HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-02-25 - Orange Coast Pilot...
'Mom Hears Voi ·ces From Space'
I
Santa Ana Loses Bid for Irvi.ne Land
Lawsuit May Be Only Course Left w City in Annexation Fight
• • • 1xon: ar 01ces ema1n
Mesa Teenager Corralle
·Alter High Speed Chase
President
·Gives State
' Of World
By JORN M. mGBTOWER
WASHINGTON (AP) -President
Nixon today charged Hanoi w i t h
broadening the Vietnam war into an
Indochina conflict and predicted the
United States and it.5 allies will have
more hard choices in combatting possible
new enemy thrusts in South Vietnam,
Cambodia and Laos.
In a globe-ranging report o[ficially
directed to Congress but aimed at the
nation and the rest of the world, Nixon
keyed his message to a quest for "a
full generation o( peace" this century.
But. he said, "If winding down the
war is my greatest satisfaction in
foreign policy, the failure to end it
is my deepest disappointment.''
He pledged to continue the winding
down, the U.S. troop withdrawal from
South Vietnam. But in stark contrast
to his declared global peace goal his
projection for Indochina emphasized the
broadened war and increased American
aid and air support for allied ground
forces.
The 6.S.000 word report., covering 180
tiages and accompanied by a .nationwide
radio speech was the second Nixon report
on the role of the United States in
world affairs since he took office.
Patterned after the consti tutionally
mandated State of the Union message,
this White House overview of the world
situation disclosed no new U.S. policy
departures.
But details ·were outlined and it gave
Nixon an opportunity to tell the story
of his foreign and strategic policies ·at
midpassage between the 1968 and 1972
elect ions.
Nixon sent the report. which has been
in preparation for several months. to
Congress under the title, "United State!
Foreign Policy for the 1970s -Building
for Peace."
Jn discussing the Indochina crillis at
considerable detail Nixon gave a deeply
pessimistic report about the prospects
for a negotiated settlement.
He had "frankly expected'' some kind
of aclion from the North Vietnamese.
Viet Cong side last year, Nixon stated,
when he expanded political tirinciples
for a settlement and a p poi n t e d
ambassador David Bruce as tieace
negotiator.
In this, he indicated. be was comple~ly
disappointed. But "We will not give up
l5'et POUCY, Page !)
WHO'S YOUR
OSCAR PICK?
The polls are oPen for national voting
In tbe "Oscar Derby." For your chance
to vote in the DAILY PILOT "election"
and, J>Uhaps, go to dinner with your
favorite stars, f'e the ballot today on
Page 14.
A 'M ==
Belles of the Bea~h
Free from cares ol earthquakes, tornadoes and
other natural disasters, these natural beauties frolic
on the beaCh at Venice. From left are Joyce Wil-
liams, Adriana BenUy and M~rgaret Markov. All
are pursuing film careers. Joyce Is a Playboy Club
bunny in Los Angeles. Adriana is a native of Argen-
tina, where she was a model. Margaret is a native
Californian and movie bit player.
Narco Roundup
In Huntington
Nets 12 Suspects
Narcotics detective! from t h e
Huntington Beach Police Department
wound up 1 three-week undercover
investigation Monday night with the
arrest of 12 persons on narcotics sales
charges.
The early evening roundup of suspected
drug peddlers included one ll·YW old
youngster and three others in their early
teens. aged 14 and 15. Additional •rrtltl
are Pf!iding, according to police.
Detective Captain Grover Payne said
only small amoW\l.!i of contraband were
confiscated during the raid, which was
accomplished through the aid ol a male
student working under-cOYer at local
school11.
Adult! arrested were:
Sae•en Cammlna•. 20, 21111 Newland
(See NAllCO, Pa1e II
SA LoseslrvineLandBid;
Suit May Be Last Hope
A lawsuit ls probably the only rtCOUn<
Jeft to ·Santa Ana in ill blttlf to annei:
923 acres ol Irvine· industrial land
the city claims wu promised to It In 1163. .
The Local Agency Forma·tion
CommiAion refused Wednesday to
reopen hearings on the boundary of the
ph>poted city of Irvine. .
On Feb. 10, the LAFC approved
incorporation of the new 18,145-ecre city,
including the disputed property just south
of the Santa Ana Marine Corps Air
Station.
The Irvine Company has acknowledged
the agreement and did 11sk the LAFC
to ei:clude the acreage from the new
clty.
Santa Ana proteated Wedneedey that LAFC Cha~man Loub R. Rdnhardt h•d
"lnUmlclll<d" C ii¥ Mwpr C ar I
Thornton when he tried to introduce
a copy of a Sl5,000 study on the effeCt
of the Irvine lncorporaUon on Santa
Ana.
This charge against Reinhardt. a
Fullerton city councilman, and other
lntlmauona that the LAFC had not
operated properly on Aug, 10 seemed
to 'Irritate eommis!lioners.
Commislioner Charles Pearson. of
Anaheim, moved thlt the petition for
a re·hearing be denied. He was backed
by Reinhardt and Stanley Northrup, a
San Clemente councilman.
Supervisor Robert BaUin continued his
stance. opposing the Irvine Company by
voting against the. motion.
The county counsel ruled the LAF'C
was not obligated to recognlie the
aareement between Santa Ana and the
(S.. LAWSUIT, P11e II
DAILY PILOT
* * * 1oc * * *
THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 25, 1971
VOL. M, NO, 41, I l•CTIONI, a ,AO•S
Santtg Probed
'
Hulse's Mother . .
'Heard Voi~es''
By TOM BARLEY
ot tll9 0.UY ,Ult llltt
Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse's mother
was describeQ today during the Orange
County Superior Court murder trial of
her BOD as a "paranoid schizophrenic''
who heard voices from space and
believed sbe was . under the influence
cf Telstar.
Dr. David Geddes told the jury in
Judge Ronald Crookshank's courtroom
that Mrs: Arthur Hulse Sr. had a record
of mental illness dating back to when
she Y(as 18 and there was "no doubt"
her form of insanity had a big effect
on the mental development of her 16-
year-old son.
The Santa Ana psychiatrist quoted Mrs.
Theft Suspect,
19, Captured
In Wild Chase
A suspected petty thie! of 19 is behind
bars today. after a wild, four-mile chase
from west tc east Costa Mesa Wednesday
in which one burly detective was hit
and knocked IO feet by the fleeing car.
Richard H. Gutierrez, of 16.15 Acacia
St., Anaheim, was booked on seven
separate charges after the 3 p.m. pursuit
reaching speeds near 70 miles per hour.
He is charged with assault with a
deadly weapon and assault and battery
on a police officer; petty theft, receiving
stolen property, resisting arrest and
reckless driving.
No bail was set, pending arraignment
in Harbor Judicial District Court.
Gutierrez avoided causing a horrendous
traffic accident in at least two instances
only by some miracle,· said the detective
team who gave chase.
The incident began with a call from
Duane R. Raab, of Trabaca . Products,
837 W. 18th. St., wltb a report that
one employe said another was stealin&
fibe~~ss products. . S e out the area, detectives
Richard Frederiksen and George Wilson
said a yOuth drove up in· an old sedan
near a spot where five motorcycle
helmets wo~ ·~ had been .hidden
"Police Officers."' they shouted,' holding'
up badges as GuUerrez got into h1a
car.
He gunned the engine suddenly a.,_
they advanced, with Frederiksen leapln;:
free, while Wilson was hit and tumbled
sidMver·side down the driveway.
He was only · stiff ana sore today,
but in need of a split pair of trousers,
said Detective Capt Bob Green.
Detective Frederiksen said t h e y
jumped into the car and chased
Gullerrei. w~allegediy s t r ea k e d
through the Intersection of Pomona Avtr
(See CHASE, P11e II
Hulse as saying that she 11aw the world
as "squares of life" and that when
each .square is occupied by a member
of the PT A the war in Vietnam Wlll
end.
She also believed, he said, that Telstar
-the s p a c e -b o r n communications
satellite -sent down pictures to her
and was also somehow involved .with
the many voices·· tl:iat spoke · to her Crom
space.
Dr. Geddes is the first defense witness
fn the Hulse trial. The ·youth ·is belng
tried for the murder last June 1 of
service station attendant Jerry Wayne
Carlin, 21, of Santa Ana.
He mu.&t eventually face trial on charge
of being an accessory to the murder la1t
June 2 of Mission Viejo teacher Florence
Nancy Brown who has hac:ked to death
in an Irvine orange grove.
Two psychiatrists called by the
prosecution have testified. that Hulse was
sane when he used a hatchet to jlack
Carlin to death in the rutroom of the
gas station.
The youth spent most of Wednesday
at the Orange County Medical Center
undergoing examination on procedures
described as brain wave test!. ne
result! of those tests were not available
this morning.
Hulse bas testified from the wltneu
bo1 that he took huge quantities of
drugs and drink before the Carlin killing
and that an unremembered remark by
the young attendant tirompted him te
pull the hatchet from his ~It and "lay
!See HIJIBE, Pare ZI
Oruge
Weather " Gusty winds under clear Ria
are the .ingredJents for Frlday'a,
weather menu, wjth eoaatal temp.
eratures quitting at 60 Md inlaniS
mercury reglsterin1 6f 1fegerea. . . .
, · INSJl)E TOJ)AY
' Orange . cOuntv fuptTVlior•'
ha'Ve aJipToved a human reJa..
tiuns commission for the CtlU""
ty, but tht com.mi.s1iort mwt
prove itl worth tolthin the ~ea.r.
Page 12.
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z Ditrt.V PILOT .1
~sRiggs
Convicted
Of Murder
Mlriha Rigg• ol Kuntl"'10n Beach w• cmvlcted of second degree murder
late •Wednesday for her role In plaMlng
the klllinS ol 19-year .. ld Robert Leroy
Hermann.
An Orange County Superior Court jury
dellbttated for 15 hours before voting
for the leS9et of two possible murder
vmlldl. They dllmlss<d c:onspincy
charges against the attracUve 19-year-0td
defendant.
Judge CliUde ~t. Owens called for
a presentencting report from the
probation department and set March
15 u the sentencing date. Miss Riggs
ol 1824 Park SL faces a possible term
of five years to life in stale prison.
She remained calm throughout the final
phase of the trial and showed no emotion
at the reading of the verdict. Judge
OwtnS allow" her to spend a few
minutes with her parents in the
courtroom and denied a motion for bail
bG!ore sbe was led ba"ck to her Orange
County jail eel!:
'The jufy accepted deputy district
attorney Robert Chatterton's argument
during. the ten-day trial that Miss Riggs
planned the mW'der of Hermann with
convicted killer Robert Eugene Williams,
19, ol. 1504 Pecan Sl, .HWlttngton Beach.
The prosecut.or successf'U.lly alleg~
that she supplied the gun used by
Williams to shoot Hermann in the back
of the head after the two youths had
chatted and smoked marijuana together
last Nov. 7 in the bedroom of Hermann's
homt 1t 416 15th St., Huntington Beach.
Wfllilms, who II 'now -ins I \flo term In slate prim• fer the lllllill,
returned to the Rigg! home and was
asked bJ her: "Did you do it?" It
was stated dming both tr1al9 that she
took the murdtr weapon from Williims
and lllpped it into her purse.
Miu IUQ•, Willlams and Hermann
wue three of five defendants arrested
at tbe Riggs home on drug chares last
Oct. St, one week belore the killing
of Hermann.
It was repeatedly testified .that M~
Riggs and Williams were 1n1.5taken m
that belief.
From Page 1
HULSE ...
it on" Carlin.
Tbe jury bas also beard the youth's
recorded confession, taped by Sant.a Ana
police investigaton when they arrested
Hulse a month after the Carlin murder.
Hulse bu identified his comf.ifion in
that killing as Steven Craig Qlrd, 20,
a tr•nsient, wbo is accused -of both
the Carlin and Brown. murders.
Investigators idtnUfr llurd as the
Jeader o( tbe drug uSing band which
devoured portions of the 31-year-old
woman's body .in satan worshiping rites
before burying it near the Ortega
Highway:. .
Hurd he been declared to be sane
and able to fact trial March 22 on
tbe dual· charges.
From Pa9e 1
NARCO ...
SL, Huntington Beach, sales of mari-
juana.
Paul Laqe, 18, 17389 Los Amlgos
C°lrcle, Fountain Valley, sales o !
dangerous drugs.
Warren Miller, Ill, Santa Ana, sales
of marijuana.
Mtt.cbell Thompson, 111, transient , sales
of marijuana and dangerous drugs.
Daulls Smltll, 18, 6201 Royalist Drive,
Huntington Beach, sales of marijuana.
Jetnlltr Gallebue, 18, transient, sales
of danlft'OUI dnigs.
OWlll COAlT
DAILY PILOT
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lJ,1 ltltll'llolo
Light Show
Trail of Minuteman II Intercontinental Ballistic ?t1issile forms spec·
tacular display over Southern California. Missile was fired from .va_n-
denberg Air Force Base near Lompoc Wednesday at dusk. Missile
\\'as reported on course down air Force's \Vestern Test Rrange.
Convict' s Girl Linked
To Bizarre Jailbreak
By ARTHUR VINSEL
Of llM O.llJ ,llOI Sl•ff
A misunderstood Valentine note may
have triggered a San Quentin Prison
Inmate's desperate dash to Orange
Cou"nty Tuesday and truly doomed a
long-awaited wedding.
James D. "Jimmie'' Harve y, 24, of
181 Pixley St., Orange, had five months
left to serve of a 1967 auto theft
conviction.
