tl\at three minutes after all the screaming and filthy Jangua;ge, they laugh and joke as if it never happened. Drinking may be '·In" to the kids you run with -but it can put YO!J "out" for keeps. You can cool It and stay popular. Read "Boole and Yoil -for Teenagers Only." Send !$ cents in coin and a long, sell-addressed, stamped. envelope with yo11r fequest in care of the DAILY PILOT. And now t must ltll you the ,.,.bole trulh. Senior and I have been seeing My question iB this : Will Milton use th.is language on me after we art mar· Viejo Wome n Rolly Around th e ~1embers of the Mjssion Viejo \Voman's Club (left> lo right) the A1mes. Richard Caneday, John Kreuzer and John Carlisle rally around the car in prepara- tion for a Saturday, Feb. 20, car rally front 6 to 7:30 110,770 Miles Chalked Up Drivers' Volunteer drivers for the American Cancer Society were honored during the annual drivers' award luncheon in the Revere House. Tustin. From its beginning in 1962 \\'ith lhrtt drivers. the pro- gram has grO\\'n lo 198 ,·olunteer drivers. according to William F. Pells. president of Horns lhc Orange County lin11 or the ACS. Transportation 111ust be made available on a \'Olun1ecr basis because of the county 's lack of public transportation. Leader of the volunteer ef- fort is t.lrs. \\' c s I e ~· Dierberger. Anaheim . assisted Car p.m. followed by a potluck and sock hop. Tickets for the Ground I-lo g Happening and rally are Sl and 1nay be purchased from ?Ylrs. Caneday. Grand prize for the rally is a \veekend for two in San Diego. Blow Host Role Assumed Coastline Auxiliary 3536, by Mrs. Pearl ri1 e y e r , Anaheim, and l\lrs. u n a Veterans of Foreign \Vars will Essex , Huntingto n Beach. host a hospitality night Fri· The drivers made 5035 trips day. Feb. 19, in the Legion and drove 110,710 miles, or Hall, Costa Mesa . l\1embers the distance of four and one-of other VFW auxiliaries will half ttmes around the world be guests. during the past year. Honored from Costa i\tesa The 7:30 program will ht J C feature American F I e I d were I Mmes. . . • Mystick Krewe of Kom us Conquerors Appear at Mardi Gras The splendor of a bygone era will be recreated when the Mystlck Krewe of Komus hosts its annual Mardi Gras Ball at a p.m. Friday, Feb. 19. Conquerors Through t h e Ages will set the theme for the medieval pageantry, which will Include a parade of an- cient greats who will emerge from the "mysterious mist" of ages past. Invited to the ball by the reigning King Louis XIV, whose secret identity will be revealed as the highlight of the ball, and Queen Marie Therese (Mrs. Thomas Coad), are Eric tm Red (Robert Rap- paport). Princess Nordrook (Mrs. Robert Meidinger), Chief Geronimo ( L e R o y Flecy), and Princess Morning Star (Mrs. Joseph Piz.zata ). Others appearing will be Monte zuma tMeidinger), Quetzalcoatl (Mrs. Robert Mehnnan ), Napoleon (Ro bert Neu), Josephine ( Mrs, Tlmolhy Kraft ). King Arthur (Richard Lulher), Queen Guinevere (~rs. Thomas Sullivan), Julius Ca es er (George Clinton), C:Omelia (Mrs. William Huntley) and Genghis Khan (Richard Boucher). Still others are KoaLsong (!\1rs. Richard Sh ug<.. rt), Pharaoh Ramses ( K r a f t ) , Nefertiti fi'olrs. Jack Pina l. Ka iser \Vilhelm (S. Clark Smith) and Princo..Bs Augusta (Mrs. Philip Carreon). The historical figures will be announced by the captain · of the Mardi Gras, Shugert. The queen will enter. gown- ed In white satin adorned with crystals and rhinestones. to jolo the king, who w i l J be wearing a royal red velvet jacket accented with gold and silver. Following the pageantry. the Elganova Ballet Troupe will perfonn and mu sic for dan- cing will begin after the en- tertainment. Directing costuming is Mrs. l\Uchael Trujillo. who utilized J. Laver's ,;Concise -Hislary of Costumes." l\l rs. Kraft was in charge of the men 's cos- PARADE FROM PAST -Notable people fro1n past eras \viii be among guests at the Mardi Gras Ball of the llfystick Kre\ve of Komus. Ready to take their places in the pageantry are (left to right) r-.lerrill G. I-lastings, past king, A1rs. Jack \V. Clark and ?\-Irs. Hastings, past queen. The festivities \\•ill begin at 8 p.m. Friday, Feb. 19. turning and t-.lrs. Edward Conroy "'as responsible for the old v"orld military attire. Ladies' ma sks were assembl· ed by Mrs. John Cochrane. Others assisting are Mrs. Walter Thomas;-court gifts; , ?i-trs. Albert Fedennan, In- vitations: Mrs. Tam a r a E!ganova. stage direction : John Cochrane. lighting and special effects: Harry Phillips, logistics; Pina. choreography ; Kraft, stage sets, and Jesse Paul. master of ceremonies. Concluding the list are Nick Paolisso, special music; Mrs. John i'.1eidinger. program ; Mrs, Coad, publicity: ~frs. Sullivan, script, and Mrs. Luther, seating. Fi ne Arts Festival ...... ___ ,,.. .., ' . ' ' ·--Callaghan, John Little Jr. and service students from Paris, 8. F. ~1oler, 100..150 trips. and Norway. Costa Rica and Joseph Fallon. 20-50 trips. Ethiopia. according to Mrs. Children C ircl e Serves Br unch • • Ma rdi Gras Ma g ic Carn ival Commuting New Orleans' J\1ardi Gras festivities \rill overflo'v into the Balboa Bay Club Saturrlr\', Feb. 20. and the Ne,vport revelry promises to match or beat that in the home of the fete. Club members and guests \Viii arrive in costume at 7 for a cocktail hour. and a Creole dinner v,oill be served at 8. Prior to the Southern-style feast, guests may enter a "shop" on famed Bourbon Street to partake of appetizers. pausing along the way to listen to the music of Ronnie Brown's Dixieland Five. Guests \viii be asked to unmask at mid· night and spend the balance of the evening getting acquainted \Vith those not recognized in disguise. Highlighting lhe evening '''ill be the c:rownint or a king and queen. \vho \vill re· ceive special awards. Costume prizes also "'il l be given. Reservations are bei.ng accepted at the clu b. Fountain Valley award win· May Buckland. Americanism · ners were Mrs. Douglass ' Hubert and Jim Munson. 50-chainnan. 100 trips, and ~lrs. Brad The auxiliary will sponsor Con1bs and Mrs. J a m e y an essay contest for sixth Jacobsen, 20-50 trips. graders in the Newport·Mesa Opening Hearts Other honorees were the School District. themed Why f\.imes. Velma Begg, special A Time lor Hearts and I Am Loyal to the Flag. award, more than 200 trips: Entries must be received Flowers, fund-raising dinner Ray Walker, five years. more b th nd f Febru nd dance will take place Friday. lhan 200 trips; Woodrow Y e e 0 il'Y a Smith. l50-200; John F. Drake. \vinners will be .annoonced in Feb. 19, in the Blessed Sacra· Essex and Jack Goodgame, March. First place winner will ment Catholic Church hall. along \\'ilh peter G. receh1e a savings bond and Hollywood. G Id Ad A G ·11· second and third prizes will aase en. am . r1 in. Sponsored by Aid for Baja and L. G. P.1etzger, 50-100 : be $tO and $5. c 1.1 1 1 --" ·ii the Mmes. Helen Evans, Nan a 1 orn a, nc., proc~s v.·1 Graner and James Kleats. 20-provide additional funds for 50. all of Huntington Beach. Easte rn Sta r an orphanage In· Tecate and Laguna Beach volunteers a medlcal clinic in Tijuana. honored were the Mmes. John Hosts Meeti ng Cocktails will be served at r . O'Neill . 100..150: Tom r..tathew and Toni Shryock. 50-7 p.m. and a catered dinner 100: Richard Buss. H. \\'. th;-a~;:er e:rchE3:re~~te51:: at I. Music will be by Las Freeman, R. W. Replogle and Poverellas (The Sin ft'n g M11ry Rhodes. 20·50. will meet at a P-m. Friday, Nuns); enu:rtainment by hyp- Feb. 19, in the f\.1asonlc l A h Ell d · Ne"·port Beach residents not st rt ur en an music Temple. Host for the evening f d · • h R A honored "'ere P..lrs. William or anc1ng '-Y l e ay lwan E. Fortner. l\lrs. L. G. will be r-.trs. Roy Piety . orchestra. Star Club will stage a Thielemeier and L. K. Rogers, dessert card party In the Founded by the Rev. Henry Nev.• officers will be present to welcome pro s pective members when Crown Circle of Florence Cr it tent on Services or Orange Coonty sponso rs a men1ber s hip brunch. l\lrs. Irene Walsh will open her l\fonarch Bay home for tile event Friday. Feb. 19. New officers v.·ho "'iii ser\'e for the coming yeitr include the Mmes. Russell Taylor, president. Harry Hinde . vice president ; Ron Harrod, recording secretary: Walsh. corresponding secreta ry. and Paul Dunham, treasurer. Fest iviti es Precede Ba II Coast Clubwomen Win Winners in the Fine Arts The annual event took place Festival sponsored by the in the Fullerton Ebe I J Orange District, Califomia,_c_lu_b_ho_u_sc_. _____ _ Federation of Women's Clubs have been announced. The Mid\vay City \Voman·s Club had one third place win· ner snd the San Clemente \Voman's Club had three first place winners, on e second and one third. An honorable mention and first place were received by 1nembers of the El Camino Real Woman 's Club, and Foont.ain Valley W om a n 's FEBRUARY'S BIRTHSTONE 1he f)methyjt Club members eamed three ,s,r~ne and capable of lnspirinr firsts. one second and tY.'O \'1rtue ..1nd high ideali, the honorable mention av.•ards. An1ethyst i~ the traditional Two honorable mention symhol or nuthority and ia awards and one lhird place still found in bishops' rinp. were laken by Newport It has been cn ll'd the favorite Beach Ebel! Club members stone or St. \'alentint•, who WGn: and lhe Laguna Be a ch one en.(:"rav'd "'ith a Cupid. wom an •s c Ju b w 8 s The An1eth.yatmark11 ita . \\'Carer w1U1 •in«:r:ity represented with one second • place and two third place wiJr ners. ~....., ..... .,.. .... ..,. ......... ,_, ..... .,. 100-150: i'.trs. Archie Locke. temple at 7:30 p.m. on Satur-Vetter, the group raises fund s Prior lo attending the an. 50-100 and P..1rs. Wendy Alex-day, Feb. 27. Members and for the Alexican projects nual Valentine Ball, members •nder. 26-50. guests are invited to play through a thrift shop in and guests of Beta Alph:i Xi Award winners from San bridge. canasta and other card Pasadena and other activities. Chapter. Bet11 Sigma Phi will Clemente \\"ere l\trs. Dan games. Orange County members have gather in ~ Garden Grove Yeilding, 50-100, and l\trs. The club also Is asking for been collecting clothing, food home of l\lr. and l\1rs. Douglas The C0sta t-.1esa \Voman's Club received a ce rtificate of participation. l\'i:ar 1101!' birth1ton1: fol" ;M_ /n1ftiriu ri11d good forllu1c ~! Un ivers ity Scanned l\1ark l\1anning. 2 0 ·SO : articles In good condition for and buHdln11 materials lo build Elmer for a cockta il party. ljiiOOiiiOiiiOiiiOiii;;;;;OiiiOiiiOiiiOiii•I La R~onne Unlversitaire en France will be discuued In French by ~in. Morris Gollub, professor of French at S1n Fernando Vallty Statt Collece. when thfl Alliance Fr1ncaise of tht\ California Riviera meetl Friday, Feb. lt. 'f11e I p.m. meeting will takr plate In Harbor View School, Coton• del Mar. Westmi nster winners v.·ere a rummage sale on April IO a girl's donnitory at the The ball. given by the \Vest l\trs. Joe Gunderson, SG-100. in tbe Woman's Chibhouse. Rancho Naureth Orphanage Grove Atta Council. will take •Me Mrs. Gollub, who holds an and t-.1rs. Lorr a I n e Hun· Those interested in having in Tecate. place Saturday. Feb. 20, ln t.1A degree in English , also nlnghakc. 20-50, and Irvine·~ articles picktd up may call ~lrs. Michael Jankowsk i of Orange. Representing the holds a French degree. lhe reprtsenlatlve was Mn. Roy Mrs. Piety or Mrs. Arthur Fountain Valley is accepting chapter as valenline princess A1rtgBtion. from lhe Sorbon-llavert. 100..150. Ste~d. donation1. is Mrs. Sidney_ Chappell. __ I 8nd a PhD rrom UCLA in OltADUATE co1t1n1r•rs II Ir o<. the Unlverslly of Porisllr:======= ''iii~-iiiiiiiiiiiMiOiiiiiiiiii! 1~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.,.....,iiiii._ _____ ..-,..11 the fitld of French Uteraturt, t,OOI'• OF OIL PAINTIN5S PltlVATI LISSONS 0'1 •ni DD't WHOLUALI WA•IHOUSI tN Prior lo her acodemlcl .... Ce!'lllllrt•blt "' '1'611• '""'•" OPIN TO THI PUILIC COHVlltSATIONAL P•IHCH & SPANISH career she worked in French S•ndy's Fluff 'n Stuff 1111,.•1.r rvto••No -•c:c1:101T10 r1AcH1•~ radio. i·ournalism and cinema,[ 1 50°/o OFF •ccu11:AT• T••NSUT1C1Ns ,H I . Utll I., IP'ANllH -l'JllNCM -IT.ALI.AN -l'O•TUOU!ll ~·ht"re she worked with Jean , Cttl• Mt-Ml! ... 1'911 Stw•" UI' E. rorNOfll:, SANTA ANA • -MJ..f4)t -1'"""-Ill..._ Renoir , nuled French director.l••••liim;.••••'I' • .ar OIALIJIS WANT•o S41-J7'0 54f-oo64 I 21)1 E. Cotti Hwy, Co,..n• 411 Mer-Ph. 67J·l9SO • lltllrAIMrkl,.. • Mnt1t Cllt"ll 11 YHn l~ II-Ll(llle!I Th, pl•t• to 10 '" Ge11wi"' Arn1lhy1t SoMtli Co•ll Pl1t1 l ri1+ol 11 lht s,,, Oi190 Fwy, ' I . ' . Wtd ntsday. F'ebruary 17, 1471 s DAIL V PILOT %9 PT A Founding Remembered • Unit Programs · Green Flag Down for Evening of Fun Indianapolis \vill be rivaled when Bear Street l'FO's Pinewood Derby gets under day at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 25. at school. The seven-inch \YOoden cars, constructed by the boys. will be raced on a downhill track. Prizes v.·ill be given and each boy participat· Horoscope Capricorn: THURSDAY FEBRUARY 18 By SYDNEY Ol\1ARR Astrology orten is \'aluable In determiAing w b e t b e r persons are compatible. So 1ay1 Dr. Ltt Seechrest, pro- fessor or soelal psychology at Northwestern University. He made hi1 rindlng:s reluctantly; he 11 rwt a friend of astrology. I recently debated with the &ood professor in Chicago. ARIES (March 21 -April 19): You can go far if you slop do'A'ngrading potential. Look ahead refuse to be dismayed by petty perso ns. Forces arc scattered. You need alternative me tho d s , plans. TA URUS {April 2Q-l\1ay 20 ): Check details which ma y ap- pear minor.· Key is to be observant. ~loney connected \\'ilh estates, cooperative pro- jects is spotlighted . No one is likely to give anything to you ror nothing. GEi\11NI (May 21-June 20): Pace Self sha re knowledge. Cycle~~: / )'OU v.•ill n1cet and over e opposition . CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Don't neglect essentials. A void extremes. Gel suflicient ~st. Check job requirements. One who insists on social whirl may be misguided . Pace yourself. AQUARIUS iJan. 20.Feb. 18): Friends may act in ec· cenlric manner. Money could be involved . Protect possessions. Play cards close to chest Means conservative course is advocated. Refuse to be extravagant. PISCES (feb. 19-~tarch 20): Money, caree,. -these areas ~re accented. There a re changes -and a romant ic interlude alS(l may be in overall picturf:, Cooperate in project which could elevate prestige. ing \1·111 receive a P1nc\\1ood Derby patch. Putting the finishin& touches on their c:ars are Oeft to right) Craig Revo, Peter Vena and Billy Barthe. I r.J ' r t J t ' " I • j f ' tF TODAY IS ''OUR BIRTHDAY you ha v c !he ability lo teach. nurse. to gene. rally aid those in distress. You are a natural humanitarian. Your views usually are pro- gressive. Your mo.s t signifi· cant month in 1971 is apt to be June. Fa shions Flowering for Day Adams PTA rt1rs. Paul Ohlsen Presi dent COM ING UP: Mr. and Pi1rs. Al Liggett will narrate a slide showing at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow of I he tr three and a half year or sailing around the world, that started in Annapolis and ended in San Diego. The program wilt cover many cf the countries they visited and shipboard life. Al iso PTA !\1rs. Keith Kinner President COi\·ll NG UP: Genera l meeting at 7:30 p.n1. tomor- row will be centered on Founders Day. Students will present a patriotic skit followed by a dessert sale . PTA v.·i ll sponsor a unit in the Patriots Day Parade Saturday, Feb. 20. REPORTS : A series of art lectures for student s v•as presented by the Newport Harbor Service League at the board meetiiig. Training proi;!ram for volunteers from El r.torro, Top of the World and Aliso Schools will be given so they may present the lectures. CdM El e. PTA Jim \\.ood President cor.1JNG UP: \Vhy N 0 l Creative Television will be the topic of Burt Snow. from KCET. Channel 28 at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Feb. 13. in the auditorium. He will Check tendency to act com- pletely on impulse. You need additional information. Dig for it. Don't take too n1uch for granted. One who really cares deserves special consideration. CANCER (June 21-July 22): To find oYr mort at>o<Jt vo.,ruu ~n<l •~lrQ!Og•, ordf'r Svdnfv om~rr·, i<l·P~~ bOOklet, Tl'>e' Trut~ Al>OO! A•l•olovv. Sfnd SO ten1~ to Om•ff Coo~lrt. thP DAil y PILOT. ea. l?•a. G•~n<I C~ntr&I SUllon. Ntw Yar•. NY, 10017. Founders Day \1·ill be t:clebrated fa shionably al 7:30 tonight by Kaiser P'fA as hon1c c('o non1irs students model their t lnthing. Pasl presidents anJ honorary rne1nbers \Vi ll be \\'elco111ed and the chorus will pro· vide music. Preparing a fashion selling arc (left to right) l.inda \Volfe, Joyce ~tcVay and Kimerli Floyd. Ee careful around anin1a ls. Pets could be frightened by quick, sudden moves. Ren1em· be r resolutions concl'rning y;ork. diet and health. forgive cantankerous neighbor. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Los- ing your temper could be cost- ly. Kno\v this and carefully sun·ev situation. Accent on rcla tiOns \\'ith members of o~ positc srx. T~re i!' chan~e -travel, variety. You will bf'.' actil·e. \'IRGO f Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Dorncslic area could be in, some\\'hat of a turmoil. Be av•are of properly values. Business prospects need close observation . Take a chance on your own abilities. You'll be repaid. LIBRA I Sept. 23-0cl. 221 · Relalives and in-laws could pose problems. Key is to know when a sl!uation has reached climax point. Don'1 atlempl to hang on to v.·hat has passed. Delay short lrips. Take care i1. writing. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Caution is key in financial decisions. tn1nsactions. Care nnw could pre\•ent citpensive mistakes. What seems ta be ~ bargain could be a scheme. Proceed accordingly. SAGITTARllJS !NO\'. 22· Dec. 21 \: Pwrtncrships, long- standing re!;:1•lonshlps arr put to · tesl. Ght' full pl ay to In· luillon Ll'nrn by 1rnt'11ir1H - • ij - CHILDREN COLOR THE ARTS -Displaying !he talents lhey acqu ired during a crcalivc al'l 11·or·k shop to l\lri:: . .John F.dington are ·rcrr1 ~1•11nn1ano rl r ftl n1:d Ale'< Enlpr~·~. 1'he \1·nrks of 40 youn'g pc/)· pie invol ved in a coope rative art \l'orkshop \Viii be on di spla,v Saturday, f'cb. 20. 1x>11,ecn 10 a.m. and 4 p.111. in lhc ~lcsa Ve rde ~1clhoclist Church. . Creativity Flourishes Creating their own festival of arts will be 40 child ren 1vho have been involved in a cooperative art workshop. The resuhs or thei r efforts ·will be on view Saturday, F'eb. 20, in the Mesa V r rd c !\fethodisl Church betv.·een 10 a.m. ;1nrt 4 p.m.. and the pub lic is 1nviled to see tht' display and partici pate in v~rious creative acti vities. ar· <"Ording to Mrs. E u g c n e Barlow . president of the Child rens' Creative A r l \\i'orkshop af Costa Mesa. There will be a drawin g for art works contributed by several area artists iiicludlng an oil painling by Mrs. Donald Biel. a m~lal scu lpture by Michael A1igelo Ba I I 1 , handmade iewelry by Lynn 1'rcdv.·ay. an etching by Richard Smith and pen and ink sketches by P.1 rs. Barlow Art objects made by the members will be available at a booth arranged by Mrs. \Vallcr Hahn. and c)lillh·en ot nll age!! will hnve the op- 1>nrt11ni!y lo crentr a rrriunir ohJ:!<:l under the direction of ~1rs. Robert t.iinter . spea k about Sesame Street and show film clips from the show . Jim Wood, presi· dent will report on the unit's p,rogress to date. Public is invited to attend. I REPORTS : School I i bra ry continues to be staffed and supported by PT A volun- teers. Students h a v i n g birthdays are invited to con- tribute a book to the library. CM High PTSA !\lrs. ~tatthew V. Waidelich President COrttlNG UP : J.1atthew V. Waide lich, chairnian an- nounces that the honorary service award and Founders Day program will take place at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in lhe Lyceum. Special en. lertainment will bt presented by the drama department. under t h e direction or lo.tiss Donna Kristiansen. Refreshmenl<i will be served bv lo.1rs. Robert P.1iller and com- mill~. Dav is PTA !\lr5. Gene Patterson President REPORTS: l.1embers to serve on the nominating com· miltee are the Mmes. Paul Belous, Paul Dumain , Carl Nauman and Richard Riley along with Werner Carlson. Estancia High PT A !\lrs. Ralph Botgel President COi\·llNG UP : Tour ef school for parents of in coming freshmen v.·ill be conducted from 9:30 a.m. until noon, 1\londay through Wednesday, March l-3 and 8-10. For further information contact Mrs. 'Ralph Boegel at 54:;.. 2418 or Pi1rs. Kenneth Heims at 546-7533 .•• Donations of clothinK, nicknacks. jewelrv and furn it ure are needed rOr the upcoming r u m m age sale. 1i1embers to contact for pickup service are Mrs. Ra ymond Ceccarini, 54S. 1692 ; Mrs. Lloyd Baker. 54f>.. 1567 ; M.rs. William Nowak. 646-1478 or r.1rs. Boegel. 54$. 2418. Killybrooke PT A rttrs. Robert Riggs President COto.11NG UP: F'ather Ap- preciation Night is the theme of the unit meeting al 7 p.m. tomorrow in the mu ltipur po s e room. featured speaker v.·ill be Louie Unser. who currentlv Is building higt. performance engines. will present a pro- grarn and film on his ex- periences In racing. Pop art by students in kindergarten throug h third grade will be displa yed, ribbons will be awarded lo students in fourth through sixth gradt' for the essay con!esl and Killybrooke servicr av.•ard v.·ill be pre.:1ented to a deserving person. FI a J! cere;mony will be led by Cu b Sc o u I Pat'k 439. Refreshments "' 11 I be donated bv mothers of fifth grade students. Lindbergh PTA l\lrs. Jack Davidson President COi\llNG UP: i\1ondlly. Feb. 22 is Red, Wh ite and Blue Day. Newport Harbor High School marching band will perform and students from Lindbergh School w i I I participate in the program. REPORTS: Dr. N t r m a n Lonts. assistant supcrin· lendent or the Nc11•porl ti.1e.~a llnilied School Distritt spoke at last week 's meeting on the middle school, cover- ing its history and ho\Y it re· l:i le.s lo our district . Honor- ;iry servicr award v.•as presented to i\irs. Jo:imes l ve rso n, health and we lfare chAirman and the continuing s er Y ic e a~·ard was presen ted ls Jark Weiling. princip11l for hi~ faithfulness to Lindbergh to.Ir.~. Robert Vircsik served as chairman of the ~election committee. Mesa Verd e PTA f.lrs. William Payoti President REPORTS : to.1iss B re n d a Easley from Lion Countrv Safari showed slide., and displayed a baby lamb at la~t week's general meeting. Honorary service a~·ard \\'as prc.~ented to i\lrs. James i\lanj!'us. A Founders Day Cards Shuffled Ca rds and luncheon will ~ shuffled when the M e s a Rebekah Lodge meets at noon lomorrow in the Odd fellowil Hall. Cost1 Mesa . Ad<titional information 1nay be obtained by catlin~ Mr:!. Henry Wed eswiefer, card par- ty chairman. program presentation honor· 1ng past pn!sldenl!l from 1961 through 1970 took pta~ Corsages were given le> those present. MT'!l. William Payne was elected president due to the resignation of ~1rs. Kitty Smith. Monte Vista PT A l'\.tr1. Fred tklts President COMING UP: Hon c r a r y service awards b\dfel dinner will take place al 7 p.m. Fri1ay. Feb. 19. in tl'le 1nu ipurpose room. A 11 par nts are invited te at- tend. REPORT'S : Citizens · ol -tl'le • month are Dav.•n Servantes . first grade: Suki Reed and Teresa DeVries. s ec• n d grade; David Slucker and Beth Ann Robinson. third grade. and P.1ike Thomas, nnh grade. NH High PTA l'\.1rs. Henry W. llofmann Jr. President C01\1JNG UP: 1-1 en or a r y service award will be presented at the Founders Day meeting at I I a.m. \Vednesday. Feb. 2~, Jn the home of !\1rs. M. Ward Bissonette. Lunch will follow at 11 :30 a.m. .PTA scholarship drive will be in the form of letters to parents requesting dona- tions. Newport Hts. PT A rtlrs. Ralph E. Stevens President COMING UP: ExecutJ y e board meeting at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday, Feb. 24. in the home of Mrs. Ralph E. Stevens. REPORTS: Cub Scouts from Den I, Pack 10 led the pledge of allegiance at the general meeting last week. Receiving the h c nor a r y service awards were Mrs, Oscar Taylor and Mrs. Har- ry Mellor. Program of con· temporary music was presented by the Twelve· tones. under lhe direction of Willlam Lind of Horace Ensign School. Elected IG serve on the nominating committee were the Mmes. Donna Ashen, f . R • Herman. Sam Palmer, Fred Bockmiller and l'\.1iss Anne Krue11:er. Attendance awards ¥:ill be presented to P.frs. Ed\\'ard Bechtel's and ti.1rs. Richard Hilliard's classes. Paularino PTA l'\.lrs. F'red Palmer President COi\'ll NG UP: Unit meeting featuring selection of a nominating committee and th e third and final program in a series of family educa. lion presentations on drug abuse with Da11e DeSoto from KMPC radio station will take place at 7: 30 p.m. tomorrow in th e multipurpose room. Public is invited to attend and baby -si tting will be available. .family night skating party to raise fund~ for a school handball backboard will take place from 6 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 23. in Harbor Roller Rink, C-Osta Mesa. Pi1rs. Jack Sikes is chairman. REPORTS : Class Valentine pt1rties took place last Thursday. Room mother! served punch and furnis hed refreshments and favors. Pomona PTA l'\.lrs. C. Darryl Bradley President COJ\·llNG UP: ·Founders Day program and the awardin& of the honorary service award will take place at 7 p.m. tomorrow. Drug abuse program will be presented by the Costa Mesa Police Department. Baby-sit- ling will be availa ble . Library commilltt mttling at 7:30 p.m. i\1onday, Feb. 23. Books in the primary library will be organized and marked. Woodland PFO l'\.1rs. lrne~l Kosllan President C0~1 1NC; UP: An nu 11 Americanism program will be presented on Tuesday, Feb. 23. Two programs will be given during the day for the students and a third program at 7:30 p.m. ror parents in the multipurpose room . Cast and chorus will hr comprised of fourth. filth and sixth grade students. Assisting Pi1rs. Jack Lil· tleton. dlreetor ire the ~Imes. A. 0. Unger, Phillip Caricof. Fred Ellis ant David Greenlee:. Laguna Group American Legion AuxllJaT1 or Laguna Beach gather$ th1 ~econd and fourth Thun1ch" evenings in the Legion Hall, \ • ! St DAil. y FllOT \Vtdntw:t11 Ftbnlll'J 17, lCJil I t I • • Caring For Others Turns Youth On ' ~. By JODEA.i~ HASTINGS CM IN ~ , .... 11111 Completely turnfll on by today's young peopl~ particularly high school and college youths -i5 Dr. James Turpin, founder a n d 1rr temalional med ical dU"ector of Project Concern, a nonprofit medical self-help relief pro- gram. 'They care about people 15larv1n,g in other parts of the \\'orld. claim! the fathf'r of four. A freque nt campus 5peJ11i.er he-•s the in111ator ol '''alk for ~tankind v.b lch raises funds for P r o J e c t (o[l('f'rn 's 15ix clirucs and tv.·o hospitals in pol·ert~ -ridden areas of Appalachia. Ariz.on.a. ~!exiq>. Soutb Vietnam and Hong Kong. "'ritten up in the Congr~ional Record. \Va lk for ~!ankind in,·oh·es youtt\S from all o,·er the countr~ help- ing 10 raise funds for lhe organ1zat1on '>'"hich operates \l"ithout gO\·ernment subsidy and u tnlirely dependut on publ.c cootrlbutions. ··roung people are uptight because I.hey 5tt our country in all its affluence arxl feel such conditions shouldn't have to e.xisl. The factors don't add up. n.·o or the m o s t popular remarks on campus today are ·ts it rele\·ant' and 'Does II compute?' • '·The most going thing today is doulg good for other peo- ple:· procla1mtd !he \'lbrant sJ)('aker Y.'ho gave up h1.s oy.·n established p r a c l i c e rn Coronado to form PrOJtel Con- rtrn. The dedicated doctor hrmly bel~\'es that the solu!ion 10 many of today 's problems 11 10 carry the message or Pr!>- Ject Concttn to the youth. YOCTH'S PROBLE)t .. I belit\'t lhat kids basically are reasooable and "'' don't gJ\'l' them an opportunity to tum on in a slgniflcant way. They nttd to get physically, emoUonall)' and spiritually io-1uuested to memben ol hia only questionable medlcinal generator) has madt ainct ILs voJved with othm. chutth school clau that the)' UH for them that I could arriv1l In \lletnam two years "In Kentucky high 5thool do MlmethJng about 1UVice dlSCOVtr wu tht smoke kept qo. and college youths built lhrte irutcad of just talking 1bou\ away mosquitos," he said. A vllla&e of 71lO peeple witching one at were IO en· bridges. San Dirgo yowng peo. it. Members \'oluntee.red their Another shipment, Dr. trlDCed by "Mt. f!d," the pie built a road, and leading lime and efforts to help with Tu r pin reea1led, contained talkina horse, lhalllt. Turpin !he group v;·as a former drug a medical clinic and Khool, three large crates of baby a!ked one oJ the elders abll.$er v.'ho had discovered he Casa dt! Todos , In Tijuana. dia pers -to a oountry whtre preclsely wbat It was that could tum on Vi"ith more tha n By 1962 it had become a the men wear Utllt more than they found so f111Cinatlng . acid or pot. Among the 8.000 nonprofit corporation w It h loin ck>ths, the women wrap ll won't the fact that the ,-c>uths in.,.ol\"ed in Walk for enough support lo establish themseJ,•e1 from the Wai.st horse talked. tt was that the \tankind there was not a a medical clinic in Hong Kong. down in a pit-ct of cloth. and bam in which he li"'ed con• single incident," he said. From Hong Koo.g it was most of the children wear no lained a rug 1Dd the horse j two yrars and 1 short hop clothes at all. 1''U"covered with-1 blanket. BUY TO~iORRO~' to Vietnam and the establish· '"It was good f<I" post-natal '"Whrn wiU our people ij1·e Dr. Turpi n nO"N has peti· ment of a U.~ hospital in care for the \illage infants, 15 well as your animals~" ! lioned his board of directors the remote central highlands though. As soon as word Dr. Turpin was asked . .~ tn establish t"'o e1~rimental some ISO miles northeut of spread through the high.lands, "Our •·orld ha:. beoom' 50 Tomorro\I' Shops in Los Saigon . moth'ML would bring their small that "' can no I001er i': Angeles and San Diego where babies in to get m n~• e1peet people to p1.111 ~·oung drug abusen may ob-PLEA FROM \"lETNAM. diaprrs -and promptly cut the:m.wh·es up by their boot lain l<'g al. physical and "\\"r wrol' !tar-stained J,l· boM in lhtm so they •·ruldn'' straps -especially U they psychiatric help atoog with the ters plnding for th' most become soiled." don"l e\•n have shoes. kno"ltdge that 5 om e. body b.uic hosp i I a I equipment: "\\'e have to fttl that U ~ c11res. Pan of the help v.·ould thermometrrs. bed pans. an-REVOLL'110N OP POOR your child Is hungry. mine ?""l come during rap Y.!Ssions with tibiotic.5. finally thrtt huge In "·hat be termed a revolu-nrV'l'r will be well fed. We former drug addicts as ••ell cartons arri"'ed in Vietnam lion of rising upectations have to br able to answrr ~ as idealistic older people. -only •'htn we oprned them, among the poor, be dt5Cribed ·0o )'OU Jo\·e us'!' by sayjng Project Concern took sha pe we dlsco)·tred they were filled the powerful eUect TV 'Love you -I A.\f )"OU.'" 10 years ago after Dr. Turpin with Ameiican cigars. and the (ape.rited by a s ma 11 Dr. Turpin concluded. .1 •• -,.,....-<r!-· ---.;.;;::a,.,,,:z:::m·-·----....,.:c::i:+ .. '"" .,,~""::-._,,,..-• ....,.,.,_,,~'l3,,.,r=-..,,::.,mz:::"'=:11'-;;:;:,<::::l:.!:i"""' [ ---------~--·-·---......-.-... ·---'---~ ~-~"tJ-l"''"'=""...v0\!--Z..., l!I~~' Luncheon Grand Slam The monthly luncheon and bridge par1y sponsored 'by the \\"oman·s CI u b ol Laguna Beach Ydll ~gin at noon on Friday Feb. 19. 1n the club- house. Luncheon uckets at SI.SO err title members and guests to ha' e lunch. pla~· cards if desired and participate in l'>''arding of door pnzes. \trs. Frank Hale and ~11.ss Janet Hull are in charge of tickets. Hosts •·ill be the Mrs. Edgar AJ:trll and Mrs. Ruth Hull. Pusons int,resled in mak- ing restT\·attons may call ~f rs. Clifford Loucks or Mrs. O. Vt'. Price. Luncheon Set For Amaranth Island Folk Art Livens Tea Officer Discusses Problems Folk songs and fashions of \\'. J. BU!s will discU!s the Philippines ,.;·ill b e mrans of curbing delinquency preseoled by Lagunans Henrv I and Flora Bass durin& i for member! of tile South ,·iJ;1tors' reception and tea Coast Parenu. '" i l ho u t '>''hich ope:ns the Laguna Beach Panners at 8 p.m. on Friday \ Y.'inter festival from 2 10 4 feb. 111. in Dana PoUit Com· p.m. on Friday. frb. 19. munity Hou.st. The afte rnoon event at the: B Laguna Beach Chamber of uss, an Orange County Commerce will be follov.