HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-02-23 - Orange Coast Pilot7
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Newport Bans High Rise; Faces Suit
Burglar Team
' Valuable Coins
• Stolen Ill Mesa
A team of burglars who may have
struck at random. -or known precisely
what they wanted -stole a safe
containing a $20,000 collection of rare
U.S. and foreign coins from a Costa
Mesa plant.
The raid was made just 1 \2 days
after it arrived.
Frank T. Georgie called police Monday
when he went to 1275 Logan Ave., and
discovered the '300 safe and contents
mis.sing.
He identified the coin collection owner
as Joe B. Smith, of Santa Ana. secretary-
treasurer ()f an electronics firm which
is about to open in the vacant industrial
suite.
Offic:er Jim Farley said Smith had
the large, heavy safe delivered only
Saturday by a transfer company that
picked it up at an undisclosed location
in Anaheim.
Smith said a number of people were
aware of ils contents and value.
Prying the plant's rollaway door, the
burglars -at least two were involved
based on weight of the loot -moved
the safe into a truck for quick escape.
Investigators said the job may have
been too much physically for even two
or three men with a wheeled dolly,
leading to speculation a hydraulic lift
was used to move the safe.
Smith did not give any specifie
Information about the denominations,
nationality or individual value of any
coins in hi.! vast collection on the initial
reports.
He told Officer Farley he would
compile a detailed inventory of his loss
and provide it to burglary detail '
detectives for additional study.
Escaped Convict Captured
After l\.idnaping of Four
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of lht DIUr ,lie! St•ll
A 13-hour manhunt for an Orange Coun-
ty convict who slipped away from San
Quentin Prison Monday nig~t. kidnapi~g
a policeman's family and fnend ended m
climactic chaos today in Fullerton.
Calley Admits
Mass Slaughter
Of Viet P eople
IT. BENNING, Ga. IAP) -Ll.
William L. Calley Jr. admitted today
that he diretced a mass execution of
Vietnamese civilians at an irrigation
d1tch in My Lai.
The government has set the number
of persons killed in the ditch at 70.
Ca lley, speaking without emotion, o(
killings at My Lai:
''JI was the order of the day."
Why, Calley was asked, dJd he give
command to one of his aoldiers to shoot.
"Because that was my order 1ir. That
was the order of the day" lhe defendant
said nauy.
"Who gave you the order?'' asked
dC!fense counsel George Latimer.
"Capt. Medina, 11ir," Calley said.
Calley said there were about four or
IS.e CALLEY, Page I) ..
'
James D. "Jimmie" Harvey, 2-4, was
captured following a 100.mile-per-hour
freeway chase In which one shot was fired
by police, when his stolen car crashed
into a cafe.
The fugitive -who had released first
the policeman's family, then his remain-
ing hostage -was taken into custody at
the scene, where fire erupted in the
wreckage.
Firemen roped off the scene to prevent
injury to the curious or a passible ex-
pll>.'lion due to gasoline from the car's
ruptured tank.
Additional details were not available
at presstlme. •
Despite the fact Harvey, a four-time
loser. still held Mrs. Cheryl J. Smith,
23. prison authorities had s8.id he was not
considered dangerous. ·
He wall armed with a pair of scissors,
Mrs. Stansfield reported today.
A · J2-hour nightmare ended at 9:20
11.m. loday for Novato Police Officer
Gary Stansfield, 30, when hlll wife
telephoned authorities from the Salad
Bowl Cafe, 400 miles south on Highway
99 In Kern County.
She announced she and their children.
'Robert, 6, and Suunne, 4 montha, had
bctn freed .
Mrs. Stansfield, 30, said they were
pfe and local otfiCtrt arrived at the
phone booth moments taler to confirm
it.
Aulhorilie1 In M•rin County aaid 'the
drama began to unfold at 9:47 p.m.
(See MANHtlNT, Pase I) ,,
' ' .. Mi,;i•a :J.t.•IJ· With ·Yarn
Knitting is not only for grannies, as anyone with
half an eye can see . It is a1110 for girls -girls like
Julie Lee , 19, who graces this Sydney, Austrailia,
beach in ·her mini·knit bikini.
!Big Shark Struck New City Officials File
By Tourist Boat;
·Several l11jured Cityhood Petition Papers
MANILA CUPJ) -A ap"eeding
Philippine Navy hydrofoil loaded with
American tourislll slammed in to a huge
shark in Manila Bay today. Many
passengers were hurled to the deck or
badly cut in collapsed steel chairs.
No one was crlUcally injured but Don
Murray, a purser aboard the Amerlcan
President Lines' President Wilson, taid
''at first it looked a Jot worse than
it was. There were blood and bodies
all over the place."
Philippine tourist officials said there
were 33 tourislll on board the 'TS-foot
Navy bydrnfoll which Wall returnln& (rorn
·Corregidor, the World War U fortress
in Manila Bay.
Thirty of the touristll were passengers
aboard the President Wl~n· . whJch
arrived earlier today from Hong Kq
on the end of a M-day Pacific ct\liJe.
JOM! Clemente , the deputy
commissioner of Philippine tourism,
said a\ least 14 of the tourlsta required
medical treatment for assorted cuts and
bumps. At lwt oot person had a broken
arm . .,
Jncorporaton of the proposed city · of
Irvine took what they called "the first
step toward the creation of a model
American Community, Monday wi~h the
filing of a notice of intent to circulate
a petition of incorporation.
The noUce was backed by 42 signatures
of residenLa or the area -25 are required
-and· was filed with Mabel casteix,
deputy clery of the Orange C::Ounty
Board of Supervisors.
Filing the papers was John H •. Burton,
chainnan of the Council of Communities.
of lmine. He aaid · no timetable bad
been set for completion of the
lhcOrporation or the new city of 18,145
acres and approximately 1,000 ctµr.em .
The incorporatora 'DOW' have 90 days
In which tO gather tignatures of owner•
of land repreltnting 25 , percent of the
taxable value within the proposed city
boundariu.
When those signatures are pre:sented
to the Board of Supervlaora a public
hearing must be set on the quest.ion.
That public hearing Is the next
opportunity for the incorporaUon to be
blocked. If persona repreaenting
ownership of more than 50 percent of
the assessed valuation of the land in
'\
question object, the tncorpc:l'ation ii
dead.
·This Is considered highly unlikely
Inasmuch as the Irvine Company owri1
almost 100 percent of the land Involved.
And the Company was the first to
propose a new city tut March.
At that time the community was to
C"Onsist of 56,000 acres with 1 population
by the year 2000 of 440,000.
, Protests by Santa Ana arid Newport
Beach resulted -in . the r 'e duce d
boundaries. Santa Ana Is· stµI on rt('Ord
as opposing the new city.
The incorporation effort hurdled Its
biggest obstacle Feti. 10 'whin ~e Local
Agency F~rmatlon Cornmissk!n by a split
3 lo 2 vote approved the inove.
rie vote came after two full he&,tiig1
and two prellminary seuioos dating back
to last October.
In a C"Overing letter to the Board
of Supervisors, Burton 1aid, "We. ate
looking forward to the opportunity of
becoming a city of which Oranae Cou11ty
can be proud and to joining you and
the other cities in makln& Orange C.Ounty
a better place for all."
Height Curb
Opponents
Plan Action
By L. PETER KRIEG
01 tllf Delly Pllet St.ft
Newport Beach Monday night banned
au high-rise conslrucllon along the
waterfront for 90 days and was Informed
Immediately it will be sued becawie
ot it.
The emergency ordinance, adopted by
a 4 to I City Council vote, prohibit&
the issuance o( building permila: for
structures more than 35 feet tall within
the boundaries of the pr:oposed Lower
Newport Bay Civic District.
In adopting the measure, the council
a!So revoked a foundation permit
obtained Thursday by Swan Constructors,
Inc.. ol San Diego: which started
immediate grading work on a 120-foot,
55-unit luxury condominium on Lido
Peninsula , just east of Lido Isle bridge.
Lawyers representing Swan. a
rubsidiary of U.S. Financial Corp ..
opposed the action and vowed they 'lt"Ould
. begin immediately to in s t i t u t e
proceedings in Orange County Superior
Court.
Newport City Attorney Tully Seymour
had predicted the move, telling the
council if it didn't yank tbe foundation.
only permit and a1lowed the builder
to pour concrete., "no court in the land .
would deny them perm.Wion to flniah
the tiulldlng."
Seymour 1ay1 he thinks the city
''possibly" can.8\ICCfled .in defendJDI the
move, but aaid, "It is not a aure thing."
Bruce Lederman, an attoroey for swan.
lnalated his clients h'd not tried "to
jwnp the gun" on tbe ordinance by
(See lll!IGl!T, Pase I)
Coat
Weatlter •
Sunny sides will prevail Tueo-
day, but windy weather will teep
the coasW temperature down to
58 degrees, wUh lnland readinat
up to 62 predicted.
INSWE TODAY
Even if JIOU itemize uour dt-
ductfons vou don't Mve to go
through the tortuous job of
computing vour .sates mes. Se,_.
St1lvia POTt.er't 1e:corut in in.
come ta.i acriu. Page JO.
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)t OAILV PILOT s
Frorn Page 1
MANHUNT ••.
tn suburban 'Norato. u the ofUcer's
family left a.llD&ll muse party.
A woman lking behind the residence
had just reported a barefoot man whose
dungarees wue wtt to the knees tried
to burglarize her house but fled when
sbt awoke.
Only three minutes later Harvey -
scheduled for release in just six rnonUta
and one week -was discovered missing
in a 101p.m. bedcbeck at a minim.um
se=l\Y lacllity outside prlJon walla.
Novato. Police' Sei'giant Tony Stoutt
aaid the suspected burglar apparently
confronted the Stansfield f a m i I y
demanding a ride.
Mrs. Smith -still missin& unUI 10:,30
a.m. toda'y -witnessed it and came oot
to see \\'hat was hap~.
';You don't know hlm -go b!lck,"'
said Mrs. Stansfield, deScnl>ed as being·
e cool, level-headed lady.
But it was too late and Harvey. a
barber born in Bee Branch, Ark., and
sent to San Quentin in 1967 for a Garden
Grove car theft conviction ordered her
into the blue sedan, too •.
'1'o my knowledge. they'd never mel
before,'• Aid Sgt. Stotitt. etnphasizing
the pOlkeRlfD'• wile would know how
to handle things. •
"My wife w6Uld probably b ave
screamed and passed out," Sgt. Stoutt
quipped to emphasi7.e Mrs. Stamifeld's
capacity to keep calm in a crisis.
The 1967 auto swung around In a
U·turn and beaded away, then turned
back and shot past the party house
again.
Investigators combing the area where
Mrs. Hannah Yobst , 46, told of routing
the would-be burglar found a blue denim
jacket with a stencilled serial nwnber
inside.
"That's the clothing we Issue at San
Quentin,·• confirmed C a I l f or n i a
Department of ·Corrections spokesman
Irwin Ritter.
"We don't con~der him a violent
person," Ritter added.
He theorized Harvey walked away from
his dormitory area and fled through
mudflats fronting the big pink prison
on the bay, perhaps hitchhiking to the
town 20 miles north.
Mrs. Stansfield confirmed this morning
that Harvey was the kidnaper and
apparently discussed the fact he had
been in San Quen tin.
Lawmen throughout C a l i f or n i a
mobilized and called in the FBI.
anticipating Harvey might steal another
car since the Stansfield auto was running
low on gasoline.
Word of the escape would make it
dangerous for him to attempt to purchase
more fuel.
Orange County authorities described
Harvey as basically a small-time con
91though a four-time repeater datlng
back from his original certification in
1963 to the California Youth Authority.
His last listed address was 181 Pixley
St ., Orange, where he was Jiving when
11-rrested in connection \\1th the Garden
Grove car theft that landed him behind
state prison walls.
Harvey's Orange County record
Includes grand theft and jail escape
besides the car theft rap four years
ago.
He served one year in Orange County
Jail following his grand theft conviction
in 1965, according to a District Attorney's
Office spokesman.
The fugitive convict -considered far
from the Bakersfield area shortly before
noon and headed ror Mexico -was
described as 5 feet, 9 inches tall and
weighing 140 pounds.
No description of his young hostage
was available, but the Stansfield car
Is a dark blue. two-door Ford hardtop
with license UHD678, police said.
No speculation was offered as to why
Harvey v•ould risk a long, stiff prison
term -possibly the death penalty v.1ith
kldnaping Involved -rather than serve
his last six months.
U.S. Jews at Meet
BRUSSEl.'i, Belgium (AP) -Two
plane loads of American Jews landed
here today to attend the three-day world
conference of Jewish communities on
tbe plight of Soviet Jews.
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I I
After the Storm
I
·Hatchet Slaying
2nd Doctor Says
Hulse Not l ·nsane
A UCI psychiatrist today became tile
seeond medical expert to testify that
Arlllur · Craig "Moose" Hulse was sane
v.•ben he allegedly cho_p~d service station
attendant JerTY ·wayne Carlin to death
Or. Frauk V. Hoff,man of HunUngton
Dr. rank V. floffman of Huntington
Beach told an· Orange County Superior
Court jury in the Garden Grove youth's
murder trial that HulEe· suffered from
a "personality disorder" and was "def·
initely antisocial" at the time of the Car·
Un killing.
"But he was not psychotic.'' Dr.
Hoffman said. "He told me he took
a large quantity of Seconals and they
blew bis. mind but. he knew what he
W)l8 doing."• ..
The woman's dismembered corpse was
later buried near tbe Ortega Hlgbway.
Taylor Has testified agaimt Itulse in
the current trial under the guarantee
that he will be allowed to plead guilty
in lesser charges If he a.Jso appear.c
for the prosecution . against lfurd and
Gibboney.
Orange County authodties are seeking
the extradition of Gibboney who is
currently beld in.a Por:tlaQd.'jail cell.
Jury Locked
Over Penalty
For Phoenix '·
Lone man sits amid ruins of home leveled by
tornado that hit Selmer, Tenn. Series of twisters
has left path of death aud destruction through
Sbutb and Midwest. See story, Page 4.
Jtotfmaa'I 1estim0ny supported th at Of Dr. JOiin Guido, a prosecution witness
who, like Hoffman this morning, testified
tha_t a 'remar~ made by Carlin while
he was being robbed allegedly prompted
Hube to grab the hatchet 'and hammer carlln to tbe floor of tbe restroom.
Hoffman also commented u n de r
questioning ' from Deputy D i s t r i c t
Attorney Martin J, Henegban that Hulse,
16, at the time of the crime, "wasn't
that concerned with the crime itseU"
and allegedly remarked when he was
interviewed four days ago by the
psychiatrist that he was 4lnly arrested
because "someone in jail for something
else talked about it."
By TOM BARLEY
Of ftit Dll't° Piltl Stiff
Eight women and four men Who must
determine life or death for Gary Harold
Phoenix of Costa Mesa remained Jocked
in their jury room today with no
indication that they "'ere nE:ar a verdict
in the marathon rape-kiQnap .trial. Valley Anti-fl'1oridation
Forces File 83 Petitions
From Page 1
CALLEY ...
five of his men at the ditch. but he
could remember only James Dursi and
Paul Meadlo -the two men he said
he spoke with.
The jury had . heard a recording in
whi ch a voice identified as "that of Hulse
admits the killing of Carlin. Arid
Henegban plans to put Hulse on the
stand again today as his last witness
in the prosecution's case against the
defendant.
They returned to ~·Oranle County
Superior Court Judge W!lliam· MUrray's
courtroom this' inornlng from the Santa ~a motel to w~ thek were ~vi,Yed
uOtler· gljard at lQ p.nt4,.¥onlby 'atter
nine hours '.of ~eliber~f..lii in lhe;e~lty_
By TERRY COVILLE
Of "" Diii)' Pli.t Sl•lf
Fountain Valley residents who oppose
the [\uoridation of city drinking water
Monday filed 83 protest petitions calling
for a public election on the issue.
They filed their petitions in city ball
at 1 p.m., four hours before a deadline
that would have made an election
impossible.
City Clerk Mary Cole said the petitions
contain 1,558 signatures. The anti-fluoride
group needs the names of 1,479 reg istered
voters to force an election.
"All the names on our petitions
probably aren't valid," George
Stolen Kisses
8ring Lawsuit
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Mrs.
June R. Becker is suing a pleasure
boat skipper and a w o m a n
acquaintance on grounds their
kisses took his mind off steering
the cra!t and led to an accident.
Mrs. Becker, a Sacramento
divorcee, asked In M o n d a y ' s
lawsuit for $3&,750 from David A.
Borth of Sklckton and Helen L.
Harris, also from Sacramento.
The 50-year~ld Mrs. Becker said
she suffered a broken leg July
II , 1970, when Berth's boat struck
il tree along the bank of the
Stockton deep water channel near
Woodbridge.
Her superior court action said
Barth's attentions were distracted
''by the negligent feminine
enticement and alluring kisses of
defendant Helen L. H a r r i s ''
resulting in the crash.
Lindegren, leader of the anti-fluoride
drive, explained today. "But we'll have
another 30 days to collect sufficient
names."
Lindegren said some of the names
probably would not count because
residents signed the petition different
from the way they registered to V(.!te.
"'Bu( We can easily get the extra
signatures," he added.
The City Council approved t he
fluoridation of city water last June 2
Ol) a 4 to 1 vote. Only Councilman
John Harper opposed it.
The city has not yet added fluorlde
compounds to the water,
"We've completed all of our studies.
We're waiting for a state permit. It
could come anytime now," City Manager
James Neal aaid today.
Neal also said it would be up lo
the council to decide if water fluoridation
Will wail until lbe aqti·fluoride petjtions
are valldited or rejected.
The city clerk has 30 days to check
the names on the list. lf enough names
are valid, the petitions will be submltted
to the city council which must set
a special e.lection not less than 74 days
or more than 89 days after receiving
the approved petitions.
Jf there aren't enough valid signatures,
Lindegren's group will have another 30
d,ays to add names to the petitions.
If they fail there won't be any election.
The anti-fluoride leader was confident
this morning he could get more
signatures
"Two weeks ago nine of us collected
230 names in one day," 1.indegren said.
·"Once we have an election set up
I'll probably drop out of this ," Lindegren
revealed. "A new organization will
educate the people abou~ fluoride."
He and his followers have maintained
that the fluoride which will be added
to city water is a toxic industrial
pollutant.
City water already contains some
natural fluoride, which Lindegren says
is not harmful.
"What did you do after you saw them
shooting into the ditch?''
"I fired into the ditch also.''
"How many times did ht give you..
the order," Calley was asked in reference
to bis company commander.
Calley said the order came five times
-once at a company briefing the night
before the My Lai assault, once at
a platoon leaders' briefing, the following
morning before the helicopters lifted olf,
and twice over t}\e radio while the
troops were in the village.
Calley is charged with killing 102
Vietnamese civilians in the hamlet of
My Lai 4 -one of several numbered
My Lai hamlets -as his company
assaulted the suspected Viet Cong
stronghold on March 16, 1968.
On tbe witness stand he told of about
four people that he killed. He also
admitted firing into a ditch that was
already filled with dead. But he did
not say -and was not Biked -whether
he killed anyone there.
There had been testimony that Calley
stood at that ditch, at the eastern edge
o( My Lai 4, for as Jong as one and
one-half hours. Today, Calley said:
"It was a very rapid period of time
to me • . . it seemed only a matter
of a half minute or a minute or bolh."
What did he see in the ditch?
"Dead people."
"Was there any appearance of anyone
being alive in there?"
"No, Sir."
How did the people get into the ditch?
"They had been ordered to go into
the ditch, Sir," Calley said.
Who ordered them into the ditch?
"Indirectly, I did - I told Meadlo
to get them (Vietnamese captives) to
the other side of the dltch, Sir.''
Paul Meadlo was a soldier in the
platoon tbat CalJey Jed that day.
Meadlo testified earlier in the trial
that he stood at Calley's side and by
his order shot into a group of 45
Vietnamese men, women and children.
Calley, Meadlo said, had ordered him
to "waste them ."
It is expected that the case will go
to the jury no later than Friday of
this week.
Whatever the jury 's verdict may be,
•1ulse will have to face trial on further
charges of being an accessory to the
murder of Florence Nancy Brown, a
J\1ission Viejo teacher who was stabbed
to death in an Irvine orange grove
less than 24 hours afler the 21-yeai-old
Carlin was slain.
Regarded by lawmen as lhe principal
in the Brown killing and Hulse's
companion in the Carlin killing is Steven
Craig Hurd, a 20·year-old drug using
transient who is scheduled to go on
trial March 22 for the two murders.
Hurd, like Hulse, has been declared
sane over the objections of defense
attorneys who have pointed to both
defendants' Jong addiction to a wide
range of drugs and narcotics.
Hurd allegedly led Herman Hendrick
Taylor, 17. a transient, Christopher
"Gypsy" Gibboney. 17, of Portland,
Oregon and Hulse in a rampage that
ended with the "devil cult" killing of
?t1rs. Brown, 31, of El Toro.
The prosecution claims it will prove
that the nomadic band stabbed Mrs.
Brown to death and devoured portions
of her body in a form ef satanic worship.
Ocean Pollution
Classes Slated
Students at Marco Forster Junior High
School will soon attend a lecture-movie
prografn on ocean pollution presented
by a Saddleback College instructor.
Norman H. Cole, life science. biology
and marine science instructor, will
present his program "The Last Frontier"
for eighth graders at the school March
5 at 2:30 p.m.
phase of the truil: • l ;.
Bailiffs said the jW:Ql'S, now ~tn ibetr
seventh week on· the'' Phoenix ·Case,
appeared tired and glad of the overnight
break but were otherwise "in very good
spirits."
The jury left the courtroom Monday
after hearing Phoenix, 29, make his
final comments in a trial in which be
has often taken over from deputy public
defender Roderick Riccardi to question
witnesses and address the jury.
The tall blond bachelor, looking pale
and drawn, urged the jury to remember
when it retired that much of the evidence
presented by Deputy District Attorney
Michael Capizzi was circummanlial.
"I'U wager that each of you bas seen
a magician do something that you'd
stake your life on," he said. "Well,
I'm betting my life now and Capizzi
gave you a lot o[ evidence that was
only circumstantial.
"Thousands of assumptions were made
for you. But you are not children and
you must judge from the facts," Phoenix
said.
Objecting bitterly to Ca pl z z i' 11
description of his rapes, kidnaps and
robberies as a "pattern of life," Phoenix
asked the jury to look on his acts
as "a few tragic moments.
"I just want to say that if you are
going to use 'pattern of life' as the
basis for banding me the death sentence
then the seven years I spent in (a
Kansas) prison didn 't J1elp me a bit,"
Phoenix said.
"In Kansas they hang you," he added.
"Here they gas you. At least ifs more
humane here since il takes a man li
minutes to die in Kansas.
"Thank you. you have been a very
conscientious jury.'' Phoenix said. ''J'm
sorry you had to sit through this."
The PhoeniK jury sat through the
accounts of nine women witnesses who
testified they were attac ked by th~
defendant in a 28-day spell last summer
while Phoeni:ii: was working as assistant
manager of a Huntington Beach health
spa.
From Page 1
Calley said he left Meadlo, who was
guarding an unspecified number of
people, to go elsewhere to order Sgt.
David Mitchell to set up a machinegun.
About 180 students are ~xpected to
attend the talk accompanied by a slide
sho\\' depicting sea life and the natural
habitat of ocean organisms.
Capizzi reminded the jury in asking
for the death sentence that four of those
women received severe injuries while
being raped. kidnaped and robbed by
the husky physical culture expert. HEIGHT CURBS SET. • •
obtaining the permit four days before
the ban was to be enacted.
He said the timing was purely
coincidental and said il was not unusual
actual construction work began the day
the permit was issued.
Several councilman had been critical
of the seeming 11th hour move by the
contractor.
Councilman Donald Mcinnis pointed
out the city could have enacted the
ordinance two weeks ago without Monday
night's hearing.
And Councilman ~11\an D o s t a 1
observed, "I do not take kindly to the
action of the developer," contending the
firm does "not have clean hands"
because of their actions.
Mayor Ed Hirth disagreed. pointing
out the firm had followed all the proper
procedures in obtaining Its use permit
for the structure, gone through the public
hearing process -at which there was
no opposition -and normally obtained
its permit.
''\Ve have no grounds to say these
people did anything out of the ordinary,"
the mayor said, ''thty did not sneak
anything by. They had nothing but
encouragement from the city and its
citizens."
The length or the m ora t o r iu m
especially bothered Councilman Richard
Croul, \11\i'> had cast the lone dissenting
vo:e after the council turnel down, 4
to 3, a substitute motion he had offered
that would have excluded the Lido
project from tht ban .
Croul pointed out the ordinance could
be extendtd for an t'ntire year. or longer,
if the council so desired and he (ell
thiJ uncertainty was unfair to all
potential bulldtrs and landowners.
"Where dou this leave the property
owners.," crouJ said, adding, ''I'm all
'
for the ordinance, but not for stringing
it out.''
Vice Mayor Hov.·ard Rogers stressed
thal it \\'ould take six affirmative council
votes to extend the ban -the same
number required for adoption -and
this would be an adequate safeguard.
Councilman Carl Kymla assured the
council hls Lower Newport Bay Civic
District Committee, which h a d
recommended the moratorium to allow
it to complete its work, will be done
within the 90-day period and noted the
on!y extension that might be needed
would be to allow time for the city
to conduct normal public hearings and
to cover the 3<klay waiting period for
the measure lo take effect,
The moratorium drew mixed reaction
from private citizens in 'the audience.
Several homeowners' 1 groups supported
the approach "'bile Richard Stevens, vice
president of the Balboa Bay C1u.b, which
Is preparing plans for a 50-foot structure,
said he had mixed emotions about It.
Stevens warnc-d "this is a dangerous
th.ing we are playing with" and said
he wondertd if an effective, sound civic
district· plan could be completed In 90
days.
''Bad plaMing is worse: than no
planning," he cautioned.
Kymla pointed out In response that
the-planrllng for the district. which fl
intended to provide stringent controls
of the district, had begun b3ck in
•
or Trade Name5 -~,. ~IV~s~&
O!i'17i~I..
SOMETIMES THEY ARE USED IN A MISLEADING WAY!!
THE FACT IS THAT NONE OF THESE NAMES ARE
MANUFACTURERS OF CARPETING. THESE NAMES
REPRESENT THE KIND OF f ti r R USED IN THE
CARPETING.
FIBER CONTENT DOES NOT NECESSARILY INDICATE
QUALITY, AS THE CRUCIAL DETERMINATION OF
QUALITY IS WHAT THE MANFUACTURER DOES WITH
THE RAW MATERIALS.
DUPONT, FOR INSTANCE, MAKES 62 KINDS OF NYLON
YARN JUST FOR CARPETING. CONSEQUENTLY, THERE
IS NO WAY A LAYMAN CAN DETERMINE QUALITY.
WEIGHT ALONE woN·T ASSURE THIS •.•. KN 0 w
THE PEOPLE .YOU BUY FROM I
I I
for all building within the boundaries" ALDEN'S
November.
George Buccola, a local builder, said '
he supported the ordinance but felt it CARPETS e DRAPES wa~ unfair to Include the condominium SANTA ANA. ORANGI
J I It . I lh TUSTIN c.n ... pro eel n on , pcnnt ng out e owner ALDEN'S
had acted in good fallh. from acquisition uo HILL cA•PITS l 663 Placentia Ave .
through the process of obtaining the & DAAPIRIES
permit$. Buccola built the Vista de! 11J74 lrYIM. Tustin. Cal. COSTA MESA
Lido building, Newport's first lligh·rlse nl4'44 646-4838
slructurt. IL..:;:::::.;:::, _________ ..!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;===!.------.:::::::;. ______ ,
( I J ' •
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Huntington Beaeh
EDI TION
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·.aoday'a Fl••I
VOL 64, NO. 46, 2 SECTIONS: 26 PAGES ' ORANGE COUN'I)', CAtlFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, '1971 TENC~
sea e
*'Order of Day'
Calley Admits
Mass Kill Order
Fl'. BENNING. Ga . IAP ) -LI.
William L. Calley Jr. admitted today
that he diretced a mass execution of
Vietnamese civilians at an irrigation
ditch in My Lai.
The government has set the number
of persons killed in the ditch at 70.
calley, speaking without emotion, of
killing1 at My Lai:
"It was the order of the day."
Why, Calley was asked, did he give
command to one of his soldiers to shoot.
"Because that was my order sir. That
was the order of the day" the defendant
1aid flatly.
"Who gave you the order?" asked
defense counsel George Latimer.
"Capt. Medina, sir," Calley &aid.
Calley said there were about four or
fjve of his men at the ditch. but he
could remember only Jame.s Dursi and
Paul Meadlo -the two men he said
he spoJu! with.
"What did you do after you saw them
shooting into the ditch?"
"I fired into the ditch also."
''How many times did he give you
the (lrde:r," Calley was asked in refettn«
to his company commander.
Calley utd the 1(1rder came five. lime.s
-once al a company brie.~ tbe. night
before the My Lai assault, once at
a platoon le.aders' briefinJ, tht following mominl before tile helicopttrt lifted off,
Murder Case
and twice. ove.r ~ radio while the
troops were in the village.
Calley is charged with killing 102
Vietnamese. civilians In the hamlet of
r.fy Lai 4 -one of several numbered
1t1y Lai hamlets -as his company
assaulted the suspected Viel Cong
stronghold on March 16, 1968.
On the witness stand he told of about
four people that he killed . He also
admitted firing into 1 ditch that was
already filled with dead. But he did
not say -and was not asked -whether
he killed anyone there.
There had be.en testimony that Calley
stood at that ditch, al the eastern edge
of My Lai 4, for as long as one and
one-half hours. Today, Calley said :
"It was a very rapid period of time.
to me . . . it seemed only 1 matter
of a half minute or a·minute or both."
What did he see in the ditch?
"Dead people."
"Was there any appearance ol anyone
being alive in there?"
"No, Sir."
How did the people get into the ditch'!
"They had been ordered lo go into
the ditch, Sir," Calley said.
Who ordered them ms.ilbt ditch?
''Indirectly, I did ~-i tolfl Meadlo
to get them (Vletn•e11 captive.a) to
the other 1ide DI IM dltA:b, Sit."
DA Asks Conviction
Of Huntington Girl
By TOM BARLEY
Of ,... l)llty l"ll•t '""
An Orange County Superior Court jury
was asked today lo convict Martha Riggs
of murder on the basis of "overwhelming
evidence'' that the Hul'ltington Beach
girl helped to plan the killing of Robe.rt
Leroy Hermann.
Deputy district attorney Robert
Chatterton stresses in his final argument
In Judge Claude M. Owens' courtroom
that a series of witnesses had given
the panel ''all the proof you need" that
Miss Riggs, 19. of 1824 Park St., supplied
the gun used by convicted killer Robert
Eugene. Williams to murder Hermann.
"Both of them wanted lhe same thing
done." Chatterton said. "We have been
told many times that she told several
people that Hermann had snitched and
that he was going to get it.
"And then," Chatterton argued.
"Williams came back to the Riggs home
from killing Hermann to be met by
Miss Riggs and the question 'did you
do it?\-The reply was," Chatterton said,
"'yes . J snuffed'."
Corfman when the youth admitted during
U1e trial that he shot Hermann, 19,
of 416 15th St. in the back of the
head in the belief that Hermann was
a "nark" - a police informer.
_It bas been establiabed during both
trials that Williams and Mias Riggs
were mistaken in that belief.
Miss Riggs, Williams and Hermann
were among a group of teenagers
arrested on drug charges by Huntington
Beach police• a week before the killing
last Nov. 7 of Hermann. That arrest.
it has been testified, aroused suspicions
of Hermann among the group.
The attractive defendant, outwardly
calm and composed. listened intently
today as Chatterton reminded the jury
of what he said wa1 her determination
to recover the gun after the killing
and eliminate evidence 1pinst her.
"Stle spoke to people who were involved
in or knew of the plan and 1he could
onJy have dOne that because she w•
equally involved In it." Chatterton 1aid.
"There can be no possible doubt of
Miss Riggs being gullly u charged and
l ask you to return 1 1uilable verdict,''
Chatterton 1ald. ·
• ~OD VIC
TAKES ON NEW JOB
Huntington Be1ch'1 GrM·n
Jack Green
Appointed
To Air Board ·-Councilman J ac.k Green -lht top
vote 1etter in tht lasl HunlinitOn Beach
coWlCil election -bas been appointed
an air pollution control officer in the
Coachella Valley.
He started tbe job as executive director
(If the Coachella Valley Regional Anti-
Pollution Authority (RAPA) in Palm
Springs Monday.
The newly created position carries a
$14,400 a year salary plus a $100 a
month car allowance.
At a press conference in Palm Springi
Monday. Green said that he planned
to commute from Huntington Beach and
did f!Ol int.end to resign bis council
r;eat.
Green, who was mayor of Huntington
Beach in 1970, was elected to 1 second
four·year council term Nov. 3.
Bon Blubaugh, assistant c I t y
21dm)nistrator of Palm Springs, today
explained the background of RAPA and
Green 's position,
He said that the authority was formed
18 months ago by the desert communities
(If Palm Springs, Indio, Indian Wells
and Desert Hot Springs.
"The purpose was to forestall
construction of an oil refinery that was
being planned near Banning in lbe San
Gorgonio Pass," Blubaugh said. "The.
authority was successful in defeating
that plan and it bas become a dead
issue.
"For the past year or so RAPA has
been inactive, but public demands for
action to fight the smog coming in
from Los Ange.Jes caused the local
governments here to decide. to appoint
a full-time director of RAPA to f~l
pollution."
Prior to Green's appointment. RAPA
had be.en administered by the city
attorney of Palm Springs, Fred Metheny.
RAPA is primarily funded by
(See GREEN, Page Z)
Trinl}ury
Still Out
On Phoenix
...
By TOM BARLEY
Of tM Deity l"llM Slllf
Eight women and four men who must
determine life or death for Gary Harold
Phoenl1 of Co.!ta Mesa remained locked
In thelr jury room today vdth no
indication that they were near a verdict
in the marathon rape-kidnap trial.
They returned to Orange County
Superior Court Judge William Murray's
courtroom this morning from the Santa
Ana motel to which they were conveyed
under guard at 10 p.m. Monday after
nine hours of deliberation in the penalty
9hase. of the trial.
Bailiffs said the jurors. now in their
seventh week on the Phoenix case,
appeared Ured and glad of the overnight
break but were o~rwi!e "in very good
spirits."
The jury left tbe c:ourtroom Monday
after bearing PMenil, 29, make his
final comments in a trial in which he
bas often taken ovtr from deJ)Uty public
defender Roderick Riccardi to q~esUon
,._ llld ,-.,. tl>o jury'.
The WI blond bachelor, Iookiiii pahl
llld-dtlwn. urpd the llll'l'• te -
wben It retired that much of ftie !Yldenct
presented by Deputy District Attorney
Michael Capizzi wu circumstantial.
"I'll wager that !:acb of you has seen
a magician do something that you'd
stake your life on," he 1ald. "Well,
I'm betting my life now and Capµil
gave you a lot of evidence that was
only circumstantial.
"Thousands of adumptions were made
for you . But you are not ,children al'ld
you must judae from the facts," Phoenix
said. •
Objecting bitterly to C a p i z z I' 1
dtsc.rtpUon of his rapes, kidnaps: a n d
robberie.s u 1 "pattern of life," Phoenix
asked the jury to look on his acU
as "a few tragic moments.
"I jusl want to aay that If you are
going to use 'pattern of life' 11 lhe
basis for banding me the death sentence
then the seven years I spent in (a
Kansas) prison didn't help me a bit,"
Phoenix 1aid.
"In Kansas they hang you,., he added.
"Here they gas you. Al least it's more
humane here since it takes a man IS
minutes to dle in Kansas.
"Thank y9u, you have been a very
conscientious jury." PhoeniJ: said. "rm
sorry you had to sit through this."
The Phoenix jury eat through the
accounts of nine women witnesses who
testified they were attacked by the
defendant in a 28-day spell la11t summer
while Phoen11 was working as usistant
manager of a Huntington Be.sch health
spa.
Capizzi r'minded the jury in lsking
for the death sentence that four of those
women re.ceived avert injuries while
being raped. kidnaped and robbed by
thfl husky 9bysical culture upert.
Defense attorney Chester Smith will
follow Chatterton in final argument.s
before Judge Owens reads instructions
to the . jury. It is expected that the
9anel will retire to consider its verdict
late today.
Chatterton will ask for a life term
for Miss Riggs. The death penalty is
not an issue In the trial .
Williams, 19. of 1504 Pecan St ..
Val.ley Petitions Filed
Huntington Beach, is already serving
a life term In slate prison, lmpased
two weeks ago by Judge Robert L.
Council · Rejects
Damage Oaim
A l&S0,000 damage cla im pressed by
HunUngton Beach policemen has been re.-
jected by the city council.
The claim was presenled by tht Hunt·
lnrton Beach Policemen's Association for
alleged damage to the "character and
integrity" or policemen during aalary ne.
1otiations last fall.
Policemen are expected to follow thtlr
damage claim with a ault ln auperior
court ln an attempt to gain an 11 perctnt
pay raise denied them Sept. 15 by the
cJly COUl'ICll.
The police association alltget that the
clty 1howed bad fa ith when the council
iel an a.25 percent p11y Increase for all
workers without further salary talks.
' ..
Residents Present Anti-fluori.dation Bids to City
By TERRY COVIl.LE
ot t"-Deity l"li.( Iliff
Fountain Valley residents who oppose
lhe nuoridalion of (lty drinking water
Monday filed 83 9rottst petltlons calling
for a. public election on the lssue.
They filed their petiUh in city hall
at t p,m., four hours before • deadline
that would bave m1de an election
impo&Sible.
City Clerk Mary Cole uld the petitions
contain 1,551 signatri. The anll-Ouorlde
group Meda the names of t,471 reatstered
voters to forct an election.
"All the names on our petitions
probably aren't Yalld,'' George
Lindegren, leader of lhe antl·nuoride
drive, explained today. "But we'll have
another 30 day1 to eollttt IU..flicient
names."
Llndegren 11ld 10me or tht names
pro~bly would not count because
resldents 1igntd the petiU011 different
from the way they registered lo· vote.
"But we can easily get the extra
aignatu.res," he added.
The City Council approvtd t he
nuoridation of city water last June 2
on 1 4 to 1 vote. Only COW>cilmin
John Harper opposed IL
The city has not yel odded fluoride
compounds to the water.
"We'Yfl completed all of our 1tudles.
We 're walt1n1 Jor a sltl:te permit. lt
couJd come anytime now/' City Manager
Jamta Neal Aki today.
NW allo nld it would be up to
the council to decide if water Ouorldatlon
will wait until the anti·ftuortde. petitions
1re validated t;J!' fe.lected.
The city clerk has 30/ da)'t lo ~eek
tho namu on .tlle U,t. I ~ •lll!f•
are v11lid, the pttitiQN will be aul*nltit.d
to the city council which must iet
t1 speclal election not Jess tht1n 74 day1
or more than 81 dl)'a aft.er rteelvin&
the lppN>ved peiltlons.
U'there aren 't eoougb·vallil algnatures,
Lindagren'1 groop wW have IMlher 30
da)'t lo ldd ...,.,, lo the peillionl.
U tlley l1U there -·t be 001 electlDll.
'.!'bl uU.fl-lloder w11 -danl
thil ·1110r111nc be could 1•t .....
·~...... . '1'!> _ • .,. nllM of 111. ~
D.l namea La OM dlt, .. IJtldeartD llld.
''Onoe we hav4 on electioo RI up
I'll probably dtop Out o/ lhJJ," Undqrm
revealed. "A new organization wW
educate the J>tOple about Ouorlde. ..
I-le and his followers have maintained
that lhe nuorlde whlcb will be added
lo city water is a to1ic indu.strial
pollullnt.
City "'i.r llrel,dy coot11na· lorn•
natural 'nuorld'e, whlcb Ltnde;rtn 11y1 ·
la not h1rmful.
ure
•
JU~Y PONDERS FATE
Convicted R1pl1t Phoenix
Cycle Park
Registrants
Showing Lo~ ..
A diaappointing)y low . •um!>er of
rt~.nta !or the 1u1ur1 11 ...
Beach cy<:l! park ha• placed <he plo1
for the lralls system in jeopardy,
according to the city r e c r e a t Io n
department.
Recreation Supervisor Rip Ribble 1aid
today that only 34 persons have
registered their motorcycles despite the
dtpartmenra efforts to spread t,S(IO
reglstritlon forms to t w o • w b e e I
enthu.siasts.
"The re11ponse has been l> r e t t y
d!smal," aald Ribble. "We netd at lea9t
500 registrations, but if we don't 1et
them, there will bi no cycle park..·•
Fret registration forma are available
al each of the. city'• mot.oreycle shops
and at the recreation center, Orange
Avenue and 17th Street.
"I'm afraid the motorc)ICle riders are
just not aware how critical these
registration forms are." added Ribble.
"They should get them to us immediately
so we can begin construction on the
park," '
The trails system Is planntd for the
Bruce Brothers gravel quarry, an eight.
acre pit on the corner of Gothard Strett
and Talbert Avenue.
Recreation and parks commissioners
chose the 1ite after hearing numerous
complaints from cycle. owners when the
city banned motorcycle riding on
unimproved land last 1ummer.
Rkier1 will be limited to Huntington
.Beach residents who may not use cycles
or greater capacity than 100 cubic
centimetert, accordina·to Ribble.
The bottom of the pit provides enough
space for a cycle track and hfils where
rider• can practice hillcllmbing. ,
Heart Surgery
On Bobby Darin
Revealed Today
LOS ANGELES I AP) -Bobby Darin,
U.year-old elriger, actor aod sonprUer,
waa in "very good" c:andjUon todaJ aft.er
undergoing heart ""lfl')' ltVtral ·days •Co· 1 bolpltol opoke11111n Mid.
The apokamln Ior Cedln "!LLeblnon
HOfl>ual. Cl)!ll4 not dllclooe we · euct .. u.. ol t11o operolloo but llld· It wu-
ool comldered au emerseaey.
"lt'1 a .maior 9peraUoa. _,. he1rt
pl'Dcedun wDllld be COl1lldertd m1jor
ourgery," tile apo1<e11m10 Olld. ·
Darin "" 1clmltted lo tile holpital lite Iul week. The opok .. m1n uid Darin
had tt<jueslld that d<tollt ... bl
rtlea1fld. •
. "I u,.Jentood !tie whole thine WU
. J\llt a bic ...,..!, " a11e 111a.
Darin, ~~ wrote auch aon11 a1
"Sptlah,, spl.Uh," and ··~am Lover,"
ha& nOt worked ID fRm1 lately btit has
been 1ppearln1 ln Lis Vt&u ehowa. .,
County Man
Faces Four.
Kidnap Raps
By· ARTlllJR II. YINSBL
0 1 Ille DellY l"llM Sl•ff
A 13-bo;ur manhunt for an 0rlnlt' Cocm-
t1 convict who sllppid .away from Sm
Quentin Prison Monday night, kid1aping
a policeman's ramily tnd friend eodecl iD
climactic chaos today in Fullerton.
Jame.. D. "Jimmie" Harvey, 24, ·Wu
captured following a 100-mile.per-haur
freeway chase Jn whi(h one 11hot wu fired
by police, wbtn his stolen car c:rubed.
into a cafe.
The fugitive -who had rtleaaed flnt
the policeman's family, then h11 remain-
ing hostage -was ta ken into custody et
the scene, where fire erupted In the
wreckage.
Firemen roped ot'f the scene to prevtnt
Injury to the curious or ·a possible ex·
plosion due to gasoline from the car'a
ruptured tank.
Additional details wtre not available
at presstime.
Des9ite the fact Harvey. a four-Ume
loser, still held Mn. Cheryl J. Smith,
23, prison authorities had said he was lltlt
considered dangerous.
He wa.s armed with a pair of ICisaon,
?.trs. Stansfield reported today.
A 12-hour nightmare ended at 9:20
1.m. today for Novato Police Officer
Gary Staruibeld, 30, when his wife
ttlep!loncd 1µ\borlO,. lrom tl>o ~
Bowl Cafe, 400 miles south on Highwa7
99 in Kem County.
She announced she and their children,
Robert, a, and Suunne, 4 montha, ·bad
(llee MANHUNT, P11e I)
Adult Education
On Sex Slated
At Golden W eat
They may think they may know an
1~t it, but _adullll have a lot to learn
about the subJect of 11ex.
So says Mn. Sylvia Boge.n, a well knoWn lechlm", who will present a flve-
week series on "Sex F.dui:ation for
Adults: A Ne.w Look," at Golden West
College, beginning Wednesday.
The programs are offered free of
char1e by the Golden West Evening
College · in cooperation with the Fourt h
District PT A a11 a community 11ervice.
They will be held in the College Ce ntei:
at 7:30 p.m. on succe.ssiye Wednesdays.
Mr&. Bogen Is former state chairman
of parent education for thfl Ca!Hornia
Congress of Parents and Teachers.' She
is the current vice-preaident of the
Orange County chapter of the National
Council on Family Relations.
In addition to lecturing widely tn
California, she writes a newspaper
column on "Understanding Teenagers."
To9ics for her series are:
Feb. 24 -"Sex Education: What
Progress Have We. 1,lade?"
Mar(h 3 · -"Sex , Education in the
Family: Fare.well to the Birds and tbe
Bees ....
March to -"S61uat and Emotional
Development During the Tttn Yean."
March 17 -"Tbe Sexual Revolution:
A Dilemma for Both Generations."
March 24 -"Sex 1n Marriage."
Oruge
We•tller
Sunny 1kies will prevail Tue.
day, but windy-weather will keep
the coastal temperature down to
58 degree&, with inland readinp
up lo 62 predicfed.
INSmE TODAY
Eu,n if 1t0u•ittmire ltO"" de-
diccUona l'OU don'' how to oo tllr<>IJ4~. •~• toriuo., JOb of
compuC~Q .,ottr tahi ttuta. Stl
SrlviG Port.n's second in ift.·
comt ta.i 11n11...Pcge 10.
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-.. .,.,., '"'"' , . ftit!lllMI ~ .. --. lyMt ,..,. ,., .... .,..,, , ... ...,..,.n
''"'""" " =j --·· --..
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; % DAll Y PILOT H T .. ldl>'. ''°"'"' "· 1971 From Page l
N. Vietnam Bit MANHUNT •••
U.S. Anno·unces been fretd.
Mrs. Stansfield. 30. said they were
safe and local officers arrived at the
pbone bOOtb moments later to confirm
it.
Heaviest Strikes Authorities ln Marin County said tlie
drama began to unfold at 9:47 p.m.
1n suburban Novato. as the officer's
family left a small house party. .
SAIGON (AP) -The U.S . Command
today announced its heaviest air strikes
in North Vietnam in three month:;. South
Vietnam's top fighting general was killed
in 1 belicopltr crash, and for the sixth
day DO progress was reporled in the
South Vietnamese drive in southern Laos,
Fifty American fighter-bombers raided
surface-to-air missile -SAM -sites
and other antiaircraft positions in North
Vietnam Saturday and S u n d a y ,
accompanied by about 20 support
aircraft, the command said. ll added
that no planes were lost. They were
the heaviest such raids since Nov. 21.
Other sources aaid the raiders also
attacked supply depoUI.
A communique said the American
planes h.it targets near the Laotian
border and "below the 19th parallel,"
or somewhere along a stretch of border
that runs for about 190 miles northwest
Larwin Firm
Issue Back
In Courtroo1n
·' LarwiD Company's controversial Foun·
ta.in Valley property -the match that i&nited the bitter 1969 recall election
-is back ln Superior Court. ., Lemon Helghts Realty ls suing Larwin
Company for $162,000, clalmlng it was
defrauded of commission on 175 acres
sold by William G. Lewis lo lhe Larw1n
Company.
-A Larwin proposal to build bomes
with small lots on the acreage caused 'i bitter recall election in which then·
;;payor Robert Schwerdtfeger and coun·
r::ilme.n Don Fregeau and Joe Courreges
*ere ousted from office.
'Lemon Heights claims it was ading
ls realtor for sale of the land when
Schwerdtfeger and former city attorney
Edwin Martin stepped in to complete
Jhe transaction with Larwi!1·
An earlier suit bad been filed by
Lemon Heights against Schwerdtfeger
and Martin, but was dropped.
·~ After the recall elecUon, a new City
Council changed the original Larwin pro-
'Oioaal aDd allowed homes on large lots
la be1bullt on the land near Magnolia
Street and Ellis A venue.
Moorhouse Set
For Austr"lia
Lifesaving Meet
Vince Moorhouse, Huntington Beach's
director of harbors and beaches, ts going
to Austfalia next month to attend an
international Ille saving meeting.
He will represent the National Surf
Ufe Saving Association of America at
a meeting March 24 of the lntematlonal
Council of Surf Life Saving in Sydney.
The U.S. association wUI pay all
Moorhom;e's travel and hotel expenses.
Tuesday night the HunUngton Beach city
council unanimously approved the trip
and Moorhouse's absenct from the city
for 10 days.
Ph!Up Stubb!, president of th e
American association, said in a letter
to the councll that the international body
is planning to establlsh a new cnn·
stltution, by.laws, and management
setup. Moorhouse has been the American
auociatlon's international liaison officer
for the past two years.
OUM•I COAST
DAILY PILOT
OM.HG• COAn' Pllll.llMING C'OM'AH't
l•Mrt N. w•,1
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Jack •· C11rr•V' Vka ,.,,_-., Md 0-.1 MllllOCI"
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Alan Olr.'ln
W•f °""'9lt C-"f 1:41tor
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11111 a..u l111l1•1r4
Malll"f A44r1ht P.O. lat. 790, •2141 .............
l.etll"' llldl: 2ZI: l'or•I A-
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of the demilitarized zone and ends about
160 miles 50Uthwest of Hanoi.
The U.S. Command said lhe
••protective reaction" strikes were
ordered after "repeated hoslile acts and
recent SAM firings by antiaircraft
posiUons against U.S. aircraft involved
in interdiction of Nortll Vietnamese
supplies along the Ho OU Minh Trail
in Laos."
A spokesman said he did not know
what damage the pJanes did. ·
CAIL l PILOT P~oll "' T•rrr CtY llle
A woman living behind the restdence
had just reported a barefoot man w~se
dungarees were v.·et to the knees tried
to burglarize her house but fled when
she awoke. Only three minutes later Harvey -
scheduled for release in just six months
and one week -was discovered missing
in a IO p.m. bedcheck at a minimum
security facility outside prison walls.
Novato Police Sergeant Tony Stoutt
said the suspecled burglar apparently
confronted the Stansfield fa m 11 y
demanding a ride.
f.1rs. Smith -still missing until 10 :30
a.m. today -wilnes.sed it and came oul
to .see what was happening.
•·You don't kn<.!\V him -go back."
said f.1rs. Stansfield. described as being
a cool, level-headed lady.
The raids began three days after
President Nixon warned that he v.·ould
place no limitation on the use of
American air' power in Indochina. There
have been 14 previous "protective
reacUon" strikes against N o r th
Vietnamese SAM alte.s this year, but
all were by one or two planes escorUng
B52 bombers or reconnaissance planes.
The general killed wu Lt. Gen. Do
Cao Tri, commander of the 25,000-man
South Vietnamese drive agalnst enemy
base camps in eutem Cambodia and
a confident, aggressive leader. Hts death
was conaldered a temporary setback to
the Vtetnamlzatton program.
Striking Commodity
But it was too late and Harvey, a
barber born in Bee Branch. Ark., and
sent to San Quentin in 1967 for a Garden
Grove car theft conviction, orde red her
into the blue sedan , too.
''To my knowledge. they'd never . ".'et
before." said Sgt. Stoutt, emphas1zrng
the policeman's wife would know how
to handle things. f
Huntington Beach is known for its oil and its surf,
brought together in this view, looking toward city
pier from Golden West Street and Pacific Coast
Highway. There are 51 oil wells along the beach
between llth and 30th Streets.
"My Y"ife would probably have
screamed and passed out ," Sgt. Stoutt
quipped to emphasize . Mrs .. s~ansifeld·s
capacity to keep calm 1n a cr1s1s.
Tri'a helicopter caught fire and crashed
shortly after he took off from his
headquarters at Tay Ninh to visit his
troops in Cambodia. Nlne men were
fat.a.Uy injured w 1 t b the 42-year~ld
general, including a veteran French
correspondent for Newsweek magazine,
Francois Sully, 42.
It was believed a fuel leak cawed
the fire.
Meanwhile, 13 miles south of Tay Ninh
and a mile from the Cambodlan border,
about 300 No r t h Vietnamese troops
attacked an American artillery bas~
supporting Tri 's for«s across the border.
Some of the attackers broke into the
base and blew up a fuel dump. The
Americans said they killed nine of the
enemy, while U.S. casualties .were two
killed and nlne wounded.
ShorUy before Tri's death, his troops
reported killing 140 North Vietnamese in
four clashes in eastern Cambodia. Four
South Vietnamese were reported killed
and 33 wounded.
A South Vietnamese spokesman said
there has been "no progress reported"
by the 16,000 South Vietnamese troops
in southern Laos trying to cut the Ho
Chi Minh supply trail. Informed sources
said in addition to heavy resistance from
enemy troops, the region ''bas been
heavily mined."
Saigon·s spokesmen bave alternately
reported the {orwardm0.5t elements 16
to 171,2 miles west of the border. Today
a rpok!SJ'han sild they were 18 air
miles into Laos and added, "! never
measure the winding road." !
In response to a question, the
spo~sman said the South Vietnamese
force has "no intention to move farther"
inta Laos. But other sources said the
Saigon command still was thinking of
moving farther westward once the drive
got rolling again.
The spokesman said 4.l North
Vietnamese were killed in two clashes
along the trail network Monday. He
said South Vietnamese losses were two
killed all<! 26 W<>unded.
Hanna Proposes
4-year Terms
In Legislature
Orange County Rep. Richard Hanna
(0..Anaheim) has called for a four-year
term for members of the House.
In a speech to Congress, Hanna warned
that "legislative quality is dizninished
by the need for incessant and expensive
campaigning. The complex issues of the
1970's demand sufficient time lo master,
and the two year term does not provide
the necsssary time.''
He said the two year term tend!
to make politicians dependant on those
who can finance increasingly costly
campaigns.
"Congressmen must be independent
from special Interests and a four year
tenn will relieve members from the
burden of having to finanee a new
campaign every other year," Hanns said.
Two other proposals contained in his
speech were a mandatory retirement
age of 70 for Representatives and fUnds
whlch would allow Congressmen te> send
qUarterly newsletters and questionnaires
to their constituents.
In speaking of the mandatory
retirement proposal, Hanna noted that
almost every important House committee
chalnnsnship ls held by a man over
or approaching 70.
''This discourages qualified young men
from running for office," he said. Hanna
also pointed out that business. teaching
and even the Catholic Church practice
mandatory retirement.
"Congress must come up to the
standard the rest of the nation has
set for itself," he said.
Colorful Cleanup
Keith .Hall. 8. with Becky Davis, 13, touch up one of 30 new trash
cans lhat bave been decorated by students in trash can painting con·
tesl at Circle View School in Jiuntington Beach. Contest combines
art v.'ilh drive for clc~ner campus. Winners '"ill be treated to ic::e
cream.
I
U.S. Emergency Action The 1967 auto swung around In I
U-turn and headed away, then turned
back and shot past the party house
again. Seen in Soaring Costs tnvestigai.ors combing the area where ~1rs. Hannah Jobst, 46, told of routint
the v.·ould-be burglar foWld a blue dtnim
jacket wil!'l a stencilled serial number
inside. WASIDNGTON !AP) -Secretary ol
the Treasury John B. Connally told
Congresa today the Nixon Administration
mlgbt well use standby power for a
wage-price in a parUcular industry -
presumably the construction industry.
CoMally'1 testimony to the House
Banking and CUrrency Committee came
as he ei:pressed the administration's
v:illingness to accept an extension of
the standby wage price control authority,
opposed by President Nixon when it
was first voted last year.
Connally emphasized, however, the
administration bas no intention cf
imposing a general wage price freeze
unless Congress specifically calls for
it. He said, however, that Nl.J:on will
make a statement later today that "I
hope will make clear that eouging will
not be permitted."
Movie Theaters
Eyed in Valley's
W oolco Center
The Shields Development Compa1y will
ask permission Wednesday night from the
planning commission to build Fountain
Valley's first two walk-in movie theaters.
Both theaters are part of the Woolco
Shopping Center Shields is building 01 the
southwest corner of Brookhurst Street
and Edinger Avenue.
The Woolco Center is one of the larger
commtreial developments planned in
Fountai11 Valley. It had a rocky start a
few months ago when neighboring resi-
dents complained about it.s proposed de·
sign.
City plaMers have since forced Shields
to provide more landscaping and better
butler zones in the parking lot.
Wednesday. planning commissioners
will look over phase two of the three-
phase development of the center. They
will also con5ider granting a conditional
exception permit for the two theaters.
The commission meets at 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesday, ln city council chambers.
Connally was questioned specifically
about the discussions between the
Secretary of Labor J. D. Hodgson with
C<1nstruction labor union officials.
He was asked whether his statement
disclaiming any intention <>f a general
frtete might rule cut action n one
specific nndustry.
"I don 't rule it out at all," Connally
replied. He said Hodgson had gone to
Miami for the discussions. ''because tbe
building trade had bad enormous wage
increases.''
"We might well do it," he said.
Rep. Henry S. Reuss (0.Wis.), quoted
to Connally what Reuss said was a
statement by Nixon that no one industry
and no one side of the bargaining table
would be made a scapegoat in the fight
against inflation.
"He woula not make one industry or
(lne side of the table a scapegoat.
"I thiik that would still be his view/1
CoMally sJid.
From Page J
GREEN ...
contributions from the four co mmunities.
Palm Springs has earmarked $5,000 for
the agency this year.
Green, who could not be reached this
morning. will work out of the Palm
Springs Chamber of Commerce office.
ulilizing !hat organization's secretarial
staff.
Blubaugh said that Green will develop
programs to preserve the desert ecology
and attempt to obtain federal funds
for RAPA and contributions from Private
sources.
At Monday's press conference, Frank
Purcell, chairman of RAPA, also
announced that t h e authority hoped to
appoint an associate director if Green
is !UCctssful in obtaining more funds.
Green was president of the Orange
County League of Cities last year and
presenUy is vice president of the South-
ern California Association of Go\'ern-
ments tSCAG).
He hopes to obtain a degree in public
administration from Cal State, Fullerton
in June.
•·That's the clothing we issue •t San
Quentin." confirmed Ca 1 if or n i a
Department of Corrections 1pokesman
Irwin Ritter.
''We don't consider bim a violent
person." Ritter added.
He theorized Harvey y;alked away from
his dormitory area and fled through
1nudflats fronting the big pink prison
on the bay. perhaps hitchhiking to the
town 20 miles north.
Mrs. Stansfield confinned this morning
that Harvey was the kidnaper and
apparently discussed the fact he had
been in San Quentin.
Lawmen throughout C a 1 I f o r n i a
mobilized and called in the FBI,
anticipating Harvey might steal another
car since the Stansfield auto was nmniD&
low on gasoline.
Word of the '5Cape would make tt
dangerous for him to attempt to purchase
more fuel. ,
Orange County aulborities described ·mMr as buiClll;y a aniall·Ume con
altliough a foUr·tlme repe'iter dating
back from his original certification in
1963 to the California Youth Authority.
His last listed address was 181 Pl1.ley
SL. Orange. where he was living when
arrested in connection with the Garden
Grove car theft that landed him behind
state prison walls.
Harvey's Orange County T e c o r d
includes grand theft and jail escape
besides the car theft rap four years
ago.
He served one year in Orange County
Jail following his grand theft conviction
in 1965, according to a District Attorney's
Office spokesman.
The fug itive convict -considered far
from the Bakersfield area shortly before
noon and headed ror Mexico -was
described as 5 feel , 9 inches tall and
weighing 140 pounds. '
No description of his young hostage
\vas available, but the Stansfield car
is a dark blue, tw<rd09r Ford hardtop
\vith license UHD678. police said.
No speculation was offered as to why
Harvey would risk a long, stiff prison
term -possibly the death penalty with
kidnaping involved -ra ther than serve
bis last six months.
e
cat,. . YiNtstf9.
Afo11;,. ...• ""to
C~tL
SOMETIMES THEY ARE USED IN A MISLEADING WAY!!
• '
THE FACT IS THAT NONE OF THESE NAMES ARE.
MANUFACTURERS OF CARPETING. THESE NAMES
REPRESENT THE KIND OF F 11 ER USED IN THE
CARPETING .
FIBER CONTENT OOES NOT NECESSARILY INDICATE
QUALITY, AS THE CRUCIAL DETERMINATION OF
QUALITY IS WHAT THE MANFUACTURER DOES WITH
THE RAW MATERIALS.
DUPONT, FOR' INSTANCE. MAKES 62 KINDS OF NYLON
YARN JUST FOR CARPETING. CONSEQUENTLY THERE
IS NO WAY A LAYMAN CAN DETERMINE QUALITY.
WEIGHT ALONE WON'T ASSURE THIS , • , , KNOW
THE PEOPLE :rou BUY FROM I
SANTA ANA, OltANOI
TUSTIN Call , ••
ALDIN'S
RID HILL CAll,ITI
& DltAlllltlll
IW4 Jrvlne, Tu1tln, Cal . ........
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave •
COSTA MUA
646-4838
J
t
'
I
Manson
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Leslie \>'an
Houten, Y:ho confessed P.1onday she
helped kill a market owner's wife. said
today she once was offered immunity
if she would testify for the state at
the Sharon Tate murder trial.
She said she rerused : "l'\•e al"•a,·s
considered the fact that J "'ould take
the stand, but not on the side of the
prosecution to get myself off ...
"I'm willing to carry the weight that
T ha\'e -that I "'as at the house
where lhal v.·oman "'as qiurdered and
I had the knife in my hand. J am
Girl
ready to 11y what I've done aod I'm
ready to be done with."
Earlier. ahe said o( the sl1ylng: "Y.'c
started stabbing and cutting up the
lady."
··1 stabbed her." the pretty brunette
said calmly . "~ don't know if it ·wa~
before or after ahe was dead but l
stabbed her."
~1iss Van Houten, 21, telling fl.1onday
-0f killing Rosemary La Blanca, became
the th.lrd woman codefendant in the
Sharon Tate mUrder · trial to make. a
witness stand admission of murder .
Like Patricia Krenwinkel and Susan
Tutw!aJ, Febru.1ry 23, 1971 H DAILY Pit.ff 3
She Refused Immunity
Atkins who prteeded her, the Youngest
woman defendant said Charles Maruson,
leader of a hippie-style ''family," had
no part in planning or executing the
murders or stven ptrsons, including Miss
Tate, the ·actrtss.
Manson, 36, and the three women have
been convicted of murder and CQnsplracy.
The jury is hearing teslimony in the
!rial's penally phase, to decide whether
to Set !he sentence at death or life
imprisonment.
Miss Van Houten's attorney, Maxwell
Keith, asked if she was sorry about
the deaths.
"Sorry i~ only a five letter word,''
she said. "It can't brlng back an)'bocly.
What can I feel"? It happened and it's
just gone."
Does she ever feel like crying for
?drs. La Blanca·s death?
"Cr)' lor her dealh? If I cry for her
dealh. il's for death itself. She's not
the only person who has died."
Inside the La Bianca home she said,
La Bianca was tied up on a couch.
hb wife sealed beside him. The state
says t.1anson entered first. tied up the
victims. then :sent killers in. The women
say he wasn't there.
?otrs. La Bianca told the Intruders:
''We'll give you anything ,'' then led the
two women into the bedroom, Miss Van
llouten recalled. where they admired
clothes in a closet .
"She was standing behind us. She
pit ked up a great big table lamp •.•
I Sa\v Lhe lamp coming down and I
blocked Jt. \Ve fought and I threw her
down on lhe bed and I tore the pillow
case and put It on her head."
Miss Krenwlnkel, she said, went to
the kitchen and returned with a handful
of utensils. "l kept telling the woman
'pl,.,. be auu• ••• Sh< Just kept uylnf
'I won't call the police' and the more
she kept saying 'l won't ca.II the police'
and the more she kept aaying police
the more panicked I got •..
"She grabbed for lhe lamp shade again
and I took one of the knives that PatricJa
had and we started stabbing and cutUnf
up the lady."
l.ater. she said, the three hHchhiked
back to the clan's commune. and ahl
told 1\1anson what had happened.
Miss Van Houten said she no· longer
th inks about the ~lngs: "I don't think
about things thal are already put.''
Tax Hike May Be Needed-Fluornoy
Ota Sincerity
Solon Proposes
Liberal Draft
WASHINGTON !UPI) -Chairman F'.
Edward Hebert of the House Armed
Services Commitee suggested today that
Congress liberalize the draft law to grant
conscientious objector status on the basis
of "sincerity" -not just religious belief.
Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird
did not comment on the proposal as
he opened committee testimony on
extending !he Selective Service Act, but
he told reporters afterv.·ard that he would
•·certainly look at it very closely."
'NOT PSYCHOTIC'
Murder Oefendent Hulse
UCI Doctor Says
Hulse 'S ane'
At Murder Scene
A UCI psychialrisl today became the
second medical expert to testify that
Arthur Craig "fl.foose" Hulse was sane
when he allegedly chopped service station
attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin to death
with a hatchet last June I.
Dr. Frank V. Hoffman of Huntington
Beach told an Or;ingc County Superior
Court jury in the Garden Grove youth·s
murder trial that Hulse suffered from
a. "personality di sorder'' and v.·a~ "de!·
initely antisocial " at the time of the Car.
Jln killing.
"But he was not psychotic." Dr.
Hoffman said. ''lfe told me he took
a large quantity of Seconals and they
blew his mind but he knew what be
was doing."
: Hoffman's testimony supported that
of Dr. John Guido, a prosecution witness
who like Hoffman thi,; morning. testified
that' a remark made by Carlin while
tie was being robbed allegedly prompted
Hulse to grab the hatchet and hammer
Carlin to the floor of the restroom.
Hoffman also cnmmcntcd under
que~tioning from Deputy DI S I. r i ct
Attorney ~'lartin J. lleneghan 1hat llu!se.
)6. at the lime of 111'~ crin1f'. "wasn't
thal roncerned wirh the crime itself''
11od allegedly remarked ~·hen be wa!'
lntervie"·ed four days ago by the
psychiatrist that he "·as only arrested
because "sqmeonc in jail for· .something
else talked about lt. ''
The jury had heard a recording 111
~·hich a voice identified as that of Hulse
admits the killing of Carlin. And
Heneghan plans lo put Hulse on the
ltand again tod1y 1s his last wit.nes!
•tn the prose<:utlon '1 case 1gainst the
itefendanL
II is e~ed that the case will go
lo the jury no later than F'riday of
)bis week.
• Whatever the jury's verdict may be,
lfulse will have to face trial on further
c:harp:es of Ming an accessor)' to the
murder of Florence Nancy BrO\\TI, a
J.1isaion Viejo teacher who was stabbed
to death in 11n lrvlne orange grove
1tu than 24 hours after the 21·yiar-old
carnn was slain.
\
Hebert, a Louisiana Democrat, said
such a liberalization of the law v.·ould
ease the plight of draft · boards now
caught between tight legal definitions
of "'hat is required lo qualify as a
conscientious objector.
But should Congress make this
modification. Hebert said it should also
require each objector to spend three
years in nonmilitary service "in the
national interellt," either in a public
or private endeavor.
In opening hearings on extending the
draft law which expires July I, Hebert
said that a man "may have views which
are essen tially or a personal nature and
not based upon any religious training
or belief. the depth of his conviction
v;ould be sufficient lo j u s t i f y
conscientious objector status."
If an objector failed to perform his
alternate service satisfactorily, Hebert
said, "The law should provide that they
then be identified as available for
induction with imm~iate transfer to
the armed forces.''
He said the three.year alternate service
would not be punitive because those
called to active duty are subject to
combat assignments and must serve four
years in the reserves after they are
released from two years of active duty.
President Nixon has asked Congress
to extend the draft law until July 1,
1973, and to provide $1.5 billion in salary
increases lo make military service so
allractive that the draft can be
abandoned in favor of an all-volunteer
army.
Laird told the committee that an all·
vo!W'Jteer Army would be a ''most
difficult ta sk," but predicted it could
be achieved by June 30, 1973.
Herbert recommended that basic pay
for the draftees be increased more than
the SO percent asked by Nixon. "Those
who support the all-volunteer force in
principle must ask themselves if the
recommendations of the administration
are sufficient to move us any appreciable
way to"•ard that concept," he said.
Laird said that a zero draft call Is
the administration's goal by mid-1973,
but he said the draft was necessary
in the interim and asked the committee
to approve a tw<>-year e1tension.
County Jetport
Site Near Brea
Studied by FAA
Orange County'~ proposed jetport site
in the Chino Hills northeast of Brea
is currently being studied by the Federal
Aviation Administration. according to
county Director of Aviation Robert
Bresnahan.
Bresnahan said the FAA Is studying
the site for airspace compatibility. He
said if found aceeptable, preliminary
construction costs in , the hilly area will
be developed to be reported to the Board
of Supervisors.
The Chino ltills site has possible
conflict v.·ith Chino Airport and Ontario
International.
The Chino Hlll~ site is !ht only county
jetport site under seriou,; ronsideration
al this timr. The propo..~d Bell Canyo•1
1'i!e in southeast Orange County met
v.·i1h grc11r opposition.
TI1e Bell Canyoo site v.•as xuggellterf
In the Ralph M. Parsons Company report
ba~ed on a ~ix monlhll 11tudy. The report
also suggested joint use of the El Toro
Marine Air Station. runways which has
met with heavy complaint from Mission
Viejo residents. ·
The Orange County Airport continues
8ll the county's only jetport and Is
subject lo night restrictions as lo number
per da)' and hours of departure.
SF Hospi tal Aider!
By Irvine Foundation
SAN FRANCISCO fUPI) -The James
Irvine FoundaUon aw•rded St, Francis
~1emorial Hoepital $90.000 MoJtda)' to
complete 1 new Jl·ra.y facility.
Now being built •t a tost Of $270,000.
the facility will provide rapid I·ray ex·
posures using 1utomatlc film chanaers
and high voltage beams.
Ul'I Ttlt1111fll
After the Stor1n
Lone man sits amid ruins of home leveled by
tornado that hit Selmer, Tenn. Series of twisters
has left path of death and destruction through
South and fl.1id,vest. See story, Page 4.
Supreme Court
Nixes Revie'v
On Development
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme
Court refused Monday to review a lower
court decision that the Army Engineers
have broad powers lo protect the ecology
as well as navigation in coastal waters.
Tbe court, in a bri er order, refused
to hear an appeal by Florida developers
seeking to build an island on submerged
land they own in Tampa Bay.
The order left standing a decision er the Sth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
lhat the engineers had authority to ref11se
lo permit the project solely because
it would harm fish and "'ildlife.
The circuit court. describing the case
as one of "spectacular p u b I i c
importance." reversed a decision by a
federal district court at Tampa lhat
the engineers had no authority to deny
lhe permit since the proposed islo ild
would not interfere with navigation.
The circuit court conceded the case
was one in ~·hich the engineers would
have granted the permit routinely a
few years ago when their only lega l
concern was navigation.
Longtime City Chief
Of Atlanta Di es at 30
ATLANTA, Ga, (AP\ -fl.1aynr
Emeritus \Villiam 8. ltartsfield. who
once said "Atlanta ill too busy to hate .''
died fl.fonday night of a heart condition.
He was 80.
Hartsfiekf served as mayor from 1936
uritil 'his retirement from politics In
1961, flctpt for 1 one-year wartime
interruption.
Santa Barbara Drilling
Clai111ed Not Dangerous
WASHINGTON lAPl -The Interior
Deparlmenl relea sed Monday a
preliminary draft of an environmental
impact statement suggesting I h a t
exploratory oil drilling in the Santa
Barbara Channel off California would
present no serious environ me nta I
problems.
The channel was the scene of a major
oil spill from a runaway production well
two years ago, and de par tm en t
permission for further oil development
has been \l'ithheld ,;ince then. although
the channel was widely leased to oil
companies wh ich paid more lhan $600
million in bonuses.
The department said that becau se the
leasing too k place before passage of
the Nati onal Environmental Policy Ar.1
of 1969, the environmental impact
statemenlll called for in · that act are
not a legal requirement on the Santa
Barbara oil development.
But il added that it is issuing
environmental statements anyway to
C1lnform to the spirit of the acl.
An introductory statement said the
draft released Monday was prepared
by staff nK!mber s of the U.S. Geological
Survey and was hcinG released to obtain
comment from other federal, stale and
local agencies and from the public.
"lt has not been submitted for final
review or approval of the Department
of the Interior or any of its bureaus ,"
the introduction said.
Summarizing its tentative findini:is . the
report said that exploratory drilling in
the channel -designed only to locate
oil reserves and not to produce oil -
"will not advl'!:rsely affect the short·term
or long·lerm value of the environment."
"The program is the only way to
evaluate lhe resource reserve potential
of the federal domain in the Santa
Barbara Channel." the report said.
It said eitploratory drilling "is a
transitory operation that, in itself, does
not alter the environment."
But it does raise the prospect of oil
production that could modify the area's
natural stale. the report added.
"However." it concluded. "any such
modifications are not anticipated to be
permanent. Should the option of mineral
development be adopted, the platform
structures could be expected to remain
for periods of 10 to 50 years depending
on many factors."
Under the more stringent regulations
11nd increased inspection imposed llince
the Santa Barbara spill of January 1969,
!he report said, a major oil spill from
exploratory drilling is highly improbable.
Should a spill occur, it said•
recreational and commercial uses of land
and water in the area '·would necessarily
be curtailed until the oil cleanup had
been completed."
But it said there Is little evidence
th :-it the Santa Barbara spill serioui;.ly
;iffccted long term biological productivity
of the area.
Studies on the long term effects of
oil spills indicated potential \amage but
were inconclusive, the report said.
The exploratory wells , it added, would
be drilled 10 deeper zones beneath the
channel. and would require additiona l
steel casing.
Collision • ID 14 Hurt
Philippine Jl y drofoil Boat Slants Into /luge Shark
MANlLA fUP I) -A speedini:
Philippine Navy hydrofoil loaded with
American tourists slammed into a huge
11hark in Manila Bay today. Many
passengers were hurled to the dfck or
badly cul in collapsed steel chairs.
No one was critically injurtd but Don
Murray, a purser aboaTd the American
President Lines' PYesident Wilson, said
''at first it looked a lot "·orse than
it w1s. There were blood and bod lu
11! over the place."
Philippine tourist officials '°'aid t?lere
were 33 tourisl.3 on board the ?~foot
Navy hydrofoil which was returning from
Corregidor, the World War II fortress
in Manila Bay.
'11\irty of the tourists were pa!'SenRer!'
aboard thP. President Wilson "'hlch
arrivtd earlier today from llong Kong
on the end or 11 ~llY Pacific cruise.
Jot1e Cle ment e , the dtpulv
commissioner of Philippine tourism,
said 111 lcnst 14 of !he triurist~ required
medical trealment for assorted cull! and
bumps. At least one person had a broken
arm.
Passenger Robert Hall, a contractor
rrom Long Beech, said "it was a shark
and it was over 20 feet long , lt was
the biggest thing I've ever seen. We
cut it in two. Chunks started Ooating
by."
Murray, the purser , of San Francisco,
conrirmed he saw a huge dorsal fin .
The lourlsts had CQmplcted tht short
three-hour tour of the island and were
;1bou t a thi rd of the way back on the
28·mile trip when the vcssc>I struck the
shnrk and "·ent dead In the waler.
II was i;hortly after 12: 15 p,m in
clear weather.
''It wa11 like hitting a stone \\·all."
said f\t nrshatl Yeatman of Kennett
Square, P11. He wa!I s1Ulng up forward
\
In 11n aluminum deck chair which
collapsed.
It took 22 st.Itches to close the cut!!
In hi!! left arm. Ills wife was bruised
but not seriously injured.
Captain Valdemar Nielsen, 70, a former
captain of lhe President Wilson, suffered
a broken right arm in the collision.
"A 200·pound man fell on top of my
arm." he said. "and all he lractured
"'as his pants .''
Howard l.irern. 8 retired steamship
ofricial from Oakland, said thtre was
no radio in the hydrofoil and the crew
had lo flag down a passi ng Inter-island
shfp. Green needl?d 10 t1tltches to clo.!ie
a cut in his head bul hls wife was
nOI injured.
The rtscuc ship, MV Dona Flortntlna,
provldtd a doc tor for first aid and took
!Ome nf the tourists to a hospital al
the Mobil rt.finery 1t Limay, Bataan,
for treatment.
Sharp. Cuts
Could Avert
l11creases
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -ConlrOUer
Houston I. Flournoy Hid today that
11 tax hike would be necessary to balance
the 1971·72 state budget "unless tber1
is a drastic reduction in erpenditurta
or a marked increase in revenues."
Flournoy said it was "apparent'' that
the general fund was headed for 1 deficit
of about $150 million during the cumnt
fiscal year before Gov. Ronald Re1pft
announred emergency e c o n o m 1
measures in December.
F'lournoy's $150 million figure backed
up Reagan's estimate last fall.
"Whether or not the economy measures
announced by the ( R e a g an )
administration are totally successful In
eli1ninating that deficit, it Is apparent
that there will be ltttle or no unrestricted
surplus as of June 30, 1971, to compare
~·ith the $144.8 million of June 30, 1971),"
Flournoy said.
The comments were ct1nlained In a
letter to Reagan in his financial report
on the 1969-70 fiscal year.
Total expenditures the previous fiscal
year were $252.12 mil lion greater than
total revenues, he told the governor.
All government costs totaled $5.73
billion with expenditures reachinl f5.99
billion, Flournoy said.
Badham Pushing
For Regulations
On Water Beds
From Wire Senletl
SACRAMENTO -Assemblyman Robert
E. Badham (R-Newport Beach rwilched
from waterfoWI to waterbeda: in 'Je&isla•
live action Monday.
Badham. who got Into bot wit.er
recently for accepting, then turnin& back
a per diem payment while be wtnt
duck hunting, is now out to protect
consumers buying the latellt sleeping
fad. the water bed.
The Newport lawmaker wants w1min&
tags placed on the aquatic mattresses ..
Badham authorized a bill provklin&
for state regulation of the new products,
plastic shells filled with about 200 gaDon1
of water and often tipping the 1cale11
at 2.000 pounds .
"How would you feel being awakentd
rrom a sound sleep by a ton of water
exploding beneath you?" questioned
Badham in submitl\ng the proposal.
liis measure would require the weight
of lhe filled bed be plainly noted;
that the electrical heating unit be fool·
proof. and that all beds be sold with a
protective oute r cover.
Mother .4.rrested
In Death of Boy
An Anaheim v.·oman told a psychiatrist
at the Orange County Medical Center
1\fl'nday that she had killed her 5-year-<tld
son .
Mrs. Mary Jo Gale, 37, of 16S5 P1mpas
Lane. was booked on suspicion of murder
pending investigation or the cause of
death or the boy.
His bod)' was found by the father,
Gordon L. Gale, In bed 1t the family
home.
The Orange County Coroner's Ollieti
Is investlgating the cause of de1th of
Patrick Gordon Gale, whose fifth
birlhday was Monday.
Coroner's aides said it was the second
time in a year that Mrs. Gale had
reported the death of one or her children.
Jn February of 1970, the told lJOllce
she had drowned her daughter Kalhleen.
2.
An aulopsy showed !lit child hod died
from a throat lnfcctlon.
Don Winslow Creator
Frank Ma1·tinek Diea
TUCSON (UPI) -Frank V. Mar1mek,
creator of the "Don Winslow of Utt
N11vy" CQmlc strip died hert Monday.
He was 75. ·
fl.1artinek, Whose featUI": Wll printed
in more than 200 newspapers, had lived
here •ln<t rtUrlD1 In llllO.
4 UAILY PILOT Tutsdiy, Ftbl'\liry 2.3, 1171
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Washington Sweats Out Laos Thrusts '
11,ti<;
'Prai1e the Lord and
pa.1 the marijuana.'
Power to
People
By DICK WEST
Jn reviewing the problems ()f the over-
developed areas of the world, l rece.nU)'
pointed out that the people in these
regions have become almost totall}'
dependent on electricity.
Even such elementary devices as
fingerna il files and sewing scissors have
been electrified, the result being a
ma!l6ive power drain that threatens l'l
exceed productive capacity.
Slnee a power failure would create
utter chaos, I proposed that the Un.ittd
Nation.s recruit adviser& in under·
developed areas to teach the natives
of the over-developed areas how to
perform such simple tasks as beatlng
eggs or rem oving lint from a c o a t
coll ar without turning on the current.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Although the
White House is talking down the point
150 far, violent North Vietnamese counter
atl<lcks are tran sforming the South
Vietnamese invasion of southern Laos
into a crucial test or President Nixon's
strategy of U.S. withdrawal from
Vietnam.
Informed officials concede the stakes
are becoming higher than they would
have been if the Laos operation hid
paralleled that in Cambodia last spring
when Ill• IJahU.1 w11 reWlvtly lllht.
A m1jor failure Jn the strike agaln5t
the Ho Chi Minh Tr1il complex, h<lwever,
would raise serious questions about the
next atage of the withdrawal program,
scheduled for May, since tht whole
disengagement process is based on the
ability of the South Vietnamese army
to defend Ila country.
State and Defense Department
1uthorities b o t h put out the
administration line Monday that, while
disappointed over the heavy leases
Vn·know1i Hero Hunted
1uJ'!ered by the South Vietnamese In
one eniagement, the action ii not
regarded 11 a aetback in the over-all
attack agairut the North Vietnamese
supply lines at1d base areas.
Spoke.smen, who would not be Identified
nor quoted directly, indicated South
Vietnamese combat ability was being
teated, but lmplled nothing was likely
to happtn to affect the President's
withdrawal strategy.
Other officials. however, are by no
means 50 confident. The S o u t b
1 STILL BELIEVE IUCh a program
ls vitally needed, but I now ue It
would have to be handled wlth great
tact and finesse to avoid orfend.lng the
people it was dr.slgned to help.
This point v.•as made clear to me
ln a Jetter I received from a nati ve
of the northeuttm part of the United
States. wh ich is one of the mo.st badly
over-developed area5 on earth.
Three years ago during the Tet Offe nsive in Viet·
nam, this unidentified Marine, at the risk of his own
Jife, drove a Mechanical Mule through intense fire
and saved a number of wounded comrades. His
identity remains a secret, but S/Sgt. Joseph Mc-
Laughlin, a platoon leador during the batue, feels
he's a step nearer to solving the mystery through
this film clip. McLaughlin says the unsung hero has
a medal coming.
"We Northeasterner5 ma y be over·
, 1 \ ..
"'1h .. TJ:i
' . ti I fiirj([pfllJ1rrEri€ I
• ~de-; I ~
George C. Scott
Repeats: 'Thanks
But No Thanks'
Bribe Suspect Oruns Up;
Takes 5th at PX Hearing
'
de veloped," he wrote , "but tha t doesn't
mean we don't have our pride. If you
meddling do-gooders will leave us alone,
we can solve the power shortage problem
v.·ilhout out.side help.
.. IT WAS AMERICAN technology that
got us into thil5 mess . and America n
technology can get us out. All we have
lo do is use It in the right v.·ay.
"In the past, technology has alway5
been used to promote progre1S. But
since v.·e are now o"·er-developed, we
must start using technology t o
retrog:rw."
As an example of how techMlogy can
be used for tha t purpose. he cited a
phonograph record titled "Shuggie '1 Old
Time Dee-O i·Lee·Leet·Deet SI id e
8oogie."
THE SONG was recorded In sterto
on unbreakable, flex ible vinyl at J.l.1/3
A.PM 's. Wh ich is the modern. hl·fi
method. But. accordir .. 3 to its dust jacket.
1t was "electronicall y reprocessed to re·
create 11n old .scratchy record."
"If electronics can do it. there is
no rtason why olher types of technology
can't make gimilar strides and revert~d
breakthroughs.
"Eventually. we·u be able to pull
ourselves dov"n by our own bootstraps."'
-UPI
SAN PEDRO DE ALCANTARA. Spain
( APJ -George C. Scott has sent a
cable asking that his namt be withdrawn
from nomination for l'ln Acad emy Award
as best actor, I.he third time he has
spurned an Oscar.
The cable to the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences 5aid he would
not be in Hollywood for the awards
ceremony "nor will any legit imate
representative of mine attend."
Scott, 43, said today, "l simply do
not v.·ant to get involved." "Peculi1r
as it may seem. I mean no offm11
to the Academy," he added.
He was nominated Monday for his
performance in ''Patton.''
Scott turned down tw o previous
nominations for best supporting actor.
Before the nom inations this year he
said he v.·ould refuse an Oscar should
it be awarded him. He said the method
of nominat ion and voting makes the
prize meaningless.
Scott is making a movie in Spain.
"GenUtmen : Although I have received
no official notification, elements of the
international pn!ss ha ve Informed me
that I have recenUy been nominated for
an Academy Award . Once again I
respectfully request that you wilhdraw
my name from the list of nominees.
?-.1y position on this matter has bun
generally well known for some 10 ye1r1.''
WASHINGTON (AP) -An Mmy
sergeant accused of accepting kickbacks
at the GI clubs he ran in Vietnam
invoked the Fifth Amendment 13 times
toda y in refusing to answer questioru
of Senate investigators.
A ae<:ond witness, a form~r i;ale&
executive for Ctrllngs Black Label beer.
testified he was "anowed '' by the cha rm
of an American sales broker and was
unaware thousandg ol dolla rs in Carllngs'
promotion funds may h&ve been used
for kickback! and bribes.
1st. Sgt. Alton Crews r e f u 5 e d
repeatedly to ansv.·er any of the questions
asked him by members of the Senate
Permanent Investigations Subcommittee.
Monda y. Jack Bybee testilied Crews
received a $12.000 kickback when the
clubs he ran paid Sl2n.OOO for the stock
of a gift shop concession run by sales
enterpreneur William J. Crum .
Bybee. a former general manager for
two Crum businesses dealing with
military clubs and PXs in Vietnam,
also testified that the only time Carling&'
promotion money was used to promote
beer wa! dur ing 1 vislt by Gordon P.
"Tommy'' Thompson. as the beer
company's former expert director,
At au other times the money was
used for klckbacb, Bybee nld.
Storm Slams Great Lakes
Two-inch Snow fall Co vers Parts of Michigan
Cellfortdu
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I
Crews ref used to say v.•hether he had
eve.r accepted any kickbacks, whether
he had ever picked up payoff money
in a Hong Kong bank or whether that
money had ever been transferred to
his account in the Union Credit Bank
ot Switzerland.
Thompson testified he was .. deeply
distressed" to learn that Carling money
that was made available lo Crum had
ever bttn used for illegal purposes.
"You should know that neither J, nor
to my knowledge the Carling Brewing
Co., ever knowingly engaged in or
approved any kickbacks, bribes or
payoffs," Thompson testified .
If the funds we.re used illegall y, he
said, "then both Carling and I have
been hoodwinked.'' •
"Based on the record nf Carling sales
in Vietnam ," he 1ald, "whatever William
Crum may have done for others,
whatever he may have done for himself ,
whatever relation. proper or improper,
he may have had with anyone, he did
not do anything for Carling."
Israel Drafting
Territory Terms
For Peace Plan
By Tbt A1JOciated Pre11
The Israeli government has created
three committees to draw up territorial
terms and new borders it would accept
in a Middle East peace agreement,
informed sources report. But Egypt ha'
told the Big Four aga in that peace
is impos.slble unless Israel withdra~'S
from all the land It captured in 1967 .
Premier Golda Meir's Cabinet declared
Sunday that t~rael would neYer return
to the boundaries existi ng before the
June 1967 war but !iaid it is willing
to negotiale new .. secure and agreed''
lerritorial lines.
Mahmoud Ri1d, Egypt's fore i gn
mi nl&ter, Monday called in Donald C.
Bergus, chief U.S. diploma t in Cairo,
and the ambassadors of Britain, France
and the Soviet Union. A ministry
spokesman said he told them the Israel
refusal constituted. "a challenge tb the
U.N. charter, the Big Four powers and
world public opinion."
"Peace can Mt be es labli.shed in
the area without Israel's tot1l withdrawal
from the entire Arab lands occupied in
June 1~7. ·• Riad declared. He caDed
on the four governments to "face this
new lsr1ell chaUenge and lake up their
respon1i bill ties toward peace," t h e
spokesman said .
The aource1 in Jerusalem uid one
border mapping committee is headed
by a senior 1rmy offlctr, another b)'
key government official! and the third
is made up of e2perta on international
law.
Vletname.se 1round-forct ~l was
regarded as a risky action from the
beginning. depending on how the North
Vietnamese reacted. Counterattacks in
the last week have persuaded
knowledgeable officials Hanoi decided to
react w/tb considerable power.
In the most dramatic action 10 far ,
a South Vietnamese Ranger battalion
was driven from a hlll position, with
about 300 or the 450 men in the unit
killed or wounded.
2-day Toll: 82
Field di5patches said, fun.hermort.
the drive into Laos has been stalled
by counter strikes for five straight days. ,
However, some of the best informed
officials here challenged a field dispatch
that the North Vietnamese ha v t
increased the number of vehicle• ·
operating on the Ho Chi. Minh Trail
from 1,000 to 2,00ll.
Thtre is no basis for estimatinJ: an y
1uch increase in truck volume, these .
sources said.
Tornado Strikes
Again, l(ills Two
FAYETIEVILLE, N.C. (UPI) - A
tornalo slruck North F a y e t t e v i 11 e
Monday, kllling at least two person.s
and in1uring 60 others, in the &econd
day of deadly weather in the South.
··it looked like London during the
blitz,'' said the Rev. Albert C. Bean,
'41, alter surveying the damage from
the twister. apparentl y spawned by the
same weather pattern wh ich unleashed
a series of tornadoes tha t killed at
least 80 ~son.s in Mississ ippi and
Louisiana Sunday.
One of Bean's sona was on a small
van used as a school bus which was
whipped into the air by the twi!ter,
overturning several gimes, and another
son watched from the Bean living room
as the front porch of the house was
ripped off.
The tornado cut a M>O-foot-wide path
through a business·residential area in
North Fayetteville near a velerans'
hospital, then skipped along a route
paraUel to Interstate 95.
At \Vade. about 10 miles northeast
()f Fayetteville on 1·95, William Turner,
43, said, "I heard a noise that sounded
like a locomotive or an airplane.
"About tha t time, the roof tore away
and the walls began to fall in," he
15&id. Turner was hit by debris, but
was not injured . His nine-year-old
daughter, Lela, suffered a broken leg .
At Falcon, about 15 miles from
Fayetteville, the twister blew In the
wall of a gymnasium at Falcon's
children's home, injuring four children.
The other children were evacuated.
Both the Veterans' Hospital end Cape
Fear Valley Hospital suffered power
failures from downed lines and had to
resor t to emergency generators to treat
the injured.
A wa ter tower and a small bu.ildiog
on the Veterans' Hospital site were
destroyed, and lrees on the hospital
grounds were uprooted, but the hospital
suffered only some broken glass and
no patients were injure\.
Only a ftw b Io ck s away, Mrs.
Margaret Davis , 66, and her daughter,
~1rs. Wilma Ray, 41, died as a result
of injuries when their house was
destroyed. ~1rs. Ray's two children v.·ere
injured.
At least 17 homes in Fayetteville wer!
destroyed, and many more badly
damaged. Several service stations and
other 6mall businesses ~·ere destroyed
• ". p a
_,
' .
.\....
Space ESP~
in lhe path of the twister.
Cape Fear Hospital treated 18 lnjureC:
persons. and Womack Army Hospita l
at nearby Ft. Bragg treated more thar.
25 tornado victims.
Midwest Hit
By Flooding ,
Huge. Storm
By UNITED PRESS OOERNATIONAL
Parts of Kansas, Nebraska and Iowa
remained virtually paralyzed today as
winds up to 50 miles an hour pllerl
up snowdrifts that only National Guarr:
vehicle.s could penetrate.
Tornadoes touched down Monday ir
Indiana. Ohio , the Carolinas and Ge<irgia.
killing two persons at Fayetteville, N.C.
The death toll in Mississippi 's Sunda~
tornadoes rose to 80.
Flooding drove hundreds or. person;
from homes along the Mississippi an c
Ohio rivers and their lributarie! and
even Hawaii was hit by a freak hail,
sleet and snow storm.
Nebraska National Guardsmen used
four·wheel.clrive vehicles to provide
esJential services in the storm areas of
their alate. Virtually every school in
the eastern part of Nebraska was closed
today for the second .!traight day.
Hundreds of persons were stranded
In downtown Omaha during the Monda y
evening rush hour. Only one flight left
Omaha's airport as high winds drifted
snow across runways.
All highways in Kansas were clcl6ed
or virtually impassable. Trains and
busses were stranded and some 600
person.s were reported s tu c k on the
Kansas turnpike as snow piled lnto IS.foot
drifts.
Blizzard conditions continued lnlo !ht
night in parts of Iowa , where wind:ii
up to 60 miles an hour whipped a
foot of new snow. Traff ic was stopped
;1cross most of the state as the snow
fell and weather officials voiced concern
that any rapid melt ing could send swollen
streams over their banks.
The storm sprouted tornadoes i nd
heavy ra in as it moved eastw!lrd. "A
probable tornado·• touched down In
Columbus, Ohio. cau.sing heavy property
damage and at least five mi nor injuries.
Another twister tore the roof from a
rural home west of Greensburg. Ind .
, • , • 5
Olof Johnson , 1 Swedlsh·born dulling engineer. displays cards which
he used in Extra Sen5ory Perception test with Astronaut Edgar
Mitchell during the Apollo 14 flight. Johnson uld more •tudy would
have to be done to determine ESP capabilities from space.
I
f
Fountain. Valley N.Y. Stocks
VOL. 64, NO. 46, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CACIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, .1971 TEN CENTS
sea e
~order of Day'
I
Calley Admits
Mass l(ill Order
FT. BENNlNG, Ga . < APl -Lt.
William L. Calley Jr. admitted today
that he diretced a mass execution of
Vietnamese civilians at an irrigation
ditch in My Lai.
'J1le govemment has set the number
~f persom killed in I.he ditch at 70.
Calley, speaking without emotion, of
killings at My Lai :
"lt was the order or the day."
Why, Calley was asked, did he give
command to one of his soldiers to shoot.
"Because that was my order sir. That
was the ord er of the day " the defendant
said flatly.
"Who gave you the order?'' asked
defense counsel George Latimer.
"Capt. Medina. sir." Calley said.
Calley said there were about four or
five of his men at the ditch. but he
could remember only James Dursi and
Paul Meadlo -the two men he said
he spoke with.
"What did you do after you saw them
shooting into th! ditch?"
"I fired inlo the ditch also."
.. How many limes did hi! give you
th@ order," Calley was asked in reference
to hi.$ cornpany·comrnander.
Calley said the order came five times
-onct at a company briefing the night
before the My Lai aMaull, once al
a platooD leaders' briefing, the following
morn.inc before the helicopters lifted off,
Murder Case
and twice cvv-the radio while the
1roops were in the village.
Calley is charged with killing !OZ
Vietnamese civilians in the hamlet of
My Lai 4 -one er several numbered
My Lai hamlels -as his company
assaulled the suspected Viet Cong
stronghcld on Marth 16, 1968.
On the witness stand he told or about
roor people that he killed. He also
admitted firing into a ditch that was
already filled with dead. But he did
not say -and was not asked -whether
he killed anyone there.
There had been testimony that Calley
stood at that ditch, at the eastern edge
of My Lai 4, for as long as ,one and
one.half hours. Today, Calley said :
"Jt was a very rapid period or time
to me . • . it seemed only a matter
of a half minute or a minule or both."
What did he see in the ditch?
"Dead people."
"Was there any appearance of anyone
being alive in there?"
"No, Sir.''
How did the people get into the ditch~
"They had been ordered to go into
the di tch, Sir ," Calley said.
Who ordered them into the ditch~
"lndinct.ly, l did -I told Meadlo
lo 1et U>!m (Vietnamese captives) to
the olber 1idt of tbt dttch, Sir.''
DA Asks Conviction
Of Huntington Girl
By TOM BARLEY
Of 11" DtOf , ... , Stiff
An Orange County Superior Court jur y
wu asked today to convict Martha Riggs
of murder on the basis of ''overv;helming
evidence'' that the Huittingto n Beach
girl helped to plan tbe killing 0£ Robert
Leroy Hermann,
Deputy district attorney Rober l
Chatterton stresses in his final argument
in Judge Claude M. Owens ' courtroom
that a series of witnesses had given
the panel "all the proof you need" that
1tfiss Riggs , 19. of 1824 Park St., supplied
the gun used by convicted killer Robert
Eugene Williams to murder Hermann.
"Both of them wanted the same thing
done," Chatterton said. "We have been
told many times that she told 11everal
people that Hermann had snitched and
that he was going lo get it.
.. And then,'' Ch at t er t (I n argued,
"'Williams came back to lhe Riggs home 6-mn killing Hermann to be met by
Miss Riggs and the questi on 'did yo u
do it?'. The reply was ," Chatterton said,
"''yes. l snuffed'."
Corfman when the youth admitted during
the trial that he shot Hermann. 19.
of 416 15th St. in the back of the
head in the belief that Hermann was
a "nark" -a police informer.
.It has been established during both
trials that Williams and Miss Riggs
were mistaken in that bel ief.
Miss Rigp, Williams and Hermann
were among a group or teenagers
arrested on drug charges by Huntington
Beach police a week before the killing ~ast Nov, 7 cf Hermann. That arrest.
11 has been testified. aroused suspicions
of Hermann ~mong the group.
The attractive defendant, ()Utwardly
calm and composed, listened intently
today as Chatterton reminded the jury
of what he said was her determination
to recover the gun after the killing
and eliminate evidence agairuit her .
"She spoke to people who were involved
in or knew of the plan and she could
only have done that becaUR 11he wai;
equally inv(l/ved In it,'' Chatterton said.
"There can be no possible doubt of
Miss Riggs being guilty as charged and
I ask you to re:turn a. suitable verdict,"
Chatterton said.
~on vi ct
TAKES ON NEW JOB
Huntington Beach's GrHn
Jack Green
Appointed
To Air Board
Councilman Jack Green -the top
vote 1etter in the let ~D ~
council election -has been appointed
an air ' polluUon. control officu in 1be
Coachella Valley.
He started the job as e1ecutive director
f)f the Coachella Valley Regional Anti-
Pollution Authority (RAPA) in Palm
Springs Monday.
The newly created position carries a
$14,400 a year salary plus a $100 a
month car allowance.
At a press conference: 'In Palm Springs
Monday. Gr@en 11aid that he planoed
to commute from Huntingtcn Be:ach and
did not intend to resign bi.! council
seat.
Green, who was mayor of Huntington
Beach in 1970, was elected to a se:cond
four-year council term Nov. 3.
Bon Blubaugh. assistant c i t y
admjnistrator of Palm Springs, today
l!xplained the background cf RAPA and
Green's position.
He said ·that the authority was formed
18 months ago by the desert communities
nf Palm Springs. Indio, Indian Wells
and Desert Hot Springs.
"The purpose was t<> f c r e s t a 11
construction of an oil refinery that was
being planned near Banning in the San
Gorgonio Pass," Blubaugh said. "The:
authority was successful in defeating
that plan and it has become a dead
Jssue,
"For the past year or so RAPA has
been inactive, but public demands f(lr
action to fight the smog coming Jn
from Los Angeles caused the local
governments here: to decide to appoint
a full-time director of RAPA to fight
pollution ."
Prior t(I Green's appointment. RAPA
had betn administertd by the city
attorney of Palm Springs, Frl!d Metheny.
RAPA is primarily funded b y
IStt GREEN, Pa1e l)
Trial Jury
Still Out
On Phoenix
By TOM BARLEY
Of ..... 0.1\f ..... , ···"
...
Eight women and four ml!n who must
determine life or death for Gary Harold
Phoenix of ~ta Mesa remained locked
In their. jury room today with no
indication that they were near a .verdict
in the marathon rape-kidnap trial.
They returned to Orange County
Superior Court Judge William Mw:ray'a
courtroom this morning from the Santa
Ana motel to which they were conveyed
under guard el 10 p.m. Monday after
nine hours or deliberation in the penalty
phase of the tri al.
Bailiffs said the jurors. now in their
seventh week on the Phoenix case.
appeared tired and glad of the overnight
break but were otherwise "in very good
spirits." ,
The jury left the courtroom Monday
afler hearin1 Phoe:n ix, Z9, make his
final comments in a trial in which he
has often taken over from deputy public
defende:r Roder ick Riccardi to question
witnesses and address the jury.
Tht tall blond bachelor. looking pale
rod drawn, urtttl lht jury_,.,..,,_
when tt ntittd that much al th< ~
Jll',..nted by Iltpllly; Dislrlcl Atfi1rrw1
MJchael Capiui was cin:um.stantill.
''l'U ,wager that each (If you has seen
a fJ'ja,giclan do something that you 'd
atake your life on,'' he said. "Weli.
11m betting my life now and Capiui
gave you . a Jot of evidence that was:
only circumstantial.
"Thousands (If assumptions were made
for you. But you are not children and
you must judge from the facts," Phoenix
said.
Objecting bitterly to C ap l.z z I's
description of his rapes, kidnaps. and r~berie:s as a "pattern of life ," Phoenix
asked the jury to look on his acts
as "a few tragic moments.
''I just want to say that if you are
going to use 'patte:m of life:' u the.
basis for handing me the death aentence
then the seven years J spe:nt in (a
Kansas) prison didn't help me a bit,''
Phoenix said.
"In Kansas they hang you ,'' he added.
''He:re: they gas you. At least it'a more
humane here since it takes a man lS
minutes to die in Kansas.
"Thank you, you have been a very
conscientious jury," Phoenix said. ''I'm
aorry you had to ail through this."
The Phoenix: jury 11at through the
accounts of nine women witnesses who
testified they were attacked by the
defendant in a 28-day 11pell last summe:r
whlle Phoenix was working as assistant
manager of a Huntington Beach health
spa.
Capiu.1 reminded the jury in asking
for the death sentence that four of those
women rectived severe injuries while
being raped, kidnaped and robbed by
th< husky ph)'11ical culture expert.
Defense attorney Chester Smith will
follow Chatterton in final argumen~
before Judge Owens reads instructions
to the . jury. lt is e1pected that the
panel will re.Ure to consider its verdict
late today.
Chatterton will ask for a life term
for Miss Riggs. The death penalty 'is
bOl an issue in the trial .
Williams, 19. of Jso.4 Pecan St.,
kuntington Beach. is already serving
' life term In state prison. imposed
two weeks ago by Judge Robert L.
Valley Petitions Filed
Council Rejects
Damage Claim
• A '650,000 damage claim pressed by
MuntingtM Beach pol.Icemen has been re--
jected by the city council .
Tha claim •as presented by the Hunt~
lngton Beach Policemen·, Association for
alleged damage to the "character and
lntearity" (If police.men during salary nt-
aotlatlons last fall .
Policemen are e1peeted to follow their
damage claim with 1 suit in 1uperior
Coun In an au.empt to rain an II percent
pay raise denied them Sept. 15 by tht
city couitcll. The police 1s.'IOCl1tion alleges Uuit the
City showl!d bad faith when the council
Ml an 1.2$ perctnt pay tncreau frw all
workers wllhotlt further salary ta lks.
' • I
Residents Present Anti-fluoridation Bids to City
By TERRY COVILLE
Of IM O.llY '11•1 Sl•lf
Fountain Valley resldenls who cpposg
the: fluoridation of city drinkin& water
Monday filed 83 protest. petitions calling
for a public election on the luue.
They filed their petitions in city h•ll
at 1 p.m .• four hour!! be:fore a deadline
that W()Uld have made 1n election
impossible.
City Clerk Mary Cole said the petition!!
contain t ,SSll signatures. The anti-Ouoride
group needs tbe names of 1,471 re:giitered
voters lo force a.n elttllon.
"All the ~~ on our petitions
probably aren't valid," Gt or g e
Llndegren. leader of the antl·Ouoride
drl\'e, explained today. "But we'll have
another 30 days to coDect sufficient
names."
Llndegren aaid aome: of tht name!!
probably would not count because
residents signed the peliti(lll different
from the way they registered to vote .
"But we can ea!lily get the extra
signatures," he added .
The City Council approved t h.e
nuoridation of city water last June 2
on a 4 to 1 vote. Only Councilman
John Harper opposed it.
The city has not yet added fluoride
compounds to the water.
"We've completed all of our studies.
We're waiting for. a ltate pmnll. It
could comt anytime now~" City Manaeu
James Ntal said today.
Neal alto 11Jd It would be ~p to
th< council to decide II ritu Ouorld1ti0n
wlll wait unW the anti·flllOride petitions
are valldated or rejected.
The city clerk has 30 doy1 to ch«k
the names on the 1isL If enough name!I
11re valid, the petitions wilJ be submitted
to the city council which mu11t aet
a !pecial eltctio;, D(ll lw than 74 days
or more than It day1 after rectlvinc
th< approved petltlons.
lf there aren't enough valid algnaturts.
1Jndeven'1 J'OUP wW have anotber 30
day1 to add nama (o the pe:Utlons.
lf they taJI there won't be any election .
The anU-Ouorlite Jtader was confident
this momln1 he CO\lld &et more
•lpalum .
"'I'Wo week• .,.,. nine of· us collected
230 names ln one dly," Ltndegren s&k1.
"Onco wt have an election aet up
1'11 probably drop oul of thi•," Undeven
nvuled. ''A new organization will
educatt the people about fluoride."
He and his fotlowe:rs have maintalntd
that thf: nuorlde which will be added
to city water ls a toxic lndustrl.al
pollutant.
City wattr already contalns tome
. natural nuor1de, which Llndecren uys
Is not harmful.
• ~::· -y • -• • 1~-~ ....... J~.~-~·
ure
County Man
-~-:.j Faces Four.
c •. ' .
JURY PONDERS FATE
Convicted Rapi1t Phoenix
Cycle Park
Registrants
Showing Low
" •
A, di.!appoiqtlngly low ' numbe:r of
~II fqr th< f111"!io;~
Beach cyele J>llfk bu . p\aced th< plans
for lhe lraila 1y1ttrn. in' jeaplrdf,
aeebrdins to the city r ec re a:t Ion
department. · ,
R.ecreation Supervisor Rip Ribble said
today that only 34 peraoO., havt
registered their motorcycles despite the
department's effprt.s ltt. 11ptead -1 ,500
registralion forms to two· w hee I
enthusiasll,
"The reaponse has been p r e tty
dismal,'' said Ribble. "We need at least
SOO registrations. but if we don't get
them, there will be no cycle park.''
Free registration forms are a~ilable:
at each of the city's motorcycle: shoP'
and at the recrtatJon ctnte:r, Orance
Avenue and 17th Street.
"l'm afraid the motorcycle riden are
just not aware how critical these
regl.rtraUon forms are," added rubble.
"They should get the:m to w lmme:diately
so we can begin construction on the
park."
The trails system Is planned for the
Bruce Brothers gravel quarry, an eight.-
acre pit on the corner of Gothard Street
and Talbert Avenue.
Recreation and parks commls!l9nera
chose the site. after hearing numerous
complaints from cycle owner• when the
city banned motorcycle riding_ on
wtimproved land last 11ummer.
Riders will be limited to Hunt,ington
Beach residents wh(I may not use cycles
of greater capacity than 100 cubic
centimeters, according to Ribble.
The bottom of the pit provides enough
space f(lr a cycle track and hilll wbere
riders can practice hillcllmbing.
Heart Surgery
On Bobby Darin
Revealed Today
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Bobby Darin,
34-yell'-Old slnge:r, actor and aonpTlter.
waa in "very good'' condition today Jfttr
underg(llng heart ""leTY ; aeveral days
Jg(), a hospite.J apokesman saJd.
The spokesman for Cedars of Lebanon
Hospital could not dilcloee the exact
naluu of the operaUon but uld It. wu
not considered an emtrceney.
"It's a major operaUon, any hurt
procedure would be constdtted -majO!'
surgery," the spokesman aald.
Darin wu odrnltted to Ille hocpJtal
late: Wt week. The spoke.man uld Darin
had requeated thal detail& • nol ho.
released.
. "1 undentood the wholt ·ihlAg "as
just a big 1tcret," she niCI.
Darin, who wrote 1uch soncs IS
11Spll1h, Splash," and 0 Drti1n Lover,''
has not worked In films lately but hu
been appurlng ln Lu Vegu 1bow1.
l(idnapRaps
By ARTHUR I\. VINSEL
Of !flt 0.lfy , .... '''"
A 13-hour manhunt for an Orange ~
ty . c~vict who slipped away from San
Quen~n Prison Monday night , kidaapm,
a policeman's family and friend ended in
climactic chaos today in Fullerton.
James 0 . '1Jimmie" Harvey, 24, wu
t:aptured f()Jlowing a 100.mile-per-hour
freeway chase in which one shot was fired
by police. when his stolen car crashed
into a cafe.
The fugitive -who had released first !he polictmu'a family, then his remain-
ing hostage -was taken Into custody at
the scene, where fire erupted in the
wreckage,
~ire.men roped off the scene to preve:nt
lnJury to tbe curious (Ir a passible ex.
plosion due to gasoline from the car's
ruptured tank.
Additional details were 11ot available
a t pressUme.
Despite the fact Harvey, a four-time
loser, atill held Mn. Cheryl J. Smith,
2.1, prison authorities had said he was not
cMSidered dangerous.
He was armed with a pair of scissors
Mrs. Stansfield reported today. •
A 12-hour f!.igbtmare. ended at 9:20
a.m. today f(lr Novato Police Offictr
Gary Slansfield, 30, when bis wife
telephoned authorities from the Salad
Bowl Cafe, 400 miles iOUth on Highway
99 in Kern County,
She announced she and their children
Robert, I. and Suzanne, 4 months, had
(See MANllVNI', Pa1< II
Adult Education
On Sex Slated
At Golden West
They. may think they may know all
about it, but adults have a lot to learn
abbut the subject of sex.
So says Mrs. Sylvia Bogen, a well
knqwt1 l~turer, who will present a flve-
we:ek series on "Sex Education for
Adults: A New Look," at Golden West
College, beginning Wednesday.
The programs are offered free of
charge by the Golden West Eve:ninc
College in cooperation with the Fourth
District PTA as a community service.
They wiD be held in the College Cent.es:
at 7:~ p.m. on successive Wednesdays.
Mis. Bogen is former state chairman
of parent education for the: California
Congress of Parents and Teachers. She
is the ' current vice-president of lhe
Orange County chapter of the National
Council on Family Relations.
In addition to lecturing widely In
California , she wrltea a newspaper
column on "Understanding Teenagers."
Topics lor her series are:
Feb. 24 -"Sex Education: What
Progress Have We 1t1ade?"
March 3 -''Se1 Education In the
Family: Farewell to the Birds and the
Bees,''
March 10 -"Sex:ual and Emotloi1aJ
Development During the Teen Years."
M~ch 17 -"The Se1ual Revolution:
A Dilemma for Both Generations."
Marcb 24-"Sex in 1!farriage."
Oruge Coast
Weatlaer
,Sunny skies will prevail Tue!-
d&y. but windy weather will keeJ)
I.ht coastal temperature down to
58 degrees, wllh lhtand readings
up to 62 predicted.
INSmE TODA 'Y
Even· if uou itemize vour dt·
ductiQM Vo" don't haut to go
through the tortuoUI job of
com.puttng flOUr aoltr mer. St•
Sulvio Porl.tr't .!tcond in in--
come. W Hrltt. Pagt 10.
l
• 2 DAI\. Y PILOT H T"""1, f1bMly "· 1971
N. Vietnam Hit From Page l
U.S. Announces
.. MANHUNT •••
bee11 freed.
Airs. Stansfield, 30, said they were
safe and local officers arrived at the
phone booth momen!J l>ler ID coollnD
iL
Heaviest Strikes Aulhorllies In Marin County 11ld the
drama began to unfold at 9:47 p.m.
in suburban Novato, as the officer's
famil y left a small house party.
SAIGON (AP) -The U.S. Common<!
today announced lta heaviest alr 1trike1
Jn North Vietnam in three months, South
Vietnam's top fighting general was killed
In a helicopter crash, and for the sixth
day no progress was reported in the
South VJetnamese drive in southern Laos.
Fifty American flgbter·bombers raided
gurfaoe-to-air missile -SAM -sites
and other antiaircraft positlon.s in North
Vietnam Saturday and S u n d a y ,
acrompanied by about 20 support
aircraft, the command said. It added
that no planes were lost. Thf!y were
the heaviest au.ch raids since Nov. 21.
Other IOUl'ces said the raider• also
attacked supply depots.
A communique said the American
tilr.nes hit targets near the Laotian
border and "below the 19th parallel,"
or somewhere along a a~tch of border
that runs for about 190 miles northwest
Larwin Firm
Issue Back
In Courtroo1n
·Larwln Company's controversial Foun.
ta1n Valley property -the match that
ignjted the bitter 1969 recall election
-la back ln Superior Court.
i..mon Heights R<alty b llllng Larwln
Company for $162,000, claiming tt wu
defrauded of commission on 175 acres
sold by WlllJam G. Lew!J to the Larwtn
Company.
A Luwln proposal to build home&
with small lots on the acreage caused
a bitter recall election iD which then-
mayor Robert Schwerdtfeger and coun·
cilmen Don Fregeau and Joe Courregea
\\'ere ousted from office.
Lemon Helgbta clairm lt waa acting
:a.s realtor for aale of the land when
Scbwerdtfegtr and former city attorney
Edwin Martin stepped In to complete
the transaction with Larwin.
An earlier suit had been filed by
Lemon Height.I against Schwerdtfeger
and Martin, but was dropped .
After the recall election, a new ctty
Council changed the original Larwin pro.
posal and allowed homes on large lots
tO be built on the land near Magnolia
Strett and Ellil A venue.
Moorhouse Set
For Australia
Lifesaving Meet
Vince Moorhouse, Huntington Beach's
director of harbors and beache.s, b g01ng
to Australia next month to attend an
international life saving meellng.
He will represent the National Surf
Life Saving A.Jsoclation of America at
a meeting March 24 of the International
Council of Surf Life Savlng ln Sydney.
The U.S. association will pay all
t.foorbouse's travel and hotel expenses.
Tuesday nlght the HunUngton Beach city
council unanlmously approved the trip
and MoorhoUle's absence from the city
for 10 day1.
Philip Stubbs, pre•ldent of t h •
American usoclatlon, said 1n a letter
to the council that the international body
is planning to e!labllsh a new con.
stitution, by·laws, and management
setup. Moorbouae has been the American
association's international liaison officer
for the past two years.
OU.l•I COAIT
DAILY PILOT
OU.HOI COAST P\llUIHIMG COMPAH'f'
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r
of the demilitarized ione and enda about
160 miles 10Uthwest of Hanoi.
The U.S. Command said the
"protective reaction" strikes were
ordered alter "repeated hostile acts and
recent SAM firings by antiaircraft
positions against U.S. aircraft involved
in interdiction of North Vietnamese
supplies along the Ho Chi Minh Trail
in Laos."
A spokesman said he did not know
what damage the planes did.
A woman living behind the residence
had just reported a barefoot man "hose
dungarees were wet to the knees tried
t() burglarize her house but nect when
lihe awoke.
Only three minutes later Harvey -
scheduled for release in just sil: months
and one week -was discovered mluing
in a 10 p.m. bedcheck 1t a tnln1mum
security facili ty outside prison wall1.
Novato Police Sergeant Tony Stoutt
said the suspected burglar •warently
confl"onted the Stansfield f a m 11 Y
demanding a ride.
Mrs. Smith -still missing until 10:30
a.m. today -witnessed it and came out
to see what was happening.
"You don't know him -go back,''
said Mrs. Stansfield. described as being
a cool, level-headed lady.
The raids began three days aftel"
President Nixon warned that he "'ould
place no limitation on the use of
American air power in Indochina. There
have been 14 previous "protective
reacUon" striku against No r th
Vietnamese SAM sites this year, but
all were by one or two planea: escorting
B52 bomber• or reconnabsance planes.
The general killed wu Lt. Gen. Do
Cao Tri. commander of the 2$,000-man
South Vietnamese drive agalnat enemy
baae camps in eastern Cambodia and
a confident, aggresllve leader. His death
was considered a temporary setback to
the VietnamlzatJon program.
Striking Com,nod.ity
But it v.·as too late and Harvey, a
barber born in Bee Branch, Ark., and
sent to San Quentin in 1967 for a Garden
Grove car theft conviction, crdered her
Into the blue sedan, too.
Huntington Beach Is known for \ts oil and Its surf,
brought together in this view, looking toward city
pier Crom Golden West Street and Pacific Coast
Highway. There are 51 oil wells along the beach
between 11th and 30th Streets.
"To my knowledge, they'd never met
before," said Sgt. Stoutt, emphasir.ing
the policeman's wife would know ho'#
to handle things.
Trl'a beUoopter caught fire and crashed
shortly after he took off from his
headquartm at Tay Ninh to visit hi!
troop& in Camhodta. Nine men were
fatally Injured w II h the 42-year .. ld
general, including a veteran French
correspondent for Newsweek magazine,
Francota Sully, 42. •
It was believed a fuel leak caused
the Jire.
Meanwhile, 13 miles aouth of Tay Ninh
and a mUe from the Cambodian border,
about 300 N o r lb Vietnamese troops
attacked an American artillery bas~
supporting Trl's forces across the border.
Some of the attackers broke into the
base and blew up 1 fuel dump. The
Americans said they killed nine of the
enemy, while U.S. casualtiet were two
killed and nine wounded.
Shortly before Trl's death, his troops
reported killing 140 North Vietnamese in
four clashes in eastern Cambodia. Four
South Vietnamese were reported killed
and 33 wounded.
A South Vietnamese spokesman said
there has been "no progress reported"
by the 16,000 South Vietnamese troops
in southern Laoa trying to cut the Ho
Chi Minh supply trail. Informed sources
said in addition to heavy resistance from
enemy troops, the region "has been
he avily mined."
Saigon's spokesmen have alternately
reported the forwardmost elements 16
to 171,) miles west of the border. Today
a spokesman said they were 18 air
miles into Laos and added, "I never
measure the winding road."
In response to a question, the
spokesman said the South Vietnamese
force has "no intention to move farther"
into Laos. But other sources said the
Saigon command still was thinking or
moving farther westward once the drive
got rolling again.
The spokesman said 41 North
Vietnamese were killed in two clashes
along the trail network Monday. He
said South Vietnamese Josaes were two
killed and 26 wounded.
Colorful Cleanup
Hanna Proposes
4-year Terms
In Legislature
Orange County Rep. Richard Hanna
(D-Anaheim) bu called for a four.year
term for members of the House.
In a speech to Congress, Hanna warned
that "legislative quality is diminished
by the need for incessant and expensive
campaigning. The complex issues of the
1970's demand lliUfficlent time to master,
and the two year tenn does not provide
the necsssary time."
He said the two year term tends
to make politicians dependant on those
who can finance increasingly costly
campaigns.
"Congressmen must be independent
from special interests and a four year
tenn will relieve members from the
burden of having to finance a new
campaign every other year," HaMa lliaid.
Two other proposaJs contained in his
speech were a mandatory retirement
age of 70 for Representatives and fun,ds
which would allow Congressmen tD send
quarterly newsletters and questionnaires
to their constituents.
Jn speaking of the mandatory
retirement proposal, Hanna noted that
almost every important House committee
chalnnsnshlp is held by a msn ever
or approaching 70.
"This discourages qualified young men
from running for office," he said. Hanna
also pointed out that business, teaching
and even the Catholic Church practice
mandatory retirement.