Rosetta ti.tctlintick, 2~. \\'a& waiting
ln Fullerton.
The wait may be far longer.
Sometime l\1onday evening, lhe lanky
barber from Bee Branch, Ark., slipped
away from a minimum security area
oot.side the walls of lhe big pink fortress
by San Francisco Bay.
"I don't know what would have made
him do it," Miss -McCllnUck said
\Vednesday.
"I had something to take care or
that couldn"l wail." Harvey to l d
reporters after being arraigned the
same day Jn Marin County t.lunicipal
Court.
He is held in lieu of $200,000 ball
set by Judge Peter A. Smith, on charges
or kidnaping, armed robbery and felony
escape.
Preliminary hearing \Vas set for March
3, v.'hile a public defender was assigned
to lhe case. although Harvey asked to
represent himself.
Harvey has been identified by the
wife of a Novato policeman and her
friend as the barefoot escapee who
abducted them at 9:47 p.m. fvlonday,
along with the officer's two children.
l\1rs. Gary Stansfield, 30, son Robert,
6. and daughter Suzanne, 4 months, were
finall y released unharmed 12 hours later
on Old Highway 99 in Bakersfield near
a care.
She feared their bodies might be found
beside some lonely road, but said the
suspect's tenderness and concern toward
the children was reassuring.
He stopped once - a dangerous
decision for an escaped convict holding
a lawman 's wife and children hostage
-to get candy for Bobby and milk
for the baby.
Continuing on to Orange County, where
the statewide manhunt was to end only
blocks from Miss McClintick's
apartment, Harvey released Mrs. Cheryl
Smith, 13, Jn An'aheim .
"lt was 'the most terrifying 13 hours
of my life," the weary young dental
assistant said.
Police anticipating Harvey's arrival
picked up his trail by motorcycle and
patrol car, touching off a frantic chase
in which one shot was fired before
his capture.
Miss ti.1cClintick said she had expected
to marry Harvey after his parole but
received no mail for so long she feared
he v.•as brooding over il
"'I didn't want to 'force him to do
something against his will or feel I
v.·as pushing him. So I wrote and told
him he didn't have to marry me when
he got out," she explained.
From Page 1
POLICY OF WORLD . • •
on negotiations," he said, "though the
past year indicated that it \1'ill be
extremely difficult to overcome the
enemy's mix of doctrine, calculations
and suspicion.
"There is the additional fact that as
our forces decline, the role '1·e can
play on many aspects of a settlement
is also bound-to decline."
Nixon appealed for trust in his
leadership a1 he seeks to develop what
he called a new. more restrained '''orld
role for the United States.
But the ~jor concern of the message
throughout was with what he called
the "most anguishing problem" of
Vietnam.
"Hanoi has made the war an Indochina
conflict," Nixon stated. v.·ith some 240,000
North Vietnamese troops in South
Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos, including
a few Viet Cong in Cambodia.
HARD CHOICES
"Enemy intentions and capabilities in
Indochina will po:ire some hard choices
about the deployment of allied troops
as v.·e pursue our withdrawals,'' he
continued, and North Vietnamese aclions
in Laos and Cambodia could require
high levels of American assistance and
air operations in order to further
Vietnamliatlon and our withdrawals.
His preview suggested that with the
Vietnamese troop strength in Indochina
the progressive withdrawal of U.S. forcts
msy be accompanied by high I e v e I 11
of military acUvity, partlcularly ~he
extensive use of American air support.
The theme o( frustration i n
peacemaking and danger In world
conditions pervaded other sections of
the m•ssive report.
Noting the Soviet Union's power
position in the Middle East, the President
said any grtat naUon•l effort to dominate
the atta would "Increase the danger
to world J>'Ace." The United States would
not allow Jt to succeed, Nixon stated.
Jn the nuclear arms race. he told
Congress and the nation that 11.•hat he
termed greatly Increased Soviet power
could tempt Moscow into bolde.r and
•
more dangerous probing of the West.
He also said the United States would
like to begin improving relations with
n1ainland Chlna, but that nation conUnues
"to cast us in the devil's role."
Nixon told the American people Ulat
he was trying to shape a new, less
burdensome policy line for the United
States in world affaits. He appealed
for understanding and perhaps ar~ed
against any new swing into American
isolationism.
A.l\IERICANS WEARY
.. The American people have grown
somev.•hal v.'eary of 25 years of
international burdens." Nixon said, "But
""e cannot let the pendulum swing in
the otiler direction, sweeping us toward
an isolationism which could be as
disastrous as excessive zeal."
ln his discussion of Indochina. the
President touched on the military
r;itualion. He declared that in spite of
heavy losses the North Vietnamese still
pose a "considerable threat" to the rirst
and second (I.he Norehrn) mi 1 it a r Y
region~ of South Vietnam.
Alternatively, the North Vietnamese
forces step up pressure againsl the
Cambodian gover nment -or,
presumably, they could work into
expanded operations in Laos. Nixon said
lhat In cambodia and Laos Hanoi has
tv.·o aims:
"Firsl, and primarily, to use them
as infiltration routes, staging bases. and
sanctuaries for attacks against South
Vietnam. S e c o n d I y , to erode
governmental controls in order lo aid
their efforts in South Vietnam <ind
perhaps take over L&os and Cambodia
themsel\'es."
lfov.'ever, Nixon elJ)rrised confidence
that even without help from American
ground ccombat tn>ops, La03 and
Cambodia can withstand efforts to
destroy th em.
"\\'e believe Iha! the two governments
can survive through their O\\'n efforts .
our various kinds of 3Ssistance. and
lhat of other friends . We look to them
lo shoulder the prim11ry comb a I
rcsponsibiliUes for their own defense."
s. Viet Unit Overrun
Reds With Tanks Capture Base in Laos
SAIGON (UPI) -Commuobt troops
movinc behind a shield of tanks overran
the South Vietnamese paratroop base
at hlU Sl IDSide Laos today and
ev,erwhelmed the 2(11}.man defense force,
front dilpatcbes reported. It was the
second such base to be captured by
the Communists.
South Vietnamese President Nguyen
Van Thieu was quoted by the official
Vietnam press agency today as saying
it is "but a matter of time" before
government forces push into North
Vietnam. His speech, made Wednesday
in Pleiku to a "people's convention,"
was released tonight.
UPI Correspondent Kennetb J .
Braddick reported tonight from Khe Sanh
on the South Vietnamese side of the
border that the Communists also had
launctJe4 a ground assault against a
South Vietnamese base at hill 30. four
miles away from hill 31 and also . in
Laos, but that outcome of the battle
\Yas not yet known.
The Communist attacks a & a i n s l
Individual South Vietnamese b a s e s
appeared to be a strategy of picking
them off. one at a lime. The South
Vietnamese established the bases to cul
across highway 9 and other branches
of the Ho Chi Minh trail in Laos.
Braddick said U.S. arijllery just inside
the South Vietnamese border opened a
155 MM howitzer attack on hill 31 tonight.
Previously, U.S. pilots said they had
''blown away" the Communist occupied
hill 31 position in air strikes before
fog closed in tonight.
Communist losses at hill 31 were not
known , but front dispatches and Saigon
reports said "hundreds" of Communists
were killed in attacks on nearby base s.
At least three other South Vietnamese
bases in Laos were reported under
mortar and rocket fire.
Communist troops last Saturday
overran landing zone Ranger, killing
100 rangers and wounding 145. Another
78 were missing in the jungled area
that controls the Ho Chi Minh supply
routes from North VietnQm to Swth
Vietnam and Cambodia.
There was no estimate of Communilit
dead in lhe American air and artillery
attacks at hill 31 but UPI correspondent
Joseph Galloway reported from nearby
fire base Della inside Laos that 159
North Vietnamese were killed there.
Another 109 were reported slain 12 miles
southy,·est of Lao Bao on French colonial
Rou te 9 -axis of the South Vietnamese
incursion into Laos.
Fron& Pa9e 1
CHASE .•.
nue and West 19th Street in the wrong
Janes.
He also ran a stop sign, they said,
then careened through heavy traffic on
a red light in the wrong lanes at Harbor
Boulevard and Victoria Street.
A police hellco})ter, meanwhile, had
jolntd the chase from aloft, while black..
and-white patrol cars were converging
on the pursuit by trying to outguess
the suspect's route.
"It was an experience I won't forget,''
remarked Frederiksen today.
Heavy mid-afternoon traffic finally
convinced the suspect that be couldn't
make his escape, investigators said ..
"He was bottled up in traffic at Harbor
Boulevard and \Vllson Street, so he
wheeled into the Union Station there,
jumped out and threw up his hands
against the roof of the car," said
Detective Frederiksen.
No shots were fired and Gutierrn
\\'as taken into custody without further
incident.
PROFESSICNAL
INTERIOR DESIGNERS
The Laoa operaUon aent 1.J.S. cuua.lties
soaring during the past week. 'Ibe
command announced 59 Americans were
killed in combat and that noncombat
deaths jumped to 42 -the blghell
toll in many 1nonths and rene<:ling the
heavy lou o( U.S. helicopter• ln the
campaign. Noncombat deatN lrw::lude
1nen J~t !n helicopters tr o m
'Tell Your Part'
''noncombat" causes.
An oWctally revised list said the United
States had lost 29 helicopter1 Jn Laos
and adjolnin~ SOUth Vietnam with 39
Americans killed, 32 wounQed and 2S
missing. Dispatches from' correspondents
in the fie.Id said more than double that
figure had been put out of action but
not listed as "destroyed,"
Manson, Girls Scream
At f(asabian in Court
LOS ANGELES (UP!) -Charles
Manson and his three w o m e n
c<>defendants shouted angrily at star
prosecution witness Linda Kasabian
Wednesda y v.·hen the pigtailed blonde
would not go along with their story
that ~1an.son ls blameless in the Tate-
LaBianca murders.
Mrs. Kasabian, 23, had been brought
back from New Hampshire by Manson's
lawyer, Irving Kanarek, but she stuck
c.almly to .her testimony siJ: months ago
that the hippie leader ordered both the
Tate and LaBianca murders.
She was granted compltte immunity
In exchange for her testimony for the
state. As she told the jury that the
three v.•omen lied in their stories
absolving Manson, Susan Atkins su~enly
shouted :
"You ooly got off by putting it on
Manson. Admit it!"
''Why don 't you tell your' part?" called
out Patricia Krenwinkel.
Mrs. Kasabian tumed in the v.·itness
chair and looked at the defendants.
··1 have," she said. ''\Vhy don't you
tell your part?"
Then, turning directly to Manson, she
said:
"Why don't you tell your part?"
'·Live \Vlth it -it's on your face,·•
cried Manson.
''Yes, it's J1eavy," ?o.1rs. Kasabian said.
"The whole thing is Insane."
Kanarek asked her wh at she meant
about it being insane.
"I've never been touched by anything
like this before and it's hard to relate
after being out for awhHe. To be here
again is strange, like a dream."
Judge Charles lf. Older ordered the
defendants to be silent or be removed
immediately from the courtroom. A few
minutes later Mrs. Kasabian \Yas
dismissed permanently as a witn.ss and
presumably she will return to btir
husband and two.children at their hQme
near Milford, N.H.
Mrs. Kasabian was followed to the
witness stand by Deputy District
Attorney Aaron Stovitz.
Stovltz testifled that bis office made
an agreement wlih Susan Atkins ' lawyer
that the state would not ask the death
penalty for her if she told the truth
Santa Ana Marine
Killed in Indochina
Santa Ana resident Staff Sgt. Richard
T. Baker was reported killed in the
Indochina conflict, according to a Ii.st
released Wednesday by the U.S. Defens"e
Department.
Baker, who v.·as in the Marine Corps,
is the husband of Mrs. Richard T. Baker,
503 S. Sail St., Santa Ana . He was
reported a casualty of non-hostile action .
OPff MOft., Th•rs. & Frf, Evtt.
about the killings before a graqd jury.
Miss Atkins did tesUfy befor.e the jury
but she subsequently recanted . her
"confession" and then told an entll'ely.
different story at the trial last week.
The defense was expected to call laler
this week psychiatrists who will give
thei r opinions about the effect of L.SD
on the sanity of the defendants.
Radio DJ's Joke
About Big Quake
Tickles Few Ribs
SAN FRANCISro (AP) -A rumor
that a disastrous earthquake would hit
the San Fernando Valley today started
as a radio disc jockey's joke and has
110 substance in fact, experts said.
The quake prediction was retracted.
But rumors provoked by the report
pron1pted Los Angeles Police Chief
Edward Davis to issue a sharp public
disclaimer, saying earthquakes cannot
be predicted.
Davis said he and ti.1ayor Sam Yorty
consulted with eminent seismologis t Dr.
Charles Richter, originator of the Ri chter
Scale of earthquake Intensity and were
assured, "any such predictio n is sheer
poppycock .''
Dick Whittington, a KGIL DJ with
a predilection for stunts, had phoned a
\\·oman while he was on the air
\Vednesda y. identifying her as a
prominent forecaste r of the future. She
predicted that early today a major quake
\vould rock the San Fernando Valley,
the area hit hardest by the Feb. 9
quake. which left 64 dead and millions
of dollars of damage.
"Those who Ww Dick knew he Was
just putting them on," said KG.IL general
manager Stan Warwick, "because the
rest of the conversation was obviously
ridiculous. But many people only heard
the beginning ."
Frona Pn.ge 1
LAWSUIT ...
Irv ine Company. It 11o·as also noted that
Tustin is fighting legality of the pact
in court.
A suit brought by Tustin last August
asks that the agreement be declared
invalid. Superior Court Judge Robert
Banya rd will resume hearings on the
matter March I.