·@d deputy probation off i c t r ,, by an open hous' in the city beliel'es members of a family . recreation center at 7:30 p.m. group are an important facto r The Filipino coup!,. bom in for making the probation pro-: ~1anila of Am'rican fa thers, gram more efftcti\·e. 1 will presenl uveral Quick The speakrr receivt'd a BA changes of ancient, mode m in 5oc1al \lelfare and is °"·ork-and regional costume! depic· ticg the e"'olutk>n of the na· ing on a master! i n tional drrss. psychological counseling al 1 Chapman College. His prtsen-\!rs. Bass tings nati\·e songs talion \l'ill be an 0 pen accompan ied by h'r husblnd discussion s'ssion. I on a unique 36-strong ectc· troharp. AJI single parents. wldov.·ed .. dJ\'OTccd, separated or un-~rmben of the chamber .._... · --' --' Lunch .. n •·ill •· ,..,.,d lor mami::u are inv1t= to att euu uo: • womm "s di,•ision . ·the ·'--· · 1 members of the: Amaranth M'rmalds. •ill ser"'e as urc meeting. A soc1a hour Memorabilia Recalls American Heritage ~:ub n:n '":~rsd1~-~~~~~ c;;h;;";;";;;;''";;';;· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l;;~~;;';;;;~~;;~;;~;;~.,;m;;:;;~;;~;;;;•;;'i;;ll;;;;a>;;n-;,I Temple. ' 11 Cards will be played by tho~ who wish lo rema in follov.·ing lunch . for re.serva- tiOl'l.5, those interested may caH J\!rs. Brock Br,wer \1n. Arthur Stead. DON'T PAY YOUR BILLS February is . .\merican ~fistory month so mem- bers of the Col. \\'m. Cabell Chapter. Daughters of the . .\merican Revolution ha,·e been active decorat· ing Ne"-port Beach libraries and sponsoring school essay contests. Contests \\inners "·ill be announced State Board Meets at Ke"'·port Elementary School on fr1day. feb. 19. and at St. John the Baptist Catholic School. Thurs· day. feb. 25. Decorating the Corona de! l\lar library are 1itrs. \\'. H. Ashbaugh (left) and l\Irs. Marjorie Carnes. Two Sessions On Calendar New Coats Sleeveless SEE THE FINANCIAL PA GE PERMA TRESS Secretaries Travel Xe"'·ly in!ta ll td president of the Cost a ~lesa federated Spring diess1ng begins ""It h IEAUTY SALONS p,.,..,. In Complete 1-tr~ Roben F. }latthe11 s of Hunt ington Beach . go1·ernor of the Board of Go1 ernors cl Legal Secretarie~. Inc. of ClTifomLa. 111·11! attend the thirrl quarterl~ meetin,11 of the boa rd 1n lh' Ambassador Horel beginning F rida~. Feh. 19. Al!O anenchng the weeken'1 meeur,g ..-·UJ be repre~en l.111'~ from ~ associations in Cal!Iorrua. Anglers Travel Spnngtune an E.1rapr ,...111 be ptn'lfwed \"La a tra1 elogu" •hen the Ang~s Friday Luncheon Oub mttl• al II M the sleeveless coat Io r f .,J]n•·1ng an e\enmg rf<'fP· Republican '\'omen's Club. designer Calvin Kelin. t1on Friday. a day Ion g ~lrs. H. J . \\"ood "'iii op<!n It is v.·orn buttoned midway, bu•1nes.s H"s.sio n ~·11! be con· her home for two e\"ents l'lhich or all the '>''i Y to the hem. duried Saturda~ and '>''ill in-"'ill lake place in the nr~t la ced through lhe bodice. or elude reports on 1 he few days. flying in the wind. Klein made f irst the board v.,11 ron,·enc these coa\f in denim, canvas, scholarship program. ll'gal at 7: 1$ p.m. tomorro"" and cotton gabardine and tick ing. ~erretaf} Ir a i n in g and on Thursday. Feb 2~. at 7 30 Klein offered the more ~em inar courses and the p m. past pr<'~ldents v. ill be traditional coal~. too One in re~u1t~ of recent!~· completed honored during the rcg1i l;1r denim \\as hooded and twicr profes.~ional le,l!a\ S('Cretar~ n1ect1ng. circled \\"1l1, a long self belt. exam1natioris. -~ .. ~"'iliiiiiiiiiliiiiiijiiiiiii~~~·p·~~~~ Stall' n!£1cers vo'ill be honored during a reception Saturda~· C\'en1ng and the l Be\·erly Hills Chapter '>''ill host: a banquet fratu r ing en- tertainment by night club performers. Beach Babes SAVE s20 to '40 PROFESSIONAl QUALln EXERCISERS WI HANDLE SIVIU.l TYPES AND HA.VI THI U.lGIST SILICT\ON TO CHOOSI ~IOM COMI IN AND TIY THEM AU 1.m feb. 19 in the ~ew;ion E'·ery \\'t'dnesday at 7 p.m. Harbor Yachl Oub. members of TOPS Bf"ach The presentaticn "'' 1 I\ be Babes convene in Hwitington &i\'t:n by a represenaU\"e o/ Beach H1ih School for pro- TIPPING or FROSTING~ at HALF PRICE FOR THE ENTIRE MONTH OF FEBRUARY ,.HONI '°l TOUI ... ,,.,.. TODATI -INCLUDI~ flOSTINCi Ol Tl~~INCO WITH e ROUX SHEER DELIGHT a tra\•el agency. grams. ~~~~~\i(·mftiGL'\IA'S ~~~~~-I SNIP 'N ST ITCH SHOPPE Rtu."1 1up•rb Sh•tr 01li9ht cr1tn1 htir li9ht1ntr, for • conv1ni1nt, comforttblt 1pplicttion . And She•r O•li9ht will li9ht•11 frolTI . li+l• to . 9t1et a •• 1 {up to .t lm tlf· whit •) in minimum time, whil• condition· in9 11 it Ji 9ht1n1. e TONING wilh ROUX FANCIFUU RINSE lll~ E11t Co•st Hwy. e Corona d•I t.A•r Phone 07).8050 CLOTHES FOR All OCCASIONS Ho,. do yc;11 do ii o" your l1n ·lh•"·IP•'i•'ul1t bud9tt1 You 4o"'t buy '~'""· vou "''~' +~ .... ... ;1h f•1hle" f\li•ic1 fro.., V!ltGIN!A'S SNI' & STITCH, Stlf tl your P•"•"" •"' •"Y0"t ol Cu• frit"dly t"d lr•i"td 11!11 t i•l1 will h1i11 ¥eu p11i tl.1 wllolt loo!. to91lht r i"clud1'19 ft•• •'0•1 ,,,.;,,,,, tflfl 1uit1blt ,,; .... s, ... le• '""· erit ifttlilv ,,.d 111! b11t ,,01 11111 -i.ud91• 1t•1lcltiftt, e IAHUMlllCAlD S 11 'f ou Seo,,, VlltGINIA e MASfll CH.4101 - USE E·I TRIM ONLY '1.s MIN. A DAY WOMlN-l-2 4,..., ai111 in 2 WMln ., lllCll ,.due•. MIN-lo• 4 lnch11 .ff wai11, IJf amoch & hipe in 2 wk1. MOOll.S FOR FAST IEOUCING AND SLIMMING OR FIRMING ANO STAYING IN SHA.Pl •2995101. l l25 '48'' Ro1. 11.95 5 6811 a la •••. 10195 01 t-Z CllDff 1j1u,. CA1ict Of V lta1tU1I C1l1ri & St7IH .,... •1•ca•r••· v1.,1. 011•1• .,... Efffftl•t Ertftlfl Rt1tl1n v e •• , •• 11, Ft141a•I• U1ff1 FREE ,~ ..... MAii Wit 'In CttTtrlCAT£ WtPVRCMSC ,_ ......... 1>1111'"" .... lt11 .. , '"' "'9tt"""" •~tttwtltfl ...... ""'' e.z Trim ex.rcl1tr 0"'"' MOlil.-U.T." ....... ,. ... COSTA MESA ANAHEIM 1932 Htrbor Blvd. 'I •IMt _,., ti 'Im llrOll PHONE 64S.ll71 284l Yi. Lincoln 1 •llK'• •••t •' •• ...,~ ,,.. tHJ.tll•ry 2'1 PHONE 121-l!IO ampht1it•1 your ntw colf-iu•t flow1 tha color onto your hair. No paroxicla or a fftr-rin11l it 1imp ty rin111 ;", 1hampoo1 out wh1n you with. Ancl it color• ancl condition• while w't 11t your hail'-Wor~s fn1t1ntly l COMl'Lm Tll'l'ING Olt FROSTING, TONING, SHAMl'OO, SET AND STYLED COMIOUT UIUAUY 21.00 HATUllD NOW AT •/2 PllCI 1250 c ...... O"IH IVllY IVIMI ... 4110 fUNOt'1 tm1il ti WlntOUT Af'HIWTMfNT l'ERMA TRESS BEAUTY SALONS HARBOR CINTER -COSTA MESA Kl 9~757 SPRINGDALE·EDINGER CTR. -HUNT . BEACH 197·159l l POINTS CENTER. -HUNT. IEACH '47-1063 0 9'1M ,.lf'llllt "-• s.to....,_...1elrttf111 ,.. J·Jllll-0•,._ .,. .. llM7ll • DEAR JOE ''Why wasn't my t«lpe tender?" How did yeu cod: It?" asked Joe. "Oh! wy I supposed to ha"'t coo~ It~" Don't Jel your eclectic buffet tum lntc> a foozl1 because you neclected te ask for the secret ingredient to make It tick . Art yeu missing out? Today'• tun611-- in hostesses make notes M their shopping list, aloitg \l"lth the milk. bread, and Armenian strtnr cheese • .. ask Joe ... or Dennil . . . or Larry . . . or whoever th'ir fa vorite man about the m~at department 111 • • • "to bone a It& o' lamb. and what i.'I UM: best sauee to put on 11. for the Farberware" • • . or '·bone and akin I chick'n breasts" .•• or "slice some calf'• livrr ti· Ira thick or thin." Lagni1p. pe . . , ''When you have so many fr iend ly nice peo. pie shopping here. It's 11 'asy to do nice things ror them." sez Joe. Peoplt servic' . . _ and you're all individuals with yc>Ur 0'1111 special tittle likeJ aM do-h01''S . . . Please ask . . the pork chop boy1 '>''iii Jove you for it. THE WAY TO A MAN'S HEART february is 1uch a lov• bug month ... Love Of country and lav' for each other ... February is our month to lave, !f)O • • • Our fir5! winner of 40 dol· lars worth of groceries for 8 weeks ... that's S320 ••• was G'lle Vrttland. JI! Via florence . Ne"'POrt Beach. You all know Gen,, H' was ~1r. Lido Realty Inc. riJht across the street from us for the past %0 years . A f,w months ago h' bec11me: a(· filiated 'll'ith Coldwell Ba nk· tr in their Fashion Island office. Gene".!L first 'R'ords were. "Oh beautiful .. first thing t"ve ev!r won from you aft'r 20 years ol loyll shopping. According tG Gtne's father wl'lo still live in New Jersey. ' ' T be dumber the farmer . the bif· ger the potatoes." Which is Genr's explanalion as tD how h' managed to pick Lido out of all or Californi1 to liv' in whf'n he ·wu transferred out her' bJ Snow Crop Frozen fooda, TlO"' !Qmebody else. cen.- gratutations Gene! Pleue <'n joy 1hose frer groceriel for !ht nekt eight '>'"etks. BIG EXCITEME~T Ir\ THE LOBBY GOL:R~IET KICHEN If you come in right at II you can watch tht Galloping Gourment o 11 !'le.vision and lick an ice cream cone whil' vnu watdl two frantic food d'met. Thursday. the \Sth , , _. Sandy Petrov. Ho m,f Economist for Low r v 'e: Food.!i will flip th' BaC-Os into everything from sOup ln fr ied bananas ... ta stes Hkt bacon. bu! i~n·l . ~ • lil t! th' perfect flAfGf into '>''illed lrl!uce. scrambJ. ed eg~~. baked beaM. vegetables. saures 1 n d c11sseroles ... Ins1 ea d hf rooking 11.nd rrum bl i "' bacon. r'ach for the Bae· Os. friday, lhf' 19th . _ • Carol Ht in i , Horne Economist for the EdiJOO Company '>'"ill cook the nt1' ~1icro \\'ave '''&v. It's 1.TI dom' in a \\'e'stinghouu portahlr ~hem \\'&\'e nven brought in b)' the nice Cnul Electric F'olk! .. , This oven is brand new Here"s why. It onlv v..'ei~ 100 pounds. so it-can hr \'try e: a 5 I 1 y transferred from your kitchen to your bo11t nr lrailer if yau becomt attach~ In iL Plugs into standa rd 110 vol_u: that art grounded • nus means 3 prongs. tD- !ftad of 2. Cook in minulM inste11d nf hours. Coot tn glau. CorninJ' \\!art. or ,.,·en rardbolrd <'Ontaineri:. And . if you'"e bttn drtAJD. ing. but putt1n1 off .. T'ht niet C01st folks have coil- ed up 1 specl1I deal. Here al Rtchlrd's, tli People Store. s.ip the. 4 nrr's boolt in ~~lobby, •• $ nt>w S40 wortf'I ~ert. ft>r • v.·r-tQ ·-inntrs comfnl ,, - ----"'" .,t. ~W=•d~M·=~~"~F•=w=~~"~11~·~1·~11~~~~~o~M~~~·~ao~r~3,,,.i : PHONE 673-6360 FOR HOME DELIVERY IN OUR DELIVERY AREA PRICES EFFECTIVE FEB. 18, 19, 20 f'r0<fiG1€e: 1(1-c-t~i· :1...-.. BANANAS FLAMBE, BANANA NUT BREAD OR FRUIT SALADS BANANADS RIPE. CENTRAL AM~:.CAgc LIDO MARKET CENTER NEWPORT BLW. AT THE ENTRANCE TD LIDO ISLE HAVE PLENTY FCR YOUR STEAK , , • MEDIUM, HOTHOUSE BUTTON MUSHROOMS 'h LB. 39¢ ARTICHOKE SEASON IS HERE! LARGE, COMPACT, GLOBE Organ Serenades for your pleosure by Bernice Fay ARTICHOKES 5 FOR $) DOLE HAS THE BESTI P•clr•d in N•tur•l Juice, SLICED, CHUNK or CRUSHED . • PINEAPPLE ~ 29c JELL-0 PUDDING ,,.,. ,...., .... ,. 6 for $1 INSTANT BREAKFAST DRINK TANG ,, ........ ., I•• J7 OL 1.19 PILLSBURY ASSORTED FLAVORS CAKE MIXES REG. SIZE 3 FOR $1 Knudsen La Bon BUITER 1 LI. 83¢ Sunshine KRISPY CRACKERS 1 LL 35¢ THE NAME IN BABY FOOD! GERBER STRAINED BABY FOOD 4¥4 oz. 12 FOR s1 HILLS BROS. COFFEE 1 u. 85¢ HILLS BROS. COFFEE 2 LI. 1.69 GEBHARDT'S JUMBO TAMALES 30 oz. 35¢ GEBHARDT'S CHILI CON CARNE w1" ..... 24 oz. 49¢ SCHILLING 4t¢ Ground BLACK PEPPER 4 01. 200 SQ. FT. REYNOLDS ALUMINUM FOIL 1.59 PLASTIC SANDWICH BAGS GLAD BAGS HCT. 29¢ CHICKEN Of THE SEA, 1.Q.F, 12 OZ. SHRIMP Groat for Shrimp Fondue! 1.29 HOLLOWAY HOUSE Stuffed GREEN PEPPERS 14 oz. 69¢ HOLLOWAY HOUSE SALISBURY STEAK 14 oz. 69¢ HOLLOWAY HOUSE CABBAGE ROLLS 14 oz. 69¢ HOLLOWAY HOUSE STUFFED POTATOES with CHEESE 12 oz. 39¢ BIRDS EYE JAPANESE, SPANISH, MEXICAN or DANISH International VEGETABLES 10 oL 39¢ BIRDS EYE I 0 OZ. Bavarian Beans with spaehle 39¢ BIRDS EYE QUICK THAW RASPBERRIES 10 OL 39¢ BIRDS EYE QUICK THAW STRAWBERRIES 10 oz. 29¢ NOBODY DOESN'T LIKE • SARA LEE BROWNIES 13 oz. 69¢ fBcgfie:r!!J FINE TEXTURED GOODNESS SUITER CREAM BREAD BRING HOME PLENTY ••• Butter-flake ROLLS RICHA RD'S VELVETY FUDGE LOAF 49¢ 6 for 31¢ 79¢ TOPPED WITH CHERRY. BOYSENBERRY, PINEAPPLE eod OTHER LUSCIOUS FRUITS LARGE FRUIT DANISH 95~ FREE BIRTHDAY CAKES ' 5 Winners Each Month FOR PARTY PUNCHES OR HEALTHFUL SIPPING! EXOTIC JUICES QUART 59~ DAISY FRESH juice$ in 9 1in9y fl•vors! Boys• enberry1 cherry, 9u1v•, m•n90, strawb•rry, p•p•y•, porn•9r1nite, coconut-pin•apple, or pa11ion fruH! 'FREE :FOOJ> WIN 8 WEEKS GROCERY MONEY 6 LUCKY WINNERS. EACH WILC GET $40 A WEEK FOR 8 WEEKS! NEXT DRAWING FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 4 P.M. Shows You How , , • With SHRIMP FONDUE And other fun "p•rty starters" GOOD THINGS TO TASTE • RECIPES, TOO THURS. FEB. 18 FROM 11-l-PM fin our lobby! iJle:Clf IT'S A WONDERFUL WORLD OF EATING IF YOU START WITH RICHARD'S FINE MEATS! · · EXTRA LEAN EASTERN PORK J"ASl' FOOD SEE A CAKE BAKE IN 5 MIN! 'A "FROACHED EGG" IN 35 SEC! CAROL HEINZ Ed isort Co, Home Econom is t Shows the fabulous Microwave Oven FRIDAY FEB. 19 11-2 PM IN OUR LOBBY SPARERIBS FOR SWEET&SOUR,CHINESEorBARBECUED 69¢ I ~ PORK LOIN ROAST ...... , ... ,...., ,.,. 1.29LI. THESE ARE THE CHOICEST STEAKS AND ROASTS CUT FROM THE EYE Of JHE RIB! SPENCER STEAKS or ROASTS RemombertheStHkSoucol 1.79La. ENGLISH STYLE' BEEF SHORT RIBS BARBECUE BEEF. RIBS So••tf & ltonamlcal LE'AN GROUND BEEF How •bo11t Sp .. hfftl tonitht! RICHARD'S FAMOUS LIDO BRAND HAMS 39( LI. 59¢LL 59( LI. Two Famous Home Economists will be at Richard's Thursday and Friday - With WHOLE HAMS 14 to 16 LBS. OF GOODNESS BUTT OR SHANK HALF HAMS 69¢LB. 79( LI, Yummy Foods lo Taste Quick Cooking Secrets, Fabulous Recipes • CENTER CUT HAM SLICES .. ". •I" G>llled ......... Richard's Bulk PORK SAUSAGE J,98 LI. 79( LI. ZACKY FARMS STUFFED CHICKEN BREAST, w,..,,,.,..,.,,, ... ,,, ' 98¢ LI. 2.39 u.. 2.49 LI. 98¢ LI. LARGE CARPENTER SQUAB , • ..., •• ,.. w11• ., .. , ,,..,,.. DRIED BEEF Always lr .. hl, 1\lced, w• 1llce If h•rtl MARINATED DUCKLING ........................ RO<O. AND A FINE SELECTION OF U.S.D.A. PRIME BEEF! HAMBURGER SPECIAL! KRAFT SLICED AMERICAN OR PIMIENTO CHEESE . oz. PKG. ROYAL HAWAIIAN MACADAMIA NUTS , oL Swiss Knight FONDUE ASSORTED BRIGHT COLORS , ALUMINUM 14 01. FONDUE POTS 5.95 1.79 1.49 lUANNA GERMAN 5 llo OZ. HERRING FILLETS ,, ........ 3for$1 wl• Miii• CAPTAIN'S CHOICE VODKA ................. .QT. 4.22 BOURBON .............. QT. S.28 GIN ........................ QT. 4.27 RIC::HARD 'S PRIVATE LABEL SCOTCH ................ QT. 7.57 GIN ........................ QT. 4. 75 VODKA ................ gr. 4. 75 BOURBON .............. T. S.80 IN OUR LOBBY Have Cooking Questions 7 NOW IS THE TIME TO ASK ! Thu": SANDY PETROV 'I I • 3 P.M. Fri: CAROC HEINZ 11 • 2 P.M. FIRST WINNER $40 A WEEK GENE VREELAND Newport Bea.ch l QTS ............. 11.40 l QTS ............. 14.21 l QTS ............. 11.55 l QTS ............. 20.44 l QTS ••........... 12.84 l QTS .••.......... 12.B4 l QTS ............. 15.84 s ..... 1.26 s ..... 1.66 Sev• 1.26 s .... e 2.25 s ..... 1.41 s ..... 1.41 s • .,. 1.71 ., '£;.J....,....cl.'-MARKET HOME & GIFT SHOP OPEN DAILY 9.7, S~N. 9°6 OPEN DAILY f.6 LIDO YACHT SHOP FLOWER SHOP CLEANERS OPEN DAILY, 9-6 OPEN DAILY 9-4 DAILY 8:)0.6, SAT. 1:10-5 • • I l . 1 .. ' ' I I 31' DAILY PILOT WtdMMlay, Ftbruar~ 17, 1971 Warranty: Condition·s Guaranteed '1Don't worry HboUI a thing. .ma'am. It 's guaranteW ~" Creal. you think -no "'Or· ries. After all. if anything goes wrong , It's guaranteed. • But guaranteed for Y.'hat? Parts and labor? \Vhat parts and for hov.• long·: The warranty conditions should be one of thr most importanl fact ors in your decision to buy a ccrtai.n brand or appliance .' Don't be misled by s u eh clain1s a~ a "lifetime'' guarantee. Talk over conditions y,·1th 1 h c sale.<;man and read lhe f 1 n c print. Leslie Paige nf th r Whirlpool Corporation su:;· gests you ask these questions· I. \Yhat parts are covered and for how loni;:"' 1 2. Is labor etl\·ertd'.' For. how long ? S. \Vho stands behind the warranty -the n1anufacturer ar the dealer? If a dealer gots ou1 af bosiness. be sure )'OU aren't without a warrantv. 4. Is the warranly in effect U you move? 5. Do ypu nt>ed to mail a registration card 1some have a deadline for mailing) or save your sales re(;ei pt ? 6. Must you mail a defective part somewhere to get y,•ar· rant y coverage? If yes. who pays for the charge al remov· Ing, replacing and mailing the defective part? 7, f.1usl an authorized agent do the v.·ork'! If yes. whal danlagc The appl1auce 1nusl also be used aerord1ng to direction in thr owner 's manual. If you 1urn a timer dial 1n the 11!'rong dtrcction and break a spring. thl' 1varranty probably y,·on·l I :~~:·.:'.'::::.;:::",:::: C H UC K under ....-hich the v.·arranty ~~~~~:~:fq:1~~~e1~~~~r~ STE A KS \V arranlies osually do not cover ii. The warranty may nol pay for malfunctioning due to in· adequate house 1viring or plumbing or failure lo follow installation instructions. Also, mos t warranties don't I I pur11cular apphance . then shop around and compare. After all. good service and product reliability are critical lo your satisfaction. And. if cover damage du e to .. act.5 of God :' such as dainage by floods . Your household in· surance may cover that. though. doesn't and when something goes If I.he warranty seem worthwhile on a wrong , you 'll want coverage. GRADE A USDA CHOICE TURKEY HIND· QUARTERS CENTER CUT LB. FRESH DRESSED FRYING RABBIT Whole or Cut Up 2 TO 21h LBS. <'Over damage due to acts of 1------------------------- abu!le. H vour th ree-vear-old BONELESS LEAN 89~B. breaks !he. dryer doo'r hlnge by swinging on it. don "! expect the warr anty to pay for the Cape Flatters STEWING BEEF ...................... U.S.D.A. CHOICE GROUND SHOULDER BEEF PATTIES 5 LI. BOX HOlM[L 1Z OZ. ALL MIAT Oranges Well-treated for Dessert If this sophisticated dessert is chilled overnight t h e oranges will lake on son1e of the 1vine color ORANGES ECUADOR 1 ~ cups dry red wine 1h cup sugar 6 very large seedless oranges lnlo a glass or ce ramic serving bowl (about 2 quarts) tum the wine and sugar. Stir until some of the sugar dissolves. Cut rind away from ' PORK SPARERIBS S·MALL SIZE oranges so no while mem· branes remain: slice lhin, discarding end$. Add to wine and sugar: cover and refrigerate for a few hours or overnight. Serve in dessert bowls with dessert spoons. Makes 6 servings. EASTERN GRAIN FED LB. BAR M WESTERN STYLE BULK STYLE 69~L 59~L 59~ .. BACON HICKORY SMOKID BULK STYLE BOLOGNA FRESH SLIC£0 CHUNK STYLE 295 LIVER SAUSAGE BIRD FARM PURE PORK RIB STEAKS ...... '' .. 98~B. WIENERS 49¢ PORK .. ·, .. _. · ---...~=~---..:...:..~":-.· .i...::S::;;:AUSAGE • SAGI: e HOT e R[G. Travel from now into Spring1 ln this flattenni;. new cape. \ CRISP DELICIOUS POTATOES U.S. No . 1 LB. 39~ Russett CELLO ,, BAG CARROTS 1 LB . PKG. YOUNG "N" TENDER 3 ~2s~ TOMATOES FIRM SLICING 23~ AVOCADOS INSTANT CROCHET cape l -Jashionab!c thing to fling over pan1 s. ~kirls. dresses! EXTRA FANCY Use worsted. No. !l hook lor 1 FUERTE lacy, solid bands . Pat. 7479; I Sizes to fit !10·\6/ and 18-42).1 \...-....;:~~------------,...J FlfiY CE~'TS lnr each pal· NABISCO SANDWICH COOKIES 49 ,1 tern -adcl 25 ct>nl <; for each YOUR CHOICE OF MINT FUDGE )' ~Ue_rn for ~1r :i.1:111 an1l CREAM OR PEANUT CRUNCH ' Special Handling : a\htrw1se I I O B YOUR CHOICE EA. 1hird-class delivery will lake I _!· _ oxe~ thrtt weeks or more. Senrl HOLLYWOOD 59" IO AHce Brook' lhr DAILY SAFFLOWER OIL FULL I' PILOT 10.S Needlecraft Dl.>pt.. OT. Bo1 163, Old Chc\Sl'a Station. Ntw York. N.Y. HIOl l. Pnnl Name. Addrts11. Zip, Pattern CARNATION Numb". 1COCOA NEW .1971 N c rd It c r a 11 Catalog -rnore I n s I a n I la~hions. knits: c r o c 1_1 cl s . DENNISON Mix fNDIVIDUA L Serving Envelope• fJUilts, embrOLllcry. gift s. JI "" pallems. 50 cen1'. CHILI & BEANS 2~R'GAENS NE\\' Completf' lnstnnt Gift Book -over JOO gills for __ _ __ _ 1111 o("<:Asions, ages. Crochet. FRISKIES BUFFET he cl ~· pa1n1. dl'1..'0upagc . knit. CAT FOODS 6 1/2 at. . ~,w. f1u1l1 -n1orr. $1. FLAT CANS Con1plrlf' A l~hun Book -1 iash1on~. p1llo1~·s. gifts, more! YOUR CHOICE OF 12 VARIETIES II. -------- ··16 .llll} Rugs" BoOk. r.o NIAGARA -Large 22 01. C•n 59~ c•:;, ol 1' I'd" Algba., SPRAY ST ARCH REG . 79c 50 cent!!. Quilt Boal. I lli pallcrns. 1 11s ot. Can 49c) ~cents - - -~tuse.um Quill 11 .. ul. ~-GLAD pallems lor 12 "'"q'" Q•Hl1' IPLASTIC WRAP 50 Ct'nlS. I Book 3. "Quilts lor ·1 rMlav·~ OELSEY -2 at. Concentrate LMng •. 15 pallcrns 50 cenls. TOILET BOWL CLEANER 1u ~oar 29• I ONUS l'AClt 111•. •tc 49• D bl F SCHILLINGS ou e reeze VANILLA EXTRACT Fret:ZP l"h1ck('n p11rl ~ b)' 79• • o• fir5t plitcing 1nc.hv1du~I p1cc..>es MJB RICE MIXES -R19. 37c "" 1 cnokit •herl In ' froe•tr. BEEF CHICKEN OR FRIED Then pa(·kapr 01r-~·r-; in 11 , t t el tOlll~ 3/1 pln!ilic bag 3nd ~torr • HILLS BROS. COFFEE 3 LB. CAN BIG ROLLS KLEENEX BOUTIQUE TOILET TISSUE PACK OF 2 ROLLS ....... . KLEENEX BOUTIQUE ---_..,. ·-"'-~ .. • ' I : • •I• • •.·I ' ~ I · •' ,i l ~ I '. \I . I • " ..... ~,· ... ····,1' ... .., / I ' C -·.·, ... r~, I ~ .. :.:.·/~,' \ -'!""' . ., . . ' r i FACIAL TISSUE 125-2 PLY KLEENEX BOUTIQUE NAPKINS c~L~o~~ci ..... . $ "BUY OF THE WEEK" FRESH MEDIUM II GRADE AA EGGS F • . ' DOZ.0 R 29 HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS GILLETTE SUPER STAINLESS BLADES DISPENSER OF S BLADES RIGHT GUARD DEODORANT REG. S 1.85 JUMBO 9 O'-CAN J & J BABY OIL REG. $1.49 10 oz. BOTTLE PROTEIN 21 HAIR SPRAY REG . $2.25 13 oz. CAN ........ . PROTEIN 21 SHAMPOO REG . $2.49 14 oz. PLASTIC •... BRIDGFORD BREAD J/I LB . LOAVES ..... . SUNKIST -6 Ot. Cans ORANGE JUICE STOUFFERS ENTREES e MACORONI & CHEESE e SPINACH SCUFFLE e POTATOES AU GRATIN e ESCALLOPED APPLES Prices Effective: Thursday thru Sunday Feb.18, 19,20,21 Pricas subject to stock on hand . WE GLADLY ACCEPT U.S.D.A. FOOD COUPONS wt GIVE WI GIV! ILUE CHIP ILUE CHIP STAMPS STAMPS COSTA MESA 19th and Placentia PLACENTIA 710 W. Chapman Wtdntsdil1, rtbfu.1r1 17, 1971 DAil V PILOT /J,1 Vegetables Put Spring Into Win.ter Fare Pick up winter meals wllh ~he secret ()f the success •ii cup chopped onion Melt butter in saucepan : an electric blender until It soup with parsley. Makes g..a 1 small 1vocado Cover with French dtealng color and texture by serving of this recipe is thorough l cup chopped celery sa"Jte carrots, onion and becomes a smooth pulp. servings. 1h cup sliced green stuffed and let stand at leut 1 hour. crisp green celery. be · s ·11 k 3 cans consomme. diluted ctlery for 15 minutes, stir-Combine broth and pureed olives Ju.st before servlnJ, 1hred car· It too will be in plentiful ating. auce wi eep for · f ti TANGY CAULIFLOWER ,upply during the cold months. hC'urs in the refrigerator , with 3 cans water ring requen y. vegetables and return to SALAD 11• cup Roquefort cheese, rots and dice avocado. ·Add M'k' I' 3 tablesNV\ns farina Add consomme and mix saucepan. Add farina, ""P""r crumbled these along with olives and Sturdy vegetable ste w , . 1 s ,1 cups. I"""' r-r-1~ teaspoon pepper well. Cover and cook over and mace, mixing well. Cook I medium cauliflower g lettuce cups cheese. nourishing c re a m and DUTCH CARROT SOUP Dash mace !ow heat for 4S minutes. Strain over kiw heat ror 20 minutes, 1h cup tangy French dress-Wash and separate the Toss lightly and sel'\le II\ vegetable soups are enhanced· 1 ~ cup butter or margarine 2 tablespoons chopped soup. forcing it l hr ou 'g h sti rring frequently. ing cauliflower into flowerttr. Cut crisp lettuce cupa. Makes with aromatic celery. 6 carrots, sliced parsley medium-fine sieve or beat in Sprinkle each serving of hot 3 carrots, shredded them into crosswise slices. 6 servings. When you need a crisp'\------------'--'-----------------"-----"---------------------------''-------vegetab!e dish Lo serve \\'ith hamburger casseroles. pot roast and fish sticks, stir-fry ·!ices of celery ln hot oil and add salted nu ts ju s t before serving. When prepaflng roasts or baked cuseroles, put in a n1ediwn-sized whole dry onion for each member of the family on a sheet ol hea\'Y alwninum foil. l'..ct them bake, 30 minutes at 400 degrees F.: 45 minutes at 350 degrees F .. with the entree. Serve the onion like baked potato. They are delicious seasoned with salt, pepper and butt.er. The root vegetables: car- rots. kohlrabi , pars n l p s , turnips and rulabags are nutritious and money savers. Add ~l teaspoon sugar to the coo king liquid to sweeten the flavor. Candied parsnips, car· rots and turnips can entice children to at least taste. Choose small tender roots for a vegetable dish. Cut the roots into slim pieces so they will cook quickly. Save the large roots to roast with meats or add to stews and soups. PEARS , LE'li'UCE AND CREri·tE DE fl.IENTHE SAUCE 6 pears. cored and halved Sall 6 iceberg lettuce cups Place two lightly.salted pear ha ves on each iceberg lettuce cup. Top each serving with 14 cup Creme de Me.lhe sauce. Makes 6 servings. Creme de l'itenlhe Sa~ce l egg 1,1; cup confectioners sugar l".i cu p whipping cream 2 teaspoons green Creme de Menthe or 1'• teaspoon pure mint extract and 2 drops green food coloring Beat egg until thick ; add sugar gradually and continue beating unlil thoroughly blended. Whip cream very sliH and add Creme de Menthe or mint extract and food coloring. Combine cream mixture with egg. Beal thoroughly. Cherry Salad Molded Tastes delicious served with sour cream. J\tOLDED CHERRY SALAD ,. I can (I pound. 1 ounce) pitted dark sweet cherries iA heavy syrup 1 package (3 ounces) cherry· flavor gelatin dessert Ju ice of I lemon (J to 4 tablespoons) 1 ~ cu p rinely diced celefy Salad greens Commercial sour cream Tn a strainer set over a I-quart measure th oroughly drain cherries. Add enough '"'aler to the cherry syrup to make Jo/, cups: pour into a 1 quart saucepan and heat to boiling. Remove from heat: add gelatin dessert and sUr .until gelatin is dissolved : shr In lemon juice. Chill until thick but not set. Fold in cherries and celery. Turn into six ~-cup molds or custard cups : chill until set. Unmold . Garnish with salad greens and serve wilh sour cream. J\1akes 6 servings. New Onion Mushroom Soup J tabl espoon butter or margarine . . 1 cup thin strips onion (1 medium) 1 can (10,~ ouncesl con- densed golden mushroom IOUP 1 soup c•n waler J slices French bread, toasted l'i1edium·grated Swiss cheese In a medium sauctpan over \ow heat. melt the butter: add onions; cook, stirring oc- casionally, until golden (not brown) and very soft -10 to 15 mJnutts or lon~er. Stir In soup and wat~!· Heat, stirring sevtt:ral l 1 mes · sr,rlnkle toast ~·Ith cheese; p ace In 90up bowls. Pour soup ovet to:~st. Serve at ' onct, i\ljkes s servings. ALBERTSON'S in SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA BRING YOU DISCOUNT PRICES EVERYDAY!! EVERY ITEM DISCOUNTED ••• YOU REALLY SAVE! CHUNK SALMON FRYER BREAST SILVER GILL. SLICED SALMON I 881 b. LI. PORK LOIN ROASTS TYSON PRIDE4 5 LB. BOX 198 lb. BONE-IN RUMP ROASTS WHOLE FRYERS -·~·-29.t POT ROASTS l looloUI. J. FARMER JOHN FRESH • I "I' ·r ' I . , • '• i ! " 1 , ' "• , \ ' '1' SLICED GROUND Down, Down Go Food Prices at Albertson's ••• Run Your Own Test, You'll le Absolutely Amtl- :r.ecl And Pleased At The 5aYln91. ly Lowering Prices We Are In No Way Lowering Our St•n• dards of Quality. The Some High Gvalfty Mer- chandise And Fr iendly BACON BEEF AUAdd11;.,.1 4 ••• 6S< lb. ._ ........ 4 a. ........... . S.-lwf. Lb. Service, With A Money lack Guarantee On IYery Item You luy At Albertson's • R d SI ko.UA. °"'' • 931 oun ea ''-"-'' ~ ................... ll SLICED BACON ......................... ..,..591 Cross Rib Roast~~.!;.~":'::~ ....... o.98< PORK STEAK=.~~···········-····"'69 1 Corned Beel Brisket~ ........... 911 S . St k' ........ .,,.,,...... 931 WISS ea ahlt.'1S.-.········ .. ~ ....... 11. L mb L . Ch ....... °"". '1 " a 01n ops • ...._.,~-............. \).. Fillet Red Snapper.~;;::.,·.~'.': ................ 871 LOOK FOR THIS •• IM: Fw llis llllnl I• £.,.,., 0.,.,1,..m WIM1 T• si., '' "'"11 ... ·i. fiil ·-'" A1• G.ni .. t., o.li" 1i- A!ld f•-119M ·-.It l• l •mn l 'Y P1iclhl 1.1.0 •.tllli•• 53' L-------'--------' Or ... ,., .. ·, S.-. L~. R.b St k ........ 1.1.1.a.o.; .. ., \l" 1 ea s ... ,_..~-.................... -. u.. F ho -·-res ysters .~"'--······-··· .. ·········,,791 L--------1 ------- DISCOUNT DELICATESSEN FAMOUS BRANDS AT DISCOUNT PRICES l!MOM DR CllOCOlAn MlllllGUI LUNCH MEAT JANET LEE HUNT-WESSON CHIFFON PIES ·-·-"'"' 4 $1 Tn DddttsV1ritli1s! •id11111¥'11'! rt gs. LARGE EGGS WESSON Oil MARGARINE 5 or. Pkg. f or • • WIENERS 5 81 letft. OM.i 11.1..rflu... r~n... 36~ ~··•lff! DOZEN ·--··49~ l1w..ld 24 ox. ....... -~39~ ONELi. PEPI 'S PIZZA Sal d ·-·-~ a s -.... u .. <"" 981 KERN'S CATSUP 5 ..... 1 1.m., Tangerines. .. -. -""'"'•-····-....... 6 ~s1 . Navel Oranges ......... , .. ,'"' ............. a.:::s1. Crisp Celery ·-·-• .............. 2 ~ 25' Artichokes ''"'"" ............................. 6 .::, s 1. Golden Rice-A-Roni ::.a:=.:.. .. _.4 :..~s 1. Accent Deodorizer • .-._... .... "&'-...,35 1 Anthony Noodles ~!!::.~ ...................... 36 1 Mott's Applejuice .... -................ -....,331 TOWELS .... $1 ... , R.C. COLA 6 ~~:; 58 1 PLANTERS COCKTAIL PEANUT f;::'.::.r::" ..... _._ ... 651 RED SOUR PITTED CHERRIES,._"'"''""''' ,.& ... 311 PINE-SOL DISINFECTANT .......... "'"" ................... s1°2 Hot Fre11<h Bread-4 .1!..'1. Cinnamon Rolls::..... .... 4.~'J. Muffins-........ -····-··6:.::, 491 Edairs..,..._ ......... _ .. s.:.::. 'l. Farm Bread,_,_ ........ .s,!!.'J. ~-~·~. 80 Proof. Fifth f CAk'f ~ WffK I 1 llADlLIAN MOCHAJ l CAKE I I 2.f"'-L I I "......... I l '""" s1s91 I IA. 1 ~--I Albertson's Scotch :":".:;'.,:~ ..• -....•. -.~l 0'4 Creme De Cocoa Or Menthe '--··· ,..$2" RUM ... , ..... ... , ..... .... FAB DETERGENT •• , .... , ....... """ ......................... 72 BEER HEFTY TRASH CAN LINERS ..... -_ ............ ..,..47 Drah Beec ... ,._ •"•·'-'1" PUREX BLEACH 38 MaltDuck:.:"~~-991 ~':~~ 1s~ , ___ , __ _, ·-····--····'""' Bloody Mary ................ 78< 6 ~.:· FOLGER'S COFFEE .. -.............. ~ 991 ... • .. ~s1 11 •. '! s71 l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!~------..1 Hl-C DRINKS ::'""' 4 ·::; $1 TOTAL DISCOUNT VARIETY TOTAL DISCOUNT FROZEN ICE CREAM ---------------•T~~:lA~a . ...... Half Gallon ••• APPLES I I I POTATOES I I I 8 ~-~991 I I ••W&U. I ,,....,r.c:11; t I ·-I ........ I I GRAPEFRUIT I 20 I I I 8 :0661 I Uis. ,., I ......... ,., I I ... , .... 5UN5HINI Hl·HO 5CHIUINOS TIDE· ..... ... CRACKERS BLACK PEPPER -371 . -... 471 SALVO ... 100"' ••• CHIER •,:;: -... C& H SUGAR PTllX PllCHll .. ,_. 1.111 0-1,.,. ,, .. ., ..... ~ON ... 48~ 5 .... ... f ............ ... CllST ..... 1.es v.i.. 72 -~-IXCIDllN .._. "''""· 661 ~LU-. IA.BY POWDll c...1.1tv-. II• JllGIN LOTION :::f.:._.....,7a. 881 DASH a-11••·834 ... AUIRTIOll"S USH llOWN 791 IVORY LIQ,!!341 "'::"POTATOES 2 .. _ 461 881 -· CASCADE ::;. 691 NICUIPRCTIV11 fH.17,11,19,20,21,22,23 Shop and Save At Any Of The 30 Albertson's Stores in Southern California WE INVITE YOU TO SHOP ALBERTSON'S AND SEE THE LOWER DISCOUNT PRICES Huntington Bt ac:h -15511 So. Edwards Huntln13ton Beach-8911 Adams Fountain Valley -16042 Magnolia Laguna Beach -700 So. Coast Hwy, Corona I M~r -3049 Coast Hwy. I .~ •' • .. W!dnnd11, Ftbflllr'J' 17, 1971 Wtd11tsd1y, FtbrUM1 17, 1971 N 6 PILOT ·AOVERTISER Chicken Divan Makes Divine Eating Chickeu Divan is a delicious, saUsfY.in& di.sh whose elegance belies its easy preparation and ecOnomical cost. At a time when lhe red meats are relatively hlgh1)ric- ed, chicken l!i plentiful and thus an excellent buy. One of this dish's greatest charms -apart from the superb flavor combination of chicken, broccoli and Pannesan cheese -is that you can prepare both the chicken breasts and the cheese sauce ahead of lime. time without being away from her guests for -too long. TABASCO CHICKEN DIVAN •;, cup salad oil 3 whole broiler-fryer chicke1' breasts, halved 1;, cup butter or margarine i;, cup flour 11, teaspoon salt 2 cups chicken stock or bouillcxi. aau"" 1 1,~ pounds fresh broccoli, par-boiled, or I package ( IO ounces) frozen broc- coJi, thawed ~ cup crated Pannesan ch,... Heat on In 'Skillet ; add chicken breasts and brown on both tides. Melt butter in a 11aucepan. Add flour and salt and stir to a smooth paste. stantly, unUI mixture thickens and oomu to a bqil. Remove from heat ; stir in cream and Tabasco. Place broca>ti and chicken in 1~uart casserole; pour sauce over all. Sprlnkle wltb cheese. CHICKEN DIVAN IS COMPANY-ELEG"NT This is a real "company" dish, too, as attested by its inclusion on the menus of many of the world's finest rtSlauranta. This type of recipe is truly a boon to the working girl planning a dinner party for she can make the initial preparations the night before and finish the dish in a short 1h cup heavy cream % teaspoon -TabascO pepper GraduaJJy stir in chicken stock and coot, stirring con- Bake in a 3511 degree oven 4U minutes, or until broccoli and chicken are tender. To serve, sprinkle with additional grated Pannesan c h e es e • YIELD: 4 to I servings. Dancers Savor . Flavor Ballet dancers 1re tremen- dous food specialists. Gayle Young -prerriier danseur for the American Ballet Theatre, which i! givibg performances in the Music Center's Pavilion I h r o u g h \ll~!day Feb. 24, -is a right smart cook. Many ol his colleagues agree that his cuisine is the greatest, too. Ofltn they assemble at hi! apartment for a feed after a night's workout on stage. Here art JOmt of his recipes .,,hich are not only his favorilt!, but also thole ot hi! artist colleagues. MOROCCAN CHICKEN I Large routing chicken - salt and pepper inside and out 14 cup coarsely chopped almonds 1 cup cooked rice I tablespoon butter I cµp grapes, setdtd and sliced in half t onion, chopped 1 pinch of aaffron 1/t teaspoon cinnamon 1 f. teaspoon black peppe r 2 Lab~s honey ?ifir all ingredients together and salt to taste. Stuff the chicken with the mixture and truss. Put on rack and roast In JOO de,ree oven. Combine the followin1 ond but< the chicken during the routing: BASTE 1,; cup melted butter 'le teupoon each of black pepper, ginger, cinnamon and 1arlic powder t tablupoon honey VAIUTORI (fer lton d'oe11vres) I pound boned and skinned chicken breast! 