"Congress must come up to the
standard the rest of the nation has
set for itself," he said.
Keith Hall, 8, with Becky Davis, 13, touch up one of 30 new trash
cans that have been decorated by students in trash can painting con·
test at Circle Vtew School in Huntington Beach. Con test combines
art with drive for cleaner campus. Winners will be treated to ice
cream.
t
U.S. Emergency Action
"My wife would probably ha v e
screamed and passed out," Sgt. Stoutt
quipped to emphasize Mr11. Slan!lleld's
capacity to keep calm in a crisis.
The 1967 auto swung around ln I
U·turn and headed awsy , then twned
back and shot past the party house
again. Seen in Soaring Costs Investigators combing the area where
Mrs. Hannah Jobst, 46, told of ~Ung
the would-be burglar found a blue denim
jacket with a stencilled serial numbtr
inside. WASIUNGTON CAP) --elary ol
the Treasury John B. Connally told
Congress today the Nixon AdmiWtration
might well use standby power for a
wage-price in a particular indu!try -
presumably the construction industry.
Connally'11 testimony to the House
Banking and PtJrrency Committee came
as he expressed the administration's
willingness to accept an extension o{
the standby wage price control authority,
apposed by President Nixon when it
was first voted la.st year.
CoMally emphasized, however. tbe
administration has no intention of
imposing a general wage price freeze
unless Congress specilically calls for
it. He said, however, that Nixon will
make a statement later today that "I
hope will make clear that gouging will
not be permitted.''
Movie Theaters
Eyed in Val,ley's
W oolco Center
The Shields Development CompaRy will
ask permission Wednesday night fr()m the
planning commissi()n to build Fountain
Valley's first two walk-in movie theaters.
Both theaters are part of the Woolco
Shopping Center Shields is building 011 the
southwest corner of Brookhurst Street
and Edinger Avenue.
The Woolco Center is one of the larger
commercial developmen ts plsnned in
Fountai11 Valley. It had a rocky start a
few mooths ago when neighboring resi-
dents complained about its proposed de-
sign.
City planners ha ve since forced Shields
to provide more landscaping and belle!"
buffer iones in the parking lot.
Wednesday, planning commissioners
will look over phase two or the lhree-
phase development of the centel". They
will also consider granting a coodilion.al
exctption permit for the tW() theaters.
The commissi on meets at 7:30 p.m.,
WedJ1esday, in city council chambers.
•
Connally was questioned specifically
about the discussions between the
Secretary cf Labor J. D. Hodgson with
construction labor union officials.
He was asked whether his statement
disc laiming any intention of a general
freeze might rule cut action n one
specific nndustry.
"I don't rule it out at all," Connally
replied. He said Hodgson had gone to
Miami for the discussions. ''because the
building trade bad had enormous wage
increases."
"We might well do it," he said.
Rep. Henry S. Reuss <D-Wis.), quoted
to Connally what Reuss said was a
statement by Nixon that no one Industry
and no one side of the bargaining table
would be made a scapegoat in the fight
against inflation.
"He would not make one industry or
one side of the table a scapegoat.
•·r thiik that would still be his view,"
Ccnnally lliaid.
l'r'om Page 1
GREEN ...
contributions from the four communities.
Palm Springs has earmarked $5,000 for
the agency this year.
Green, who could not be reached this
morning, will work out of lhe Palm
Springs Chamber of Commerce office,
utilizing that organization 's sec retarial
staff.
Blubaugh said that Green will develop
pr!Jgrams to preserve I.he desert ecology
·and attempt to obtain federal funds
for RAPA and contributions from Private
sources.
At Monday's press conference, Frank
Purcell, chai rman of RAPA, also
announced that t h e authority hoped to
appoint an associate director if Green
is successful in obtaining more funds .
Green was president of the Orange
County League of Cities last year and
presenUy is vice president of the South-
ern Cali£ornia Association cf Govern-
ments (SCAG).
He hopes to obtain a degree in public
administration from Cal Slate, Fullerton
in June.
"That's the clothing we issue at San
Quentin,'' confirmed Ca 1 if or n i a
Department of Corrections spokesman
Irwin Ritter.
"We don't consider him a violent
person," Ritter added.
He theorized Harvey walked away from
his dormiU>ry area and fled through
mudflats fronting the big pink prison
en the bay, perhaps hitchhiking to the
town 20 miles north.
Mrs: Stansf1eld conflnned this morning
that Harvey was the kidnaper and
appareiitly discussed the fact be hid
been in San Quentin.
Lawmen throughout C a 11 f .or n l I
mobilized and called in the FBI,
anticipating Harvey might steal another
car since the Stansfield auto was nmni.ng
Jow on gasoline.
Word or the escape wou1d make tt
dangerous for him to attempt to purchase
more fuel .
Orange ·County authorities described
Harvey 11s basically a small·Ume con
although a four-time repeater dating
back from his original certification in
196.1 to the California Youth Authority.
His last listed address was 181 Pixley
SI., Orange, where he was living when
arrested in connection with the Garden
Grove car theft that landed him behind
state prison walls.
Harvey's Orange County Te cor d
Includes grand theft and jail escape
besides the car theft rap four years
ago.
He served one year in Orange County
Jail £allowing hls grand theft conviction
in 1965, according to a District Attorney's
Office spokesman.
The fugitive convict -considered far
from the Bakersfield area shortly before
noon and headed ror Mexico -wa:.
described as S feel, 9 inches tall and
"'eighing 140 pounds.
No description of his young hostage
was ava ilable, but the Stansfield cal"
is a dark blue, two-door Ford hardtop
"'ilh license UHD678, police said.
No speculation was cffered as to why
11arYey would risk a Jong, stiff prison
term -possibly the death penalty with
kidnaping involved -rather than set'Je
bis last six months.
e Afon."t. .... -.nt0
ctE'IAo. -.r-IE'se-•
OFf71tE'1. '
SOMETIMES THEY ARE USED IN A MISLEADING WAY!!
l
THE FACT IS THAT NONE OF THESE NAMES ARE
MANUFACTURERS OF CARPETING. THESE NAMES
REPRESENT THE KIND OF F II ER USED IN THE
CARPETING.
FIBER CONTENT DOES NOT NECESSARILY INDICATE
QUALITY, AS THE CRUCIAL DETERMINATION OF '
QUALITY IS WHAT THE MANFUACTURER DOES WITH
THE RAW MATERIALS.
DUPONT, FOR INSTANCE, MAKES 62 KINDS OF NYLON
YARN JUST FOR CARPETING. CONSEQUENTLY, THERE
IS NO WAY A LAYMAN CAN DETERMINE QUALITY.
WEIGHT ALONE WON'T ASSURE THIS •••• K H 0 W
THE PEOPLE ,YOU BUY FROM I
SANTA ANA. OllANGI
TUSTIN C•ll •••
ALDIN'S
RID HILL CAllPITI
& DRAflllllll
11J74 lrt'ln-.. Tu•tln, Cal. ........
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
I'
I
I
r
•
Newport Beaeh
EDITION
Today's Final
N.Y. St.oeks
VOL. 64, NO. ~6. 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESD>,Y, FEBRUARY ·23, 1971 TEN CENTS
.
Newport .Facing Law·suit Over High Rise Ban
By L. PETER. KRIEG
OI Ille tl•llY Piii! ll•lf
Newport Beach Monday night banned
all nigh-rise construction along the
waterfront for 90 days and was informed
immediately it will be sued because
of it.
The emergency ordinance, adopted by .
a 6 to 1 City Council vote. prohibits
the issuance of building permits for
structures more than 35 feet tall within
the boundaries of the proposed Lower
~order of Doy'
Newport Bay Civic District.
In adopting the measure. the council
also revoked a foundation permit
obtained Thursday by Swan Cons tructors,
Inc., of San Diego, which started
immediate grading work on a 12(}.foot,
55-unit lux ury condominium on Lido
Peninsula, just east of Lido Isle bridge .
Lawyers representing Swan, a
subsidiary of U.S. Financial Corp.,
opposed the action and vowed they would
be&in immediately to in s ti t u t e
e
Calley Admits
Mass Kill Order
FT. BENNING, Ga. (AP) -Ll.
William L. Calley Jr. admitted today
that he diretced a mass execution of
Vietnamese civilians at an irrigation
ditch in My Lai.
The government has set the number
of persons killed in the ditch at 70.
Calley, speaking without emotion, of
killings at fl.ty Lai :
'.'It wu the order of the day."
V/hy, Calley was asked, did he give
command to one or hiJ aoidien to shoot.
"Because that was my order sJr. That
was the order of the day" the defendant
i;aid Datly.
"WM gave you the order?" asked
defense counsel George Latimer.
"Capt. Medina , sir," Calley said.
Calley said there were about four or
five of his men at the ditch. but he
could remember only James Dursi and
Paul Meadlo -the two men he said
he spoke with.
"What did you do arter you saw them
Orange County
Representation
Increases 70%
From Wire Sen:lces
Orange County gained 70 percent
rn or e legislative representation today
as the legislature released the report of
iU reapportionment committee . The
county gained two Assembly seals. one
and one-third Senate seats and one and
one-third congresisonal scats.
California's affluent suburbs will gain
nine and one-third legislative and con#
gressional seals through reapportion-
ment this year, mostly at the expense
of lhe Los Angeles, San Francisco and
Oakland urban centers.
That report wall issued today by the
Assembly elections and Reapportion-
ment Committee.
shooting into the di\ch?"
"l fired into the ditch also .''
"How many tim es did he give you
the order," Calley was asked in reference
to his company commander.
Calley said the order came five time!!
-once at a company briefing the night
before the My Lai assault, once at
a platoon leaders' briefing, the followin&
moning b<IOI'• Ibo bellcollltn lifted off,
snd twice over I.be radJo while the
U"OOps were in the villqe.
Callty u charged with killing !02
Vietnamtae civtliaru in the hamlet of
My Lai 4 -one of several numbered
My Lai hamlels -as his comp11ny
assaulted the suspected Viet Cong
stronghold on March 16, 1968.
On the witness st.and he told of about
four people that he kUled. He also
admitted firing into a ditch that was
already filled with dead. But he did
not say -and was not as~ed -whether
he k.illed anyone there.
There had been testimony that Calley
gtood at that ditch, at the eastern edge
of My Lai 4, for as long as one and
one-half hours. Today, Calley said:
"It was a very rapid period of time
lo me . • • it seemed only a malt.tr
of a half minute or a minute er both."
What did he see in the ditch?
"Dead people."
"Was there any appearance of anyone
being alive in there?"
"No, Sir ."
How did the people get into the ditch?
"They had been ordered to go into
the ditc h, Sir," Calley said.
Who ordered them into the ditch?
"Indirectly, I did -I told Meadlo to get them (Vietnamese captives) to
the other side of the dltcb, Sir.''
Easier to Get Drunk?
CARSON CITY, Nev. (UPI) -It's
easier to get drunk today in Nevada.
It takes only .10 percent alcohol in
the blood to be convicted of drunk driving
under a bill signed Monday by Gov .
Mike O'Cillaghan. The previous level
was .15 peroenl
proceedings in Orange County Superior
Court.
Newport City Attorney Tully Seymour
had predicted the movt, telling the
council if it didn't yank the foundation--
only permit and allowed the builder
to pour concrete. "no court in the land
would deny th.em permis>ion to finish
the building."
Seymour says he thinks the city
''possibly" can succeed in defending the
move, but said, "It is not a sure thing."
Bruce Lederman. an attorney for Swan,
insisted his clients had DOt tried "to
jump the gun" on the ordinaDce by
the ban was to be enacted.
He said the timing was purely
coincident.I and said it was not unusual
obt.iining the permit four days before
actual canst.ruction work began the day
lhe perm.it was Issued.
Several councilman had been critical
of the aetming 11th hour move by tbe
contr1ctor.
....... on vi ct
•
I·
JURY PONDERS FATE
Convicted R1Pi1t Phoenix
Phoenix Jurors
Remain Locked
In Lengthy Case
By TOM BARLEY
OI !tit O.ltr l'lltl Stiff
Eight women and four men who must
determine life cir death for Gary Harold
Phoenix of Costa Me:;a remained locked
in their jury room today with no
indication that they were near a verdict
in the marathon rape·kidnap trial.
They returned to Orange County
Superior Caurt J udge William Murray'!!
courtroom this mor1:ing from the Santa
Ana motel lo which they were conveyed
under guard at 10 p.m. Monday after
nine hours of deliberation in the penalty
phase of the trial.
Bailiffs said the jurors, now in their
seventh week on the Phoenil case,
appeared tired and glad of the overnight
break but were otherwtse "Jn very good
spirils." '
Tbe jury left the cow-troom Monday
after hearing Pboenil, 29, make hls
final comments in a trial in which he
has often taken over from deputy public
defender Roderick Riccardi to question
(See PHOENIX, Page Z)
Organizers
Of Irvine
City File
lncorporalor!I of the proposed city or
Irvine took what they called "the first
step toward the creation of a model
American Community, Monday with the
filing ol a nolief: of intent to circul ate
a petition ol incorporation.
The notice was backed by 42 signaturell
of residents of the area -2$ are requirtd
-and wu filed with Mabel C.steis,
!ftJl!IJY cl&IJ 0(. Ille Qr-~ Boord « Supervlaon. ·
FilinJ the papers was John 1!. Burton,
<11111111•r•o1 ui. Council oMlllllllll-
of Irvine. He n ld no timetable bad
betn set for completion of t h e
Incorporation of the new city or 18,14$
acres and approximately 7 ,000 cilizen!I.
The ineorporators now have 90 days
In which to 1ather signatures of owners
at land representing 25 percent of the
tazabl\ value within the propo!led city
boundafles.
When those signatures are presented
to the Board of Supervisors a public
hearing must be set on the question.
That public: hearing is the next
opportunity for the incoh>oration to be
blocked. If r,rsons repre se ntlnc
ownership o more than 50 perctnt of
(Ste mVINE Pace I)
Ed Hirth Named
To NOISE Board
Newport Beach Mayor Ed Hirth has
been appointed to lhe board of directors
of the National Organization to Insure
a Sound~ntrolled E n v i r o n me n t
(NOfSE).
The appointment was made al the
organization's fir!lt . national symposium
on jet noise recntly.
NOISE Is an alliance of municlpalitiei;
formed in 1969 "to combat the growing
menace of noise pollulion caused by
jet airplanes," acoording to the 1roup'8
president, Ralph C. Caso.
NOE hes been actively campaigning
for a program to retrofit all ui!:ting
commercial jet planes with noise
suppressing devices, accordini to Caso.
Committee chainnan, Henry Waz.
man, D-Los Angeles. said final 1970
et:nsus figures will make the average
Assembly district population 249,414. the
average state Senate district 498.828,
and the average congressional dilltrict
464,026.
\Vaxman. whose committee will have
primary responsibility ror redrawing
line!! to match populalion shifts. issued
a list or county-by-county enlitlemenU
which showed Orange, Sanla Clara. San
Bernardino. Riverside. Contra Costa
and San Diego counties making th e big#
1est gain!! in legislative seats.
Manager Wins Delay
Lo!! Angeles and San Francisco coun·
ties top the ll~t of losers. followed by
Alameda, Kern and Fre!lno counties.
Tars to Hold
Taknt Show
The Newport Harbor High School
talent show, Tars 'N Stars, will
optn It! twHllght run Friday tn
the .school's auditorium.
Th< show ~ tpolllOl'ed by tl!t
Junior ClaSJJ to raise funds for
the Junior-Senior Prom.
Curtain time is 8 p.m. and
t11dmlsllion is SI with a student
body c11rd and Sl.25 without. The
8how will run Friday ind Saturday
•!iht.
' '
Administrator Gets Two Weeks to Review Budget
A stunned city administration Monday
night won a two-week delay in City
Council act.ion on a proposed directive
that would place stringent, austue
guidellne.s on the preparaUon of lbe 1971·
'12 Newport Beach budget.
Visibly .shaken at the proposal, which
would place a $1.20 ceiling on the next
lax rate, City Manager Harvey L.
Hurlburt pleaded for Ume to review
the guidelines.
The directive, prepired by a two-man
council committee, would also place a
freeze at the March I manpower levels,
forbid the filltng of 1ny ftttare vacancies,
mlnlml.z.e city employe aalary Increases
and outlaw the upamlon or any city
services.
Hurlburt hsd not teen the document
prior to the mcelin& and obvioully w1s
not prepared to answer It.
Struggling for a reiponse, h e
Immediately asked for two weeks "lo
look at it.." Ufin&: be would need the
"
time "to give an intelligent response."
He said he bad "a Jot of questions
regardinJ interpretation" and a a i d
several (x>int.s needed clarification.
Introducing the proposal, Cooncilman
Donald Mcinnis said "severe llmitationa
to lhe (budget·making) procedure'' are
needed "in view of tbe economic
conditions we see today and will ate
in the next fiscal year."
l::le sakl the concept of establiahlnl
an initial goal "ahould have been
established years .ago" and pointed out
It wilt 11ve oonsldtrable -trlinmfii(
Ille propoood bud«et down. .
Mclnnla lndkaled be and fellow
committeeman, Couocilman Clrl Xymla.
agreed that ~ could b< tome
movement. but gave. t:VuJ lnd.lc:atlon
it wouldn't be wry much.
11lf: $1.20 per $100 v1lu11tlon maximum
tax would be down slighUy from the
current $1.225, ,
Kymla sltt§cd I.ht council will have
to take a hard line approach this year
because lhe city cannot expect any fifl!
from the assessor.
With re-evaluation, the auusmenl
jumped 19 percent last year and gave
all taxing agencies a major windfall.
"This' year we •re not aolng to be
thaL fortllnate," Kymla said.
The wordini of the document stresses tht b.ard-preaed economic times and
says, "Th< present level of oerv!CtJ
l'thdeted and/or pro'lided ii considered
lo (lo.rwonable and -labft, '?'lldri& Into Ml ICCOW!l lhe pr ... nt ·•'"'the 1<11eral eeonomy ancf lhe .....n need lo hold lbe line ·on lhe m-en~s and Upe:ndlttires, and ;t the
ame time_ tully ricognlztng t b e
df:slrabUlty ol continuing to provide 1
CONlstent l •Ye I of aervicu, and
rte0gnlIJng that in many lnstancta the ~level or H:rv1ce!I prorided does not
nectMerlly equate directly to ~
population per It, I.he following suldeJines
•h•ll b< ullUted In preparill( tbe
proposed bud&eta."
J
Councilman Donald MclMls pointed
out the city could have enacted the
ordinance two weeks aeo without Mooday
night 's hearing.
And Councilman Milan D o s t a I
observed, "I do not take kindly to the
acllon of the developer ," coo tending the
firm does "not hive clean bands"
because of their actions.
Mayor Ed Hirth disagreed, pointing
out the firm hid followed all the proper
procedurts In obtaining llJ "" pmnil
for the structure, gone through the public
hearing proces,, -at which there wu
no opposition -and normally obtained
il4 permit.
"We have no grounds to say these.
people did anything out of the ordlnary, ..
the mayor said, ''they did not sneak
anything by. They had nothing but
(See HEIGHT, Pase I)
tu re
u ... ,...,.
• CAPTURED. IN COUNTY
Sin Quentin Etc•Pff H1rv1y
Newport Council
Faces PW.nners
In Joi11t Meet
The Newport Beach City C.Ouncil and
PlaMing Commission will clash bead-on
over the future of Promontory Point.
In the face of the commission'!!
rejection of a coonc.il order to participate
in a committee-study of p o & s I b I e
development of the vaJuable tract, the
council voted Monday night to meet
in special joint session March ?.
The planners Thursday refused to
participate in the study Wlleas the council
would reject a pending zoning ippeal
on the 3().acre tract.
The Irvine Campany had taken a
propollal for a 620-unit apartment
compleK on the point to the council
after iL was turned down by a t to
2 vote of the commission.
Re!lident! of nearby Balboa Jal.and ind
· Bea·con Bay had opposed the pcoject.
clabnlng lt was too dellse and urging
the land, now unclas.llifled , be zoned
for single-family Ulle.
The joint meeting is rspected to cover
the general topic of unc\1ssified zones,
as well u the s,pecific Promontory Point
Wue.
The council ordered the meeting, to
take place at 7:30 p.m. In the Mariner's
library, after a 45-mlnule uecutive
sesakm.
City Attorney Tully Seymour aaJd lht
closed-door council conference Monday
night was le1aI aince It dealt with
matters of personnel -apparlintly
meaning the conduct of the Planning
commission member• 1n nauntin1 the
original council order.
That order involved the creation of
a committee of coundlmen, planne!'3,
lbe Irvine Comf)llly and the Balboa
Isl and Improvement Auocl10on, wbicb
would try to work out an acctptable
plan for lhe area.
ID forming the committee, fbt council
took no formal • actloa oo lhe odual
appeal btfort It.
Wins Pancake Race ' .
LIBERAL, Kan. (UP!) -Mn.
Barbara Rinehart, wife of an otitftld
worker, bounded down the icy brick
+alttttl of Liberal today In S?.7 Miconds
to win t~ 1onual Shrove TUttday
internaUonal pancake race 11atn1t the
womao of Olne1, En&Jllld.
>
County Man
Faces Four
l{idnap Raps
By ARTIIUR R. VINSEL
01 111t o.11r Pltlt •t•ff
A 13-hour manhunt for an Orange Coun.
ty convict who slipped away from San
Quentin Prison Monday night, kidaaping
a policeman's family and friend ended fD
climactic chao5 today in Fullerton.
James D. "Jimmie" Harvey. %4, wa1
captured following a 100-mlle-per·b:>ur
freeway chase in which one shot was firtd
by police, wben hill stolen car crashed
into a cafe.
1be fugitive -who bad released first
the polictman'a famlly, then bis remain-
~ .bosta'ge ;_ was t.aken into custody at
thi1! -scene, where fire erupted in the wreckage,
' Piremen roped off the soene to prevent
injury to the curious or a possible ex.
plosion due to gasoline from the car'1
ruptured tank.
Additional detalls were not available
at presstime.
Despite the £act Harvey, a four-time
loser •. still held Mrs. Cheryl J. Smith,
%3, prison authoriti~ had said he wu not
consldered dangerous.
He was armed with a pair of sclslort
Mrs. Stansfield reported today. '
A 12-lmur nightmare ended 1t 1:20
a.m. today for Novato Police Officer
Gary Stansfield, 30, when bls wife
telephoned authorities from the Salad
Bowl Cafe, 400 mile& south on Highway
99 in Kern Caunty.
She announced sbe and their children,
Robert, 6, and Suzanne, 4 months, had
been freed.
Mrs. Stansfield, 30, said they were
safe and local officers arrived at the
pbone booth moments later to conf1rm
it.
Authorities in Marin County said the
drama began to unfold at 9:47 p.m.
in suburban Novato, as the offief:r's
family left a small house party.
A woman living behind the residence
had just reported a barefoot man whose
dungarees were wet to the knees tried
to burglarize her house but fled when
she awoke.
Only three minutes later Harvey -
scheduled for release in just six months
and one week -was discovered mJsslng
in a 10 p.m. bedcheck at a minimum
security facility outside prison wall!.
Novato Police Sergeant Tony Stoutt
said the suspected burglar apparentJ,y
confronted the St.anslield f a m J I y
demanding a ride.
Mrs. Smith -still missing until 10:~
!Set MANHUNT, P11e I)
Oruge
Weather
Sunny 8kJea will prevail Ttle&-
day, but windy weather will keep
the coastal temperature down to
58 degrees. with inland readinc1
up lo 62 pr<dlcled.
INSmE TODAY
Even if uou ftt!mize .,aur Mo
duction.s uou don'' ha~ to go
thtoJlgh the tortuo1U ;ob of
cOmpw:~_no ~our iall1 ta.ifs. Ste
SultM 4 Porter't 1tcon4 fn fft. come ta% serie1. Pa.gt 10.
Cl....,_.. I
Clllldl• l.lfl! U
CMQHMlll U-J:t .-.. " Crw...C It
DMlll Ntlkilt I ·~ ,.,. ' .... ~ ,,
,lllllla 11•11 -.. "" .......... 11 Mii... •
~ OA!l. Y PILOT N
'Fiscal Strains'
Co·uncil Rejects
Employe Raises
ProJ)OSed mJd.year salary increases for
certain Newport Beach city employes
were k!Ued by the Qty Council Monday
night \•ihen Vice Mayor Howard Rogers
moved the proposal be filed.
11le council , ln budget deliber1Uon1
last spring, had agree~ to consi~er
addilional increases at mid.year for ]Ob
classifications that fell slgnificantly
belo"' benchmark pay figures i n
surrounding rommunlUes.
City AUomey Tully Seymour ruled
Friday, however, that the council was
not bound lo do anything more than
study the comparative pay acales. It
Land Tussle
did not have to act, he said.
Councilman Donald Mcinnis erplalned
what everybody already knew that the
dty is in tough financial straits this
year and "cannot go ahead with these
adjustments."
The city employes associaUon had
offered a compromise pJan that would
have made the increases effective at
a Jatu date, thereby lowering the cost
by one third. .
As origiaally proposed, the mcreases
would have been ef!ectlve as of Jan. 9
and the l!sociation suggested this date
be pushed baek to March 1 "recognWng
the fiscal strains {act.1 by the cjty."
Irvine Says Santa Ana
Has No Basis for Suit
The lNlne Company today maintained
It has lived up to its legal obligation to
the City oI Santa Ana invol~ing the ~n·
lroversial 923-acre industrial tract 111·
eluded withln the proposed boundaries
of the City of Irvine. _
Therefore. a company lipokesman sa1~ Santa Ana bu no ba!l.s for any Iawswt
* * * SA Councilmen
To Fight Land
Loss to Irvine
Santa Ana councilmen Monday decided
to right the lo!! or 923 acres of Industrial
land to the new city of Irvine.
'I'he council instructed its attorney IG
-ask the Local Agency Formation
Commlssk>n (LAFCl to reconsider Its
Feb. 10 3 to 2 approval of the 18.145
,ere ne'I' city.
U this falls to get ad.Ion, the council
decided it will go to the Board of
Supervison and, if necessary, to court.
The lmportanct of the land to Santa
Ana Wtl! emphasized by the special
Mondly mornine meeting to conalder
the bsue. • l
The city contends the Irvine Company
agreed that Santa Ana could aMex the
property located just south of the Marine
Corps A1r Facility.
The company agreed to oppose
annexation to any other city.
William R. Mason, Inilne president,
carrled out this part of the agJeement
when he wrote to the LAFC l!k:lng
that lhe 923 acres be excluded from
the"proposed new clty.
ID its appeal to the LAFC, the city
contends lt was not allowed to present
full evidence in the hearing on the
clty of lniine. The evidence not accepted
wu a report on tbe effect of the new
city on Santa Ana done by a ChJcago
firm for $15,000.
nie acreage in question "'IS part of
an out of court settlement between the
Irvine Company and the city in 1963
ln which Santa Ana agreed to drop
annexation of a 300-root wide nine-mile
long stringbean strip through the heart.
of the Irvine ranch to Laguna Hills
Leisure World.
OUMll COAST
DAILY PILOT
d'iv.HGI COAST PUILllHIHO ~'AHY '
l•Hrl H. W.M ,, .. lfMt .. ,.....,..
against the company (see separate
litory).
Responding to the Santa Ana City
Council litigation threat the company
spokesman said:
1•0n Dec. 21, the trvine Company for·
mally filed with the Local Agency For·
mation Commi.sshm (LAFC) a protest
again.st the inclusion of this particular
industrial land within Ille pn>poud
boundaries of the City of Irvine.
''In Jodging that protest we lived up to our agreement. 'Die LAFC, however.
chose to make Its detenninatlon appa~
enUy on the basis or logical boundaries
and the needs of the new city, and did
not on the basis or a legally quest!on·
able agreement. •
"The subject now appears to be a
closed issue, in view of Mr. Turner's
(LAFC administrator Richard Turner)
recorded declaration that the LAFC did
consider the 923 acres during its delibe-
rations."
In that December protest letter, the
company referred to Santa Ana's orig·
inal strip annexation plan as a "blzme
scheme."
Jn 1963 Santa Ana had aought to an·
nex a nine-mile long, 300-foot wide atrip
between Jts cl t y limits and Leisure
World on a line across the ttnler of the
Irvine Ranch. 1, 1, •
In an out-Of.eourt 1ettlemt11t the
company at ~ Ume agreed that the. 9~ tract which adjoln1 Santa
Ana's boundaries would become a part
of that city.
From Page I
IRVINE •.•
the assessed valuation or the land in
question object, the incorporation is
dead.
This is considered highly unlikely
inasmuch as the Irvine Company owns
almost 100 percent or the land involved.
And lhe Company was the first to
propose a new city last March.
At that time the community wu to
consist of 56,000 acres with a population
by the year 2000 of 440,000.
Protests by Santa Ana and Newport
Beach resulted in the r e d u c e d
boundaries. Santa Ana hr still on record
as opposing the new city.
The incorporation effort hurdled it!!
biggest obstacle Feb. 10 when the Local
Agency Formation Commission by a split
3 to 2 vote approved the move.
The vote came after two full hearings
and two preliminary sessions dating back
to last October.
tn a covering letter to the Bo1rd
of Supervisors, Burton said, "We are
looking forward to the opportunity of
becoming a city of which Orange County
can be proud and to joining you and
the other cltiell in making Orange County
a better place for all.''
Wamrway
Dredging
~tudy Set
A study to determine the ef{ecls of
private dredsing of tht-public waterw1y1
and other factors cited In a recent
slate ·attorney general's opin ion on
tldelands use fees was ordered by the
Ne'N))Ort Beach City . Council Mond11y
night.
The opinion said there could be groun&
for a municipality to exclude at le11st
private piers from taxation because of
cost-saving dredging and e t b t r
improvements paid for by the pier
owners.
Councilman Carl Kymla, heretofore a
:supporter of the controversial use fees ,
urged the study ';to determine bow the
guidelines in fact fit Newport Beach.''
Councilman Richard Croul also asked
}!arbor and Tidelands Administrator
George Dawes to report on pending atate
leglslation involving coastal development
and land use and bow that might affect
the city's control of the shoreline and
jts taxing powers.
Vice Mayor Howard Rogers, a foe
of the fees, ca 11 e d Kymla 's· originel
proposal "an excellent idea" urging the
study be brought baCk at tbe next council
:session in two weeks.
Dawes said be was WllUre., if this
coold be done but agreed with reque st
by Kymla that it be completed before
the study of the ne1t budget begins
in April.
Pre5sure on the city to rescind the
fees has been great, and is mounting.
The Newport Harbor Chamber o[
Commerce Monday adopted a resolution
asking all but Ille regiJtration let be
rescinded.
The fees were enacted on a .f to
3 council vote. A bid by Rogers two
months ago to introduce an ordinance
to repeal t.ie Lax was defe.attd by a
similar .f to 3 vote, with the provision
that the attorney general be asked to
comment on the city 's legel requirement
to charge them.
In that opinion, the city was told
Ibey are not mandatory.
From Page I
MANHUNT .••
a.m. today -witnessed it and came out
to see what was happening.
"You don't know him -go back,"
aald Mrs. Stansfield. deaa'ibed u being
a C<IOI, level·htaded lady.
lut it wu fl>!. late and Harvey, a
barber born in Bet Branch, Ark., and
·sent to Se Quentin in 1967 for a Garden
Grove ci r theft convlc:Uon, ordered htr
into the blue sedan, too.
"To my knowledge, they'd never mtl
before," said Sgt. Stoutt. emphasizing
the policeman's wlfe would know how
to handle things.
"My wife would probably have
screamed and passed out," Sg!. Stou~t
quipped to emphasize Mrs. Stai\!lfeld s
capacity to keep calm in a crisis.
The 1967 auto swung around tn a
U·turn and headed away, then turned
back and shot past the party house
again.
Investigators combing the area where
Mrs. HtMah Jobst, 46, told of routlng
the would-be burglar found a blue denim
jacktt with a stencilled serial number
inside.
"That's the clothing we issue al San
Quentin." confirmed C al if o r n i a
Department of Corrections 1pOke.sman
Irwin Ritttr.
"We don't consider him a violent
person," Ritter added.
He theorized Harvey walked away from
his dormitory area and fled through
mudflats fronting the big plnk prison
on the bay, perhaps hitchhiking to the
town 20 miles north.
Mrs. Stansfield confirmed this morning
that Harvey was the ltidnaper and
apparently discussed the fact he had
been in San Quentin.
Lawmen throughout C a I I f o r n l a
moblllzed and called in the FBI,
anticipating Harvey might steal another
car since the Stansfltld auto wu runnin&
low on gasoline.
Jtc~ l. cv,r..,
Vier P'ru-.it Mil 6-1 ~
1' ..... , lt' .... 1r ...... Corona del Mar Entrant
1\•111 •• A. Mvr,111111 M.IMI .... llll!W
l... '•*•r Xrl•t
N ........ hMll CllJ r•1i.r
flewp<Nta..• ~
lllJ N.w,ort ao11lt•ttl
'M'1lll119 Add1111: ,.0. I•• 1171, t2•6l ...... _
c...r• ••1 lit W.t .,., ,,,.... l.....,. 9-dl: Ul: •w•r A...,.,. "'""'~ '-<111 1"11 a-cti lwi.r•"' ~II '*'-'IWJ -HWfrl Cl GtmlM llNI
, Tzhs• •• 1n•1 MZ ... JJt
Cl...,... A4t•l'htll '42·1671
Wins Laguna Dart Throw
A Corona de1 Mar man who pl a y !I
tor a Laguna Beach ttam emergtd
Sunday from • field of 95 entrants to
become champion dart lhrower of the
Far West Shootout held 11 the Boya'
Club In Laguna Beach,
Ed Snyder, of 431'12 Dahlia Ave., beat
dt'!fendlng champion Conr1d Daniels of san Dimu in the men'• singles to win
the fin:t pl1ce traphy and a color
televlliion. Snyder pl1y1 darts for the
team sponsored by Mother'& T1vem of
Laguna Beacll.
The weekend dart tourney attracted
over 1,000 spectator• and more than
300 dart enthusilsQ to lhe Art Colony.
The contest was sporuored by the Lagunt
Beach Jayttes and was the young
businessmen's second such tvent.
Tht player1 and rpectator1, in addition
to consuming thousands of hamburgers
and hot dogs over the course of the
weekend event, downed 70 ca.es and
10 kegs of bttr, bre1kin& the record
set at the 1970 tournament. The dart
tourney ls held Jn conjunction with the
Winter Festival.
Other winners in the men's singles,
In addition to Snyder and Daniels, wtre
Larry Morrison, third place, of Culver
City and Dave Burch, fourth place, of
Laguna Beach.
Winners in the women's singles event
were : first, Mary Bate of Venice;
second, Ladonna Hemple or Culver City ;
third. Sherle Stram, of Culver City and
fourth, Cyd RlcketJen, of Venice.
The six-man team evenl of the
tournament wu won by a group from
Westchester, who narrowly defeated
Laguna Beach's team from Mother's
for tile tltle. 'Mle winning team was
from the Tradesman and included Jody
Simkins. Conr11 Daniels, Joe Young.
Jack Carr, Bernie Warren and Dick
Milruen.
~ Mother's Tavern team taklng
second pl1ce was composed of Dave
CotUngton. Alan Mathews, Vince Nelson,
John Hedjes, Larry Kerbs ond Mike
McGiii.
The tt1m winning the doUbl~ evtnl
was made up of Noel Ktahfont ind
Jack Springer, both of the San Fernando
Valley.
Beeall Battled
I ' ' Newport Cir-amber Opposes Drive
Newport llarbor C b a m b t r of
Commerce directors ?t1onday
W1111tmously .. 1oc1 to ·-• ....,.!led recall campaign against tlx NeWJIQrt
Booth City Councilmen wbicll b being
mounted by ~ttorney Mix Sturges and
former school trustee Harvey 0 . Peast.
Chamber directors p:issed a resolution
a111iR1t re.till •• a form or government
-a resolul.lon aimed apecllically at
the movement to unseal all councilmen
except Vice Mayor Howard Rogers.
Board member and former chamber
president John Macnab expressed Lbe
opinion of the board when he noted
the resolution Is for "closing the gate
on recall or anyone at anytime became
of his views."
Some board members said they ftll
thelr oppoailion to the recaU movement
would only "dlgnlly ll -· than it deattVet," but Chamber Prtaldtnt Bill
Ring aald, '111is Is tile type of luue
that we should not remain 1llent on."
~ resolution notes:
"Whereas no actions (of the City
Council) involve any claims of fraud.
dishonesty malfeasance in office or olher
rorms of ' misconduct for which the
remedy of recall might be appropriate.
"Now therefore be it resolved that
this Board of Directors hereby ex~resses
ila rearfirmance of its trust 1n our
councilmanic form of representative
government and the duly e l e c t e d
member.s of our city council ' . . and
this board of directors is against any
recall of any City Council members."
Newport Chamber Seeks
To Rescind Tideland Fees
A. ruling by the state attomey general
that Newport Beach does not have to im-
pose a tidelands use fee has brought a
recommendation from the Newport Har·
bor Chamber of Commerce to rescind
the lees. ·
Al their luncheon meeting l\.1onday,
cbambtr directors decided to ask tht city
council to rescind its tidela11ds use fees.
retitin the pier registration lets and ask
county supervisors to abandon their plans
fDT a tidelands use fee.
The opinion. issued last week by deputy
Attorney General JohJi Morris, ~led the
city can, but does riot have to unpose a
use fee.
Larry Miller, represeating the Marine
Division of the chamber, said pe felt a
reaffinnation of the chamber's stand was
necessary in light of the opinion .
In a letter sent to City Manager Harvey
Hurlburt, chamber directors said the fee
is "unjustified and Is an unwarratited
burden on the already overt;.xed boat
owner."
But chamber officials also emphasized
their support of the pier registretion .fee
a!I a means of policing lhe usts of tide·
lands.
Chamber official.s called proposed
county tidelaads· fees "quite far out ol
line."
From Page I
HEIGHT CURBS SET • • •
encow;agement from the city and it.s
citlz.em."
The length of the moratbrium
especially bothered Councilman Richard
Crou1 wio had cast the lone dissenting
vote 'after the council turnel down, .f
to 3 a substltute motion he had offered
that' would have excluded the LidG
project from the ban.
Crou1 pointed out the ordinance could
be extended for an entire year, or longer.
if tbe council so desired and he felt
this unctrtalnty was unfair to all
potential buildets and landowners.
"Where does this leave the property
owners " Croul said, adding, "I'm ail
for the' ordlnanct, but not for stringing
it OU\.", ,
Vice Mayor Howard Ro,ers stressed
that II would take alx affirmative council
voles to extend the ban -the same
number required for adoption -and
thls would be an adequate safeguard.
Councilman Carl Kymla assured the
council his Lower New'pOrt Bay Civic
District Committee, which had
recommended the moratorium to allow
it to complete its work, will be done
within the 90-dsy period and noted the
only extension that might be needed
would be to allow time for the city
to conduct nonnal public hearings and
to cover the 30-day waiting period for
the measure to take effect.
The moratorium drew mixed reaction
from private citlzens in the audience.
Several homeowners' groups supporttd
the approach while Richard Stevens, v~ce
president of the Balboa Bay Club, which
is preparing plans for a SO.foot structure,
U.S. Jews at Meet
BRUSSELS. Belgium (AP) -Two
plane loads of American Je\\'S landed
here today to attend the three-day world
conference of Jewish communities on
the plight of Soviet Jews.
said he had mixed emotions about it.
Stevens warned ''lhis is a dangerous
thing we are playing with'' and said
he wondered if an effective, sound civic
district plan could be completed in 90
days.
"Bad plllMing is worse than no
planning," he cautioned.
Kymla pointed out in re sponse that
the planning for the district. which is
intended to provide stringent controls
for 111 building within lhe boundaries
of the district, had begun back in
Novembe r.
George Bucco la, a local builder, said
he supported the ordinance but felt it
was unfair to include the condomiai.um
project in on it, pointing out the owner
bad acted in good faith, from acquisition
through the procesa of obtaining the
permits. ~uccola built the Vis.ta del
Lido bullding, .Newport'a first blgh-rlse
structure.
Vera Keegan
Services Held
Funeral serVices were held today for
a Newport Beach woman whose family
heritage goes back decades Into the
colorful history of Los Angeles' Olvera
Street Mexican community.
Mrs. Vera M. Keegan, 19, o( 213 38th
St., died Friday.
Requiem Mass was held at 9 a.m.
in OUr Lady of Mt. Cannel Catholic
Church, 2046 Mar Vista Drive, Newport
Beach.
Bom in Los Angeles, Mrs. Keegan
was 81ifeJon11 Cali!orrtia resident and
leaves her sister, Mrs. Is ab e 11 e
Mosquera, of Newport Beach, fy,•o
grandchildren and one nephew.
Services were under direction of Bell
Broadway Mortuary. lnttrment followed
at Calvary Cemetery in Los Angeles.
Rites Set . --t •• ::S~
)4 •.
' •
! For Balboa
Pioneer
Funeral services will bt he 1 d
Wednesday for Balboa Island pioneer
businessman and civic leader Anton
Hershey, who died Sunday. Jfe was 79.
A native of Switzerland, Mr. Hershey
moved to Balboa Island in 1929 during
the early days of its development. He
planted the first eucal yptus lrees that
still lint lhe island's main street along
r.tarine Avenue. J\1r. Hershey also built
ty,·o long-ll me island businesses, the
.Market Spot and Villagt In n.
Active in civic affairs. he y,·as a charter
member or the port Harbor Rotary
Club and the old r s' fun club known
as Amigos Vie.}os. He as also affiliated
with the Newport Har Elks Lodge.
Known to bis many fri ds as "Tony,''
Mr. Hershey y,•as also active in the
Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce.
Final ritts will be conducte d
In Corona del Mar. Burial will follo\9
at the park.
Mr. Hershey is survived by his wife,
Mina of the family home at 203
Onyx' Ave., his daughter. ~1rs. Lyle Fin·
Jey and tv.·o grandchildren, Susan and
Tony, all of Balboa Island. .
The family has suggesttd tributes In
form of donations to the American
Cencer Society.
Fron• Page 1
PHOENIX ...
witnesses and address the jury.
The tall blond.. bachelor, looking pale
and drawn, urged the jw-y to remembtr
whtn it retirtd that much of the evidence
presented by Deputy District Attomet,
Michael Capiui was circumstantial.
"I'll wager that tach of you bu 1een
a magician do something that you'd
stake your life on ," he said. "Well,
I'm betting my lire now and Capiu:i
gave you a lot of evidence that was
only circumstantial.
"Thousands of assumptions were made
for you. But you are not children and
you must judge from the racts," Phoenix
said.
Objecting bitterly to C a p ! z 1 I' s
description or his rapes, kidnaps and
robberies as a "pattern of life," Phoenix
asked the jury to look on his acls
as "a few tragic moments.
"I just want lo say that if yoo ar1
·going to use 'pattern of life'. 1s the-
basis for handing me the delltb 1entence
~ the MV'n -~~· J. ~. ip. (~ Kaosas.) prison dido t btlp me a bit,
~jx.:fa~'bie"y fi•ng'you'..:,,. added.
"Here they gas you. At Ieut it's more
humane here :dnce it takes a man 15
minutes to die in Kansas.
''Thank you, you have betn a very
conscientiouio; jury," Phoenix said. 1·rm
sorry you had to sit through this."
The Phoenix jury sat through the
accounts of nine women witnesses who
testified they were attacked by the
defendant in a 23-day spell last summer
while Phoenix was working 11 ass istant
manager of a Huntington Beach health
spa .
Caplni reminded the jury ln aski ng
for the death sentence that !our of those
women received severe injuries while
being raped, kidnaped and robbed by
the husky physicel culture expert.
Will Not Lose Jobs
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -Pregnant
stewardesses will no longer be fired
but will be granted maternity le1v1
whether they are married or not,
National Airlines announced.
• "<•<M•~ e ct /,fOIJfjhfo
el.t\iese ..
o~tt.
SOMETIMES THEY ARE USED IN A MISLEADING WAY!!
THE FACT IS THAT NONE OF THESE NAMES ARE
MANUFACTURERS OF CARPETING. THESE NAMES
REPRESENT THE KIN D OF f 11 ER USED IN THE
CARPETING.
FIBER CONTENT DOES NOT NECESSARILY INDICATE
QUALITY, AS THE CRUCIAL DETERMINATION OF
QUALITY IS WHAT THE MANFUACTURER DOES WITH
THE RAW MATERIALS.
DUPONT, FOR INSTANCE, MAKES 62 KINDS OF NYLON
YARN JUST FOR CARPETING, CONSEQUENTLY, THERE
IS NO WAY A LAYMAN CAN DETERMINE QUALITY.
WEIGHT ALONE WON'T ASSURE THIS • , • , KN 0 W
THE PEOPLE .YOU IU~ FROM I
SANTA ANA. OltANOI
TUITIN Call •••
ALDIN'I
lllD HILL CAR,ITI
& DllA,llllll
1W4 Ir.I-. Tutti\ C1J. ... ,,..
ALDEN'S ·
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MISA
646-4831
7
•
7
:
•
Costa Mesa Today's Final
N.Y. Stoeks '
.
VOL 64, NO . 46, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 197 I' TEN CENTS
sea e
'Order of Day'
'
Calley Admits
Mass Kill Order
F"T. BENNING . Ga. (APl -Lt.
William L. Calley .Jr. admitted today
that he directed a mass execution of
County Gains
70% More
State Seats
From Wire Services
Orange County gained 70 percent
m o r e legislative representation today
as the legislature released the report of
ii., reapportionment committee. The
county gained two Assembly seats, one
and one-third Senate seats and one and
one-third congresisonal seats.
califomia's affluent suburbs will gain
nine and one-third legislativ.e and con-
gressional seai., through reapportion-
ment this year. mostly at the expense
of the Los Angeles, ·San Francisco and
Oakland urban centers.
That. report was issued today by the
Asselnbly elections and Reapportion·
ment Committee.
Committee ! chainnan, Henry Wax-
man. D-Los Angeles, said fi11al 1970
censu!! figures will makt the average
Assembly district population 249,414, the
average state Senate district 498.828,
and the average congressional di.strict
464,026.
Waxman. whose committee will have
primary responsibility for redrawing
Jines to match population shifts, issued
a list of county-by"°unty entitlements
which showed Orange. Santa Clara. San
Bernardino. Riverside. Contra Costa
and San Diego rounties making the big-
gest gains in legislative seats.
Burglary Rash
Hits Campuses
" In Costa Mesa
A rash or weekend campus burglaries
was recorded in Costa Mesa Monday,
just as one homeowners' gr o u p
announced a We:dnesday panel discussion
of such activity .
Loss \\·as low in most cases. but an
fnventory is under way at one school
today to determine the value of electronic
computer components stolen.
Werner Carlson. of Maude B. Davis
lntermediate School, IOf>O Arlington
Drive, discovered the items owned by
Wang Computers. of Los Angeles,
missing Monday morning.
Re said a door was standing unlocked
when he arrived.
Instructor Judith A. Cummings, of
Everett Rea Intermediate School. 601
Hamilton St.. told offi cers $14 in petty
cash · was taken from a cabinet in her
roo~.·
Police questioned two boys who
obtained her key shortly before clau
began to leave a live. caged rabbi t
in the room but they denied knowledge
of the missing money.
The teacher said many students knew
It was there.
Employe / Geraldine Speheger also
aITived Monday morning at Vidocia
School, 1025 Victoria SL, lo find a lock
picked in the cafeteria kitchen area,
where someone stole $3 from a drawer.
Campus burglary and vandalism . in
general will be discussed Wednesday
at 7:30 p.m .. when a panel is convened
before the Mesa Verde Homeowners
Association at the Costa Mesa Golf and
C:Ountry Club.
Dian1ond Disappears
• With Party Guests
A Costa 1'1esa woman told police
Monday that her husband's $500 diamond
rlnJ ~was found mis.sing after Saturday
night party guests had left their home.
t.oreJta M. Caln of 1975 Fullerton Ave,
told investigators she wasn't ue
whtther the Item disappeared before
or during the fesUvilies.
, f
Vietnamese civilians at an irrigation
dilch in My Lal.
The government has set the number
of persons killed in lbe ditch at 70.
Calley, speaking without emotion. of
killings at My Lai:
"It was the order of the day."
Why, Calley was asked, did he give
command to one of his soldien to shoot.
"Because that was my order sir. That
was the t1rdtt of the day" the defendant
said natly.
"Who gave you the order~" asked
defense counsel George Latimer.
"Capt. Medina, air," Calley said.
Callev said there were about four or
five oi his men at the ditch. but he
could remember only James Dursi and
Paul Mead.lo -the two men be said
he spoke with.
"What did you do after you saw them
shooting into the ditch?"
"I fired into the ditch also."
"Hhw niany times did he give you
the orQer," Calley was asked in reference
to his, cOmpany commander.
Calley said the order ca.me five times
-on~e at a company briefing the night
before the My. Lai auiul~, onee at
a platoon Jeaderz''b'iiefinC, the fullowing
morning before the he~pters lifted of.f,
and · twic~ over 'the· rpdio while the
troops were in the villag;.
Calley is charged with killing 10%
Vietnamese civilians in the hamlet of
My LS:i 4 -one of several numbered
My Lai hamlets -8.!I his company
assaulted the suspected Viet Cong
stronghold on March 16, 1963.
On the witness stand he told of about
four people that he killed. He also
admitted firing into a ditch that was
already fiUed with de8d. But he did
not say -and was not asked -whether
he killed anyone there.
There had been testimony that Calley
stood at that ditch, at the eastern edge
of My Lai 4, for as long as one and
one-half hours. Today, Calley said :
"It was a very rapid period or time
to me •.. it seemed onJy a matter
of a half minute or a miltute or both."
What did he see in the ditch?
"Dead people."
''Was there any appearance of anyone
(Set CALLEY, Page %)
Road Widening
Project Leads
To Car Tieups
A major widening project on Placentia
Avenue in Costa Mesa has led to
increased traffic problems farther down
the line, requiring completion of the
!\Olltherly section now to s m o o t h the
congested flow of vehicles .
Purchase of right~f-way on Placentia
Avenue between 19th and 16th streets
has been stepped up and is scheduled
to begin this April.
Details of the $360,000 job to be don•
by the 0 range County-admistered
Arterial Highway Financing Program
were disclosed this week in a letter
lo landowners.
Actual construction Is set for the
summer of 1973, according to Assistant
City Engineer Norm Spielman, but
purchase or land totaling $181 ,000 must
be handled in thrtt stages due to limited
funds .
Besides the buy5 beginning in April ,
additional land will be purchased later
In 1971 and the remainder the following
year. 1sys Spielman.
Currenlly 40 reet from curb lo curb
in most ca11es, Pl<icentia Avenue 1o1;iJI
be widened lo an actual 64 feet of
pa vement within an 80-foot righl-Qf-wa y.
This mean."! landowners will have curb
races moved back to within 12 lett
of their property lines with a pouible
variation in aome areas, depending on
additional study.
Signals wlll I>< wtalled at 16th Street
find Placentia Avenue. with a rlght-<1f·
entry clauae requested by Ulfl city to
allow unlfonn·constructlon.
Property ownen with questions may
cormuJt Spielman In person or call him
during buaineu houri, a 1.m. to a p.m.,
for additional information.
J
~on vi ct
• Industry
I Emergency
I · Dec"fared
JURY PONDERS FATE
Convicted Rapist Phoenix
Phoenix Trial
Jurors Still
Deliberating
l
By TOM .BARLEY'
Olllle 9'1!f-••H ' ,· J -p'!'f"""'
Etght women aM:f&rr' men who must
de~rqti.ge ,lif.e or death for Gary Harold
Pliienit of Costa Mesa remained tocked
in their jury room today with , no
indicstion thet they were near a verdic t
in the marathon rape-kidnap trial.
They returned to Orange County
Superior Court Judge William Murray's
courtroom this morning from the Santa
Ana motel to .which they were conveyed
under guard at 10 p.m. Monday after
nine ·hours of delibe.raUon in the penalty
phase:of the tl'i31.
Bailiffs said the jurors. now ln their
seventh week on the Phoenix case,
appeared tired and glad of the overnight
break but were of.htrwtse "in very goOd
1piriU!:." .
The jury left the courtroom Mond;ly
after hearing Phoenix. 29,. make his
final ·comment3 in a trial in which he
has often taken over from. depu.ty , public
defender Roderick RicC~rdi to · qllesticin
witnesses and address the jurY.. '
The tall blond bache!Or, looking pale
and drawn , urged the jury to remember
when it retired that much of the evidence
presented by Deputy Dis'trkt Attorney
Michael Capizzi was circu'mstantial.
''I'll wager that each or you has seen
a magician do wmething that you'd
stake your life on," ht said. •·well,
I'm betting my life now and Capizzi
gave you a Jot of evidence that was
only circumstantial.
"Thousand.! of 1U1sumptions were made
for you. But you are not children and
you must judge from the facts,·• Phoenix
said.
Objecting bitterly to Cap 1zi1' e:
description of his rapes, kidnaps a nd
robberies as a "pattern of life,'' Phoenix
asked the jury to lOOk on hie: acts
as "a few tragic moment3.
''I just want to say that if you are
going to use 'pattern of life' as I.he
basis for handing me the death sentence
then the seven yeara t spent in (a
IS.e PHOENIX, 'Page I)
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -President
Nixon declared an emergency in the
construction i n d u s t r y Tuesday a n d
suspended requirementa that union scale
wages be paid on all federal construction
project!.
Nb:on spurned for at least the time
beinJ a freeze nn wages and price!
in the industry. which has had one
of the. sharpest inflationary spirals.
His order would affect about SZ!'I billion
worth of federal construction tn the first
year.
Nixon said current requirements that
local union wage scales be paid on
government projects "only gives federal
endorsement and encouragement to
severe inflationary pressures'' at a time
when "construction wages and prices
are skyrocketing."
Labor Secretary James D. Hodgson
aMounced the action at a news
conference following his unsuccessful
attempb to reach voluntary agreement
between contractors and building unions
to curb construction costs. 1.· a ·state~. tho. Pres1.o1en~ poinled
out that ,wages had Increased 18.3
perc~nl in· bUilding trades la1t year
c:oMpared with an 8.J percent intTease
in manufacturing. He also n o led
unemployment in the building trades was
twice that of tbe national average.
Nixon1s action suspended for an
Indefinite period the Dsvis-Bacon set,
a depression-era measure thiJt requires
that workers on federal building projecU!:
be paid local union wages.
The move was considered less severe
than the wage-price freeze that Ni1on
had considered as an altemative.
Hodgson did not rule . out I a t e r
implementation of such a freeze if this
st~p does not halt the inflatio11ary spi.rcll.
Heart Surgery
On Bobby Darin
Revealed Today
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Bobby Dari.n,
34-year-<1\d singer, actor and songwriter ,
was in •·very good" condition today aft.er
undergoing heart surgery several days
ago, a hospital spokesman said.
The spokesman for Cedars of Lebanon
Hospital could not disclose the exact
nature of the operation but said It was
not considered iin emergency.
"Tl's a major operation, any heart
procedure would be considered major
surgery,'' the spokesman said.
Darin was admitted to the hospital
late last week. The spokesman said Darin
had requested that details not be
released.
"I understood the whole thing was
just a big secret," she said.
Darin, who wrote such songs as
''Splish, Splash." and "Dream Lover."
has not worked ln films lately but has
been appearinc in Las Vegas shows.
Coins Colle~ted
Burglars Make Off With Rare Loot
A team of burglars who may have
struck at random -or known precisely
what tbey wanted -stole a • safe
containing a S20,000 coUecOon of rar~
U.S. and foreign coins from a Costa
Mei1a plant.
The raid was made just l ~ days
after it arrived.
Frank T. Georgie called pallet Monday
when he went .to 1%75 Logan Ave.,, and
discovered the $300 ufe and contents
ml!3ing.
He idtnUfled the coin collecfion owner
as Joe B. Smith, of Santa Ana. stcretary-
trte5'U'et or an electronics firm which
ls about lo open iii the 'vacant induslrill
1ulte.
Officer Jim 11atley said Smith had
the large, heavy safe delivtted only
Saturday by a J.r.anaftt company that
picked it up at an undilclOlled locat!ori
ln Anaheim.
Smith said a number of people were
aware of lta content• and value.
Prying the plant's rollaway door, the
burglars -at least two were involved
based on weight of the loot -movPd
the safe into a truck for quick escape.
lnvee:tlgalor1 aaid Ille job may have
been too moch physicalfy for even two
or lhree men ' with a wheeled dolly,
1 leading · to specu1aUon a tiydrauUc lift
was ufed to move the sate.
Smith did not ' give any 1peclfic
Information about the denomin1ti0lll,
nationality or tndlvldual value of Ill)'
coins in his vast collecUon on the iniUal
reports.
He told Officer Farley he would
compile a dttailtd lnven~ry of his loss
al>d , provide ii to burglary dellil
· det<cllv.,'f0r •dtlltlonal 1tudy.
(
•
'-· .. -·---·--
ure
' County Man
· Faces Four.
ni , ,j Kidnap Raps ..
CAPTURED IN COUNT.Y
San Quentin Escapee Harvey
Irvine Cityhood
Petition Papers
Filed in County
1-poratm of !ho ;,..,.,...;a 'clly·or
1rvine·'1ook what they cllled ''\ht flrtt
llOp toward the Clftllbfl«" i 'Ml
American Community. Mondly wllh the
filing of a notice of intlnt to 'clrt'\l.latl
1 petition of incorporation. .
The notice was backed by 42 signal.urea
of residents of the area -~ are required
. -and was filed with. Mabel Ca.sttlx.
depUty clery cf the Orange County
Bo~rd of Sypervisors ..
Filin'g the papers was Jiihn H. Burton,
.chairman of' the Council ·Of Cbmmunities
of. Irvine. He said no timetable had
been set fpr comp}etjon .. <>f the
incorporation of the new city, of 18,145
acres and approximat'ely 7,000 citizens.-
The incorpora~rs npvi. have 90 da,ys
In which to gather signatures of owners
of land reP.resenting 25 percent of the
taxable value within the proposed city
boundaries.
When these signatures ·are presented
to the Board of· Superviso~ a public
hearing must be set on I.he question.
That public · hearing is the next
opportunity for the incorporation to be
blocked. If persons rep re a en ting
ownership of more. than 50 percent of
the assessed valuation of the land in
question object, the incorporation is
dead.
This is considered highly unlikely
inasmuch as the Irvine ComPanY owns
almost 100 percent of the land involved.
And the Company was the first to
propose a new citY last March. ·
At that time the community , was to
consist of 56,000 acres with a popuJation
by the year 2000 of 440,000. '
Protests by Santa Arla and NewPorl
Beach resulted in the re d u c e d
boundatieK. Santa Ana is still on record
as opposing the new city.
The ' incorporation effort hurdled il'!I
biggest obstacle Feb. 10 when the Local
Agency Foi:matlon CommiJs\on by a SP,lit
3 to Z vote approved the move.
The vote came after two full hearings
and two preliminary sessiolll!I dating back
to last October.
In a covering . letter to the Board
of Supervisors, Burton said, "We' are
looking forward to the opportunity of
becoming a city of which .Orange County
can · be proud and to joining you and
the other cities in malting Orange r.owtty
a better place for all." ~
Burglar Leaves
Dead-end Trail
A burglar who ·1ttt i.n easy·to-fOllow
trail through • bed of lc<pllilt· alld
an adjacent vacant,fleld Jooted a '():)sta
Mua home of nearly •· in vattiablf:S
late Monday night.
Mra. Ellen L. Garber~ oC . 1883 S-
Circle. told police she 1rrivid himu~
from vlslUng frl•nda to find a •teJ<viaion
set, sewing machine . and '66. ln cub
gooe from bu Men Verde home .•
lnvealigators said thoy· trailed • the
lnlrUdM from the rtlfdtnct'• 1lidin1
gla11 door thr"'311 the field b~t. hil
trl<i1 •oded there.
• .,
By ARTJl\Jll R. VINSEL
Of ..,. o.11r l'llM Ii.ff
A lJ.hour manhunt for an Orange Coun-
ty conVict who slip~ awsy from Sin
Quentir1 Prisoh Monday night, kidup~
a policeman's famil,y and friend ended In
climactic chaos today in Fullerton.
James D. ''Jimmie" Harvey, 24, was
captured following .a JOO.mile-per-hour
freeway chase' in which one shot wu fired
by police, when his .ftoJen car crashed
into a1cafe. Th~ ~ugilive -°who bad released first ~ policeman's family, then h.1a remaU...
mg hostage -·was taken into· eustody at
the scene, where fire erupted in the
wr~kage. ,
fire.men roped off the scene to•prevent
lnJury to. Ule curious or a pOssible ex.
ploslOn due to 1•solitie from ·the ear's
ruptured• tank.
AddiUo~al details were l'IOt available at pressume.
Despite the fact Harvey, a four-time
loser .. still held Mn. Cheryl J. Smith
23, P~lSOO au~rities had said he was not considered dangerous.
He was· armed With a pair of·sciS&Ors.
Mrs. Slansfteld reported today.
A '12-hour nightmare ended at 9:70
a.m. today for Novato Police Officer
Gary Stansfjeld, 30, when hit wife
telepltoned autborhies from the Salad
Bowl ·Cafe, 400 miles south on Highway
II ill Kern Oluniy. • Sl\e *"'1<ll1nced she and their cblldren Rob¢, 8, and SUzanne, f montbJ, bad
been •freed.
Mra. Stansfield, 30, eaid they were
11.fe and local officers arrived at • the
phone booth momenta later to confirm IL
Authorities in Marin County said the
!1r'ama began to unfold .et 9:47 p.m.
m ~uburban Novato, as the officer's
family. Jett a ·small house party.
A wo.man Uving behind the residence
had jllst reported a barefoot man whose
dungarees were wet to· the Jmeea tried
to bur@:larlu her house but fled when she awo~.'
Only three minutes later }:larvey -sched~d for release .in just six lllOl'lthJ
and one week -was discovered missing
in a 10 p.m. bedc~eck at a mjnimum
&ecurity facility outalde prison walls.
Novato ' Police sergeant To1i.y Stoutt
said the .suspected burglar ·apparenUy
confr,ont~ the Starislield Ca m I I y
demanding a ride.
MJ:s. Smilh -still missing until 10:30
a.m. tOday -witnessed Jt and· came -out
to see what was happening. .
:·vou don't know him -go back,"
said Mrs. Stansfield, described as being
a cool,.level-headed lady.
But lt was too late and Harvey a
barber born in Bee Branch, Ark., ~nd
sent to San Quentin. in 1967 for a Garden
Grove car theft conviction, ordered her
into the blue sedan, too .
"To my knowledge, they'd never met
before," said Sgt. Stoutt. emphasizing
the policeman's wife would know how to handle .·things.
"My wife would probably have
screamed and pas~ out," Sgt. Stoutt
quipped t.o emphlsize Mn. Stansifeld's
capacity to keep calm In.a crisis.
The 1987 auto ·swung around ln a
U-turn and head.ed away, then turned
!See MANHUNT, Page !)
Oru•e
Weadter
' Sunny skies will prev.ail Tuet-
day, but. wtndy weather will keep
the coastal tanperature down to
S8 del?ffl, with inland readings
up to 62 predicted.
JNsmE TODAY
' . .Et1tn if0 11ou.-itemlu uour &·
'duciiont ft/OU don't have to oo
, ~ro~qh. Che tortuoua job o/,
comp_vting \'Our sales'. mes. See 'Slllcib~ f!'orltr.'1 second inco,;,e
ta.% ttrie1. Paat JO. -• -II <IMdtlllt U1> " ,.,,.,., '"'"' " ·-..... ··--.. ...... " (If ..... t.Mltr • ,,.._ " Spl¥1t """ " ........ W.tlfft • ,_ 1 .. ,, ••""1•1 ,. ... • tl9dl Mlrl;tf\ 1•11
•• lltwt.I ....... " TtlW ..... " ··-1•11 -" ·-" ··-• • ,. ... t:.-.n " ·-··~"-, . ., ........ • ...... """"
..
.. ·---""
! DAIL V PILOT c
From P•ge l
MANHUNT .•.
baclt and shol pas! !he party house
egatn.
investigators comblng lht arta where
Mn. Haru>ah lob>~ 46, told of roullOg
the wClll!d-be buralar found a blue denim
jacket with a stencilled serial number
'inside.
"Thal's the clothing v•e issue at San
Quentin," confirmed C a I if o r n I a
Department of Corrections spokesman
Irwin Rltter.
"We don't consider him a violent
person," Ritter added.
He theorized Harvey walled away from
hls dormitory area and fled through
mudflats fronting the big pink prison
on the bay, perhaps hitchhiking to the
town 20 miles north.
Mrs. Stansfield confirmed this morning
that Harvey was the kldn.aper and
.app11rently discussed the fact be bad
been in San Quentin.
Lawmen throughout Ca 1 i f or n i a
mobilized and called in the FBI,
anticipating Harvey might st.eat another
car since the Stansfield auto was nmning
Jow on gasoline.
\Vard of the escape would make it
dangerous for him to attempt to purchase
more fuel.
Orange County authorities described
Harvey as basically a small-time con
allhough a four-time repeater dating
back from his original certification in
1963 to the C8lifomla Youth Autbority.
His last listed address was 181 Pixley
St .. Orange, where he was living when
arrested in connection with the Garden
Grove car theft that landed him behind
lilate prison walls.
Harvey's Orange Cowity r e c o r d
Includes grand theft and jail escape
besides the car theft rap fou: yean
ago.
He served one year in Orange County
Jail following his grand theft conviction
in 1965, according to a District Attorney's
Office spokesman.
The fugitive convict -considered far
from the Bakersfield area shortly before
noon and headed for Mexico -was
described as 5 feet, 9 inche1 tall and
weighing lfO pounds.
No description of bis young hostage
was aYailable, but the Stansfield car
ls a dark blue, tw<Hioor Ford hardtop
with liCi'!nse UHD678, police said.
No speculation was offered as to why
Hanrey would risk a long, stiff pri!on
tenn -possibly the death penalty with
kidnaplng invo]Yed -rather than serve
his last sil: months.
From Pfl!/e I
PHOE NIX . ••
Kansas) prison didn't help me a bit,''
Phoenix aald.
.. In Kansas they hang you ," he added.
.. Hert they gas you. At least It's more
humane here since lt takes a man IS
minutes to die in Kansu.
"Thank you, you have been a very
conscientious jury,'' Phoenix said. "I'm
sorry you had to sit through this."
The Phoenix jury 1at through the
accounts of nine women witnesses who
testified they were attacked by the
defendant in a 28-day spell last summer
while Phoenix was working u assistant
manager of a Huntington Beach health
spa.
Capizzi reminded the jury In asking
for the death sentence that four of those
women received severe injuries while
being raped, kidnaped and robbed by
the husky physical culture expert
Pregnant Hostesses
Will Not Lose Jobs
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -Pregnant
stewardesses will no longer be fired
but will be granted maternity le ave
whether they are married or not,
National Airlines announced.
The airline said It was not affected
fn its decision by a threat fr om
stewa rde!!lses that pregnant c a b i n
hostesses would show up to picket the
airline's golf tournament March 20.
A troop of maternity-clad stewardesses
showed up to picket a pretournamen.t
press affair last month.
DAILY PILOT
OltANGI! CO.UT l"UILISHIHO COMPMY
Rolo•rt N. W1N
PTtllllMI """ l"'*'ltlw
J11Jc R.. C1rl1y 'IQ""'"'"' 1111111 c.-11 ""~
111•11111 k1rril ......
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M-o~ Editor
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T~, Fei>Mty 2', 1971
---------------------------7 -I Ith --------------------------------------------
Election Districts
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FO<D
4
DAILY l"llOT HI .. M ...
N. Vietna11a Hit
U.S. Anno·unces
Heaviest Strikes
SAIGON (AP) -The U.S. Command
today announced its heaYlest air strikes
in North Vietnam in three months, South
Vietnam's top righting general was killed
in a helicopter crash. and for the sixth
day no progress was reported in the
Soot.h Vietnamese drive in souther.n Laos.
Fifty American fighter-bombers raided
surface-to-air missile -SAM -sites
and other antiaircraft positions )n North
Vielnam Saturday and S und 1 y ,
accompanied by about 20 1 support
aircrart, the command said. 1t added
that no planes were lost. They were
the heaviest such raids since Nov. 21.
Other sources said the raiders also
attacked supply depots.
A communique-sa id the American
pl&nes hit targets near the Laotian
border and '"below the 19th parallel.''
or somewhere along a stretch of border
that runs for about 190 miles northwest
of the demilitarized zone and end! about
160 miles southwest of Haf¥>L
The U.S. Co mmand said the
.. protective reaction'' strikes we r e
ordered after "repeated hostile acls and
recent SAM firinga, by antiaircraft
positions against U.S. aircraft involved
in interd iction of North Vietnamese
supplies along lhe Ho Chi Minh Trail
in Laos."
A spokesman said he did not kno\v
what damage the plane.! did.
The raids began three days after
President Nixon warned that he wtluid
place no limitation on the use of
American air power in Indochina. There
haYe been 14 previous .. protective
reaction" strikes against North
Vietnamese SAM sites this year, but
all were by one or two planes escorting
BS2 bombers or reconnaissanct planes .
The general killed was Lt. Gen. Do
Cao Tri, commander of the 25,000-man
South Vietnamese driYe against enemy
base camps in eastern Cambodia and
a confident, aggreilsive leader. His death
was considered a temporary 1etback to
the Vietnamizatlon program.
Americans said they killed nine of the
enemy, while U.S. casualties were two
killtd. and nine wounded.
Shortly be!ore 'l'ri's death, his troops
reported killing 140 North Vietnamese in
four clashes in eastern Cambodia. Four
South Vietnamese were reported killed
and 33 wounded.
A South Vietname!!le spokesm an said
there has been "no progress reported'"
by the JE,000 South Vietnamese troops
in souther n Laos trying to eut the Ho
Chi Minh suppl y trail. Informed sources
said in addition to heavy resistance from
enemy troops, the region "has been
heavily mined."
Saigon·s spokesmen have alternately
·reported the forwardmost elements 16
to 171h miles weal of the border. Today
a spokesman said they were 18 air
miles into Laos and added, "I never
measure the winding road."
Panel Studies
Revised Mesti
General Plan
Moving swiflly through a 14-ltem
agenda. the Costa Mesa Planning
Commission Mooday night contiaued to
public hearing on the ci ty's new revised
general plan.
The flexible guildeline for future
development -not too diUe~nt at all
from an initial blueprint prepared ll
years ago -will be up Marth 22 for;
another review.
Five among otber zone exception
permits and rezone applications on the
agenda were continued until March 3
and March 22 action after more study
session consideration. ·
Map outlines seven trustee districts in Newport-
Mesa Unified School District. School board seats
for trustee areas 1, 3 and 6 (cross-batched) will be
up for grabs in April 20 election. Deadline for can-
didates to file with county schools office for the elec-
tion is Thursday. Voters throughout the school dis·
tricl cast ballots in the election, but candidates
must live in the district they hope to represent.
Trustee areas were set up in order to insure bal·
anced representation in school district, which serYes
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa.
Tri 's helicopter caught fire and crashed
shortly after he took off from his
headquarters at Tay Ninh to visit his
troops in Cambodia. Nine men were
fatally injured w i t h the 42-year-old
general, inchMiing a Yeteran French
correspondent for Newswetk magazine,
Francois Sully. 42.
It wu believed a fuel leak caused
the fire.
Meanwhile, 13 miles south of Tay Ninh
alld a mile from the Cambodian border,
about 300 N o r th Vietnamese troops
attacked an American artillery but:,
1upporting Tri's rorces across the border.
A rezone petition requested. by the
Irvine Company for change of industrial
land near Orange CoUnty Airport to
commercial zonlng was withdrawn
pending submission of a new development
pla n.
The property, east of the Newport
Freeway, "'est o{ Red HUI Avenue and
bounded roughly by Paularlno AYenue
and Baker Street is to be f.nnexed ~
the city contingent upon the zone change~
Jtems approved or gJveu ra.vorable
recommendation pending c o u n c l J
approval ·incl ude:
Drugs Seminar
Slated in Mesa
By Church Group
The Knights of C.olumbm Wednesday
will stage a drug and narcotics seminar
in Costa Mesa.
The public is inYited to the 7:30 p.m.
meeting at St. Joachim'! Church Parish
Hall, where narcotics detective Bob
Lennert will review the problem and
amwer questions.
"You know, I don't eYen know what
this stuff looks like ,'' remarked Knights
of Columbus representatiYe Bob f.fcNulty
in urging public attendance;
All varieties of narcotics and dangerous
drugs v.ill be exhibited along with
discussion of methods of dealing with
the local drug sellers and users.
Statistics compiled for 1970 were
released last week by police, showing
a 12 percent decline in the number
of arrests among juvenile user!!, while
adult offenses rose.
F rom Pa,ge 1
CALLEY. • •
be ing a.live in there?"
"No, Sir."
How did the people get into the ditch?
•·They had been ordered to go into
the ditch. Sir," Calley said.
Who ordered them into the ditch?
"Indirectly, I did - I told Mea dlo
to get them (Vietnamese capliYes) lo
the other side of the ditch, Sir.''
Paul Meadlo was a soldier in the
platoon that Calley led that day.
l\feadlo testified earlier in the trial
that he atood at Calley's side and by
his order shot into a group of 45
Vietnamese men. v.·omen and children.
Calley, Meadlo said, had ordered hlm
to "waste them."
Calley said he lert Meadlo, who wa s
guarding an unspecified number of
people, to go elsewhere to order Sgt.
David Mitchell to set up a machinegun.
•·J came out and l\feadlo was r; t I 11
standing there with 1he group of
Vietnamese. 1 yelled at Meadlo that
if he couldn't move all those people
to get rld or them ."
Just minutes brfore. Calley said , he
had rteelved a radio call from l\1edlna
asking blrn why "l wu disobeying hls
orders."
Calley 11id he told the caplaln that
ht wu slowing hlm down.
''At that time. he told me to w1ste
tht Vietnamese."
After glYlng Meadlo the order, Calley
said he heard rlrl.ng.
Where!
"At Mltchfll'a location. Gunships were
atlll bla:dng • • • 1pparentiy the third
element was coming through the Ylllage."
Q. Did you flro at !hat group of
people!
A. No, Sir. I did no!.
'
Newport Bans High Rise
For 90-day Morawrium
Some or the 1ttackera broke into the
base and blew up a ruel dump. The
-A zone exception permit ·for Pier
11 operator Veriion Rantln. to keep the
~vem at 1976 Newport Blvd. open witll
35 of his 75 required oU-e1rett parking
spaces while in fscrow "to purchase 1n
adjacent lot which will provide tht
M ' 'R bb't remainder. esa S a l -A Ienlalive pare.I map !or Cosla
Mesa Investors Corporation, 1220 W. Bay
H t h' D d Ave., Newport Beach, dividing land at
By L. PETER KRIEG jump the gun" on the ordinance by U, C 00ffie the northwest corner of West 19th Street
or 111• 011"' "1111111" the ban was to be enac ted. and Meyer Place into two parcels.
Newport Beach Monday night banned He aaid the timing was purely The bunny building ls about to come -A wne exception permit allowing
111 high-rise construction along the coincidental and said it was not unusual tumbling down. Sylvester J. Cook to operate an open
waterfront for 90 days and was informed Directors of the 32nd DI al r i ct storage rental yard for construction
immediately it will be sued because obtaining t.he permit four days before Agricultural Association have voted to equipment and materials at 2 o 2 I
actual construction work began the day tear down the rabbit exhibit structure Placentia AYe., in an industrial zone.
of it. the permit was issued. because it is dilapidated and could -A tentative parcel map allowing
The emergency ordinance, adopted by Several councilman had been critical possibly fall down . Robert E. McC1elland, 3100 Trinity Drive,
a 6 to l City Council vote, prohibits A rented tent will replace the bunny to divide the northwest corner of Santa of the seeming llUt hour moye by the h h lh Or Co ty Fa;rgrounds An A d '-·1 Pl · to the issuance of building permits for utc on e ange un • a venue an u::c1 ace in two contractor. ;0 Cosla Mesa pr1·or to the Fair and parcels structures more than 3S feet tall within ' · Councilman Donald Mcinnis pointed exposition in mid.July. -Proposed abandonment 0£ 1m11l
the boundaries of the proposed Lower out the city could haYe enacted the The livestock headquarters building portions of city right-of-way at 2221
Newport Bay Civic District. Isn't in much better shape. but will Harbor Blvd. and the southwest COl'Jl er
In adopting the measure, the council ordinance two "'eeks ago without Monday be used anyway because it includes of Harbor BouleYard and PonderO!a
also revoked a foundation permit night's hearing. restroom and dressing room facilities. Street. And C.ouncilman Milan Dost at A number of capital improvemen\11 -A zone exception permit for Carter
obtained Thursday by Swan Constructors, l'lbserved, "I do not take kindly to the such as construction or new buildings Outdoor Advertising Copmapny, 3321 w.
Inc., of San Diego, which started action of the developer," contending the is scheduled at the fairgrounds. pa id Castor St., Santa Ana, to continue
immediate grading work on a 120-foot , firm does "not have clean hands'' by funds from sale of Newport Freev•ay maintaining a billboard at 1625 Newport
M-unit luxury condominium on Lido because of their actions. right-of-way to the state, Blvd., in a commercial zone.
Peninsula, just east of Lido Isle bridge. 1--;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~;:;:~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Lawyers representing Swan, a
subsidiary of U.S. Financial Corp.,
opposed the action and vowed they would
begin immediately to i n st i t u t e
proceedings in Orange County Superior
Courl
Newport City Attorney Tully Seymour
had predicted the moYe, telling the
council if it didn't yank the foundation-
only permit and allowed the builder
to pour concrete, "no court in the land
would deny them permission to fin ish
the building."
Seymour says he think.a the city
"possibly" can succeed in defending the
moYe, but aald, "It is not a sure thing ."
Bruct Lederman, an attorney for Swan,
insisted his clients had not tried "lo
Mesa " City Chief
Honors Farmers
With FF A Week
Gone are the days when Orange County
was a rural society in which ranching
and !arming was 1he predominant
profession. but agriculture is still 1
major business.
And Cos ta Mesa f.fayor Robert. P.f.
Wilson has proclaimed Feb. 21 through
21 as Future Farmers of America Wtek
in honor of young men and women
planning careers in the field.
His proclamation notes that while
agrlculwre ls far more sophlsUcattd.
through modem scientific methods, FFA
members are engaged in many related
areas.
Besides deYeloping leadership potenlitd .
profes.~ionallsm and Improved U.S. food
suppllea, he notes the FFA has always
Inspired patrloUam among Its members.
I
•
ctC/Aa . -VV£sc._
0Fi1'Fl£t.
SOMETIMES THEY ARE USED IN A MISLEADING WAY!!
THE FACT IS THAT NONE OF THESE NAMES ARE
MANUFACTURERS OF CARPETING, THESE NAMES
REPRESENT THE KIND OF F 111 A USED IN THE
CARPETING.
FIBER CONTENT DOES NOT NECESSARILY INDICATE
QUALITY, AS THE CRUCIAL DETERMINATION OF
QUALITY IS WHAT THE MANFIJACTURER DOES WITH
THE RAW MATERIALS.
DUPONT, FOR INSTANCE, MAKES 62 KINDS OF NYLON
YARN JUST FOR CARPETING. CONSEQUENTLY, THERE
IS NO WAY A LAYMAN CAN DETERMINE QUALITY.
WEIGHT ALONE WON'T ASSURE THIS •••• KN 0 W
THE PEOPLE :YOU BUY FROM f
ALDEN'S'.
IAHTA ANA., OllANGI
TUITIN C1ll •••
ALDIN'I
llD HILL CAll:PITI
I DlllAPllllll
llJ74 lnlne, Tu1tln. C1I.
•>Wl44
CARPETS e DRAPES
l
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
'
7
Saddlehaek
• VOL. 64, NO. 46, 2 SECTIO NS, 26 PAGES
e
Neighbors A id
Clemente House
Spared by Blaze
By JOHN VALTERZA
01 IM OlllY ~llol Slllf
The garage and atlic of an expensive
Shorecliffs home in San Clemente erupted
into flame Monday evening and neighbors
-mostly teenagers -formed a chain
to successfully spare the victims'
possessions from damage.
As firemen fought the blaze in the
home of Mr. and Mrs . Ernest Conway
of 2603 Via Cascadita, shotgun shells
and rifle cartridges stored in the garage
Sewage Iss ue
To Be Aired
By Planners
A public hearing on the proposed
aewage element lo the San Clemente
general plan will be . h~ld Wednesday
by city planning comm1ss1oners.
The proposed segment of the city's
development guidelines has b e e n
suggested by the ctt.y staff to assure
the city's qualification for federal grants
-including the pending awa~d of f~s
for a mass ive sewer f11a1n pro1ect
running along El Camino Real.
The element. a map and supplemental
material on existing and proposed city
1anitation facilities, will go on to city
councilmen if planning commissioners
approve it after Wednesday's hearing.
The large sewage main proposed for
El Camino is destined to take lhe
overload away from the city's ex.isling
north-south collector line v.'hich runs
parallel to the coastline.
Other action 8chedu!ed before the
commission Wednesday includes: .
-A request by the Sheltec Corporation
seeking persmission to build a sales
office and four on-site directional signs
at 403 Calle Pueblo. The facilities are
planned to assist in sales of ~3 tract
homes. Signs and portable 0H1ce are
requested for a one·year period.
-The rezone request by Alfred F..
Mann, owner in escrow of the nearly
of San Clemente Medical Center. Mann.
who is buying the land from C. T.
DeCinces, seeks a zone change allowing
multiple residential use of the terraced
land between the San Diego lree"·ay
Shell Oil Company for a temporary sign
at 439 N. El Camino and 2400 S. El
Camino. President regulations sel fl 30-
da y limit to such signs. Shell seeks
an extension to 80 days .
Ocean Pollution
Classes Slated
Students at Maren Forster Junior High
School will soon attend a lecture-mov ie
program on ocean pollution prese nted
by a Saddleback College instructor.
Norman H. Cole. life science, biology
and marine science instructor. will
prt:seht his program "The Last Frontier''
for eighth graders at the school March
6 at 2:30 p.ni
About 180 students are l?xpected to
attend the talk accompanied by a slide
show depicting sea life and the natural
habitat of ocean organisms.
~
began firing from the intense heat of
the blaze.
The ammunition kept firemen at bay
for a time, but volunteers successfully
kept the intense blaze from spreading
to the main portion of the rented
residence.
Fire Chief 'f\.ferton Hackett said
damage was estimated at about $6,000
to the structure and contents.
Because the garage is separated from
the rest of the rambling residence,
flames did not spread into the living
area. Some severe damage to rafters
and roofing, however, occurred, Hackett
said.
Dozens or youthful neighbors pitched
in to evacuate the residence, stacking
the family 's belongings on adjoining
patios.
The Jnitia l fire alarm came in from
an anopymous caller at 6:35 p.m. and
the first fire rig arrived at the scene
nine minutes later.
Volunteers arrived a few minutes after
that, hampered by the lack of the city's
largest and newest pumper rig,
undergoing extensive transmission repair
in Long Beach.
Hackett said the blaze "must have
been burning for some time before
anyone noticed it."
Mrs. Conway told firemen iJle sensed
something wrong at ~bout 6:35 p.m.
and went into her patio to Investigate.
She discovered her garage ablaze -
flames already licking through the shake
roof.
She said her husband had left for
Los Angeles shortly after dinner. A few
moments later she discovered the garage
ablaze.
Hackett said the fire apparently started
in the area of a workbench. The exact
cause. he said, is still under investigation.
Growth Control
Chamber Topic
Controlled gro"•th and how it can be
accomplished will be the topic at the
\Vednesday meeting of the San Juan
Capistrano Chamber of Commerce.
Guest spea ker will be Edward Carson
Beale of Palos Verdes who has done
extensive work in land planning and
architecture.
The consultant has worked in many
communities "'here cont.rolled growth is
in effect He will describe his work and
the problems and advantages he has
encountered.
The breakfast meeting will Lake p\act:
at 7:30 a.m. at Pete and Clara'1
Restaurant in San Juan Capistrano.
Bealle Singer Fined,
Car Struck Officer
LONDON (AP) -Bealle George
Ha rrison "'as fined and banned from
driving today for gently nudging a
London traffic cop three times with
his car.
Harrison admitted the offense but did
not appear in court. Confiscating his
license for a month and imposing a
$60 fine the judge said: "ln my view,
the most effective way of dealing with
cases of this sort. whoever the driver
may be. is a short 1harp
disqualification.·'
I
ORAN GE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESD AY, FEBRUARY B , '197 1
........ on vi ct
Today's Final
TEN CENTS
ure
County Man
Faces Four.
Kidnap Raps
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of Ills DIUY 1'110! Stiff
A 13·hour manhunt for an Orange Coun.
ty convict who slipped away from San
Quentin Prison Monday night, kidnaping
a policeman 's family and friend endl!:d in
climactic chaos today in Fullerton.
James D. ''Jimmie'' Harvey, 24, 1¥as
captured following a 100-mile-per-hour
freeway chase in which one shot was fired
by police, when his stolen car crashed
into a cafe.
The fugitive -who had released first
the policema1fs family, then his· remain.
Jng hostage -was taken into custody at
the scene, where fire erupted in the
wreckage.
Firemen roped off the scene to prevent
Injury to the curious or a possible eX"·
ploslon due to gasoline from lht: car's
ruptured tank.
Additional details were not available
at presstime.
Despite the fact Harvey, a four-time
loser, still held Mrs. Cheryl J. Smith,
23, prison authorities had said he was not
coosldered dangerous.
SAN CLEMENTE FIRE AT 2603 VIA ·CASCADITA1DID ESTl~TED $6,000 DAMAGE
Vol..-r Fir........,lotKf>lln..llrOl!I> ... ~> DOMl .. WN Chiefly·ln,Gllrowt ancl·Atti" . . .
He was armed with a pair of scissors,
Mrs. Stansfield reported today.
A 12-hour nijhtmare ended at t :20
a.m. today for Novato Police Officer
Gary Stansfield, 30, when bis wife
tt:lephoned authorities from the Salad
Bowl Cafe, 400 miles: south on lftghway
99 in Kern County.
..
NEIGHBORS PITCH IN TO HELP CARRY OUT FURNISHINGS
Bl11e St1rted In Vicinity Of A Gar1ge Work Bench
Trustees Expand VD
Program for School
An expanded venereal d i s e a s e
education program was approved
Monday night for San Clemente lligh
School.
Down tJae
M •• ISSJOQ
Trail
Funds Pour In
For Dana Statue
DANA POINT -Contributions for the
statue of Richard Henry Dana in Dana
Point Harbor are beginning to come
in. according to Les Remmers, project
chairman.
But nearly $7,000 is still needed before
the bronze statue will be cast by sculptor
John Terken of New YorK.
Residents who wish to donate to the
t.ax deduclible fund can send their
contributions to the Dana Statue Fund,
San Juan Capistrano Historical SoCiety,
Box 81, San Juan Capistrano 92675.
Individuals or groups donating over $100
will have their name inscribed on a
plaque below the statue.
She announced she and their children,
Robert, 6. and Suzanne, 4 months, bid
been freed.
Mrs. Stansfield. 30, said they were
safe and local officers arrived at the
phone booth moments later to confirm
il
Boys Club Sets
Little League
Signup Date
San Clemente's Little League will
conduct registration of boys 9 to 12
yea rs old Friday and Saturday at the
Boy's Club near the ball diamond.
Friday evening's signups will be from
7 to 9 o'clock: and Saturdays from 9
a.m. to noon .
All boys who have turned nine years
old before last Aug. 1 and those who
will not be older than 12 next Aug.
I are eligible. Birth certificates and
a $10 uniform and registration fee are
req uired.
Spokesmen for the league stressed that
boys who have played in the league
before as well as newcomers must e Viejo Queen register.
. ' 4 Officers for the league this year are MISSION VIEJO -L1nd1t Huber has Dick Stephan.o;, pres id en t · Don
been named Miss Mission Viejo by the Rasmussen and Depsey Caron co'..p!ayer
Saddleback Valley Ch amber of agents ;. Kay Womack, secrelary; Mel
Commerce. Mitchell, Dick Caron, Al Ehlow,
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Katherine Barnes, Harry Merchant and
Huber resides at 2.'!661 Calle Hogar. Jerry Reckinger, all board memberh.
Mission Viejo. She ls a social scien~s
major at Saddleback College.
She will represent her community in
the Miss Orange County· Pageant at
the end of this week.
e Btueball Lots OKd
Oruge
Weatlter
New Schoo·l Name Sought
Trustees of the' Capistrano Unif)ed
School District voted unanimously . to
include seniors in the current program
whi1e directing the administration to
initiate a program for au students next
year.
Venereal disease education is currently
provided in the tenth grade. A film
i1 shown in physical education classes
and a physician from the Orange County
Health 0ePartment conducts a question
and answer session. +
EAST IRVINE -Trustees of the San
Joaquin Elementary School District have
approved the use of vacant school sites
for Little League Baseball use.
, A special lease contr"act with tbe
Mission Viejo Little League has been
renewed for the Montanoso site.
An agreement with a Pony-Colt Leagut:
Sunny skies will prevaJl Tues-
day, but windy weather will keep
t.ht: coastal temperature down to
S8 degrees. with inland readings
up to 62 predicted.
Aegean Hills R es idents Don't Want Second Moulton
There won't be two Mou Ito n
Elementary Schools after all -providing
the residents of Aegean Hills come up
with lll new name for the Moulton School
in their area.
Members of the Aegean H 111 s
Homeowners Association complaintd to
the. Board of Trustees of the San Joaquin
Elementary School •District recently that
the name Lewis f . Moulton School was
not appropriate.
They suggested that the board replace
the name with either Los Pinos or
c
I
Sanllago in kefping with tht: Spanish
theme of the area.
The board agreed after conslderable
discussion, but did not select a new
name for the school. They left It up
to the homeowners' group.
Board Chairman Gratian Bid art
objected to changing the namt: on the
grounds that it would open the door
for others to make similar requests.
Trustee Robert Dameron offered 1
solution to that problem, suggesting
naming each school site as soon as
construction of a school beg1i\s.
•·we can see that the community ls
notified well in advance to offer their
1uggestions for nama," be a.kltd ..
The Aegean 1U11s group has until
March 3 to present a name to the
board of the former Moulton School
on Rt:gina Street.
There will still be: another Moulton
School. however, this one in Crown Valley
ln the Capistrano Unified Schoo! District
-unless that one's changed, too.
High· school princilf.81 Daryl Taylor
de$ttibed the difficulty the school h8s
in obtaining the films at a convenient
time while trying to correlate the.
physician's visit.
A further complication is the legal
requirement that forces the district to
lnform each parent and give them an
opportunity to remove tbeir child' from
the presentation.
"We s~ed the films to the 10th
grade t.bls year and the response was
very good,'' said Taylor. "The doctor was
very favorably impressed."
•
In the Saddleback Valley also has · been
sanctioned.
Groups wishing to use vacant sites
for recreation purposes can call Rex..
Nerison at the administratlve office for
information.
e GOP Seer eta r 11
MISSION VIEJO -William S. Hul1y
has been elected secretary or the
Saddleback unit of the Cllifornla
Republican Alisembly. Hulay, former
chief administrative offl~r of tbe
Republican State Central C:Ommittee, is
currently prosecuting attorney fl?f lhe
city of Long Beach. He lives with his
faraily at 24022 5atW'na Drive.
'\
INSIDE TODAY
Even if you ftemlze your de-
du~tiotU you don't have to 110
through the tortuous job of
computing your sales taxes. See
Sylvia PorUr's second in in-
come taJ: series. Pnge 10.
C1lllmtll.
C~edli.t U• CllnllleC ._, , ........
Cltllft Notlcn f'1tltw ..... _
·~ ....... lllNfll llllUtM• -AM.._,
Mlllkl
• " 2 .. u .. .. ' • " 1 .. 11 .. .. '
-" Mllllfll ~ 1t ... , .......... ...,
Or•flff Ctu!lty •
s11vi. """"' lt lllOl'h , .. 11
,,... ~ 1•11 T•llllltlell 11
'"""" II WMIMr • W-'• Htw1 Ii.IS W•rM lo!.., ...
% DAIL V PILOT SC T11r$day, Frbruary 2J, 1971
Saddlehack Trustees Initiate School Bonds
87 BARBARA KREfBICH
OI .._ DellY ,.lltl t11H
Ooocludlnc lhat lhe1' II UtUe cbanc<
of obWnlnJ !loped.for state !ln111Clal
aid under Governor Reagan's reduced
budgd, Saddleback College trustees
\'Oted Monday night to go to the voters
in June vdlh a $24,870,000 bond proposal.
The funds would be used f o r
constructJon of permanent facilities at
Ute existing 200-acre campus in Mission
Viejo over the years up to 1975 and
for aCquisltion of a 151).acre site for
a aecond campus in the Tustin area
Hatchet Slaying
for tuture development .
FacWtles proposed under the program
wooJd include a aclenc.matbemaUc1
bulldlnc and a fine ar!J bulldln1 to
bl conatrucled Jn 1m-n, a armnaalum-
pbyslca! education blllldlnl llld an
admlnlstraUon bulldln1 1n 197!-14 and
a technology building and business
scienct! building in 1974·75.
The funds also would Cover the cost
of aite preparailon and landacaping for
the new facilities.
The college, having failed In Its attempt
to obtain matching funds under the
state's Junior College Constrnction Ad
2nd Doctor Says
Hulse Not Insane
A UCl psychiatrist today became the
second medical expert to testify that
Arthur Craig "Moose" HuJse was sane
when he allegedly chopped service station
attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin to death
wil.h a hatchet last June t.
Dr. Frank V. Hoffman of Huntington
Beach told an Orange County Superior
Court jury ln the Gardea Grove youth 's
murder trial that Hulse suffered from
a .. personality disorder" and was "def-
initely anUsocial" at the Lime of the Car·
lin kilting.
"But he was nol psychotic," Dr.
Hoffman said. "He told me he took
a large quantity of Sec0nals and they
blew his mind but be knew what be
was doing."
Hoffman's testimony i:;upported thal
of Dr. John Guido, a prosecution witness
who, like Hoffman this morning. testified
that a remark made by Carlin while
Hanna Proposes
4-year Terms
In Legislature
Orange County Rep. Richard Hanna
(D.Anahelm) has called for a four-year
term for members of the House.
· In a speech to Congress, Hanna warned.
that "legislative quality ls diminished
by the need for incessant and expensive
campaigning. The complex Issues of the
1970's demand sufficient time to master,
and the two year term does not provide
the necsssary time."
He said the two year term tends
to make polilicians dependant on those
v•ho can finance increasingly costly
campaigrui.
"Congtt!lsmen must be Independent
from special interests and a four year
term will relieve members from the
burden or having to finance a new
campaign every other year," Hanna said.
Two other proposals contained in his
Eipccch were a mandatory retirement
a ~~ of 70 for Representatives and funds
v.·:~ich would allow Congressmen to send
quarterly newsletters and questionnaire s
to their constituents.
In speaking of the manda tor y
retirement proposal, Hanna noted that
almost every important House committee
ch3i.rman.!hip is held by a man over
or aoproachlng 711.
"This discourages qualified young men
fr om ruMing for office," he said. Hanna
also pointed out that business, teaching
and even the Catholic Church practice
mandatory retirement.
"Congress must come up to the
gtandard the rest of the nation has
set for i ··","he said.
DAllY PILOT
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he was being robbed allegedly prompted
Hulse to grab the hatchet and hammer
Carlin to the floor of the restroom.
Hoffman also commented u n d e r
quesUonlng from Deputy D I 11 t r I c t
Attorney Martin J. Heneghan that Hulse,
16, at the time of the crime, "wasn't
that concerned with the crime itself''
aod allegedly remarked when he was
interviewed rour days ago by the
psychiatrist that be was only arre!lted
becswe "someone in jail for something
else talked about it."
The jury had heard a recording la
whlch a voice identified a!I that of Hulse
admits the killing of Carlin. And
Henegban plans to put Hulse on tha
stand again today as bis last wilncss
in the prosecution's case against the
defendant
It is expected that the case will go
to the jury no later than Friday of
tbis week.
Whatever the jury's verdict may be,
Hulse will have to face lrlal on further
charges of being an accessory to the
murder of Florence Nancy Brown, a
Mission Viejo teacher who was stabbed
to death in an Irvine orange grove
less than 24 hours after the 21.year-old
Carlin was slain.
Regarded by lawmen as the principal
ln the Brown kllllng and Hulse's
companion in the Carlin killing ts Steven
Craig Hurd, a 20-year-old drug using
transient who ls scheduled to go on
trial March 22 for the two murders.
Hurd , like Hulse, bas been declared
sane over the objections o[ defense
attorneys who have pointed to both
defendants' long addiction to a wide
range of drugs and narcotics.
Hurd allegedly led Herman Hendrick
Taylor, 17. a transient, Christopher
"Gypsy" Gibboney. 17, of Portland,
Oregon and Hulse in a rampage that
ende d with the "devil cult" k.lfling of
Mrs . Brown, 31, of El Toro.
The prosecution claims it will prove
that the nomadic band stabbed ~1rs.
Brown to death and devoured portions
of her body in a form of satanic worship.
The woman's dismembered corpse was
later buried near the Ortega Highway.
lnniates' Lawye.r
Shot in Home;
Assista:it Held
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) -Attorney
Carol Will Scott, representing 36 Raiford
Prison inmates in an American Civil
Liberties Union suit, was shot today
al her home. Police picked up her 21·
year-old legal .assistant for questioning.
Paul Michael "Mike" Smith was taken
Into custody shortly after the 4:53 a.m.
shooting, according to police Capt. R.
T. Angel. No charges were lilcd
immedlately.
f\1iss Scott underwent surgery for a
chest v;ound above the heart, Angel
said.
Authorities said l>iiss Scott, 30, ·went
to Raiford about 9 p.m. lttonday to
take depositions from prisoners who said
that they witnessed guards beating
inmates without provocation.
Persons at the prison said she then
left in the company of an ex-convict
and a woman whose son Is currently
in prison and wants Miss Sc-Ott to be
his lawyer.
The slender divorcee is the mother
of three children and specializes In
narcotics cases. Fellow attorneys in
Gainesville described her as outspoken
and a "lone wolf.'' '
ln a suit here Saturday In Jacksonville
federal court, Miss Scott charged the
civil rights of the inmates had bet?n
violated by a series of Incidents In
v.•hlch guards clashed with prisoners.
Miss Scott's suit asked for a federal
takeover of the prison and describrd
a shooting Incident at Raiford in which
&4 inmates v.·ere injured by sunflre as
the '"Raiford massacres.''
The Ga inesville attorney said she
lnterviev.·ed some 40 prisoners about
disturbances al the prison's maximum
security East Unit.
The suit. however, was dismissed by
U.S. District Court Judge T. J. Tjonlt
until ~1i!ls Scott CQ\lld produce a prl!on
'~rt to 1gret that unnece5!1ary forct
h11d been used in quelling the rebellion.
Raiford officials and wardens from
three other 10Uthern 1l.8tes testified that
guards had acted Justifiably In controlling
the violent outbr'-akll,
far a $3.7 million library~lassroom
complex, will proceed with t h e
construction of lhll facility thla year,
u1ln1 money left from Its original bond
l&aue, a spokesman aaid today. Bids
art Hpt<led to p out In April.
Since formation of the junior collese
district in 1967 it has had only one
bond issue. A $9 '1? million issue was
approved by the voters in 1968 for
development of the initial campu! with
relocatable buildings, which still are
being used. Balance of these bonds will
finance the new library facility.
An application for matching state fW1ds
for the propo!Jd science-mathematics
buildln& 1net all quallflcatlons under the
Junior Colle&e COnstrucUon Act , the
collq:e 1poke.aman aald, but ''the currtnt
lndJcaUons are that no money "'ill be
available."
Dr. Fred H. Bremer, superintendent·
president. said however that the college
will corith1Ue to make appllcaUoru for
each proposed facility under the state
ronstruction act.
It was pointed out U1at the revised
construction program for · allocation or
monies from the proposed bond musure
. were presented as guldt.lines and w<>uld
be aubjtct to revision.
Bremer uld he bad met with officials
of lhe Irvine company to dl5CUss the
acquisition of possible aites for a second
campus in the Tustin area .
Board president Hans W. Vogel also
noted that the college would welcome
any offers by land developers !or
suggested sites.
At present the trustees are considering
only the acquisition of a 150-acre site for
the second campus. with development
to be W1dertaken in the future.
OAILY' PILOT'"''• •w ltk~.,~ Klthltr
The proposed bond issue would lnvolvt iio cbao&e in the 1971-n tu rate, wbich
carries an ll<ent lndebttdbeu from tht:
fir11t bond Issue. Total tu: rate for tht
two issues would reach 21 cents in 1972·
73. peak out at" 33 cents in J973-74,
then reduce in folio.wing years.
Trustees pointed out that additional
facilities which would h1tve bqoste_d the
projected Campus co.!l to . HJ .million
were pared from the proposal approved
Monday.
'fhese included a stadium, swimmlng
pool, classrooms, facuJly offlcta and
auditorium.
Calley Says
He Ordered
Mass Deaths
FT. BENNING. Ga. CAP ) -Lt.
\Villiam L. Calley Jr. admitted today
that he diretced a mass execution of
Vietnamese civilians at an irrigation
ditch in My Lai.
The government has sel the number
of persons killed in the ditch at 70.
Calley, speaking without emotion, of
killings at My Lai:
"It was the order of the day."
Why, Calley was asked, did he 1ive
command to cne of his soldler.s to shoot.
"Because Utat was my order 1ir. That
wa.s the crder of the day" the defendant
said flatly.
.. Who gave ·you the order?" asked
defense counsel George Latimer.
Juicy Freeavay Crash
"Capt. Medina, sir," Calley uid.
Calley said there were about four OI'
five of his men at the ditch. but he
could remember only James Dursi and
Paul ,_1.eadlo -the t"·o men he 11aid
he spoke with. California Highway Patrol officers said truck driv·
er Donald Hill, 30, Porterville, escaped with minor
injuries Monday atfer his orange-laden truck
slammed into the center Wvider and flipped over,
spilling citrus fruit all over the San Diego Freeway
near Warner Avenue in Huntington Beach. Jiigh·
way Patrol investigators said Hill apparently 'vent
to sleep at the wheel. The crash tied up Monday
morning commuter traffic for several hours.
..What did you do arter you saw them
shooting into the ditch?"
"I fired into the ditch also."
''How many times did he give you
the order," Calley was asked in reference
to his company commander.
New Las Palmas Buildings Marine Charge
Denial Rejected
Calley said the order came five times
-once at a company briefing the night
before the My Lai assault, once at
a platoon leaders· briefing, the following
morning before the helicopters lifted off,
and twice over the radio while the
troops were in the village. 1st School Fund Priority As about 40 young civilian supporters
of an accused Marine dese rter watched,
a court-martial judge al Camp Pendleton
r.tonday refused to dismiss charges
against Pvt. David Osborne, 20, of
Stevenson, Wash.
Calley i! charged with killing 102
Vietnamese civilians in the hamlet cf
1t1y Lai 4 -one of several numbered
My Lai hamlets -as his company
assaulted the suspected Viet Cong
:itronghold on March 16, 1968.
By PA1'1ELA HALLAN
01 lltl DlllW Pllol 51111
The demolition and reconstruction of
all pre-Field Act buildi11gs at Las Palma•
School In San Clemente has been
approved as the first priority for bond
money recently sold by the Caplstrano
Unified School District.
Members of the board of trustees
voted Monday to hire Blurock and
Associates to design the riew facility
which will be built on the site of the
current structure. No time table has
yet been set.
The second priority approved v.•as Ille
construction of Shorecllffs Junlor High
in San Clemente. Prelim.lnary plans have
already been drawn by architects for
this school.
All or these priorities are contingent
on -whether or not the state provides
the funding for Dana Hills High School
as Jt has promised. If for any reason
it does Dot, the bond money which Ls
a llttle more than $4 million will be
used for this project.
The district administration has agreed
Stolen Kisses
Bring Lawsuit
SACRAMENTO CUP!) -Mrs.
June R. Becker is suing a pleasure
boat skipper and a \V o m a n
acquaintance on grounds their
kisses took his mind off steering
lhe craft and led to an accident.
~1rs. Becker, a Sacramento
divorcee. asked in Monday's
lawsuit for $36,750 from David A.
Borth of Stockton and Helen L.
Harris. also fro m Sacramento.
The SO.year-old f\lrs. Becker said
she suffered a broken leg July
ti, 1970, v.•hen Borth·s boat struck
l tree along the bank of the
Stoc kton deep y,·ater channel near
\Voodbridge.
lier superior court •ction said
Borlh's attentions were distracted
"by the negligent f em I n I n e
enticement arid alluring kisses or
defendant Helen L. H a r r I s ' '
resulting in the crash.
Preg nant Hostesses
Will No t Lose Jobs
Pt11Ar.11. Fla. (AP) -Prt'gnant
stewardwes wlll no longer be fired
but will be granted maternity letve
whether they are married or not.
National Airlines announced.
The airline said it was not affected
In Its decision by a threat from
stewardesses that pregnant c I bl n
hostesst~ woulrl show up to picket the
alrline's golf tournament March 20.
h troop of maternity-clad stewardesses
1howed up lo picket a pretoumament
press affair last month,
to create a master calendar including
the priorities listed by the board. But
this won't be done until after the bids
are awarded for the new high .&chool,
aides said.
The state also ha! approved the
Richard Henry Dana addition but h11s
not released funds yet.
Trustee Fred Newhart Jr. made the
motion to reconstruct Las Palmas School.
This and the old Capistrano School are
the only pre-Field Act buildings which
house studentJ. At the latter structure
only the gymnasium and art room are
pre-Field Act.
Superintendent Truman Be n e d i c t
agreed with the board's decision to
reconstruct Las Palmas, rather than
rehabllitate the 1927 st ruc ture .
"Rehabllitialion often costs as much as
80 percent of what a new structure
wouJd cost," he said. "It's better to
reconstruct."
If money Is left over after the
construction of Las Palmas and
Shorecllffs the board \viii use it for
an elementary school, but will not
pinpoint JUI location until studies can
be made as to where the greatest need
exists.
The general court martial opened early
this week In the case of the 20-year-old
Marine arrested tn Vancouver, 8. C.,
last November after being designated
a deserter.
The observers In the courtroom
Monday -both young men and women
-described themselves as supporters
of the declared deserter. The trial room
is a converted classroom. No disorders
were reported.
Attorne ys had sought dismissal of the
charges because of asserted Jack of
evidence. They also leveled criticism
of arrest and detention procedures.
Osborne allegedly deserted in January
of 1970, then fled lo the Canadian
province.
U.S. J ews at Meet
BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -Two
plane loads of American Jews landed
here today lo attend the three-day world
conference of Jewish communlties on
the plight of Soviet Jews.
On Ute witness stand he told of about
four people that he killed. He also
admitted firing into a ditch that w1s
already filled with dead. But he did
not say -and was not asked -whether
he killed anyone there.
There had been testimony that Calley
stood at that ditch, at the eastern edge
of My Lai 4, for as long as one and
one-half hours. Today, Calley said:
''It was a very rapid period of tlme
to me . , . it seemed only a matter
of a half minute or a minute or both."
\Vhat did he see in the ditch7
"Dead people."
"Wa.s there any appearance of anyone
being alive in there?"
"No, Sir."
How did the people get into the ditch?
"They had been ordered to go into
the ditch, Sir," Ca11ey said.
Who ordered them into the ditch~
''Indirectly, J did -1 told Meadlo
to get them (Vietnamese captives) to
the other side of the ditch, Sir."
Paul Meadlo was a soldier in the
platoon that Calley led that day.
• e lifo,,;;.-. •• ""lo
ctf:/A•.
--t1Yf:Sl: ~
Ofl~tt.
SOMETIMES THEY ARE USED IN A MISLEADING WAY!!
THE FACT IS TH AT NONE OF THESE NAMES ARE
MANUFACTURERS OF CARPETING. THESE NAMES
REPRESENT THE KIND OF FI IE R USED IN THE
CARPETING.
FIBER CONTENT DOES NOT NECESSARILY INDICATE
QUALITY, AS THE CRUCIAL DETERMINATION OF
QUALITY IS WHAT THE MANFUACTURER DOES WITH
THE RAW MATERIALS.
DUPONT. FOR INSTANCE, MAKES 62 KINDS OF NYLON
YARN JUST FOR CARPETING. CONSEQUENTLY, THERE
IS NO WAY A LAYMAN CAN DETERMINE QUALITY •
WEIGHT ALONE WON'T ASSURE THIS •••• KNOW
THE PEOPLE ,YOU BUY FROM I
;
ALDEN'S ·~
'
5ANT A ANA. OllANOI
TUSTIN C1ll •••
ALDIN'5
RED HILL' CARitnl
I ORAltlltllS
llJ74 lrvl"'• Tutti", C1I, ........
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ava.
COSTA MISA
646-4838
I I
7
7
Lag1111a Beaeh
EDITIO N
VOL. M, NO. 46, 2 SECTIONS, 26 P!-GES ORANGE COlJNTY, CALI FORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, '1971 TEN C&NTS
' .
Newport Facing Law·suit Over High Rise Ban
By L. PETER KRIEG
01 tM DellY P'llll Sltff
Ne~rt Beach Monday night banned
all high-rise construction along the
waterfront for 90 days and was informed
hnmedlately it will be sued because
of it.
The emergency ordinance, adopled by
I 6 to 1 City Council vote, prohibits
the. issuance of building permit.a for
gtructures more than ~ feel tall within
the boundaries o( the proposed Lower
Newport Bay Civic Districl
In adopting the measurt, tbe cooncil
al.so revoked a foundation permit
obtained Thursday by Swan Constructors,
Inc., of San Diego, which started
immediate grading work on a 120-foot.
SS-unit hmay coodominlum on Lido
Penimula, just eut of 1.Jdo Iale bridge.
Lawyera represenUog Swan. a
subsidiary of U.S. Financial Corp.,
opposed the acUon and vowed they would
begin immediat.ly to In 1 111 u t •
proceedings ln Orange County Superior
Court.
Newport City Attorney Tully Seymour
had predicted. the move, te114tg the
councll il it dldnl yank the !oondatlon.
only permit and allowed lhe bulkier
to pour .. concrete, 1'no .coort in the land
would deoy lbem permission to !inllb
the building."
Seymour aays be thlnks the clty
1'pos1ibly" can 1ucc:eed iD defendinl the
movg,, but said, .. It la not a sure thing."
Bruce Lederman, an attomf:y for Swan,
insisted b1a clients had not tried .. to
jump tM gun" on the ordinance by
the be.n was to be enacted. He. said the timing was purely
colncldenlll and said it was not unusual
obtalnln( the pmnil four day1 befin
actual c:onslrucllon work began the day
the pennit was iasued.
Several councilman bad been critical
of tho .... mini Ulb boor move by the
contractor. ·
• •
Councilman Donald Mclnni! 1>9inled
out the city ~d ha\!e enacted 'the
ordinance two week5 ago without Mondiy
night's bearing.
And Councilman Mllan D o 1 ta 1
9bserved, "l do not like kindly to tbe
action of the developer," contendint the
firm does "not have clean hl.hda'"
because of their acUorui. .
Mayor Ed Hirth dlsaireed; polnUnC
out the firm bad followed all the proper
procedu(es In obttlnlns Ht -111'1ftll
for the tlrlldure, '°"" thr..,p lllO pablie
htlfin& process -at Whldi there~ ...
no opposition' -Md -norma0y Gbtllnod
its permit.
"We_ have no lfO'.l.Dds to W these
people did aoytbing out of the °"""'!Y•.,
the l!l>yor talH, "they · did 119t .lllieak
aeylbing by. 'Ibey had llOlllillC .bGt
encoUiagement from the city . and tta
cltium."
sea .__..OllVICt ur:e
14 Injure d
Philippine Boat·
Slams Into Shark
MANILA (UPI) -A speeding
Pbilippine Navy hydrofoil loaded with
American tourists slammed into a buge
shark in Manila Bay today . Many
passengers were hurled to the deck or
badly. cut in collapsed steel chairs.
No one was critically injured but Don
Geology Tied
To Hillside
Building Law
Laguna Beach Planning Commissioners
Monday night agreed to tie geological
surveys to a proposed ordinance setting
1tandards for hlllside development.
Revision of tbe PRO ( p I an ne d
residential development) zoning law, up
for seCond hearing on Monday, March
l , came in answer to an observation
made by Commissicn Chairman William
Lambourne.
The chairman w o l e d that n o t all
property 1ble to develop under PRO
standards would be subject to provisions
of the subdivisioh ordinance.
LamboW"De pointed out in some cases
a site developed without subdivision
would be subject only to A soil lest,
as required under the uniform building
code .
The question of safely developing
hillside sites was raised last week by
writer Arnold Hano who holly contest.ed
'-hillside housing tract proposed in 1970
by the Cordoba. Ccrporalion.
Ha"no. who tagged architect Peter
Ostrander's plan as a ''people packing"
attempt, further declared geologists had
found 30 percent of the hillside l3nd
Ln question unstable.
Commissioners at the Monday study
session agrttd to add a provi!!ion to
the zone Which would require that PRD
housing comply with all requirements
of the subdivision ordinance.
The question of density in PRO, oow
at 4 un its per acre, was raised again
by Commissioner Ca rl Johnson. an
advocate of retaining a v i 11 a g e
atmosphere.
Jobnson put in a bid for 3.5 units
per acre with a hope of keeping
population at a minimum. "The purpose
ol the zone is to give nexibUity, not
in crease density." Johnson said.
• Lambourne elected to await the pub·
lic's response to density during the sec..
ond public hearing.
Murray, a purser aboard lhe Amtrlcan
President Lines' President Wll&on, 11ld
''at first it looked a lot worse than
il was. There were blood and bodies
all over the place."
Philippuie tourist officials said there
were 3J 'l""i411 on .-..rd, lhi 7i.fool
Navy hydrofoil whlr.b wu rttumln& from
Corrqldor, the fiarW. ·war U fOrtreN
in Manila Bay.
1birty or the tourist. ·were panenw•
aboard the President Wilson which
arrived ·earlier today 1 from Hong Kong
on the end of a fl&.day Pacilic cruise.
Jose Clemente, the deputy
commissioner of Philippine tourism,
aaid at least 14 of the tourists required
medical treatme"nt for assorted cuts and
bumps. At least one person had a broken
arm.
Passenger Robert Hall. a contractor
from Long Beach, said "it was a shark
and il was over ZO feet IOrnJ. lt was
the biggut . thing I've ever teen. We
cut it in ~wo. Chunb started floating
by."
Murray, the purser, of San Francisco,
confinned he saw a huge dorsal fin.
The touri!ta had completed the short
three-hour toYr of the island and were
aOOut a third of the way back on the
2.8-mile trip wben the vessel struck the
sbark and went dead ln the water.
It was shortly af.ter ll:l5 p.m in
clear weather.
"It was like hitting a stone wall."
said Marshall Yeatman of Kennett
Square. Pa , He was sitiing up forward
in an aluminum deck chair which
collapsed.
It took 22 stitches to close tbf: cuts
In his left arm. His wife was bruised
but no( seriowily ln)zrecf'.
Captain Valdemar~Niellen, 70, a former
captain of the Presideat Willon, suffered
a broten right •rm ii the eollision.
"A 200-pound man fell on top of my
arm," he said, "and all he fractured
was his pants."
AFS Students
Initi ate New
Family Visits
Two American Field Service 1tudent.a
are paying brief visits to Llguna Beach
families in a new abort-tum ·ucbange
program designed to give foreign
students a litUe wider e1:perience during
thtir school year in the Unit.eel States.
•
Planners Eye
High Rise Curb
The impact of a proposed 36-foot
building height ceiling, b e I n g
pu.!hed by a citizens' inltiaUve
group, on future annexation . was
di!cuMed by Laguna B e a c b
planners Monday night.
Commission chairman William.
Lamboume asked city planner Al
Autry what recourse the city would
have should developers of Irvine
Campany land to the north of the
city feel the height limit too
restrictive.
Autry replied either Lhe Irvine
Company woola choose to annu:
its land to Newport ee·aeh,. or
cOuld preseDt the land as a
puzoned, county. 1 ppr o v 4_d
•1elopmen1 for •cllJ eotisidontlliL
lrrl~e· .QtyhOocl
P etition Papers
Filed in County .
Incorporators of the proposed city of
Irvine took what they called "the first
step towatd tbe creation of a model
American Community, Monday with the
filing of a nolice of intent to circulate
1 petition of incorporalion.
The noUce was backtd by 42 signatures
of residents of the area • 25 art required
-and was filed with ~.tabel Ca!teix,
deputy clery of the Orange County
Board or Supervison. •
Filing Lhe papers was John H. Burton,
chairman of the Council of Ccmmunities
of Irvine. He aiid no timetable had
been set for completion of t h e
incorporation of the new city of 11.145
acres and approximately 7.000 citizens.
The incorporators now have 90 days
in which to gather signatures of ownen
or land representing 25 percent of the
taxable value wttbin the proposed city
boundaries.
When those signatW"ea are presented
to the Board of Supervisors a public
hearing must be set on the question.
That public hear.ing is the next
opportunity for the incorporation to be
blocktd. 1f persons representi n g
ownership of more than 50 per«nt of
the assessed valuation of the land in
question object, the incorporation is
dead.
Thi! is considered highly unlikely
ina111¥Ch as the Irvine Company owns
alm~ 100 percent of the land involved.
And the Company was the tint to
propose a new city last March.
At that time the community was to
coru1ist of 56,000 acres with a population
by the year 2000 of 440,000.
Protests by Santa Ana and Newport
Beach resulted in the r e d u c e d
boundaries. Santa Ana is still on record
u opposing the new city.
The Incorporation effort hurdled its
biggest obstacle Feb. 10 when the Local
Agency Formation Commission by· a split
3 to 1 vote approved the move.
Laguna Engineer
8th Name Added
In School Vote
By PATRICK BOYLE
Of lllt Ollllp' l'lllt 111"
Thi! ballot for the upcoming school
board election in the Laguna Beach
UnUied School District. was tnade oM
name longer -today with the candidacy
..... .,. ...... o1 .. , ... '!ff ..,., ....
There are now 1 total of ticln resk\ents
-lour milt and four female -wio 'iv~ .1tllie!' flied . lo. r11n "!or .e ~
to then .. member 1>oard·0r·wllo'llavo
llid they wttl probably file before tlie
deadline. The election, achtdWed for
April 20, wfll fill two fOur·year 'terms
on ~e board Jnd ·a two-year tenn Whl.ch
bec.ame available with the resipation
ol -ii trustee.
The latest entrant into the field ia
Arnold Laderman. a reaearch engineer
with Philco Ford Corporation of Newport
Beech. Laderman, 41, Uves with his
wife at 2745 Temple Hills Drive· and
bas two youngsters attending Top of
the World Elementary School.
He holds a Pb.D. in mecbanjcal
tngjnttrin_g and has lived i.n ~guna
Beach for. live years. A pad president
of the TOW-PTA. he is also active in
the Boy Scout program and plans to
run for the une1pired term of resigning
trustee William Wilco1en.
The: four candidates who have formally
filed to run for election l.o the five-
member board are:
Peggy D'Jsidoro. 25, cf 298$ Rounsevel
Terrace. She bolds a master's degree
in English and a slate teaching credential
from cal State Fullerton and is now
doing substitute leaching In Santa Ana.
She hopes to teach at the junior college
leve l beginning in the fall of 1971 and
will seek 1 four-year term on the board.