Tustin ls agretab!e to the land going
to the new city even though it had
fought Santa Ana over the property in
previous LAFC hearings.
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Huntington Beaeh
EDITION
VO l. 6", NO. '48, l SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1971
• • e s I en ar res1
Red Tank Thrust
Desperate Viets
;i·
Beat Off Attack
SAIGON (AP) -South Vietnamese
paratroopers beat off a fierce assault
Thursday by eight North Vielnamese
tanks on the ir base in Laos, lowering
'!ttillery to point blank range to help
knock out five of !hem, U.S. officers
said.
While there were no reports of further
South Vietnamese advances into southern
Laos to cut the Ho Chi Minb trail,
Gen. Creighlon W. Abrams, U • S •
commander in Vietnam, said the
operation was going well despite heavy
fighting and some setbacks.
The fighting in Laos was at Hill 31,
about 10 miles inside Laos.
The North Vietnamese struck with
tanks in their first use of armor since
early in 1969. U.S. officers said the
direct artillery fire , along with antitank
weapons, helicopter gunships and jet
fighter-bombers, beat off the attack.
Most of the tanks were bagged by
the paratroopers. and the remaining
three Oed with U.S. fighter-bom bers in
pursuit. a U.S. officer in the north said.
He reported the paratroopers still held
the hill and "were holding out and were
doing 1 good job." A U.S. F4 Ph~ntom
jet was shot down while flying bombing
missions in support or the base . The
U.S. Command said both crew member•
were rescued.
There was no word on casualties at
the base. Hill 31 is five miles southwest
of the point where a government tanger
base was overrun ever the weekend
with severe losses to the South
Vietnamese defenders.
The action at Hill 31 was the latest
In a series of bloody engagement.. that
have erupted since the So u t h
Vietnamese drive lntG Laos began Feb.
8.
The South Vietnamese said thal three
fire support bases and three field
positions in Laos were hit by eaemy
rockets, mortar and recoilless rifle fire.
Casualties were described as light.
The tanks reported used in the attack
on Hill 31 were believed to be PT16s ,
a Soviet-made light amphibious type.
It was the first time enemy tanks
have been reported employed in the
current Laos ca mpaign. although South
Vietnamese spokesmen said earlier that
air and artillery strikes had destroyed
a dozen tanks of this type inside Laos.
ln an interv iew with Peter A. Jay
of the Wa shington Post, Abrams
described the campaign in Laos as
criUcal tG the U.S. troop withdrawal
SA City Lawyer
Appointed To
New Judgeship
Santa Ana City Attorney William Mock
Wednesday was appoin ted to the newly-
created judgeship in the West Orange
County Judicial District.
The announcement was by a
spokes man for Gov. Ronald Reagan.
Mock said he t.xpecls to be sworn
In sometime within the neJ"t four weeks,
but added that he will confer with the
presiding judge of the district c o u r t
before a date is set. ~tock, 42. joined the city of Sants.
Ana in January of 1966 as assistant
city aU.orney and in June of that year
he was appointed clty attorney.
Mock is a graduate of Drake University
Law School and lives In • Santa Ana
with h.is wife and three children. He
is 1. Republican.
Mock will become the seventh Judge
to join the West County ~ and •D
apening for an eighth judge wtll bto:I~
available In May of thls year. He will
be paid P,,,724 a year.
WHO'S YOUR
OSCA R PI CK?
The polls are open for national voting
In the "Oscar Derby." For your chance
to vote In the DAILY PILC71' "election"
•nd, perh•P'· go I<> dinner with your
favorite .tars, Ht the ballot today on
P11ge I,,
program but added that its succw or
failure will not be apparent before next
faU.
Abrams said i! there ls no significant
enemy military effort in South Vietnam
after the rainy season ends in Ju1y
and before the October presidential
elections in South Vietnam then the
operation can be counted a success.
AQrams Insisted !be operation had a
limited objective, the destruction of
enemy supply stockpiles to prevent a
1971 orfensive in the northern provices
of South Vietnam. He said it never
was intended to seal off the Ho Chi
Minh trail.
Jurors Find
Riggs Guilty
OnDeathRap
Martha Riggs of· Bunttnaton Beach
wa1 convicted cf second degrH murder
late Wednesday for her role in planning
the killing of 19-year-old Robert Leroy
Hernwm.
An Orange County Superior Court jury
deliberated for 15 hours before voting
for the lesser of two possible murder
verdicts. They dismissed conspiracy
charges against the attractive 19-year-old
defendant.
Judge Cla ude M. Owens called for
a presentenceing report from tbe
probat.ion department and set March
15 as the sentencing date. Miu Riggs
of 1824 Park SL facet a possible term
of five years to life in atate prison.
She remained caJm lhroughout Utt final
phase of the trial and showed no emotion
at the reading of the verdict Judg~
Owens allowec. her to spend a few
minutes with her pareata in the
courtroom and denied a motion for bail
before she was led back to her Orange
County jail cell .
The jury accepted deputy district
attorney Robert Chatterton's argument
during the ten-day trial that Miss Riggs
planned the murder of Hermann with
convicted killer Robert Eugene Will iams,
19. of 15°' Pecan St., Huntington Beach.
The prosecutor successfully alleged
that she supplied the gun used by
Williams to shoot Hermann in the bar.k
of the head after the two youths had
chatted and smoked marijuana together
last Nov. 7 ln the bedroom of Hermann's
home at 418 15th St., Huntington Beach.
Williams, who i.s now serving a life
term in state prison for the killing,
returned to the Riggs home and was
asked by her: "Did you do it?" It
was. stated during both trials that sbe
took the murder weapon frotn Willlama
and .Upped it Int<> her purse.
Miss Riggs, Williams and Hermann
were three of five defendants arrested
al the Riggs home en drug chares last
Oct. 31 , one week before the killing
of Hermann.
It was repe.atedly testified that MJas
Riggs and WUllams were miataken in
that belief.
Narco Roundup
In Huntington
Nets 12 Suspects· ..
Narcotics detectiva from t b e
Huntlngl<>n J!c•ch Poll<o ~I
woondup•tm.e._k_
lnvesUgaUon Monday Dl&bt wltb the
arrest of U penons on n1rcutla; ulel
charges.
'!be early evening ""1lldup o! .u.p..IA!d
drug peddlen inclU<!ed one 11 ·yttr old
youngster and three others in their urly
teens, aged 14 and 15. Addition,] arrestl
are pendinll, according I<> pollco.
Detectlve Capt.a.In Grover Payne 11.ld
only amaU 1mounts of contraband were
confiscated d1rrlng the r1ld. which wa1
accompliahed throu&h tht aid of a mile
atudent workl.nJ under-cover at local
ld>ooll.
THIS IS ARCHITECT'S RENDERING DF HUNTINGTON BEACH'S $8.S MILLION CIVIC CENTER
Tw1>1tory Police Building (left) and FJvHtory Administration Bulldtng Would RlH Above Nearby Homes
Data on Center Studied
Huntington Group Mulls Over Facts, Figure s
By ALAN DIRKIN through which the city will final')Ct the
01 "'-o.u, f'li.t s1t11 fa cilities with construction bonds.
The five-story tower in the $8.5 million Larry Curran. an attorney a n d
Huntington Beach civic center -likened chairman cf the corporation, questioned
by the architect to an office building wh ether the city would be setting "an
on Wilshire Boulevard -will st.and 157 unhappy precedent'' in building a center
feel tall in an area ioned for single that does not meet zoning rtqulrtmenll.
family homes limittd to 30 feet in blight. "l dqn't .know whether ·'t'f: ~ want
'lbtte oil .,..lll'•IDJY~•ilo be ·-ptios> lo bwld,i'-tl91e.bulldlng ...... ~."
on the 14-acre site oppnsite tht he co~nted.
Hunttngton Bead> fftsh kbGol, oH 1! • Aili! C'lty AlliniNitnlOl-,Bnnder
will COit $24,000 a year to inJure the Castle fepUed that the l 7 ·a l o r Y
centtr and $.1 million library against retirement towers belr11 plaMtd by the
earthquake damage. First Christian Church at 11th Street
These were some of the points and Adams Avenue would be higher,
discussed Wednesday evening at a but suggested the zoning ordiDllleel could
meeting of the Huntington Beach Public be amended.
Facilities Corporation, the v eh ic I t Today, PlanJtinl: Director Kenneth
Army Doctor Says Calley
'l{new Right From Wrong'
FT. BENNING, Ga. IAP) -An Army
psychiatrist who followed Ll. William
Calley Jr. to the witness stand testified
today ht could find no ev idence l.bal
Calley suffered from "any form cf
mental disorder I could think of" in
the massacre at ,..ty Lai.
"One could say the entire incident
is bizarre," Maj. Henry E. Edwards
replied to one question put to him.
He was the first rebuttal witness for
the prosecution. The defense rested
Wednesday after Calley had epent two
days on tbe witness stand.
Edwards was one of three Walter
Reed Hospital psychiatristi t b 1 t
constituted a sanity board for Calley.
A second member cf the team, U .
Col. Frank1in G. Jones, followed Edward.!i
to the witness stand.
Edwards' t e at i m o n y directly
contradicted that of defense psycblatrlsll
who u.id that Calley did indeed have
mental impa1rment that clouded his
capacity to premeditate his actions ~at
My Lal on March 16, 11168. Calley Is
charged wltb murdering 102 viUager1
that day.
Edwards answered affirmatively to all
questions touching on whether the
Lieutenant bad the capacity to k n o w
right from wrong, the ability to do
what be knew was right 1nd to form
the specific intent to kill.
How did he define the specific intent
to kill?
"That be bad the noUon and desire
to end someone's lilt!," Edwards said.
1'My cpinion is that there was no
impairment to his me n t a 1 U>ought
processes on that day ••. the way be
performed he was responding to cues
and stimuli around him."
In cross-examination, the psychiatrist
was asked whether the mind could be
conditioned along certain channels, "I'll
say a channel to It.ill"
'The question came in cbnnection with
the :90-Called Pavlov exper1menl in which
dogs were coodiUoned to respond to
certain stimuli.
Edwards said be bad not read the
works of P1vlov, a Ru.s.sian. "1 don't
know thal he ever made 1 n y
commentary, but. a person can be
conditioned to kill." Edwards. sakt.
At another point, the psyChiatrist said,
"I believe one can be c."flitioned." But
he 1dded be.did not tltink it was possible
to condition one section of lhe mind
without affe<:Ung others.
' Doyal Collision
Anne Hits Cab; Palace Geu Bill·
LONDON (AP) -P•trick Lins uy1
be'• billing Bucklngh•m Palace l!O for
the damage Prlnctss Anne did to the
back of hll cab.
Queen Elizabeth's :io.,..,-.oJd da•ahttr
wu ctrl•lna her new RdWlt 8dm!lor
Jpo<U car when t bumped nl<> "'111'1
tax Wedntldly oo the busy Brompt<>n
Road.
"J b&d to brake sharply, and there
was 1 hell . of a lood bang u the
other car bashed into me," the 34-year·
old cabbie told newsmt.n.
"J got out to excbanae • few harcl
words with this YOUDI blOfldt at , U\I
wheel. Then this bloke carne. from , the
1po*-car and told me to aend lhl
bUI fi 8ucklngh1m Palac~. • ''tiaked blm WbO thi ball WU dtr.1111
' .,
that thing aod be !<>Id mo Prlnceu
Anne. 'WbJt' m you doing.' I &aid,
'teacbln& her to drive?' He 11id no
and 1 11ld be Jhould be."
No .one w~ bu.rt. but . the collision
brj>ke. ,Ling'• l>Ullgbt and tw~led •
fender. He ..Umated the rtpain would '°'' It pounds -IQ).
Un1 Hid the P<in<as "Just sot there
&Ort or shocked and stony faefd'" while
he talktd t<> her escort, ldenlllled_ Iller,
as ber personal dettttive.
Th• Queen and Prince Pb.1llp ga•t
their daughter the '5,280 car as a
Oirbtmu presenL. The accident wa1
her !&II 1ince 1he paued the drlvinl
lt•t -,,.,. .... Bue~ ~ai.c. 1a1d tho d•mar
'ta Iii \.;ii car WU "lallty -llclal.
Reynolds explained that a zone change
would not be necessary because zoning
regulations do not apply to cities or
school districts.
"They bave their own inspectors," he
added.
The pollct headquarters adjacent to
the admln!st.raUon tower wlll be ~ ftel
. 111~'.IJI tht early )'em but ·· tho
third ' story ·u added it will stretch to
• feet.
Clatle Aid that there were three ell
wella, presently produclng to barrels a
day, on the site. As part o{ ill agreement
with the Huntington Beach Comp111y,
from whlc}). the city is buying the land,
the city could have the wells capped
(See CENTER, Pase I )
17 Now in Race
For Huntington
District Seats
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
OI ni. D9l11 f'tlel llllf
Four more per.sons have f i I e d
nomination papers for the April 20
trustee electicn In the Huntington Beach
Union High School District, bringing the
field of candidates to a record high
or 11.
The unprecedented inter est in the
elecUon has been focused on two board
seats which go on the block.
Those who filed this morning include
Mrs. Bartletta Suter, a Westminster
housewife ; John D. Hamilton , the former
Mayor of Seal Beach ; Peter Horton,
an aerospace executive from Huntington
Beach, and Harry Hi cks, an attorney
practicing Jn Fountai n Valley.
Mrs. Suter, 5211 Vale Cir c I e,
Westminster, said she Is running "to
hopefully see that our children get a
good education." The housewife and
mother of four added , "I have no ax
to grind other than that J want my
children to be educated."