1~ cup JOJ sauce '' cup sake (or dry y.·hite wine) ,, cup sugar Scallion• cut into 1,," to ~4'' '"""" Melted butter Cut the chicken Into strips 1 2" wide and 1ppmximately 2" long. Dip them in butter. hfir aoy saue. sake ind sugar. Take chicktn pieces from butter and marinate them In the ,;,y sauce mixture lor 5 to 10 minutes. Wrap each piece of scallion with a strip of chicken ind skewer on an extra long fancy cocktail pick. lffal oven to 350 derrees. Place skewered piecta in pan . a!ld place in broiler on a lower shelf. Broil for 15 minute.!! basting oc· cuionally with JOY sauce mil:· ture. Then turn and continue cooking 10 to 1$ minutes or until done. GAZPACHO , ..... !puloll _,) lG-1'1 soda cr1e:ken 1,1: cup olive oil 4 bouillon cubes fbeef ) 2 cup1 boilins water 3 No. 2 cans tomato juicl!: 2 Olrlons irated or fintly chopped J cups celery fintly chopped or diced ! Green peppers minced 2 teaspoons salt '1 clovts garlic . 2 t11blespoona ltmori juice Dash of Tabuco 4 tablespoons minced fresh herbs (anry, baa i I , pantey) I cucumber thinly 1llc!d Crumble Mlda cracker into salad oil in 1 bowl DifloJve bouillon cubes tn watt/ and cook briefly. Add bouillon, tomato juict, onion. celery, ireen pepper ind salt to cracker and oil mlKture. Cul garlic cloves ln hall le!1111notse ond ltick on toothplcu. Pul In 1upecbo. Cover and cbW 1evenl houta. or prefenbly overnight. F1oat several cucumber slletS on top of each bowl of aoup when aerved. AIJO servt with one let cube in •ach bowl to kttp ll chllled If d<Slred. '.,_,.Cy· Quality Cabana Bananas ~iOOi Centrlf Arnerica- Perfect for Lunch Boxe s or Sliced on Cereal. lb. Fancy C1lifor1i1 Navel Variety -lb. bag Blade Cuts USDA ·Choice Grade Beef lb. 4,bL SJ !!!~l~s 4For$) !!!~~!!~~~eak~ 98c Carrots 3 ., .. 29' Apples :i::. 4-lk. 49c !:~~l!~ks lb. S)49 us."'fl• 1-Pacia"do.ir1 rorY•u' 11ag "•PAlif.en.chy o~icious! ,.,,. .., Top Sirloin.Steak $)79 Pears U.S. llo. 1 A1jo1 for Easy Salads or Desserts Wal nuts Large 39' Ro!"~lne lellucee .. hes ... 151 Grapefruit To flariioc ..... B•oil-USDA Choko loef . lb. sir• 1b. Ram. n .1 '":,:--·:·:~ 35; Lare• Six• Spencer Steaks $)99 Eltetilent for Cakes, Coolies, Sallds, tic· Fruit Juice ~=: :~ 881 RI .. Red 0 J • 11 ., 11on.r ... Rib Eye Pofflon-USDA Choke fleof lb. · range UICI 11i C Yellow Onions .~.s , 3 ~~~ 29; Safeway Brand Pure fruil Ju ice o:i. . Asparagus i-:.~'S:."!: "· 49¢ 8 ;~, 99c Safeway Sells Only U.S. D. A. DISCOUNT FROZEN FOODS •ins Eye T asti Fries 114L 2J:i .. ,. ~ Bridgford Bread Dough 3 ~;~~. 56; Fordhook Limas :,~.~ ... ~ •:;;~ 22; Bel al·r Peas '""'"' '"ly '·"· 271 • fresll Glrdtn FlivOf ''" Va1 de lamp Enchiladas ~::: 36; Bel-air Cheese Pizza ll•tL 65¢ .. ,. DISCOUNT DAIRY-DELI! Shady lane Batter o:!ij~ Dalewood Margarine Lucerne Tartar Sauce Lucerae Peanut Batter Lucerae Assorted Dips Lucene Yogurt ""°"'' Fl""' ··~ 82; •'•· ..... 20-ct~. ..... 35; 1111 tl .. L 53; ... l •IL 37; .... •; ..... 2"' .,.. ur DISCOUNT NON -FOODS VICKS VICKS VAPORUB NYQUIL Reliews Distreu ol Colds! Ni&h1 Time Cold Mtdicin1 l.l•IL 53c l •lt1 •11• tlu 1111 loµem Ski• Cream 10.0L sp1 ~" Beil Gay Lotion Fnl Relit! 14L 87; tf'rom Pain! ... C..tac Ca1111les 12 Ho11rs .~ •. 991 ol Relltl! •f ti Strim Medicated Pads .... 99; ... , P~1i1 Skin Lotion r~~· ·~~:L 861 Lysol Spray Disinfectant ~::· 791 DISCOUNT BABY FOODS Si11ilac Baby For111ul1 Gerller's Baby Foods ~:~~d .... 13' 1 GARDEN SUPPLIES A' DISCOUNT PRICES Cross Ribs Cente.r Cuti Hanlia1 llaglc COAST BIO llulff.Purpon Sul,h1t1 ef lm1111l1 USOA Choi<o !!elf I~ 7-Bone Roast 0-Bone Roast Bo1eless Roast Sirloin Tip Roast SLICED BEEF LIVER ... !di ,.,,, , ... f9C , .. _ .... II. HUMUS PLAllT FOOD S.!•· 20 ... 19' .. ., , .. Sho!Ade• Cuts 79; USDA Choice Bttf I~ Alw hi Thi ,._ u..i for ,. ,.,. Snail Ptlllls 50 ~.~ sl 16 \lotll I•! 2111 ... 59' --~ hl•••J $199 20·1i. .. , U11114 F1rllll11r "..'::... = 19t Rolled l T.. 89-Beef DMlci , .. .... 1m s111 DELSEY BATHROOM • TISSUE 2-roll. pack c MEDIUM 'AA' EGGS BEL·AIR FROZEN ORANGE JUICE ' Om>R...ry fl, HIGHWAY TOMATO CATSUP c DISCOUNT PRICES MEAN EXTRA SAVINGS! Om• D' Ille Crop b ao~:~85-· 1 ~~:~· 35' I Brown ~er y Bee! ~6 ':: 79' I Sno-Wh1te Salt ~~:~ 2~~ 11' -m-~··-·-"'-:.~.... t· • -Nestle's Quik Chocdate AMted SeM Hot or Cold cuiek DiS!Olvinr i::79 Canadian Whiskey ~ cua111ai Hill $ 69 Lucerne M·11k r!::'~or ::~ 17' Smooth & Mellow Morninr l'Arff" ~~;~~~1111 FIFTH I Bel-air Hash Browns :k~ 33' Old Calho11 Bo1rbon ~~' "· 1521 t Fresh Cookies ~~~ '~;;~49' I Scotties Calypso Pk~"!~00 26' Stanton's Dry Gin ~"tr ... 1411 Kavlaaa Vodka g;,i:;."'~~:.Jl.'I; ... 1411 Mac flair's Scotch ~~~ •• 1611 ' I • I PlLOJ ..AOVtRTISER 7 N Wtdnt~1. Ftbruary 17, 1971 ~f.~· Hea.rty · Start Puts Skiers on · Slopes ~'-. "Meet. you on the slopes!'' , i; , . More and more. people are : heading for the slopes and getting hooked on the in- vlgoraUng sport of skiing. •' And, ~ only way lo start a stimulating day of skiing is ' · With a hearty, warm ing b,..,ak-• j• • '< fast. . ,:• , , . Sure·ll>-please and sure-to- ' aatisfy is a fluffy omelet filled and slices of mushrooms. The special accent is a lacing of canned chicken giblet gravy. which blends the flavors of the ingredients. SKIJERS' OMELET 6 eggs, separated 1 J cup milk 2 teaspoon:; dried chopped chives Dash pepper 3 tablespoons butter or margarine Sauce 1 can (4 ounces) sliced mushrooms, drained 1 tablespoon butter or margarine giblet gravy 112 cup ham , cut in thin strips ~l cup shrrdded Swiss cheese Omelet: Beat •::g whites un- lil stifL Beat egg yolks until thick and lemon colored ; beat in milk, chives, and pepper ; fold inlo whites. Heat butler in oven·proof skillet; pour in eggs. bro.wned on bottom. Bake at 35tl degrees F. for 10 minutes or until top springs back when pressed with finger. Sauce: Meanwhile ln saucepan, brown mushrooms Jn butter. Add gravy and ham. Hea t; stir now and then. Transfer omelet to platter. • JiAJLY Pl~T • 1 · • to the brlm with 'melled Swiss ' 'cheese, hearty strips of ham Canned chicken giblet gravy eliminates the gravy-making hassle ... wilh the simple swirl of a can opener, you can enjoy the homemade goodne1s of gravy made with real chieken broth, tender diced giblets and subtle seasonings in a matter of minutes. 1 can (ton ouoces) chicken Cook over low heal about 5 minutes or until lightly Make a ahallow cut down center: sprinkle with cheese. Pour part of sauce on: fold in half. Pour sauce over top. Makes 4 servings. HEARTY OMLETS GIVE A Lt'T ON SLOPIS .. "I J, •• . .. :f~ . . . •. ::. ~· . •.f·. Farmer John Full Shank Portion Deep Smoked 'Fuliy Cooked American lamb Short Shank Prtt•~ed 5-lli~ 69' Shoulder R"'t lb. lb. USDA Choice Quality Genuine fresh American lamb llade er l·Bont Rib Lallp Chps Small Lola Chops ' lb.99c lb. $)19 lb. $)59 Pump, Meaty And Tender lb2-31 • 11• Whole Body C1t·U, Fry1r1 ·~· 35' lb. Ground Beef Flavonvl ond Juky {In :I-lb. Chub $1.6.SJ , I• 3~~ Chub lb. SSC ) :"--·-Choice Beel A 1 Discount Prices (Large Sirloin Lamp Chips lb. SI .23 ) ~!!~!.~_w!!~~-~~ 55c ~!~!~~ Ha~.!od ... $289 ... . , ' .. ., " . :l Vea I Chops ltade or 7-Bone-Lean, Tendu & Meaty lb.89' Veal Sieaks Full Cut Sirloin s111 B01Je Jn 10. •• . .. Veal Steaks T-Bone or Porterhou$.e 10. s119 center Ham Slices 1~\k 10. s12t Cook d H' '"" ""'" e ams f•ll Botl PortJon ,.. 591 •' SAFEWAY ' ' . PRE-GROUND COFFEE • c " ... ' . ~ DISCOUNT HOUSEHOLD "!~ ... '~ FINISH DISitWASNER Detergent ' . """ -' Spotless Ai.rtomatie Dlsliwl$hin1 JJ.1r, ,.,. . Ivory Liquid Detergent f~ Drett Detergent ~~:2ry":, M Cle IJl.P-e Household f. IR For Thorouah Cle1nin1! ~\·.Safeguard Soap· :~:~ 54( ...... 571 ... ..... 871 Jkr. ...... 651 ... ' 1 '' 21 1 11011 ; ... SAFEWAY SUPER SAVERS \fl Ri"ce A Roni~ in B!ef. Chicken l'Ao·•i. • • or Spanish Styli •Ir• ·-. ·8 Ha· "1r Spray rrv11 n,,_1, R.,.1., ,. • .,, 491 i::·· or Hird-to-Hold Styles 111 ,.. • Oberti Olives s1~.::' ·~;:·101 · a Lucerne Fruit Salads :.~. 351 ·· I li1gara Spray Starch ·~;:·· 591 PORK SPARE· RIBS SLICED BACON STERLING FRANKS SOLE FILLETS Sltrn.,1"1 Hk •t,., SIMkMI t•IJt. 49' , ri'~:d SIGMAN'S ::.: 18• pkf • Great Taste Treat-l·I~. 58' Fully Cookd-lleat & lb. 99' Sene 'Em Anytime! pkc. Eal. A Tas~ Treat! f1t11'1-l!J11lar Or Cco"lry St1lt Oscar Marer Bacon .~:" ,:;: 1i~d'f;., 881 Oscar Marer Wiaurs •,,::w :::: 731 Luncheon Meal ~/:." :-:~ 371 Beef Patties Ouidi; Cook1n• S.noncd Jutl l11~U Y11I Patties Ouk' Cooliln1 hn-. M Mi11111ul R1p1rt'1 Fish Cakes ..... 114" 89• ,,,, 11 .. i. ... ,.,. .... '1" Brttdtd Sliri .. "!::..::" , ... ,, .. ... Htllbll Sl11k1 Capt. Cl'leict I· .. If II ... ,. , ... Fish SHcka e.tlln"1 &Miu ~; 471 ''" ... , ....... , hllt:•o. ." .................. ,111111 ..... , ...... tom OHn., ,,.,,,,. '"" • •• , .. ,, O.icl ..... , GERBER'S BABY FOODS Choice Of Strained Fruits. Vegetabl!s Or Jllices. Western Chili W /Beans '~'!:'"391 Spam and Cheese C.::.\o, '!:• 591 Glorietta Tomato Juice ' :.~ 491 Banana Pudding Cups :~1"·~:. 131 Fresh Orange ngelFood RING u .• ~ ... 39c frtsMY Btl.td wi1h Quality aJ11 l"rr1d~n11 .W l(llOW Howl Cinnamon Sohntcktn Rolls ,.,. 391 Vienna Sesame Brttd ',';:." 33+ Skylark Freneh B111d '1;;1· 331 Iced Cina.men Rolls .., .. 391 · 'e. ~ 1 SNO·WHITE If ~~~~ WATER SOfTNER SALT Exlrll Co1111 50 :::·· DISCOUNT PAPER GOODS Scot Toilet Tissue Facial Tissue I~~~ n~,:; '"!~"' 151 T. T R11ul• ampax ampons ,, ••ptn • • I r'" 241 t Ill •••. 421 tf II TOMATO •sAUCE CATSUP AND SAUCES H • I( t h "'' *"''' , .... 35' e1nz e c up ,_, 1o"""'' .. . Town House C1tsup ~~ •t;t• 29' Hunt's Tomato Sauce '::· 11' WATCH FOR OUR SUPER SAVERS LOOK FOR THIS MARK •rtt11 lfftttlt• T-1rt. "" Wtf;, Fl'-11·1• If l•ftw•J t•11t lltM •• •"'"1 '"' •IPf fl Ulllt 0.111fftiM, •• l•lte ,, ...... Macaroon A Mighty Mixture An . easy-to-make .dewrt. AIMOND MACUOON APPLES 1ri cup unsifted nour \0 !eJSPQOn b&ldlll potldlt ~~ teupoon aalt . rn poulds (about) ,Pp1u I cup 1u11r, 14 tl!!ISJ>OOn ciMID'IOD · 2 tlblespOons butter," aolt tt teaspoon alniond eltraet I large eai % cup thinly aJictd blanched 1lmond1 On wa:r paper thoroulhly. stir toaether the flour, bakint powd~ and aalt: set. alidt. Pare, quarter and core ap- plea: 11lce thin to make 1 quart . In a medium mixlnl bowl stir tocether ~ cup ol the sugar and the ciMamon; mix: in apples; tum into a t-lnch gl1ss pie plate. Bake apples in a preheated 37$<1eiree oven for 20 mlllutta ; apples wilt ahrink. ·. Me1nwhi1e 'in. a amall mii:· Ing bowl cream butter, the rtm&iii!ng ~ cup au1ar and the almond e.1tract : lborouJhly beat in eu; stir In flour mixture and 1Ai cup of the almonds, Spn!ad bitter, a little at a time, over apples: sprinkle with rem1hli.n1 1/4 cup a1mond1. Return to 375-degne oven ind bake until browned -30 mlautu loqer. Serve wann with vanilll ice cream or whipped crum. Makes I lot servu.p. Easy Princess , 9126 '--'-' · SlltS 1.16 "" 1'T~i ... 1'T .... ..,.. ... A SUP. or A PRJNC!SS with an . erubuant fllna of 1earf to ti~ or drape as you wish. Nole t.leg1nt, hi·rlle neck. Whip It up in knit. Printed Pat\Un 11211: Ntw Missts' Slut ·a. II,· Ji, It. II. Slzt II (busl ·#ll IUu 21> yards ~h. · · SEVENTY-FIVI!: CINTI for e.ch pettern -add 15 cents for each pattern for Air Mall and Special Hand 11n1 ;' otherwise thlrd-<:lus delivery will like three weeb or mart. S.nd to Marl111 Mutln, the DAILY , PlLOt 4U Patttm Dept., 233 Wtn \IUI St., Now Yotk, N.Y. 111111. · Print NiMJ, ADDRESS with ZIP, llllC Ind ITYU: NUMBER. Swin1 into Sprln,i ! New, New P.1ttem Calllo& tw aepuaw, JumJllll)ta, allm- mln1 lhapts, rn. pltttm coupon. to cent.. lllSTANT SEWING BOOK MW today, WW tomorrow. It. · INSTANT FMlllON BOOK -Hlmdrtdt o/ fUlllon facti . 11. l - < ' --, Wtdntsday, February 17, 1971 Karen Valentine Puts Heart Into Co9king &yJOHNA BUNN schools. They were concerned who'd had the l~d the year KAREN VALENTINE'S or ,~ teaspoon lhyme. 1? Trinl meat well, add bee( on 4 skewers. Brush lightly that when the spring play before and she just wasn't BEEF SlllSH KEBABS teaspoon basil. pinch dry to marinade. Cover. chill 2 with marinade . NEW YORK -''l like to came a\ong and I was perfect that super. It was a frolic For Lbe marinade: sage to 3 hours, turning oc-Broil beef quickly on one cook a lot. Before I was mar· for the lead, the drama to her, but it was serious 1 cup salad \or vegetable) 1\1 lbs. boneless Jean tender casionally. side, turn. Broil vegetable and ried. I cooked creat lasagne. teacher pulled me asisfe and with me. And my teacher oil steak (Porterhouse or club For the Ske~·ers: beef kebabs at the same lime. '!bit wu like my belt dlsb," said, 'Well, I can't give you knew it was serious and that :j• cup white wine (or ~ steak or top round) cut 8 small \Yhole onions, cooked Broil until meat is cooked sald Karen V 11 e n t I n e ihe lead, beta use it might bothered me." cu, wine-vinegar plus \• in 2-inch cubes 6 che rry tomatoes to desired doneness a n d ("Everyone thinks Valentine cause resentment among the ''.,Someday 1 would love to cup water ) I teaspoon salt One large green pepper, cut veget11bles are brown. Remove la really .-rake name, but kids.' have a house with a brick I clove garlic, pressed 1 ~ teaspoon freshly ground in large pieces n1eot and vegetables fr om lt'"s"real''). ~ skewers. Arrange alternating "An~ I said. ·ca use kitchenwilhcopperpol!ban~-'Ad lib the herbs: 1h bay Jcar pepper 8 mushrooms caps (fresh ."You see I lived on a resentMeot? This isn't what ing around," she said shifting crushed, big pinch r int Combine oil, wine (or \\'inc-or canned) meat and vegetables 0 n Chkkeo ranch and I bate I wan(I'my life to be. J want subjects happily. Recipes for herbs, 'Ar teaspoon crushed vinegar and water ), garlic, Arrange beef on 4 skewers. mounds of hot cooked rice. poultry because I bad so much to be~an entertainer.' And quick and successful cooking red peppers your choice of herb com-Sprinkle with salt and pepper. Afi'ERTHOUGHTS : "I like ol It as a child so I made you se~, he gave the lead for novice or masler cooks · or J,'i teaspoon each oregano bination, sail and pepper ; mix Arrange onions. tomatoes. to use the same marinade ST AR OF ROOM 222 Karen Valentine lasagne for Thanksgiving din-to a p11J!sica1 ·education major follow: and basil, sprig parsley well. green pepper and mushrooms on a steak," Karen advised. n~. ...::.::...'.::::=:=_::::::_:::.=:._::..:.:_:._:._~~~~~~~~~_::__..:c::..:_:::_'-'-:._:::_~~~~~~~~~-=-~:....:.:'-~~~~~~~~'-~~~~~~~~~~~~- · •we had a couplt: of our bachelor friends in and I didn't think anything of it. As we sat down to Thanks~v ing dinner. they "'ere waiting for J.he turkey and everything. "Somelhing was v e r y wrong: my lasagne was just terrible. It tasted Ii k e kerosene. And our friends were waiting for a big turkey dinner an d there was this awful lasagne. They had t\vo or three help ings because they'd been saving up for so long." Karen Valentine is as real as her name is. She has a disarmingly beautiful smile, not a bit ruffled by the pace or her publicity schedule. Shoeless, she kept pulling back stray locks of red-brown hair tht11l tumbled to her shoulders as we talked. "I'd never really c ook ed until I got married. Now I like to experimvit with spices· and all that jau. I just make up things as I go a1ong and never follow a recipe. I just add a little of this, a little of that and it comes out!" "I cook very simple things becailse I'm dsually dieting you know -trying to watch my weight, So when you eat at home, you try and eat simply : steak and salad, bak- ed potatoes and some fruit. You have to be careful so you don't get up in the weight department. "'I like to cook, especially v.•hen I'm hav ing company. We only hav e four chairs. so if It's company, it's a sit-dow n dinner for another couple. I like to eat by candle light because I look better!" she said impishly. "And I like to fix it. I love to go marketing and pick out great meats. I even like arranging thin&s. It's crazy that way. but I l~e doing things myself because it gives me a sense of having done something! She blueprinted a typical company meal. "I or ten prepare shish kebabs w i t h beef. I cut it up and use while wine and ail kinds of things'. fine herbs, marinate it and skewer that with onions. little tomatoe s and mushrooms. " .. ' • U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR MAYFAIR ILUE RIBBON STEER BEEF WELL TRIMMED RIB STEAKS EXCELLENT FOR PAN FRY OR ROASTS ~ lb. BONELESS BEEF STEAKS • CHUCK STEAK & FAMILY STEAK U.S.D-A. CHOICE OR MAYFAIR BLUE RIBBON STEER BEEF lb . CALIF.ORNIA GROWN FROM FOSTER FARMS FRYING CHICKEN LEGS C. lb. FRESH GROUND HOURLY GROUND CHUCK FRESH TASTY EXTRA LEAN c lb . TURKEY PARTS YOUNG HEN OR TOM~HANOCUT WINGS .............................. lb 39' .• ' PORTERHOUS '.: ORT-BONE • STEAK !) U.S.O.A GRADED CHOICE OR MAYFAIR BLUE RIBBON WELL TRIMMED~TAILS OFF s 49 lb. .. . , SEA FOODS S -. MAYFAIR' "J'hen I do ricearoni. It's so easy, it's almost cheating. T cook vegetables of some kinds like beans Italian style in stainless steel ·with no water'. P.1y mother's health oriented. Italian and always cooks her vegetables i n stainless stttl ! " "~1y husband 's free lancing. TOP SIRLOIN $ STEAKS WILSON •:,,r,~· 41• SLAB BACON . · , LEGS ................................ lb.49' THIGHS ........................... . .... lb. S 9' BREASTS ............................ lb. 79' 79 T mean he's just completed a segment for "The Young Rebels." It takes longer for a man to get established. say until he's 35 or older. "We have a tiny little English-style house with early American furniture in California .. we don 't have very mUch furniture , but I'd rather wail an d have an orange crate and have something I really want." Asked if she'd ever regret- ted not becoming a teacher. I she served as president of the Future Teachers Associa- tion v.•hile she attended high school in Sebastopol ). she replied , "Oh Lord, no~ l v.·ouldn'l want to be a teacher for the world. I love acting! 1 did belong to the F"I' A. but you see:, that ·was like a cover up. I wanted to act, but in my litUe home town, it's ridiculous to say you v.·ant to be an actress. Because they'd think you 've flipped and you're going to the big city and you're going to be· a loose woman." (She stars on the Emmy award winning ABC:TV Show, Room 222). _ ''\\lhen I w8s In high school and I entered the Miss Teenage thing and I was get· Ung a kit of honors. They began casting the 1pring play. I've alv.·a)'S fell very slighted about this: All the teachers v.·ere so concerned t h a t because of all my activities J ~:ouJd cause resentment among tbe kids. Ma ybe because l v.•as able to fly to New York and do a TV show or perform for other Calorie CountJ It has been lhown that alct;hol provided from JO to 20 per cent ol the total calories coosumed by the adull popula· lion In NoMh America. So report.I Food and Nultltlon News. U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR MAYFAIR'S BLUE RIBBON STEER BEE F-BONELESS lb. DOLE CRUSHfD.SllCID,CHUNKS PINEAPPLE IN NATURAlJUICE NO. 2 CAN ••. , ................ . BELL BRAND l~~;~-.~~~.~ ... 35~ POTATO CHIPS ~!!~!.~~~ ........ _10~ REG. HOZ. 49~ GIBLETS ............................. ib.49' BACKS & NECKS ........... lb. 19' LIBBY'S VEGETABLES CORN ~:~~ lOlC .. N TOMATOES ~';"'' GREEN BEANS .;;;':'~':."' DOWNEY SOFTENER ... as· TOP JOB ., ... . . • .. 69' SAFEGUARD ~'.o.. _ 85' MAYFAIR FARM FRESH FRUITS 6a VEGETABLES WILSON BACON · ;' CERllFIEDl~b.PKG ··-··-························-··--·• ) ~~ln0£lhlijl•R3111·r·l·t1 " . <'·~ OH BOY PIZ ~ ·1'.."..!.-.,:.,o• CHEESE PIZZA BONUS P'..CK IONUSPACK 7 Cl " l/160l.Fot!ntl 1 ' PRlaOFONE 911 ., BIRDS EYE 1Mn1111A TIOHL A 3 VEGETABLES ,..,, __ 11- s.a.v.1..1u ....... o......is1t, JA'-""ESf, ME~ . SP.a.NISH rut!i~!~~l~'~G. i i 19 .. _ .......... -~ ~-~~~-~~~~ & ORAN'E JUICE 001 "" 1•;s' TREESwtET l?OZ.CAN.l9c .............. -··--·-"-••• GRAPEFRUIT ,. ' LARGE SUNKIST, JUICY - I ! SWEET. JUICY I FLORIDA, RUBY /1 RED or WHITE t Wtdntsd~y, Ftbru1ry 17, 1~71 DAILV PILOT 3T Hamburger Turns Hero Ethereal Angel Roll Heavenly Treat i • • l E N FF The filling ror . tJi e s e sandwiches is made With beef and cheese. BURGER HEROES 2 pounds ground Chuck beef \~ cup prepared mustard J teaspoon salt 1,~ teaspoon pepper 6 slices (each about 3i,.t Jn. ches square) muenster cheese S individual loaves (each about ' inches I o n g ) Italian bread Barbecue sauce , see below ~Iii beef, mustard, salt and pepper ; divide into 6 equ al portions. Roll up each cheese slice ; place a roll in the center or each portion of meat and shape into rolls, each about 5 inch.es long. Cook to desired doneness in a small amount of corn-oil margarine in a large skillet. Cut loaves in half; sandwich a burger in each, topping meat with the Barbecue Sauce. PORK STEAKS EASTERN PORK LEAN & TENDER c lb. Barbe.cue Saul.>e In a !mall skillet over low heat melt J tablespoons oocn- oil margarine ; add ~ cup chopped green pepper', 113 cup chopped onion and I clove garlic (minced): cook until lender. Add ~:.: cup chili sauce. 2 tablespoons brown sugar and i,~ teaspoon Worcestershire sauce: simmer for 5 minutes; reheat if necessary before us- in g. Makes 6 servings. . February can be a fun month for the homemaker who likes to cook. Valentine's Day and Lin- coln's and Washington's birthdays present many op- portunities for p r e p a r i n g special n1eals and dessert treats. We can thank George Washington and his hatchet for all-American c h e r r y desse~ts. And for an easy and delicious change from tradi- tional cherry pie, why not of- PICNIC STYLE SHOULDER LEAN MEATY-EASTERN PORK ~ lb. PORK ·BUTI ROASTS PORK TENDERLOIN STEAKSL .. 98C ~~w.59~. CIALS FOR LENTEN MEALS WHOLEs11s O• SLlaD lb. · t SHRIMP s119 MEDIUM GREEN ....................... M ........... l8. s J 19 Fillet of Sole . lb~s 119 REAKFAST SPECIALS ."':&t I'• s"i ..... ~ ... :ii .. ~ I ' • .. . 1 COTIAGE CHEESE '~~~EN 31 ~ •-' 59, PT. ~~~~~~!_~R_E~_".'_ .... 59' ..... 35' MARGARINE .UOEN SOFl H.llS 14 '9:G ........ IMO DRESSING 21' PINlS 111 .. .. .......... --...... ,,_ ...... li ilTS. ~~~~!.!.~!~~·lE~~------· 69" SWANSOll IRIAKFAST - ,ANc.Ml & SAU SAG£ 11-t Ol. EGG, 43( /'OlAIO & SAUSAG£ 611 01 fREfllCtl lOAST & SAUSAGt S"·Ol--··-.. - lllD,Ef01D IREAD l{I •. IOAVES ............... •l· PRAVDA VODKA b~~PR~0~299 • • FRYER DRUMSTICKS FRYER THIGHS LEGS & THIGHS ";~~:" U.S.D.A. CHOICI OR MAYFAIR 'S BLUE RIBBON STllR BIEi MAYFAIR DELICATESSEN \~fRA"_~$55c MA!!9..~!!~.,f.!.~H!ESE U•FT SJc YFRESH BO(o····-······-·· ......... _,., SAltME..r.JCM Alt lffF,•EG.01ttrl1C«sua:o 120 GNA 6"" AUERKRAUT "'°··········--"' ..,- "°""-'OEMJlDCtMonoz.™ 35c IUQDIUAJS -'" tro1"5.SO!lrto101.,.._ 45' W.ottnD -.o. uossuao,01 ~"' ":A~ tA.65' DASH Jumbo Slt.1 Deal Pak .. , • , • , , •. , . , , , , ••••. CHEER D~::.~:nt McVITIES ENGLISH COOKIES ......... 3 " $1.69 99~ i $1.00 rer your family a light and airy Angel Roll ? Although it may look dif- ficult to prepare, this elegant dessert roll actually demands only a few minutes or your time. Convenience foods - canned pie rilling and angel tood cake· mix -shorten the preparation tin1e. In addition. the filling and cake mix; are baked together, niaking Angel Roll an ex- cellent hurry-up dessert. Create delicious varialions WITH THIS COUl'ON ltMIT 1 COUPON PE• AOUlT CUSIOME• , FEI. 18-fE l.1• WITH THIS COUPON LIMIT 1 COUPON or Angel Roll with other fruit pie fillings or try \lo·hole cranberry sauce. One package of cake mix will make t\YO Angel Rolls or one roll and 12 cupcakes. ANGEL ROLL 2/3 cup cherry pie filling l package (15 ounce) Angel Food Cake n1ix Powdered sugar Line bottom of well greased 15xl0xl·inch jelly roll pan with waxed paper. Allow paper to P(IAOlllTCUSTOM~I · fEI. ll·ffl. 14 YOU SA VE 20c WITH THIS COUPON LISTERINE SICU11999S2 1-lb. ROLL extend :Z·inches beyond narrow ends of pan . Grease paper. Spread cherry pie filling even· ly on paper in pan. Prepare cake batter ac· CQrding to package directions. Cover filling With half of cake bl'::.:r, spread .evenly into eor- 11ers of pan. (Use remaining baller for cupcakes.) Bake in oven at 400 degrees for 18-20 minutes or until a light golden brown. (When using a preheated oven. baking time should be cut 5-10 , l•ND OF FIOST LIMIT .3 CHIPPED MIA TS l&f, IAll, TUltlET ant1a,co-lftf 3 $ SKU/19996 WITH THISCOUl'ON 3 OZa OMIT I COVP'ON PEIADIJLTCUSTOM(I PKG. FOR IEI. 11.ffl.1~ ADVERTISED PRICH EFFECTIVE 7 FULL DAYS THURS., FEB. 18 thru WED., FEB. 24 175 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA minutes.) Loosen cake from sides of pan. Invert Immediately on towel dusted with powdered sugar. Remove waxed paper. For a more spectacular ertect ad- ditional cherries may be ad· ded. Roll cake fiom narrow end. Makes one 1G-inch dessert roll . To serve, cut the roll into slices about l·lnch thick. Top with a scoop of !Ce cream or whipped cream. Truly a wonderful way to honor our rtrst president! Low Curves 9242 SIZES 8-16 Low and curvy -see how seaming achieves a new. elongated proportion in front and back. A pert collar and pocket flaps polish it on. Printed Pattern 9242 : NEW r.fisses' Sires 8, IO, 12. l>i, 16. Size 12 (bust) 34.) takes I 1h yards 6G-inch fabric. SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS for each pattern -add 25 cents for eaCh pattern for Air Mail and Special H a nd II n g; otherwise third-class delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to Marian Martin, the DAILY PILOT 442 Pattern Dept., 232 West ~8th St., New York. N.Y. 10011. Print NAME, ADDR ESS with ZIP, SIZE and . STYLE NUMBER. Swing into Spring! New, New Pattern Catalog has separates. jumpsuits, slim- ming shapes, free pattern coupon. SO cents. INSTANT SEWING BOOK sew today, wear tomorrow. 11. Egg Nog Recipe A Winner Orange County residents ac- counted for eight of the win· ning receipes in a special cook book just published by radio station KMPC personali~y Jim Lange. Selected from among the en- tries in the "Recipe or the Day" contest which Lange aired on his daily noon to 3 p.m. show, included in the book was a Holiday Egg Nog, subiTiitt.ed by Mrs. Daniel Sur~ las of HunUngton Beach. JANE SURFAS' EGG NOG 12 egg whites l 1h cup sugar 12 egg yolks 1/4 teaspoon salt I quart heavy cream, beaten stiff t quart bourbon whisky J quart milk 1 cup rum Beat the egg whites until stiff. Beat in \i cup sugar. Beat egg yolks, 1 Cup sugar, salt until very light. Comlilno egg mixtures and sUr unUI thoroughly blended. A d d cream, milt and whisky a{ld. beat well. Add rum. P,ollr Into large jug or botUe. Cover. flt makes over 8 galtoo.) Store in cool placi!. Sprinkle with nutmea when serving. Serves 30. Paint Tric k When you've finished pain. Ung. paint a line on the outside of the can to indicate how much p'alnt ls left. • • r ' • •• " . ' • • • l' . .. -.. • • 38 DAILY PILOT WedMsd11, Ftbru1ry 17, 1971 Spicy Chili Con Carne Sweetened for Delicate Palates ID u swer lo ~t.M.'l requeat size called for but there are recommended, t found lhls makes ty.•o thin 8-inch rounds; equals two 9-lnch layers; a amount of diced green pepper evaporated milk gives a rich same amount or rolled out for 14tweet" cblll u prepared gentral substituUou that will true with the "LBJ 's Favorite two 9-inch squares, lhree 8--10 x 4-inch tube pan equals in 4 tablespoons butter or flavor, is cheaper than cream. pie dough you would use for 11 hl&ll scboolJ, I wtlll you give almost as good results. Chocolate Cake" even though Inch layers; a 13 x 9 x 2 two 9 x 5 x 3 loaves or margarine just until tender, Now add the oysters, 1 tea-a one-crust pie. Dough shoold woald tn iny favorite. sometimes just as good. The dlrecUons came right from the rectangle, two 9--inch layers one 13 x 9 x 2 rectangle. not browned in the least. spoon salt, ~ teaspoon pepper first be pricked here and J dOn't know that It ls only exception Is pound cake. White House. I used the or two 8--inch squares; a 12 Oyster pie is a fine way Blend in 5 level tablespoons and 2 tablespoons chopped pi· there. As with. any pie, you anytlllq Uke the • c boo I That must be baked in a loaf surplus for four cupcakes. x 8 x 2 rectangle. two 8--lnch to get maximum mealtime flour. Measure the oyster miento. You can get by must t.ake care to press dough vuatoa, but my huaband and or tube pan. Otherwise, if a cake bakes layers; a 9 x 5 x 3 loaf mileage out of just 1 pb'lt juice, add enough milk or without pimiento but It makes firmly to the rim of the dish, t love It. Aro1111d bere tt ba1 Occasionally I have run iJll an 8-lnch square. it will pan, one 9-inch square for 24 of oysters. Drain oysters but cream to make 2 cups. Blend things look a lot more in· using a table fork. Brush top come to be k®Wn as "Edna'a across a recipe that has too also bake in one 9·inch round to 30 cupcakes, regulatil)n ' reserve liquid. Now cook lh that in too, cook til l thickened. teresting. Pour into greased with milk, bake at 375 for dlUI con came.'' You nud much batter for the pan layer; one S.inch. square sire; a 9 x 3~ tube pan cup diced celery and a like (Undiluted u n 1 wee ten e d baking dish and top with the about 30 minutes. one table1poon butter, 1 poundi.-==--==_:::::__::::__:=:_::::_::_:__::::__:_:::._::__:_::_ ___ :_ __ -'"'---'-:..:C-'-.:2_.:::_=-=::=:-.:=__::_:::;_:_:.===:...::.::..:..::_:~~~:_=~-==-=....:::_.::::._:::_:::..:::__ ______ _ greand bed (I usually ue 1round round) (~cup chopped onions, 1 No. 303 can of kidney beans, juice and all, a 10- ounce can of tomato soup, 1 1mall cu of tomato paste, t teaspoon salt and juat 'hi le11poo11 chill powder. Melt the batter ln the frying pan over medium beat. Add LETS ASK THE COOK by N1n Wiley meat and onion and cook until browned, atlrrlng frequently. Add tbe re1t of the Ingredients and cook, covered, for anoth er 30 to 40 minutes, sllrrlng OC· <:asloaally. -MRS. EDNA M. ERDMAN. CHEEKTOWAGA, N.Y. That's just about the way I make mine with the ex- ception or the lomato paste. Since neither of us al home can tolerate highly spiced foods, I use very little chili powder. Here in my area there Is a very popular •iring or chili parlors where the procedure is entirely dlfferent. People have flocked to thOf• places for years. It Is something of a do-it-yourself dish. First the cooked beans are spooned Into the bottom of the bowl; the cooked m@at goes on top of that. From there you are on your own. You can make it as hot or as mild as you wish. Various condiments are on the table -hot pepper sauce, mustard. a dry chili mix . If you like onions, those are served on the side, uncooked. The proprietor is such a chili purist he refuses to add my ketchup or even tomato sauce. lt still pains the proprietor to make it available but he has bowed to the request if you insist. He has no trouble keeping the places packed, so a whole generation has wawn up eating his brand of chili. DEAR NAN : I never have rrre11y bamburii;ers. Instead of frying 1 bake tbem on a rack set in the pan. I bake them at 350 for 15 minutes, then turn and bake the other 1ide for that long. This take s longer than frying. but they Bl't the juicie st and ta1tfest ewr. -ROSE RONDEAU, BUFFALO, N.Y. DEAR NAN: Please do a column on the problems of blgb altitude cooking. Casper 11 1 mlle hl"h. -J\IBS. H. D. MOSER, CASPER, WY. Those of you who live at other altitudes may think this doesn't concern you but recipe adjustments tan be a problem in any direction. A booklet. "Top or The Mountain Cakes." is available from General Foods Corpora. lion. 250 North St., White Plains. N.Y. 10602. The recipes are adapted for altitudes of 3-4,000 feet, then iMi,000 feet. then 6-7,000 fee t. There is not one se t of Instructions t could give that would help everyone, everywhere. Every few hun· dred feet increase or decrease in elevation can sometimes change the whole picture. Flour dries out faster at increased elevations so more liquid and less leavening may be called for. Cake and quick bread hatters can b e particularly hard to h11ndle without some changes. Sheet and layer cakes are easier to manas:e than loaf pan recipes. You will note that cake mires call for a little additional flour and moisture, an increase In oven tern· peratures for anything over a certain elevation. Water boils at 212 degrees at sea level. Over that. the boil ing point drops 1 degree every 500 feet so that way up on the mountain top, liquids may boil when they are not much more than lukewann. Thal effects: the liming of boll· ed stews, vegetables, fruits, svrups and deep fat frying . Go ln the other direction and you have to throw everything into ttverse. DEAR NAN: How aboat 1 rtdpe for oyder p I e sometime? Alto, it 11 1tmoylftg to have • rtclpe tall for a certain site po n lcb you do not 1lway1 h1YI!! on hand. 11 there ..... W1 ........ Butt Portion 59• Boneless Ham ... L:.;,ff. '1 ~! STAR·KIST ~~~ ~Y,OLCAll] FACIAL TISSUE FAB Chuck Steaks ~~ 59' Family Steaks ~ 11'! Buttered Steaks ~""' 11'! SWOOO SEMEC110NO !!!.'~.!.'!~!!'.'. ....... 98 ~ (...,.,,., s.a ...._ flhl> -u• -tr., ..... ,~"--si.i.,. ....-..... --.,. ~ .... ..._ .... ._ •··-· • I& Gortoon.lo&Olpi ......... ,...., -'"-···· '"' -s..a..~·---11.or ~--· ...... -$1.111 ~Solo,_,..__ 11.or l'""''"ftl .... -'1 Vot1 for Your F11rorit1 Checker and ... •¢ ~ E ~ (' ENGLISH >I ~ ~'} )5 MUFFINS I ·~~.v...-.J~~ Pl~~""'o, 31c i E ? Sourdough § ~/' 6 IN POLY BAG iii § VONS POUND CAKE o~";~;. 39¢ ~ ~ BABKA COFFEE CAKE . .~~t. 45• I E A.tih1nl11g fib. 1 t thn1119h March 20 -"'Ill inou'ilwm. • 11"' ~ "Uttle blro" .. ,....k• by cl..:oroti1111 11oth •loclr. l lrthck>y Coh, ~ P •r -h "$pt1:i1>I Orcl11" CC1k11, with 11 .,..,1111 P'lo-tli..: d1111oling th. = f! Zocfloc. 51911 of lh11 porlicw!1>r dot.. ~ !i r rrrn1nr.1:ru'11Tnr111.u Hn,u:u:n.1 n:n:11 rJ 1.w:r 1n 1 n n 11;r.1,1~111:u;u1T1:r11:1:m.1~ Egg Noodles .. ~~,,,,"':: .. 25' Quaker Oats Cereal ,!'fl 33• P Cal. F d '""""''""'m 2'25' urr oo ~o::~ : Parkay Margarine c::~"'29' ·Mushroom Pieces""~'t.."""-29< Au Gratin Potatoes ~~43' Knudsen Orange Juice 4ag;;_7CJc fjfjJl1Jf'J llQUORS fEATURIS * 330 DELUXE UNITS * 1900 FEET OF PRIVATt BEACH * BEAUTY SHOl'-GIFT SHOP *HEALTH CLUB · * 9 LYMPIC SIZE SWIMMING POOL *PRIVATE DOCK & BOAT RENTAL *RESTAURANT.COCKTAIL LOUNGES *ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTl Y * MOONUOHT CRUISES ON "BAHIA IEllE" *COMPLETE BANQUET AND CONVENTION fACILnlES Conlest Rules: A WOllDllfUla ~ """""°'' WllDllD 1":rury . "''"" fOI TWO '"" • -Ho1J 111u - - Kolp "-f..-..!lo a...i.. Wlo ....,..,. -"'-.... ' "'-* 00...U, .,, .... ,._ Gao.IN" ..... k. """"""'- af 'i..,'t CW ...... \'ow lolal9\'_t_,., .. ~ <-··· ~ '"* Jollltdl 2, 1f7t ... WllMn "" ... NallW.,. M.11. 1111• c-lo°""' Ill All >.duht -1• ,._.of l>qo E."'Jlf VON lm:ployHt _, 1l>B fa .. ~j ... kllof ~..,,j,I An , _ _, ,,_ o..dota...-He> ~ M--,i. f-~ ••• Ent... Ol!...i l-!!lllWWWhWIU_lll"_ ... JnllllPr!-.-W0ll~l~.,.11'!11111n1~11n11 Juice Oranges ~ ....... u. Watermelon. :::. ........ : .. u. Fresh Cabbage := .... ,;, Fresh Celery ::;::. ....... .... wi...i.-.,_. -.. oot. ,......, .., -hi .. . IO .... JOO'• W..0'1 _.,,.,.,., ,,_ W.. 'IMof ..... . .,, ...... Gcoglo10liot..ti,--.,.._.to.e.. All lo• _,..,,.t _ IO_...aldi_.,.,._ rr.-i..i ... ....., ...... This Wee k's FeotUre: . I 9 l '"W' PllllT OFYOURCND~I C l'!ut 11 Fr .. l~ir ''*''-Sl .OI vo1.,.. W'rtt. s,.oo Pllrc:hose, Both '°' °"'7 ..•• 503 OFF ON FRAMES SAVE $2.00 l •• • • • • • • • • ift· ~.~!~~g~~'•~i . . ~--: ~..._.,.... __ • 11. 1'71. ~ 0.. '-• l'W , __ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Frouri fooJ Vofu.d ... , ... l1fttl •• ,,.,. ....,.. ... ... '' '" I Mlfllt' .... -....... ' ..::... ... ·~· .. 1-Q. ............. ; ................ ... """ Glo"" "'°""""" , ................... 11111 -1 tining of other pans that could be used In place or MjGlrt one1, wbere you will ttfd come oat wfth lbe batttr pound lt the right depth? -MARY JANE CONNER, . P!!l '300 TwftNTootft ........ ,.,..._. 2k lcry9f" Atptnn JO'• ..., --__ ,_.:... s2c Act-tMt Hair ftnr-. ....._.......;---. 5ok ... KINZER, PA . 10111 Since almost every cake has a ch1r1cttr of Its own, II 34081 Is always beat to use the p11n Adams Ave., at Brookhurst, Huntington Beach Doheny Park Drive, Capistrano Beach 5922 Edinger Ave., at Springitale, Huntington Beach Laguna Hills Plaza, El Toro 21 082 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach 17950 Magnolia, Fountain Valley 5 PILOT·AOVERTISER N Wtdnt!oday, February 17, 1971 T11tidlr, ftiNlrJ 14, 1971 DAILY PILOT 39 FOR TOTAL DISCOUNT PRICES ON THE WID·EST VARIETY OF PRODUCE Pll!CfS EITTCTIVE SHOP TOTAL DISCOUNT THRIFTIMART WED. THRU 1UES., FEB. 17·23 MIAT DEPARTMINT' _______ .--1m1111 MIAT DIPARTMINT------· 111 .... EASTERN PORK-SMALL SIZES u .s.D.A. GRADE 'A' GUARANTEED FRESH w~~~! ~B~~v FRESH FRYING CHICKENS FANCY ES LB. CUTUP 33 C PAN READY FRYERS lb. WILSON'S CRISPRITE 1 NEW 'READY TO BROWN' . SLICED ! i:rt1·1<'"~ c BACON 1SAUSAGE .......... 10 ••• , ... 85 I Hormel 's Red Lobel, Hoffmon'' I Betterrnoid, ond Sigman'•-Vac-Pak YOONG TfNDE•-CEUO 8.4.G 28C l 48c I SLICED sg CELERY HEARTS .............................. • •. !~~· ! BACON .. ;.~~;. ~. iiiluiiii'........... . .. 38! 8.4.ICEI: SIZE RUSSET 1 0 OSCAR MAYER TREATS BAKING POTATOES.............. ·-· 1t. REG. SLICED 68c I WAFER 69c I LlnLI . 79c '"'" TASTY-t·lb. c.11. · 10 c j '""m-w•• "" 69C BACON lb., BAC0N '2oL "·I FRllRS ... ~~C·A·R·R·O·T~S=·=···==-:·:1 :P:r:u:n=e:S:•:·'":':··=-=·~::! ·MEAT DEPARTMENT C:OlUPARE •'°SAVE "TEN DER-LEE" CENTER HAM$129 SLICES . LB. WILSON'S TENDERMADE, HORMEL'S CURE 81 BONELESS FULLY COOKED , 129 HALF HAMS....... LB. FRESH EASTERN PORK f!CNIC I Clf.U(IOU5 TtMOt• Shoulder 49 c 1 Butt 49 c \ Shoulder 69, Roast...... lb. 1 Roast...... lb. 1 Steak...... lb. COACH!lu.. VAllfY 8 LB. 79c GRAPEFRUIT .. : ................ ' .. BAG ... U.S.D.A. "CHOICE" BONELESS U.S.D.A. GRADE "CHOICE" J~RSEVMAIO GRADE "AA" CLOD ROAST or 9 ·9 .c ,, .... --::: .. -.. ~.. BONELESS Fresh Butter........... . ... 11.81 c liOOKFORTHE ........ CHUCK DA!SYWHll'PEO 7-BONE ROAST.... LB. r " Sweet Butter ...................... 61 c FAMl°LY0 STEAK •••• $1~.~ r . ¢~ ROAST '""""""" . 1xT11A D1scouin Savings These a re items where we ore able to charge lets than cur regular Discount Pr ice due to monU• focturer'1 temporary promotional a llowances or an exceptionally good purchase. iR°o-iiil'i)-8iii ..... 551t.. ~· ~ 88 !~~~.!~w~~~!!.;··· .. "::;::; 77 c S""p·"· .. E"N'';c ... E •• R •• 1 .. S. TEAK •• $19,.8 ··-... -~' C Sliced Bread ................... 1''·25c .. .,, ..,... COMSTOCK CHERRY 9 j IXTRA DISCOUNT TOP's'i°RL,OIN $169 ¥-....-LB. Pie Filling ......................... irn.4 cr-----;'!f' QUAIL C"''o""R··'-•"'~E·D"''R"ou'N'D"5" 95 1 1:b·. • ... ~ .... ~,.,!1sc:7o9~7 .~.~.!~2!0 $]" Ch;~~ies......... . ..• ,,,,;,29c'\ \.~;;~Kl \TOMATO SAUCE RQ(KCOD ,. DOYER SOLE DOlE-CHUNKS, CRUSHED, SLICED .\ I 7. "'""""' ........ 89 ; I ..... M~• ••••• 891~ Pineapple in Juice ... .,,;,39c \ ,. •9c 1 134.oz. C OCEAN PERCH •• ~ lb.1 Northem Trucotl lk. 0EtM0Nrt:-sL1cEo°"H•tvEs 1 lb... 1 . TIN IA Cl • p h 31 c ... ------• 1ng eac es ................. ,,,., r;. IU)\D -\~1 tllOlll< IOOllON'~ tlOllN 1•1!D-J .U,. $ 09 OH' M>ffll01lt<l-1i<». Sirloin TIDs ........... 45' Chicken In Basket 2 Submarine ••••.-79< J;OIO ••u IJOHN !1•lOIN n,~.. l'OHOtl'~ fto!lN !i ll Y-'.olo4 11 ., Gil>()'~ !l'OllN a;t;;;[s;;;.rs ........ ~1 55 3-Course Dinners 64c BAGCYPiZZA'.~~-• ... 19c llltDIPl'f flOZtt.l llll.UO Vegetables,. .. _" •• 26' llllDISM fKIJElotWfAIMONO! French Boans .......... 41' .. -------•DELICATESSEN DEPT. WEBER Ol' VIRGINIA-12·0Z. PKG. HOT DOG TENDER & JUICY FRANKS BUNS 8-CT. PKG. c .C f"M'" 18 MUSTARD ............ •n. c C.UN.1,!IONllOUN $J05 Solo Fiiiets ......... ""' JOIJlf~lWINl~l!Na.-olo4 $]26 Fish Sticks .......... 14•L • CAl!HAllONUOUl<-1'••· $J IS Haddock Fiiiets ........ f lJ'"UfPOUN ate Fried Halibut ........ . $;i: ..... ..c._ 79c Tid~ .... ~...... 101~11 ... $21' SIJ,UCll...,.11-0...rl l•TllflOC>.<ol U.t.&.Nt• 79' Miracle White 69' Dow Aerosol .... ~ ... c;::; ...................... Gool $J4S h~h~ ................... -~ 13c Wlt<DIX(W,_1•<! 2 OOI01$ttW•il<l"l Glass Cleaner ....... 9' Liquid Ajax ........... 55' FANT.ASTIC.RECORD OFFmtl VOL 3 NOW AVAILABL G,_ pe_,.,.1;.1 .. I.~., lllo f;11....,1<1, Al Mortl,.., Tl•• l ln911..., T•J., l~• S.•I•'>· GI•~ ('o,.pi,.11, J• Slolfotd, l:•y 51<1rr. A~dy •-u. 1.d Mcl(Mn, , .. ,,"-•·in 11 top low.,11 .. , indwdln91 1"9 J .. 111~ Of N-, ~.t.o .. IV, I .,,. l• i..t., '..If, l-l~•· w.11i1.,. 1. TH s~.w.1 .... Sh .... ...i ... h, fl ...... °" TM w.11-d JAH<AHDmoH • C J $ f DISCOUNT PRIC!I Mayonnaise ....................... Q .. rt 54 -----~flj JERSEYMAID-STIRRED or FRUIT MARGAOINE I IMITATIOH'I FRESH YOGURT Kraft Parkay ................ ,,.29c 1 IMO soMuR I .1 g MAOGARINE 3 9 J CREA I c Borden's Danish .......... ,,,. c I 37e:1 a oz. ' CHEESE FOOD $ 2 ·I Pini I IA. Kraft Velveeta ................ ,, •. 1 1 ' ______ J (QUARrs ••• s9<> QUAil Pork & Beans ........... 12v,24c OLOlllfTIA Tomato Juice ................... .,33c AU fl.AYOllS Sego Powder .................. .',r;: 29c COfF£E $195 Instant Maxim i~~~. '"' ....... J:RAFT . BBQ Sauce .................. ta ... 39c .APPIAN WAY Pizza Mix ......... , ................. ,,.. 39c GOIOEN GRAIN DINNEI. . Macaroni & Cheddar,,.~.19c SCHLlllNG -2~ ot. Garlic Bread Sprinkle 39c !2·1b. TIN. $1.73) 9 MJB Coffee .. . ................ ,,, .. 7 c l ·lb. TIN $ MJB Coffee . ...................... 2 35 l·lb. TIN ' Manning's Coffee ......... 87c OlfANGf PEKOE MJB Tea Bags ............ '""'" 55c CA!!NATION Instant Breakfast .......... 5 7c scl;Ci;icli"C:ookies ... ,,v, •• 55 c COOKIES (PRE·,.ICED ••• 49c) - Burry's Best ............................ 43c DIXlf-S 02. Cold Cups ............. , ............... ., ... 69c DOG fOOD Chuck Wagon .................... ,, •. 88c 2EE TltOP'IC TONE Paper N .. pkins ...................... 11 • HEALTH & BEAUTY A.IDS C:OltJl•AtlE •••••••••••••••••• SOME •• DISCOUNT lOTION .6 o?. Fo111Uy Sil•• CHAIGI PllCI Head & Shoulders ... ., ... $1°4 MUl.INE-.-6...,z. $ I ~EXTRA DISCOUNT .---,<sfo:;;; BIRDSEYE-FROZEN, JO-OZ. PKG. 1 JOi:ozeN 1 VEGETABLES I ECLAIR. VElVEl •I I CHOCOLATE I 22 I PIES I PEAS, CUT CORN, c l C. l CHOPPED SPINACH, \ !~ ,.,_!!.·l ZUCCHINI, SQUASH IA ,.., -I "W'f IXTRA DISCOUNT .-----::f·j HEINZ \ "ott1otf \ KETCHUP , cKOPPlll I 24c \ 94c \ 14 oz. ' __ .1 j ~DISCOUNT PRICE 1 !iko~l'Yf.~f--\ VAN DE KAMP FROZEN-7V2-0Z. I iAsi1 \ ENCHILADAS l JR1Es : BEEF. 3 J.c I ,,_ 49c1 CHICKEN L•;; _____ J or CHEESE IA. I ~EXTRA DISCOUNT _ -• TREESWEET-FROZEN r-..o;~ii~" ORANGE JUICE , JRENCH 1 I gc I TOAST I I 5 I 60Z. I !~"'4 C\ IA. • ------· (12 -0Z .... 44<) j m IXTRA DISCOUNT ----~ FRANCO-AMERICAN f s~i~'fsi".U \ SPAGHETll \ afo3~g \ AND MEAT BALLS 1 SAVER 1 35c \ ;'. 31 C1 15 OZ. I -----· --Clear Eyes............................... 123 '"',.""' $ J 'l':.W!fDISCOUNTPRICI ~.!!!!rln ... .......... .. ........... -109 r OtANGE~'·FROZEN NOVELTIES N I S 79c I JULIUS i SPACESHOT asa praJ ............................. ,., 1 BARS 1 POP$1cLEs & •uoG•· Right Guard ................ "·" 1 27 \ •,, •9c\1 rocwHONH0~Russ.•1<;"•vo. 01UEnE 7•t. $ I SICLES -12 PAK 59! HAit COND!flONft 4 ot. $ 67 .. ~ ~ B k B I 1 !-~-----'"' RUTH BARS-6 PAK IA. :;:;::;;:::;::::.;.;.;:.;.;.:=."""'r,..e,.c-""'as c ...................... ""' ~~=========== 2701 HARBOR .BLVD., COST A MESA e 13J22 BROOKHURST, GARDEN GROVE e 1308 W. EDINGER, SANTA ANA 5858 W~RNER, HUNTING~ON BEACH e , 23811 EL TOR,O. EL TORO ' I " • • h< 40 DAILY PILOT Wtdntsdi)', ftbn.wJ 17, l97l ROT AL IRA.NO \.LI. PICG. 5"' • BEEF FRANKS ---u . '7- MQlllfU 12:.ouNCf All MEAT WIENER .. 49' ' CHEFS DELIGHT• 2 LB. LOAF 8 9 c CHE ESE SPREAD ·--···-·-·-·· .. --. 4 303 s1 CANS II LIBBY'S FRUIT COCKTAIL ........ .. 4 4-0Z. s1 CANS LIBBY'S SAUSAGE VIENNA FLAVOR KIST TOASTER PASTRY 3 .POP-UPS _ ................. .. REG. s1 PKGS. GOLDEN GRAIN EGG-MEDIUM 6. WIDE 2 4 9c .NOODLES ........................ 12.oz.PKGs. 5 14-0Z.sl BO TILES RICH TOMATO FLAVOR CA TSUP KERNS ...... LIQUID DIET ASSORTED FLAVORS 6 s 1 METRECAL ........................ ;~~ "MCA.Ji 9 COFFEE ... -..... ~~: 82c CHEESE c OFF I. 5 WITH THIS · COUPON SLICES INDIVIDUALLY WRAPPED ~l~J~RN~~~-S'. ................ 7 9 C KRUSTEAZ 2-LB. PANCAKE MIX GOOOONLY AT STATER BROS. WELCH'S ~~~~VE ................... 45' 20.0UNCE MR.CLEANCLEANER _____ , __ ,,..,,73' LAVA IVORYBARSOAP .... ···r·--··----''""1r TOP JOB CLEANER ___ .. __ ,. .• ,73• HAND SOAP CAMAY BAR SOAP . _.,,_ 13' ' SPIC & SPAN CLEANER ___ ·""' 99' ZEST BAR SOAP -------"" 15' COMET CLEANSER _ .• "~Ii' lARGE 19' SAFEGUARD 0<000'""•" ·---• 2""29' Tut~. February 16, \q71 s PJLOT -ADVE RTISE., :';) iou·iTii0aoiiE ROAST LB. 6 s, · IONW>•lllFSHOULOH · 95' ROLLED ROAST .......... LB. ST REOUNDLSTEAKBoNEIN LB. 93 c USDA otOJCE OR ST A TEI BRO•. CERTIFIED IEIF 9 3 ( RUMP ROAST ................... LB. PICNIC STYLE SHOULDER USOACHOJCEOISTATERllO•.atTiFIU>IEIF 93-c: RIB STEAKS ................ . ... LB. ' USDA CHOICE OR ST A TEI llOS. aRTIFllD IEIF s 1 0 9 STEAKS r..-J.0:.12c.E ....... LB. FatSH • LEAN • DfLICtOUS-GROUND HOURLY 5 5 GROUND BEEF ................ LB. c USDACHOICIOISTATlRIROS. S 135 T -BONE snAKS ......... u. fXTIA UAM • JLAVOIFUl 93( 0 GROUND ROUND ......... u . LB. USOAOtOICIOISTATllllOS. $ 1 ]9 PORTERHOUSE STK. u . BOsTON1PORK BUTTL1.59' • USOACHOICIOISTATOllOS, $163 TOP SIRLOIN STEAK LI. . MOlllLL YOIKSHIRf 49' SLICED BACON ............ u . : CUT-UP FRYERS LB.33' L-Loa< 7w,-'Jod /Z'~ U IDGfOID IAll IM THE RA 'I' 2 SC DINNER ROLLS ........ . ... ooz. MOITON ASSOITlDfl.AVOI S 27C CREAM PIES ............................ ,..oz 1UM1T1•-or. •. 11.24.oz .... 11 .1~ 47c FISH STICKS G~!~' ................. a.oz. KotD •~i 55c 111105EYt:,-OL 4·s1 BURGUNDYBEEF _,,, FRENCHCUTBEANS _ ' . •oto~ 55c ""O!>fYE 4oc ' BEEF STROGANOFF _ •<>< TASTI FRIES ---"'L ~· W!TliOEAA\!>A\JCf 41c .llNO'S 69' BIRDS EYE ONIONS _,"' · PIZZA ROLLS ____ ," BORDENS MAYONNAISE ........ or. 63' GREEN BEANS ~~c':g~~~ ..... '°' 24' SLICED CARROTS DIAMOND A -··'" 23' ltOSIUIAZ>ID 49c ' SHRIMP STICKS -· a.oz. MOtTONS ASSOITfD 64C DINNERS 3-COURSE ................. 17-0Z. O«XOlATECAKl•llOWNLlS•COffE(CAkf 79c CAKES iARA LEE ............................. £ACH RED CHERRIES r!~~i~r'lto ____ '°' 33' SUPERIOR COCKTAIL P'NUTS •LANTER .... ll·OZ 69' TAMALES SPANISH P'NUTS •LANTER ... -. >JOZ 59'. 27 n>.Sll111{£FOllVE ... l 73' PK:ISW{ff 5 SJ BUTTER STEAKS __ ••'-PEAS & CARROTS ... '"" ROYAL CROWN COLA ;\~sn 6 ... oz 99' 2 c FANTAiLESHRIMP s2is iCE11CREAM"SUNDAES __ 63c MAXWELL HOUSE ::"oVt.~' ••. 1ooz 11.49 4-oz ... 23' IOWHf.IOUSE 6 BA~ ~AC~ 63' ----"" BUTTER BRICKLE ___ .. MEATBALL STEW ~:'6.',0~: .... ,, oz 83' PEPPERONI PIZZA ;:«~,·,~::.. "o 79' INSTANT •<G. 57c BREAKFAST ................. OF6 CAIHATIOH ASSOITfD JLl.YORS SAUSAGE PIZZA ;:'6,~0~" ••••.• "o 73' ii" CHEESE PIZZA i~'U,0~; ........ •<G 59' YORK ONIONS ..... '" 33' •. oz 23' SAUCE W/BITS CONf'D'NA ......... 2 JOO 49' MJB RICE MIXES ~~l~ROOM ......... oz. 65' JOHNSONS KLEAR ........ oz. 11.61 PLEDGE REG. or LEMON ,. oz 11.20 JI FOAM OVEN CLEANER "oz 11.29 VETS DOG FOOD ASST .......• .10 "'l ·OZ '1 FABRIC SOFTENER OOWN'-·······'· 79' CHILI WITH BEANS ARMOUR. ,.-.oz 42' ARMOUR CHILI 'Oe<ANS •••.• ,.oz 56' HUNT'S TOMATO PUREE .. ,,oz 37' GRAPEFRUIT LARGE FANCY COACHELLA VALLEY !BAG59c APPLES x~~~L€Y / WASHINGTON RED DELICIOUS 2 LBS.29c HUNT'S APRICOTS JOOZ 37' ... 15 oz. 24' HUNT'S PEACHES ~'~'i.',~rs ..... 15 oz 23' . INST. POTATOES !~~gl~.'o .... z.oz Hl' PURE GOLD• LARGE FANCY NAVEL 2 ORANGES ........ . .... LBS. 2 9c EXTRA FANCY WASHINGTON 2 PEARS D'ANIOU ........... us.39" BROWN ONIONS HUNT'S TOMATOES w"o" ... 210Z 35' HUNT'S TOMATO JUICE ___ .. oz 37' LARGE FANCY RIPE FUERTE 2 AVOCADOS ........... FOR39c U.S. NO. 1 SWEET ~29c HUNT'S TOMATO PASTE _ ... 2o oz 33' KRAFT DRESSING """" ........... •oz 41' ~~:::E~~~s ... _ .. 48c W•R•d .. mUSDA AiSOtffDJIAGtANCI 7-0l. food Starnp.~ 1n our KRAFT MAYONNAISE 65' O"og•.Lo.Aog•'" -~· ........ QT. & RtVl!ISidt County Stores TEXSUN JUICE ~~2~,i~"u~r . __ ... 54' - HEINZ B.8.0. SAUCES ....... 10oz. 47' --- SPRAY ON STARCH ns,~:f~s. -59' . . FABRIC FINISH i~,?,~:f~s .. -·-·-59'' rtiiilflJll' , .. · YUBAN COFFEE ..... -----· ---"93' '---- KRAFT MARGARINE "R"' ..... "31' RANCH STYLE BEANS .... . noz 29' CHOC. PINWHEELS ~~~,~~6'. ... . 59' HORMEL CHILI ~il~s .......... , .. o, 69' PKG. Of 10 33' ... Of)O 88' 75c JOHNSON IA!Y PRODUCTS VICKI BABY OIL 10-01. _ 1 11• COUGH 010•1 POWDER "·•L -95· A),1 f~AVOI) LOTION "OL ·---. 99· EA 15< 4-WAY BRIGHT SIDE NASAL SPRAY SHAMPOO 'h·OZ79c "·0' s 123 VK:KS BAYER WILllNIOM V.A.PO-ASPIRIN l"OID RUI H:G.Of 100 RlADl:I 1.l -OUHO 87• OOUILI IOC.f '·, 59c 59· V<tltwtHt 2 9 c N (; Of J• • • RICES PLUS BLUE CHIP STAMPS * LOW-LOW PRICES PLUS BLUE CHIP STAMPS * LOW-LOW PRICES PLUS BLUE CHIP STAMPS * LOW-LOW PRICES PLUS BLUE CH ' CRACKER Bt.RREL BISCUITS CHEESE CHEESE CHEESE KRAn I 0.01. l'tUSIUIY HG. IOIDtNS CltARFllU> Oii llUTTUMHJ( WltA,HO MJCIS •PIEAD suas MILLOWSTICKS .... _ ....... 75c ~OL29C 16-0Z.99' 16-0Z.83C SHARP STICKS ................. 87c X-SHARP STICKS ............. 89c BIZ PRE-SOAK 68' GIANT PKG. 14600 So. lrookh1nt •••·· Wntrnh11tet 707 Wftt NhteMe11"' Street, Cnta MHG, 6162 ,.,,,,.., A....,.ve, H111tll11tto11 l.och, Z60l Wnt S.ft11tff11ttl StTHt, Sa11ta A110, 1811 Choprno11 A•e1111e, Gotdt11 Gto••• 2160 No1th T111tl11 A•a1111a, So11ta A110, PRICES EFFEC. THURS. thru WEDS .. FEB. 18th-24th " 1100 lost CalllM .t•e11110, Oro119a, 2564 W f lr(!Mw..,, Aitahthll, 1522 WnPrnlMtltl' llYCI., Wett111l111111, 2180 Nawpo" ll•d . Couo M.,_,, 1410 West Llncol11 A-1111a, A11oheirn. 1175 lo•ef St•••I. Ca1t11 M•w. 2610 !dl119or A•1t11111t, 501110 A110, 14171 lltd HUI "-••"w". 11111111, 1110 Mc.Fodd&11 A•o1111t, So"to Aflo. 1421 2 Ml""' A•o1111t, Whlltlt1r, RICES PLUS BLUE C HIP STAMPS * LOW·LOW PRICES PLUS BLUE CHIP STAMPS * LOW-LOW PRICES PLUS BLUE CHIP STAMPS* LOW-LOW PRICES PLUS BLUE CHI ... ·-' • Alpha Beta's Man in Blue says: MICHAE~ BONAVENTURA STORE MANAGER GRAND AVENUE • COVINA Fresh Fruits ontl Vegetollles ot DISCOUNT PRICES! @TENDER• FIRST,~, SEASON '' m ASPARAGUS 0.:. RUSSETS 10 ~~(; 39¢ PINEAPPLE ~~,~ ONIONS BROWN 10• ORANGES JU /CE 6 LBS.1°0 POTATOES ORi~;. 10~. CELERY LARGE 19:. AVOCADOS FUERTE 25:. CABBAGE ~\~.~it'D 7:. RADISHES/g~\~s 10:. CARROTS :;~~~~~s 10• SQUASH =~~l'r~~RANEAN s• EGGPLANT,::~~owc 10: FRESHCUTBUNCH 88' LffiUCE :i~~~~Af 10·· ; l .. ~ i POM PONS V tabl ·•w""""o 10¢ flllE LIM.OM ...... , WITM PUlCM.t.11 ege es : ~~~11."cr THESE PROOUC~ PRICE-5 EFFECTIVE THU.RS. throu gh WED.1 FEBRUARY 18 throu h 24 . TOTAL UISC OUNl S ll/[RY !JAY 9-0Z. AtROSOL $0til{ Al l'tll ltll STOltES DISCOUfo!T CHAPICC P•IG( IH:r.Ut.All OR UNSC!JlTED ARRID mu-DRY ANTl·l't:RSPIRANT .J..N121 . ---------------- @ 12.oz. lAPI • WH!TC Pt TJllOLf.UM JEUY ,,.. -VISEL/HE ~---VASCL'l't • lll-CZ • • ._. INTENSIVE CIRl '"'""' HIND lOTIOH Sl)tTU' or Ml ':HILDR!:U ; M1JlTI'1.! VitA!~!lli:. CHOCKS Vil !MINS ut'] II TOTA\ 01c;.coUHTS EVERY UAY SOME Al'>ll SCTA STOit(.~ OISCOIJIH CM.UC:( l'llCC ~A U.RORA• 2-ROLL PACK • WHITt • 'jii;ji( B~th~~.;;''¥1ssue ~ 2 51 D...... 12-l!•CH S!Zl: • JUMSrJ 100.r oor 51 ' D ... ~ .. SARAN WRAP ..&St' ©cui.'il1T'E:"&A'iis 39c 331 © sf'Rircli:ii~s'ECAL'isc 291 100-fOOT ROLL ..Me: ~h • ---------------..... _ ll·O?. CAll • ~ ANlt H o...... PLANTERS PtANUTS _Ne· 661 I -OZ. CAN • COCJ:f AIL Jk' 6Jc ~ U UllA. S_({UDDf'.R'S •II-,?!,.. _'IQ_ ~WAMPUM CORN CHIPS.-- • f l'lltD @ 7-0Z Pt::G. • Rt!I flOAST • Dl'IUMSTICt'.. MINUTE RICE MIX l11( 301 © i~~~~~, ll:tii~e. ,.sat 50' I ~ SUNSHltlt • 16-0Z. PKG. 431 ~ Hl·HO CRACKERS Ar ~AUNT ltM1MA•2·LI. Pl'O, ~ '""''"!"' 491 ,,.--PANCAK Mil JI( ~Al!l'T l t M!MA • 31.()t. I OT'TLE 831 ~ PANC KE SYRUP Jk' ~" Ol. BOTT>< __ AIM ~CHI PANCAKE SYRUP .JK .ii;g· Ot.DC rA11M • ~4-0Z. IOTTt.5 &4j PINCIKl SYRUP _.lk ©PILL'>B!JRY llU"Cf!Y !ACK 1;,..oz PJ.CKAGC Instant Potatoes Jlc 531 ~M ILAN! 11911 • l ·OZ. IOTTu: 34, ~French Drnslnc .m ©&ooo"sf'.A's'Ois"''.2* 191 vE'T'i"liii'G FOCOo"" Jtc' 9c Wfdnt1Py, F'tbt11al')' 17, 1971 Your Alpha Seia Fritndlv Nel11hltofk6od llu1ther I !ht Mon in th• Re4 AptOl'l I Prou41y Offers BUTCHER'S PltlDE MEATS MIATS YOU'LL II PROUI> TO SlRVI • QU.4.LITY 6' SATISFACTION G!JARANT~iD ~--I WILSON 'S CRISPRITI "'"' "" BACON ,a • ..,_, SMOKED HAMS BUTT PORTION 59• 1,nur1 t'1H 01 f~IMUI JOHM 1 ·LB. PACKAGE FULL SHANK HALF ·~b. ALPHA !ETA IUTCHE•'S PRIDE BEIF AT 01Si:6UNT P.JCES USOA GRAC?E A FRESH ECONO-PAK WHO~E BODY GROUNDLBBEEF 57.~ FRESH ROUND STEAK ~~Lf 97• FRYERS m WE WELOOIE FOOD ST •IP SHOPP£11S IH AllY UlS lllCllll. lli!ISID\· Ol OOAllGl C61M!Y llrt4111 • n!r lnJ!HI a{mf, l'Olll ~HOPI IN AP'll MArr lb. Ji•111ntefMN SIC INL.ESS • 1;.()Z. PAGX.JiQ. LINK SAUSAGE se~~-FAMILY STEAK 1 °'"· I CONYUllNDE FOODS ·~'(, -- 80~~-TOP SIRLOIN STEAK 1 "1~ . ·BONE STEAK 131"· HOT DOG ON·A·STICIC llUH LARGE ENO S NDING RIB ROAST 97;. MIAT \OAf. ROSE • I -OZ. PACKAGE Be~,t 7-IONE ROAST 91;. SNllMP STICKS TOTAi 01\Cf>UNTS ['1(111 UAV lll,Hll IElA • fi-PACI: l~~ 291 EHSUSH MUfflNS VALUE t lRK.HOLM "S • l·t!. l OM 45c-411 CINNAMON IRUO VA!. $CHAT 'S • lilt UI. LO.f.r _&b-&11., SH!!PHERDER IRUO _,._ UU BtTTY CROC KER • 2J!f,.o z. CHtP.R'f • PtA::;:l • APPU • 11ITT:APl'U: -UPSIDE-DOWN . CAKE Mil _)IC &JI o......, ll·':>Z • JTALI A'f 331 ........ KRAFT DRESSING 42C' lf>-OZ. L~AL HlOO 1su.im 67• 13-~IOX or z•. J'.COUU.11 • :SUP[ft ~K~f{X:x PUJS ..Jk 68• ~n oi r.w . '" 21' \!!::::!I SUPREMA CHERRIES ..l5e" ' ~ ll lPHA 8ETll • C&-IA~ >m 411 ~ BllCK TU jk' ~ l')l. tNVrt nPt • CH!Ct::EN NOODU: 1 o• WYlER'S SOUP MIX JW ,...,;;-._ ':' ~tlVflOPt l'ACl:AGt • CHlCKtN D~:::. l!P'f8~t Sii1U1P M1~r ·* 32' i'I HV>.O·t.IMOLt E( tte COIJNTl!9 VtGt TAIL.C .:!'V lh: ©!>l' .(!l. f'ICG. • l l t l Oft c d1cK1.N • ltlSTANT .(L 39' STEERO IDU/llOH ,_ ' ~11 oi 1 AR 'l!::::;:J BORDEN'S OVA 4.P IECE PLACE SETTING 99' 6h•ffi<idlJ GOLDEN MEADOW CERAMIC DIMMUWAll • NO COUPONS 04' M!Nt MUM 1""*:>-PUl.C.liASI NlC.lSS.4.1.Y '-.;, • • OISliWASH(I. i>.~E ·-• AC.C(S!.Oll Y ANO HlVING PIEClS Al.SOAVAIV.l l l AT I.OW DIK OllNT PllllCIS • 51'1 IN·STOll 01~\.AY SlORI HOUM: MON. "'"' '"'· 10 AM4 PM SAT. W IUN.11Ml .. 7 Pllll rO!A! UI\! UU~l\ !VlHI llA~ SOio![ .tl,MA IE IA SlntltS OISGl!IUtll (;HA~G( ~llC.£ ~!~.oz Colli • tlO ltAllS ~ iio'fai£t'cii1u ..sac 49' t::C;;\ ~l·OU NCf. IAll • POUJH J"iUH OR ~A'~'fti Jane's DILLSJlc" 51 c @Pniib~rJ Flour ~ 541 ~Piiii'siCiii'lbl'" -l9c 521 Dl.'il'6S,\J!L.C OlAPJ:~:> • 30.cQIJNT • MtOIUM •.TQOOU:!l.S J 2' FRESMAIYES 1.89 Nl:WIOlllN \,Jt" I.It @ ~1.oz. 11om t •TA.1llJC torntJtll 127 NU·SOFT J.59"' (8 illAiliiia 's?'A'iic'ii' 59c'491 )iiiiiiii( 21.-0z. CAN • At ROGOL 6PllAY )le , ... 78~ 59~ 43:. WILSON'S CERTIFIED CANNED HAMS 11/2 LB. SIZE IOrAl u 1~.coUHf', IVl~r f!A T SOM£ Al.MIA l(fA STOlllS OllCOUllT C.K.\a!OE 'II It( ~.QUI/CE CONTAINtl• lODl'Z.tD 1 .. MOllTDN'S SALT Jlc e· D4H WILLIAMS KIA.FT DISCOUNTS KRAF'T • 10-0Z • M£Ll.OW 1&1 CRACKER BARRIL STICK .Jk 10.ot. • SHARP STICK ~ ... IG-OZ. • [XTftA !HAllP tiTJCK fa ... l·LB. l'AGKA.Ct PRECIOUS RICOTTA l·LI . PACKAgt OSCM MAYll All-MUT Wl!HEAS f.OUNCt PA.Cl.'.AG£ DIHOU Sl/CED HAM ii GALLO • lJ.0%. SAU ME CHUI J.W1 41 a•w> • ll'h""'-2" SIUME CHUI ~ 12.oz •• FJl.OttN:. VERDI ·P!LA1 • Mtr>~Y • IPAHWf 3&1 GREEN GIANT !ICE Jk' VAN Dt KA.MP• PJIOUN • 12-eZ. CfflIIE C• 1111' •'If EMCHIUOA DINNER Jlc' H ~ >ANQUtT . •·"'-."'"''"··A .. ~ COOl·IUAU ..;a< •Ill" @ OH 80 Y • 12.oz .• Tl!ottM' • WlTK Cll EESE OR ~klVts STUFF!U POTATOES ~I ~CHUN kJPIG • rRoztu ~EGG ROUS l2-COUNT ..1lr 881 :-t·OUNfi..E • f!l:OU:N ....... __H" PET-llTZ CH!IRY PIE ~· rt-OUNCE CUSTAJIO PIE Jlcl .. @ l lRDSl;YE • 17-0'l:. • r1'0UN ..W COOL·M-CREAMY ...48e !lllr .u.euNC£ CONTAJNEJI .)k' ,.. 'h CAU.ON • TAM!t.T PAY: Me &ell AlPHA llTA ICE CREAM v.u.-· $.f.T IUACTJOM GUAAANT(E0 Oft 'i'Olllt MONIY •l'UNDlO • SAUl T,f..X tolli CTfO ON ALL TAXAILE ITtML WI 1.l SU\lltNI lt1GMT TO ftlflAI S.6.W TO C.OMMllGl.6.t. 6(Al.lllS. COSTA MISA-:-24t I . 17tb It. HUNTINGTON llACH-f04S M•rnt HUNTINGTON llACH-11611 N. M.lln It. DOUBLE DISCOUNTS ••• Ol'I Plr<1 to0vlrt0J mo4-"°'11lble by tetl"\Pol'O"'f ciurcN .. ollowcanu1 from tke n'lc:lnufotturers, with IM 1avil\gJ passed Ol'I lo you, FOUNTAIM VALLIY~fO W•ntef' LAGUNA HILLS-2JS41 C•lle 41 la LvlM UlVINl-ll040 t"vlvet", Unlvertlty Perk IOUTH LAGUNA~Ol22 S. Co11t Hiw1y • • jf:t DAILY PILOT Wednndat, Ftbnaary 17, 1971 Wtdntsday, Ftbrllaf')' 17, 1971 S PILOT-ADVERTISER 1J ,. ' EVERYDAY LOW MEAT PRICES 1 Day Fresh-Whole Clltrornia Grown l FRYERS~~01bs.li , Armour's l Pan Size Sliced , BACON 12;~~ • i 3 Iba. A up-extr• plump-C•llfoml• Grown Grad• A Kl~lzo 33 FHYERS 1b.• cu"r·ui!f FRYERS 10.•35 F'Y•r 59 LEGS-THIGHS 1b.• . BREASTS lb .• 85 EVERYDAY LOW PORK PRICES I ~ Rtgul•r ar Country Style lb .• 89 lb .• 89 lb .• 49 I .. SPARERIBS lain End Cut PORK CHOPS I P00RK .. ROASTS Shoulder .lb .• 89 [. PORK STEAKS • EVERYDAY LOW PRICES Fresh Ash FRESH FILLETS 98 OCEAN PEARCH lb.• UN1/PLUS BUY Stoulfers Beef Chicken Turkey MEAT PIES~k:~.49 FROZEN FOODS Green Gi•nt Yeget1ble-5 Y•ristie1 ,, .... 45 CASSEROLES Kerns Siad , ...... 27 STRAWBERRIES F>orAroi:s ,. .... 26 SHRfMPdedRound , ..... 99 Pet Ritz.-2 pk. PIE SHELLS .., .. 33 Pet AIU .,, .• 34 CHERRY PIES 8rldHrd 1 Ml. ~ SI W ITE BREAD .:. '"' Fresh Pact-Grede A PEAS & CARROTS 10-or .• 17 ·sed? We at Ralphs understand you r problems so we did something a bo~t it. We pledge to give you the bes t of everything. The highest quali ty, friendliest service, AND the lowest prices in town. *WE GUARANTEE .... to meet any price by any other super· market if it is a regula r everyday price on identical brand or identical product quality. •Excludes weekly advertised special!. EVERYDAY WW MEAT PRICES Eastern Grain fed Pork Center Cuts RIB CHOPS Ii Ralphs Rock cornlsh Min. WL 20 oz. ea GAME HENS Ii TENDERMADE BONELESS HAM n.1.39 eRAl.siNG srR1Ps lb •• 89 BE~F-TENDERLOIN 2.49 lb.•97 Bre1ded-Frozen VEAL STEAKS EVERYDAY LOW BACON PRICES FARM~JOHN .57 1-lb. S1ran Pack OSCAR MAYER wAMFER2.TiflN ~f'tii'ci<·1SLICED .88 .89 11>-lb. pkg. .89' EVERYDAY WW PRICES Dairy R•lpht-Attorted Flavor& YOGURT BlJ°TTERMILK BUTTERMILK I.or .• 21 Ouart .19 V.-GaL•37 Delicatessen L!O'S-B••f, Spicy Beef, sl.Yc·ED0MEATS .35 .45 12·0L 1.12 1.12 LEO'S-Corned Bfff, P11tr1ml, H1m S1LiCE1D"MEATS Wllno-S1l1ml Chuba. or WIENERS Wllno-12·oz. KNACKWURST Oacer Mat•! All Mt1t or Pure Beef 73 FRANKS 1-lb.COO 4·GL•49 Danol1 Sectioned • formed SLICED HAM RalHt Sllc•d Individually Wnipped 1 8 C EESE ........ .. American 12--o.r.• i="R"ANi<s 1., ... 68 Monterey-Chunk JACK CHEESE lb .• 93 Ralphs-Potato, Colt Slaw, Macaroni 37 SALADS 1 • .., ... CLOSEOUT SPECIALS! Food S1v1r-l !k V1lv1 27 JAR ,,., ... Food S1ver-l tc V1lu1 66 6 CUP ..... •.• while lreld SAVER they last 1.66 n-•66 Food S•ver-nc V•lu• 37 JAR , ..... s'au'ARE .66 S1ERVER .99 SQUARE .37 Ralphs UNl/PLUS BUYS help you save even more! UNl/PLUS BUYS are manufacturers special allowances and we pass the savings on to you. These reduced prices remain in effect as long as special allowances are available. Here is a partial listing of Ralphs UNI/PLUS BUYS· Wishbone ltallan · DRESSING~:~e .35 Royal Crown Cola Pius oeposit 18-0Z. BTLS lp:59 PANTRY FILLERS Health & Seaufy Aids Gold Medel ,,.~ 1.10 TOOTH PASTE ,. .... 48 FLOUR B•n Rell On 1'/roz.•83 C0°FFEE Jib. 2.39 DEODORANT Diet Rlt9-lkL NO Dtpollt SOttles \llt11le ""' 1.31 COLA ..... 79 HAIR TONIC TEABAGS 31'1 .59 ,.. ... 1.15 CONGRESPIRIN MJB TEA BAGS ..... 49 Pantry Fillers jEtLv , ....... 27 C••• Sw•rn• Sile~ POTATOES 1s•-t-or .• 15 For Your Cofl•• ,. .... 82 Del Monte 11·oz.. .26 COFFEE MATE FRUIT COCKTAIL BEMEFSTEW ...... 65 BertolH ""' 1.16 OLIVE OIL EVERYDAY LOW PRODUCE PRICES U.S. No. 1 Russet 1 D lb cello bag POTATOES Finest Qu1llty Chiquita BANANAS Callfofnl1 Futrte AVOCADOS Kl nnow TANGERINES ca-FiRors C11ifornl• Pippin APPLES Air Freighted-Taste the Difference Fresh H1w1ll1n PINEAPPLE • , ... 10 HCh.25 lb •• 19 lb. .10 lb.•23 lb .• 25 EVERYDAY LOW PRICES Award Winning Bakery RALPHS WHITE OR WHEAT BREAD R1lph1 Sandwich or SPLIT TOP CHERRY PIES COFFEE1CA,KE 4 R1lph1-C.ke of the week CHERRY TORTE .33 , ·lb. I-oz. .mt 8in .• '79 •..• 55 71n.a85 **** Ralphs Welcomes U.S .D.A. FOOD STAMPS COUPONS Ralphs Superb Catering ICE CREAM Y.Ga~·B9 HOUSEHOLD ITEMS si>:NiYA'Rv'NA°PK1Ns .39 si;'RAY STARCH 2211r.159 Flnl1h Dl1hw11her 3J..or.•54 DETERGENT lnclud1112c OH La bel AJAX CLEANSER • oz. 26 4 PAK• Stretch & 5111 ..... 32 FOOD WRAP Stretch I Sei l FOOD WRAP ,, ••.• 55 Ylv1-A11t. & Decor1t1d Gl1n1 133 PAPER TOWELS . Heusehold Needs FROZEN FOOD P•ntry Fillers Pantry Filleri Alcohofic Beverages Health & Beauty Aid• li'ETERGENT •9·01: •• 88 !i••• lff BANANA CAKE c • ....-.-.-llhc10'1C--• DETERGENT .)0·01-.96 ECLAIRS fill051cNGc"'"'' DETERGENT A9-oz •• 88 .... DETERGENT Af ·Ol .• 11 r ...... -ORANGE JUICE SHELF LINERS 99< Si1e .89 Or•"'' s-•Eg' POTATOE __ .,, ...... s ... _.,, c_ .. _, v-"'' SPRAY POLISH 7-01 .• 79 DINNERS FEATURE OF THE WEEK Sheffield Heirloorn Quality Chi1111 COFFEE 4rnc CUP ;Jeadz '"tu1 l\'llY '' I" I• II~" "''""''"'I'll ~ "r •~P~l ••tu •llr-h• 1""' \t, •-' ..... .eut>ful ~J:J...:.ion Ii""'"'"' Yl.f1fM"•i.,t 1ht"" 1hi1 ""'le f.••111!y '19.· ~"-'•• ·~·•TJ $1 5111,,.,"7~ l'·Ol-.79 k-il VAN LLA • pk. .53 Sdllll~·•lff SUP EME tu w-111111 ... 11'1/z-oz. ,43 CRACKERS 6-01 .• 23 •• Rli """ CR CKERS 20·01.-.35 l:ii'5ic'iEs "•· .72 MILKB'ALi..S -· "•" .47 Ge1k<J -Stn 1,...d ,,.,., ... V ... 11'1•~• C••fll" No1t1 BABY FOOD •~2-0 1 .• ot Ralphs Exclu1ive1 -MIST u .. f .09 2:J,~-OL .47 a-.-c~"""d ,,...._ •• v~.w.. K-R lqulff -llf•ll~I tri•10!l1c~r L3TioN BABY FOOD 61/:z-01. •• 13 BOU BON11'r"' Fol•h 4.19 si1n -01 .• as. K•fiBt SC"bTCHH•• .,..on., No,. • ..,, S• • 16-01 . ..37 FR STED FLAKES 10·01 .• 39 Folrfi 4.59 CREA M A·o z .• 89 16-01 .• 47 s .. ,..,.,11'1 -L•rt•Oriff ll•10••-ll'1ll·"""ll•·lloo• MCO'urHWA S~ PRUNES J.lb .• 83 FRENCH WINES Fi llh 1.29 17-01.1.15 1 •~'2-or . ..47 i:fiA~·BERRY JUICE illl<bH l .. w-n ... CllOI F .. ~,.-... 2 -.1 •• 32-or: • .55 BEER cose of 2• .99 SELTZER ,,., .53 C~fFFEE '"" "'"'"' .89 1·1b. f .77 EXCEDRIN 100of.f8 FEB. 18 THRU 24, 1971 YOUR NEAREST RALPHS STORE IS LOCATED AT 9901 ADAMS BLVD., BEACH , Sto re Hrs: 9-10 Daily 9 am-9 pm Sunda y "' ' --"' -. DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS I JIS' COO UNN<RSTAN HARVEY, VA MNK Ti:J.lER,SLIPPIN' ME ~IS ~AGO' \\Ollli,1'55 51.LIGS! JN PA WOWSO'PA IMMOAA~ !'ARP: "MEMINP IS T~U~PLW'! JUDGE PARKER Nor R'E.A.LLV, SAM! MY C"R''S OUT i::i:zONT ! WE WON'T &E OUTDOORS MOR'E THAN A FEW SECONPS! PLAIN JANE I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I ACROSS 1 Ki nd of tire - b Command to a cat 10 Spanish lady 14 The wh ite poplar 15 Jason's ship lb Slack Pott. 17 Kind of bear 18 Bad I osei: 2 woids 20 Letter 2.1 Cut off .,.,n11 shears 2J Equine 24 Weave togl!'thtr 2& Came to a peak 28 Mr . Lloyd JO One who felr5 something: SuflilC Jl Make a speech 32 A lir1e· grained gypsum 3b Kitchen utens ii 37 Sharp ridge 38 A. Gabor 39 Garden flowe1s : 2 words 42 Enltrtaintr 44 Travtl authoiita- tions 45 Push over 4& Writers 4') ltatlan pott 50 Th.omas ·-: Political leader 51 Benign SZ Male animal 55 Law 58 Employment 00 SQ I itary bl Big quantity: Z w0tds &2 Quotes b3 Common contraction &4 Yl)9os lav statesman &5 Forest ftl\t,l'tS DOWN l Deeply absorbed 2 Nigerian native: Var. 3 Obs 1rve a holiday 4 In the manner of: 2 words 5 Fabric used for sheet s Ii Ple,s ing to the taste 1 Harvest Yesterday's Puzz le Solved : ' 8 Gon e 9 Hill 10 Removes from office 11 Cease growth belo1e maturation 12 -··code 13 Fed the k!Uy . l'l Queen of P S P A I'. c ( 0 t "' 2/17/71 35 Kind of contest 37 Bu ild ing recess 40 Proves 41 Its capital is Lhasa 42 Oeportmen' 43 Choose 45 Color 4b Short period of lime 22 Hinged 47 Slender cover opt:n t.>cial 25 "Ncristnsel" 48 Laughing 2b Ti!.1 ks 49 Same 27 Garment 51 A fastening 28 Dance steps : 53 Awry Informal 54 Muddle 29 Lined up Sb Dull finish 30 Entreaties 57 Actor-·-· 32 Tracts Wal lach 33 Moderot\I.' S'l Church!!l's 34 'flcked title 2 l ' ) 1 • • 10 11 12 13 , I By Chester Gould iv Tom K. Ryan By Al Smith .,,,URS ARE FULL OF SO MUCH l-IOT AIR ! By Harold Le Doux SAM, MEEf ALBERT! ME'S AN OLD l=RIEND OF ELMO'S! I ll-IOUGMT ME'D IE INTERESTED IN HE.&.R1~6 ELMO's sroev! I Ll'L ABNER HERE: COME. TH'U.S. MAii., ON , TH'US MULl!D' SAU Y BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS By Frank Baginski .....,.------.-. PERKINS 1 WAS. ~US.T READJ~A &cd< \l/~EH 1 GOT TO "THL~KLNG. oF YOU! MISS PEACH >.NO so, I SAY, IHAT evE.llCY HUMAN &•ING $HOULP se GIVEN FULL.. CONSIOt!!R.ATION 8ecAU~IJ EVll!!~Y HUMAN f>e/NG< 16 INTl<INSICAl.l.Y WOICTHY • ...... --, ... roii ~ l!alfFIT OF 1'<0$E OF !JOO WHO A~f. sn1.1. A BIT" O~U!1EAl!OOrSllOS ... • @ ~ ' I 'THA"T INGLUPE5 VO_!:!, "TO~ IV<1HUIC :t ~l.IME/JDA ~IP "TO <IOOR LOCAL. L.l!lt,IJ<IJ / ... By John Miles By Mell \' ,.. c; ... ,, ,,.,. .. ,, .; .: •. :- STEVE ROPER By Saunders and Overgard GOOD! ""ll RIDE UP ON lDP OF THAT LITTLE KMOl.L.l "'AH' WATCH FROM 7HERE.' PEANUTS By Charles M. Schulz \llll'Re NOT WEAAJN6 ~ IW 00 \llU K££l' JQ;T eeRlli£ 6aN6 OllT'51CE, I MITTENS OR GIJ:NE5 '<tX!R H/VJD<> ~? DIP 11fEAI IN lllT QM.ATE f CR AN</JHIN6- • !r " I I 11 • • l I I • v • .. Vltdnt$llay, Fetiruary 17, 1971 DAILY l'!LOT 4S By Cho"" lmwttl ly Ga Anlola 1y Ferd Jolinun ,\<tlO\'HJll .. Nl~IT Of' 5/'AC~-,>.U "TICllMOLO<&Y. .. 