Florence Beane, 42. of 32221 Vista
de San Clemente. Mrii. Beane ls president er the Laguna Buch PTA Council and
has been a Laguna Beach residennt
for all: years. She is the mother -of
three children 'and pl•111 to eeei, a four·
yl!ar term on the board.
Churchill Colleague
Succumbs After Fall
SALISBURY, England !AP )
Viscount Stuart of Findborn, one or
Winston ChurcblU'1 trusted colleagues
during World War II, died in 1 local
hollpltal Sunday night after a fall. He
was 74.
Stuart was parliamentary chief whip
for Ule warUme government a n d
O!urch111'1 secretacy of state for Scotland
from lilt to 1117.
Stanley Munsat, 31, of · m Baja st.
Munsat is a professor of philosophy at
UC trvlne ·and has two children. one
of whom atte11ds Aliso Elementary·School.
He recti iftd his Ph/D. in philosophy
at the uiuvent\y of M1thi&111 and ·bn
ijv'4., tn I,,SJ111• ~ !Or Ii!':~
Mwi11t wm ru.n ror 11 1oUr·~-.Mll
on the board. -~} · , l
' Larry. T1ylor'. ..... II 183 ;Myrtlt • ..
Up ·for ~leclioil 1o I ~ be ' ill*
beld 'lo< four ye1ra, Tty!o,i1 •pr.,fdenl
of "Ille· Board of Trustees. Taylqr : worts •s. a salesn;ian for • a Gotta . Mm
automobile dealership. t
Jn addition to Ladl!rman. residents
who have taken out election pape rs: ,
Catherine MacQuarrie, !5'f, of , 411
Emerald Bay. Mrs. McQuanie, an
unsucceuful candidate for ele;ction in
the 1969 tcbool board ract, said Monday
she will file for elthl!r a four.year term
Or . the two-year une1plred term. A
Laguna Beach resident for five years,
sbe has three grown sons and is a
retired librarian.
Astrid Simsarian, 34. of 28U ChillOft
Wiy. Mrs. Slmurian. now.a hOusewlfe,
bas had 1 long career in education.
teaching In schools In MaS!achusett.a,
Florida and American schools i a
Germany. If s.he decides tt> file for
election, she said It would be for I.he
unexpired term of Wilcoxen.
Carl Mitchell, 34, of 345 Emerald Bay.
A eraduate of Stanford University t.a,w
School and practicing attorney, Mitchell
has lived in Laguna Beach for one year
and is the father of two children.
Although he has not made a definite
decision concerning his candidacy, he
said Monday he woUld possibly seek
electiqn to Wilcoxen's unerplred term.
•
Elephant Seals
Movi ng South
SACRAMENTO !UPI) -The etephanl
&ea!, threatened with uterminaUon iJI
the late 1880s whe:n hunted fOr its fine.
quality oil, Is now lhriy~g off the
Southern California coast. the .State
Department of Flsb and Game reported
today.
Marine bioloa:ists conducting the DFG'a
annual census of the huge -animala
counted 3,200 seals on San Miguel Island,
home b11t for mos\ cf the Callfomil
population.
Thi!! male Hals reach· lengths of 15
to ta feel and weigh up to l,000 poundt.
CTP A Supports
Height Limits
Karin Unger of Gru, Austria , who
Is attending Millikan High at Lon1 Beach.
ls spending two Wttb with the Thomas
CtJU:Omp family in South Lquna. Manolo
Equiraun of Bilbao. Spain, Is spending
his first week with I.he Hal Akins family
ln Laguna and will move to the J<l8eph
Tomehak home for the l@COfld week
At Wi nter Festiv al
By unanimoos voll! of lb membership,
the Laguna Beach Citizens' Town
Planning Association bas endorsed the:
propoged initiative to limit all bullding
betgh{ In Lag111111 Be~ch to 11 reet.
The CTPA added Its endorsement to
that of the Civic League arter an anU..
lllgb rl!e groop callioe ilaell VUlage
Laguna published a ootice of intention
to circul11te petitions backing the height
limit l1w. .
• lf signatures of 15 percent. nf the
~ity's registered voters are obtained,
the City Council mun adopt such an
ordinance or place It befort the
ell!ctorate 1t a 1ptclal election.
"
Visitors:i Watch Whales
of his Laguna vlail. Hil U.S. tchool ts
WllJon High in Loog Beach. Laguna Beach WbMr F..UV1t Yllilon.
The auxiliary foreign t1:change villll will find a varied menu of entertainment
are informal, with students spendlnc Wednesday ind Thuiadl)'. ranging rrom
most of their tirne wt th the host families a whale-watchlnc c r.." l t • to 11( e1hl:ll·
and auditing clasm: that inlcreit them tion of folk dancinl. '
at the high llcbool. '!be white wlld>n' w1tl teavo the
'!be family vitlts may become o Clwnber of comm ..... o!!lco, 280 Park
regular port ol lhe AFS 1tudenl e1ch1nge -Avo .. by bus· II 12,30 p.m. Wocfoe!dly,
program, whlc:h •• placu t1cb rtudmt 'ncketl for the excursion m l '8.50.
wtth one aelected famlly for thl! l!ntlr•-available at thl! Chamber.
school year. At 7:30 p.m. the Legt1na rolkdancers
. . '
w1tl pttlenl I -tthJbitloJI '(i1 Ille
llrls' .IYID at Laguna Beacb HIP Scboot.
Arllstt from tlio San Clemiofo •ue1
wtU ilar In the HI Neighbor bQ i.l\ibit
on llii Fe411val Poounda, alq '!Ith local art.lib ana cra~Q'len. Tht ~ .are
optfl from noon to dutk free of eharce.
'l'hurtclay w11t bt hlghll~ ·by Ille
p..,.nts1tori "" n.i ir~IOs!iei 111 • the Festival For11m Th .. w •113 p.m.
lfeilry and Flora 8 1 1 s wtU pretMI . ,. ...
"lberla,n. Toor" Ind 0. W., '!orfCI 1ljll
cf fer "So111b Americts." Admlsilc ts
25,c:ents. f
Ht Ne!ghbcr Day win feature N~
Beach 111'1 on 1ht F'elltv1l '""'ndt l\Oin noon to · d111~ ,;.o.t then· wttl bt o ) • a
hollle 11 tho clly lleoreailoo Cenler
1t 7:31l p.m.
The COh Pnr mm teat "AJ11UllnC
Goel" wQI be en tllf1 II tho' l.ioPn*
Moul!On P!1yhoust bo1b 1venlnp •I l:JO.
•
'
County Man
Faces Four
Kidnap Raps
By ARTllllR R. VINSEL
et Ille O.ltw Plitt .....
•
A 13-bour manhunt for an Oranp Coon..
ty convict who allpped away from. Sl1t
Quentin Prison Mo!¥1ay night, kldut>lnl
a Policeman'a·family ind friend eodtd ilt
climactic chaos· today In Fullerton.·
Jam~. D. "Jjmmie~· Harvey. 24, -,,11
captured foDow.ifig a ·100.mne:Per~
lreeway 'Cbt.1ie in ·~ Me·Uot wu ftnd
by 1"1joe. wr,o ·hit ' lloloo car -""'1t.:.e·"eale-.. ·'r '"' ' ,.... \ T n.. ~· .:.. .. w rV ••• ftnl,. ~ Wl':'"°'•Jilllb'. tlMo ll!a -
ge ~-lllll~ II " aeini; . . llr'I' flVl!W 1 "' tW ~e-·.: -~ ~. .
Flttmen roped ·•ff'1llll ·....,. lo'Ple•.,. -
!rijury. to ·.IJie 'cur1out or 1 possible a-
plottoa ·d!Je to plotlne 'from 1 Ille w 'f
ruptured.tank.· r '
Addltional detaila were aot avaDatQe
It' pretltlme. • ·· · · -
~"' the ' lad u.rvey. 1 !our.time
l ... r,. stlll held Mn"Cberyl J. Smffh,
13, priaon aulboriU.. had 111d he wu oot
con.idered dancerous.
He waa armed Wfth a pair of ICiaors,
Mrt. S1an1flekt '!P'flod today.
A !?>hour niJlilmlre ended 11 1,11 •.m. today for• Novato Police Offte11r
Gil}' Stans!)eld, . IO, · wben hit wile
telephoned •ulbcrfU,. from Ibo 1lalod
Bowl 'Cale. 400 -toulb .. ~ t9 in Kern Oxmty. · , '
Sbe -ed she and their-.
Rober!, &. and Suzanoe, f ·monlllt. bid
been freed.
Mn. ·Slansfiald, IO, tald. they 1ri1ro
Ille-and k>cal ·offic:en arrived at• tN
phone booth moments . J1ter to canftrm
It. .
Authorities bi Marin County akl the
drama · began · to unfold at t :f1 p.m. '
in .suburban Novato, a• the offlCft''•
family left a small house -party.
A 'woman living · behind the ruidence
had juat repGrted 1 barefoot man whole
dungarees were wet to the ,kMet tried to burglarize ber house but 'ned whm
1be 'woke.
QnJy lbree minutes llt.r Harvey< -
acbedaled for rele.ue In just' 1~ mcxitJw
and one week -Wu discioVered m1IPn&
tn· a 10 p.m. beck:bect at · •· mlnhnum
M.curity facility outside prlton -waU. ..
Novato PoRce · Sergeant · Tony 'Stoutl
llkl the· ~ burgltr 1pparo!111J
conlrooted the Sllllsfletd I 1 m 111 4emandina •·ride. .
Mn. Smilh -ttlll mlllinf unlJl .10,ao
a,JJl, today--witneued tt bd came .ut
to lee wlial wu ha(IPlllinl. .
Oralit•
Wuiller
sunny tldfl 1rill'•prev•U "-
day, but wllldy -wW' bip
the coutal' lemperJlwoe -to
18 ~. w1lb !Oland rum.ct
up ·to a predfcltcl. ' · ·
INSWE TODAY
" .1: .. 11 lf·~u lt.miz< ._~.i..
duction.f J10U don'l Moc to oo
through Iha tortuo"' Joli of
compUdog ,. ... ~-s.·S.•.i $fl\1ia PortK• e'·.tcord ·1W.4i.-~
CO!flf. toz .mu. 1'oGe 10.
5,. : ..... -:•.; '1
t l'tMI """' ,. ...,,.. t ' ..,,,
Stedl..,.... tion -" -" ·-. ........... , ... --..
•
•
t DAILY PILOT SC Tutld'1, rtbnllll 23, 1971
Saddle back Trustees Initiate SohoQl . Bonds •
111 llAIUWtA KR8ia1i:u
OI tll9 o.11)' •u.1 It.It
Concl"4lni that !he~ is utUe cbance
of ol>laiDlnl boped~or ot.te 'llnanclal
aid under Governor Reagan's reduced
budget, Saddltl)ack: College trustees
voted Monday night to go to the voters
in June w1lh a '24,870,000 bond proposal.
The 1fl.inds would be used fo r
construction or permanent facilities at
the ei:isling 200-acre campus in Mission
Vltjo over the years up to 1975 and
for acquisition cf a · 1so-acre site for
a ucand ~ in the Tustin area
Hatc het Slatti ng
for future development.
Facllitit! proposed under the program
would include a ICltnce-mathemaUcs
bulldl!!i and • tine Iris buildl!!i to
be -truci.d Jo ll'IJ.73, 1 l)'llllllllum·
ph)'llcal educeUon bulldlllg and 1n
admin!Jlr1Uon building Jo 1973-14 and
a technology building and business
science bu.ild.ing in 1974·75.
The fllllda · al6o would cover the cost
or alte preparation and landscaping for
the new facilities.
The <;allege, having failed in Its attempt to obtain matching funds under the
ataie's Junior College Construction Act
2nd Docto·r Say~
Hulse Not Insane
A UCI psychiatrist today becan1e the
second. medical expert to testify that
Arthur Craig "Moose'' Hulse was sane
when he allegedly chopped service station
attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin to death
with a hatchet last June 1.
Dr. Frank V. Hoffman of Hunlington
Beach told an Orange County Superior
Court jury in the Garden Grove youth's
murder trial that Hulse suffered from
a "personality disorder" and was "def.
inltely antisocial" at the time of the Car·
!in killing.
"But he was not psychotic.'' Dr.
Hoffman said. "He told me he took
a large quantity of Seconals and they
blew his mind but he knew what be
was doing."
Hoflman'1 testimony supported that
of Dr. John Guido, a prosecution witness
who, like Hoffman this morning, testified
that a remark made by Carlin while
H anna Proposes
4-year Terms
In Leg islature
Orange County Rep. Ricblrd Hanna
~Anaheim ) has called for a four-year
term for members of the House.
.. In a speech to Congress, Hanna warned
that •'legislative quality ia diminished
by the need for lncessant and e~nsi ve
campelgnJng. The complex is.sues of the
1970's demand sufficient tune to master,
and the two year term doe! not provide
the necsssary time."
He said the two year term tends
to make politicians dependant on those
who can finance increasingly costly
campalgns.
"Congressmen must be independent
from special interests and a four year
term will relieve members from the
burden of having to finance a new
campaign every other year," Hanna said.
Two other proposals contained In his
gpeech were a mandatory retirement
a .. e of 70 for Representatives and funds
wl~cb would allow Congressmen to send
quarterly newsletters and questloMaires
t.o their constituents.
In speaking of the mandatory
retirement proposal, Hanna noted that
almost every important House committee
chairmanship is held by a man over
or approaching 70.
•'This discourages qualified young men
from running for office," he said. Hanna
also pointed out that business, teaching
and even the Catholic Church practice
mandatory retirement.
"Congress must come up to the
standard the rest of the nation has
set for i'.i;clf, ·• he said,
DAILY PILOT -.
ORANG;< COAiT P'UllLISHINO COM"AHY
Rtbtrt N. w ,,4
'°"'io.i1 tnd Plilllll"*'
Jee.• R. c.rt..,
Vb Pr.slffnt •NI ~11 M•""flW
T\om•1 r,,.,.lf
Editor
Tlto,.,.•• A. M..,r,\i111
Mt""llll'll Edlilf>
C1i•rtet H. l..111 •Uc.t.•rd P. Nill
AH'1f~ MIMcllrill Edliw.
Let• ...... Offk•
222 Fot••t A¥•11u• s.. c._... Offk4t
, JOI North El C1111i110 A•1I
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ti1111tlnet.I\ lklidu 11t1J a..c:11 ""'"'"
DAIL V PllOT, ..mi ""ldt It C9fftll ... "-,._...,__ It ,.,.i1111t111 •ur •c'l't Sun-••v "" ""'',. •rt ... .., ~ a..o. H ....... 1 ltldl. Cal• #MN, Mlll!l .... '91\
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C. .. tfaM ..,. St4il•Jdl. '"""' -"" -"ltloMI Wltltfl, l"f'••d•I prfnH11t1 pltnt i.
at .1Jll w"' '"' si.-1, c..t. M<9&.
f .. 11•1 11 C714) MJ-4111
Cl•lftetl u..11 , a '4Wn
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, ........ 4ff."'6 °'"""''· 1'71, ar..t· C....t .._. ... °'""""'· Nil -...... lllW"9f!llN.
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8y c.enltr A.JI -""'' .,. 111111 0.11 "'-""'' ""*9ry ... ,., ..... ti.II ,....,..,.,.
I
he was being robbed allegedly prompted
Hulse to grab the hatchet and hammer
Carlin to the floor of the restroom.
Hoffman also commented u n d e t
questioning from Deputy D 1 s l r j c t
Attorney Martin J. Heneghan th at 11ulse,
16, at the time of the crime, ''wasn't
that concerned with the crime it.sell"
and allegedly remarked when he was
interviewed four days ago by the
psychiatrist that be was only arrested
because •·someone in jail for something
else talked about it."
The jury had heard a recording i1
which a voice identified as that of Hulse
admits the killing of Carlin. And
Heneghan plans to put Hulse on the
stand again today as his last witness
in the prosecution's case against the
defendant.
It is expected that the case will go
to the jury no later than Friday of
this week.
Whatever the jury 's verdict may be.
Hul se will have to face trial on further
charges of being an accessory to the
murder of Florence Nancy Brown, a
Mission Viejo teacher who was stabbed
to death in an Irvine orange grove
less than 24 hours after the 21·year-old
Carlin was slaln.
Regarded by lawmen as the principal
in the Brown killing and Hulse's
companion in the Carlin killing is Steven
Craig Hurd, a 20-year-old drug using
transient who is scheduled to go on
trial March Z2 for the two murders.
Hurd, like Hulse, bas been declared
sane over the objections of defen1e
attorneys who have polnted to both
defendants' Jong addiction to a wide
range of drugs and narcoUcs.
Hurd allegedly led Herman Hendrick
Taylor, 17, a transient, Christopher
"Gypsy'~ Gibboney, 17, of Portland,
Oregon and Hulse in a rampage tha t
ended with the "devil cult" killing of
Mrs. Brown, 31, of El Toro.
The prosecution claims it will prove
that th~ nomadic band stabbed Mrs.
Brown to death and devoured portions
of her body in a form of satanic worship.
The woman's dismembered corpse was
later buried near the Ortega Highway.
Inmates' Lawyer
S liot in Home;
Assistan t Held
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP ) -Attorney
Carol Will Scott, representing 36 Raiford
Prison inmates in an American Civil
Liberties Union suit, \Vas shot today
at her home. Police picked up her 21·
year-old legal assistant for questioning.
Paul Michael "Mike" Smith was taken
into custody shortly after the 4:53 a.m.
shooting, according to police Capt. R.
T. Angel. No charges were filed
immediately.
t-.tiss Scott underwent surgery for a
chest wound above the heart, Angel
said.
Authorities said Miss Scott. 30, went
to Raiford about 9 p.m. Monday to
take depositions from prisoners who said
that they witnessed guards beating
inmates without provocation.
Persons at the prison said she then
left in the company of an ex-convict
and a woman whose son is currently
in prison and wants t-.1iss Scott to be
his lawyer.
The slender divorcee ls the mother
of three children and specializes In
uarcotics cases. Fellow attorneys in
Gainesville described her as outspoken
and a "lone wolf."
Jn a suit here Saturday In Jacksonville
federal court. Miss Scott charged the
civil rights or the inmates had been
violated by a series of incidents ln
which guards clashed with prisoners.
t-.t iss Scott 's suit asked for a federal
takeover of the prison and described
a &hooting incident at Raiford in which
64 inmates were injured by gunfire as
the "Raiford massacres."
The Gainesville attorney said she
interviev.·ed some 40 pri$0ners about
disturbances at the prison's maximum
security East Unit.
The suit, however, was dismissed by
U.S. District Court Judge T. J. TjoOJt
until Miss Scott could produce a prison
expert to agree that unnecessary force
had been used In quelling the rebellion.
Raiford officials and v.·ardens from
three othl'r southern stlltes tesUfied tht1t
RUlrds had acted ju.stlflably in cont}olling
lbe violent oulbreak.t.
for a '3.7 million library-classroom
complex, will proceed wtlh th e
comt.rucUon of Utl.s t1clllty tb1I year,
usln& money left trom its orlalD&l bond
issue. a 1poµman ~ todly. Bkis
1rt etpeoled lo I• out In Aprll.
Since formaUon of tht junior college
district in 1967 It bas had only one
bond issue. A $91A million issue was
approved by the voters in 1968 for
development or the initial campus with
relocatable buildings, whlch still are
being used. Balance of these bonds will
finance the new library facility .
An application for matching state funds
for the proposed lcienc&omathematics.
bulldina met all quaJUicaUons under the
Junior Coll"ie Construction Ad, the
college 1pokeaman said, but "the cun-ent
l.ndlcatlons are that 110 money will be
availlble. ''
Dr. Fred ll. Bremer, superintendent·
presldent, said however that tbe college
will continue to make applications for
each proposed facility under the state
construction act.
It was pointed out that the revised
construction program for allocation of
monies !rom the pro~ bond measure
wiere presented a1 guidelines and would
be subject lo reviiion.
Bremer 11k1 he bad met with otfic\J}s
of the Irvine company to discuss P'e
acqulslUon of possJble sites for a sdnd
campus In the Tus1fn area.
Board president Hans W. Vogel also
noted that the college would welcome.
any offers by land developer• for
suggested sites.
At present the trustees are considering
only the acquisition of a ISG-acre 1ite for
the second campus, with development
to be undertaken ia the future.
The proposed bond Issue would involve
no cllange In Ille 1971·?2 ip rale, which
earlies an 11-cent ind~ from tM
llrst bond i..u.. Total 111 rote lot th•
two is.rues would reacb 21 cent.s in 1972·
73. peak out at SS cents In 1973-74,
then reduce In following years.
Trustees pointed out that additional
facilities wllich wouJd bave boosted the
projected campus cost to $42 million
were pared from the pr<>J>033l approved
Monday.
These in cluded a stadium. swimming
pool, classrooms , faculty offiets 1nd
.auditorium.
Calley Says
He Ordered
Ma ss Deaths
FT. BENNING, Ga. IAP! -Lt.
William L. Calley Jr. admitted today
that he diretced a mass execution o[
Vietnamese civilians at an irrigation
ditch in My Lai.
The government llas set the number
of persons killed in the ditch at 70.
Calley, speaking without emotion, or
killings at My Lai:
"It was the order or the day:•
Why, Calley was asked, did he give
command to one of his 50ldierg to sboot.
''Because that was my order sir. Thal
\vas the order of the day" the defendant
&aid nauy.
.. Who gave you the order?'' asked
defense counsel George Latimer.
J11ier Freeway CrasH
,;Capt. ~1edina. sir," Calley said.
Calley said there were about four or
five of his men at the ditch, but he
could remember only James: Dursi and
Paul Meadlo -the two men he said
he spoke with.
California Highway Patrol officers said truck driv-
er Donald Hill, 30, Porterville, escaped with minor
injuries Monday atfer his orange·laden truck
~lammed into the center divider and flipped over,
spilling citrus fruit all over the San Diego Freeway
near Warner Avenue in Huntington Beach. J~igh·
way Patrol investigators said Hill apparently went
to sleep at the wheel. The crash tied up Monday
morning commuter traffic for several hours.
''What did you do after you saw them
shooting into the ditch?"
"I fired into the ditch also."
New Las Palmas Buildings
1st School Fund Priority
Mari1ie Charge
Denial Rejected
As about 40 young civilian supporters:
of an accused Marine deserter watched,
a court-martial judge at Camp Pendleton
Monday refused to dismiss charges
against Pvt. David Osborne, 20, of
Stevenson, Wash.
"How many limes did he give you
the order," Calley was asked in reference
to his company commander.
Calley said the order came five limes
-once at a company briefing the night
before the My Lai assault, once at
a platoon leaders' briering, the following
morning before the helicopters lifted oft,
and twice over lhe radio while the
troops were in the village.
Calley is charged vdth killing 102
Vietnamese civilians in the hamlet of
My Lai 4 -one of several numbered
t-.1y Lai hamlets -.a.s his company
assaulted the suspected Viet Cong
stronghold on March 16, 1968.
By PMIELA HAIJ..AN
Of "" Diiiy ,Oltllt Sltlf
The. demolition and reconstruction or
all pre.Field Ad buildh1gs at Las Palmas
School in San Clemente has been
approved as the first priority for bond
money recently sold by the Capistrano
Unified School District.
Members or the board of trustees
voted Monday to hire Blurock and
Associates to design the new facility
which will be built on the site of the
current structure. No time table has
yet been set.
The second priority approved was the
construction of Shore.cliffs Junior High
in San Clemente. Preliminary plans have
already been drawn by architects for
this school.
All of these priorities are contingent
on v.·bether or not the state provides
the funding for Dana Hills High School
as it has promised. If for any reason
it does not. the bond money which is
a little more than $4 million will be
used for this project.
The district administration has agreed
Stole n Kisses
Bring Lawsuit
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Mrs.
June R. Becker is suing a pleasure
boat skipper and a w o m a n
acquaintanei! on grounds their
kisses took his mind off steering
lhe craft and led to an accident.
Mrs. Becker, a Sacra mento
divorcee. asked in M o n d a y ' s
lawsuit for $36,750 from David A.
Borth of Stockton and Helen L.
Harris. also from Sacramento.
The SO.year-old Mrs. Becker said
she suffered a broken leg July
11 , 1970, when Borth·s boat struck
a tree along the bank of the
Stockton deep water channel near
Woodbridge.
lfer superior court action said
Borth's attentions were distracted
"by the negligent r em I n I n e
enticement and alluring kisses of
defendant Helen L. H a r r i s ' 1
result ing in the crash.
P1·egnant Hostesses
Will Not Lose J obs
f\IIAMT. Fla. {AP) -Pregnant
stewardesses will no longer be firtd
but will be granted maternity leave
whetM:r they are married or not,
National Airlines announced .
The. airline said ii was not af£ecled
In Its decision by a threat from
$le .... ·ardesses that pregnant cab I n
hostesses would show up to plcktt the
airline's golf tournament March 20.
A troop of maternity-clad 1tewardessts
1howed up to picket a pretournament
press affair last month.
'·
to CJ'fale • master calendar Including
the priorities listed by the board. But
this won't be done unlil after the bids
are awarded for the new high school,
aides said.
The state also has approved the
Richard Henry Dana addition but has
not released hmds yet.
Trustee Fred Newhart Jr. made the
motion to reconstruct Las Palmas School.
This and the old Capistrano School are
the only pre-Field Act buildings: which
house students. At the latter structure
only the gymnasium and art room are
pre·Field Act.
Superintendent Truman Be n e d i c t
agreed with the board's decision to
reconstruct Las Palmas. rather than
rehabilitate the 1927 s tr u ct u r e .
"Rehabilitiation often costs as much as
80 percent of what ·a new structure
would cost.'' he said. "It's better to
reconstruct."
If money is left over afte r the
construction of Las Palmas a n d
Shorecliffs the board will we it £or
an elementary school, but will not
pinpoint its location until studies can
be made as to where the greatest need
exists.
•
The general court martial opened early
this week in the case of the 20-year-old
Marine arrested in Vancouver, B. C.,
last November after being designated
a deserter.
The observers In the courtroom
Monday -both young men and women
-described thcmselVi!s as supporters
of the declared deserter. The trial room
is a converted classroom. No disorders
were reported.
Attorneys had sought dismissal of the
charges because or asserted lack of
evidence. They also leveled criticism
of arrest and detention procedures.
Osborne allegedly deserted in January
of 1970. then fled to the Canadian
province.
U.S . Jews at Meet
BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP ) -Two
plane loads of American Jews landed
here today to attend the three-day world
conference of Jewish communities on
the plight of Soviet Jews.
On the witness stand he told of about
four people that he killed. He also
admitted firing into a ditch that was
already filled with dead. But he did
not say -and was not asked -whether
he killed anyone there.
There had been testimony that Calley
stood at that ditch, at the eastern edge
of My Lai 4, for as long as one and
one-half hours. Today, Calley said:
"It 'l•:as a very rapid period of time
to me . . • it seemed only a matter
of a half minute or a minute or both."
\\fbat did he see in the ditch?
•·Dead people."
"Was there any appearance of anyone
being ali\'e in there?"
"No, Sir."
How did the people get into the ditch?
•·They had been ordered to go into
the ditch, Sir," Calley said.
Who ordered them into the ditch?
"Indirectly, I did -I told Meadlo
to get them (Vietnamese captives) to
the other side of the ditch, Sir."
Paul titeadlo was a soldier in the
platoon that Calley led that day.
cte,,. ..
""'\/VE'se &.
_, OFf'l'Fitt.
SOMETIMES THEY ARE USED IN A MISLEADING WAY!!
THE FACT IS THAT NONE OF THESE NAMES ARE
MANUFACTURERS OF CARPETING. THESE NAMES
REPRESENT THE KIND OF F 11 I l USED IN THE
CARPETING.
FI BER CONTENT DOES NOT NECESSARILY INDICATE
QUALITY, AS THE CRUCIAL DETERMINATION OF
QUALITY IS WHAT THE MANFUACTURER DOES WITH
THE RAW MATERIALS.
DUPONT, FOR INSTANCE, MAKES 62 KINDS OF NYLON
YARN JUST FOR CARPETING. CONSEQUENTLY, THERE
IS NO WAY A LAYMAN CAN DETERMINE QUALITY.
WEIGHT ALONE WON'T ASSURE THIS , • , • KN 0 W
THE PEOPLE .YOU BUY FROM I
IANTA ANA, Oll:ANQI
TUITIN Cell •• ,
ALDIN'S
ll:ID HILL CAll:Pns
& DRAP,ll:llS
1U7' '"''"" Tutti!\ Cal • ........
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia AYt •
COSTA MISA
646-4838
San _ ~lemen1e
Ca is1rano
VOL 04, NO. 46, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES •
EDITION
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
N.Y. Stoelm
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1~71' TEN CENTS ------
sea e ~on vi ct tu re •
NeighbMs Aid
Clemente House
Spared by Blaze
By JOHN VALTERZA
01 lllt DtltY l'Ht! Sitt!
The garage and attic of an expensive
Shorecliffs home in San Clemente erupted
into flame Monday evening and neighbors
-mostly teenagers -formed a chain
to successfully spare the victims'
possessions from damage.
As firemen (ought the blaze in the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Conway
of 2603 Via Cascadita. shotgun shells
and rifle cartridges stored in the garage
Sewage Issue
To Be Aired
By Planners
A public hearing on the proposed
sewage element to the San Clemente
general plan will be held Wednesday
by city planning commissioners.
The proposed segmenl of the city's
development guidelines has b e e n
suggested by the city sl.aff to assure
the city'!! qualif!cation for federal grants
-including the pending award of funds
for a massive sewer main project
running along El Camino Real. .....
The element. a map and supplemental
material on existing and proposed city
sanitation facililics. will go on lo cily
councilmen if planning commissioners
approve il after Wednesday's hearing.
The large sewage main proposed for
El Camino is destined to take the
overload away from the city's existing
north-south collector line which runs
parallel to the coastline.
Other action scheduled before the
commis5ion Wednesday includes : .
-A request by the She\let Corporation
seeking persmission to build a sales
orfice and four on-site directional signs
at 403 Calle Pueblo. The facilities are
planned to assist in sales of ~ tract
homes. Signs and portable ofhce are
requested for a one-year period.
-The rezone request by Alfred E.
Mann, owner in escrow of the nearly
of San Clemente Medical Center. Mann.
\\"ho is buying the land from C. T.
DeCinces. seeks a zone change allO\.\'ing
multiple residential use of the terraced
land between the San Diego freeway
Shell Oil Company for a temporary sign
at 439 N. El Camino and 2400 S. El
Camino. President r<'gulations set a JO.
da y limit to such signs. Shell seeks
an extension to 80 days.
Ocean Pollution
Classes Slated
Students al Aiarco Forster Junior High
School will soon attend a lectur~mo\•ie
program on ocean pollution presented
by a Saddleback College instructor.
Norman H. Cole, life science. biology
and marine sciencf' instructor. will
present his program "The Last frontier ··
for eighth graders at the school March
5 at 2:30 p.m.
About 180 stude nts are ~:ir.pected to
attend the talk accompanied by a slide
show depicting sea life and the natural
habitat of ocean organisms.
..
began firing from the intense hf'at ol
the blaze.
The ammunition kept firemen at bay
for a time. but volunteers successfully
kept the intense blaze from spreading ·
to the main portion oC the rented
residence.
Fire Chief Merton Hackett saicf
damage was estimated al about $6,000
to the structure and contents.
Because the garage is separated from
the rest or· the rambling residence,
flames did not spread into the living
area. Some severe damage to rafters
and roofing, however, occurred, Hackett
said.
Dozens of youthful neighbors pitched
in to evacuate the residence, stacking
the family's belongings on adjoining
patios.
The initial fire alarm came in from
an anonymous caller at 6:35 p.m . and
the first fire rig arrived at the scene
nine minutes later.
Volunteers arrived a rew minutes after
that. hampered by the lack of the city's
largest and newest pumper r i g ,
undergoing f'xtensive transmission repair
in Long Beach.
Hackett said the blaze "must have
been buming for some time before
anyone noticed it."
Airs. Conway told firemen she sensed
something wrvng at about 6:35 p.m.
and went into her patio lo Investigate.
She discovered her garage ablaze -
flames already licking through the shake
roof.
She said her husband had left for
Los Angeles shortly after dinner. A fev1
moments later she discovered the garage
ablaze.
Hackett said the fire apparently started
in the area of a workbench. The exact
cause. he said, is still under investigation.
Growth Control
Chamber Topic
Controlled growth and how it can be
accomplished will be the topic at lhe
Wednesday meeting of the San Juan
Capistrano Chamber of Commerce.
Guest speaker will be Edward Carson
Beale of Palos Verdes who has done
extensive work in land planning and
architecture.
The consult.ant has worked in many
communities where controlled growth ill
in effect. He will describe his work and
the probl ems and advantages he has
encountered.
The breakfast meeting will t.ake place
at 7:30 a.m. at Pete and Clara''
Restaurant in San Juan Capistrano.
Beatie Singer Fined,
Car Struck Officer
LONOON (AP) -Beatie George
Harrison was fined and banned from
driving today for gently nudging a
London traffic cop three times witlt
his car.
Harrison admitted the oCfense but did
not appear· in court. Confiscating his
license for a month and imposing a
SliO fine the judge said : "In my view,
the most effective wa y of dealing with
cases of this sort. whoever the driver
may be. is a short sh a r p
disqualification.''
SAN CLEMENTE FIRE AT 2603 VIA CASCADITA DID ESTIMATED $6,000 DAMAGE
Vol,u,,te~r Fir•111•ni 8,ttl' ~l1zt· ~rom. ~t;. Dl.IJl~~W••· Chiefly In .c;.r1 .. ,tnd Attic . -
NEIGHBORS PITCH IN TO HELP CARRY OUT FURNISHINGS
Bl1ze St1rted In Vicinity Of A G1r1g• Work Bench
Trustees Expand VD
Program for School
An expanded venereal d i s e a s e
education program was a p p r o v e d
Monday night for San Clemente High
S<:hool.
Down the
Mission
Trail
Funds Pour In
For Dana Statue
DANA POINT -Contributions for the
statue of Richard Henry Dana in Dana
Point lfarbor are beginning to come
in. according to Les Remmers, project
chairman .
But nearly $7 ,000 is still needed before
the bronze statue will be cast by sculptor
John Terken of New York.
Residents who wish to donate to the
tax deductible fund can send their
contributions to the Dana Statue Fund,
San Juan Capistrano Historical Society,
Box 81. San Juan Capistrano 92675.
Individuals or group!! donating over $100
v•i!I have their name inscribed on a
plaque below the statue.
e Viejo Queen
l\11SSION VIEJO -Linda Huber has
been named f\1iss Mission Viejo by the
Si:iddleback Valley Ch a m be r of
Commerce.
The daughter of Mr. and Mr!!. Walter
Huber resides at 23661 Calle Hoger,
f\fission Viejo. She is a social sciences
major at Saddleback College.
She will represent her community in
the Miss Orange County Pageant at
the end or this week.
e Baseball Lots OKd
New School Name Sought
T r u s t e e s of the Capistrano Unified
School District voted unanimously to
Include seniors in the current program
while directing the administration to
initiate a program for all students next
year.
Venereal disease education is currently
provided ln the tenth grade .. A film
Is shown in physical education classes
and a physician from the Orange County
Health Department ronducts a question
and answer session.
EAST IRVINE -Trustees of the San
Joaquin Elementary School District have
approved the u!e of vacant school 1iles
for Little League Baseball use.
A special lease t."Ontracl with the
Mission Viejo Little League has been
renewed for the Montanoso site.
An agreement with a Pony-Colt League
In the Saddleback Valley also bas been
sanctioned. Aegean Hill,s Residen,ts Don't Want Second Moulton
There won't be two Moulton
Elementary Schools afler all -providing
the residents of Aegean Hills come up
with a new name for the Moulton School
ln their area.
Members of the Aegean H l 11 s
Homeowners AS!OCiaUon complained to
the Board of Trustees of the San Joaquin
Elementary School District. recently that
lhe name Lewis r. Moullon School was
not Appropriate.
Th<'Y 11uggested that the board replace
the name "·lth either Los Pinos or
'
Santiago in keeping with the Spanish
theme of the area.
The board agreed after considerable
discussion, but did not Rlect a new
name for the school. They left It up
to the homeowners' group.
Board Chairman Grstian B l d a r t
objected lo ch111ngi11g the name on the
grounds that it would open the door
for others to make a:imilar requests.
Trustee Robert Dameron offered a
solution lo that problem, 11uggesting
naming each school site as soon as
construction of a school begin!!.
··we can see that the community is
notified well in advanct to offer their
suggesUom for names ," he a.lded.
The Aegean Hills group bas until
March 3 to present 1 name lo the
board of lhe former Moulton School
on Regina Street.
There will still be another Moulton
School. however, this one in Crown Valley
In the Capistrano Unified School Distric t
-unless that one's changed, too.
High 5Chool principal Daryl Taylor
described the difficulty the school has
in obtaining the films at a convenient
time while tl')'lng to correlate tile
physlc!Jn's vi!IL
A f\lrther complication Is the legal
requirement that forces the district. lo
inform each parent and give lhem an
opportunity to remove their child from
the presentation.
"\Ye showed the films to the tOth
grade this year and the respoll!ie was·
very good," fiald Taylor. "The doctor was
very fa vorab ly impressed.''
Groups wishing to use vacant sites
for recreation purposes can call Rex
Nerlson at the administrative office for
Information.
e ·GOP Seer~tary
MISSION VIEJO -Wiiiiam S. ttulsy
has been elected secretary of the
Saddleback unit of the California
Repubilcan Assembly. Hulsy, former
chief administrative officer of the
Republican State Central Committee, iJ
currently pro!lecuting attorney for the
city of Long Beach . He lives With his
family at 24622 Saturna Drive.
Count)!Man
Faces Four.
l{idnapRaps
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of "'-Dell" ,lltt .....
A 13-hour manhunt for an Orange Cou'n·
ty convict who slipped away from San
Quentin Prison Monday night, kidaaping
a policeman's family and friend ended in
climactic chaos today in Fullerton.
James D. "Jimmie" Harvey, 2-i, was
captured following a JOO.mile-per-hour
freeway chase in which one shot was fired
by police. when his stolen car crashed
into a cafe.
The fugitive -who had released first
the policema11's family, then his remaiJl..
ing hostage -was taken into custody at
the scene, where fire erupted in the
wreckage.
Firemen roped off the scene lo prevent
Injury to the curious or a possible ex.
plosion due to gasoline from the car'r
ruptured tank.
Additional details were not available
11 presstime .
Despite the fact Harvey, a four-timt
loser, still held Mrs. Cheryl J _ Smith,
2.3, prison authoritieg had aaid he was not
considered dangerous.
He was armed with a pair of 1CWor1.
Mrs. Stansfield reported today.
A 12-bour nightmare ended at t :2G
a.m. today for Novato Pollce Offlctt
Gary Stansfield, 30. when his wile
telephoned authorities from the Salad
Bowl Cafe, 400 miles south on Highway
99 In Kern County. /
She announced she and their children,
Robert. 6. and Suzanne, 4 month!, bad
been freed.
Mrs. Stansfield. 30, said they were
safe and local officers arrived at the
phone booth moments later to confirm
it.
Boys Ouh Sets
Little League
Signup Date
San Clemente 's Little League will
conduct registration of boys 9 to 12
years old Friday and Saturday at the
Boy's Club near the ball diamond.
Friday evening's signups will be from
7 to 9 o'clock and Saturdays from 9
a.m. to noon.
All boys who have turned nine years
old before last Aug. 1 and those who
will not be older than 12 next Aug.
l are eligible. Birth certificates and
a $10 uniform and registration fee are
required.
Spokesmen for the league stressed that
boys who have played in the league
before as well as newcomers must
register.
Officers for the league this year are
Dick Stephaiu, pres Iden t : Don
Rasmussen and Depsey Caron. co-player
agents: Kay Womack. secretary: Mel
Mitchell , Dick Caron, Al Ehlow,
Kalherine Barnes, Harry Merchant and
Jerry Reckinger, all boa.rd memberh.
Oruge Cout
Weather
Sunny skies will prevail TUe>
day, but windy weather will kee p
the coastal temperature down to
S8 degrees, with inland readinJ:1
up to 62 predicted.
JNSWE TODA l.'
E~n if you ittmlze your de-
ductions you do" 't have to go
through tht tortuoUI Job of
computing uour soles taztr. Sec
Sylvia Porttr's .second ht in-
come taz: serie.s. Pogt 10.
t.IM..,,.11 I
Cllltdl"" u, 11
C1aalllef awl ._... " c,. • ....,. ,,
0.1111 l'Mllttt •
a11tw11I ..... '
•111t111i-9 11 'I-• 1•11 -" """ l"'"'1 ,, •""'' '
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. •
2 DAIL v PILOT SC Tutsdly, February 2J, 1971
Saddleback Trustees Initiate School Bonds
By BARBARA KREIBICB
01 l"9 DlllY Pl .. 1 1!1H
COocludina that theni b lltUe chance
of obtalnlng hoped-for •Lite financial
aid under Governor Reagan's reduced
budgt!I, Saddleback College trustees
voted ~tonday night to go to the voters
in June with a '24,870.000 bond proposal.
The funds would be used f o r
construction or permanent fa cllllles at
the existing 200-acre campus in Mission
\llejo over U1e years up to 1975 and
for acquisition of a l~acre site for
oi seCQnd campus in the Tustin area
1'atchet Slaying
for tuture development.
F•cWties proposed under lbe pro1ram
would include I aclenc.malhemaUcs
building and a fine •I'll. buJldlng IA>
be constructed 1n lf72..73, a omnulum4
physlcal educaUon bulldln& and an
administration building in 1173.74 and
a technology blillding and business
science building in 1974·75. .
The funds al90 would cover lhe cost
of site preparation and landscaping for
Lbe new facilities.
The college, having failed ln Its attempt
to obtain matching funds under the
. state's Junior College Conslructlon Act
2nd Doctor Says
Hulse Not Insane
A UCI psychiatrisl today became the
second medical expert to testify that
Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse wall sane
\vhen he allegedly chopped service station
attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin to death
v.·ilh a hatchet last June I.
Dr. Frank V. Hoilman o! Huntington
Beach told an Orange County Superior
Court jury in the Garden Grove youth's
murder 1ria1 that Hulse suffered from
a "personality disorder" and w3s "def·
initely antisocial" at the time of the Car-
lin killing.
"But he was not psychotic," Dr.
Hoffman said. "He told me he took
a large quantity of Seconals and they
blew his mind but he knew what he
l4'as doing."
Hoffman's testimony supported that
of Dr. John Gui.do, a prosecution witness
who, like Hoffman this morning, testified
that a remark made by Carlin while
Hanna Proposes
4-year Terms
In Legislature
Orange County Rep. Richard Hanna
(0-Anaheim) has called for a four-year
term for members of the }louse.
In a speech to OJngress, Hanna warned
that "legislative quality is diminished
by the need for Incessant and expensive
campaigning. The complex issues of the
1970's demand sufficient time to master,
and the two year term does not provide
the necsssary time."
He said the two year term tends
to make politicians dependant on those
who can finance increasingly costly
campaigns.
"Congressmen must be independent
from special interest! and a four year
term will relieve members from the
burden of having to finance a new
campaign every other year."' Hanna said.
Two other proposals contained in his
speech v.·ere a mandatory reliremenl
a .. ~ of 70 for Representatives and funds
"';:ich would allow Congressmen to send
quarterly newslelters and questionnaires
to their co nstituents.
In speaking of the mand atory
retirement proposal , Hanna noted that
almost every important House committee
chairmanship is held by a man over
or approaching 70.
''This discourages qualified young men
from ruMing for office," he said. Hanna
also pointed out that business, teaching
and even the Catholic Church practice
mandatory retirement.
"Congress must come up to the
standard the rest of the nation has
set for i :;~~f." he said.
OJANGI COAST
DAllY PILOT
OltANG:< COAST P UILl$tUNt. COMJIAHY
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122 For11t A•en ue
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'
he was being robbed allegedly prompted
Hulse to grab the batchet and hammer
Carlin to the floor of the restroom.
Hollman also commented u n d e r
questioning from Deputy 0 I a t r I c t
Attorney Mlll'Un J. Heneghan that Hulse,
16, at the lime of the crime, ''wasn't
that concerned with the crime itseU''
and allegedly remarked when he was
intervlewed four days ago by the
psychiatrist that he was only arrested
because "someone in jail for something
else talked about it."
The jury had heard a recording 11
which a voice identified as that of Hu1se
admits the killing of Carlin. And
Henegban plans to put Hulse on the
stand again today as his la.st witness
in the prosecution's case agalnst lbe
defendant.
It is expected that the case will go
to the jury no later than Friday of
this week.
Whatever the jury's verdict may be,
Hulse will have to face lrial on further
charges of being an accessory to the
murder of Florence Nancy Brown, a
Mission Viejo teacher who was stabbed
to death in an Irvine orange grove
Jess than 24 hours after the 21·year-old
Carlin was slain.
Regarded by lawmen as the principal
in the Brown killing and Hu1se's
companion in the Carlin killing ls SteYen
Craig Hurd, a 21>-year-old drug uslng
transient l4'ho is scheduled to go on
trial March 22 for the two murders.
Hurd, like Hulse, bas been declared
sane over the objections of defense
attorneys who have pointed to both
defendants' Jong addiction lo a wide
range of drugs and narcotics.
Hurd allegedly led Herman llcndrick
Taylor, 17, a transient, Christopher
"Gypsy'' Gibboney. 17, of PorUand,
Oregon and Hulse in a rampage that
ended with the "devil cult" kllllng of
Mrs. Brown, 31. of El Toro.
The proseculion claims il will prove
that the nomadic band stabbed ~1rs.
Brown to death and devoured portions
of her body in a form of satanic worship.
The woman·s dismembered corpse was
later buried near the Ortega Highway.
I n1nates' Lawyer
Shot in Home;
Assistant Held
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) -Attorney
Carol Will Scott, representing 36 Raiford
Prison inmates in an American Civil
Liberties Union suit, was shot today
at her home. Police picked up her 21·
year.old legal assistant for queslioning,
Paul Michael "Mike" Smith was taken
into custody shortly after the 4:53 a.m.
shooting, according lo police Capt. R.
T. Angel. No charges "·ere filed
immediately.
~liss Scotl underwent surgery for a
chest v•ound above the heart, Angel
said.
Authorities said Miss Scott. 30, went
to Raiford about 9 p.m. Monc!ay to
take depositions from prisoners who said
that they · l4'itnessed guards beating
inmates without provocation.
Persons at the prison said she then
left Jn the company of an ex-conv ict
and a woman whose son is currently
in prison and wants li1lss Scott to be
his lawyer ,
The slender divorcee Is the mother
l'Jf three children and speciali~es in
narcotics cases. Fellow attorneys in
Gainesv ille. described her as outspoken
and a "lone. wolf."
tn a suit here Saturday in Jacksonville
federal court. Miss Scott charged the
civil rights ot the Inmates had been
violated by a series of Incidents in
which guards clashed with prisoners .
Aiiss Scott's &ult asked for a federal
take<>ver or tht!' prison and described
11 shooting Incident at Raiford in which
64 Inmates "'ere injured by gunfire as
the "Raiford massacres."
The Gainesville attorney said she
lnterviev.·ed some 40 prisoners about
disturbances nt the prison's maxlmum
security East Unlt
The suit. however, WA! dism issed by
U.S. District Court Judge T. J. Tjoflit
until Mis.<> Scott could produce: t prl!on
expert to agree that unne<:esaary force
had been used In qUt:IUng the rcbtl!J on.
Raiford officials and warden! Crom
three other southern st.ates testified that
guards had acted justifiably ln controlling
the violent outbreak!.
•
for a $3.7 million library.classroom
comple1, wUI procted with t h e
construcUon of thb faclllty this year,
using money left from lb! orl&lnal bond
issue, 1 spokesman said today. Bids
are erpected to go out ln April.
Since formation of the Junior college
di strict in 1967 it has had only one
bond issue. A $9 1h million Issue was
approved by the voters in J968 for
development of the initial campull with
relocatable buildings. whic h still are
being used. Balance of these bonds will
finance the new library facility.
An application for matching state funds
for the proposed acience-mathemalics
building niet all quallfications under U>e
Junior College Construct.Ion Act, the
colle&e spokesman said, but "the current
indlcaliona are: Ullll no money will be
available."
Dr. Fred ll. Bremer. superintendent·
pre.sjdent, said however that the college
will continue to make applications• for
each proposed facility under the state
construction act.
It was pointed out that the revised
construction program for allocation of
monles from the proposed bond measure
"'ere presented as guidelines and wou1d
be subject to revision.
Bremer u.ld he had met with officials
or the trvtnc company to discuss the
tu.'Quisltlon of possible sites ror a second
campus in the Tustin area .
Bmlrd president Hans \V. Vogel also
noted that the college would welcome
any offers by land developers for
suggested sites.
Al present the lrustees are l.'Onsidering
only the acquisilion of a J5Cl-acre site for
the second campus, \\'ith dcveloprne.111
to be undertaken in the future.
DAILY '°ILOT P'h1l1 • ., 1.lth•rf Kfftlllr
Tbe proposed bond Issue would lnvolYt:
no cha.a&e In Lhe 1971-12 tax rate, which
carries a4 11-cent ln(lebtednea:1 from the
first bond issue. TotaJ tax r1t1 for the
two issues would reJch 2t cents in 1972-
73, peak out at 33 cents in 1973-74,
lhen reduce in follo.wln1 yt:ars.
Trustees pointed out that additional
facilities which would h;:i ve boosted the
projected campus cost to .$42 n1Wlon
\\'ere pared from the proposal approved
Monday.
These included a stad1ul\l, swinuning
pool, classroon1s. faculty offices _.id
auditorium .
Calley Says
He 01·dered
Mass Deaths
FT. BENNING, Ga. (AP) -LI.
Willia1n L. Cal!ey Jr . .admitted today
lhal he diretced a mass execution of
Vietnamese civilians at an irrigation
ditch in My Lai.
The government has set the number
or persons killed in the ditch at 70.
Calley. speaking without emotion, of
killings at My Lai :
"It was the ordl!r or the day."
Why , Calley was asked, did he give
command to one of his soldiers to shoot.
"Because that was my order sir. That
was the order of the day" the defendant
said flatly.
"\\'ho gave you the order~" asked
defense counsel George Latimer.
Juicy E'reetVafl Crash
"Capt. 1'.1edlna, sir," Calley said.
Calley said there were about fou r or
five of his men at the ditch. but he
('OUld remember only James Dursi and
Paul Mead!o -the two men he said
he spoke with.
California Highway Patrol officers said truck driv-
er Donald HUI, 30, Porterville, escaped with minor
injuries Monday atfer his orange·laden truck
slammed into the center divider and flipped over,
spilling citrus fruit all over the San Diego Freeway
near Warner Avenue in Huntington Beach. fligh·
way Patrol investigators said llill apparently wen t
to sleep at the \vheel. The crash tied up 1.1onday
morning commuter traffic for several hours.
'·What did you do after you saw lhem
shooting into the ditch?"
''I fired into the ditch also.''
New Las Palmas Buildings Marine Charge
Denial Rejected
''How many times did he give you
the order," Calley was asked in reference
lo his company comntander.
Calley said the order came five times
-once at a company briefing tbe night
before the My Lai ;:issautt. once at
a platoon leaders· briefing, the following
morning before the helicopters lifted off.
and lwice over the radio while the
troops were in the village. 1st School Fund Priority As abou t 40 young civilian supporters
or an accused l\1arinc deserter watched,
a court-martial judge at Camp Pendleton
1'.-Jonday refused to dismiss chargell
against Pvt. David Osborne, 20, 0£
Stevenson, Wash.
Calley Is charged with killing 102
Vietnamese civilians in the hamlet of
My Lai 4 -one of several numbered
My Lai hamlets -as his company
assaulted the suspected Viel Cong
stronghold on March 16, 1968.
By PA!'o1ELA HALLAN
01 l~I D1Uy l'llOI S!tll
The demolition and reconstruction of
all pre·Field Act buildb1gs at Las Palmaa
School in San Clemente has been
approved as the fir st priority for bond
money recently sold by the Capistrano
Unified School District.
Members of the board of trustees
voted Monday to hire Blurock and
Associates to design the new facility
which will be built on the site of the
current structure. No time table has
yet been set.
The second priority approved was the
construction of Shorecliffs Junior High
in San Clemente. Preliminary plans have
already been drawn by architects for
this school.
All of these priorities are contingent
on whether or not the state provides
the funding for Dana Hills High School
as it has promised. If for any reason
it does not, the bond money \\'hich is
a little more than $4 million v.·111 be
used for this project.
The district administration has agreed
Stolen Kisses
Bring Lawsuit
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Mrs.
June R. Becker is suing a pleasure
boat skipper and a \Yo man
acquaintance on grounds their
kisses took his mind off steering
the crafi and Jed to an accident.
1'.1rs. Becker, a Sacramento
divorcee, asked in M on da y 's
lav.·suit for $36,75CI from David A.
Borth or Stockton and Helen L.
llarris. also from Sacramento.
' The 50-ycar-old Mrs. Becker said
she suffered a broken leg July
11 , 1970, when Borth's boat struck '
~ tree along the bank of the
Stockton deep water channel near
\Voodbrldge.
Her superior court action said
Borth's attentions were distracted
"by the neiligent f em i n i n e
enticement and alluring kisses or
defendant Helen L. H a r r I s ' '
resulting in the crash.
Pregnant Hostesses
Will Not Lose Jobs
1'.tIA.i\11, Fla (AP) Pregnant
stewardesses will no longer ht fired
but will be granted maternity leave
whether they are married or not,
N11 tonal Airlines announced.
The airline said ii \\'SS not affect~
In its decillion by a threat from
slewflrdesses that pregnant ca b I n
hostellSes would show up to picke t the
airline '~ golf toumamrnt March 20.
A Lroop of maternity-clad stewardesses
showed up to picket a pretournament
press a!f&ir last month.
\
to create a master calendar including
the priorities listed by the board. But
this won't be done until alter the bids
are awarded for the new high school,
aides said_
The state also has approved the
Richard Henry Dana addition but has
not released funds yet.
Trustee Fred Newhart Jr. made the
motion to reconstruct Las Palmas School.
This and the old Capistrano School are
the only pre-Field Act buildings which
house studenLs. At the latter structure
only the gymnasium and art room are
pre·Field Act.
Superintendent Truman Be n e d I c t
agreed with the board's decision to
reconstruct Las Palmas. rather than
rehabilitate the 1927 st r u c I u re .
"'Rehabllitialion often costs as much as
SD percent of what a new slructure
would cost." he said. ''It's better to
reconstruct.''
If money is left over after the
construction of Las Palmas a n d
Shorecliffs the board will use it for
an elementary school. but \\•ill nGt
plnpoint its location until studies can
be made as to where the greatest need
exists.
•
'!'he general court martial opened early
this v.·eek in the case of the 20..year-old
Marine arrested in Vancouver, B. C.,
last November after being designated
a deserter.
The observers in the courtroom
Monday -both young men and women
-described themselves as supporters
of the declared deserter. The trial room
is a converted classroom. No disorders
were reported.
Attorneys had sought dismissal or the
charges because of asserted lack of
evidence. They also leveled criticism
of arrest and detention procedu res.
Osborne allegedly dcscrled in January
of 1970, then fled to the Canadian
province.
U.S. Jews at ~Ieet
BRUSSELS , Belgium (AP) -Two
plane loads of American Je,.,.s landed
here today to attend 1he three -day world
conference of Jc\vish communities on
the plight of Soviet Jev.·s.
On the witness stand he told of about
four people that he killed. He also
admitted fir ing into a ditch that was
already filled with dead. But he did
not say -and was not asked -whether
he killed anyone there.
There had been testimony that Caney
stood at that ditch, at the eastern edge
of !\1y Lai 4, for as long as one and
one·half hours. Today. Calley said :
"It J as a very rapid period of time
to me . . . It seemed only a matter
of a half minute or a minute or both."
\Vhat did he see in the ditch?
"Dead people."
"Was there any appearance of anyone
being alive in there?"
"No, Sir."
How did the people get into the ditch?
''They had been ord ered to go into
the ditch. Sir,'' Calley s;:iid.
Who ordered lhem into the ditch?
"Indirectly, I did -l told Mead.lo
to get them IVietname~ captives) to
lhe other side of the ditch. Sir ...
Paul ~feadlo was a sold ier in the
platoon that Calley led that day.
<&1:1.
"1f\Jt:s1; &.
OFl'TFl~L
SOMETIMES THEY ARE USED IN A MISLEADING WAY!!
THE FACT IS THAT NONE OF THESE tlAMES ARE
MANUFACTURERS OF CARPETING. THESE NAMES
REPRESENT THE KIND OF FI IE R USED IN THE
CARPETING.
FIBER CONTENT DOES NOT NECESSARILY INDICATE
QUALITY, AS THE CRUCIAL DETERMINATION OF
QUALITY IS WHAT THE MANFUACTURER DOES WITH
THE RAW MATERIALS.
DUPONT, FOR INSTANCE, MAKES 62 KINDS OF NYLON
YARN JUST FOR CARPETING. CONSEQUENTLY, THERE
IS NO WAY A LAYMAN CAN DETERMINE QUALITY.
WEIGHT ALONE WON 'T ASSURE THIS ••.. K N 0 W
THE PEOPLE .YOU BUY FROM I
SANTA ANA. ORANGI
TUSTIN (Ill , ••
ALDIN'S
RED HILL CARPl!'TS
& DRAPIRllJ
11374 lrrl"•· Tu1tln, C•I·
1>1·"44
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
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Red Cross Asks
New War Rules
LEGAL NOTICE
Cl!llTlf'IC.t.1'1 ,, •vs11111111 ,ICTITIOU$ ,llM NAMI
tiw llMtltltnld If l'le•IO" ar11r.. it\tl wt 1•1 HIMlllcHn. t T V t rio
~llt"Ct ll'\ltlntll ti 1111 1NI Ht rbof
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lttl• 1111 """' tn. ,,.,. n•-a• 111""'-1 of 11'\t ........ , lnlf!"tltf4 !fl Jl)cl ~llMU ..... 11
GENEVA (UPI) The Tl $uggests that those taking Nf:N01ttt10N5 TV ' ..,,.,,1.1•NCES .,,. I'll•! H IO tltm II Cl'ft'OOI"" pf I~~
lnlernatlonal Commltlte of pert tn such ho~tlht1ts be 1t11io..1111 "''°"' """°'' """"' •"II
th R d Cr I I t t d I t ed t0drt'1Jf1 tit 11 fo!low1 e c OS! s ap1>ea ing rea e 1 cap ur e s 1'"''' w,.,,,, N1~ 'Mll L ••~l><i•n to governn1en1.S lo agree on prisoners of war 1ust as In '"••' wftnu., wm11"" cy,.,. NI~ llU NoMft loat Stro•I ....... 1..,
new rules of war lo protect large interna;llone) conflicts w1TNl"S5 1111• "'"'' 11111 111h f•Y
I I b b Al I t II ti OI '•llrut,., 1t11 c1v11ans rom om 1 n R eas a exceu ons 11o11 EllT w1:ssEY N111
attacks should be suspended durlnR WILLIAM CYllUS NIX
As guardian of the Gentva the duration or the conflict" sr.t.Tt! OF c•LIFOllN•.t. f u
I r ••9 h 1t sa1d COUN I'( OF Oft.t.NOI. l convent ons o J.,,. l e o" 1~1. 1,.n .,, o1 "•b•u•rv .., D
comm1t1ee says rev1s1ons are ----.-::c:-:--c-=-c:----1 1•11 1111011 "'' 1~. Ul'l(j1 .. r•M<1 •
LEGAL NOTICE No!t•v •ubllc In t nll to• ••Id COii"'" urgently required to meeet '"" S••'• r111d1111 1111 .. 1.. 4 w 1,,
conditions of modern combat l 11• (C"'''"''1u1°".a 1<>11 •-11 o• .. oi111111 NOT!Cl! TO Cllt!OITO•I IOHtttd ltot>trl Wt""' NI~ '"" Wlllltm
Jt already has arranged two 1u.-t:11101t cou11T Of' TN• cv,.,. NI• kMwn •o "'' 10 " •M STATI' OF CALIFOllNt,t, l'Oa '"'°"I wlll»t IWll'lll tto •ulltctll)H COnferenCe! this year Which THI COUNTY D, 011.t.lllCI lo IM wllflln lntl•U-~I t n t/
Wiii discuss br1ng1ng the (•IA!~ OI Els~: s ... 1-1'::.~,,,D Ot(tlu.! :~-':':.'"'~~·tel 1' "'' '111' '"'' IAKUllCI
C.:OnventtOnS Up to date NOTICE IS HEllEllV GIVEN 10 1n1 WITNESS mY twlfld IM t!llcltl tttl
(<td IC" or t~ t D0•1 Mn\i!d d«fdlnl IOFl"ICl.t.L SlAll The flISI will involve Red rh11 1 1 "''""'" "'".., cttl"'' •••ln11 M•t1Y llETtf "'OltTON
Cross officials from 32 ::m "'!11~::11~.:;:,1~"'~:!. .. ,':, 11/~ ~;i'.:Cl:.:i":!<• ~=lll11<n •
countries and will be held 1n '"'° offke or lfle <I••~ o• the •lllwP o •• ,.., c ..... rv •nlltlld tou•• or to ~r111n1 tfttm ~ 111 My c""'"'lulon 1 .,1,., The Hague from March l to ,,_. tlf(:eu•,.,. y""'°"" M 11>e .t.nrll • 1111
DAIL V PILOT I)
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTIC.E .....
l' ... ttl Clt Tlf'ICo\TI Of' lll'llMISI
LIGAL frt(lflCl C:lltflll'IC.t.Tl Of' tUSl~lll JICflflOUl JllAMI
NOTIC:l INVlfllll• IUU ll'IC:ITIOVf 111.t.Mll T~• ~111•"4!11 119 <t•l+r.. lfl•Y • ~
HOTICI! IS Hl!JtllV GIVEN 111<11 TPw llNl,,olf_ SO-t <tllltl/' "-1t cond'\lctlM t bltltlMU II ,. 0 16~ ..
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t nd E• ""''~' '" •tto•dl"'' wit~ llluben I! 1<11nt1• low1rl D loY•ll !}If )Ill II Soecl!lt1!100"• -D<I fllt Ill tfto ottlct $11!1 9' Cotltornl1 Or1n•t Ct>o nlY Stnlt A"" C•IU11<11l1 or ~•la 01,1.1c1 On f"tbtu11•1 ! un bth••• ,,.. 1 01•td Fib'""'" I 1t11
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to Ju"" JO lt1' 1/\1 t1m~ ()n Jin :l'f 1111 Hlo<t mt • NoluY ,1,11 """'' t•ov•lltf 1n•-h t~I• b d Mt,., 8otn Mo•1nn Public In tMl for o.110 SUI• 0•11on1ll'1' l~t I (Of'"o!• with Govf'""'""' Coclf Nftll l• Public. Ct! lor11I• tPDt••td Ft111k M fln•I• H l'lltnll s.<t 0,., .1~01)1 l>•lntlPtl 0111<• ln llu•tw l!Clwt•I D l.ovtlt known ''
Tht Ctl lo•n t 1•lh t~~ wilt !If In O•t""I Count• mt In ho '"' "'"°"'' wi.o1• ntmtl •~dlllon to tft• a•I<~• ~llOlfl F"CI••• M• Com,,.1<110" £•~"•' •rt aub.<•lbocl lo tl'lt wLl!lln lfltl•Ul!'lfnl E•cl .. T•• HIMPllOfl ct•Hllctltl wll) .... 11 t 1'11 ... ., •tk"l!•ltdtld lflty ••tcuttcl tn1
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Tft• &011<1 01 T•u1te•1 ,..,. .. ,, 1110 l 'c'~'o'""o'~c_o'c'"-'"''-'""-'c'c"c_ ___ ,clc>_>,1I 10111c1.1 l•• I -·---~---·-to w•lvt '"¥ ""~"1111t .. ,~1,..1n LEGAL NOTICE Noll•• "11bll( c1111orn11 Dettd s~~ ..... 1 "" ,.,ln<INI Ofllc• In -------. °''"'' CounlV OCEAN Vll!W SCHOOL T .. 71. M• COl!lltll"lon IWllf tl
DISTllll CT NOTICf! TO Cltt!OITOli JUl\f 1i ""
II• GM'lr">1 0 l"'1n $U,.llt1011 COUIT 0' THI Jl'ubllol'lttl Ort nt• Coul btfl¥ •11~t c1,.1o. ot 1111 STATI 01" C.t.Llf'OllNIA 'Oil Fll)f'l,11•¥ J t II Jl 1'11 t).t 11 IOl•d OI TrVll~•' THI COUNTY 0' Olt.t.NOI 1'1111.ll<""" 0•1"" C•~ll t'.lt il¥ f'\I~• 161 ,t, ... \u
Fob•ut •• Jl 1nd M••<fl ! 1tn «11 11 Ei!tl• el LAlllY ALL YM HE AOL EE LEGAL NonCE
DK et~ 1---------------NOTIC E IS HEllEllV GIVEN M !hf I' .. ,.
crOOll11<1 01 lht •-• lltm•d ~codonl ClltT.,ICATI 01 •USINlll LEGAL NOTICE March 6 The second will bring u..O.r;ltnld •• ,,.... oltl<e or "-' 1110<ne¥1 •ublltlttcl 0r.,.., C••ot 0111~ Pllet MtlCENN,t, & FITTING P 0 lo• !Doi, Ftl)<11,t.-, U '"" Mirth J I H 1t11 I--~~~~~~ lflt t •II "''°"' "-•I"' Cltl"'I tttlml ll'l(flTIOUI NAMI
Paitatiny a Jtitnbo governmental representallves '~100 El To•o ,,, ... a su11• .., L11un1 110-11 Cf1r1,1c.t.T1 011 1u11N111
h HIHI C:t llkrtnl1 mu -It" It 1n11----------------1 l'ICTITIOUl JllAMI toge! er 1n Geneva from May ol•t• 01 11u,1~ .. 1 11 !ht und•••I"'"' l~• und1 .. 1,....., oo c•••ltv 1n1v ••• 24 to June 12 In t ll ,,.,.111r• oe•1tlnl~t to '"-111•1• J,EGAL NOTICE c,,...,uc!lnt • ,,,.1111111 tt "" W
,~. ••Id dec-nl ,,, •l'Gu!nd IO Ill~ Tiit llf>Cl1<1l1Md 6o <••Illy ,...,, •••
lhun. Wllft 1111 ""''"'"' YO<IC'.l>o .. In c-uc:l!nt I bu•I ....... JIU NOl lOf\" tl\o 1111,, 9' '"' clfrk or Ill• •bO"• (<1111 Meu c1111.,n!1 uf'lllt • lhl lk ..,1111111 t1111rt °' to oreunr IPl!'m wit!! tltl0<11 firm n•,,.. o1 •OWEll SOF T
'"' ""'"''• \'OU(~... 10 ·~· ..... !(LEEN SEllVICI! Ind tftol ul~ Ur"' .... 1.n" ti "" 0111(1 ol "" 1llDf"4!•• II ,_"" ol '"' IOI-In• •l•OO~• GOTT\ It!.• I. LOCl(E •m Sun~•I -011 Nlll'lU In full .... •ltctl OI •11!
ILou!t Yt •d lot Anti u Ct!lto•nlt wltlc.n Wnc• 1•1 •• i.11ow•
Pain ters at Lockheed's Palmdale plant sprav L-101 t
Trt Star 1etilner using ne" mob1Je paint gantry The
46 ton gantry rolls on rails and pos111ons painters
bv elevator so one coat of paint can be applied to
178 foot fuselage in 40 minutes
o! u lCI det~dtftl wltM" 16\it menll11 W•ol"' ""~' Av• SAnlt Ant C•lltcrn • N t th I d h n t bll 11 'lfll r ----UM!f' •h• 1(1111,., I\ m ""m• ol 0 w I s an 1ng l e •II••'"' " PU (f M 0 • no t i C:lllTl,IC:.t.T• OJ •UllNl!ll W!LGAllD COATIN\.5 •r\ll '~·· ••Id
volume reached by the Geneva Ot1tc1::1bft''S1-1'J,l'~b LON EV '"' .~~.1.~,•.•,.Tiou,.• ,": .. M,,•, •·-· ,,, fl•m 11•""'""'tc1o111o.1o11ow1,.. a•.,011•
0 t 1"'9 lh d E•teul•lv ol lht Wiii ,..,.. " ·-• wfla • n•,,.•• 1,, tvll •nd •lf <" of C nven Jons Jn '"' ey o 01 1~1 '"""" n•MICI decedent tonducllftt 1 butlntn '' 11116 Ellvtwtrt• ,.,kl•~'' ••t ,1 1e11ow•
not cover the whole field of MtlCENN.t. • 'ITT•No L" 11u"11n11tw1 •••di c1111orn1• UA!ll• Jolln wm 50I ~ WU•M,. •~· •• 0,.,.1111 w Ml<tlf•ll •h• llcrllloui 11''" n•mt ol l'M s ,1, llo•d H1101 .. ,.,11~ 11t E
human misfortunes the ,. 0 II•• UM PUILUHING COM .. ANY '""' , .... I ••IO "'' $1
h tho al1(1 O! 11\j•ln~u nf I~• U" SllW f~ll• tl1n1b¥ t111 ,.,, II•
dt .. lt ntd In all ,,..11 ... Pt•r.lnl"' to No • Cl»lf M••• C•lll lbt tlltl~ o• 1t ld d•c!'O•"' w!tbln llollerf LJnd1 fv JIU Nttlon1I Pl
tou• month• oltt• !bt llnl PtiblkttlOfl C1»I• M••1 Call/
of tll.11 nolltl Ot!ICI "tb•ut rv I !tll Ottld J1nu1ry :l'f lt11 Sttvo I! Otntlty I E T llld I II ... ''"' I) com11»td 9' .... IOllf'Wln• ....... , Otttd Ftb It \fl! committee !\Bid 11 111 1 ••• u • wna•~ ntm•t 111 1u11 t nd oltt•• of JMn w111 ' I lt,Mnt Hll•",. '•'',"''"I• t1U1 fllldlft(t '" •• fDllOWI l~~~ e Hoc••""' Ill l 1s now more lhan 20 ltt 0 111 .,.. • •lc~••d L M1r11, ''''' ''-••••••
Jua!11t AnM ~11dlt• 11!>1)1•! llndny Adm111!ttr11<l1 cl !nt tilt!• ST.t.TI! OP CALIFOllNIA
nt I~• AhnYt l\IUNd CIKtd~n! OltANGE CDVNTY
Ca11ine Co11s
OOTTLIEI & lOCKl On 'tb't!t•V I 1'71 lltloff II'• 1
HH 'un11I ltul•Y•r• Not•"' •ubllt In 11\11 to• 1tld !lt!f "' A"I'"' CtlHWftlt .... ontllv IPP••••d l10vf Edt•• DlnJhY
Ttl till) 11 ... Jlll '"" ltoetrf LIOWltlY k......,.n !O 11'1 !n AlltlnlYI .... Almlnlllrl ttll bl lb• ......... wf\o ... nt .... I •• , IUl!Krlbo
•ul)ll1~1d Ott l\ft Co•ol DlllV P ll~I td IO lht wltbln lnolr U..,t nl I nd
Af! ... n1w1 ter E•ttMlrl• l "" SIM• nl Ct lll0<n • Or1nt• Co ntY y ears since they were drafted Publ •t.l!ll Or•"'" co11• D1ll¥ "101 " 1-1unt1ntl&n I••~~ I!' B•n P.t(lill• On Ftfl " u11 11ero•• ,,., 1 !<lo!•••
HI< It "" M h ! t 1, 1111 l)U 5tn C tmtnl• llutnl l'tr~ Pufllk (,. •<'<! lilt '''" ~!ti. Pf'•tOntllv Moreover The Hague law o n F u••• • '" -ot 11 Dtted Ftb 11 n11 1np•1red J011n w111 1nd LI e • o
lhe contrary which deals ---,111th,•,•,• ~ •• ••,,,•11~ l'i<><:~ ... ,.,n~ kflOW" • "'' 1e "" 111•
LEOAL NOTICE PffiOl'I wfla e n1mu A!I tub•cdbed more with the regulation of ' s111• el c11111rnl1 Or•n1• CeuMY ta '"' w thin 1""•11m•n• , n d F•ll•u••v 1 • u ?l 1111 l"-11 1ck1111wi.o1tc1 11\e" IXKlll ltl ll>e II/I'll
Dogs Fight War on Pot I d --------°" Ftfl•+.11•¥ ,, 1fl1 b91~•t ,.,, •rknAwlMOtll th•Y "'(~!tel .... 11mt hosll 11!es an of the ut1hiallon t.t.11 ll'll • NGll•V 1'11b!lt I" tnd for H id s1.io ,O~FICIAL SF AL1
nf weapoos gOes back to 1907 NOT1c • ro CIEDITOlll• pt•!Oftt l!V ••P•••fd ll lthlld L Mt rfl"t f'olom• w JO•C• Ht •EllllOlt COUllT OJ TNI .. f Btn ••nhlt •~aw~ In "'' ra No•l•Y Publ <..Cilllornlf
when bomber aircraft had not ST•l E oJ c.t.L1Joa1111.t. J Oit "" '"' ""°"' w""'" •• ,.,.. ,,. P•l"< 0,1 Of"<• in
1 F.GAL NOTICE
l.t.11 tt7'
!Ot!ltl•I 1111)
Ml"' ll•lb Mo<IOll Nott•Y l'utlk C1llft1~l1 P1'nc:lo11 Oft!tt In Or tntt CounfY
CERRITOS Ca hr I AP) -
\V1th 4:iU sentry dogs standing
guard Bob Beus1ng s place
al"ays had 11 form1dable
appearana! But since he s
begun to train dogs lo smell
out man1uana hr has made
1t a virtual fortress
Beus1ng a former d1stncl
attorney 1nvest1gator began
tra1n1ng dogs 10 years ;igo
and now has 750 giant
sch nau sers Dobrrman
pinschers German shepherds
and Japanese akitas Three
hundred are 1n a kcnn~I in
Sen Lurs Obispo lhe rest at
his farmhouse here
T hree years ago he s tarted
l ra1n1ng a few In detect
narcotics and one a 5 year-<1ld
German shepherd n a m e rt
G inger has uncovered 31tt tons
of mar11uana as \\ell as other
drugs while working for \a\v
enforcement agencies
Beus1ng 46 cred1l!i the
sniffers gflOd "or k "1lh the
fact hes been shot at three
tin1es recently t\\1f'e Jn his
car and once in his home
Consequenlly to hi~ home he
has added an electric gate
lloodl1ghts closed c 1 r cu 1 t
lelev1s1on panning the grounds
a nd padding on the walls tn
absorb bullets
Most of the dogs ;ire guard~
dispatched nightly to some 250
c:ar Jots cemeterteJO;
warehouses 11nd stores in the
Los Angeles area
The dogs work 1n pairs
Africa Tour
\\1lhout handlers for about
t250 a month
A dog plus "alk1e talkie
carrying trainer costs Sl5 an
hour
Twent) four trainers leach
the animals to hold at bay
until police arrive any person
who enters the bu1ld1ng,
including the client
A man cannot come and
go a rb1trar1ly in his O\\n
plant say~ Bcus ing
In JO vears 80 of his d ogs
have been killed mainly by
I;UflS and bows and arrows
He gets the dogs rrnm private
donors the Society for the
Prevention of Cruelty lo
Anuna\s and pet homes
The dogs are 'a \ued al
$2 000 each and it takes an
average of four months to
train one
ti.1ar1Juana sniffer s I a k e
longer Ginger valued al
SlO 000 took eight months to
lea1 n tn find pot 1n tin foil,
masking tape or heav~ brov.n
p;iper Once she found 41
pounds of hashish 1n a surf
bo.i
Her large!l single haul was
I 200 kilograms of mariiuana
Although he rents the pot·
sniffing dog s to Jaw
enfo rcement agencies h e
refuses to sell any He says
police chiefs are aniuous In
buy them but narcotics agents
often resent their efficiency
and refuse to work them or
overwork them
, THI COUNTY OF 011 .t.NGll: 1uborrlt\M !1 I~• wl!kln lntt•u..,1nt t r.cl O•tn~o (oi ol• )el come into existence-N1 .., "'411 •c~NiWltO•.., int• 1•tcu1w 1~ ... ,.,, My cn,...mi.iien E•ol"' Mv C""'mlnl&n E••!•H ,t,p1 I I 1'11 There are four Geneva EsMtt of AlllY HOLSTEIN tlUTT!lll CO,FICl•L IEALI 5•al ll Ull •kt .t.llBY 1-1 lll UTT Ell 1k1 A&llV M•,... Ifft. M"'lon P ~11,~ed O•t .,ot Coo•I Do!IY ,.llot
NOTIC:I TO ClllDITOIS
•Ul>l!llllOll COUIT OJ TMI
'T.t.Tt 01" C:.t.lll'Olllt!A '0 11 TNf COUNTY OF 0111.t.p.IGE Publ Wfl Otl nto CNll Otllf' 1 1101
<Onvent1ons under "h1ch the ll UTlElll OPC:e•te<I NM•rv l'ubllt c11U0<nl• Feo•u•rv I! ,,.., M••<J< 1 , 1• 1111 rrte ,t, H1U f ob•u•,... I t 1' ll 1111 117 11
r II NOTIC E 11 Hf'11£8V C>1\1£N lo lb~ ••lnc:lot l Ofllco In IOt-11 Eil•I• of LOLA MAE I AllNES LEGAL NOTICE o owing p e r s o n s are (rte11to., 01 '"' •DOY• n1....., OeclH!•n• o .,.., ceunl¥ o.crnttl
protecled ·~·· ...... ,°". h••1"' t 111"'' ••11"1t M• Com"'1"!oll E••lr•• NOllCE ts HElllEflY GIVEN 1e '"• ------.~, u 111 d«e<I"'' 1•1 •t<1u1rr<1 ro 1111 A,...11 • 1"1 LEGAL NOTICE t••••m"" of 11t• '"",,. n•m..t der..ren1 T""" I Mihtary wounded and tl'tPm wll~ ·~· "K•U••• """'ft••• In 'uflll""tt1 O••n•• Cn•tl D•1!¥ ,, lt'Jl"I·-------------1'~" •II e•roMI ~•vlna ,,~ "'' •otlA" NOTICI!. TO Cltl!OITOltl
sick doctors med 1 ea 1 •l'lt ot!l<e a• the tlerk el '~• •be•• Ftb•u•rY n •nO Mttclt 1 t !6 101 l.t.I '"' "'' u ld attt<ltn• ••t •f'lul...., lo Ill• SUl>EltlOlll COU'llT Of' THI enll!IPCI cou I OI lo 0~1tnt 1htm wlllt 4ot 11 NOTICE TO ClllEDITOlll lh•m w !~ rl'lo nP<en•'1 v...,cnon n If A Tl 0, CALJFGINIA
pcrsonne-1 chaplains , ... nK••16•V """ci'>I" le '~. --------------'---! sv•~ll lOll CGUIT 01" THE lht ellkt of , ... cW•k ol 1"I t bCV• FOii THI! COUNTY 0,
2 Wo"Oded SICk m•dical uno•• lontd •t '"" 0111~• 01 M• .t.norn••< STATI OF c.t.LIFOlllllt.t. Joll tnllu..i ceu•l e• ro ''~""' tluom with 0111.t.NGI
u DUllYf.t. C,.llPENTER ' l\AllNES LEGAL NOTICE THI. COUNTY Of' 011:.t.NOll ino ,,.,.,..,, vOt.Jcnett to !ht un No ..,..,UI
personnel chaplains of armed !llY EllNE~T J SCMAG Jiii! ~j)' NO ...... uf ...... '"""' II t . llOll•ld t• .... ,,n.. E•t•I• ,, MAlllTHA F Ml!'LCHEI
Mac,lr.'1hu• fllwd P O flo• llU NoWf>O•I Clltlll"ICATI 01 I UllNISS E1ltl• ol r t1ANIC AUGUST FUNAR" AUotnt¥ •I L•w Jll Wt•I Tnfd .Str11/ Oet•l•tll
fOrCCS 31 sea Bnd I he 8t•th Ct lo•nlt t 1Ml w~l<h I '"" ~ICTITIOUI N.t.MI All.a ~"°wn to Flll ANI( ,t, FUNAllO Soni• An, Ct lllr,.nl• 1?101 wltlcn It NOTICE IS HEllEllY GIVEN lo Ill•
s h•pwrecked ottc• "' fl111 """ ol "'' undt,.l1nld Tiit unflnltnld 10 et•llh '"•• '" De<•~''"" 111, pile• or 11u11 .... 11 M t~• 111'1(j1n!an1d c,.dlto•I ol •1'• •bC•t n•mld dtttdtnl ln 111 m1!l•fi otrttlnln1 to tn1 rtltlt conductln• 1 builn•11 11 p n 80, '''' NOTICf 11 HEll:EflY GIYEN to 111• I~ tll ,.,,,,,., 1•rt1lnln• to •h• ••!•II lh•t •II oerie~1 MY!nt cl1!m1 •••ln11 3 Prisnncrs of WAr 01 u a d•cfdent within tau• ...onth1 !•Yin• Ctlltor"I• undlf th• 1 ,1111°"' tttd!to•• 01 ,~. ~l!e•t nim .. 1 dtt'"""' ~· 11 • dt<e<ltnl .. 11n1n '"" ,,.,en1~1 1111 Jtld 5t!<:tdenl "'" •t11u1...i to lilt tlltr tllf fltSI oubl!eetl~n el tM1 no1lc1 11,,.. """" ol FLOll.t.l MASffllPIECES thll • 1 o•,.on• "••Int cltlm< 1gt ln•I t 11•• lft• llttl publ k ttlan cl 1nl1 n~Het lhom wllh thf nKn'"'l' "°"'"'" In 4 C1v1!1ans in enemy or 01100 Fen•v••• 11 1t11 •n.a 1.,0, ,,19 11,.., 1, (o"'""'' of 1,., ••Id aece<1•n• .,. ,10u rte1 10 1 '• 01ttd J•A .,., 7' 1111 '"" 011rc1 el '"• ti••~ el t111 •bl:I••
occupied ter rltory ~¥!'c~~~ ~' 1;~~~~?N 11 u1TE1t. ;~~. i:~:w :·.c:;":~• ,;:~o:;,, na:;:• ,'", ;~:"' ort~;" n;n·, .. :•c;~•.~,.,. ei"cr~:";~~ ~·::~:;,1~·c;~;. w111 °' :;; u"n",c~:'~:. o•v~:,~;:,""',e"''~ "'!.
T he fourth c:onvenllOn Jn nf lb• ~be"• n~"'•d doc•~· t 1011o.,., ·~' !IPd '~"'' or 10 ~•• ... n1 rn'm w1111 '"" •bl:lv• n1mt<1 dtc..r•nt de•1!1ntd •I th1 eltlc• of hh 11te""'1
I I DUltYEA Cllll .. t:NTE• .. IAINl!S {~tfl•• F Slnfn It U(IO \Na 1,, tbt nocoua•~ YOUChtr! to lbt un IONAl..D H 1>1111.NNllt TAFT I CKfllMAN I. MAllK~ 11'-I! pa11 cu ar rcqutres rev1.,1on ILY llllNl!ST' SCHAG JI Av• No H Coil• Mnt E~I~ H ,,. 1lon•d ot CIO PLUNKETT ~ Alltf"IY •• l tw S•n Vlctnl• lt>u tv••d lultt •U lo1
!he Red CrOSS ma!nlalOS OJJ M1c.t.rthur I I•• Sloon 1100 Wt IC I AYt Na H Colli PLUNICETT lllornt•• ti Low '1l ()I"' Jll Wnt T~I•• 11-1 An•• II Colllornlt ff!O~t w~lrn h ,,,_
JI t h h "O It• ""' ~··• Av• p o In• )61 l-luntlnt1M •••ch 11nl• •~• c1m1r~l• H1t1 "•c• or b~•lntu of •~• 11no.1111nld pOln S OU! f ill t e NIWl'O•I ltt(b Ct!lt tUU Ctl tornl• t?~•f which !t lbt eli co Ttlftlbent ITUI U1 1111 In fll mtlltrJ '"'" nlnt lo !ht 11t•tt
t I I Ttl UI tt~ Otltd F•b It 1'1! of bll<ln••I et 1111 und•,.lt n•n In alt ,1,11.,,,.,, !tr l••eutrl• "' •tld d~<•d•nr whb ln •ou. "'°"'bl conven Ion pro eels CJVJ ians ..,111,,..., ,o, l!•KMIOI' CHAlll LEs E SLOAN 11 ..,111,, 0,,,. nlno te ,~, .,,.,. 01 Publlon..r o''"Q' '""'' flt!+¥ , IM 111,,""' 11.u oubt1e111en el •Mt "llllct
On]y against !he abuse (lf Pufl!ltbed O•t nt• Ca11t Otllv Pii ot l!NIO H SLOIN ••IO noe•d•nt within '""' "'~"tnt t llf' F•b•uffV ' I 16 '1 1111 )ll 11 Oaltd F•b•ut ,.., I 1'11 FebrV tfv 11 t nd Mt•tn 1 t II 1911 Stol• ol Co 1""' 1 O•t noo Cwn,., tn• 11"1 oubll~•t!on oft~, nolltt ---~ -BUii.TON W MELCHIE ll 11 enemy power and no! against •11 n °" F•b•11••• 11 101 "oornro ,.., D•••o "•b•v••• , 1111 LEGAL NOTICE E•tc1110• 01 ttt• wm ei
th I '
----I Not••v P111ll c +n .,, .. '"' •l]d Sltl• S• ·~ 0 N ••1l'I•• Tho •bOYf n•,.,•d O•c•d•n• e use 0 arms EG L NOTICE 01•1<1n•fl" •Po••"d C~t.iu I! Slt'Ji n E•oc,,.,,1 .. 0, 1 ... wm "' ,. '"" l.t.'T .t.CICllltM.t.111 & M,t,11111 fl JS now known a bit L A _ ---II •n<I Enid M SIOI~ know" le m• '"e t bnv• nfm"fl d"Cflll"I CllTIFIC.t.TI! OJ •UUNllll 11U1 It" Vl<tRlt •1.,. ~"'tt 611
'" bt ·~• otr1°"' Wl'l<I•• ,,.,.,,, '" l>tUNICE:TT & l>LUNKln ll'ICl!TIOUt MAMIE lta AAt•IH Clllltr1d1 t11Mt late In the da) that maSS!VP. l.t.11: IO:ll IU~Ktlbtfl '" , ..... u~1n 1..,,1, ......... , l l'IO •u OU~• ···-T"• Uf\(lf .. !tn•d do torlllY '"'y ••• Ttl UUI .,, .. .,1 air bombing!! or tOWn.5 d td NOTICE TO CllDllOlllJ '''""wltdol'd t~ev toecutfd '"' lfmf II' O IDK lH t-U<llnt 1 bu•lntH al 1111 l t t\l,t,lletR••t kr l•tCWIW
tU•Ell lO• C:OUaY Oii Tl-II! fOF,-ICl.O L SEIL) Hunllntlo" lttch C•llf nul f!ov Drlvt N•wPO•I l~t<b (1lllornl• l'ubl!tbtd O•t"'t CCIII DtllY "'"' not pav off from !ht military STATE OF C.t.l ll'OlllN IA '0111 JOAN f SOVlE Tel Ill JUI .. 11' Hll .,....,,, '"" ll(llllou• 11 .... n•m• "' AN Flb"ll"' ' u n Mtrcn 1 1t11 Ji)f.11
r THIE COUN TV 011' 0 11.t.NG I! No!1,... ,.ul!ll( Ct ll!ornlt AllerM•• .... l•ttUltl> CHOI! MAlllJNI! lllEPAlll t nd inot •• d ----po1nt O view, lhe Red Cross H• .t."*4n Ceu"'• of O••nt• Publ lf'ltd 0 t not co''' D•!!v ,.1,..,1 11.,,., 1, <omootH ot ,...,. 1o11 ..... 1 ... a••>0n• I F.O,AL NOTICE said E_~l•I~ GI '1101EllT J,lr.ME5 FlllYf Mv Cammi ol"" [•el••• Wh<'!I nt mt t In h;U IMI •11c11 ol -Rl'IO \nown ti llOllEtll J FRY[ Juno 1• ltl! 1•b•utt• ' U JJ •nd """"" 1 1"1 •ttld•oc• .,. ••tell-. 1----T h 0 u g h the towns o •••• ,..., "uMl1n•" 0 l 'IO• (l>••I O• ly ,,.~,,, ______________ ._,_11 Cl•••f'rt IL S~•nn.... 0!1 Po•• NOtlCI OJ TllU!Tt!I s 1.t.Ll
d NOTICE 15 HERF&Y GIUEN lo lbt Ftb•OJtrY U • .,.., Mt teh' t U 1t)I tlll )I I K!mbf•I• l'I N•wPCtl fl•t<ll C1l I TI Nt 1111'11
e s troyed have been rebuilt ,,,.,110., ot '"' 1r.o.e n•mf'll dttod•n• LEGAL NOTICE Eu••n• c J•rrY 112' w Gltnwoo<I o.., Frldt" M••t~ 11 1111 ti 11 119
nothing has been done to t~•• •II a• .. on• "'"In• c11 1,,., ,,.1.,, I.EGA!, NOTICE l•M• An• C1111 .t. M lb• 11 ca"'"'"u°" (•I c1111er,,111 1~e t•ld dr<~d•nl I• ...,ulr•CI lo Ill• D,o1H J•n '"'I! UH f Co•,.,,rotlon '"'"'"'Iv TITLI! IN
revive lhe rules that are valJd ,~,m wllh '"' nKtn••v vouc~•ri i .. --------1111: "" Cl•""'' e 'h•nn•• sut1.t.NCE •ND Tlll UIT COMl'.t.NY .,
th h '"'° llfl <• cl l"t ti"\ ot lht t bOv• •.t.I MU NOTICI! TO Clt.IDITOllS Ev1•n1 ( Jet,.. duty to...,lnt..i lru1!t• undor 1.wt
Jn IS Sp ere t~lllled tCKrt or 10 pruent '"'"' wl!~ loOTl(I TO CllltllTOlt~ !Ul"lllt.101 COU lll T 01" TNll: ST.t.lE OF CALIFOllNIA o ""'""' o "'"~ ot l tUU rtcn•ll•'1 Perhaps state~ will be !b• ntc~ ...... •CKJChl " In !h• ll1J0•1t1011 COUltT D, TNI JT~TE OF CAL l,.OllNIA PO• 011.t.NGf. COUNTY •ugu!I :Ill Ill •• In•! NI :l'fHJ undtro i n..i ~I clo lllnn tld H Pfll'n'' ST.t.TI! 0, C.t.1.tJOltNIA 1"0111 Tl'I E COUNT'!' OP DlllllllGI. On J1nu1,., ll 1111 Mini • II'• • In 111>ot UH ••A• 611 at Oflleltl
prepared to aecepl today a Att.,.nev ,1 L,..... J1s Wi!t! Thi'!'d \T"tl TNI C:DUNTY o, OltA~Gl Nn ,1, 'II" No .,., l'uh1 c 1n ond fa• •8ld 5111e j t1oeo•o1 In th• of!le• "' ,~, counl'I'
m In J m Um numbt'r Of Sa"lo An1 Ca! to•nl1 t)l(l1 wnlth lo Nt A .. ldl f <lll• of tlAYMONO J ,t, M f S no ,,ontl!• t Po••rod M• Euo •n• C J•rrv llKOt<ltr pl O••not Coun!V Ctll!Olnlt
llht plf<t of bu• "UI ol ll'lo undtr1lo....O Et!•!• ol ~,t,",t,~ M GERE N llOUC .. r.RO 1~• rt•YMQNO J BO l~"ewn 1o m• IO be l~f ntnon w"°'ie1wlL~ SELL AT l'UBLIC AUCTION TO prOVISIOnS intended tO Spare In t ll mt llt" Pt•!.tlnn' 111 th• Hlflt Df<f" td CKJ.PO 1~1 RAYMOND flOUCMA tlO n•m• !1 tub1ttll'lod 111 lh• wllflln +n HIGHEST fl!OOElll FOii (ASH IP•YtCI•
lh I I I I I 111 ltld noctd•nl whn" fAur ment~1 NOTICE IS liEREllY GIVEN In l~o Otc•~ •If •frum•nl tnd •c~nowtedttd M• tXO(l/led 11 !Im• 111 ••le fn ltw1ut """'"" nl
e C VI 180 pOpU a IOn al east tl!•r !ht Hr,I eublcotl~• et thl1 n11t!ct t•tdl!O'I M !hi ,IHl•t ntm~n d•<~dtnl NOTICE 15 HEllEllY GIVFN !o !~•mo,.,,., tt'W United 1!1!11) •I 1n1 1oulh lrenl
part of the evils 1t IS Dttl'<I F•~•ue•v 11 !9/1 1~•1 •II '"'""' ntvln• t •Im• •011n,1 c ri!l!ntt nt m, """"~ n•m•n d•c•d•n! IOttld•I 5••11 •n• onct ro !h• Old O•tnt• c'" nty
h Ntne• J••n Frvt E•tcutr ~ tno •t lCI n1ctc1t"! 1ro rfoulctd !11 lltt lh•r •I a•"""' II••"' cltlm• tt•lnst Jo Ann 0 Cnx (CKl(lflOu•• toclltd 111 '"' 100 B nc~ I reatencd wlth ~1 th• w 11 of mo '"'"' with !~! ntcn •••v voucher• '" '"• 1tl(I ll•c•l!tn! " • ,...,u1 .. 11 ro "• Not•,. Publ c c11 torn t or WtJt S•n1t .t.n• loul•~•rd llo•m• I•
The conveotioos al•o fail as •II<>•• ne"'ttl doe1C11n! '"' Mii<• 111 '"' tTtrk nl int •bo•• th•"' wl!h th• nt~•~'""' "°"'""' In o,.,,,. Coun•• w .. 1 ''" 51 1111 5•n1t An• c,1uor"1' ION.t.LO H 1>111.t!NNl!ll flltlll td tllll•I e• lo P•t1tnl lht m wl!n tho aHlr• nl tbt cl••~ of lh• •°""' MY Commlulen E~Pl•H •II t'l•nt !Ill• '"" lnlfttll (OftYIYM I hey now st end In adequately Att ... n•• 11 l•w '"' n•<•n •,., voucntro 10 'h , t nllt ·~ cou<t "' 10 1>•••en1 th•m w 111 J • lO n11 ta •nd ..... n1111 by 11 unr11r ••"
I t I d d JU Wt•I T~l•d "'"' uM.,•len•d fl lh• all c1 or hi< •tlo•n•v 1no nt<:•s••rY vouch• ' lo rno un ,. hll•hNI O•Ana~ CnA" Dtll• PllM D•HI "' Tru•t 111 lh• ,,.,...,,., tlluAIM pro re CIVI 1an oclor~ an Si n•• An1 C•lllt•n!t '"" MtTCl-IEll l-l•ll T " flRI SCOE 'IS d• tl!tn•d •'' " lllONAl O 1-1 P•l"NNl:''l Ftb'U ... Y 1 ' II lJ ltll 111 11 In ••I• C•""'Y "Id Slt lt dt!Crlbtd
''
""SC• wh d I b t h Id T , ,.. (7Ul s-1 .. n1 (lvlt Ct""' O•I•• W•ll S•n!o .t.11• J1$ w~u Th d ~"••t S•ntt ~"" G -Cl "
h "' 0 0 no U SOU ... ~1::.,.;11,,.. f"~•<ut•I• Ctlltnrnl1 ttXll wltlcn 1, rht p!•c• Cat!ornl• t11C1 which !< lh• ••e•• 11 1A I Nl1/I Lot,. In Blnc;k ll 11 Fl"I .t.dd/Uon
.ave the r1ghl lo \\Cllr the Publhl Kl O••nH Coo•t fie 1v 011e1 "' bu•I"'" of tbt und•" '"M !n 111 "' llu•I"'" ol '"' ~no1,.1en"' tn 111 I' •IJtt to N•wP<t•I H'l•hl1 In 1n. Cll• or
Red C•o•s emblem Ii s•,d Ft b•1,11,., Jl ond MA•<h ' t 16 1Jn "'"'11" •rrtolnlnt le •no ••t•t• 01 m•U•r< ""'"In no le lb• .. 11 • ol CllTIJICATI 0, ltUSINfSI N,.,....,,, lf"<b CouMY et o,.n•o ~i!•I• ' •' n 41 11D ••'• OfC1d•n1 wHM11 •ou• "'"nlhl tfl•• ••Id l!rcHlf'nl wll~ln '"'' mnntho '"" l'IC tlTIOUt NAMI ol Ctlll.,nlt 11 1nown on lht Mto ~ urther ~teps must be ino 11 .. 1 Publlc•11Dn ol 1n • notl<t '"" 0.,1 Publl<•' M ot 1~11 nell<• Tn• 11/ld•••ltMd " t••!ll• 1~1.,. ••• ••co•d"" In 11oo1i; • Po•• •• ol
Frerich President
LEGAL NOTICE Ol!td F•tw11,,... 1t 1fl1 Ott•G Jt n "'" 1f 1111 ,._ ,..1 I Ml1c11t1 ... ou1 Mt1tt In lht olllc1 of
laken lo ensure 1hal the w.t.LLAce o Gl!llEN w+1•t0 J f!CKJt~•rd <0""U:.11~1,,~1:;;"1S!~~n'',;!!!1 ~~11~:,,1~ t~• c1111nt.. ll•cor11~• or o.~ .... coun•"
conventions are applied ,-,,-,,,,,.,, 0 , eo••••.t.TIOlll •a• F••cu1er ti tn• w11 n1 .oomlnl••••tor ei rh• !•Ill• ~;:,,, ~~. 110111°"1 11,,., n•m• ,1 1 Tbt •••••t tddr•u t nd or~,, com...on
Ibo •bl:l•o "''""' de<•~'"' ftf •~• •"~ """"d IJ«O(!fn! & I IUILOING WINTENANCE Ind d..,!1ntllen II '"" ef , .... ''"I ••oHrtv S"perv1s1on Jn the even! of TRANSACTION 0' I US!NISS UNOlll MITCNlll MAit. lltl~COI! lll:ON•LO H l'lllNNfll t I ,.,.ld .. ulb...i t bl:IYt It ''"""''" to "" ,ICT!TIOUS 1111.t.Mt! l lJ Civic Ct~ltt OrtYI w ... 1 .t.ll .. nt¥ •I Lt w 1~•! ut~ I tm ' C""'-t<I o lllCIO Cit¥ Slt~I Ntwoorl Bt•t!O
Shows His Talents
PARIS fUPll -Prcstdent
Georges 'J>ompidou has sho"n
the cr1t1cs he can seJ\ France
abroad as eff1c1cntly a ~
CharlP.S de Gaulle d d and
do it without slepp1ng on the
toes of French allies
Hls face tanned by the
tropical sun and his wa1~t a
notch thinner the president
has iust completed an R 000
mile lr1p throu1;1h five nation~
1n Black Alnca v. h i ch
indicated Iha! r re n c h
Influence there ha~ no l
d iminished with Ot Gaulle s
d eath last November
Comb1n1ng subtle diplomacy
with a businesslike approach
to problems besetllng lhc
African hosts the 5~vear-<1ld
pre!1denl drew rro"ds a:r;
large as those \h;'!t gathered
1n African capitals 12 years
a go to greet De Gaulle
The man who ga\e Afr1cRn
colonies independence tn 1960
P ompldou was almost mobbed
ln Senegal and !he Ivory
Coast ll'hlte lhe "elcome w<1s
nnly hard ly less enthus1ast1c
In the smaller nations he
toured Maur11anla
Cameroun and Gabon
Pompldou won the heart of
t.he African cro\.\dS 11 n d
ltaders without any or Uie
oratory snd visionary schen1es
of his flluslrious predecessor
Siner the flr!il day he stepped
on African soil al the sun-
11 co r ch e d capita l o f
t.1aurltJnla Nouakcholt the
former Rothschild b a n k er
drove home relentlessly one
theme dear lo African ears
their ntcd for mort
lechnicsl and financial aid
from the West
He told the Africans he w!JI
champion 1n Wt!tern eouncils
their cause and struggle for
the ~tablllzatlon nf wnrld
prices nf the rllw materl11l~
which arr v1rtuartr lhe1r only
monev-cnr n1ng exports
Pompidou "hose country
already prides Jli;elf on bc1n~
the single largest aid pe1
capita giver "1th $1 bilhon
111 annual off1c1al aid touched
Afncan hearts by warning It
"'ould be vain to bclleve that
\VOi Id peac(' can he assur ed
through the injustice of under
development
Pomp1dou carefullv strayeci
frnni attacking anyont! nr
g1v1ng advice to anyone during
his trtp Thts was a sharp
departure from lhe commotion
De Gau.IP nflen produced
during his foreign lrips using
them as ph~lforms rnr attacks
nn various big po\vers chiefly
the United St.ate~
Pomp1dou s pro1n1se of
increa sed aid touched off a
scr;imble 1n sever.!11 African
c:iprtals he did nol v 1s1l th!~
1rn1c but plans to tour on
another African trip next
)Car
Their le11ders pron1ptly fie"
lo Ab1d1an lo meet Pompldou
and d 1scu5i; w1lh hrm the new
deal he had enunc1~ted while
~topping over tn the Ivory
Co11st
1 nl1ke De Gaul!(' Pomp1dou
did not rule out oth('r Influence
In French sptak1ng Africa He
told his hosts F'rance hoped
othu rich nations wlll Join
1n the promotion of tht
continent
The fl't!nch presJdt>nl 1Jso
sought to sweeten the p1\I of
an increased financial effort
for the French taxpayer
Jn several statemtnL'i he
v.as lhr first French leader
to assert that Fr ance 1
coopernllon wllh Africa wa&
not 11 one \Vay JJtreet
cheaper imports of r 11 w
materials wert bencrit11n~
French In d ustry and
commcrcr too
hosllht1es usually JS entrusted Tnt Unde,. ,,..o c .. , .... ,uon eou s1nt1 Ant c:.111....,11 11191 JIJ w.,1 l"••• s''"' !a+!owl~o o"'°"' wfle1• Mm•• In ru1•1cau1orn ,
ht<•bY ct I fy lh•I I! II CO"~Utllna Tot1 IJJ.flU St"lo Ant Clllfo•nlt tf1t1 Ind "11<11 of 'f'!dt"C• ltf fl IDllDWP Tt'W undtn l,nod Tru\l•I dlocl•lml '"" In ,11 neutral stale but tn many t ''"'~dl•I ,..a1.,, lluoin,10 •t l-<•n ..,111..,.. 10, l•KMI" ,. 1ehont 1110 JI! •U• St•"' Not111..... 1'41:11 Occld•n1•1 1 •blllt~ 101 in• lnc:o,,ectn1_11 pl '"'
CaSCS !here IS no SUCh {I 11 d•I Snl Cooltt•tno ll••c~ Co+U.,.nl1 l'ublllbfd O•t"'• C&t•I Dally •lie! AllW"'• IOr Admlnl!l<t!tf l n l-lunrln1ton l otch C• 11 •rt tdd"ll t fld otl\fr r°"'"'°" uMI" th~ I clllleu• ll•m 01m• or llttclln1 Ftllfut•Y 7) '"" Mt•t~ J t U 1111 l'ybll•hod O••n•• Cot II D•ll¥ r l!nt .t.nt~onY lutt•!mO<>CO llt01 Miiiy !It$ •nll;on 11 onv tnown "'•tin
prnlect1ng powrr ' Guld•"t• 5•rvk•• "I J.o<11n O•t ntf •IJ 11 ~eoru••• 1 t fe Jl 1•11 1 ... 11 ln Huntln1ton Be•e" Calll Sold u 11 ... 111 b• mad• b~I wlth0\11
The committee d d I f cwn•,, '""' I"" 1•ld 1 •m I• <Omoeold 1--------Dt•fd Jt nui ,.., 30 lflt coven•"' or wtrrtntl/' '"'""or lmtlllll
I no re er °' '"' to1tow1na co "'"1' o• wMlf LEGAL NOTICE LEGAi NOTICE sir"' No!t•ln•'' '"a" dln1 11111 1>e11rn !on "' ..... llpl"nly to rhe Vietnam war orlnclo•! PltC• o! bu•lntU l• •• •ellOWt , ~ .Ontfll>fty Tu!ttl"'("'"" cumbrtn<•• to .,. lfte •tm1lnln• 01ln
bu' Orr'c'.,, po1nl tn the C~••I•• D•v ...... (Of'"•U(l<'n '"( ~TAT£ OF C.t.L IFnlllNl,t, c!Pll •U'" ol ,.., note ••uir•d b¥ " l<OOl C•m!no di Ell•tl!t C•Plllrt no NOTICI 01" TlllUSTll!' ! S4ll NOTICI INVITING llOJ Otl•NGE COUNTY u ld Ot•d cl Trutl IJ>-wll l!0.000 OO d rr I r lttn NI GlHlll Nelle• t ~•••bv I •tn lht1 b• ~··~ On J1nut•Y :JC 1t11 ""'" • m• I I I 1 icut1es 0 gC'Ll1ng 3 ~·.~·:F.i;1 •~:n1:.ni1 111 , 11," d•• 81 ,,1 rrto 1nu 01 T•u•'~·· et'"• C•••' comM1tn1tyNn11'" l'ub11< In '""'" ••cl s111• ~.::,,:::~1dv~~~~~on11 •1•.,.P'~",.,",7'r~:
C'OUntrv such as N 0 r I h F~b•uttV 1•1! On Tutldtv M.Uc~ " lt/1 "' 11 00 (Oii••• 0 •!•!ct of 0•'"'' CllOJnh "'"°"•II• l "f'•••'!'d SI••• N~f!Jlnffr •~d '"'"'' or ••Id fl••d "' lru11 '"" V'Ctoam Which ••goed the (~~tit• tltv UO" Co •lruct o~ D clotk AM ,-ln1ncl•I Ftd••1t!on Inc C1!Uo111l1 w!tl r•c•lvo te•l•9 Md! uo l,t,nlhon• TutT•lmOlldO known to n t IC '""'''' Ind iiointu ol lftr Trui!tt
1,,, • D•l•w•,. cnr...,r1tlon fl I u•!•• "' to 11 OC •"' Tu11<1•• M1rrh 7 1111 flt !h• It'"''" whM• "'m~• • • -..b•e•I"-•nd ol +n• !•uttl e•titfd b¥ u l•
Gene.via conventions In abid e (l<'lltLF1 fl~Vl~!t'lN ll ft1• lu1td T•u•I•• und•• '"" •v••u•nl "' lhf PUr(~••lno O•nl ol Hid •cftoot •d to •h• wit~ n 1~1''"'"'"n' '"° 0.ld or Tru••
b h r p,.,ld•nt lo '"' tl•ed al truil "''""~ ro 1n ti •11 <! n•ti•d •t llll) ,.di m• .t.v•.,v• t•knnwl,ftted lht• e•Ku1•~ Thi "m' lh• ""o•llcl u¥ 1 l'd•r ••I~ Oo"'1 If Y I Cm l has f;UJCd \0 FLLEN ( flAVISS(')N l~•NoHe1 ftfDPlfv!trotordtd !n ll(lo'lk Ce•!o M.,• C11!to•n• 11 w~rb Hm• (OffltltlS••l y,11,t ll•tolOIOff uocutell tMI lfel•trf!lf
Pr OY!de detailed p•isooe• list~ ~· ••T•., '® 011• n~ "' Onlcl•I ll•c~•ll• ,..,~ bd• will b1 1ub11r1v o••n..i onn ~.• 1 I! ~w,'",'" c "' 1 in'"' ..,.,,.1,ne" 1 w•ltton Dtcl••tllllll 1 ' "" CA IFOPNIA 1 Coun!v lllt<D•ll•r or Ort noo County •••dl'lr PlllNTINl':OFGOLO~NW!ST "0 1 "''111 ' • nrn i ot fltloul! t P\d Dtmond 10, Sl !f Ind refuses pt'.'rmis~lon tn Red ST-TF. OF L c11u.,,,1. Will SELL 11 oun1e •u<!lon COl LEl':E c.oTALOG so" un" n·~n~• Counh • w 1111n Nntle• cl 0111u11 1n11 El1c11,,,.
COUNTY OF Olf:.t.NGE 1" to bl•hHt bl"°t' !at c11n (o••tbl• .Oii bid• trt !o bt I" A<eo•l!•nc• M" C~mmlnlon f)lt'lrtl ro St ll lfl• nde•lltn•d t tUIP4 u ld
Cross delejla\es IO vl~lf POW On lhlo !Ith 11 •• "' Ftb•u•"' 1111 b,.. •t '"'' ol ••If In 11w1v1 mOnt• nl wl!n r~. ln•t•uctln'" •"d Cnndl!lnno •n~ , ., Nn;::" 1",' 0,,,, ''' ,JNoll<t el D1l1u11 ind t:T•cllOll "'Stlt '''' mo 1 N~t•'¥ l'ubllt •~ •n~ lot Hid >•• .. '' ' 00 , , '" , S ''' , "" •~•d ur•na• ""'' • camps and pre"eots , f•<c un • • •• en • 1 d•w11k ott c11 on• wn <~ ••• llllW "" 111. , 1 , ,1 10 "" •t tG•d•d In tht ceunr" wft-., • ' C.ountv ·~~ '>I••• •nlO nt ther•ln ""'" 11 !h• 1nlr1nc1 •o S111•• Na , ITOO •nd "'"" It• \ft "" In th• o•U•• f'llru t•Y ' t 1' lJ 1111 ' tho rool ••altlrlV h loi:it•d
exc han11e of mail and parcel~ (n ... mlH ~·" .,.., <Wn " 11~•l6"tllv Gt•d•n "''"' • .,.,,, .. .,,, In tit• Cllv ol ,~. Purcho•lnt Att~I of u l• "~""! r f'(,AL NO r1cr. 0 111 Plbru•·~ II ""
S th I ,.,,,.,,~ (ho lo• fl••hl"" ""° Ell•n 01 Gt•dtn G•nvo Count• ft! 011.,,1 Oltftltl -Tht Tl (orMrt Uon
nme 1ng mu~! (l SO be C Otv "o" ~nown to mt In lit 1~1 St•lo ol C'll!ll•n!t tll •l•l>T Ullo 1no E~<h bldd•r "''<I oubml! ,.Ith ~I• JI' ttJU lo! (ollfornlt )
done In prntect both c1v1han~ ,,,,1~'"' ••d Stcr11•'Y 01 t ~ • !"'""'' n!lw n11d 11¥ 11 • nd,, ,,111 II« • c••"l•r • cnl!~ <trilfl..i c~•tk CElllT1,1cAT1 o, •us1 11111s1 • c ro•me"Y
d cftrno••1?n ·~•! •~e-tu1..., lh• within Dtfd ol Y•u•I In Ibo ''"°'"• •ltyo!M"' bldn••o bl)nn "'•d• oov1n 1 re th• ,ICTtT IOUJ MAMI TITLE INSU ltAllCf: A/.10
;in combatants Jn CIVI i \.\:Rrs 1"1"um1n1 nn 1>1~•11 al !h• tn•~"••tlon 1.. 111« c .... nl• '"" 5t•tt «•tvlbfd ortl•• nt ·~• Co•" c-. ... unl!v Cl>ll••• Th• vnd trtlinld dot• cert h "' 11 Tll UIT COM,..t.NY
" uprisings the Red Cross th••·1~ """'"' •lld •c•now•d•HI '" •• Lot 111 GI Trtc! No •lU 11 t1111ric1 lloivd o1 T•ull••• 1n •n 1...oun1 co,..,uc:ll~• , flu•ln''' •' 1117 H••bo1 •• i.o1a T•u•'•• "'' lh •I l<Kh C"'J>Ott 110" tVIC Jlttl lb f •h-n Oii I Mtl IPCO•dod In IOOk Ml l"'j Jh•n 11¥0 ft"<•"! IJ••) OI (o•I• M••• (•I !Dtnll Uft(l•r lflt I C &y T"°"'ot Au1lln S&Jd ,,,.., 1U ••••• ~I 11 U lnc:l 11lv• of lhf tum ~Ill II I t u• t nlfo ll'ltl I~• t 110\ll ll•"' ntm• lit CHAMPION '1t01
WITNE SS ll"Y ~tnd tnd otHd•I •ftl Ml1t•llt MOU< MIPI •tcn•CI• ~I o ,.,,,, blCIOt• wlll •nl., In to 1111 1•-1"1 MOTOllCVCL E$ '"" l~tl ,010 11'"' h "ubll1hff N1-rl MtrbO• NIWI l rt1t
LEGAL NOTICE
I .. II 2"11 NOTICa TO Clll!DITO•~
SUl>t!lllOll C:OUll:T OF TM!
ST.t.Tt: OJ CALlllOltJll l& 11'011:
TH I (OUNTY 01' 011.t.NOf
"'• ....... .,J E.>tt!e ft• JAMES A lll tlf 1k• J •MEI t.NGU~ llli\llE tn<f J•M E~ l!DWA lllD ILAllE Oec•tH~
NOTICE 1$ HEltEllY GIVEN 19 lb• (•tllll.,•1 ol tft• 1l)Ovr fll.....S Oectt•n!
•~•I 111 "'"Of'' ~•"l"f c •lm1 ••t in•! iht 011" dectlltnl '" '"'ul"'" lo lilt
11\t.., wit~ ll>t ntc•n t ,... """''"'" In !h1 ottlct of !ht tlt•k ot t"' '"""' fntl!led (DU•I Df 10 nrt•~nl !ll~m WI!~
l~t ntct •HfV woucb•'I In t ~ 1
llll~trt!tntd or lh• oUlt~ or ~·· t !lo•ntv M JACK HALL •II ftll lllb Sto"t" (o~I· .... ,,. ,,. IOtftll t'lh'1 wbl(I> ,,
tr.. e1tc, "' 1tv11n.e.1 "' th• u11111111,,...d In 111 !lit ! •fl e•r11lnl"• to tnr e1lt1•
o• 1tld dMldr~t w11~1~ lou• mD<i!k 11t1 r 1ht !I••• Pul>l!e•llon of 1~11 f\DI~•
Dl!INI F11>1u1rY It 11'1 C"t t O•ll t ft t E
,i.dm lftlltr•!•I' wlln lhl Wiii Anntv,d 01
lb• E11•" o1 •~• AboYfd Mlfttll dtcHlt~I M J,t,(I( MALL
•1• 11111 11111 llrttl Ct11f M•t1 CtMl•Rll tUJI Ttl 611 1~1
..,,_., lt1 .t.•lfllnltlrtr'I•
"'"' ,.,..wm .t.n11111f l'llftllllllcl 0,.n•t CMll
FHl<ut r' Jl '"" M••Ch J
"" ..
.....
PICTI T10US I UStN.IJ NAMl ifATIMIJllT
i.nowl"I "''°" 11 6o•nt hu1ln1n
llULlOC:IC S Tll.t.Y[L llUlt.f:.t.U,
il'1t1> on Huort Sf,nlt Ant C:1lll
J•iNI I Mll<lltt! tlf WllfdOmd•
Dr L1 C11\td1 c 1n1 11a11 T~lt tii,i,1,,..1.1 ,, confu<!td '" tn1i'l¥!dU1I 'lt ntd JAMIS MHCNILL
T 7U11 il'llllll~td O•.,.lt C0ttl 01111 l'llel r1~1v11v U 1r>a M••Cfl f t I& 1111
i(;J II
!OFFICIAL SE•LI Counlv C•lllo•nl1 Stl(t D•OOt•lv h t!oe Contt•<t II t~• •lme I• •w~•dltl to c""'IOIHI ftf t~ toll-I'll .,.,_ Wiie,. (omblllltl wll~ tltlt1 l>ll(lt Nt WO!lrt
PIUL tl IJ((LhlllY Jlt r•Mfl•d lo flf Qtm"'M!V kn-n "' him In Ill• •v•nt ef l•llu,. I" '"'"' ~tm• !n !VII '"" p •<• ol •t•!d•nct ltt•(h Ct111e•nlt FlblOJl 'Y ti 13 Ind llnll•Y "ubllc Cll tor"IJ Jl•f ICt•,... L•,.. (DOI' Mt'' C~Uto•nle lnto •u<h rnnl•t(I Ill• l'•O<tt•" nl 11 ,, lell~ M•r<J< 1 1t11 M>11
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1'\(:I 10 1tn ....:....,b<tnet1 10 111 tPll' ,.,,..1n1~1 Ne blOll•• "'•¥ wll~dr•w hlo btd lo• l M Otlt Mft NOTlCI fO C:lll•DITOltl l'uf"ll h'n Or•n~e C~t\1 D• Iv •11•1 •rlnc:latl ,...., ~· lh• nnto •~<u••d hv • 01,lod fnrtv llYt (ill dlvt llOm•ll"''' 5TATt Oit (Al!l"Ol(NI A JUl'ElltOlt COUit OI" TNI F•flnrt •V 73 ""'Mt"~ 1 ' ,, ltll «1"-11 ••Id d-ID'Wll "DU SI •!In l•!lf•\I 301 .. 11,. l~t d•t• HI IOI th• ,,, ... 1 .... OP ANGE COVNTV JTATI Of' CALIPOllNl,t,
from AutVll I 1'10 1$ In \ti~ nn•• tnNllOI °" Ftllrutr.,. 1 1111 btler1 "'' 1 1011: THI COUltlY 011
LEGAL NOTICE •'"l(lfd •Ml 111 ..... , •\11111 "''~ lt<U•fd Tb• llOl•d ~' T•1ill••! ............ , Noll•• •u~! c In on~ •or ••Id ~ •• ,. Olt.4NOI!
b• ••lcl dttd ot l•Ull n•IVll"9t "' ,,l•ttln• ·~· •NI t i! bid• Ptt!Ofttll'I' ...... ,,d T~·· H Orl•noo Ht ..... m. Dt lf Ftl)<uor,, It 1111 o• to WAlvt •nv ltr,~ulorltl" "' In khown to ,... tn bl •~t oeno" WM-s• l':•lolo of Mt"' Vl<tlnla Chlldt tl\C
kNiwn a• Mttw v1.,1n11 S¢~11111 Dtc.tffo .. Fl~AN(IAL l'EDEll.t.TION IN( to•,,.olltl., !n l "Y l)ld or !ft l~t l>tddlnt nf"'" I• tUblt<I"°'" !~ lbt within In
"' 111t~ Trvt1eo Ootn M•"h 1 1tl1 !I !Ill •"' tl•ul'•""' •nd t tknowttdll'CI' f'lt ••"Cull!'ll llv 11:-d (l Wbllnf y ~""!!<I Nfll:IMAN F WATSON lh• IOll'lt frvtl 0111<'1 St<IV 8Gt •d DI T•1111 .. 1 !Ollltlfl Jell\ Publll~!'tl 0•1"11• (0111 fl~ll• Piiot l'ubl!11'1od O"n•• (011! 0.11,. I'll"! M•rv fl•t~ Mo•'"" Februa1" U In~ Mt •(I I t 1171 :If) 11 Fth<11lr• 1' '3 1911 )AS II Noltr" •ubTlc Ca! to111lt
NOTICE IS l-IEllE~Y C>tVEN lo 1111
•••dllO • el I~• •"""' n1mte1 d~c•d1ftt •~et •II 11trlll~I ~•Yl.,. cl1!m1 •141"'' 1h• •~I~ de<;"flon• • • •"'l11l•M te !l!tl lhem wlttl lht ntc•o•rv vouch-•l !~ --------------1----Prlnc:l•tl OtUc1 !"