Hamilton, 41, works as a production
asm.stant for a Long Beach oil company
1nd lives at 1712 Harbor Way, Seal
Beach. The former city councilman said
be Is running "to &Ive so m e
representation to the west end cf the
hlgh school district."
Also joining Ure race ls Peter Horton,
61 ; ol 16431 Barnstable Circle, Huntington
Beach .. Horton was last year'a president or· the Huntington Beach Chamber of
Conunerce. •
"I am running because I'm very aware
of 'lhe importance of a IOWld educational
prOoess:· &aid Horton, a. McDorinell
Douglas txec:UtJve. "I want to see if
l can do IOmethlng to help It:"
Hieb, a 37-year old attorney, lives
at 9177 LaOrande Circlt, Fountain Valley.
Said Hico, · "'Mle ochool board is
entering a period where they bave a
coiitnctlng economic; 1ltu1tion wi.tb an
eiPandilll ldtoof syslem. 'Ibey need
Mmeone who can get erut.er tUtdency
tnim the f1<:11iUes they . alrtady hav.
•nd de>!" belier methods of uUllJitlg
the abrlnklng tu dollar."
Odler candidates for the two a1ots
are Donald Jonts, Huntingkrl Bearh.
attonley; C1therlnt1 Mooring, Fountain
Valley, hou.aewiff!I: Howard Warner.
HunUngton Bea~h. dt8lgntt and teachtr;
Edward Gauthier, Hu.nUngt.on Beach,
contract adminJatrator: John K. Lawson,
Huntington BeJch, tacher:
Dr. Joseph Rlbal, lfunllng""' Buch,
(!oJ,CANDIDATD. r .,..1)
'.l .... d ay'1 Flnal
N.Y. St.eeks
TEN CENTS
en
Nixon Tells
U.S. Role
In World
By JOHN M. m GHTOWER
WASiUNGTON (AP ) -President
Nixon today charged Hanoi w I t h
broadening lhe Vietnam war into an
Indochina e-0n£Uct and predicted the
United States and its allit!l will have
more hard choices in comba.tting possible
new enemy thrusts in South Vietnam,
Cambodia and Laos.
In a globe-ranging report offlciall)"
directed to Congress but aimed at the
nation and the rest of the world, Nixon
keyed his message to a quest fGr "a
full gene ration of peace" this century.
But, he said, "If winding dQwn the
war is my greatest satisfaction in
foreign policy, the failure to end it
Is my deepest disappointment."
He pledged to continue the winding
down, the U.S. troop withdrawal from
South Vietnam. But in stark contrast
to his declared globa l peace goal bls
projection for Indochina emphasized the
broadened war and increased American
aid and air support for allied ground
forces.
The 65.000 word report. covering 180
pages 11nd accompanied by a nationwide
radio speech was the second Nlzon report
on tht role of th• United States in
world affairs sinct he took o!flce.
Patterned after the conalitutlonally
mandated State of the Union message.
this White House overview Of the world
situation disclosed DO new U.S. policy
departures.
But details were ouUined and ft gave
Nixon an opportunity to tell the story
of hls foreign and strategic policies at
midpassage between the 1968 and 1972
elections.
Nixon sent the report, which h!s been
in preparation for several months, to
Congress under the title, "United Slates
Foreign Policy for the 1970s -Building
for Peace."
In discussing the Indochina erlsts at
coosiderable detail Nixon gave a deeply
pessimistic report about the prospects:
for a negotiated settlement.
He had "frankly expected" some kind
of action from the North Vittnamese·
Viet Cong side last yeir, NiJ:on stated,
when be expanded political principles
for a settlement and a p p o i n t t! d
ambassador David Bruce as peace
negotiator.
ln this. he indicated, be was completely
disappointed. But "We will not give up
on negotiations," he &aid, "though the
past year indicated that it will be
extremely difficult to overcome the
enemy's mi:t of doctrine, calculations
and suspicion.
"There Is the additional fact that as
cur forces decline, the role we can
play on many aspects of a settlement
is also bound to decline."
NJ1on appealed for trust in his
leadership as he seeks to develop what
he called a new, more restrained world
role for the United States.
But the major concern of the message
throughout was with what he called
the "most a.aguisbing problem" cf
Vietnam.
"Hanoi has made the war an Indochina.
conflict," Nixon stated, with some 240,000
North Vietnamese troops In South
!See NIXON, Pap I )
0r ....
lfeatller
Gusty winds under clear t:kfQ
are the ingredients for Friday'•
weather menu, with coast.al temp.
erature.s quitting at 60 and lnland
mercury registertna K degrees.
INSWE TODAY
Orange Countu 1upe:rvim1
have appro0td a human rclo.
tian.r commia1ion for the coun-
~y. but the · commfltfon m1t1&
prOVt it.I worth within CM ~tar.
Page 12.
l
I
I
•• O/.ILV "·-"• .,
Fou 11ta~~ Valley Hosts Vital s~hool -Me~t
By TERRY COVIJJ.E
01 n.. o.u, '11tl Sl•ff
PPBS: Four letters which could either
revolutionl%.e California educllion or ·
spawn revolutions tG•inst iL
Either direction may be determined
Friday morning 1n Fountain Valley when
a state commlsslon opens a public
hearing on the subject.
PPBS (Planning, Programming,
Budgeting Systems) is a systems·
management approach taken Crom the
world of business and applied to the
world of education.
Jn essence it is supposed to put in
writing, ideas that have long been
theories in the minds of educators. It
Also asks education to thoroughly outline
the details of how school money is spent.
'Ibe Fountain Valley School District
Fro1n Pa9e 1
NIXON ...
Vietnam , Cambodia and Laos, including
a few Viet Cong in Cambodia.
"Enemy intentions and capabilities in
Indochina will pose some hard choices
about the deployment of allied troops
as we pursue our withdrawals," he
continued, and North Vietnamese actions
ln Laos and Caxnbodia could require
high levels of American assistance and
air operations in order to further
Vielnamization and our withdrawals.
His prev iew suggested that with the
Vietnamese troop strength In Indochina
the progressive withdrawal or u .s. forces
tnay be accompanied by high 1 e v e I s
of military activity, particularly the
utensive use of American air support.
The theme of frustration i n
peacemaking and danger in world
condiUons pervaded other sections of
the massive report.
Noting the Soviet Union's power
pcsition in the Middle East, the Pres~dent
said any great national effort to donunate
the area would "increase the danger
to world peace." The United States would
not allow it to succeed, Nixon stated.
In the nuclear arms race, he told
Congress and the nation that what he
termed greaUy increased SOviet power
ccu\d tempt Moscow into bolder and
more dangerous probing of the West.
He also said t:1e United States would
like to begin improving relations with
mainland China, but that nation continues
.. to cast us in the devil's role."
Nixon told the American people thal
he was trying to shape a new, !ess
burdensome policy line for the United
States in world affairs. He appealed
for understanding and perhaps argued
against any new swing into American
isolationism.
"The American , people have grown
somewliflt weary· of 25 years of
International burdens," Nixon said. "But
we cannot •let the pendulum swing in
the other directiOn. swe~ping us toward
an isolationism which could be as
disastrous as e.xcessive ieaL"
In his d15cussion of Indochina, the
President touched on the military
situation. He declared that in spite or
heavy losses the North Vietnamese still
pose a "c0nsiderable threat" to the first
and second (tr.e northern) mi 11t1 r y
regions of Soulh Vietnam.
Beach Lawmaker
To Visit School
State Assemblyman Robert Burke lR-
Huntington Beach) will stop off Friday
•t Harper School, Fountain Valley, to
j ?.et the youngsters who plan to visit
~ in Sacramento.
Burke will prt\1iew the tour he plans
fl give 73 eighth grade youngsters and
their eight chaperones in the Capitol
March 22.
On that da y, the Harper group will
ny by jet to Sacramento. meet Burke
there, then vi sit the major government
buildings and state officials.
OUM•I COAST
DAILV°PIU:iT
OllANCJI COAST PUILllHlNI> C0M'A>CY
RoMrt N. W•ed
PfOl!dtnl .... hbli.tiol'
J1•i L c~rf'Y'
Ykt l'raldthr W 0...1 Ml,..Otl"
n • ..,., K .... 1r
Edl!Cll'
Th•"'•• A. Murpfil11•
M-Olna E•llW
Al•it Dlr.)11 w•t C>nlnoo '-'' Sdl!W'
All>•rf W. l1l•t
A11oc:letc Edlfor
H ......... .._k Offlc.e
17115 a..~ loul•w•r4
Molli119 Add ros11 P.O. le1t 790, 92,41 ,,_.,_
~ 9-ctl; 222 hr•t ... _
ClDeft #Nllt.ti ,_ W.1 .,, Strlft
N""""""' IMUI: Im H""llOf'I hu:1N1nl s.n QenWllttJ as Hortft El C.1111iw lt•I
Tel•,.•• t714l MJ-4JJ1
o-Hie4 U..rtkl .. M2·1t71
N one of 14 districts In the state using
PPBS. Local administrators say it will
iocreae pubUc knowledt:e a b o u t
education, while making the achool.s more
elr.ctlve.
But a state A!semblyman . from
HunUnston Stach bu calltd PP81 "lft
accounting tool usable by lhc .,..Ml
managers to mold all of us Into u eir
version of utopian man."
Assemblyman Robe.rt Burke ( R -
Huntington Beach) believes the use of
PPBS management techniques by the
schools should be limited by the state
~glslature.
Jn a recent news letter he said there
was evidence sOme school districts were
already misusing PPBS. He didn't say
which diBtricts, .or how it was being
misused.
' [1-,
'
BACK TO BIG 'Q'
Lovelorn Car Thief Harvey
Friday's public hearing wlll involve
spee.kers from all over S o u t he r n
CaWornla. 'lbe hearing opens at 9 a.m ..
fn Fol.l.Dlaln Valley City Co u n c 11
chambers, 102!)0 Slater Ave.
It wUI .bli conducted by the atate
Ad•lsory i-nllalon on Sohool Dlatrlct
Budgeting and AceounUng, w hi ch
launched the PPBS pilot studies In 1988.
This is the last year the state will
finance the PPBS studies in the 14
districts. The state commission will
listen to public commt?nts on it, then
spend the afternoon studying Fountain
Valley's use or it. Friday's events Will
help detennine the future of PPBS In
California schools.
Mike Brick, superintendent of the
Fountain Valley district. has such faith
in it, he said his district would continue
U,I Tti.PIKllM
'I FEAR MY FAULT'
Letter Writer McClintick
the PPBS outline wbrtber the state
supporta It or not.
"The purpose of Jt,'1 he explained,
"is to make educaUon more eU1cltnt
and effective, and to l n c re 1 s e
communication wltb the pubUc."
The planning part means a district muat put down in writing its philosophy
and goals -what It wants to teach
or develop in the children.
Programming is outlining how the
district will achieve its goals -teach
a student to read at a certain level,
for example.
Budgeting involves the accountability
factor. Once a district knows in writing
what it plans to do now and bow, it can
say what the cost will be. 'Iben it
can see ll all the goals can be reached
under the money possible.
i\'ixon Says
Throughout the system, lhe distrk:
4 responsible for testing, proving that'
certain goals have betn or can be
roached .
Fountain Valley got to the very base
of PPBS when it wrotef an educational
plan for each of the 13 elementary
schools.
The educational plan -found at each
school and open to the public for reading
-tells in 11pecific tenns what that
school is going to do for children at
any point in time, any age and ability.
"You can open up any one of our
educational plans and find a complete
description -0! the school's major goals
and activities," Brick: said. ''It's the
only descriptive analysis: of educatioa
l know of in this country.''
He said PPBS plans 11ave been used
extensively in priv&te companies such :_
as General .Mellors, Ford. Dupont and ~
McDonnell·Douglu. At least 19 stat.et
al.so use it as. well as many clllet
and counties. .~
State authorities are interested in the
detailed budget PPBS can ac hieve, while
local authorities have also used the
management approach to outline their
own educational goals.
Opponents or PPBS fear it will
eventually make children nothing more
than computer punch cards -with their
entire education a tape program in a
big machine.
"That's not the \'i'ay it's used," Brick
says. "For us it's a better way of
telling the public what we're doing."
Russ Inch Ahead
No Nightclub
Pictures N oiv
lndis~reet executives in darkened
nightclubs with dates other than
their wives just tell t h e
cameragirl: No pic.tures, please.
•
In Atom Arsenal A ttam of bandits who raided
Grove Liquors, 9842 Katelia Ave,.
Garde n Grove, Wednesday night,
were much meaner \vhen they saw
the birdie v.·atching them. WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Soviet
Union has surpassed the United States
in some categories of strategic nuclear
weapoM and may be preparing for a
"first strike" capability, President Nixon
aaid today.
He said the Soviet Union overhauled
the United States in 1969 in the number
of intercontinental ballistic missiles and
is rapidly gaining in numben: of
submarine launched ballistic missiles.
"By any standard, we believe t he
number of Soviet stragelic forces now
exceeds the level needed for deterrence,''
Nixon said in his "state of the world''
message.
"Even more important than the gro"'th
in numbers has been the change in
the nature of the rorces the USSR chose
to develop and deploy. The.se forces
include systems -particularly the SS9
ICBM with large multiple warheads -
\.\hcih, U further improved and deployed
in sufficient numbers, could be uniquely
suitable for a first strike against our
land-based deterrent forces."