1il~, "IHI': l.lst.UZIAI) WIU. 8e Pel.l"li!IID Tb Pll!'Eer 'IOU Tb T)IE. ~IOIJS ~<ISAllP 1)~5 VOJ-VMes Oil 1Ue SO!JaeGT / ., u H I THI m.AHGI WOIUI .. ·111. MUM By Roger Bolen -N:IO gi;MISM~, raucs-llO POSM11l" OR SMOYll.I• ! DENNIS THE MENACI • 'WR£ /(/f;r)l#S ! • • .. ~ ' .. ' D!>n 't miss a tJfngle _a.isle at Bl _,Rancho this week, dqring · our ~ .. • •• ~ t 1 • • • ' ' .1 .. ..,,,, • . -. I •• • • Pr/RIB Rib So tender and delicious .•• the · choicest cut of U.S.D.A. Choice bee( ribs ••• ared nature's \vay ••• trimmed El Rancho style I SELECT SMALL END! ' I ' ' . ' • ·I -- . l/laPBX ........... ~~~~ ........ 21 I Liquid bleach that work11 .rnagic on thoee ha.rd stains • , • El Rancho's price works maiic on the budptl Spence r Steak . ~~c~· $189 ' Frozen concentrate from Florida'• Indian River countty ... fin; flavor from Treesweet! 12 oz. can 3k • • • • • • • • • • • lb. .. Sheer delight! ... super satisfaction ... the superlatives could go on and on ! Naturally aged!) I Cheerios .................................. 35• Cooking Sauces ................. 3 .. '1 R. . nchero Ste .· k ~J~ct , $129 '• ~~i~~doo:~a 2;k~l·~-~::.~~:~·-···· 49· ;~~i;~~·;~· 1t;,;;:.~:.~~~~-!--~~·4; • • lb Betty Crocker mixes ••• complete with fruit! Ground meat variationa from Betty Crockerl ' . . . . . . . ' At thia price,, put a few in \Ii• freezer: Did you kn ow that all our maats are always freezer wrapped? ' MJ B R•ice Mi'xeS 3 Sl Vet's Dog fOOd 10 '1 G d R d 89• s1· d Ba 59• • • .... ... .... .. ~r ... .. .... .. .. . .. .. . fOUn 0Un ....................... 11J ICe COn ......................... 11J Flavored varieties, so delicious ! 7 oz. pkgs. Save· the labela to he)p the blind! No. 1 cans. A!Twaya freakh to offer finepr flavor: Patties, too: M El Ranc8ho's 9own ... LEG 59 • Dole's fruit Drink .............. 31or s1 Bathroom Cleaner ................. 69• Ur ey arts BRg~S fb THl~H~ fb ' ' Pineapple-Grapefruit.,. pink or rogular! 46 oz. Dow does it! Save 20e on big 20 oz. can! · • • • • • • • ' • • • • • • • • P t ·B C k" 53• A T' 23• So much meaty goodness.,. Cut !rom broad breasted, chunky legged U.S.D.A. Grade A turkeys! eanu af 00 leS ............... UfOra ISSUe ....................... ; • Ideals from Nabisco ,., IOI/• oz pkg aave Sc' Two roll packs.,. white or colors .,, ¢.di Dungeness Crabs .... ~R~ :~~ ••••• 69~ ·I ~~·~: ~~~!~~~· .. ·~·~:·~~ .. ::~·::!.?.~~ _ ~~~~!~ .. ~~~~~!~·~;~~.30~1 !!ore iood eating for your money,,. because they're meatier! l.fake & casserole, or a cocktail'. · .,.. ?tlarmalade or ·strawberry ••• 12 oz. jan. • ~ . . ...,,,,, .... •• . • •• •• • , ' Aorp'a ... al'''I ARI' I • Duke St. Paulin ................ 59' Duke Baby Esrom ............. 59' O j . ul"'pj U• TENDER TBf For aimple snacks or buffet delight! 7 oz. Appeals to taste and imagination! 8 oz. • I · · · · · · · · .11 I Creamed H~varti. .. :··· ...... 59' Duke Brie ................. : ......... 49~ 1 ' c~~s~;b~;;e ~~d.er: f P~~:~~~~~i~~;~~;: :h: :·:· 02 g::n1~9c ' ;~b~a5;;~~~~'_'_t·~~:·.~~.:~-.~9: ;:t~ic~~el(;;~:d Ch1;;~~~·--~~·4;: I Cl&S1ic favorite with connoisseurs! 7 oz;. Five unique flavor varietiea ! 4 oz. pkg. Enjoy garden fresl1 flavor: AJ,\·ays fresh to afford the flavor yo u favor! ' lw es ........ for . Green Onions ........ 2 For 19' For the bulfet, serve with rye bread! 6 oz. Semi-soft ... mild, yet distinctive! 6 oz. • Add color ... and zest ... to the menu! Mild flavor ,,. with touch of authority! Tilsif ·POrf SalUt• TJbo '1.6l lb. ., fresh Bean Sprouts ........................................... 19f.. I Favorites from benmark ... by th• piece. g!~!~~ !~ew£~e~~,! ·0~:i;~· ~: .• ·' .• ;.••:;·•·;;..-., -·-· ······-~ ~ El Rancho Liquor Values! $1 .00 OFF El Rancho's Sale Price! ' d"'' -.... ,' ~-... ' . . • ~ • . •• • •• I \ ) . ' QUA~T $ 99 C~a . 1a~" :~. 1skey ~ ..... ! • • • 4 Thi• ,...,le_ eJ\d only , . U.ve ·•l·.-00 .• ~ , get acquaint.d w_ith .El Rancho'• amooth Canadian I ' Holiday Times Vodka .. ou1RT .. '3.99 80 proof at this low price I Compare the value: Cabernet Sauvignon ... flfllt .. '2.50 Deep dark delicious dry red \\·ine! El Rancho's ·Scotch .... FlflH .... '5.79 St. Emilion Annand Roux flflH'2.49 Bottled In Scotland ... 86 proof: Quirt •• $1.l'l A dinnel' ,,,,jne you're sure to appreciate! • Ezra Brooks ........ Hlll-'AL~ .... , '10.59 Strair!il whiakey in the economy 11>~ illa'I Chas.· Krug Vin Rose ... nm1 .. '1.89 The wine with taste appeal !or everyone! Pri<es in effect Th uradov through Su•dav, • Feb.18, !91 to, !1. No 1tile8 to dealer1. Open da<lv 9 to 9 .,. Sundov JO to 1 Ask th& manager about our convenient Charge Account S11rv/ce HUNTINGTON HARBOUR: Warner Ave. & Algonqu in St. NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 Newport Blvd. • 2555 Eastbluff Or. \Eastbluff Village Center) Also conveniently located stores in Arcadia, Pasadana and South Pasadena ' • ' . ' ' " 4( ~~·'.. '..\ T~-Hiin:tittg·i!(>~ 8.~ch Thank you, all you wonderful peopw for your ivelcome and congratulations. ' • • Thanks ' ' . we carie is Busi1iess forced tt>. double to yvu our size. I{ you \o\'&nt a 3 bedroom home with warmth and ctutrm, this ,is It. Brick fireplace, shutters_ with over'-draperies· ln every ·room, "'Ali to wall car- peting. Extra large patio with built-in bar-be- que. Curved brick entr,· \\'Rik and decorative brick_ CE'Oef:. Two years Otd and btotler than ,ne\v, SJ?·~ :'·. 7.~ % assumable loan. 842-2535. " ~;$1 . , , .,Rl'(ATE ESTATES ,BEA,UJY s,aUtifu1 h ome In the "Private Estates" qeai< the upper bay. Features new quality v.·all"to ~·all cafl>Ctll and drape!; throughout two separaj(' ·flre- plaC('S, This prestige area home has 4 bedrooms plus family room, 2¥.i baths and a good 2000 sq. ft. S~7.:poo. You O\vn the l~d. Phone 64&-11y1 . IF YOU LOVE ME ..• rll provide a tx>autiful homr for your fam ily in iind exCt'llent Huntington Bt'ach neighhm'hood. Come and see my 24,200 square fet't with'5'fled. rooms. 3-b11ths, a formal dining room1 and large masler suite. Brick patio, large concrete drive- \\'BY \\•ith room for boat/trailer, block wall~ end y,•ater softener ... and y;~u may ass1,urie a. 5~ % VA Loan with pa~mt'll1$ Of $248 per vtonth · lnrluding Pm. f or information please can -546· 2313. .... HU.NTINGTO.N BEACH LOVELY Ow~ is Jeavini', aiea and must sell this nearly ne\v 4 Bedroom 3 Bath beauty on cul de sac \\'ith extra large yard with gatt? for boat or trailer $42,000. Phonl'! ~-2313 ' . I' ' DID YOU KNOW ! ! That you can move into a lovely 3 bedroom) 2 bath '.home \\'itt\ a family room and 14x3J foot heated and filtered pool in ~fesa V('rdt' for only SJl,950. You must i;ec it to believe it. Call right away. 546·2313. ' ' '"°r • The most outstanding value on today's market In a luxury (J\eaclfat.1900 sq. fl.) 3 bedroom home. our t:r!bsfr rred o\vner l\lUST sell hls sharr 4 Con;~ider ~heye'.;leatures: laig" separate family bedrc:ib(tf home \Vith lerge fa1ni]y roofil frt, -};ast .. • r<*>m' V.'itJi \iref: bar, formal dining; 2~ baths, bluff. J{edecoralcd in 1970 l\'i.th luxurious s!l&g-, ·nearly ne\v $hag carpet, h~vy shake roof. Only car~t.. ha.ndson1e ,,,ood pancl1n~ an.d dccpriitor . lQ% down. ~l 500. €all 673-8550 ' \\'allcover1ngs. An excPll('nt family ho.me wi~h an ·. EAST BLUFF BARGAIN nve?iitd garage for Dad's v.·orkshop, Top' value · at oalY,544,750. Phone Q73-8550 I . . . POOL TIME Don't v.:Att on this lovely pool home in Ne11·1l0rt HeightS .. ~·'Ev('l'y co.nveniellcr for family livinii;. four"'.swiny bedroomg, :.! baths \\ith out~idf' en· try ff.om pool. Large C'OVC!'f'd patio. carcfrrr landsCflping. Better hurcy • Call today to ~ee :>46-2113. $43,950. ,. '• ~~ \~ {' . ' EASTSIDE f:t>la:.: in this love!y living room \vilh sha~ car· Jl('ls, 11ancling & fireplace. Enjoy cooking in the con\·E'nience ,~itchr.n \\1th built·ins & dish\,·ash· t'r, 'Add to thi~ .1 Bedrooms k a family room !ol" 1:om!ortablc family livi ng. Come Hlk t' A look ! S30,950. 646·7171. .' ·~if , ' •'1 i Wiltt \ ' ·)~" '~ .,, ·•.r JI, f! .~~l· ' . t• ···' I!": --• " " ' NEARLY N!W ,HARBOR \VIEW.::'."" "-'4~ ~ ~, . On a lot large enoui;;~fqr ,h9!-!,i&~~.trailer. A .. 1'S~~~E 5 /4 Vo -LOAN beautiful nearly new 4@-aT~~hmity room-'t'hls 3 bcd'room ho1nc \\'ith shake roof, brick i;arden kitchen -luxury bathir --··a real drtam firepla~. \\'&II to wall carpeting, custom draper· home under marke1 st :!143,000. Phone 646-7171 irs, lar~e covered patio and ft?nced yard shoY.'S to view. pride of 01vnership insid<' and out. $27,900. Phone 842·253:> for details. • • , BUSYt BUSY! . * SALE$'MEN * EARN MOREi LEARN MORE! Let us show you how • • You can earn up to 80Sb 1 e Profit Shnrll}~ Plan e;\Penonali~.~ 1'raining Pr·o~r<lnl ·•·?ifore SaJes Heh> -1':r11· Trainini; J'roi;ram ' Start$ F~b. 2~. ,.Call Randy ~l<:C,rd\e 04G·2316 for intrrvip11·. AnENTIO VET RA ~ WANT A ,2ND G.I. LOAN \Ve have helped many veterans, \\'ho ha\•r previously used their loans here or out of state, to reinstate and g~t another loan. \Ve may be able to help you-Phone any of our offices for lull information. · WORLD WAR II AND KOAEAN VETS The ne1v law states that )'our t'1i~ibili1y I~ no1v rene\1·ed. You can bUy \\·Ith nn do1rn pa rnt. • • • ' " . ' . Bl'tAND NEW ;'t-iODEL HOME In one of the finesl i;ec\iQ.ns in 1-Iunlington Beach · -4 Bedrooms and famlly _room-2400 i>q. ft. of Luxury.-Deluxe kitchen with dish1vasher.~r peted and landscaped ready to move in,-10<,~ down or liberal FHA terms-Phone 546-2313. ~:. ,., . -:.-• -.I ~r .. .,_ .• DISTINCTIVE EXECUTIVE .:';700 SQ', fl. o{ •charm • "'.'i.lh n'laitnificcn1. View of 'lfarbor. Loaded with speCiaJ features. Unique tri- ll'VI'), construction. Truly an oUtstanding hO(ne S67,000, Phone 546-2313 or 646-7171 • r~ i 1"~r.-".r·r:"'; ~~i · > ·f 1 ':R r LAR~E, FAMILY 1,U~K HOME . . IN HARllOR VIEW .. Hl~i4"' . f4 ' pltllh home you and your fai'r!Hy would br firou4 of. Spaciousness and comf(n1 il'o.prcsst'd 1n this home. 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, 3 car garage, Forrnal living room forn1al dining' room, family room with fir'eplace atld· ~·ct bar. \Vall to wall carpets throuJO:hQUt,l w8'~ paper. Cry!!tal ehan- dellli!r in dinln~m. and custom fixturei throughout. Profes&IOtial Jand!!caping and sprinkl· ers. A Jot of othtr extras. $61,930. Phone 646· 7171. • . ..... ~ .. --...... - " ' '· · Randy McCardw LAGUNA INVESTMENT 20 unit~ just completed. ~i;· block to sandy lx-a,·h 11 1 Wood's Co\'r. Sparkling pool and corninunity t·rereatlon c_·entrr. Attractive Spanish architc1·· lure $425,000. Gopd financing •vailable. Phone 546·2313 CANOE IN THE CANAL ! Launch a canor from your ll'rraced back yard. A i;pacious 4 bedroom home In Ne,vport Shore!!. A family oriented localio~ \\'ilh S\1•imming, tcn- ni.~ and Clubhouse facilities. Price $43.500. Call 546-2313 for th"" l'.actg. Sharp 3 Bt'droom and Cori\'. den. l bedroom \1·i1h sepe.rate rntry. Hardwood floors. 2 bath!'l. Excel· lent f&mily home at S25.9j(). Call 673•8550 tq I JUST LISTED brdroon1, 2 bath townl'\ouse in thr beautiful f\lonlicello A1·ca. f ull use of S\\•imming pool, rrCreation Rrra and c:lub"hou&e-. Don't do yard 11urk and Iivt a littlr. Only $23,500. Call and ' ' See 54ti·2.113. • ; 1 ·.: ; - THE HOUSE THAT TERRY BUILT . Buill by,.a\bi[IJ.4cr, ln l-lunlington Beach ror hi2' O\Vll family....'.! Brorooms, 2 baths With lots of cha1m and t"xtra features $39,900. To vie\v call 546-2313 or 842-.25.J:\. ., ' '"' .; ',.,..1·. ' . 4 Conyet1i!lnt . Locations Near You NEWPORT BEACH I 700 New po rt Blvd. 646-7 171 COS TA MESA '27 90 Ha rbo r Bl vd. 546-2 313 , , , ' HUNTINGTON BEACH 179 31 Bea ~h Bl vd. 842-2 535 CORONA DEL MAR 332 Ma rg uerite 673 -8 55 0 MESA D.EL MAR 'story Plegantt lo'l-IA -Vx 5 bedrooms, 3 bath~. 'f8mily. room, large livlni-room, walk to: All ·schools. the park, shopping. It's sharp -sharp. Pricf.d $39,500. Call 546-2313. NEWPORT ...... Lar~e \Vell Arranged rooms, lots of storage ·arid \1·alk·in closets. Beautiful. :;tone fireplace~~ ..... ant kilchrn oj)('n to family room. 3 Be6rp'Oms. :LI,) Baths Jn Oest Ne,vport Beach .~.·~ ~ion fcin.ure for gro\\'inc 1familY.· ~· All::J·fbr ~48.300. can 646-1111 ~ .: ~: · • · ' ASSUME 51/• 0/o LOAN Thi.~ 3 bedroom home with shakl'! 1'001,: ,"1ck fi rcplacl', \\'all to 11·all carpetins. custom drap!!r-o il's, large CO\'ered r1aUo and fenced yard lihoWI pride of ownershiri inside and out. $27,900, Phone 842-:l535 for detnils. ·' . .. 1 '·-c ,. '~ ' ,_ lJutstanding Skyla rk home ,top Ga.rden Grove'!.,. cation near schools and s~opplng. 3 bedroom..:. 2 baths. 1?4nClled dir,iing, Priced &t CRV -'~,200, J"lo', dO\\•n to vets -tlow ~~~. F~ • Ph.~ 84Z. 2535 . 'f'' ... ,• , ;:'""' . • •• WAVE AT THE WAvf,f': ~ rrom the picture \vindo1~· or thi~ 'large oc@M front living room. Dining room. 3 b.."drooms, e@' h!iif jta o"'" wash basin. O~ricr, '"ill carry 1".' Down J>llYQ1eQJ Dexlble. Askini $69,950. Oi.\fi~ to11·ti oWn~r say11 sell! 646·717;., , ;I' Quality custom construction! Better than ne\V..- condition! Truly minimum ' ea~ :;iird1 Locate+ in n1uch deiiired Newport Heights! 3 Bedr i, 2 full baths. Huge Family Room, Pr iced • Ill $49;9QO. -C.Jl 646-Jl71. Let US shO\V yoti very special home today, , . • INVEST,MENTS , • 27 84 Ha rbo r Blvd ., Su ite 20'1 Co ste Mes a 546-2316 · .;; . ; EXPERIENCE ELIMINATES EXP ERIMENT IT'S FUN TO BE NIC E TO PEO P'Lf \ ' ,, I I I ,. . . . -Wtdt1t~~. F'fbntarr 17, lt71 PILOT·ADV£RT!SER 15 Jet ~v•ryon1 Hai -Something That DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED · .ADS You Cen Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad --Someone Else W e nt1 The Bi est Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results .. •• ............. I~ ....... ..... I~ l~--'_"""~i~ :I .............. !~I _,,, ... l~I -.... l~I _ ..... ~~~I I~ EASY LJVIN ' G•neral Corona Del Mar * DUPLEX * Cott• M.se Huntln1ton Beed! I;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; --"'----~I AUTHENTIC SPANISH QUICK 9UICK BEACH LIVING FOR VERY SPECIAL PEOPLE I ExceptionaJ good taste in this spacious 2 BR home in Irvine Terrace. Lovely garden view from all rooms. Lux. detail. $62,500 77 Linda Isle Drive -OjMn Sunday Ne\v 5 Br .. 5 bath home on lagoon. Marble entry. wet bar, Ah1/FM Intercom, Huge mstr Br. has beam ceil. & own frplc. Large !iv. & ln this spa.CIOUJ carefree condominium Located clo~ 10 shOpping and priced below market 2 Bedrooms. Z bal.h.s Enclosed yard Excellent Tl!rms Only $26,950 Cuti! oldl!r borne and 2 "tory bldg with 1ul!st apt. \Valk ID town & be.1ch. Needs some TLC & fix.in' but it's priced right at. , , , $45,000 Ownet movini out of state. Brirl&' otters FHA. no dOwn VA. or aawne 5\4'/o Joan .1t SlJO month pa.y1 every. thing, Fantastic 3 bedroom, 2 bath. dining & hu1e added famt.ly room. Crpts, drps and I 'all exlrt!. Excellent loc&· lion on qull!t strttt. AOOnr I only 12-1.500. For all detail• I call i>f0..1151, Herita1e R•&l·J tors •open eve1.) Authentically 1tyled from tht arehed courtyard entrY to adobe~ tiled roof. 3 Javi:sh btdroomli. Huie muter &t1He. 21tl baths. \\'alk.in closet. Vaulted bea.m ceil. lngr. Cracklini:: fioor lO ~ij. in, cl!nter fireplace. All elec. dream kitchen. Huge CO\"U · ed palio .• Easily tinished tor den "'ilh hea\I)' peaked beam ceilings. ji.fuch more and only 3 yrs )'(>Ung. READY' FOR THIS~! Only $26.900. E-Z terms. A must ID Stt -Call (714.) 962.-5.}85 "Our 26th Year" fam. rms. w/frplcs. w/deck ....... $185,000 WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Rud For complet• Information on all homes & lots, pl•••• call : NEWPORT CENTER '44-4910 HORSE -LOVERS I '"ll::::::l:::::z:::::~ZI: !1 Mini.Ranch 132xl50, 2 BR. * * * * * * BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR Ill Dov•r Or .. Suit• 3, N.B. 647-4620 REALTORS SINCE 19-tS • home + s1udio apl., tall I HOME And BUSINESS Your opportuniiy IO Jivf' in an f'~celleru FOC"R B!:O. ROO'.\f, l"''O bath home and opt'l'B1e your busineM> from this lal'Je C'OrrM'r Int nPar modem shopp1n.1> center. The honlf' i~ in e!l.Cf'llent contli. Hon and ha~ 11 li1rge u.leJ room. Prf'Mnt 01>."ll('rs are no~· 01lt'rat1n11: 11n antique I shop and are lea\·Uiir: the arPa . Priced at Only S26.:'i'Xl for quick sale. CAIJ us 00"' for appoin1men1 lo stt. [\'tnin';{S C3lJ 646-lj79 • • * STEVE JENNINGS 15902 Malm Ci rcle Huntington Beach You arr lht" l\1nnrr ot ? uckets 10 rhe Western National Boat & Marine Show at tfw. ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER Ft"bn.u1ry ~h rhru 211ih Plf'are call 642-.iilii.lt. "xr. Jl.f hf't"·ern 9 and I pm t(I cl11!m your tl ckP!11. 1Norrh C.Oun1y roJl.frf't' numbt"r is 540.12201 • * • t:nCf'r tht' markrr price. 0....-n.. Pr mu!'t M'll immed111tely. s~rkhn~ J bNfrm. 2 bath 2 •rory homP ~·uh !am il~ J, l'innus ,.inn1. H~a\·y 1ha.ke roor. fu lly ('arperM. fan11s. llrally Jandscaprd k mort- ~O\l.· only S30.9j(l. C 11 1 l :'Hj..!H2~. General Ulltll()UI'. t1()-'tl'.S RMI ENM, 1754000 EXTRA ! The t;:-iIQL:E ;o.:E\VS iii out! It prin1s just good nf'\\'I. Call 67J.600() for 1 copy. Call a/Jli(J 1/ ~'Ou'rl ti~ 10 sr,. d('C'Orator Airla Rokos· fa h- u](lcis ~ lw-<lnn .. l l\ath. lam· 1ly homt>. Only S~3.9;l0, It'& \'Pry t.~JQl."E'. UNIVUI'. t1V-'tH ~e•I Eslll•. ·1~ '") E. (0•1r l'<"''I'· Cor-0.l !Mr, C,~I. Real1or 2629 Harbor. c.~J. HARBOR HIGHLANDS Spacious Three Bdrm, Tv.·o balh home in one ot NE\\". PORTS better aret..s. 17'xlf Addition 10 m.111er Bdrm. ifruly a qu~ni; 1uilel. All thi!I plus large pstio and sparkling pool. Tll'O car gar. age, Nice Jandacaplng. Pric. rd Right &t only $36,950. Gener•I I 01nerel I HOT OFF THE PRESS! 1 =B;;;;IG;;;;sP;;;;LA;;;;sH= 4 BEDRM • 2 BATHS ""'· '"· ...,. ••• '"''""'" Build 11. boat? Ride? Gar. ~-pl bl • den? AU for $3.4 ,000. 673-4400 1: UlO •ce. tn J'Vlit ~oven. UNIVERSITY' REALTY CATCH YOUR carpeUi, drapes, pauo. dble 13001 E. Csf. Hwy. 673-6.;10 garage. Near So. Cout --~-~~---·I BREATH! Pliua. 121.750. REDUCED $2000 Be lhp lirsl 10 5tt this sharp LITILE CASH 3 bedroom ;\fes11. rlel !\far 1 The panoramic view of hat-Roy McCardl• Reeltor 3 br on approx 1" acre ocean bor, penlnsu.la &: ocean Ii 1810 Newpon Blvd., c.M. view Jot. Cul-de-iac. near I OKI Sf [ 01~0\ '" NE A l 11)/1 5 home, our NEWEST LIST· ING! Ifs a i;paciou:s and fl;'o d(lwn Gf terms available I breathtakin1. Scenic boat ac. 541-7729 1chools. $25.500. Owner. 19131 Brookhurst Ave, on thia 2 5tory, 3 bed.rm, I 'iv\ty just below, 3 BR., den, 642-1122 f:\'es; or 548.(192 Hunn·nrton Beach roomy l'lome "'ilh large tw-cf. •m•·•"" 2 patl"" in rear. pool hon1r. Walk 10 beach. fam. rm., 3% baths! Sll3,IO} HARBO" VIEW <da~y''=-~----~ 1-cP.'CiJ'LA"Trui<-., ,. t ,. · · S ~ SPECULATORS Br.ll"t of all. buy on VA terms orma u1n1ng rm., pa!IO __..._., , HOME IMMAC. l BR + detached ""ilh norhrna-do"·n or assume kitchf!n, 2':11 baths, exotic .............--____,,,,,...... A beaut. 5 BR. home: ""'et rec. nn. C.Ollege Park 6fc VA $21 .500 as5Umable f'Xi~ling .l"-7' ilnnual pt"r· larn:lrc11plng. ExiKring 6""-~-l..L ... -11 8 _.,_ bar, Jovely shag cptf .. seJf. heated pool Mme. Frplc & loan. 4 Bedroom 2 bath. bl VA loan is assumable. \.IUIUW9ll,--cl••";"< ov•n•·. -•dy 10 1 extras $3.2,500 5-15--5097. Dutch Haven !'>lanna. ElK' centllgP rale IOiln, repaya e ....... , ... I Ill $195 per mo., INCLUD-$<10.COO. ~•c1ur&1rt~ move into? S59,5Q). Includ. PVT pty, no do..,,1'1 to Vets, bltn range & oven, dishwa&h· ING taxe~ and insurance at • COATS I -in&' the land. I 2 sty, 3 BR. 2 ba, many er, large llving room wltu Id . "· lo CORBIN x-· , __ , pd ,,, 9lO hreplace. famtly rm, dlrHng :1! ;~~g~hou n t nave WALl..ACE 1133-0700 644"243C!: • ~i74. ..uiuK ' ....,.., · area, oversized bedrms lll'llh I REAL TORS :.t:ESA Verde area, 2 &ty, large master, w/w upgtad· I ~ COATS Open Ev•nings I Today's Best Buy MARTIN 4 B!t &: den. 2~i ~ bJtns, ~ ~~~:n~5i;a~s. Jene. lo 9' I ~ II M V ~ 4 ,.._.. $39,500. By awnr, alt 4--r-u, patio, J ' WALLACE I • 2-4454 • L.11Ce ent csa eiue. <=.<· REAL TORS 6"«-7662 54'6-lf.JS dbie gat•. 220 E 17 ti rm on qu1e1 stref't. Coverrd I · t REALTORS BAY AVE. INCOME patio, exist.in;.:-512 7,, FHA DOVER SHORES , DUPLEX S36,9:i0, 23rd & I' 1-;\er11ng.• C11.J/ :J.m.326.1 -5u...4141-. Joan but nflcr('d on most any View home. 1148 Sanliaro Dr. Orani;r. C.\!. 2 BR. l BA B/ I (Op1n Ev•nlngs) Ch11.rmtng 2 Br. coiiage '!'I ttrms. SZ7.000. Bf'sf huy. sp11c. 5 BR. -1 ba. Pa .. 2 gar + 1 Ox Z a 962.41471 ( ::::. J 546-8103 shake roof: huge used brick Adaplahlf' floor plan for , ""Orkl'ihop. Builder &42-4905 I h On M h ' :?2 YEARS or frplc .. Ivy c::ove_red fencing; RENTAL .f & !amity, Mesa coup!eor lgf'. family. Newly / *Sharp Z BR Triplex * 1 L•ss Tan •. ont ' REAL ESTATI-: SERVICE a-plus incom" unit. Be~t area Verd l 26j or offer demrated By app't $91 000 GI oo down payment $4.2 000 Rent down buys this 3 bdrm. IN THF. HARBOR AREA I -, . nr. ba.y, beach. e1c. s;-,9.9.50. e , B'IJ G . d R. 11' . Nev.' otferin Bob 0Jso11' 2 . bath area To1>.·nhouse, Call: 673·3663 673-8086 Eves. ~ Ul·SllO 1 • run Y~ •• or cA.iio• 54,,.~-_,, · pr1me area, priced right B1chelor's H id•lwJy 1 5.BEDROOM ! lne1rcin-·t,_ 8.1.l Dover Dr .. N.B. 642462(1 nc •. .,..""""· I S20.500'. 1 ~ llv rm, ""/""' Tiny hOU.S(' .2 BR. Smalt /Of· ~.... '-'ti; · 1 nd OUEGE REALTY REPOSSESSIONS Dov1r Shor•• I ttPl!, drps, \V/D. relrig, Jg 10""" mainr. You 0 ""·n '!_le a · 1 · .. AMBLING distance IO the 15COMMattKldlif,CllL Sp&rkling clean hOmes, some p.1.tio & POOL priv.~ f'ul! i..J>1>.· ta;\e~ ·only S.ll r. All of BLUE PACJFJC ... Oriented newly painted & carpeted. 2, *ELEGANT VIEW* I Price $20 . .500 .• CJ. or FHA 1llage Real [state thi~. in Coron11. d('l .\lar. for fora big. F'UN·LOVINGfam. 4-BEDRM. :. 4. & 5 bdrim. Some with Exec. Secluded C.Onlemp. terms. Call &li-1221. ""'"'"s~E~C~L~U~D~E".'D"""~[I only S29.:i00 · Hurr:v:! Uy! \\"ATERF'RONTING file I 40 FT. POOL pools, f'HA.VA conv. ierms, Ide<ti !or enlt-rtaining, Old I ~ 67§ .. JQQQ ainaJ & near the clubhouse, CHANNEL FRONT from $17,000 to .$4(),000. \n::irld charm! Hi ceiling~. 1 COTT AGE pools. 1ennis cour1~ & "ffc·• I Spacloo~ 6 BR, 4 Ba, separ. $27,950 Collins &: \\'a!(& Inc. leaded 1>."indo\\.'S, brick/ art>a . SEPA.RATt: famil~ ate nrficr. Pier & 1l1p, By ~ b.1th.s, large toom1 rhruout. 884.l Ad&ms Ave. 962-5.)23 ""1'0ll&:ht iron. 5.000 sq It. a $100 DOWN room, 3 balh.\ k S·P·A·C· appnln/ml'n!. Huge !amdy rm. entry haJL ha."s. 4 ctr gar. $169,z;c(l, 117141 Beach Blvd., Hlgn Bch $20,500 T-O·U·SN·E·SS!! 147.SOll. I PETE BARRITT RLTY Parlt lik• yud. la'71• ,wim $23,500 548·1249. Clt>'n 'tit 9 p.m. ASK roR ,,,N COATS. pool ~ dockinr •nd .. ho. "DOLL HOUSE " GI NO DOWN Loc111td in Co11a ~le~. yo1J'UI j 6754930. M0.1720 Sharp &: dean. 3 Bedrms, Fountain Vell_•Y~-- ~~';1 s~:~:~i~a~r~~!,..iiiiiiiiiiii,..iiiiiiiiiiiiii ~·co.· 642-5200 TARBELL 2955 Harbor tu11 dining rm. built-ins, na. NEW SHAG CARPETS Priced Below Merket I S PRIME VIEW -tun.I birch kitchen cabinets. l BEDROOr..f + FINISHED Vacant 4 BR, 1% BA, Jikl!' rkls1ng cos1s 11 ran be your1 . MAKE OFFER ll·UJf ....._,,·~ to I•'-adv••'"•• 541).1720 BONUS ROOM! (Could bt new crpts, drps, newly paint· You don't ha~·" to ht-a \t'I· ---------..,., II'""" --e ..... .._ rr11 n . it's In e.xl'f!llt-nl roni:li· Rl'Ah)· Company Se('luderl lge 3 bl'dnn. den. I of the View. Ivan Wells l'lt'W TAR.BELL 2955 Harbor 2 br·s or hobby room). S228 ed thruout. Clo~ lo shop· 11on YI 11tt it ~fo~ its gtlrl('~ LI DO ISLE BEACHES • BOATS Big yard. CIOSf' m tcbools. 1' -I BR. 3 BA.. pwdr rm bo~ G.I .• FHA TERMS 1' Thtal per .mo. Only .$5950 ping and parks. Don'! "·ait! ~·8640 SPECTACULAR Bayshorei; by lhf' beach fni.·y & ~hoppr. A.uume FHA in Dover Shoru. Fam rm 3 BR 2 Ba 4::e !am rm down! Wont tasn Collins&: \Vatts 962.5,523 1,0' 1·1e" Jh·ing room, 4 btd c ~ ,..m•. de n. d'"'"' "'°m. .._., 131'" • -~nri open J11n. R=r 1n1u rw11 1:ila1d balh1ng pool II.is \ li Ca5cad1ng 2629 Harbor. C.'.\I. ~9.:ai. $25,750 Macnab-Irvine WITH 6Vc•/, LOAN 3 Sdr. + F 1mily Rm. 64£-8235 675.3710 4 RR . .( baths. Top loc. halance, ll'/frplc k 1>.·et be.r. Sec.Jud. Scrt~ned Ja.na1, Corner. Jot.' HAFFDAL 8EAL TY c & w ReduC'l'd 10 $14..000. JEAN SMITH, RL TR ~pool. Roy J. \\'&rd, Rltr., FORTIN co. 642-5000 842-440:i •s: 541·2"46 Hom• Show R•altor& 400 E. 17th S1.. C.~f. 646..32:;5 10l' r..larilM'ri;, &i&.1550. ope.n B Ibo I I nd BY O\\lNER, $24.4..30, .( BR . ''Armchair Hou~ehunling·• I dally. • • S • I Cdl'' 2 ~a. bltn~. lrplc, mvtred 1 --~D"'l"V"O"'R"c=E~--1 l"i35 E. Coa1i1 1 ""'Y·, TifE SUN NEVER SETS on SlQ;\f dn ,.Jd 011•n • e11r Jst. pano. !ncd, nr schools. 675-7125 Pilot Oaulfied Whitt-Elephant Dimt"-A·Line 3 Br. 2 ·Ba, frp! + r:st hie 6"2A22b4 I Forces sale, near..Jlew 3 BR. v b .... • l BA Ayres built hOme, ;/3-6~?. a. "r "''at., pat. Huntington Beech bltns, drps. crpts, f.rplc, blck Corona d11 M ar Ju•t hke ne "" J l"""in tll f'd ,,.,.._._.,.,.._"::"...., Bdrm~. h~g~ lamlly rm .1-VALUE PLUS~ - eleganr fireplacr. llC'"' u " F:xtia ~hilrp 4 b('drm -\9x The Purzle with the Bui/f./n Chuckle O ReorrollfOI• letter1 of tti1 four 1'rol'llbled "WOfdl b.- low io form lour si11111l1 words. * OPEN DAIL y 1-S *I 1927 Sabrina T•rr. BIG 4 BR. PLUS POOL ONLY $22,250 ..,,.all. heated POOL. land· scaped, 1 mi. to acean. As. 1uml! x.tnt loan. $32,990. 968-2929 Bkr. DESPERATE OWNER rarpf'!I02:. na1ur~! 11ood cab. J.R print. Hugr Jot with al!ey <tn·1nt" Tt-rr. l .( Bdrms., Unbelie\'able: \'oo can·t milis S15 950 inPt~. ~.1720 ar1'f'~~. I!~ ne11• ~M..s:: w w ' TAR.BELL 2955 H•rbor rrp1 • I..· r!rp.<, t·rC'th p111n1 Jn pool: Very cle&n: Xlnt view on 1.1 homf' J1ke thls. Tree 4 BR 2 BA of bay, ocean & .)t'tty. Ll'l'o·e-hned st i\fodern p!u1h decor I "-·' ,1· crpts ndk """ 2 Bf!dr{l()ms k lamily room, -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ f 11nd oor. SP 124 . .'lOO GI or I · A ' hu-uOUI. " odl!I co lllon y pallO & trel!s. custom from deep pile carpehng 10 J s b · · lar2e cornrr lot. Obie car NEED I f'H.\ tt>rms! \\"on't !as1. cal! be u ml! t>rt terms. aury. I decorative 1vallpaper. Queen. KRAFT REAL TY i;-ar•i::r 11 lvr;u r!oor. Blrn .(117.12'!1 . elf'(" kllchtn Room 10 bu ild mM "t t irPnsrd Rt-al E•l!l/p Sa.JPS DON V. FRANKLIN sized bedrooms 2 bath!. De. Realtor lu.-.;e butlt.in kitchen that 1n11 Beach Bh·t1 .. Hntgn Bch e 673-2212 e sparkle.~. AM·Fl\t in1errom. 842·1418 E\'es: 962·~24 on PPOple . r12h1 a1>.11,): ! Newport W. E. Lachtnmyer, Rltr !Mi() '.'\e1>.i.:irt 81\'d., C.)l. lil 11 ~arh Rl\d .. Htgn Bch Dill &~·3928 Eves: 67J..4.'i7i . 0p€'n ·11J !l p,m. •• . EMERALD-BAY-- J0WNff0USES '!'""'~'" """ "''" ""w from rh 1" 'mmar. 4 bdrm. (anytime) 2 & 3 Bto<lrnom!', paliot;. db!f' '' /am1Jy rni. homt-. Com. I'"~""'~""''"-"""..,..,..,..._.._,. s;arai.::r. rrpts I..· rirps, blln!.I ni~niry pools. trnnt5 els., 4 bdr.-$27,950 ~ \finutri;. to !he St'ach. prt\·. l)rarh: pn\·. patrolf'd Collins I..· \\"all• ~2.~ ~1rl'f'1~ for your security. ~6·8111 l--iGTT"UT'"l-,.E_H...,.~1 I S.nten<ed man's promise to I' I ) I . his girl: "Remember me, dor- .--,.--,.-.,,-.,----'ingl If nobody calls for m• I p 0 y C I M in six months, .'. -." This is • (two-fir) 3 Bdrm. 2 b11, home, cozy 1 frplc. Forced air, built.in kit. 4-l·Br. II.Pt. Tll·o.{er the price ol one. J4j.000. University Realty 300] E. C5t. Hwy. 67).fu,O I Coverttl patio. Gas BBQ. Huntington Harbour Boat 1.1cces1. H~ated kidney SACRIFICE _ SSS 00) _ shaped pool with all t h e . . ' equipment. ro;ear beach. ji.fagn1l1cent 4 br-. 4 ba. I ~·aiertront tv:ime 1n Hun. Very lov.· down. Hurry • Be tington Ha rbour l O 1 · lst. Call (n4J 9EJ2...5.58.'j. v.·aterfront 57' cb:.k Call 213/j92-160l !or apt,· Prin· cipa.ls only. NOW'S THE I ORI \'I [ Ol\O\ ,. Pt' Al 'OR( SWIM + TENNIS soo h · 1 193 ooo * NEW L 1sTING _*_ "'"" ~ "PPl.nny. · Bf'~ ~ bedrm, full din-? D1Lancy R•al Estat• I 2-11 I I ' I I I' j O Como!tta the thutkle quoted bv 11/Hng In the miQing werdt . you develop from st•p No. 3 below. 375 MARIGOLD Gracious 3 bdrm .. l~ barhs. Spat'. !iv. rm. w/lrplc. for. 1 ma! dln. rm. Eating area in 19131 Brookhurst Ave. kl!ch. Patio. Plenty of room j Hunlina;ton Beach TIME FOR Cj)UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT in~; natural birch pane(. • BR. duplf'x . xl.n1 loc. Prr. 282:8 E. Coa~r H\I' .. Cd'.\f P•INT NUM<ltREO UTIERS in(,> b1dll·in'-. Ht-a\')' shake m1t for fi paying gut-sl&. ~~.7270 ) · IN 1HE~E U:;!A~'§:"5?=*°'= for boat Or Uir. , ----''---'-'-- ru1'-.'140-rm l3:-t,OOJ. UNSClAMelE UTIERS ,. MORGAN REALTY "WHITE ELEPHANTS" TARBELL 295S HJrbor George Will iamt.on OfAL di.rte! fi42.5678 . Chaf'ie FOR ANSWfR 67~2 67~59 overrunninr )\)Ul' bout~ I Realtor your 1.d, then sit back and O ,-. .. "'"""'1''' .,z-5611 ~7:1.4Jso 645.1564 Ev .. "''••10th• phon• n••' 1 _ SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATI N 900 General G•n•r•I Gener1I I GenerJI General Gener•l For th1t Item under $31, try the Penny PincbeJ' Gen•r•I NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY "Cuh" .. seu them thru Daily PUot Classified 17D Ill :i =J i Ul ¥4 #J ----------.... --------------.... ------New po rt Beach Office-646-7711 2043 Wtttcllff Dr. 1t Irvine Open Ev1nln91 VETERANS ond HEY GALS It's happening a .. in. Acrordirig lo thfl llou!le aclion of 1970, even though Veterans used their eligibility fnr loan:-. many no\\' May 11ualify for another. GAi .... <;, tell your Vel hubby U> come Into our office (or a consultatio n or phone for .appointment. Costa Meso Offic• DAYS 545.9491 2190 Hori.or 11.~. NIGHTS 545·0465 HONIYMOON conAc;I! 117,fOO PalCI Pleast. rnov.·ly"·P<U or 11ttond hortt'ymMMf'rs onlr. Older 2 bedroam homP, but C'ulr a~ a hu1:'s etr: La.r~e SOxl~O In! for fulurr t'JCf"llllnslon. Chllicl'.' EA•Ul dl! Costa Mega, Submit )·our tttrm.s. Onn'I mlu lhb otlf'? SILLll TaANSffUID IAST $2,151 DOWN! lkaulllul 3 bedroom home 1>.•ltt"t 2'rl baths. hu,2t '20x'20 p.la.v rnom: 81Jilt in 1969. Vacant for immedllll! ~Piney. Very rhoiCf' f'llunlain Valll!y •pot. FUU. PRICE is $26.500. Submit >·ciur tf'rm~. llNT1'L .1 Bdrn1. 2 hilth. rlhl. li:'.llr111r, F'lrt-pl11rr. h1111r kitrh,.n. car· P"tl 11nd drapt<1-. Gr>'RI loca1lnn. $22!'1 J>('r mtlnlh. CAii NO DOWN TO YITS 0\\tl 11 tri11lf'x, rour 11nly 1·ruh nutl11y !~ cl,.,~lng cost" llnd impnunrt.-. CholC'f' C~11. r..tMR 1(1(1\tlon -East of Harbnr 8h•d. U\·r in onr and rf'nt 2 nlhtN.. ('.nod 1'1lnklno;:!~ \Vrll. I s:;111"',~' If you\·r brfo!l In !hr ~~rv !tf' •ny timr. rall us. ~ew t1n1·s n1ti;hl 1n•i<f' .\nu elO:lhl,. OPEN UNTIL 9:00 P.M. Huntington Beach Office-842·4455 7612 Edinger o,.n Evonln11 S40.5140 Ol"N>SITI HUNTIN6TON C:INTll EXECUTIVE DESPlltA Tl 11 ~fust 1acritice thl& pluth 4 bedroam est.air with 1slanct cen· trr kifc~n. form1J dinffli:" room. brick flREPLACE, perk Ilk,. ltndaupina and 1.iORE. $29,000. STEAL!! Trade >'Our hom,.! STILL STANDJNc;U so you kno\\• lrs a solid buy, nnCK 1h1a ca.~ts. frtsh pa int, 3 qut•n·slifd beodrooms. 1nd VA or f"HA Tt-rms l11v1U. ablt-. $23,:KIO and only $184 per monlh. Trade your prt:sent homt! - NO CASH rf'qu!rt•tf if Quallfll'd \"('t tn men•• Into this .'.1 Quttn·slied brdroom palaC"t. HUGF; 11rrwira1,. famil\' room, (re1,hly pllint· l'd and " .. illnc fl)r Jf>U, p1ymcntii less.thllfl $200 ~r month. Trtidl' your home. HUI IT IS !! $23.500 FULL PllCI Short dl,taoct tCI t"IN'31\, ~hopplna: and fr"P"1l'"· J qu~n· siitd ~drriom.s. Tll!Cl\ JhllJ:" carl)('tJ and ~16RE. \I A fir rHA Tf'rm~ "·ith paymrnu ot only $184 ptr month. Tr1de )'Our home: WANT AD 642·5678 Gener el JI PILOT-ADVERTISER Almost 1: ael"f': SPK'lacular ocean I:. coastline \•ie11'!i. Onf' cf the r,111 prime buildin;: 1it's remaining in Laguna. Trrirated &: planred voi1h a :N"•t variC'ty of trtts around the futuTc building arca. $27.500, Call · AO/an REAL ESTATE 1100 Glenneyn SI. 494.9(73 .a.19-0316 Lido Isle Prime Lido Nord ternti1. Ci•v ••••••••••••••••••••.••••••• :. l'ti•n• •••.•••••••••••••••••••• • 1 TIMU TIMIS $6.10 $10.65 -- $1.21 $13.10 ---1 $9.76 $1 s.ss ' Wtdne~y, F'tbnl.lty 17, 1971 !~1961 ~laple i\V ... Costa flle.sa " TIMIS ----- $1S .9D --- $20.10 $24.30 • • NICE I & 2 BR.. Trallcr~. 2 BP., 2 ba l: dtn S9:i & up. 13.1 E. tGth St, 111tll-r.o-w11.ll cp1~ "-bit~ r.;D, 42, C~1. • 673-32'1;. • • I BR Trailer in Rollin!! I BR apt, "Adult s only. On lfDmt'!I /\dull r nrk. ND !)('IS, "'a1erfrnnt, heau1ltul vic1-1, f'or intD: &1&-4323. S17il mo. 67:1-8.JSO. LRG 1 BR . 11,,,,, crp1~. 1------------CUT Hl•I -PASTI OH YOUJI IMYILOPI 5 BR. 6 ba . .,,,. 'i!lci·aror, 5!: l~rwin Realty, In~. P. • " I s~-000 I 21562 Bmokhurst H.E. I Bi lbo• Peninsuli1 I bl tnll, 1 adult, 1'IO peJs. S1 32. -·-----------:I-::':::':::::''::::=::':'.::-::=-Yf'arly. 6-12-8010 • $23 \\"!\--OCEANFRONT r $15 per \\"E'f'k u p rr lot 11'r • 011 . 6'"· . .~5411 ·. ' lip of Lido Isle 5--a~ytime Beau!. .f SR., ~ Ba. hOtnc 2 POPULAR Monl1r.ello ~pill trp\n;, j6 ft. \\'ater frontage.