LEGAL NOTICE orant• cou"'• LEGAL NOTICE My Cammlulcn A« I I 1111
l'111111oned nr1n•1 Cft••t ll"•&•utrv I f 16 Jl 1'11
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Att•ntJ for ••tc•fff ,.111lll111td' Or t,,,_ COiii D•HY ,+IOI
Fllrr11t r¥ ' 1" U t lll Mttcft 1 10{ ll).11
1.EGAL NOTICE
'ILi frtO •JUl 'l(TlflOU I I UJ!NIJI 11'ATIMIM1'
1'11c ~llOWlnt ff'lll6ft I' -.Int .. OON ALOSON $ OE"T STOltl »I M1l11 II llttlbol ,,..,
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JO OAJ.V PIL OT SC
l'our ltlo11ey's ll'ortla
Tip s 011 Savii1g Mo1·e Money
111 Prepa1·i11g lnco1ne Taxes
B) SYL\ I,\ POHTER
(ln rolJaborallon "Ith lhc
Rtscnrcb l o5lltQIC of
America\
A<:su n111g 'ou Itemize \our
deductions vou tlmi t hB\ c to
,go through lhe IUrtuous ]Ob
of ro1nput1ng lhe aC'tual sales
1:'lxl'S you paid 1n J970 111 order
to t1gurt )our o:t:ll" and local
sale~ tax deducUc.ns You ctt 1
do 11 the e as y 11 a) by
deducting lhe amount aUo\.led
b} lhc off1c1:ll treasu1y op-
1 on I sales tux table for a
f !Ill Jy Qf \Otlf SIU' \\ 11h \OUT
111con1e \ ou ti ftnd these
taxes 1n lhe tax booklC't the
1reas 1r} stn\ yO\J and you
can add lo Lhe r1b'Ure allov.ed
lo you bv the table anv sales
l:r~ you ptlld on !he purchase
cif :in auto ~except 1n Ver
11\IJ!\l)
'rlie off c1i1l 1nstruction<:: do
nnt say so but the Treasu ry
:i1~o lrt s }'Clu :"ll'Jd anv ~encral
sales tax on lhe purchase or
a boat airplane mobile tra1\e1
or materials bought by vou
for the co nstru cllon of vour
o o home
(ll)lllons of you will h ,.
lo prepa re your 1971 cs11nHlfttl
!:ix declaration after f111sh1n~
1970 from 1949 Aga111 an er1sy
"ay lo co\ er ~ourselr aga n~t
po ss ible penalty r or
underpa\ 111~ ~our 71 Jr1 x "
tl'l estimate )Our 1971 lax as
the ~nine as the tax on your
1970 Form 1040
You 1nay find 1! cheaper
lh:>ug h lo u s c 1971 tax
r 1(rs and exemptions \\h1Je
rht1mat1ng your 71 tax on
the basis of the facts 1n ~our
7il rc1 urn The rea~on~ are
lhr 2 percenl :;u rch<irce
1n1poscd in calenda1 1970 \\111
not apply in 1971 and VI' 1r
personal exemptions \\ill ri~e
from S:62a oo Your 70 retur n
lo $650 on )Our 71 return
Also 1f yo u are s ngle \OU
1nay p~y taxes at sharplv
redt ced rates for 1971 And
1£ )Our earnings are 1n the
\ erv hiph brncket 'ou mav
qualify for a new 60 percent
ce1hng rate J instead of a 70
percent top rate)
If either yo u or ~our spot1sr
;i re ph~!'ilcall\ u n a b I"
because of illness to sign \ottr
Joint return or declara tion
\OU It hnd the Treasu ry has
eas~ it s requirements The
"ell spouse can \\1th the 01al
co nsent or the 1\1 one sign
lhe others n am c
clun111at u1g the for mt!r need
lri h;11 e a po" er of ;ittornc)
signed by the 111 spous0 The
nc11 rule s1rnplv requires 1ou
lo add a f 1nnal statement
:i!\er }Oll s1~n for vour ~c k
spouse cxpla1n1ng the reason
for the 1nab1hly of the spouse
to sign and confi rm ing lhat
the spouse has consented
If \OU are among the
hundt eds (Jf thousands or
couples \\ho IHI\~ volunt~rily
oi pnratcd but h::l\e nei lher
a divorce nor a le gal
1 000 t OF OIL PAINTINGS
WHOLESALE WAREHOUSE
OPEN TO THE f'UILIC
50°/o OFF
11' E EOl,.GEll SA,.TA .,..
l'f\One '1J-41Cll
OEALEllS W,t,HlEO
UT'S BE FRIENDLY
U ) u ha\r n t!f'IJ.:hh rs
nr knO\\ 1 f an) on<' niov n.,.
lo our ar a r If a-.c t1 II s
~fl 1h11t "' niay Xll nd 1
fr "ndly "'"lcomr 111 d h 11
1hc1n '" hrr 111r lltftU8 lllf'd
1n t11e1r Of'\~ su 1 rot rd ni.:s
So Coast V1s1tor
494-0579
Harbor V1s1tor
6~0174
'
iseparatlon you may beneht
fron1 a tax br eak 1vhich
Congress .,..rote loto lhe 69
tax reform law pr1mar1ly to
help abandoned v.1ves
You probably file separate
returns and are generally
taxed as single But you
haven l been able lo get all
!he tax breaks given a single
peison You cant (a) take
lhe $l 000 n1ax1JT1um standard
deduction or the $ 1 0 O O
deducuon from o rd 1 nar y
income allowed for capital
losses ~ ou re l1m1ted to $500
for )ear \ou cant (b) use
the lower head of household
rates even though yo u
01h0 r"1 se qualify You cant
tc) freely use the standa rd
deduction or itemize your
deductions both of you must
use one or the other And
you can t Id I use a different
I) pc of standard deduction
bolh of you must use the
percentage stant1a1d or IO\\
1ncon1e allowance
Bu t 1f either or both of
~ou separately can n1eet the
fo lto"ing requirements ot the
new abandoned
Computer Savvy Aids
Air1ne11 a11d Students
NE\Y YORK <UPI ) -Lewis
Robins a com puter experl
fl om \Vestporl Conn has
made a lot of money by
simphfy1ng the complex for
~overnmcnt Robins 38 also
h:is helped \oung s chool
children ll.1lh reading pro-
blems
The Columb111 Unrver<::ity
graduate has 11 orked his
s1mp l1f1cat1on magic on ex
ecutJves and salesmen al Lit
ion Industries IBM Union
Carbide and Na11on<1 I Cash
Rc~1s!er He had his most
notable success at NCR v.hich
10 19112 hired him to tr:11n
Air Fo1 ce personnel 111 the
1 se of the NCR 300 computer
The government had purchas
ed 174 of them the largest
single order 111 NCR h1~tor:v
lo erase the work 1n Air Force
prll mas1er offices around the
\1or1d But the srile wa<:: con
IH\ge 11 upon lra1n ng the n
dn 1duals who wou ld use them
Robins I\ as called tn He
simply produced an audio tape
"hlch guides the operator
throuith the vanou~ steps ;:r<i
hP <:1ts ar the con~ole All
thr complex I e ch n 1 c a I
\t'rnacular "as reduced lo
langtia,!!e lhe a\ er ave person
c11n understaAd and 1t \\01ked
rn r NCR
Th:it !'>amP \e ir Roh1ns
"tarted work1nE! on a prohlern
11 h ch ah\ ;i\s had 1ntere~ted
h 1n 1ench1ng non 1ead1nrr
prnh!em elen1en1arv schonl
chi!drr l lo rearl \\ orking
lhrou,(!h a sm:ill ~chCH'll 1n Bed
rord l-l1lls NY R o b in ~
lt>arned tlHll melho I a d
materials had l1!tle to do "1th
thr 01 er all p1 obi r m
So nnbini; dec1derl to de\ 1sc
a <:vs!en1 th~t 1\0Ulrl rnot 1 a1e
a prnblrm render hv n11011 tng
lnm 10 1neasure his daily pro-
gr('SS He 1n\ rntcd a pro-
J?rammed un t 11 h1C'h bas1cal!v
\ :is a smnll trl\ like record
pl 11 rr color code(I to cards
lm!l 1nted \\Ith rc11 Simple
11(lrd~
R1 g 1 \ 1 n ~ me JJ;\ rablr
proo f of Jail\ pro~re~~ said
R IJns 11rre sho11n" lhe
child accustomed tn failure
th:it he i; ~uccecding
Robins set up a comp:inv
c dlcrl Creative Le <1m1ng Inc
to dc1elnp produce an rl
m:Jrkct the ~\sl r m and Jlol
51>1rr<il schoo n to trv 1! ou1
Theodore W11ller pre~ dP:nt of
Grol!f'r Edt cntton:'ll Cor p a
suh~1d 1nrv or Grolier Inc rn
<'1cloped1:i pt bl1sher~ bf'r~me
I i1cre~t ed 1n tie re;id ni:
~1i sle111 In Apnl 1!170 creat 1e
learning became a Grol1rr
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e !lr11~a.rr 1l1:11 fr \OU
~ I 1rr II ~II ~ I Jf
, 111 a t n y C'k 1 nul
l idll
e N 0011.IJI~ I 1; ~ b1 JU~l
p311<'1 ~h;i1: r111>t"t
l,N'•I s1rrrl3uy-Ck 100
Costa Xlcsa
e l ry 1crf1 f(lr !O d il \
bU~ll\\ H \( 1 .. r-.:1• ' 1
C. J ,.1 !I f 11.lr,:r Pl t-r.r
hh Ju~1 1hr 1holr 101k~
Ck 9Z.}
e So ind !ht' bug!r lalt~fl
1 "N' con1rs in-pupplt~
r>1.1rHnq 11dor,hlt & of
ro 1r~r l' !I! P.r~c:!r Jl 1p
pr< Buy no" 11.1\r fl<l11
C1< •
Economic
Fo1·un1 Set
Hew "'•'• '' • e.iepll•t1• wert~ r• 'f'•• 111 c••rtt1Y
Ge•dwlll &. c..,11
Tl:LIPHOMF
.t.H5WEJIN~ IUIU11
935.7777
c.ell
OVER THE COUNTER
··-"" ,.,..._.,_, wtl•l'"I •I •11rnltnlttf¥ t I lft lrt111 MAIO l"rtce• • ""' lllC""4tt ,. .. 11 .,. Nrtn.o•· IMrllM•• ,, alftflllllML
NASO L1st1 ng1 for Monday, February 22. 1971
.... •1• ....... •1•
Complete-New York Stock List
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11 9 9 0 ~15•49o h8 6 S o !OJ I t 11 4J I o l o
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Tuesday F"tbroary 23 1<171 SC DAILY PILOT ll
Tuesday·s Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
Stoek Lenders
MOST SHARES
',O ~~"
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Market Firms Up
In Brisk Trading
NEW YORK (UP) -The stock market closed
flrm 1n brisk trad1ng Tuesday
Shortly before the close the Oo\v Jones Indus
trial Average "as up 1 37 at 870 35 Standard &
Poor s 500 stock index shov,red a gain or O 33 al
96 05
Of the 1 tS61 issues on the tape 83 1 advanced
while 539 declined A turnover of around 15 000
000 .,!'ares compared "1th JI 840 000 shares Mon
day
American Telephone and Scott Paper \Vere
among the days n1ost active iss ues
Scott Paper traded an early block of 105 000
shares at 26 unchanged 1n a cross transaction and
another of 10 000 shares at the same price
On Monday H I Romnes chairman of AT&T
said the company 1s app1oalh1ug the point \vhere 1t
should took to the equity market for 1ts future
ftnanc1n~ requ1rements Al the same lime he noted
that ID order to be successful 1n 1 a1smg funds 1n
lhe equity market AT&T 1nust fi rst improve its
profit margins to a point that \vouJd narrant a 1nar
ket price for 1ts stock considerably higher than
1970 levels
Steels and mostors generallv traded narrov. ly
So d J. most chemicals ra11s a1rhnes and aircrafts
EJectron1cs and oils showed scattered strength
Prices showed a steady tone ID brisk trading
on the American Stock Exchange
Co1nplete Closing Prices -Ainerican Stoel{ Exchange List
NEW Y0111( AP l 111t.111v $ compf.
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"ASHINGTON <AP) -Jul
1an &httr who became US
~pace public: affair$ chief dur
1ng tt~ ~fercury prl)f!ram and
..... , ,. stayed tl1rough rhree moon
-• l~ndJng mfsslons has quit and
no onl! Is saying w~
That part of lt Is not im
porlant and T d rather not
talk aOOut It Schett said
Mond1y after ~ubmltUng hlJ
rc.s lgna\Jon effect1v1: 1n an•
month I prefe r to let the rec-
ord speok Cor itself
•
I r
Tuesday, FtltmlP)' 23, 1971
CHECKING •UP•
Jigsaw Puzzlers
Poor at Al gebra
SOMETHING ELSE t h e
science boys are trying to
figure out is why a man in
ll near soundproof room after
about 30 minutes tends to get
wistful. sad, down in the
mouth. It happens repeatedly
in tests ... OUR LANGUAGE;
MAN. that philosophical
fellow, says what's wrong with
the world can be described
in three words: overspend,
overkill and overbreed ...
"WHEN A PIPE SMOKER
comes into my tavern ,''
reports a bartender of long
t'xperience, "1 never worry
that he'll wind up drunk. Pipe
smoke rs just don 't drink fast
enough to get out of line."
rarely good al algebra, It's
said .. , Q. "Do you realiz.e
that 100 percent of all serious
ski accidents occur on the
la sl run of the day?" A.
Appreciate hearing that. Will
rile it .... "You said the
date 1776 is on every St bill.
You're wrong . '1 've found three
without it." A. Look again,
it's there.
FORGET ms NAME, but
the 1936 World Champion Hog
Ca ller once said. "You have
to be sincere, not just loud.
You need to convince lhe hog-.
yo u've got wmething they
want." Altogether reasonable .
Co ming from a hog caller.
But the boss of a major ad
agency liked the philosophy ,
too. So much, in fact. he had
it engraved on a plaque for
his office wall. Not sure that
was fitting.
•
Lawmakers Big Power A~~ord Seen on Laos
Get Blame
For Blaze
SACRAMENTO (U PI) -
The stale aiisembJyman who
represents Taft said the
Legislature should be blamed
for the deaths of seven
mentally retarded patients in
a nu rsing home fire.
He took sharp objection lo
11 social worker leader who
charged that Gov. Ronald
Reagan "put the match" to
the Taft fire through fiscal
economies in Sacramento.
Assemblyman W i I I i a m
Ketchum (R-Paso Rob I es )
said the Legislature should
have passed laws establishing
fire safety standards at homes
used to house the retarded
patients. He said present laws
cover homes for persons under
16 years old and over 64 but
not for ages in between.
By STEWART HENSLEY "the Chinese people can not intention to use such weapon5, operation would be confined scale m~ght result if the three
WASHINGTON tUPI) be lndifrerent sc such rabid the Chinese omitted that to the area south of the 17th Hanoi divisions just north of
The United States 8 n d acts of aggression.'' ' charge from their general parallel, sevenl hundred the de m i 11 ta r l z I! d tone
Mainland China "Without any These statements were condemnation of his remarks miles touth ol the Chinese attempted to move into Soulia
official contact appear to have assessed as standard as constituting "the zenith in border and .. t least 200 miles Vietnam. And Nixon decU~
reached a tacit understanding Communist reaction. A arrogance ." south of the Plain ot Jars, to rule out a South Vietnam~
of the limit.s beyond which nwnber of official Chinese China's other main concern where Communist forces are land invasion of the north if
the allied invasion of southern reports indicated Peking was appeared to be reflected in engaged with troops or the actions by Hanoi warranted
Laos will not go. morl!! concl!!rned over the a Chinese statement warning Royal Laotian government. it.
This is a critical point. It posslbility that the United that she was Jinked with Loas The United Slates has been Speculation \hat the invasion
bears directly on whether Slates would use tactical by mountains and rivers. and laying down its on of Laos might bring Chinese
China would feel impelled to nocleir weapons to support the two countries "have a specifications, w i th the "volunteers" into the fight,
send ''volunteer" troops to Saigon's troops. . common boundary of several penalties for violating them as they stormed into North
assist Hanoi 's forces in La05. After President Nixon in his hundN!d kilotnet.ers." Officials said that a Korea 20 years ago, has
The impression that Peking Wednesday news conference The White House tllen said resumption of U.S. bombihg originated with U.S.
is nol contemplating military __ sa_l_d_t_h•:_:t_W_•_•h_ln.;gc_ton __ ha_d_n_o _lh-'e-So_u_th_V-'ie:.:t:.:n•::_m-'e-'se---'g'.:.rou~n-d_o_r_N_co::_rt_h_V_ie_tn_a_m_on __ •_m_a.;j_or __ "°_m_m_en_t_at_o_rs_a_n_d_n_o_t _P_ek_l~ng.
intervention emerges from al
study by authorities here of
the Chinese statements
against tlle United States since
the drive against the llo Chi
Minh Trail began Feb. 8.
China responded to the
invasion, carried out by South
Vietnamese under heavy U.S
air support. with a declaration
that it "would not stand idly
by."
Then Peking described the
situation In Laos as "a grave
menace to China" and said
Keeps things cleaner without
effort, eliminates bath tub rings
"I submit the blame for
this tragedy rests on our
shoulder!,'' Ketchum told the -----------1
You Work Less
You Save Money Soap and clothing last longer
Assembly during debate on
a Democratic-sponsored bill to
resto re Medi-Cal services. MO STE ST.
LEAST ES T He said legislation could be
passed lo cover f u t u r e
situations but ii is "something
like locking the barn after BUENOS AIRES (AP) -
the horse escapes." The more Argentine TV
Ketchum was critical or shows of her bodily charms,
WHEN THI!: OFFSPRING
are mostly girls. it's the
mother, not the father, who
is the more romantic of the
matrimonial partners. When
the offspring are mostly boys,
it's the father ·woo is the
more romantic of the pair.
Generally, generally. That is
what a team of scientists now
says thei r studies indicate.
representatives of nu rs in g the more a model will make,
AMONG THOSE numeroos homes and social worker A new W;ige agreement,
phrases that really say exactly unions who blamed Reagan hammered out in 18 months
l..11..try ii .,..,., ""-Are Oea.ner
opposite of what we take them for the fire because of medical of negotiations, provides for
include. ';It's cheap at half care budget cutbacks. pay of $52.51'.1 for an
the price.'' , . _ DID I CLA l~1 The seven were killed early appearance fully clothed in
nobody could recite th e Friday when names consumed a 30-second commercial, $15
Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans
Complete Installation Available! J ust Ask!
OPEN QUESTION -What
11re the only five words in
English ending in '·dous"?
alphabet backwards in two the :>U-year-old wooden more if the model is in
minute,• Wrnng ,g,in! H•'< building JI d•Y' belore they b" '"d brlel or Hlmy I Sears I three clients who can do that, were to have been moved nightgown, and another $10
one in five seconds . , . NO, because the building was a for a closeup of anatomical
So. Coast Plaza 3333 Bristol St. Ph. 5411-3333
Buena Park 8150 La Palma Ave. Pb. 8284400
Santa Ana 1716 So. Main St. Ph. 547-3371
THERE ARE co u n 11 es s
human heads in this world
v.•ith exactly the same number
of hairs on them. A n d
countless lrees with exactly
the same number of leaves.
I think' of that somelimes
v.·hen I get mail addressed
to Resident which reads: "You
have been chosen by a panel
DR. STASICK of Hammond, -fire hazard. charms. ..u,--.o....,_
Jnd., is· not eligible for ll~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,;;;;;..,..,;;.;;;,;;;,;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;,;;;,;;;;;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; membership in the Proper Job!
Club, sorry _ .. A READER
says she has found 288 ways
to spell yogurt, including
youghggurrtt. Not acceptable
... WHAT! YOU CAN'T think
of the only state's name tha t
ends in the letter K? Come
of judges to receive a free on.
gift offering ... " ... THOSE
BETTORS who win at the race
tracks all over the country
RA PIO REPL V -No, sir,
fact that Britt.any has the
highesl birthrate in France
has nothing to do with the
fact thal Britlany leads 1111
the provinces of France in
oyster consumption, that's
definite.
tend to leave earh'. And the
)'oung ladies who ·handle the
checkrooms know this for a
certainty. They always gel
bir;ger tips after the si xth or
seventh race than after the
eighlh or ninlh.
CUST0~1ER SERVICE -Q.
"Any specia l trait that people
"'ho are particularly adept al
working jigsaw puzzles have
in common?" A. They're
Your questions and com-
ments are welcomed and
will be used in CHECKING
UP wherever possible . Ad-
d.ress ~tters to L. M. Boyd,
P. 0. Box 187."i, Newport
Bea.ch, Calif., 92660.
Drairied Dry
California's Large st
Lake Vanishing Again
H A N F 0 R D (A P)
California 's largest lake is
disappearing again. ,
Tulare Lake, a I mo s t
eliminated by land-reclaiming
projects, spread to near its
original size two years ago
afler record floods strained
dams and flood-control proj·
e<>ts.
By next Scplembcr. experts
said it will be nearly "dry"
;i~ain and farming operations
will have resumed in much
of lhe fertile bo!lom land.
The lake as recently as two
years ago covered sorne 88,000
;icrcs to depths of up tn
20 feel. It now is spread over
less than 30.000 acres and is
less than six feel deep in
~ost pla ces.
F o I I ow i n g exccplional\y
heavy snowfall and record
spring runoffs from the Sierra
watershed, Tulare Lake in
1969 was the largest body of
water entirely within the
11tate's borders.
At its peak it contained
nearly two million acre feet
of water. When il is "dry''
there will be less lhan 175,000
feet remaining.
The watershed is currently
normal as far as lhe snowpack
and waler content are con-
cerned. according to the latest
Snow S u r Y e y Report.
In addition, the Io we r
reaches of the Kings River,
once the primary stream
leading into the lake basin,
has been cleaned up through
a channel clearing project,
which means more water can
flow north to the sea and
away from lhe lake.
Only in the event of a major
snow and rainfall dur ing the
next few months will th e
Kaweah. Tulare and Kern
rivers be able lo fill and dump
directly into the basin.
Chief engineer S la n 1 e y
Barnes for the Boswell Corp.'s
extensive farming operations
says most of the land will
be dry enough to farm this
year. Cotton and grains thrive
in th e area covered by the
lake basin.
Barnes said "if v.·e don't
ha ve any unusual or signifi-
cant storms between now and
the end or the current season"
most of the lake will he
planted for the first time in
two years.
Barnes says pumping lo ir-
rigate surrounding ;ireas and
rapid evaporation -up to
1.000 acre. feet a day -have
helped bring the lake lev el
down .
HOLIDAY HOUSE
LIQUORS
•
10\
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ON CASE
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LONG
llACK ' i
Crowd Curb
Law Sought
For Laguna
The Laguna Beach City Council will
hold an adjourned meeting at ~ p.m.
Wednesday to consider adoption of an
urgency Ordinance to control outdoor
gatherln.p.
The ordinanct, P.tepared by the city
attorney in the wake of the Christmas
happening that brought 20,000 people to
Laguna Canyon and disrupted the
community for thttt days, is designed
to head off a repetition of the costly
event.
It "would require the promoter of a
rock festival or slmilar event to apply
for a city permit 90 days in advance,
complying with a Jong list o f
requirements regarding s a n i t a t i on ,
medical care, food and water supplies,
traffic control and security.
As presented to the· council last week,
the ordinance would apply to gatherings
of 2,500 or i:nore persons. However,
councilman Edward Lorr sought to
reduce the figure to 500.
"MOTHER EARTH" PART OF LAGUNA ENVIRONMENT FOR ONE-NIGHT STANO
Cam Yo ung, Toni Shearer, Mike 'Douglass Do Musical Number In Ecology Revue
When it was suggested this might
Inconvenience other a c c e p t a b I e
gatherings, the council left the matter
of the crowd size in abeyance pending
review by the attorney and addition
of several points proposed by city
department heads. Directive Voide•I
Merit R,aise Question
Considered by Board
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of !ht O•llY PllOf St•!I
San Joaquin Elementary S c h <1 o t
District trustees Yt'restled Monday nighl
with the knotty question of merit or
incentive pay for teachers, principals
and classified employes.
Hearing presentations by committees
ef each of the three types of distric t
employcs seemed only to cloud the issue
further, allhough lhe board discovered
its directive to consider "non-automatic''
salary increases is illegal.
Stu CUnningham. University Park
elementary principal, presented a n
opinion of the Orange County Counsel
.base d on the recently scrapped Santa
Ana Unified School District merit pay
plan,
The opinion indicated recent legislative
changes in the education code while
allowing for merit pay raises do not
altO\V a district to pass over an employe
at raise time.
Superintendent Ralph Gates told the
board "some complicate<.: s y s I e m
providing yr.arly slep increases to all
employes with merit increases to some
could be developed ." He cited the present
S340 yearly increment granted 10
teachers and said that figure could be
divided to grant for examplf. a $40
annual hike to all teachers. with the
remaining S300 reserved for merit raises.
Mother Arrested
111 Deatl1 of Boy
An Anaheim \\"Oman told a psychiatrist
at the Orange County Medical Center
r.tonday that she had killed her 5-year-old
son .
l\1rs. 1.-lary Jo Gale. 37. of 1655 Pampas
Lane, v;as booked on suspicion of murder
pending investigation of the cause of
death of the boy.
His body was found by the father,
Gordon L. Gale. in bed at the family
home.
The Orange County Coroner's Office
Is investigating the cause of death or
P::itrick \.ordon Gale, whose fifth
ltirthday was ~londay.
Coroner's aides said it \vas the second
time in a year that l\1rs. Gale had
reported the death of one of her children.
ln February of 1970, she told police
~he had drowned her daughter Kathleen,
2.
An autopsy showed the child had died
from a throat infection.
Dog Discove red;
Bitten Bo y Safe
Thf' German Shepherd dog which
se verely bit a 7 ·year -old Garden Grove
bov has been found.
Kenneth Cor\vin \\.'ill not have to
nndcrgo a series r:f r:ibies ~hots ::is
the dog ,,·as found to have been
\"'attinated.
The animal ~·as found Monday after
11 day long search by police or the
neighborhood near Parkview School
playground where the incident occurred
Saturday.
6 F llospital Aided
'By Jr,ine Foundation
SAN FRA NC ISCO (UPil -The Jame!!
lr\·ine Foundation a~·arded St. Franc!~
~lcnlorial Hospital $90.000 Monday to
tonlpletr a new x-r:iy facility.
No1v being built RI a co~t of $270,000,
lht1: f:icility will provide rapid x-ray ex·
~o~urrs using automatic film changers
and high voltage beams,
The difficulty with merit pay programs
is the way employes will be evaluated,
all three groups told the board.
Princ ipals said they needed more lime
to come up with an evaluation device
that would be equitable. They suggested
evaluations by alt teachers under a
principal, the principal himself and a
district administrator.
Teachers avoided the merit pay
concept entirely and presented what
board me1nbers felt \Vas a "negative''
approach to the problem -a set of
"steps that must have been taken ''
before a etacher is fired or refused
a raise.
"\Ve're trying lo reward teachers for
extra effort and are looking for
.something that works to reward not
penalize," Board President Gratian
Bidart reminded teachers.
Echoing Bidart's sentiment, Navy Lt.
Phillip Bradfield, trustee from El Toro.
added. "people \Vho put ou1 more should
be rewarded more than the person who
does the standard job for their superior
performance .. ,
Chuck Bo\\.·er. teacher from La Paz
sc hool in {\1ission Viejo, asked, ·'Hou•
do you determine superior perfor-
mance ?''
Te ache rs are ''philosophically''
supportive of merit pay plans. but are
('oncerned about the techn ique used to
judge performance, Bower told lhe
board.
Although equally conce rned about the
means of evaluating pr inc i pa J s '
performance. the four person~
represent ing principals openly questioned
the concept of merit pay.
Such plans have been considered for
more than 50 years but few schools
have adopted them. the principals said.
"No one has found a systern that
doesn't cause friction. IO\\·er teacher
morale and place emphasis on individual
performance instead of tean1 effort.''
Lee Popejay, principal at Mission Viejo's
Cordillera school said.
lie added "merit pay is best for
factories where you i:an see output and
n1easure it .. ,
Trus1ee James A. Nelson. e\e('tronic
engineer from Mission Viejo. t o o k
urnbrage ~·ith this view not i n g
..adminisl rators should have some idea
of a teacher's performance."
Principals questioned whether mer it
or incentive pay would in fact motivate
teachers to produce more. They
suggested "salary points" for attendance
at in·service training sessions as a means
to reward teachers and lmpro\'e the
educational program.
Dave Whitcher, principal at Valencia
School, noted the district already
provides points for attendance at training
workshops and, with Cunningham and
Popejay, he argued that such sessions
had inspired tea chers to perform better,
The classified cmployes presentation
by Woodir R. ti·laybcrry chairn1an of
the non-teaching personnel com mittee
studying merit pay, \\'as highly pra ised
by the board. Ho~·ever, Nelson look
issue with the sample rating rorm<i
incl•tdcd in lhl" proposa l say ing "reliance
on fonns to do the job has not proven
adequate in industry.
"I ask my supervisors 1o set objecllves
and then ~·rite an evalualion of how
their employes have met t h e s c
objectives."
Bidart argued that such a system
would not work for a gardener with
the district ''You could tell him to
plant some lawns wilhin fl certain time,
it could rain for six months, and then
where would he be ~·hen he didn't meet
your objectives?"
No action on the merit or iO('('nlive
pay issue was taJcn f\1onday night Gates
,1·as asked to include the topic on the
hoard'~ f\111reh 3 agenda. when ii i,
expected lhe board will offer the three
cmployc groups a \\.'ritten dlrectlvc lo
offt.r further guidanc~ to the board on
the issue.
'Mother Earth'
Comes to Laguna
Thursday Nigl1t
Lagunans wlhl have been unable to get
reservations for the ecological mu sical
satire "Mother Earth" during ils sell.out
run in Costa Mesa, will have a chance to
sec the show in a special performance
Thursday evening at the Laguna Beach
High School.
Pro-environment People (PEP). a new· .
1.v formed ecological group, is bringing
the South Coast Reper tory success to La·
guna for a one-night stand as a commun·
ity service to bolster the cause of con-
servation.
Described by Los Angeles Times criLic
Dan Sullivan as ''. , • the most brilliant
performance in years ... belongs in the
Musi c Center," the production has been
sold out since it s January opening in the
company's small Costa fi1esa theater,
\\'here its run has been extended through
mid·ApriL Performances throughout the
lVest will follow.
Tickets at $3.50 will be available at the
door before the 8:30 p.m. performance or
may be purchased in advance at Dilley's
Book Store. Fahrenheit 451 Gallery aod
Bookstore. the Laguna Greenbelt office,
216 Forest Ave . or the PEP office, 280
Park Ave.
Ladies to Help
Quake Victi1ns
Ladies of Laguna Hills Leisure World
ha ve mobilized to aid victims of the
Feb. 9 earthquake that is still making
life tough for San Fernando Valley
residents.
A staging area has been established
behind the Leisure World Medical
Building and will remain ope n 8 a.m.
to 5 p.m. through Thursday at least.
Clothing and other items for infants
and school-age children will be
accepted, along with canned goods and
milk.
"PJ~ase remind prople this is urgent.''
sa id a spokesman for the group. which
m11 y continue at another location over
the \\'Cekend.
lftisy /tf a11
The council is exf>'(ted to adopt the
final law both as a regular and an
urgency ordinance. The fonner rtquires
two public hearings and a 30-day wait
after adoption before it b e c o m e s
effective.
An urgency ordinance, which can be
adopted for reasons of public health
and safety, becomes effective
immediately but must eventually be
replaced by a regular ordinance if it
is to remain on the books.
County Jetport
Site Near Brea
Studied by FAA
Orange County's proposed jetport site
in the Chino Hills northeast of Brea
is currently being studied by the Federal
Aviation Administration, according to
county Director of Aviation Rdbert
Bresnahan.
Bresnahan said the FAA is studying
the site for airspace compatibility. He
said if found acceptable. preliminary
construction costs in the hilly area will
be developed to be reported to the Board
of Supervisors. •
The Chino Hills site has possible
conOict with Chino Airport and Ontario
lntemational.
The Chino Hills liil.e: Is the only county
jetport site under serious consideration
at this time. The proposed Bell Canyon
site in southeast Orange County met
with great opposition.
The Bell Canyon site was suggested
ln the Ralph M. Parsons Company report
based on a six months study. The report
also suggested joint use of the El Toro
Marine Air Station runwa ys which has
met with heavy complaint from Mission
Viejo residents.
The Orange County Airport continues
as the county's only jetport and is
subject to flh;i:ht restrictions as to number
per day and hours of departure.
Longtinte City Chief
Of Atlanta Dies at 80
ATLANTA. Ga. (AP) Mayor
Emeritus William B. Hartsfield. who
once said "Atlanta is too busy to h3te ,''
died Monday night of a heart condition.
He was 80.
Hartsfi eld served as mayor from 1936
until his retirement from politics in
1961, except for a one-year wartime
interruption.
Actor Ryan O'Neal will be busier than ever now that he has been
no1nlnated for an Academy A'vard for best performance by an actor
for his role in "Lave Story." O'Neal clowns \Vith a gag telephone on
the set of his latest movie, "The Wlld Rovers."
Tut5dJY, Ftbruar~ 2.3, 1971 ;:;
Wlaoa Pardner
Sheriff Jim Carson (with gun) seems to have the drop on "suspect••
Dakota Williams, who appears to be making off \\'ith one of the many
trophies that will be part of the community celebrations of the swal·
lows return to historic San Juan Capistrano. It's all in fun. Fiesta
week is March 14 through 20. It includes, dances, mock shootouts, a
trail ride and a pageant at the mission .
Santa Barbara Drilling
Claimed Not Dangerous
\VASHINGTON (APl -The Interior
Department released M on d a y a
preliminary draft of an environmental
impact statement suggesting that
r;:ploratory oil drilling: in the Santa
Barbara Channel off California wnuJd
presenl no serious environ men ta I
problems.
The channel was the scene or a maj or
oil spill fr om a runaway production u·ell
t\VO years ago. and department
permission for further oil development
has been vdlhheld since then. alth ough
lhe channel was widely leased to oil
companies which paid more than $GOO
million in bonuses.
The department said that because the
leasing took place before passage of
the National Environmental Policy Act
of 1969, the environmental Impact
statements called for in that act are
not a legal requ irement on the San!a
Barbara oil development.
But it added that It Is issuing
environmental statements anyway lo
conform to the spirit of the act.
An introductory statement said the
draft released Monday was prepared
by staff membefs of the U.S. Geological
Survey and was being released to obtain
comment from other federal, state and
local agencies and from the public.
"It has not been submitted for final
review or approval of the Department
Veteran Fi1·emen
From El Toro
Department Cited
Twenty years ago one or Orange
County's true "service" clubs was
formed, the EI Toro Volunteer Fire
Department.
Last week four members were honored
y,·ho have been with the departn1ent
since it was organized.
Department Chief Joseph Ustarii
remembers his first days wi th the
organization. "In our f i r s t year we
had six emergency calls," he recalled.
"whereas in I 9 7 O the departmeni
responded to 402 calls."
The department was formed February
10, 1951 with the avowed purpose lo
"Protect Life and Valuable Property''
of those in and around the community
of El Toro.
Jn honor of the 20th anniversary,
County F'ire Warden Elmer F. Osterman
presented awards to Usla riz, chief for
15 years: Foster Prather, who was the
department's second chief from 1951 to
1~53: Avelineo Lopez and Richard
Bennett.
Lopez, has held the orflces of first
assistant and second assistant chief for
the past 10 years and Bennet has at
one lime been a department captain.
Also honored by Osterman was
Ramond Sanchez who has been a
member for 10 years and ooe of the
department's captains.
Tool Box, Casl1
Taken in Laguna
Police today are Investigating the
wttkend theft of a $250 tool box and
$18 in ca s h from a Laguna Beach
automobile dealership,
Investigators said the lhlef pried a
sllding glass door to break the lock
1111nd enter Allen Oldsmobile, 1150 S. Coast
Highway. The burglar riOed a vending
machine and cash box , taking $18 In
change, before venturing into the
workshop area of the facility.
The unknown i;uspect then removed
a tool box filled with expensive tool'
belonging to Paul Hase. of 32602
Deadwood Drive, San Juan Qlpistrano.
I
of the Interior or any of its bureaus,"
the introduction said .
Summarizing its tentative findings, the
report said that exploratory drilling in
lhe channel -designed only to locata
oil re serves and not to produce oil -
''\viii not adversely affect the short-ter m
or long-term value of the environment."
"The program is the only way to
evaluate the resource reserve potential
of the federal domain in the Santa
Barbara Channel.'' the report said.
It said exploratory drilling "is a
transilory operation that, in itself, does
not alter the environment."
But it does raise the prospect of oil
production that coukl modify the area's
natural state, the report added.
"Ho"'ever.'' it concluded, "any such
modifi<!ations are not anticipated to be
permanent. Should the option of mineral
c!evclopmcnt be adopted, the platforrri
s1ructures could be expected to rQnain
for 1>eriods of 10 to 50 years dependina:
on n1any fa ctors."
Under the more stringent regulationa
and increased inspection imposed since
the Santa Barbara spill of January 1969,
the report said, a major oil spill from
exploratory drilling is highly improbable,
Should a spill occur, it said.
recreationa l and commercial uses of land
and water in the area "would necessarily
be curtailed until the oil cleanup had
been completed."
But it said there is little evidence
that the Santa Barbara spill serioysly
affected long term biological productltiity
of the area.
Studies on the Jong term effects ()f
oil spills indicated potential lamage but
were inconclusive, the report said.
The exploratory wells, it added, would
be drilled to deeper zones beneath the
channel. and would require additional
steel casing.
Bodhcini Pushing
For Regulations
On W oter Beds
From Wire Service!!
SACRAMENTO -Assemblyman Robert
E. Badham (R-Newport Beach switched
from waterfowl to wate rbeds in Jegisla·
li ve action Monday.
Badham, who got lnlo hot water
recently for accepting, then turning back
a r>er diem payment while he went
duck hunting, is now out to protect
consumers buying the latest sleeping
fad . the water bed.
The Newport lawmaker wants warning
tags placed on the aquatic mattresses.
Badbam authorized a bill providing
for state regulation of the new products ,
plastic shells filled with about 200 gallons
of water and often tipping the scales
at 2,000 pounds.
"How would you feel being awakened
from a sound sleep by a ton <>£ water
exploding beneath you?'' questioned
Badham in submitting the proposal.
His measure would require the weight
of the filled bed be plainly noted:
that the electrical heating unit be foo!-
provf, and that all beds be sold with a
protective outer cover.
Cigarette Warnings
Order.ed in Britain
LONDON CAP) -The British
government today gave c i g a r • t t e
manufacturers Wl!U July to print a healtJI
warning on their packages.
Sir Keith Joseph, tht secretary for
weial i;crvices , told the tobacco men
if they dldn"t fall In Hne by then, the
government would muster 11$ majority
in the House of Commons: behind
legislalio11 lo make the w a r n i Ac
mandatory.
•
•
4 VAil Y PILOT Tuesday, Ftbrvarr 2J, 1971
1fleJu
W~a·shington Sweats Out Laos Thrusts:
If~
'Prai1e t/ae Lord and
pa.• the marijuana. '
Power to
Peop"le
By DICK WEST
In reviewing the prob lems of the over-
devel.oped areas of the world , 1 recenUy
pointed out that the people in these
regions ha ve become almost totally
dependent on electricity.
Even such elementary devices as
fingernail files and sewing scissors have
been electrified, the result being a
massive power drain that threatens t~
ex«ed productive capacity.
Since a power failure would create
utter chaos. J proposed that the United
Nations recruit advisers in under·
de,•eloped areas to teach the nalives
of the over-developed areas how to
perform auch simple tasks as beating
eggs or removing lint from a c o a l
collar without turning on the current.
I STILL BELIEVE such a program
is vitally needed, but I now see it
would have to be handled with great
tact and finesse to avoid offending the
people it Wiiii desi111ed to help.
This point was made clear to me
ln a letter I received from a native
of the northeastern part of the United
States, which ts one of the m06l badly
over-developed areaa on earth.
"We Northea1tttners may be over•
' --_.,
developed," he wrote, "but that doesn 't
mean we don't have our pride. If you
meddling do-gooders will leave us alone,
we can solve the power shortage problem
without out.side help.
"IT WAS AMERICAN technology that
got us into this mess. and American
technology can get us out. All we have
to do is use lt in the right way.
"In the past, technology has alwa ys
been used to promote progress. But
since we are now over<leveloped, we
must start using technology t o
retrogress.''
As an example of how technology can
be used for that purpose. he cited a
phonograph record titled "Shuggie's Old
Time Dee·Di·Lee·Leet·Deet S 1 i d e
Boogie."
THE SONG was recorded in stereo
on unbreakable, flexible vinyl at 33-113
RPM 'l'i. \\'hich is the modem . hi·fi
method . But. accord.ir.:; to its dust jacket.
it "''as "electronically reprocessed to re·
create an old scratchy record.''
"If electronics ca n dn it. there is
no reason "'hy other types of technology
can't make similar strides and reverted
breakthroughs.
''Eventually. we 'll be able lo pull
our5elves down by our owi;i bootstraps."
-UPI
WASHINGTON (AP) -Although the
White House iJ talking down the point
IO fa~. violent North Vietnamese counter
attacks are transforming the South
Vietnamese invasion of southern Laos
into a crucial test of President Nixon's
1trategy of U.S. withdrawal from
Vietnam.
Informed officials concede the atake 5
are becoming higher than they would
have been if the Laos operation had
paralleled that in Cambodia last spring
when the fighting was relatively light.
A major failure in the strike against
the Ho Chi Minh Trail complex, however,
would raise serious questions about the
next stage of the withdrawal program,
scheduled for May , since the whole
disengagement process is based on the
ability of the South Vietnamese army
to defend its country.
State and Defense Department
author!Ues b o t h put out the
administration line Monday lhlt, while
disappointed ovu .the heavy losses
sullered by the South Vletnames.e ln
one engagement, the action is not
regarded as a setback in the over-all
attack against· the North Vietnamese
supply lines and base areas.
Spokesmen, who would not be Identified
nor quoted directly, indicated South
VJetnamese combat ability was being
teated, but implied nothing was likely
to happen to affect the President's
withdraw&! strategy.
other ofliclals, however. are by no
mew ao confident. The S o u t b
lJnknown Hero Hunted
Three years ago during the Tet Offensive in Viet·
nam, this unidentified Marine, at th e risk of his own
life, drove a Mechanical Mule through intense fire
and saved a number of wounded comrades. His
identity remains a secret, but S/Sgt. Joseph Mc·
Laughlin, a platoon leader during the battle, feels
he's a step nearer to solving the mystery through
this film clip. McLaughlin says the unsung hero has
a medal coming.
George C. Scott
Repeats: 'Thanks
But N o Thanks'
SAN PEDRO 0£ ALCANTARA, Spain
(AP) -George C. Scott has sent a
cable asking that his name be withdrawn
from nomination for an Academy Award
as best actor, the third time he h a s
spumed an Oscar.
The cable to 'the Academy of ~1otion
Picture Arts and Sciences said he would
not be in Hollywood for the awards
ceremony "nor will any legitimale
representative or mine attend."
Scott. 43. said today, "I simply do
not want to get involved." "Peculiar
as it may seem, l mean no offense
to the Academy." he added.
He was nominated Monday for his
performance in "Patton."
Scott turned dov;n two previous
nominations for best supporting acto r.
Before the nominations this year he
said he would refuse an Oscar should
it be awarded him . He said the method
of nomination and voting makes the
prize meaningless.
Scott is making a movie in Sp1un.
"Gentlemen : Altho ugh l have receh•ed
no official notification, elements of the
international presis have Informed me
that I have recently been nominated for
an Academy Award. Once again I
respectfully request that you withdraw
my name frQm the list of nominees.
t-.1y position on this matter has been
generally well known for some IO years."
Bribe Suspect Clams Up;
Takes 5tl1 at PX Hearing
\VASHJNGTON (AP) -An Army
sergeant accused of accepting kickbacks
al the GI clubs he ran in Vietnam
invoked the Fifth Amendment 13 times
today in refusing to answer questions
of Senate investigators.
A second witness, a former sales
execuLive for Carlings Black Label beer,
testified he was "snowed" by the charm
of an American sales broker and was
una ware thousands of dollars in Carlings'
promotion funds may have been used
for kickbacks and bribes.
!st. Sgt. Alton Cre~ refused
repeatedly to answer any of the questions
asked him by members of the Senate
Permanent Investigations Subcommittee.
f\1on day, Jack Bybee testified Crews
received a $12,000 kickback when the
clubs he ran paid $120.000 for the stock
of a gift shop concession run by sales
enterpreneur Wi!Uam J. Crum.
Bybee, a former general manager for
t"'O Crum businesses dealing with
military clubs and PXs in Vietnam ,
also testified that the only time Carllngs'
promotion money was used to promote
beer was during a visit by Gordon P.
•·r omn1y" Thompson, as the beer
company's former expert director.
Al all other times the money was
used for kickbacks, Bybee said.
Crews refused lo say whether he had
ever ac cepted any kickbacks . whether
he had ever picked up payoff money
in a Hong Kong bank or whether that
mone y had ever been transferred to
his account in the Unio n Credit Bank
of Switzerla nd.
Thompson teslified he '-''as "deeply
dis tressed" lo learn that Carling money
tha t "''as made available to Crum had
ever been used for illegal purposes.
"You should know tha t neither I. nor
lo my knowledge the Carling Brewing
Co., ever knowingly engaged in or
approved any kickbacks. bribes or
pa yoffs ." Thompson testified .
tr the funds were used illegally. he
said, "then both Carling and t have
been hoodwinked."
"Based on the record of Carling sales
in Vietnam ," he said, •·whatever William
Crum ma y ha ve done for others,
whatever he may have done for him self,
whatever relation. proper or improper,
he may have had with anyone, he did
not do anything for Carling."
Storm Slams Great Lakes
Israel Drafting
T erritory T erms
For Peace Plan
By The. Associated Press
T wo-inch Snow fall Cove rs Parts of Michigan
The Israeli government has created
three committees to draw up territorial
terms and new borders it would ac~pt
in a Middle East peace agreement,
California
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informed sources report. But Egypl has
told the Big Four again that peace
is impossible unless Israel withdraws
from all the land it captured in 1967.
Premier Golda Meir 's Cabinet declared
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,, 21 ·" Sunday that Israel would never return ~ " f 6, 15 ,11 to the boundaries existing be ore the
11 111 .01 June 1967 war bul said it is willing ~ ;t ·'' to negotiate new "secure and agreed"
n n . ..s territorial lines. ~ r, ·" Mahmoud Riad, Egypt's fore i g n
., • .u minister. f\.ionday called in Dona ld C.
~ ~ Bergus, chief U.S. diplomat in Cairo,
1' '' '"" and the ambassadors of Britain , France
:: : .u and the Soviet Union. A minislrY
,, " spokesman ssid he told them the Israel !: ~ ·'1 refusal constituted, •·a challenge to the
J6 » :;r U.N. charter. the Big Four powers and
n ,. .et world public opinion." !f ~ "Peace c•n nol be established ln
M n the are1 without lsraers total withdrawal ~ ~ from the entire Arab lands occupitd In n JD .A1 June 1987," Riad declared. He caJled
~ !; ·11 on the four governments to "face this
H >• 1.00 new l!raell challenge and take up their
:: ~: ,1 responsibililies towa rd peace," the
n !II spoke~man said .
•l "' 'ir The sources in Jerusalem said one t ' •l •r l• HJ border mapping committee Is headed t; · ~ ·11 by 11 senior army offi cer, another by
~• >i .01 key government offic:iRl.s and lhe third
!~ ~ oJ i~ nlade up of experts on international
., t3 law
I
Vietnamese ground-force thrust was
regarded as a risky action from the
beglnnlDg, depending on how the North
Vietnamese reacted. Counterattacks ln
the la1t week have persuaded
knowledgeable oftlclals Hanoi decided to
react with considerable poY.'l!r.
In the most dramatic action 10 far.
a South Vietnamese Ranger battalion
was driven from a hill poaitioo, with
about 300 of the 450 men 1n the unit
killed or wounded.
2·da11 Toll: 82
Field dlspatches said, furthermorP . :
the drive into Laos has been 1talled:
by counter strikes for five straight days. :
However, some of the best informed '.
officials here challenged a field dispatch :
that the North Vietnamese h a v •:
increased the number of vehicles :
operating on the Ho Chi Minh Trail :
from 1,000 to 2,000, :
There is no basis for estimating an y :
such increase in truck volume, these :
50\lr'Ces gajd,
To·rnado Strikes
·Again, Kills Two
FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. (UPI) - A
tornalo struck North F 1 yet te vi II e
Monday, killing at least two persons
and injuring 60 others, in the second
da y of deadly weather in the South.
'"ll looked like London dur ing the
blitz:: said the Rev. Albert C. Bean,
41. after sur veying the damage from
the twister. apparently spawned by the
game v;eather pattern which unleashed
a series of tornadoes thal killed at
least 80 persons in Mississi ppi and
L-Ouisiana Sunday.
One of Bean's sons was on a small
van used as a school bus which was
whipped into the air by the twister,
overturning severa1 gimes, and another
gon watched from the Bean Jiving room
as the front porch of the house was
ripped off.
The tornado cul a 500-foot-wide path
through a business-residential aree in
North Fayetteville near a veterans'
hospital, then skipped along a route
parallel to Interstate 95.
At \Vade, about 10 mile!! northeast
of Fayetteville on 1·95. William Turner.
43, said, "I heard a noise thal sounded
like a locomotive or an airplane .
"About that time, the roof tore away
and the walls began lo fall in," he
said. Turner was hit by debris, but
was not injured. His nine-year-old
daughter, Lela, suffered a br oke n leg.
At Fa lcon, about IS miles from
Fayetteville, the twister blew in the
wall of a gymnas ium at Falcon's
children's home. injuring four children.
The other children were evacuated.
Both the Veterans' Hospital and Cape
Fear Valley Hospital suffered power
failures from downed lines and had to
resort to emergency generators to treat
the injured .
A water tower and a small building
on the Veterans' Hospital site were
destroyed. and trees on the hospital
grounds were uprooted. but the hospital
suffered only some broken glass and
no patients were injure!.
Only a few b Io c ks away, Mrs.
~1argaret Davis. 66. and her daughter.
ri.rrs. Wilma Ra y, 41. died as a result
of injuries when the ir house was
destroyed. ~lrs. Ray's two children were
injured.
At least 17 homes in Fayetteville were
destroyed. and many more badly
damaged . Sever al service gtations and
other small businesses were destroyed
• ": F .
I r
-~
Space ESP?
/
in the path of th'e twi1ter.
Capt Fear Hospital treated 18 tnjurec..
person!, and Womack Army Hospita l
at nearby Ft. Bragg treated more thar. ·
25 tornado victims.
Midwest Hit
By Flooding,
Huge Storm
By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
Parts of Kansas, Nebraska and Jow2
remained virtually paralyzed today ai
winds up to 50 miles an hour pllec!
up snowdrifts that only National Guarf:
vehicles could penetrate .
Tornadoes touched down Monday ir
lndiana. Ohio, the Carolinas and Georgia.
killing two persons at Fayetteville, N.C
'The death toll in Mississippi's Sunda}
tornadoes rose to 80.
Flooding drove hundreds of person~
from homes along the Mississippi anc
Ohio rivers and their tributaries and
even Hawaii was hit by a freak bail.
sleet and snow storm.
Nebraska National Guardsmen w:ed
four·wheel-drive vehicles to provlde
essential services in the storm areas of
their state. Virtually every school In
the eastern part of Nebraska was closed
toda y for the second straight day.
Hundreds of persons were stranded
in downtown Omaha during the Monday ,
evening rush hour. Only one flight left .
Omaha 's airport as high winds drifted
snow across runways.
All highways in Kansas were closed
or virtually impassable. Trains and
busses were stranded and some MO
persons were reported s l u c k on the
Kansas turnpike as snow piled into lf>.foot
drifts.
Blizzard conditions conlinucd Into tht
night in part.5 of Iowa. where winds
up to liO miles an hour whipptd a
fool of new snow. Traffic was slopped
across most of the stale as the sno'"
fell and weather officials voiced concern
that any rapid melting could send swollen
streams over their banks.
The storm 6prouted tornadoes and
heavy rain as it moved eastward. "A
probable tornado" touched down In
Columbus. Ohio. causing heavy property
damage and at least five minor injuries.
Another tY:ister tore the roof from a
rural home west of Greensburg, Ind.
, • s' a
Olor Johnson. a Swedish·born drafting engineer. displays cards which
he used in Extra Sensory Perception test with Astronaut Edgar
Mitchell during the Apollo 14 flighl Johnson said more study would
have lo be done to determine ESP capabilities from space.
!, I,
..
Las Vegas
Brothels
Outlawed
CARSON CITY, Nev. (UPI)
-The Nevada 1£gisla ture
voted Monday to o u t I a w
brothels in the neighborhood
of Las Vegas -a city where
illegal call girls arti about
as difficult to find as slot
machines.
The bill, which went to Gov.
Mike O'Callaghan a f t e r
o v e r w helming legislative
approval, would forbid houses
of prostitution in counties of
more than 200,000 population.
Jn Nevada, that means
Clark County where Las
Vegas is located. Prostitution
By Phil lntirlandi
Tu,sd1y, Ftbru1ry ?l, 1971 DAILY PILOT 5
Extension of Human Life
Quite Possible-Science
WASHINGTON CAP) -By
the year 2,000, the acientist
said, it shou ld be technically
possible to add 20 lo 40 useful
years to an individual's period
of middle age,
Dr, Leon R. Kass or the
National Academy of Sciences
said conservative estimates
from recent research indicate
aging may be a process that
can be man ipulated, perhaps
by such measures as diet and
drugs.
seminar on science and public
policy being held this week
at the academy.
At first, Kass said. longevity
probably \\'iii be obtained by
an individtial anly at great
expense.
"Who is likely to be able
to buy it~·· he asked , "Do
conscience and pr u d e n c e
permit us to enlarge the gap
between rich and p o o r •
especially with respect to
something as fundamental as
lile itself?"
Already, he cont In u e d ,
medical advances have pro-
duced some dehumanization
of life, such as the increasing
number of lonely old people
kept alive by medlca] pro-
gress. "We have learned how to
increate their years," be aaid,
"but we have not learned how
to help them enjoy lbelr
days."
Such forthcomJ ng
possibilities as altering man's
genetic makeup. produclng an
embryo in a test tube before
implanting it in the mother,
the progress t o w a r d the
development of an artificial
placenta, Kass said, raise
great problems.
He said there should be
some klnd of Institutional
control of web. science and
technology.
wo tild remain legal on a local «okay. I'll just ogle you until he'a off the other line."
option basis throughoot the---------------------rest of the st.ate.
Working from an Im a I stu~ies. Kass said, scientists
have suggested a very small
decrease In the temperature
~f a human body could slow
the rate of aging. Body
processes slow down at lower
temperatures.
Bul it is just such dramatic
possibilities in c u r r e n t
biomedical research that raise
profound questions for society,
said Kass, executive direclor
of the National Academy's
Committee on Life Sciences
and Social Policy,
Go to Cotcrt
UPI T•l ... 11111>
CAROL NAGATA, 19, WITH PHOTO OF FIANCE
Fre5no Coed, War Hero Fujii Plan to Wed
"'He's Got Guts'
Cre·w Chief Hero Hailed
HONOLULU (AP) -An American helicopter crew
ch.ief who helped besieged South Vienamese troops fight
off heavy enemy atlacks in Laos for fotir days is kno11.n
in his hometo11.·n as "a boy with a lot of guts."
"An an athlete. he had a btirning desire to excel ,''
says Richard Doi. Lhe former high school coach of Spec.
5 Dennis M. Fujii, 21, of Hanapepe, llawaii. "The things
he did in Laos didn 't surprise us."
F'ujii remained behind at a South Vietnamese ranger
base six miles inside Laos Thursday after mortar fire de·
strayed his medical evacuat~on helicopter.
The four other me n of1 the helicopter crew, three of
them wounded, were lifted out by another helicopter later
that day. Bllt Fujii, also wounded by shrapnel. slayed.
?t1anning a radio, Fujii directed air support of the be-
sieged base. One helicopter pilot reported : "If they get
out of there, they'll have to thank that crew chief."
He said Fujii was the only one in the base who spoke
English well enough to direct aircraft fire on the enemy.
\\ihen enemy rocket and mortar fire drove the South
Vietnamese out of the base inlo a new position, Fujii
went with them by clinging to the undercarriage of a
helicopter. The helicopter was hit by ground fire and was
burning when it limped into the new position. Fujii again
took an active role in helping the defenders until he was
evacuated to a hospital in South Vietnam Monday.
hfore than half the ranger battalion's 450 men were
killed or wounded in the fighting.
Doi said in an interview Monday that the 6-foot·2
Fujii "showed a lot of desire" as a basketball and foot·
ball player at Waimea High School on Kauai lsland.
Fujii dropped out of high school in 1968. He completed
reqtiirements for a diploma after enlisting in the Army.
Heart Studied
Scientists Taking
Look at Exercise
LONDON (UPI) -The in the gym to make spot tests
conductor on a double-decked on heart and lungs, on agility
bus, running up and down all and coordination and on the
day, seems to be less likely psychological and emotional
to have a heart attack than attitudes of the men to their
the sedentary driver of the state or fitness.
vehicle. And on studies like Eldon Griffiths. minister of
this some scientists have sport. and Dr. Roge r
based a belief that exercise Bannister, the firsl four·
is good for keeping the heart mintile miler and now a
Neither advocates nor
opponents of the bi!J thought
it wotild change the ca11 girl
business in the southern
Nevada gambling mecca.
"It goes on an yway ,''
argued Eileen Brookman, an
assemblywoman from Las
Vegas who favors legalized
prostitlllion. "Legalizing it
might Cllt down on some of
the activities on the Strip."
She referred to the Las
Vegas gambling strip where
call girls are everywhere in
evidence.
Frances Hawkins.
assemblywoman from rtiral
Hawthorne, agreed that illegal
prostitution flrurishes in Las
Vegas but said legalizing a
brothel wouldn't change the
call girl business anyway.
Emergency
Alert Test
Suspended
NEW YORK (AP) -The
Associated Press and United
Press International have
suspeRded transmission of
routine lest! of the national
emergency broadcast warning
system until safegtiards are
devised against false alerts.
Last Saturday a fal se alert
went out over the AP and
UPI wires to radio and
television stations and stood
for 18 minutes before the
National Emergency Warning
Center at Colorado Springs,
Colo .• corrected the mistake.
The two news services told
the Federal Commwticatioru;
C-Ommission Monday t h e y
would suspend transmission of
the regular Saturday morning
test message until a telephone
link is provided for
verification or alerts.
5 Minutes
Cost Hirn
$145,000
LOS ANGELES (AP) healthy. member of the sports council, Five minutes before a jury Btil other scientists are not inatigurated the three-year so Stire that exercise does sttidy. On the restilts Griffiths, was going to award Kenneth
any more than make the eier· v.·ill decide \\'hether there Carlsted $180.000 in his la wsuit against a helicopter firm. the clser "feel" better and doei1 should be an expansion of nol, in fact, nrevent or delay sports facilities for the middle· former pollce sergeant settled 1" with the company for $.15,000. a coronary incidenl. certa in degenerative diseases Carlsted. 44 , injured three
Jn a gymnasitim In the began to rise in Britain with years ago in a helicopter crash
shadow of St. Paul's Cathedral the decline in the use of while on traffic duty, sued
a group of v o I ti n Ii er mtiscle power. Bell Helicoter Co. for $500,000,
bus inessmen . hitherto "Are these two phenomena He alleged the craft had 8 sedentary. are taking part in causally related ?" be asked. faulty tail rotor blade.
a govern m en I-financed 'Does man need a certain Superior Court jtirors had
eJt:periment to determine what amount of muscular activity de I i berated since last
part exercise can play. if any, to maintain his metabolic Wednesday before announcing
In prevention of heart attacks. functions in a state necessary Monday they had a verdict.
'Ille study is being directed for health and lo prevent They came into the courtroom
by the sports and medical degenerative diseases? and told the judge they had
research councils under an "Jn other words can voted Carlsted $180,000 blll the
aged to balance the ctirrent eJt:ercise be regarded a s judge said there was no need
concentration on young people, beneficial? if so, l h en to record it now because a
Dr. H. E. Lewis of the opporttinities for active sport settlement had been made out
Medical Research Council said and recreation become a basic of court five minutes earlier.
1he stibjects are divided into social and physiological need "lt"s all part of the ball
three groups. One group of the community." game,'' Carlsted said.
consists of men In the cate· j;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I gory most prone lo heart at·
tacks. a second of men who
have already had a heart al·
t8ck, and the third or seden·
tary per!lons whose health rt·
<'OTd over the three ye"ars will
be mat<"hed against the other
twn as a control.
The e1perlment should help
rJariry the present connicting
d11tJ nn the \'&lne of exrrci•e.
Dr. Mervyn Davies or the
ltttdical Research C o u n c 11
oMe said the incidence of
initial grant of $18,000.
Al ?t-1urray, Britain's
Olympic weight llftinR'. coach,
ntade available hi~ c I I y
gyfnn3sium, which d r a w s
much or Its cllentcle from
the nearby financial district .
for the experiment. A
laboratory has been set up
FAIR
F11I, f.tir, ftcf111I . Tlio11
lltt•• wotelt 111'" 11p f1cto" !11
1pt r1tie11 en th• DA ILY Pll01
1lliferitl p19t •¥1ry ll1y,
COAST SUPER MARKO
F"aturing
MANNINCOS IEEF
Cu1tom Trlmmlnt
fer S,.clal Occ:11lon1
i:' I , . '
OrWr.,. ....... ..,_,,u .....
Delivery
begin•
1 p.m.
673-3510
-.J
f te I
Woman Took Infant Chino Prisoners Fight
To Keep Their Warden 'To Give It Love' He spoke ltlonday to a
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
11-1rs. Wanda Sue Shelbouroe
pleaded innoctnl to a
kidnaping charge Monday and
said she only wanted to give
the baby she took from a
hospital "the Jove I thotighl
she was missing.''
"The baby was beautiftil and
needed love . . . I wanted to
adopt her and I still do,''
she continued.
Mrs. Shelbourne , 23, told
reporters she had gone to San
Francisco General Hospital
J an. JO with a friend who
wanted to get a sprained ankle
laped.
While there she saw 3-
months-old Kema Norris on
a table.
" asked the doctor abo tit
her and he said she was
abandoned and I asked him
if I could bold the baby. He
said yes and I changed her
diaper. For about an hour,
I walked around with the baby
in my arms, making her feel
she was wanted, even a little
bit."
A doctor asked all those
not seeking treatment to leave
the room and Mrs. Shelbourne
said: 0 So I wasn't there to
seek a doctor, so l went in
the other room. Then I just
walked out, down the hall wilh
her. I went out the side door.''
Unab le Lo find work in San
Francisco or nearby
Pittsbtirg, she look the child
to her mother's house in
Norfolk, Va., where police
acted on a lip to arrest her.
Officers who arrested h1rs.
Shelbourne last Wednesday
said the child had gained
v.·eight and was healthy.
FILMS SHOW
MOON DUFF
SPACE CENTER, Houston
CAP) -Photographs Indicate
Apollo 14 astronaut Alan B.
Shepard's ltinar golf game was
more filled for the putting
greens than the fairway.
While Shepard was on the
moon earlier this month, he
used a makeshift club to
whack two smuggled golf balls
over the lunar terrain .
Shepard claimed his shots
went "miles and miles and
miles." Monday, Dr . Gordon
Swann of the U.S. Geological
Survey said pictures showed
one or the golf balls in a
crater near their I u n a r
spaceship.
"I think It's abotil 20 yards
out," Swann said.
CmNO (AP) -Convicts at
the Califomia Institution for
Men aren't going to loSe their
warden, iE they have their
way.
Seven Inmates with a
peliUon carrying signatures of
700 others have filed suit in
U .S, District Court Lo prevent
the stale from transferring
Supt. Waller T. Stone to
another prison.
"The inmates here are
getting a little se!f·respect
since Stone became
superintendent," says Stan
Cohn, serving a l O. ye a r
sentence for grand th eft.
"He's t oug h, btit he
understands us."
Stone is a veteran state
cor rections officer who has
spent mtich of his 25 years
of service at the minimum
security prison here. Seven
months ago he was promoted
to head a three-prison com·
plex at Chino. On July 1, the
state is reassigning him as
superintendent at So 1 e d a d •
prison, an insUtution how;ing
tough felons 130 miJes south '
of San Francisco.
The seven convicts clalm
a violation of their ci"Vil rights
in the federal court complaint. ·
"I've never heard o r .
anything ,like this before,''
says Stone, adding that the
suit probably has litUe chance.
Cohn, a spokesman for the'·
Inmates, said Stone h a 1 ·
started several pro g ram s
which are popular with the,
men. Stone increased from 1
three to five months the Ume .•
convicts soon to be freed can •
work outside the prison In .
the commllnity, o pened .
schools in diving and animal '
psychology and gr a n t e d
overnight vi.sits to prisoners'
wives.
For.~ whcicaft't
clecide·between
full-si•4comfort and small·car
savings-
' •
\
'
alx-cyllnder or V-8).
• Altimlnlzed exhaust r ayatem.
front·fender Inner panels, anti•
introduces a nfJ/tll there? Straight to your nearest corrosionbatterythat laatlonger.;
---· -Oldsmobile dealer's. Ha's got a • Flo-Thru Vent il ation that
Cutlass HanltoP. that new Cutlass Hardto p that gives brings in.outside air for Interior
. you the best of both. comfort ao you arrive refreshed'
This new Cutlats modal, and unruffled. , gn• res you both the lowest priced hardtop Olds • Tou gh blas·ply,belted tires for W • offers, gives you things like: lmpro'Ved tra ction end longer
There you are, caught right In • A big, solld Body by Fis her tread life.
the middle. You want to ha"Ve witt'I room for six grown-up1. • Slde--guard beams In each]
your cake and eat It, too. •A coll1prlng ride, computer· door tor extra security, plus •
You want a car with a lot of matched to each car's welghi long list of other Important OM
room, a lot of comfort, a lot of and equipment. Specially tuned safety features.
claaa, but you al10wtnt the kind body motint1 for a qu ieter ride. So why comproml1e? Get
of 1a"Vlng1 and economy you • A pollutlon·llghtlng engine full-size Olds comfort and every•'1 normally only get In a amall car. that runs ettlclantly on no-te1d, thing that goes with lt-plua low
Where do you go from Jow·lead or regular ga1 {elthtr price and exceplfonal economy.1
Now! Sp1cl1laM9cbing OldaCutlaa Step Ah1adSal1t
Righi now )'OU' Oldli d.al•r ._ oll•rtng .ome wry 1nr.ctlvf 011thtw 111 .... ,, .. ". Ylttri topl Louw,..d f'loodt Whlltwalltl
froatlng for 1 nry anractrw c1Mi. Dutfng till 81tp-MeMI Whffl cllt ctl WhMI openlflO molcll ngsl Plt.*'I nylon cerp&.
aai. on lhl• Qltl• Hucnop, ,,.., otlerin; ll)eCI• N Vll'lll• •nor All your1 1t ,..1 NY!no• 11 Old• dMI•,. rt;ih t now.
Oldsmobile
ALWAYS A S'nPAHll.¥t
• DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE . '
An Academic Question
University of California planners are asking admin·
lstrators at UC Irvine to take another look at the growth
goals originally set for the campus in the early 1960s.
Instead of a full·blown general campus or 27,500,
Berkeley analysts say, it is possible that UC! could be
asked lo hold an enrollmenl ceiling of 10,000, al leas!
for the next 10 years.
Nothlng Is firm yet. University spokesmen char·
acterize the matter as a continuing study of t~e enrol!·
ment piCture. Indeed, a group headed by U~ Vice ?res.1·
dent Harry Wellman is expected to report m detail this
spring on the university's future growth.
But some university planners are saying no'v that
1970 census figur es fail to hold up earlier predictions
of growth potential at UCI and other campuses.
In fest·growing Orange County, t his is a bil difficult
lo swallow. It al so raises some questions:
-How could the earlier projections have been so
far off'!
-What would a cut of two-thirds in ultimate enroll·
ment at UCI mean to the proposed City of Irvine?
• -What about the future of UCl's medical school,
already clouded by the lack of funds to build facilities.
-\Viii UCI be open only to those with the right
combin ation of grades, money and timing in the next
decade?
Some might even ask if the figures currently being
bandied about on the top flocirs of University Hall in
Berkeley are a.imed at shaking a few legislators into
beefing up the university budget. .
A more reasoned view is that the university must
at least look at alternate growth patterns in the face of
the state's continuing money problems.
way. The last major building for which funds are avail·
able is under construction at the campus now. Jn terms
of space limitations alone, an enrollment celling of
10,000 does nol appear unualidic.
However, an enrollment cellinf alone won't solve
any long-term problems, whether they deal with the
budge!, or the wger human needs of those served by
the university.
It may be the UCI campus will move away from
becoming another UCLA. It may have to concentrate on
developing a particular academic strength. as some
other UC campwes already have done. It may have to
find new ways to serve more people.
In shor~ maybe ii is lime lo rethink some of the
time-honored concepts, about high~ education. With
the university's budget ptoblem.s; it may be:a necessity.
And maybe necessity will be th e mother ~ invention.
Thursday Is Filing Deadline . ' ..
A reminder to citizens aspiring· to membership on
local -school boards:
Deadline for filing candidate's papers is 5 p.m.
Thursday, Feb. 25. For~s are available at any school
district office. Occupation showi;i must conform with
that appearing on the candidate's.: voter registratiou.
The papers must be delivered:to the Ora.nge County
Department of Education office at 1104 Civic Center
Drive, Wes&, Santa Ana before the ·deadline. _Thereto~.
at this late date, don't trust po!ital service, even special
delivery; go in person.
. .
• ·~· . . ~..:·~tJ Of course. any outcry over a possible two-thirds re·
duclion in UCI's planned size could be academic any· . '
If you feel you have something to offer the children
of your community, the time is-now. 'UN*~ Tl!Al HM~ !\AT.~ ~u~~, You Vf GOT A )OLIP 80tJ E HE~.'
Everlnsting
Paradox of
Femininity
T11oo0 11 Al Lara"
ll -\s the everlutin• paradox of
ftmininitJ that woman is at her strongest
wbm ab&. usu her ~ to Jniluence
a man. • • •
\\'hat most children don't learn •ntil
~too 1ate is that if they obey most of
' the !lily and unim-; :~r:! r:!~' d~~~~
1hey build up "cre-
dit'• in laler years
for breaking other
rules that have more
significance to them.
(One sOOuld always
5<1Ve disobedienct for
matters of pr inciple
in order to obtain the mulmum eUect. l • • •
There is no love without a little
jealousy, but there is lots of jealousy
without much love. • • •
What this country needs as much as
an)1hing else is less public speaking
and more private listening. • • •
In a domestic quarrel, the grievancts
expressed are seldom the grievances
felt -asha med to articulate their deeper
feelings, the disputant.! focus on some
trJvial conOict that, even if resolved,
fails to rea ch the heart of the matter. • • •
The plain fact of the matter is that
arganized crime in America is financt!d
largely by the proceeds of illegal gambl·
ing: and nobody u·ants to legitimatize
gambling beeause the present set-up is
too comfortable for everyone -including
the be ti or, who wou ld have to pay a
tax on his "'innings if the government
controlled wager ing. • • •
Realists are right in saying that there
ts no sense in love ; where they go
~·rorig is failing lo recognize that there is no sense without It, either. (Like
Dear
Gloom,·
Gus:
Superior Court Judge Bruct Sum·
ner has been honored by his for·
mer colleaguu in Sacramento for
his service as chairman of the
California Constitution Revision
Commission. To think that. give n
less political extremism. Orange
County could have had this fine
Republican statesman in Wash·
ington !
-J. D.
nit ,....,.,.. Nfllct1 ,........ .,...... ""
_. ..... nrr .... •I -. --· tMll' YWf "' """ ......... , OW. Oa6tr ,lllC.
salt. it cannot be taken alone. but must
be sprinkled over most things, or they
have no taste.) • • • •
How often can one use a "white lie"
before it becomes gray and dirty, and
fin ally black, from usage?
• • •
No man really knows how much the
better part of hirmelf can be rationalized
away by the wor~r part until he runs
for office. • • •
It is el.lly lo blame "apathy" for
the failure of a program. yet just as
many projects fail because they are
guided by people y,·ho have far more
enthusiasm than ta ct. • • •
To an urban dvoeller , the most
frustrating aspect of staying overnight
in a small town is the impossibility
of getting anything to e a t after 10
p.m., Wlless you 're visiting with friends. • • •
The way in which young children ca n
feel neglected by over-busy fath ers has
been wryly illustrated by Dr. Erik
Erikson, who asked the young son of
a doctor friend, ''W hat do you want
to be when you grow up?" And I.he
boy promptly replied, "A patient:• • • •
A historian Is general\y a man who
takes his revenge for being insignificant
in the present by assuming an arroganl
mastery over the past. • • •
Most actors want to be directors:
most diretlors secretly yearn to be
playwright:i; and most playwrighll: are
frusb'ated actors -thus the circle of
creative confusion completes itself.
Premarital Counseling
T"o ketp many people from seeking
to dillolve thelr marriages a new law
attempla to prepare them for marriage
by m~lng them aware of'the Importance
or their new status.
A man over 18 but under 21 can
be. married if he get.I -his parent! or
guai<!lalll' wrtti.n opproyal. Such ap-
prcwal ·ls •ISO req Wred in the case of
a 11rl under 11.
BUI' ANY PERSON -.det 13 needs
men than Jmt JUCh approval. The law
roquiru for him and her:
L Tb< otlllefJI in wrlllnC ol lbe parent& « IUf1llanl or each penon who is
-.Ce; or me paron~ or of lbe auar·
dllll. and: I. Tiit approval of 1 1Uperior court
Jodet ..... lfn& pormlssion IO IUch young
-le to many. The court rtquhu couruelln& before
marrlqt for P'?l'Je under II . A
eow«I« talks to them 1bout lbe toelal,
-1<. and pmon1J mpohlibllities
ol lbe mmlqe. Such ...,,,..l!nf may
hOt be ollerod lrom 1ny glv<n reilgloua
dellominallon uni.,. the par\),. oonsenl.
111.l! YOUNG OOUPLE paya IOC' ht
c•unoolln1. However. the court1mnst con-
Jldtr lhtlr abl!tty to pay •-I oth<r
t~inp befcn ordertnt the -nni.
' 'taw' in •Action
' \
Any Caliromla mtarrl•Re.'i by underage
persons without the required parental
consent and court approval can be an·
nulled. 1r such marrlace is between an j'adult"
and a minor under the age of legal
consent, only the mirn" (or his parent
or guardian while th!! minor t1 sUll
under the age of legal consent) can
aue for annulment. Of rourse. Ir there
are other grounds for an annulment,
such u fraud , incapacity, or ln.u.nlly,
either party may sue.
CAUFORNIA ACCEPTS u V11id mar-
riages made in other states which are
valtd under the laws of the other state.
California still retains: an inttrest In
many matters affecting marrh1ge. and
thus will not rerognlie a polyga mous
or fncestous marriage. evtn lhough it
was vaJjd in the it.ate whue It took
placr.
"Nott: California la•'' offer thi.Y
cohtrM 10 ~ou mo~ kllow cbout our
law1.
An9er Over Seutlaeast Asia Defies Rati0ta(ll Analysis
Curious
The anger of the liberals over recent
developments tn Southeast Asia defies
rational analysis.
\Vhat is it that they want ? What do
they really feel ? What would Ibey do
if they were making the decisions abo ut
our policy in Asia?
The answers, I submit, are not nearly
as simple as they seem. The fa tal
y,·eakness of the liberal position at this
point is that it is inherently a minority
position. not because the government
or the majority of the country is
reactionary and warlike, but because
what the liberals recommend could not
be adopted by any American government.
mE ONE CONSISTENT characteristic
of liberal thinking today is that of
dissent-not from any particular policy,
but from any policy that has the slighte!t
chance of success. When it comes to
Southeast Asia, the failure of American
policy has become a primary article
of faith to practicing liberals.
The anger at the present course of
events is real enough. There i1J little
that happens in this country or abroad
that does not fuel their sense of
exasperation and dismay, Their capacity
for dire prediction is limitless.
Liberal
'· .... :
The libtral! are even angry at each
other. The peace movement, they
complain. is dead, kiUed off by the
machinations of a devious administration.
Even the peace bloc in the Senate seems
to be showing new sigM of indecision
and impotence..
AND MEANWMLE, of co u r I e ,
everything is going lo hell in a
handbasket.
The Cambodians, despite all 'the
predictions, are showing sign. of
determination in resisting the invasion
of their country by North Vietnam. The
South Vietnamese are said to be invading
Laos with the object-just imagine it-of
break.ing up Communist supply lines into
their country. And worst of all, the
Americans art helping them, even while
claiming that they intend to· withdraw
the bulk of their forces in Vietnam
as quickly as possible.
Small wonder the liberals f t e I
betrayed. 'This is hardly the BCtnal'io
View of the War
they had in mind when the Senate doves
pushed through the Cooper.Church
amendment last swnmer. And if, in
the end, they were unable to limit the
use of American air power in su pport ing
actions in Laos and cambodia, why
surely the administration should ha\'e
understood what they meant lo do.
BUT WHAT IS IT exactly that they
did intend? Tbe liberal lexicon is a
bit mur-~ when it comes to practical
policy, but a few solid points show
llrough· lhe rlletoric .
They would, presumably, prohibit all
help for Cambodia and Laos and for
the South Vietnamese operating in these
countries. They also would set a finn
date for the end of the American
involvement in Vietnam -including the
withdrawal of all American troops and
support for the Vietnamese army. And
finally, they would pull the rug out
from under the "unrepresentative and
repressive" government in Saigon and
set up in ib 'Place a coaliUon willing
to come to terms with Hanoi. ·
Or would they?
The curious thing about the Senate
liberals is that while they readily make
ruinous suggestions about what others
might do, they show little zest for puUing
such suggestions into effect. The chances,
for instance, of extending the Cooper-
Church amendment to cover the use
of American air power in Cambodia
and Laos are rated at practically zero.
lF YOU ASK THE~f. furthermore,
whether they really would prefer to
see a Communist government in control
in camhodia or Laos, they will say
of course not. If you ask them w h o
would" be served by a ·public timetable
for an American departure f r o m
Vietnam, they change the subject. lf
you ask them whether they consider
the government in Hanoi mo r e
representative and less repressive than
the one in Saigon, they say it is beside
the point.
More than anyth ing else, one feels,
there is an apprehen sion that it may
all work out -that the disaster they
have been predicting so relentlessly over
the years may not actuaUy come about.
It is, quite obviously, a luxury which
only the opposition can afford And the
liberals at this point seem devoutly
attached to their opposition role.
Crosby S. Noyes
in the Washington Sunday Star
Answers to Vietnam War Questions
WASHING TON -Down through the
Vietnam War years, the raw facts aboul
the fighting have gone through auch
a filtering and flavoring process that
the public no longer trusll: the ofUcial
statements.
This is renected in the large number
of inquiries we receive. asking what
is really happening on the battlefront.
We have JOught the answers from our
own competent and confidenUal IOUfces.
Here are the most newsworthy ·replies:
Whal ls the real purpose •f the drive
Into Laos? The aim is to cat the North
Vietna mese supply
line. But unfortun-
ately. most of the
supplles for the pres·
ent dry season had
already moved down
lhe Ho Chi Mioh
lrail network before
the South Vietnamese
struck. Intelligence
reports show a heavy
flow of war goods down the tnflltr1tlon
routes during. the dry months of
September, October and November. Bul
the flow had already dwindled to .a
trickle before the South Vietnamese could
cut it off. This would indicate that the
Communist forcts In South Vietnam and
811 George ---·
Dear George :
I'm a 23-year~ld fa~r and
my sister brought her 20-year-old
girl lrlend borne on a vi.sit This
glrl is silly. Sbe screams when
9he sees a li ttle old pi,, and throws
her arms around my neck. RUN
up to me when she stt.S a cow,
and throws her arms around me.
Ye•l<r<lay •he Jumped right Into
my arms when she saw a horse.
How can t convlnct Mr the fann
isn 't even as dangerous as tht
city?
FARM BOY
Dear Farm Boy :
I've got a good Idea she'11lrtady
learned.
(Problems solved at lowest rates.
Big trade-ins OQ old probltms! Do
not send your / mother·ln-l1w. At
Ira.st don't stnd her posl.qe due. l
'4i' " Cambodia already had received most
of the aupplies that had been intended
for them during the dry season.
WUt b lllt risk that the Laos Invasion
will ncalate the wer? Hanoi isn't
e1pected to mass a large force in Laos
to resis t the South Vietname se
operation. Allied forces, complete with
walling planes and massed artillery, are
prepared to de vastate any N or t h
Vietnamese force that might come into
the open. The Communist atrategy bas
always betn to avoid battles they might
lose apd wail for a chance to attack
a ~able spot. Hanoi ia more likely,
therefore, to strike back elsewhere at
a weak point. The best clue: Communist
forces already have increased the
military pressure on the Royal Lao
government in northern Laos .
ls Rtd Cblna likely to lnttrvent in
Laos? The Red Chinese have warned
that they won't remain indifferent to
the South Vietnamese drive into Laos
but would take "all effective measures''
to aid the Comm unist forces. In recent
months, the Chinese ha ve stepped up
construction of a road that cu" across
Laos almost to the Thai border. The
construction crew and guard force. which
formerly had numbered no more than
3.000 has now bten increased to more
than JS,000. The best estimate is that
the road is intended ar a supply line
for Communist guerrillas, not an invasion
route for Chinese troops. Overt Ollnese
Hang-up on Hairiness
To the Editor :
I am 25 years old and am attending
Ornnge Coast C.Ollege on the Gl Bill,
u·h1ch I find Insufficient to live on.
I spent four years in the service, have
a beard and long hair and am a very de·
prndible ""orker. I htive no doubt thAt t
am 1 betlrr worker than the people (wilh
short halr) hired for the jobs for whidi I
applied.
1 don't want the government to support
me. but I'm getting JO teed oU that
If these people won •t hlrt me to work.
they WILL support me for doing nothing
when I go on unemployment.
EDWARD M. PEARL
T he Women'• Sectlen
To the Editor:
Congratul ations to the DAILY PILOT's
talented Women's Section for once again
coming up with the Caliroml11: Newspaper
Publishers As30CillUon award !
Your news section may be "up town''
but your wornen's section i~ truly the
heart and the life blood of our
community. ·
01' BEHALF OF the: thouaands of
Lettera from readers are welcome.
Normally tutitfr.t ahould conv«u their
mll!'&.SOgei in 300 words or less. The
right to Condll!'n.t'C rcttll!'rl tojit space
or eUminotc libeJ ii rrserve . AU l1t-
Ur1 nnui includf fignaU1.re and maiZ..
ing address. but ncmt1 mau ,,. with-
held on request if auffi~nt reason
is aJ)J>Ortnt. Poe~ wiU not be pub-
lfshtt!
women who 1truggle to run a benefit,
put on a program, launch a daughter,
etc.. etc., may I add our grateful
appreciation for the outstanding support
given all our effort.! by hard working
editor, Bea Anderson and her creative
crew •.. Jo Olson, Jodean Hastings.
Jackie Coombs and Barbara Duarte.
Kudos too, to long suffering photogs.
I~ Payne and Diel!: Koehler. I hope
they au 1ct big raises. They deserve
Ill
MRS. LOREN HEATHER
involvement in Indochina isn't anticipal·
ed.
11 the White House telling the truth
about the absence of U.S . combat troops
in Laos? American ground troops stopped
at the Laotian border. although they
are ready for action in Laos if they
should be needed to help repel a North
Vietnamese counterattack. CI A -1 e d
guerrilla bands of mountain tribesmen
are also operating in southern Laos,
assisting the South Vietnamese invaders.
Technically, the American advisers
area't military men but civilians on
the ·CIA payroll. The Army's special
forces, however. have sent observation
teams across the border.
Ts President Nixon trying to win or
to wind down the Vietnam War? Tht
President is seeking to turn the war
over to the South Vietnamese but te
leave I.hem strong enough to defend
lhemselves. He also wants to p!'<ltect
the withdrawing American troops from
a possible Asian OunkJrk. fie views the
drive into the Ho Chi Minh trail complex
and the bombing attacks upon North
Vietnam as rear-guard action to reduce
Hanoi's o.bility lo mount on offens ive.
Meanwhile, the President has withdrawn
almost all draftees from com b a t
operations. Before the end or the year.
ht hopt.s lo keep all Americans oul
of combat except for air ind artillery
support for the South Vietnamese.
--WWW-
Tuesday, February 23. 1971
The ediiorial page of the Dailu
Pilot seeks to 1nform and slim·
ulatt rtoders bu presenting thi.t
newspaper's opiniom and com·
menklt!J o-n topics of b1tereat
and significa11ct, by providi11g n
forum for the expression of
our readers' opi11ion.t, and by
ri:tsen(in17 tl1e diverse vftll,.
points of i riforrn.id obseruers
and 1pokes1ne11 oti topie.t of lhr
d•¥·
Robert N. Weed, Publlsher
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Tutsday, Ft btuar)' 23, 1971 DAILY PILOT '1
. ' .
C> df. iscounl
OUR NAME . MEANS DISCOUNTS EVERYDAY!
WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF QUALITY MERCHANDISE AT LOW DISCOUNT PRICES.
PIKES lfflCTIYI WID. THRU TUES. flHUART 24 1\rw MAllCll 2. 1971
FRESH
KUMQUATS
29~
'
TOM~:
TURKEYS
' .. : ~··, .··· -t:-;. ,·' ,,. . ··~ . . . ,_, •. ' -.f.~, ·'
• •• • c ,·. ~
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CORNIS'H ~~~~ozrn
. ~ . I LB.20Z.
GAME HENS
STEWING
CHICKENS
FRESH
WHOLE
BODY
' . . . . ~· ........ .__ -. ;,e:·. ·~ .. -. ··.. . . ,\ ..... \'.'-.... .. ...... l" . . . . .. -..
0 ' " -~-""'"'' ,,•.;l, .;, ..... .s._. .. ' '
·J ••• ' , •• \i·C ..... i"• ...,.,.,~~·· ~•
LENTEN SEA FOOD SPECIALS
FRESH PERCH FILLns ' 79~
Westem Oysters:=... 79•-
SQUJD · ::.~.. 49.t.
GOLDEN RIPE '' . . . . '' . ' -' ' . . ---,, __ ..... fr ··1.· '
""' ~ -B:ANANAS EGGPLANT LARGE 10t. ., . -
c ~ ~ v ., _..,. ·--' '
PREMIUM RUssns
lb.
19~.
' . ' --;. . -' ·~
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CARROTS 1ltCIUO12c .. , ...
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• • • • • ' 1 •
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V bl """"'" 1oc egeta es : ::::~l•CAllm . LI.
VARIETY OF COLORS
PLASTIC FLOWERS
YOUR
CHOICE
VALUES TO 49•
'AC0UIH'SDl'l'• 10.SOZ.
A NJ OU
PEARS
GEISl.ER• 5 ll. MG
WILD BIRDSEED
~ , OHlOl<tLY••.750L•fMILYSIHME
· 'TOOjHPASn 44c
1 DRYSKIN
~ LOTION
·~' 93c . ... @43c
® MICRltilel802. ooc~n~r•~•LY ~~ .!* ~MOUTHWASH ~~!!~. ~ .... :~ -\8) IXTIAITllNITH . 109
ASSORTED COLORS
'oiNCH @ii6'~c)"
PLA YB ALLS .::.-o KETCHUP .
66' ®=~'";-~
'
ST'""'IMOUISDAllYi 10 • .-.t•t,.a.SAT.&SUfll.11•.-... ?J.-.
'•, • ' -· • • ,. o• ._, I \• ... , ·"'' ... . ~ ' . . . . -
SHOULDER~~~~ss
CLOD ROAST
CH-UCK FIRSTCUi
USDA CHOICE
ROAST
ST ANDING ~i:«HO~E
RIB ROAST
-. .:· ~· ............
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® 4STA•
M DISCOUNT
ARE EXTRA SAVINGS MADE
POSSIBLE BY SPECIAL PUR·
CHASES FROM THE MANUFAC·
TURER & PASSED ON TO YOUI
c
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lb.
c
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c
lb.
GOLDEN MEAt/CNI
DINNllWAIE
SOME f&D SOME FM
STORES DtscOllT STOllS 19Clllf
CMAlGl PIKI . OM'iE 111C1
=-----LUNCH MEATS
® HORMELCHILI
® ORANGEjuicE
LAND 'O flOIT •I OZ.
SLICED Lunch Meats f1*'I ClWflllD • 16 OL
~American Slices
1121AL•fAMll.Y PACI
FOREMOST ICE CREAM
.»· 45'
.w 69'
j!• 85'
)9• 35'
,19• 79'
pf• 63' r1*'I MOITON. 21 or •• flOllM
~Macaroni & Cheese ~· 39' r1*'I TllUWltt •6 OL • FROrllll ~ORANGE JUICE ~· 21'
120t•FROZEH }fc 41c
~ ~IYIDfl<1•11 OL • FIOZIM ~Junior Pizza~-=-J!• 65'
~ •.ClllT•IMUIOI .. ~KOTEX....... V' 114
@FAeDETERGENT ff• 68c
@1ail6ii'RiNK'... ;n 1n
141COllT•AStelnD
@YIYANAPKINS ~ 31c
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~CRACKERS . 3f• 33«= ~ "tDOlllYAUIYIAIKM•IMIOL
r1*'I Salad Dressing -,5• 65c ~ TDSUMPIM1•4601.
f1*'I Grapefruit Drink "• 41c ~""" "' ... ®~~;;;;o ff• 33«=
PUDDING
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1S v~\.1 PILOT
U.S., Canada Ships
War Games Set
Off Area Coasts
SAN DIEGO !UPI/ -A
to.day first flee t exercise
involving 47 American and
Clnadian ships and 22 air
unUs was started today off
the Southern California coast.
Called Adm ixture, t h e
exercise will involve 20,000
navymen in ships and aircraft.
Vice Adm. Ray Pett, First
Fleet Commander, said lbe
exercise will mix together all
phases of naval operations and
1,1·ill test the skills or crewmen
and the capabilities of
equipment.
Petl;t.uid tht operations will
determine first fleet readiness
and results will be shared with
othe.r neet cemmanders in the
Atlantic and Pacific.
Deputy KiJJs
Youth, 18
SANTA CRUZ (UPI) -A
sheriff's deputy shot and tilled
a teen-age youth who be said
aimed a pellet gun at h1m
~1onday during an attempt to
burglarize a grocery store. u: Charles Schertr of the
Santa Cruz Police Department
identified the slain youth ss
Gary Neil, IS, of Santa Cruz
and said the ratal shot WU
fired by Clifford Bond or the
Santa Crui County sheriff's de-
.,artment.
John Olsen, a baker, had
run to lhe sheriff's office
saying he had uen a man
1,1•ith a gun as he entered
the grocery acre1s the street.
Df!ath Nati.,.,.
COL•O•OY•
Artnur L Cot.trove. Aet n. DI IMf
"•r>Dnl, COilll Mt-ti. l\lrYlwcl IJ'I' "111,
Ft~J>CH; -btol.1!«1, 111•1 E. ....., f yt rdl Cot.,row, both of Ciiio. Strv-
kt1 "Ill be l>t!ld Wei:lnnoill', J 1.m.,
Btll era.Nwtl' Ch-I. lnltrmtnl, Hlr·
b&r lllHI Mtonorltl ...... ••II l •OIO'lllY
N.0'111try, D!...:!or1.
K•lllON•N
11i 1d 11rd W111el' H1lnonon. lll N. flll!t ll,
l..OI A"'tln. St,..lt H Pflldlftl fl 5htlttf
Ltvvftl B4'ld! N\Qr1111rv.
Ml•IHn
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V!tw C111pel. lnt.,rn...+, fltclllc Vltw
M"""atlot flt!"lt. ..tclllt Vlt• -1utty,
DlrK!Of"I.
'"'" Glot"d ThMIPIDn J.i1. 1sm Li i lolltl,
Lt-• Hl!l1. 01t1 DI dMlh, l'tbr\ltrl' JI.
SUl'Y!Yed br IWI tollt. G. T. Jttl, of
Lt9Vlll Hlll1, t rod J1mt1 Jtlt, U.S. Air
FOl'U 1n G1rm1nrr -· dtuthlt rt, Mr1.
G!llllV• Btnltmln, lraoklvn; Mn. Ju1nlt1
L.wett. Los Antalt11 tllltr, M-.. Ftrn
Wooelv, Lubl>ort, Tt••t: 11 er1nclchlldr1n1
, trlll-9ranOCl'lllll ..... St NICet, WtClnt•·
d1r, 11 AM, Shtfftr l1•11n1 I H Ch Clll~
1!. lni.tmenl. Amttl11o, Ttltl. S"-tlt r
L•9Vlll '"di Morl111N , Dlreclor1.
McCOIKLI
The Navy said 42 U.S. ships
and five Ccnadian vessels will
participate. Units from San
Diego. Long Beach, S a n
Francisco, Se I t t I e and
Bremerton, Wa.sh., and Pearl
If arbor were lo be involved,
The e1.ercise, the fltst large-
sc1le maneuven of the year
ror the nrst Oeet. will divide
parttcipating units i o t •
friendly "Blue" forces and
aggressor "Orange'' forces.
While Blue surfact and anti-
submarine force' o p e r a t e
against O r a n I e opposition
forces at aea , jet fighters and
attack aircralt from the
aircraft carrier USS Midway
will ny sorties to inland
target.s where they will be
opposed by aggressor air craft
Throughout the exercise,
U.S. and Canadian destroyers
and frigates wlll Ore en
bombardment tara;ets on San
Clemente Jsland and various
surface and air targets.
Surface-to-air ml!slle:1 will be
launched a g • i n s t airborne
targets and rniMile firinits will
take plaee on the Pacific
missile r&n1e.
Resort Road
Costs Soar
At High Rate
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
cost of building • highway
into the proposed Disney ski
resort at Mineral King has
jumped from $25 million to
i,u million in three years,
atate officials said today.
That will go up at the rile
of $1.5 mill ion a year through
inflation while the U . S .
Supreme Court de c Ide I
whether to allow Walt Disney
Productions to build t h e
controversial resort in the
Sierra Nevada.
The cost would rise to M1
mililon by "the earliest that
actual constrvc:tion could t&art
-about three years from
now.
And a Southern California
legislator said be will try
. again to slop construction of
the rGld altogether.
DOTTED LINE SHOWS 4.4-MILE LAST VOYAGE OF QUEEN MARY
Ob .. rvatlon Points Shown; Ship to Be Permanently Anchored
Anti-subversive Unit
Tone-down Suggested
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
Two Democratic Senators iay
the investigative powers of the
Senate's controversial fact-
linding subcommittee on un-
American activities ought to
be tooed down but the panel
should pursue its work,
However, the ranking
member of the 3ubcommi1tee,
Republican Sen. H. L.
Richardson , believes the unit's
invesUgative authority should
be expanded to include a
seriet of statewide hearings
on subversive activities.
"We have riiore need of this
committee than we've eve r
had before, because there is
infinitely more overt milita ncy
with groups planning I o
overthrow the government."
Richardson told a newsman
Monday.
But Senate leader James R.
Mills said the panel's
activities should be redefined
so it is more legislalive-
oriented I n recommending
proposals to bulwark national
defe.DR. . ,
The San Diego Pemocrat
said the panel in the past
has failed to fulfill i ts
legislative responsibilities in
simply holding hearings and
making reports on alleged
subvcrsivts.
"The way It was operated
In the past was not in keeping
with I.he way a legislative
committee should operate,"
Mllls told an interviewer. He
also denied reports the
subcommittee w o u I d be
abolished.
Mills said he felt the panel
should propose legislation lo
improve national security, if
it was to be considered a
valuable unit. He a Is o
criticized the handling of the
data collected.
'Adulthood'
Said Needed
Jn Vote Law
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A
proposal to lower the state
voting age won't be put to
a vote unless the ballot
proposition also gives 18-year·
olds all responsibilities of
adulthood, an A s s e m b 1 y
committee says.
The Ass em b I y Judiciary
Committee agreed Monday to
the ballot proposal, taking no
action on four measures which
only lower the state voting
age. They agreed to hold a
second hearirg on t \V o
measures that grant majority
for all purposes at age 18.
Assembl y man John
Vasconcellos (D-San Jose),
author of one full majority
measure, said he didn't think
volers would lower the voling
age without a guarantee
youths would also get the
extra responsibllltiet that go
with adulthood.
Last Voyage
Of Queen
Set Saturday
Powered by nine tugs and
sporting a new paint job, the
Queen Mary will move 4.4
miles across the Port of Long
Beach early Saturday morning
to her pennanent berth at
Pier J across the Los Angeles
River channel from downtown
Long Beach.
The Queen Mary will leave
Pier E, her berth since her
arrival in Long Beach Dec.
9, 1967, al 6:30 a. m.
Approximately 21h: hours later,
the tugs will guide the 81,000-
lon ship alongside her new
pier and parallel to a
protective rock berm - a
precision maneuver under the
circumstances because there
wlll be only 30 feet ot
clearance an either side of
the ship 's 1019-fool·long hull.
Actress Greer G ar s on ,
Academy Award·winrn!r in
1942 for her role in "Mrs.
Miniver'' and twice a
passenger on the Queen f\fary ,
will accept the first line from
the ship at Pier J •' a $9.6
million fa cility with parking
for 4200 cars.
.'4 •
Reagan Termed Clear Victor ·
In First Medi-Cal Skirmish
SACRAMENTO ( U P I ) -
Gov. Ronald Reagan has
emerged the clear victor in
his first fight with the new
Democratic legislature over
Medi-Cal.
Now the next move is up
to him, And he plans to make
It March 3.
Reagan on that dale will
addresa a, rare joint session
of the legislature to personally
unveil his long-awaited
"refonn" proposals for
welfare and Medi-Cal.
The governor won his first
test of strength with the
legislature's new Democratic
majority Monday when
Assembly Republicans
rejected a bill rescinding the
administration's economy
cutbacks in the fl billion Medi-
cal program.
Backers retained a thread
of hope for llie measure when
its author, Democrat i c
Assemblyman John L. Burton
or San Francisco, served
notice he would s e e k
reconsideration of the vote
today. But it seemed unlikely
he could muster e n o u g b
support to revive the bill.
The proposal needed a two-
thirds house majority, or ~
votes, for passage to the
·Senate. lt went down on a
45-J2 vote.
All no votes were cast by
RepubUcans. F o r t y • t w o
Democrats supported t h e
measure along with three
Republicans E u g en e
Chapple of Cool, Ken Maddy
of Fresno and Ernest Mobley
of Sanger.
Assembly Republican
Leader Robert T. Monagan
of Tracy argued that the
Legislature ''for too long has
indulged in stop-gap Medi-Cal
solutions" such as Burton's
bill and should enact a broad
* * * * * ~ Medi-Cal Plans Told
To Federal Officials
WASHINGTON (UPI) lo1,1·ard common go a Is,''
Gov. Ronald Reagan has given agreed Richardson. He said
Nixon Administration officials it would be "premature to guess at the problems thal his "best sales pitch" for will arise."
overhaul of California weUare Reagan and the Nixon
and Medi-Cal programs. Administration often are at
At a news conference with odds over welfare. T h e
HEW Secretary E 11 i o t governor is an outspoken critic
Richardson after an hour-long of the Presidenl's family
private meeting with federal assistan ce plan while the
officials Monday, the governor federal administration has
said, "11.·e are all hopefully threatened to cut off $1 billion
aiming at the same goal of in aid unless Ca I i for n i a
better care for the destitute."' conforms to federal welfare
He said he asked for the law.
reform measure.
But Assemblyman L e o n ""
Ralph (D-Los Angeles), said
"I think it's ridiculous for
us to expect people who are
sick, who need care now, to
wail until we bring about
'refonn.' "
Republic.an Assemblyman
Gordon W. Duffy of Hanford,
the party's Medi-Cal expert,
sald "I share with Mr. Burton
his deep concern for lhe health
conditions of the poor. But
I do not share his enthusiasm
for this bi!L "
He pleaded with his
colleagues, "don't vote for a
bad bill simply because it was
put in for the right reason."
Just before the floor debate
-the legislature's first of
the session -Duffy's
bipartisan Medi-Ca l
investigating c o m m i t t e c
issued a report critical of
some administration cutbacks.
The Assemblyman
introduced an urgency bill
re commended by the
committee to restore some
benefit! to foster and crippled
children and local mental
patients. The measure also
decreed that any costs shifted
to county taxrolls this fiscal
year because of Reagan's cuts
would be paid for by the state.
Cou11t y Post
To MacLean
SANTA ANA -Dr. Donald
MacLean, 43, has been named
to head the Orange County
Department of Educ at i o a
marine projects office.
Dr, MacLean repla ce s
Ronald Linsky who pioneered
the county school s program
which includes operation of
two sea-going laboratories for
use by county school children.
MacLean was m a r i n e
science coordinator for th~
San Diego County education
depa rtment and authored a
recenlly state-adopted text-
book in science.
meeting to seek the1---:~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiij;:-
administration's support for DANISH FUlNITUlf SWEDISH CRYSTAL
his y,·eJfare reform program, lllDAL l1Gl$TIT CHINA l STIEL which includes a b u d g e t
cutback of $700 million.
"We made our best sales
pitch without requesting a
defini te co mm it m en t,' •
Reagan said, noting that no
conflicts of any kind surfaced
during th e meeting.
"It was a very ha ppy
discussion of a joint federal-
atlte enterprise d i re c t e d
!-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
donr;-~e
-...~ 2640 E.CouU·llll!l•i Corono cler MDf'
Do;ly 9 :)CHoS:)I Tel: 644-7340
l•ndolf' 11to5' &tlA-M..torCna.ga
CAdv•rll•trntnl)
Mrs. Patrkl• Vtr Mt'Col'tllt . ChtHI ,,,.._
let I ncl !nlumtnl, Wl'dl'lltdlY. lO:Jll ,.M,
WtsJMlnt1tt Mtrnorltl "'"' Mor!Ut ... tfld c..-i .. ·r. F1mur Mi9'Vt1t1 '"°'' •lill!n1 to ml~t m-1•1 cC111lrlbutlon1, •lttst
contrlbul• IQ l!'le f11 trkl1 McCorlllt ,,., ..
morl1I Fwnd, clo Tiie Unlv1nltr unntd
Mflllodl1! Chl/tcl'I, lrvlM , C1lll.
The Supreme Court agreed
Monday to hear the Sierra
Club's suit to b Io ck
construction or ?..iineral King
in part of the Sequoi~ Game
Refuge in Forest Service land
surreunded ()D three sides by
Sequoia National Park. A
decision ls not expected be fore r-----------------------, somettme in 1972.
The public ls invited to
watch the berthing of the
Queen Mary from sevtral
vantage points in the Pier
J area. The southern terminus
of the Long Beach freeway
and the six·lane Queen's Way
bridge from downtown Long
Beach are the principal access
routes to Pier J . Traffic
officers will route visitors to
ample free parking at Pier
J and at the Long Beach
Arena across the channel.
Road Repa,-ing
Contract Given
Revolutionizes
Denture Wearing McO&Nt•L
'"'Int 9 McOlnlel. "" 77, or 7'1.._0
v 11 M1rlpcs1 Etsl, Lt•unt Hlt11. Dlt1
cl 111111\, F~'Y ti Survl"""' lw •Ill.
1t1lto1rlrw; '"' d1111h11r1, Jott""lne Mtl· .on, Arllnot"". V1 ; MltY McOt nlt'I, Al-
'°""brt; mo1,..r. Jo1eph1nt McD1nlt l. LI·
l llM Hiii,; lhr•t Qr1nd<hl!dr111, M
t rMl-9rlJldChi'ld•l'll. $e,..1c1s, Thur1d1r,
7 PM, 1"1clllc VllW Chu•t !. l<lut""'tnl.
"•<Ilic VI"'° Mtmorl1I Ptr~, OlrKttCI bJ
P1cltlc V!tw Mc>rtu1•Y
MILLll
"""'" L. Mll!tr. nn w. Cot1t Hilh•lt, N1"*110rl 9ttch. O.!r ot dtlth, Ftb. 11.
SuN IYtd bt hu1t11nd. Erne.1 L. M!llt•,
Nr.,._I 111ch1 cltuohlrr. Mri. J!ldl!h
Annt ...... 1 .... "'•••ndtll , Vlt1lnl1; IWO '°"'· Jelfrev l~nn M!lltr. "'''""°'' 811ch1 J imtl L•wll Mlllu . U.S. Nl....,.I lwo
or~ndchl!drrn; """ t1ro1nu ; ont 1lihr. i:unfftl ...... 1, ... WednU dlY. 1 PM. P1cl·
!it Vlt.,. Ch1Ptl, •llh llrv. l \I To•no.,.
.,111cti!lnt. lntlr-ftl. Ptclllc Vl1w M•·
morlt l P1r\. 11111 Co1l1 Mt11 Mort111rv,
ARBUCKLE & SON wm-curr MORTUARY
U'J E. 11t.b SI. Cotti Men -• BALTZ MORTUARIES
Coreu del Mir , --OR M<SI
001ta Men ·~.... ~IL t-UU • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 Broadw17, Col'll Meu
1J Wiii • lfc()()JIM!Clt LAGUNA
BEACll MO~ARY 1m~ea.,..w.
IM-1111 . -
PACIPIC VIEW \
~IEMORIAL PAlllt c._, 111.-., .. p_o;.r: Dm.
N...,.n ...... Collltnla -••
PEEi'. FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNlt!W.
BOMB
'Ml Bolal Att.
11--' ""'1SU • SlollTll5' MOJl'[l}ARY
117 M• II.
Rulll"'° Budo -
Robert H. Ramey, district
highway engineer for that
area, said the original $25
mUlion cost of the 20.>mlle
long two-lane road bas
increased since early 1968 to
about $.18 mi!Uon with inflation
adding lo that by four percent
a year.
The State Division o I
Highways has held up wo~k
on the road -not even tn
the design stages yet -while
legal action aagtnst the resort
ls settled.
The Sierra Club contends
the project w o u I d do
irreparable harm to the area
and that the U.S. secretaries
of agriculture and interior
ei:cteded their authority in
authorizing it.
Youth Buried
Alive After
Stab Attack
'Do~' Drafted
2 ,000 Patients Protest
SAN ANDREAS (UPI ) -Dr. Thomas Werner is on
his ''ay to Vietnam -and many or his 2,000 patients in
this hamlet in California's rugged mother lode country
The Queen Mary will be
In view along the eastern edge
of Pier J from about 8 a.m.
She is ex pected to be secured
an hour later.
Only workmen will be
permitted aboard lhe Queen
Mary until she opens for
guided tours in mid-April.
aren 't too happy. R d' h' \Verner, 33. one of Lwo doctors in town, reported Mon· a 1ograp J C
day at Camp Pendleton for three weeks of training before
he'll shipped to Southeast Asia as medical officer for a Gear Lease 01([ unit in Seabees.
He 1,1•as dratted despite his own protests and those of ORANGE _ The fi ve-yearl a good number or his patients. They wrote letters, signed h . ,
petitions and made calls to Congressmen, the Department lease of r ad i 0 gr a P 1c1 of Defense and a White House manpower advisory board. equipment for the X-Ray [
They argued that his services were needed in Cala-Laboratory at Orange County
veras CoWlty, a rugged chunk of the High· Sierra made Medical Center al a cost 0!1
famou s by Mark Twain's jumping frog. $319,64.2 has been approved byl
"l\tany of my patients '1•1IU have to seek medical care 1he county Bo a rd ofl
out of the county now," said Wemer before leavln1. He Supervisors.
said he was the family doctor for 2.000 persons -a good One unit will be leased from
sha~ of the county 's 13,585 residents. There are nine other Van Water and Rogers for
doctors in the county, butseveral are semi·relittd and $2,007 per month or a total
treat only a small number of patients. of $114,771 and another will
Werner, who is married and has four daughters. said be leased from the Profexray ,
SANTA ANA Irvine
Boulevard between C u I v E' r
Drive and Jeffrey Road will
be resurfaced under $ 31,095
contract awarded by the
Orange County Board of
Supervisors.
The Sully Miller Company
of Orange won the contract.
County engineers estimated
the cost of the project at
$36,150.
SPIRAL SLICED
WHOLE: Olll HALF
Tht nureat tbin1 to havin1 your
own teeth ii Jll*ible nOtJ with a
plastic uum di9COTtry that actu-
allJ hold1 both "uppers" and
"Jowen" a -..,.,. jlfl•i•U.
It'•• reTolution1r1 di1covtrJ alltd FIXODlln, for daily home u1e. (U.S. Piit.· f3,003,988) With
F1xoosm many dentu.re wearen
may eiit. tpeall:, l•uih. wit.Ii llttlt •orrt of dentu.ret comin1 IOOll.
P"lXOOCH't form1 a tlutic mein·
bran1 t.b1t help. abeorb tb1 ahoc:k
of bit.lrif IDd dltWIDf-belPI pro-
l«t rums from bn1Wn1. You m•1
bitt harder, ttt more n1turall1-
tnio1 apples, c.om-on·the-cob.
FlltOOL'IT m1y htlp you tpeak
mort t!early. be more at t1111e. The apeaal penc1l·p01nt d1tpen1tt
]tlt JOU spot FIXOOF.NT w1UI pre-c1siM , .. 1111tn1 'Mtdtdl
Ont •PDlication Pl•Y l11t round tbe clock·. Otnture1 that fit art
esll!l'ltiaJ to health. See your dentist
regularly, Get t1!y·to-'111t Frxoor.r.'T
Dtnlure Adbt11vc Crt •m at 111 """ """""'
HAMS
" • • • So Good It Will
Haunt You 'Til It's Gone"
O~r toam• •rt "'' ffnnl ce~fld 10-1 POr11t'1 -OU• ,.,w dry
curlno method, rttl WI-Ill hlctory and t~!e-'11 • I and
.,_, oven llaltlnll ho!My •n •Pk • 01111 ••• ""''~ "''
-•kl. $o dtlklc111 I nd tppttl1lnt *I lllSI -"'"" • to lmprovt 1!'1!1 product WW llttn rntkln; tor 34 yu 1 ftd
lllO, '"'"' "" to bol!On'I tO tllll •Kh dtlKllDll 11~ fi n bt runovtd llf!ortlntly. Comp11t1ty Hlitd •"II rttOt O•-
dtr your HMty 8aktd Ht m toOty, t n 1d'ttnl11r• In , ~,mtnr you'll n1v1r fo rotr.
he would retum here after his two-year stint as a Lieuten-Division. Litton l\t e d I ca 'I Rn AIL ITOJlll
ant Commander In the Navy. Products for $3,414 per month l70D E. Co••t Hlthwey, Corona lllol Mo~7l-to00 '=============================================!__~or~•~f~i ,~e~-y~e~a~r~t~ol~•:l~o~f~l2~0~4.~87~l~-l!,,~~~;;::;::~~::;::::;::;;:::;;::::;:::;;:::;==,,;:''~"~S~.:,;•~roo;::k;h~•~r•;t;,;;A~na;;h•~l;m;,,,======~';,,_;;'•~•~I=:! BOULDER CREEK (UPI) I~
-Police waited today for
a young man who "'' stabbed
and buried alive in iht S11;nta
Cruz Mountains to recover
from su rgery so they could
question him about hit ordea1.
I>ennll Saylor, 21, Sin Jose,
Calll.. w11 reported In
satis factory condition
following JUrg.ery for aeveral
knife wounds In the chest. and
cul! on the head.
Dtputles said he knock~
on the door or a campaln&
rtsort a few miles north or
Boulder Creek late Sunday
ntghl Re wa1 bleeding Imm
his wDWlds ind hls clothing
WllS covered wlth dirt.
Searchera combing tht aria
round a •hallow grave on a
mnote hUl1k1e in w h I c h
Saylor-apparently was buried.
Detectives aald they had not
been able lo queaUon Saylor
extenalvely on hit ordeaJ or
who JI.I! attackers we rt
becauM he WIS rushed Into
sur1ery at Santa Cruz Gtneral
Hoipltal.
The 8antl CM mountains,
bout 50 mJlta aouth of San
FranellOD, are filled with both
resort anu and h I p p I e
communes.
Choose One of the Many
Coast & Southern Federal
Offices to Serve You:
'fr llAINOPPtCl:lth l HUI, LOI~• ll2S-13&1
W1LIHIAI et QIU.MIRCY f'LACI: 3133 Wl11h 11'9
BIVCI., LA •a.1285
LA. CMC CIMTU: 2nd ' Broadway . 821-1102
AHUHnNQTON l!ACH: 111 Huntlnglon Center.
(71 4) 8117-1047
aANTA ANA LOAN llJMCI! AGIMCY: 1906 N, MtJn St.• (714) 547..f257
flMMTA MONICA: 711 Wll1hlr1II/Yd.•53-07 ...
'ft 1AN NORO: 1oth I P•clflc • 131·2341
•WUT COVINA: EMtl•nd Shopping Ctr.• 331-2201
11"P.t.HORAllA CITY: ie11 Vmn Nuyt Blvd.• 892-1171
•TARZANA: 11111 Ventura eoultv•~ • MM614
•LONO llACH13rd I loc:u•t • 437•7411
*Open SltutdQ1; -9 .,.. lo t pfl Dally Houri-9 tm lo 4 pm
ASSETS OVER $800 MILLION
Art Linkletter Shows You
a New Way to Beat Inflation
... Just Join
&lie IJ!Sidets
Oub
With 1 $2.500 bal111ce Jn your aavlnga
•ccount, you are •llglble to become
a member. Subltanllal 11vin!3• ire
available when purchulng many lttm1
Including automoblles, fumlture,
1ppU1nces, Jtwelry. Plus many
frte aervlc91 -money ordera,
nre depo11t boxn, etc.
Coast & Southern Federal
Offers You These
Highest Prevailing Rates:
COll,OUNDID DAILY AHD PAID QUAATVILY.•
5.00°1°-5.130/o
Passbook: No Minimum.
5.25 °/0 -5.39"/o
Thl'H Month Certificate; No Minimum,
5. 7 5 "l•-5.92 "lo
On•Ye•r Certificate; $1,rxxJ Minimum .
6,QOO/o.6,18"1•
T~YearCerttflcate; SS,000 Minimum,
• Elftclf~ Annul/ E•mlng•
• IN~URANCE TO $20,000
'
Painting a Jtinabo
P ainters a l Lock heed's P alm dale plant s p r a y L-!Oll
Tri·Star Jetli ner using ne\~' mo bile pain t gantry. The
46-ton gantry rolls on rails and positions painters
by elevat or so one coat of paint can be applied to
178-foot fu selage 1n 40 minutes.
Canine Cops
Dog s Fight War on Pot
CERRITOS. Calif. (AP) -
\V1th 451.l sentry dogs standing
guard, Bob Beusing's place
ah~:ays had a formidable
appearance But since he's
be:gun to train dogs to sme!I
out m ar11uana, he has made
it a v1rluat fortress
Beus1ng, a forn1er district
a ttorney investigator, began
training dogs 10 years a go
and now has 7 5 0·g 1a nt
sc hn a u s e r s . Doberman
p1nsch ers. German shepherds
a nd J apane.se akitas. Three
hundred are 1n a kennel in
San Luis Ob ispo. !he rest at
his fa r mhouse here
Three years ago he started
t ra1n1ng a fey,· to detect
narCQhcs a nd one. a 5·year-old
German shepherd n a m e d
Ginger. has unco\'.ered 3~ tons
of marijuana a s y,elJ as other
drugs v.•h1!e Yiorlung for Jaw
e nforcement agencies .
'vithout handlers for a bout
$250 a month.
A dog plus \\'alk1e-talkie·
carrying trainer costs SIS an
h6ur.
Twenty.four trainers tea ch
the a nimals to hold at ba y
un til police arriv e any pe rson
who enters the b u 1 l d1ng ,
including the client.
"A m an canno t c ome an d
go a rbitra rily In his OV.'n
plant," says Beu s1ng
In JO years 80 of his dogs
h ave be en killed. mainly h y
guns a n d bow s and a rrows
He g ets the dogs from private
donor s. !he Society ror the
Prevention of Cruelly t o
Anim als and pet homes.
The dogs are valued al
SZ.000 each a nd ii takes an
average of four months to
train one.
t.1ar1Ju ana sniffers t a k e.
longer. Ginger, valued at
$10,000 took e ight months to
learn to nnd pot In tin foll,
masking tape or heavy hrown
paper Once she fou nd 41
pounds of ha~h1sh tn a s urr
boat
Her largest single haul was
t .200 kilogra m s of mar ijuana,
Although he re n ts t he pot·
sniffing d og s to law
•
Red Cross Asks
New War Rules
GENEVA IUPI) The
l ntrmatlonal Commlttee Of
the R e d Cross Is appealing·
to 1overnment.s to •gree on
new rules or war to pr otect
clvUlans from b o m b I o I
a u 1c ks.
As guardian o f the Genev1
convl!ntlons of 1949, the
It &Uggests that lhose laking
part 1n such hosh htics be
tre ated . U c aptured, a s
p risoners o r war ju.st as in
la r ge 1ntematlonal conUlcts .
"At least all executions
should be Sll!pended durlnit
the dura tion of the c onfllcl,"
1t said
com mittee sa ys r evisions are' ____ LE_G_A_L_N_OT_l_CE __ _
LEGAL NOTICE
c••Tll"ICAT• 011 a u 101•u lllCTITIOUI 11111:111. fl.I.Ml
"'"' lllMltrtlt....S • htrtlW <•"' ... "'-' ..... (~I .... l ,lt. '"" AHlllWIU ~I-•I 1111, 1•1 Hffbor aiw . Cltv tf CMl1 Mtu, c..,11ly 111
Or._, ll•hl " c.111.,,.141, -.. ""'
ll(lftltvt 11 .... "'"'· " dt•ltllt!IO'I whlcll
'"" 1161 ll'li"' 111o1 11'111 ....,_ or """'' tf lhl --11\lltulN 111 wltl llutlfllf4. 1-11;
Ml!NDf ~SON'S TV & Alll't,.IANCE$ 11141
11111 ••kl '''"' h (Mf'tO....t of ,,.. '9Uowtn1 "'11111, WhoM ~•n'lt 11141
!Mid•'""' •••• , 19llowt ltO.f! Wo1-Mlt, 1"31 l11~bvr11 ll•ttl, Wll!tt.... Wlltlln'! (Yflll NII
l'OS N(ltth lllOtt 11'"'· A...ahtlto>. WITN(ll -M llfl 111•1 lflh dt J tf l'lbrUl l"I', lfll
ltOllEllT Wl!SSl!'I' NIJC WILLIAM (Vlt'JS NIX
l'TAl a 01' CAll"Oi.N1A r
COUNT'!' 01' Olt•NOf I
...
Oft 11111 lt!h dl'P' tf F tlll'~"'· 4 O .