In 1965, the United States had 934
lCBMs and 464 submarine-launched
ballistic missiles compared with 224 and
107 for the Soviet Union. Nixon ·said
Clerk Robert Stillion, 27, said
Jne youth blasted the camera off
its "'all mounts \vith a 12-gauge
~hotgun before both lied out the
door with $40 in loot.
From Pa9e 1
CENTER . ' ..
by the tnd of 1969, the Soviet Union or realigne~.
had l ,109 ICBMs to 1,054 for tbe United Castle said the city had not yet decided
States and in 1970 added 331 more while whether to have them capped or keep
the United States maintained the same them pumping until they run dry.
level. "It would be foolhardy to cap them
Last year the United States had 656 lf the return is great,'' he commented.
Convict' s Girl Linked Manson, Girls
Shout Down
Linda Kasabian
submarine-launched ballistic missiles -"Thfy are on the perinieter of the site
the same as in 1969 -while the Soviet and could be landscaped so they would
Union had 350. an increase or 110 over 11ot be noticeable.'·
1969, the President said. It was also Castle u'ho revealed lhat
Nixon said, "By the mid 1970s we it would cost $24 ,000 to insure the center
To Bizarre Jailbreak
expect the Soviets to have a force or and library planned for the Central Park
ballistic missile submarines equal in size against earthquake damage. Tb e
to our own. Furthermore. the Soviet insurance would be a requirement of ·
Union has continued to make significant the bond sales the public facilities
By ARTHUR VINSEL
01 IM' 0.llY ,1111 11111
A misunderstood Valentine note rnay
have triggered a San Quentin Prison
inmate's desperate dash to Orange
County Tuesday and truly doomed a
long-awaited wedding.
James D. "Jiimnie". Harvey, 24, of
181 Pixley St., Orange, had five months
left to serve of a 1967 auto theft
conviction.
Rosetta McCJintick, 24, was waiting
in Fullerton.
The wait may be far longer.
Sometime f.1onday evening, the lanky
barber from Bee Branch, Ark., slipped
away from a minimum security area
outside the walls or the big pink fortress
by San Francisco Bay,
"I don't know what would have made
him do it," ~1iss McClintick said.
Wednesday.
··I had something to take care or
that couldn't wait," llarvey to l d
reporters after being arraigned the
same day in Marin County Municipal
Court.
He is held in lieu of $200,000 bail
set by Judge Peter A. Smith, on charges
of kidnaping, armed robbery and felony
escape.
Preliminary hearing was set for r.tarch
3, \Vhile a pub lic defender was assigned
to the case, although Harvey asked to
represent himsetr.
Har vey bas been iden tified by the
wile of a Novato policeman and her
frie nd as the barefoot escapee who
abducted them at 9:47 p.m . Monday,
along with the officer's two children.
Mrs. Gary Stansfield, 30, son Robert,
Administrators
Lose Four-year
Contract Bids ·
The three top administrators of the
lluntington Beach City School District
asked for four year contracts Tuesday
night -"As a vote of confidence."
They were turned down.
District trustees tabled the request
for further discussion.
S. A. Moffett, Superintendent, said he
was requesting the longer contract in
lieu of pay raises for administrators.
"Teachers and principals were given
pay raises," Molfett said. "A longer
contract could be a factor of the board
giving us a vote of confidence iru:teld
of raises."
"I don't like four-year contract!,"
Trustee Ivan Liggett said. ''I'd rather
give you A pay raise. u
"l don't see anything wrong with longer
contracta unleu we're plaMin& to change
administrations,'' Trustee 0rv111 e
Hanson, lnterjeeted.
"l don't hive that in mlnd," added
Trustee Louis DaHarb. "But I'd rather
have a two-year chopping block."
MoffcU, Deputy Superintendent Charles
Pal.mcc and Assl!tanl Superintendent
Detty Funkhouser are all on three-year
contracts which expire June 30, 1973.
"l'd like to give It a llttle further
thought," Ste,·e Holden, chairman ot the
lrustees, said. He then tabled the request
to no apeclllc elate.
qualitative improvements in its strategic corporation will authorize as part of =
forces. These include new and improved the lease-back financing agreement with
6, and daughter Suzanne, 4 months, were LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Charles versions of their Minuteman size SSll the city.
finally released unharmed 12 hours later ~fanson and his three women missile, continued testing of multiple Architect Kurt Meyer described the
-On Old Highway 99 in Bakersfield near codefendant.s shouted angrily at star warheads. research and testing of ABM center as a building complex that will
a cafe. prosecution witness Linda Kasabian components, and improved air defense outlive "fads over styles."
She feared their bodits might be found \Vednesday when the pigtailed blonde sys tems." He· explained that the ground nOor
beside some lonely road, but said the would not go along with their story He said mainland China by the late of the administration tower and the sus~t's tenderness and concern tovt'ard that Manson is blameless in the Tate-1970s probably will have ICBMs "capable development ''Wing that will tun behind
the children was reassuring. LaBianca murders. of reaching the U.S." it 'viii be devoted to publlc services.
He stopped once -a dangerou9 Mrs. Kas sbian, 23, bad been brought Nixon cautioned that there has been 'fhe finance; plan ning and public work.s
decision for an escaped convict holding back from New Hampshire by Manson's some slowing in ·soviet development departments will be located there.
a lawman's wife and children hostage lawyer, Irving Kanarek, but she stuck of land-based missile launchers. But he ··The citizens will be able to get what
-to get candy for Bobby and milk calmly to her testimony six months ago said "The significance of thi s they want with the minimum of run·
for the baby. that the hippie leader ordered both the development is not clear." around,'' he said.
C t. · t o c h Tate and LaBianca murders. Meyer said that the uper parts or on 1nu1ng on o range ounty. w ere the tower will be like an office building
the statewide manhunt was to end only She was granted complete immunity on Wilshire Boulevard. "In 0 u r
blocks from Miss ?>.1 cc Ii n tick 's in exchange for her testimony for the Tot Smothered discussions we felt a good average
apartment, Harvey released Mrs. Cheryl state. As she told the jury that the quality office building would be the right
Smith, 23, in Anaheim. three women lied in th eir stories kind to follow1o get the kind of efficiency
"It was the most terrifying 13 hours absolving Manson , Susan Atkins suddenly By Crib Blanket that is required," he commented.
-0f my life," the weary young dental shouted: . The archi!ect . said they hoped to go
assistant said. "You only got off by putting it on into production in the Jale summer witb
Police anticipating Harvey's arrival :f..lanson, Admit ii!" A Huntington Beach mother woke up public bids being sought in August.
Picked up his trail by motorcycle and "Why don't you tell your part?" called Wednesday morning and discovered her Public Works Director Jim Wheeler
patrol car, touching off a frantic chase out Patricia Krenwinkel. live-month-old son dead in his crib. said that the structures would exceed
in which one shot was fired before Mrs. Kasabian turned in the witness Investigators from the Orange County code requirements for earthquake safety.
his capture. chair and looked at the defendants. Coroner's Office said the tot, Brendan "I'm conviaced that safety factors are
"I have," she said. "Why don't you A. Frost, 7112 Sunlight Lane, was very very con""rvat•·ve" w h e I ~11ss McClintick said she had expected · "" ' e e r tell your part'" apparently suffocated accidentally by a commented adding th t · 1 • t to marry Harvey after his parole but · · a se1smo og1s s Then, turning directly to Manson, she blanket. had done tho-ugh resea h f th ·1 received no mail for so long she feared sa•·d·. '"' re or e c1 Y· Attempts to revive the infant through "I have no concern but 0 t
he was brooding over it. "Why don't you tell your part?" mouth-to-mouth resuscitation proved re'.11e.mber that you 'cannot yd~sig~usa
''l didn't 'vant to force him to do "Live with it -it's on your face ," futile. He was pronounced dead on arrival bu1ld1ng for the epicenter of an
something against his will or feel 1 cried ~tanson. at Huntington lntercommunity Hospital. earthquake if you want to use it."
was pushing him. So I wrote and told 1i=li~~~-·====~~~~~~:;~···=·=~;===='====~=~====1 him he didn't have to marry me when
he got out," she explained.
Tom and shre_dded note paper found
in Harvey's personal effects after he
was found missing at a 10 p.m. bedcheck
gave San Quentin authorities a clue.
''The only thing 1 can imagine is
that he misunderstood," she said.
r.1iss McClintick said shortly after the
Valentine giving him his option of
romantic freedom -he still had the
fact of his bleak dally life for five
months -she learned or a rwnor that
she had married.
Quickly, she mailed another note to
San Quentin.
"I don't think he got that letter before
'this' happened," she said sadly.
Whatever consolation it may be to
the woman whoSe boy[rlend now faces
far more than his initial four years
behind bars, Harvey denied Wednesday
she is to blame. .. ..
Fron• Pqe 1
CANDIDATES ...
psychology teacher: Joseph Mizrahi,
\Vestminster. retired deputy &herHr;
George Logan, Huntington B e a c h ,
attorney: Edmund C. P. Sheth1.n1 Westminster. Alcoholic Beverage Control
Board Investigator: Robert E, Dingwall,
llunlinglon Beach, print shop owner;
Robe.rt Gordon, Westminster, computer
11ysterrni analyst. and Dennis ~1angers,
Huntington B~ach, school principal.
One of the two contested seats belongs
to school board President Matthew
Weyuker. The other was held by Dr.
,Joseph Ribal, removed from his post
last December for absl'!nting himself
beyond the 9C).day limit allowed by law.
Ile will be seeking re-election.
Weyu ker, an administrative 89Sis:Ulnt
from \\"estminster. oid he would seek
rl'!~le.clion but had not filed as of 11
o'clock lhi.'! momin£.
A Nylon
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Price!
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.,
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•
IF YOU CAN'T
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~275
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COSTA MESA, CALIF.
M6·0l7J 646.027'
I
I
1
State Cash
Condition
'Serious'
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Legislative
Analyst A. Alan Post says the financial
condllion of state government now "Is
even more serious" than when Gov.
Ronald Reagan first came to office.
The Legislature's nonpartisan fiscal
watchdog warns th at the slate will run
short of cash next fall. some sovernment
programs are undtrfunded and a tu
increase may be necessary.
Soon after Reagan replaced Democrat
Edmund G. Brown in 1967 the new
governor told Californians in a statev.ide
telecast that:
''Not since the bleak days of the
depression have v.•e faced such a dark
picture. . .our state has betn looted
and drained of its flnancia1 resources
in a manne r unique in our history."
Reagan then pushed through a $1 billion
statewide tu increase -the major
legislative accomplishment <1f hls first
term -and blamed Democrats for
making it necessary.
The economy-minded governor no''
zays be i! "unalterably opposed" to
another tax hike and Post, in his annual
budget report to the Legislature
Wednesday, did not recommend one.
But Post did say the picture is even
darker than four years ago and
emphasized that Reagan's $6.73 billion
budget proposal for the next fiscal year
can only be balanced by sharp spending
reductions, a tax increase or a
combination of both.
•re pointed out that the state -hard
hit by sluggish recession-era tax revenues
-is spending $m.4 million more than
it i! taking in and expects to end the
fiscal year June 30 with a $124.5 million
deficit.
The veteran money watcher iiaid this
"has ierious in'tplications" for next
year's budge t. He noted the last time
the state faced a similar situation was
in 1967.
"This situation," he said, 1'is even
more serious."
"It is not yet clea r how the (next)
budget is to be funded," he explained.
"Cash needs cannot be met from regular
borrowing sources. . .and new taxes
or special outside b o r r o w i n g
arrangements '"ill have to be resorted
to."
Post said the Feb. 9 Los Angeles
earthquake will have "an unknown
impact" on state revenues, but that
personal income and corporation taxes
will be less due to casualty losses and
that sales tax revenue! v.·ill rise because
o f repairs to damaged property.
Despite the gloomy fi scal portrait,
Post recommended-that Reagan's budget
be increased by a net '183 million.
"There are areas in which good public
policy justifies increases or smaller
reductions than those proposed in the
budget," he said.
Of the increase, '116.2 million would
be spent for a five pe rcent co1t-of.Jiving
salary hike for state employes and a
10 percent raise for University of
California and state college faculty.
Another $72 million would replace funds
Reagan proposes to withdraw from the
teachers' retirement fund lo balance his
budget.
Also, '30 million in new slate aid
v•ould go to elementary and secondary
schools.
Beyond that, Post recommended a
statewide property tax for schools. The
money would be evenly distributed and
benefit poor schools primarily.
Post did not say so in his 1,100 page
budget analysis, but he told newsmen
the property tax he has in mind '4'ou\d
be $2.05 per SIOO assessed valuation
and raise $70 million.
Santa Ana l\farine
Killed in Indochina
Santa Ana resident Staff Sgt. Richard
1'. Baker was reported killed in the
Indochina conflict, according to a list
released Wednesday by the U.S. Defense
Department.
Baker, who was in the Marine C:Orp11,
11 the husband of Mr1. Richard T. Baker,
50.1 S. Sail St.. Santa Ana. He was
reported a casualty of non·bostile action.
•
Hold Tlaat Pose
The old family tree is used for an informal class picture by members
of a new ecology course at Berkshire Commw1i ty College in Pitts·
field, Mass. Members of the class picked out the tree, assembled ap-
propriately and were duly photographed by a classmate.
U.S. Deaths in Battle
Highest in 51h Months
SAIGON (AP) -The U.S. Command
today reported th e highest weekly
American death toll in Vietnam in :;•z
months. A spokesman said the re still
'~'as no forv.•ard movement by South
Vietnamese for ces in Laos. and a Sou1h
Vietnamese base JO miles across the
border was reported under heavy mortar
and rocket attack for the third day.