\ le1·cl mori_el 2 + 2 tlen. Room for large boat sllps. 11..dult secllon. Rec &· pool Prl $500 IXKI j fa cil. $22.300. 0 w n er. I .riu G~n-dy, Rltr. ~.,.._,_1'_1_· ~--~-. 333 Oowr Dr .• NB &1:?><1620 Income Property... 166 ! NEW EXCLUSIVE 21 c. Onrige Gro''"· Baytront. 1Andy beach Rivenirk-11rea. 6 )T. f'll(I Imm11.cul1tlt t~f'~. Good iJl("(lmt, Xlnl :: OR .• dtn. l ~th~ C'Orrll!T' Joe. for lu tnT? 11p- ~\\-n hy 11pP0t, only pr'!i"l11tion. Sacrificr SiO.OOJ. $111.0(l(I 10'; Do\\-n_ ba.J. 9 )'ts. ~tay LIDO REALTY INC. It•"" I 2177 Vi• lido -673-7300 0\\1\ER ~IS.3263 M.lld;f"Mir 4 U~tTS. I yr old. Cm'nf'r lot, l ·l BR. 2 HA, frplc: MESA DEL MAR 2.-2 BR, 2 BA, 1 n1ctly J bdrm. 2 bath, 1'1' ki!Chtn k furn . 2 BR, I BA. 4 pvt tam J'Tn \\'ilh buUt-ln•. \V/\V I Jrllf C. ~I. $i6.'l. mo. Inc. CJrpl!lin1. dral)(~. !rpl, fDrc. SG!J,%0. P. o. Bo:< 212. Cd:-01 td 1ir. OOVl'rtd p11.llo. 2 cttr LUCKY "ll'', 5 dup]f'Xe'~ + gar. $31.~. O\\~r ,,.~Hng I h!r, E~. W/ftnttc! )d. f I~· b\' llPJ:l()ln!m~n!. ;\)7.1:11., Uf! t· 1m1""11.•ft l'f'nt11. 15,o " 1 _, .\ i::~ rin $111'f'f Al:1 6i~~. A ;oort \\"l\n ,.11 1• . ,.. , • -- 111\0--t 1'!'"' I •!" fil,-.,1;7~ IUSIN ESS REPLY MA I L Orongo Coost DAILY PILOT P. 0. lox 1560 Cotte M11a, Collf. 92626 CloniflH Dep1. Lovely Bachelors, I -Bl{. 11·/kltchens. S2~1 per 1\lf'f'k tl faid srl"\'ice. Pool. Util ''P Apt~ i\lOT"'L ,· 1g..9-,; • 67H740 e .. 1 c. ' 1 '"'' 1---------NICI:: 1 Bit Dplx. Quif'I. Corona del Mi1r I Srp. by. g11.r11gr!. Adult~ o\·rr 30, i\;o ~1s. .. 1~~1021 --~1 * COROLIDO APTS * ATIRl\C, 2 Br apl!!. SI~. 2 Br. studlos & slreet lr\•rl~. Arlull~ only. Kr Harbor & Sl~ &: UJ1. Pt nthou&ell $220. \\'llson. 6i.>-81Kl btwn S..l Dfthwhr. f'rp!, dbl e11irpor1. DUPLEX I Rr fum, quiet. Pool , 673-3378 I nn doii:s. ~ear sMpplng. • • BACHELOR Ap1, nta.r ~118-7720 nr"'· l\lan r r,.f'ri, UHi in· Am{ACTIVI:: E-~•dr Stud io el ud ed apt. 2 BR. 1 '1 BA. Ptlol. Call 6/.>-j120 I N('> ~t~. G41Hi&10 1 RR lllpl. S120. \\'•~ $120 l en-:--166•-Ne\\port 6iJ..7031 ; '<lttkdayll: !!'oll Bh·d, A1J ut.U inclUdf'(I. No frtf'I 6.18.8800 ~"' 28>1. _I pr!" or children. &16-8&83 r:ve BACH ELOR apr, 2 blk11 Imm )ISS . SHARP 2 BR. hi( ComnA, I adl!. no Pf'I~ Hr11rtd Pool Adult~ no "Pf:lA SllO. Yrty. G42-8.i20. ___ I ~t'n ~kl:_ M~.93:zO' 2 BR, 1 ba. C•P~. Pool, NJ. I BR. ,, 2 Brt 1r -8\ nf 11 ... ·y, ,\•lull~. no pct~. . · • / · l1 6.'i mti. fii:i.....;21.1 I CPt•. d11J';, nr ihor~; pool. UU' ;'II] !&~ :0.lont'OVIA. Th11 "Yrl10111 Pwc:!"f." {·lali~Hlrrf • 6~~ BF:l\UTlFUI. r URN. AP-rs. Sl·10-S\6j. QuiPt, prtv. patio. 2 \\"llrd,..,bl's, frple, d.tq~°' rm, lnckcd ~rp, R;ar. PMI. I Sauna. RPl' rn1 1 17301 Kttl.•o(m Ln. t 1 blk \\' ! Df &!arh Blvr1 , on Slat"'I • !M2-7Mli. $11:>-St:ti. LG!'.:, n1odcm t br hr neean: crpts. drps, etc 409 Calif. i'JG..1261. S4i·J169 --I BR, Slli per month u1cluding uul11Jes i I Trad~winds Rhy 8'li--8."i11 Blk 10 Oce11n. Bachf'ln1· · 1 apl, ulil pd. I ariul1, 16.i. I Yf'arly. &i2-3.J:!(l ,I \\' ALK ID beai:.-h. dehl'\~ I & 2 BR. pool. "" l 2!h SI. & 219 l:J!h SL DELUXE Bache~Units - \\lalk 10 Ocean. Util pd. LINDBORG CO. 53G-2:i79 i'i1rn. Bachf'IDr SlOO. CALL 646-2637 Laguna Beach ;$Qoo SJIARE turn beach 11pt, S8.i ''" lllO inc. utlls. Call 49-1-46;)8 Lido ltle 1Bf:Adf Apfs. ·tiiirifsl\CQ· 1 I Br.. l: BactM'IDr. Garagt>. f<!OO, $22.i. ,,2j(). 320 NDrd. Til: 642-W!l7 I Newport Beach Just For Single Adults South Bay Club Is a w~le I new way of Ufe designed just for single people. J!'s I fun l'ving with \\'arm, dy. namic neighbors. It'& a 1 hf'allh club, Sl\Unas, s\\im. I ming pool, party room, bil· liards, indoor golf driviru: range, tennis courts, pro shop and 1·eslclcnt tennis prD. I Single. 1 & 2 Bedroom ILL'I:· . modern conveniences avail-1 ury apartments v.·lt h all 1hc able. }llrnished and WlfUrn- . ished. I ?-IODELS OPF.N DAIL y . I 10 A.r.t. • 8 P.:\t . : I RENTS FROM $150 ··I NEWPORT BEACH 880 IRVINE AVE, IRVINE & 16th 17141 645-0550 SOUTH BAY CLUB ' ' APARTMENTS . • . l ive where the fun isl O :F.AN FRONT ·On !he beflch, :: Br, 2 83. magnili- rf'nt view ll'/gar11s;::f'. :\larch I !hru .IUl'le 1."1. U11I incld"d $2.iO mo. ~i48-4i~7 or 616-IS.1.l . I HOUSE traJlrr·I l>r Sl.L'l ~. ulil p11id. $(,() depw;i l riq'tl. ' ::'\o Pf'I~. no singlrs under 2.i ~>l&-4i79. BACHELOR in pv1. N.B. , I hon1(', F.mpl n111.n, pvt ~ntr & rlt>ck, SI~(). :"1'18-368-1. , I fiJ~-~1tJJ ! .... \Rr.f:. a!!rac :! Bi-. fl'plc, clm:I' 10 hf';ich. J11vail oow. '" ,J11nr " $!75. includ 's u1il_ f'Vf',~ 711: !IS2·78:l1 . 2BR uri rer · \Valk to beach-: $2:1() incl u!i1. Yearly, Avail 3/1. 21.l / 4·17-9-143. --LGE 1 BR a.pt 11vai: J"cl.I. ·' thru Jul1fl, $175 mo 11~/:i21--0988 • 827~000. I Apt. Unfurn. 365 Gener al -.. ' ' • ~ RENTAL FINDERS I ::: Free To landl~r!I~ =-645.0111 ,, t:=:: '4J§ W. l,fll, C•t• Mete I Back Bay • v1~;\v. z en . Crpt11, Ji5: blt n~. lrg pool ~ lltl ,. I _S!W/rno. Call 673-3690.,. Balboa Peninsula ....<r~ 2 BR. Fr1)1e., balcony :'115 E:, Bny. \Vtnter rah!!! S175 n1onlhly. Yrarly av11iit:•: tn.-I qu1rr at 11p1. No. C, 673--152:1 or :;..i~mt. VIE\V, 2 Br. 2 Ba, frpf I f'l~r. kitch, t.nc pr, walk 1D oct'&n k bay, Adlb. No pet1o. Yearl.)' $265. 675-S.197. Corona ct.I Mar ' PAAJ< Your Cftf • y.•AJk, I nr ocean, nr shoppinc. N~w apls. 2 BR. 2 ba. bf:am et'illrc. trplr. many >;tra11. sm .. ~ at lltl I ~ltu·xuerHt, 67j-4873, :'tlS-7!18.1. tJ"Ni(fuE ne'r 3 Br 2 Ba. hltn1o, cpts/drp!I'., d'hl 1ar. sm. 673-6719. 673-000-f I BR W/ •wln1 pool. Ulll pd. S145 'mo w 1 lease. •s1~ I Dahlia £d'!''Ntn•. 5-j~tn ' ARAND ll('\1-ID"'"~r duplt>11., 3 Hr. 2 fln. hlln~. cpl, ~ Dahlh~ :\.'ii &12-MA6. -"•II ir!lr ' "" " ,... ··;-. ;-,: .... -'' "'"· CJ'' ~I • .--. . .• . ' . ,. -··-·· OAJlV PILOT WtdAtidq, Ptbruary 17, 1971 WedneMil1. February 17, 1971 PILOT-ADVERTISE~ J2 IE~"'-~rtl/1 -"'-lrtl I ~~-l[!] .___I -·_""""'"__;"'"' ll!J l··-lw-J[t]I _._. ...... l[t] I ...,_ ...... I~, _ ...... ]rt][,.,..,_. ....... J~ AptL, Furn. or Unfurn. Aph., Apt>., . 370 1_.;.F.;.u;.;'";.;·..;•_•_U;;.;nf.;..;;u;.:m;.;•_;3.;.70_.;.F.;.u_rn_ • ..;•_•_U_n_l_u_rn_._3_71 Nowfl!rl a...ch Noweort BNcll ::A,.t. Unfurn. l6S I Aj>t. Unlum. 365 Apt. Unfurl' 165 AJlt: UnNrn. 365 Apts., Apts., ! Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfur". 370 1• ...... ~,'-------~ _c_._•t_•_M_ .. _. _____ .-c.-.-t-.-M-.-.-.-~~~._L_id_•_l_d_• ____ ~ .~-----_.;;..;.;.; _ _.;.. Co1te Mesa n CORDOVA Apts .-czw.n. dtl M•r 1. Huntington Baadt Huntin9ton Beach F··1RWAY •• WATERFRONT •• 11 * FRI~ w~ 3 en. 2 BA, "''· ''" VILLA RENTAL SERVICE nn. 1400 mo."'"'· 673-3.186 fl n ff to~. ~·· APJS, eo.1a Mcoa • Hunu,,.1on Mos• Verde of-a lo{uinla ..ftermoda --~ Beach e Newport Beach I~ 2 &. 3 SR't 1.2.3 BR APTS. I 2 BR upstairs. Gar. Ne"'Jy Casual estate living. Enter La Qhtnta Her· 1-!1 • 0~ TEN ACRES I Pl.ivate paUo, pool _ Jndlv. 1 Aak about our DISCOUNT decor. Child ok. No pets. mo!ia's lush green atmosphere & stroll tree- ] • ' a· R Fu linl laundry lac. I PLAN Call 636-0220. $150/n)O. 557.8400, lined walk \V!!fS to your ;i:t. "I' • m l urn. r\~ .. ~ n.... .... Co M-· , --N •-h ALL UTILITIES I CLUDED F,lrtplacell / Priv. patios. I uCT Adut,.e · ..... ~t rq I VILLA MESA APTS, ~port _.ac P'liols Tennl$ Contr.t'I Bkfst. 20122 <:: ta 1°nlf: A 2 BR, Prlv patio. fitd pool. I BR. Unf. $150 -Furn. $180 soo Su J..a.ne Cdll 6#-26ll ,1 ... an a _na ve. 2 car encl'd 1ar. Children MARINER SQUARE 2 BR. Unf. $180 -Furn. $210 • · " -M" J""chom Apr 'A 3 Spac. fir. plans, deco· •. f"-'"btn' gs·. tive (~facArthur nr Coast 111\ J .... . -• • ..-\\'elcome, 00 pets please! APARTMENTS,. o.u.iu.> •• ')' &46·~a $16:i mo. 711 \V. \VlJ.aon. Announct'c lht availability of \Vithin romantic setting w/fun or privacy. 64&-12:il 2 &:: 3 BR units for adults Terraced pool, pri. sunken gu BBQ's w/ Cost• Mesa NEW Nfl NEW VILLA CORDOVA QUIET-SAFE 40 Unit Adult Ap•rtment Complex 1 I. 2 BEDROOMS FURN. OR UNFURN. e Spacious Apartment& I P•rk-Lilce Surroundings QULET • DELUXE , , J.2 & 3 BR APTS l,:·.(lso FUR:.f. BAOi.ELOR -.·l\" patk>s • Hid Pools I \\'It.SON GARDEN APTS. de5iring to live anlids1 beau. s~u.lded seating compl. w/Ramada & Foun· 2 BR Unfum. Newly dee. ty by the sea in the pres· ta1n. 2077 Ch•rle St. 642-4470 New cpfll/drps. Spac ligious \Ye!tcliff area ot *Color co-ord. ltit w/ indirect lighting. Bf' sure to see I.best Charm. grounds. Adlts, no petll. Nc\\"port Beach. * Deluxe r•nge & ovens * Plush sh•g crptg. • Special cabinet space • Lock garaps w/ lg stor • Bin cell e Ladry • Patlo1 in~ 1. l 2 BR Spanish style, S~40/mo. 2283 Fount a In FROM $230 * 8onus storage space * Cov. cerport presuge apts f:>r sdults. Eii:. \\·~ E. (Harbor, turn W. For infonnation phone r.lr. * Sculptured merble pull"m •n & tile baths Ira lrg liv nns, shag cpl'd &: on Wilson). __ P..oberl t.I. Buckley, Manag. * Elegant recreation room. • Dwhr/diapl • Gu sto\·e e Special !!OUndprooflrl&' I ~Nr shop'g: * Adult! only drp'd thruout. D1\•hrs, 11pa~ MESA VERDE er, at l714) 545.0252 or \\Titc FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY • Shag carpets, drape5 GAS &: \VATER PAID i ·MARTINIQUE APTS closets. beauL pool, rec. 2 BR, cpts, drps, bltns, wash/ to The ~ice-of the !\tan. Blk from Huntington Center, San Diego room, encl gar. j dry attach. Locked ear & aa;l!r, i\t~r1rier Square Apts, fi'l'\vy .. Golden\vest Colleae. Mo.-Mo. From $140. ' _ J7'i San!a Ana A\'r, (,\! EASTSIOE I $~~: ~!ccr~~.rS,.~j;;;g ll.\.\ rrvinc Av<', NB. Cai . San Die go Frwy. to Bearh Blvd., So. on ' ltgr. Apt 113, 6'16·5.: 12 9266t Beach 3 blks. to l·lolt; W. on Holt to .•• 2323 Eld•n Ave., CM 646-0032 Brand new 2 BR, 1 BA. $173. NE\V Spacious 1 &: 2 BR, l Q "·~·· drp• dwhr .. 11 cl••-bl EASTBLUFF a uinta Hermosa 714·. 847-5" I .... ,.ui, • • ... tn5, crpt!l, drpll, garage. "'""' ing gflS oven, all wtr & ga11 Immed. occupancy. Sl0-1973 pd. I-ltd pool. 324 E. 20th or 54>23:21. 2 BR. 2 ba. vie\v apt. AJll~r"';'=========,..,..======= bltns, carpeted & draped. 1 Apts., , Apts., SEACLlfT l\lanor Apt!. 1 " 2 Br.., 11.2 BA. $140-$160. $30 move in allo\1·ance .+ .reg. di&coun!. Crp1.s, drps, •pallo, pool, infant ok. l:i2.i Placentia Ave. 5-1Pr2682 st. 64&-9!~ ~E-,-',,""'a"1u"'ff'-----year old. S235 i\fo. Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 BAY MEADOWS APTS. ''THE GABLES" J BR. 1 1 ~ BA v.·/ gar. $lii0. Adllil, Cpt.s, drps, lncd yd. 2131.n Orange Ave. 6JS.4120 1!70 · 2 Br, den., lrplc: redec. Cpts, drps, Patio, 11dj. i;hp'i· :;.48-8301, 213: 59WZ!7 * 2 BR. elte bltns, lock. gar, l\Iesa Verde al't'a. Big closets. $155/mo. No pets. 537-MOO 2 Br fn cour1. Sto\"C, C[l>L-., garage. 2 children. no pets. SHARP 3 BR, 2~S BA, 1fllO sq. ft. Studio apt, crpts, drps, nr So. Oil Plua. $200 mo. Drl\'e by 973 Valencia. Call 545--0718 )f,il'. Quiet Adult Living 2 BR Shag cpts, bltrui, beaut. lnd.Kpd, $170. lncl all tJtil, Adlts only, no pets. 2-1! Avocado Sr. * 646-0979 HARBOR GREENS JUI!, S\4j. :;.ts-.6031. 3 lge br, l 3/4 ·ba. $16;). 2 * FRESH AIR- 816 A:.'1!GOS \VAY .-.... 6~2-1771. SHARP B1urr1:, . Ho· . 1'" ~'· Nr. poof A l"l.ul 1\1111. s~·r .. ~ \Jr,, J,.,a,.,.., At: t • 67.~39:'.0. ---2 BR"s. X·lr:, nr b11} .t ()("f'an. s1;;; )'C''11'1,I ~;<'\\ ly d<"C. Adul!~. 67.:r. 117:! an G pm & 11•knd~ -----LGI..: 2 Hrt s!uuio. "' BA. CTp1~. rlrp•·. bl!n~ & D\V, l\<:a1 ll<i:1'.'. Jlos11. SIOO. &12....J:l.'>i t:1:?-li71. ----LIDO ISLr: . Fl11chelor!'! only !;~r 1 r:n 11p1, a!I util's pd. !i:IAI. 1110. G7j.JS92 DELl"'\l': 1 BR. 1\pl. Unlil Jul) :~1h Adulls unly. t Cnll 6i~r:::i2G • -San Clemente - 01..:LIJXE 2 BR 2 13a., bl1ln!, dshwhr. rCC'. roorn. Adult!i onl). SlSO. 49Z..22:l9. ·---Santa Ana . ----- VILLA MARSEILLES BRAND NEW 1-------- Coste Mesa BRAND NEW UNITS all with beam celllna:1 paneling pvt patk>s, frple, 'all rec iacu. ittes. Adult1, no pets. • Bachelor • e 1 BR from $14D e e 2 BR from $165 e :S7 \V. Bay St I bt\\·n Harbor & Ne\\'P<lrt Blvd, %. mi N. of 19th St). CALL 646.0073 -LG·! Br, 11~ ba studio apt. childrt>n ok. no pets, fan1iliell only. Pri\· Call artC'r 4 p111 . :i-1:l.J2l:l \ra.!k J blks to Beach: SPACIOUS 'l>A.U(I. 726 Joann St. $141) I SJ~ Bdr. Dix. Bit-ins. \\1ijh just a c:U L, you car. Cpts/Drp~. PrL bale. Gar. ·,ett It a.II! Place a Dail~ like nu, xlnt loc. 96:Z-.1180. Pilot Classified Ad . Call I Dally Piiot \\"ant Ads have itirect 642-567! TODAY~ bargains galore. NO MATTER )·~HAT 1 ~· IT IS ••• ~ l I I I YOU CAN SELL IT WITH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD For FHt Service & Expert Assist1nce DIAL 642°5678 DIRECT Beaut. big 3 BR apt. ,1· '' crpts, drps, bltns except refrig. S22j, No pct11. j36..J71J WALK TO OCEAN 1 BR. Crpls, dr~. sornc 11 I !rplc &: patios. Sl2(1.$1jQ/per mo. Adul!.'I. LINDBORG CO. e SJ&.2J7!1 WALK TO BEACHll t.OVELY NE\V 1 & 2 BR. Crpt5, drps. Ofshwasht>n.. 709 Pahn • 847.3!1J7 I BEACHBLUFF Apts ' NE\V 2 BR 2 Ba, dish1\'.:1Sh· ers, pool, ·paOo. 8231 Elli!. 8-12-S.ln or 847·3937. $140 ASh'. about our di.M:flunt plan~ 2 BR, ct11ts. drpg, bltJns. car. port $Zi ?.lo\.'e-In Allow. an~. m Utica: 536-2462. · . OIEZ ORO APTS , 823-1 Atlanta., 1·2 BR, f)()()l. j [ private garage. \'1ashers, , dryen. 536-8038: s.JG.2727 NE\V 2 BR from $13:>. Cpl~. drp.'I, bltns, p:1.tio, fnm sec- tion. play area, No pels. 84&-7117 l RR, 2 BA. Condo. 2 car i::aragc. PUol . $22.5/mo. Call :)36..7723 nftt>r 5:30 pn1, 2 BR . cloSt"d gar, p.it lo :u~a. Children & pet OK. $140 842.S.ll)j I 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. Adult Living Furn, & Unfurn. D11'h11aNhcr • ro!ur coordinat. ed aµpl1 ~1ncr~ . plush shai; carpet _ rhoice or 2 color ~chen1rs . ' ba1hs _ s1all ~hOl\"('11' . mirrored 11·arll- robe donrs • indirect light· 1,, '" kitchen breakfast b11r . hu.i:-e pri,•are fenced patio • plush lanWcapin~ • hrick Bar-B.Q's. large heat- ed pools S.· lana i. 3101 So. Bristol SJ. f'i :\11. N. of So. Coas1 Plaza) S1"nt1 An• PHONE' SS7-82DD . . CAN1 BE BEAT SIKGLE STORY South Sea Atmosphen 2 BR .. 2 BATH Ca~ts & drpi; Air C.Onditioncd Privntc Patio-; HI-.:ATED POOL Plenty ot \11w11 Carport & Stora~ HIDDEN Vil.LACI:; GARDEN AP'l'S. 2j(J() South Sal1a Santa Ana ~ f>l&.lll5 1 1 BR, crpt1, drps. rt'frlg., hl1ns, $135 n10. incl utll. Tradew1nds Rlty 8~7-Sj],t I IApts., Furn. or Unfurn. 370 I $13.i · 2 BR., '2 BATit Crpts, 1lrp~. bit~. j;hild o k . 89-1-21jl or 897-..~!H AVAIL no1v $159~2-BR. aii "'"1ni11. Pool k:ld11 ok. rurniturr :tvall. 96i;-i~lt'I 1 General PALM MESA APTS. I 81{ unful'n ........ $13.1.00 1 BR furn ........... $149.:.0 Baclt('lOD furnlthM fr'Qn1 Sl40. HUNTINGTON BEACH -Adults Look into ... OPEHIHG SPECill-1 BEDROOM TRDM 1145! CASA del SOL lleAr Jll beaches • P1ivate Terrace • Rec Building• SaunAs 2 Pools • Billiards • Gym • Putting Green ind Volleyball Bu11t·in K.itcllens • Di5hY.'Ashers • Oispnsals • Carpets/Drilpes Close to all shopping • Private Parking and S!orilge ALSO: 2 Bedroom w/Fireplace From $205 21661 Brookhul'31, HunlinElon Beath-(714) 962·6653 HUNTINGTON BEACH -Adult and Family Sections The possible dream ... I Bedroom Fro m $135-2 Bedroom, 2 Blths From $155 HUNTINGTON GRANADA Private Terrace • 3 Pools w/Cabanas •Built-in Kitcllens Dishwashers • Carpets/Drapes • Walk-in Closets • Dreui n& Room~ Close to Shopping, All Beaches and Lei!ure Areas 17111 Golden West St., Huntington Beach (714} 147· 1055 (Just South Of Warner) SANTA ANA -Adult and Family Sections Break the monotony ... OPENING SPECill-1 BEDROOM rnlM $1371 PARK PLAZA P11vate Patios • Rte Buildinc •Saunas • JJcu11i •Poot Built 1n Kitcllens • Di1hwaY!ers • Carpets/Dr1pu Nt1r South Coast Plua • Leisure Areas • r reeways ILS~ 1 Bedroom/1 Bath from $167 Town House w/1;) S.llrs from S175 3900 South flower. S.nb ln1-(114) S.5-l214 (2 bhxks east ol Bristol and MacArthur) ' fT Oakwood ... a new way to live in Newport Beach It'• fun, fine neighbors and prestige livin&. all in one luxurious package. That's Oak· \\·ood Garden Apartments in Newpor.t Beacb. just minutes from Balboa's Bay and beaches. There's a ~ million dollar Clubhowte with party room, billiards room, indoor gol! driv· ing range, men's and women'5 health clubl. saunas, tcnrilii courts, rHident tennis pro and pro shop. and Olympic size pool All this, and much more, jwt 1te1>5 frorn yout' nrofes.s.ionally deeora.ted apartment, each \\ith private balcony/patios.. Air condition· ing/fireplaces optional. 01kwood Gtrden Ap•rtments On 16th Street betv.·een Irvine and Dov•r Dr. (714) 642-8170 S,.cl•a 1 .. 4t•, 1 • 2 hdr••m Mltel. FintltW er 111fvn11lthd. Pre11t 1145. IMMMs.t. Occ1,•1ttY. MHeh .,_ deily 11 ni f9 I '"' 2 Br i15:l up.. 3 BR $1&1 up. Patio, pool, children ok. Inq. rental bonus now. l\10RA KAI Apt.~. 18881 l\Iora Kai Lane, !; blk E. of Bench. off Garfield, 962-<994. Newport Beach BACHELOR & 1 br apts. Nr Bay, Eves. 6i;i-7876 or 4M-2'2j(l Ren tats I~ FOR immediate occupancy in Orange County's most lovely garden comm"! com- plex. Comm'! pro!esaionaJ , & mrdicat 5uites, in San,· Juan Capistrano adjacent to Bank of America. 835-8035 DESK SPACE 222 Forest Avenus Laguna Beech Room a 400 494-9466 "N_E_W_PO_R_T_B_EA_Ol __ c;_·v-ic1J FURN & unf \\'/bath & kitchen priv, Pvt home.. Brookhurst & -Adam5 area. 968-3051. Center, 300 ft to 1000 ft. Aru;v.·. & Secret ari al. 67~1601 1'~URN. Pvt entr. quiet N.B. I j NE\V oUices, 17877 Beach home Empl man $60 Bl. Lo\1·est rents. C al 1[ MS-36s.t, 64Z..522J. • S~Z..2.i2J or <213J 394.0013. YNG college or ,vorking a:irl AIR COND., OCEAN. VtE\Vt Balboa Isl. Kit & TV nn asoortNl sizes, shop centerl lele. $65/mo It up. 67;).3613 San Clemente 492-2979 _ * $15 PER y,·eek .• up 1670 SAA'TA ANA AVE, C:\1 \V/kitchem. $25 per v.·tek Fron1 300 ~· 1L 3:ic gq fl. . up Apts. l\IOTEL. 5o1g.97;;;) 675-2-164 or 541-5032 FURNISHED utU pd y,•/kit 3700 NEWPORT BLVD, N8 I • • •ONTHEBAY • female only. Close to OCC, 67. 2464 "•! _ S70 per mo. 642-8520. I '"" or "'" . ....,...,. Rent•l• to Shere 430 :; NE\V office5, 17877 Bt~ch Bl. Lo\\·est ~nr.s. 8(2-2jz VICTORIA BEACH. 2 BR or 21:1: 39-HIOl:i tun, l•M!1v. Share E-:icp. Pref. • E:\'ECtrrrvE Suit~ of Of. mature yoong 11· or k i n g hcf's. 334:1 Nf'\1·port Bh·d .. person or 1tuden1. John f\"B. Call fi.1~54j 494-:>ijl. ~~.c...~cc...=::_ ___ • I 2 Rm 5ui!e, pvt ba, pvt en~. 1 GIRL tD share 3 Br. furn. Prlcg, crpt/drp, util pd. hse v1/ 2 othen. STJ/ mo. $145/mo. 0\\-ner. 67J.67S7 Balboa Isl. ~7-1829 or 67j...J8()6 afl 6:30 pm . or Business Rental 445 11·knds. w kl 1 dy b • SUITES avallable l\1edica1 50 to share home nr Gar--pro ess ona K, . or ng a et\veen li l:.j f 1 I bid. 11612 field k Brookhursl. ReLs. Be:ach Blvd, ll.B. Park~nr-96298S6 Air cond: He at i ng · Carpeting: Janitorial serv NEEDED, female roomma1e lnquii·e Sui!e 8 or call 18-2.:i to share bc!autiful, ~0-5724. · gpaciou~. octsn \'ie1v 3 BR house. 497-2047 BEAUTY Salon 1or LeaM. fully e<JUipptod ~n ahoppinc SHARE Ci.arming Bal. Isle. l center, San aem. 492--2979 ~~~~· Fem a 1 f' 400' STORE, shop, ottica. $95. 2340 Newport mvct, C.;\f. 6-16-2344, 543-&333 GIRL to sh&re 11n1I 3 BR h1e w/same, 1 blk lrom ocean N.B. 673-51,jJ aft 6 lndustrl•I Rent•I 451 SMALL UNITS COSTA MESA $~. &: $Hi7. Per ~lonth Immt<lhllc Occupancy FOR motor hOmts, trailer, Nriv 6.iOO sq. ft. unit, lSlh I \\'hllller. 110.2%0 po\\·er, APT to &hare ~·f working lad)·. Cs.II bf'twHn 7 A~t .. 1 P~t. 6G-3115. I Gar•e•• for Rent 435 boat, etc. ]652 Npl Bh·d, Ci\I. plenty oC parkhit. M2-2S21• &l:2-5106. See: Robert Nath'es~ Rltr: ' L•pun• Beach I OCE.\N VIE\\'. I.rt: Bach('lo r & 1 en 11.pts, Cpt11, dmi;, blt-in1, patio. \\"alk "g dist. t•1 town, 100 Cliff Dr. La1:11na IJr!aTh, ~94--~~s. OCf.A..\! front ~pec!acular \-ill1o1, JfuJt tm!l. l frp.lcs. ' &aut iTnd.'1 $600 ~1 o. 2 UP. apt.I $1T.'i n10. -· 1110./mo. Of.: e P(.l(Jl, -Managed By: Office Rent•I 440 I Costa ~lcsa 642-i,it> ' ll-.... D-E;...S_K;.;.;_;S..;.P_A_C_E.;.;.: CO"MERClAIANDliSfRIAL ~1500 Ml ft, t:.c to Ile * San Clen1en1c 496-1840+ NEW bldi;::, 1721-2300 1q tr. Nr B11kf'r It Jo'alrvlew, t yr. le&se. Sull!Vln, ~429. !s:i j e !',\t,;N A • JAc1;zz1 --1:-Mil ~!CAA. l>r, -1:)..1-lG:i.1 HARBOR MANAGEMENT CD.,INC. &\nla An~ 305 No. El C1mine Re•I So" Clemente 4!12-44l0 CORONA DEL MAR D1mt:·A·Llnt' 642-56i8-Dlnll'"A·L1ne &t~?! ' l PILOT ·ADV£RTIS£R Wf'd~sday, February 17, 1971 JOIN THE 'SELLERS CIRCLE' WE'RE SAVING SPACE FOR • • • ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ If you sell a service and don't advertise in the DAILY PILOT Service Directory, you're doing business the hard way. The Se rvice Directory I classifications 600-699 in the classified ad section doily) gives you on advantage you get through no other odvertiiing med ium . It reach- es customers who ore ready to buy. Be there when your prospects come into the morket looking for the services you hove to sell. If your service isn't listed, we'll start a category just for you. Pick up the phone right now ond res erve your space in the "Sellers Circle" .•• Your Direct Line to Directory Results 642-5678 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED AD DEPARTMENT • w ..... ,, '•bruatJ 17, 1911 DAllY 'ILDT ....... ""'*>• ... 1~,;.[ Loot_ ... __ ;;;.)8);;; Rentals Wanted 4611 F.....t llrH odt l :r CAR Cange in Costa I h1EDIUM SIZE Cocker mbc Mesa. To be used for I male, bm &: blk. Nr Wllson storage. Call Terry, The I .\ Placentia. Hit by car, Real Estaters 546-2313 undtr treatment al Animal UNF'URN 1 or 2 BR apl, ~~lter, Santa Ana. For lnlo nr shopping, N . B . -C . ~l . -~3562,=__, _____ _ area: Quiet older v.·ldo1\l. It.ACING. bicycle, m~ or When You Wont it done right •.• Coll one of the experts listed below!! Job Wontod, Mole 19 l\tAN w/admtnl&trative ~· per. lrl ambulalory ~-valescent bome1, Wu all phaat1 of bookltffpins 6 tlt.115 analy1ll In 111&Jd11:. turlng line. 1408 W. 9th .St., S.A. Call ....,.TI), ...... Mr. Dove. Job Wantod, Fem.ole 702 M6-SlfK>. I boya. D&rk color. Blue grips ~~~~;;;;~~~;~~~~~~ Ml$c, R•nt•ls 465 on ha.nil.lea. Patlloc~ to chain link lence In elly park * * * 1:e=~~~=.:,1~tc. ~~a67t~f1ar about 1 I SeMcnandlttplirt )~ [ S.Vlctsand,..,.n )~, ..._tndRepaitt )~ J~:1s5 ~h:.!!~::TH Call 64U560 Jo""OUND a mlxf'd Shepherd Coron• i6-I M-r , Husky, white w/brown, F I I T You are the v..Vu·M!T-9', l[j] male, age 12 mo's. Vic. B•byiltting um tur• ncom• •x 2 dcketa to the .. 19th & Santa Ana Ave., W t N tkwl I .. 536-861l. ---------·1FURN1TURE Strlppln1. Central Business Services •s ern • • , 111~;;;;;;;;~;;; 7ABO=u=1~o.,..-,.~,~G<,,_-nn-., COSTA MESA AJ.>, boat poru. Wood • eTHE TAX ADVISORS Boot S~-~orl.., "!.~. Penonals PRE SCHOOL metal. In out 10' vat p ---Re o. ~ 530 Shepherd Collie, female, 1 • 6"2-34.U. erm. o~ aa 8~1 tes at lbe 11 _P_o_rs_o_n_•_I•------yr old'." Blk & bro\\'JI 18th ll Monrovia,% day +l ;;;:-cc:o:-T"::-------I 328 No. Newport vd. ANAHEIM ., .... 5-18-3338 full day sessions. Planned Gardening Opposite Hoag Hospital • * * . P1'0£1'8.m, hot lunches. Ages 1---------For Appt CaJl ~ CONVENTION C.O. ENDICOTT FOUND darling white 2-6, hn 6:30 .Ut-6:00 Pi\1. AL'S GARDENING . CENTER 10572 Margarita Ave Samoyed, Vic: University Sl& v.·k-C'OMPARE! 642-4050 !or gardening tr 1ma ll INCOME TAX SERV February 20th rhnl 2Sth Fountain Velley Park -2 mo 'a old. Please 838-5237 landscaping service•. call $4 &: up, 9 am-9 pm wkdys. Pl.ease call &U.561! xt 314 You are the "'inner or identify. 646-2739. or • S4G-5198. Servin&: Ne\\>pOrt, Open eVf!1/wknd!. Appts between 9 and 1 P~ ~claim I 7=o0--,..,-"°",,--,-o-CHR1ST1AN mothtr I\' l 11 Cd'! ""--•• ""'·-M all .. o ~~o •ooo N•wpo" 2 lickets to the t..ADYS \\lllch. Vic: on the " . ......,,ta ... esa, uuY= av · '"°""""°' .M>'t4' • ., )'OUI' ticketl. (North County W •• ~rn National beach near 8th St. babysit your child days. Shores, WestcliU. C.M. toll·'-" number ii ~,t/l.J.220) 1• Full or part time or oc-t""=====-,.,---,-1 " ~ Boat & Marine 673-0287 casional. Fenced yard. PR 0 FE SS IONAL malrr Ironing • • • Show ~tALE Labrador. Nr. pier Companions. 50c hr .• $4 tenance, pruning, tree work, GIRL Frid y ttra ti all kl ., <prinklers. pes•·, disease, IRONING \\"8nted $:!.SO doz. ay-ng, a e w at the in H.B. c to enti.i. day. 548-139j "' /G 01 It Pub Raia 11·eed control. Clean up j:ibs. my home. Brin& hangers. "' en c · · ANAHEIM 962-T806. BABYSlITING my home, G ,,,,, ~-· Call ~j...(1665. tlons exp. seeks challengiJW CONVENTION X h d d Terms. eorge, ..............,, lull 1 \"-Call Lin :'\-!AN cat u a opte us. ?-.let.a del i\far, any age NE\V , nwns, n!-seed. "'-mpl IRONING mu home S1.l5 per ,,.,, .~m7e pos uun. CENTER please con1e &: get It. ~·elcon1e. Xlnl play facil.. ..... ..,.. ··v 1;1'N-U" 54~1 la\\'n care. Clean up by job hr. Brill&' O\\'fl h&ngert.1~=~·~--...,---1 February 20th thrU 28th · Mt lunches, e er ti I i e d or mo. Free est. For inlo 54a.-7641 AIDES For eonvaleaotnct, Please call 642-5678, ext. 314 SMALL female Sealpoint de-teacher. a.19--0126 897_2417 or 846--0932. 7'"-;;::":;=-----1 elderly care or family can. bet\\'een 9 and 1 pm lO claim clawed, very alfectionate, ii11iJ•1LLLLtbIB•hbi>i'"it;i";>;;;•;;:u,;-.,hhliW\di\;\,; \ ~E~X~'P~E~R~T~~,~"-=,.,-,,-, J•nitori•I J~omemakers, 547-{;68L your tickets. (North County fi.lj.1082 al! 4. my licensed home ag" 2 a p aneae WILL <:lean >'Dllr office or EXP. l>.ledlcal transcriber A toll free number is 540 1220) thru 5, ~ion thru".;ft-i. !!'.ardener .. Complete garden-1 .. " • · CHILD'S gold ring Jound at ... ,,. ,038 in: semce. Free est . comm'! bldg w/s~lal care Insur. secy, ful or ........ * * * i\Iariner'1 .Park. Call .,..,,.... · 6-ta.-03-ti. at rea80nable rost. Free est. time. -494-9618, 74-1-SlilS. FULLY LICENSED * 646-1031 to identify. BABYSITIER, all ages, U 213/473-4074 collect after 1 Holp Wonted, M & F 711 S · · a1· al AL'S Landscaping. Tree Reno\\'rK'rl Jlindu p1ntu 1st L SSS hours. \\'arm me s, big al y-~ mod 11 pm, Tue, Thur, Sat, Sun. Advice on all matters. ost back yard. 642-1:.92, Cl\f. reniov · lllu re e ng. L nd . B . Trash baullng, lot cleanup. a scap1ng A Better Love, \\farriage, USll'leSS look NE\VPORT H•igh'-'""'" -~ 1 d S'.\tALL yng fem cat, s ~ .... .ir; Repair :sprinkler&. ui.>-1166. T p It' Readings given ays a like Siamese vie Orange yard, sand box, Bala.need PRUNE-WEED-arr COl\1PLETE Prof. Ser v. emporary os '°" \.\"eek, 10 am • 10 pm. c I l"-h. xm·1 ··-. 00. ......,. Slate lic'd l'Ontractor. C.a.ll 312 N. El Camino Real, Av-:!.Jth St area -:'\ · ....... ... ... ., ,,...... \Ve Cater to Your E\•try 1 "968-"7l="8F-. ~-----I URGENRY NEEDED ... San Clement<:' Re\\·ard tor lnlo !W&-O:l56. =P~R~E-«;--hoo~l-.. -,-.75"'d.,-""'~k. \Vlsh. !>lj.Q73 mom. or 492-9136, 492-007~ GOLD link bracelet ~·/SI. Brookhunt It Adams area, eves. Painting & ADVENTURE Louis Arch charm. Lost Feb H.B. 96S-30j1. 'E~X~P~E:-R~l:-E~N~C~E'°"D PaJ)9rh•nglng G C RUISE 12 nr Se4!'s Candy Store.1s"AB=Y°'S°"J°"T-w'"'»'"'d-y•:-.°'ho:-t'""m.,.,atc:-s. Japanese -Amtrlcan PROFESSIONAL p-•·tt-. SAILIN Cd~l 673--0062 eves. big •-M. Ne. N" ..... t Blv.d. cl ~ ·• 150 ft. 3 mast Square Rigger. ;oc;-,-;-;--:::=-n::':-:OT:'' I 3 .... " " gardener, comp. garde ng Exler. 1 sttuy, iow u $200 Leaving 3115;n I 0 r 3 S)-IAU.. \.\'hite Poo d 1 e. & 19th St. &ffi-ll.)8, 646-$089. Ir clean up. 893-Qlj(), ~'/gd pa.int. Avg rm. $18 .• months. ~ten & \\'On1en \\'Ml-female. Baker & ?.lesa \VlLL babysit, my home, 8-5 IE'°XP'°. '"E'°R"". 1"10:-,::: .. "u"ao"'G°"•=ro.=ner Accous. ceillnp sprayed i. • cd \\'/desire for adventure Verde. Call * ii>T-403.2 • ~fon thru Fri. Hot lunches. Comp I et e Ga rd en\ n g coats $15. Roy, 847-1358 & travel & ability to share CHAR. Grey kitten "Tosha" 64:>-109-t Service. Kamalanl, 646-4676. -:.=EX:;i;ITERli;;;;.;;;OR;:..;·lNT;;ER°"'l"'O'°'R"•~I . Clerks Typists Secretaries Keypunchers PBX Operaton BookkHpers Assemblers expenses. For information Vic 9th St, Balboa. Feb J --,Lo-v"'t-.,.-,-.,..--,,-m-y~ho-m-,--GARDENING and Jaw n Won't be underbkl Custom call Pam Reynolds, 7th. Child's pet. 67:>-2Ta3. Fenced In yard care. ,veek or month, tree \\'Ork, finest paints. Free • (213) 378-2605 LOST: Gold charm (trolley • &1H031 • f'Sl. 53&-438j alt. 4 p.m. esUcolor .congulting. Reis, • PALM READINGS earl Vic Sea Shanty, N.B. I 'CH=1"LO""o:-,-ce-.,.m-y"ho=m:-:,-. °"P"cec.1 Husband Busy?' Call i\Ioose liL, bonded. Full linancin&: CARDS REWARD Call 551-8874. fer 2 yrs or older. Fairview 545--0820 alter 6-Repair avail. 492-5338, 543-0085 • Ancient Sane! Readings LOST: Female lrlsh Setter &: Adams, C.P.f, 549-0152 Bulld-Serv Most Thinp YOU SUPPLY THE PAlNT • Spiritual Readings 20 mo's. Vic H.B. Eves e LJCENSED babysitting, RAJ}; Gutters I nsta ll ed. \\'ill paint any nn $10. 697-9:!7:! -10 Ai\1-10 Pi\1 536-3098. Re\.\·ard~ S3 per day, Vic: Beach Quality v.-ork. Reasonable. Int I exter. F~ est. 45 yrs H b "P· Also ..... ~nter v.'Qrk, Work when and 210 \V. \\'hitticr, La a ra Green parakeet lost in vie & Han•anl. 892-781S. f'ree e~t. 968-WS ~-.... '"""=°""""°'°"",-,...-,-,--:=----,..---,-----any kind. ~1M6, Sj1-86J8. whtir• you wantl Next to La Habra Theater Bermuda, J\fesa Verde area. LIC'D Child Care, n1y home General Services SWEDISH MASSAGE "Willie". !WS-0559 any hours. Hot lunch, tenc----·------LESCO Painting Contractor ~~~~~~~~~: • • * Inter & Exter. 2 Story ANO SAUNA -"'~'~'~"',,.· ~"'~S-_383<_. __ _ KAY BRIGHTMAN Specialist. Also, accoust Trained t~h. fur rela.":ation. JJ l• l • \\IJLL Babysit • my h-.lme · Li & \" Interim S212 G • 11 !~L"""'"''.· ' .. " Personnel S""'ic· e Private rooms. fnt1ruction behind Pomona school r1nne 01.... !iii, • Open 24hours•1 ,;;mmmmiiiii~iiiiiii: ~~--•-ts._5.1>1____ Irvine No wa.sung Builders You are lhe ~inner of APER * 2626 Newport Blvd. t tickets to the * WALLP COSTA 1'fESA 645-0860 Schools & Western N•tion•I \Vhen you call "?i.lac" 44S E. 17th St .. C.M. 642-7523 -. st uctiont 575 BRICK, block, concrete, 548-l#t 646-1711 SINGLE? WIDOWED? in r carpentry, hoUM" leveling, Boat & Marine Divorced? Over 21? Discov•r a Gre•t Ne'# all types remodeling. No Show Equal OpP"'. Em ..... PAINTING/papering. 11 yrs . For a sell explanatory mes-CerHr With The job loo timttll, Lie. Contr. at the tn Harbor area. Lie & AGE no limit, 11->w top ec»- bonded. Ref's turn. 64Z-2356. metic skin care. We train. sage 24 hrs a day call 96~~ ANAHEIM I ;;i;;-~-'-;;;::;;;::-,;::;;:;;.::;'I Vanda Beauty Coun9e1o2' INT & Exler, Painling. 4~3227 496-40!1 "' 541-9991 AIRLINES Corpontor CONVENTION WOMEN CENTER Llc'd, ins. F~ .est. 30 yrs """A"N'°'17MA~L~S~H~E-L~T~&~R~ rnterested in joining Toast. mistress call .Jean Van Der Borden 6'1&-3253; 642.222.3 aft 5. FOR ladies only. $5 massage SJ!fcial $j, 1143~ Beach Blvd., H.B. 84i-9213 A l. COHO LI CS Anonymous Phone 542-12i7 or -wfite to P.O. Box 1223 Costa l\.fesa. ][g] Found (fre• ads) sso FOUND: Poodle, vie. OI :\fesa Verde. Call & identify, 642-7000; 546-138.'i. FOUND -White male rabbit. 642-79jL * * * A natural for )OOilg people who \\'ant excitement p.lus! Ticket Agent? Air Fn!lght? Station age n t7 Reserva- tions? Ramp or travel agent?' \\'e'll train )'OU for these and matt, day or nlte. \Ve Include placement u- si.iita~e. CARPENTRY Fl'bruary 20th thru 28th MINOR REPAIRS. No Job Please call 6'12-5678, exr. 314 Too Small. Cahlnr.t in gar-OOtween 9 and 1 pm to claim ages & o I h f' r cabinets. )'OUr 1icket1. {North County 545.8175 ti no answt>r lea\'e toll-free numb<:'r is 540-1220) msg al 646-2372. H. 0. * * * Anderson H•uling REl\.10DELING & ~pair MOVING, Garage clean-up Specialist, Comm'I, reside o-& IHe hauling. ReasJnable. tiaI, Paneling, cab In et s, marlite, fonnica. 644-7598. Free estimates. 645-1002 Est. ?.l Yf'!. Approved for YARD. Garase cleanups, Veterans. Eligible institution 1.C_•_•_,P_•_t_So_rv_ic_• ____ 1 trees dirt ivy removal, 1kip under the federally Insured loader, baekh<k. 962-8745. student 104J1 pro&:ram. Diamond Carpet Cleaning Airline School• Pacific 610 E. 17th, Santi An.a 543-6596 PIANO LESSONS Your home. Certifi e d teachers. Music Systems. Mr. llathcock, &16-1368. * * * Avg 1ize room $8 TRASH & Garage e.leao-.up, Repairing & installations 7 days. $10 a lood. Free Free Est. 6(5.1317 est. AnyUmc, 54&-5031. Cement, Concrete I ·H::-ou-,-.-c-:l•_•_n-,in-9---- •• CONCRETE. Beat The SUN Brite i\faint Carpets, Bad \Veather! Floors , floors. windows ele. Reskl1 patios. Reu. Call Don & eomm'I. Free est. 6'12-3514. 531-5621. CONCRETE, brick, stone, HOUSE OF CLEAN tile etc. Patios, walks, Complete House Cleanlfl&' drives, decks. Free est. 6'12--6824 exper. Chuck, 64.>-0809. PAINTING/papering, 18 yn 1 Man to work as.driver, ken. · ll ho LI" & nelman It dog he. collec tor. 1n arr area. .. M "A ddl · • bonded. Ref s furn. 642--2.356. ust ..... ve a r v1ng rec. • "7;:;;""o==C::C:::~7"1 be bondable. Apply at :llli12 PAINTING, professional. All Laguna Canyon Rd., Lquna work gua r n . Color Beach. srecialist. ~7081: 547-l+n CUSTOM Paper Hanging, In-ASSEMBLERS & ter/exter. painting. Save on TRAINEES paper. 53t-7991. , Shut Met.al/Wood FI.RSI' Oass Painting &. 3 immed. openings for tall paper • hanging, Free ~st. young men w/agillty. Some Call 56-3459. exper. desirable. Top pay. Plaster, P•tch, R•pair Openings muat be filled thb: ---'--..;.