101, Mt11•• "''' tl>t Undt•1l1nte1. 1 N.,,,., llubll< In end hit ••Id Ctunt'f •nd l11t•. t11lotlnt lt•1 .. lf\ d 11 I Y urgtntly rtqu 1red to m eeet
conditions of modern combat. T n• eomm!nle."04 1-.ii 1-11, IH'NM<•t"'
N0ll(f 'TCI Cl fOITC•t ••Hlrtcl lll:ol>o!"I WttWI' Nlw lllf Wllll1m
LEGAL NOTICE
ll'OAL MOTKI: NOT\C I lfrlVITllfO l UK
NOTICE II HE•EtY GIVIH 'NII
"" l otrd Of '""'"' If "'' Oct ll\ V-'k-1 Dhtrlcl ti 01'111t• CllN>tv,
H111111ntton 11..:11, c.u,.,..111 •• w1~ '"''"' blol to IUt(hfl' $~It! tnol teu .... ltlll
l ido wlU bt '~'"'" .. kl f II I ""·• Mlt'(I\ 1• lf11, ,, "" Alll'Tll"l"••llol! 0111(1 IJ ltkl S<htol Dll1'1c:I, 1''1 Wt i'O'tf
A_, HUl'lll'-ton lt1ell, C:tllfttnlf, 11 whkll llfnt u ltl blcl1 will lit _.....
•1111 <llHI for lho ... rtll•"" t i S-.o11~• ltld Etul1tl!lllll, Ill 1ccord•nt1 11<\I~
SH<lt1c1•1oJ>• ..ow en 1111 111 ll'lt o"let el ••Id Dl11rlcl
Tht 111111•• llll'lnlltfl I• d•llY•t 11-1
11 ••tcllll'd unlt u t n Ml••~•'• !1 ill1l•nt1H1, •nd loW l lH •r •••-11 llH'l\1111 lddllf-1 OU<(h t•tt l1om II""
lo llrn• with •1t1 ttlctl 1u•11hltH
to Jvnt 30. lfl't. All l1H1>1 Ptl Vldfd lft•OllOh lhlo bid
oholl <Gm•"' "'!"-Oo\<t lllmll\I Ct&t Sft1!-•JtlO.f)OI T ~• C•lltet11lt ••It< 11• wO! ~ 1 .. 1clClltlOll 10 IN tfl(" -"" .. ...,, .. , f~(llol T111 "-~'""'llof\ etttlllc.tltl w!ll
bo lurnl•"'°"· II 1prllt•lllo 1M INtd DI T•ull111 tt-•O I ...
r!t l>I le ••l•<I '"" •l'ld 111 bldt 111<1
T11tsdQ, Ftbruvy V , 1971 DAILY PILOT I)
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NCJtlCE --..... ,,. (llTIPICATll 01" l lJSINlll
Cll TIPl(ATI 0, I UllMl'I f'l(Tl1'10US NAMI
ll'ICITIOU't MAM.I Tll• Wldftt!t ...... d9 <trftl¥ ,....,, ••• Thi lilfH!tr1feloHI ,_ et'11f¥ hf b , ~""9 t M IMM •f ... 0 , l tr Mot.
c.Mucll111 • ""J"'"t 11 211 "A.~ (t brllle W.•""'111•!9•, C:1Ulet"f111, U<IM• OW tic.•
SI , (flit ~. (t llfor11l1, '1t71 ""'4rl' tllloul II"'" lll<M ol MfWl"Olf l lYlllA
llw lot.•11111'<• II•"! ,.._ ol M I. I CO ll'ld !1111 i.al« llr"' It tlnl-itd
IN0U5Tlf1EI .... !Ml otlol ll•fl'I II o1 ltl• 10110 .. 1 ... "'-'• Wiiow Ml'l'lfl
«omPGwd o1 tl\f fj!JloWl"'I H•ll(ltl, "'"-'' 111 full t n411 •ll<ft el rtJldt<ic:t tr. ,._..,, !11 luH t rod Pltct t i ,,_klt l'>Ct It lollowt•
It ,, lollowJ "'•'* N<, o ... i., JOD G•lt l)(Nfl II:.., (, 11...nltr, 111 "A" C1erltl9 Orlvt , ,.I, l •'*•d1l1, l'lerlM
11. C00;I• Mtu C1llltlrnl1 H 01-l utlW, 1111 Ll klC•"OHI (t.,
01tld l'tbr\11.., I, It/I S.1111 "'"'' C1H,1ornl.t llubtn E Hl/il!tt Ed ... •td 0 . Ltvtl!, 1J11 !It! II,
S!tlt el C1ll10r11l1, 0•1111t c-rv, J111t1 ,t.111, C.1!1~r111t 011 Ftb•Yl •'P' I, 1•1l. bthll't ""'' I 0.1..:1 F-"•u ... v 1. 1'11
N011rv "'11DI" 111 ind for ••141 S11t•·1 l'••llk M Oowl1 '°''Mllt ll'P' 1Ht••..:I ll~bftl ( HUftltf H Gl..,11 1""1>1
11.-10 "''' '" 1111 rht MtJOll Wllll•t £ctwt•d o Lovtll Ill~ It 1ut:t.crlbt<I !O !ht ... !tllf11 lll·15TAT[ OF C.lll,OllN IA, 1 .. UM•nt 11\d 1ck-1Mt ..:I ht latCUIHI 0114NGE COUNTY , IM wmt, Oft Jan, ,., 1'71. bolor• mt, 1 Ntttr.o
M1,.y I Uh Mot1011 "'ublk 111 t NI for ukl l!1tt , ll•NM+l'P'
,. ........ P11blk.Ctll!orflll ·-••Id "••nit ""· Dovl•. H, Oltflll •'rll'>Ch .. 1 ()!!kt Ill l ull>v, EdWud D LovtU. kllllWll II °''"'' c-tv "'' 10 11oo '"' ''"°"' w~• n""'' ,...,. Commln lOI' f.•o1'tt 1•1 wl>oc:rlM'<I t1 ,,.. wllllf11 !1111tum•11I
...... 11 '· nll ·~ 1eli-ltdllhl IM'P' ••KlllM "" lluiltl•ll.. Or111tt Coa1t 0.11, 1'1~1 ,.,,., F11>1~1rw J, f, ii. 21 101 2U.71 (0 111<1•1 k •tl Hllllll I!'. CillH It already has arra nged two su,..l!•101t ccu•T c11 Tlllf c,..,, NI• ,,,.... .. 1• mt to bt 111• l 'T•T• Cl" CALll'(l•M•• 11011 .......... wll<IH Mll'lll ••• •ub1erlbo4 C'Qnferences this year which TH• cou NT'P' CJ Ol4 NG • ,, "" w11n1n 1111trumt111, • 11"
'J] d b lh Ne A"*4Jt •d'-'.-!tte Ill mt 1 ... 1 lfltw t•KUI ..
•• w•i .. '"' *""'"'''''• ""'t1". ____ cLcE:G::AL NOTICE DettCI .,.~ ......... ' lt !I
OCEot.N VIEW SCHOOi. T"'JIJI
Nelt l'Y ll11~llC • Ct llfOf"ll llrln<IN I Olt!et In o ...... ,....,.,,
WI ISCUSS r1ng1ng e E~lllt el EL1lf0 SHl!"'••o DKt•i.td. lllf >l/n~ OUTlllCT HOTIC• TCI Cll.Ol'T(l•I No• C""""l••lon E•1!1tt
Ju"• 1• "" convention s up to date. NOTIC E lS HElll!I V GIVEN "' "" WITNESS ...... 1111'1111 •1'1111 efOel•I '"'·
c•NlhYJ ol "" ·-· M mte de<:ldtfll t0J JICl4l Sl!4L)
I v c;...,., G. l••" I U,..1110• COURT 01< THI llUl>ilol\.N 0.t ... I (Mlf 01lly lllilot
T he first will involve Red "''' 111 ... ,_., "•~lfl9 c11lmt 111tn11 M,t,lt'P' •ETH MOltTO"f
C"•t DI "'* STAT• (Ill t ALll'Oll ltlA JOI l"tOrut ry J, t, 11, 1), 10 1 U..n looitd ol 'T•uottfl THI COUNT'!' 01< 011:,t.M•I
Cr II' ' I f 32 lflt .. Id *-nl ••• •lflllllttd ,. 1111 Nt11rv "'ublle • Ct Mll:irfl\t oss o 1C1a s rom 1n""'. wl1h ~ l\tttU1N vovcMrt In 11.1...,1,.1 Ollk • 111
l'ullH1flM Or1ntt (<'111 Cll H'P' 1111~! Nt .1.•4-llU LEGAL N001CE
countries a nd y, 111 be held in "" ottk:1 el .,.. e~ ot t111 10.W o,,,.., Cou111Y
Fobrutrv 1l 1nd MltCll T, 1tl1 a \•11 Ei11r1 of lAltlt'P' AlL'l'N HE40lfl,
..,1111 .. courl or lo "''"""' tMf!I. "1111 M1 Commlulotl E••lt ...
The Hague from fl.tarch 1 to 1ti. nec:"511f'I \'O\ICMl'1. i. "" A••U '· n 11 LEGAL NOTICE
March 6 The second will br ing 11"*•1l111e4 11 .,.. o111e1 ct h•r a1i.r ... v1. l'11bll1h101 O••"" Cu •• 01nv "'not!---------------• M<KENNA & ftT'TINO, 11 O It\ 7»4, l'tbrlltl"I' t) tlld Maf'f~ t. t 16, lfTl
governme n ta l representatives 1•100 E• To,.. "°"· 511nt .1., l •WMl------------'c':•""i cE11Tr111c ... 1 .. CP 1u11N 1 11
lh • G I M Hlll1. C•lllCll'f\lt '265.3, Wiik~ I• "'' PICTl'TIOUI N4M•
toge er 1n e neva rom a y 11"' "' bl/Sff\tff o1 ,,,. ..,....,...1"'"' 'T11<t 11"""•''""" "° <••""' th•v •••
24 to J une 12 ~~ ~~io m•:!:~..,'i,'t'~~;~,',, '~'."' ,.:~:~!, o. ____ L_E_G_AL __ N_O_TI_C_E ____ ~~;~~" ~ ... ~u~~n:1~1
... ~. ,'1~..,11~ "N ] ' t h t d lh 111•• !ht ti.11 1Ut1U<1llon of lfllo nollet 1 undt r lht l!cllll11111 lltm l\tmt et 0 w I s an 1ng e O•ltd Ftbt\ll f¥ 1t, 1•11 C•ITl .. IC•T• 011 1u1u1•1s WILG•llD CO•TIN(;5 """ lh•I lt(d
volume rea ched by the Geneva HAZEL SHEPAllO LONl!'I' ••tTITIOUJ NAMI l1f1'!1 11 (Ofl"tO.Std "' II•• IOllCIWll'lf •• ,..fl,, Eiecurrl~ el !flt Wiii 'Thi lltldtrt!1nN dfl (1!"1111 '"•¥ ••t who•• ntmt• 111 lull '"" 111e•1 ol COnVCntiOnS In 194!1, the y dO 01 11\1 obf>YO .......... Hc~tnl tllndvellnt I l>1Jtlntu It 1111• Edlewlltr ttlid•nct f tt u IOllOw•,
not cover the whole fteld of MeKINN" & l"ITTIN• Ln ' Hu<1tl.,.ton 1 '1'11. c.iull!"nl•, u"Cl•r Jl)ll" wm, SOI " W!l•"I•• ••• ..
1 , 0..,111, w ~,,,.11 tho tlct11l11111 llrm "'"" DI II M, ~ A l !oyd Hocktr1mllh, 111 I!
human mis fortunes." t h e ,.. c. ••• ,,M 11u1L11H11'(c; COMP•Nv . •nd '"'' '•'d 1i.1 s•
d '~IH 11 T••• ••, ''"' A ll•rn iA cornte1td ol lho lllllowl,,. flt •1on1. Ot!HI l'@b It lt11
committee sa1 , L•11111, HUit, C•Hlt•,,11 •UU who•t "'"'" 111 i1111 '"" •11c•• 01 Jn~ .. wo•
•I • lh '''' ''''' ,--• •t1l~tnct ''' 11 11110 ... 1• l lo•d E. Hock•r,,rillh ' t IS n ow m ore an 20 A".,"''' 1;"!11tt~ttl• 1tlch1ro L M1r11n, 11114 EH •w•!11 SI•" &I c111to•11I• Or•n•• C&uMv
year s since they w ere drafted. "11btl1ht<1 O••n•• c ... ,, 0111.,. 111101 L11 • Hu<1U11''"" e11ch, I!. ll•11 11a1111111, On "'" 11 ,.,, 1>110•• 1111. • No11ry
.......... ,, •l'ICI M1•ell '· t. If, "" ·~· St l\ Cit""'""· l utl\fl lltrli 1'uOllc 111 '"" !Of ···~ ll•lt, Hll10n1llv fl.i ore over. The Hague law, on ..,,.,, 011.., ""'· n. 1"1 '""'''" Jolln w111 ""' L 1 o . d
th t h h d I IUcl'lt•d L. M1ttln HO(lil•lfTllth k,.......n to mo lo 1>fo !~t
e con rary. w IC ea s NOTICE r fl•n 111dU11 "'"°"' ... 11o-w 11, .... 1 ,,, •ubicrtt>N m ore with the regulation of LEGAL SI•~ 11 ci 1u..,n11, o.,,.., Countv • 10 lh• wlln!n 111u•um1n1 1 11 d
0.. J tbruar. :11. 11n , bltort 1111, llk-lt<lttd '""" •••cul" lh1 11mt host1ht1es and of the ut1hzalion a .1.1 ,.,, • N11•• .. "'ubnc !n '"" tor ••Id 1111 •• (OFFICIAL SEALI
o f weannns, goes back to 1907. ,.!:.',',",,', ',',~',,",",",',, "''1DM11• ••H••M 111c~"'" L M1r11n 0o,01n• w Jo•t• yv ,,,.. u & I! Ion "•dlll1 kno ... 11 to "'' to Nol•N Publl~.Cttl"'•11l1
when bomber aircra ft had not sTATe o"' t AL1,.01N1.1. 11e111 t>t ,,.. ,.,,....,, wl'lol1 "'"'"' ••• ,.,,,,,1,.11 °'"'' in 'THI tOUNTY 011 Oii.i.NOi 1ul>1Crtl>fd le IM Wl1hln ln1.,um•nl Incl Ori ""' Cou-ntv
ye\ come into existence " N• ,,...,.n 1ctonow1H11H the• ••1cu11t11 '"' "'"" My '""'"''"loll E••l•tt
Thore are four Ge"''' E1t1I• of Al l Y HCILIT(IN I UTTE I , COFFl(IAl SEAl) S•al 11 Ill• " •kl ol.lllV H l!UTTEI. tkl AllY M•rv loth Mo•!On Publl•""" Or•nt • (flt•! O•ll• llllol
"'"-]-------~~~-----NOTIC E IS Hl!ltl!lV GIVE N to 1111 11..-1t
C•Hlli.r• ol IM ·-· 11•mtol ff(.-lpnt C•ll'Tll"IC A'T• 011 a U11Nlll
11111 111 "'''°'" hov!l'lt (ltlml l tt lml l"IC'TtTIOUS NAMI 1111 11lil f1ef'Mn! l•t •lflllll•ld le 1111 'Tftt Utldt'lltl'lld f O cetllf'P' ltltl< U t
IPllm wltll lht l\ICUM•Y VO<l(/'llro, 111 Conclll<tlllt I l>ut llltll I t !1U Nllilr"
int 1ttlt• of lht (!f'l ti tfll 11Mlv• C"t" M•M• Ctlltol"llll, ~ndtr lllt lie·
1nllll te coutt .... " P'fHl\I tn.m, with 11t1 ... ,. lltm ....... el l'OWl!lt IOl'T•
!ht neetu ••• •OU.:"f fl, to th• U,,. KLEEN SEllVIC.I! lf!d 11111 tlli! firm
dt .. ltnld ti !hi Olflc1 fll htr t t!O<MVI. 11 (-lf<I Of !Ill 1611-1111 .........
GO'TTllf:l & LOCK E, 917t 5Uftlll -· """''' In IUll 11\11 l lttl t ef •HI• loul1~1,d, loo "n11ln. C1llfor"l1 wnkll dint• 1r1 •• 111111 ... •· I• '"' •llct el bl/I n•n el tllo ~" Slt Yt Ell1'1or O•n•lw. 11H ~tcltk dtro11nHI 111 111 m1tl tt1 •trt1lnl11t le No II C0tl1 Me11, C1t+I
'"' •••••• ot ••Id '"'"''"" Within """'" Lind••·· JIU NU!o111I ftl lo~r ml'tl'tlll• 1fl1r tllt 11,.r p11bll,11lon Co.11 Mn1, C1lll
of th11 notlcr Dtl•O Ftbr111•v I 1'11
DtlHI J1n~•IY l'I "" S!IYI E Ot Nby Juclllll ol."n' Ht1~lto l ot>ttl Llnlltlw Adml11l1!rt lfl• of , ... 111011 ST,t.'TE Of C.ll lFOllNrA,
01 !ho •b0v1 11111'1111 dttlffnl OltANGI! COUNTY, GOT'TLll l & LOCK• On F•br111•'P' \, !tr!, INitort l'f\I• •
ft:tf tu•HI 1111ttvu• NellfV Pub!/( In Ind .. , '''" St1lt .
Lit A11111t1, t 1llltt11l1 P''""'"' u>pt1rtd lltYI Eoltl• fl.l1101t• Ttt (1111 JlloJU2 •nd 11-•I lll'ldtl'P' k-n It ml IO
Alltrltl'l'I ,., A.,,.l•ltl,.l•I• bfO lho ,.,,.,,,, wh<lu "'""' ,,, ·~•Ibo
llvbll1hld O'""' (N •I 1!11llv l'llol td tt 1~1 wftnln lntt'llm•nl ,,,_ FtbtUI " ,, •• !I, u. 1t11 l4·11 1c•f'Owltc!1od ll'lty ••ttYIMI !tit .......
LEGAL NOTICE !-----. ----..... ,.,.
NOT ICI TO t l lOITOl l
1u 11•11101 COU•T o~ 'Tii i ITITI: (II< CALl,OI NIA J Oit
fHl' COUNTY 0' O•ANGI
N1. A·lllH
l0fflcl1t loon Ml .., leln M-
No!trw Pul>llc • C1lll11nl1 llllncl11I 0Ultl In Ott ntl (OUfl!V ,...,. COll"ml n lOll l wtlrw .... ,u ' !tll llublhhod Ora,.,o Co1tl D1lli/ ... 11~1
''"''"'"' 1 •• 16. 11 1t/I f'7," convent ions. under w hich lhe llUTTE•. D•••••HI No••rv 11ub11e c11o1or1111 Ftf!•u•rv n •nd M1rcn 2 t 11. 101 NOTICE IS HEREl 'I' GIVEN lo I... "'•l lOCIPOI Ollltt In <Ot-11 f. t 1
following p e. r s on s are c•l!'dllo•• 01 "'' '"""'' n•med ll•<lffnl O'•n•• counlY -0tc!:.~ of LOL4 MAE I AllNES. LEGAL NOTICE
"rotected . lhU •II .... ., ..... 1\1~1,.. Cltlm• ••1ln1I ,.,.. .. Co'N"'l•tltr! E•ol•t! NOTICI! IS Hf:llf.I V GIVEN to ,~.1 --------c."'C.CCC-____ _
t' '"' Mid dtc.-ltnl ,,. •Mvl•HI le 1111 Aorll • 1'11 LEGAL NOTICE ue<1!1o1> ol lllt •boYt nam.O dt<11<1tnr T'41ttt J f\.fllflary WOUnded and l!\tm, wl!h 1tlt lle<l'U••'P' •DUChtfl, !" ll ublllllffl C<I ... , Co11t Oollv lll~•.1--------!1'111 oll porson• h1•!"9 rlol,,..1 1•t!n,1 NC'TIC• TC Clll'DIT(lltt
k d I d I I"' onlet of "'• ,, ... of !II• 1"°"11 Jtbru•r. n Ind M.for(I\ t ••. ,, "" ... It 7"' , ... u ld 11Kt61111 ... fH Ult.O to 1111 J u ... 1110• COi.HiT 01' THI
SIC , 0C Or!, m e IC 8 1ntlllffl cou•I, or le lrttt nl lhtm, wltn .IOf·" lll OTICI TC CltaDt'TOlll 1n~rn wllll tn• lltCllM•Y 'P'WCllf,., In ITA'T• 011 CAl lll'Oltfrll.l
personnel. c haplain s. tl'lt ntt•H•rY VOl/tftttl le 'I\. IU ... llJ(ll COUllT 011' TH• lht •Ille• ot '"' (!orA ol IM t bO•• J (lll TNI' CCUNTY 011
W d
-• , k d lltldt,..lt l\ICI II lhl elllct ol lllt AllOfl\fYtl ITATI Cll' C•l 1 .. 0•NIA P(llt t ntlt,,.,, CDUtl 6r le l •t lfM !Mm, with O•AflOI 2 oun ""· sic , me 1c al ou 1tYE4. c.i.11:llENTE1t & 1.1.1tNl!S LEGAL NOTICE 'THI couNTV oP o••N•• "" nectt1.1rv vtMKll•••· to• ,,.. u,._ ,,,,,, ,, "' ""nu
Pe rsonnel. ch a plains o f armed tl Y Ell:N EST J K HAG. Jiil. Ulll------NI """'' d1fJ lt .. ld I t t ie l on•ld M ll r•n"'" MA ll:THA J . Ml!LCM l!lt, M1t,t.tthu• fllYd . P O 9Gir llN, NtW16rl <•llTl .. ICAT I Cll" I USI N•SJ, Ellllo el f llANK •UGUST FUNAlltt, Atler111y •I l•w lll Wfll 'Third Sl•te!, Otc:•••od fOl'CeS I t st.a, and th t 9t1eh, C1illornlt '2M3. which 11 1111 llltTl'TIOUt HAMI •Ito know" 11 FllANIC 4 "UNAll:O Son!• An• C1lllor11l1 tHlll, wlllcll 11 NOTICf 11 Hf"EIY C5111IN to lh1
h k d pit <• of butll\4'11 of 11'1 11tldtr1ltnod llle undo'1itrltd 10 ct ,!llY ll'ltY '" OIC••I"' 1n1 1l1c1 ot llllllM" el lllt und111l1n1d e...,.l!ott of tnt •bovf n1m" dec:Hl.,.1
s 1pwrec e . [I\ oil "''"'" P<Or1•1nlnt lo "'' t1!1!t C-U<lln• • bu!IMll II II 0 l o• 0 10 NO'TIC l IS HElt f llY GIVEN lo 11\o In t ll .... n ... otrlt lllhll le !ht ••l•t• 11111 •II "'"'"' "••!!It clt lrnt ... 11111 3 Pr isoners or w ar ol ••Id <IKtdtnl, wllhln '""' 1n&11m1 (rtdll I 1h "" ,,. ... dM:•""' I of 11ld dtCldtnl' ... uhln • .,.,, ln&l\ll\1 lho >1ld dfl(.-ltfll ··~ •f'IUl!'fd le 1111 tlltt !ht ilr" oubli<llln" ol 11111 110!1e1 ~1"'1"" Celllomlt , llnlllt 1110 l/c!lll""1 1~,1 °~~ O ,~, "h• "1~, f\~ltlm• •••ln~I 1ntt tllt 11•11 oub!lclllen ol !hit netlu "''"' with !hf ne<1u 1ry vtucllt'1, !11 4 C1v1hans 1n ene m y or 0111t1 l<eb•u•N 1• !fl! •m n•m• "' l'L0•4L MAITE ll PIECIES ,~ '1, ~, 0 , v 1 HI 1 111 01tK1 J1nu•"' ,. ltn lh• olll<• of thr tlf.rli: el •ti. 1bli¥• O 'ON I UTTl!ll t lMI lhll 11ld !I'm It (6mP6"d ol ti ICt t n •rt rt~u r e 1 lllilllffl (Olltl, or lo flftlt"I "''"'' wit" OCCUpied territory. ~.!c~~:~I ~~ C:m lh• f~llo ... j,.. flfflOl\1, Wf\Oll nlf"•t In lll•m, wl!h lftf fltcfll•N YOU~lllfl If\ 'i:'::~;rl~·~~~~f Wiii fff tho n1><:eU1t¥ YOUCl>ttl le !hi 11,..
Th. fourlh -n .. e nti'on 'in ' • , full 111d •l•ct1 ot rn!t lllct 1r1 11 lht olllc1 ol !ht elt1k ol lht t bGYt " 0 "'" ,,,,,, •• , ,, '"' '''''' '' ''' '''''''''· ,_v • DUllVE1 l~~:~~T•:'t l~c;N"lt tolle"''' onllllotl court, or to OfOunr lft•m, with lh• •bov• n1m K TAFT .. ~ ACll:EAM,t.N 6 Mot.•11:,, l1WI
Particula r r t qu1reS re"l!l'On, •Y· •••l>T • ><•••• •O (ntrl•• f 5"'-• II UOI! ""•llt•• lftt lltCfUllW vouchtt1 to lhl 1111 ll ON ALO H ... ltlNNlll Si n lll<onto l~•IOvt•d Sul!1 tU, Lo•
• 4 4 A••· Ne, M, Ce1t1 M .. 1 f nld H d•"10"'° "1 ele PlUNl(ETT A. Allt•nt • 11 Le• Anootu (tlllo;.;'11 tori~ Wiiie~ It 1!11
the Red Cross maintains. ~,•,• ~,,',',','•"*' ""' · l!N n, 1100 Wi ll ie• ,..Yt No H. Co•I• ll LUNJCETT, •llorn•v• •' L•w •11 011v1 111 w111 l•Wt St1111 ''''' • "••-•• ,, , .... ,.,_,,.,. M•11 ....... ~ 0 •o· , ••. H1111ll ... IM •••<II Sllllt """' C1tlltrnl1 '1ffl "" ·~ .... • .• It poin ts out tha t the New-1 •••<II. c1111, flWJ '''""'' ,, ,,11 c.111..,nl• .,,., wh''" 11 lh• 111c1 T11 .. ......,. 11u 1 u1 .. n 1 '" 111 "''""' 11t111n1.,. to '"' e111t• T1l1 U I n ot • • ! 11\1 J o1 tr.. ncl I d I 11 ,t.tt .. 111• ltr •1tewlrl1 ol tl ld ffledenl. ...1th1<1 f-mon1ht COnVentJOn protects CiVJbanS A.lllrMYt It< ..... v11r CH•ll:LES E 5l0AN II e 1 Mii W It! t n• n 1 llubllinld Or1nt t Ce•1' 1!11111 Pl\01 11trr Ille tlrtl 011~lle1ll011 ol 11111 ""ll<t.
Only a gainst th. ab" •• Or llutlll.i>N O••llt• Cw t! Dal" "'llel ENID H SLOot.N ~;tr;• ;••:•lnl~t~I 1~ 1111 •:~•tt 11°1 J obrut rv J, t , 11. )J, 1n1 lU·11 01ll!'d F~b•vor• j , 1'71 F-ebrut N 73 I ncl M•rtl\ I, t, 1t, lt11 SI•!• II C•lllttrnlo Orf""' Counlv s •co'" w 11 lt1I' ll'>On 1 1 tr llUI TON W, ME:lCHl!lt II
enemy power and not agains t 111 11 on "•Orv"" it. itn. ?lt!crr "''· ""o::;.:.1 :::~<,".'~"';. ~~/t11 ncllt• LEGAL NOTICE Ea..:111or 01 '"" will e1
h f !----------------• Not1rv "'ubtlc In 11141 Ill" Hkl S!llt, l•roll 0 Morti..,,u Tl\• •btrv• n1mod df<;l!'d•llt t e use o a r ms. LEGAL "OTICE •••00111UY •-•••d Ch••'•• E, s 1o111 E vttl• 01 ,,... will e1 '~ T,t.l<T, AtKlll:MAN & M.AlllKI "It 1s now known , a bit
1
_________ 1~ 11 •nd Enl.s H 11 .... 11 known ,, "'' ,~:Cabl>v• "'"'•d dtcltdtfll C.lltTlll'ICA'TI 0" l \JllNl t l n u 1 1111 v1e:11111 11v1 . sun1 tU -~ It bf '"' •t•IO'lt ...... H "'"''' ... PLIJNKl!n " "'LIJNl(I TT FltTITIOUI MAMI L11 ....... 11t. c1r~rflll ..... la\e in the day, that m aSStVe 1111 MJI 1\lbKrlbf'O le !h• wllllln l"ttrumMI l tld tit Olivo AVlllut 'T~t 1111<11roltnffl "9 ettlll• '"'"' ti• T1t Ulll •lt"lif
bo b. f did NO'TICI: TO CllEOITOlll 1cknowlldtld l!lty t•e<:uttd 11'!1 oi mt II (I 11, ''' c-ucllnt I tloullf\IU It 1111 I tek ""-"'' kr l •i nl., air m ings o towns su,..1.11110• cOUll'T Oii' TH• 10,J1C•"l sE•ll Hwlllll'lfNI\ •••<-· t•lll, tHdl l •v Drlvo, NowP6t1 •••ell. C•lllornt•. 11uo11i11tc1 or11191 '"'' "'II' •11 ..
not pay off. from the m ilitary STA'TI' o• Col.LIPOl 111A ,Oii J04N E. SOULE Tll< SU.HJt ... JM-ltll llnd•• !IV lktHl9u1 II•"' n•mt ol AN .. ti> ...... ,.,.'· u 1l M•rcll I. 1'11 iN-1 'THI! CCUN'TY O• o•ANO I Not1rv Pvbl!c , Colllornlt Atttrlltn ttr l i tculrl• CHO~ M°'ltlNI! 11£11411 •nd lhU 111<1 ' ' •
point o( view ," the Red Cross "' ... ......, C1111n1y 01 Or•n•• ,..~ll•llH O••no• c1111 D•lt' Pilol 11•m 11 '°"'"'" "' ttw io11ow1,,. Pf•oon• LEGAL NOTICE Sllld E111'• ol ll:Oll EllT JAMES l<IYE M• Cemmlulon l!••l•~t ,.otuorv t, ll H '""" Mt rcll I lf7l -u MmPI In lull I nd •llCll ti 1be known 11 llOll!'Rl J J ll'l'E, Ju"I U 1111 :IOI It rul~•IOCf t •t •• JellOW> 1----
•' T ho u gh the lown! Otc••iHll "'u""'"M o,,,.., coo•• 0 .. 11. 1>11ni c11,.nc1 1 S~•"""'· UJI lle11 NCT1c1 c11 'TIU1t•1·s IAl l NOTICE 1$ MEll:EllY GIVEN 1~ tl'lt "et1ru1r• )J ono M••eh T f u ltll 'D1 II k lrnblrl• Pl , Ntwoorl l elCll (1111 T S, Ne, 1·11"1
destroyed have been re built. e•..irto•• ~' ino •t>oY• n1med dKN•nlJ·---___ _ LEGAL N OTICE E1,.~n• c J•"•· UH w G!t nwooo On "''"••· M••eh 11, 1t11 '' 11 llt
th h be d t lh•I 111 o•.,ont h1vlnt e!1lm1 111ln1t L EGAL NOTICE S1nl1 "'"' C1tll .i. M lh• Tl C«P61111M !fll C11U&rnl1), no lng as en One 0 lft~ lt ld d0<M"'! t tf •Hulr•ll te Iii• I . Ol lHI Jt nul•Y J!, 1'11 I (Qrl"'•orl°" f••mfflV, TITLI! IN
revive the rules tha t a re vahd tntm. wl!h •he nte• .. ••V VO\ltftf"• 111 -I .lit H l1 (lutn<f II Sl\l11n.. SUlll:ANCE ot.NO TIU$T COMPot.NY, ,,
lllf fllllc• or !ht cle•~ ot ,,,.. 1btlv• I All Jnl NOTICE TO Clll!Dl'T(lllt E11t1M C JIH'P' d111Y I PNlnlf'<I Tru1t11 ul'ldn "'' in this sphere 1nl1!11d '°"''· °' !o ,,.,.111 llllm .... 11n NOTICI TCI C•IDIT(ll ' t Ulll'll lCll COUI T 011' TH• STATE OF Col.llFOll:N14 C1l'1t1•nl lo .... ., ot Tr111I 'll'C~•~·<l
"Perhaps sta tes .. 11 be ,,,. MC•n•rY vo1.cn•n . IO ,~. tl},.•lt•OI CCVlt T OF TNI STATEO,CAL!l<Cl!N !A llOI O•ANGECOUNlY ......... ,t JD , ,MJ, •• 11111, N1. 2'111. IJlldt'll~ne<I '' c/o ltcneld M llr1nn... ST.I.Tl 011 CALl1'011:Nl4 11011 THI tCUNT'I' 0, Cllot.NGf On Jt nut•'P' H, lf1!, btloro m1 • In boW Wn, P•tt 61J, ol OU lel1I
prepared {O ac cept today a A!ltl"fll• 11 Low '" w .. t Tftltd Slrtt!, THI COUNTY (I" (II.I.NO i Ne ... HIJt Nol1r• l'ublle !n 1nd for t.olf 1!>10, llpeor<11 In lh• ofl lcl of th• Counl1 · -be ( 51.,11 4n1 C1tllornl1 f?1fll , wMc~ 11 Ne A ..... H E1ll!1 or ll•VMO"IO JA M I! l llt•IOMllY 1o•t•'ed Mf. 1!1tt•M (, J""' •Kfl•d1r or O••M• (oun .... C1lllotnl1 m In Im u m num r 0 '"' pl1re of b111lntu of lh• und•,,!•-1!1!1!1 el 1411AM M GE ll:EN llOUCKA llD, ·-· AA'P'MONO J 101) knowf\ re .,.. 10 bt lllt ""on who•• Will SELL AT PUl l l( AUCTION TO
"
,.
"'
Beu.sing. 45. credits the
sniffers' gnod ,.,.ork "'1th t~
fact h e's bee n isho! at three
times recently, twice in his
car and once m his hom e.
Consequently. to his home he
ha s added an electric gate,
floodlights, closed c 1 r c u 1 t
telev1s1on panning !he grounds
a nd padding o n the walls to
absorb bullets
Most of the dogs are guards.
dispatched nigh tly lo som e 2SO
car lots, ceme te ries,
\varehouses and stores in the
Los Angeles area
enforcement agenc ies, h e
r e fuses to sell any. He s a ys
police chiefs a r e anxious lo
buy them b ut narcotics agents
often resent their efficiency
and refuse to y,·ork them o r
overwork them.
prov1s1ons Intended to spare In •II m1!!1r1 01•!tl11!nt le '"• .... ,. DtttU td (H~PO lkl llAYMONO I OUCHAll D. n1m1 !1 11/bl{tlbod le •h• wllllln In. HIGHEST 11100!;11 "Olt CASH (ll'P'tl>I• ol •llll dt<H•n! wltll!ll lout mOllll\1 NOTICI! II Hl!ltEIV t;.tVEN to th o De(•••"" t1rum•nl "'" •ckllolOltdtHI M t •ICUIKI •I !!mo cl 1111 In !1wl~I lllOf\tY ol _.._
the civiha n popu lation a t lea st 1111, tht 1.,,1 •ubllt•!lon 01 !hi• notJct. cr1dltoro 01 "'• 11>G'<t ntmtd d1c1t11n1 NOTICE 1s MEll EllY c:1VE N to !h• tht 1•m• '"" un111t11 s11te1 J "' 1n1 •outh l•o"'
Part of th e evJ!S it is 01tecl Fobry1ry 1t, 1'71 th1I t ll '"""'' h1vl.,. tl•!m1 a91lnll C•tdl!o" fll lh1 •l>n•• n1rnt d dtced..,! (Of!ltll l l t tl) •11!•tl'>CI 11 1n1 Old Oftlltf C<Wntv Ntnr• Jtin Fry1, f ,ll'Cul•I• lh1 ttlol decte1n! 1ro rt~11lrff1 lo f111 l hll 111 ~t10111 h1vlnt elt!m1 111ln1! Jo . .i.n~ D Co• Covrt.....,1t , loc1ltd I" !ht MIO llock t hreatened with.·· ot in~ Wiii 01 ,~. '"""'· with tM ntctt ... ,.,. ""u<h•" In '"" 11kl ~c•dtnt .,, '"""!'"' 1n 111. Nol••• Publlc • C1llfornl1 et Wt1t l•nlt ""' 11.,.,1,..ord f!Ofrnorl• I l bo'<e naml<I' n•eldi nr l~o oftlco cl th~ clt•k el !ho f bO\lo lh•m .. uh tn. Mt•~I•"' vDU<h•••· In O'""'" COu11"' Wu t •th 51fHI), Stnlo 11.nl . C1!llt111!1. The conven tions a so fail as ION.I.LO H ll'll:INNl ll: .,.1n1td cour1 o• 1e .,,,. .. , lh•m, wltt. th• ot11,, 01 the (ltrk c• th• •llov• Mv com,.,IHIOll f•olr•• •U rl~ht, 1111. •"" !nt•re•I eonvtw"'1
they now stand 10 a d equately 411.,,,..,. 11 Low '"' ntttn •,.,. """eh•"· '• 1 h , •ntltl•d <1111•• " •• ... -.111 t~•m. with Jy!v >0. "" te 1nc1 now h11<1 I>• 11 Ul\Cltr ••lt1 JU Wt•! TMrt ll•HI uowt•.,1•11"<1 11 lhr ollle• o• n1, 11'0rM••: lhe n1c1111rv """"h"" •11 tn1 un "'ubll1n..i O••nt• Coul Otll1 "'llCI Dff11 ol l ru1t In th• ••0$1••1Y 1!1ull•tl
prolect civilian doctors and ii n!• Afto, c1111.,n11 "'" MITCHELL ,...,.., " 1111 1scoE "' 11••1i1nM 11 c'• llONot.lO H ,.,.,,NNE•. Ftbru.,., 1. •. \1, n. 11n ,:w H in 11 111 Cou111v 11\d 1111t dt1e•lbtd
h d I b h Id 'T•Ml•hllll !1141 M\•OJI Civic Ctnrtr 0fl"• Wt1t, S•nlt A,.., 31J W••t Thl•lf $!rot!, SonT1 Ant, L E GAL NO'rlCE 11 nurses. w 0 0 no ut s OU Atlll'lllY lllr •~..:•l•I, C•lllornl• H IOI. .... lllch I• •ht ., ••• C•lllOf"'" .,,C1 wM<h !• ,~. ol••·"·---=='= , • l~I "·In l lock JI el F•fll Alklltlo11
have the righl to v.ear the ,.~11"'" 0,.,, .. c1111r D••'v 1111e1 et ""'1"'" 01 tht unot•1l1n"" 111 •II of bullntu 01 1n1 uno•"''""" In 111 1 ,.:;tH; In N•-..rl H•l1hu. •n "" cu .. ••
R d C F brut J) nd Mire~ T t It 1t11 m•t!tri 1ert1l11ln1 le th• t <lt!f el "'"""" e•r!1!11lnt I• '"' ••l•I• nl ClltTll'IClTI o" l Ut lMl't l New-r l •ICh, County ot Or1not, 51•1• e rOSS emblem, ii Said t rY 1 ' ' llf.79 ••Id dO<Hl,nl, w!lflin tou• "'""lh1 1ti.r tall! tltc..,,•nt within '"'" m11111h1 t l1 tr l'IC'TITIOUI NAM( Of C1lltornl1, I I '"'°"'" en 1~1 Mii
f'urther. steps m ust be: lh• 11,.1 11111111e•1lon 11 11'11• nollt• ,,.. ""' 011~lle•t11111"' th11 ""''e• Tht wndrril•Md 00 <••tllY thtv .,. ••<''""" 111 l ook •. II••• u cl
LEGAL NOTICE DUM '•b•ultY "· 1•11 011..i J1•u••Y "· 1'11 •Mdl.ICllnt • Ntlntu 11 1tt11 Oct!d•lllt l MloctllfntOUI M•P•. In lh1 olllct elf
Africa Toor
The Qogs v.•ork in paLrs
taken to ensure that the W•LLACI! o Ol!llEN wur .... J 11ouch••~ m. '""""' •••c•<1•• e1 O••nt• '"""tv • J d -------------~~c F•..:vlor If lho WUI •' """'l11l1tr1ltr ol rh1 l!'•l1!t L11 , Hu11!1"0!1111 l tlt h t1UI , Ctlllo~nl•. 'Tiit '''"' edd• ... 1 incl otl'ltr e°""""n COnventlOnS are a pp le . Cl!llTll<ICATE 01< CC•ll'Oll:ATION l'C• lh• lbo"I' nt mltl dtcMonl 61 I'>• •"•· • """"'" dfctdt nl Ul'ldtr lht lltlllloui 11'";, n•:•,,• T CIPll•"~llon, Ir ony, of trio t•t l 1r-rlY
S h I ' •• ' •• '''o' ••• "'''''' "•OOO "Oo<•O" '''' ••• KO OO••'O ' ••••••• & I I UILl>IHG Mot.IN N4 ltld O•<"... ,-, 0, -··--.. lo "' uperv1s1on 1n t e event o " .. ti'ic1v1c .. t;11t••ll!"IW W•~t 1 ,.11,,,;..1,·l•w 1h11 ••Id 11.,,. " ,_..,, el '"' m:,•• c 1,y Sr•Hl. N.';~ ,,,,~.
host11it1es usually is e ntrusted "'"' u .. :!~.~!:::!:ui. c.=:uen '°'' 111111 A111, C•l~ll r1111 JU w .. 1 n 1rot "'''' •011owi,.. ••••on•, w11o11 ntm•• 111 full c .1uor1111
French President
"' I II I efld\lcilnt T I llf.t2H S1n1 ... c Ill I "'" llll'I cl•t•• el lttldonu ••••• IOllOWI ' Tne und•fllt "td Tru.111 ""'l1frn1 l nY to II ritU!rlll State bU( in man y :''~~ecl~:~lf~elJI.:. .,,,.Jn!,. c ti ].ft21 ... :.. ..... , lw l qcwlt~ 'T1lt:M::: l~~,·~l~ll1 S!1vt Nothlntot, lt61l Occldenli l Utblht~ fot 1n'P' l11CorrKl"tl1 el Int
lh h • ·• C o>-Oo ' ''' 0 ••-o "' l~ , Hunllnt lon l1t(h Ct lll '"''' ''''''' '"' ''"'' , __ cases e re I! no s ue c 111• d•I se1 C1•1"'',. •••-"• • ..,.n u1>11111to1 o ...... Co111 Dt nv "''"'' "''"v "' ...... ~ '""' .i.ni~...... Tune1rnc11<1o. "'°' Mltl'P' ~ ....... undo• tht !lt!lllOll• tlrm Ill"'* of llt1dl.,. Jltltuary H lnCI Mo•Cll ,, t , 11 lt'1 llul>!lthtd Ortntl (NII 0.llY Pllol ln , KullllMIM liicll. t illl. d1o l1n1tlon , II •n'P' I-" ~1rfl1t
protecting power ,. Guldincf 5•rvlc•• e1 """" O••nt• •l:t.11 1<eoru••• 1 '· t•. 11, u11 '"·'1 )0 1 S1ld 1111 w111 11t 1Nd<ll. bl.It wu1>1u1 Shows His Talents
P AR IS IUP!l -President
Georges Pompidou has shov.·n
the critics he Clln sell F r ance
a broad as eff1cienlly a s
Cha rles d e Gaulle did and
do it without stepping on the
t oes of French allies
His face tanned by lhc
t ropica l sun and his waist a
nolch thinner. the president
has Jus t completed an 8 000·
mile trip through five nations
1n Black Africa v.· h 1 c h
indicaled that F r e n c h
influence there has not
diminished with De Gaulle's
death last November
Combining subtle diplomacy
v.·1th a businesslike approach
to problems bcsctl1ng !he
African hosts. lhe 59-year-old
pre sident drew crO\\ d~ as
large a~ those. thal gathered
1n Afncan capitals 12 years
a go to greet De Gaulle
The m a n w h o gave African
colon1es independence in 1960.
P o mp1dou w as almost mobbed
in Senegal and lhe Ivory
Coa st w·h1le !he v.·elcome was
only har dly less en1hu s1as!lc
in the smaller nations he
toured fl.1au r 1t11nla,
C.:imeroun and Gahon.
Pompidou won the heart of
the A(rican crov.ds a n d
leaders without any of the
ortitory 11nd vision ary schemes
of his 1llustrlous predecessor .
Since the firsl day he stepped
on African soil til the sun·
sco r che d cap i tal or
Mauritania. Nouakchon, the
rormt r Rothschild b a n k e r
d rove home. relentlessly one
themt deair to African ears
their nct:d for more
technical and financial aid
frnm the \Vest.
He told the Afncans he will
champion In Weslern counc ils
their cause t1nd filruggle for
the st.ablllr.atlon of world
prices of the raw materials
v.hich are virtually their only
Th ]ti d d t I counlY '"" 1n11 •t ld firm 11 comlOll<I DllN Jt nut rv "' toven1111 er Wl 'll nl'P', t•P•tn OI' l~Ute, e CQm m ee 1 no re er , ••• LEG OT! LEGAL NOT! stt~• Noll1ll'lt•• •••••di~ 11111, -·n•uloll OI' ,,,.
m ."'y .ar"lng expo t I t h V el th• lol!owlM co••O•ll Ofl, ~,.,.., AL N CE CE Anl~O"Y Tu!!tllT'IOMO "" ,... • r s. open y o t e 1etna m war, 1r1nc1c1r 011c• "'111111 ..... 11 •• 1.11,,....· ____ ____ _ __ ___ _ ___ sr.1.rE OF C"L1Fo1NIA, e,•,,•,', ",~.!'' ,", ','!, ·~.,·.~.·,1~.1~,,."',,"'
P d h b I ff I h c~ .. 1•• O••l11on C011•tr11tt1011 inc.. T'I' Y'" " ·-.... ompl OU. w ose country u 0 lCJa s point to t e '•1!1 , .... ine dt 1!1l•t ll1. C•O!l"fl\I HOTICI 01" 'TllUSTl l 'I IAl l · NOf lCI INVITtN$ l lOS Ollot."IGE COUN 111d Ot•d el 'Tru•!, l•wll t lO.oot ee,
I d 'd d ff ] f l••~ NI • OlftlJt NcHco +t htffbV •lvtll thtl tll• llo•rd On J1~111rv JO un, !Mio•• "'"· t wlln lnt.,t1t llio•eon, 11 orOYldod If\ 8 rea y pri es itself o n being I ICU !JC! 0 getting a ~1;.'~E~;11:r:11~.nc1 1~1, 1,1" ~·~ et 11•1 NC • 1•111 o1 T•u1t100 ot th• ce111 cornmun11v Not••• Pub!lt 1,, •nd I•• ••Id !1tt•.j,..1d note •dv•n<•I u •"• """'' '~•
the single largest a id ""r country such as N o r t h ~tbrutrv. ltll On Tuf1d1v. Mtre~ Ii, 1t11, 11 11 oo Coll•t• 0111r1c1 cl O••n•• co~n1v 1•t "o1101+v •••~"" Sttv• Nott•+ntP• 1~d 1,,..,1 01 ••Id o.~ 01 Truir 1 .... .-~ (~••It' 01_.1111111 ContltuttloM, o Cll'IC-A M FIMt nd•I '•d•"'~•n IM , C1lllornl1, will •ettl•1 1t•l1ot bldl uni ..,~,~~nv T~!.,lmonllo ltn11w11 to mt !o c~O•te• 1no e.w•tOUll of 11,, TruitH
c;ip1ti\ giver with SI b illion V ietnam, whJch s ig ne d the • Dt l•w•r• cofll>O•t!lo~. 11 Truot•• nr to 11•00 '"' Tu1111•v. No•rcn 1. 1•11, bt 1~1 ptroo111 wno .. n1mo .,. 1111!"""" 1111d 01 ,~. ''"''' ''"•'"' bv ••Id ' I ff J d I h d G I t bid Inc 111~1Htultd T•u11e• unot r 11\11 eu"u•nl •' I~• Pure h11lnt D•pl, 01 ••Id icllool l'd 10 lh• w!lhlM ln••n•m•nt •1111 Otod of Trusl 1n annua o 1c1a a1 , ou c e eneva ronv en ion s. o 8 e CH.O.l!lF.S l!IAVISSDN, 10 1n1 dtM 01 t•vtt rtttrrt d 10 in dlitrlc• l«•l•d •t lllll Al!t m• 4 v•n""· ••W1111Wleft1•d 111•1 •••t11IN 1ht ""'' 'Tft! b•n•rfcl•N u...,,, told O.td "'
African hearts by warning , "It by !hem. It has f:uled to ~l'L~~"~ o.i.visSON , "'" Nrtlk• 01 D•t1u11 ••Co•Otd 111 '""~' Co•t1 Mu• c1111orn1~, u whl(h 11m• 101r1e1•1 1t(:1~,1 r Wl'•on l•u•I "~·~toto•n ••tturto and d1+1~r•M
Would be .. ,·10 IO belie"e that 'd d t I d J '* t~H. 1111 HS. el Otllcl1I lt ot6'd1, ••Jd bld1 w+tl bl oul>llelv oo•M<I •~d ., 1 ,. bll<. <•Ul•n!i t• !ho unntr111nK a wrltr1n 011el•rttl'" • • prov1 e eat e prisoner l~l.), S•"•1••Y Ccun11 !!~cord•• ot o'"''"" coun!Y, ,..d ••• ~IUNTING OF GOO.OF.fl wE•T """'" u cl O•t•utt '"" Otm11\11 ror s.11 11111
I STATE OF C•ll~OINlol. l < O Or•n•• (Oun"' world peace can be assure d re uses perm ission to Red 111 ror~ • wrLL !ELL, •' •u1>11c •vc11o11 COtL Er.£ CATA LOG '011 1t11.,, M mrulcn E•~l•u • "''1""' ~011<1 .. o.rir.uit •"d l!1ect1en COUNTY OF l!llANGE h• In hl11'1t1I blclClu tOt (l!h l••YI OI• 4 11 bid• ••• to bt I" l (Cer,ont• W Corn197 to ~•II Th• und1nl•n•ll c1u01d t1lll through the in1ustice of under-Cross delegates to visll POW On 1~1, 11ih d•• 01 lltb""'"'· 1'"· 11•· •• 11 ... , 01 1•11 1n 11w1u1 _.,. 111 wlll'I tht 1"11r11c11on, 1no cnno111°"' .... ~ ,.. blli~•dNoO .. ~;. t .. 11 0111, ~1101 Noll(• 1r 01111111 1n0 Eltctl°" -., s.n
de ,eJopment " COmpS, and pre"ents I free ll:i•t mt, I NOii"' ... ublle In tn(I fOf tl ld lht UMllod lt1tt1) Oii th• tldtWl flt SoeclUcotlont Whl~ ort now ... lilt , .. • ' O '' '' 1t1\ l •I .,. te bf. •t<O•do-d In !hf Counl'P' wl!lrt • coun11 1no Sitto, ru lnlnt 1n1r•ln, dulY 11 lh• •nl .. IOCt le Sul!t No •· •100 i ncl "''' tit •ocvr..i Jn I~• oft lt• •u•" · ' " •~• ttll o•optrlv h loc:ltffl
Pompi•ou ca refully strayed exch ange or m all a nd parcel1 cornm1n 1cnt'd 1no ·-"· 11••to11•11v G1•d•11 c;, ... , 1...,1t .,••o 1n "'' c11, of 1r.. 11ur<~•1ln1 "•1111 01 u ld •c110o1 LEGAL NC'TJCF. 0111 "'~'u''" 11, "" " So ... ,.. •• e~ c~~.i .. D•~ll•Gn ~nd EllHI ot Gt •f!f\ Gr<Wt C&un!Y •I Or111t•. dl~l•ltl Tho Tl Ca<'OC!tl llttl.
from attacking anyone. or mething m usl a lso bt c D1v:11on •-to m• to bo IM s1111 11 c1111orn11 111 rloti!. 11111. 1nd E •t11 l>kld•• "'1111 ,1111m11 ... 1tn hlo ,...7ftu 1D1 c111lo•n111
d d . d one to p rotect both civilians P•tttde~I 1nd Sic••'•"' •I 1" • 1"""" 110w nt id b• 11 """'' ••Id bid • (t•hl•r'• rft1c~. •••llflfll cllt(.k c 11tT111rC4T• 011 au11 NISI •1c '°'"'''""· g1v1ng a vice to a nyone ur1ng coraer1no.. lh1I e~Ku!•d IM wlt~lll Df'HI of "'"II 111 '"" 11r011.rl• 1U1J•l.-I or bldd•t'• bolld """' •••1bi. ,, '"" lllCTITIOUI NA ME TITLE INSU it .i.NC( AHO
his trip T his was a sharp a nd combatants in c1v1l wars lntlr~menr ~" blha!I 1r 1111 co•1or111.,, in 10111 County •""' ''"'' 111Krl!IHI ord., el •h• '""" c .... mu1111. Corl•~· Tiit 11notrtl11"1td 11ot1 , .. 111v "' 11 'Tll:UST C0'9'1'AN'I'
I or "prisings, the Red Cross l~frtln 11•m~. '"" 1ek_,...,,.,. to ••. Let 111 11 lrtct No i )U , •• 11111r1e1 ac..,.f o1 f •u111e1 111 1n •tn11u"' e-uct·n• 1 11u1111u1 11 ll11 Htrtin•. 11 1•1<1 Tru1t11. departurt rom the commotion mi lh•I •ll(h ,.,..,,.,.,,.,,, ••K111H lht a-11 1111 • Mt• •Kordte in t oo11 not l•n 1h1n 11 ... •"e'"' u·.1 n1 Co•!• ,.v ... c1111"'"1' .,,,.,., tllf 11c '' T110m11 4ut1111
D G !I ft od d said . V"'~ 1"· 11•••• l• It U l1'>Clu11v, of th• oum bid •• • 1u"'"'"' ""'' the 1111ou1 "'~ "'"" ot tHAM,.ION ""' e au e 0 en pr uce ·---------------! WITNESS ...... ht nd •"" olllcltl ... 1. Mll(t ll•-· Ml••· •Kotdl ol Ott l'ltt ~kid•• wnr 1nlf r lll!O 1i., ••-ltd MOTOl ('P'(L(& '"" "''' u !d "'"' It Pubhtl\HI Ntwtot1 Ht rbor NtW1 ll•nl
during h is foreign trips. using LEGAL NOTICE tOFFICIAL sEAL l Cov111Y, C11Uor11l1, Silo o•wt•t>r II 11i.e CO!'t•tcl 11 tne ''"'' 11 '""''""' •o eorn1111ec1 el 1nt 1elklwl.,. oer~. wllfl•• comblnH w1111 o.uv 1111o1, N....._.
I f PAUL O McCL,t.llY, JI r•d'ldod 16 0. eomrnOlll• ~n11wn t•, "'"' ln 1111 •v•nl of l1llu10 16 11111r 11•me f" 1u11 t ncl pltC• of '"lk,.te llt1ch. Ct t!!Omlt f'lbt'Ult~ U, ,,, 11111 them .BS p 3t Orms for attacks NMI""" l'uftll<. C•Bfor11l1 ]1$1 Ktrrv LoM, Co1l1 Mtll. (1!1f&rnlA. ln!1 II/Ch (l!<lll1et lht l lOCltdl ol 11 11 tol1ow1, M1rcll f, 1'11 a.fl
On VarlOUS big powers, chiefly l .llt ~ l'rlnf•Dll 0Hlc1 In 5tld I•'• will l>t "'.odf, bvt wllftOlll lh• < ... Cl w!!I bt r1,lel!tf , o< In In• Tllom•• H 0.1411\d6. 1051 "'Ori Cl\lllN NOT IC• 'TO Cll•OITO•I 01.0110• Counlv tlWMtnl or wo"'""· ••e''" or l"'lllfd, Clll fll • bGllCI lhf lull 1um lllfrool "'lief, N-lt(!rl le1ch, Cl llf ttUO LEGAL NOTICE the United States. tU11•1ro11: COIJIT ol" 'TNE M• t,,...,,.1,11.,., l~plrt• •H••dln• 11111. 1 ••••11 1111 o• w111 ~ 10••111...i i. ••!' tcl\ool d111r1c1. o.11t1 Ftb•u••~ 1 "" STATI 0 0 CAll .. CI N14 11(111 Oct. 10 197' ont"'"'brt n<ff, to PtY 1111 rtml1"1~t No blddt t maw wl!ftdt1w ftll bid for l H Otllndl NC TICI TO C1t•Ot'TOll-.---
POmp1dou'S promise 0 f T"• COUNTY 01' OltAHOa Pi;tiH•h°"' Or•"'• Cnt •! 0•11• 111!"1 ptlnele•I tum ~r 1~, nett ••cured lt'I I M•lod lotl'P'·fl•• tdl d•v1 hom•llmt1 STA ti! DI' C4Ll,Olll:NI°', I UPfltlOll COU•'T 011 TH•
increased a id touched off I Ne •"*41J Ftt>rut tY ,l 1ncl Mlf(h? t, lt, !tl1 ~11 11ld ll••d, 1 ... wtt l'OUJJ wit" lnlf1'•1 :Jr)J Allt, tr.. d1l1 ttl for 1111 """'"' O•ANGE COUNTY, ITATI Oii CALlllOll:NIA Ei!flt ot Jot.Mf.I ot. IL •~E. t k• -------· ---!torn AutUO I, lt/0 11 !" tlld ~oi. lht•tol On l"fbr1111Y 1. 1111, bllOl't mt, t
scramble Jn several African JAMl!S ANGUS 1 u.1tr '"" JAM ES LEGAL N OTICE •• ,,..1o..i, '"" 111 otl'ler 1um1 1111n 1K11•N Th• • .,,, "' T•11•"•• ,.,,,..,. ... 111, Ner • .., llubllf. 1n 1nd •e• ••Ill ~,.,.. l'Cll: TH • couNT'I' oir IEDW.1.110 &LAllE . Otctttfd Of ll ld d .. d Ill lr111!. l tlVllttt Of •1l"tllnt 1nw '"d tll llld1 1>1ttG<11l!v aPatorHI Tllemll H, O<l•llllf H~~:=4 Capita ls he dJd not VISlt this NOltCI! IS ME l'U:l 'P' GtVl!N lo 1111 1!11tt l'•ll•ut,..,. 16, 1'11 II" lo w1lvt 1n, Ju "11lu lll1t 11• .,.. t -n It mt 11 M IM ""°" wl\clt&
time but plans to l our o n crHl"'n 01 lht •l>G•• ntmtd fet~tnt n n1 ''""NCIAL ~EDl!llot.llON, INC , 1orrn111t1•1 in '"¥ bid or 111 011 b!dd!,.. ll•m• 1, ,0111,,1t1td 1e tl'lt w1111111 1,,. E11ott GI Ma.., Vfrtlnl• tnl1«1• •I"' 11111 t ll ~'"°"t ~lvlnt (l~lmt ••t lno! l>j0TICI' OP IHTI NTICN 'TO T A1 •uell T•ullfl Ootn• Morell ,, 1'11 • 11 00 t m, t trvm•nl l lld ICktldWllhlt N hi b'lt'Ult'd kne"'n I I M1•V Vl•tlllll lchUl!f, Dlctl ..
another Afr ican trip next "'' Jtld dtttd•n• ... IMUlfffl '" Ill• Cl:•"'' St!tU'lllTY INTllll 8¥! llfllNPrl • W~ltntY Slo11•d, NO•IAA"I II!: WATSON !ht u mt '" ""'"'· wllh 111, f\ICHll ,.,. vovchtri. In (5KI '1f1-IU1 u c.c.1 T•u•I O!llet• S..clv, ...... d •I Trutlffl (0111cll l Seti) NOTICE IS >l[l !llV GIVEN II\ "'• ~ear !hi olfltf et ,~. eltt11: of '"• 1bovt NOTICE I• !U't•l>V 1lvtn re !lit ll1•bll1h•d o, ...... (0111 l!lt ll'P' ... It~!, "'ub!ltht~ Ort iw• (0111 OtllV Pill\! Motv l •tll MOl!<lll (.rtdl!ori el lhl •bo'P't Ill!"'" dtel!'d111t
Their lead.r s Pr omptly flew ,,.1111M 00\/rl er lo .,111~1 '~'"'' wltll C•tdlto" ot D•Vtl> L 'Tol.YLOll: •1111 "'"'111r'P' U I nd Mlr~h I, t . Ull lt1·11 "•b•u•ry !I, lJ, lfll ltS.71 NOTl'Y Pvbl!c . c.011t11,n•1 inti 111 "'''°111 hi vlni t!ilm• 11111111
1 •UOll:f.Y H, 'TAYLOR, 1!111>1er.. "hfft "'•lnclpil Olllto 111 Int 11ld dt-e:•<l•nl "" •••ul•od lo lllol
t Ah dJ P Id ht Mtcentrv voucn1r1. to 111 I butlnt u ·~~rfu l• IHI ••~tr Slfetl 1 "GAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Ort n•t (O\lll!V tll•m wl!ll Int ntc:e_u1ry voueh1r1, I~ n 1 a n lo m eet omp OU 11n1t11l•nf'll •I tt.e 0111cr or ~•· 1n11•n•v Coil• M•••· coun!Y 01 Or•ntf. $111• ldlt •• '"""'"'-''''''' 1~• onlce_ ti •~• ti••• or 1h1 •b<rl•
and d iscuss with him the new ~11ti!"c;,1:A~~·111:~~11 E~~~1;11';.11~:;,•t;, ot c1t1tornl•, '~'' 1 •t<u•l!Y '""'"' Ar·ll ,-·1Ti1 ~· 1ntlll•ll <outt, "' " 1r011n1 1,,..,,, wllll
deal ,_ had enuncialed while ll'le •lie• •' l!lit1<1111 et tht ul\dt<1le111t1 11 •btMI• In bt u·ou K !IV 0·~"'' ,0,,,,•,•0• ,'"'•••••••• ,0,,,,•,•0• ,"','•••T••• "ubll•hecl Or•n•t C•••t O•llv ~1101 1111 , fl«•iwrv "llllC, 11~"· 10 1~• ,,-'"" •M trtnt•d t~ O 11 t It I II UT I(') N Ftbr~try J, t. ti, 23, n n 2o )I dtfl l llHI ti 1111 tll Ct or l,ll(httl on, t • j th ] In •II "''11tfl PC"tln\nt lo "-t •1!1!' Sl:IVICF~ INV f 5 TM ENT COit· tl/Plltl(ll CCIHl'T (IJ THI I Ulll'll lOll COUI T OP THE ... rtor111v ti L1w IJllll Adtml A~111.,.,
g opp1ng over n e vor y ol u ld llKfdl M, wlllll" 11111< monTn POll:ATION $tcl/fHI ...... , .... wht 1• lT•TI 011 t 41.1 .. 0 I NIA I T.I.Tl OF CALlllC•l'ol•A •OI LE GAL-N oTiCE ___ COit• ,...., •• fUi), whlcP! It !ht •ltt• Coast '"'' ,~. llrtt 111b!le1llet1 ~· tnl1 "OllCt NllMU 111\dto \\ l• 1'°1 E•'' )ltll Slr'f\, ,:). TN• (l!llJNTY (I" THI: COUMTV 011 o •AN•l ol w.1 .. ,11 or lh• ...... ,,1,fl/'(I In ,u U I k De OtlN ,.;;r;;~~'f ,1!· 1"11 [ . 1 11 , 1 , v1,,,.,n, counrY cr1 LO! ,..,.,1,,, s11t• Oii ANOE I! N1. A.uut ll..lHH "'•"'" "'""•lnln• •o ft>tl ••t•I• of
•1'd "nolt 'rule oGutauollhlee,rp1'onmOupo1dnouc< ~;:.1:!',•;~,',',.'," R_Y,. ... of T~'":":,.w In whlcll int J.ocv•n1 1!111io of ~!.~1:1" M JOt1N$ON. t...!!!1:, ~111::;1.~~.,,,,1,:,N:1:·-..:~": ClltT~~c'~~T~:u~J frl~~~111a11 =~ 11.~:'~:'~•11;!"'~" rn:, =~· •lhl•
'1 '" , .. ~, "' llllt•nt w!ll lot crt•lfll lo, ln t•nt•ll, D9Ct l..,. 11 Wm, "'· JOll-. °'"'''"' O.tod J1brut t'P' I. ltll
In French·s~ak 1ng Afr1'c a. He lht E•!•to er! ,,.. 111 rntrclltl!dlst, •<t0\11'>11 •ltt!v•blt, II•· NOTICI II Hlltl!I V GIVl!N lo ll'lt NOTICE ll HEllEIY GIVE N le Ill• 'Tl'lf unlltn ltnH °"' c.ortl/J Ill 1t Ml(ht•1 D!011 r~ AbOY ... """"' Otc:"'1'1! nd I I I 1111..,,. IM ,,...ltoH ., "'' ...... lll rnH dKH ffll trMllttt ol lh• •lltw Ill/MCI """'"'' e ..... ucllllt • bu1lll*'• •1 Ut w. "'" E •-cv•,,.. 61 tn•
told his hosts France hoped ~·. ':~~ l~~L~,,... ::1111~ •• 01"~1':' ~.v.~r... ., ..... Iv lhft ·~~ ltttllll 111"1"" (111ml lflflll 11'111 Ill ... _, "'""'' elll"'I ....... , ~~i111~'!1' 11'::'' ... ~~"'~·· A~E:.; :'!'~: ~':!.!!:t•
other rich nat1'001 w1'll Join CMll M•••· <•lllw~I• tul1 -IK•tfod 11 '"' l tke• ,, ... I. C•I• Tiit .... """""' ••• •lollll'lt'11d .. fUt ll'lt .. Id •tctcll!ll ... r~11••td It 1111 l l!ll!V•llOH SEl:VICI ..... "'" lt ld -· '"" __ , Mn1. ,_.... ., O•-·· lltlt (If '"""· Wiii! 1111 neef'ltl•J """""'" Ill "'-· with 1111 lltCtl ... 1"11 wwcflt•1. Jn II • .. "' ·~ I II ' • In t~ promotion of the Tth tc:t-ltt• c1111er1111, 111111 butlflttu """"" •• "" 1111c1 "' ''" c11r11 ., '~ 1111¥1 111e offlct 11 1111 <lftk ., 1111 •"°... '"' (omD01 ' ' rw"" " -· '* "''"'' A-. "'*""' .. l.fl!lhtllb•trl.tl NOltTH Oll:UGS. 111tlfltiol CMWI ... lo llM'IM!lt ll'ltm, wllll tnlllt.11 eeul't, ... to •• ...,,, ,,....., """' ,..,..., .... ,,.. tn r11N '"° l'ltc• If rttltlll'U Chi• Miii. Cllll-1• l lill
continent wffflolrtt..WHl•Aftllll.. 'Tilt •for•~•ld t.ICVl'\l'P' ltllltl(llel't Wiii ,,.. 111(........ _,..,,, 1(1 1111 II ... 1111 l'tl(UMN ¥9U(ftttt, II 1111 \/.,. h II lollowt Tth 0141 Mf.7U1 Tbe f' h d l I lllltillll\td Ottll-fl C&.111 0 111.,. Pltet, bl <tn.•""'"'91" .,. ,,, tll•r ,,,. ht C11ritint11 et 1111 1111e1 ,, ~ .. 111.,.,...,..1 ,.,.,,,... 11 '"' tlfrk• 01 111, 11,..fltn·, "-"....,, w. Gt<"""'-1u1 •·-• ,.,,.,...., .., ••1e11tlf'
renc pres1 en II Ml Febr111 ..... 1l '"" Mt •cll ,, '· ... 1'11 dl1 II "'-•ch. IOI. •• Jt100 A.M. CUNAll:O 11111 Kl•K, IJ1 Nor"' ll:eu. c u11111.•o •1111 IUltK. '" Nori• 11011. LIM. COi/i Mff.1, Ct lll. llltlllllhM Otl l'ttl Cotti Dtllv 1'1191,
sought to sweeten lhe plll of ------------'-'_1·-".1,, l!llitriiwtlon 5....,i.:,1 '"""''""" ••11•• ""'• c11aor11t1, "'°' .... 1c11 11 1111 ''"" Afll, c 1111"""" .,,.,, wllkll rt 0 •1• '~"" ~~ '""ni•rv '· ,., n •M M••ct. J, 1111
an increased r1nanc111l effort LEGAL NOTICE CorHttlll'tl't· ?.07 ••••• Jtltl ,,, .. ,, •!Kt ., lluf1111-t• of 1111 ulldfrtltllf'O "" •Itel cl llullnftl of Ille """'"i1111t1 S1 ATE 01" CALl'O•Ht4, 11.s.n v.,-., CtlllOl'llll. In lmltllrntnh. kl I ll lfllllt" ttrll lf\lnt le 1111 Hllll In t it mtllt1•1 ptr!1llll111 M 11\t ttlllt O•AHGa COVHfY
for lhe F rench taxpayer. --------------1 St ,,, ,, .. _ h:I "" U (llrod If ,.,, lltttclt~t. wltlll" ""' rn(!f\1111 C)f ••111 dlt'edtnl. wl1l'tln , ... , """''ht °" "'""\/''" \, 1t11 lltlo•t "'" I LEGAL NOTTClt
In '
-"eraJ SJa••menJ! ht 1"·1'11 ll1rty, 111 tlvtlnfll1 n1m" t lld ldllrtsMI t f'lttr lf'lt II•" M llc.t tlott If tlllt fllllc.t. t l•tr l~I Ort! l'Wlk•!'M ti "'It 111!1e1. Nollry llublk In lfl4 ,... t•ld 5111o, ----------------
..... K ll'ICTITIOIJt l USINI SS .. , •• lY 1111 Debi ... "" 1111 lh•tt "''' 011111 J t•ni•rv J. lf71 0.1H "'"'".'" J, If/I .......... 11, ·-·r~ Artl't\M' w Cill'Ctl'tf\ , .... "°· PlUl
WAS the firs t F rench leader MAM• IT4TIMl:H'T ••• , .,,,, 11'11 N-ITHIL M. KAUI Lr 1!11111 ,,. K•ue" 11.-11 lo "'' lft lie 1111 !MrlOll """1·• ... CTITIOUS I u I I N. 11 Tht i.11qw1,.. --fl itolnt bllllneJfo Dlltd l'•&<°llll'P' .,, ltl1 Ad111lf\11t 11trl~ IOl~Wl" A~n«td Ad,,..11lllfll•I• w1111.w111.A ..... ~ .. n1mt 11 111Hc:•lllod " IM Wl!hlll t" lfilT•M•NT
10 :i sserl that F r an c e • s ,, 01sTR1luT10N se:11v1c1s of lh• E1!•1t 111 1111 •bevt e1 tht "'"'~ of 1"' ""'"'Int ,.,. 1c~newltd1M ,.,. •~tcu11d 'Th• ltltll'>I"" --iA d•l11t.i bu•l-• "~ration Ith Al t 8 tULL«r;·s "'••vcL 11u11:tAU. 1 tNVl lTMfNT co1t,..0*.1.T10 N Ntmof dH-4tnr •llf'v• ,. .... "" •et6flnt •!It t.,.,., ., C I'~ W r CA WI Ft,,.,lon $Ou1,.._ S111tt AM, C1l!I. IOH!" T, W£IO!MAN, tUNll.•O •"' IUlll lC CUNA ll:O 1tld Kl•lf. !Olfleltl St•I\ 00NALDSl!IN'$ 0£11T. StOltf, aot
M1l11 SI , 8tllld.t "'" not a one-waiy street J•mtt • M11cn111. 111 w111doiN1 0111,1c1 M1n••" .,, "'""' •t1t *'' N. ••~ ,,.."' ••"' MMlon
DI'' l • (1'11111. Ct ll! ''°" s~11rH ''"" 111111 A.111, C1Jlf. nn l ""'• A111, (tlll, ftH1 NM•,., llullll(. Ct llll:irnlt cheaper Imports <lf raw Thl1 1ti1111n1•1 11 ctl\OllcNC"" 11111tvlf\t1I 1•VNSw10 01tuo co. Tth M14.l11 Tt1· ..-1.s11 "'''"'I••• Otlle• 111
Lrwl1 0 011111ld1011, le~ 0, 0mM.
W••ll tN•1
materials w ere benefitling 111,,... JAMii MltCHILt. lfll •••• Miii 11r .. 1 ""'""'' l•r ••m1111ttt•t"• Alftt'M¥t,., -"""ln!1t111rh· O•tnt• ceuntv 'T•11t1• Vffltlll, Ctllf. ,..,. W~tll·WltloA•11•HI •1ti.W1tt.,t,111111t M'P' cn,,.ml11l111 ••• , ...
French f n du It r 'I ind llullll•htll O••ntt Co.11 f>•!I• lllle1 At1•1 Jtllll T. Wll .. 111111 Putwhl'!fd O•l lltf Cfttll f>lllY fl!lel llullllUI.., Ot•tlt• (~•1• D~·I~ ,.,IOI ll.1111 •• 1'11
'Tlllt bu'lntU I• llt!nl COflclll(lld W tn llld!VIClll~I.
"'v11111~1d 0••-Cn1J1 O.!tv "'lllrt O•llY 1'11111 l"~PT lf, H ,,.. MtoCll t. I, Ftllrw•rv ,,, I ncl l>\l tCh 1 ••••• !fll Pul!t""ld Ol tf\fl Gff.lf D1\ly l'llol, ~lt•Ul•'P' '· ••• u '"" Ml•C~ '· 1'11 FtOr\t-IPT t, "' n afllf Mlrdt ,, !'11 lllJ'llH111H °"""' , .... ,
commertce, too 't nJ n 1'1b. J3. "" V•·" >00-n 101} 11111rv1rv 1. t, "· u. 1tn ?4'r1 11f11 "'"' ,,
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10 DAICV PICOT s lut.sday ftbtLW)' 23 1971
Your ltlo1tey's OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock List
Tips on Saving Mo1·e Money ·-=.~ .. -:::::::.-=-:.::.:::=.•w"::.-"1"\ .... ::."',~~·f..;:1:...~.::m·::1 .... , ...
Worth
NASO Lllllng1 for Mondoy, Fobruory 22, 1971 ' '••• ._ ,_ "' l/::f"« ::"
1••••••;• ..... •~-=-·= .... =•••llFlllll••••••llM .... M ............ ,.._c.,. Fd ~ ISU !!lo -'4 e::-J;.
.. bOJ~D I 10 U 1(1 t 11 ~ 1' o -H\ llffVf,. •111..... ....... ,,. .. AC:fl Ind J. ,., "'I' ........ ~ -\.'J 111!1 Ol'I j .. IN •If ...... l it Acmt( tY .IO lS U t. l• 1 l•i., -t1 ~bell AM "°"'' ,......, JD 1S 4 .,.... '11o -h N •• 11"' I~ kfw YOIU( (Al'I IA Mii ?' .. ~us l!'nYtl ,, ,,~~~tlOtr11 1•0 •• Adm1E• ~ ~ u. u U\O ~I! 5f.P
111 Prepa1·i11g l11co1ne Taxes
-TM lolltwlne Ill r~ fJ ir i ~ I ,',",'• 4'V, !t"" •llntt M U't 24.'o M Miil 1 10 ~1 11'0 1' .. 16\0 -U Mll.,P ~t
Ry SVL\IA roRTER
(In CGl!aboratloo l'lllh I.be
Rtstarrh ln11llult of
America)
separation 301.1 m11y bentf1t
from a lax break y,luch
Congress wrote Into the 69
t .. x reform law primarily to
help abandoned wives
n"' ••-.O •uot,.. •;... Pr fl RU~ ellF Ill 11+< 11\4 ~~~.~ 15' 411 '* 1 .., ; ll +1 \~ fl~Mll 2 new "abandoned w 1 f I: I ·1 <)Ill,_ """'llo<I ~y ult 1111 :,,. • .~ ~~ •1~ 1~ IJ:1,~1 t. ·~~ f\.\U Atln•Lt. l ~ ~1t irn ~ , :· =,::: ~!.r 1',I ~x~ I ch f the l'ltllon• M~ll( vrod11 ,,;, •nee le 1 § " l h ,.;, Aet,..LI pt J • .. d \\ 41 'I -h l ..... u .).,. prOV ,IOn ea 0 YOU Cln ~ of S.CurUlt,Httll11 In ,? .. Jh !•r.11<1 12~ H\\W1h1 M!t •"I .~. Aiu r e Co J4 11 ti lhi _I,(,. rl1 Cr1!'1
file a.s • srngle person without r.ot 1e1:1u1/~ ins!': °'::'i'/11C: 1 ~ ~"" ..,,.,. P 'JI!. if\11 ""rn; ~: h 0 u ' ~l)"n •nc u 1 .. "-4''l 4'lt -+ 1 , ~ l cv•Jl
th bo 1 ,,.,, 11u1 '" ,,,.. Mldoc Mi "" 4+). '" •o 12 U llo 111•1 Mt ,;~ J"' A' I'°" 1t1t1 'f 1!; 12 • ,4' + ~. ::'rJn:f1 J e a ve restrictions ru1t11•1 v• 111•1• tiolotim ~ "'? "'U' , J li K PL nio n p. : ~ 111':.i D',t!1 ,Jt 24 ", ~ i _.,, ,!!", ,' "•'
Ellher of you or both of :=::.1:~~:1'J '' ~; ~., 111 it''~~ .... :rr .. c; 1;t: 1~~~~~1 ~ 21\ Jt ~ 1tH1w1ir " " •u "'' 11'> ·1'11'
l OU separately MUSI ( J) f<)e ~~,,',!. ""'1dl ,~JS!:!~ c;,,1 '!: 11\-0 Wellll "• ll'A 12 W"r11"r E )Im ,..,, !1,'°'i'11 r 10 r M;. Jilt Sllii t 1' J:: ~~I lf Assiurung \ ou Jtemlze your
deductions you don t ha\ e to
go lhrou:_:h tht tortuous 1ob
o( computing the actual sales
laxes )OU p:ud in l970 in order
to f1gurt your stat'" and local
!I.ales tax dedurt1(o(]S Yoo can
do Jt lhe eas) "ay bv
deducung the amount allo"ed
by the orf1c111J 1rcas1n1 op-
11on:il sales tax table lor a
ram1]y of ,our SIU! "'th \our
1ncom~ 'ou II hnd lhese
laxes in l/1• lax booklet the
Treasury senl you and you
can add lo the figure allo" ed
to )OU by the table any ,..ales
tax vou paJd on the purchase
of an auto {except in Ver
n1ont 1
Tile off1c1al 1nstrurl1ons do
not say so but lhe Treasurv
al,..o leis ~ou add an v l!"nera l
sales tax on lhe purchase or
a boat airplane mr:t11le trailer
or rnatt'rials boughl by you
for the construclron of }our
011n home
You probably file separate
rel urns and are generally
taxed as single But you
ha\ en I been able to get ell
the tat brtalul given a single
perstin You cant (a ) take
!he $1 000 maX!mum standard
deduction or the $ I O o O
deducl1on from or d 1 nar y
income allowed for capital
los~es ) ou rt hm1ted to $500
for vear You ran I fb) use
the lo'Aer bead or household
rtlles e\ en though yo u
ot~M\ 1se quahfy You cant
(c) freely use tht standard
deduclion l'Jr 1tem1ze ~our
deducllons both of you must
ust one or lhe other And
}OU cant fd) use a different
type. of standard deduction
both or you must use the
percentage slandard or low
income allo1~ ance
But 1f either or both of
)OU separatelv can meet the
follov.:1ng nqurrements or the
--•• """' """"'" 2 22\'ll Altlli• ,. ' -'· 11 • ,.,.., 11" ;-'\ lllG Dlf JO t I 2 ) h•~e -... "'1• 11<11 ,..,. -. i\J •tit -'>"-n.. 23 • -iu llGE iJ, a separa e return u..~ ll'"'I DI' 1,11<1 PP lib Al "°' .» s. ~ ~ ,2 -1o I"'/ .. ' 1 40 i hi h ho IOld lb l 11 ff H I P I !t°"<•n'"'•'o-•, " 'll't IJ ll t Tr' I .. mainta n 11 s (or er) me 11,,1., merk•ff H:~n c. :w 211~ .,. ,.,. 1 11 • 22 -\I IT :.?s toe
a household which r ore Ull llllf "' "411111 1:''" Int 11~ l2 I MUTUAL :•.,c.S••,... .)I) 11.'4 l \o 70 :101. -:\lo llft5YC , 20 or m Oll1 tM 11111 Prit:u m1" '( t 11 ''" ndr :io 11 u • '' o -~ c 1, 111v .JG th h " th ta bl cio "°' l<\cl\IClt nd " ''"HI• "',!""•,',' .,,,.. " U•• 12lt lj . -I CllVll'IV pf BJ an O~ Bu e xa e year ett I m1 ~u11. lntcw ~ "• •, ,•,• A ••Ll>d '• us l)lt> lJ 1 -o c t11111 tll JI 1s the principal plac. Of abode m1r~llO'twft or uwn ,.,.,.,., 11 , 11 JO • H • '"' -\1 " Stu "' HIOtl /"I Cont I ''"' A ~l"" pl J 4 u ' 4)" .Ql,, -1 • lll"li El' • of a dependent who Is a son A.1o1 CDr• .. ~ ' 11trm in ~ '" FUNDS !, ~P(11 l ~ 111 1''° '' 2' • -' i.nc oi ..,
d ht AFAPt I 31\~ :C'h Int 8Will 1 11'} 1 A IO Ml n olO 4V 7111 11 • 11 -~o, 1v ("I\ M or aug er or stepson or A1¥ 1r.c e10 1fl~ 1n1 N~ 1 r 11\lo 21 AllllM 11 ,~ 1 n ~ :1111 n -... "'"U~ 2.1'
.stepdaughter for whom he (or ~~J ~':: lf 0 1l" 1~1(~11' ff"" rt1: "' ed P~ .. 1f t: i1" iJ''' =•": :=:u ~
h At11ri. 111 ~ JV, 11 1oe1u1 1 31 31.,, ~11\:5tuo~~ 111 11 • Ju. n ..-~. ""'1,,1 ,. $ e) I! ~nt1lled to a All s. """ lO't> J~ F-l"4 ' AUi, (II f SCI IOl •• I • l\o -~. ~et!' pl~
d d d•" (•) A!• lnck/f 3\'i ~ J-n C 11 o A A > }JI "\\ 1' U\ -'' A Finl -56 epen ence l:\IUctJon ., "ltlff H , '~j1m .,., .. s J~; Hfhw Y01t1C CA,J l~vttlon Grou' A~:•,u c.::! .)Cl tt n ii -•· A !llfAllt r"rnlsh more than on•hnlf •'",""'•~ •~ lA 1mes F 1S0i 2flo ~ Jo 1aw "' ._... 10s fldJ •.Jt t.lt Alce. 1 to 1J U'llo ~,, l.~ -~· °"'' s1 G••
0::-•• ' n: j""•D~ 'I 10'4 '''""•' l~rr ltd by IAut '" 10 11 A"'I ~ ' '° 5 11to ,, l 21 -t~ USG• oil lt th. CO" of ma la n••g the 'l'o Ll'ld 1ru 14' """ ?111 l , 4 me 1•111111 A11.1ei. P °' ' 13 , • AM A •• ,1 ''' 'j ~ ... -. ~ c~1 1 " In I .... Al B•v .... 3•i 11Hr II no .. uvo•UCll'I 4t 1«Wll~I Stoco. 1toa7011.-,,...,. -"'10 • • j ··· -•• 0(1 ''" M
household and I.) nol ha,, .1onft11 E• 1~ 10lo Kt ISi ,. '~ ll h 0.1ltrs. Inc !" Stlocl '" '" Am Et on" II 21'" ' I µ,. -\~ 0 I ... I '° Al yn l!lt U '1 15 I k t v1r JIU. 11 I'll .,kit •* wn di v., Py 1 I 7 11 Am Mtn lOr Ut1 ;1~~ lo•: 4 , .!/ lo ln1 A k
l our spouse as 1 member of"',~",•,,", 11o f!• •• Grn 414 ...u"'~'-HCu•1t~1 n .. 1111111 ''' s oAIMH 011.so ...i1 1JV)tll 12 --,a 011111 111..., .,, U \o 11h IYI"' l'o 4 "' htvt btt11 1111 20 ).4 21111 AAl•t:"r. ., Jf Sl\.'i 51'• SI• + i Olo ""' I AO that ho usehold durmg the A El L•~ 7t• m "' T 12. nlil:~J",111l.~.~'"'1vr 10t 10t Am Ir 11 IO 3 1 16'h 1'. 161'> 011 1,,., 1 Am E~Pt ·~· la • ti Ill ,..,. I ' 1....... '""'i'U'l' MMfl(k 1 u • 21 A Ba .. ~Sq J2 :!!I "~· 1u, o~ In p' u enllrt' ytar A•"•'•"•'•" • t 111 • .,.,, 31 371/t A111 JMM!n 21 I) 21 u"' ftrnds 1120 145 •nt. ,, ,1 -\i !Is' 'o" • ~ ~'I '' 11111 E 10 ~ 11 lie On 1 f;I 2 21 tVI OM F~l'IOl Am8 <kll 10 IJ 79\~ 11\i 2f -" .. If In meeting requirement A M~t.11 llltll •i(ov• fn u1o 1,1Adml 11111 Fu1d1 Nouo es.10 .. Am C1n!:io 1u •l1r ' 4 ,_~es pf 1 Am Te v II IV:. c I G ..... 111 l )ll ltl c '' ···-·AC•11ot1s .,.,,,,~28\'t+t1 !a~G11 l l~ (2) You m.lnt.ln a home as •"" 0 '' ~ .. •l'I u1 1111 11 lnccm •I) 'JJ Ut '" Am Ctmen 1l 91; • 1 o uP ti '5t
I I r bnd Anl!~' 111 tl' iOI'! fYll PC 10 101! ln~u• I 61 1 '5 CUI 112 19.19 21 10 A (Min I 60 12 2J'• 1 : ,. , -' o rioon i IO a pr1nc1 pa pace o a e Arn ,,,., 1 ; 1~ 11\11 tn ' ' Adul11 51' ,,. Cu• 11• •~ '" ACrv5ua 140 t 2l o 2J\1 ll>.o 4" 1{ mn En 1311 ... M !" t~ 1{11191 El •') 1 A1 n1 FCI f6j 1t !~ Cui k l 111•S'A(y111d125 lll J5 o ,}.I') Jl '>-I om~lv fO of the child for the entire A~ "MOP 1 t< 13.,. Kirk CP 1 71'< .1o111 111e1 1 J 1 t5 cui Kl 'u s' "'"' o 11 1 1 u N v. 20 o XI~ _ , omwE 111'11 H '2\~3] l{,._p \lot 31 >Jl V.Atul1 l h 151 Cuo $1 11241ttllAOll!Te IOu •111 :16\~ lSl< :M +' oml: prt u year rather than JUSt half the:~":. lJ\!il oi toL.lnc• In l.lilo ).4 , ll Am ,. 16 ll (.u1 s1 10J111u .1om Ou.ive.i 21 ~. 11, l'l jlomE P •l
Ir ACC l ot 111~s.i1~-1nd lttt 'lo 4 Al1t1 e 10j,d11411 Cul ~J IM 1:16 AmEPw 1111 l'/6 ;o , "'' 1'1 o -omw 01 Ml year you may e\l!:O qua1y A:'9 5c 1l\ ,,., '"' w11 1~10;1;"~ Fd 1121n11 Cu•~ '"'•ff Am Exp 1ne1 111 111-1 ll\il lllo-io omo .if n
he d r ho hold 8 11 0 Al 5 1 4'4 ftlOn Jlt II' mc11 I U 'l'J Po Ir J 59 J 9• AmE•P •I A• °"'""' Sc nsa a 0 use -en 1!k., 21,022'!.•ae1vc11t•lfl'AmBu1 310JH 1c1rD 72'194 t1~11 1~so ,1 ~-~1omw1 !0
1,11.d to U'. lo •• r I.I rates 11,1mlllll 13,174\lo "''"'' no J Am Cv11 1DS71115 ll(lr GI '20100I AGn8Fd ,., 26 M . '' 16\, -MU i! BIUrT'•I ~ 11 e wr G " Ul'I ""' Eql'f un1v1 I tnox Fil l X> 6 11 A G•11 "' J,0 ICl 11 7 11 11"' onnMtl lll
th n Slnsle per.on Other. I•· 2 o1N •w1 II' IJ J....,Arner li!•pttH ex (irtll 9 ~ , .... Gnt~pll'-I 11\• JJ>, l •+ L onr1c fl! ;I a .::ct~ :n 3J 001..... ••1 ' c" I I" • ' •• AKI! u 11 I• H Am HOLi! '° ff II 10•. 10~. -~ Oii Edi• I IO l¥\Se can Bet1I ,. tt 11 ~ 10. 011 Cll Y 21. lli ln<m• •JD 10 11 btrtv 1 Ot • w A Homt 1 10 2)1 n 1ov, n + v. .,,, I'"
B!tl Ltb 4J., '6 vnch C '"' 1S , Sptel I OI /l !1 Inv I ll 121 Am 'l<>1p 26 1115 J1 ~ JI 37 on Ol1pt > 811UP1 VI 10 lf'h M1d GEi UV> U\1 Stoc.k 117 l t':!Llnc Nit 10Jfll3' Am l11v1! SO ;n 11"1 ll ~ lt'l"' -\'o onE PtCl lS
:\flll1ons of \ou 11 Ill h 11 ,.
to prepare your 1971 estimated
lax derlara!1on after ftn1sh1ng
1970 lrom 1949 Again an easy
\\av lo co1er yourself aga1n"'I
po s slbl e prnalty for
undcrpa\1ng }our ~, trtx 1s
to estimate your 1971 lax 11.s
rhe same as the tax on }our
1970 Forin l!l40
Coniputer Savvy Aids
A irnie1i u1id Students
B•rlt HI •7>ff l'o Et 11 \l~o lll.> lnvnt I to 161ll• Stk 142 1'2A Homo!Pfl 7IO,S ~JOfl1lOJ~-l>(o !°" dl'P1 t
<d SOtl 4l ''"' If.I[ '""' Jlo I Am Grlh I S7 I ll llln1 I 11 A MtCI Cl 11 51 JI .)01, XI : t'o 11<1 Fili 1 20 l!llrld'l r 11• l '-I• ltllt 7,. 1 '>Am nv ""'vi llLoom 1 $.fy '' A MHCI• I 40 IH » 0 3'\J :u -Otl Fil 1>'4 loO
ll•ti. I'll 3 :u ' l~rl •1 •m Mui • It '"' C1111C1 XI IO XI Ill .... Ml c • pf 4 J n l ""' "' -;-on Fr~nt OIUt El 7 ~ J nor c 1 I' 1 AmN Giii l 11 2 JI Ci1> 1 10 t1 10 91 Am Moro • Jil 1 1 11• 1,_; !, ~ 11<1 Ltsolno 8oo!ht c. H • 17 • \\Ir Ml• II 11\ Ancnor G DUP """'' 14 'u II ANl!G11 2 11 llO fO JI :it I co .. H1 c; 1 II 1!1001 AM 11 ll'\lt erowr "~ ™: CIPll l.Cf 117 Lulh a . 11OJIJ15 ....... PholP ' l)'J I i , II 1 -c ..... Powe l BM C•• t , 10,. \lul LP u \ lJ , Grw" 10 tt II tJI .111n1 In 1 Jl t.S. A llleiOV 0"9 Ill Sl Sl SI \ -io 1on~ 11• . .n 1!1•1C1et1 t W 7\• l,\cQuv 16 " lncmt I n I ti ....,Mtn • u $ Jt Am 5t1t 12 " in.;, 11'1\ l7'o , "",, P\4 SO 'ink 111 ll 42/o Fd llV IU t 1J,. G Am S~p 60b u 11'~. -~ 11<1 • .. n • 's 26 u v. .... "" M ...... Vel'll 'llW'311~~1 ·~ , ..... A 5mtH Ito 3"i 1 • " -1 ffin C•n l j,Q Br I C• td M1t 1J • 24',\ "llron , SI SOI Mf,u1c1>usttt Co Am~Alr JO Jf !}J 26 ° 1iU -~I I (111 PU Jj flf'IJn A 1~• 11 .. '-1.t<;! n 40 • 411, A.It Hou•hton F ffd 110 t 10 Am$At "'10 1 4.-. ""'° 4714 + ,, I COii JOe l!l .nl'I •• t 1n! Ml I .. llhll\' Fund A Ill '°' lnlltP tll tlO Am Sidi 202 ~s "" 41 Ofltl(orp 1
You rnay find rt cheaper
though to u se 1971 tax
riiles and exemp1 1ons 11h1le
rht1mating 'our 71 lax on
lhe basis of lhe facts 1n }Our
i O return TI1e reasons arP
lhe 2 : percent su rch:irge
lrTIJKlsed in calendar 1970 1v1ll
not apply 1n 1971 and i.:our
personal erempllons l'.111 n ,..e
from :t62a on }our 70 rt>!urn
In $650 on }OUr 71 return
Also if ~ou are single tou
may pay taxes al sharplv
reduced rales ror 1971 And
if your eaminj!s are 1n lhe
\erv h1Ph brackel \OU mav
qu11hfy for a ne w 60 percent
cr1hng rate (instead of a 70
percenl top ra!e )
I( t ither you or your spoust:
111re phy <:1rallv unable
her ;iuse or illness I" sign )our
Joint relurn or declaration
~ou 11 flnd 1he Treasury has
eased ns requrremcnts Th e
v.ell spouse can v.1th the oral
consent of the 111 one sign
the others name
chm1nal1ng the formt:r need
In hB\e a p1n1rr nf allorne\
<:1gned by lhe 111 spouse The
new rule s11n!'!y req111rr~ \OU
to add a formal slalemenl
Rf tcr )OU SL:!n !or \f!Uf r'I(
spouse expta1n1ng the rea~on
fnr the inab1hly of the spoust
to sign and confirming that
thr spouse has consented
If you are among the
hundreas of thousands of
couples who hav• \Olunlarily
"e paraterl but ha1e neither
11 dlvor~ nor a legal
1 000 1 011 OIL PAIM TIMG'
WHOLESALI WAalHOUSI
OPEN JO THI PUILIC
so•;. OFF
111' • eCl NGll• '"''""' ••• "ho>nt •1~ CIEAtEll WANTIED ..-
LET'S BE FRIENll Y
II )OU hll\! nr I ll<'i:(hbr"
or kM.,.. of llO)Onl' n1•"1n:::
to our 11rra pll'llM' 11'11 u•
~o thal 1 " may r~I nit 11
friendly 1\rlcon1r and I r\J
thrill t J ho. rumr ar-qu111n\1'il
In lhl'1r nr.,.. ~ 1rrn 1nd1n:::•
So Coast Visitor
4~579
Harbor Visitor
Mi-0174
NE\V YORK (UPI) -Le\\1!
Robins a computer expe:rt
from \\'estport Conn has
made a lot of money by
s1mpldy1ng the complex for
government Robins 38 also
has helped young s c h o o I
children with reading pro-
blems
The Colurnbla Un1\ ers1tv
graduate has worked h1iii
s1mphf1callon magic on f':t
ecuLl\es and sale~men at Lit
Ion tndustr1es JB~f Union
Carb1dl" and National Cash
Register He had his mo<1t
notable success al NCR "h1ch
1n 1962 hired him to train
Atr Force per~nn~I 1n lhe
11se of the NCR 390 computer
The eo\ ernment had purcha"
ed 174 or them the loirge!>I
single order 1n NCR h 1~tor)
to erase 1he ~ork Hl Air Force
pavmaster office" around the
\1orld But the sale "a" con
11ngent upo• training the 1n
d1 v1duals "ho '"ou ld use them
Robins "as called 1n •Te
si mply produ ced ;i n audio tape
\vhich guides lht ope:rator
lhrou.gh the \ar1ous sleps fl'I
he sits at the ron"ole All
the complex tech n 1 c a I
1 ernacular was reduced to
language lhe averaee per~'"l
ran underst::111d and 11 \\Orked
for NCR
Th;'!! samt' )ear Robin~
starlcd \\OrkinJ! on a problem
11h1ch ah1a\s had 1ntt're~ttd
him le:<ich1ri,c: non readrnrr
problem elementan school
children to rtad \Vorkin~
thrnugh "' small ~chool 1n Bed
ford Hill<: NY Rob i n!
learned that melho t an<t
materials had ht!le to do "'th
lhe OVt'r :'Ill problem
So Rnbins decided to de\ t~e.
a s\~tem that "ould mnll1ate
a problem re :ider b) allo\\ln~
him to measure h s daily pro-
~res~ lie 1n11'n!('d a pro.
1i:ramme<1 un t 11 h ('11 b:is1callv
t\ :'l'I a o.;n1~ll ln1 like record
pla\er color-l"oded to card~
1mor1nted \11th a fe.,.. s1mplt
v.ord' n, 1; 1 1 1 n g mea<1u rabl ~
pr,..,f ol d:ul1 pro2re~<= ~aid
R•i!"S 'v.e re <=hn111 n1T lht
rtuld aCN stomeri In failurt
th~t he ~ succeed1n~ •
Robin., M!t up a comp:in..v
callet1 Creah\e IA':im1ng Inc
lo de' elop product a n d
market the <t\Slem and l!'Ol
'"'eral ~chrlfi1n to trv 11 out
Theodorl' \\a tier pre~ de nt or
Grolier Educalional Corp a
sub~fdtnry of Grolier Inc en-
c1 clopt'd1a publishers bec:ime
1nteres1ed In lht read nir
<t\slem In Apnl 1970 rnoa•\\e
le11rn1ng became a Groher
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e Hr1" .ca rt11il 1:1\r fir 10
f<n~tcr 1h:i n t r'~ If
'l."0 1 Ina hu1r} Q; 1 ou!
Tooay
:~~tYC• \\ l \ \\1<1111 Cl 1•• l lo Fund I 711 I ff MIU 11 j 12.Jl .... $ d 014 JJ ' .:I'• ~f; ~ -~ I Cp plA1--IO eurltUO 1 ,,,'nt.l,\ldlt• ]';1 l• Slock I OI 6..51 ~\f;U Inc J ll ltj,Q A~ Srtrll 4' SI 11 1••1 !' -:: Ot>IMI• ('ol 'partner 1nwhat1s now call !1c L•1i .. ~ t•\Mklw GT ., 1<I kc. '"soi <I•~· Gt~ ll101'"'" ~'"" m iai. iov, o>.·-~:!~'8' •• • WSv 171\1,,.MotGll 1' 3'V>e1-tlltJtMIH Tr ll\lll!ltAm l.LTJj,Q ·-""' llllf1 ed th c I c e I ve lld N 1\1\\\luVG "'1n11111•ti. l ll l1t ""•·~ •1'41• .. 1tso n ...... o I Ot1tr1110111
e iroier r a 1 :'llO<l'M ~;'l "t{J:.,"'5{11 h: i:::~~Ot>Knt 1it;1~i;~v.1J~iu 1llt 1~!~:.~.'1",':11~ 11:f i/J:: ll\: IN::~~~ ~wooc1,un11 :3 Reading Program. C•n~M • •'4 s"'""""w" 111 2l\lol,~nerk Gh ,1, ,,. v CP 1211u uA ,Dr 10 ltO 2i ?l') ~1,,_1 -,•nil 110 In lhe last SI X months lhe l:~ ~!•• 11 • 11'~ M11<11 Col •~ 10 \ ai. • Fd 1 1t 1 11 \\ocdv 1 1111 1' oe m nc 11 ,,. 1 -, )coo Qt 11111 Sow I 1 l lio Moo<t P 10\to 10,,_ BOii°"' St I 10 l lJ \\ F FO I IJ t •4 Ame 011 60 II '11• 11 '> 11 \ _ >o (COW II SI svstem has been purchased ~!: MA , 1 5\1 MOor• s l ' u 111111 Fo11 11 Jt n lTjV.tF Grll s J9 s a1 ~1e1 '°' 19 u 11 ; 11q _ 1~ "'nthB 01Q
and used in 90 classrooms c1,,•,',"•• 3 , .. • Mrte TrA 21 V. 'l-. loston 1 22 1 H v.uus Gu 11 02111t ,,...,,,, ~o '° 1~ ~" :,\ xi _ \l ~~~G~':rci?~ c ~ l~\ Mo!cll M I'\ • l!lrwn Fd J JI l 11 V.U OmG u11aval AMP tn M '' 15 \ 61 , :fZ -Crwnze 1 10
In 1,6 Cities Jn 2, stales New ~'·,,'," .~.· 2:'i tlU. Mo! Ctub UJ..o u :o. Bui tck Celv n Y.u Om n U"IVlll Am11co °'O 1t ~~ • • • -'· 1u•1Wr A 1 ~ " 11:\lo 111'1 Ml•T• wt '~ Sh IUI c~ u ll u I ',\ul s~rs 16 OS 11 O,! Amoe• c .)I • ~? -. York City has it in 250 ,,•,nTe~,, "l~.O•Mutltr 9•,104 c!r"",n u o11oe!\lut Trst u111v11111im•t• 01t' .: ;/.; ~J.~: J~ -~ ~~~M\:01 • 1• 1•\iMr••LE :ionJ11 lwsi~~r'~S~EA Mu1 101t10 40A1M r an1s 2 $.1 '>.u 14 •-~ classrooms The Queen of S1k Ctn• La~ t:w. Hcc Ind s 1v. • ~11 r11d 10 $110 51 Amsi1 "'" 1 , , , ,, •,, -• 1htrt 0 '"' 1 N1r •1 C U\'o 11-., y Vnt 1J l6 ~ I ~&! SKur S.. Am~ltd I IO •S ll 30 ; XII~ -• !lrl Ind .JO!I kim last year purchased two hm Lt~ 11 • n N• C•• "' 1 • 1<1• t~"}dFd ; ;~ 1~M 1111111 10 ti 11 " :mre 12 41 111 , • !'" = ~ •rt 111<1 p1 1 r th h!J Ind ~1 l ' Nil G~O lJ\O U t C ''' O >> Bon<! 5 0t 5 SI llacc~ l to .!Jt l1 • '10 > l '4 1vcoCo l 11 0 em Chto u I 1, 11 N•I L n 311'1' lit• ( •Piil!• Olv" 'lS • n Ancll Hat:k 1 3t 34 • lS" lS~a -·~ 0.l'CD p" 1J Does the blue mach1ne·1~:1~·~1 13 1• 111 Med Jl »~c::: 5~~ ~~: lf: Grw•h •1'1001~0(" $v< s ll\'I 10 , 21,_1,01v1nHu11 so ol 1J lJ N•! SKlf. )1 llU,Ctnl 5hr 1 ffl)OI Pf S k 13'11UAP h~ 110 41 41 •I ~" -O•vlnPl 160 really \1ork'J Yes 1r word ~~stMt• 'u ,1, ~1,•, ',',•,•, 1•;, '•Chinnn1 Fun111 tncom s.io 1t0,,...:0 i°'n/1 'J ,1,., I&• 1• -~.o'L pto 1 .11
r h d Ir t C I UA ,., 7t,. l\lo I'< l!l•tn 114115! Sock 11• I HAPL C 6 So J.4~ 3'~-7o0ffro Co 1 romteeucatlna raernitycl!ua 71i'11~1E11 GE ,..,,,,com SI 111 111Nt•G1h '"'"APL1>1"'8 1•11,11 1•.-,o.rm1P1U
r I J hn H 1l • 2lt J N1tG " • 11Ai Gr .. !h s OS s u tUW Cel s •s I 11 AlllA Svc i"'• .! ,,nl. 171~ 111. -~-Ot Mlllt 1 10 IS mean1ngu o ~·.i:11~11 11 '12 'Hk,.,,, F 11\'l lt i 1"com 161 111 NNW F1110211022...., ~· 1 ,n1a 111~ O•t•Ar so Neimever president or !he c1 n1 11.., 1• ~ u ii!• A •:H• ""' S11t< 1 /1 1 u "'""" w d 11 9• u i. A ~:::"' O!f , 61 ~ ., l• """ -•, o,11K '"' Cit O t ;r (0 ltll l!I U '4 1l.Ch1 .. Gr 80• Htwo11 U6f 1'01 Atd\0Pl ' l ~~ Cenn llf<1H Bank Street College of Erlura c~ ""c.. 11 ) 1t Ctr N~ u 1, 14 (1<111 •. ol 1 XI Hie/\ Str t 11111 26 Arl1 Ps•:, Col 1~1 ~~ ~ r l7''o -'• 0.nnvlht 04
lion and. member Or th' Ct"•'··'•~ r. ~I Eur 0 1 OJ l~ Fund 1'1 tsoH<ierl>I l!SllSJIAri.11, OS l•t l 'o JOI ) i'. ,1 12,!nltol'rlnl t fll,u u1~n 1WN1!G Q,JQ\•F n ''"'ll'1119Pn 11111Armco$l '"':Ill'• -...... ~co olB "atlona lReadong Councol ',!!..en,',,' •4 1 "Pusv 211111 0 sn11c1 11 101111 "'"' 1n 1>1Armc 1117 10 25 n•' ~·· ~~•-\•lr'Sato!nc ., 1• ..... ! ~. 5) ucl Jhc • 'l< S;iKI I tl '15 !DO Full~ 1J II I! XI Arrn PU IS llDO il\ il • ~ .. -I etfd I I., (Prmed II VI!""' effeCll\e' C~ G•~ 11 1? Or.lo An I t hrmtl 11 11 110101 Fund t4 IOllA..,11 c-1111 IOI 3'., JS'I 3' ~ ~•Erl D'""' '• Coml I'• t ~ :>tl1'11 Sc.,1 11 171 Co on• wms U..H 1'.51 Arm(~ pfl 15 11, ,011 6? tO \ ~ ' ti Ell P 5 50 Ke•th Bradac principal at the com 1-11" c rn ""'"' ll l Equ1y 401 416 :>Ne 11.5r11.51Ar'" 111u1&a n 31 3,..•.... O..•e• .J• Com P.v 1 0 IJ 'II ltr TP 11 1 l')li Ful'ld lo IJ I II OP-I DO I 74 Aro Coro 90 4 ?'11 Ill' 7'\'' -\ Dl1IFlft1n 411 Daniel \\'ebster School t;ew t'omo " ' 1 "' HA ' , 1 , Grw ~ '10 '11 °""' "'A\ 1.011111 Ar vin 1no:r 1 ,, :it ' 71 ' ,,~ -• o 1m1nu 1 10 (mp ...... 10 • I I 0 :t~yc1 IJ .. 1' In o;n • 9J 10 ~SloTc ~ec lD )Cl 11 'O ASll II 01 I 10 20'f 21 • 11 • ... • -• ot .... S~lm 1 Rochelle NY said It pro-cmo ,,., ,5 s Unl llr 1 u. Ven! 411 51JP1c1 Fnd 16tl3SAHll l!ltow Sl t ' ,·-~011hpl(2
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Mrs John Hoffman second ',!:, •,0oct 31 • 3>' '••k• D• H 4 ~ ~w ~ All 1 •1 l ss p1 IAUI • '° 1 '° """' '••mo .. 11. 11 • 111, -v. D0 tbo d .. n ~· • '•f:1rkw H t o lO ol,.;,;:~, i ~\1J 'r,11Phll• u11u.s.aA,•,,t""•" '"" ll l&>o is , 16 +;r,01g:;:0'fl11 •rade teachor 1n \Vestport 10t01•n l • 2l 1utY P •• 1,t , j ~l orim t•tlo.st ~ 1.u l• ,,i, ,,, '4\.1.-"oo E " OOot 1° 19 ••velle I• 1 IS ,~MIP!! t 1 I 1 Pl1>1 SI I 12 1112 AH E Oil 11 II fl ti +I'" "1• qulo credits It w1!h leachi ng lhree ll<'P s s 51 1p,...1 Ml 9 • .,, omp 811 • '"p1..., 1<111 111 190 "'" RcMf111 ... , ,, •·~ ..s ~-l 0111,,.~ ... 40 ~Olm Vr ,1, , ,1:.,, Ptt fo T ll 7I Comp FO t 17 10 61 Pion Fnd ll 21 IJ l • .flit illcll pll 7j '' ~ '°' '° 60l.~ + •• ll l"g Pl l!I 1 poor readers to read v.hen rwffrf •'"P p 1 , omotk ~,. •61, , 1,,,,,,,A lll cllOIJ •ln 1C11 111 _., 011onco '' Cn ., ~ 3: pen, '••~ • • oncord 1 ,, 1 S4 Ill 11• .... "''" Pl110 l j ' ,, 0 1ntv :JCb all other systems failed ,: ~h :t 1 , 1 , "''' wo u • 2• 1 1111101 tn 11 3111 u 1>1 ~·1h 11 .. 11 11 Al•~ cr.fo'rl 1 ,1 :t~ ~~ fj"4 _, ~ 011111v ...,. yp ,1 r 1 T>.o I IV.CD!111 Ml J N 1&6Pfkl FUlld• .flill~t Cap 17 1 ' t;' J -V.ll1 S•ae 1'.!G Oant lbl 1'. ,',", =~.rois'.. l',, ,sj Cont G n '., ',. r;,....,1h 24, ,. 14 ].I. ATO tll( Ill~ )S4 IQ I 10 . lG -+ I Ofv1ttl11d l6 Oin ly / • •Corti Lil ll1Jt1 1i N r1 II tl7 Auoe Pod ,.. 9' t\ t s'D•Ml<r $29 Oa I o,~ • ' s • ,,,.,,.,,, I I I Cntv C11• 1l !In 51 H Hat 1S ",," Alllorn Pela '' JO '' • -0 P11>01r J6 Ott• Gti 2• i•\ " "' tn ""' tJ > C•n WO v s tJ •JO Prt Ful'ld I~" in 11 Autom n !rid 101 • • 1i,;. "; ~ -1 ~ OomtMn1 !II Ci!eln p 3 l ~ Porlr HI{ JO • 21 \'o C n WD1I 6 15 7 It Por PO<lf I fJ 161 AY(O Coro 4d U 1• It 1 -, OomF~d ~ 01¥, Fd 1 1U P O Ga I l l 4 lltVOI> M 17 HI '1 fO Provdn! 4.ll J 71 "veo Co wt 5111 4\'i J 0 J • -A !)or c (o J1 0.¥ Mr 11 ll Pud Ml\ l J OtllWl t CO'D Prlld $y1 \Ol0112JAVtc pfJXt 11 •2 40 ,•-1, [)Q O vr O~lu• C1 74 15 PubS NM 22\'I 22 ~ OKI! 1 H 12 9S Pllln1 m FUndl Ave Y Pd 2n 11 l)> J!• ,1,Z -1 I Oovr (p 15 Cecot In lot PubSHC 11 12' 01wr 121lH02 Eaull 1IOIOf ll.•n• I ~ '51lt o 1...., ll =~OowChm/~0 Otklll •o 13~ " • ub 11>t 1 J:lo 0e 1 1 02 1 ti Gl'Ol'I H 1i U 41 AVll! Pl? SO 5 I 51 60' -4 i Ort'/OCP I ~ O•I~ lnl II ') l oPU tD• I \ l '>OcdG Cot l<Ol lS ~I Grlh t1t lll.IOAUnfl"' • S l7 71 1I I 0 •'11nd ltO Ott c nT n • '. -11 ... ~tl 2r. JO ., Ortxr! 111( 0 If lftCGl"I • Ot I Ul"'"on P<! 1 0 'Cf II 0 &! ... -: g HI of 1~0 O•I 1!1 21 '11 ~ POuo (p JI• Slo Orevl Fd IAll 1 tJ lnYtll I~ I Ot Al!tt 0 1 I O Jio U J 0 = ron ill~ i l')pwov• • •\~il<J11CA11 o !l0 rvllvll '114 J.OV 111 19111 n 01tvlu•Co l
D 1m c 1 ~ lt RT Sv1 I 1 E1 0!1Lrto1<1 II Vo••• • SJ 1 ' -g.-Ou~. Pw l .0 O 1t 'I< 5 • ll;•t• Pr 1 , f , '11l1n t U 10 11 lflt••r• 10 •• 11 XI l~bc:lt. I 50 •ll ~ ,. ~ )Cl Dukt nfl 70 llG<ul•l I 11 1h• I C :>l n> Grw ~ 1' 11l f 1 Rlnfrt 1111 IS 1J l!la~tO T 15 J0t 19•1 ;~, 7t 0 _ , Ou~t Pl6 IJ O"ldlll L l 1 ' ~1n1b El ;(.II ll lftCO"I I U '-11 khUJ r IUll VI I le ! GE l '1 91 l4 ~ 31 1 :l.J 1 -0u•8rd I~ OtN J~n .it. 41\:& llivch c1 fl t4 ~ ~•<I 8 •l •fl s UOd! Funcll Bar Pl B• Sii 11 o n 1 , n +, Ou~ in I!'!
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Th 1971 0 C t <I 1', P i111ecot Ea If ~ 10 be sl •13 11 11 s 1 1 •n•P =' 1 l 'J, ,, 1 _ ttuPQ~t ol•S6 e range oun y °' r 0~ u ~ 111 RuP En 5 , "'' gr•t i1.11n11 a'!'i u ·~·rs•:u ,••no 01111 , 1n, ,,, _ ~ o.... LI 1 M
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Ch C II II be b Id " h • 1 0 , t\i lllottlon I~ l\\eoul p 0 101 1Jt V!tr1 6SI 119 l!lo$1c •~c !Ill 21 u, l' ~ Oviltm Am apman oegev.1 e ,,111; 8, 1 ,n.1t.ui 1101 :io 31 Fi!rkl l~ll l ~•Sttc A.., , .. 110 1t8••c.i 1so 1m0 31 1, r. -Ell 11.uv.llYI" M• '°'" I"" Bu 1001 10 0S ~tl Specs 111016"1!11!•' Ml9 jJ 6 0 16 ,}-.~ .at 3 pm ~farch 2 1n.,,,~' ,...,s-llllt• J'o4\c d o•1r 1 13 >entGn tJJ1.MB1•1i.rp11 5201 10 ,,.,..-~"HltP c .., I U11 ,, " 111111 E s J"I Fld~Ur G•OUD Shim Fd IOotlO"B•lhlllO O>t IS.,,,"~ 16 -1•E11e1Co to Chapman s lllemor1al Ha l l Ei '"""' '• ,,ScllOn n J o S'' C101 1t1 13e1s1111• A1 7109 J01al!l1 thtn P71 50 4., il 1,~-1 •f'11tAlrt1n Fm~s o 1• 1c,sc c~1 »o ''" Eu~1 IJ1!1'3'5h o...n 112J171Jg1ur Lb ~ lOl 1s , SJ si.,=1·!~:::'CJ1,111ir1• Auditorium 3lJ N Glassel! £ e 1v c ~ 3 , co1 Son, 11 761 Ev•' 11oo 11 2 Side 'SI 10 "1 •• L~b 1 ' 1! 11 1 ln... ~ != E;:., q~ If. 1 5c PP1 H 21 n • 11e is Iii 111 s '"'' Fund• l•v• c • JO o 10, , t , = .,.11 Koc111i 1•
Thi' "Ill be th ffJhfntwJt 4 >1 Scr~o A S 5't '~!n l~ll l l i C•P tUfttBt1rln9s ••.ll-o t• l.j o '\£1hf'".Y.1 1~,, " e I £~w 1 o I 11 o 1 ,.., e Pr ,,,,,. l'2 I l• '"' 5 1~ J •3 lnve~t 11 Cl n as i:~~ .c:111 M 17 :is JI , u -£{•,;dJ it consecullve )ear the counci1E•e T~c ~ 1>0S•I• Cm• ' "' ~no 11nuo Tu•• 10 11s l!lt<:r'O'~ lO Ii JI , i•i ,,,_,,F,.l•o~l!l no 1 Fl!IC•to ,3 Sono11 l o 71Fln•nc•!r roq Smh e t4'146&etet1A( 3!43 '"4l'ot +•l"G&G1a
ha' hosted the bu siness and "'1n T'k l . l 5...: Gp J.'1 I~ ov..... I ' 4 J~wJ In~ '10 '81 Bt coPt t .!!. ,s1 1•. 11•· 141, _,. F ICI AHO( r.~~Q 1 > Stvet1UP !J S4 lnckl•I llll 41'SwlnvC.lt&l711e ,.... l71 \71 1•j l -t,i'IM~mM11t F~<llV I l )SC1tY •I l•o llll lncom Jli~"So•t 1nv1Jlll4!.4&:lge,.::.,.16!1_ 1,0 711 77'1 ))-IMMHJf>O indu strial community to an Fine ".I 1 1 ~ ' • SaNE T11 '°' f vent 111 • 11 s11ec • • 1• 1 :19 ee 1-1 ~··· 6 l<'l • " '~'" • ~ ""' 11 H• "~'M ,,,,..,,, s ... r.1co " 1,,.F,,,. VI ll Oll1nJs1F ... GI •• , •6tl!lr !rnf"' '° llS .l9 o 3•· 311 i -,IPIM~~ I
t\ en1 leatu1 lng 1 e a d I n g ~::G B'ii,:, '1 ". j . ~.~ ••• '.~.·~.vc 11 i 1; ·~~:. •n ng ~ I ~! : !1 ~1:.~ms:~ isu~~:J 18 c:~ ~ 'f,t~, .~ .• 1 ~I ·. ~;: ~~ 0 : ~: ~t..t~d r,t
'p·'·csmen on the t i " '" 1. • ,. '' '' Fit inst• ' 'Ii t 31 , , , , ,, , ~ SJ 131'> -I!'.,..., F , • "" na !Ona f!PMI n 1 ~ '1 s" RtVIJ ,,~ 1 I Fn M~ I • 8J ! ~' ~~o ';:d I~' IAS e~.Ji c:u 5/)0 7:10 JI • ~ • 17 • """rY.flil '° ' economy staled Donal d p "' v F" , 1•k s1111 Ml'd JO ~ 11 11 !'i1 111 1 1 , , , ,, 8.~_, 1 16• 1~9 16' 4 -1 ""'~"" 11"
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·• 1, O•s 5 , "•'S~••11~ro due 1 1 ~ ... 1:•~0 1'0 1 ~~ fA FmcD •I ,, Kennedy president. F 1 r s I ( "" 1• • " '1 '"' •• C•J • 11 s ' ~ "-ot Fd' l'nof "''lo l " 11 11 -~ """' • G•1 ~m, ~~ 1h!1i'~u:~ f! 4!'':,1 ,, r~11 s o 1111 nio 1•M1 11~n1 so11so 1_, .lA. l4 :i.o 1 , F110~M111 111 American Tille In s urance Foml• • , s , ,, 10 ~F 1 G~ Jll 1 11 c,~,o· •,•.,;•. 1:~0::, rn 211 r 1 1 . -\",'ID M 111~15 Fo~t 1,;"~' ;1 ,. u•O• (1111 " • l4 • 14 "" Fl ' ft • ~ , ~"I' flut n Compan) and Cha•rman Of (he " 'T•mP• 11' l'I l:'ou'tllt , c; o~o !un• v Id Inv 0• k•v P~o UI 10 o "• t • _ • i!.ou t1 ''° F~:f't& '';r•1Hlf ••111• Grw!h •ti ·~· G111 1 ~1 1bl t!hj, 111'1 ),. 7'1 1 I 1 •-~Eaul!Llt M pres1denl s Counc1I ~~~in 11, ,~~•v o w '' 11 111coon n1o i.o su"'' i~"1111~• p11n .. •• "'• 1~• 1~·-•1E1•1·Fd 10•
T GI; C ;) 1, TV Com I > f Aull ·~ f ll Tech IJS f nl !< ~~Uft l '11 0 1<> ~1 _ I' 1!1 nc ''° his }ear sub1erl' for ,.,1111~(' 16 1 1p:tenn•nt ,, 11 Satcl t41 10 >1 S1n< c:1 t J•1~11IOCll"R ]• '' l'1 1,,.,1111,_ ,E1qulrr .>o
d'scusslon " Ill be general '"• s,,,' u 1~1• Therm A 1' '4 ou 'l 10 oo 11 01 ™" Ao 11 tl J 1'1.1 11J,t ~e 8 ~ 'o ,·~ e! ut. 67 ) • , Fsn~'"' ?O " l'l I .. 11111.co I lliF ...... l~G OU11 TtlC~" t9610ll 1110""0C •• ·~ 11 '~ -•,Fon~P,,.4
b th I GI( t 1 llliT!lrl• '" t t \ ONTC ~,,?"'ICY/!' ft 5 I Sii • O 6'1 ll 1'I 10 o "•t ~ 0'• u~1ne~s e monev supp y r. L•""' ' ,1 11n c;., ·~· ' \ l';rw h 1 1, 6 11 r "" •• , ie 1 11t 11 o •C•• l.lb J~1 •i-. , , ., , _ , Fthyl en " and direction of !he stockG"-1 tsl • ,,T•tc C1>1 J J v11 'I' 1r31t,.v E~ 101090~=~1';,,d '' • tl o i1, 111 +-,F h• 111 •~ I': l!•n 4 s ~rtlCJ\I G lt I 1• I !ncom l J J JJ;rvaor o 11 02 n 1 1 ~ 14 1• ''\lo -l!'u OlllO t • market Kennedy said Gl•Ttel! ~ :ti T nsn o 1 l• • l'C ~ 11 1 ~ t 10 o u 01 rwne r: 2 11 i is ::~~. ~'' 1 s •,, • '' '"'~ -'• "'11>oh1 '"no r.e•s• f ; 1 r:11 r MOb 14 S J~F~nll !n GrP w..C-Inc 1 (11 4•11'1 J • 11 Fv•~•Prd <o Persons 1ntere9ted 1n "tc1> It~ ' J re• •11 l.1 ~:16 Cm•t •1•101•, Mu '" o ... ,:~~7:1•;, ~·it\ '" 1'~"' ,•~ce110 t•s r.a aCvc I• 4o f klelr ·~ •1 1mo•c l l7!llJnlfCI •11 0'3 •MEd"'' 6 ,.., l! it -1F1bo 1t '' rett1\ 1ng 1nv1tatlons to lhelr.ooot LS I! • 11~ '""" Fri 10 H ~ ~rid Trd n • 1i 11 J~I~" svc G ., t""'"' 'IC N '"; 1:!.~ 11:1• 1 J -... F1 <h c1m
es<nt mas c•lt the college o"'••"' ,', ' ' •• , 1 lu.., ,, ') Jl ' 1' 1 ~, 11' B °"" ll !l ll " B ~n t ",.... 1•1 1r <• ,11 -"'•1• Ml" "Ce " ~ ~· l"'o Jj• l" f cGl l I ti ulld "'" I • t flll Inv 1 4 ~"I " <IO\I ?•O ' 0 -• F•lrm&'ll I f71i) 63J-83:?1 Ext 221 There "''°" 5c 11 • It • us •-not 11 • IPO ll f"':," I 'O • 12 \I~ (Op ' 11 1n ., 'I II Mv , :-0 r:;; :~ !, ~o -• Ftll • I
h :t A'~, • ~~11 ,. J:11c:i Fun~~.$.5 IJ 1'11:·: ,.,~~. ~ n•' ,": ... l ~: ~ -::"\~~;1 F:~ 1~ no c arge to parlic1pants G~i f'c It!. au A<cm ,,, 711 ~' Pel h'I •• , 1 • ''• l,'•-t. :••~ ~1i. f ifteen 1nd1\ 1duals an d 8 ,.d , ,, , "'""' 11.111 h,,. lie!...,. M•,, 2s ,. 3
1! AS tn 1 '6 S<t!ft IM •I• """""'4 llf1 )'., -1 F-t I '' 1nstllullons hBve underwritten Beach l\'la11 rom SI 1'll l•(:t v1... •11 100J ttw .G"' '••\ •• ··~-... ,.·~·~! 17" G ll'IFd A 1:?7 OCJI Iii\ V j J.j 3'1 ,, -1 FtdNMt " the foruno c··nnody odd·"' Gr:t'I 1no lt.,. '''JF11 c1~ '" 1 00 1Y11ur. t n 11 '"' "''' ,, _ ,,_, ,• n. l:U (;~lrlln U J.j JU Vt u1 n• Id flrow~ Ce j l lfll• 1n , IOI~ ~ ..... :c oft >• The".-Rober! f B Haml!Otl V1 Ln 10 7~• llwn~~ro 10 11 11 .. 1,1 > -, '" eaver H"I , , 10 1.,. .. .., ~ • s6• :w"s""' 1 •o ,4 ,, • 11 11 • -~ .:gr•Gill 111 pre~ldent \~1llardBrent T k p t Gtr. ''I !'I Sp St s•i ••s ""1""' ll• 111, 'ti 1 11 -F '" a es Os ~'>O tJ olnc•S 11>11•1•1o •U('"F•l10 ~'" ,,,,6 :1 ',.:0:01
5 'nc, Compan) Inc Beckman H&C Fil 1111 11 u'1""11 t•• 1s1=u::Fc'/.i 11 •••• ,. 1, ~"'O:dlf" Otv
I I '· f C f M&C t I • ,,,J1ngd '"'"'flu 60 I l 7 1 _ F• ..,Co 1& n~ rumen1.11 nc a .,,," Gor 1 v 11.J ~ n11P • ,, s ,1 ~~ '"" 10 • , • /Fib btd 7~
Comp., k Foods In c Jerry E •• re•er 'I l"'CI~~ IQ Ml 161 /I "• A '1 ',. r~~:,r':,., .Lr ,, "" •• \ • = ... .'Jc!/;\ 40 " r 'ltrl(• 1~ l ~J1'•IS1 n •'~'-"I '' l" 11 \ J n 1 .i. l=t ft 4o (hcvron Oil Field Research be " ~· ft 11 ,, 11" OJ~" Mu '1J J •l ~ ... ~';" ',,• '1 1 • ~ 1• • •• ~ c., F"l'd~ " llunhngton Bearh has en H 111..... 1 ..i • 11 N• •ft G n ,.. 11 "' n " • .., ~O\l ~ , " ·1'"' ·~ Co F.1np1re l nsu ran ee !:M ,_" ''' 111 F.r• ,.~, 1 "!0~""~ ~" 211 '• "• l"'i' 91 named loan officer at Crocke r .. 1 w• 1 ° 1 • r0 .,.. • 1 '' • ' '' 1 "~ Ata 1 1 • Co111p11n\ f rrsl Amer1c11n ' n 1• C" • 1 .. 11 1~ flo1~ v~1.' 4
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TI I C111zensNationalBank s SAnl<i '"''" •15 ·•v 1•• I 1i.. 1111 -~,·••NI' 1 tA' 1 r nsurnncc C o rn ll a n) • • 1 • ' ,, • -C-• 1111\ r ' •
f ~t '°'1111ol'~I n"rik nr Or:i n"r Anit of fice II nas announced ~1~ r ",1 ,1 ' i' ,1 • • ~·~ nc• ~ '' o ••, " 1 :1 ~~~~ µ.