The increase in American deaths for
the second successive week w a s
attributed to the offensive in Laos to
cut the Ho Chi Minh trail. The U.S.
Command 's weekly casualty summary
said 59 Americans were killed in action
and another 42 died of nonhostile causes,
including helicopler accidents.
The total of 101 Americans was ihe
largest since 125 died during the v.·eek
of Aug. 3().Sept. 5 when 87 were killed
in action and 38 died from acc idents
and illness.
The U.S. Command reported 217
American troops v.1ounded in act.ion last
week, the same as the v.·eek before.
This raised total America n casualtiets
in the war since Jan. l. 1961, to 44.:;18
killed. in act.ion. 9,253 dead or nonhostile
causes and 293.163 wounded. Another
1,453 Americans were listed as mi ssing
or captured. including 10 missing in
air crashes in Laos.
The Saigon government reported 432
South Vietnamese killed in action lasl
v.•eek. 46 less than the week before,
and 1,446 wounded. 287 more than the
previous v.·eek. The U.S. Command
claimed allied forces killed 2,260 North
Vietnamese and Viet Cong in South
Vietnam. Cambodia and Laos, the highest
total claimed since last May.
U.S. officials say no American ground
troops are taking part in the operation
on the Laotian Side or the border, but
9,000 of them are acting as a blocking
210 Shocks Recorded
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Seismologists
at the Galifomia Institute of Technology
report that more than 210 measurable
aftershocks ha.Ye occurred since the
destructiYe Feb. 9 earthquake.
rorcc in the northern provinces or South
Vietnam. and an est imated 500 U.S.
helicopters are furnishing almost all of
the air support for the South Vietnamese
in Laos.
The U.S. Command has acknov.•\edged
the loss of 29 helicopters in operations
on both ~s of the border, with 40
Amer icans killed in them, 15 missing
and 21i v.·ounded. But scores of other
helicopters have been damaged by enemy
fire. and there bas been no day·lo-day
report of casualties aboard these craft.
Meanv.·hile, small-scale but sharp
fighting, ambushes and rocket and
mortar attacks have taken a steady
loll among th e U.S. ground force east
of the La otian border.
Although the American death toll last
\veek was the highest in nearly six
months, the casualty totals were only
slightly above those reported in the first
v.·eek of the Laotian operation. The
casualty summary last Thursday for the
week of Feb. 7·13 listed 51 Americans
killed in combat, 32 dead or nonhostile
causes and 217 wounded. The number
killed in action the n was more than
double the 24 killed in combat the week
before.
Boy, 14, Saves
Man Fron1 Fire
A Santa Ana boy was praised today
by fire officials for his effort~ v.·hich
probably saved the life of a 33-year-old
man in a burning home.
Kevin Ames. 14, of 1143 S. Parton
St., spotted smoke coming from the
home of Jerry Hessen, 1138 S. Garnsey
St. He tried to attract the occupants
and then ra,n to the nea rby home uf
Lawrence Oberlies, 1142 S. Garnsey .
Oberlies called the fire department
and he and Kevin fourid Hessen on
the rloor unconscious an d helped him
to safety.
The fire, apparently caused by a
.smoldering cigarelte did $200 damage
to furn iture.
Hulse Mom's Sanity Probed
Heard Voices Fro1n Space, Says Ps yc1iiatrist
By TOM BARLEY
01 1M h ll' 1'1191 Sttff
Arthur Craig "/.1oose" Hulse's mother
wu described today during lbe Orange
County Superior C:Ourt murder trial o[
her aon as a "paranoid schizophrenic"
who heard voices from space and
beUeved she was under tbe influence
of Telslar.
Or. DaYid Geddes told tbe jury in
Judge Ronald Crookshank"11 courtroom
that Mrs. Arthur Hul!!e. Sr. had a record
of mental Illness dating back to when
1be was II and there \\'SS "no doubt"
btr rorm of ln.sa'11ty had a big effect
on ~ mental development or her l~
year-old aon. The Santi Ana psychlatrls~ quoted Mni:.
Hube as saying that sbt saw the world
as "squ11res of life " and that when
each square 11 occupied by a member
ef tbe PTA the war Jn Vietnam will
tnd.
Shi also bellevlif, ho 11lcl, that Telatat
I
-the s p a c e • b o r n communlcallons
satellite· -sent down pictures to her
and was also somehow intolved with
the many Yclces that spoke W her from
1pace.
Dr. Geddes Js the fir.;;t defense witness
in the Hulse trial. The youth is being
tried for the murder last June I of
serYice station aUendant Jerry Wayne
Carlin, 21, of Santa Ana.
He must eventually face trial on charge
of being an accessory to the murder la11t
June 2 of Mission Viejo teacher Floreoce
Nancy Brown who wa1 hacked to death
in an Irvine orange grove.
TtA'O psychiatrists called by the
prosecution have testiried that Hulse was
sane when he used a hatchet to hack
Carlln to death ln the restroom o( tbe
gas station.
The youth spent mOllt or Wedne!iday
at the Orange C:Ounty Medical Center
undergoing examination on procedures
described as brain wave tesls. Tbe
multi e( lbose tests were not aYallable
th.is morning.
Hulse has testified from the wltnes!I
box that he took huge quantities o(
drugs and drink before the Carlin ldlling
and that an unremembered remark by
tbe young attendant prompted him to
pull the hatchet from hls belt and "lay
it on" Carlin.
The jury has also beard the youth'!I
recorded confession, taped by Santa Ana
police investigators when they arrested
llulse a month after the Carlin murder.
1-lulse has identified his companloi'I In
that killing as Steven Craig Jfurd, 20,
a transient. who is accused of both
the carlin and Brown murders.
Investigators Identify Hurd es the
lender of the drug using band which
devoured portions of the 31-year-old
woman's body In satan worshiping rites
brfore burying It near the Ortega
Jlighway.
Hurd has been declared to be 1ane
ancj able to face trlaJ March 22 en
lbe dJJal charges.
.\
Thursdlf, .bnuary 25, 1971 H DAILY PILOT _::
Highlight·s Pinpointed
Nixon's State of World Talk at Gla11ce
WASHINGTON (AP) -Following are
mai n points in President Nixon's second
annual State·of-the·World report ·t o
Congress:
\'IETNAM
-J'osslblllllts for a negotiated Vietnam
peace have been stymied by Nortll
Vietna mese den1ands which amount to
•·a guaranteed political takeover" of the
South. "If winding down the war is
my greatest satisfaction in foreign policy,
!J1e failure to end it is my deepest
disappointment." The Unite<.. States "will
not give up on negotiations," and
meanwhile encouraging progress is being
made on the other route to U.S.
disengagement -the Vietnamization
program for turnin g over more of the
war burden to South Vietnam.
-Hanoi has stepped up the war In
Laos and Cambodia and ··we face some
very serious problems" there against
large masses of enemy troops. Enemy
intentions "will pose some hard choices
about tbe deployment of allied troops
a.s we pursue our own withdrawals •••
North Vietnamese actions could require
blgb levels of American assistance and
air operations in order to further
Vlctnamizatlon and our withdrawals."
l\11DEAST
The rtlldtast poses the world's most
dangerous situation toda y because a
fiare-4.Jp could bring about U.S.·Sovie t
confrontation. America Is pledged to a
major role in helping bring about an
Arab-Israeli settlement.
ARMS TALKS
-The United Slates sees U.S.-Soviet
nuclear parity as an opportunity for
spurring negotiationa. Moscow should
not mistake the U.S. posture by probing
for adYantages and risking confrontation.
Soviet performance i! mixed so far on
issues ranging from the Mideast and
Berlin lo Cuba.
-A new U.S. defense study shows
the United States should go forward
with its Safeguard anti-ballistic miMile
system in the absence of a dlsarament
agreement at the U.S.-Soviel Stratea:ic
Arms Limitation Ta lks. The Soviet
proposal al SALT for an ABM curb
is unacceptable because it does not
provide for limiting offensive missiles
at the same lime. Washington wUI
continue to strive ror a broad agreement.
NIXON DOcrRINE
-The Nixon Doctrine reflects changed
world conditions. Americans wanl to
carry less of the burden around the
world and other countries a r e
increasingly able to play a larger role.
While "cutting back overseas J o r c e s
prudently,'' the United States will allll
live up to Its treaty commitments.
EUROPE
-"Ultimately we may see a sing!At
entity making policy for Western Europe
in all fields, including diplomacy and
defeme." The Europea n Common Marke•
counlrie.s are invited to set up a mi.asion
in Washington. U.S. and European
defense and foreign policy a r 1
complementary. ''European defe n se ,
today a.s far into the future aii I can
see, will require mutual support acros!S
the Atlantic.·•
In seeking to improve East-West
relations in Europe, the allies must
remain militarily strong, avoid internal
divisions and wor k for solutions tha(
are in the common interest. The
brea kdown of the Stalinist bloc has
created new aspirations in both East
and West Europe.
HEMISPHERE
-In Latin America, "the United State.a
must accommodate diversity and seek
to maintain the fabric of hemispheric
unity ••• In a turbulent age, the mandate
for our hem ispheric policy Is to ad
compassionalely, to work cooperatively,
and to strengthen the bonds of a
maturing partnership."
Our plants are greener.
Penneys Garden Shops.
Belgian Azellas
in bud or bloom
to brighten your
garden now.
1 gal.1 OS
sga1. 459
111
Specl1! buy!
Hanging baake1s
planled with
lush green Ivy.
7• basket.
Air Fem needs
nolhlng but alr
to live a long,
luxuriant Ille.
399
C'-1-nt
VeltchlG1rdenl.I
ot variegatl!d
green Gold Dust
ptants In 1 gal.
containers.
889
-.
Plllll Gledlolus
bulbs now and
enjoy summers of
stately flowers.
Mixed colors.
999 p~g. ol 1?.
PIClcloedPMCll orplumn..
Choooe from:
Elberta or
Golden Jubll ..
peach, «Sant«
Rosa dwarf Plum.
299_,,
Avoilobla ti lhH• Penney Gordon Cenler5: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Center. Chorg• It
•
I
I
4 OAll Y PILOT
Rus sians
B last U.S.
Loos Move
MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet Union
declared t.od.y It "cannot r e m a i n
lndlfrerent to the new e&ealation of the
Alntrican ag11es1ion'' in Indochina.
A covernment statement said "the tnvulon of the United States in Laos
and tbe thrtats to atep up provocations·•
1&aln1t North Vietnam "can make the
se1rch for Plflul toward a peaceful
aetUement ..• more d.Jfficult ."
'"Ille. Soviet people are prepared to
continue giving all neces.sary aid to the
fraternal Democratic Republic o f
Vietnam, to the patriots of tndechlna
defending their legitimate rights, fighting
for the realization of their vital intereits
and aspirations," aaid the statement,
carried in the government newspaper
Izvestia and distributed by Tass, the
crflcial news agency.
'nle statement ass-erttd it was a
.. dangerow: delusion" that tl'le United
States can act with impunity in Indochina
and entails "the most 11 e r I o u a
consequences. above all for the United
6tlltes itself."
"The Soviet government resolutely
deneunce. the armed Intervention agai~t
Laos as aMther criminal act by the
U!!.lted St.ates," the statement continued. Shot Full of Hoks
~kippers Arrested
~
Four Cuba Bo rtts ~
•
Seized Off U.S.
KEY WEST. Fla. (UPI) -Slat< agents
and the Coa.at Guard, after a
jurisdictional squabble on the high seas,
seized four Cuban filhlng boats today,
arrested their aklppera and b~ht them
to port to fact char1es of fishing in
U.S. watersf
The Coast Guard seized the 7S-fool
CUban boat "Lamda" and was escorting
three other CUban boats back into
rnternational wat.era when the Florida
Marine Patrol intervened and a.1ested
the masters of the three amaller Cuban
vtsaels.
Florida Natural Resources Director
Randolph Hodges u.id the state arrt!ted
the skippers of the three smalltt Cuban
boats after Key Wtst fisherman Joe
Fitzgerald swore oul affidavits saying
he witnessed all four CUban boatl fishing
l.n.side the 1%-mile U.S. territorial limit.
The Coast Guard knew of only one
violation.
Fitzeerald, skipper of the
1'Glassbreaker," swore out a second
affidavit charging the skiriper of one
of the Cuban boata attemrited to ram
his vessel.
~
th'. three smaller Cuban lishin& boats ~
to a Marina on nearby Stock Island. ~:
In Miami, meanwhile, the head ot:-
the Cuban exne group ''Conuniltte otJ
100," Or. Jorge Robel Jo. beg a tf.
negotiations with the Cuban Embassy
in Madrid to attempt to work out a
swap with the Fidel Castro regime for
the return of the fishing boat crewmtn
for the release of some political prisoners ••
being held in CUban jails. :
A Coast Guard spokesman in t-.1iaml
admitted "there is some tension at this
moment between the Coalt Guard and
st.ate authorities."
The Coast Guard said it released the
other three Cuban vessel.; "because there
was no Coast Guard eyewitness to them
actually fishing in US. territorial waters.
We were authorized by our Washington
headquarters to seize only the one boat,"
the Coast Guard spokesman said.
The atatiment wa11 tl'le harshest Soviet
reacUon to date on the fncurslon into u ...
The S&viet Union ICCU!ed the United
Stites of carrying "a cynical pclicy"
to make Asians fight Asians and selected
the South Vietnamese ''for the direct
e1ecutor of ila plans in Laos."