-"---I \\reek. Call Now! 9 am ID •PATCH PLASTER.ING All types. Free estimates Call 54Q..Q25 9 pm. ORANGE COAST EMPLOYMENT Plumbing AGENCY ----<------1124 Broadway, C.M. &&s.!lll PLUMBING REPAIR No job too small • 642--3128 • ASS'T. Housekeeper, for 1st. class hotel MU&t be exp'd. LEW TAKAS &. SONS Classified ad No. 69, Dally COMPLETE PLUMBING Pilot, P. 0 . 1560, Costa ~~~-~~~~~~-~-~~~~"""\\:;968-l\609~~~·--,,o---,,:c::-:-7: l·--,a~.~,~.~Bc""'•"ch;:-;J:-,,~,,~o"riru"'° PATIOS, \\/alk.s, drives, in· Crpls, windoWfl, floors etc 11tall new lawns, saw, break, Res. &: Comm'I. 646-1401. 24 HR SERV, 646-8340 Mesa, Calll. 92626. Plumbing • Elect • Repair A-RESUME put your ap. Trader's Paradise remove. 54&-8668 Jor est. ~tesa Clcanlna: Servtce TIIE very best in concrete Carpel!, Windows, Floors elc. \\'Ork now available. Free Resid. & Commc'I. 5484lll i1.so per hr plication on TOP. We com- 642-2755 M).0006 pose: & print SO copies - Remodel & Rep•ir ONLY $15.00. Call 6if6.-085t for appointment. \Vant mobile home. nr. coast: have clear 3 Br. 2% ba. home, $45,oo:> eq., blk. lo ocean. Balboa Bay Proir erties 67J. 7@> lO acres level farm land near lake & river by Love- lak, Nev. Intersection HI\')' 40 &. :;o. Trade for car, cam1lC.r or ? 5-K)..2:l:U WO & 9x12 Pre-war Chinese Oriental rugs. beaut color &. good cond & Lo\\·rey elec organ, cost $1400. Trade for car or '! M>3974 "rant Hi Desert Calif -OUI· ()f-state, health. Have a comer 00xll7 2 bldgs. Eq $42:\f. F.P. SSS." inc. $4.U mtl. Ownrr c.~J. &iG-&>.'i8. 10-2 BR units CM St%> ?II Loan 155.llOO 11uumable 111 i.6'.'r. Trade !or clear home l.hls area $2..l-S3(l;\f & owner !atry 2nd. Ag1 549-0Zl.8. What do you have to trade? List It bere -fn On.nge Coonty'1 largest read tn.d. "' porl.1i42.5678 * * ,. lines times dollars estimates. 613-139j aft 5. GENERAL Home Repair .1 --~------·I Income Tax CEMENT WORK, no job too i----------sma.11, reatonable. F r ee Estim. H. Stuflkk, 548-SGli carpentry, cabinets, doors, screens le misc. 492-2654 frade equity in beautifully ~lil'P'i-for 'iO Landeau ?.fo- tor home, 23·, sleeps 6, for tale model Sta.. Wag. Load· ~ w/xtrs. 963-1891, 5'11·9250 Contractor ROBERTS REMODELING CUilom Remodeling For Particular People Balboa Isle 673.9'282 1 BR. 3 BA, 2100 ft . W.ellf1, ROO:'\t Additions. L. T. Dover Shrs 11re11, NB. l\f.int ComtrucUon. Single story or cond. Trd S22ht eq, comm'I, 2. Estim., plans & layout. Ind. prop or Units, O.C. Dy 847-Jjll )42.9500, eves/wkcls &1Ml96'.! GAR., util or storage bldgs h it7j per sq IL (400 mi HAVE 27 Acre nut ranc f1 min) Resld, apt & comm'I \vllh houSt', Oregon. $50,000 al comparable costs. Equlty. \Vant loca1 Income. 64.2-5997. :'\ladge Davis Realtor ~IY Way, quality home ~-~-"'-·7_1XX1~-,-~ 1 repair, Wall,:, eeilin1, noon lf11ve Newport Beach du-etc. No job too small. plex, $20-P.l eq: want Desert 547-0036, 24 hr ans. atrv. Gordon N. Warren P.A. Roofing Since 19Jl. 6/J-334j TIME FOR QUICK CASH LEE Roofing co. Roofing of all types. Reaiver, repain, roof coatings. Uc/bonded since '-47. 642-1222. T. Guy Roofing. Deal Direct r do my own 'Mlrk. 645-2780, 54&-9j9(1. Sewing/ Alt•ration1 -A LTE'RATIONS, restyling, Expert titter, Top rers, N.B. area. 641)..2704 Call Roth Call. EUROPEAN dressmaking all eu&ton1 titted. Very reasonable. 673-1849. Alter•tlons -641..$145 Neat, aeCUl'8tt, 20 years exp, Tllo Hot Springs hou.-or • irul> l1"v"•"LKJ=N"G'""o.°'c"k"Coo=°'ti'°.,..::-o::;1 I mlt. i\1,.dg,,e .... ~;IXX\vi11, Realtor. all types. Lee Roofing Co, THROUGH A "''" C,.\f, &IZ. 7222 ~ est. *Veme, The Tile Man* CusL "'Ork. Install Ir: rep&in. No job too sml. Plaster patchifl&', Leaking shower repair. 847-1957/846-Q206, CE:R.AllUC tile new .\ I In\"<' $80.000 F /C plus ROO~f additions Ir concrete $130.000 eq. + SST.000 paper slabs It rernodel1, at S600 mo. \Vant 41).00 unit • 847--6333 "* motel. i\1adge Davis. Ren!· ~Ll-o7'd~Co,-o"'1r-.-Re""'°m00o-,"1"'1.,.- tor. &12-7000 Additions, Plans, La)'Ol.lt rtmodtl. F'rTe est Small DAILY PILOT 1 -~.......,.··.1com_ •. _' 3 '_·'_ 0 _'·1 Trff S.Nf« I.;....-'--'-..;.;_-'---- Equity 1n 3 br, 2 ba hou11e Kart E. Kencta11 548-1537 WANT AD TREES. Jtedres, Top, Trim, In Tu1tln. Will trade for Add itions * Remodellne cul, removed, ballled. lnl. Gerwkk A Sons, Llt. -~2-W9~.~_IJ J~:--. -ear, cam()E'r or '! Tlte DAILfi PILOT '.i! ORANG COAST'S l~ing * Call M0-233.1 * 673-0041 • 549-7170 Upholstery LTKF To tratlt? 0 u r 642 5678 M k I I Tr•der'o Paradise eolumo io " UC Uphohl•rer • Quall'> ar etp ace * tor yoo! 5 LWei, 5 Days for v.'Ork, Anthony's U p b . ------13. Call today ••. M2-561S. S<Mce. ~ NJ!. '-~~~~~-·-~~~~~--~~~ ..... ~~ --\ -. . . -· •• • ' . -. . ... DA!l.'t' PIL.OT * Wf'Glltiod•y, f'tbr~ 17, 1911 PILOT ·ADVERTISU 10 FEB.20-28 iii ~ Find Your Name ;: .. See The Big Show " ' .. FREE '. If your name i1 111ted In 1 special •d-;t could •pr.•r und•r 1ny cl1uiflc1tlon, to look 1t them 111-f)hone 642·567 , Ext•nt lon 31-4, bttwHn 9 a.m. end 1 p.m. te make 1rrlf't•m1nts to pick up your tickets at 1ny conve nient DAILY PILOT office. --- Be The Guest of the DAILY PILOT -l MARINE "QUEE N OF • --.<::!! SH ow c~i,~~~-~fe~:v o~~:IAL ~ow INF~~~u !~;;;;~~~~~~;~~~;;;;~~~ HOUSE· SKI 0 , c:j=-MARINE ~;;;~~~;:j°~~~~~~~~;;;;~~I ,~, JfJlllriill 1 !'Ill' ...,y,,......... BOATS: BOATS w ACCESSORIES I' 1 -· 1~~ I Jfi ..___.....,_"'""--,-~l!!J l . ....,_. ltliJ ....,.,,....., .l!!J ~-/ii1 liffiiba FEB. 20·28 ~---~& I -I& ~-'..,iii'iii' viiiouiliiiii;~iiiiil :. ••••• ;;~;;11 ~ ~ .... CONV •N TIDM DOORSOPEN i • Htlp Wented, M & F 710 Help Wanted,. M' F 710 Ht lp Wanted M & F 710 T\ ~ E1rn C E NTSR WE EKE NOS 12 NOON. WEEl<OAVSA PM Miscellaneous Ill Mu1lcal ln1trument1 m FREE 10 a iood home --'----~·----tOO WUT KAfll.Uo 4Y(. • .+JIAM!llll, CAllfOllllA ADULTS $1.7S• KIOS ta.ltl 7$1. -lovable blk/br short haired ASSEMBLERS for camper faC't'lf')'. f\t ajorway, 869 \Y 18th St, Costa Meu e DENTAL ASSJSfANT -HOUSEKEEPERS & ?ilAIDS \VESTINCHOUSE r ir Ir l 1 , e MAGNATONE Amp, two comblna.Uon Searle & mln. De!k only. Dental exp. nee. 1 trained and pla~ tno ftt) 1 cro"·lOP .lrttu.r, twl door U" 1peakers, re ve r b , SbtP. 15 weeU hsbrk, sho\Ji:, Ins., acct's rec .. some Sat's. al5> schoohn1t for you~ l II 1 I] I II 1 J] 1 ]["'"· J compartments $100. SUpu tttmelo, 2 cbannela, cover, Xlnt dilp. 546-6326 2/ll Arf'N: Ladle• 30-60. Ground ~ hen's. H.B. area brides. SUrfslde Domestic Eft11toynw1t f £"'*'ymerot Mtrd\andisa V delux GE stove, dbl ovtn, like new. Seit otte r . 2 ~!ALE pUp• _ &m. mixed floor oppor. ""'/a nationally Call Sam-9pm. 846-~. &hool. Call us 646-S!lll grill, rotisserie, pulh button 838-3j()Q Bea&le _Terrier. 1 wks. old advert~ multi-million S JIOUSE\VIVES -3 openings selling, like new $125. DRUM SET, complete, $200. champagne & w h I te . ros:metir finn. New \\' DE!<.'TAL ass't. exper, pa.rt Pllhne. Aver $3 per hr. Sal Help W•nted , M & F 710 Furniture IJO Queen bed se1, complete E.~cellent condition. Ideal for 96S...Q63 9W. Christine Dr., Coast Ofc accepting ap-or full tinit-. l\laturr, No €'Xp. l'M'C. \.\'e trttin, l"or es ARE YOU _ $25. Cosco 2 chair 1ervlng advanced student. 548-5148 11.B. 2/16 pllcations lor pan or f/lime I * 968-5782 * •PP!. c::all !'¥trli. Muller OCCUPAT!Or:lALL \" * \VA IT RE SS.DINNER WHY BUY table $Ij, Chrome kitchen eve or 'veekend. HUNGARIAN Sheep Dog, ~.ork .. Avg $10 hr. Call JI.In . DEPENDABLE '"b)'S.>tler * .>l&-5770 • HOUSE Exp'd-food &. Mt, -t chain, xtra lea\'es m·'e, -'J blk. g mo. All ,,. 836-6021! ll ~ .,.. ~--c---.,.-C'.'c-,,,---·~ DISTURBED? kl I , d k $20. Broi~tn n au aahyde • FLUTE, Gemeinl\a.rdt, .. ;u orns, am pm. up to 3 days 11·k. am or ~um"',·~eb",,',·. ,",',',·imoin,_ 1P1•.·8;,_ START A NE\V CARE£R ~::e;,~:e~;s 9J IU 8 12 i:on: 1 fURNIJUR£? covered chair $25. Maple Good oond, uklng $70. shOlll very lovable, to • At.rro POLI S HI NG &. pm, sit "'/small son of nice '"" . Sl2000 1 $18000 · 1 cha! $20 2 * 546-0605 * ver). c oo d ho m e . DETAI L position!.. Exp'd parent.Ii \\'ho rcl!ide I n 96&-3666 Look ' ' be o ' · SA'.\t"S SEAFOOD, 16:178 , occassiona r · ----------, -192-~ 2/lS . cl . • . b"' d 1ng to lier your 1ncon1e Pacific lhvy. l!unt B('h chest of drawer• $5 f!:a. 4. engine ean1ng paint-w-Harbor View area. G pay HSKPRS Empl)T pays tee. & build a futurr 1~·lth Sf'CUr· Be Flexible I dra..,·er 32:c42" desk $20. 20" Pi•no1/0r9an1 126 ting. Salary open. Gro\.\·th &: pleas. <."01id's. 6-1-1-1536. George Allen Byland Agney ily, 30 10 90 day training * WAITRE SS-EXP'D l"l.l'nt 1no. to mo, with brass \\'all elec clock Si co. ~iETRO CAR \VASH DRAPERY workroon1-feml, 106-B E. 16th, S.A. 547--0395. progr.i.111 that will qualify l\lust be over 21. NO PHONE 100°/o Purchase Option Everythinr in gOOd cond. CLEARANCE 2950 Haf'b?r Blvd . C.~I. vc.p'd po\.\'er mach opers & you 10 earn Sll.00'.) 10 $18,000 CALLS. Apply 1n person, Ind. item selection i\lovin&, CdM, 673-3743. SALE Auto w/train. Beach Draprry * INSPECTRESS * a year. S4.')I) draw & bonus & Surf & Sirloin, j930 \V. Coasl I 24 H r. Dtly, * AUCTION * I 2 SALESMEN Serv. 900 \\'. 17th, C . .\1.1 c~prns(' allowanC"c. If you H11·y., N.B. I c_USTOM Ovel' 100 P ianos I: Ortans Need J combination new & 646-3909. , \Vi1h e;xperlence preferred, qualify, ('arnlng ivil\ eXCt'cd \Vaitrcss~s EXPERIENCED. Furniture Rent•I Fine Furniture Rtoduced for immed, sale. Used auto salesmen. ExCt'I-ELECTRONIC engineer for for first class Uotel. and Sl,000 !)f'r month. while irt.iirL oi·cr 2!. Apply CoHl'P Shop, j17 \V, 19th, C.i\1. 548-::4SI _ & Appliance· I Buy Now. & Sa~el lent con1ml1;1ion & demo limiled tie.Id 11·ork, in.plant pleasant working conditions. ing, llotrl Laguna, Lag. Bch. A'laheini 77-1-2800 Auct10ns Friday. 7;00 p.m. Open Dally 10 til 6 plan. lmpita!Uatlon & mcdi-administration, sales & Al.SO . Night t.laid. 17I4l Jo"'OR CONFIDENTIAL * \\'ELDER'S ltELPER . Lalfabrll 694-3108 Windy's Auction Barn Fr: 10-9 * Sun 12·5 1;111. service of industrial elec-644-1700 Ex1. 5T.i. INTEP.VIE\V .......,,,,, N ~ CM 616 .,,..,,. COAST MUSIC S T TREAULT I Par1 rin1e. 660 \\', 17th St. .w•J >i e\i;po,., ·ooov NEl'~RT •-HARBOR EE AL E I Ironic instrumen!s Involving * j.il-5733 9 am I pn"l • Bldg. l8, Costa i\1esa 5. PC Spanish beJroom se t Behind To11y'a B!~g. Ma t'l. Co•la '.cMesav ~* "" -~ SALES MANAGER inlegrated c.ircuits, digital • includes· 9 drawer dre vo"""-""'' h ' ., __ .. SARAH Coventry needs II. tl'OMAN to l·lr.11n v11canc . . sser RUGS! RUGS1 RUGS' HARBOR AMERICAN tee nques, """''"'resume to ' 1 N 1 \\·/ mirror, dbl headboard, . · · 19'9 H•rbor, Costa M t s• Classified ad No. 73, Daily · or pt lime he P-0 n-apts. Expcrirn~. Cal 1 2 nile stands, $109. Jusl nght. for car-boat-HA..:\l~fOND, S t ein 1v a)', Yamaha. Ne11• & used pianos of most makes. Best buya m So. Calif. at Schmidt l\tuaic Cti., 1907 N . .i\tain, Santa Ana. •AVON • REPRESEJ\'TATIVES V? adwrti.sed reruJarly -nr p.nd l\lapzint's. Be on )'OUrstH and enjoy high f'llmings. Call now - :H6-i'Wl llr ;;.ia..70.11 l'ERSOS N'EI. A GES CT Secret•ry to $575 for Operation~ l\l&r w/tech- n1ca1 !inn in So. Santa Ana. Xln't skills, must be (ie.xible \\'/good lllfitud,. l personal- ity. P!lol, P.O. Box 1560, Costa I . ~ vestmrnt. \Vilt train, min I after 6 Pl\-1 5,;7-0180 Your choice of any lamp camper-trailers. Bo1h rn11. :\Iesa 92626. ' • -age 20 54:>-42!16 & 839-7:l68 X-RA y TECHNOLOGIST, in stock, 2:1':' oil. 2 only-18" HundN"ds to chose: from. EXCELLEN'T comm., :l\l/f'. I · ~ 5425 \'/Jfh or 1v1!hout special pro-! black & \\"hile portable TV's Must sell to . help pay Hoip. A product for bus. &. home. Sec'y cedures. Soulh Coast Coin. in good cood $j9 ea UfF & Dr. G: bills I8l i\lerrill Very simple to s e 11 • Part_s De?t. ~H, at·cur 1.yping. mun1ty HospitaJ. 31872 Coast 188;> Harbo~ Blvd.' C~l:l_P_l._S<_S._O_TO_>_. ----- 496-JjT2, 499-2940. M ail Girl . H1\')'.. So. Laguna. (714) 548-9-lj7 R eceptionist $350 1 499-1311 Ext. z.:-is 1-----------1BOAT parts: Inboard tank!, * EXECUTIVE * JRVINE PE RSONN EL Typl' ~ l\',p.m, T\VX .. ,. "TRA JN. CO.,JE i~ o"r FURNITURE_ returned trom Jack Cole bucket seats, * SALES CAREER * 1 $£D• N E WPORT -~ ... props !or i\1ercury :-l(I hp Starlin&: salary plus conim. r...VICES•AGENCY I I businl'ss-~iakr it } our~. display studios, model horn· -12:'> hp. Controls, cables, First ye a r earnings of 4&S E. 171h <at lrvincl C.~1. IJPlerOsonn,e OArgenNcyB ~~rer. 1training11· Ea,rn "'h,.ile ! i.-., dc~~ra~~~~~~~1~lation. single le\·er cont ro l 1, WE have 21 new & used pianos and 10 new & used Ol'ilUIS, all on Specia.I Sale . Some at or n«:ar dealer's cost. You are sure to find what You want at $12,000 plus. Possible 2 yr 642-1470 ove ., , , , ~ou f'arn, "'" r i;. or I R D FURNITURE 11• i nclshield~. instrun1ents, training progTani by centw·y 1 ,...,,.,..,..,..,..,..,..,.. 1 .. ~~~64~2~·3;;8;;7~0~,..~ app1 call K-Korp 827-2420 etc. Bargains. 5'19-0j3() ol d national co. Business or or J::.0-3.tt1, 1844, Newport Bl., C.M . SACRIFICE; 2 Goodyear WURLITZER splntt piano, sales background helpful. No JANITORS-Exp'd only, work * SECRET AR y -Ex-Young ATTORNEY lo "·ork ~·on., 'fhur, & Fri 'Tit 9 G70 x 14 \1ide ovals on full keyboard. S po 11 e ss t\I ARD'S BALO\VIN STUDIO 1819 Newport Blvd, 6-12-8~84 tra.vel/Mgmt. opportunities. Beach Cities. I401 Kraemer perienced & familiar ~l'ith in small 1;, atty' s 1 \Vcd. Sat, & Sun 'TU 6 new chronle reverse rlmi walnut finish ?o.Iust see. S47i ARNIE NIELSON Blvd. Anaheim, Calif. rnedical trrms, par! time. dO\\'nto\1•n Los Angele.!! of-AlOVlNG: All like new, $8,j Hurst 3 speed .!!hitter 96~71 8l5-454S Ext. 288 e LAB T EC H NICIAN South Coast Community rice. Good schola.slic bkgrnd bcaulilul 8' sofa $IOO. Com-and Chev, trans $4;) 348 ..:c.:..:=~~~-~-- A" ' •... • oppo~"o>"Jy Licen~d. Part lime In lge: Jlollpital. 31872 ~ Coasl Hwy .. I rcq'd. Sl3.200 per annum. modes S3j ea, Mr. & ;',lrs Chev f'n"". tripo"·er, cam, Studio Crane! .. ;u ''" So I •g""° 1•141 4Ml111 h 121, • S'6", Xlnt cond. Make offer. Pediatric Group. 646-0545 ,,.,·, J~ ... _ '7.,.. Tel l\1r_. Butterwort .,J chairs $65 ca, game table, more l:l16. 893-6460. Employer !\f/F r...'\t ...., Pvt pty ~2645 t-.1rs. \Varren. • 627-3141 I Slj(). custom quilled sofa. * SPRING · * DRIVERS * LEGAL SEC'Y SERVICE E.~:tab'd, Fuller dark pe~an cocktail & com· WARDROBE '* Piano, small irand "'/bench. E • , . . Brush rtr. $12.>$175 "·k. to f§J mode, Kng: &. queen bdrm . • ~ Maho&a.ny. No xpenence 1\1ust be xln t typl!il. 5?mC' st .. al~o pt , time 546-5745. I MerchMldiw I "'" sets lamps 2 desks $15 sizes .:i, '· !l, 16, top labd.s $ljll, * * * j~0-M32 N I cxper. probate -P T. New. . V & si2i ~9o&l. beUs, sports 1vear, sweaters, ecessary. port Center Ole. \Vr11e Clas.. •SIN~LE needle p o vier . dreSSl's, coats. loads of ac. Sporting Goods 830 Must havl' clean Calilornia sified ad No. 62 Daily Pilot, ma.chine cperaf'ors Also l\1UST sell, beaut. f\ledit-Sl $1-s·· 8922 dr" .· record Apply po Bo !560 'c 1 i\lr trainees. · lerranean lurniturt. Gold 9· cess. · ·a. l..l· -11 ing · · : x · 0~ a sa, i\l.D l\1ANUFACTURil'G Appliances 802 wfa & love seat, $275. Co!-.270 Remington model 1611 .:?7(1 Remlngton model ';"60 Y~3~LE~~lhC:i.~ C~~-Cah.f. !l2G2G. . . , Ne"·~rl Bf'ach &12-856j * * * ft€' & end ta bles. Veh·et \.\dlh Weaver 2.5 s 7 power ~~~a~~;av:~~ x 'ZT ~~ Stcr .. •ry to $SOO I LVN s or 11~al1fled person~ I SHARP legal sct'y or tra.inee RALPH MCADAMS high back ehrs. Blk naugh. variable scope, 2 extra Need young front olc. se<''y ESTThtATING & lake~fr !or drav.:1ng blood 1 n v.·anted by Auorneys in H.B. 21 2 Sequoia W•y II' sola & love sea1. $1j(), clips, $135. Also .243 Sav~e ~=d S~. ~;: ,:av~v~~ to work far exciUn& N. B. \\'Ork for landscape ~I\+ laboratory. Sou~ Co a~ I Be:aul cUicl': & pleasam sur-Came set, lamps, pictures. model 99f 1\•\lh \Ve.aver K-t nrm in property mgmL Lite tractor. Back~und 1 n Oln1mun1ty Hospital, 318j2 roundings. Good typing & Santa Ana all 2 mo.~ old. 714: 897-8651 scope $130. 557-731:>. 1 .,'~"'~"=S~l">l~·~"='-~"~'1=5=. :;:;-.;;;; SH llO p 1yp·n ad math, construction, expe_r Coast H"'Y·. So. ':Aguna. dictation skills n e. c e 11 1 . You are the 1vinncr ol SACRIFICE _ IO rms near NE\V Heavy Duty Skil Saw .770 REMINGTON model 760 w/figurt;· .m. 1 g, prr!'d but not req d, \Vil (714) 499-1311 Ext. lXi Under 3-9S2-ti6U 2 tickets to the neiv ?.!edit. furn inc. 8, No. 554, 8\~" ball bearin&" with Weaver 2.5 x 1 J)O\.\'er train, Apply 1920 So. Yale LVN _ All shift! lull time. • a. . · Western National black naugahyde sofa & is;;, Ray Ban amber trap variable acope, 2 extra • . St., S.A. Personnel Dep01, ii o a g Social Director $700. Boat & M •r ina J t d 11· s"""'l"ng glasses $10 1534 clips, su:;. Also .243 Savage Gor_f Friday t.o $450 EXPERIENCED •'IOLDERS H"'p•">•I, N.B. C·ll Lo,,;,,, \Vestclilf Per. O\'esea ' neVt'r use ' j(), '""' I . \ K • LOVABLE male beige and \\'ht terrier ml'< -4 rnog, med bred. IAves children. Nff<is good home. 54&-3562 alt 1 PM 836-4493 2/16 6 PUPPIES bca&:le. aize 6 "·eeks old 11.1!aned, 4 blk/\.\'hl 2 blonde. A!ale, female. Good with cllildren. 6-12-6878 2/16 DAU.IATION P edigl·ee. S mos old. Female, frtt to good home \\'/fenced )'d. 493--3894 2f\8 2 adorable l\t & f' blk l brown sheperd mix pup11. Netod fenced yards. 339-7181 2/lT i\IALE Pedigree Basset hound 21 I yrs old, tri col- ored, has papers, free to a good home. ~7379 2/1 6 Need loving homes for -4 adorable Ba'>sct 1ni.x pups. Need fenced yards. 1-892-1654 01' 836-44!13 2117 FREE 6' tall Fan Palm tree, Bl'aut & heal!hy, You di& fr om f ro n t y a rd . 968-900-1 2/14 LOVABLE ~~ dachshund ~I chihuahua brown femall!' . Very a ffectionate to good home. 540-2333 2/.16 FREE to good home • adults or lamily \\'/older children. AKC male Pekingese, 4 yrs old. 548-1223 2-18 BEAUTIFUL half l\lam lon1 hair male. 3 yrs old. Lovely disposition ONLY to good home. 642-48-18 2/19 3 ADORABLE mixed breed Hound Dogs 1 "'kit. Need gd. homes, 11523-9194 , 8?.6-4493 2/ u: FRIENDL "I' Dutch rabbit & guinea pig who share a lge cage need gd, home . 557~~ 2/19 ~-(50 til . " .. Show Bunk beds 5· collee table Newport Blvd, Costa l\Jesa. model 99F \\-:ith Veaver ... .,. .. 1ng w.p.m.), lngetc. nd TRAINEES days or sonneJ Agency, 2043 \Vest-at thf' • '•=='=~-~--~~ scope Sl?.CJ. 5.37-7315. Conitructlon be_ kgrnd help. ,'·,ghts. '•l•·G-go' , Y••ht *P~V.kN L·,.,J0oJIO.Cllon',oo,_,,',h~l0t0. *, cliff Dr., N.B. s.1:>-2770 2 end com m od es, IRVINE Coast Country Club 1,,:_::c:::,.,=~~~=,--= ~-IINIATIJRE Doxle, maJe f 1 La.gt H 11 " .... "' .... ... ..., ... ANAHEIM hide-a-bed, Spanish King family membership for &al!: Sl\!S Head Ki\!y's SOO's llith yrs old. Blk. \\'/broivn. u · ina 1 s arra. Corp., 1631 Placentia. C.M. Center 5,12-so.;4 SUPERVISOR -Direct Sa!ca. CONVENTION b ti r-m-. ve r y rs n b I. frum member. For in-?>farkcr bindings $125. Used Needs loi·e. 646-5136 2/19 AbOVf' position~ all Ice paid by employer .. , • Alao Jo·ee Job~ EXPERIENCED lull chg You mny be one of the CENTER 213/925-~622. formation call 673-91Jl, Mr. ju~! t11·lce. 673-1j82 MALE-full !i.J11e, n1ust be ' k t k 1 1 -0~=====,.-,~= NEED gd. hon1e !/yd. for Bookeeper thru P&L. must neat in appearance, 18-25, d ~y pco~ we ~ee ° February 20th lhru 28th ' Lll\E Ile\\', lrg 7 p <' Smith . • 3 SURrBOARDS, 8', 7'5", lovable gentle min. German bf' xlnt typist. 5-ID-9772 for food-to-go t1elic111esse11 . See dcvc °.P a 1 1~',1~ ll II Please call &12.j678, rx1. 314 Secretary desk, L shape, CUSTOMIZED DOORS 6'1", lo rails, UP TO $4i Shep,,.rd, fem. 64j.J96j 2/l9 appointment. c I stribu1ors. lg ·!OCOlllC ..,.. 9 d I I . s-9 N 30x60 E f 714: 536-1911 Harold. 49a E. 171h .l\I. potential for management· ""tv.·cen an pm 10 c aim 1 · ew · xecu we Arlisll'Y in \Vood by Artis t 6 EXPERIENCED maid, part i\IEO. TRANSCRIBER _ ntlnde-d peopll'. l\1en or your ticket!. (Nonh County desk & _lrg high_back Slvivel &. Scupl!or. Call 962-6269 for -T-V-,-R•dio, HiFi, P:~~ t;>°G~.L~~~e!'u!~l '· lime. Apply ln person 220,; 3-ll, full time. PerM>nnel \Vomen 5'15-j960 toll-[ree number is 540-1221)) black vinyl chair, SJ89. Lrg estimate. Stereo 13' 67>-8954 2119 410 W. Coaat Hwy. Suite H N .B. H.,~, Blvd c M H N • * * 30x48 1 dra\.\-er desk needl!l'"'Joo· m'Ri~· ·~-:;k~;;;;Ji \-::::::.:::... ____ ..::::::I uu ' ' . Dept, Hoag osp, ewpt. SUPERVISOR LVN tl-7:30 ..,,,,·n. IJO. UIT. l'~ Ha,borlTAXIDERi\I\:, birds, small EXPERIENCED . Bch • .. ,.,,.. and GARRARD ttton:l<hanger. p ART Shepherd pups :; '>''ks \~~r.~NNT~~'~G,..mod~~ .... ,..~ I ,._ o-rator' 1'0w, ',",g,-1 · a .m. rel, sh., \\'k end!I. O'KEEFF. & f\lerr111 s1o\•e Blvd 0.1. 548-94.57 animadl• m,0'"1 1ed on ~"hda p'·~r. ~amo"' styi"•· ,.g, old T.o gd, home, Aft ~. 64S.2716 BE .I N e. no exp. mac 1"" ,,.. · liliddle Aged \~"Oman, 30 or Park Lido Conva!escen1 · carve tea P a.que1. "" >' .... J_ ..,, "" "' 1 afternoon a \\·eek. Great loll. Female, Call 673-1731 over, neai appear.i.nce for Center 642-3)44 SlO, lkl'\dix Refrig S25. Ken· 3 \\'HITE lefl h11nd doo r service 64;,...3~62 el'eS. $39.50, special $77. New Al· 6f.>-8954 2/19 · u 1 1 .. __ .. moIT \\o"a~hcr SJj, Zenith re.frig in ttip cond ss:> ea •-ob'• ,,, ... ,·. <'~ E. 11th. 1 YR old pan Doberman· pay, stnc y or un. ""''•·• Full Ch•rg• ASST f\tANAGER TRAINEE.TE LEPllO~E ad\"ert~ing 21" TV $15 & miscf.'ll !urn. J 8' . gold sofa ,i:. chair~ H''IBRID "R~ \\'orms". 50c .,. .. "~ ... ..., Shephf'rd. fem. Cd w/klds. desc:r1ption to P .O. Box I0026, Bookkeeper Starting salary $325 mo, In-lroni our pleasanl Nel''l>Ol'l , All \.\'Ork gd. sg 1-o1::9;:. in xlnt colXi. s7o. 1 g· for forly, 6x f?r iuxty. ALTEC A7-500 IP~ ll k er Aft -4. 67:Hl9."'~ 21I9 Santa Ana. JOB COSTING. i\1ACHINE quirt" in ()('rson. PAY-LESS oUices. Hrly 11·ages. i\Iorn---Spanish sofa & love Sl'at, Cra1\·dads for caUah, 14-$1. rystem. 19561 R oder ic k *" BOAT CARPE.'\'TER or SHOP EXP. ESSENTIAL. SHOE STORE, 2'nt Harbor ing or C'Ve. shiUs, 645-3030 * GAS di;•f'n & teblt $69. Ufl'', l88j Harbor Blvd 5-JG..-6481 aft 5:30 Lane. Huntington Bl'ach. CABINET ~1AKER. Ex-FEE RE·U.ffiURSED. LO-Blvd, C.1'>1. 33, i\lr. f.1adrid "'ashers, $j()_ \Vilt de! C:\I. :»&-9-Jji 'CtmHES galore, H igh 21' COLOR TV RCA S95. perienced. Penn. job, fringe CAL. Call Ann $45-7770 ~fODEi..S~ompo!!ites &: TELEPHONE Ansviering \l'/guar. l\1str Chg. i\1aytag NE\V 5 pc dinette set w/ strles, sz 6-8, synthttic 119 !'>1ari~. Balboa Island. be n e f i I 1 · LAKE AR· \\'estcliff Personr:el Agency: portfolios pho!Ugraphed. S3j &>rv. Exp. prerd. fl or repairrnan. 531-8637. floi·a/ chairs, $3S. Like new \\'l_lt~· blonde, make otter. Ph; ~186 ROY."HEAD ?.CARINA. cn41 2!H3 Westcllff Dr., N.8. lAl-& up, for appt call John Pt hn1e. w/lrain quaUfied 1 pc SpatJiah dinette set.1_54_~_368_2 ______ ~ :~19= .. ~p.~,~.,".~,~.~Co~k>-r~rv=.-1=150~ 337-2501 iio fee jobs). Sp ark .'I, A .'Is o c I ate girl ovC'r 30. Ph: :l'I0-2032 KEl'\~TORE aulo '1·a.shcr, $59. 7 pc antique 1''hitt DRAFTING desk \Vi th til1· 21" Color 1V SlOO BODY .l P Al?>.'T ?.1'.AN, for Photogr11phers, 642-1427. TRAfrlC SUPERVISOR l11.tc model, Xlnt cone!, ss5, dinetle sel. good c:ond, $39. lop. Drawers. locking, bolh • 548-6S29 • u&ed car k>t. Musi have FURNITURE NURSF. AIDE TRAINING Excellcol 'oppor1uni1y ,,ith guar. & delivered. j46-86'72. UFr, 188~ Harbor Blvd, sides. All metal \\'ilh swi~·el l ~~~~~~~~~~ 01''tl equip'mt. MS-2698 or -SAL ES -A health care up pt y . fnstest gr o "'in g boat 8~7~11~' Ci\1. :l4S-9·ti7 chair. Good. ss:>. 5-19-QjJQ 1 · [i attr ~ P~. $74540 For local dept. storf!: E 111 p Io y m c n f offered. 1nanufacturer' in US. Ex-fOR SALE: Colrl~pol l:l cu DOVER ShON?ll redecorating SY:'llBRAETTE: The \\'Ork· l free to You ] S BOOKKEEPER, full charxe, • TOP COMJ\OSSION Personnel Oep1. llo11g Hosp. perience musl include both 11 chesl fyp<' IN'rzer. Xln'\ • i\.1editc.rrancan pecan \\'OOd ing bra, Cnslm lilted tn machine job l'ihop. New • CO. BENEFTI'S N.B. do11111:stie & expor! shipping, wnrl. S2~i0. 837-8fi6./. kir1g hC'adbollt'd I: nlte l ~m~y~ho~m~•~-i;,,~·1~ .. f1~;~1 ==-~I ~miiimmmmm;;;;; lllcillty, Irvine complex. Quality line to sell * OPJ:.-RATORS* Thorough kno"'·ledge of So. LGE refrigerator '35. also stands, custom c h air .s ,l~tUST i\lovt'. \Vasher&;. dryer \\'rite Cl•l\.~llled ad No. 72. Apply in person Single needle, Dtpericnced Cali!. area al.so require-cl. Dbl door refrig $4i I lenlher IOI" desk wfcha1r, $7j, Dinett(' !let S4:i. Daily Pllol. P. 0. Bo :ic to Mn. Thompson only, top pay. ROLF'S l\fFG. Apply in pC'l'SOn to Coast * 646-78W * 646-6100 * * 497_1224 ** 1560,CostaMesa,ca.~26 W. T. GRANT CO. 86."i Production Place. N.B. Catamaran, l30l2 Call(' LARGE Ken11101·r 1wi.shing BOO.KCASE headboard. box CHILD'S )'ellow chest, CASHIER-P11rt T ime Pers.onnel Office Ph 6-16--0308 Pe rfeclo, San Juan maC'hinr . F:xN'll('nl con-spr1np and matlrl'Sll. 2• J. Appl' Port ~,1,, !9811 Adams Ave., Gran! Pl.ua : ' · Capistr1Hl0 . di lion. S20. &12-1~18 :i.t 1 h' d _., . drawer. llkl' """' S ;,. Baby "" PAPER BOYS , n c ing resser ........ mir-b $' 6~ ... -evenlnp after 6 Brookhurst & Adams, T BEACH TOP notch Rubhl'r Chemist \\'lllRLPOOL au!o wa!hf'r. ror. Contemporary ?llode.rn. ug:zy .>. 4"·1 Htg. Beach NEWPOR Req: must be prolicient in xln! rond S·ID. Cui1r. & /\11.king $j(). 8.17-7187 DeLuxt' trallC'r for lhi-ec C ARPENTERS, plumben, An equal opportunity I R.outr1 open in Newport rubber con1pounding I:. de. 1notorcyle. \Viele til'es. electrlclana, u 11emblera for employeT Beach for boys age l6-l5. 1 . h . l d<'h1•crt'd. ~~16-S6i7, 847-SJl:; LULL.A.BYE Crib & nialtress J\j(). 5-J6.Ql3j motor bomf!:I, Ex~. pre:fd \'e op~ent. wit a min.· yn. G.E. 12 1•u ft refrlg • used Good cond, S2.>: kitehenr---. -------will tnln 'f qualtfltd Call Circulation De Pt. t.:xp tn this area l\lust be labll' "'/4 chair'll & smal1 l\10VING TO llA\VAll - but .. _ ~--M-..1-' GE.'i'ERAL clerk \\•facctg 642-4321. mgt"n1 oriented 1harp & ag 0111>' 6 nlo. Co~t &l80 Jll'IV, buffet $jl). 847--073l. Stove, "''-hsegoods, 1ools, LOVABLE black kitty, gm eye~. l\'/Shol!. 673-3331 Siamese Complete GER~IAN Shep. A K C beautiful 1\ilh c h i Id r f' n . .)36-Z26;} 2/16 1 vr:A.R old \Vire Haired Tt"nier l'M!eds lovable home 11·/children. 962-1887 fE~tA LE Rabbit, 2 yr1 old. Call :>18-9832. Ask f o r Cher; I 2/18 FREE Basset Hound. Good natured. Loves k i d •. a.18-61 42 2/111 .i\llXED bl'eed pupp i e 1, lo1•able. beautiful 7 "'ks old. 84&-4531 2/18 l\11 N poodle, male, 7 mo. Pul't'bred Xlnt 11.·/children. 839-l2]j 2/111 PUPPIES. part C e rm a 11 Sbephe1'd, 6 'l'k~ o Id . 494-5828 a.lier 12 pm. 2/Ill AKC dachshund male 21:. yrs. good 'vith adults or older childrt'n. 5-16-1450 2116 \:i Siamese '1 Russian Blue cat. l )T pl11yful and adap- table G-ij...-0137 2/t'i l\TAi~X kitten, 4 mos, to home that will spay her. 536--0-liS 2/16 $2-$3 ptr "'"· """"" .. w .. , bkgrod. Req; H.s .. ""· d, PAPER BOYS . • • .. Go . !iell for $8.i. ;~1&-9a!l7 30'iO Pullman, ea.ta 1.feu. gressive. ContaC't l\Irs. n.. J ~~~'--~-~-~"°li e '"o"LO"'R'"rv"~23;;.~.--;A~dm°";,=,"i,1 etc. Reaoonable. 6-l.>-3381 Apply betwn 9 &: 11 :30 Ai\1 lype 50/60 wpm lstati:cal~ FOUNTAIN VALLEY zalcz at 4!12-1153. Building M a te rials 806 h\in bed set "'' rocker, S\VAG & pole lamps for sale VERY cute female, cOOculate GER~1AN Shepherd male 111on. thru Frt. lO key ad_dlng mac e. Route• open in F.V. tor boys * TYPISTS * 1 d11.y bed Jiv rm chair lo\.~ ·Many sizes, shapea 6 col· color poodle puppy. Want. pup, 6 mo. rids good homf!, FE:\IALE G. Shepherd ttbout l ."i mo old to a good home. 893-8800 2/15 * CHINESE CHE F * ditto machine. Good starting age ll·15. Call 642.f32I, Cir. · DOORS sC'aL 6i~ or 67J-65s5 ors. Brand ne'"· 646-m7 loving home. 548-6801 2/16 6-15-0!69, 64Z.-Jl78 2/19 Q\lo.llty Ex:perienced ~~or+ lnt~~ ~~ cullttlon Dept. a ~';~~t'l~h ' INTER/EXTER I DIVORCED man must sell LG~ \Jprlght deep Cree~e. YNG adult ca ts-Some COCK·A·POO ~ tnoll old, 642-561!1 aft s. Mr. Taylor ?o.trs. Gooulll'z. PAYROLL cler~. A c 1· t s today I 100trs To Choose Jo'ro1n llf'"' contemporary furn incl Sl7..l. Lge round marblr d1n-tlf!Utered j 4 6-7 3 0 g or hsb1·kn, rd w I children. p11yable / recen·ahll'. E:'I. lnlC'l'V\\'lt. 9-J:? 16-5 Daily. 11-<1 Sun. color TV. Call 847-2818. ing rm table $100. :>.1&-1262 ~~13 ~115 67:-.-8887 2/19 Clerk Typist For ntw a pt dwelling, Typin&: 50·60, hvy publle contacL GENERAL OJo'FICE • at prr, N.8. 1 0 r I ware Wei ter n Go'rl In•. MILLER-DRAKE G S I 112 Aunl~1N J~aze Mink Stole ~~~~~~~kj·7~J~! !~~~~~~~~~~' least 3 )fi exp. Shorthand •"gl-•r•"n• Co. Xlnt Co .. 2""' So M . S S A arage a • ittens, kin& '- "' I f I I t · kill " '" .. 4G67 i\fe,cArthur Blvd. ~"" · 1 11111 l., · · cost $j()(). Sell for $175. In i1hort hair. 4 mo-2 yrs. p u, x n typlng • s bf!nefl1$. S95 wk. 644-4100. !N('xt to Slandnrd Brands) GARAGE SALE. 3045 Grlln t gd concl. 536-280;> I II~] re q 'd. Some a cctg Nt1\!PQrt BC'.ach 546-lOl2 • . 546-73(18 2/19 Ptls •nd SuppliH b.c-uod, IS25 +, Call PROPE_:JlTY A1ANAGEl\-fEm rH0-032:J Avr, Costa Mella, Fn, Silt FROLIC in the snow-moun· l'"J• M d good '---------' Reception lit Utt tYJ!lng, Atlrnctlve. Jr. vine Con1plex. M ISS EXEC AGENCY .fl.O W. Cout Hiii")'., NB E ' t ' • s F b 1"21 ·~ •. 1 anx. nee .'I _ . S.16-999j xper1ence1, ma uro coupe; T PIST j -I ' un, C . ,,. . lain cabin . .11lp1 6. S90fwk. homf'. 546.7308 2119 nlanage & maintenance of Y CAB I NET S, co 1npletc H h Id Good 114 Also \\'knds. 5..i7-1-027. ~~i;~~"._7:-,-...:':':"l t.!!•••••••• .. HAJRSTYUSTS wanted by a pt. ('Omplex, Ci\f. Salary jQ 11•.p.n1 . \Viii train ror kitchen. Rang(', oven, etc. ouse 0 1 . -BEAUTIFUL ~, Manx ca~ Cats .&52 LA Dama Coiffures (new + apl. Call collecl (il4) i\IT!>'T. Totol Jo'cc Paid by B<'autlful & ttasonablc, ;\l EO I TERR A NE AN BRO\\N ?'tural _mink stole 10 mo. old. 50-23.13 21161 .;;;;,;.;,,.. _____ ...,.::::;: Owntt'll). Call 5-4 0 • 50 71, 776--9840. Co. Cnll Lor&inr. 61.S-'.r.70, 646-5393 lurnitul'I'. near nt\.\', Sofa f~~~l~~ntd. .$2'l5. J PUPPIES pt. Shep. pt. PURE 8 R E 0 Bunnne -........ ~~-83 0 ~1302 tir RICHARDS \Ve1tcllff p('~nnel A~ncy. Fur n iture 110 & lo\•r •eat .$1j(). 6 pil'.'«' • tttTltt 8 1\'tf!ks, ft'ff to a spay~ fel'MJc klttf!:n. Alto ,..........,..., 2043 We~tcliff Dr., N.B, (Al. King ~drm $200, D bl e 4:<8 BRUNSWICK POOL eood homt. 536-7633 2ns neut~ Brltiah Blut!, Bolb COOKS • Mu.sl know to<>d • HEAD w~ 6 Da .IOUPI &: tauttl. Wotk1na; wk. Dinner lfOUM'. P1.nn. houri I am to 2 pm, lifon Jntervle1''1 9 to 12 noon. thru 1'rl. An holld8>11 oU. SAJ'\{'$ SEAFOOD 16 21 8 pekf f'Mdiul iJUuranct", 2 Pacific Ill\')'. Hunt. Sch. •ttb vacaOon. Ca 11 ltAIRORESSE'RS, incre11Y-m..M yuur aa.lariea )J't. Booth .;;;;;,;c00o-=~K~D~f_,,l,..,.I ___ ' rental. C -etc an * CALL 673-82:i0 * C.11 Ann 645-2770 I W&STCLll"F PERSOl'INEL • HOTEL • AGENCY DESK CLERK zu WoaJCllU Dr. I Newport Bt:arh lle1vy ,.xperirn~ Talent Showcase JIO l•e jol:MI) 8' SOFA. rH'Vf'r used. quilled btdrm c:ompl. $225. CoU .. TABLE, All a.CCf'SI, Sl75 or -1D montha old. CdM. Call no I h ~-• 1~ Be JJ e•o """~ 3 Cute black k it t~ns s~ '193 r "•• --'y. Pop-S!ng('l"I, Piano Sinit· •UPHOLSrl"RER or TRl.\l· ni, llCOIC R\Jlln•.-v S ...:i. rnd lablt'S. Jovr sea!, velvet st o er . ...,,,.-o,i,.., 5.37-6093 211;; ,,,.....,. ¥ u111 Jlong & Group&. ~!ER ~perlel\C'erl. Prrm, flt~t<'h!?G kwrst:AI S 1 :i · ('ha i~. lamp~. mi 1 c e I. AUTO. eltt. Olympia Ditto Dogs IS4 Jam smiklns 11-'f'lcoine job, lrinre bf'neflts. l..Ah"E 5,.t.,..19.l.1 tM2-9492. ntachlnt. $70. BUNNIES Kl good home. catl -- 6-12-5619 fl.Ir. Taylor ARRO\\'lli:AD fl.IARlNA. 4j" ROU:'\'O l!:llme lablr, 1ur· I M iscell•neous 111 * Call 962.(,607 * after 6:30 P l-I m.JS94 2/lS I DAL:\1ATIAN, :: mo'1,, mala R,;'l"'1-tExp'd.) lor l-ll:'lii7 171~1 ll7-2j()l quolse, oi1rnd~ to ~nl 8,i M lsctlltneous BANTA~t R0011ten;.beauliful, Pt'lfSho"" Top cond . l l -7 ;3 D f\fedlClll-tw'fical *\\'AITRE.SS·t:xpcrielK'f'd, ~ upholslcrrd chaff&. Sl::.0.1 • SPF..CTAL UTIL I TY W ted 120 I mo.old SG-I682 2116 6~2-1937. units 11M"3-ll:30 ICU. CCU . food A cocktalb. d11ys. 1''1ne 6-16-&U~ SlrF;J,VES, 8X6, Folkcru.1-"'-•~n.;,;;.;_ ____ .,;;;;~ KJTl'EN 2, ~'ttltl tabby, BEAUTIFUL hish Setter~ The New Pacific~ Ho1ipih1I position for ri;:ht airl, A.~k CUSTO~I Spanish har stool1. 8!ll-ISll \YAi'Vf'ED: One four.drawu ~ 2n6 ~~~~~. 1 mo'1 old, c.a.11 l')!)f'nina: M•n.:h at. S.12--0611, !or \Va,yne SJ.l-0Il2 hke ""'\', p11 1ri .s&'l cA ..... 1u • DATSUN :Ho 4 used file cab1riet and tine l•rre l\IANX, frtt to lpteial homl!, ~ 18792 0Va1'·are AVf!. Hun-Rbncho S3n Joaquin sncririce. s11 .... ~1s.~ N'ver5ed Chrome 1''hf!f!:ia, otllce deJJc. both \lted. w ry nttt. 436-1730 2116 SCHNAUZER pups-~l•I• at •tud-Groon1ing. tlnl[lon BtAch 92648. Ciolf Couru SACRJFTCF. like nc11 vf'lvrl mdlAI tire!! SlOO. 96S-4323. ~2779 Ill! 5:30 Pl\f ROUTE ~ $130 "'k to sl. 1<:021 Culrer Road ~nl:t S. lo1r itcat. T\', ln n1p~, \\'E l..oall--Buy-Sell ,anything CASH for tum, appllarns. WEI:\IARANER8. femal•. U silver I:. red. '194-82S.J 2/16 TJk•• ov eslab f>)illtr Bt'tl'h rivlne, nr .C.I !'tr· fii:Hi!l26 Coa~· Pa1\•n & A11c1lon. 2.j26 100111, & misc i I em 1 . M&-0<39 CONSULTANT, Ce:n1 tood1 , Pl ,. JN PER"O" neecl1 7 women tor Vivia11e • ,.p • 1 .