(t'l11nt\ I ~ Fluor honor:i~v b\ li"rnld c Klpf' senior \Ice "'' ~ ii ~ • • ~;:; 11.i.: I ·z a llT,} • l ! • !l~ : 't {,r.·. ~ti ~
o•,1 01' f th ··-d Th d d -. \ ~ r•"• U'\V J >..., ~ ' > I 1 r .... ~-0 • •1 r • n o e Ul.Nlr ,. pre~i ent an r e i;; 1 on ;a I T • t r" 6 ..... 00 l\ ,, 1 11. F ·~o Fl,,, co~rat 0 Ltd m•nag·r v r .... f n P•e l Jt ·~: ,1 • • I . ~ ~I. fl l l
R o bert F. ll:tn ,o n "rC)Cr Jormorls nve••~· 1'1~1J •···· ·~IJ lllO •~Cflo ~ ,: ~~'· !f• ff -~•l"l•G•i " I" "R$ •ll un 150 ,;t s111 fl" 1 -'1'•l>ev If'
Economic
Forum Set
In Orange
• No Quallf.> Ing: J br ju~1
p111nttd Sh 111 Cll IK'I
Gre•t :-uper Buy -Cl\ 100
Costa ~lesa..
• Rey v.'Ord for t o d 1 )
.,, .. in • ,. , .. ~n•li! 110 fi • ''0 -""""£ Cf t
adm1nts1rat1veP')r1ne.r Artht.rr Jisslstanl managt:r at lbe "'" .......... --~--1 ··::tr''ohllJ d i ,a •~· ~t0 -' ::~""i;' 111
'oung and Company Harold br", No rth Orang-VIiia • e L1 1.. ·1u » 2.S 11 • F -c. 1 nr 11J1 .. -An ••'tt 1n """'"11• tOOI ""ti'" .,. r, 1 Iii , :t. 'IJ., ,,.~ U"':. • .c:1'"';"e l J~ullon prehldent Re(1n1ng Park office In Orange Daun l'l<IOll ler th!IH tltoltntlld Cl) wllld'I !:.,1e;f f,Ji.. ISO if•l J.j • " • rr;1~r .,f1/: A~soc1atet !Canada) Ltd L. Gillett replaces Freyer 1 1 ,,.. 1r..i111 t~ 11 ,...,.. ~ '"" ciri-rN ·~ j..111 1 t ' lli.' t. • _" F~c c1 ll
AlitO The Trvlne Company that office lit"'" 01v1orNos ,,.. 111111111 ••t• :u~ ~ ~ ,!~ \~;:: ;f·-~~~f.t21~
•·eystone Sav<ngs and Loan f ""'1"' •ll'llNllM "'"1t1fltf t•1 '"" •19•7• 1.10 s,q u • """ -.t; =11i. l'ae1• cs 111 " rt)tr w1!hseveral~tars «i1tra1 fbldlc11,...,."ld•t•~111111 cieorp •v J ,_I rreett"""
BUSlfWJ-1 \CKER A J
C cl 1hap NI« price Re-
1 lt Jutr lhe whole lliOrlu om
As~lallon Or11nge Saving! previous busintss nnd credit Y••• .,. '""'1• "''" 1c1 111-1 en ~CCJ tiw:'1:U n1 1'/ l~ 1 1, "00'M"' ',.
.nd Loan A"ocl''lon Th. ffCUlft<lla'-d tl/llltltftdt1 (lfl ••Id lttl t l"llt(p J Ul M•o i&:1? !:..!: = 0 ~:\<IC: '°to experience Jo1ntd Crocker-111111 ttJ c111111111 ttod'1 ,,, •nnui1 ''" otA•:i;: i .,J, ,, 4J•>-''"Melli llfl lO
Oii Compani "t1r-111u1 11lvkfef'ld OFl'lttt1111 r11 ..,, ,,~ w "'v 1 ,, ,. 1~ ~J\I ~ti. -• ,.t111 w~ 111 1 tri11n1ng pn>ll'rl!lm 1n 1966 lie ctflt 11'1 •loc' 1110 ''" re1•1 0 1 "' ''"1 l• H 1J 1''l 1 • 21 , -~ ~a:::r~, ·~
Townstnd Compnny and Union C 1 t 1 i e n 8 • adm inl!tratlve "'• • ut •todl dlvlftn11 !M "d "''' ~~' F~"' 11f u ff ' •r • -1 'I""'' w>11 !O
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0 1Qf 0U' CllpAC leS n vwr1.hl1a,1te ii"lr•lhln h)<llll• t:~.",1 1r !!~ zc o ill •-'•"•'' 116 • Sound th,. U:t f' CaU'tf Hew M11c• 1, • ,..,,, ,. • coll Ill lht h:lnk ! o(C1crs 1n the d' ri11u1'°~' 111 , ... d vklrn111 '"'" Ctn\\Pw 110 !~ )0 , 1~: fi,, =: :·,~11....,1 In cJI
hr rt COmf'$ 1ht> puppJ!':\ ••rtfl .. ''' 111 c•-ttcsr p,t 'It a ' I h .. h,., lu111r1 twll a•"•~'" C•~ w. 1 t •I ,, , ,. , 1 ' 0 " n :iire lln I !S l=lf.4CT!ON~ !I l~d (,H-••• ~ ,...,, ~YI lJ ' lo 'I 11 -• G•C ,, • Uarlin;: •dciro!>!r I or G••'•'" & c.,~ 1 J 1 •··· I c 1 1 •• ,_ ™'' v •-' i rnns tr o .~ ltm n1om1a •~u •111 1c1on1~1'•:t"r1111011 ctto1r,r~ ••o~"" •0 1,o to • 2 •••1Ci •cc,~r 1
''OUl'!le CUii" DCllJ:lr pu11 T(Ll,.fONI 1 nnd ~ub~f'OUt.til appointment fol ow "'''"'' tl •C'llon•n•"11' 1 1c""' ... 1 .. 1 fO 2p 0 l'I,; li''"' g::corr.te10
P "'--8uyno'llll\rnt.I\ AH$W[~ING IU r[A,U i lol!otii1•11 1111-. 11 fflttfl111 !" l.!\!11t1/S tna11. w l4t tt•o , t':•:<i.-~~e'j-" "~ 11~sl~tan1 monaaer of lh<' 01 "'""i"'''""r•'••r11a1<1"1\'tlllulc"'' ~~ 1i ,.,, ,.,, ' c.~1 "' •• k 1 8 3 5 • 7 7 7 7 South (:(last Pim office /n °11"°1<"0 ioiio.tn• ttut• 11 frfff1-ll !~":r~11'"'• 11' ' n·~~" '' .""-----------------------------~'--------------J In 11 llt. ...:m:s ,_.,; "' ~·I .J. • .:. =1 ' ~:·~"" I ::o Cos11 ~!csa -· ""'"" 1jvl 1u -l'" ,•,.~ ,. , "J r1-.1:~ r~ "" '" lltl~Hlll 11• )1t1 ..., Ill.. -r, :OCA CNi~CI
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1971 DAil Y PILOT
Monday~s Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stook Excliange List . ..... . .. ·-----------
,
M.O:t Co JO M .. I( (:n 60
MU:AnF 10ll M-' F11 IJ<i
MIC¥ p/ I 15
M" ~ Olr Mil ory l IO M•tnvox I ,. M1"'1IM "6b M-r n M411 H1n l 11
MAPCO fO Ml ttlo l t0
Mf (Ot .to
Ml fCCN' pl AJ M4'""'°"' Mlt Mid 70 M~Grllb .n M l f ... 21t Mtr'llun Ctm Mtrl1011 IOI
M' thl'd 1 0
Mlr!ll'M l 10 IA!"r'IOCYI SO MMCO Cl 2t ~....U· 12 MIU<lf l'tr ~·~" '" tr'11 11~0 M ~JDStr I tO
MI V 0 Ill IO MI YI 0.( U M4v1JW $Ob
Mt ¥110 110. MCA Inc 60 =vl\Xl,8
McC11! 150 MtCl"Ol'Y'91 I M<Elll lb MC Id (D
~I Hltfl LIW (19M ~~1 St k Le d .oc aers
SS).!\ ,.\'t ;J.I>,,-•, ftfQST11U•D~ Soent111 A 61 nt. 11 /6 -2.. UQAfu;,,jl H rlOll 40 JI ~..,, ll ) ,..,.., H\11 1
11 ~ 10 • JO o -"" 110CIC5 IN IHI IJIOTLIOHf -l'V H"' l t 20h 20\lo )Ol,->.. l\IEW Y011K Al>)-itloo (Oll"I Pl'~ OttYlt 1'11
1,. t'lo tlt .,.__ -.... C!Oa"M Of !II~ lflttll MOit IC .ell.It El "'•• " I\.\ ... -'I' ff ' Ol:•f I -"" m1 NY $ OCl E~ Dfln~IMJH I ...... ~-1.w""I"" • t,.O '°'" 10> 19 1t1.. 10 _ Good~••• m o.i ,.,, Ir" 11 ~ ~ -M-•.:-rcr1e1 :nit: ~~; .. 1e~J,O:J
' IJ 11 • I • -• ()o;(IOt'fl ti ue -1 1 _., ~l lll{tnOh lAO .. ,, H , HO.. •l'I 011y Pp1 UI t00 I! ,• -11 1a•rt Pn,)O
.'
7Jl't J.S ,J , G11H O I 110.IOCI -10 IB Pt nt,.• 11'1 7 , 1~ -.... 0 HloH Ind Ulf,IOO -1\.1 d 111,"
llllO 6J 6) ll -I 0ow Cht'm OS 100 •1'--~ 1· • 1 Ill I 0 ' • , t~llco tj,AoQO ~~') -~ ~Cll 1 J tl ~ .cl\. .:J Ft<1H1 Mtt 91 700 ... ~ t lo I 11111 1 1111 ~ • '°"' + v. Mce>ooino t'l ~ 1,1\.o i., I l'HJ 1 '! ... , 111 111'1-.... Ptll Am I l'OO ~ -lit ~-1>S 7 ~ Mlo 3''-IJ\lit. Corp U* I -._ 'p,.f,.
"en,,,. ui -1 g ~., 11.ioo ?ft.\ -'-..J:t"
lOJ0 o 7'1..Jll -•PtOvllnO 1•1110l'l!o tnYWkl.0
h S ll\ 3' :1611 -1 rtn •Y ..10 •a,"•,,.,~µ,_• 1 rtt.IO 11 tt•o 70., ., o S•ltol tottt •vi en 110
lS l!"lo 12\t 17"" -3o thd1 I Nlfll Ltw CMv C11t lltlrc~ Br •
106 ~· »'• ll 1 -I 'I"'~ ... lf: ...,.,.. IJ I! -1 ... l>tflftlC• pt J »'1 !l "l lol ~ -\\ tef ~fl 50
1: :.: : ' n.. 1, ~:PP"Llt Prt':o l~ tt: tf;\ if~'; -f ~iN,J;
61 31 1 .. l l.. •P'~tt otllO »50 109 11111 1111 , •I l o11ivc/"
W •t.l•c 1 1 JI • -\ p: ,l: ::i: ~ i:s: ~ 1w1,,.,.. :;..1 :.._.,: -W to
I .,41,.d t -'lo P..,nwt.10 l3l11.o 21..., -%:1 ~
l '°'' ~ ~ -1 '"'"""" Pl " 1,) 21\o 2l I lS'-+ V. l=or dl~ 1s 11\.'t 53 s.i • -'I P•n"'u" IO •,. JO-. 1'llo JO\'t -ll 1 w ,,,. l :«i
"' ,",,, l\.li 11~ ~\Pe.uV p1 U ~1 001. ~I -3\•-llt "Prgpl60 ~ 101-I~ P-Orl I 0 1) 1011 Jllioi, 7611 ml 11 o wf _,. 1~ Jl .... 1S Peoo>G11 1Cll 173 XI'° U :J) -l, C'l!ll JO
1•l •1 • 4 .. ''"' -\ ""''Co l m »... Sol> 54" + "' un cti.m oo Ou JI • ,",", y1'4 -1-. Perl!; mr 1Dv lS '51~ ,,. , :M14 -IV. 11n01h o • l ~. ""-1 Pet Inc 1 XI n 12 ~1\.t 411r:I -~ 11n O pt11?J
t ,~ 211o \II -I l>t roe f'IO 10 2N 71"1 wi...,. 4 nlNtm..., ~· 1""' lJ~. n o -"' P11tP1u 110 1l N1r:I 2Sh • -... ncillrlld IO
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2t ll\lo U\4 llh -"' Pl! orn fO l• J7 l!p,, + w wl'llh J!ll.SO ~. u 25\lr. -1\lo Pttro Int w I """ , JI\', 11111/t M ~b
''
o '•'"' loll{, 21"' -,_.. P1t ol D( .ll li )t 7W >IV• .j.. 'lo V•lu 1.10 1 -Oil.Pt! m 19Q II :1111, '°" 10'1'1 -VI r oll llCI tlO 56 1 loll\• ~v, Plllt IOI l J! lA. 31 . Jr, uomlo G ..
lJO 1J '> "' 11i1 -l 0 P!_>f1110 21e "'.I J9o 11. +\lo Fd Ho IJ l4 :D" J:IV. -'lo Pn • El 1 '4 "61 lo • 7•'> 2ll'I -h Wfnlr tot
"SJ•o JJ SJ -'P"'l "'llS 1 2Ql\l)1J111J"1-V, wine, 10 t25 11'1t. ~ J ., +Ill P~I' I Ill~.. m 11 ,, 11 -I ¥11 on AC '1~ )to, lt lll'-'°'Ptll Pll lO UO 6l 1 t) tJ -, YI DI' 0tnn :»JI Xl •70 ->loPllEPl'll0 1 70S.C -.!.I 1.1 -1\
l ;µ »'o Jll -Pn Mor 170 11.S 54 \l il!z -t 19 1 !z lo 1 ,P~ Mor~l ol 160 ot .. .,,..,.\ Tiii Bd 6(1 USO llt llJ IJ5 -l P~ M Oil to z 00 6l•< •l t.)1~ .,.1 ~Te cctl I 0
1 21 10 211 -'Pn p na 6 ll 1>..o "" if'' -\ l• j" ~ t Sl.lO '5>.. ~.~ >Pfltl1'llp 1 :!Olo 10'1o 1,_,..11 ev otll l ,, n i n ~ ll 11-1••~1Pt!110 ,, ll o :n 1 l -t TtmDIEI Ml
' 11~ t I -0 P~IVH •O 12 11•• l , 11 -~11ndY Corp 39 I H•o II l -V. P HING1 lO 11 1 1 7 ! -1 •DDtnCo 4C l •S U U I P lbu v 11 1 ~I 16 Sl -ech M 0'1 26 l1>l6 •:Wlo-1\IJP0t0NGa1 1K1 55161< 11 lh _0 Ttchn c0<1C11
16 e t 1 -, P lt1t vB oa ~12J 19r, a • 79 • -,.. 1,"i=''""1";!"
111 *"'" •I -lo p F!Q 10 ) 11~ ~-16 +Ii t Vnt J«I 6J 115 IJ P !Son 60b 311 11"" ·~ •lo-11t T11dplJ II \St »\lo 1411. !.I.._ Pie" Rtl Cl> 11 1 100. JO o -""l'"""'t' P
l " It '' -1 Pl111eyLI 12 JCS !:: 21'1 1\.1 -Ttlu11 r 15 1tl 11 't IS'\o t~ -llifi PPll Pld XI 501 I 'I I lo &ll'o +l T~· 1f ,. U4 ll u v.-11t P0tlK 110 5 j n Il --.... ~ ... 20 IAt. "' 4C"'-"' PorG EI JI! 14 1 ' 10'• 1 \ t . i-1 tJ n v. 1111t Por11 thF 1 ~ 4 :M1> ii"' ~ .._ r.: ",'5,.f 76 JOA. 10\t. IO 'o Po......EJroc I 11 l!'t 1 \, 11 .. -\(,T E~ '1!
12 31P1o ->\1 JO'--(., l'o1 E P1 I Sii f110 J•~· 1 "" Sf\. -"' r:o.;f 1 :!10 21"< ., 21~o -ll'o Pol El DI 2 U 1 IOUo 4;)"' 40\IJ -Ill 111 23 'I 11 1 71t.lo -1~ PPG lr>d ..0 49 J.il"" Y.lo, lJ\O -1\lo
110 y ~ 14 'I SllV. Prem nd 00 1 11\'o 21 ., 11
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tJ h~ ll~ 0 +I ! 1.::11:
14} !':"" t;, ~~,. -h't :~;~ »
l/ U ' H"4 ji•-'• p . f s k Tta,LCI 'jg :1 ~~~~~I,~ 1·1ces o toe s iJ~
121 " ,.... •r'.-1 -•• Tntntiat I N ~ ~. ~"' m;-+~ '"°"' .,... ...
.] 1h. ,,,~ ~ .. h D 1. SI I f='~ k.51
•11 1~ s1~ r,--= ~ ec me iarp y ii..~~~'~ w J~t{ pi: ~p; = n ii=~, I tg uU ~~ "~ ~~ -.111, Tlm-•11 1 IO
1• ~ • .,. H"' -':::Jtlly «lb 4i ,, IE~ l "-h ;~.ri,:
,, 1011 ~ NEW YORK (UPl)-Prices: were sharply lower toi..soE • m
11 171.ll 1 .... 11• -• th TOPI llol 400 " 11 ~ ~ , _.,. on Wall Street late Monday reflectlnd reports at Tr1111 co '°
• , a T,.,,,1,11111 "' ·~ '" -'" South Vietnamese forces have suffered revenes 1n T••n1w •Ir '; n • ::" 1llll ll!1 h th TrnwA r Pl 1.11 ,., :w•\ "'" _ii Laos and 1nd1cat1ons t at e Federal Reserve rmwF1 .. .,
1 )111 \1 l -~ Bo d II (led ( h d j J ( ti Tr1111mr1 IJ u 22, 1•1 2' -, ar IS not fu y comm1 o t e a m n s ra on s T,lfl>.C.., 10
iSt0 11 • 1•11 14 ~ -i... program tor slimuJatwg the economy T IM(ll 1~v 1\ ~t ~ -~ -.... l,:::~~°" It ll U'1 ttilo -J aJ T1wr1•f2 2ij ~ »ft -111t Near the close the Dow ones lndustri aver r ... iv•.,, 1J
21 d~ :re !fl + U age \Vas off more lh•n 8 points at 870 41 Standa,rd i'~:: ~,\1lo ~i riH 1flt n~ = :i & Poor s 500 stock mdex showed a toss o! 0 80 at +·:'Ir!~ 1(1
iJ D1~ ,1: ""' t " 95 94 t:~ ~~'c'° •
,7 JOl rn• ~~ + 1.4: 'l'RW pt1'9 l aJ~ 11"' -i. Of the J 638 ISJUeS CfOSSlng the tape, 1178 fe l~~GC~ftln
1\0 1 ~ ~~ 1 tt + " treated while 238 gained 11Mr <01•
11 I" l I -1-h ~ ~ ~ 3\ ~ 3\~ =1 , A four hour turnover of 12 430 000 shares com ~~~ ~~ 1~ t~ DU: D.:?-•• pared with 12 990 ooo shares traded 11t a compar ~~1 cg. 111r,
~l ~~ ~" ~~ + ., able period last Friday ~~nd 0012 -T-Unl1 NV 1~
n l'" tt !j!i •• Point siz ed moven 1n the oils generalJy retreat ~" C•mf 1 , '° ~1 1;, = , n Ct,~dl! 1~ lt.! I~ =~! ed Electronics were mixed \Vh1le steels motors ~~J:ec~l: 1~1 ~ :Ui" U ~ = j: airlines and aircrafts moved over narro'v price un e .,,~ ~
11 14 , ,, , 7•. + " ranges 1n most mstances un e1 oiJ.JO
U • • 4 •'i'I -.... ~~• c1,,,,1: il~~,:11~i2I•-::,• p dJ db ! thA u"P•ict, "' ..... 34<> " -rices ec 1ne m eavy urn over on e mer1 ... 5~ 1«: ,,. ·~~ -:!',z) can Stock Exchange tl~J£i:f i;f itU 1t~ vi + h Vrolrwt l ltf I
-'o ~ .. ~-:' ~ Vnllflaol 10
--"w••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••/u"'t.lifr llO tl.5 J -·p Vt1ll••""• JO .U ~ H! ~U = U ~"Ii ::J_J:
alal ilh U\. il~ -1 UnU F n Ctl
'"" I Hlf' UW ~ 0. H DOW 10~1! AYIUGll 1'~ Y.,kl"Jl)Fllll D9w.J-.... t i" JI ~ ~14 ~ -• KS 0..11 Hi!' mt eltM Hd Wt"'"" 1 IJ n '"" trlt .~. )2~'1 ... = li'lld t l1.'1111.' W ... -;.ttWt kH 120. S "°" IG i ~-·• ~I(' '4... -\!I .. nto lE ··n-AW• 9u•I' ,IQ 1l ,, ,, ... 1•""-"" 1 ••h u "°"'+ ~ i Ut 113.11 1 1 Jll" ltt -111W1 1Mwr .o 21101 "•'• 'J" ,,.. __ •, I 20111 lflo \ff•-'"''' Slk 211111 II U ~II -1fJ Wt-/\Co ) 100 w1. !f\lo ~ + It. fran11ellcol1 !" 1100.1 uMG 1., ,.,.,-,,., W•"ll l111t •1 'J7 ... 311, ll • _.,.,
IN 7111 '1t 'ltllt -11t IMui I.I 1 '1111 W11d F-• :as 'I"' l"" IP.. ... ' > ffil 11 ~ l~ -\o Tr1<1 Iii Wa lllU .tO I ,._ lt'-1t ... -1 211 'lt\I M'-' V1 I lll-* Wa roe 1111 ~ l JO~ 1 '' 10\it • 1
lli ~ Ui.: ~~ + ~u lie t.111 ~:,r.·1~ ,-;: i~: ft I ;1 n
1 n n II -w1rllw1 m ,"',\•" 1'•-"'•
1 1"a "'" lili _ " $11" Nt'I W11n sv to. J l"11 I> o -l o
.. \4 2~\;o 1~• -V. IM1 I "!tit U• eit. C... :::~ ~ t ''~' ~' 1& ' i~ I Ito 3 \o lllo -.. Wabll Ot! E Oh ti-. 10 o -•
M 21 11\4 '' -llt un/I c., IO \' 1"' 11~1 "• -0 w1fs ~! •2 1J •sl •>~ 11~ -1 M 11 6'\o ~ + ~Un t 11111 10 ! '"'. '"', 10lt + .. IWelto I orp ll 5 ._ S'._ -~ ~f~"' 44'4-I untrn,ld 1•. I 1 1 Wt$FI 1.0 •lo.cl\,4)1..;~
61 if' t::t r~· =:: ~~J11U!"''11o J 4 1 II ' ;~~· = ~ ~ftrPt~ ~n 1~~ ~-, r. ;: ... =1 '
1:.s lt" llh t , +n~ un i.11el• l~ JI~. !~ .. 11 -1 w1rftit. 2 '' 3'I J',,' ",. '•'••' -' 'J 21\0 7"~ 1"'° -"° Uni Pk M" t ~. 1'• 2lol -\I Wn lltnc \ lO Oii ) ,...
)l 32lo l1h -"-U!'!G 120 ., 11\.0 •ov. .OV.-1 Won Md '° • jS• '' lS l -11 1~ 11 u -~u Fn Cleo iv,•'-11 • _...,w.,,tn Pac •J .. o 1•• u.1-•• I' " 114~ "' -t lV. u Fors 21" )l u, ... ' » -I' wnv"ion I .., 11 4.<ih u1. u 1 -• )I .O Jo llh • u~~to01 1 oe 111 >•Vo?,.._ 21 ~-w" U"P' 1 • 11 .. " " Ill 1ti... 1~ 110\ -VS Gy1>1m J J 62, 1 1 , -.. Wft U" pl60 l l'1 I' ..,_1 " \'" , ... 11\'t + \ USGvp Oii.. I :I.SI lJ l!-4 + .... ~. v Et IG l6i n ,~ ,, IS 1-. I lh. usl,.,,1111 .ii fft ll o 21~ n _i we11E P!Jt O •XI 1 ol tJ
»1 II , 11'6 "to -\'I US LH)O .11 .. U 1 1 11 ... -t Wt1 vto I OS °'• '~ , ~t-~!! __ • 4$ 16l. U ~ 1•111 -;, U$ Pl'/'Ch 14 »J JN. 1111 l ... -to,, W•Ybe t 10 -_., n ,,
SU '~ ·~ '. -USPr,:1111.10 l2 lr• i's~ JJ>;, -Hi W"'r n1 IO JSS SI ~ • )I u l\o 4 1 ,.,._ 'u! M lJ 1 21 -;,w""' 11!6 IJ s Jl )\> !"-. 211 )ot, o ))1, ™' + .... U tnlll 10 tl 1f 1 2f ,,.._l.,.WllHPI SI 3' IS .. 1(1'o .... -·~ 1 Q Ullo ... -.-11oU$SIH I J«I :1• XI :1111 Jo -WllHPlt 111> lw SJ SS SS • 111 JI 'I lt\'I lOI,~ USTOWC l 10 11 )21 l1 XI o Wlltt P I JI> 12 •J U I -1
1' 21\, 111 l'" -1 unr, "II 12 uo 21 , 211'.I n, -""w11 c pl '° ,',!',• ,•,1~, ',', • I. 3Hlo no-:i..Unl U! wl j1 II ... I\,_ Wiii.Con ID •H ...
t """ Jl"\ JI .. _ , Un Ut OI Js j H • l!~ l~• -1 """I Cn 1>!" l 11 ll l ll>. 11\:o -i lJIM !' :Mtii-1 U<!U,fllO 10).1,. -..321-211.Wlll(~PBJ JS" J.l\o'lli-\t lN JI ,~1 Jt _ _,u L.,e 50 J ! ll~I J~'l l•i-1 11l1 CplC l ! :lo o :ll~ )I\,
6 lJl'i 1 lJ ; _ Vi uni"° Pd .ao
15
_ 0.,, 111'> Jv,, -~1 w~ .c u •' 10 JJ , Jl\o 210, -•• ll I I ,,,,. t)\.o un ... r COfl\P 7l<o Jl -\\Whl• MfJor 1)1 JI'• 10• JI _,._, S U lilt 11 + I'll Up/OI\., Ml I •1'> 11 41• \'I Wh rttkl SU ll l >o th -1 .. :au Ullo 11'19 )1\41 -"'u • ald!I IO li\l Im IJl + l\ w C~tlCorP l " lf' :16h ,. • -1 S1 11"' 11 l"" _ lo USL FE .JO lJ Jl\.o !._\lo ll"° -"t W 1111$ 150 JI l ~ 01• \Golt -1
UV USM t1pwl till n ...... 71 •-ltW Ron 10 ~ :16\o l,1'1 13\'t -'t --USM ltl'210 4 Jiil JI »11 + \II w llom• 11 o :16,f l1 l!\'I JI -t1
4U :Ml,\ ,.,.. 111 + \\ UUI. Oii.JO 141'1 tll'o JI ti -1 Wmsll 0 ""' l .. 1l • 101.l. n • -•r. " t7\\ 2~ 71\lo -"UllhCon IOI Jl Ill.lo tl•I> ll"" +1 w ...... OllO 10 )4 n"I )4 -1 3:tt lll' ?Sl-'l. U>4-"'11tn ... L ltl ":lit.. l6l' ll> _.,.WnnOJo llol 11 C• •O ..,,...__,,
'"so JS lll• 1o:i. _ 1 .. ~·,,•,n •1~ '" •'• ,. 1 ,',-' -, • w nn O;:i' 11 I •l l' •l • •.n -U toAO 11\'I _ V. • Oto _.., ii 71 ' ~I" .,. -W Mboo INI I I tt•o 1•>.. 23 -'• JI lllto 11\lo lJ \'I VCA c~ pt IO I '"' l•l< ,.,.. + i w IE Pw .. ll '' • 2J"1 ll'• -\o
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Gets Alvard
Richard T Robertson, •
graduate student In tbe UC
Jrvll'IC' Depa r lm c nt of
Psythob1ology hils b een
awarded a NATO Postdoctoral
Fellov.slup in Science
Robertson was one ot only
4S .selteted for the award lrom
more than 400 nonunees .,..
tionw1de A PhD candidate 1n
PS)'chobK>ICJiY ~t UCI he plans
to ntt~nd the-Ma"J Planck
lnsUtute 1n f rank turt 1 Germ;ny
Robertson Is n 1rafl11ate ot
Washington Stat.e Uruver:s1ty
DAil' l"llOf TundaJ, ftW,,ary 23, 1971
CHECKING . •UP•
Jigsaw Puzzlers
Poor at Algebra
SO~fE.THING ELSE t h e
science boys are trying to
figure out is why a man In
a near soundproo! room after
about 30 minutes tends to get
wistful , sad. do.w:n._ in the
mouth. It happens repeatedly
in tests ... OUR LANGUAGE
MAN, th a t philosophical
fellow , says \Vhat's wrong with
the world can be described
in three words: overspend,
overkill and overbreed , , ,
.. WHEN A PIPE S~fOKER
comes into my tavern,''
reports a bartender of long
experience, "I never worry
that he'll wind up drunk. Pipe
smokers juJi1 don't drink fast
enough to gel out of line."
WHEN THE OFFSPRING
are mostly girls. H's the
mother, not the father, who
is the more romantic of the
matrimonial partners. When
the offspring are mostly boys.
ifs the father who is the
more romantic of the pair.
Generally, generally. That is
what a team of scientists now
says their studies indicate.
OPEN QUESTION -What
are the only five 1,1.·ords in
English ending in "dous·'?
rarely good at algebra, it's
said ... Q. ''Do you realize
that 100 percent of all serious
ski accidents occur on the
last run of the day?" A.
Appreciate hearing that Will
file it ..•. ··You said the
date rn& is on every SI bill.
You're wrong. I've found three
without it.·• A. Look again,
it's there.
FORGET HIS NAA-1E, but
the 1936 World Champion Hog
Caller once said, ''You have
to be sincere, not just loud.
You need to convince the hog~
you've got something they
want." Altogether reasonable.
Coming from a hog caller.
But the boss of a major ad
agency liked the philosophy,
too. So much, in fact, he had
it engraved on a plaque for
his office wall. Not sure t.hat
was fitting.
.Lawmakers Big Power A~~ord Seen on Laos
Get Blame
For Blaze
SACRAMEN'J'O (UPI) -
The state assemblyman who
represent.s Taft said the
Legislature shoul d be blamed
for ·the deaths of seven
mentally retarded patients in
a nursing home fire.
He took sharp objection to
a social worker leader who
charged that Gov . Ronald
Reagan "put the match" to
the Taft fire through fiscal
economies in Sacramento.
Assemblyman W i 11 i a m
·Ketchum (ft-Paso Rob I es )
sakl the Legislature should
have passed laws establishing
firt salety standards at homes
used to house the retarded
patilnloi. He said present laws
cover homes for persons under
16 years old and over &4 but
not for ages in between .
''I submit the blame for
this tragedy rests on our
By STEWART HENSLEY "tht Olinese people can not intention to use such weapons, operation would bt confined
WASHINGTON (UPI) -be l.ndlrferent 50 such rabid the Chinese omitted that to the arta aouth of the 17th
The United Slates and act.s of aWesslon." charge from their general parallel, several hundred
Mainland Chi na without any 'These .statements were condemnation 0( his remarks miles south of the Chinese
official contact appear to have assessed as stan dard as constituting "the zenith in border and at least 200 miles
reached a tacit understariding Communist reaction. A arrogance." south of the Plain 0( Jars,
of the limits beyond Which number of official Chinese China's other main concern where Communist forces are
the allied invasion of southern reports iodicated Peking was appeared to be reflected in engaged with troops of the
Laos will not go. more conCtr~ over the a Chinese staiement warning Royal Laotian government.
This is a critical point. ll possibility 'ttiat the United that she was linked with Loas The United States has been
bears directly on whether States would ·use t.aCtical by mountains and rivers, and laying down ils O'f'tl
China would feel impelled to nuclear weapons to support the two countries '·have a specifications, w Ith t.lie
send "volunteer" troops to Saigon's troops. common boundary of several penalties for violating them
assist Hanoi's forces in Laos. After President Nixon in his bundred kilometers.'' Officials said that a
The impres.skin that Peking Wednesday news conference The White House then said resumption o! U.S. bombfug
scale might result if the three
Hanoi divisions jusl north of
the demilitarized zone
attempted to move into South
Vietnam. And Nixon decl~
to rule out a South Vietnamese
land invasion of the north If
actions by Hanoi warranted
it.
is not contemplating military said that Washington .had no the South Vietnamese ground of North Vietnam on a major
interventioo "emerges from a•1-------'C-------------=-------------'------------
Speculation that the invasion
of Laos might bring Chinese
"volunteers" into the fight,
as they stonned into North
Korea 20 years ago, has
originated with U.S.
commentators and not Peking.
study by authorjlies here 0(
the Chinese s tatement s
against the United States since
the drive against the Ho Chi
Minh Trail began Feb. 8.
China responded to the
in v.asion, carried out by South
Vietnamese. under heavy U .S
air support, with a dec_laration
that it "would not stand idly
by.''
Then Peking described the
situation in Laos as "a grave
menace to China" and said
Keeps things cleaner without
effo rt, eliminates bath tub rings
shoulders," Ketchum told the -----------1
You Work Less
You Save Money Soap and clothing last longer Assembly during debate on
a Democratic-sponsored bill to 1 restore Medi-Cal services.
He said legislation coWd be
passed to cover f u t u r e
: situations but it is "something
, like locking the barn after
, the horse escapes."
Ket chum was critica1 of
\representatives of nursing
)lomes and social worker
unioru who blamed Reagan
for the fire· because of medical
ca re budget cutbacks.
The seven were killed early
Friday when names consumed
the SU-year-old w o o d e n
building 11 days before they
were to have been moved
because the building was a
fire hazard.
MO ST EST,
LEAST EST
BUENOS AIRES (AP) -
The more Argentine TV
shows of her bodily charms,
the more a model will make.
A new wage agreement,
hammered out in 18 months
of negotiations, provides for
pay of $52.50 for a n
appearance fully clothed in
a JO-second commercial, $15
more if the model is in
bra and brief or filmy
nightgown . and another $10
for a closeup fl! anatomical
charms.
Dh"' "'"" Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans
Complete lnstalla lion Available ! Just Ask!
So. Coast Plaza 3333 Bristol St. Ph. 541h'1333
Buena Park 8150 La Palma Ave. Ph. 828-4400
SaDla Ana 1716 So. Main St. Ph. 547-3371 THERE ARE count I es s
human heads in this world
with exactly the same number
of hairs on them. A n d
countless trees with exactly
the same number of leaves.
I think of that sometimes
when I get mail addressed
lo Resident '>''hich reads: ··vou
have been chosen by a panel
AA10NG THOSE numerous
phrases that really say exactly
opposite of what we lake them
include ... It's cheap at half
the price .. , ... DID I CLA1~1
nobody could recite t h e
alphabet backwards in two
minutes? Wrong again! Have
three client.s who can do that,
one in five seconds . . . NO.
DR. STASICK of Hammond,
Jnd., is not eligible forlJ~;,;,;o;,;,;,;,;,;,;,;,;,;,;;,;,;;,;;,;;,;;,;;,;;,;;,;;,;;,;;,;;,;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ membership in the Proper Jobi
Club, sorry ••. A READER
says she has found 1.8IJ ways
to spell yogurt, includin
youghggurrtt. Not acceptable
•.. WHAT! YOU CAN'T think
of the only state's name that
ends in the letter K? Come
of judges to receive a free on .
gift offering ... " ... THOSE
BETTORS who win at the ra ce
tracks all over the country
RA.PIO REPLY -No. sir,
fact that Brittany has the
highest birthrate in France
has nothing to do with the
fact that Brittany leads 111
the provinces of France in
oyster consumption, that's
definite.
tend to leave early. And the
young ladies who ha~le the
checkrooms know this for a
certainty. They always get
biQler tips after the sixth or
seventh race than after the
eighth or ninth.
CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q.
"Any special trait that people
1,1.·ho are particularly adept at
working jigsaw puules have
in common?" A. They're
Your question.rand com·
tnenl! are welcomed and
will be used in CHECKING
UP wherever possible. Ad'.
dres.s letters to L. M. Boyd,
P. 0. Box 1875 , Newport
Beach, Calif., 92660.
D1•ained Dry
California's Largest
'
Lal{e Vanishing Again
HANF 0 RD {AP)
California·s largest Jake is
disappearing aga in.
Tulare Lake. a J mos t
eliminated by land-reclaiming
projects, spread to near its
original siz e two years ago
after record floods st ra ined
dams and flood-control proj-
ects.
By next &?ptembcr. experts
said it will be nearly "dry''
again and rarming operations
will have resumed in much
f)f the rertile bottom land.
The lake as recently as two
years ago covered some 88,000
acres to depths or up to
2t> feel. It now is spread over
less than 30.000 acres and is
less than six feel deep in
most places.
F o 11 o w i n g exceptionally
heavy snowfa ll and record
spring runof!s from the Sierra
watershed. Tulare Lake in
1969 was the largest body or
water entirely within the
.state·s borders.
At ils peak it contained
nearly two million acre feet
ef water. When it is ··dry''
there will be less than 175,000
feet remaining.
The watershed is currently
normal as far as the snowpack
and water cootent are con-
cerned. according to the latest
Snow S u r v e y Report.
In addition, the 1 owe r
reaches of the Kings River.
once the primary stream
leading into the lake basin,
has been cleaned up through
a channel clearing project,
which means more water can
flow north to the sea and
a'>'·ay from the lake.
Only in the event of a major
snow and rainfall during the
next few months will the
Kaweah. Tulare and Kern
rivers be able lo fill and dump
directly into the basin.
Chief engineer S t a n I e y
Barnes for the Bosv.·ell Corp.'s
extensive farming operations
says most of the latid will
be dry enough to farm this
year. Cotton and grains thrive
in the area covered by the
lake basin.
Barnes said "if we don•t
have any unusual or signifi·
cant storms between now and
the end of the current .season"
most of the lake will be
planted for the first time in
two years.
Barnes says pumping to Ir-
rigate surrounding areas and
rapid evaporation -up to
1.000 acre feel a day -have
helped bring lhe lake level
down .
HOLIDAY .HOUSE
IJIQUORS
1o'lo
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3 BLOCKS NORTH OF THE SAN DIEGO FREEWAY
c~fer HARBOR BLVD. & WARNER AVE.
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'""" IUCH
• of ne
lb
~ii d
n ..
'· th
as s.
g.
••
,. .. .. · •1 ~ .•
1~ .,,
..,
,...
·· ..
Mr. Blackwell, who says
women know he won't make
a fool of them with his
c reations, de.s.igns
hot pants for milady
for city wear in the
summer.
-
•
,
"
• ,
•
BLACKWELL'S BARBS
·-.} •
·1···: .. : ! <·~ ~ •'·' •' ,.· '. .. . ,. ·.• , .. ...
In
Worst Designers Next
By MARIAN CHRISTY
NEW YORK -Rebel designer Mr.
Blackwell has carved out controversial
status in the fashion world by daring
to singlehandedly thrust a shocking self·
assessed list of the "Worse dressed" into
the international limelight.
The fuMy list, which has caused
Blackwell's image to flourish prolitically,
teeters on the bii.arre and invariably
makes front page because the designer'•
comments on the list-makers represent
the verY readable naked truth.
It's understandable that Blackwell
hates being labeled a buffoon and a
freak, and spits out his peppery
comments uninhibitedly •.
"It's about time si>meone said out
loud what people buzz about at private
cocktail parties," he says with emotion.
"Behind closed doors the gossips say,
boy, doesn't she look like hell? I happen
to think it's more damaging to crawl
into a tacky little corner and whisper
than to speak out in public."
So he spuUers about ''listed" people :
"Sophia Loren gorgeous? Nonsense.
She 's not even attractive. M for her
midis, they 're fit for a fired schoolmarm.
"Barbra Streisand's see-through Arnold
Scassi-designed dresg was the perfect
exam ple of nudity at the wrong time,
wrong place. And , God, when she wear•
those dreadful bat-winged chiffons and
stretches out her arms, I want to stick
a broomstick in 'her claws. Barbara's face
could never carry a witch's-brew fashion.
''Elizabeth Taylor Burton is in my
Worse-dressed Hall of Fame. She really
should be bo$S or the Di am o nd
Acquisition Bureau. She's a I wa y s
15quashed ~nmericfully into her seedy
clothes. Actually, Elizabeth and . Ric hard
are freakouts .
"Queen Elizabeth is Frumpville No.
t. She wears hats most people wouldn't
plant. Her short white gloves suggest
she's going to burst into a chorus or
'Mammy.' And that satchel she carries
in lieu of a purse suggests wherever
6he goes she stays overnight.''
At the moment Blackwell is livid with
his fellow fashion designers. Business
is dangerously down, confusion reigns
supreme, fashion has become negated
because the world is bent on survival
and clothes are frivolous trappings.
Blackwell is planning two outs.
By 1972 he plans to open six Mr.
Blackwell boutiques -featuring his
concept of super-feminillf: clothes. Stores
will contain both his collection and those
by designers intent on making women
attractive to men.
His second route will be to issue a
new list, namely, "Ten Designers Most
Responsible for Abusing Fashionables."
His prime candidate for the dubious
distinction is Rudi Gernreich.
"Why, he comes out with the worst
creations on earth," says Blackwell. "He
has a genius for stupidities like braless
and topless , which are insults to most
women. And the rifle, the helmet and
the bullet-belt routine is downright
hostile. Any woman who would wear
Gernreich accessories is frustrated .''
Blackwell also despises Yves Saint
Laurent getups.
"The clothes are just plain sick," he
says pointedly. "They"re dusty , attic·y
costumes Grandma should have given
awa y and didn't. Yves be lieves in junk
fit for the demented ."
Pierre Cardin might also make the
list:
"He puts cut-outs on his dresses and,
if they're an inch higher or lower, the
woman is in trouble. Evidently he has
never seen a naked lady."'
Despite your reactions to Mr.
Blackwell 's IJCid comments -good or
bad -you've. got to hand it to him
for scraping hls way to fame.
And "The Truth,"' as Mr. BlackweU
calls himself, coes marching on.
Thing for Spring
Victims
• • •
' Evening glamour is
brightened with these
flor•I pri nts. Shorter
versi on is in organza, the
long gown and cape are in
chiffon.
BEA ANDERSON, Ed Hor
T11tH1r, l'1bn11rr JJ, IJTI ""' n
Denim
Status Symbol Now Priced Reasonably
Diamonds may be forever, but denim
-cotton denim -is definitely the
new status symbol tor 1971.
Denim, in its most popular fonn, ha!
been synonymous with jeans for years.
1t also is the sign of workmen's stiff
looking pants and overalls.
But as fashiorui change. sO do fabric!!,
and with the advent of softer looking
clothes for ihe 70s, denim is keeping
up with the times.
Tl has had its surface brushed or
gcrubbed lo give a soft appearance.
It is pleasant to touch and allows a
new dimension in tailoring. And it ii
Brus hed denim croppeCI
jacket and matchin g
narrow knickers is
d ubbed "newsboy."
Both have contrast
to pstitching. Tho
''extra '' add ition is
the hat.
this denim •.• brushed denim .. , tha t
is the answer t'o spring coats and jackets.
In the 1960s "youth" led the way
In that everyone tried to look you nger
and emulate the young. Designer Nat
Hirsch believes youth is still leading
• , , but in a different manner.
Today, the younger generation is looked
upon and expected to set new trends,
new sta ndards and to create the total
environment. Then the ' ' o t he r ' '
generation adapts it acco rd ing ly. Hirsch
is convinced that the young set the
direction of society. He firmly believes
fashion starts on the streets of the
world and elevates from there,
· The "couture'' as It has existed Is
becoming Jess influential and important.
Certainly, this decade 's younger set is
more involved in tile wa ys of the world
than the young were in previous
genera lions.
They have little or no concern for
very expensive, label-conscious clothes.
One's status might depend on how many
patches a girl has on her jeans rather
than whal the label of her coat reads
When It 's draped over a chair. The
word ''couture" might well be associated
with "history" as-youth stands toda y.
Hirsch thinks brushed denim clothes
ire timely and that the k>ok is right
for the softer styles In which he believes.
Also, In this time of rising costs and
Inflation, brushed denim clothes can be
well atyled and trimmed at reasonable
prices.
Another youth-Inspired I a s h i o n
Innovation wtilch started to gain in
popularity last year are cartoon tops,
comic strip jeans and more. Now
appliques have taken over. Appliques
Include a heart on e jacket pocket,
t star on the back of a denim cape.
It"1 ju.st one of many contemporary
and tasteful approachet to clothes.
• Down·to-.1rth 1t1tu1 fincla
its way up front In tht.
brushed denim GI b.1 o"
length co1t (lift). Th• feb-
ric used to bt th• VtO rking
man's favorite, but ht no
longer h11 priority. Agai n
It's tht choice In • fitted
midi co1t. Shirt cuffs and
military buttons complete
th1e outfit.
' . . .
T11t~ay, February 23, 1971
Ha rborite Turns Author
• r.
Man Behind Scene Emerges
•
Race Strategy Mapped Out for Benefit
Roundin g the far turn in preparation fo r the annual
Friends of the Catalina Island School for Boys f{acc
Day at Santa Anit a Ra ce ·rrack are iteft to righ t 1
:'llrs. JC!a n Candy. ;\lbert Simonds. board of trustees
president, and !\trs. Simonds, chairman. Proceeds
\\'Jll go to th e schoo l's library.
Mom's Rol .e Aborted by Dad
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I an1 shocke<l
and outraged over your answer to "On
the Brink ." the man \l.'hose wire became
pregnant without his knowledge or eon·
sent. knowing full "'ell tha t he did not
u·ant another child. They already ha d
three. the eldes t 20 and the youngest
13. The poor fellov.• said the prospect
of being tied do"'" until he v.•as 60
v;as horribly depressing and he just
cooldn't lace it. He gave his \1·ife a
choict -ei ther she has an aborl ion
or he gets a divorce.
ANN LANDERS
Here v.as a very unhappy man 1vho
was as king for your opinion. Instead
of giving him a civil ized ·answer you
responded in an abusive manner and
told him hi.s wife didn 't get pregnant
by herself -that he should stop ac ting
like a jac kass and accept the fourth
child \l'ith dignity.
Every child has the right to ht> v.1anlcd
by BOTH parents. And v.·ho in the hell
need s a fourth child anyv:a y'' My heart
ached for that father and I orn burning
over your insensiliv ity. 1"11 bet yo u
receive hundred s of le tters li ke this one
and you'll probably throw them all 111
the v.·astebasket. unanswered -DISA P-
POl!\TED IN SANTA BARB AR1\
DEAR OJS : Yt'ould you be I i e 1· e
thousands·.•
To all 1o1 ho v.·rote to lell me I am
cruel. unfeeling. ignorant and just pl<1in
nuls. I v.·ouhl likt lo say this : Any
man who v.·outd gJ1'e his wile the choice
of abortion or di\'Orce -after sbc h::is
told him she y,anls tbe child, is indeed
a jackass.
I have i.latrd publicly and in priul,
tbat I slaad f11ur square in fa\'or or
abo rtion on rle1nand , for any woman
-married or unmarried -provided
of course Iha! her physit·ian says the
pregnancy ean he lerminaled sarcly.
I beliel'e the 1nattrr of abortion should
be decided bCl\\'l'C n a v.·on1an and her
doctor. y,•itho ul interference from rhurch
or state. I al so h;u·r recontn1ended vascc·
tomy as a sane and sensible method
of hirtb control for n1arricd men O\Cr
3~ who don't w<1n1 lar)!l'r f11ntilics.
I recognize th{· nel·cl for populalion
control and ha\l' 'u i.li.1tt·d. repe1:1ledly.
Rut in Ibis caS•'. lh1· v.·oman already i~
preg nant. She '1 ant~ !hr 1·hi ld. In rnv
upiniil11 her "·ishr~ ~huuld prc\'ait. Thi•
1•icious and hys tcrieal lone of lhe people
"'ho disagreed Y.ilh m~· ans1rer persuaded
me more deeply than e\cr th at I "·as
righl.
DEAH A~i\ L1\\"DEHS: \\"hat can be
done about a tcachrr 11ho picks on
No 'Lion '-All 'Bear' Fac t
Club Stalks Talk
Slides taken during African
safaris will be the highlight
of a Thursday. Feb. 25.
Executives' Dinner Club or
Orange Coast meeti ng in the
Newporter Inn.
Following a ti o n1. .~0<·i:1l
hour hosted bv !ht• i\lcssrs.
and i\1 mes. vCrne \\"oodru fr.
Glen Simrnon:' and Ll'on Hud<!,
Ed Quinn \Vi ii descr1bi> ho\1
hi s l roph~· roon1 has hC'tome
a museurn.
Quinn 1s :1 furn1rr \ 1('('
president 11[ the Chr\"!'ll'r
Corpora11011. \1orld tra\·cler
and Game l1unter Hurn 111
Detroit. h<' 11a~ educa1ed 111
New Ynrk 11nd retu·ed 111
Jr vine CO\'('
a child unmercifully'..' Our 10-year-<>ld
!'Oil Orrin is nol a bad boy. He"s ~vcrage.
No better and no worse than any o[
1he ot he r boys in his room.
''eslcrday his teacher sent Orrin home
for no reason at all. He. was cryin g
when he w11lked in to the house -
humiliated and hurt. \Vhy would a
teacher be so mean· as to do this?
I'd like your opinion, -MOM WHO
\\!ANTS FAIRNESS
DEAR l\IOM: When a child Is sent
l101ne from school in the middle of
the day "fo r no reason" -there's a
reason. Go to the schoo l and fi nd out'
what it is.
It is interesting that yo u have decided
the tea cher is mean y,·ithout knowing
the facts. !\!others who blindly side -y,•it h
{heir children against teachers in1·ariably
tlo their children niore harm than good.
Unsur1• of yourself on d11tes:' \Vhat's
right? \\'hat's \\Tong ? Should you'..'
Shouldn't you? Send for Ann Landers'
booklet. "Dating Dos and Don'ls." enclos·
ing 11·it h }OUr request 35 cents in coin
and a long . self-addressed, stamped
~nvelope in care of the DAILY PILOT.
Alabamans
Present
Potpourri
An Alaba ma Potpourri by
mem ber Alabamans will be
on the agenda \\'hen the United
Daughters of the Confederacy,
Em ma Sansome Chapter,
Santa Ana , meets at I p.m.
Thursday. Feb. 25. in the
Laguna Hil ts home of fl1 rs.
John Carver.
~1 rs . Qu i nn. an
accomplished pianist. organ ist
and concert v iol i n is t .
accompanied her husband on
six safari!i.
MAUREEN JOHNSON
To Marry
In charge of the meeting
is i\'!rs. C. A. Nissen, program
chairn1an. and co-hostess for
1 he meeting will be flfrs.
Sterli ng Graydon.
•
GAME HUNTER
Ed Quinn
Annual Dance
Their trophy room is
de corated 'lith a variety of
animals including geese flying
from !he ceiling, elephants.
tigers, lions. zebra and polar
bear.
Mrs. ~m Uarst 1v i 1 I
Introduce the s p e a k e 1·
following a business :-;es'.'lion
conducted by Joseph Hehn .
Those ' in 1erestrd 111
reservatiQn.c; may call i\1iss
Fern Randolph in La guna
Beach.
Meeting Model
April Day
Selected
An April ~ \\'eddtnt: in tllj'
ll untington Valley H :i p 11 !--I
Church. Fountnin Valley 1s
being planned by ~laurC'Cn
Johnson and James lltuton.
~C'1\·s of lhe for!hcom1nf;!
e\ cnt y,·as announced by the
brtdc-clccl's parent~. i\1r. nnd
'-lrs. Don Johnso n of llun-
tlngton !!reach durin~ a lun-
cheon in the H untington
Harbou r Be1tch Club.
The historian of the monthly
UDC Magazine features the
role or a specific confederate
slate in the \\'ar Bel\\'ecn the
Sl:.ill'S. At a r e a meetings
n;.itives of lhat stale presen t
historical material gathered
fron\ old journals. le tt ers and
diaries
Presiding al the meeting
will !)j, :\liss Christine Brooks.
.-.;onrnembers interested in;
auending are invited lo
contact the hostesses.
Desig ners
Join Forces
By JACKIE C0~1BS
Ol IM o.u, ..... , Sl•H
Grawnan's Chinese Theater,
the Hollywood Bowl, the ma·
jestic Masonic T e m p le on
Hollywood Boulevard -v.·hat
trip to California is complete
without these noted
landmarks?
Tourists would return home
with fewe r memories if it
weren't tor Charles E .
Toberman. successful deve.
loper and builder.
"Charles Toberman is a
man 0( highest principles,
deep sincerity and un-
conquerable courage. His is
a tremendous Horatio Alger
story that will i n s p i r e
everyone," said Grace Glasser
Koopal, author of the recently .
published biography, "Free
Enterprise -Foundation of
America"s Greatness."
Mr_p.. Koopal, a Newport
BesCh re sident, believes the
lire of the Southern California
developer has a me.ssage for
the youth and the policy
makers of the United States.
1' America was built on free
enterprise. People witti. limited
means and background could
succeed if they had the guts.
Mr. Toberman had the guts."
Coming to Hollywood in 1902
with $30 in his pocket, the
industrious young man built
two fortunes. Before the
crash. the Tobermans' ex-
penses were $10,000 a month.
"It took him 12 years to pay
off his debt s but he refused
to declare bankruptcy," ~frs.
Koopal cootinued.
Although Toberman was
able to expand his business
and commercial enterprises to
multi millionaire holdings, he
was civic and culturally mind·
ed, according to Mrs. Koopal.
A charter member of the Joun·
Scholars
Get Boost
Scholarship funds [or
horticultural students will be
raised when the Huntington
View Branch, Women 's Na·
t1onal Farm and Garden
Association sponsors a benefit
luncheon al 11 :45 a . m .
'fhursday, Feb. 25.
Clyde Wempler or Superb
Decor Nursery will dis cuss the
Use of Organic Chelated Iron
during the affair in the Hun-
tington Beach Mercury Sav-
ings and Loan building. He
hold an MS degree form the
University of Pennsylvania in
horticulture and is a member
of the California Association
of Nurserymen.
Mr s. Al Manire is accepting
reservations.
Pla ns continue for I h e
group's forthcomi ng spring
f101,1.·er show lo take place May
15 in the Fountain Valley City
Hall.
Dads Back
In School
Fathers went back to school
when Hilltop Nursery School
opened its doors during an
open ho use.
Young sons and daughters
escorted their dads through
the experience of collage-
making , carpentry, pudding
fingerpainting and a tour of
scien ce room materi:lls on the
five senses.
All recon vened in the main
room for music, juice and
cookies.
The open house for fathers
is one of many events schedul·
ed by the Costa ~fesa non-pro-
fit cooperati ve nursery school .
~tembersh ip in the organiza-
tion may be obtained by call·
ing Mrs. Norman Vaughn,
Irvine, or ~frs. Pa u J
Masumoto, Fountain Valley.
Fashions
On Parade
Plans for a ~la rch 20 fashion
sho11.· and benefit y,ill be
formula ted "·hen members of
Alpha Dtlta P1 Alumnae
Association meel ror lunch
Thu rsday, Feb. ~. in the
Fullerton home of ~I r s .
Charles Peterson.
Members will com pl ete
decorations for the event
taking place in Bullocks, Santa
Ana. Costa ~1esa Country Club
will be the SC!ttlng ror the
a n" u a I Valentine's Da oce
given b)1 Oe:lta Alpho Phi
Chapltr, Beta Sigma Phi.
Mrs. Richard tlUtchC'U or
Huntington Beach will hosl :t
mo<k!I nu.'<'tlng of Pi Pi
Chnpter. Beta Sigma Phi ;.ii
7 p.m. 1on1ght. Orhoste~s will
be l\1r.t;. Al Hotek.
flllss John~n 1s a gr<1duatc
or Fountain Vnll<'Y H i g h
School and 11ttenct.~ (;olden
\Vest College.
The pu blic Is Invited to the
The firs:l joint meeting of the fashion show and rese rvations
Orangr Counly chapters of the may be made by ca lling Mrs.
Arnerican Institute of Interior Pet~rson .
Ttie group w111 gather at
7 p.m. Saturday, F@b. 27, for
cocktatls which wlll launch
reslivllie11. Mrs. w a y n e
Updike, pre1ldenl will be
crowned vale!nllnt queen.
!. ...
A butf1·t supper a n d
pru rnn1 llllcd T(l See and
to Kno\1. to be given b}' ll1rs.
fi 1chard L o dw ick are
SChl'duled
lier rlanct, son {)r JudJ.ic
and fllr:< llan1pto11 Hu111111 <•I
1luntinJilon Beac·h. 1~ a
i raduulc of the 1\rn1y·Navy
Academy. Carl~bad nnd 11lso
atl cnds Golden \\'est Colll.'ge. ...
0~1gners and the Na tional So-F-~· -=o....-=========.I cfl.'!y of Interior Designers wil l
t11k1• place tonight at 7 in the
.Vewporter 1nn.
The student AID chapter
fron1 California S1111e College
a1 .F ullerton will a ttend. ...
LOCAL
No olhtr "'"'•P•p•r t•ll• vov
more, fvery d•v. tboul wh11't
9oi119 on in tho Gretter Or•nt t
Co•1t th111 tht DAILY rtLOT.
ding board o! the Hollywood
Bowl, he se rved as the later
association's president for 16
years.
"He has done incredible
things and throughout his life
there Is woven a beauliful
Jove story ." His wife of 69
years, Josephine "was his life.
She went everywhere with him
-even on business trips."
They were married on a street
in Whichita Falls, Kan. in
1902.
Mrs. Koopal credits
Tobennan with initiating the
"de-centralized s h o p p i n g
center." In 1919 he built a
group of shops and a garage
r.ear Hollywood Boulevard and
Bronson Street on the belief
that "as the city grew, it
was impractical to make peo--
pie come fnm greater and
greater distances to the heart
of the town in order to get
their routine shopping needs."
His shops and further sub--
divisions were an immediate
success, she added;
The author says the book
will inspire young people. "It
is a means of making them
aware of the great possibilities
ror themselves in their own
country. It gets across the
idea that we must get down
to the basics -a belief in
ourselves, our country and a
will,ingness to work, to achieve
our goals."
"There Is too much ten·
dency to sit around and com-
plain -not really do anything
constructive."
Mrs. Koopa1, born in Ntw
York City and rals!d In Mon.
tana and Washington, began
her career as a cub reporter
on !he Spokane Spokesman
Review. She came to
California where she owned
a commercial art studio,
edited a magazine, owned an
advertising agency a n d
"edited a few milllon words
ot advertising copy."
The local author is already
deeply involved in two more
books, one which will chroni cle
the acoustical giant, the
Hollywood Bowl. Such en·
terprise seems to concur with
the subject of her biography
"Work satisfies the urge to
answer 'Who am I?' Unlike
friendship or love, it gives
you back what you put into
it ," she maintains.
Beautiful Pieces
if
'
lG"'P IQ~.
-.g.1119.00
Beautiful occas ional pieces and dining
room groups ... but look at the prices.
eHpooeot~ -·· ........ _ ... , ···-·-
bpone nt, o modern crafted de1ign with it's o,,.
g les comforto bly roun ded, Su rfoce skill full y
odomed with parquet ond graceful moldings· for
beoury 1oke1 I
I
... 11 2900
ll
8 piece
Dining
Set , .......... ............
Dock ald9 dMM,
1r • ....t bt.
toble ... ffet.
::
1
-769°0
MOH.12"0 9 pto1
TuH. WM. TI!.n~ $e1. t:)O le li30
fll. 9:30 10 9 Pl"
THE STORE OF FAMOUS NAMES
15 14 North Main Street ,._.. S<l 1-'"'
C1111om•r Parking lot On Syc.omore Street
.... ..... .-.. ' '
•
/
Consumer Fires Put Dinner Party Staged
Bowes Reveal News 'Heat on
By JO OLSON
Of "" D&llr l'llDt 51111
They say that it is not possi-
ble tG actively support and
£ollow through more than
three or four bills each session
of the California Legislature
unless you blow your 1nind.
Barbara Erickson really
ble1v it this year because she
has been lobbying for e\'ery
bill pertaining to consumers,
women, fam ily life, nutrition
and education she possibly
can.
Barbara. a Sacramento re!'i-
dent who is legislative director
for the Californ ia Ho m e
Ecanomics Assaciation. is a
ball oI fire \\'hen it comes
10 V.'Orking (or important bills,
and hopes to light a few fires
under consumers throughout
the state.
She addressed members of
the Orange District CHEA
dur ing a meeling in the Olive
Tree Buffet, Fullerton.
~1rs. Erickson's job i s
monumen tal from the start.
She n1usl sort through
thousands cf new bills as they
arc introduced and cull out
the ones pertaining to CHEA
policies.
PACKAGES
To em phasize the im-
por lance of fcllcwing and sup-
porting legislaticn, Barbara
..... ~' . .......,~.,,.a~
LEGISLATIVE CONFERENCE -Discussing policies
of the California Home Economics Association re-
garding legislation are Oefl to right) l\1rs. Philip
\Vidolf. president of the Orange District, l\Irs. Floyd
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
described life as a series cf
packages.
"'{he firtt package is where
we are conceived. It is subject
to (egislation through the
abortion bill.
"When you are born you
are put into a package or
diapers and shirts, and we
k e e p packaging ourselves.
They became expensive and
a sLatus symbol. Legislation
concerns here are labeling and
inflammable clothing.
''\Ve are taken home from
th! hospital in a n o t h e r
package, again a itatus sym-
bol in some homes. Autos also
are subject to legislation.
l\tanufacturers didn't want to
.,1" -·~
'
make them any itafer until
Nader blew the . hom on
them."
Auto , repail'$ are another
conside.tation for legislation.
"People pay n1ore ''" the
repairs or th~ir car th an their
awn body," Mrs. Erickson
pointed out, "and the man
vlho repain your car doe~n't
have to be licensed, even
though your Ufe is at stake
v.·hen you drive it.
"To keep your body alive
you are fed thlng s from
packages, battles and cans.
The more than 5,000 items
in the supermarkEi. are sub-
ject to legislation through
labeling, unit priting aod
Erickson, legislative director for CHEA, an~ lilrs.
Carol Heinz. district president-elect. lo.1rs. Erickson,
a Sacramento resident, was guest speaker for a dis·
lricl meeting.
dating for freshness.
"At lhe top of the list for
budgetin1. repre senting status
and often causing financial
problems are the packages we
live in.'' Here the legislative
controls are on .financing, con-
structlcn and building cedes.
"Samething has to happen
far a new law to be made,''
Mrs. Erickson pointed out.
Another package is the place
where you wcrk. which is af-
fected by Jaber laws and those
gol'erning working conditions.
The last package comes
v.·hen you die. "You get put
into a package. Some are very
expensive, also status sym-
bols." ~frs. Erkkson said a
refonn bill is pending.
Hov.• do you gel plugged
Jn to legislative issues?
"Read a newspaper. Re ad
two if necessary. Clip stories
about bills.
•·Join sometlting or start a
consumer interest group .
"\Vrlte simple, short letters.
Immediate action is
n ece s s a r y . Call your
legislator's office to find out
where the bill is.''
FORM LETl'ERB
Phone calls and tel egrams
help, she said, bul dittoed.
mimeographed or form letters
shculd never be sent. Also.
letters v.·ith more than one
signature will be disregarded
because legislators fe!l the
signers aren"l re a 11 y in-
terested .
Copies of bills may hr
ordered by writing Io
Legislalive Bill Ro a m .
Sacramento. Calif. 9all14. Two
free capies will be mailed 1vith
each request.
Mrs. Ericksan also said it
Is important to find out which
comm I ttees congressmen
belong to because decisions
are made In committee.
What is the most important
action for women. consumers,
parents, teachers and anyone
else interested in protecting
their "pack:iges" to take?
.. Spend SiK cents and take
!he fime lo write a letter.''
KAREN ROHRIG •·
To S1y Vows
Fall Date
Selected
The betrothal of Karen
Roh rig lo Robert Norling v.·a~
revealed during a · candle-
llghting ceremo ny al Biola
College and during a family
dinner hosted by the Rev. and
flfrs. Wallace Norling of Costa
Mesa, parents of the future
bridegroorn.
Among guests at the party .
given on the 23rd anniversary
of the Norlings, "·ere f\1r. and
~!rs. John Rohr i g of
Hunl ington Beach. parents of
the bride-elecl.
~liss Rohrig is a graduate
of fluntin~ton Beach lli gh
School and a senior at Biola.
Her fi ance aHended Estancia
High School and Californi a
State Colle ge at Long Beach.
They \Viii exchange pledges
Sept. 11 in Calvary Church.
Santa Ana.
HB Auxiliary I
Every second Tuesday of ,
the month members of Oran ge
Shores f'.tedi cal Assistants'!
Association assemble at 8 p.m.
Location may be abtained byj
calling ~1rs. Jani! Anderson,1 ~~1511.
During a diMcr pany in
their Nev,.port Beach home
~Ir. and ~lrs. Jl ugh Heiby
Bowe annou nced the engage-
ment of their daughter Sue
Anne Bowe to John \\'aldron
1.1adding. •
The benedict-f le<:t is the san
or Dr. and Mrs. Cordon F.
ltiadding or Jlillsborough.
l\liss Bo~·e attended the
American School of Paris and
graduated from the CathedraJ
School of SI. l\l ary·s. Garden
City, N.Y. She debuted in the
Cor'nelia Cotillion in Garden
City before attending Hollins
College in Roanoke. \la.
The bride~lect will graduale
from the University of Arizona
in June.
Her fiance is a gradua te
of Lake Forest Academy,
Lake f orest. Ill. and will
graduate from the U of A
in June with a degret in
hospital admini stration. He is
an affiliate of Phi Delta Theta
Fraternity.
SUE ANNE BOWE
Brid .. l.ct
A June i6 wedding is planner!
in St. James Epi sc o p al
Church, Ne,vport Beach.
Engagement Revealed
April Day Chosen
\Vedding pledges v.·ilJ be ex-t.frs. James N. Guthrie ot San·
changed by Carol Ann Lykke la Ana , is a graduate cf Santa
of Balboa Island and James ~ High School and Whitlier
N. Guthr ie Jr, of Newport ,1-~-~o~e~ge~.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij
Beach during April 3 rites 1
10 the Saratoga federated!
Church. Sa ratoga.
Their betrotha l has been an-
nounced by ~!r . and :0.1rs.
Don ald E. Lykke or Saratoga,
parents cf the bride-to-be.
f'.f iss Lykke, a graduate of
Saratoga Hlgh School and San
Jose Stale College, is a1 1eacher ift the fountain!
Valley Schoo l District.
Her finance, son of Mr. and'
~ .. ™ :,;re.,•..,,. '·~ .%'1• 1,000'1 OF Oil PAINTINGS l
WHOllSAll WAREHOUSE
O'lN TO THE PUILIC
50°/o OFF '
UH •· EOIMGEI, SIHTA ANA l I P~ona l ls-4'0i ,
•· • Ol!Al.ERS WAHTE O ,.--..,..... -------·
• '<"
iewels by 1oseph
HAVE YOU EVER SEEN
A HEART SHAP ED
DIAMOND I
J1w1!1 by Jo11ph h11 ona. II
.,,.,;9h1 1.2§ ctr•h pricad 11
$1,-100.00.
l oQ•in9 for 1om1lhin9 dill1r1n11
J1w1l1 by Jo11ph li1t ill
Unu1u1I mountin91
Oilf111nl Oi1mond1
Q,;9in1I ld111
Thi pl1c• to 90 for Fini J1wtlry
South Co11l Pl11•
Bri1lol •I th1 Sin 0;190 Fwv .
Co.+1 Mt11 S40-'t066
Capricorn: Avoid Extravagance
END YOUR ''HANG-UPS''
WITH A GAS DRYER
WEDNESDAY
FEBRUAR Y 24
By SYDNEY O.\IARR
Capricorn perSO'l'ls can at-
tend lo busiAess but are not
ad\'erse to having fun . It is
not easy to know a Capricorn.
but once confidence is gai'ned
friendship usually is lasting.
Tbe5e persons harmonize "'ilb
Scorpio. Pisces, Taurus and
Virgo. They are fortun ate in
a financial ser.se for Sngit-
larlus nalives. Some famous
persons born under Capricorn
include Hank Greenberg, Sal
~Tineo and Ruby Keeler.
ARIES (~ta rch 2l·Aprl1 19):
Hold off on mon£'y decisions.
Purchase of luxury item could
make unreason;ible den t in
budget You can gel what you
really need -1f p:1ticnt.
Reruse to be rushed, pushed.
TA URUS (April 20-May 20):
Avo}d tr ying to d u ~ k
responsibili ty. Tasks 11'h1ch
have been delayed rnust now
be co1npleted. Slate position
in frank , forthright manner.
Then do what n1ust be done.
You can sucrecd.
GEflllNI \i\1ay 21-Junz 20):
Envious associate could be
~prcading ru1nors, gos s i p.
Reali ze this and pro t e c t
you rself. Fol101v h u n c h .
Information you need can be
1crificd through long-distance
c:al!.
CAr\CER (June 21-July 22 ):
Study A ~ies message. Caution
is advised. Don'l rationalize
truth. Face music. You soon
v.•ill have opportunity for
greater freed om. P rep are
no\1'. Check details. Get hous:!.
in order.
LEO !July 2.1,Aug. 22/: One
\\•ho offers a favor may de-
mand ioo much in return. Ob-
tain hint from Can c er
message. Maintai n s tead y
pace. Don 'l be tempted by
c1npty promises. Adhere lo
principles. Stand tall.
\'IRGO fAug. 23-Se pt. 22):
Be pr epared ror meaningful
changes. Affects area of v.·ork,
special se rvi ces. One in posi-
tion of authority may now
lack init iative. Offer sug-
ges!ions. Present p 1 a n ,
forn1al.
LIBRA fSepl. 23"0ct. 22 !:
Dispute may arise over rooney
connected with mate, partner.
Diplomatic approach should be
TltS> T11ne To Glre , ~
More people are becon1ing involv~d in their
con1 munity every day. If you are. loo~mg for the
best ,vay to n1akc your O\VO contr1but1on, "'hY not
let the Volunteer Rurea11 of. Southern Oran~e Coun-
ty help you find just the ri ght vol unteer Job?.The
bureau is open fron1 8:30 a.111. to 1 p.m. each \1·eek-
da y. GREEN LIGHT OFFERED
1\Iany children need a head start in schoo~.
cspeciallv if they arc rncntally retarded or handi-
capped. "11opc Haven Sc!1ool. Cost.a l\1esa is a day
care center for such children lrh1ch accepts them
at 18 months. Volunleers a~e the bac~bonc of Lhe
project. working di_r~ctly with the children under
professional superv1s10~. In order to be ready for
public school. these children need an extra start.
PROBLEM PR EGNANCY
A mature. objective attitude is needed by the
person who \\'ill accept incoming phone calls for
problem pregnancies. Those in nee~ must ha.ve
their questi on!ii a~s1\•ered and be put 1n touch w1~h
the services av;ulable to them. Volunteers will ' ' . undergo training.
HEARING SCREENED
Providence Speech and !~earin g Clinic in
Orange is looking for volunteers for their Hearing
Screening ·program in private Orange County
schools. Volunteers \VIII be trained to use portable.
audlotest equ lpn1c nt and n1ay choose the areas and
1 hours t9 \\"Ork rron1 an nv;i i!ahlc lj"t
advocated. Ultimate gain is
indicated. Makt gesture
toward re<:oncilialion. You'll
be happier.
SCORPIO (Oct . 23-Nov. 21 ):
Older individual may appose
your vie1vs. Obtain a valid
hint from Libra message.
Avoid stlf-deception. fa c c
facts as they exist. ltla ke con-
cession to family member.
SAG ITIARJUS tNov. 22-
Dec. 21): !told cff on short
journey. Take care \\'ilh v.·hal
you comn1 il ta writing. Some
around you now are ultra-
sensitive. Don't get caught up
in foolish dlspute. Praise one
1vho has been loyal.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan:
19): Avoid tendency to be ex-
travagant. Realize that any
windfall may also have Its
dra\vbacks. Key is to utilize1 past experience. c omm o n1
sense. Fine ror taking in ·'
~·entory. I
AQUARIUS (Jan. ZO.Feb. 1
18 ). Someone is lvorking ,
quietly in your beha1£. Avoid j
jumping to oonclusions. Hold 1 of£ on accusations. Realize a
delicale balance musl be
maintained. You a~c due for '
surprise benefits. I
PISCES I Feb. 19-March 20): 1 \Vhat appeared solid may ac-,
tually be flim sy. Know this
and tread lighlly . Follow ex-1
ample set by Cancer in-
dividual. Look beyond ICM! c.b-J
viou~. Subtle approach \VllJ
succeed.
Series
Interest
Elicits Civic
1n Schools
Informative sketches ti f
schools in the Laguna Beach
Unified School District v.·ill be
provided during a monthl y
luncheon series sponsored by
a women's citi zen committee
headed by l\1rs. John C.
Penney.
Lunchtons will be in
Thurston Intermediate School
beginning at noon o n
Thursday, Feb. 25. ~·ith a
presentation of the El Morro
Blindness
Talk Topic
"to1iss Ann Maguire, a
volunteer member of the
8 r a i 11 e Institute Speakers'
Bureau, will discuss aspects
of blindness for members of
Chapter OA of PEO during
a luncheon tomorrow.
Miss Maguire ·will cover
services oUered by the:
lnstitule, a nonprofit
organization In L<ls Angeles
offering more than 120 fre:e
classes for the blind, in the
Laguna Beach home of Mrs.
C. Edward Miller.
ini tial teaching a 1 p h a b f! t I
reading program and songs
by the chorus.
During lunch, Mrs. Penney.I
\\'ho has conducted tours of I
Thurston for groups and
individuals, will give a sketch 1
or the school. 1
Lunch will be prepared and 1
served by sludents in the 1
home economics department.
Commit tee meJT1bers
working with the chairman
include the Mmes. David
Young and James Brotzman,
El Morro; Joseph Tomehak
and Robert Peacock, Laguna
Beach Higll School: Aldon E. I
Clark and Helen Van Due.sen, I
Aliso; Edward Powell andl
Robert Brotherton. Top of the
World, and Charles AicC&Jla, I
Thurston. I
Representativ~ of c I v I c
crganizations will rective an
invitation to atlend t h e
sessions and learn more aboutll
the school system.
Plea Made
A plea has been madt byl
the Albert Sitton Home for
donaUOJ\$ of wash and wear
shirts, si1.es 10 to 14.
Mrs. Kenneth B o s t o n ,
supervisor of the receiving
home, stated that othtr needs
Include patterns £or chlldrtn's
re•
Bigger C•p•clly! lmprov•d air now! Convenient loading.
Even • removable conaole for easy, quick Mniclng,
If II'• evtr needed. Never befcre so ma ny improve-
ments at one lime. That's why we say it's "re-invented ...
Dri,• up lo 18 pounds .
t II'• onlt 2r wkte.
ye before an 1&-lb . dryer .
Nev?r only 27 inches wide. Sig
thats h to dry a huge 18·Jb. eno~ h Flexible eoolJOh lo fam11ywas · dry 8 nandtul.
Flowing Heat . . 1 etllcienl circulating S1mp e, pUlls air through the dryer syste~ of blowing it. Surrounds
instea . iece witti 8'f'fJO, each 1umbl1ng P h. g
controlled heal Edv~"':ty"'
comes out soil an u •
natK>nWid8 protection plan
yeal re ·rofanyde*t 1-year warranty !or ~s • ... year
•1n the enlire produC~, Ponly) !or tumishing
Proteetion Planf (pade~eclive Drive ~otor
a replacement or
and Pulleys.
lnte11rll11 and Dep1!tldablllt11 sh1ce 1947
n Unt Screen . oacro l int screen 1~ fine mesh Dacron o et 10 easy
right up lront .hEas~~engthe tiniest lo clean. Cate es
hnl pcrticles.
Permanent Press Care rou911
A combination of gentle, .thO He.at
ble drying with Flowing ' tum atic cao\--down plus an autom d of every cycle. period,_a_:~~es~;nal te\ls you •hen A Cyc..,,
clothes are ready.
95
clothing, maternity smocks 411 E. St\'tfttetnth Str~et Loguna Hlth PJoro
and 1ewing material~. 1 (n••t t• S•'t·On)
I
l
The speaker was employed
by Paciftc Telephone and
Telegraph Co. as a lecturer
for more than 18 years. She
is a past prealdent and present
achievement 111nd membership
chairman of the Laguna Beach
Branch of the Natlcnal League
of Amcric~n Pen \\'omen. Contribullons may be mail.01 '46·1'84 dally 9.9, Sot.,''' 8)7.JIJO dally 10·6. M/f, 10.9
or delivered to t!'t home. ''-----------------------------~---1---------J
\
" . . ' .. ' ... . . . . •• ...
'·
Jfl DAILY PllOT
'
Floo.d's Goal: Beat Cardinal·s in World Series
POMPANO BEACH. Fla. lAPl -Curt
Flood arrived 1t the W11blngtoo
Sen1ton' 1pring trlining Cll1)p Monday
wllh~one goal ln mi.ad ,in 19'71 baseball:
'l'o 'd',reat tht St. l.ouit Cardinals badly
in the World Seriea.
"I've been thinking about it all winter,"
said Flood after a two-hour, fifteen·
minute workoot. "The one persor\e.l Joal
I hive U tO kick th e hell out of the
Cardinals 1n the World Strie1."
Flood'a dlad,iin foe the Cardinals
stems from their trading him to the
Philadelphia Philliea in IM9 after 11
years in St Louis. He refused to report,
Tbe th~y-Jwo year-old F lood qt ou t
the:1910 season·aner filing a f.4.l·milUon
suil against baseball In which he alleged
that the reserve system \'lolatea federal
antitrust statutes. The 1ystem is a set
oi rUlts lhlt ,_.binds a player t9 the
club tbal aigns hlm until he ls traded,
told or releaa,:d.
His Plea n1 mmed down .by a ~ed~ral
Oistrld Court juctse and now is Wider
appeal.
Flood was lured back to baseball by
the Washington Senator owner Bob Short
who acquired him from Philadelphia last
November Jn a trade 'tor • utility
infielder and two minor leaguers. lle
signed for an estimated $110,000 a year.
Before Flood gets even in the World
Series, however , he first must get him-
self in shape to play the regular season
for a1 team that finished last ln the
S.nead Survives Bad'. Finish
To Win Tucson Golf Title
.. .,
'
' \
Ul'I Ttl .......
TUCSON WINNER J. C. SNEAD RELAXES WITH BARE·FOOTED WIFE .
Faee La Verne Tonight
SCC Takes Nine Count
·After 77-75 Cage Loss ..
I
By 110\\'ARD L. HANDY
Of t111 Dl ll"f 1'1111 SltH
.It •·as a life or dC'ath struggle for
Azusa .Parific College Monday night and
the Cougars survived a savage second
ha lf attack by the host South!'rn
California College Vanguard basketball
team to post a 77-75 victory before
a standing room only cro"·d.
"the loss puts the Vanguards on the
fiDor Jor a nine count with two road
games re!Jlaining 8nd a pair or vlctorie~
a must for survival to the NAIA playoffs
tliat begi n Saturd11y. ,
College must win them both for a berth
in !ht playoffs.
The win assured Azusa Pacific of 11
spot io the rtgionalll v.·ilh a 19-9 season
record . SoCal OJllege is now 17-8 for
the year.
\"irtory wasn't in the books for U1e
\"a11J;uard.t Monday niRhl. Down by lS
pci nts ~4!l-J~I at halft i'llc. coach Paul
PC';,k's charges roa red intn sccont1 hAlf
action with an outstanding comeback
performance..
Y/ith 4: IS remaining, the \';inguard.,
moved In front, 70-67, an d appeared
headed for sn easy finish to their most
succc!'sful c11mpaign on the hardv.'oods.
Former Senators
Baseball Player
Pockets $22,000
TUC-SON (AP) -J. C. Snead, a 29-
year--0ld nephew of the greal Sa m Snead,
has his first title, a little bit of a
problem and some small bad fce1ings
about the way he won.
Snead -the J. C. stands for Jesse
Carlyle -became eligible for the
pr estige -laden POA national
championship when he v;on the weather·
plagued $110,000 Tucson Open golf
tournament in a 36-hole windup Monda y.
And that's the proble m. The PGA
slart.s Thursday Jn southern Florida, a
three-day drive.
"I just don·t know what to do ," said
Snead, a one-time professional baseball
player who had just won $22,000 and
his first pro golf championship with
a final-round 66 for 273. "l don't know
whether to play there , try to get tbtre
or not. I've got my car with me. my
\Vire wilh me, all my possesaions. l
just don 't know."
But the big, hard-hilting CUY wu
mostly concerned about bit bo&ty-bocey
finish.
"I all'·ays woodered what I would
do If I Wm In that altuallon." t-.e
uid. "And I found out. Ludir.a by
two with IWO holn IO play. !t WIPft
II bad U 1 tboucht but ft WU bid.
Jl'J a bad way to f~.h. I fftl kinda
bad about that.
"I -.. and thllf a wondtrfu\. I'm awful
happy. Bui I lon't like Ille way I
finisbfd "
SMad, •·ho didn 't bkt up golf unlil
)'Ir waa 25 •·hen he cave up a career
as an outfitldtt in the \\'a!!hi ngton
~nalor1 cl\aln. Jed or abated the ll'ad
all tht •·ay, was t ie d with veteran
Dale Douglass at the end of 36 holes
and aga in alter 54.
The lattrr wu Monday morning. when
they finished the third round of the
tournament that had one round rained
out and another canceled by a
lino"'storm .
Snead picked up one stroke going out
In the afternoon, reeling off three
consecutive birdies starting on the second
hole. lipped out an eagle putt and !!ettled
for a bird on the sixth and put an
iron within three feet on the next.
He lurned in 31 -and was ju$l
one stroke in front on the equally
determined Douglass. The rest of the
field had drilled baC'k.
Douglass. a former Ryder Cup pla yer
Y."ho "'as in the twosome in front of
Snead, \Vedged to lou r feet and made
the putt on the 11th hole to gain a
tie. So they \Vere all even as Snead
went to the 15th, a 580-yard par five.
He holed out a W.yard chip shot for
an eagle three and a two-s troke marg in.
Fi'1At uOr•• 8r>d m<>n•V winnin~1 In!~• Slt0,000
Tuu<l!I Open Golf loc1<ntmen1:
J. c. Sn1td, n;.llOO
0.11 0awr111, u;,500
Geo•QI AfChff. S!.l•J ~ett 1..,..1n, u .. •l
Al M"'Vtrt, U,"3
0.Wi!I Wt1WT•, ll.511
Frln' llt•rd, ll.!1! J1tli: C11pil, U,51S
°'""Ill• MDDCly. 11.150 Sob Ch111u , 1!.1511
Boll SITlhh, 1),1511
Don Siu. Sl,111
J'tlJI M•rflt \', 11.177
Lt• l "vlno, 11.1?1
J""n M llll •, 11.160
l.4rt1 M•n10fl, U .114
S!l v• SP<~V, II.HO
Ct1•r SrnUOO, Jl,ll!I
JOl'ln Li"tr. 11.ltO
Loer1· 1109i.r. 11,lit
A M, SI-fl, 11.n(I
Bobby G•ttn-. 11,no
Ila" Lunn, HJI Ltuv Mowrv. !.tJ4I
lH Eidt•, \.IJI
J!ad ~ut1ul!i, U JI
Pt!• ll•own, UJI 'Te,,.mr JoeoM. Hlll Dtvl Ekhll1>tr1tff. U~
1 ... .,. ""tiott. 11311
Jtck M""!V'O"'"Y· SIJI
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1'·11·'1-~)IJ n.,,,..,,,_,.,
10-1i..10.io.-J1!
American League East last year while
losing its last 14 game&.
"Tired is not the word for it. 1 'm
. exhausted," he said as he peeled off
his clothes arter the workout . "J feel
'like somebody's been beating on me."
The ~fool-9 165-pound center fielder
sa id manager Ted Williams told him
"do as much as I could and then quit.
I did everything everybody else did."
: "Heli, ifs his first day here," sai d
'Williams. "l\fost of the other guys have
been here for nine days."
Flood, who was not requirl!d lo report
until Tue.sday, did a lot of running -
In sneakers because his baseball 1hoe1
are loo new, playing pepper and catch,
roaming the outfield, working on the
bases and talking to newsmen and (111$.
He also took one tum In the balling
cage. "J was terrible," he said of his
first time st bat Jn two years. "My
timing was off. l couldn't see the ball. •1
Both Flood 'Bnd Williams said thty
believe the biggest problem f1cln1 lhl
~ I .. 1
I
TED WILLlAMS WATCHES CURT FLOOD, DENNY McLAIN DRILL.
Sports in B1•ief
Purdue's l\Iacl{ey Die s;
Ral ston to Meet Lave1·
LAF/\Yl::TII::, Ind. -Guy ''Red''
l\1ackcy, athletic director al Purdue since
1912 and associated with the universily
for 4:; years, died ~1onday night in
Lafayette Home Hospi tal after an
extended illness.
~1ackt}', Lhe dean of Big Ten athletic
d1rec1ors, had been hospitalized since
Nov. 8 \l'hen he suffered a stroke. He
spen t son1e time in December at the
l\layo Cli ni c in Rochester, Minn .. where
he had part of his right leg amputated
lo allevviale a circulatory problen1. He
also suffered a second, more serious,
stroke J)ec. 20.
He returned hon1e Jan . 5.
{\lacke y. 6.'.i. ~ratluatcd frorn Purdue
in 1929 \\'ilh an arts degree in agriculture.
I-le was a vnrsi ty footba ll player for
1he Boilermakers and n1ade honorable
mention All-America as an end his senior
year. •
NEW YORK -Denn is Ralston of
Bakersfitld broke Arthur Ashe·s servict
in the third·set lie -breaker lo bt'>at his
Richmond, Va., foe 6-2. 4-6, 7-6 Monda y
night and earn lhr. right to face Corona
del t-.lar's Rod Laver in the r-.tarch
18 semifinal" of the $210.000 Tennis
Ch!impions Classic.
In the other semifinal m:itch al
flladisnn Sq uare Garden, Tom Okker of
The Netherlands \Vil! lace Ne\\·port
Beach's Roy Emerson. Each semifinal
winner will collect $15,000.
Laver teamed with fello"· Aussie Tony
Roche to beat Ashe and Enb Lutz of
Berkeley , 6'4, 7·6 in the ~st-of-three
doubles match, the second
with a !ie-bre:aker. •
se:t ending
It v.·as a close 72-69 victory 011er
Stanford by \llashington Monday night.
but Californ ia decisively disposed of
Wash ington State 102-76 in the other
Pacific·8 Conference basketball game.
•
LOS ANGELES -The Los Angeles
Rams have announced the signing of
their 16th-round draft choice along with
the completion or their 1971 preseason
schedule which includes a game \Vi th
the San F'rancisco 49crs.
Ross Boice, a 6-foot-2, 245-pound
linebacker from Pacific Lutheran in
Tacoma , Wash., "'as signed along 1vilb
lhrce free ag ents, Grambling linebackers
Ant hony Simmons and Audie McSwain
and fllorgan Stale guard Bruce Caraway.
The exhibition J,?ame 1vith the 49ers,
a traditional for many yeflrs. was set
for a Thursday night, Sept. 8 and will
be the Rams' final non-NFL test before
the league season begins.
•
KANSAS CITY -All three Bii: Eii:ht
ba.~ketball games scheduled for r-.tonday
night have been postponed because of
the m ass Ive snowstorm v.·h1ch ha s
paralyzed much of the midwest.
The games aHrctcd are Kansas at
Kansas State. Oklahoma State at
Missouri and Oklahoma 11t Nebraska.
Kansas a! Kansas Sla te and Oklahoma
at Nebraska have been rescheduled for
Tuesday night.
outrielder, whose IJfetirne battln& averq:e
in 12 season• Is .293. will be to familiar·
lu himsdf with the Amtrlcan Leque
pitcher• .
"He knows lbl pmc. IO ht W<Ja 't
have any prablnnl." laid Williama. "Ht
doesn't kn o w the ~ WSUt
pltcbtn. or -r of IMm, but wt'U
ti.Ip him all .. cu.
"His ,,. la no ~"'""'"'!n•. I tlol'I lhlnk
the y.,r'1 laYOll will -him. C...
lid<n<t allouldo' ... I bis pnblrm wtth
lllm.''
New Dispute
Develops
In Net War
SALISBURY, Md . (AP) -An olllclal
of the U.S. Lawn Tennis Association
charged today that World Oiampionahip
Tennis, Inc .. was seeking to sign illegal
contracl! with promoters.
"Emissaries of Lamar Hunt are goin~
around holding clandestine meetings,"
said Bill Riordan, "signing cloak and
dagger contracts that are in absolute
C<1nflicl with rules or the Internstional
Lawn Tennis Federation."
··The federation prohibits the paying
or guarantees by promoters or a n y
group," said Riordan , the USLTA 's
player coordinator, "but that's what Mike
Davies and Donald Dell are seeking
for the contrsct pros.
•·we started open tennis to do away
with under-the-table payments to players,
and now management is looking for
them. With all the money Hunt has
I don't see why he has to do t hat '.
Maybe he doesn't know what Davies
and Dell are doing."
Rio rdan, gene ral chairman of the U.S.
indoor and Caribbean circuits, rejected
• an ofrer by Davies to send lhe bottom
21 of \VCT's :J2.man stable to the recently
completed U.S. NationaJ Indoor Open
Jn Salisbury.
"I wanttd 12, including some of their
fop eight." Riordan said, "and all they
orfered was 21 bodies. I would hav e
liked to have had players like Rod Laver.
Arthur Ashe , Roy Emerson and Ker.
Rosewall, but that's not what they
ofltred.
"I would like to have pros in the
!\ational Indoor Open , but I v.•ant pros
\1•ilh honor."
A~ a re~ull of the lmpass,. Riordan
rejected al! WCT pla yers, and fielded
a 43-man dra't' ·of independent pros and
amateurs from 19 nati ons. He claims
he was vindicated during the eight-day
tournament which ended Sunday with
Clark Graebner edging Cliff Richey in
five sets.
Riordan said the tournament, In
Salisbury for the past eight years. drew
record crowds totaling about 38.000
including three standing ·room audience~
of 4.000.
''In addition." he said, "we had the
finals on the National Educational
Television netw ork of more than 120
stations in 47 stales. It was the greale3t
exposure in the history of the game."
The USLT A had lo pay the educational
network $87,000 for five weeks or
televising the indoor circuit.
"I've had fanta stic support on the
stand I took in turning dcwn the conlract
pros.'' Riordan said. "About 98 percent
of those ln contact with me, a.a.id I
v.·as right.
"I feel I've been completely vindicated
by !he results of the tournament, and
already rve had three: overtu res from
intermediaries of WCT concerning next
year's Indoor Open."
Estancia's Carr
Quits Cage Post
Gary Carr.
Estancia High ,
resignation.
basketball coach
has submitted
II
his
Carr1 26, who took over as head coach
this lleason, said he was stepping down
.~o that he could concentrate on bis
\'arsity football assignment.
C~rr coached the offensive and
defensive lines for the Eagles last season.
He will continue to help out the
basketball program as a lightweight
coach.
Carr"s varsity ba sketball l t 1 m
compiled a 5-9 Irvine League rec0rd
And an 11·15 season mark. Tonight It will be La Verne College
a0d Thursday the season finale at Los
Angeles Baptist OllJege In Newhall.
NAI·A offli:lala tiave stated that SoCal
Cage Rankings
David Pa~1ne "'as shooting "'ilh
unerring accuracy inside and alnng the
baseline v.·hile Jerry Rinker and Ted
Harper hit "ell from out side to move
the Vanguards inl.O command.
But Cougar rzuard Rob Soto loo k charge
in the closing minutt.i to SCQre five
of his se\·cn points afler missing five
successive attempls fr om the floor
earlier In the half. He scored the final
lhree points lo give the Cougars the
cushion they needed v.•ith four seconds
lefl .
HB Coaches to Duel Daily P~lot
J
Accur~y at !ht free throw linf! in
lhe first half gave the Cougers a
commandi111 halftime advanl&ge. Ar.us•
hit 13 of IS, the firit 10 In a row.
at the c~rity line whUe the Vant:UArds
scored four of 1even. .
heel CeU•ff 1'-1 Asvtt•l'lr. 'Ill
H••ll'I" J •... .,,,. o. ,.v.-.
~lMlr
'-'\ll~r
So~t<l1tt1
·~~--" c;,.,,
1&'•'• H~llt!l'•I.
""(Jft., "'""'" ,,,uw11-~'''' •O,tio!e )J l1
11 I ) II Vt1110"t 10 I o ?f s11 1101t~1"'1111 •t1u J I I 11 ,Ill'.., I f 1)
I I I 1 Sllltm•ll t J )
lllJ l!tl'lt• ''~ fl l •lttwi.. 0010 ~I I) !9 1! Ttll!• 1 l! I! 11 11
1.M1•!>1c!fjt 'f, M('.11 UI .,, .U. r
By L.EOPOLO J. NE\\"TON
01 ,,.. Olllr "'" Sl•tt
Huntington Beach High coaches ma tch
basketball talents "'t lh the DAILY PILOT
sports staff Wednesda y night in a 6:30
gamt at Huntington Beach High.
The tiff Is a prelimin11ry to an 8
o'cloc k struggle between the Oil City
faculty and the Harlem Clowns.
Pacing the coaches ~ former Oiler
rlav\ng great Elmer Combs. not'd ns
"Elmer the Great." back In the late
1920s when he was ;o;tarrlng .
Old as he is, Combs say!i he feels
ht has one more g11me left in him
and \Ycdnesday nlghl will be it Mo\\·evcr.
he may be riskin~ Jiff' and limb bccnosr
Glenn "The Axe" \Yhile has be(l'n
llMignt.d lo CO\'er Combl .
It is of sorts a rematch of 1 on('
on one confron;a11on the old rivals had
a few years btick v.·hen Comb& u~
1llc:,al screens lo sweep \Vhile.
1\le11n11 hilc. \lunting1nn has ~Ctilpcd
!he boltom of !he barrel.
Even big daddy Ken ~1oals is being
pressed inlo scr \·1ce. The last lime he
h"ndlf'd a b11~ketb~ll was in his pre-World
\l,lar II athlclic dnys, sup{medly at a
home for wayward boys
Then the.re are t11·0 unlikely candidate~
for actirn. includi~A !)on \\1:tlkcr. the
fn!hcr of thr l:111~rh11ll tc:im nnd tht
real pop to more ki<b lhHn you1t hop:t!
lo ~cc In an orphanajj:c.
If \\'n lkcr Isn't standing by In lhe
m11tr rnily 1v~rd for No. 17. he 'll be
tryinlil to mold lhe Oller machine together
\Ylth hi~ ketn foot work.
•lls sld!.klck. one Pa ul \\'ood. fini shed
early "ilh lhe prune harvest and track
\~·orkouts and has vowed to raise havoc
\1'1th those know-II-All news hounds.
One Doug Scott. reportedly 6-3, 112
pounds. is the rnaches' big man while
in reserve are thr real st.ars -Dale
Schultz and Bob Rice .
The DAILY PILOT works arowid its
hir;h-gra red attack featurinq Cra ii:t "The
\\1hip'' Sheff Inside and Phil ''Pancho
Vi1ln "' Ross mRraudi ng the floor for
the JE:irb aRe play!!.
Then Arden ~1:11::.bury IV pick~ up
the ~hick, :ilonJ; with one RoJ[er
r rcricrick C:irlson -cx -Marlne C:;rp~
m('SS boy .
Ron Eva ns ts i;:i\'1ng up h.ls wrckrn d
job :it. Poco Padre 10 1york ror
"'f"dnesday'li bash and Long John Cass
will play, beard and e-ll. ..
Some have called
Cass after some of
underneath.
John Calis ,
his missed
Jack
shots
Howard L. Hand y, adopted father nf
Golden \Vest College . UCI, Marina and
Southern Cal College. will officiate the
debacle .
The DAILY PILOT had some bad
breaks, losing three close ones (~48.
86-'6. 81-72 ) .to the Fullerton Tribue•
la.!:t mcnth.
But the DAILY PILOT I! unbe11en
in Fchrunry , hal'ing n;iilcd six stralght
intrRsquad duels.
S,A.llNO \,INIUPI
OtH• 11'!:11 "' c .. ,11 •• ••• "'· .... "'· •• •• •• ·~ t ••Ill • ""' &tOll " •• '" " "~II Ill: en • r1u1 Wiled '" >M "' ••• C••lo ~~!!I c I("" MO•l1 "' •• '" .. •09.,. C1r•tet1 ' Dell W•lk~• .,, "' '" J·ll 01 ... ~ Wiii!• ' l!:l!'ner Cemb1 •• '"
·-·
____ _, __ _
..._ ____ ~ SoCal Co1if ereiace Cha1npwns
Tutsdif, F'ebruary 23, 1971 DAILY OILDT J7
Barons Duel A·ztecs
Uni Tackles Royals
FV Facing
La Quinta
In Playoff
A rematch or,a 1970 summer
league confrontation -that's
whert to begin in describing
tonight's CIF AAA basketball
clash betwetn La Quinta 's
Aztecs and the host Fountain
Valley Barons.
Fledgling
Trojans Get'
Nod Tonight
Rotation has f I n a 1 f y
managed to creep into tbt
basketball program at firat·
year University High.
Coach John Drlscol1's
fledgling Trojans cloeed eut
their flrst-ever regular 11ason
schedule with a 7·11 record
Golden West College ha s \vrapped up the Southern California
Conference basketball championship and no\v awaits the regional
playoffs March 5-6. Men1bers of the team (from left) include Bill
Hessel , ~l_ark \Vhitfield, Kurt 1 Brown, Chris Thompson, Calvin
Graham, Jun Anderson, 'M~rk Dekker1 !\tel Platt, Brian Ambrozich,
Jeff Powers, Joe Croom i RJck Barnes, Curt Carlson and Rick .l\.tann .
Coach Dave Brown's Baron.!!
will be facing a virtually
unknown enemy in the a
•'clock contest against the
1 wllh many of thole 11 kme:'I
coming at the hands of
formidable AAA and A.AAA
opposition.
HB Rival Edison's Super Grid Whiz
Has Height
A 1 Ready for State Prep Game p enty
\VHITTI ER -A vetera n
qu intet with the ability to fieltl
a front line composed or G--1,
6-G and ~ awaits Hunt inglon
Beach lligh's Oilers Friday
night in fi rst round CIF AAAA
basketball hosti lities.
Coach Jack PribnO\\'·s LH
Scrna·s Lancers are the
Whltmon t League's No. I
entry after finis hing in a
three-way tie for first place.
The Lancers v.·ere buried
in fourth place before \Vinning
their last th ree f..mes lo force
the lie.
Leading Pribnov.•s ta 11
limbers is returning all-league
cen ter Dave Stroud. He leads
the team in sco ring \\'ilb a
15.5 average and packs 180
pounds on a 6-G frame.
Ted Bartscherer is a 6-4
forward v.·ith a 14.5 average
and has been instrumental in
several key wins for La Serna.
The other starting forwa J"ds
is 6-1 John Lewis. but it's
been La Habra lransfer Fred
ffaberccht, a 6-8 junior, \Vho
has been used in the front
line for the most pa rt
recently.
\'fhen Haberecht is in the
lineup the Lancers move
Stroud lo the corner.
As for the Lan c e:t.'
offensive attack. Pr i b no \V
says, "\\'e like lo work the
ball .around and take anything
we can get .
''\Ve·n take the break if it's
lhere but we have some pretty
good shooters. Defensively 11·e
like to play a man-to--man
sty le if vl e can."'
Guards Pat Cain (5-RI and
Scott Wolters 15-10) round out
the all-senior starting lineup.
"t-.'either is a startling offensive
threat.
Another key Lancer is
reserve f or \Va rd John
\Vestrup, a six-footer 11·ith
excellent jumping ability.
The Lancer me n Io r
considers Stroud and
Barlcherer as n1ajor college
prospects.
La Serna has seen action
11ga inst Oran ge County teams
three times in tournament
play.
The Lancers knoc ked off
\'ilia Park (81 -74) en route
lo the Cal }figh tournan1ent
championship and a Is o
\\•hipped Sonora, 83-64.
The only loss was to Lo\\"C'll
l" a game that Pribno\v
considers his learn 's best one-
half effort of the year.
"\Ve played our b e s l
basketball of the year in the
first half against Lowell and
\\'e had them by 14 al the
half. Bui we lost \\loiters \Vith
an ankle injury and it seems
like we scored about nine
points in the remaining t1vo
quarters," says PribnG\\1•
Lo1vell prevailed. 59-54.l.
La Strna { 15--l I
7l San Gabriel
71 Santa Fe
$7 San Marino
81 ,Villa Park
$7 ~1onte Vista
50 Lowell
13 $on<>r• 81. Monte Vista
gS' Temple City
1? La Mirada
70 Sierra 62 h1onte Vista
5.i 'MonteOOll9
85 Pioneer
79 \\i'hlttier
(3 Sierra
62 ~1onle Vista
$8 Montebello
ftO Pioneer
st \Vhlttier
'
62
59
5.1
G9
f.4
5.1
87
"7
49
58
" R2
'8
·15
6[1
57
72 ..
By PHIL ROSS
01 lfl.I 01lty .. !lot Sti ll
Dubbed "Super St ud" by his
high school teammates, tackle
Craig Mortensen of Edison
High"s CJF AAA foot~all
champions bas to be sitting
on top of the world right no\v.
f\1ortensen is one of l\\'O
Orange Coas t area players
picked to perform ror the
South all-stars in the 30th
annual Shrine state football
co ntest at the LA Colisum
July 30 (Newport Harbor's
Grant Gelker is the other).
The 6-0. 220--pounder open ed
many gaping holes r or
Charger runners and was a
good pass blocker the past
f\\'O campaigns as coach Bill
Vail 's crew rolled up an
impressive 17-3-2 slate.
f\.1ortensen was accorded all-
Irvine Le a g u e , all-Orange
County and all.Cl F' AAA i!rst
team laurels and "'as nosed
out by middle guard mate
Mark DeHuff for the Irvine's
lineman-of-the-year award.
Although a bad wrist forced
him into concentrating on
offense his junior y e a r .
fl1ortensen worked w i t h
diligence and weights in the
off.season and became a two--
\vay mainstay his las! season
in a Charger uniform. He wore
a cast prior to his senior
campaign.
Vail says of his big lineman.
CRAIG MORTENSEN
''he'll probably play guard in
college because he's a really
fine offenseive blocker.
"But he played at our stud
(outside forcing end spot) on
defense this past season and
did a great job."
Ca!led by Vail the strongest
physical specimen he coached
on the AAA titlists, Mortensen
continually charged in at
opposing running ba cks anrt
turned in a cred itable
performance each lime oul .
As Vail put it, "He \Vas
Grigsby, Orgill Make
All-Irvine Cage Elite
A pair oC Orange Coast area players garnered first team
selections on the official 1971 All-Irvine League basketball
team as selected by the DAlLY PILOT.
Estancia High's Gary Orgill and Corona de! l\.1ar's l\lark
Grigsby secured first team berths.
The 5-11 Orgill, operating .at forward , was the second
leading scorer in the circuit with .a 22.9 average.
.. Grigsby averaged 14.7 per contest in leading his Sea
~in~ mates to a 7-7 loop mark. The Sea Kings were involved
in eight one-point decisions in Irvine hostilities.
Second team choices from the Orange Coast area include
Costa Mesa's Doug f\1acLean . Edison's John Fisher and
rounlain Valley's George Gerber.
Junior Rick Quinn of champion Los Alamitos was tab·
bed as player of the year while Ezra Van Hom v.•as named
coach of the year.
Player
Rick Quinn
Gary Orgill
Jim Kt>yes
Bob Stewart
ti.1ark Grigsby
AU.. ffiVINE LEAGUE
First Team
School
Los Alamitos
Estancia
Sa nta Ana Valley
fl·lagnolia
Corona del Mar
Second Team
Ht.
6-21;i
5-11
.. 6 ...
.. 2
Geo rge Gerber Fountain Valh.•y 5-7
Cha rley Richie ~·lagnolia 6-3
Doug ~ .. tacLean Costa ~1esa 6-3
John Fisher Edison ft.. 6
Kirke Foerster Los Alamitos 5-11
Player of the Year-Quinn. Los Alamitos
Class
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
C.Oach of the Year-Ezra Van Horn, Los Alamitos
,..,.,,
21. l
22.9
23.0
16.1
14.7
8.7
16.5
15.2
13.2
7.2
Home Game for Yikes;
Oilers at La Sern<t
!\farina High School's Sunsel
League e<rchampions go inlo
the CIF AAAA basketball
playoffs as the loop's No. I
team via a coin Oip and. host
Montebello of lbe Whitmont
League in the first round
Friday night.
Huntin gto n Beach ,
mean.,.·hile, will take lo the
road and meets La Scrnn ,
another Whitmont tri-
champlon.
Verbum Del's F.<iglcs arc
thr No. l seed ln the 32·tcam
tQurncy and v.•ill me c t
Centennial Saturday :ti noon.
Channel 4 will carry Lhe g:une
live.
The other Orange r.ounty
c•Jntin&fnls. Troy and La
1
Habra. have drawn home
assignments against Rolling
Hills and Millikan.
really consistent a g a I n s t
everybody. In fact. I can"t
recall him not doing a good
job against anybody.''
Mortensen is flabbergasteJ
at being chosen to represent
second·year Edison in the
state's biggest post-:.eason
prep gridiron show.
Mortensen says he didn 't
realize he had been selected
for the Shrine tilt until ·he
had read about it in the
DAILY PILOT last week.
"lf we (the South) win this
game, it'll be an honor to
go along with the C I Jo'
championship we won at
Edison," he adds.
"I think the whole So:.ith
team should be composed or
players (rom my t ea 1n
(Edison} but I'm happy just
to get the honor of playing
in the game."
Mortensen expects to be
playing guard in college, es
indicated above by Vail.
However, he thinks he'll
probably major In liberal arts
in order to procure an
eventual career in medicine
or medical research.
Until he does embark on
his medical career though. it's
a certainty that Craig Morten-
sen will work ever oirnvard in
developing his reputalion as
"Super Stud ".
Rustlers
Host L.4.
In Finale
Golden \Vest College,
already assured or a berth
in the state JC region81
basketball playoffs, battles
T~s Angeles City College
tonight in the final Southern
Ca lifornia Conference Liit ot
the season.
The game is set for I al
Orange C.Oat;! College.
The Rustler! wrapped up
the SoCal crown Friday with
a 75--74 victory ov~r East LA.
A win tonight would give
coach Dick Stricklin's RusUers
a final circuit mark of lt.1-2
and run their season record
to 24-4.
That's quite a reve rsa l from
last season's marks of 2-10
and 5-22,
LACC was the last club to
beat Golden West (86-85) three
weeks ago. Since that time
the Rustlers have reeled off
five victories in !I row.
The Cubs have won five
or 11 conference games.
The Rustlers' Br I a n
Ambrozich, who sat out the
East LA game with a knee
injury, also may not see action
lonigbt. He Is Golden West's
top rebounder and No. 2
scorer.
If Ambrozich does not pla y,
sophomore Jell Powers "'Ill
start at one of the forward
spot!,
The. Olber Rustler starters
I n c I u d e guards Chris
Thompson ar.d Rick Barnes .
center Mark Dekker and
forward Jim Anderson.
Anderson picked up the
scoring slack when Ambroilch
was injured. The fonntr
Rancho Alamitos Jllgh s1ar
has poured in Sl points In
the last two games, including
28 against East LA.
Thompson continues to lead
the Rustlers in scoring. Ile's
hit S94 poinl'I this season for
a 22.0 average. His two-y,.nr
output Is J,301.
Aztec;s, for a Jiunllngton DAVE BROWN
lt"s Oilers
All Over
Beach summer loop game has -----~----
been the only meeting of the
t11•0 teams in the past year.
Brown's cagers tied for
seeond place in the Irvine
League with Magnolia at U
and thus earned the right to
host La Quinta (16-3), third
place finisher in the Garden
1'.10NTEBELLO -~larina Grove League, in the cpening
Jiigh School 's baske1ball team salvo or t~ playoffs.
may have considered ilself The Aztecs of coach Bill through with Oilers after the Vikes' two • game split with Reynolds are spearheaded by
liunlington Beach in Sunset 6-5 center Jeff St. Clair, who's
League hostilities, but there been breezing along 'i\'ith a
is another band of Oilers 26.9 SCQring average.
loomine on the agenda Friday In addition to his scoring night.
Montebello High"s Whilrnont prowess, the hefty St. Clair
League entry, a contingent helps control the boards, along
that tied for the league title with 6-3 Brian Kordik, latest
with Pioneer and La Serna, in a line of basketball playing
furnishes the opposition for -1 brothers in the Garden Grove
coach Jim Stephens' Vikings area.
in the first round of the CIF Re~1nolds 11ays, "we're 11101
AAAA playoffs. real quick but we're pretty
It's a rare appearance for strong in rebounding in spite
Montebello in the eliminations, or our height."
this only the second time in After Sl. Clair and Kordik ,
the 15 years that the Oilers the Azt.ec height chart drops
have managed to make the lo 5-11 sophomore Kevin
playoffs. Messner, the other forward .
Coach Warren \Vinches ter is ti.lessner's 5-7 junior brother.
in his first year at the varsi ty John, pairs ''lith 5-9 senior
helm after 14 years of duty Mike Spriggs in giving La
as Bee coach. His cu rrent Quinta a backcourt which
team i& composed almost matches up similarly t e
entirely from last year's Bee Fountain Valley's guard pair
team. of 5-7 George Gerber and his
Leading the Oilers' offensive 5-9 brother Pete.
attack is Robert Aragon. a Brown figures tha t La
11-3 senior forward with 8 15.6 Quinta will attempt to use
scoring average. an extensive pressure game
Also in low twin (Jgures is against the Barons adinitting.
the balance of the forward "other than having good
wall with forward Ray Flores balance, we don 't re a 11 y
(6-1 jr.) and senior center present that many pr oblems.
Daryl Steen (6-5) averaging "We've already I aced
11.3 and 10.4 per outing. (Jerry) ?tiaras (Pacific ace)
And if ~Ion t e be 11 o · s from that league but St. Clair
moniker is 1imilar to is one of the better players
Huntington B e a c h , the we'll have faced."
offensive system ,is a I s 0 Although Fountain Valley
similar with a high-low post had a sometimes sh 1 k y
setup and a pair of outside regular season, in one pre.
shooters in the fold . season st ring the Barons
The ball handler is junior claimed consecutive vlctorit!
rttlke ?.1ayoral, one of three over AAA playoff entrants
juniors in the starting lineup. Katella, Los Alamitos and
Aragon mans the high post Orange.
position whJle Steen anchors No doubt, thev'd like to add
the inside. a fourth playoff member to
As for Marina, the Oiler that list of victims tonight.
mentor expects to try nothing l'eu~tti.. v111ey 1,,.1•1 different from the past. "I t: :\~e:den•
understand Marina likes to '° RJv~r•\de Norlh SI We1tm Mier
M
ll
Eagles To11
Final CIF
Cage Poll
Verbum Dei's Ea g I es
captured the No. 1 ranking
in the rtnal CIF AAA.I,,
basketball poll following the
completion of the regular
season.
Undefeated Crescent.a
Valley edged into second while
Compton slipped to third. The
latter suffered its first los!
of the year to Warren (56-.Jl)
last week.
JC Track
cv1rn1 fll\lrt lt.4Vtl Or•-Cu 11 ''° ,.l1y-I. Or•~ Coos! Cll1r111!1, l le<od. Vin Nol!, Pr11l,y;, .U.5. 120 1'11$11 hurdles -I. T11•n11r CCI I, Delo (C) l. Obtr1 CCI. 15.6. u11 -11 Vin Nolt "\01 t. l lJl!.r 10) J. A111 1., (C/· •t )611 -I. IC.. CC t. JGMS (Cl :L Wtllff ~01 11.2. llO -I, ~ 10} I. Ori n (0)
1 ae'""'"° ICI. J;Cl.I. 4olO Int. ltvtdles -1. Tur/Mr IC! ..Hllt'I' COi l1ntlt tO). f1.,.
ii.: -1. Vin N11fe 101 J, Buller
10 J, ICtll !Cl. "·'· WO mUe -I, Moor• 101 2 Pltr(I (0) J. V1lvtrd1 (C), lG:U.J. "
Miit lttll'I' -1. °'"'"' COl•I IPt15!fY. V1n Nolt, ow.., •• l utlerl. .J0.6. Sl>or Ptll -I. Forrtslrr ICI 1, Frv (() J, W1tlsh11r CC). $0-11. Ol1t111 -l. Forrt1ler IC) 2. Loulek (OJ J, 11.,nH 101. 141·fU. l~111m11 -I. Delp CC) 1. l•Mlt CO) J, rl11!'d IOI. 11 .. ''\. PD!t "'11111 -1. Ooett C() 1.