An American Cobra helicopter pilot, who was flyin&
support missions for Saigon's offensive against
the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos, surveys damage to
the rotor blade alter be encountered heavy Com·
muniat ground fire.
"He rusbed at my boat at full throtUe.
making funny gestures as it passed
within siJ: feet of my stern." Fitzgerald
told Florida authorities. He said the
cook of the "Glassbreaker," Lola Purdue,
was knocked to the deck by the heavy
wake from the Cuban boat and was
slightly injured.
Interest Rate
On Mortages
Tak es Big Dip
"Washington alleges that American
aniled forces take a restricted part
in the incursion, supplying fire and
logistics support to the South Vietnamese
troops," the statement aaid.
"An attack with the use or air force
and art1Uery is just the same crime
as an attack with the u.w: of ground
forces. Jt makes no difference to
Laotians who are dying now whether
they are killed by a bullet or a bomb
drOpped from the air."
Soviet Union
Receives Envoy
From Va tican
:ti.tOSCOW (UPI) -For the first time
1ince cemmunlsm came tn the Kremlin,
the Soviets today officially received an
emissary of tbe Vatican.
Archbilbop Agostino Ca11roli. one of
the c:hurcb's amoothest dirilomats and
a man experienced in dealing w i t h
Communist regimes, arrived in P.foscow
late Wednetday and was g r e e t e d
officially by a representative of the
Soviet Foreign Ministry.
Officially, Casaroli came to deposit
the VaUcan'1 doeumenll of ratification
ef tbe nuclear nonproUferatlen treaty.
Unofficially, the prelate will l!itay five
days to see Soviet officials for talks
that could determil'le the course or future
relaUons between the atbei1t Kremlin
and the J'toman Qlholic Vatican -<lnce
considered trrecol!.cllable enemies.
When asked if he planned to discuss
church-state relations with the Soviets,
Casa.roll replied, "I am open."
Casarol, who speaks Russian, is I.he
most qualified diplomat of the cburcb
for dealing with the Kremlin. He guided
the talks that led to establishment of
diplom1tic relations between the Va tican
and Yugoslavia last year. He also worked
out the modus vivendi governing rel1tions
witb the Hungarian regime.
High ranking Soviet officials have
visited the Vatican in recent years, bul
not 1ince the 1917 revolution has the
Roman Catholic church sent a prelate
to have official dealings with the Soviets
l!!. Moscow. Vatican officials have visited
the Soviet Union, but never as o(flci11J
IUQla Of the government.
Israel , U.S. Clash Seen
Over New Peace Treaty
By Uu.ited Press Inttrn1ttonal
Premier G<>lda Meir met today in
Tel Aviv with her inner cabinet to
approve the final draft of Israel'l!i
response to the latest Egyptian Middle
East peace offer. ThP.re were reports
Israel w11s at odds with Washington
<ln the future ef the Israeli fortress
at Shann El Sheikh .
Sharm El Sheikh Is the fortress
euarding the Strait of Tiran entrance
to the Gulf of Aqaba, the waterway
to the Israeli port of Eilat. The Israeli!
captured it in the 1967 war and have
indicated they would never give it up.
Peace proposals put forth by U.N.
?.1edi11tor Gunnar V. Jarring have called
for an Israeli withdrawal from the Sinai
Cin dy Scrams ,
Drops Drawers
LONDON IAP) When
Cinderella made her midnight
rlight she lost more than a glass
dipper.
She lost all her clothes.
Prince Charming snatched up her
panties and told his servanta: ''Try
lhem <ln every girl in the city.
I'll marry the one they fit."
Hundreds of girls tried, but of
:nurse they fit only Cindy.
That's a hippie version of the
~hildren·s classic. as written by
.he Rev. Peter Jones. lie did it
when the youth club of his
Unitarian chapel undertook a
musical sho w.
The 39-year-0ld minister said: ··1
did this as a takeoff of !he so.called
;>ermissive society, for people to
laugh at."
For the record , Cinderella does
marry the prince.
Peninsula including SMrm El Sheikh.
The United States V.'aS reported favorable
to the Jarring proposals.
Political sources in Cairo iaid Egypt
has asked the United States to bring
pressure on Israel to withdraw from
<lCcupied territory and that it warned
that the Egyptian armed forces are
"fully prepared" lo liberate the seized
lands by force if Israel refl.L!ies to pull
back.
Mrs. Meir'• inner cabinet includes
Deputy Premier Yigal Allon, Foreign
Mlnbter Abba Eban, Defense Minister
f\.foshe Dayan and Yisrael Galili, minister
without porUolio. Official sources said
their reply would be trammitted to
Jarring today or Friday by Israeli U.N.
envoy Yosef Tekoah.
Shouting Match
Disrupts Speech
At Jewish Meet
BRUSSELS (UP!) -The World
Conference on Soviet Jewry disintegrated
into a half-hour shouting match at its
final session today when Menahem Begin.
former vice premier of Israel, accused
the conference organizers of denouncing
Rabbi 1'-feir Kahane to the police.
Kahane is leader of the militant
American Jewish Defense League (JOL)
and was refused entrance to the
conference when be: came here from
New York Wednesday.
•·The era when Jew denounces Jew
to the police has plllSed forever ," Begin
&aid.
At this point, Dr. William A. Wexler
of lhe United States, member of the
conference's nine-man pre.!!idium, rushed
to the rostrwn and shouted: "You 're
a goddam liar and you know it."
Cold Thaws, Waters Rise
B"lessing in Plains l s Cur se to Riv er Areas
Calllornla
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Tunnel Sighted
In Ber lin; Mass
Escape Thwarted
BERLIN I AP) -A 1\1/Ulel leading
under the Berlin Wall to the eastern
sector of the city was uncovered today
shorUy before 17 refugees from the
Communist regime were scheduled to
flee to the Wesl.
Authorities said the tunnel , nearly four
feet high and running at least 360 feet
from the ceUar of a West Berlin house,
was discovered Wednesday night by
Western police. They sealed off the
western entrance.
Today, East German soldiers began
digging the tunnel out from their aide
of the wall.
It would hllve been the biggest mass
escape past the wall since 19&4 v.·hen
57 refUgees tunneled through the 'v e s t
Berlin .
Police said geven persons were
fnvolved fn the plan to bring out the
17 re!ugees today or Friday. Three of
the seven involved were found by police
Blill digging the tunnel.
The tunnel was beneath this street
that the 57 made it to the We.st in
1964. On that <lCcasion the Eal!it Germans
Bild one or their border guards was
shot dead during the escape.
Florida Marine Patrol Lt. E.G. Little
said the three smaller Cuban fishing
00.ts -two 60 foottrs and a SG-fooler
-were seiud by two armed Florida
marine patrol boa.ts, the 3 2. f o o t
Barracuda and the 2J.fool Seabird.
Little said when the two Florida
?tfarine patrol boats moved in to arrest
lhe skippers <lf the three smaller CUban
boats, "the Coast Guard cutter Oilllgence
took aggressive acUon'' toward the atate
boats.
The Coast Guard cutter Capt York.
mean11.·hi!e, arrived at it.a Key We 1 t
base with the Cuban boat "Lamda ''
and its crew 11bout 10 a.m. EST.
The Florida Marine Patrol escorted
Fren ch Mounta ineer
Saved on Icy Peak
CHA~10NIX, France (UPI ) - A fivt·
man rescue team landed from helicopters
today and rescued alpinist R e n e
Desmaisons from an icy ledge 4,300
feet up the Grande!! Jora.ues Peak,
where he had been stranded for a week.
His companion, Serge Golweault, was
dead .
The rescuers worked their way 300
feet to lhe ledge, 200 feet below the
summit. after several earlier rescue
at.tempts by air were frustrated by high
winds and icy conditions. Fresh, heavy
snowfalls made an expedition on foot
Jmposslble.
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Int erest rates
on conventional home m o r t g a g e s
recorded the larg~st one-month drop in
the eight years lhat records have been
kept last monlh, the federal home loan
bank board reported today.
The board said the average effedive
interest rite on conventional mortgag~
for the purchase of new homes was
8.17 percent in January, dow.i from De·
cember'a 8.38 percent and well below the
1.15 percent recorded Past October.
The average effective interest rate
on conventional mortgages for the
purthlse of new homes was 8.07 percent,
down from December's 8.26 percent and
a !harp drori from the 8.42 percent
recorded in September.
Board Chairman Preston i\1artin said
the declines reflecteed increased savings
in mortgage lending instituti ons,
particularly s a v i n g s and loan
associations.
The dec line in convenLional mortgage
Interest rates has been accompanied by
a sharp decline in the interest ceiling
on FHA and VA mortgages. That ceiling
was redu~ to 7 percent on Feb. 17.
However, during January the ceiling
was 8 percent for the first 12 days
and 7.5 percent for the rest of the
month.
In addition to the interest ceiling,
lenders in t h e government.backed
programs usually add "points" which
Increase the effective cost of the loan
above the ceiling. A "point'' is ll one-time
charge equal to one percent-of the loan ~·
and is usually pald by the seller rather
than the buyer.
SOFTLY, GLO WING COLOR S-LIKE AM BER
GOLD, BROWN, GREEN, WI NE. NAVY. IVORY.
PALE PINK, BLUE OR LILAC. REG.12.99 ' !
Now7.9Q
<!Jt.
MASTER CHARGE BANKAMERICARD
SOUfN COAST 'LAZA, COJfA MIU-lltOAOWAV'I ANl.NllM C•NTI•, loNANllM-I ULLOC•'I f'AINION MUA•I· UNTA ANA
•• • • .. .. . • .. ..
I
I
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"
Fountain Valley
VOL 6'1 , NO. 48, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES
• e s I
Red Tank Thrust
Desperate Viets
Beat Off Attack
SAIGON {AP) -South Vietnamese
paratroopers beat off a fierce assault
Thursday by eight North Vietnamese
tanks on their base. in Laos, lowering
artillery to point blank range to help
knock wt five of them, U.S. officers
said.
While there were no reports of further
South Vietnamese advances into southern
Laos to cut the Ho Chi Minh trail,
Gen. Creighton W. Abrams, U . S.
commander in Vietnam. said the
operation was going well despite heavy
fighting and some setbacks.
The fighting in Laos was at Hill 31,
about IO miles inside Laos.
The North Vietnamese struck with
tanks in their first use of armor since
early in 1969. U.S. officers said the
direct artillery fire. along with antitank
weapons, helicopter gunships and jet
fighter.bombers, beat off the attack.
Most of the tanks were bagged by
the paratroopers, an~ the remain~g
three fled with U.S. fighter-bombers 10
pur$U.it a U.S. officer in the north sai d.
He ~ported the paratroopers still held
the hill and "were holding out and were
doing a good job." A U.S. ~4 Phant~m
jet was shot down while flymg bombmg
missions in support of the base. The
U.S. Command II.id both crew members
were rescued.
There was no word --on casualties at
the base. Hill 31 il five miles southwest
ef the point where a government ranger
base was overrun over the weekend
with severe losses to the South
Vietnamese defenders.
The action at Hill 31 was the latest
ln a se ries of bloody engagement" that
have erupted since the S o u t h
Vietnamese drive into Laos began Feb.
I. The South Vietnamese !I.aid that three
fire support bases and three field
positions in Laos were hit by enemy
rockets. mortar and recoilless rifle fire.
Casualties were described as lighL
The tanks reported used in the attack
on Hill 31 were believed to be PT76s, a Soviet-made light amphibi ous type .
It was the first time enemy tanks
have been reported employed in the
current Laos campaign, although South
Vietnamese spokesmen said earlier that
air and artillery strikes had destroyed
a dozen lanks of this type inside Laos.
1n an interview with Peter A. Jay
of the Washington Post, Abram a
described the campaign in Laos as
critical to the U.S. troop withdrawal
SA City Lawyer
Appointed To
New Judgeship
Santa Ana City Attomt:y William Mock
Wednesday wa5 appointed to the ntwly-
created judgeship In the West Orange
C.oul'lty Judicial District.
The anoouncement was by a
spokesman for Gov. Ronald Reagan.
Mock said he expects to be sworn
in sometime withio the next foor weeks.
but added that he will confer with the
presiding judge of the district c o u r t
before a date Is set.
Mock. 42, joined the city of Santa
J,.na In January of 1966 as assistant
city attorney and In June of that year
h~ was appointed city attorney.
Mock is a graduate of Drake University
.Law School and lives in Santa Ana
.Oth his wife and three children. He
Is a Republican.
Mock will become the seventh judge
to join the West Qnlnty court and an
opening for an eighth judge will become
aval1able in May or this year. He will
be paid Pl.724 I Y"'·
WHO'S YOUR
OSCAR PICK?
The pollJ are opt.n for national voUng
ln the. "Olcar Derby." For YoW' chance
to ·vote In lht DAILY PtLOT ''election"
and, perhap1, go tn dinner With your
favorJte 1tars, aee the ballot todl.)' on
Pare 14.
• ~
program bul added that ib suctess or
failure will not be apparent before next
fall .
Abrams said if there is no significant
enemy military effort in South Vietnam
after the rainy season ends in July
and before the October presidential
elections in South Vietnam then the
operation can be counted a success.
Abrams insisted the operation had •
limited objective, the desb'uction of
enemy supply stockpiles to prevent a
1971 offensive ln the northern provices
of South Vietnam. He said it never
was intended to seal off the Ho Chi
Minh trail.
Jurors Find
Riggs Guilty
OnDeathRap
Martha Riggs or Huntington Beach
was convicted of secood degree murder
late Wednesday for her role in planning
the kil1in& of 19-ye.ar~ld Robert Leroy
Hermann. I
An Orange County Superior Court jury
deliberated for t~ hours before voting
for the le•r of two possible murder
verdicts. They dismissed eonl!lplracy
charges against the attractive l~year~Jd
defendant.