~ .~ • Woocla..t CoamttlcL We N EWPORTER INN train. Extt po1'1 1vall, 1111 Jl07 Jtmbone ~ uw. 5Cf...J.f6£ Newpon Buell rle In I.Acuna. Xlnf pt 11111!'1 ·~1 T E-ELE.PlrAJ\1'S:-: VAf'ANCIF.S Cn~! nlQnr> ! Nc,rport Bll'd. 642...$400. S.12-701 j or Aft i). 5-ls-1227. ~fALE black Coekapoo pup. I \\"k ;1150 av11il. Ph. 5l2-1."i7J ( 01111T11nn1ni,: )0111· h<lllM'~ Rttnt your !10t1M', .1111, ~ton' Li1'1·: rw1'· Scnr11 color TV FtJRNITliRE \'IANT F..D. 1 py, &46-!mi llfL :;. 2118 'l'hf "ftlloiv Pn:n-~"-otj "C11..~h''~ . .sr:ll lhrn1 thl'U ~ldg. .. ~!l". lhru a lJall) Piiot $17.), b.12 grt'cn carptt. Hem or hou11e full. \VE PAY \VHT 1i COCkt'r spllnitl. \~ clfllllll!M •• , 64~"'671 Dally Pllot ClaMifit'd Ch'~'UIM Jid, rood rood, $5(). 54~ll CASH . 5M-404 1 mini. coll ie. MG-2346 2/l!I PO~lERANTAN-Bla<'k male, 6 mo, l\KC, all shor.s.. llou~broken. $$j. ~,17-4909 Sell idle Items nowt ciii 642-5678 Now! ' J PllDT·AOVERTISER Wtd11tMt1y, Ftbr\111117, 1971 Wtdne~1y, February 17, 1971 DAILY PILOT IJJ ......... 1§1 I .......... 1§1 I ·~....... 1§1 I -·-1§1 s 154 Boats, Spood & Ski tll Mobile Homu t11 1.T'.,!rvc;:::::ks::!., ____ .;9';::2:IA-•l_os:::;W:-'-;:":;tod-:;-=:;:-"'-Aulos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported '10 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 1 F•mal• slllol, 2 mOI. SMw '!:!'. •:=!!"'. F~:'. trl•k'·, U:l?11\J!j!JtJt!ll!Oi 1969 3,l TON CHM WE PAY TOP quality! Little bl•ek llOy ....... "" ... u.v---CASH male -..1•, 21' mos, 3 boat. i\1any xtn.s. $1250. -........ Flnftt Adult Pk n .. l>id. pkk•P. 6 "'""'"· IO)'·mlnl poodles, creme, 1 st1clc, rad». Strong truck. male, 2 ttm. 6 black minit. ll' OUTBOARD Runabout &: JN SOl.Tnl!:RN CAUF. Gareequa nc!w color (116860) ror us~ cari & trUcki, just 646--0142 33.l i:. 17th St., trailer. Uphol front seat. • 18 yr mln. aa;e lcr ' $2499 11 f f ti t G~~AN Sh<phenl •• ,.. ::· ~~% hp outbnl .• ~: ""m 181.>0 GROTH" ciiEvno'Lrf r"'~~~1,~ w;:~:· ;:1~ [iJ : ~o:.,;:ra:'!~ H"v.n CONNELL CHEVROLET A>k ror Saleo M•nagrr Champion parents. Llght & 1. TtanspOrtation I • $300;000 cttlb facility 2828 liAR.BOR BLVD 18211 Beach Blvd, dark, beautiful marldnp. . . • Small pet approved · l lunUngton Beach $2$ I: $30. 8J3..-0764 e Goll', Car wash, La1vn 00\\') COSTA MESA S4&-l20l 847-6087 Kl 9·33Jl AKC SILKY TERR I E R C S I /R I 920 • Move in Today! '69 CHM % TON ll\fPORTS WANTED PU.,,s READ~ TO SPOIL amper11 • • en ""·"· M-Rd o •-< • -~---------1 S.A .. -.. , lo JC!Ll..lTY • range Count ... a YOUR LOVER. MALE $125, CAMPER Ottramp ln Irvine (aoulb) U>ngbed Pickup. VB, Auto. TOP· S BUYER. FEMALE $175. CA LL * 7141832..8585 * matlc, dlr. Power Steerin&:, BILL ?i.fAXEY TOYOTA 644-'800 AFTER 6 PM. Commercial '71 License 18881 Beach Blvd. DACHSHUND ,.... CLEARANCE SALE THE BEST OF •127492, ""''Sell .... 7144 H. ll<a<h. Ph. Mt.8555 mlniji.tutt, AKC, Black Sc BOTH WORLDS '69 ECONOLINE Super Van Autos, Imported 970 tan Ir. maboaany fed . J..ar&:e selection pre '71 For a beautiful home, IOW E-100. New Ansen mags, t----~---- n4J633-40111. Campers Now Sla6bed to malnterumce and atehltecur-Jndy&, chrome, custom ALFA ROMEO AKC Collie puppies . 10 wk!, $ 9 OYll ally impressive deslp, ~ gl'ffn paint, Sting r a YI--------- champion sired, $50. 4 ACTUAl the exclline new "Village bur.kets, stereo, panell~. A JEWF..L. '62 Alfa Romco 1194-1044 FACTOaT House" by Levitt Mobile $4000 Invested, sell $2QXI. C\:lnv. 1 Own<'r. Only 31.000 INYOICI System1 on display now at M5-4687 mi's. Clean, top cond. $650. ~~.:':~c~=::pio~·~: ~~~E MBOABiL~A~g~~s 1969 FORD Yz TON 1-.... -1-3611------ "'· Afl<r 6 pm, 4'"8364 FOR 1425 Baku St. Co•la .,,,. AUSTIN HEALEY. e ELEGANT Afghan Pop•. J""I S, of S.D. "'-• at Harbor ELOORAOO CMTPERS .... • .. ~ Pickup. 6 cyl., stick shift, new I---------· I AKC. Black masked silver. THEODORE TI4/509470 starliiht bronze color, radio, 962'<956 aft •. ROBINS FORD NOW OPEN low, tow mil ... Nice UlOSOCJ 1966 Austin Healey Sprite $600 or Best oUer • ~1492 . POODLES, AKC, Ado...,bl• ~ .. HARBOR BLVD. $1699 am.all miniature, Very ~ CONTEMPO.. reasonable. 962-219j. COSTA P.1ESA 642.QOtO LAGUNA HILLS BMW BEAUTIFUL AKC Beaglo '63 VW Camper. ll<d, stovo, 23301 RIDGE ROUTE DR. CONNELL CHEVROLET 1 ______ _ pups, 21,; mo's old. Very re-frig, water. Xl n't cond. (Corner of Moullon Pkwy) Reu. tn3) 592-5303 $875. 675-7747. LAGUNA HILLS ---------!Prestige adult community ad. GERP.fAN shorthair, 8 wk!, Cycles, Bikes, jaeent to Leisure \\'orld, 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 54&-1203 '69 B:0.1\V 2002, A~l/F'r.1 radio, mag ...,•heels, new tircl'i. $2150. 496-2762 DATSUN DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AND SUNOAYS l!ISM Bea ... h Blvd. Huntlnaton Beach 142-7781 or 5'!0-0442 FiAT """""""' "THINK" JAGUAR l\IUsr SEU... '67 XKB cpe. superb cond., 4 spd, &tt'reo, ~·ire wh.ls, lo ml. 644-8197. KARMANN GHIA '67 KARMANN GHIA Cpe. Radio, stlrk. Sure beA· urlfu1 ycllo\v car. (\\l'Vl\332) $1399 CONNELL CHEVROLET t::/1 .. 0~ 2828 HARBOR BLVD. ,. .. w.. COSTA i\!ESA 5-16.1203 ... "FRIEDLANDER" 9 '66 CO,VERTIBLE, now pnin1 & upl'lol. Good motor 11750 llACH llYD. ,r,, t11~. Brazil bound, n1u.s1 (Hwy. ltl M'll! 83S-3500 893-7566 • 537-6824 '60 Ghia, '62 eng, big bore, NEW-USED·SERV. .~trnker crank, new clutch, l.l"l.ft.ft.ft.1-'-5511_._ .. -=~-=~"'·ro=s-- .,8 FIAT 850 SPY DER RDSTR. Red with black tn. lerior, Like new, YQY834 $899 CHICK IVERSON vw 5$3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA LOTUS '66 Elen S-2 Convt, Fu1J sen.it"e r e cord • AM/f.\1, P\'l pry $2163. 495-."1'.MJ7 MERCEDES BENZ P8P'" ! :,'t:,~ * Scooters 925 """tiM '""""ndings, all '70 CHEVY PICKUP 1"""" appointment•, pot. DATSUN '69 124 SPORT CPE. IDAU.fA11AN pups, AKC, be1.utiful, Good dispo1ltion, n nbl. 4.!M-7270 or 497-1~ e SHEL TY, AKC e l"UVVV1 ling gtt<n. bobby shop, 8 loot Bed ,;th oamper •h•ll_ I-------; Female. $50. 642-1469 Horus 856 BROODr-.tARE -Double bred Joe Rttd IL in foal to Palleo's. Note $2,000 or best offer. (714) 737-5649 Norco. General 900 * * * ROBERT SIEMBIEBA THiii HONDA .. "FRIEDlAHDER .. , .. llMClll CMWT· In 537-6824 • 893-7566 NEW·USED-SERV. mooh mor<. Only 8,000 '""'' mil"! 1967 DATSUN CALL 830-l!kXI •76085G. Take ol.der Trade ~ Tripi• Wide Cornell \Vilt lin. Pvt. Pty. Call 2 Dr. Sedan. Auto1nat1c, ra· Continental e Paramount ~-3100 AIL 10 a.m. dio, heater, Pl't'llY car . Banina1on • UrUvenal ":x> CHEVY %, T, dual hubs, {UVT099J Flamingo • General xtra heavy dly, Ca II $899 broadmoor e Slar "3=1816. Hill~~:P~~rldg• ·~""'Dodg• '""' trucl<· R""' CONNELL CHEVROLET A~1/F!'ol, 4 speed. d!r. Ra- dial tires. (YBY 732) ?itust sell. \\'ill take trade or fin- ance. Cali 4S4--7744. '&: FIAT, 12•1 Sport Coupe. 19,000 1nilcs. :ZS ~!PG, 96 llP. 5 spd. Al\1-t~:-.t. 54~:M MOBILE HOMES $1.50. *** ,,.,...\.16 HONDA iiiiii!ii~~iiiii 13)6 N. Harbor, S.A. Auto Loasinn 964 2828 HARBOR BLVD. '67 HONDA RARE S600 * TI.f/531~105 * • COSTA MESA 5-16-1203 ------------------·1-.,---;-.;;--,~-;---I Convert. 20,000 mi. New Tripi• Wide Cornell e New 171 Datsun 1'1ichclins. Xlnt cond. $.~7j. Hillcre!l • Flamingo ···~ WE LEASE IGOO OHC, Pickup with camp.1 __ ... _,.._91_o_9_A_M_10_1_P_M_ 1 Paramount • Universal er. Sale priC"C" $2099 dlr. Baniniiton • Broadmoor (# PL5214j2270l \VIU take Contiuental ti Star All MAKES car In trade. \Viii finance Genera] • Hillcrest private pa1•\y. Cal! 546-8736 JAGUAR MG ~ t.iftl THINK m .. ~ .. ''FRIEDLANDER" 'J7SO l•ACH IHWY, )t) 893-7566 • 537-6824 NEW·US EO·SERV. OPEL 1968 OPEL KADETTE 2 Door H.T. Radto, hco.i.er, <I ~pr~. 39,22!1 miles. Nict. {XSft l!Hl TRIUMPH ---1969 TRIUMPH • Spitfire rdstr. R&H, 1!1ck, one carctul owner. (Yl'X\ SJ21 $899 $1299 CO"NELL CHEVROLET CONNELL CHEVROLET 282& 1-tARBOR BLVD. CQSrA P.1ESA 546-1203 * '68 Opel Rally* 22,800 mU<'s, exlr11s. ( E..'<cep- tionally clean!) $1 250. Pri\'. pa rly. Ph, &12-6643 alter l:flO rou, e '70 OPEL GT e $300 • take over payments. * 54&-0012 alter 6 * PORSCHE '67 PORSCHE 911, 5 spd. \Veber's, Koni~. lo mi's, CQf'K_'OUl'!lC COnd. $ 3 4 9 5. 6'14-0J86 SUNBEAM SU NBEAi\t Alpine '65, 10,000 mi., xlnt cond., must see to appreciate, P.lichelln-x tires, ne1v clutch 4!ra-U16 cvc/"'knd. TOYOTA THE ALL NE\V lfiOO CC COROLAS, 4 SPEEDS &. Atrr0r.1ATICS TI·IE ALL NE\V ('ORONA HT CPE 4 SPEEDS & AUTOr.fATICS SAVE ON 1970 DEMOS ~erutlewiA W TOYOTA 1966 H11rbor, C.r.T. Bill., MAXEY !TIOJY(O!TIA! 2828 HARBOR BLVD. CO~'TA M'ESA ~1203' '71 SPITFIRES NOW ON DISPLAY Comf' In for a !!'!ii drive! FRITZ WARREN'S SPORT CAR CENTER 710 E. 1st St, S.A, 547-076-1 Open daily 9.9; clo~ Sunday 1970 TRIU?i.IPH TR~ rtk blue roadster. \Vire "'hii1, lo rn1 $2975. 644--4132 or 6"4-2260 VOLKSWAGEN WANTED I'll pay top dollar for !'fllll" VOLKS\Vr\GEN today, Cali and ask for Ron Pinchol, 549-3031 Ext. 66·67. 673-0'l'.Xl, '65 V\V Bus GCIOCI cond. r.tust SeU 548-4050 alle1· 5 P~t e 1967 VW-Xlnl c:om:I. New pajnl. $795 or bcl'it oUer. &la-0144 VW • '64 Beetle • Very good meclt. concl. ~50 * .~ * !)Sg....4205 '62 Ghia, rebll eng. l\lust sell, $500. 642-2!1m V\V '62 BUG. Original in xlnt cond. JS,.j(), Ca ll 673-5620 eves: 673--0728. '63 V\V, re bit eng. Low mileage, nC\\' pa1nl & inL $595, 53&-334·1 '70 V\V Bug. green. radio, air cone!. '71 lie. 61~5 aft 6 pm. '65 V\V. Camper.Panel neblt throu1-:hout! Sec H! 8-trk, hdphonts 642-3".M.'i. '6.'i V\V Sedan-New paint, 1ircs, engine. $1'l0. •1!17-1461 20831 Woodlu Ln Huntington Beech You art the winner of CHAPMAN & MODELS .,. 4M.68LJ. MOBILE HOMES ll33l ll<aoh Blvd., G.G. '69 DATSUN PICKUP JAGUAR HEADQUARTERS The only authorlz.ed JAGUAR dealer in the entire Harbor Area. 18881 BEACH Bl VD. Hunt. Beach 147..asss I ml N. or CoMt Hwy. on Sch ~ '67 LAND CRUISER SllARP \'\V Bus. blue & 1vhite, Must sell. $2i00. FM radio. 495-{)823. 2 tickets to the Western National Boat & Marine Show at the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER Februuy 20th lhru 28th Please call 642-5678, eXt. 314 betv.·een 9 and t pm to claim your tickets. !North County toll-tree number is 541).tnlJ) * * * SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Saloon -Crack -Lunge - Myopic -I'M YOURS Sentenced man's promise to his girl: "Remember me, darling! lt nobody call5 for me in 1ix month$, J'l\1 YOURS." FOR RENT l BR apt w/40' boat slip. 1ide lie. Newport Beach PIO per mo. (714J 547-25'5 or 673-2828 Boats, Power 906 '68-3(1) Scrambler. *' 714.'SJG.2930 * E.'<. roncl. 1'1ajor tune, new RESALE Bargains -Imm. c~rbs, .ALL new wiring, new POio. Long Beach, Hun. dirt tires. Must. see and tington. NePt, Co ?if es, ride to .apprec.iale $400. SaAn, Tu~. Org. 962-7689 Call TED '64 YAi\lAHA 50cc step thru, United ~tobile Homes regi.,. ·n. Needs m inor 645-3140 633-2961 ~'Ork. s.tS. Also, spare parU Motor Homes 940 ;15. 64&-5479. "70" TRllTh1PH. Extended YOUR ., -~ ho ., front end. Xtra chrome, seco'"" me on custom paint $ll50 or best whee l s. Co mpletely oUer. 546--0528 1 e If-contained beautifully --,,==--o--=c--1 cared for '70 Landau Motor 1.969 Yamaha 250cc Home . Dodg~powered Dirt & S~t model automatic 23-footer, sleeps 4300 miles $400 6/Refrig. runs on gas or • 835-1492 • e.lec., range & automatic Deluxe trailer for three oven, forced air lurnace, motorcycle. Wide tire~. large hold ing tank, big $150. 546--0135 water tank, ov ersize '67 YAMAHA 100c.c Trail ga&0llnc tank. Ready to roll. Master. Xlnt cone!. im or Extras Include racks and best oller. 646--8157. ramp for hauling two Hon-==.,-=""'"~,--;=I das on rear. See the HONDA '68 450 Scrambler, package io .appreciate ll 4000 mi's, Perfect S650 or Offered by owner below best ofler. 968--S726. retail, $10,500. 19n lie. fee HARLEY chopper, '61 lliready paid. P hone engine, xtra transmission & 968-1891 or 541-9250. Harley partJ, phone 492-7911 1970 r-.fOTOR Home -Sleeps '68 TRJUAiIPH 500 6, seU-rontalned. 16' Chevy Best otter itusl Sell! 6 c~I . ?tfust seU. $3500. 1813 e 54~7890 eve. e Viola Pl, C.M. YACHT broktr or salesman I ~~~:c:,~::....;~,0.-;::::b.:::'"-:=•=::::;--.;,.; -Unusual opportunity. Call 1970 YAl'ilAHA YS Cl, 200 Trailers, Travel 945 Bob J-lenry, American CC street scrambl~r. 1200 ,. , Yachting Association. TI4; mi'. Xlnt cond. $385. 842--7967 ~LID 1948 Kitco 16 ca_m: """1'2"l ---===;---·I ping trlr. Many extra1. $a25 1..:,::.,:.:;,;;===='"°"'=c I \V~D or? Anytime 645-3381 '61 23' CHRISCRAF'l' Cava. 31)J or z:io:c Honda Scram. 15' SERRO Scotty travel trlr. lier. outriggers, radio, flush bier. Running or not. ~·1690 Sips 4. S300/best ofler or deck, needs care. $3000. YA~tAHA 250 Enduro. Ex· trade. 64~3017. 646.5003 I=~~=-,---;=-;;;; I ""· $4'5. T "I Utlrty 19' SEA Eagle -I/0, 120 * 546-9453* ra1 ers, I 947 hp, Top & mooring cover. skl~. compass, trailer, etc. $2150. 541-8470 or 632--1339. 41' OiRIS 1959 lri·cabin Loaded. $20,500. 644-4132 or 644-2200 *'10 Yamaha ~5 MX 14' Tandem Trailer Top condition, Never raced. With 4 wheels. All steel weld. Xtras! $4Xl. 673-2062. ~ conslructio:1 ~~" Steel MINI BIKE deck plating .. 5(5..4361 or $ OPEN. 897.7365 642-:i845, WW sell. Or trade GO KART Mc 6 for pickup. BAUER BUICK in COSTA MESA LEASE A NEW l9TI PINTO $50.00 mo. £36 mo.) open end RENT A NE\V 1971 PINTO S4 DAY AND 4¢ MILE PUT A LITI1.E KICK IN YOUR Llf'E! THEOOORE ROBINS FORO 2060 HARBOR BLVD., COSI'A MESA 642-0010 Auto Service, Parts 966 {4) '71 CHEV ~.t T P/U u•herls, 16.5 x 6, 8 lug, 61,;" bolt circle, Si:i 2 Fii;k 6.00-16; 2 Goodyear 6.2.'i-16 tires, on Ford % T P/U wheel, xlnl cond, SSO. Priv party. 673-6955 eves. 40 hp V\V engines • Exchangr. $28j_ Complttc, New Incl clutcb, crank, I i f t e r s, valves, & e \·e rythlng. Guaranleed . l\f.D. CaU 897-7365 '68 Chopped Triumph $850. Aft 5 pm Ir: wknd1: 635-7897 l§j Aulomolive, 642-3625 "' 1940 FORD PARTS: Deluxe 1~-----~ hood, grill, starter, Genera- tor and aluminum Mads for V-3 nat head. AU priceU reu. 83&5672 15 TO 25 FT. 1llP1 avail. Autos Wanted WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR CAR CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd. O>tta 1tesa. 546-1200 TOP DOLLAR 968 IM po~·cr bolts. Private for laeoon. \Vater A. tlec. avail. Mobile Homes JU 2828 HARBOR BLVD. CLEAN USED CARS Bayside Vlllllt, 300 E . COSTA MESA 546-l20l See Andy Brown Coe.it Hwy, NB DON-B•Y. Sell, Lisl or1;c:c..,.,~~-~--'-~-" I THEODORE • '65 VW Dune Bug-, Eng WANTED TO RENT on Tradt, Until )'OU ..., ROBINS FORD Balboa hi•. TJ<.up ..-Call TED i"'I ttblL % com, big bo,., for 16' po'A·er boal 6Th-7220 United ~loblle Jfon'lf'~ 2-b1rttl, XlM cand, S1350. 2000 Harbor Blvd. \\'ANTED: Slip up lo 60' 17&7 "A" Npl Blvd, CJ·!. l-968-4~~883===== Costa ?.1csa for 4.S' Catch.. Bt:1t rel'•. &1~140 1960 CORVAIR--642.0010 6Ta-49~~. SPACE ttrnl $55 • .Qx.8', cor· Make Otter WE PAY TOP DOLLAR -~-~ ner, pool, adult park. Top ~7817 Afttr 6 Pi\l FOR TOP USED CARS Boats, SJJ!!l!I I Ski _tJ.! 1»nd. Shag crptng. $2900. Trucks 962 It your car ii extn. cle&11, J1~560~Pl~a~oe~n~a~··::,· ~N;··~· ~S..~M~a:r~j:;--;:;;;-;:;-;:c;-p::LJ.: I aee ua tint. tr BELLBOY "69, Jo hrL -'60 Ford \' TON p u BAUER ButCK 120 ~let<' Crulttr, IB/08, BAYSIDE VILLAGE ' " ITT f'lt'tl puces, mlllny 302 Luinaton Circle. 2 Br. CL.~~~· ft 6 • 234 E. 17th St. • N 1 Ir $2SM TeJ 2 Ba. Rtduoed to $9,950. ~ • pm Cotta Mesa. 543-7165 xtnt.s. tiv r · · ' 13 ....... r-Owner 673-0968 '65 EL CM.flNO \'try good -VANS WAN-TEO-C\'ts 642-!1367 •""" ""I• ' • . SEu.°lNG Your bMIT "Uitt" 1 t'<40 J hr turnlshe~. Nict :~~lo~ ~~~S.14 onalo1I To~ SSS for 1.ny vAn, running with 111 ~II II ta•! O.Uy adult.pet park, S4a ~pace 1_~-~-·-~---ar not. PTL Motot1, 2186 Piiot O~~IUtd. &ti-MTI ttnt. $2300. 847-5.561 alt 4 White ElephAitt Dime-A.Line J-larbor lllv(t, ~t.. 646--2698 Equipped with 48" Paris Va.J.. ley Camper (YN\V 2871 dlr. Will take car in trade or fin- ance private party. CalJ 4!W.681 l or 54&-8736. 1970 STN ~·gn, sacrilice! S2j() do1-•;n; assume 11 monthly payments, $66.92 Pvt p1y. 833--1252 '66 Datsun 1600 Roadster '64 ?.11DGET, runs i.:ood, S:l:lt or best oUer, 53&-102·1 of1<'r <I 11•hee.I drive, warren hubs, 6:30 \\'eek-i.lays or anyt1n1e new rubber. dlr. Take clear 6G V\V sunroof. J;l()O eng. A.\1-F.\I. new l1N's I: brake!. $750. 5-18-2000 wk-end~. 19&1 P.1G 1100 SE[lAN t:7j. Good mnclllio11 * * 49-1-35.\8 * * Fo. RESULTS }'OU can De- pend on, Call the Super- :>a 1 es man .. Dally Pilot Classified fi.12-5678 -place your ad & charge II! car in u·ade or small do"11. t TRB 3321 Sacrifice! Call Ira 5-I0-3100 or 49-1-7503 aft 10 A.l\f. '67 CORONA • R&H, auto. 30,000 acl n1i. 1 O\voer. Xlnt cond. 6iJ.-3244 or 529-1164 e 'li7 V\V, XL..'iT CON D P.IU.'ol See To AppN'CJat• * AFT 6; 5~+016:1 I>" '68 V\V Bus, radio & sunroof. Good conditKJn. S22:=i!l 518-14!7 '69 YE'LLO\V \V/ blk int e '10 V\V Bus, sill] under Corona Coupe. Like new. \\'3rn1n!y, $2!l'J5. 5--J0..-898.l aft l.IJw mi. $1650. 962-3100 5 pm -~------~ 980 Autos, New 980 FINAL CLEARANCE OF ALL REMAIN ING NEW AND EXECUTIVE 1970 BUICKS AND OPELS ! ! ! • BRAND NEW 1970 OPEL 2 DOOR SEDAN (119269771; '1649 DEMO '70 RIVIERA DEMO '70 RIVIERA DEMO '70 GS 400 !H920707 l DEMO '70 GS 400 DEMO '70 OPEL GT NEW '70 OPEL Rallye IZI006711 19420611001 (929 261466) s3595 DEMO '70 OPEL GT NEW '70 OPEL Rallye NEW '70 OPEL Rallye 1942017296 ) 1'929297506) (929299152 1 UICK_1N COSTA DEMO '70 RIVIERA IH9ll002J DEMO '70 OPEL GT (942011799) ALL 1970's HAVE REMAINING FACTORY WARRANTIES 234 E.17th St. MESA 548 -7 765 "SPECIALIZING IN QUALITY" • l ' l l • Al/lol. lmpo<lod 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Auto•, Imported ,VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOLVO '63 vw Stj)UAREBACK lOZX 059) $499 CHICK IVERSON . vw 1970 HARBOR BLVD COSTA MESA '69 YW BUG 4 'Speed, radio. dlr. Heater. (VPT ::Ml Must sacrili~. Will take car in 1.rade or tin· ance private party, Ca 11 546-8736 ur 49-1-6811. ___ 1 '65 YW BUS '66 VW GHIA Yellow wlblk landau top. ~ew valve job, XNNs.54 $1299 CHICK IVERSON vw rttS-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA '68 SQUAREBACK Radio & Heater. fXEV457) $1535 Harbour V.W. lal'C)• Selection Of VW Campers, Vans, Kombls, Buses, New & Used lmmt>d late Delivery CHICK IVERSON vw 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 1968 YW BUG Radio, stick, strong car. (Nice.) (\VCE2681 I $1199 187~u~~IN~~ BEA~ I CONNELL CHEVROLET 1970 VW Camp m 0 b11 e 2828 HARBOR BLVD. 4 speed. dlr. Radio. heater. ITAP 2171 \Viii take car in trade or finance private par. ty. Cali ~or 49-1-6811. \\'/pop-top. Xlnt cond. COSTA MESA 5,16-1203 557-2637 ---=='----1'69 VW Bug. sunroof, A~1-1959 VOLVO llS Is •.... 1963 V\V Bus. need!i engine \\'otk. OFFER. '63 V'IV Bug-New tires, head- er system, ne\V tags. Xlnt cond. $500 646-3726 f'~f. xlnt cond, under war- ranty, private party, SLl2Zi. 61:>-7131. 642-7387 Call 5''8-6237 -----~ Top Value in its Size! ..... "No Gimmi<k1, No Giv11w•y1. J111t 21 Yr1. Hon11t S1llin9 ALL FOUR MODELS NOW AVAILABLE AT rroNNELL CHEVROLET 100 VEGAS TO CHOOSE FROM Named Car o f the Year 1971 MOTO• TREND Bes t Handling Car in Am edca Regardless of Price ROAD l TUCK Fines t Out Of Com parison T es ts of the Six Sma ll Cars CAR • DRIVER BRAND NEW 1971 VEGA 2 DOOR SEDAN OR DE R YOU RS TODAY TAKING ADVANTAGE OF WINTER PRICES FOR YOUR SUMMER VACATION TRUCK oR CAMPER . VANS Lots of Them BRAND NEW 1971 CHEVROLET IMMEOIATE DELIVERY Heater • R•ar Door Gl1u Aux. Seat, Etc. l•AND NI W 1971 CAMPER 8' AND 1971 CHEV. VB·ll• T. Truck. s ••. 604161 COMPLETE $3195 • Si r. 196579 $2595 IMMI DIAT! DELIYIJI Y IRAND NIW CHrY. 1971 SUBURBAN CARRYALL FACTORY AIR-:V•·TON Sir. 610150 $1000 DISCOUNT 26' HORIZON MOTOR HOME F11lly S11f Co"l•in1d, SI••!» Eight, Air Conditlon1d FOR RENT iJ:~r1. CALL ION KU.NZ PICKUPS Lots of Them BRAND NEW 1971 CHEVROLET 1/l Ton PICKUP Sir. 6 1-1967 IMME DIATE D!LIYEJIT hlty fo<twy E .. 1lp,..t NEW 1971 CH EVROLET BLAZERS 4 WH EEL DR IVE HUGE DISCOUNTS! CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 HARBOR BLVD. -· . -, Wtdntiday, Ftbnwy 17, 1971 PILOT .ADVl:RTISEA % -~-]~ 970 Autos, Imported 970Autos, UMd 990 Autot, UMd 990 Autos, UMd MUSTANG VOLVO CHEVROLET DODGE '66 DODGE CHARGER 19&7 MUSTANG 1968 TORINO GT V8, automatic; .Ut: FM 1ttr· '°· fact. air. Loaded (481- 2 Dr. Fastback cpe, 1 owner, AGUJ Take older trade ar new car trade in. 4. speed, am. dn. Will tin. pvt. Pb'· radio, P.S. Cheap, Cheap, dlr. 541).3100 Call Pat. Cheap. (259AJ 1965 l\f USI' ANG Convt. V.3, $1299 power, new brakes, shock'!, BUICK 2828 HARBOR BLVD. etc. Fine car. Call 548-2681 ;::--;:-:-;--:;--;--;-::-;--l~CO~ST~A~M~ESA~:__~~~~~l~ro~J '63 Buick Skylarl< M"iog. '70 NOYA 2 OR. ·CONNELL CHEVROLET ·~"'.:f. ~:t,;:u~iio "!: lnust sell. Best offer. Has offer, 642---4991 set alp chrm ""his in gd 2828 HARBOR BLVD. l96l MUSfANG 2x2 GT . .f. cond. 645-0-'69. Cpe. 6 cylinder, stick. (212-COSTA 1'fESA 546-120.1 spd, !ull pwr, lo mUts. '65 Buick Gran Sport-Air, AGBl L--LJ fo ? Clean. Extras. 546-1319. < •pd. Cleoo. • $1999 -ng r • car S"10 675-6354 EASY Call Auto IW•n'ol Ir" of OLDSMOBILE '67 BUICK Riviera, full pw<, CONNR.J: CHEVROLET oharge. We h&" "'"'" -==="---I fa<I ai•. Sao. Mu•t .. 11 . waiting, AU typo!•"'"'· 1966 OLDS 98 S1925. 546-9134 2828 HARBOR BLVD. Sellers also welcome. CADILLAC COSTA ME.SA .... llOJ 61244.11 Auto Refern.1 Service '10 Cad C<mvt, Load«!, ""' '70 KINGSWOOO '66 roRO G!l""• 4-dr HT. ml'.!i, Full factory wan-anty, 352 engine, factory air, P/1, Ask for "Bob Ellis" 540-4491, 9 pas5 wagon. Luggage rack, new paint. $195. 545-7635 644-1996. $5995. Y8, automatic, R&.H, power eves or wkndt. 'li6 CADILLAC Sedan s~eering &: brakes, air cond. '63 FORD falrlane Station 2 Dr. H.T. P-seats, P-wfn. ~·s radio, P.S., a.Ir cond. Lots Or car here. (RSK69'T) $899 CONNELL CHEVROLET DeVillt>, all i~nver, xlnt (:;il7AZV) Wagon. Clean! R & H, Air "',,~,~·. $1695. Call 546-1075 $3799 cond. $300 or best offer 2828 HARBOR BLVD. ~ 548-5206 I 642-1251. COSTA MESA 546-1213 ·Lo~~7ed~~~ ~n'"er ~ Ville, CONNELL CHEVROLET ·~ [:;~ ~~r~rnebe~:;:. '6!01~rlf8tra!~~~ reor:lt * 536-2460 * 'Z1 T Roadster, Best oUer. * 962-3965 * '67 SUPE'R Sport Camaro 2828 HARBOR BLVD. 645--0169, 642-3578 PLYMOUTH Xlnt cond auto traru; Fuli COSTA MESA 546-1203 '59 FORD $300 or BESf OF- po\ver. c~n 642-1205.' '68 CHEVY Van, e cyl, stan. FER. Xlnt cond. 35,001 mi l--,-6-J_P_L_Y_MQ __ UJH __ _ 1964 Cadillac. new tires. 1 trans, good mech. cond. l'.ln nu eng. 642-5930 owner, $995 cash. call Make offer. 642--0363 '59 RANCHERO, auto, good ~5-292!'. CONTINENTAL "'""'"'"· $350. BARRACUDA e '66 CAD 4-dr, Full poy:er,1---------l =~*~C'°'ai~l""M~2~·1.cls;-'-·~*--i Beautiful. Show Cal'-'64 AU. 1963 FORD Galaxy 500, low Coupe. (Do it yourself) it.AH, * 673-0680 * Black Parade Convt. mileage, x.lnt cond. $-150. P·steerlng, V8. CUUS465) Absolutely concourse. All 673-3264. $599 . CHEVROLET factory oplions avail thru '63 COUNTRY Squire, Auto, '70 IMPALA '68 incl radials, FJ\f, E &: C. $150 or Oller . Must see to believe. 675-8770 * 714: 5J6.1911 * 2828 HARBOR BLVD. ==~:;,::::c::;:.,...::_,= COSTA MESA 546-lllll 1963 A good car. Ru11& like '62 FORD C.Onvt. Auto. V-8, CONNELL CHEVROLET 4 Dr. H.T. VS, R&H , po\\·er a top. Must sell to help 55,000 miles. Xlnt. Asking steering, automatic, air cond. pay hosp & Dr. bills $475 $450. 842-ll35 ·j (7'l4ADN) \l/owee l OO'i'ti 30 Don 646--0705 anytime. Also '67 Ranchero 6. Good 1969 P LYMOunt Flay Ill, •j day gUarantee. hundreds of small rugs for economy. Very Clean. 4 dr. Power t leering, radio, $2599 '· 11000 494-m5 "'""· air rorxfWooinf. Ex· I CONNELL CHEVROLET '6!nd~~tt!;;~~pe E;ct~~~; s1~=E!1.~A~/~~· a~to~w':'. ~!::. u~:~t~n.yr ~ extras. Eve: 499-4020. Day: $1095. 494-208J , 494-4TIS. ranty, Must 11ell n o 1J'! 499-2221 . 1 ~""''-i.~iiii'iiii=--1 ,;.""'""'~~'~~,,..,.~..,..-I 2828 HARBOR BLVD. '64 Continental. Excellent GREMLIN '65 BARRACUDA, clwi. COSTA MESA 5-16-1203 cond. l\lust see to ap---------new tires, stereo, radio, preciate. One owner. Eve: '70 GREMLIN heater $995. 642--0185 49'J.-.4020. Day: 4~mt. Brand new. Special factory I -',;58;.:=::P;L°"Y;M~O;:,U;;T;;:H;..,$l"U:;-I purchase. Luggage rack, '69 IMPALA 4 Dr Sed. vs R&H auto. 1963 LINCOLN convertible· · .. ' ' ' Nrw lires $600 644-1627 P.S., all" cond. Last chance. ,,.. .. 2 Al v" ,·.,., • (Y0.5542) =-la LS!a, •D, $2199 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA i\1ESA 5'16-1203 CORVAIR '63 CORVAIR Mont.a Conv. Xlnt cond. Orig. 0v.114'r. $350 673-4818 1960 CORVAIR MAKE OFTER? 5-Mi-7817 atfer 6 pm rallye strii>es, custom exter---=*-='--=139~~*~--I ior, tinted glasz. push but-PONTIAC Jon radio. A315246. $1995. 1---------1 Harbor American 1969 PONTIAC 646-0261 1969 HARBOR, COSTA J\.iESA LINCOLN Firebird 2 Dr. H.T. Auto .. radio, heater, P .S., vinyl root, air cond. 29,000 one owner miles. (AOT 18.1) WOWEE '68 CHEY. CAMARO *LUXURIOUS '63 Llncoln Continental w/elect sunroof. Great cond, $8'.XI. 4 ~9447 or 833-3810. $2299 CONNELL CHEVROLET. COSTA MESA 546-1200 I ' ' • .. TIME m ' • • MADE IN AMERICA, BY AMERICANS, THIODORE IOllNS SR. Time M19ulne Qu1llty 0.1ler Aw1rd THIODORI ROllNS JR. ~~--FOR AMERICANS I A Little Bit Bigger For Just A Few Dollars More 1 e 2 DDORS e 4 DOORS e 6 CYLINDeRS e V-8 's e STICKS e AUTO. TRANS. Fully equipped with 1600 C.C. e09ine, fully svncronized 4 speed transmission. heater & defroster, hi-level "directair" ventilation system, windshield washers, hl·bldl: 11f1ty bucket nets, seat belts • • • front A rear, padded visor & dash, locking steiring column, backup ll9hts. Biisiness Is Good At Theodore Robins Ford! . ~ ' ' . 'l,'he Req,son Is Simple ~:i' MUSTANG ' ,~ . NEW 2 DR •. HARDTOP SAVE V-8. bit t1res.,1A-T. P-S, P-dlscs, rad, $ a.Ir, T-glass. "'hi cvrs. Hi bkts, etc. 53990 (144519,. W·1tMr ~3742.00 Our Price $3202.10 N!~..2 h~~~~-s~~.~ .. R~-~~-SAVE steer, P-discs, radio, dee grp, T-glus, $5 766 I · whl cvrs etc. (131869). W-stkr $J911 .25 Our Price $3334.74 N,~~82hi ~~; ~.PJ!:. ~~~~-SA VE discs, ~ad, console, mag whls, compet $665 2& -1usp, 1nstrumrnt grp, 4 spd, Hurst fihft, etc. 1111175). -W·•tkr_ $4290.2S Our l'rice $3625.00 NS~~. ~-t~pR~_,;,~~~~~! ~kt" SA VE bit tires, tit 'teer, A-T, A;\1-fl\I, con-$750 16 sole, Pwindows, spt \~1hl cvrs, T-gl8$S etc. (1024301. W0 stkr $4784.75 o .. Price $4014.59 .:1 RANCHERO NEW RANCHERO SAVE Emission control system, E7X14 tires, $68388 AM radio. (119131 ). W0 stkr $3196;82 Our Price $2712.94 NEW RANCHERO 500 SAVE 351 VS. cruisomatic, vis. group, P.S., power disc brakes, radio, tint. glass, $888 63 H.D. susp. (11~48). • W·stkr $4284.06 Our Price $1195.43 New 2 dr. Hdtp. Brou9h. SAVE 351 VS, A·T, blt lirf'S, rad. ''is .t>rp, P-S, P.discs, air, rear \vlnd dcifrosl, $71791 T-glass, dlx \\·hi cvrs, etc. tl3'f411l. W-stkT $4Sl4.ZO Our Price $3816.29 New 2 dr. Hdlp. Brou9h. SAVE 351 VS. A-T, bit tires, vis grp. P·S, P· -~~.' air, rad, whl cvrs, etc. (124· $68162 W·stkr $442l.2S Our Price $3741.73 N!~VB.~! ,:,~~; .~~'f!·hl bk SAVE bkls, A-T. bit tlrf!s, P·S, P-discs. air, $76290 AM-F'?i-1-ster, con.sole, T-glass etc. (119129). W-s>kr $481 l.ZS Our Price $4050.lS NEW 4 DR. SEDAN SAVE 351.vs. AT·. bit tires. P·S. P-discs, air. rad, T-a:lass, whl cvrs. bdy mould· $60529 ini;: clc. {10J052J. W·stkr $4008.25 Our Price $l40Z.t6 N-~~ BRONCO NEW BRONCO WAGON VS, rrar bench geat, bucket gts., H.D. pk11;., 2 5kid plates, t-r.D. tires, spare tire carrier, R&H. free running hu~. H.D. rad, H.D. bat. (05685). W·11kr $44l6.Z7 Our l'rlce $379S.OO SAVE $641 27 NEW BRONCO WAGON SAVE VS, rear be nch 1t., bucket sts., H.D. pkg.. skid plates. H.D. tires, spare $70726 clUTle r, R&:H, free runnin~ hubs, H.D. rad. aux fuel tank. {89548i. W·stkr $4707.22 Our Price $1999.96 N~. ~~Dti,~, ~;,.. A·T, p.,tr, SAVE ~. T·Glass, eltt elk, radio, etc. (130· $86300 W·atkr $4924.00 Our Price $4061.00 N::"~.T~, ~,~u?;.~.d~;~~~-SAVE A·T, P·str. P-scat, p.Jocks. a.ir Af\1· $1098 Ff\f.1ter. T·clus, P•windows, etc. . Cl287CtlJ. W·stk' $6041 .00 Our Price $4942.89 New LTD Brou9. 4 dr Hdtp SA VE P·dlscg. bit tire~. 429-VS, A·T, P-str. air. radio, T·i;l&sll. dlx str y,;]lJ, whl $CJOO'' cvrs, nylon cpt, etc. <103503). W-stkr $5069,7S Our Price $41'9.M N!~v"~~!~·b,~~,?, .. s!~!~ .. SAVE '""" afr, "dlo, T-gial•,• whl cvrs, $74595 nylon cpt, etc. (1009641. W·slkr $4l4l.7S Our Price $3597.80 ~~ FIOO PICKUP NEW F· 100 STYLESIDE SA VE VS, amp I: oil gauges, radio, reduced {85l:Si.lcvel exhaust. G78xl5 tlre1o. $74359 W-stkr $l4ll.88 Our Price $Z69S.29 Ns~~.i!" ~~,~~~!~~ .. xlt. SA VE amp &: oil gauges, tool box, cruiso-$953 89 matic, Of)t. \'acuun1 boo5tcr, AM·FM stereo, P.S., G78x15 tires, etc. (0651 l. W·stkr $4850.20 Our Price $1896.ll ROBINS READY NEW CAR TRADE-IN'S '6S MUSTAN~ H.T. $996 VS auto .. P.S., 1t!r condition· in£. good miles. ! NBG2o.31. '66 MUSTANG H.T. V8, auto., R&H. JlO"'er steering. Lo\v nules. (FSB925). '69 SHELBA COBRA GT 350. 4 speed, radio, heater, pow•r steering. £ZLH9741. '68 MUSTAN~ H.T. $1596 Red special trim, ys. &peed, R&}f, power steering. Good miles. l\VXR843L '67 MERCURY COMET Cyclone. 2 Dr. H.T. V8. auto., P.S., R&:H, good miles. (TXT655) '65 MERCURY PARKLANE 2 Dr. H.T. Orig. thru--0ut. VB, auto .. P.S., Fact. air, vinvl root. CRGV625) '67 PONTIAC LeMans 4 dr. H.T .. VS, auto .. P.S., R&H. air cond. (VEP174J. '61 PONTIAC Tempest custom rvt. VS, autn .. P.S., radio, h'ater. {VCLJ81J. 81,2 AC:RES 1 How 1Jpo11 Row of Beo11tlful New Cars And Trucks To Pick YOIJH'S From t ~~r' T·BIRD N,;wv,2 A°'~·r ~'~~~~'"'' SAVE tp, bit llres, tilt stePr., P-sea ts, $13.52 air-auto tcn1 p cnlrl, R ~ind de· frost. P-antcn. 11000141. W-stkr $7178.00 Our M ee $6025.54 NEW 2 DR. HARDTOP SAVE 429 VS, AT. P·steer, P-discs, spc in· tuloc. vieyl roof, Ult ''''"• afr. $115078 T -glass, P·windows, bit tires, rad, auto brk rel, etc. (111706). W-stk' $6561.00 Our Price $5410.22 NEW 2 DR. HARDTOP SAVE 429 VB. A·T, P·Stf'er, P~scs. rad, 11prc intC'rlor, vinyl roof, blt tires, $1179°8 tilt sl.cC'r, air, T·glass, P-"·inCl.OY.'5, etr. ( l 11578). W0stkr $6609.00 Our Price $5181 .90 NEW 2 DR. HARDTOP SAVE 429 VS, A·T, P·S, P-discs, spec in- trrior, blt ~lre5, tilt steer~ air T· $1141 70 ~lass. p."·1ndO\\"S, rad, vinyl tp, etr. 11064351. W·stkr $6358.50 Our Price $5116.~ ~~r' F250 PICKUP N~si!·~~.Otoo~'!!!~ru~omaLic, SAVE radio. tint. glass, 55 amp alternator. 25 $90 ()98 ~al. tank. P.S., basic camper special. 8.00x16.5 tire,;. (801561. W-stkr $4554.25 Our Price $l6SJ.27 Ns~!,.~"2!? v~U~J,~~"'· p. SAVE disc brakes, radio, tint. glass, 55 amp $912 ,6 alternator, 25 gaJ. tank, P.S., 875x16.5 11res. IS01551. W0stkr $4S11 .l8 Our Price $3599.SZ '64 FORD 'I• TON Styleslde pickup. Long bed, camper 5hell, VS, good miles. (P82513J. '66 PLYMOUTH Satellite 2 dr. H.T. VS, 4 speed, R&H, good miles. ISBY581 l. '70 MUSTANG H.T. VS.. auto., R&:H. po\\·er 5teering, factory air. Fac- tory warranty 11vailable. Low milH. (498AGD J. '69 CORTINA WAGON $1296 4 soeed. radio, heater, lo\v mileage. C527AGE J. '63 COMET S2Z M!T!OR Reconditioned VB eng., rebuilt auto. trans., RAH. power atttring. Auto.&: 4 l'ipetds. radio, USED PINTOS SAVE heater, warranty a.va!lable, with & without air cond. '68 COUGAR H.T. ~ 896 VS, 11uto., RA:H. power steering, low miles. War· , ranty avaJlable. 1525-A\VJ). SALES 'D.EPT. . HOORS • I AM To t PM MON·FRI I AM Tt 6 PM SAT 10 AM To 6 PM SUN I <FLY518l. S•ltl l'rtca GeM .., n ti_.., ten IWlllC'I " ,......, Mi.. PART~SERVICE HOURS 7 AM To 9 PM MON 7 AM To 6 PM TUE-FRI ) I I PARTS DEPT. ONLY 8 AM to 1 PM SATURDAYS • • ' ' -• ' I ... • -• • ~ =§f.__DAl_LY _PILO_T -~ Wed...tay, February 17, 1971 Wrdntsday, Ftbtuary 17, 19?1 PILOT-ADVERTISER JI .. DICK WILSON SAYS: IT IS OUR CONST·ANT GOAL TO OFFER TH HI HIST QUALITY MERCHANDISE AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRIC . . BRANDNEW1971 BRAND :NEW19Jl MUSTANG "The Import Eater"$ '7HE BfTl'it IDEA;CAR" $ ""' «p.lippecl with 1600 C.C. 1111ginl, lully synuoiiitd 4 sptld tronsmiuiM, Maw & dlfmW, hHMI "dirlctW' V#!tiotion 1p- -. wnllhilld Ms1w1. i..bnck safety MUI stots, HGt bllts-- tr'Oftl & ,_-, poddld •isor & da"'-lotkil'lg I~ colurm,, ta:q, fights. Sftj,.~154311 ~ii • l I I II Sti ck & lt14lr f1r I• IMllll1M lhll_,. 15 Dlf. hrwf(1lenAMll.W.. $65 fOT'I $65 TOTAL DOWN f'l.'0 PYf'l.1T PYMT $65 11 tllt , .... 41• ... ,.,_ .. , Miii $65 It tlrlt kit.I ..tMy '9fl9Mlt IMIMI .. te•, 'J1 llcHM -4 •II fl-• cHrtn .. '"'"""" c:A41t fer H -•tu. h f•n"H ,.,_.., '"'' b $MOS IKW'-t •II fllMow• cllel'f", ,_ .. , .. '71 llc•M ,, If,_. p,.fw t9 ,., -a.. a. WI call ,.-kt I• ..ty $1069AS IMI .... IM" Ni .. '71 I~ , .. ,.. ., "THE PROVEN COMPACT" &CAMPER · F250 3/4 TON & ELDORADO CAB-OVER IMMEDIATE DEUVERY BRAND NEW 1971 . 1:11RD • ' $ c~ ~ rackoge ~ipt, witti '$3488 FULL PRICE · ' \ . . • IMMEDIATE DEUfEIY AMMI ALPllClllTASIUTI 11" -. - j 40MUSTANGS BRAND NEW 1971 FORD PICK-UP Serial No. FlOARK62Sn IMMEDIATE DEUVERY (BRAND NEW 1971 -ECONOLINE VAN OIDll TOUIS llOW ' · '64 CHEV.~~~- I> . . '69 FORD 3/4 T. Styleside 119 lftglfll, d hlcwy dutr • ( 182000) ' •, ' i . .: • • '