Slmom jCl l. L1em11t1ll /Cl. JU, Mith 1,1mp -1. E11 min !CJ 2.
De10 <C> J. ll1•fle1t 101 '-'· J1~1t1n -1. Fry le"> 1. tA.,.r!1 COl J. 8l1nth1rd 10). 1U.1. .~~1~~1 cWimf. F;jil~· I0~~1:, .• ,~~l J,
And, in its regular 2.1-1ame
slate. University had the
distinction of playln& 2 ~
different opponent.a.
However, that ever·present
r o t a t i o n bit has. rather
inadvertently creeped lnto qie
Trojans' plans in tbe first
round of the CIF A playoff:'I
which get under way tonltht
(7:30) vt'hen University hosts
Ambassador at Misa:ion Viejo
High.
Uni is favored by II.
Ambassador's Royals had
the dubiota honor of falline:
prey to the Trojam 67-4.S last
month and Driscoll claims
he 's hardly gcing to c::hanae
a thing.
"\Ve'll have basically the
same starting lineup we've
had. But I'm moving Bnice
Mico (6-1) into the backcourt
and freshman Paul Simon (ft..
11 up front for several
reasons," states Driscoll.
"First off, Mlco is a 1ood
ball handler and It takes the
pressure off the freshman
(Simon).
"S«.-ondly, we've be-en
lacking in scortng from our
backcourt by not being able
to clear ourselves tor the easy
shot.
"So." Driscoll adds, "~fico
should be able to &ive us
some punch from back there."
Driscoll: expects tlJe .Royal9
lo throw a press at his
charges although Ambauador
mentor Paul Berry says, "we
usually switch back and forth
from a 1-2-2 zone to an
aggressive man.to-man in our
regular defensive setup.''
" ~· • " " ~a
" " .. .,.
" ..
" " ..
• . ..
l! ~ ~ n " • .,
" " ~ .,
" " " zone and most of o u r s' 1<11e111
opponents in the Whitmont ~! ~nn~~m1101 n ori
League have done the same. .:i G1rde~ Gtov• 11 =~~1c .• nc1. "Actually it doesn't make '' e11en1 P•rt
" .. .,
" " " " .. Marina Finishes No.1
much difference -it's a little :i [:;'':f~11.,,
late .to change anything now. : r-;~;:'1:,1 M•r
"We like to think of 111 cos11 M111 51 SA Vll~Y ourselves iu a running team,'' 10 E1t111<.11 31 l ot Al1m!101 says Winchester. "But when ,, M11no111
we 've lost J think it's been J: ~=·~·. M•r
because of a general overall ;? E~1:'.:ii':v
lack of quickness." he adds. " Edi..., L• 0v1t111 11,.11
The Oilers compiled an 'J l:~:a;
overall mark Of 17-7 and 7-3 a fg;~: Pork
in loop battle. One Of their 1' SA V1!~y u M!nlon Vl,lo best efforts was in the first ll ~:ft:\,!;:~
half against No. 2 sttded u 1 ... t11ren
Crescenta Valley, which had ~ 8:~~
I I .1 I I ''°"'•rio on Y a our.po1n marg n a 12 G1rden Gro~t
that juncture. !~ ::c~· A 11m1ro~
M911"4Nlle 117•11 11 Ioli-Gr1""'1 SJ II Lot Ami-ri : a~i;.!l:!° Grovt '4 '2 PIClflet
.., • 11:111<.ho Al1mn.-S6 11 101 .. Gr111C11 511 tt Los Ami-n ~nll1n
"
' • " " " " " ~
In County Hoop Poll
" " ..
~ " .. ?.!arina 1tigh's Sunset
League ~hampions have
completed the re gul at ion
:: schedule as the official No.
~~ 1 team in Orange County prep
'~ ba.!lketball circle! as selected ~ by the DArLY PILOT. ~ Coach Jim Stephens' classy
:; Vlkings rambled to a 2t-6
:~ mark for the year, whk'b l1 includes eight straight over
5CI the past [our weeks, " 47 Champions dominate the
" f '' irst six places w I t h ~: Huntington Beach H i g b ' s
;: Oilers holding the No. & spot
.lfter blasting Aneheim and
nipping Newport to clinch •
portion of the Sunset title.
01\ANGE COUNl'Y TOP II
Place Team Pttata
L Marina (21-t) 41
2. Troy JIM) 45
3. La Habra (21-3) +t
4. Katell.a (20-&) 39
5. Rancho Alantitos (1•7)30
.6. Hunllnglon Beacb (2N)22
7. Tustin (lWl 11
a. Orange (16-1) U
9. Servite (lf.5) ·10
10. Pacifica (11-5) T ·
~~1 ~ t~1
}i1'
NOW THRU SUNDAY .. " m ~
Gymnastics
OtJft~ '#lit Ott.JU IM.W) SIUl lNl'lle
F!Ocr t•t•Cllt -Mc.F111I (G\, ),
WlltOl'I !SI, J, "•tllt rd !GI, Wiftllll'lt
mlrll~ l,H.
L-hor'M -I. Mcl"t11I !Gl. '· S.M.!ltt IG). J, WlllOll 101, WIMlfll m1rk; t .7S.
ll:ll'ltl -I, WllllOfl ISJ, 2, Glfl'9'1
111. J. 511'11111 !OJ. Wh'lnlnt m1rk:
l.S.
llff horM -1. S.Ymour IGI.
'· VIUtOfl (5), J. Wll!On IGI. w 1 .. nlnt m1r~; I.OJ.
P1r1!1tt b1r1 -I, WllMffl fSl.
2. O'N~ll (G ), 1. G1rr11t (SJ, Wlnt1lflt
mi••~ 1.t.
Hltfl b\tr -1. VD!\ Wi id (Cl
,, Stnt~I !G), J, MtF11;t 101. WlflnliJ ,,...,.: •.o.
All•rOllflll -~!~I WllHn Ill.
AYtrlfli 1.)0. 11
. . " . .
J DAILY PILOT Tut~.11, Ftbruary 23, 1971
Costa Jtlesa Playhouse ., ..
'Jeremy Troy' Funniest of Season
By T0;\1 TITUS
OI tt. DaltJ •11e1 l .. H
.. 0, w11a1 a unigltd 1vr.b
itic ivea v,.
\Vl1e11 f1rs1 /()t' pru(:/1c:c
10 deceit·e."
-Sir "'aLltr .Scort
Deetption, misrepreM'nta-
tion a n d misunderstanding
have been a staple of lhealn-
<'a l con1edy from Shakes-
peare lo Simon bul no11i·here
have these ingredients been
so imaginatively or effeetivrly
employed as in thr current
production at the Costa ~iesa
Ci\'ic Playhouse.
Its title is .. Here Lies
Jtrt1ny Troy," and mark it
•Nell beeause it is very likely
the "sleeper" of the year.
Certainly ft is the most
hilarious comedy mounted on
an Orange County communlty
theater stage this season.
Jack Sharkey's riotous tale
ol a lawyer bidding fo r a
senior partnershi p in his firm,
"·ithout benefit or so mu c h
as a oollege education, never
gra~ a Broadway stage -
and more's the pity. lls
subsequent manipulations or
ootrageous identities a n d
impossi bl e situations
transcend it far beyond the
•
run of the mUI don1e:stic
comedy In which lhe wife
walks out In Act I and is
back in hubby's arins by the
fi nal curtain.
Richard Andersen. In his
first directorial assignment
for the Civic Playhouse. has
'"Ht:lll! t.111 Jl!ll lM'I' TllO'f"
,. comHI~ b• J•ck S~•·••~. <ll•Klt<l
b• ll khlr<l "'tK1•11t"• 1119• rn1na1or
L~•\ WU1M. •l•l•led b• ll1r1N••
C1rhth. IOVl\d 1n11 fighU"'ll b• JI"'
F•Ht r. P•t~nltd ~ ,,,. (Mii M•JI
(••le Pl•YhouW l'rlOIY1 U KI S•IU•dlY1
1nroueh M1rcn • •' !Iii! Comm11,.nv
C•,.1t• •udllo•ium, °'"'"'' (OtJply F1lr1•011tKI•, Cos11 ~II.
THI CAST
Jt,trn• Troy ., .
..:11h-.n fro• .•••.• cn .. 11. 8k-t• ... , Tln1 Wln•low ., .,
S••n l•t'1t n
G•"" llo111<1i(I
C••ol Fwl•llc-Joe Del 11.,.....
llOMI• Eb•t~ Al1n ;<1rl
gli tters In her choice ot
accents and actiom, hitting
her peak in the dinner scene
which calls on her to prepare
a most indigestible repast.
And, iC any doubt penists
that Alan Hart is probably
the beat character actor in
Orange Coonty, it is pretty
well dispelled by his riotous
performance as the senior
attorney. Hart is at his
gregarious best in a back-
slapping, pun-poppi ng r o I e
which gives his broad comic
taleot.s full rein.
Drawbacks in this most
Impressive production are few
and far between, and mostly
minor in scope. Two which
come to mind are t h e
apparent dematerialization or
pulled out all lhe stops in an exiting actor, since he is
a briskly mounted production nol seen through the open
Cutting Out
Singer Chucks Career
Tuesday
Evening
-· ill"f'tJ.l11ato1 sets oul to tr«k droWll
lh1 men "'llo perm1nt11tt1 blinded
him ind •illed his wile with 1
bomb.
which ferrets out c v e r y wind~ and the failure to
available comic reaction from ·~~~~~~~~~~~II smirk to uuff11w. There is little update a reference lo Perry I "' Mason when a number of1
that can be done about the current lawyer TV series!
FE lllUAJltY 22
5:DO IJ Iii Nftl l•rJ Dunphr.
O MIC """"icl: T•m Sllrdtf. ,
CJ flit Nt11 SllM Gw1ll: 81tl
Ruutll. Pt!tr l uplll, Untt l t•·1
111n. Norm Crosbr Is CO·hotl.
0 DEAN MARTIN, SUSAN * HAYWARD·"ADA"·Color
ID LUCY & CAROL * BURNETT •nd DAVID m OtvMt frtll Slltw Guests: Gt01tt
Bums. C.101 8ur11ttt. Lucille Ball.
CIJ f....,. $4illf4
fD llCbt1p Hiit Pt111 Htrm1n
Adler talks with .IGhn Re ud<ln of
lht Melropoht1n Opua.
@m l'lttm rw livillc
el LI Cri-" lil1 CriNa
m1) 61 -Suwi Hayward, Oe1n1 il' tin 3'· ''C flt In tfl t
Martin, Will114 Hyd1.Whit1: ltalphl ~ .... 76:ama) .,,~Allnt Baxttl,
Mt1k11. A PoWtf·hun1ry 1111 lrom l R 1..., 11 11 tht w1on1 aidt of 1111 trKb uw1 1 '"' 1 •Ill)'.
•n 11sy-1oin1 min to tt l to thr 9:00
Gew1nor's m1n~on. 1J THE FUGITIVE GETS
O Did V111 o,,, * CAUGHT TONIGHT! m Tiit Ftinbltn n 0 TN Fucitin
ID @(.l)Stlr Tr1l CDilplCllJOITu1ntd On World If
fl!) lih1ffiftt1ncl Sports Sports irtals lttl what r,ally
El f11ft11 f1111lly l ot• on behind tht sc1nes-ihr
IE Nttlcilrt 34 11ru11ln i nd exhil1n tions.
@ {j) TllUdl, MMit: "I TI!l nl I fD hl.tldl In lllt llln Foti" (dr1m1) '6Z-Susan H1yw11d,
ail LI Htt1 F1•ili1r ctll C.1111111 Peter finch. Woman doctor ton~itl·
Q) llPUI """ Htwthof111/Gr1tr. td of 1 "mMCJ killinl'' in london
1:15 m cai11111·. ,.d
1:>oOC.nllill Ct Jllfl'• m Titt flrill N1111
f1l) Hellppodp l td1•
Eii)StkdM fil111 /lllnit1l1
m n. Dneft "tPtrt
mJ LM OlridHet
(DAIC Ntn
7:00 IJ CIS Nl'lrl Wtlttt Cronkilt .
0 m'! NIC Ntwt, DIYid Brinkley
rr1 nk McG ... ~" Cl'ltnctllor.
0 n.t's Mr l iM! m Qil (])I lm LIKJ
IDDr1pet
fli) Tiii T11111td "' Cfiai1 "'Why Can'I
You He1r Thrau1h the Noi~• in
l11er becomes in'IOlvtd wilh lh1
relentless pr03ewtor wllo 111d
caused hfl' to be sent lo priMJn.
fEl Tiie Awoutu "Should your
s.i1t1 enact a prt·1fi•I pr tvtntin
denltnlion sb lult!"
@E)tlllH1n11 m 1.a c.iist1t11a.•
a:l N•la<b•
':JO II Qi (I) All iR tlN F1111ily Carroll
O'Connor, Je1n St1pJetG11, Rob Rein·
tr, S1ll1 St1uth1r1 Jta r. Mile Jn.
v1!ts 1 roun1 tOuple to 1p1nd lh1
nitht at lht Bunk11 hotJSll but 1uns
Into Miiettions wh1n Alchit lt1rns •
th1 visitors 111 not le11Hr m1rr11d. I
ml Mlllkllt/Pt.Ws Dtlk m Cfftl!I 4t Afl&ustitS
Your Cir? A music/rap 11uion lO:DO O IJj (j) CBS 1tepoll1 '1he Sell·
1imed 11 bnn1in1 lh1 m11nln1 ol in1 ol the Penh11on." An 1J1min 1·
contempor1ry music into ptnpecti¥e Hon of !he Penh1on'1 public lfl•·
!01 th e 1dull 1enei11ion, fl1tu1ln1 lions 1c\1¥i!1e1. l!ogt! Mudd rt·
lop recordm1 111oup1 •lld 11Dloisl1. ports. 1
E) Christ Ille liwln& WIMd 0 l thMlft 111d B1rkllf Gu1111 111 m ltHafil [d MtMll1on, Doc Sevuinstn, Mlrty I
tl.!l Si11pl1111tnll Maria Allen. P111I Winchell l lld M1rty
ln1t!s. fl)NM,, ..
0 l i1 S ""' Kni~ S"1dtri.
inherent stillness or the first could have been substituted. ·
15 minutes or so. but beyond ' that. "Jereiny Troy·• i s '·Here Wes Jeremy Troy"
hilarity of the highest order " socks it to the attorneys in
t ~ ":::";,....~ much the same manner as
lt y,•ould be nexl Io DA1LY PILOT s1111 "'"''• South Coast Repertory's "The impossible lo list 1 he SHOCKING _ /\.I an Imaginary Invalid." which interlocking int rigue \\'hich al90 opened over the weekend.
d lh I I Sk I h·1 Hart is aghast at the compoun s e po . ec 1y lays it on the medi c al
d ·1 I d th go ings on bet\vee n Joe rawn, 1 revo ves aroun e profession. And. it may be
f 'd ho t t Del Rosso and Bonn ie a uresa1 P ny a or n e Y lhal you \VOn't realize . the
h II h h. Ebsen in "Here Lies "' ose co cge c um uses IS significance to the play's title da k Sec Cl to ga'. f e Jeremy Troy" at the r r n r e until the following morning.
lodging. I h en complicates Costa 1'!esa Civic Play-Truly the funniest show of
matters by bringing in a kook·.· house. the community theater season,
model who of necessity is ·'Jeremy Troy" continues for
passed off as th~ lawyer's two more weekends at the
y,•ife "'hen the bos!:i arrives laugh-laden e\'ening w h I I e Community Center auditorium
fnr dinner. doped up to the teeth on on the Orange C 0 u n 1 y
(;ene Bendirt play~ the tranquilizers. Fairgrounds.
central role or the beleaguered Joe Del Rosso starts stowly.1 -------------
barristcr with a splendid but warms rapidly to his task
command of the b a r be cl as the intruder-blackmailer,
subtl eties which enrich his an ilinerant artisl who's been
character, as well as a le~ching off his co 11 e g e
definite affinity for the poor classmates in alphabetical
soul bu ffeted by !he tidal order. Del Rosso's brash
waves \Vhich branch out frQ!lh strength plays per r ec I l y
his own rippling prevarication. against the studiously weaker
Additionally, his timing is character of Benedict and
finely honed and h is makes for a fine
predicament elicits tneasurcs contras!.
of bolh sympalhy and dtlight Funny as they are, the (Qr
rrom his audience. 1na1or characters are mere •ru• ' rwMr1~ t
As the wife. forced into an straight men for the daffy
impromptu impersonation of d1ngaling model -whose1 a Hon1anian princess. Carol professional Jargon fue ls the '. I .~ ·~~-"" Faulstick is nothing short of farcial fire -p I aye d -.sP ,co..<">.............., \!:!I
superb. She arnpliries her role beau tifully by Bonnie Ebsen.lr=~~;~;:;;;;~l wit h every line and delivers A newcomer in a c a s t or -
the funniest sequence of _•_polished veterans, Miss Ebsen/
SECOND llG ,EATURE
11;1m s., FRANCOIS TRUFFAUT
"STOLEN KISSES"
(!]COLOR bi lltL>•
.... _ .. lllHll ~II.Ill\-'~
,it,1,.J,•, !lli'li Jl'["J , ff111lffHJT
'"the wild child''
• ..• ~ ... ,,,,,,,,1, 1; . U1111edAr11s:ts
(;r.!f( ;{•!.!•
IALIOA PENINSULA
67l·4041-Op111 6:45
NOW-ENDS TUtr:SDA't'
"AIRPORT"
011d Julie A11dr•w1
"DARLING LILI"
"Lill" 7:00 011ly-"Alrport" t :l 5
STARTS Wtr:DNESDAY
7:lCI 1J 5 ([) ll'l'lriJ Hillbilllts
om1 1BC1l l l n. '"'rUi 11111 C.tby Special, Or! Cosby"s IUISIS
111 Bur11u Mtnd1th. Hiney Wil·
son. Herb Cdelm1n, jolm~y lro'lln,
BillJ Eckstint. John O.h1111, D1.10
G1llrs11it. Billy Sanfl i nd l ilt Hlft·
Barn" M1Hris. 1~======================~11 o rrn rn m ... f'" w.1by, .....
crerK>n.
0 Yil1inil 'r•h•ra Sfltw Sut Ant
t1111don, Pit Cooptr. Don Dtfort
1nd Don Gtlltrt 111t1l.
0 lit rn m Tiit Mff Sl!lft4 "A
Double !or llln1er" Julit 1ssumt1
!he identity o! 1 deJd undtl'CO'lt!
1.i:1nt to t~PQ:se the t11der ol 1
n1raitits nn1.
Q Millitn $ Morit: ''Silo, OR M1i11
Stlllt" {drtm•) 'fi~.loslf t<r011t1
m Trvlll '' C.nseq11111u1
Q) It , ... 1 T'llitt
i1i.) Ci•1111 30
l!EJ LI 0111111
7:55 ai) C1ttdiH d1 S.,~n6o1
1:00 B ta ()),, ... "''"
··c1nlhi1." Drs. Welby 1nd ICiley
111 sutd 101 m1l11<Klice bJ a P•·
litnl wllo 1lleae1 tlllir l r11!mt nl
CIUJ.ed htr lo bt pu1\JJed.
O lartw Wud Hews m NNS Gtor11 Pu!nam. Hal fish·
min. m OU•lt , ... "'"ntu11 "Mtltnlf'I
M111c."
ED MIP SdlMI: 'robltt111 i nd , ..
$1bllltiu Or. Wit!itm Gl1u 1r mod·
tr1lts this JZ-part co!le11 urdil
IEl_.Rt·Mi
al) Ftll:IY•I lllniu n1
IO:JO 0 ,.,, Cot,tr M.,,it: "l1l1 Un·
I c1nq11e1tcl" (tdventure) '•7-GlfJ
Coo11tr, Paultllt Goddard, Boris
I Kllloff, W11d lond. In 177J, up.
'''" hom Y111ini1 lrtts ll'ilduntss
lnd11ns i nd 1ttaeherous W!li!ts.
Q) lill Jtkn1 IC,..
t:ll I lltlfti4 ~ • bf •
:11:00 0 !ifi CIJ III"""
flit Wllitrt tti1 l id. Sltp1 Dr. C11lol 0 Q1 Ci) m Jhon
Wtbtr of 111e St1t1 Dtptrtmtnl o!
Mtntlt HJ1it111 llosl1 this pro1r1m 0 l!D Ntn
m l t TtH ~t T1~ttl
which u plorts Ioctl t tlorts lo dt•ll O 111.W: 'TM Ttliu•~ (westt m)
•1th dru1 uw11. Gunt ii O!. J. 'Si -Audit Mu1pflr, l rodtridl
Tllomts Un11rltidtr, Crnford, Di1M Lory1.
C'iJ r111 '"'9' l 1.ni.-t11 m Mtwit: "1"• tll1 SMts ol fript-
ll'' (drt mt) '4Z. -..loh• Pt)'M.
M1urctn O'H1r1.
1:05 m UH• Lan m Mtvit: ~ ... , •l ttll Wtr11"
l:J0'8 5 @ KM Hn G11ut.: Tom (d11m1) ·55 -frtnk lovtfoJ.
T. Hiii, C.Onnlt [llOll, 8obbr ~Ill fl!) l lttl k11r111I
tnll Susan lttl'f.
l!JllHC@:IH!ch ScbMl l1~tt 1 ll:l0 6 9 CIJ Mtn 'rif!i"
'-" Ch•,i.ti.W, Sport1t11ter1 0 @i CI! m 111111111 Ct1to1 Jot n
ltou hlrttl llld Ton! Ht-.klnl ct1, R1~•n IUISh,
tht pl1y·by.pl1y I nd color r,mrntn 0 &) Dkt Ct11ttl
1tfJ from '•uley P~l1IOll.
0"''" 0 BEST BET * TV SNEAK PREVIEW
MOYING/MEMORAILE
IJIHHlleMC -" "' w-= .,,_,...... (Ihm•) '7l-
ltm11 Fr1ndlan. lrMford Olll1111n,
ltt Mtte Nol111. A criMIMI lftlu1111(11
12:30 m All-NIPl Slltw; "DRt Mlnwlt 11
lfl't," ..... 1 l:t11"1titn" •nd •-,.w.
•I* Crtrip ."
1:001J lllwit: "'Oil, S•~~, .. (d11m1l
'SJ -Roll Clrn11on, Adri1n Booth.
2::.)CI 1J llltrit: "lill llllt T1wi1nt•"
(lll)'SttfJ) '57_,at O'BrltR. -------------
Wednesday
DAYTIME MOVIES
ular) '54-11111 Simmons, Vietor
Mat~rt. O ''Ct11Wlct1 rowr" (f11m•l ·~
Ben G1m11, Rod Sttl&tr. m "M1 Oltltw l rtitf1tt1• (wtJl trn )
t:OO ll "lflttrfts Cu'1 fikt llltl!t('I ·~I -Robert St1ck. Mlc\•r Rooney
ti1•1n1) 'l7-.1te1 McCru . "'lttH• i:oom ''L••t 0•1• at h •pelr' (d11tn11
If Cltltl PontiK" (1Mt1lurt) '51 '49-Prulon roster, 111111 AtlhllOnt
ln l..W. Z:Ol IJ "lrlaM L..r (d11f!lf) 'SO -
, .• 0 '1\e [IJlltiall"' 1'111 I h~tctl C•fJ Cooptt . lturt~ B1c111.
I
Sears Professional
Tax Pre paration Sen ·ice
Sears now offers you a completely pro·
fessional tax se rvice wil h a completely
personal Lo uch. Trained ta x preparers
rea li ze th e importance of yo ur lax rel urn
and they gi ve you lhc ki nd of .personal
atte ntion th at has come lo be a Sears
tradem ark over lhe years.
~1·ur~ ·rax J'rtpara lion Sttl'ice
Sali •ru1·1io11 r.u:1rnnlr rfJ or )'ou r ,\l one~· Ba£'k
Sears
r..A•S, ao 1•UCI( AND CO.
\II ~f'ttr~ ~tort ..
or t n Jail) 9130 1.m.
1.1 Q:JO p.m ..•
~u nd•.•• J;l noon lo ,j p.m.
~~~~~~~~-
WALT DISNIY'S
"THE WILD
COUNTRY"
AHD
"BOATNIKS"
STARTS WEDNESDAY
Barbra CD
StnisaDd
Gt.urge Segal
TMOwl
=
No 0111 Ult4.r 17 Pen11ltttd
URlnt Wltk • P•rfff ., A\1111lf
Gw•11li.1
MATINEE WED.
AT 1 :00 P.M.
~do
•1w•01T •fACl4 •• •t •~• •""••r+
I• lehl•w• ll•• lolo •• (II . l •t l !I
ENDS TONIGHT
JASON ROI.A.I DS
IH
"FOOLS"
CLIFF ROlllTSON
IH
"CHARLY"
STARTS WEDNESDAY
BARBRA STRBSANO
BEST
ACTRESS
AWARD
ALSO
ACADEMY AWARD
WINNER-
BEST FOREIGN FILM
'Z'
•. .. . . .
• COOi ,..., •• OOC•I-Ill .. . 111.-lf.C• ...... ...
PREMIERE
ENGAGEMENT
,&DW.&ftDS
-·-· .. ·--··-.. ·--· ........ -· ·-. -...........
' IN MISSION Vl'EJO
EDWARDS
ELLIOTT GOULD
11< .l O.lVID l.. WOLl'U ~-
"I LOVE MY •••
WIFE"
..... ~"'C' ..... ''°"""'°"""'-
-AI-
Wttkd•"fl: "WH .. ' r & lt:JO, "Crn1 .. IHl1"
l :U •nly: 1.i. & 11111.: "Wit .. ' S:IS-7·1t:JCI,
"C••H,..dl" 1:»-J & l :U
"NUN AT THI
CROSSlOADS"
RESERVED SEAT
ENGAGEMENT
NOW
DUSON HOffMMI
"lJTTl.f 816 ~-, ... , ••• , ... ,"" """"° lfil'l o
Chief Don George• Faye Dunowov
......... ,.._ .. ..._., ... *S·H A
MMGM P'f~1!ioll ill PAllA\l\SIOff" M£Tlt0Cll.OR' :
2nd HIT -BARBARA HERSHEY in "THE BABY MAKER" {R)
"lJtERE
WAsA
CRookEd
M " AN... LaJ.3.1.
ALSO AT BOTH THEATRES
ROBERT RIDFOID &
MICHAILJ. POLLARD
CINEMA VIEJO
S.lli O•ir.O fl\'Y Al l1' Pll lUll~on e 10 6'190
"
DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
Mun AND JEFF
'T>l AT IS No WAY
'TO EAT SOUP IN
PUBLIC!
JUDGE PARKER
•
•
I'VE GOr &ETTER 'TWINGS
TO PO THAN SIT ~EIZE
A.NO USTE-N 10 ELMO'S
""-IW-IOI O rnATTER. VlC:
PLAIN JANE
' '
...
NO, Q PONT MA.VE BITTER
TMIN6S TO 00'. YOU'RE WOR'k'.·
1U6 ~ ME, Si\M.~ ANU WMEN
YOll GO TO WORK ror ME
AHO M.Y &OAIZP, YOU POH'T
RESIGN EfrnER~
l DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I PERKINS
ACROSS itl Run easily
itZ Kind of
1 Vertica l malt shttp
pole 44 Fell
1 5 Fish 45 Ro.111 about
9·Cut into 4& Ofient
1 • cimes 47 Lovtd lo
114 Rh'!f to thtj ' excess , 8altle Sea "'Quiet
15 Callfotnla ; 53 Dog wine center . 57 In no way
16 JfatfYe of 58 Nearly
an A.slan 5' Decoralfd
Kingdom 1 cake
117 Govr:rn 61 Sheltered
• 18 RtptJlsivt area
·person 62 Clergyman's
'19 Bass, house 11 Mus lim
for one and tand judge :
ZO Noted bl Oppress Variant
Ylollnist 64 Relattd by 12 Noun end ing
22 l ade blood 13 Exp irtd
believe fl5 Facial 21 Approaches
24 Set forth expression 2J Makes
In wll'dS 66 Lento leatt1'r
26 Rulers b7 lluslc 1I 25 Apart:
of old symbol CorDb . fOI'•
"17 Servant 28 R!-Ck~ss
29 !Insect DOIN people
30 Part of 30 -''" the body l Ways 31 Sheltered
31 Certain Z Grow,....up lro!'ll the
printing pen on wind
spibol1 3 Alabartl 32 Young
37 Drink clty salmon
38 Soutcel 4 Thera py JJ Ho111011t
of loot 5 Wink 111edicine
dl1co11fort 6 Wet 34 Add itional
39 Fret fro111 1 Commence• 35 Sh ip
so11ethlng ment section
objection· 8 Manner of 36 Nothing
at.le riding a ha'Se 37 Piece of
40 N. Amerlcaa 9 Afl'IUSt ,oJl ing
sn1ke ~· 10 Golf clubs slock
z123n 1
40 Sc.tistance or plant or lg!n
42 Uodenllt
43 Exis ted
45 Thyroid
gland
enl argement
47 Ila Han
actress 48 Picture
tr1 nsfer:
Informal
50 C1ll forth
51 Island
in the
Caribbean
52 River of
England
53 NFL tea111
54 Abba-:
Israel
FOl'r lgn
MlnistK
55 Quality
of sound
56 lllakt ovet
ftO lllolsture . .....,~~,..,,,,,,....,...,...,.~
u
' . .. ,~
•
MISS PEACH
i
I
l
STEVE ROPER
ON llETllllN!NG
TO THE RANCH,
STEVE F/NOS °"' r LllCAH WffE ,<T!/C>tl,
By Chest• Gould
MI'S MAO ECPER.IENC.E. ON
1llESE ntlMC.5 eEFORE.EH?
Ol<AV I T\IATMAICP
US EVl!ll !
By Tom K. Ryon
By Al Smith
By Frank Baginski
i • Jl
[ ' '
-AND IF
THEY OON'T'
SeTTl.E mm, weru: GOING
WTELL
11.fEllt MOrfEJS!
Ll'L ABNER
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
MOON MUWNS
I
RING'
RING'
RING'
ANIMAL CRACKERS
.. -
• . . . . •
By John Miles
By Men
KOIUSE
7MCY SAY
'Tf-le HANO TWrr'
llDCK5 "TUE CRADLE
SPANKS TUS llt1al?
By Chorln M. Schull .------....;
I WAS 60NG 10 A5K MER
10 BE lllE 6(1E5T 5l'EAKER
AT CXIR FIRST MEfTIN6 ...
Tueida1, February 23, 1971 DAILY "LOT J!
ly Al Copp
By Charles a. sottl
By Gus Arriola
By Ferd Johnson
By Roger Bolen
~\
, .. STIAHGI WOMD
MR.MUM
DENNIS THE ~ENACE
-P'r'" ..
l
I
•
J I
, .. , .. ,_ .... ,. ' ... • " ·, " ·. ~. • ... ,• · .. . . . ', -. "•r +•• > t r' \ '• '• \ . .
~IJ UAJLV PILOT Turill.W, ftbrw)o 2J, 1971
Everyone Hes
Something Thal
Someone Else Wanh
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
·The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
You Can Sell It,
Find It, Trade It
With a Wont Ad
1~-_,,._ .... __,J ~ I -"''" I~ I ...... ,,.SM I~ I ...... ,,... l~I ...... ,,.,. I~ i ...... ,,.,. I~ I ,_,,. ..
General
2629 11arbor. C.M.
546-8640
Thinking of
SELLING?
GET
COSTA MESA
DOLL HOUSE
sn.soo
Set' lhis horn'° immed-
iatt'ly, a charminR" J
bcdrm located in a clean
*
General
* * * * TAYLOR CO.
DOVER SHORES SIOS,000
*
Beautiful new 4 & den home built j ust for
you! Spectacular living rm & lge formal OR.
"Our 26th Year''
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
COATS
& TODO'S CONDO
. WALLACE
REALTORS
-.546-4141-
(0p•n Ev•nings)
residential area of Costa fl!,..,..!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!""""'"'"I ?t1esa. Vets buy it for no * *
Todd Bingham Is a disp!ac·
ed aerospace eng., now
st u d y i n g Environment.
<11 Engineering at UCL His
2 bedrm Bluffs Condo Is va-
cant 11s he has sought less
S quartf'rs, It's in g: o o d
shape, with vicw1 front and
back. Mr. Bingham is ask·
ing .$35,950 for thls properly,
..
mont'y down, your PRY· EARL S. CURRY
nient including taxe~ 1768 Creslmont Pl. and Insurance will bf>
$186.00 mo. HUIT)' • it Costa Mesa
\\.'On't last. You arc The \1•inner o!
General
ofinJa !Jj/e
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
12 Linda Isle Drive
Elegant ne\V 5 BR. 4 Y.i ba. hon1e \\'/formal
din. rm .. fam. rm., v.1el bar. Impressive en-
try court w/16 ft. mahog. doors. $179,500.
For Complete information on •II homes &
lots, please call:
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
833 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620
@IA\' ,\ m:.'irnl
llEAt:I'\' I:\C
EST ~.\9 ~~J_O~j
TAX REFUNDERS Eve nings Call 548-326:>
General Huntington Beach
GREAT VIEWI HOME & BUSINESS 01 harbor & ocean. Attr. split
level home on R-3 5100 sq.
2 Good Cosla -'lesa C-2 Joca. f1 lot. Ideal for 4 apt. units.
11ons. S200.IXXI. 2501 Ocean Blvd.,
ll.) Dentist office + 3 BR Cd:-01. By app'L only,
AUTHENTIC SPANISH
BEACH LIVING
Au thentically styled from the
arched courtyard enlrY to
adobe red tiled roof. 3 Javish
bedrooms. !luge niaster
suite. 21: baths. \Valk-in
close t. Vaultf'd beam ceil-
ings. Crackling floor to ceil
ing center fireplace. All elec.
dream kitchen. Huge cover-
ed patio. _ Easily finished
tor den with heaYy peaked
beam ceilings, Much more
and only 3 yrs young.
READY FOR THIS!? Only
$26,900, E-Z terms. A must
to see -Call (Il4) £162.5585
hon1e. Bill Grundy, Realtor
(1.) .1 BR hon1e on Harbor Call: 642-4620
Blvd. I ~C-o-st~e~M7e-,-.-----
Newport
••
F1irview
646-8811
{1nytime)
VALUE PLUS
Extra sharp 4 bedrm + 19x
38 pool. Huge lot with alley
access, hke new shag w/w
crpts & drps. Fresh paint in
and out. SP $2-1.500 GI or
1-~HA t<'rms! \Von't Jast, call
847.1221.
Macnab-Irvine
Realty Company
SWEEPING VIEW
From dramatic 3 bedroom
and den plus family room.
Smart decor, excellent for
family a n d entertaining.
Great cul-de-sat' Jot with
pool and play area. :kar
garage. $82,500.
NO QUALIJ-~YING! , , .With
Cash lo FHA Loan. 3 Br,
just painted. Like new shag
cptg & kit Doors. Listed
$23,500 .•. Try $23,000! Agt:
67~.
• * 4 Br, 2 ba, crpts, drps,
garage, lge fenced yard &
patio. $24 ,000, CaJI 548-3840
from 5 to 9 pm. By owner,
MES,\ Verde area, 2 sty,
4 BR & den, 2~t btt, bltns,
$39,500. By o.,.,·nr, aft 4 -
546-1758
DUPLEX $36,930, 23rd &
Orange, C~I. 2 BR, 1 BA
HlRISI E OLSO~ '" R£A LrO.RS
ea., 2 gar + 10x20 19131 Brookhurst Ave,
\\'Orkshop. BuildC'r 642-4905 Huntington Beach * Sharp 2 BR T riplex Less Than One Month's G~e': ~H~~i~=~m~~· S4~J:: Rent down buys this 3 bdrm.
Realtor, 54S.5.JSO. 2 bath area Townhouse,
prime area, priced right
BY OWNER • 3 hr, 2 ba, $20,500! Lg !iv rill, w/w
family rm, den, crpts & crpts, drps, W/D, refrig, Jg
drps. $23,500. Nr Back Bay. patio & POOL priv.! Full
2003 Wlllo, 64&-9842 GI FHA =--c='"7.~----· I Price $20,500. • . , or
East Bluff terms. Call 847·1221,
By Owner-Mak• Offer
Beaut park view condo. Im·
mac cond. 3 br. 644-:)468
OWNER-2 sty custom frt inn Beach Blvd. Htgn Bch
row Bayview s10.cm ol Open 'Iii 9 'p.m.
'""" 157•500• 641-14"°· 7°/o FHA • GI
ACTION
2 tickets 10 the
Western National
Boat & Marine
Show
I I is bE'lng shown every day.
UIOl l()Ul t1().4tlS
_F_o_u_n_••_i_n_V_•_l_l•~Y ____ 14 BR, 2 BA, like new cond!·
$28,j{)() DuplC'X 1212 BR, good BEAUTIFUL 642-8235 67>3210 CAN YOU BELIEVE? lion. Nr shopping: & sehools.
HARBOR VIEW l l=~===::=::::::;E:I New Look/Span Style Only $'26.950.
Macnab-Irvine
4 l~DROOM +
FAM. RM .
at th('
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER
~e11 es111e. 11s-eooo E·sidc'. C,\1 locar1on. Quaint Coll'n & Watts O"''ners unit + good income f'rom this great LUsk 4 Bdrm. CATHEDRAL BE A ME 0 1 s 962-5523
unit. homP. Family room. nifty ANYONE QUALIFIES CEILING, SPACIOUS 3 c & w
..,..,.,..,..., .. -,....,,,. s.17.000 Fourplf'X f~l 2 BR den plus a pool wit h Jacuzzi For this sharp 3 bedrm Bedrm 2 bath, family rm,
?uJ E, (OjSf Hwy, Co•on• 0.1 Mir, eaur.
uni!$. Gross scheduled rt>nt -also has a bullt·!n BBQ. homl" -lush carpeting & Only s:1950 do"·n or VA/
F<'bruary 20th thni 28th EVERYONE $610 per nio. cm'ner will con. Close to beach, schools &. draJ)('!'I & 10x25 cowrNI FHA terms~ lmmac~ NO DOWN GI
ROOM FOR
GLASS WAW
Custom home built in a ~i·
circle with gtass watla 10
permit a lanTa$1ic ocean
view from all rooms. Circu-
lar family room ha1 cattle.
drat ceiling & til't'plact.
Wrought iron & v.'OOd thnJ.
Ollt. 4 bedrooms, 2 bath1 le
many luxury features. Call
for an appointment to see
those features that are too
numerous to men!ion. $7'9,500
..A-Olan
REAL ESTATE
1190 Clenneyre St.
49-1.9-173 549-0316
Laguna Niguel
TEE -OFF
From your patio. Lge level
lot on the golf course. Spec.
ial price for special ~pie
-only S27.500. Montgomery
Real Esta!e. 34144 Cout
Hwy. 496.1268
Lido Isl•
NEW LISTING
Lge. 2.sty., 3 Bdrms., 21~
bath p!us dining rm. home
on 45 It. lot. Big livin1 rm.
\\~th massive stone trple. Ir
high beam ceiling. $72,500
bou>cll>l> loW90D,... 'ACCJ1CQP .
3416 Via Lido fi75-4562 * REOUCEO * Immac. 5 BR., family rm.
.ts Ft. Lot street.to.
strt'et. By app'l onl1,
$93,750
LICO REALTY INC.
3377 Vio Lido 673-7300
BY OWNER: 3 Br, 2 ba.
40 Ft lot. Lg patio $69,950
Open every day. 673-2684.
545-2512
Mesa del Mar
EXECUTIVE MODEL
Here is t1 gorgeous 1900
sq. CL Neptune home -
professionally 1and~cap..
ed \\'Ith a forest or to\\'•
ering trrcs • 21.ii tiled
bathi;. -all rlrcl:ric bulll-
in kitchen -separate
family room • block
\\'all fcn<'e \\'ilh boat or
trai\C'r acces.~ -elrclric
~ara~e dooi· -\v.:itrr
softrn<'r · a hrauliful
homr 1n!<idr and out •
Ai;ki11c SJ4,750 make of·
fer.
P!l'aM> call &t2·5678, eXI. 314 1 A real faniily homt' wuh sider 00 dO\\'n to GI, shopping. $58,600. patio. 71-;:',;, Interest, no loan HAFFDAL REAL TY
bet,\·een 9 and 1 pm to claim I FOUR LARGE BDR:\'IS, and f<>es, 10'::. dm\'n. Hurry, this 842-4-105 Eves; 5-11-2446 t BR. fam nn, 2~ ha, 2 MESA DEL MAR
FASTER
EASTSIDE COTTAGE
l BEDROOM 2 BATH
$23,500
The \'alue of 8 \lfetime
• no monC'y dO\\'fl to
Ye ls • low Jo"' dO"'n 10 anybody • JoC'a lrd in
Cos ta ~lr<:a. it hit.'! a
your llCkl'tS. tNo.rlh Counly T11·o fuJI IJa!hs. F resh pain! Newport ~ won 't last~ Only BLOR'S Sacrifice-Span. sTyle toll~[rce nun1bcr 1~ 540-1220} insirll' and out Large ."i.'l'x •t .........--.............. $23,500 nu cusl'orn 4 Br. $32,500. * * * J35' Jot with allf'y access !or Coldwell, Banker PERRON 642·1771 $1500 dn. Loaded wl xtras. TWO ON A LOT boat. carnper, and traill"r F.tirview ~Hoco••-'"" . Shake.~. Frpl. Crpt thruout.
.sloragf'. T\vo car garage, 646-8811 PUTT & SWIM Sprnklrs, lndscpd, fn cg . FHA-YA-OK large yard, R·4 l.onC'd. All On Private Road in Ne"-port J0223 Phea s ant Avf'.
Look . 2 . 2 Bedroom homes 1his for $2t9~i0 wuh VA OR (.anytime) 833-0700 644-2430 BPach. ] Bdrm. & family l;c53~7~-0~380==,-,==,-,-=~ 1 on one 101 • \\'hat a bu y . 1-tl'A FINANCJNG. ~===::::=::::::=::I rn1. plus E'nclosed patio. BY OWNER, $24,4::.0, 4 BR,
Built !o O\\'ners needs • Bul I ~J!l!!l!l!ll!ll!ll!!ll!l!ll!!ll~,l'""'"''$i~"j;5'i~:"'"""' 6 u N 1 TS Communily pool & puttin~ 2 ba, bltns. frplc, covf'red perfect as a home + lncome I 1 $146 TOTAL )'.?rl'en. S.J!I.~. patio, fn cd, IU' schools.
or 1t.s an investment. Excel.,.__.., PAYMENT De lancy Reil Estate 642-2264
Jent access 10 shopping and 1 r".._-'lror This charniing 3 BR in $75,000 good spendable :l828 E. Coast H1,·y., Cdt-1 Huntington Beach
schools . Hurry • Come in-smog.free beach area, eigh! Very special one story de. l ===-~6'~4~-7'!1~-~o'..,,_=-' ;;:;;;--;-;:;;-;:;-;;;;--;:;:;;;
vcsugate and invest. years yaung, master bed-sign!! ExcluSt\'e i1·11h us • PRESTIGE ADDRESS BIG 4 BR. PLUS POOL DIAL &1J.0303 room suire, FIREPLACE, Eastside! ~ 2 BR, 1 BA each,
1
220 E 17tH 646-0555 _, 1 f • Of'signrd 10 take ad\·anatge . anu a I o tomorrows com· 'Bl1ns. rcfrig., crp!g, drps, E\'f'nings Call 646-4579 1 1 od 126 ~ FULL of lhe Vi<'w. [\•an Wells ne.,.,·, ONLY $22,250 ---~=------1 ors I ay. ,.,,,., fencl-d \\'/con1ple!c privacy,
i;tory beauty. Pride ot own-3 bdrm, 2 bath, lge kitchen I
ership cond. \\'ill sell at CRV tam nn witb built-ins. W/W
price S33.2oo. Drive by 19071 carpetlna:. drape•, frpl, t~
Lindsay Ln, then call ed air, covered patio. 2 car
J OE FORTIER RLTY gar. $31,500. Owoer selliJle * 646.3410 * by appointment 557·73lS
EASY LIVIN.' Newport BHch
Reduced $1SOO
Delu."e Townhouse, 2 BR.
dble gar., patio, bltrui, Jike
ne1v, Best area.
Collins & Walts 962-5523
OWNER'S sharp 3 BR 2 BA ,
din nn, blt-lns, crpts, drps,
ldscpd, nr Springdale &
Slater. $28,800. 846-6~8.
Irvine
BEACH COTTAGE
2 BR. 2 Ba. O'size R·l Joi ,
you O\\-'n the land! Ollend
tor $29,650 with terms.
MORGAN REAL TY
673-6642 675-6459
$ PRICE 4 BR .. 1 BA. pwdr nn home 2000 · separate patios, 2 Blocks ro in Dover Shores. Fam rm Walker & Lee -17th St. shopping. PrC'SE'nt wi lrplc & ,,...f't har. Sc<'lud· UnbelieYabll'! You can'l miss I;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;
ineon1<" ss:,o per mo. hut on a home like !his. Tree TO A SMALL BOY
h Id ,_ 0,.. ,..,_ C'd pool. Roy J. \\'anl. Rllr ..
VIEW BAY & OCEAN
Sharp Clift Dr. ~ 2 BR. 2 B.i.
• Country French kitchen.
New carpet. Q.,.,·ner J1:?avin&
area. $5t,500
double 1;11.rai;:c • forc<'d 2'l99 Harbor. C.~I.
air heat · 3 i:;ood Sil<' 11·-""'==c--==~--
Linder rhl:! 1narket pricl'. 011·n.
t'r must seJJ imn1cd1arely ,
sparkl1n1: 3 IM!drrn, 2 bath
2 story home 11·1\h family &
bonus room. HC'avy shake
roof, fully carpC'tcd, fanlas.
tically landscaped & more.
Now only SlQ,950. C a I I
;.i5-84.24.
Realtors
1
s ou vo: raised. I ·• ..,.,1vn. l03.'l ~!anncrs, GJ&.lj5!), oj){'n hncd st. t.lodern plush decor lfonie ls just a "filling" sta-
7682 Edinger Lach:!nmyer Rlty ilaily from dee p pile carpeting to tion, bu1 10 r.tom & Darl it's
HARRIET PERRY
REALTOR 642.9178
SECLUfJED 3 BR, 2 ba,
Frplc, remodeled kitchen,
Lge patio, elec garag1i.
Extensive g a rd e n, n'r
schools & church, ldeaJ far
family $39.500. Principa.ls
only, 645-2764 art 3 pm~ )
bedroom~ & '"'111 baths 4 BED-POOL 17141 842-4,l."Xi or :;-io.:>140 Call 616.;928, Eves: fi.is.2:.ioo I -;-===~,-,--=-~· I decoraUYe waJlpaper. Queen. much more. , ,here is such I llOt;SES on 101, Eastslde •iz--' '--"''"""m•. 2 bath•, n.. (f -don't \\·a1t -this onf' $850 TOT AL DOWN
\\"ill li<'ll f'AST! Seeing i.'i bcllev1ng , !his oner * DUPLEX * I t"U ., •• , ... .,,, ~ '-"' a home that o ers eYery.
$25 200 C .. \I, Room for n1ore . Lo1v luxe bu.ill-in kitchen that thing & only a hop, skip &
FROM
EXECUTIVE HOME
18 MOS. OLD
Thi!! Beaut!ful Sandcastle
Mme ha5 been upgraded
in evl:!ry \\'Ry, .To b
transfer forcr!I sale. No'" \'&C8nt the O\\'!l<'r \\'!Inti;
action. -1 Kin~ t; i z c
bedroon1s. 21, lik•d bi:11h~.
sep. fan1. room \\lth brirk
firt>place. Sep. lorn1. 1lin·
ing room. Open a I r
cathedral eeiling. Deluxe
shq: carpeling In all
rooms. Floor lo ce!ltng
custom drapes intluded.
ProfMlionally land5Cl.ped
all for SU.IOI. No down
to Vet.I. SH It now!
in a lifetime bargain.TH I('}\
shag carpets, space.age
kitchen and close 10 major
shopping and freeways.
CALL AT ONCE.
B!k. to ocean. Pool. i\1oclern , do1\'n or exchang<'. ''""I''· A~f-n,1 intor-m.
'BR 2 2 BR SPARKL ~" jump to · shopping center & · · h ba. upper; ·• ING 3 Br. home Covered patio. Gas BBQ. i,s f I I~ ba. Jower . .$62,500 Jnclud-4 UR + Family Rm \\'/big yard. Assume FHA Boat access. Heated kidney llchool. · ·5 BR., 2 ba., or
es the land. Ov.•ner will con. Cua om designed features. loar · low down, shaped pool with a.II the only $38,950.
sider trade for home on pen. Ceramic tiled kHchen, thick FORTIN CO. &l2-5000 equipment. Near beach. ,. eel h•11
Walker & Lee insula. shag carpeting, elegant en. EASTBLUFF-OWNER Very low do\vn. HurTy • Be . '. r I
Call; 673-:IB63 6-12·22.53 Eves. try hall. 4 Bcdrm, family Bini \\'atch from bed. Frnt 1st. Cali (714) 962-5585.
rm, large roon1s thruoul. row Back Ba.y Jor. 2 sty, 3
Reallots 540-1 720 bd, :1 ba, 25' rt'<' rm w/lg
76,112 Edinger I TARBELL 2955 Harbor fl·pt 1n1ll arlrlrrl. J.lugc sun-associated
BROKERS-REALTORS
202S W Balbocr 673·)66)
HIRlSl E Ol.SON "' R£AlTO"S
_:!_l ~I 8·12-4455 or !'HO-_!>~ NORTH cOsTAMESA REPOSSESSIONS deck & ,i.:las~-'~alJ added.10
1 HARBOR VIEW Brand new gold shag carpt•I Sparkling clean homes, some 111as1rr bd . $.1 1,500. &f4.J•ti0
HOMES "''f'rywh<'r<'. Spic and Span FORECLOSURE I 'lC\Yly painted & <·arpe!cd, 2. Corona del Mar 1913 1 Brookhurst Ave.
,\ beaut. j BR, home: iicL lwauty, Pr\cC'd al $n.~i00. ::, 4 & 5 bdrms. Sonic 1~·iih 1---:--------(Jµen to all tC'rn1s~ l'o Do111n r.IES,\ VERDE, ;, Bedroom pools. FHA-VA conv. lcrms, SEE WHAT 1 --"-'"'-''-·"~'-'°-"-"-'-'-'-'--bar. JoYely shag cptg:., self. GI'• or FllA new 7' ~ Goy'1 rixt>r-upper, 2.)()(1 sq. 11., f SS 000 D W 'll B cleaning ovens; ready lO .... bo rom $17,00Q lo $40,000. ' own t uy ELEGANT MANSION fnl ereKt Rates. l hug(' bed. nl'C'-'ll a ut r\·en·th1ng • Collins & Walla Jnc. Hill &: ocean Yiew. Like n('111 move into! $59,500 • Includ. ,.,,,1 • , 1 " "°" d '62-5523 2 Sto-,. "-'room $28 500 1,11 '"g '"'I•-•. rooin~. 1 gocgrous ball". . , .. i·ps, cean p, N'-""""A am, A\'e, 2 BR h k & •• , b k •.1 E)e\.I ·:.:i· •
.. , nu ·• s a e U=u ric · price, ''"· lorTnal dining
CORBIN-Kllchcn is sparkling. E."clu-PQ.lr ·you nan1e ti. $29,000 314 ACR~ Might c:xchange for small
sive. CALL Or be!i:t otter. Hurry: T.D. S<9.~. room. family room , large &ck Bay. 2 BR. din rm: rt>C >NU ,. cit "' bl b · k
MARTIN WalkRe,.r1.,&,, Lee ~!.i,-_Et:~ .. r_E·At~ :~""' °''"""' ·~ ""~~i~~;·;:,~Y R .. ~~4,,, ~~:::~~.:;~~~-~~ Tc.oil -PETE BARRETT RlJY 2 Br, dbl gar, patio. dr-ps, completely fenced &
REALTY
Univ. Park Cenler, Irvine
Call Anytim e 833.0820
Laguna Beach
ON hill abo\•e ocean, perfec l
condition, 3 BR l ~I BA
modern with <lf'cks tor out-
door living, Low main.
tenance, ready to move in.
$37,500.
ENGLUND REAL ESTATE
318 ThaJia . ......,,
3 BR. Custom Bil, new. 2
Newport Heights
ELEGANT custom bu I lJ1
home like new. 3 bdrm~,
2 ha. Large mast<'r bdrm
wit h frplc. Extra largt
living & dining rm. New
cpts/ <lrps. kitchen bl tM.
elect gar dr. SE'e this betort
you buy $39,500 646-2414
Graham Rlty.
CHARMING custom
home like ne.,.,·. J Bdrm1.,
2 ha, Large master bdnn.
"'ith trplc. Extra Jarg~
living' & dining: rm. Ne1'f'
cpls/drp~. Kitchen bltD1,
elect. gar. dr. Stt UU.
before you buy. $39.500
GR.AHAJ\f REALTY 646-~14
FARROW REAi_.. TORS 644-1662 2790 Harbor 81\'d. at Adams ;'=::C::i:::i~~~~= 1 Yrs lease. $215. landscaped. O\'C'tS1zed dble
f :iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio I ~Q.16.l Open 'hl 9 P:\I ]1 !'\o JX'T~. 675-1034 garage. Call now. RENT BEATER LIOO WATERFRONT 642-5200 "IV!l!TE ELEPHANTS"
Ba., bltn kit. frplc, decks, Silverado
2 car gar, vie"'" lndscpd, 1 _,,.,.~-------•I crpl, drps, under ground VERY, very rustic fixer;
util's. Room for 'Jge pool. upper. 3 br, raised r~1 $46,500 firm. By Owner, $4000 down, terms. $10,500.
494--0407 aft 12 noon. G4!J-2'206 '
4 BEDRM 2 BATHS APTS.-320 LICO NORO $22 450~-0"'""""'"' '""' ho""' [l' COMMERCIAL f or only $17.850 large mod. • $110.000 Price ""'i1h 7'/o l!'il J "Cash" .. se!l them lhru
LOT + ern 3 bedroom, 2 balh & 1'.D. 6 Beaut, !urn. un ils; 1 Daily Pilot Classified t62-4471 ( :::: J 546·1103
1llage Real Estate
tam.ii ho Doubl Firt>Plil cc. bltn rlln.t:c & oven, fi & -1 2 IEDROOM bl y F mt'. c garagf', carpC'1s <lrapes, patio dble ' car garages ut1 . ruon1 . 3 BR + Family Rm. tns, A heat, carpets & • . 80 r t. on swimming beach. Drl·am l'""''· l•"'' f··-•lly RENTAL UNIT d T g~•ge. Near So. Coast ·~ 0 " rflpes. 01al monthly of \\'ill consider trade for boat rn1 o\'eri;ized kitchen bullt. sfl'il -Odt}}A ~r.tr $19,500 $HO pays cYerything, Sub-Plaza. s27.750. or maximum $85,000 lge. 4 in~: lirf'placc. 3 Bd~u; No ~ }."' a -Q.ft
l{t"rE''ll your chenr,. t.o ml1 on Jow do"'n payment Roy McCardle Realtor BR. house. J rlO\\'n 1e rm 11 RV11.lliible V
Rail £1t1t1,
Gtntral
lnvest in your future -aJld move into this charmf'r. 18lO Neii•port Blvd., C.M. Bill Grundy, Rltr. 540-!7'20 · The Puttfe· with the Bui/I-In Chuckle
1'1fs property ls locat~ Call ~1151, Heritage Real· 548-7729 83J Dover Dr .. N.B. &12-4620 I TARBELL 29SS Harbor A,partm.,,t1 far a•l• lft'
fr\ Co&la l>IC'sa buslnC'fi.~ tors (open C.\'C's. 1 I "'l~~~~::"::~~~!!!![!!!""!!!!"!'~~~!!!!!!!!"" O lleorronoe letttr• rif the
cUlllrlt't -it ha~ ti prei;· """"!"~~::'"-"!'!~:="!!!!!!! BEACH BARGAIN HELP .I TRANS"ER lour xron'lhled words h. 11 UN ITS Newport Shottl ctit incomr of !140.00 II LITTLE HOU.SE 126000 S 3 i: low to form four limple words. Closf' 10 bf'och. Full tJUe. per mu. and ha' irre!lt • 1 • • tep~ 10 ~an! · · )'Olm PROBLEr.·1
potential for rururr BIG LAND BR. 1~4 hll , Bltns. 21:1:1rg<1.r. \\? need ~ to kit • lo SPECIALISTS 1 LI AIY GI El'L I I Excellent :Yf'llr aroul\d f ro\\·th -at $19.500 ynu 1£a.1t•lde Cos!A i\lesa. ~>Oni Agr Good condition! \nJll'I ni1:1y be the Ol'lf' our p M I Income of Sl.000 mo. J4 otn't ml's • call no11·! CAYWOOD REAL TY bu;ytn: lire ivaiting lor•: roperty anagemen Garages. Only 8 years Old.
1obuild•duple:1:.f or$l9,j(lQ I w lk & L Real Estate $139500
you had better-huiry • .,.,.e 6306 "r· Coosi 11""'Y., NB a er ee STEPHENS & KAYE cftAHAi1 NfJ~L~·~ .E AL TORS ,,.,, .... , onO! Call • S48-l 790 00-0122 ANYTL'<E L E l A G I
2629 Harbor Blvd.
546-8640
OPEN EVES.
'TILL 8:30
W lk & L $27 950 211!3 w.,tcll!f Oriv. t-r-T'l"'-.-"=-i ~ UDO ISLE • M"ll q""'°'.I a er ee , 646-71il Opt>n 'lit 9 Pr.t Newport Beach •ddre11 I 11 I I' . ,. ~:e:.~~~i;(, :n~:.:u:
Rnllon N d MESA DEL MAR O\Armlnai; 3 nR, dlnlng/fam· >I land to yr. 211!. Owmr.
2790 lfarbor Blvd, a1 Adana 4 Bd 0 h ow~ t~1rms fi 4 Bedrooms 2 baths, family ily. CoY. t>811o. ?>1odem kit. R y N I O I ' An untalented poet pw-6t2-4091 d.,1.
56-Mru. Open 'Iii 9 PM nn, uge •mi ynn. irt-l'oom, itoubll' rnrng,., f>ro. ShoW! bcaut\lully. Extra Jg ._..,.,.....,,.....,..~--1: i slsted In 1ubmltti"" niattrlal i1 u ·11 (l-22 2) ~~·kldlnhlng 'b~1• 1"'1
1:1rakl fesslonal landscaping. AJ. ~tB. fenced )'ilrd. S.ll.900. .---I' I' I I h "• ru • ' B&rpin * NEW LISTING * ... ......., tc f'n ca 1rx' 1. ar . 1 JEAN SMITH Rl TR _ _ . •to a toug editor. Finally, at SSS.'150. 10~ dow11"1.
2 BR. dUJ)Jf!X • xlnt Joe, Pl'r· likf' ,YB.rd. MO-lraJ niost ne'v ~mil'. ari:c • 64S-Ji5.=i '::'.:======-·~the editor wrote him, '"for 833-8090 ~ hn:. Bkr. , ·
mil for 6 ..... .,in" guests. TARBELL 2955 Harbor hl·a~M • n d tillered pool. ~ E. 171h St., C __ -'_1·---1 [ 'heaven's sob, please curb Commercl1I
rv • -$34,:.00. No '"'"' to ""' $147'-B E E T A D $3.~.000. CdM BAYFRONT <'ran,, "~~~-~~'-~-l y0our Cc:;i.i:: th• t~11ekl•::Zci~..t Property 1SI I
George Williamson 3 Bd1n11 , 2 bathj;. 12 yr~rs OiJy~ 612.j166 t-:\"l'~. ·,1:..g:i.o~ 1
7 I* I I I I by f1Ulng In fh1 rn1Sllrtg word. OFFICE BLDG,
Realtor I 0111 ~·nrh 011 l;oih ~Jd1· .... 1 'i--,\C'RE-e 0 tJ NT Ry , A Month · · · --vou dev1lop from ttap No. 3 b•low. Net income S26.300
673-4350 645-.1564 Eves S1 29.,"0!), 1-:Sl'i\T'F:, J Bit 2 h~. J8X31J Prin1r 1111\1 3 Bl·~lr111~. hu11c a PR:!N f NW.18ER:f0 1 I 4 Single lcnan1 "AA/\" * TRIPLEX * Home Show Realtors pool, llor~rs OK Lo do"-n 1 fa1n1ly l'nl, rnlry hall, lr1rl(r-~ tfllE~S IN SQUA RES Price $270,tn:I
Eul.iide> C~ta ?olesa "1\rn1t'h&lr Houschunt lnJ:" or r.\ch11n.:r. On C' I a~ 1 rr10n1~ thn1nu1. P11y111enls Relllrns lg\" 10% on CNi h hiv.
All 2 R1t., J ~ baths 3.l.n E. Coast !11\1)',, cd,\1 j-j~~Tl' les~ lhfln renr :1.m-171.Q 6 ~~:C:~-!.~~ LETTERS I I I I I 'I I I I \V, R. DUBOIS INC. ·~I
f"ORTl.N co. 642.0000 675.n25 IT'S A bl't'C'ze .• Sf'!i your TARBELL 29S5 Harbor . . . • • • • • • * 545-7lli6 ... ..: ~ J --11.,~. C.M. ,,.,,,. Piiot Won! AtfJ lt&w For "'" t em """" ISO. fl ems wl!h '"'" ud,_DaU, O•ily Pilol Won: A .. h•"" l SCR. AM-LETS ANsw-.J s IN CLASSIFICATION Loo A""" wan! ad b a Ii!!!! I .,.,.·,..-..,,..-!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ '.!bcr~g~llns~.!'!aknw~'.:_· ----· Ir)' the Ptrn,, Pinehf'r PllQI Claulfied. "2-{i678 b1rtalnr plcn. · ER !:& Investment -• I ~-------------------~~;.:::;.:;;;;::.:;:__ ___ .
Tutsday, Ftbr11ary 23, 1~71 OAILV PILOt 21
14"1..__I -·~_·::t·_,,J~I r..,,., l~I -.. , ...... !~I -· .. -1~1-"'~ l1!11·-"'-l[!]l-"'-l[!]l ..,--"""' ... l~l-... -lr!l 1C;;o;m;m;;er;c;Io;l;;;;;,;;;;;1,B;u;s;,J;,.;,;,;;;;;;~~~1 :H;o;u; ... ;;;U;n;fu;r;n.m~~305;1 Houu1 Unfurn. 305 Aptt. Fum. 360 Apts. Fum. 360 Apt. Unfum. 365 Apt. Unfum. 365 Apt. Unfurn.
Property lSI Opportunity 200 1 ~--,....-----11 ----....,.----1-:..;.;::;.;;;..;.:, ___ ...;;;:.1·:----,....---Gtn•r•I Fountain V•lley B•lboa Peninsula Huntington S.ach Costa Meu Costa Mesa Fountain Valley
CHAru.IJNG Ll1Una Beach * * * '"::'.°"'~"'='==°"""""""':-:-:-I ,-.,,,,-~::-"'.':-:--,,.,--1-,-,,_,.,...._,---,,...,-''iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 11 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.l---ALLM;V---stores & apt. on Coast Hwy. MARK C. TYLER FREE RENT BOOK 4 BR/2 Ba, bltins, dbl gar, YJ::A.Rl.'i -3 nn1, 2 ba.BEAU'l'lFUL 1''URN. APTS.1 1 AU.NEW
Lot 80' X llll' to alley. 20521 M inervo Ln. DROP IN AND crp~/dcps. incl utll. 319 Fernando St, ll<G-$165. Qul<t, priv. patio, NEW NEW NEW HACIENDA HARBOR VALLEY PARK
Fully leased. Owner wUI Huntington Baich BROWSE 213: 31"M721 B:tlboa 673·:>!1ffi 2 wardrobts, trplc, dressing APARTMENTS
finance a~ 7.S% . .Bkr. You are the winner ol 3 bedroom, 2 bath., Fireplace, Huntington Be•ch C d 1 M rm, k>cked ~p. ear. Pool. VILLA CORDOVA •.. opens new doors for R.ealommlcs Corp. 615-6700 2 ticketa 10 the carpets •rut dr11pes, double Orona ' er Sauna. Rec: nn. Quiet Adult living ••. YOUNG FAMILIES
Condomlnlumt Western National aarage, big fenced yard. 2 BR, 1\1 ba Condo, Sl60 BACHELOR apt, 2 blk! from l'P..Ol Keelson Ln, (l blk \V, 1 BR. Apts $160
for ••I• 160 Boat & Marine Rent S2i'l5 per month, maybe per mo. • BR, 2 ba house Olg Corona, 1 adlt, no pets. of Beach Blvd, on Slater). QUIET~AFE i\LL UTIL. PAID 2 BR. Garden Aptt Sl75
Show lease with OPTION. SZIO. per mo, Call Mr. SllO. Yrly. 642--8520. * S42-7S43. 40 Unit Adult t & 2 BR'a. Sl..50-$170. Shag 2 BR. Townhouses $185
U I V at 111<' WALKER & LEE, f ,~~~':a1~·~-"~· -"-~-~~·-· _,,C_•_•...,.• t ;,:;B:;R:.., .;:,"cba"-• .:.c;;t::.,=.:;Pool~-. ~So-.l l--,,-.B;;;R,-, •su;i<·O'.pe:=,::m::oo:;th;:---Apartment Co~lex carpets, blt-ina, encl gar. 3 BR. Apartment $210
n qu• acant-Urgent ANAHEIM ol Hwy, Adults, M ..... lnduding utilities 1 & 2 BEDR MS 2 Bedrm, 2 ba, "flBVRON" C Realton 3 BR hse • wJw thruout, s165 mo. 673-8213 Tradewinds Rlty 847-85U E 1 ·n1 11 be 1 ages. swimming Pool. Ne.,.,•Jy
Townhouse, ready to move ONVENTION disposal drps patio No n eria1 ng "" I a P ea8· decor. Beaut. landscpd.
in. lmmaculale thtuouL As~. CENTER 2700 HARBOR BLVD. cali 962-85781 : r WANTED; Mature. quiet I WAIJ< to beach, deluxe Utt. Dl!COrating thiJ lovely, Adulis, no pets.
Pre.school center. Adult pool,
Children's pool, Priv patios.
Elec kitchens Wall to wall cl~ts & cMpets. 2 play.
grounds. Carports A ltor"· ....
1ng $2S,OOO. Make oiler. ' February 20th thru 28lh ___ A~T'..l,A~D~A~M~S~---1 ;~!>';;;"~· ;;;;;;;-ii;;:--;;;0;'-',-"~0;;; '"''Oman to rent small, cozy l & 2 BR, pool, 220 12th spacious apt will be a joy, 241 Avocado e 646-0979 Please call 642-5678, ext. 314 LEASE New small 3 br, den, 2-Cllr tum apt. 673-5784 St. & 21915th St. e Special cabinet space
Ship Ahoy! 11 bet'<l>ee.n 9 and l pm to da.im garage, hltn~ F~~ & Costa Mts• DELUXE Bachelor Units • •Lock garages w/ lg stor I ZIE:Z=:ll:SZZZ~
rantutic sailor·.. delight. your Uckets. (North County HOrf.-E & BUSINESS landscaped, ....... ~'""" Walk to Ocean. Util pd .• Bm a:il • Lndry . Palio!I
Nautical 2 bedrm 2 ba + toll·ftee number is 540·1220) Irvin• REMARKABLY LINDBORG CO. ~2519 e D\V/dlspl e Huge gas stve
exttl. "Captaina Cabin" • a* * k 2 Bedrm house convuted in. NEW 3 BR, 2 BA, crpts. EXTii:J~~~~~LY 1_L_l_do_l_al_e ______ : ~~a~ :~07~~~ing *BRAND NEW*
1725' S. Euclid St.
{just south ot Warner In
Fountain Valley)
Phono (7141 ~71$
Huntington Beach
m11st lee .•. only $23.500. Newspaper Dealership lo Oentisl'i office + 3 bed. drps, hid comm. poo! & BEAUTIFUL BEACH Apts, Furnished l carpets drapes
For L.A. Hec•ld E•am,·-r ,·.. rm house, $425 per month -.. 1••1 ~ier '·mily " h I G G ,
LA COSTA APTS. l & 2 BR.
Bltns, swimming pool &: gar·
age, AU util pd, $150 lo $170
mo. Adults no pets. FHA 221 02 .... " t bo h l"A R'ddi R alt '""" '""' ,--,.., ... ' Val D'iser• Garden Apts Br.. Bae e or. arage. AS & \YATER PAID
-Corona de! Mar. Be In busi. ~~ · """" 1 e, e or, $260. 17662 Manchester . Adull.5, 00 pets $200, $225, $250. 320 Nord. Mo. to Mo. From $140. 354 Avocado: Cl\f. 642-9708 $21,00G FulJ price, 3 bedrm, ness for )'Ourself. Cash de. ~~-·--~---= 833-8210 Putting green, waterfall &, _71_<_, -"-'-""--'------2323 Elden Ave, crvt
1% ba, washer, dryer, re. posit req'd. Write Box RP, 1 BR cottage kids/pe~ •• $75 L•guna Beoch ,. IN Ba k B I 1r· bl R&O stream, IIO\l'ers t;vcrywhere, Newport Beach ear c ay HARBOR GREENS * FRESH AIR ig., ln • crpls, drps, 2662 Lincoln, Anaheim. 1 BR home, uUI paid ••.. $100
3
B 2 Ba 45• pool, rec. room, billiards.•----,.-----Ste i\fgr. Ted \Voodhead
loo much tor the money!! GENERAL ON SALE LI· 2 BR kids/pets OK····•· $U8 $265. BEAUT. r, ' BBQ's. Sauna, furn.-unlurn, 1HOUSE trailer·l br nlS n10, ~0032 GARDEN & STUDIO APTS \Valk 3 blks to Beach!
Larwin Realty, Inc. QUOR LICENSE WANTED 3 BR fenced kids/pets •• $150 ~stom1 bit. ~~74•4•9 frplc, Singles, 1 BR. 1 BR + dtn, util paid. $60 deposit req'd. ~!!I!~ l&ch. 1, 2, 3 BR's. from $110. Beaut. bli:-3 BR apt. w/w 2l562 Btookh""-1, H.B. Ora·go Cou•ty bo--"de 2 BR hoc•• ra••h , •••• , $165 v1.tw. mmac . ...,..... eves. 2700 p t W C •t t d bit ... a " " JUI.LI ""' "" 2 BR, From $135. See ill No pets, no singles under e erson ay, "'. crp s. rps, ns ex~pt
546-5411 • •nytime restaurant. TI4/839-6770 3 BR, den/pool ••······ $185 lido Isle 2000 Parsons Rd., 642-8670 25. 548-47"19. FROM $135 546-0370 retrig. $225. No pets. 536-17U
. NE\Y Beauty Salon STAR*LET 776-7330 -3-B-,-.-,-.-,-.-Larg--,-.. -t-lo-Bet\l.oeenHarbor&Newport,10B~A~CH=E~LO~R~~;,-p_v_L_N~.~B·.I Spanish Carden Apts, l --~.~N~E~W=L~Y~--1 LGE 2 BR, bltns, 6' bar,
E'.XECUTIVE Condominium equipment for sale, 4 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, $450 M y 1 2 Blk N. 19th. home. Empl man, pvt e.ntr Conveniently Located DECORATED Close 10 ocean, f'ncl garage.
in ?.fesa Verde. Next to stations, 6 d'"'•er chairs available immed. Close to · o. ear y. & de•k. 1140. "'° '"°", 2 All 11 'd 117' • Golf Cou 2 St 3 ·" 673-2684 545-2512 ... J'Sa"'.>W':I l & Bedrooms QUIET 2 BR's. Gar & Pool. u 1 pai • a mo. •
rse. ory 492-2979. xlnt scOOols. $225 Per mo. ' • * * * 6'12·5221. BuLlt·ins c-r,, d-•. "dul" ••ly, no BSJO.R
17
S
66
135 mo, I a r •It . Br/211' bath5, Intercom, ,. h 1 t and 1 t th Mesa V•rde El p M A .,. .,. " u .. Cw;tom cab I ne 1 r y in BEAUTY Salon, new equi~ \\JI 8 as mon . s ----------1 uerto es• pis * $25 \VEEK & UP * Carpels & drapes Pf'l!I. * 642-S<H2 I-====~===-Kitchen & Bath. Spacious ment, reasonable to right rent req., + $lOO deposit. 4 BR, 2 ba, fam rm, bltns, * * * * MESA l\fOTEL Enclosed Gar11ges WALK TO OCEAN
<lining &: living room. It's p11rty, ~7-9164, 846-5753. Call agent S46-414l 2 car attach. gar, pool. Nr. 1 Btdroom Apts. Kitchen, TV 's, maid service. Pool & Recreation Rm, • LRG 1~ BR . s!udio.: patio, 1 BR. Crpts, dl'P!I, 50me w/
Yours for the price l35.500 Money to loan 240 3 Bedroon1, 2 bath, patio, all schl5, children Ok. $32j Heated pool, 646-9681 Sec: HiO \V. Wilson pool, 1:-11 ba + P\\dr 1'1!1: frplc & patk>s. $120.$150/per
• Will tell furnished. See $230 pr. month or lease. mo lse. 837....st'il7 $155 incl. utilitielli. ~!so furn. 2 BR upper. Walk to beach. lrg closet & &IOtll.'l"e. Sl55 mo. Adults.
at JOU Club How;e Circle, 1 t TD L S60 cleaning security Newport Beach Pool & Recreation area. S250 incl ulil. Yearly. Avail & $65, 2925 i\lendoza Dr,, LlNDBORG co. e 536-2579 54~799 for appt CaU An S oa n deposit. 645--0249 after 71 ----------Quiet Environment. Off 311 213 I 447•9443 C~t.
Adair. 1_ INTEREST p.m. ask for Dan Lee or PARK Lido 3 BR, 2'i BA. street parking. No chlldre.t, LO. . BR Duplex. Stove & WALK TO BEACHll •o c•: n•91 d VELY fum 2 Br lov.·er ' LOVELY NE~V 1 & 2 8R. I p 166 ' .,.._"" ays. Crpl5, drps, blt·ins. no pets. · · Refrig. No children. !'IQ pets.
ncom• roperty 2nd TD Loan . 3 _BDRf\1'., Family rm., ~k Fireplace. S27J. 6-12-$797 apt.: now until June. s10:;1 per mo. \Valer & Crpts, drps. Dishwaaher'!I,
20. AC'. Orange Grove, like yard. Costa Mesa. Kids University Parle 19:J9.1961 l\1aple AV<!. ABBEY REALTY 642·38."lll REALTORS gardnt>r furn, 912·A \Y, 17th 7~ Palm * 347.3957
R1ven;1de area. 6 yr. old Term5 based on equity. OK, brk., $200 a month. NO ;;.;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;.;;;;:;; Costa !\lesa San Cltmente SINCE 1945 St. 5-18-(i9.~ BEACH BLUFF Apts
trees. Good income. Xlnt 642-2171 54S.06T1 FEE. 54G-1720. $22' ·~~'!'!!"'!!'~~!"9~~1 :;;w,iC;{7,";;;;:;;:;;7ill;;;: 673•4400 New cozy 1 BR, fpl, crpt, NE\Y 2 BR, 2 Ba, dishwuh· -c••r J-t•c lutu-•o-2 BR., 1 bath·········· a NE\" "ltG DELUXE ~mot:' *WALK lo Shop'g • Atlrac ''' pool pa"· 8231 ~"-... " " .. ""· u .. ''" Serving Harbor area 21 yrs. 3 BURM.+ family rm., full ... ... • ,._...,., !~~~~~~~~~~ drps. fenced yd, gar. PPts • • uu. ~. p~ciauon. Sacrifice S70.000. Sattltr Mortg•g• Co. dining rm., built-ins., brk. 3 BR., 2% baths······ $285 BACH-furn $139.50 1 BR. furn. 4Adults.1 · k children \l·elcome. Sl75. M2-8477 or 847·3957•
IO '0 Down, bal. 9 yn. May 336 E. 17th Street $390 a month. NO FEE, 3 BP...&. din. rm. ...... $325 1 BR.furn $150 SlJOlmo. Phone 92-63l3· FAIRWAY &15.2413 $140
tradeO\VNER .. ,3,.3 Ne\vport, 54()...1720. 3 BR. &. lam. rm. •····• $325 2 BR-furn $180 Apt. Unfurn. 365 ASK about our discount plan!
.,., 4 BR.., 2~ baths ........ $325 VILLA APJS $170 • 2 Br, den, frpl.c; 2 BR bi•'--cash Fast •' LIVE al the b<aoh yeao-UNFURN AVAILABLE General , cedoo. Cpl" drp" P•i>o, , orp", d.,,., wo, ''"" round tor only St25 ADULTS ONLY, NO PETS d' h · o 1o 0001 2l3 port, $25 Move.In Allow· 4 UNITS, 1 )T old. Corner
Jot, 1·3 BR, 2 SA, !rplc;
2.2 BR, 2 BA, 1 nicely 1st & 2nd Trust Deeds
Jurn. 2 BR, l BA. 4 pvt FREE APPRAISALS
gar. C. J\.1. $765, mo. inc. Costa Mesa Investment
$69.950. P. 0. Box 212, CdM .§48..7711 anytime
lots for Sale 170
4 CE:\lETERY lots. Blue Money Wanted 250
Spruce section, Harbor Rest TEACHERS need financing
i\lemor!al Park S 7 O O. for 2nd trust deed on income
~8-307S prop. 968-7510 or 644-7222.
Mountain, Das•rf,
Rtsort 1741 J~ Housel for Rent 'fl!-KLAMATII River, 14110 ac
'Ol1 paved rd. Xlnt. fisllingl~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;; & hunting. dub privil. 2411 .
mi'1 E. of Eureka oft inters Houses Furnished 300
5, ~VUI M'.ll for orig, inv. G ~ I c. C. Ferrell, 1m Orange enera Ave, C.i\I, 548-3077 1-LAN--D-LO_RO_s ___ Q_WN_E_R_S_
R1tal Estate Wanted 184 PROPERTY MANAGERS
-'---------IWe ~µ refer tenants to you
HOMES NEEDED tree 0t charge . . . M'"Y
desirable tenants on our
F t \ , lh waiting list. or tr~ns erees. \ e are e ALA Rentals. • G45'J900
exclusive agents for a na·l==--=---,.,,..-.,.--
tlonal corporation. Call JocaJ $100 -Attrac mobile home,
agent before you llst-847 .6612. bltns, cpt!, drps, sngls ok.
\VANT to lease or buy 3 or Blue Beacon* 645-0111
4 br house. O.C.C. & Cdill $125 . 2 Br. cottage, Utll pd.
Hi·School area. Principals Nr heh & bay. Ideal cpl.
only. 61a-7415 Blue Beacon* &45-0111
[ f in;uicial
l\fJNI Home -just big enough
I ~ !or you. Only SSJ.
• ALA ftcontals e 645'-0ll l
Costa Mesa
1---------a J. S p g. ol' 0-c.>U 1 ; 700 u • 530 O•-ALA Rentals • 64j..J900 1760 Pomona 642-2015 * * * 2 & l BR's 592-5227 ance. ,..., tica; ,,,.~.
$160 . 2 Br. bltn.~. cpts/drps, * Studio Apt $110 MR. D. l . N.ATIONS Private patio, pool • lndlv. ATIRACT. Like new. l BR. CHEZ ORO API'S
palio "" pool. Pet ok. 929 La Mirada laundry tac. Dsh\Vhr, crpts, rlrps, bltns. 8234 Atlanta, 1·2 BR, pool ,
Blue Beacon* 645~0Tll * 1 Bedroom $130 Laguna Beach Nea r orange Co. Airport,, Htrl pool. All util pd. Only private gar11ge, Washers,
"SINCE 1946" MAPLE ST, NEAR 19'TH You arc the winn~r ot ucr. Adult5 onlv, Slacl. Inquire~ 307 Avocado 1~"~"'~'~'·-'·~536-=~'°~"°"": _536-="="=J BUNGALO\V Retreat, 1 Br " • g ,,,~ """·' NE\V LOVELY GARDEN home, yard & gar. $90 1st Western Bank Bldg 645-0349 2 tickets to the 20122 Santa Ana Avt;, nPt ·, ...,......,".,.,
ALA Rentals • 645-3900 Universily Park SINGLES SlJO all ulil. exc@pl Western National f.lgr, l\trs. Joachlm, Apt J.A •DELUXE l & 2 BR's. Furn APT. Lrg patiG & encl
Days 833-0101 Nights elec, modern bar, cte. Boat & Marine 546.6215 01 unturn . Bltns, crp!s, garden,. 2 BRbt' 2 BA.1Shag $200 • 4 Br. on 1., ac. Bltns,
cpl!!, drps, gar. fncd yd.
Blue Beacon * 64S.OT 11 4 BR., 2~ baths ........ $100
"',INI Home-perfect for just TuM!e Rock 4 BR, vu , • $475
you! $8.'l. 3 BR., 2~ baths ........ $.150 ALA Rental5 e 645-3900 ----~----· -c 3 BR. 2 ba. !am. rm .•• $340
$9() • l Br Duplex. Bltns, gd 3 BR. 2 ba. home ...... SJQ
area. Ideal older cpl.
Blue Beacon* 645..()lll
R,;\RE 2 Br + den. new
cpl !!love, gar, child. $16.>
ALA Rentals e 64S.3900
$145 -2 Br, bltns, cpts/drps,
chlldreh & pets welcome.
Blue Beacon* 645-0111
JACKPOT-2 Br, RIO. crpts,
drps, yrd, kids & peUl. $130
ALA Rentals e 645-3900
Corona dtl Mer
Harbor View
Homes
3 bedroom, 2 bath5, luxurious
carpet & drapes thMJout, all
buiJf.Jns including self clean.
ing oven, fenct'd yard, green
(ired hill
REALTY
Univ. Park Center, Irvine
Cali Anytime 833·0820
Housts Furn. or
Unfum.
University Park
310
3 BR/2~~ ba. 2-Story, bltins,
frplc . Clean! Club
pr ivileg es. Avail
Immediately! $ 3001 m ()
546-72&1
Duplexes Unfurn. 350
Newport Beach
belt & park \1ith cabana & 2 DOORS from Bch. 4 Br
Show l ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I dcp< pool <•cd•ns crpts, rps, tns, enc gar. Adul!.!l only. 1!17S Parsons " • ._ · Near beach , 21662
'""""'Font). M" apt. No. " ,,,., EL CORDOVA Apts N.1ss.1u PAL.\IS, 171 E. Brookh""t SI, Apt B, 3. ANAHEIM 22nd St. CM . 642-364J. 646-0841
•DELUXE 1 & 2 BR's. Furn CONVENTION 2on Ch•rl• St. "2 '470 NE\VLY DECORATED 2 d bl
I Bl' .. CENTER V"'I -. LrT: 2 Br wl gar. $130 BR apl. wlw, rps, tns, or WI Urn. ns, crp .... , Be sure to see thetie Charm. disposal, laundry spa~. No d"'.'1, pool, garden & . Febru""" 20th 1hnl 28th Dispos:i.1, \\'Sier pd. 2176-D .,. -., ing l & 2 BR Spanish style, Pl 1,· £ "~"AT"" pets. 962-8j78 !or info N.As.5AU PAL."1S, 177 E. Please call 642-5678, ot. 314 ace.n a .. ve. u.w-1 ~ C 642-364• prestige apts for adulls. Ex. l BR, crpts, drp&, refrig., 22nd St., \\I. ~. bet\l·een 9 and 1 pm to claim tra lrg liv rms, shag cpt'd &: * LRG 1 BR. apt. All new hltns. s13;, mo. incl u!il.
SI4C l BR. $175 · 2 BR. your tickets. (North County drp'd thruout. Dwhrs, spac crpt,, drps, tile & paint. Trade\\'ind~ Rlty 8'17-8511
Ul.it pd. Pool. Garden Liv. toll·free number is S40.l220J 1 t be 1 1 Bltns. $145/mo. 546-.Q.151. r ------~-~-·• . Adi 1 7~ W * * * c o5e s, au · poo • rec. 998 El Can1ino, C.:\f. lfiE. 2 Br., 1~ Ba, Sludin. mg. ts, no pc•. 'IU • room, ('nct gnr.
18th SI CM
:
::::::::::::::::.::::::::: LR~QUIET CLEAN Patin. 11dulls, no petJ. $15(1. " • ..,.. • 4JO Ht1nlington S!. * DELUXE BR $165. 2 BR, 1~3 BA. GE kilch.
Bachelor apt~. $.15 \11kly !: RENTAL FINDERS Park-Like Surroundings Adl!s. E·sidc, Cill. :rl.~·6132 AVAIL no1v $159. 2 BR. a U
up. Furn. incl ulil. Monthly FrM To Londlordi QUIET • DELUXE BRAND new 3 hr downslair5 exlra.,. Pool. Kids ek. Furniture avail. 968-7510 terms avail. 998 El Camino. 1.2 & 3 BR APTS $27a. T11,·o 2 hr up!!ta irs $175.
54&-0451 645.QI 11 Also FURN. BACHELOR 642-4905 or 213/69.1-2542. 347 $:i0 moving 111low, New 2
e BEAUTIFULLY clean 1 •JJW.1t ... Coide M ...
&. 2 br apt.s. Pool. Crpts •
& dfl)S. Adults only. $130 Just for Single Adults
10 $160. 642-2181. SOUTH BAY CLUB
NICE 1 BR. Dplx. Quiet. APARTMENTS
Sep, by garage~. Adults Newport Beach
over 30. No pcls. 548-1021 8RO Irvine Ave.
FURN B h I & 1 B (flvine and 16Ch)'
.ac •or • r. (714) 445--0550 Exceptionally nice I
2TTO Newport Blvd., CM Balboa Island
P1v patios * Htrl Pools \Voodland Pl., C.M. Br from $135. Cpts/dfl>S,
Nr sl-.op'g • Adul!s only "THE GABLES" bltns, rncd patios, play
MARTINIQUE APTS 2 DR, l \; BA w/ gu. 11511. ""· 8'"'7277•
1m sanla Ana Ave, Ci\I Adl!s. Cpts, drps, fncd yd. Huntington Harbour
Mgr. Apt 113 646-SS4l 2437·0 Orange Ave. 636-4120 DECORATOR'S 2 br, 2 ba, * 2 BR. $145/mo. Pool.· frptc. Waterfront w/35 '
Conv . .i;hop'g. No children. boat slip, $500, 714/846·29'l9.
313 E. 17th Pl. 548-65.12 r ~~==-~~-~~·I L~guna Beach $90. AV AIL 3/1. Non.snioker, 1 -~--------1 Adult, stv. rclrlg, drapes. OCEAN VIEW. Lrg Bachelor
545-4536 & l BR apts. Cpts, drps,
Business
Opportunity
pool only steps away. This 2 b 1 d S30 WK • 1 per, w/ kit BA YFRONT. l'lf"ar l'K"w •
3 Bedroom • 2 bath, beautiful home only 1 yr. old. Yrl~ =r ~~~2'4~rp' rps. $l'.i. l\faid &er, linen.~. 1V Patio, aandy t-ch. 3 hr. 2217 Jtarhor. near U'tlson 2 Br. Children ok. No pet!!.
200 hardwood floors. dining Convenient to Fashion Is-l ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ii!!!ii!!!!!i!!!!!!!I & tele. Seaiark l\lotcl, Y~arly $400/mo. 67l--5299 2 BR. l\.i BA STUDIO !ltd pool, Cp1s I drps, 126
blt-in5, patio. Walk'g dist.
to town . JOO Clift Dr,
Laguna Beach. 4!H-5498. room, built·ins. dish11·asher. land &. all shopping. $350 pr. I' 2301 Npt Blvd. 646-7415 eves TO\VNHOUSE. Sl40/mn. ~fon!e Vista . &12-5790
Lido Isle 1----------disposal, fireplace. forced month on lease, Avail. I •-~-""'"-llW'I QUIET, studi03 $l15, 1 BR's, B•lbo• Poninsula •Heated pool·Adult1 only NE\V Spacious I & 2 BR, DISTRIBlITORS NEEDED air heating, patio. Near .....,,,.,,. e N bit t d •t·-h '·L PI•··· phooo 1125, No chldrn or pets. o pets-AdJ. tn shnpp;og ns, crp s, tp5, garage. * * WATERFRONT * * HUNT'S "SNACK·PACK" shopping -lease for l~i ".,,.._ ...,. """""" 644-2013 Eves. 2135 El1den Ave. O.f, Iii~ 2 BR, F~t·., bal-o" 315 Immed. occupancy. 540-1973 ' -3 BR, 2 BA, "'· din New multi·miUion dollu years or more $285.00 mo. .,. ~ ~" " o:A~ "~it -•
advertised snack pack \Valer paid. 3061 Loren Lane J Br, 2 ba nr bch. Gar, Apts. Furn. 360 mgr Ap 6· E. Bay. Winter ratc11 $175 * FREE 1-0-'~~=-~~=·=~----rm. $400 mo. Lease. 67J.8886
product!!'. NEED No W ! -Tel. 545-8609 for appt. balcony. Children. pets ok. FURN apt, smnll bachelor, monthly. Yearly avail. ln· RENTAL SERVICE * BEAUTIFUL 1 & 2 BR. Mesa Verde
R II bl . \V~hr/dry"· 1350 m 0 • General All ulil, Adults, no pel5, quirt> at apt. No. c, 673-1521 ,.. __ IA M••• • Hu·n·ogt•o Contemporary Garden Apt.s. -------I e a e men or v.·omen 111 ATTRAC l br, Eside $125. .....,,, "°" " u p r I 1 I $14--·
Your area to service fast. Single ""rson. Innu ire 2645 673-54;16, c• .. ., • ..,.. $85 mo, S2j 1 e curl t Y · or 5-18-7711, Beach e N~WJIOrt Beach 11 ios, rp c:i;, poo • 3 • I 2 BR UP5lairs. Gar. Newly .. -.. ., ...... "'...,,, •••• &16-8464 $160. Call 546-5163 deco Ch.Id k N ti moving coin operated Weslminslerevt's&wknds. Costa Mes• * * 1r Corona del Mar l -2·3 BR AP'I"S. r. 1 0 ' 0 pe ·
products in comp. '"Y Dana Po'rnt HELEN LAMBERT • 1 BR. Heated Pool. No Ask About our DISCOUNT SllARP lq: 1 & 2 Br, $150/mo. 557·8400.
x e cured 1 0 ca t 1 on s .i----------121s Bucknell: .1 hr k fam 2358 ''A" rwt~. Crpts, drp!. 126 l\fonle PLAN. Call 636-0220. rpts/drps, blms. quiet bldg. Newport Beach
coninirrcial or factory, Part FOR lease 3 BR., cptd. drps, plus huge rump1u1 rm. $250. Vi~t11 Ave. 642-57!l0. -No pct~. rnfant ok. $130 Drive by. Call 54a-6671 for Mariposa East VILLA MESA APTS. <•"._>:$1r_:SO":·..'"C'l).":.".97<:2'~._'"".''::·:>268~2'_. I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; t or lull lin1e. 6 10 12 hours lge yd, gardt'ner, 2 patios., L H'll * 1·BR. Quiet. adul!s, no ~~""' 2 BR. Priv patio. H!r:I pool. -
per "'·eek. no 5et1ing. CASH $163. mo. S\50. deaning/. app!. You :~cu~~ \l'i,nn~r or Pf'ls. 2.r12 Elden. 5j7-7936. 'Q.. 2 car cncl'd gar, Chl!rlren ATTR.AC like new 1·2 BR. MARINER SQUARE
REQUIRED SGOO to $1.·197. breaka~e drl'IOsit 496-{i2(l!I. 3 BR, lge ft'nc'd yrl . .$175. Aft 5 • &16-2768 • 11,·elcome, no pc!s pJeasr.! Lg pool, cpts, drp~. displ. APARTMENTS
\\'rile for more infor·mallon: Laguna Beach Children !: pets OK. 204.J wa'at'e;ckrn'''N•'0t,·'"'onal S~lALL sleeping &. .~i!!ing $1 65 mo. 7HI w. \\'ilson, u!I pd, 1884 l\tonrovia. Annovnce~ the avaUabUlty et
Instant Food Supply. P.O. President Pl. &16-U45 or room. restroom facil, $60 ON TEN ACRES 646-1251 _5'_·~8-0=336~· ==---= 2 & 3 BR units for adults
Box 3155, Torrance, Calif. * STUDIO COTIAGE * &16-62jj, Boat & Marine mo, S20 secorily. 646-&164 1 &: 2 BR. Furn. & Unfum. It' BEAUTIF1JL l & 2 BR. de8iring to live amld1t beau.
9050J. Inc!Ude p h 0 n e FURNISHED 3 BR, 2 ba, lge k1!chen bhn, Show FittplaCtos I priv. patios. MESA VERDE C.Ontemporary Garden Apt.... 1y by the sea in the pres·
-number. Artl5tic stud io cottage al 2-car &arage, cov'd patio. at the AVAIL now, 2 BR furn. Pool. Pools Tt!nnls Contnt'I Bkht. 2 BR, cpl~. drps, bllns, wash/ Patio11. Ir p I cs, pool. tigious \Yestclilt area or
1,-,.,.--------·I Victoria Beach. All v.'OOCI Jge back yard. $260 lease ANAHEIM Rec nn, Good 1'?,~~~No 900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-26ll dry attach. Locked g11r & $145--SJ.60. call 546-5163. Newport Beach.
AAA paneled, s.kylights, !rplc. only, 9.59 Cheyenne St, CONVENTION pels or children. ~J0£1, (MacArthur nr Cout Hwy) stor, Lrg CIOS('tli. Nr. shp'g. CANDY AND 1185 >I h ~A" N\I\• LRG l BR w/w Cl'J)tg, bltns, l l.50. Owner c.in ... ..an • .,,.,....... • QUIET 2 hr. Adults only, FROM $230 · ' ont ~ CENTER d 1 1132 ,,....,..,,.,,," .... __,., 110 pets. Bltn~. crpts & drps. For lnformation phone Mr.
SNACK SUPPL V ilflSSION REALTY 494.0i31 New Lrg J BR 2 BA. tarn rm, February 20th thru 28th ~e~l u. 164~ pets. . PARK Your car & walk. I ii DELUX 3 BR, 2 bath S135. ~100 Robert M. Buckley, lwlanag.
WE ESTABLISH San Clemente 2 fpl's crpts. drps, fenced yd, Please call 642-5678, ext. 314 Y nr ocean, nr shopplne. New Townhsc. BlfM, dshw5r, NR 2 BR 1" BA c er. at Ctt4) 645.0252 0 .. v.•ri•-ALL ROUTES L-l & 2 Br All elec 2 L-new • n · pt~. · • "" 2 c gar. Pets & children wel. ....,tween 9 and 1 pm tel claim · apts. 2 BR, ba, ....,am patio, pool, cluhhs, $225. d-•, stv-Owhr. oar. No to The Oflice of the Man-(No selling Involved) YEAR·ROVND lease come $l8;J 64.s.Zlll your tickets. (North County Adlts, Pool-putting grn celling, lrplc, many x~. 54j..5270. ·•· agor, J.larincr ~~uare Apt,,
CASH REQUIRED heautiful beach hou!I@, ==~---~~~-• toll·lr~ nwnber is 540.12201 Bahin l\1nr Apts, MS-0~92 $235 & $250 at 330 1 ,3~Lg-8~.-2~8~---1-r pets. 766 \V_ \Vilson . 642·7958 lil4 lrvi~ Av~ NB ca.!
P111n one •.••.•••••.. S9T.i.OO Ou Island ing view. Private SHARP, Attractive 2 hr h~. * * 1r ** NICE 1 & 2 BR. Trailers. MargUerite, 6 7 5-4 8 7 3 r 8• a, new cps, Dana Point e. · •
looo ·1 (C" ru St•• I fenced/·-', f""'lc. beamed • drp5, no pell!'.. children ok. 92664. Plan TWO .......... $ ,_,uo con1n1un1 y ~P s ovres J'IU ... s9· & 133 E 16th SI ~8-7ll83 PECTACULAR-;;;:;;:;;;;;.11 """"'"'"""""""""'""'""'""'' Plan lhree ........ S32)t).00 San CJl'mente. On the eeiling, s1ove &: ref, Elec pd l BR duplex util pd •••• $75 a up. · ' ' Avail now. $165/mo. 54j.7245. s PECTACULAR ~anfrnl
-... be h four I \el f 1165. No ""Is. !>18-6680 , 1 BR pr1v cottage $75 No. ~z. CM. 642-12S:> UNIQUE MW 3 Br, 2 Ba, NEWLY d ........ r 2 BR, op••, I 2 BR 2 b I PARK NEWPORT • care c.:l!Cellent income for a few ac , e ' s, our ,,~ •••••• di hlt.n11 cpts/drps dbl gar """" "" v ew, ' a, • ove, free llvr overlkg the waler. hours weekly work. CDaylli & bedrooms, 313 baths , MATURE adults, 1 BR. 1 BR cottage ulil pd •••• $80 ATTRACTIVE E-1lde. Stu o • • · drps, bl!n11, 2.car garage, retrig, cpts &. drps, $225.
1 :tvenlngs). Refilling and CO!· galleria, family roo m, SOO. 2038 Wall1.~. ''A". 1 BR duplex tot/pet OK •• $90 apt. 2 BR.. l~ BA. Pool. S275. 673-6719, 673--6904 $160 673-7909 837-5370 7 pools, 7 t!!:nnln cts .$750,000
)ectlng money from coin '>P· 5tudio. Fu rnished or 548-3934 * 962-3448. 1 en guest house util pd $90 No pets. 6"16-6610. Cost• Mesa SHARP 3 BR, 2~ BA, lliOO East Bluff ~~1.Ff':r $i75 ~~ ::: ;
._1.ted dlspensera \vlthln a otherwise. D11ys 1714 J l BR Util Pd. Hntgn Sch . $45 $155. SHARP 2 BR. gq. ft. Studio apt, crplll, 1----------
, ~8.lified area. <Hanr:lles 44""9., 5,.7;,:i.,. nights ( 7 l 4 ~ 2c!ig~· 1 5~;il c~~l~k. ~~. STAR*LET 776-7330 Healed Pool. Adull11, no JX?I• HARBOR drps, nr So. Cst Plaza. $200 :~. ;;v;ooi:e&,b!,ec~ii
•name brand ca.ndy an df,....-~-·-.~.-.;----.,.. .,. J~OLlDAY PLAZA (leen ok). &t2.9fi20 1 mo. Drive by 973 Valencia. NEWPORT BEACH opt maid aer, cpts, drps.
cnacks). For petMnal in:l!r. Houses Unfurn. 305 E:e;;~~~~ .. frpl, bt'anl DELUXE Spacious l BR 1 BR. & 2 BR, 1~ BJ\. TOWNHOUSE Call 545--0718 Mgr. VIiia Granada Apts. Just N. of Fashion lst at
Vlew send name, add~&~ G I furn apt SIJ..i. He:ated pool. Cp1>, drn~; nr ihl>p11; pool, BEAIJT. Count.-.• Oub Villa. four bedrooms with b1.lcon. Jamboree & San Joaquin entr• ceil, patio, Adults onl", no A 1 kl N h'ld ., "' I ~ • .,,, c ..... tnd phone number to !\lull\. " mp e par ng. o c l ren Utl'. pd. 1884 Monrovia. 2 BR, 1 ~ BA, pvt patios. e~ auuvt; .-ow. nlCIVWlll Hills rd. 644-1900 for leuln&'
Ste,fo Dl1lrlbu!lng, Inc., 1~1 *-----.-----* pets, st4s. G42-8520. · oo pets. 1965 ~mona. 1 SR. Frplc. Patio. Bt'Am 22l7 Tlarhor, near Wll50n crpt, drps, bit-Ins. $260 mo. livln: & quiet $UTOUndlng Info. W~sl Broadwny, Anahehn. DON PATE $18:> • CLEAN, 3 br, r.rpts, CM ceilinJ!:!. 1 adll. No pet' e 2 en. 1 BA TOW!l.'HOUSE. For turther lnlo call Jeanne for family v.·ith i.'hlldrTn. EASTBLUFF
Ca. 928:12 1n<1) 778-5000. 10051 Beverly Dr. drp~. stove & relMg. Fenced CHATEAU LAPOINTE $137. Ye11rly. 64U.l2>. All on 1 floor. Sl25.nl5 Edwards 9G8-G323. N@ar Corona del Ma.r Hlgh
_ HUNTtNG A. nSllrNG Huntington Beach yard. Call ll.t/774-86lO DELUXE furn 2 Br. 11pt. "'""""l1"5-~-.,..,-,,.--I • Jleated pool·Adulls only NEW 3 BR. ewneni unit, frpl. School. Fin?place, wet bar&:
Uhtque opportunity, establish You an!: the wiMer of 2 BR dijpJex, 1araae, Adults, Pool Cose to shops. $150. * /kit h perm wee ~: • No pets.Adj to shOpplnc all bltru, •ha& crptJ, drpll, bullt.ln kitchen appliancts.
an ll'MCJ' in yuur area 2 tickets to the m pets, $1.44 per mo, 773 Adults. oo pets. w c ens, Jl'r • No chUdren closed prage. lmmtd. oc-835 AMlCOS WAY 614.2991 ~ I h " •~ ft h' W Wllton 548-2$)2 • .u up Apia. MOTEL, ~9755. Coldwell Banker & Co. ·IN'Jkrc unu"i' ... s 1ng Wtstern N•tion•I · • "'"l Pomona Ave, C.M. w:upancy, 540-1973 or •
trips. We have a natkmA.11.Y Boat & M•rine l BR. hM. tencd, tlre:pl. P'ri!f Aalbo• Island 1 BR.. furn apt. Pool. Prlv. SEACLIFF MMOr A p 11, 545-2321. .,hn.Agtng Aeent 541-522! .t~ TV •how which wUJ Show adlll. No petJ. ~72 att balcorl)'. Sl~/mo, 145 E. Bachl!klr, l & 2 BR.. llh * COROLIOO APTS * TOWNHOUSE -Owner's 4 .. I )'OUJ" tripa for )'OU. Put 5 pm . 2 BR, 2 bJ & den 181h St. !67~ BA. $137.5()..$100, UI move Br, 3 Ba., a1ao 2 Br, 2%
2 BR. 2 ba. view apt. All
bll~. ca.rpel~ .l draped. l
year old. S23S t.fo.
W A?illGOS WAY
t 5 '75-611~0 0 -····==a.• cir ,fu!Jmtl~ bUJlne!:.., 00
8373
ANAotHiheEIM Wl.ll·t~wall cpta le bltni Dan• Point In allowance + reg . 2 Br. studios I: atrtet le~ll. Ba. Patlot. Encl 1 a r . .. a.... ;JUilU eVU' _ Dover Sho,..1 * -. -·· * ---------1 discount. CrptJ, drps, patio, JlSS A: up. P0:nthoust1 $220. ""'11. B .. ~ A New Way To Live ...,,,,.. ' · • CONVENTION ., .. ,..,)_, stNGLE, TV, pool, petJ ok, pool, dtlldren ok. lS2S Dshwhr. f'rpJ. dbl carport. Fo•~
1
in Newport Beach !DUN~~~~Ar.?RE CENTER 4111~~~r.'*~no~tru:r!~· v~~~ ~~r!h ~~~ lN~ f~~. A;~~ S2S & up. wkly. Dnna Placentia Ave. 548-26.!2. Pool. 673-3378' .. ountaln Va ley OAKWOOD GARDEN
Manare sales k S.rv. Dept. February 20th thru 28th Pool. $.\10/mo , 646-2130 Incl utu·~. 675--2975, r.tarlna Inn, J4lll Coast * I BR., !st Ooor, adult11, EASTSIDE NEW 2 BR .• :I BA. Patio. APARTMENTS
$10,000 req'd pu1ia.I t'°rms. Pltllse CAii 642·56'18, tXI, 314 ~E;-~"°"uff,,------1~~-'-'='-'-7=0----· I Hwy. $123/mo. 820 Center St. Call Brand new 2 BR., 1 BA. S175. Garage. Uilhv.·asht!r. Full On 16th Street btwn
Salaf')' $250 per 'A'll: rh1.~ bl!t,,ve~n 9 and 1 pm to claim est Bl B•lboa Peninsula Huntington Beacti &12-.!'1848. crp11, drps, dwhr. Kif clee.n. new carpeting. $180/mo. lrvlne and Oovl"r Dr.
ptofit. Far 11ppt ph: 639-1151 your ticktt•. (Nl'lrth C4unty 4 BR, fam rm. vill\Y, e $2.i WK-OCEANrnO'NT l ~~::.:,::_:::_.:_::.::_:.:_ __ ,l1fl1~000.,!11Bdidc:c.1oii1x,.1Bliit.1-~1n'5:s. Ing ga!I oven. all wtr & gn1 ~-~~"'~· ~~~~~-(71•) 642..a170
or 8~1433 '-"' 208~ loll·fi·ec number is 5'10,12201 Comple!f' prlv3ey, Ftnt'f'd, l.ovclly Ba.chc!lors, 1 -BR. FREE UTJL. rurn I BR Cpts/D~. Prl bale, Gar. pd. Htd pool. 324 E. 20th Brt, 2 BA. Condo. 2 car 2 BR, Sl70 Uo. Nt lloa« ~Iltl Your O"•n 9111inl's~ .. * * $350/mo unr. or $4j()/mo ?\laid service. Pool. Utll. apt. like nu, xlnt loc. 962-4180. St. MS.9148 garage. Pool. $225/mO. Call lfosp. Crpla. drp&, bltna,
Exeeptlon11l opportunity for SPREADING ROO:\f-3 Br, furn. 644-16'7 • 675-8740 • Nr he11ch, pool. $130 up. z BR, wlw cpl!!, drps, blln $170. 2 BR new ct)IS, drp~. 5.16-7723 after S: 30 pm . v.·a,.hr/dryr space. 1 a r
'fUC rmwlng Income: For huge yd, 1,milits w-tlc. SI~. Tum unuHd Item• :'°quick The "Ytllow Pqts" of 5.16-Jm, 536-7282, SJG.1366 RIO, Sa._iral atrcae, frpl. Bltns, frpi, C&r, Mtlo. No Tha "Y1!1low Pages" o\ patio . .WT Dana Rd, N~ !~e• 54>S9!i0 ALA R.enwr • 645-3900 _c_u_,_h, .;.cal;_I_M=>-.o!i6:.:.78:.J!..>:.... __ , _ci_ ... _lfltd_· _.. _._.~ ____ bl ,_m_e-_A·_Lme __ ....,,_.;.7.;.a __ . ll85. I6''l;, lath. SS7-G68l pet.I 15'4 Elm '1RllOO. cluall!M .•• Mi..5618 ----------
'
• I
. . ' ... ,. . .. .. . ' . ' ' ' . ' • • . . " .. . .. •
ZZ OAI LV PILOT
Apt. Unfurn. 365
Newport &Heh
* BAYFRONT * Delu.xe ney..·Jy decor, ne\\'
dl'1!.peries. 2 BR's, 2 BA's.
$375. 3121 W. Coo.tit Rwy, Np!
SHARP BluUs 3 Br., 1\.7
ba.. Nr. pool. A'•ail now
$325 Mo, Lse. Agent 675-S930
San Clemente
DELUXE 2 BR., 2 Ba.,
blttns, dJhv.'hr, ree. room.
Adult.I only. $180. 492-2259.
S•nta Ana
..
T\lffday, FtbruNJ 23, 1971
l~I I~ I ;;;;I ;;;;;;""'';;;;;;"''' ~]~~II
445 Personals Aptt., . Apts., Roomt 400 Business Rental
Furn. or Unfum. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 ---------___ _. _______________ 11-2 Gentleman. Muter Br. SUITES available, Medical * *
Huntington Beach Huntington Beech ref. heated pool, terutl.s bch profe11slonal bldg, 17612 MARK HALES ;,:;:;;:;;;:;;;;,,;;;;;;;;=="'=========:::I area. ~518. Beach Blvd, li.B. Parking: 420 Emerion
Guest Home 415 A l r .cond: Heating Newpgrt Beach
Q ..JI. ---------1 Carpeting: JanltoriaJ ~rv • f * PRIVATE ROOM Inquire SuHe 8, or call You are the wlnner ol a utn a ermo~a for ambulatory person. 540-5724. 2 tickets to the
Casual estate living. Enter La Quinta Her-Bright • chef:ry ganlen sur.1~1-nd~u-,~,,~1-a~I ~R-a-nt_a_l--4S-O WBoaestelr&n NM1tionel
rowtding1. NutritiOUs meals.I--------....;~ arine mosa's lush green atmo sphere & stroll tree-Cwl 548.41'5.I. SMALL UNITS Show
lined walk ways to your apt. t the
All UTILITIES INCLUDED Rentols to Shara 430 COSTA MESA ANAHEIM
1 BR. Unf. $150 -Furn. $180 1 GIRL to h 3 B l $95. & $l57· Per Month CONVENTION
BR I 180 F $210 s are r. um. Immediate Occupancy
2 • Un . $ -urn. hse w/ 2 others. S'TS/ mo. New 6500 sq ft unit !8th & CENTER
3 Spac. fir, plans, decor. furnishings: live Balboa Isl. 557-1829 or Whittier, ·11o.')')n • February 20th thru 28th
within romantic setting w/fun or /ir1vacy. 67S--3806 aft 6:30 pm or 1 ty f tri::' power, Ple ·" 64" ~"'78 \l.'knds. pen o par .... ..,. ase Cau ........., , ext 314
Terraced pool, pd sunken gas B Q's W/ ---------See: Robert Nattreu Rltr between 9 and l pm to claim
seculded seating compL w/Ramada & Faun· \\'ILL share my beaut Cd!\f Costa Mesa. 642..l4.ss · your ticketir. (North C.ounty
Ren tall
530
•
ta.in. 3 BR, 3 ba, view homed ~==~,:,cc=-===--toll-free number is S40·12a'.I)
VILLA MARSEILLES * Color co-ord. ldt w/, indirect lighting. \v/responsible \vork'g gal. COt.fMERCIAL-INDUSI'RlAL * * *
BR.AHO NEW * Deluxe range & ovens * Plush shag crptg. &14--0603. *~l~lsq ft, l3c ~ l2c PALM READINGS
SPACIOUS * Bonus storage spac:e *·Cov. carport 2 BR furn, Balboa "'-Wking " emente 4 l84-0* CARDS
1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. * Sculptured marble pullin1n l t ile baths person to share w/cp1. $100 NE'\V bldg, 172S-2J:OO sq !t. Ancient Sa~ Readings
* El mo + smJ uW Nr Baker & Fairview, 1 S . . R Adult Living e9ant recreation room. · 67,1TI6 ·Bob yr. least!. Sullivan, 540-4429. Pll'1tual eadinp
Furn. & Unlurn. FURNISHED MOOELS OPEN DAILY ~ 691-9m • 1D AM-10 PM
Dishwasher -color coordinat-Blk £rom Huntington Center, San Diego 24 yr old 'Mlrking girl needs Rentals Wanted 460 210 W. Whitti<'r La Habra
ed appliances . plu.'1h shag Frwy .. Goldenwest College. roommate I share 2 BR hse 2 CAR Garage in Costa Next to La Habra Theater
carpet • choice of 2 color San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd .. So. on on Isl ytly $150 each. Ph: Mesa. To be used for DANCE Clas&es-$12 per mo.
sche:mes • 2 baths • stall Beach 3 blks. to Holt; W. on Holt to • • • 675-4641. storage. Call Terry, 'The Jazz exercise, Ta hit I an
showers • mirrored v.'ard· · LaQuinta Hermosa 714: 947.5441 GIRL to share sml 3 BR Re11l Estaters ~6-2313 Hawaiia n, tumbling, ballet,
robe don~. indinct tight-hse w/same, 1 blk from Misc. Rentals 465 jazz photography for
hW' Jn kitchen . bre111dast ==================~ ocean N.B. 673-5152 aft 6 modelll. All ages. Beginners
bar • huge private fenced Apts., Apt1., \VORKJNG lady would like •. FENCED storage area.1.,.w"ol7oo~m~'~·"54(>.,.7."'5540~·==~ll
patio • phL~h landscaping • Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 same tQ Sha.re apt, H.B. 011 surfaced; Co&ta Mesa. SINGLE? WIDOWED?
brick Bar·B-Q's. large hea.t. General Costa Mesa J ~Cf,•~ll:8~47~-<858;';;-:.:"~n~ti~I_;2~,30~p'.'.m~. ;JiCiailli64i&-028iiiii'i'iii96i2-i 78ii13iii. iiii J Divorced? Over 21? ed pools .l lanai. \VILL share my 2 br, 2 FOJ' a self explanatory mes.
3101 So. Bristol St. 1250 sq ft lg 2 Br, 1~~ ba, b pool t I d
1
r-------... e 24 .. .._a d•y call a, , ap w stu ent or l/ "64) •u• (¥.r l\li. N. of So. Coast Plaza) u!l rm for wh/dr, patio, v.'Orking girl. N.B. 6U-89TI Announcements , __ .,..._,""=,.,°'="'•'•·99'l1 ___ 11
Santa Ana PALM MESA APJS. •"· opl/dp. $I65. 540-8688. ;~~~~~~~1;;·---.:;~1· WOMEN PHONE Ss7 •200 h Garages for Rent 435 : -o Huntington Beac Interested in joining Toast.
CAN'T BE BEAT
SINGLE STORY
South Sea Atmosphere
2 BR .• 2 BArn
Carpets & drp!f
Air Conditioned
Private Patios
HEATED POOL
Plenty o1 lawn
Carport &: Storage
HIDDEN VD..LAGE
GARDEN APTS.
2500 South Salta
Santa Ana "1 S46-l.S2.5
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
Apts.,.
Furn. or Unfurn.
Sant• Ana
370
1 BR unfum ··•••••· SJl,j.00 -;:;;:;;:;;;;;:;;:;;:;;;;; FOR motor home11, trailer, Legal Notices 510 mistrellS call Jean Van Der
1 BR tum ••••••••••• $'149.50 • boat, etc. 1652 Npt Blvd, CM.,----------Borden 646-32.55; 542.2225
Bachefrolonm >urni>Sl'".· hed ON BEACH I. &IZ.2821, 642-5100. t• -•;;clt~S7.=,,.-.,.,..~~--= ----------11 v.·ill no longer be ...
2 BR apts $175 mo. Office Rental 440 responsible for any debts FOR ladies o.nly, $5 massage mo.Imo. OK * 1 Bdrm ............ $205 1 __________ 1 other than my ov.·n. John special S5. 17434 Beach
• POOL * 2 Bdrm ........ from S235 SUPER-DELUXE QUAlJTY CliUord Beecher. Blvd., Jf.B. 847-9713
• SAUNA * 3 Bdrm ......... · .... $375 1·2·3 room, up to 3,000 sq.
• JACUZZI Furniture Available ft. oUice suites. Immed. oc-,
1561 r.1esa Dr. Santa Ana Carpets.drapes-d ishwasher cupancy. Orange County.
ht!ated pool.saunas-tennis /irport Irvine Commerc· Person~I•
Coste Mesa
BAY MEADOW APTS.
Beam ceilings, paneling, pMv.
patios, recreation facilities.
All Adults, no pets. * 2 BR. from $165 *
387 \V. Bay St. lbtwn Harbor
& Newport Blvd. J,j. mi N.
of 13th St}.
CALL 646-0073
rec room-ocean views Complex, adj. Airporter
patios-ample parking Hotel & Restaurant, banks,
Security guards. San Diego & N'pt Fwys. Personals 530 F d (I d ) HUNTINGTON UNCROWDED PARKING 1-------oun ra• • • 5SO
LOWEsr RATES ADVENTURE PACIFIC Owner/m8'.211'lDW'ontDr. SAILING CRUISE TOYorMin.PoodleorCo<k·
711 OCE R 8 Newport Be h a-poo, cream colored &8 lbs AN AVE., H.B. m. • ac 150 ft. 3 Inllllt Square rugger. vie. Alpha Beta Main ir. (714) 5.36.1487 833-3223 Courtesy to Brokers Leaving 3/15171 l o r 3
Ole open lO am-6 pm Daily CONSUL TING months. r-.ren & women want. :;;~~H.B. on 2118• Call
WILLIAM \VALTERS CO. ASSOCIATES eel w/desire for adventure l,;.~=:.....~-~---11
2 Br $155 up-3 BR $180
up. Patio, pool, children ok.
lnq. rental bonus now.
WANTED & travel & ability I<> share FOUND al mailbo:it n r Gunderson·s Drug, women's ?ifarketing. Financial • Tech· expenses. For infonnation bi.focal glasses. 716 E.
n1cal, To share ofiice suite call Pam Reynolds, Balboa Blvd. Balboa
LRG 1 & 2 BR. apt.s. lO r.IORA KAI Apts. 18881 irora Kai Lane, ~~ blk E. min from college, ocean &
Jn Npt Center. 714/SS7.(i()76, 12131 378-260'.:i
PO Bo .o~ I · C-"f PART Dciberman/Shep/Point. x ""• rvine, dJI • FULLY LICENSED * er mix. i\lale black \V/ fan
could walk to shop'g. Has ol Beach, olf Garfield,
laundry fac:., carport & pool.1 "'962-8::...::::"":.:·c...,,.--,..---
Renl from $130-$155. Ask Newport Beach
DESK SPACE Renov.~d llindu Spiritualist mrkgs. Vic Del Mar &~pt , Advice on all matters. 305 No. El Camino Real Love, J\.tarriage, Bu.!liness Blvd, C.i\1. 548-3843
San Clement• Readings given 7 days a FEMALE Dachshund .
about ~ discount. 1846 BAQ-IELOR & l br 11pts.
Placentia Mgr. Apt H. Nr Bay Eve11 6T:>-7876 or
646-8564 494-2250. •
492-4G> v.·eek, 10 am • 10 pm. reddish brown, Identify.
312 N. El Camino Real, 54&-4067 DESK SPACE
222 Forest Avenu•
Laguno .Beach
<94-9466
San Clemente Black & tan shaggy female
Apts.,
Furn. or Unfurn.
Santa Ana
MyDaddy#fS,
"l.Jwe and leam"
370
OCEANFRNT 3 br, 2 ba,
avail J.farch 1 • June 15th.
675-1410 eves/1vknds.
492-9136, 492-0076 puppy, nr Tamura School,
ALCOHOLICS Anonymous Fountain Valley. 842.}84{)
PJnne 542-7217 or write to LARGE orange striped male
P .O. Box 1223 Costa Mesa. cat with flea collar Mesa
Santa Ana
LAS PALOMAS
APARTMENTS
LARGE o r f ice \v/re~p. Dime-A-Line 642-5678 Verde area. 545-3054
lion1st area & 1S!orage I iiiii;iii;ii;iiijiijliiiillliiiiii;i;iiiijiijjjiiiiiill
space. 1500 Adams, Suitel*' * *
307, C.M. * * * Brand new from $140 NEWPORT BEACH Civic·l,------------------.,11
1 & 2 BR. furn.-unfurnished Center, 300 ft to 1000 ft:1,
with dish\~·ashcr. Heated Answ. & Secretarial .
pool & lanai. Central gas 675-1601 Trader's Paradise heating & 11ir-conditioning.5 __ N_E_l_V_o_fii-.,-,-,,-,-,-,77-B-,-.-,h
Gas & \\'&ter paid. Priva1e Bl. Lowest rents. Ca 11
patios. Color choice shag 842-2525 or 1213) 394.-0015. Ii nes
carpeting. 1670 SANTA ANA AVE, C:-01 Santa Ana 54-0.4988
1400 \Vest \Varner Ave. From 300 sq. ft 35c sq ft. t1" mes 675-2464 or 541-5032 North ot South Coast Plaza
Shopping Centt'r & near San 3700 NE\VPORT BLVD, NB
Diego & Newport Freeways. • oN THE BAY • I dollars
Awtde Con~niently located corner 675-2464 (It 541-5032
MWCOl'let'ptha Warner & Bristol. 5 NE\V ollitts, 17877 Beach''------------------' 9P91b11entl~ F'l.y areas, Bl. Lo\vest rents 842-25251
n.fmmingpools, rectationcenter, or 213: 394-0015 IVILL trade equity \Vest
SIUMS,lndlhesmartestnewepert· Rtnt1ls l[,.s] • EXECUTIVE Suite of Of. Van Nuys horn~ w/pool, low
Kint 3 yr old gelding w/.
!.addle, bridle, etc. Trade
for motorbike. office equip.
men!, sporting equipment.
Value $500. 540.7823
..... -.., JMl'As""'9r.Come, •• andbrfngthekldc. fices. 3345 Nev.•port Blvd., lnl. FHA loan, for Income
,_... ~ NB. Call 64:;....4545 oroperty, San Clemente.
I SQ\l"-13 \ SUNFl..OWER tARl.Y ACHIEYEMDfT CEJfTER CORONA DEL MAR Ptincipals only. 492-1081.
I nU"TQ"i\.1 A'""' 1<crMltad P<h'•I• ~ I @ Rooms 400 ~ r ·1 & Cbi tu~"'" l P•• .. <b~ol oft °'' o•• ~ th 2 Rm suite, pvt ba, pvt entr. :-.ter ins: SI \'et • na,
\ •· ,__. •·-1· C:.e•t '"' -U•c ~ --I t · I 12 '~--, pircn1 .. • 11e1lb11 K~tt· * $1 j PEJ;t v.·eck • up Prkg, crpt/drp, util pd. ::omp e e 5en•1rc or •
.... .-. t,~~~rb t1e1lrtlos, •""' •• L: \V/ki tchens. $TJ per '"'Cek $145/mo. Owner. 673.6757 "lllue S2000, TRADE FOR
U~. ~ :::Z..:: ~ t -up Apt!. J.10TEL. 518-9755 ON the Oe<!an in Huntington ?ickup truck. i;~nd or???
"'"'" & Elillt. Co. --· -!••111 !11111' 4 Sllllt l•ftl i' :;, FUR.i"ll!SHED, util pd, v.•/ki!, Bch • Ne\v deluxe ollirts G75-8 ... l Wo\h firt~loc. • Alf.tNl-t111111rt1•S.lt.f.lt111"10l'ftlo t ! -•llrl""· female only. Close to OCC, avail \\larch 15. Crpt~. drps, I BR 3 BA hse, 2 blks from
from $1&!1 per montll ~ SiO per mo. &-l2-8520. ample parking. 536-2579 heh, n£'\v C'tpls. San Oe·
~;:;11nA='·~ ~ ... a Daily Pilot Cla.ss!Jied Turn unused items into quick men!<'. Trade for 30·-io· late
AaoGtrQtlloL1tJ'Dtftlopnnlllfrt.8-IU~JlllV._...itlill.S.n..daf 11 Ad. 642-5678 cash, call 612-5678 model boa.I. Ph: 492·98:i7
Apts., Apts., I Apts., Apts., :-ves and v.·eck ends.
Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 \Vant Hi Desert Calif -ou1-
General General General General
:if-state. health. Have Cl
comer !lOxl..17 2 bldiS· Eq
S42~1. F.P, $68'.\l inc. $445
mo. OwnC'r C.:O.f. 646-8558.
Kentucky land, 10 acrts on
H\\'Y 7:).1. City v.·ater. gas
& el<"C. \Vlll trade for apt
Jldg or unall court in Ca.
1:'6-8069
Equity in 2~~ A hi.desert
located in canyon. Trade for
late van, pick-up, car or ?
S46-8313, l to 5 pm & 8 lo
};30 pm
'68 Mustang GT.Super sharp
Stereo !ape, radio, full pw;,
nu tir<'ll. very clean inter.
·n lie. Lo mi. Trd eq, for
pick-up or ? 646.975..C!
Beaut 2-acre parccJ.11 on
largest takt· in Calif. Camp.
ing. hunling. fishing, \\'a.
~· terskiing, Trad<' for other
property or ? 547.8j(]7
H11rt'ley Walnut Grove in
Vis11lia. Val. ('()mer fronlge
en 2 busy hwys, $2500/ A
FOR O.C. Income prep,
$65.000 eq. Bkr/Qnr &15-0441.
Sll,000 ('(1Uity.Jrg-4 Br hom11
.price $.36,000·be11u1!1u/ att11
• vac11nt-TRADE tor Io w
t'!ntaJ prof)f'1·1y.
Call :.4.>-6227 ---3 un its In RfvPnlde . incom ..
$3300 yr. V11luf' $19,SOO.
Trsdl! for boat i>r )ft!(' n10-
de! Cllr. Darl ing Reali)',
71.t/686-7161 ,
* *
Have free & clear lot,
5.3500. Can add other equi·
ti es. \Yant travel trail<'r,
noter home. camper, home.
ncon1C'. &Hi-4837
Build<'rs - 2.1 acres. top I~
:-iition. Frt'C' & clear. \\'ill
lrade for F&C home or du·
Jl!'x. C"OOst area. $55.000
_.alu('. Bkr 642-2436
Horse ranch Orange Park
Acres. 5 br, 3 ba, pool, air
t"ond. 1 acre +, lO!Hl
tlleads Ave .. Trd for Red·
:ling. Ca. prop. 835-89'11
16,410 A. cattle & row crop
ranch. l\Ioney maker. AU
:atUe & equip incl. Val.
i1!ll,OOO F&C. trd for So. :a. prop. Brk &12·UJ6
lWO 2 BR Unitll in Orange
• Exchange tor J-4 Units,
Col!ita. r.tesa -Harbor area.
Owner.
Otll """"' Mini.T buggy cover eng/
trans. No top. Street legal
:dnt rond. $1000 value.
Trade for V\\i 196&-up.
&1::)-21 11
Sl9.000 eq. in Beaut. La Cos.
ta Country Club imp'd. Jot
lor inc/invest. prop. N"p! ..
11re11. Hope Gerrie. i\f3.cnab.
Irvine Rlty. 675-3210
3 BR, 2~1 ba Baycr!'gt,
$40,000 eq. For: Jots or Jand
TD's, \\'aterfmt or '!' $18,ooO
bal. at 51ii ~ assume \VilJ
help for rite deal , mi784
PIANO. Early American
sty]e, v.ith padded bench 2
Yl'll old, v.'i lh 8 yr warrant;> .
1'1'ft.JC' for aurornobi!e or 11
496°244.'i
'64 Chevy 6 cyl 1t «>n pick.
Ufl \'.,lued $1000. Sh3otp.
Trad(' for V\V dune-buggy
11•11h rop, Call 9 A~f only,
&12-49i9.
* * *
. . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . ' . . . . . . . ' . . . . . . . . .
JOIN THE
'
'SELLERS CIRCLE'
WE'RE
SAVING
SPACE
FOR
•••
~
~
~
~
~
~
·~
~
If you sell 11 service and don't advertise in the
DAILY PILOT Service Directory, you're doing
business the hard way. The Service Directory
.1 classifications 600-699 in the classified ad
section daily) gives you an advantage you get
through no other advertising medium. It reach·
es customers who are ready to buy. Be there
when your prospects come into the market
looking for the services you have to sell. If
your 1ervice isn't listed, we'll start a category
just for you.
Piek up the phone right now and reserve your
space in the "Sellers Circle" .••
Your Direct Line to
Directory Results
642-5678
CLASSIFIED AD DEPARTMENT
i
' -
Tutldoy, Ftbtulry 23, 1971 DAILY PILOT
fhis variety of fin~e~s~chho~o~l~s:c.;.;;.._I~[ ~ ........ ~~ .... ~-~~Ir:<'!
could introduce _ D Schools and ' l
ANNOUNCING •••••••.
ANOTHER PRE-SCHOOL
NOW OPEN IN NEWPORT BEACH·
COSTA MESA AREA
This Pre·School Program Has Been De-
veloped By Mrs. Eleanor Wynne Over The
Past 3 Years At U. C. I. Irvine. Stressing
Total Development Of Your Child
* Intellectually
* Emotionally
* Physically
* Socially
LITTLE STEPS
LEARNING
CENTERS
541 Center St.
Costa Mesa 645·5577
• Credentialed Teachers
• Educational Program
• 1\iorning & Afternoon Sessions
e State Licensed
FlRST CHRISTIAN
PRE-SCHOOL
792 Victori11 Avenue
Co sta Mesa
548-4778
Newport Air Associates
Flite School & Flying Club
LEARN TO FLY
$500.
IFh101cl .. AYallebf•) * FAA APP ROVED *
Comp1•1• Co11r1• ln,ludet;
40 Hours fli ght time in Cessna I SO's with
20 hrs. d u•I instruction. Club membership.
2 Month's free dues. Individual instruction,
tailored to YOUR ability.
10 OTHER AIRCRAFT AVAILABLE
11 LOWEST RATES IN ORANGE COUNTY
Le•rn to '"fly now - -and h•v• fun I * Fly Mexico & Canada * Specia l Rates for Commercial or
Instrument Students.
For Complete Details C•ll NOW
673. 0313
Found (frn ads) 550 Lost SSS
SM, blk puppy v.•/wht feel,
temalr. vie. 61st St., N.B.
642-0362
SSS
LOST or strayed bro\\'n toy
male Poodle. Daughter is
heartbroken, Ca!I I 213 )
598-126:> days, 536-lj7I eves.
LOST • Sm blk/wht shaggy
YOUNG ca1 lost ln ~1~ado\1· doll: {!em cocka.poo) Sat vie
Lark G<>H Course area. Ha5 Ellis: & }.lagnolia. Reward
mediun1 long halr, da1·k 962-89.).·1 grey 'vith touches of orange. 1---------
Ht.r name is "CHARMEY", LOST female Irish Seiter,
&: she is "''earing a flea nr. W. 17th St. C.l\t
col.Jar, $;;(1 RE WAR D ! Reward, 615-8862, 2 13 I
~·· E 498-""~ day~: ~~ ve s :1 ~=~~~-~--=
846-3786 LO!,T: Doberm1.n Pincer, blk
\VHITE I.:. tan \vhippet/fox-female, Capistrano B c h
ho\lnd comb, female. Black 11.rea, Reward, 4 9 6-3 6 4 6 ,
studded collar, Mesa Verde 49&-5858 art a. Fan)ily a r I ev e•. =r,-m-,-:,,-Coc~-.. -.,,..-d7.,.-, w-hl~te 11
Ans"·ers to Trout. Reward. \V/red nee collar, vie 31.st S1,
546-8543 N.B. 67~18'12
l lELP Lost Sunday, camera sa.'lALL black fem cat, -n lehstis, 13Smm I.: 28mm in •·~~ l'---collar, vie Cnyn Acres, Lag Tum case on hl!l btivn 8 h R , rd m ~.,91 Jamboree, MR cArlhur & ='.c·:,.,,'~"~'~· ~-~~~~
PaJisades. Please c all GRAY·\\'!!. huskio/shepherd
anyllme, 67:>-Si47 Ir.male, med size. Reward.
L. -
Children discover great things
at our school. Themselves.
Our school. Early Achievement Center.
Unlike most pre-schools, we do more than
keep little hands busy.
We keep little minds busy.
With science. Math. Language. Art.
Social Studies.
Things like that.
Impressed? Don't be.
It's not what we teach that's so special.
It's the special way we teach.
We encourage children to discuss things.
Touch things. Act out things.
So they will better know their capabilities.
And themselves.
Sunflower Early Achievement Center
25 15 West Sunflower Avenue
Sanla Ana, California 92704 (Which is just about the greatest
lesson of alt.}
Ok, like to discover more about us?
714/540-4750
Call or write for our free brochure. Or drop by
our Sunflower school.
We're open year 'round. ·
So parents can come in anytime. And
children can be enrolled anytime.
NEWPORT -MESA
PRE-SCHOOL
140 E. 22nd ST., COSTA MESA
645-2323
6:15 A.M. -5:30 P.M.
Kindergarten Readiness
Arts & Crafts
Music & Rhythm
Physical Fitness
Phonics
Colors & Numbers
Educational Field Trips
Hot Lunches
Basic Bible Stories
TOTAL CHILD
DEVELOPMENT
AIRLINE & TRAVEL CAREERS
For Men and Women
e Traval Agent e Reservations
e Ticket Sales e Air freight Cargo
e ·Comm unications e Operations Agent
Day and night cle1s11
AIRLINE SCHOOLS PACIFIC
Accredited:
S•nl• An • 543-6596
610 EHi 17th SlrHt
National Association Trade & Technica l
Schools
Approved for Veterans
Eligible institution under the Fedorally In·
sured Student Loan Program
SEW-KNITS
SPECIALIZING IN STRETCH & KNIT FABRICS
"d LINGERIE
All Brands Stretch Patter ns
Vogue & Butterick Patterns
WE HAV E TH E FINIST SELECTION
OF KNIT PAIRIC$ ON THE ORANGE COAST.
2199 FAIRVIEW ROAD
COSTA MESA 540-3268
S-T -lf..E-T-C-H
& SEW (T.M.J
CLASSES
a 2 hr. $1500 Lftaons
Morning -Afternoon
and Evening
UTTLE STEPS
LEARNING
CENTERS
"THE PRE-SCHOOL YEARS -
HOW IMPORTANT ARE THEY ••• "
You are cordially invited to attend a
seminar & discussion concerning the two
basic questions affecting early childhood
development.
I) What specific opportunities do chil·
dren need during the first few years?
2) Ho'v can these opportunities be provid·
ed?
• • Guest Speakers: Eleanor Wynne &
Mr. Ge no Echterllng
DATE : Thursday, February 25, 1971
TIME: 7:30 P.M.
PLACE: 541 Center Street, Costa Mesa
PHONE: (714) 645-5577
BLACK Scottie dog los! vie 67~16 aft 5 pm . I
W~stmont tract. r 0 \l n t Af'GHAN lost vie Zl!I k I
Valley, Call 8 4 7 -2 4 2 S Santtt Ana\. C.~1. G~yish-
Jllwam. brown. Re...,.rd, 645-5869 ,.,,....,..,.,..,.,.i..,.,,,.,,,.,,,.,,,.,,,.,,,.,,,.,,,.,,,.~.lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliillllllllllllll
WHAT IS YOGA?
Vitality? Peace of Mind? Concen tration?
Beauty? Success? Friendship?
Strength? A Good Night's Sleep?
Will Power? Youthfulness?
YOU CAN DO YOGA!
See for yourself how natural and
effective YOGA is!
•• FREE DEMONSTRATION
•• WEDNESDAY AT 3 P.M.
EIGHT WEEK CLASSES START e e THURSDAY MORNING AT JO AM
YOGA CENTER
445 E. 17th St,, Co1la Ma,.
646-8281
COME AS YOU ARE!
Baby1lttlnv
NEWPORT He ights art&. Lil:
yard, land. box. Balanced
lunch. Xln't care. 845-275'
BABYSlTrING, weekdays,
my home, F.V,. Fncd yard,
certified teacher, ~5933
LOVING Child Care, Mon
thru Friday. Fairview
Baker area, C.?wf. 5f6-3l24
BABYSITTING my home,
fncd yard, re!'a. Colta Meu.
area. 642-0334.
• LJC'D baby1ittin& $3 per
day. Vic. Btach It Hal&td.
892-7818.
Builder•
BRICK, block, concrete ,•
carpentry, house levt.linr.i
all types remodelinJ'. No.
job loo 1m&ll. Lie. Contr.:
96U945
Carpenter
CARPENTRY I
MINOR REPAIRS. No J ob I
Too Small. CabW:t in pr-,
ages • o t b e r cabinets. ~
MS-8175 H no annw lea.vel
nl!g at 646-2311 H. 0 .
Anderson
REMODELING & Repair
Speclallat, Comm'I, re1iden-
tlal. Paneltne. cabinet1 ,
marUte, tonnica. 644-7591.
.. • • • • I • • • I I • • • • I • • •
WOOD production pa r t 1 ,
cabinet work, boat
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
COSTA MESA
PRE-SCHOOL
1797 Monrovia Avenue
(Corner of 18th Street & Monrovia)
Coste Mesa
642·4050 or 838-5237
Opan 6:30 AM 'Iii 6:00 PM
$18 A WEEK -COMPARE!
Full & Half Dey Se1s lan1
Ages 2 to 6 Years
ttHot Lunches & Snacks
**Creative Actlvltle1
ttMusic, Stories
**Sp•nl1h
Real Estate School
PREPARE FOR STATE EXAM
IN 4 WEEKS
Licensing Preparation for:
• Real Estate SaJesmen & Brokers
• Building Contractors
• Insurance
• Day & Evening Classes
California Department of Education
Approved-Master Charge and
BankAmericard Accepted.
For Information-Brochure-
FREE GUEST LECTURE
Phona 646-3229
ANTHONY SCHOOLS OF
NEWPORT BEACH
325 North Newport Blvd.
Newport Beach • 646-3229
LOlt and Found lnatructlon
• carpentry. 646-5 219 ,
• 544-0437.
• DWnond Carpet CIWl!nr
• Avg size room $8
Repairin& A installations
• Frte Est. 645-13171
•Cement, Concrtt• • • ee CONCRETE. BQt The:
• Bad Weather!, Floors.\
• pa.boa. Reu. Call Don
• 642-8514.
•PATIOS, walks, drives, ln-1
• stall new la\\'l'IS, uw, break,:
remove, 548--8668 for est.
• CEMENT WORK, m job too
• small, reasonable. F re e
• Estlm. H. Stufiick, 548-8615
• Block Walls .. Sidewalks
• Drivewaya -Patios
549-3173. Morn. or eve. •l=--c--:----~-1 •Contractor
•ROOM Addltiona. L. T .
Conatructlon. Single story or
• %. Estim,, plans Ir l.a)wt
• 847-1511
•GAR., util or atol'a&'e bldis
• $4.75 per 1q ft (400 #Q"
• tt min) Re1ld, apt • com.m'l
at comparable coats .
• 642-5997 •
Additions * Remodellna
Gerwick & Sons, Llc.
673--600. * ~9-2170
Llc'd Contr. Remodelinc
Addltion1, Plans, IAyout
Karl E. Kendall 548-1531
G1ner11I Services
RAll'T Gutt.rs Installed.
Quality work. Reuonable.
Free est. 968-mB
Gardening
:AL'S GARDENING
fOl' gardeninJ & amall
Iand1eaping 1ervice1, call
~5198. Serving Newport,
CcL\f, O:ista Mesa. Dover
Shores, \Vestelltt.
PROFESSIONAL main-
tenance, pruning, tree work,
sprinklers, pests, disease,
weed control. Clean up jobs.
T~rm!. George, ~5893.
JOHNSON'S GARDENING
Yard care, clea.1\•Ups,
planting, •pr in kl e rs .
962-2035
D & K's Ganlenil]8 Hl'Vfee.
Complete Lawn
i\1aintenance. Ft'!'e • • t ,
518--082~
NEW Lawns, ~seed. Comp!
la'Ml care. Oean up by job
or mo. }'ree est. For info
~ 897-2417 or 846-0'332.
11311' EXPERT J'apanese
1;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiiiii~iiiiii~ Liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiil gardener. Complete 1ud#n-I I Ing Mrvice, Fl'ttl e a t .
Lost 555 Schools & 64>-0345. ;;..;...,_______ instructions 575 LAWN ca.re; mo w Ina:.
BRASS candlen!ck in Fashlon ,,,..,=...., ____ ...:.;..;I edging, vacuumil".li. First
Island, REWARD. TlfTORING grades 1-6 , cuUing free. Call alter 6
lneludes modern mafh. Std p,\I 847-~14{)
49-1·2286 e I em en t ar y credtntla.h:.IAL'"°"·s,-L".,"'nd-:1-.,.-p-:lng-. -=T-,-.-.1
VERY ·rAl\1E RACOON ~>~l .. ~73~.;;~t~~~~~~I removal. Yatd remodtlin&. HARBOR VIE\V HILLS Truh bauttni, lot cleanup. 1 ~~~~·~6~4'1~·1~37~0~*~~~ Repair sprinklers.. 6T3-ll65.
[ Strvfc:tsandlt .. ..a-,~ SMALL Landsca p l nr ,
. e_. •. ~ General Cleanup &: Haulin&. I 642--2138 or 642-0570. lntlruction ';;;;;;;;;;;;~· m EXPER. Hawaiian Gardener
1 Babyaitting Complete Garden i ng
Schools & COSTA MESA Service, Ka.malani. 646-4676.
inttructions 575 PRE-SCHOOL COMPLETE yard Care ,
---------11th Is Monrovia, % day + Cleanup, h'Mh hauling by
BRIDGE i n st r u c t Io ns , fuU day u.uions Planned Job or mo, 897-2417, 846-0032
begin'~. 2 le11son11 wk, Ptoaram hot lunCties A.Bea HusbaM Busy'!' Call MOOH
J\.1on-Wed or Tucs--Tburs, u , hrs' 6:30 AM-6:00 PM, 545-0820 a1ter 6-Repalr
7:3G-9:30 p.n1. Fee $2 per $1S wk~COr.IPAR.E! 842-4050 BuUd-Strv Most Tb.lnp
les&0n. Classes begin ?-lat or 138.5237, Haullnn
1 & 2. 646-7042 eve11. •
PIANO LESSONS \VILL babyAit Yout chlld in YARt>, Garage cleanups,
Your horne. Cert ified my Uetnaed home, •&'•• 2 ~s dirt Jvy removaJ. ddp
tellchtl'll. ~lusic Systems. thru ~. ~Ion lhna Fr\, loa~r, backhoe. 9624143.
Mr. Hatht-ock, 646-1368. ~9-4038. 'fR.'SH a: Gara1e clean-up.
PIANO LmONS -learn CHILO Cart my home, fncd 1 da~. S10 a load. Frff
theory, 1i1ht reading ~tc. yard, play rm, ha.lanced tst. An)'llme, MS-5031.
C•ll Bn1ce ~~~ (U.C.I. dinners, toy1, trans p~ Fait resultl are Just a pboDf
mu1lc baok1round.) 646--Jj0.1, 645--3147 'f call a-.'&)' • so.M'11
.,.t ,, ... ~·~· .. •
• '
(
•
I
I
1
f
!
•
, :Z4 DAILY PILOT TllfSd.l1.,.Frbtu.uy 2.3, 1971
l--~1~1---l~ I l[Il] I l[Il] l.___ ...... _, ... __,l[Il] !.___ ..... _ ..... __,j[Il]
Haullng Paintlnt &
Paperhanging MOVING, Garqe clean-up
Help W•nlod, M f, F 710 Help W•nlod, M f, F 710 Help W•nlod, M f, F 710 Help W•ntod, M f, F 710
I Ute haullnr. ReaaonbJe. LARRY'S Inttrion, quality
Free e1timate1, ~S.1602 paint i ng &:: custom
YARD CLEANUP drapl'ries. 645-5350,
&57-1-155 . .t Haullni 54&-04U ,=c.c,~~-~-=-
PAlNTING/papttin&:. 18 yn
Houaecle•nlng in Harbor area. Llc .t
SUN Bl'lte Maint C'arpea, bOoded. Reta Jum. ~.
fJoora, wlndow1 elc. Resld'l PROFESSIONAL painlln&" .l
& comm'I. Frtt es I. paper hangirl£'. 25 )TS exper.
!137-5621. Ref's. Free est. 540-1943.
EXPERIENCED lady would INT & Exler. Palntlng.
like housetjeanina. Call aft Llc'd, ins. Free est. 30 yrs
S:
517-4727
HOUSECLEANING
By Day. O}vn Transportation
836<6<8
expcr. Chuck, 645--0809.
IS'J' CLASS Painting A
paper-hanging. Inter/Exler,
Free est. ~S..3-159
PAINTING/papering. lg )TS
Jn Harbor area. Llc 4t
borxled. Ref's !urn. 641-2356.
A Beltt't Temporary
PositiOQ
URGENTLY
NEEDED , • ,
• Clerks e Typists
• Secretaries
• Keypunchers e PBX Operators e Bookkeepers e Assemblers
\Vork "'hen & where
you want?
Bookk.!eper
FULL CHARGE
BOOKKEEPER
* DRIVERS*
No Experience
. Necessary!
Exclusive. golf country club, ~·fu.st have clean CalUornla
located 1n New~t Beach driving record, Apply
area ~ks an lnd1vl~uaJ to YELLOW ¢AB CO.
. su~1se & control 1U ac-186 E. 16th S C.M count.int s;ystem. I., ·
Ei.'1PLOYMENT Couni;l!lors,
Indlv!'1ual selected must have training provided, no exp.
a demonstrated ability to nee .. Applicaliont each
keep accuraie rteords ac-e\'en1ng at 8 PM. 323 14th
curately interperate ~-St. No. 7. H.B.
ating results, and supeivise ESCROW CLERK
clerical personnel. Exposure Exi>d. Call Loraine, 645-mo.
to EDP service bureau.s \VestclUf Personnf} Agency,
helpful, 2™3 Wertcllft Dr., N.8.
HOUSE OF CLEAi"I
Camplete House Cleaninr
'4"'824
ESTABUSHED ya rd age Position requires three to five store needs pe.n;i;inable sales
yrs. experience as a full clerk for Tue, \Ved, Fri
Pleater, Patch, Re p•lr I • charge bookkeeper. Salary & Sat, Knowledge knit
Bay &: Beach Jatutorial nter1m commensurate "'ith back. fabrics. & sewing req'd,
II · 0 U SEKEEPER/Compan.
ion, Jive in to care Io r
elderly \\'Onllln in lovely
home on Balboa \\'B.tertront.
Pvt. bednn & bath. Give
rt>ferences & exper. \Vrite,
CIH1itled ad No. 109, Daily
Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa
Meu, Calif. 92626
Housekeeper $2 hr, 3 hrs a
day, 4 days a wk, cau aft
4 pm. GfZ.3417
llOUSEKEEPER l Child
care. 9: 30 am-6 pm. Weekly
basis. Salary open. Ref's.
Not under 25. 5'U).9212
* HOUSEKEEPER "'anted:
4 hrs daily, 5 days a week.
N.B. area. 642-2425.
HSKPR, live-in. Lag. Bc.h,
"'ido~'t'r, children 4 & 6.
?.fust have car, $250 mo.
6 day wk. 54~1107; 4'»-6297. crpu:, "'indows , nooNi etc •PATCH PLASTERING Personnel Service ground. Apply 2199 Fairview, C.i\t. Res. &: Comm'!. &16-1-401. 1 All types. Frtt estimates HSKPRS Emplyr pays tee. Call 540-682-EXPERIENCED advertising George Allen Byland Agney
Mesa Cleaning Service j . J 445 E. 17th St., C.M. Please submit resume with agency person, strong copy !06-B E. lSth, S.A. 547--0395, Carpets, WindO\\'s, Floors etc.
1
Plumbing 642_752l quahfic3.tions and 53.lary re. & some creative lay-out. _
0 -·•'d & Comm,'l MS-4111 quiremen•-. \Vrit• Calssificd Xl-t opport""•'ty npldly IN· ST 0 RE d "a Per Y = · · Pl"mbi•g • E\,,,·. 0 ·pair Equo\ Oppor. Employer "' " .... .. " ~""' Ad #107, Daily Pilot, P.O. expanding marine-oriented salesperson. 5 day y,·eek.
EXPER. Lady, own , $7.SOperhr I ~ Boxl560 Costa Mesa, Calif. corp. Send resume ro P.O. Wed thru Sun. Substantial transportation. By Day. · 642-2'1.ii 642--0506 1 ~ • 1 t I
5-18-7801 aft 6 P~I I PLUAiBING REPAIR * * A Better Position * * 92626. Box lTI, Balboa Island. ~=~~;~-;~~S9l-;.:3a 0 n
LIZ REINDERS *CHINESE CHEF* EXPERIENCED SHOE 7"=~=~===°"11 Income Tax No job loo small Q"•ilty Ex""'rfenced SALESLADY, Childrens & * INTERIOR DECORATOR
I
• "'"31~ e Personnel Agency .. .,.. ~ .,....,. "" 642-5619 aft 5, r.tr. Taylor Womens. Ph: 644.42'23 tlem~ .. 1ust Have Experience Snu.ley Tax Serv1'ce . -4500 campus Dr .. N.B. * ,, •• ,-~ * Roofing Cali For Appolnimenl * CLERICAL-Part time. hill's Shoes, #54 Fashion .,..... :;i .. ,,
L · Roofing t ;)46..1118 CALL 542-6Ti!I Island, N.B. INTERESTING Telephone
e 13th YEAR LOCALLY • i EE Rovftng co. . 0
"""""""""""""""""""" l ==='a~l~";',;1~P~>l~.~~~IEXPERIENCED MOLDERS \\'ork lrom home. Must have Qualified _ Reasonable aU types .. Recover.' repairs, n.. N' h private line and al least
II'· • s>,!ILEY I root ,coahngs. Lie/bonded CONSULTANT. Gen'! foods ..,,.ys or 1g ts
C ........ ~Pub\' A 1,1 since 47. 642-7222. A·R ES U i\l E pul your needs 7 women for Vivlane lofacGregor Yacht Corp. four hoW'S daily, \\'rite,
e1cill•-... 1c ccoun . application on TOP. We \Voodard Cosmetics. We 1631 Pla&entia, C.M. Classified ad No. 108, Dally
612<2'11 anytime 646-9666 0~. Gu1y00 Roofing. Dealk. compose & print 50 copies Ira.in. Exec pos's avail, sm Pilot. P. o. Box l3fi0, Costa
Ctn1ral Bminess Services .,.1~21''.,·' l:AO ~ 0. Wi} \\'Or • ONLY $15.00. Call ~~ lnv. 544-1464 • FRY coo_ K • Mesa. Calif. 92626.
fiTHE TAX ADVISORS .... ...---....a-....,,., -"'-'~''~"°-'-"-1m-'-"-1 ----1 ** COOK !uJI time
Perm. oUice·Reu Ratea Sewing/Alter•tion1 AUTO POLISH I NG & ** DISHWASHERS APPLY IN PERSON
328 No. Ne1•:port Blvd. ALTERATIONS. restyling, DETAIL positions. Exp'd Exp'd. l\1ust be clean. neat
Oppo!!lle Hoag HO!pltal Expert Utter. Top ref'~. engine cleaning & paint-bu!· and over Zl. Apply in perM>n THE RIGGER For Appl. <;all 64~ N.B. area. 646-2704 Call fing. Salary open. Gro\\'\h only. Surf & Sirloin, 5930
INCOME TAX SERV Ruth Call. co. :'\IETRO CAR WASH \V. Coast H11.)'., N.B. 2950 Harbor Blvd. C.~I. $.f ,(r up. 9 am-9 PQ1 wkd}'s. EUROPEAN dressmaking 1..:===.:...:.:...:c_ __ _
Open eves/wknds. Appts I all custom fitted. Very
avail 548--0588. 1842 Nev.·port, rea~nable. 673-1&19.
C.J\ol. p A. Alterations -642-5845
Gordon N. W•rren • Neat, accurate, 20 years exp.
Since 1951. 61&.3345
Ironing
rRONING rny home $1.2a per
hr. Bring own hangen.
545-7641
Tile
*Verne, The Tile Man*
Cust. \\'Ot'k. Install & repair!.
No job too sml. Plaster
patchin1. Leaking shower
repair. 847-1957/846-0206.
Auto
2 SALESMEN
Need 3 combination ne1v &:
used aulo salesn1en. Excel.
lent con1n1isslon & dcnKl
plan, hospitalization & medi.
cal.
SEE AL TETREAULT
SALES MANAGER
HARBOR AMERICAN
1969 Harbor, Costa Mesa
Painting &
P•perh•nging
CERAA1IC tile new & remodel. Free est. Small BABYSJTIER • my home,
jobs y,;e]rome. SJ 6. 2 4 2 6 , C.r.f., 2 pre-scho?lel'S .ages * EXTERIOR·INTERIOR * 53&-8885 1 & 3. Mon· Fri, 7: 4J to
\Von't be underbid CUsl'Om ----------5:15. 615-3872 after 5 y,vrk, finest paints. Free Tree Service
est/color consulting. Refs, lit., bonded. Full financ.ini TREES, Hedges, Top, Tl'im,
=a= cut. removed, hauled. Ins. avail. 492-5338, 50-....W 6"2-mO Big John.
YOU SUPPLY TI-IE PAINT
Will paint any nn $10. Upholstery
Int I exter. Free est. 45 yrsu ·-c--U-p_ho_ls_l•-,.-,-.-Q-"'1..,,..ilY
e.'<p. ~lso carpenter \\"Ork, ""'Ork. Anthony's Up h.
any kind. ~7046, 557-8638. Service. 642-5827 N.B.
No Wasti~ --
*WALLPAPER* I lllJI When )'OU call "Mac" 543-1444 646-Iru E~yment
LESCO Painting Contractorl ~;;;;;;;~~
BAKER-Donut Shop. Early
morning. \Viii train. No
phone calls please .
\\'inchell's Donut Shop 2947
1-Jarbor Blvd. C.i\t.
Betty Bruce
Gxec
410 \\', Coast Hwy .. N.8. Int/ext. 2 Story 5peclallst.
Also, accou1 t , cei\,
spraying, Lie & ins.
~5-2399
By appoint. 6-l&-3939
O.C.C. sturlenl, male, 20, I.,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""!!!!!!!!!""""'
wishes part-time \\'Ork in BOOKKEEPEK, full charge,
EXPER. Painter. Inter. & A.M. Anything &33-333.> n1achine job shop. New
Exler. Y.'Ork by hr. Xln't J "-ob-w-.~.,-.-d~,~F=e-m-a~le~7~02" I facility, lrvine complex.
ref's. Dick Fielding, Hun· \Vrite Class!tied &d No. 12,
Job Wanted, Mele 700
lington Beach, 968-4065. AIDES For convaiesceT1Ce, Daily Pilo!. P. 0, Box 1 -~----'--1o---,-All-I elderly care or family care. ljf,(), Costa :\tesa, Ca. 92626 PAINTING, profess nlLI.
\V 0 r k g u a r n . C 0 I 0 r Homemakers. 517~1. BOOKKEEPER F IC lor
srecialist. 646-7081: 5'17-1441 NURSE, C0'.\1PANION accounting olc P /lime .
CUSTOM Paper Hanging, in· COOK. PERMANENT Accul'. typist. ~lini skirt
ter/vi:ter. paint.in&:. Save on • 646-1822 • OK. Hrs open. 833-3443
paper. 531-7991. EXP. l\lcdical transcriber & -'~'~Y='"~H~•~· ====~-o-~P-A~l-N~T-1 N-G-,-,-, ,-,-,-,-,-.1 insur. secy, full or part * BOOKKEEPER *
guarantet'd work. Lic'd. time. 494-9618. 744-5616. Full charg. exper. thru Pk L
Loral refs. Call 675-5740 Ftlr that item under ;50, J\lust be xlnt typist. 54()..9177
11 lt 5. try the Penny Pincher for appt.
NO. 16 FASH ION ISLAND COOKS • i\Iust know good NE\VPORT BEACH
soups & sauces. Hours 6'1 iiiiiiiiiiiiii ...... iii..iiiiiiiii
FURNITURE
-SALES-
am to 2 pm. l\lon thru
Jo'ri. All holidays off, paid
n1edical Jnsurance. 2 y,·eeks
vacation. Call 833-8666 For local dept. s!orl!
COOK-DIETICIAN e TOP COMMJSSION e CO. BENEFI'fs
Expd. Call Ann, &J:-,2770, Qt1ality Hne to sell
\Vestclitf Personnel Agl"ncy, Apply in person
2043 Westcliff Drive, N.B. to J\.1rs. Thompson
" COOK * ORDERLY Exp W . T. GRANT CO.
prel'd. Park Lido Convales. Personnel Office
cent Hosp. ~2-2410 9811 Adams Ave., Grant Plaza
Brookhurst & Adams, * Dental Asst. tltg. Beach
Front ofc. Prev. dental exper. An equal opportunily
w/know'l of X·ray, bkkpng employer
& billing. ... .. ,.., .......... ,,,.
Service Center Emp Agency FULL Charge Bookkeeper -
500 Nei~'JXJM Center Dr. N.B. l\1in. J yeal's experience.
Suite 53.i I 644-4981 Aviation oriented I and
tlcvelopntent co. XI n t
e DENTAL ASSISfANT -....,orking conditions. Salary
Desk only. Dental exp, nee. open, Ne11•port Be a ch.
Ins., accl's rec., some Sat's. 5.)7-6277.
Fringe ben's. H.B. area.1----------
Call 8am-9pm, 846-3540. GAS Station a!tendant. Days
DENTAL ass't, exper,
or full time. Mature. * 968-5782 *
& eves, p11.rl & full time.
part BA \'SIDE 66
1101 Bayside Drive, NB.
Call 67J...20-1;i
Dental Assist•nt
Exp. necess. S.16-5613 (9-,j) * GIRL FRIDAY *
With experience in general
DRAPERY 'vorkmom-feml. office duties to include
exp'd power mach opers & bookkeeping, tax returns.
w/train. Beach Drapery accounts rec/pay. Ab!IHy lo
Serv. 900 \V. 17th, C.:\I. deal wi1h people and handle
64&.3!m. one girl ofc. Age 25-35.
DRUG STORE CLERK, ma. J. J. KNICKERBOCKER
lurp LADY only, full time. CARPET CO. Hunlington
Cal l 4~221H. Beach. 962-3351. Call for ap-
----------1 pointment. Bring brief
rr·s Beach house time. Big· resume.
r::est selection ever! See thel-*-'-:H~E=A~D~l~V-A~IT~R-E=ss-~~,~o~,· I
DAILY PILOT Classified wk. Dinner House. Perm.
11ectlon now! Jnter,iiel\'S 9 to 12 noon.
Turn unused items into qUick
cash, call &12-JG'i8
SAl\l'S SEAFOOD 16 2 7 8
USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK. WE PAY POSTAGE!
5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES
Pacific Hy,·y. Hunt. Bch.
• HOTEL •
DESK CLERK
l l~avy experience
' TIMI$ • TIMlS
1
TIMES
12
TIMI$
e APPLY IN PERSON e
NEWPORTER INN
ll07 Janiboree Rd.
Ne1vport Beach
H 0 TE 1~ Desk-Reservation l-----1·----·1-----1-----1--$-
6
-.l-O-l-----l-----I Cleric r.1ust have exprr.
$4.50 $10.65 $15.90 Ca!I r,1gr. or Auditor lor
1-----1-----l·----1----1-----1-----l·---l----l----I app!. HOTEL LAGUNA,
$5.10 $8.21 $13.10 $20.10 <94-1151.
HOUSE\VIVES -3 openings
$6.00 $9.76 $15.55 $24.30 P/time. Aver. S3 per hr.
PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0
P11•1i1h f•r , •• , , , , , , • d1ys, ••••~11i119 , , • •• • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
:le11ific.,11.111 •• , •••••• .-. •••••••••• , •••••••••••• , •••••••••••••••••
TO FIGUll COST
No exp. nee. \Ve lrain. Fur
appl. call A1rs. l'>1ul!er * ~57i0*
He lp Wanted, M & F 710
!O; .,
•
IR.VINE PERSONNEL
SER.VICESg.AGENCY
488 E. 17th (at Irvine) C.M.
642-1470
J . W. ROBINSON'S
NE\VPORT BEACH
has immediate
opening for a
MAINTENANCE
MECHANIC
FUU. Tl~IE AND XLi~T
CO~IPAJVY BENEFITS
APPLY in person 10.J pm
Personnel Dept.
•2 f·ashion fsl., N.B.
Equal opportunity employer
e KITCHEN HELP e
5-19-3061
-*~L~V~N~3t011 P.M.*
!):19.31)61
LVN·3:00 to 11 :00 relief shift.
Park Lido Convalescent
Center 642-8044
Membership Sales
s12:;..szoo \\'kly straight sales
commission. Independent
contracto r basis. nian orl
1\·oman, civic orJcnted, \\'/
mcn1~rship sale.'§ ability lorl
leading Chamber of Con1.
merce In Orange Co. Send!
photo & resume to Classifi~
ad #63, Daily Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa l\fesa, Calif.
""'·
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
'"telp Wanted, M & F 710 I
N''"' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •. • •. • • .. • • •' • • • • • • •' •. •.' • • • • • • •. • .. • .. •
,Ill 011Jy •11• w•rrl i11 •• ,~
1p•t• •b•~•. l11tlud• v•ur
•dclr•n •r ph o11• 1111111b•r.
The ""' •f your .d ;, •I th•
•11d of th• li111 011 whi,h Iii•
l•tt werrl el vour •ti i1 w1it•
lt11 , Add $1.00 ••lrt if vou
tl11irt 111• ef DAILY PILOT
I•• ltt•lce ... ith M1 f1eli ft •
pli11.
JUST WHAT IS A GOOD JOB
~,,,,, .............................................. -........ .
City •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '11011• ••••••••••••••••••••••••
/------------CVT Hiii -PASTt ON TOUI IHYILOPl
,
IUSINESS RE,LY MAIL
""' Cl• ..... N-. IL C.... "'-• c.11 ... .a.
011n91 Cout DAILY PILOT
P. O. lox 15'0
Com MelO, Collf. 92626
C:l1ulflool .,....
•• ,_.,. s1.., .........
It Mt.I~ ia t•e
UllllH Stlttt
I '
ANYWAY?
ll''.'! one thal glv<'s you
enough incomc 1o kerr
your farnll}' from e\•cr
h11vin11: another flnan.
rl11 I "·orry.
It's one thet lnclude1
ht'alth and llfe Insur-
ance CO\'era~ 11.nd
more oth('r benefits
than you can believe.
Ifs a job \\'ith dignity
and rre~Uge. A job
that brings you JnlO
contnct \\'ith interrsl·
ini; people', A job in a
firld \\·ith limitless
~ro\\'lh opportunlUcs.
tt's a job jus1 llkl' the
on<'s \\·e·rc offering to
the best people \\'e can
{Ind.
LCOA INVESTMENT AND REALTY, INC.
Or•nt• County Ar•• -(714) llS..J2l)
RiY1r1ld1 Ar•• -171 4) 79l·»•o
lo• An11lts Ar11 -(21l) 112·2'20
'
"
NOW!
.NEW!
•
' •
PILOT " ' ' '
PENNY
PINCHER
CLASSIFIED ~DS
WITH A
NEW-LOW-RATE
J LINE~
2 TIMES
$2.00
ANY ITEM
$ OR
LESS
e EACH ITEM MUST BE PRICED e
e No Item Over $50 e No Commercial Firms e
e No Copy Ch1nge1 e No Abbrwi1tions e
CALL
642-5678
ASK FOR YOUR
DAILY PILOT AD-VISOR
AND YOU MAY CHARGE IT!
.
•
. ---
See The Big Show MSTCRH NATIONAi.
BOAT FREE &MARINE --
TueJdly, Ftbfuary 23, 1971 DAILY PILOT Z5
Find Your Name
If "'"' ••-11 Hsi.cl lo • 1pad1I ad-It could appoar uoclar any
cla11lflc1tton, IO look at them· all-phone 642-5671, ldentlon
314, betwMn 9 1.m. and 1 p.m. to make 1rrangements to pick up your
tlckeh at any convenient DAILY PILOT office. •
"QUEEN OF
THE SHOW" Be The Guest of the DiilLY PILOT
SHOW
cusro• wxu•Y
1
omctAL sttow INFLATABLE 11;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~jl~ __... 57'C?~U~BI~ 1~~i B?~~S ~ HO USE · SKI · MARINE ~~~~~~~~~~;~~~;;;;;;;;;~I ~-·-mp!_.,_ .... _' ~J I iii [ (mp!••-• lw I •mp1,, .... , lli+J """'""~"""" aoAis:aoA1s ACcEssoR1Es II' -. l!!J L-. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~· ~ ~Jilt~; FEB.20·28 .. b ........... I~ I ...:r.r. ... l~1 ~1 _1_ ...... _ .. 11oo__,I•
Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710
~ ~ ~U CDMV•NTIOM DOOASQPEN Help Wanted, M & F 710 1'\ rtlYI CENTER WEEK'ENOS12NOON·WEEl<DAYS4PM
MANICURIST
For N.B, Salor: 673-6890
l\'IARRIED num lo assunic
Fuller Brush routl'. i\lr.
Hoffman 832~8.
Salesmen-Saleswomen
$800 guarantee to qualified
pl'rsons. ~;~~~~~r.:::1;~~~~~~M;n~"~"~·-~·~~~.~~~·~·~· ~~·~ .... ~.~,.~~~~~A~DU~L~T~S;$1~.7;•;· K;•;o·~·~0.~1'~1~7'~·~~1~D~og~·~~~~~~~'54~ ... ~ Sllpa/Docka tlO MobiNl·o-w o' PENm SOLDERERS
6 'I , DIVORCE forces &ale of 15 TO • FT. ·"po a·-U. uos to 1 yr eXpet', l111 to be I ~ -•• aut. ~male G er man for pow.· boats. Private $2.~ hr. APEX '---"-""""' __ '_" __ ll ~J I Mtrchlnd'11• I~ I Free to You Ill ~,J.~~~ry ~:'nu~~·~ =-W~~~:J"';: J8~~~M:.~s
• •
Spc-c1 red Corporation opening
nc11· location in Ne11.-porl * Beach. Top sales personnel
r1E'i'ded 10 introduce excit ing,
1~volutlon:u·y braury icch-
Employment Agency _ . . .~ •·;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;·~~I old. 546-3009 CM, eYH Cout Hwy, NB 23301 RIDGE ROUl'E D1l.
1873 I !arbor Blvd. I••••••••-1 except Tues &. Thurs: U (Cotntt ct Moa!ton Pkw)r)
Cosla 1'-1esa 5-18-3-126 F .1 810 M ' JI BlS HO,l E .. nted fo• p-tty no ans\\-er try later. Boats, Speed & Ski 911 LAGUNA HILLS VON MILLS
3016 Cliff Dr.
Newport Beach
\'ou are the 1\·inner ol
(':.Block So. 01 l9thl urn1 ure 1sce 1neous • '" housebroken ~I groy.71 male l Female silky, 2 moa. Show 17' BELLBOY '69, lo hrs. Pr6tire adult eommlIDl'1 •d·
WHY Buy * LIQUIDATING * kitten. Part angora with quality! Little black toy U> Mere Cru!Jer, m tOB, jacent to Lell\n World. niqur. Al! areas. Unlin1i1ed SUPER ronscie.nth·nis-. hard-
carninb potential. i\1iss i\lel· 11-orking lady to do floor to-
ner, 646-31i15. ceiling cleaning job on 2
SALESLADIES pt tin1c for br Cd;\1 hon1e t II' ice
• Contl'nts of Large !tome middl~ed or o lder male poodle, 21,i mos. 3 IIT, elect puges, mllllY Beaut:1tal l\UTOUDdl.nll. Ill
Color lV'1, couche11, piano; people. 548-19511 10 toy-mini poodle1, creme, l xtra.I, New trlr. $2850. Tel. luxury appointments, pUI· FURNITURE? 111atern11y specialty chain. n1on1h/y. $31hr. Ca I J
Gd salary, beaut . decour, 61l-32Hl, 3 to 10 11n1 Be Flexible I
at the pll'as. work. cond·s. State TELEPJIONE APPT SEC'Y, Rent mo. lo mo. with
ANAHEIM exp. P. 0 . Box 346 Corona Pt-timc. ou r officr, Cd~!. 4. 100°/o Purchase Option
2 tickets 10 lhc
Western National
Boat & Marine
Show
CONVENTION drl i\lar 92625· 8 pm. Needl"d : self assured Jnd. item selection
CENTER SALES bu~incss per.ion \1"ho cnJoys 24 Hr. Defy.
February 20th thru 2Sth Sell sho1v exhibit space. Good calling strangC'rs. 833-3656 or CUSTOM
{'01nn11ssion, leads tul'n1shcd. 675-1089 Furniture Rental Please call 642-5678, cx1. 31•1 between 9 and 1pm10 ciaim 1 -"-"°-"'_63_~_8_33_3 _____ TE LEPHONE advertising :i17 \V. 19th, C.?i-f, 54g,34g1
your tickets. (North Cuunty * SALES\\'OMEN • fro111 our pleasant Ncwport A'U!hcln1 774-ZSOO
toll·lree number is 540-12'20) 1\Iature, part time.. off lees. nrly 11 11. gr s, La lfabra 694-3706 * * . * YOUNG r·•I ATER.~ITY l\lorning 01" CVC'. ~hilts. 6-15. FURNITURE returned from
~10LDERS, Fibcrglass-f~xp'd SHOPS 3030 33• JI.tr. l\ladrid display studios, model hom. -~""~· =Co~'~'~'-P_I'_'~=.· ~C~.l\~l. __ 1r E LE PHONE 1\nswer1ng e-, decorator .. cancellation. in hand Jay-up. Apply in per. ::-., SARAJi Covent"" necds fl. Serv. Exp, pref'd. Fl or All Brand l'."c1v son 9-IO \V. 17th St., C.i\I., •J p . Coastal Recreation Inc. or pt tin1e help. No in· l !lme. \\'/train it qualified R O FURNITURE
vestment. \Viii train, min Not undC'r 30. Ph: 54fi.2052 1844 Newport Bl., C.M.
l\Iotel n1aids, EXPERJENC· ""n 20 "" '""" r. 83°7568 TRA -S ... .,, ..... .-.~"""' er-INEE :\1on., Thur. & Fri 'Ti! 9
ED ONLY. Apply 1" person, I SEAMSTRESSES" 1st & 2nd Shifts \Ved., SaL & Sun 'Til 6 Costa Mesa Inn. Ci\l, l5t & 2nd Shifts 3 lmn1cd. openings fo1· rncn to i\IUST sell, beaut. Jl.Ied it-
NEED extra monry~ \\'c'r<' fn1 n1C'CI. openings n1ust be Irani irnfusrnu! hand S('V.'· trrranean furniture. Gold 9'
looking for rnanagcrial-!ype filled this \1·k. Po\\·cr sev.. ing_ Call Now! 9 Ai\t 'til sofa & lO\-e seat. $2i j, Cof· people to help us in a new 1 1ng n1ach. cxper, desirable, 9 P'.II. frr & end tab cs. Velvet
business. F'ull or part timc, Call No1\'. 9 M1 'ti! 9 Pl\1. ORANGE COAST !ugh back chrs. Blk naugh. Call 548-6641 or &12-38~9 ORANGE COAST EMPLOYMENT !r sofa ,& love sent. $150.
NURSES AIDE in Jarge EMPLOYMENT AGENCY Game set. lamps, pictures.
::~~I ~~:~ti~. ~·~oe tl~k~ AGENCY J ~12~l~B~'~oo~· rl~':"~Y~.~c~··;"~· ;':'~'·~3~11.'.IJW:fd~l~2EmRo_,RoEl:Cd.;-7~!~4';-;;"~7~-,.~·~;1,;.
to 11·ork ivi!h children. Scnd l24 Broadway, C.~1. 6-lj.Jlll • ·r RAIN J:: E-Garn1ent \\"ATER RED, .c omp I el e
l'efrig., tables, BR sets & Ai\f-lPi\1. 2(25 male, 2 Jem. 6 black mln\1. eves, &12-9361 ting ll"ttn. hobby lbl>p,
misc. Let s negotia!e? FREE 10 good home 2 mo. 646-0142 333 E. 17th St., 17~' Flbera:lus Boat, trlr, much ~.
673-0549 pup ;) Weimaraner, %i-c_.>_t_. --------75hp motor. Family &Id !-:-,-;CALL-,~ l!303llOO
.270 Remington model 760 Labrador after 5:00 P.~1. DA<.: HS HUND pup a, boat. Man,y xtru. $1250. Trlple Wide Cornell
with \Veaver 2.5 x 7 power 225 A. Pafua.da, San mlnlature, AKC, mack & 54Q.0665, Continental e Paramount
variable scope, 2 extra Clemt-nle 2/23 tlll\ & mahoaany red . 13' OUTBOARD Runabout & &.niniton • Unlwnal
cllps, $135. Also .243 Savage \YANTED good home forr ..:."='~'633-4:.:.:...:::.018:::.. -----trailer. Uphol front seal. F1amina:o • Genrral
model 99F v.·lt h \Veaver K-4. "sclmoodle", female 7 mo. STANDARD Poodlt-beautl. Xlnt. cond, 3'ii hp oulbn:I. &ro&dmoor • Star -'"'°="'"'-~Sl='°~·~"'=·='-='~315::=. ___ 1 cult-aUectionate we J J fut blk fem. puppy: champ. $160. 962-3965 Hllkrelf • Cambrldml
GENUINE AquamaritM! ti.ha\~. Loves children. ion sired. 492-3364 aft 6 Boats, Storane 912 CHAPMAN
stones trom Brazil. Cut • 6".-Qa9. 2/'&J . • MOBILE HOMIS POODLES, AKC, Adorable LOCKED t ·-• '"-· 1 ·-N u.~ s • faceted. Only Sll Nocb A )IALE AND FEMALE small miniature Very • e ..... ~ •--e or uvo • naa.._., --·~·~·=H=""::.:c"~'-67=3~·"'°':.::c.... __ J 8ETTER AND Co 111@ reasonable. 962-2195. ::tt. or .... ;am.::th. :iOcC ii~ 1 --,=*=71~VJll.a!=='='='m'=•~-· I
GAS DRYER. SZl pupplts 10 mo. outside dogs ,.-THE BEST OF
Dl,Nr-PT' ' • -all thoC1. xlnt \\'/child: BEAUTIFUL !'-KC Beagle 542.-6560. BOTH WORLDS
...... :·~:~··~--J.Q7.1m alter 6 PM. 2/25 pups, 2~ mos old, Very , ,...,.n,,,. ..... A_, Reas. (213) 592-5.303. [i] For a beautiful bomr, la"
Miscoll•neou• ....., .. IUX.>W '-"'1'Ln.Vl11 gray I I .th. maintenance and arcbit.cuz'. Wanted 121 Cock . A.Pool yr old. Mlnia~u.re SC HNAUZER .. Trwportatlon .. ally bnprea:l.va dai&n. S..
951-4119 alt !i:XI needs a puppies, AKC rer. 7 wkl. C. i;mmmmm~·::: I the excltlnc new •"vtnap
,-,-.-N-'T_E_D-,--1'-ls-in--,-._--n pd home. 2/25 _!.!.Call G44-2411 * * • House" by LeYttt Mobile
rocking chair. l\1ust be hft PRE'lTY 1moke P@rsian DALMATIANS • AKC re&i•· Campers, Sale/Rent f20 Syste1n1 on dllptay now et
or nt nominal cost. 54Q..22i9 kitty, female, 3 mo, All !ered. Dl.3'1:_646-7203; After BAY HARBOR
aft 5 P.)t. shot!. Free to Loving home. :i pm: 548-!H•6. CAMPER MOBILE HOMES
CE i\1ENT BLOCKS 644·1621 2/23CUTE black min i ature 1425.BakerSt. eo.t&~
\YANTED. Suitable Io r l YR old cockapxi. black. poodle pups, 7 weeks, $15. J"ust S. of S.D. Y.,,, at Harbor
build!"• book ··~"'· Call Chlld .. n• dog, LookJ like Call ........ CLEARANCE SALE n4J5t0.94'IO
646-4665 aft. 5: 00 pm. poodle when c lip p ed . e POODLE Pups, pw:tbred Triple Wkle Cornell
Office Furniture/ 897-5372 2/'15 minia. 8 \\Tks, 2 Blk temal· Large telectlon .pre ·n Hlllcrost e Flamlnp
Equip. 824 9 wk old puppy. JI.fed. size.1 .,:";:,•,,="':.;~=,,':,:'°,::~..,..._~--Campers Now Sluhed to Paramomlt • Untv.nal
resume 10 Box 1728 , factory . Thorou g h t.·ustoin 7X9 raised redwood
Nev.1>0rt Beach, Ca!. • * * SE:A:\1STRESSES knoi\•ledgr of s e \V ini.; frame \1' I bu a rant e e d *
. E)[~ricnced single needle e~~rn1ial. 400l Bircli, unit n1all1't'ss & safety linrr.
NURSES Needed ror prn·11te 1 ... "''0 "·19~ Never used, l\fUST
..
R. W. KRANZ
302 Visia Baya
Costa Mesa
Parl Terrier. Cocke r & e PUREBRED Welmaraner-$ OYll Barrinrton • Bmedmoor * Sht-phen:I. Loves k i ds . All ihotll, Includes doghouse 49 ACTUAL Contiuental " Star
540-7660 2/25 $35. 675-8954. FACTORY Gent':ral e llUkftst
CUTE female German DALMATIAN, 3 mo'a., male. INYOICI CHAPMAN opera oroo . .,....,....,,. ;:i "1' ', N<'1,po1·1 Bcach, 11r duly, RN's. LVN's, Pract, J;i ... ii;ii.ii.i ... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii OC au·pol'I SACRIFICE $13(1 complete.
have ref's. Ph 11.11,v hr &12-SS2S ;;"'\V-fi'f' Ri::SS:O;JN"°n1~'~3l).:,';l7~08~-,-~--Secretary 9!155 Lescoulie Nurses * \\'A 1 TR J:: SS-DINNER , , . Regis!r) Construction. EsCI'O\I, loan HOUSI:: r~xp'd·food & ILL:'llE::iS makes it a necessi·
pki.:;11g helpfu l. i\'tust ha ve C'ocktails· G da 11. k . ty to sell all 10 ~ms ol
NURSES-RN Relil't for 7:00 xlri'1 SH & ty ping. Iritcrvie,1•5 9 to 12 noon. our nr .new i\1edlt, £urn
to 3:30 shill. Jr. Sec'y SSOC SA.,l'S SEAFOOD 16276 cheap. "Example • 8 blk
Park Lido Con\·aicscent t\sslst admin. sec·y. SH. die-Pat'ilic H\\"y. Munt i:k:h naug so.fa & lo\'l'~eat, never
Center &12-80-1~ taphonr & acture. typist . * WAITRESS EXP'D usi.•d $150. 213: 92;r36Z2
PA.RT time sales opportunlly F /C Bkkper $600 • EXCESS furniturc sale ·
\'ou are the \Vinner of
2 tickets to the
Western National
Boot & Marine
Show
Shephe.rd pup me to good P@t/Sbow,. Top cond. SHOWCASE MOBIL& HOMES
home. Call 841·1927 alt 3:30 642--1937. DE~ 123.1!, ~~~~·:·a. _p.m. 21251_A_UTO--.-,-l-to-.-0-lym_p_l_1_D_ll_to' 1
o Adorable G. Sht-p and Lab. machine. $70, ELDORADO CAMPERS 10x50' d!lux mobU. home,
mix pups 7 ,veek~ 3 blk * Call !162-660T * THEODORE setup in nice adlt pk, 1tt
2 Brindle n"d Kood hom" EAUTIFUL lrl h S. -ROBINS FORD to appreciate. Aft I A 548-3388 2/25 B s tier, -HARBOR BL~,..... wkndl: 548--2897.
LOVABLE
female, T mo'1 old. Call ......,,,. .-.u.
)UUng m al e 63J.fi659 COSTA~ 642-0010 • 10x!i5 Beaut Cond.. 5 Star
for 3 Jicense-d Real Estate Constr. bckgrnd ,,·/EDP. Not under 21. NO PHONE Eastl'rn & s t e.elcase
salespeople. Private desk & NEWPORT c ,.\LLS. Apply in person, furniturc.
phone. Call for intervic11•• Su rf & Sirloin, 5930 \V. Coast 6j';"O off.
at the
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER
February 20th thru 28th
Please call &12-a6T8, eXl. 314
bl'tween 9 and l pm to claim
your tickets. (North County
toll-free number is 540-.12.20) * .. ..
medium brttd blk a.nd tant~c,,..~·.,....--~-...,.. 1968 Dodge family wagon Parli: tn Colt& Mesa. Owner
shelti@ mix loves children AKC. Alaskan Malamute, camper van. Air cond, Blpa 548-4046.
has shots. 542-7096 2125 choice 9 wk male puppy, 4 adultg o• 2 -•uJ•· • 4 =ax~40"""=1...,.br-t~llJ'lillhed.---~N~t~.,,-1 =~~~--...,.--,..1 gua.rantttd. Alao 2 y•r • .... .. "" BLACK Cocker spaniel male, proven male at 1 t u d , children. Many extru. ?iitlllt adult-pe:t park. U5 lp&Oe
pedigree. 3 yrs old free to1 ;';5'&-~'7228~.,....~~~..,-....,.-J ,;i'"i;i";:·-:S;:2950i::'.;;;548-0440~-ii;;;;i';-;;;;"".;; rent. $2300. UF-9111 art 4 1ood home. Papers1-: FOR --• '""= ..,. _, T llt T I ~· included, 892-1450 2!25 GERMAN 1horthalr, 8 wits, .,...e-,......., ... o.~ V8 '4 ra rs, rave ~
. papt-;ra & shots $50 ton P.U. truck w/196S lO'ii' _,
LONG HAIRED S 1 a me 1 e * 673-4315 * Calll. camper, Call eves 1 '69 Trav~ EH Trailer, XI'· ~lETAL OFFICE n1ale yr o.ld, &hota:, very to 9, 547-3n6. T wl n Bed, fully
LIKE NE\V S&0 lovable. 495-4869 2/25 DALMATIAN pupa, AKC, CABOVER Cam-· on F'A-' seU~ntiined. TV antmna, CARRIER alr condition!'!' ~~-----~--1 beautiful, Good dl&posltlon, .. -. wl.I easy roll canopy. Uka new!
Personnel Agency 11 N B W . E. Lachanmyer "'Y.. · · Ted :\lickcy, 1866 N. Tustin,
1860 Nev.·porl Blvd .. c.~f. ·m Dov;rl~~·· N.B. \\'ANT llun11ngton Bchl,O"-'rn~n=g70 ____ ~~~
Call 646-3928 Eves: 673-4577 ·64 • \\'Oman for li!c house\1·ork, S' SOFA. ne\·er used, quilted
PHONE canvasser, not i\ton'!'I & Fri's only, 4.5 floral, scotchguarded $125. SECRl::TAR\'. marketing/ 1 !2 b 8'T ""~~ under 18, Sales ex per pref'd, ioui-s. per r. ~ -~.,,.., .i\fa 1rhing loveseat $ 7 5.
.. -'" "·I 64_ sales .. \lust be skilled l)'P· betwn JOuni & 2 pin only. ,1.1.'1-19i"i o: ""• ~ · + comm · ;> isl. Lile shorthand. Salary 49~9 commensurate \\'I experi·
DESK
e WELDER e
ShN't Steel J•abrlcation s7;,, Rl'cliner, nc11· S50. 846-21374 FRE·E puppy to JOOd home. n:;nbl. 494-1270 <Jt -497-1520 w/new trans. Fully &dr con. 864 Sonora Rd. CM.
co. has immediate open· Guld/\\hl n1arblc end table CA SH regis ter NCR model Call before 3 pm.• ELEGANT Afghan Pups, fained. S1600. 646-1108 l'T""r•~l~lt-r-,=,~U~t~l~ll~ly::;. __ M7='1
inas for crrtified wC'lders, S?.O. 64~32 21. $300. 342-4967· 2/25 AKC. Black mu:ked aUver.
e PRESS BRAKE {'lll't'. \Vrite Classi.fied ad
OPER. e No. 76, Daily Pilot, Box: 1560,
Need n1cn with high qual· 9· SOFA'"' niatching chair, 1 ____ *_54~&-'-"55~"~--*---DOUBLE box spring 962-6956 aft .f. Cycles, Blk11, 14' Tandem Trailer
Good skil!s, Excellent Salary. hy and t'fficienry rcrorrl. grC'en. very good condition. Pianos/Orgons 826 mattress, in iood cond. j G Id R--1---Scooters t2S With 4 wbeelt. AD steel weld.
JI.lust have kno1vled gc of Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626.
blueprints and abllily 10 SECRETARY
do any type or selup -
tolerance to + or .. 010,
Xlnt bcncfits, good v.·ag£'s.
Kenneth C, llollo\1•ay Inc.
X!nt. benefits and good S200/both. 644-5465 ----------642--0657. 2f25 o en etr everl 1-----------. -·-·ctlon. "" s•··l Call Ann. 645-2770, \Ves1<'lilf "" C 71' ~~.6588 ..... '""""'"" -,. """
Personnel Agrncy, 2CH3 '1"ilR('S. SACRLFICE like new velvet CLEARANCE Pan poodle puppy female, ..,~.. - -... - - deck P1atins. 56-0lll <lr
\
'
., D NB H'.enneth c. Hol!o1va y Inc. so fa & IO\"e seal, n ·, lamp•, SALE needs a home, coco coior. Hor••• 156 I ......... -• ~. wm ..u. Or tr,.& \ 'eslc 1 f r., . • i=oo A THINI """" J\l'ms!rong \'t'. r1c. 673-6926 Ju t darl·n 968-1857 2"u for plclcup
SERVICE Sl.,, e·lo•m·n, t· I · s
1
g ''"" BROOD?-.fAR.E -Doublt-; bred /~~~~·~~~~~~! 16680 Arms1rong Avc.
Irvine Industrial Complex
S.A. Apply ~ P.~l.
'"' ~ ~· rv1nC" Induslrial Con1plcx Over JOO P ianos &: Orgllils HQ'.,,.._ W. full rinie/1-p! t1n1c, at least S.A. Apply 4 p ,.\\. 8' RLACK NA UG. SOFA Reduced for Im.med, sale. NEED good home, tncd yard Joe Reed II. 1n foal tD A...i i&.l.C"at
2 yrs rxp. Not under 21, l\'ever used * $100 B N S for lovabl@ liv@ly ft-male Palleo'r. Note make otter. I If £4 J pl'l'I married. See Jerry X ·){A Y 1'ECHNOLOGHrr. * 213/925-3622 * uy ow & avi I Basset mix pup, 7 wks. (TI4l 7J'i.5649 Norm. • Autalflr ..
Printing 7am-4 : m..m, 2590 Kev.-port \\'ifh or \1·i!houl special COUC!I 2 h . I' d bl Open Dally JO Iii 6 892-1654. 5-18-4215 2123 •'fRIEDl.ANDER" ~--·····;;;-~, PRESSMAN ..,..,., procedurt!S. South O:m~r · c airs, n ta es. Fr: 10-9 * Sun 12-5 Bh·n. C.!\!. C lomps & coUee table. Good COAST MUSIC LOVABLE~ !•malt mlnlol , v 36.. & 2 omn1un1ty lfospital. 31872 1 $200 S II ~= .-:Ao 3~, •• · 1 ]~ " .irs. exper, · press · SE.RVICE Sta All•ndant . or r ~ :no-"»» G 0 •· 1 )'1' be. blk lolt1MCI ~ ~ 2 h ~ Coa st ll"'Y·· So. Laguna. · · NEWPORT & CIARBOR. · "'"'I'· ige M.rine
color i 1iehli. From $j, 5 r. Full or pt rin1e, Over 18. 1i(7i"ii'•'i9'-;iilii3!ili Ei,xi1i. i3'6iiiiiilAntiquC' tea cart, ~dney Costa Mesa * 642-2851 mask v er)' a en t I e Equfpment .
APEX :\lus1 be nea!, good nppear-shap!'d desk & more, Call PR CE ~>3965 2/25
Employment Agency a nee & personable \v/good l).t;,.2688 ACTI BE AU T J FU L German General -
1873 Harbor Blvd. f 3006 H rbo c J\I I~ S " -Cos1a ~resa 548-3426 1.'..":.:::"~·=:.c.:='='c,·-=:.·:.::..· -Mt';tCfiindii• ~ TRUNDLE_ bed $15; Triple ORGANS hepherd 1
7ll yr old spayedl---------
11 2 Blk So. of l9thl SEHVICE Es!ab'd. Fuller 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~· jjV~;1 dresser $1_,, Prices you \11on't believe! female. Good with children. FOR RENT l BR apt wl•o· Brush rte, Sl25-S175 \\"k. to I * &1~3803 * \YARD'S BALD\VfN STUDIO To good home. 8'16-96l7 2/23 boat lllp, side tie, Newi;x>rt
P R 0 FE S SION,\L phone st .. also pt. time 546-57~5. Antiques 800 LA_R_G_e--lo-,-n-g•--,-h-,-,-t' 18lfl Ne1vport Blvd, &12-8484 "PEGGY Su@" I ova bl"' Beach $~ per mo. (71•)
solicitor • Dan.1 Poi~1t, San * SHAMPOO GIRL * separa1e cushions, dark gold blk/wht female Ten1er 9 547-2595 or 673-2828
d.. HA:\1MOND, :;tel nwa y. mo. shots. hsbrk. Jriendly Boatt Power Cl@men1e, Cap\s!rano nren. Assistants, Beauticians, Hair-SCRAM-LETS ~'fl12lo_',",,,•.ood con 1t1on S25. Yamaha. Nciv & used 5-18-2l;,J aft 6 212,. •
\Vork in your ov.11 l1on1£'. dressers, Hair Styltsts, i\1an. 1r · f I k B t pianos o mos ma cs, cs MALE 6 wks German '61 25• CHRISCRAFT Cava. :::4~ea~!:~ee~re;:·oop:~~~ ~~~~~r;,f:. ~~~t~·t:~cn~~;. ~~:~ ANSWERS Garage Saie 812 ~f:s~~n g_.,c~~? a~~~~\~~ Shepherd pup. 2287 Pacific Iler, outrigger1, radio, tlu1h
and noon. Roy Alvarado, J{AIR HUNT. ~'ABU!,OUS Sa!r: Gd quality Sanlfl Ana. Ave., CM 2/25 deck, needs care, $3000.
906
Dune Bunl•• 956
(1™) '70 llcemed Calif
dune bu.gin. StrHt lqaI,
lo ml'•, fUIJ1 aqulp'd .
VariOU1 colon, Your choim,
$l8SO. 6"-1'°8, 6"--0'1» aft
6 pm.
'65 VW Dune BUOY, Eng
just reblt. " cam, bl1 b<ft,
2-barrel, Xlnt cond, JU50.
968-1883
1960 CORVAIR
Make Otter
st6·1117 After e: FM
PROPERTY 1\IANAGEMENT ERS SALO:-/ 644-2151 day or lol~ or goodies, original art e S'nJDIO grand, 5'6", Xlnt Black Siamt-se Kitty, green 646·5993 175
E ~ . d I I Gal!ry -Legat -. 1.rony -''orks, clubs, wig•, rug•. C . h 33' 1964 OWENS FBRGLS B ~-~-k "·bit ..__A_. DUNE Buu:y (CUltom)·Rebtt xl"'riencc , ma urc coup e: r\'£'. Deb i·ond. 1\1ake oUer. Pvt ply. eyes. ompl. \l.1l shots U"11w1ui.C er .nic uu•n.1 manage & nialntenancc of ate -DOGGEREL .~preads, n1ini bike, 9462 9G8-2S45. 673-3331 2/2' BRIGANTINE, $17,500, BY to 2:11. A·l Gd. Shape. $325. e~. M&nJ o:tru, $1lSl5.
a'*. compl0<, C'.ll, Salary e SHEET STEEL e An untalented poet ~rsis!. Daytona Cir, HB. 962~569. ".'....------OWNER n• I m-5135 Call •ft 5· 536-3905 644-4779. +'apt. Call collect <Tl4) fmmed iate opening fnr ed in subml11ing material to Tues. \Ved & Thur. BALD\VIN Oraan, 53 keys, CHILD'S &wing set in good ' · · · l'S~po-rt.,-,-.R~.-.-.~R~od~-,~5~9,1
Precision cabinet t h I I" II h 8 ~al8, llko n•w. •""" con d . AI10, toys .22 FT. Century Raven.170 Doyourparttofight ' _, I 775--98.JO. a oug {'(_ 1tor. ,•.na Y. 1 c GARAGE Sale: F urn., ~· -b lnbo ~ Sii il 'f •·poll Layout Mechanics "A" ("(htor v.rot h n1 fo hrav value: FOR S300. 847-3444. &16-6150 2/'15 P a.... P avs. • 1 •"" utlon.. SCHWINN 10 *RECEPTION IST / GIRL . ~ e 1 i ' ~ · clo!hlng, ~urfboard, ski~. LONC..hair Chihuahua 4-5 necess. $5,000. 615-0614, 1peed, 84!11 Otter. 5'8-1610 '56 Chevy Nomd-Ntvtr FRIDA y to Pr im 11 ri 1 Y Q11<il1ry '''ork necessary. ens sa <', p case cur yoor d~h\\·,;hr, ping-pong tbl. 1132 BALD\Vl:"ll organ & speaker, raced new !27/«50 hp ~-· Qual1Jicd only need apply. DOGGEREL." airona In, C.:\f. like ne,.,., full p"' d al lbs. Over 1 yr. 0.Vner sick. 25x9 CRUZON Sporttisher, '66 HONDA 160 • • uVJK
ha)'Klle lelephonc 11/rome Profit sharing & retire. ANOTHER kl 1 1 k•ybr>arcl. Sl600. G44-l:Zn. 836-4493 2125 loaded. Mint condition wf NEW TIRES, au.IN end. h:)'dro, custom 1Dt..
.. n'l ofc, incl. typiiut & true· oar O GARAGE Sall" -Misr Jtcn1s. Lido 1· .,._,., '"~" ,..,,.,., s-•-675 ~ ltrett <Jt ltJ1p. •-In ft, nirnt plan, life & henlth 1· 1 o k R , bl 2 Fom•I• puppi'•• • ,~... A 1P-..,,....,, '"°""",_, ~l,J or ou.i::r. ·104a or-adding mach. 771 \\I. 17th, .a~ ern a : ounu ta es, S.11 .~. Sun lron1 11 lo t HOBART M. Cable Upright '"' uk $1000 or bnt otter. C.&1. 1nsurincl', good \\'ages. Chinn rabtncts, School 300i Harhor Vici,· Dr Cd\! piaoo, in good cond, $195 Shepherd, part Sheepdog. Boats, Rent/Chert'r 908 HARLEY chopper, '67 64>1324. RE~AURAZ'T: :\'ov.• lnkin~ l<~~hA7-~~~~;aX\'~~· ~~~('~t~~~I~~ es~s'. a118~ Household Goods . 8.14 or best offer. M6-6201. .>49-3900 2123 ~= =.. ~~:~ 1 "·GO=-~,.,,,..nl~,-~47!=--ci=,-..,.--,1
a p pl ica t ion s for Irvine Jndustrial Con1plcx p 1 T l .. Sporting Good• 830 2 Spayed cal!, very 3l' Tw:lnacrew Chrl•, fully balanced, 110lidt, batted
* \\'A IT RESSE~, $.A. Apply 4 P.~t. S~~~; A v9~' us t n · ~fo\1lng • \Va.!lhl'r/dryer, and alf@chonate nd good home equlp'd, Flshln.i or Cruil-HONDA !i-1INI TRAIL 50, tram, 125 MPH, t:T 12'i, * 0 IS H \VA S HER S, I\> mLc;cclJ 20192 Imperial Cove .270 RE~llNGTON model 760 &. lovi ng care. 548-6202. 2/23 ing. 548-:2434. $l?5. Go-cart $50. many txtru, bnt cflet ed
*COOKS NO-Ort(' under 111 SlflPPJNG SUPERVlSOR A N T I Q U E I run k , l-1. Hunt Sch, 968-2081 with \Veaver 2.5 x 7 power COCK·A·POO _ 6 moa. old. Bolts, Sall 909 * 673-7267 * or trade. 710 S. Coast Hwy ne~ ai)ply. COLON '{ Experienced Only rectangular. over 70 yrars M ' II BlB vnriable scopt-, 2 extra female. All shob. , ""to '70 BULTACO Matador 250 No. I. Lquna Btach.
IO•CHE 3211 H b • 540-4511 * olrl $40, good condition. isce aneou• JJ.Jv 1----------"· otr J;::.,.-;-~-----.,,=I . .. N, a r or 5-l;,....1)9()6, clips, $135. Also .243 Savage kids? 968-2543 2/23 * CAL 20 outboard-boat cc. Ex:. co. u.lt er. Trucks ff2
DIYd .. C.~1 . e STEEL * AUCTION * mOOel 99~, with Weaver K-4 bath h" ed t 3 al 675-0739
CATION • A I' 802 ,;cope $130. S5T-731S. 1 Yr old ~epherd/Dober-. , 1ng. mu, m n1,
RICHARDS FABRI pp iances Ftne Fumi!ure man P lnacher. Ukes kids. 2 jibs, $2450. ~ day1; 1969 250 YAMAHA Twtn. '63 International PU TC.lent Showcase • F:XPERJENCED • K:O::EN""M:::O:::R-::E",-,-,.-w-.,-.-.,-,s:;--_I & Appliance~ Swaps 834 675-3954. 2/25 6~2927 eve1. ~~~ry ..... ~111an, xlnt o>nd. $$SO.
Sheet Metal Grinder I -~-Pop-Singers, Piono s!n~. Al so t<cnmore gas dryer Aur.tions Friday, 7:00 p,m. TRADE brand new &urfOOftrd ADOR ABLE G ~rm a. n 14' O"Day s oop, w/kttl, ......,....
along & Groups.. for £'l£'ctronic cabinetry $40. Both Xlnt «ind. Guar Windy's Auction Barn for 11·Pt 11uil v•llh sletves 8hepherd pups, 6 wka: old. Fun Zont-; Boat Company, YAMAHA Enduro 25(1, 1969 8 cyltndtr. radio. dlr. Het-t-
J am s<'Ssions welcome Need nian '''ho takt'S &: dl'l lveN'I!, ;l 4 6 _ S 6 T 2 . 207•1, N 1 C~i G-'IG S686 642-880 ! 61>-895-4. 2125 Balboa. 613-0240. In xlnt condition. $495. Call er. CAZ 10. WW take car in
1&12.5619 ~Ir. Taylor pr1rlc In qunl ity finish. 8·17 1 Jj .l )"J ewpor' i • -HOBIE CAT 1 YR OLD 673--1436 trade or ftnl.na.,prlvate p&l\-X!nt. h1.•nr!lls, good 1vag. Behind Tony's B:C:g, JI.fat'!. TV, Radio, HIFI, FREE Puppies, S wks old. LATE _ .. ,70 v·wuakl 500 "'1· O.U s.8-8731 or f94.6l11.
e 'PROF'ESSIONA L \\'AX· Kl::N;\tOnE auto '''asher & . Stereo 836 Beagle-Lab mlx. Ca I I PERFECT CONDITION ~~ .n.s 1-:RS. f'uU ttmr work, af!er r!'I niaich\ng rice dryer, Xlnt ASS ISTANCE Lesgue Thri ft 546-0636 2123 W/TR.AlLER &12-5356 Mach III. Immac. Xtru. '52 CHEVY pMtJ • GCXld
6 P~t. Ph· 63(}-1601 Kei::~hAC. Hollov.·aAy Inc. ('Ond, $80. Guar &-delivered. Sho p .~n~nl da\~)'J ha!'I :tO A)IATEUR RADIO GEAR: BLACK & ••·bite malt kltt•n, HOBIE C&I 14' 19'70 w/trlr Mu.It llff $745. 646-8385. tins 6: bod,y. Enc rur11 1""""' nrustrong ve. ..1, o.-,2 "'' .. ''' n('1v T'h r11l que open J E' -T · l30 -" Mutt --" •200 Sllltll t rvil'IE' lndustrial C.Omplex "''r-"' ·"" ' to '· :\Ion, \\'~ & Fri. •co •.w ransmitter : 9 v.·ks old rood y,•/chlldren. A extras, Xlnt cond, $1025. * '6' YAMAHA 80 dirt bike •"""· RU • •
RElLATED PRODUCTS lo S.A. Apply 4 P.i\1 .... GAS dryers &. nrblt fl'aturing ne"' item!'! & Eico ;22 vro s25: Gonset 83J.-.838(), 2/25 6T~ll40. Xlnt cond. $100. ·,,,-=-~usa,,_=...,=------1 "·asMrs ,...., \VIII d I Comn1 IV VF"O $6 0 ; Call eves M&-4n2 1936 "-Ton~ custom bu s I n es 1 • l n d u 11 r )' . • ..,.,, c othPr goodies, 505 32nd St. Aull'Onii.. Paddle $ 1 2. FE~1ALE cockapoo, .p&)'ed. CLASSlC, Jac1., cwt. eiau/
commt-rr.ial 1'.ccounta: r:am * Steno/Recept. \v/gulU'. ri!•tr Chg, ~laytag N.B. Heathkit CB-t w/pw r Xlnt watchdog. 2 )'TS old . wd, 1-1' 1loop, A.mfr. tr1r, SCHWI NN $ SPEED e&tnPtr V.,,' spd, camper sub&t&.~tilll Per c " n I a i; e I Good job Jor gal w/mtn. ex. repairman. ~l-8637. LIKE new, 2 yr. o 1 d supply $10. 5-16-n<U aJter 548-3461 2/25 $1275. or trad.11 up, 496.5952 STINGR.A't -•hell, Many t:Xtru. Owner,
commissions v.1th 66 yPar Pt-.r Req's llCCU~ typing 55 14· \\'est1nghouM' ~frig, ,.,.1 \redgcy,ood Range 11· I S pm. BEAUTIF"UL Bl.ACK MALE '69 COLUMBIA 28. Dq1, $3$ 67:J..6S7S 1 "54&-.!261"'"'=-'~·--~----I
M ·1 firm. \\1ell rounc:NI. ~ w.~.m. \Viii trai~ on Pix. lg@ freezer, ln xlnt cond. Ph !rflon griddle S'f5. AsM'.l rlcd be 213 636--0757 not '70 SU%uld T~. Too many '64 Dntnl"I P .U. truck,
tes!ed aM provrn Lfl(' I Service Ct'nlt'r Emp Agency &16-918~ lamps, rotfec & @nd tables ~·t • w~U ha;_:d. Approx. 64~5724 213 ;M~ : atru to lilt Str'll'et or trail (RRY883) no dellwr.s, $5.50 m~an:.aJ e~~llrntl ~ne ~~:11 1 ~1()(1 Nev.-pori C@nter Dr N.B. REFRIG \\'/LC foltEE7.E R S5 ca. Rre11.kfast !able "'/2 If= yra o d, 548-5 2 2/25 LIDO 14' I: 11 N 688 $375. ~-• a week payments. lt~ fo ~nC~n~hd~ P~lnt ii Su11e a.15 I &14.-t9!it Cl!AHANTEED .•• SJ:i rh11il':'i , l!vlng room ~'.· etc. fre1 lo You '.:'.~· o~~;ma.~ Sh1::,hboln!t. $850. w tr. er, o. , '65 BSA 650 lJ&htnlna Runs Ha~ Blvd, C.M. ____ , . · * * 646-i820 * * Thi~ v.·H'k only. GIS..~i9 "" eood Eng Reblt A kl e 19$1 JlANQ{ERO Xlnt Via'!'"lSh Ct11·p .. 912 J •• Ohio SUl'l'.RVISOR·LYN 117 ~ Female 64~2834 2/25 Call 9 am.noon 536.112(1 · · · ~ "I nd I •
d Ohl · · :..., Furnlturt 810 2 P.efni;"s $75 &. S20. motors · ---~-548-S~ a.tt. S:?O pm. J C'O • SOO. ~l~·· Cle,·elan • 0 · ;un l't'l!c.>I, wk ends. clec & ftU. 20" bike spare ADORABLE beq\e puppies, F1tEE ice plant -you dig, e Ll~O 14 •122 e 250 Sil" Bear o>m le: ,;, '98·3702 aft 5
Pnrk Udo Convalescen! lllDE-A-RF.D &. 111ln bt'd rmrtP. pov.·r r mov.·er SU. 4 \\'Ii.A old a.16--1452. 2/2;, 208 21st SL, C.r.t 2/25 __ $49!_*~673-4865 _ ttbll, $%15. ' p e., i? Do!te-Van w/wlndam,
The "''ellow Pa~!'!'I""
clanlficd ... 642-j(j78
Sell!tdle Items nowt
C&ll 642-5618 NO\V!
01 Centrr &iZ..804·1 ron1ple1c. Afl 6:30 P:\t call &16-$47f1. MATURED Bassel Ifouncl. BERMUDA ;raal. CAPE COD CAT BOAT • * $1Ml20 * I V-8 auto. Asldns $1400.
Turn thMe \Vhtte Elcphl'nts fl.14-7396. JIT Yams • Avocado shag niale. !'>41-9797 2/23 548-•903 2125 18', fbrbls, (213) 834-3883._ ..--u70MOTO-GU~'TI: 8,000 ,!!'.r~.
into cash thru a DaJ.bi Pilot Jo'or rhat l!cm undrr $50. c111"pf'I, fin11 condlllon. Call I FREE Guinea P!x-5; 1 m11lt, ANY Day 11 the BEsr day to For That Item under $50, ml, A.1 ~pe, fUU dreu., A IO<>I .... --l-ad--11-a_-1_.,
Olme-11-hflt' ad!J If')' !he Penny Plnche.r fi4~1fl27 1 female. ti4G-tll'17 2/23 tun •n ad! Don't try the Penny Plncht-r 952-(1221. tnv,ttment __________ ,
•• ~· J I
l
f
•
I '
•
H DAILY PILOT Ttiesdir, Ftbnl.Vf 2l, 1911
I _._ .... l§J I ---1§11 -~-I§] I --~§]I · ---l~I ,_.__ l§J l·---•l§JI AotnlrU. l§l ~~~~1 .;;;;~~~·;;;;;;;:;;·1~~~1
970 Auto., Imported 970 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Uaed 990 ;.;.:.;.;;:..;.:;;::;:;;.:;:........;.;.;;1--::-:-:-~~~ Truck• "2 Auto• Wanted -"8 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported
MERCURY VOLKSWAGEN VOLVO CADILLAC DODGE
- - ----SPtt<l .. r '57 ean.n. GT "64 VW BUG ·"'.,,....,v"'o1'°'vo_2,,_or,,..:....-u-,~,ll-;;:64-;--;C;-O-Upe--;;De:-;V;:il;;-le-'69 CHARGER RT-Ai" More. '70 Marquis Cpo.
----.---;.;.;..;;W;._E ;,,.P-AY~T_O_P...;...., FIAT
970 Autos, lmportocl
PORSCHE
Fonl '65 ~-T. CASH .-----...----· Exceptional cond. Extremely ROW l99 condition. Am-Fm, 2 apkn, AM/fM, X1nt cond. $2300 SHOWROOM l'YPE Or CAR
Style side ''THINK'' rare. Rebll eng. b I u l' 5799 1tan. trans. $1l95. 64~1m. Full power + air, )a/\dau !Oji. or ~st offer, Before 5: u ooo miles Attrachve ~
klr used Cal'I & trucks, jus! w/black int, continental Autos, Used 990 Extra iharp! (OPP402) Al.\-7244: a lt 6: 1-687-0295. d'ium TurqOOise Mist fin\1h
V-l O\lerdrive Md.. • call us for l'l'et: e:dimates. /IJDBfl · _'_''_''_1_•_k_'_'·_La_•_"_°'_B_••_'_h CHICK IVERSON .. $1495 '63 Dodge Dart deluxe GT. with white ir11erlor &. landau AIR CONDJTIONING GROTH CHEVROLET • , . 4M--4672. • * * $300. 535-1167 ask for Don roor: Inunacula te! Premium
lbdkl, helter, heavy du ty • '53 PORSCHE-Restored. YW KENNETH l'ttfi_. _ _.~,,,,. ~ or Dave equipped, auro. trans., AMI
ti.Ju with & fl. cabover Aik for Sales Manager lff Konis, chnn rims, rtbll 549-3031 Ext, 66 or 61 THOMPSON ~ I ·,.:.64:..::Dod:::;.:g:_e_Po_l_ar_•_500_.~P-/B~.1 f'M stereo radio, beater,
camper. H&J •love, rt!rlg., l82U Stach Blvd. ''fRJEOLA.NDER'' trans, neBew S:90 e,".l,• 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 7302 W. Oceanfront 2100 Harbor Bl\•d, 645-0466 PIS, PIW. Al.r cone!, $850. power 1teering, power brak-
etc. etc. A law mileage Hlln tlngton Beach AMJFM. autilul. $u"N. COSTA MESA N ewport Beech 1965 CAOILI.AC coupe 675--0781. e!, tac. alr c011d. Truly st>Pt-
a-eam puff I.hat mullJSt be 841-6087 KI 9-3331 lJ7so,~:.c:,, ILYD. 675-7?4?. '68 VW You are the winner of DeVille, amazing condition, 1965 DODGE Dart: 2 dr, leu & like new. •,"'","',w
seen A: driven to 1 y ap. 893_7566 a 5.37-6824 '68 912 4-spd, Good cone!, DOUBLE CAB PICKUP 2 tickets to the all black, all extru, Owner tires etc. See an as or
predate. CR69la>J WE PAY CASH NEW.USED-SE RV. X!ras, Sacrifice this wknd. Western Nationa l must sell, Sl450. 644-621.S ~~~~·: 1!;~3~8-i~d cond. $S50. demonstration. (916 BEQ), SALE PRICED ""' • T.O.P. <ro-273S. ~rY:' Bo•• & M1rlno CAMARO Joh""'" • So•, 2626 ""'°' FOR YOUR CAR ~ ROVER CHICK IVERSON Show FORD Bl, Co"' Mosa. 5'6-
5630
ib
at W e '69 CAMARO RS-Orange, I ~--------MUST NG ~eA_.. CONNELL '10 FIAT Spoct Spyd<c, '""" 1968 ROVER 2000 TC afr vw ANAHEIM Afr"'""· di'"' ........ aoto '65 CountJy A ~ mi 's, A.~t/rri.1 radio, Best cond. $2700 or Bst Olr. 1:.~g,.~11n E•T. 66 or 61 CONVENTION trans. 673-5811 1----------·I
· OILLAC CHEVROLET offer. must sell. 841·1363. 54g...g.ig. ,,., JU '65 MUSTANG """"""" o""" 1. 1970 ljARBOlt BLVD. CENTER Squ'1re Wagon
:l6flO HARBOit BL., 2828 Harboc Blvd. JAGUAR _ _::_S~U:'.:N~B~E~A~M~-J -~ici:OSTj;ji'A~MfjESAffii-J F•broary "';" tbru 281b CHEVROLET COSTA MESA Costa ri.tesa 5-16-1200 ---------_ '65 VW SEDAN Please call 64.v5678, ext. 314 4 speer!. New paint. New ttrts. 540-Ope S nd --==...:..:=--=-==-JAGUAR '65 Sunbeam Tiger Convt, between 9 and 1 pm to claim GET the best transportatlon V8, automatic. dlr, Power (OXG 5341
9lQ) • n u ay JOP DOLLAR HEAD"'UARTERS Brand M W fnIBSOl SlO your tickets. (North County $150 can buy: a "just gel steering. fl!M PX!\ Wi!l take $995
'69 Datsun · Pickup
With·ts" Parris Valley Camp.
et. dlr, Sleeps 4 people.
fYNW2!17l Win tlll<e car in
tfade or fin8nce private par.
ty. Call 546..8736 or 49-1-6811.
• .....-delivers, $12 a week R&H, VJ.Y650 toll·free number is 54(1.1220) me tbere and back'" 1961 car In trade or wilt finance
for The only authorized JAGUAR payments. See a t 1945 $695.00 * * * Olevrolet Impala, 348 en-priva\e party. Call 546-8736 ,iii, .. ___ ... NJ..;,a
CLEAN USED CARS dealer in the entire Harbor Harbor Blvd, CM. gine runs well, three s~d or 4~11. '"4!1e114 I~
See Andy Brown Atea, 1-J96_1_S_U_N_B_E_A_M_M_i~--4-d-r ·~UC~we.<;,~i~~U~~) Hu~ .shifter, chrome ..:.:,.l ::oo.CkC:IC-n"g°'f'o_r_o_ca-r°'?,.-2100 Harbor mvd. MS.0466
THEODORE CompletSe sedan. Lo mi, clean. Best $3150. '68 CAMARO, V8, ~ls. new Interior, good EASY '70 MACH J ROBINS FORD SALE olft'r takes. ~1fi69 2-dr. Hardtp. Air, auto UV<.1;3 and paint (with excep. Call Auto Refenal tree ol
SERVICE 187ll BEACH BL. 842-4-435 trans P/S Rally s-rt lion of one smaBhed rear charg~. We have Rilers VS 1 ., AM FM f 2060 Harbor Blvd. ' ' ""' ' fender) 644 7201 · · .1.11 • • 11.u omauc, s er. Costa Mesa PARTS TOYOTA HUNTINGTON BEAOl 33 ,000 mi's, $1 875. · · • wailing. nu types & prices. eo, fa ct. air. Loaded 1487•
642-0010 BAUER '65 vw Camper ~~w&~~,~~:is5~ft 6 63 Nova II Wagon Selle!"$ al~~~fme. AGU) Take older trade or ·sa CHM 3{ TON IMPORTS WANTED BUICK THE ALL NEW 1600 cc FUily equi pped. 634 BSG Auto RelerTal Service sm. dn, Will fin. pvt, ply.
74 IN COROLAS, $ 1499 BUICK Automatic. New paint. (JGH. =7"~~=;,.=:~~d dlr. 540.3100 Call Pat,
Loni:b<d Pidru p. vs. AolD· ~·j ~f;;~• COSTA MESA 4 SPEEDS & AUTOMATICS CHICK IVERSON '''" '64 COUNTRY SQUIRE '68 MUSTANG PS, P/d;oc
matic, dlr. Po1.11tr Steering, BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 234 E. 17th Street THE AU. NE\V e $595 brakes, air, vinyl top. Orig
Chmmtteial '71 Lictnse IB881 Beacb Bh.:d. 5-tS.7765 O)RONA }IT CPE VW BUICK '66 RIVIERA ~----·· ~-.. --.-StalionWagon,VS,Aulomatic o .. i,ner 573-8593.
•127492. l-fust Stll 494-7744 H. Bea.di. Ph. 847-8555 c,59~~J.-go--'-.,.~3~ .. ~,-.. -.~37~.000-4 SPEEDS & AlITOri.1ATICS S49"303l Ext. 66 or 61 . '~ r~ dlr. PowC!r Stee r ing '65 Mustang fastback...J spd,
mi's. Near neii• 3.8 eng, SAVE ON 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 2100 Harbor Blvd. 645-0466 C01'V884} Must Seu. Full 6 cyl, r&h, new tires. $825
Auto Leasing 964 Autos, Imported 1---.""'"---970 rodi•b, odg. p•ln<. m"h. 1970 DEMOS COSTA MESA AlR [;~d:6NING '68 MALIBU WAGON Pri" $415, Call 494-1144 or otter. 61>-1"'5. * perfect. SlOOO. 549--0022. V\V . '&I Beetle . Very good Full . full '65 Ranchero V...fl. Ex('l'pt'ly 1969 MUSTANG VS. auto,
WE LEASE
ALL MAKES
& MODELS
BAUER
BUICK
In COSTA
MESA
234 E. 17th St.
Costa Mesa M&-n65 •
LEASE
.A NEW un
PINTO
$50.00 mo.
(36 mo.)
open end
RENT
A NEW 1971
PINTO
$4 DAY
AND
4¢ MILE
Ptrr A LIT'Il.E
KICK IN YOUR
LIFE!
THEODORE
ROBINS FORD
DiO HARBOR BLVD.,
COST A f\fESA
64UXl10
Auto Service, P.1rts 966
TAKE OUT OR IN'STAU.
* * STEVEN BECK
7901/2 No. Coast Hwy.
Laguna B~ach
You are !he 11.'inner ot
2 tickets to tbe
Western National
Boat & Marine
Show
at the
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER
February 20th thru 28th
Please call 642-5678, ext 314
between 9 and 1 pm to claim
your tickett, (North County
toll-!ree number is 540.1220)
* * *
AUSTIN HEALEY
'68 SPRITE, like-new, 15.00'.l
mi. It'• beautiflll but mu't
&ell -boytriend too big to
!\1UST SELL. '67 XKE cpe. fl""" [nr.:JI power eqUlpmenl, clean, lo mi's, air, R&H, vinyl top, lo ml, 1 Owner.
b
_,
4
pd Ulll IAUIO mech. concl. vinyl. strato interior. stereo. Automatic, Radio, Heater dlr. PIS, auto, new brakes & Must Sec! Sl99J. SJ!l--1796.
super co11u., s , stereo. S850 * * * 968-4205 Most all the deluxe extras. CXIJ 154) M"'f 0 ·11, Will hock s= 49'3429
v.ire v.·hls, lo mi. 644...fl197. TOYOTA ~ 1 s """· ,,... · '10 V\V Camper-Pop top, (REH643$1.J888 Trade or finance, Call '66 FORD Fairlane, new eng OLDSMOBILE
fully t'QUipd. 10,500 mi. _<"94--1~14-< ______ & trans, $450 or best oner. ---------1
LOTUS
WfUS '66 Elan S.2 Convt,
Full service r ecord,
AM/FM, Pvt pty S2l63.
495-5907
MERCEDES BENZ
1966 Harbor, C.:'.f. 646-9303
BILL MAXEY
!Tl()JYIOIT!A!
18881 BEACH BLVD.
Hunt. Beach 147..a55J
I mt N. of Cout Hwy. cm Bcll
'67 LAND CRUISER
Good cond. S3100. 494-3320. '68 325 El Camino, new 'Z7 T Roadster, Best oner, '69 Olds 442 2 Dr HT '66 YW GHIA chocolate brow1:1 pa I n t, 645-0169, 642-3578 ONE OWNER. 14,000 Ml.
Y'eKo'w. ,1,i rh Black landau ~ibeq, autom, buckels, air, P"."'l' '69 FORD LTD Cntry Squirt' ~auti~uJ silver fox miS'I ~n. strg, wide racing tires, Mag JO pa•• •fa wag, ~ m,··,, !Sh with burgundy Interior, top, new valve jol:> XNH~4 ~.. 11.1 CADILLAC rims. Very well cared for , xlnt cond. $2900. ~8. Equipped with aulo tran~., $1199 ...,,!UHTHORIZED OEALEFI: 9 to 5, 830-5282; 6 to 9, radio, heater, power steer.
CHI
~t>VU ARBOR BL., 83Q..8936. '591'~0RD. $280 or Best offer. CK IVERSON COsrA MESA •~~-~-----New t"ngine, good tires, ing, power brakes, power
VW 540.9100 Open Sunday 1970 MONTE Carb-Green. ,R~/c;H;;·.;":;2-~5930~·---~I windows, air cond, If you
• Buckets & all extras, lo ;; are hard lo please, please
549--3031 Ext. 66 or 67 ==~--~--~I mi. $3400, 644-4132 or "&4 GALAXIE sln wagon, p/s, don't miss this f i ne car.
1970 HARBOR BLVD. '69 BUICK Riveria '"loaded" 644-2260 r & h, lac, air cond., clean, ZLG118. Johnson & Son, 2626
COSTA M.ESA 25,0CXI mi's, 2 yr warr. $3450. '60 Chevy 2-<l r h r d t p, $500. 492-3768• priv. pty. Harbor Bl., Costa Mtsa.
4 Whee!! drive, warrC!n hubs, ---W-:_A_N_T_Ec_D ___ , Pvt ply, 642-6667 or Immaculate. (QVJ550 ) '&4 FORD f'alcon V...fl, 4 54(1..5630.
new rubber. dlr. Take clear 673-3762. Terms avail, S299. See e t speed mus! sell, $400 orl---'-,~64-0~L-D~S~---1
car in trade or small down. I'lt pay top dollar for !'Our CADILLAC 1945 llarbor Blvd., C.M , best olfpr 646-9076. Cutlass, buckC!t seat!, 11/s,
~TRB 332) Sacrifice! Call VOLKSWAGEN today, Call ---------l'65 IMPALA SS, R/H, P.S., SUPER VAN '66, l O\.\'nl'r, p/b, good 1irrs, new pain!.
Ira s.40·3100 or 494-7503 alt ll1ld ask for Ron Pirrchot, e P .B., Bucket seats, Runs low~ ml., R/H, auto, air. X1n't cond . $425 or beat oH.
10 A.~f. 549-3031 Ext. 66-61. 673-0!m. '68 CADILLAC good, Make offer. 96&--8654 _SJ095. 4M-2081. 494-4715. er. 548.8118.
'67 CORONA • R&.H, auto, '69 VW BUG 067 Chevy Impala, R/H, • 1i6 FORD GALAXIE •
30,000 act mi. l owner. Xlnt ZVC 708 · · I SIGOO * FACTORY Affi * rond. 673-3244 or 529-1164 $ Ficetwoed brougham. Baro-air, engine x nt. . S650. • 54:>-29!12 ti! .11250. &lJ-8936 aft 6. 1 ---=~~--'---
DA TSUN MG
OLDSMOBILE
New '71 Datsun ~
1600 OHC, Pickup with camp. • THINK
er. Sale priee S2099 dlr.
( # Pl$1452710) Will take
cir in tnde, Will finance
"l!.G"
1599 q"' gold with gold tapes'"" EvPs only: 494-6244 '69 · YELLOW w/ blk inl ~3 LINCOLN '63 Holiday 4 Dr. HT. Pis,
CHICK IVERSON & l"lber in"rioc. Full pow. '66 lMPALA Sio W•goo, /b · Corona Coupe. Llke new. · • · \ Clean full t lr _ _, ---------1 P • eJr cond.; new paint, Low mi. SlGSO. 962-3190 VW er, factory aii, ilt telescop-, Y au o, a couu, brakei; good tire~. \Vilt take ic wheel AM-FM stPreo S1200. 673-4017 1967 .f dr C.Ontinental-Sharp, trade as part. G42-54&t. TRIUMPH 54!l-3031 Ext. 66 or 61 power ~ locks, twilighi '68 CHEVY Van, 6 cyl, 1tan. lite. bl ue w/wht vinyl fop. --==~===~-I
1970 HARBOR BLVD, 1entine!, very }ow mileage. trans, good rntth. cond. .All Xtras; Xlnt Concl:. PLYMOUTH '71 SPITFIRES COSTA MESA (VFG4211 M•k• olf<r. 64Z-0363 968-S818.
SALE PRICED MERCURY 1966 PLY SPORT FURY
NOW ON DISPLAY '52 VW BUS '57 CHEVY GD COND * N•w '"'·· """
Come In for a test drive! SUNROOF $400. 642-0Sll M ,70 M 1 • brake~. 3,IXX\ milet
tJ7M BEACM fHWY. :au FRITZ WARREN'S ib '65 Impala, power 'leering, erc.Conve~~ erey * ago. Xlnt cond,
893-7566 e S37..fl824 SPORT CAR CENTER Hard to tind model, lmmacu· Gl\TSll e$ air, $800. * Must ~ell $850.
:~~~'..fu"' C.tl 546~136 "FRIEDLANDER',
'69 Datsun Wagon
NEW-USE[)..SER'(. 710 E. lst St., S.A. 547-0164 latC!, recent engine NUV767 ·~CADILLAC l ~=~,-e64:.:4-:.,;.:12::31;_ __ ~ Thi ~EhlSPORTY ONE 642...fl532 49~jl~~r·c! t.H~:~; -Opendaily9-9; closed Sunday $799 AUTl-IOAIZED OEALEl't MUST Sell t h is \Verk '67 b~!:Sto:~ul~~t:~~~wA:;~ '64 Plymouth ~port1 Fury
'69 Mk Iti Spitfire conv., b!k CHICK IVERSON 760() HARBOR BL., Chtvy 4 dr. Perfect Cond. bll h be d · · New 383 engine ported finance private part~. MGB . COSTA MESA t>.1ake Offer. 548--0816. mo e as en riven only treads, hi-rise & 'qu ad. B "'s~· or •"'.~!!. lthr int. low mileage. Im. VW J2 000 ml end mllllt ... '"" .,..,,. ,,,., -.;rot w ~• O ·, d . · f ue . & J\.f torque·llite, ''"'"· maculatc. S1295 firm. Estate .,..()..9100 pen Sunday '56 CHEVY Nomad-See Hot an nven o .app 1e
DOT DATSUN
•• 1,. 4,,_29.,6 1910 HARBOR BLVD. e Rod I ll'Cl.8 ' bucket scats floor shills e J966 l\1GB e .... COSTA MESA co umn , Classification Fully equi_p!>(!d ""ilh au10. mags. l\fJNT' CONDITION:
OPEN DAILY EXCELLENT CONDITION '60 TR-3, Xlnt cond ---------·I 1968 Cad Sed Deville 959. 645-1324. trans., radio, heater, power S980. 633-5.'>76
AND SIT.,O. ••• 492-4894 S:UO or Best Offer '68 VW Bus, radio & sunrool. CAN YOU BELIEVE CHRYSLER steering, power brakes fac. ·
SUNDAYS OPEL * 6-14-0498 ancr 6 pm * I~ condition. 19.000 1'.lt. air rond., etc. 4 near' new Bp~K t~~ssepdssiox~' 196ril
18835 Beach Blvd. :•:=~:_ ____ _:54:.:::_8·::14::87: !Solt pastel blue exterior with IMPERIAL 1967 tires Ask for demonstration ymou 6 • nt con · Hun~on Beach * ,68 Opel Rally* VOLKSWAGEN • '70 VW Bus, still url(IC!r dark blue leather and Ian· MUST SELL! ~HZ•Pclbo. ,J8ohl.",~~-;~MSo,~n~ :,s~ c;;:;~ ~-~tr.5°' Call
842-TIBl or ~0-0442 22 800 1 £ La S \\'AJTanty, S2!195. 540...fl981 aft rlau roof, fully luxury equip. 2-dr . hardtop, Darll: green .._" ~.... ....
' mi f's, extras. 4 XCC!p. ! r9e election 5 pm ........ auto. trans., Ai\1: FM m•tall•·· ,,., .• h "'ft.m•l•h. 540-5630. '69 Plymouth Fury IlI, Load-'65 Datsun Wanon tionally cleanr 1 $1250. Priv. """ ... · -· .. d Tak ENGINES & ~ ,~. dlr. Mo•t ,a•n'"fi·•'· party. Ph. &12-6643 after Of YW Campers, '70 VW BUG stereo, tilt wheE'I steering, ing leather. Fully uipped 1970 MERCURY :ri $J.9(1;o~a:1enlll, pay
TRANSMISSIONS ""~ "' ... 3 00 V K b• heater, power steering, pow. incl. Air Condition!n .. pow-MARQUIS CPE · · Will 1-1·-car io •-d· o< ~'~p'-m-·~~~~--, I anS, Om IS, 2!7 AGT b k · 6 . .,., ' '53 PLYMO Have
1
everal of each on hand. "-..... .... .--: 51699 t'r ra es power w1~ows, er stttrinJ!:, po11.·er brakes, SHOWROOM TYPE OF CAR ' UTII 2 dr, black,
finance-priva!e party. 1970 Opel GT , 7,000 or1g1nal Buses, New & Used \Vay power :seat, air cond. nnwer windows """Wer seat, 11000 Jl.rn.ES orig cond, 19 mpi S200 or
Al!O, complete automotlve o:.A"'8136 or 4o«•ii. milrs, s26;io or best oiler. k ••·· ' ~ T d 64' '"'1 RtVice. -~----~-=---Call M7-7697. Immediate Delivery CHICK IYERSON This fine car is Ii e new in auto, trans., radio, heater, Attractive medium turquoise ra P, ........,.. •
1970 STN wgn, sacrifice! S250 CHICK IVERSON VW every respect. Ask for dem-etc, etc. Priced for quick mist fi nish with whitt inter. '66 PLYMOUT!f Fury, good
Very Reesonaiiile
\l.'i!J P. Up & Deliv.
548-713'
down; assume 27 monthly PORSCHE ons1 ration. \VYG744. J ohnson sale. Only Sl215 (V0Y736). ior and landau roo[ immac. cond, S800 or best offer
pa.yme.nts. $66.92 Pvt ply. VW ~9.3031 Ext .. 66 or 67 & Son, 262'6 Harbor Bl., Johnson & Son 262'6 Harbor ulate! prC!mium equipped, 842-8314.
833-1252 '63 Porsche Super ~9.30n Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. Costa MC!sa. 54CJ..5630 Bl., Costa Mes.i. 540-56.30 auto trans, am fin s!ereol---;P;;O=N=T"IA-c-C=---1
'69 DATSUN 2 dr. Tape Cpe. Bahama yellow wilh hlk 1970 HARBOR BLVD, COSTA f\.1ESA e COMET radio, hea1C!r, power steer.1 _________ ,1
Deck, like new. S1475 ln!C!rior, Al\1 /F~1. chrome COSTA MESA 1965 V\V Bus-1500 eng, Many Cad. '70 Sed. de Ville ---------Ing, power brakes, Fae air '67 GRAND PRIX
HI Stall Hem! torque 546-5772 eves ";heC'ls. rC!Cent engine '69 VW FASTBACK extras. Best oller. 64&-3478 * "67 COMET WAGON * condit!on. Tr:uly spotless 26,431 Actual Miles
eortVttter Ir Dex plate $140 '66 Datsun 1600 Roadster1 PXW91l2 l'\VO 177 or ailS-3042. FACTORY VERY CLEAN $775 ~nd hke new 4 near nev.· MU~ SELL lire mist ,green
Mllodon oiling system for HT-New cond. $2399 $ll99 '66 V\I/ FASTBACK AIR CONDITIONING e 8!17-6705 e tires eic. ~ and ask for ronvt w/Wht top. PIS, P/B,
Mopar B & Hem! enitnes SU95 • T.0 .P. 642-88.56 I Rt'built ('ng, 6.!XXI mt. srJO. FULL LEATHER INTERIOR demonslralmn. !!16 BEQ. P/\V, Air l'Ontl, AM/FM ra.
$011. To~o<-fiH• .,.,.,..,,.,, ___ Fl_A_T---1 CHICK IVERSON CHICK IVERSON 891 •10· CONTINENTAL John"'n & Soo, 2626 "'""'' ,-,. "--" -·b~ XI f _, '' I I -----'::·:.~::.::':.,,,~~~ Full power inc]. door locks,---------Bl C 1 M ~An"-""" ,UU<.J(I, .. ...,r, n co, .... type. Uke new cond. 1J5. VW VW '63 VW SQUARE BACK . .• os a esa. ,,..,,.,,,,JV. SACRIFICE $'~. 642·'~" 633-557S. tilt & 1elescop1c steering. '63 Continental. Excellent ...,"" .uou
Autos W.1nted
'69 124 SPYDER 5-l!',..30J1 t;xt, 66 or 61 a.\9-30:\1 Ext. 66 nr 67 OZX 051 \•1nyl lnp, stereo, locally cond. Stcrro rape & many '69 Marquis i~""'~"-'~-'~"~'·'=~~-~-I
1970 HARBOR BLVD. 1970 HARBOR BLVD, $499 driven je11.·el, (025AOY) & <'Xtras. E\"e: 499-4020. Day: Brougham Cpe, 1966 P 0 NT 1 AC GTI'>.
Red \.\'ith Black \nterior. 5 COSTA ~iESA COST,\ ~IESA CHICK IVERSON priced to sPIJ today: 499-2221. TOP OF' THE han:llop, factory air, PIS. ,WE PAY TOP OOIJ.AR
FOR TOP USED CARS
U your car ii extra clean,
11'9 Us ftr5t.
~UER BUICK
23' ,E. 17th St.
Costa Mf'M SfS-7765
•
~=~~_;_.,c:;c_ __ -~~=~==-$5888 I--------LUXURY LINE P/B. , .. ,0 i-no., •·/S -a·.k Speed Trans. fZVGSS4 ) '68 PGRSCHE, Stlvrr iv/blk '68 VW BUG VW '64 Continental. Excellent .,_ ... "' " •·
$2195 · • cond. ri.1ust see to an. Dl·auti [ul blue Bermuda mis! s1erro, grC!flt condi!ion, ue int. :>-~rid. A~l/Fl\1, chrm 1 ,,.....001 ,. r \ h · h d k bl '· d · Bill Jones.' .. vhls, $3750. TI4/956-1182 v ,.,. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. preciate. One O\.\'ner. Evt: ins 11.·11 ar ue L<IO au to apprec1att, Sl,400, phone
BJ Spor.tscar Center • 1962 PORSCHE ,. "' $1299 COSTA MESA ~ibeq, 499--<fl20. D•ro 49!>-mt. roof k inferior, Compfofely·'=".,"--cf380.-',.,· ~~-~-
• · ~ IJK'r CHICK IVERSON '69 VW-XLNT COND. 1966 Lincol n Contif)l'ntal 4-dr. equipped \1.'ith all the luxury 'fi6 LeMANS, Top cond. P/11, Coupe. Ski & luggage r11C'.k. CADILLAC d features. Auto trans .. AM/ P/b. Auto. trans. Deluxe
183.l Ht'rbor. C.M. S.t()..4491 Sl:SOO, 5-19-1267. YW Lo mi. S1595. 6'14-0713 AUTl-!OAIZEO DEALE~ ~~~~7 wilh / cxtra.11. FM sten~o radio, hcattr, int. S875. Call 54s-5379
5-19-3031 Ext, 66 or 67 VOLVO 2600 HARBOR BL., CORVAIR power steerin~, power brak. GTO '70 JUDGE Ram-air
1970 HARBOR BLVD. O)S'I'A MESA t'S. power \.\'lndow~. 6-way auto, air cond!tio~int", $2995:
All 71 's Are Here ~5'~0-:!9~100~--~0~p•~n~S1~•oo~ay~l--;;;~;:;;;;;:;;:-;';;'--I power seat. Fae. air cond., 646-82l2 . .,. ·
COSTA ~1ESA J42 • 144 . 145. 164 . e 1960 CORVAIR completely serviced & main··l---=,.,-.,.-,==~--1
'6' VIV, Imm"" I at. 1800 " CAD. '67 Sed Dev·111e MAKE OFFER: "'"''· N•w poin" • plug,, RAMBLER <DLR8704l SlO delivers, $10 4 SPEEDS & AUTOMATICS 546.7817 alfer 6 pm 4 new tires elc. See and ----------1
11 \\'('C!k payments. l!H5 1970 144 SEDAN DEMO lo.,,,,,...,C~~. ~==~= drive thi11; beautiful car to-1967 Ambassador 990 H t C ~1 1'"ACTORY · orvair {YDY120l $299 arwir, ·• · RADfO, HEATER, full price, Trrms available. rlay. {YCP936J Johnson & SOLJD VALUE!
'67 V\\I fstbk, 38,000 ml., AUTOMATIC AIR CONDITIONING 1945 Harbor Blvd, C.1\1. Son, 26'2fi llarbor Bl., Costa 2-dr, hardtop, Gold metallic rn~. 1nlcr, body like ne11.· # 8782 JUST 37.000 MILES CORV Mrsa. 54()..56.1() finish 11.·/n1a1chlng lntuior.
$10 19, Rick ~Tacnah. days $2899 Beautiful pov.·der blue w/ * AIR '61 f\.fon1.11, 4 Air condilioning, power
'f' •23-,., ·~·3 h. ,. 1 d Dr. CIC'an . Mere. '69 M .1rq uis . • -.~ ;i; t>Vf' ,,,.....,.,,.. OVERSf.AS DEL. SPEC. v.· 1te !OJI. u I powrr, oor * Call 842-808i * 4 OHT. strer1ng, power bra~'·
'69 V\\' C;imrwr. 23,(KM) mi',, loclC!l, Ar-111-~M radio, Hit &I~~~""""="'--'----· IA\ auto. Iran~ .. radio, heatu,
I O\\'nrr, $2650. 6i~ aft fi••u Ln11.:1 telescope-str-er1n~. Trunk '63 Corvalr Convt Spyder AtVARf? WINN,. hlN~ SfYLTNG near new th•es, el e. Drives
4 pm & wknds. UWL UAIW opC'.ntr, most all dtlUXC ex· • Good Cone!. • tractive ig 1 ivy )-•ellow hrautilully. on I y $975.
fr ••. 'TYT789) [\.'c: 647--6832 w1lh dark ivy green Interior. fWA••-i J So
"'" RED K"m"'" Ghia VOLVO SALE PRICED TODAY Bfaok io1,.;or & 1""'8o roof ~ . ohnoon & o, CouP<" • Jl.5~1 miles. A)t/ CORVmE Luxury equipped throUghou1: 2626 Harbor Bl., Costa Mfsa f~1 . Otter 646-5804 Auto, trans., radio, heater, ,_34_0-_5'30_·-=-==,..---·I 1966 Hllrbor, C.~1. 646-9303 e '6!'i CUSTOM CORVETIE 1 ** 1967 VAN ** ib _Sell or trade. Worth $lb!. power steering. powtr brak. T·BIRD
rc1 rtblt moior. M/sell ~ GN'al e-1, es, power windo,.,•s etc. Thisl--""'""'°"="'"°--·I
lmmt'd. $1500, 544-7543 aft 5 .a. ~CADIL~ ·=~~~ETTE FASTBACI< exttllent CBJ' reflects wry '65 J-BIRO vw . '6-1 Bee~. Vt'ry good ~ 1H1NI AUTMOAIZ(O OEAUFt c~re.ru1 maintenance. Dtl\'~n
h d 'VOLVO' 2600 HARBOR B 327, 4 spttd, mags, Call only i..ooo milts. &!t> & . S~'"/Jec · CO~~* 96&-42(15 m • COSTA MESA L., 11fler 5. 49Z-49Jt. drlvt! 10 •~rr.ciate condition. Full power. Air oond. cOYL-
COUGAR IWY B "31 JohMo" & Soo. 7011
. ., vw BUG \\'/SUNROOF "FRIEDLANDER" S<0-9100 o,.n Suoo.,, 2626 Hubor Bl., C:O.f• M"a REBLT ENG. XL.'rr COND e l-6!_CO_U_G______ MO.""'~" AFT 6: ~18-iMO ! ' AR. Air. n-ctnt """"' 1 ""'--___ . .,.,_J __ .
'69 V\V <,-,,,-•·rk Sfo ···gn, lnM llACh IHWT. •1 • '67 CAO 4-dr ))(': Ville. tune-up, 4 nt'w !lre1. Good '64 Mt'rcury ~tontcl11ir iklr 'IJ4'JCll4 '~ ·~ """ .. 893·7!i66 • Mi'-6824 Loaded, By owner. mlltage. Sl!m. !97-8174 H'r Sh · 2Joo H bo auto. Sl6!l:i Afl 6 rl\t: NEW-USED-SE RV. * 5.16·2460 * eve• & wk·'•· · · arp. Air N'lnd & all ar r Blvrl. &15-0456 ,... p11.·r. S650. 644-0713. .66 T s·~ ~1.\. D.'ly~: GE l-6.\1a. ~ VACANCIES Cost monty• ,6 "-·· +,;;:;;:::_;_::;:::::_::::,,_ __ I -In• w/11.ll the v.·hls!les • 9 ... vuJrar. air cond , v1nyl ''WEED It & reap", .clcnn !:.: tw>lls! tS.AA008l SIO
'67 V\Y Faslback. XI n t Rtnl your OOust, •flt., 11!0~ inp, new 11"'· lo bl"• •-·k, I " ,,.,.., oul t 1e trtasures M tr11'h • deliver~ SlO a we k
rond1tion. Orirlnal own<'r Sell ktle Items now! Olli bldg., etc. thru a Da.Uy PDOI 12300. Call aft f:30 pm f 1 ·' ' um nt<'I C"ll.!ih thru 11 Daily ri11 ymf'nt11 Sf't! 1t 1&4~ $1.2YI. Call : 4~"161. 647,a711 No"•! Qa.c;slfltd ad. 54~3163. Pilo l Cll1salfled 111d. 642-:!1678 Harbor si\.'tl.'C.~!. '
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$1095
7