Judge Claude M. Owens called for
a presentenceing report from the
probation department and aet March
15 as the sentencing date'-~ Riggs
of 1824 Park SL faces a possible term
(Jf five years to life in state prison.
She rerilained ca1m throughout the final
phase of the trial and showed no emotk>n
al the rea11ing or the verdict. Judge
Owens allowec; her to spend • few
minutes with her parents Jn the
courtroom and denied a motion for bail
before she was led back to her Orange
County jail cell.
The jury accepted deputy district
attorney Robert Chatterton's argumen\
during thP. ten-day trial that Miss Rigg!!
plaMed the murd er of Hermann with
convicted killer Rober:. Eugene Williams,
19, of 1504 Pecan St., Huntington Beach.
The prosecutor successfully alleged
that she supplied the gun used by
Williams to shoot Hermann Jn the ba~k
of the bead after the two youths had
chatted and amoked marijuana together
last Nov. 7 in the bedroom of Hermann'a
home at 416 15th St., Huntington Beach.
Williams, who iJ now serving 1 life
term in state prison for the killing,
returned to the Riggs home and was
asked by her: "Did you do itJ" lt
was stated during both triala that she
took lbe murder weapon from William5
and slipped It into her pur ...
Miss "Rigp, Williams and Hermann
were three oC five defendants arrested
at the Riggs borne on drug cim'es last
Oct. 31, one week before the k11lina:
ol Hermann.
It was repeatedJy le!tified that MW
Riggs and Williams wer• mi!take.n in
that belief.
Narco Roundup
In Huntington
Nets 12 Suspects
Narcotics detectivo from t b e
Huntlng!Dn Beach Polle< Department
wound up a ~ undercover
lnvestlgaUon Mooclay •labl with the
atTtSt of 12 penon1 on n.areotlcl Illes
charge&.
The early evening roundup of suspected
drui peddi<n included" one ll·)'Ur old
youngst<r and ,lhrff othen in·lheir Oll"\y
tew, qed 14 aocl IS. Addltiooal arresl.s are pending, accanl!ng lo poUoe.
Dtttctlve Captain Grover Payne H.ld
only amall amounts of contraband were.
conflsctted during the raid, which wu
accomplW!ed thrOugb the aid ol a male
1tudent workin& \Mer-cover at 1ocaJ
ocboolt.
' •
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1971
• en ar-res1
THIS IS ARCHITECT'S RENDERING OF HUNTINGTON BEACH'S $1.5 MILLION CIVIC CENTER
Two-story Police Building (left) and Flv•story Admlni1tr1tion Building Would Rise Above Nearby Homes
Data on Center Studied
Huntington Group Mulls O·ver Facts, Figures
By ALAN DlRKIN through which the city will finance the
or ""' O.ltf l"lltt "•" facilities with construction bonds.
The five-story tower in the $8.5 million Larry CUrran, an attorney a n d
Huntington Beach civic ce1ter -likened chairman of the corporation, questioned
by the architect to an office building wh·ether the city would be setting ·•an
on Wilshire Boulevard ~ will stand 157 unhappy precedent" in building a center
feet tall in an area zoned for single th8t does ·not meet mning requirementl.
family. homes limited to ao feet in heiglll "I don't know whether ·we· would want
Three oil wells may .also be pumping to build a civic ·building oh .a variance,"
on the t.f..acre ·t.· opposite tilt he commented. . • •
Huntington . l!e.acb. · 'School .. ~~.;, ~'611t:l*llain~··~ will cost SU.000 1· ar to in.!Ur•i' .. ""t1w, e:i'ft!e · -·(ej>1fecf-' 'tlfat the 1'1 • s t o r y
center and , P . million library against retirement towers. bein& planned by the
.. fOilji!Rte damage. Finl Chrlltln Cburch al 17th Street
Theee were some of the poinb and Adami Avenut would be higher.
disc~ Wednesday evening at a bot 1Uggested the. ZOlllns ordin.ances could
meeting of the Huntington Beach Public be amended.
Facilities Corporation, the v eh Jc I e Today, Plannini Director Kenneth
Army Doctor Says Calley
'l(new Right From Wrong'
FT. BENNING, Ga. (AP) -An Army
psychiatrist y.•ho followed Lt. William
Calley Jr. to the witness stand testified
t.oday he could find no evidence that
Calley suffered from "any form of
mental disorder I could think of" in
the massacre al My Lai.
"One could say the entire incident
is bi.7.arre," Maj. Henry E. Edwards
replied to one question put to him.
He was the first rebuttal witness for
the prosecution. The defense rested
Wednesday after Calley had spent two
days on the witness stand.
Edwards was one of three Waher
Reed Hospital psycbiatrisb t h a t
constituted a san ity board for Calley,
A second me mber ol the team, Lt.
C.ol. Franklin G. Jones, followed Edwards
to the witness stand.
Edwards' tes timony directly
contradicted that tJf defense psychiatrists
who 1aid that Calley did indeed have
mental impairment that clouded his
capacity to premeditate his actions at
My Lal on March 16, 1968. Calley is
charged with murdering 10l villagers
that day.
Edwards answered affirmatively to all
questions touching on wbtlher the
lieutenant bad the capacity to k 11 ow
right from wrong, the. ability lo do
what be knew was right and to fonn
the specific Intent to kill.
How did he define 'the specific intent
to kill~
"That he had the nation and desire
to end someone's life." Edwards said.
''My opinion is that there was no
Impairment to his me n t a I thouaht
processes on that day ••• the way he
performed he was responding to cues
and slimuli around him."
In cross-txamination, the psychiatri~t
was asked whether the mind couJd be
conditioned along certain channels, "l0ll
1ay a chann~l to kill."
The question came in connection with
Ult so.called Pavlov expe riment in which
dogs were conditioned to respond to
certain stimu1i.
Edwards said he had not r~ad the
works of Pavlov, a Russian. "l don't
know that he ever made a n y
C()mmentary, but 1 periOn can be
conditioned io kill,'' Edwards said.
At anolbtr point, the psychiatrist said,
1•1 believe one can be conditioned." But
he added be did not think it was possible
to condlUon one sedfon of the mind
without aUe<:Un1 othen.
Royal Collision
Anne Hits Cab; Palace Gets Bill
LONDON .(AP) -·Patrick Ling HYJ
be'a bllllni Bucl\lnghom Palta! l60 for
the dlmage Princess Anoe did to the
back ol hb cab.
Qu«J1 EIU.beth"s 20-year-old daught<r
was driving her netr RtUant Sdmta.r
sports cir wbtn t bumped nto Lng'1
tar Wednesday on the busy Brompton
Road.
"I bad lo brake sh1r1>IY. and there
was a hell o( a loud bang as tht
other car buh&d Lato mt," the 3+-)'tlf'i
old cabble told newsmel'I.
"l got out to exchange a few b,af
words ..-Ith this y_oung blondt at • tt.e
whtel. ni.n lb!&• blol<e arme • ""m ,ihe
1ports car and lold me to send Lhe
bill to Buckingham Palace.
'1 llked him who lhe bell was drfVlil
• ' . '
that thing aod be told ·me Prlncels ·
Anne. 'Wbat are Yf1J· doi.D&.' t nid,
'te:achtn& her to ddv'e?' He ll1d no
and I uld be should be."
No one was hurt. but t1M colliaion
broke Una·s talOlj.bt and twiStl!d a
fender. He esUmattd lhe. ttpain would •
COii ~ PouoclJ·-''60.
Llnr llld the princtss "Just .. 1 then
tori ol al>ocl<ed ucl lto«IY faced" while
bi lalkad· to her llCGl1, ldintlfled laler
ai bet eersonal de1«tlve.
'.l)o Queen and Prince Pltlllp 11ve thO!r 1 d,ougbter tllt ~,l80 car u a
~mc,ma1 prttent.. The accident wu
li<r fin!• slnct &be paued tllt drivlll&
le.st three yean qo.
Bucklnjbam Palace 11id ·ll)e dill\~ , ta fha n>)'ll car wp•"fllr\y superfjcill. •
• •
Reynolds explained that a zone change
would not be necessary because zoning
regulations do not apply to cities or
.school districts.
"They have their own inspectors," he
added.
The police. headquarters adjacent to
the administration tower will be 66 feet
high in the early years but when the
third . story Ls .adde.d. it will slret~ to __ ....,. ._ • I· · , ~',r>l•':. -~ ... ' •. I •··,. ' 'Castle said that there were thret oil
wells, preSenUy produclq -40 barreli a
day, pn the site. Aa part ol. ita airet;ment
with the Huntington Beach Company,
from which ~ city iJ buylng the land,
the city could have the wells capped
(See CENTER, l'llge 11
17 Now in Race
For Huntington
District Seats
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of FM DllllY l"UM Sllff
Four more persons have f l l e d
nomination papers for the April 20
trustet election in the Huntington Beach
Union High School District, bringing the
field of candidates to a record high
of 17.
The unprecedented interest in the
election has been focused on two board
se1t.s which go on the block.
Those who filed this morning include
Mrs. Bartletta Suter, a Westminster
housewife; John D. Hamilton, the former
Mayor of Seal Btach ; Peter Horton,
an aerospace executive from Huntington
Belch, and Harry Hicks, an attorney
practicing in Fountain Valley.
Mrs. Suter. 5211 Vale CI r c I e,
Westminster, 1aid sht is running "to
hopefully see that our chlldren get a
good education." The housfwife and
mother or four added, "l have no ax.
to grind other than that I want my
children to be educated."
Hamilton, 41, works as a production
a5.1istant for a Long Beach ail company
and lives at 1712 Harbor Way, Seal
Beach. The former city councilman said
he is running "to give a o m e
representation to the. west end of the
high school dlttrlct."
Also joining the race ts Peter Horton,
51. tJf 164.11 Barn.stable Circle, HunUngton
Beach. Horton was last year's president
or the HunUnaton Beach Chamber of
Commerce.
"I am running because I'm very aware
af the Importance tJf a aound educational
proceu,'' said Horton, a McDoMell
Douglas u:ec:uttve. "1 wa nt to lff l!
I can do wmethlng to help It."
Hicks, a S7·year otd attorney. lives
at'9J77 LaGrande Circle, Fountain Valley.
Said • Hick! .. "Th• ocbool board b
enttring a period where they have a
contncting econorrilc sltuaUon wiLh an
upandlog achool system. They need
aomeone who .can ~t grtattt efficiency
from the (acllltfes they already have
alld devl!e better methods ol uWIJinf
the abrtnklng tu·dollar.''
other clhdidatts for the two slots
are · Donald Jonu. Huntlngtoll .Beocb,
attorney; Catherllte Moorlng, Fountaln
Valley, housewlfe; How•rii Wtmer,
Huntington Buch, d"lgner aocl ladler;
Edward Gauthier, HunUngton Beach,
conlraCI admlnlllralor; Jolln IC. Lawoon,
Hunt!Dgton -· te1cher; Dr. JOIOpb Rlbal, Hunt[n1ton ~cb,
(See CANDIDATEI, Pa~ I)
Today's Final
N.Y. S~ks
TEN CENTS
en
Nixon Tells
U.S. Role
In World
By JOHN M. IDGHTOWER
WASIDNGTON (AP) -President
Nixon today charged Hanni w l th
broadening the Vietnam war into an
Indochina conflict and predided the
United States and Its allies will have
more hard choices in combatling possible
new enemy thrusts in South Vietnam,
Cambodia and Laos.
In a globe-ranging report oUiciall1
directed to Congress but aimed at the
nation and the rest of the world, Nixon
keyed his message to a quest for "a
full generation of peace." this century.
But, he said, "If winding down the
war is my greatest satisfaction in
foreign policy, the failure to end It
is my deepest disappointment."
He pledged to continue the winding
down, the U.S. troop withdrawal from
South Vietnam. But in stark contrast
to his declared global peace. goal his
projection for lndochlna emphasized the
broadened war and increased American
aid and air support for allied ground
forces.
Tbe 65,000 word report, covering 180
pages and accompanied by a nationwide
radio speech was the second Nixon report
on the role of the United States ln
world affairs .since he took oflice.
Patter~ed after the coosUtulionally
mandated State of the Union meuq:e,
this White House overview of the world
situatiOn disclosed no new U.S. policy
departures.
But details were outlined and It gave
Nixon an opportunity to tell the. story
of his foreign and strategic policies at
midpassage between the 1968 and 1972
elections.
~ixon sent the report. which has been
in preparation for several months, to
CA>ngres.s under the title, "United States
Foreign Policy for the 1970s -Building
for Peace."
In discussing the Indochina crisis at
considerable detail Nixon gave a deeply
pessimistic report about the prospects
for a negotiated settlement.
He had "frankly expected" some kind
of action from the North Vietnamese.
Viet Cong side last year, NixOn stated,
when be expanded political principles
for a setUement and appointed
ambassador David Bru~ as peace '
negotiator.
tn this, he indicated, he was completely
disappointed. But "We will not give up
on negotiations," he said, "though the
past year indicated that it will be
extremely difficult to overcome the
enemy's mix of doctrine, calculations
and suspicion.
"There is the additional fact that as
our forces decline, the role we can
play on many aspects of a settlement
is also bound to decline."
Nixon appealed for trust ln his
leadership as he seeks to develop what
he called a new, more restrained: world
role for the United States.
But the major concern of lhe message
throughout was with what he called
the "most anguislllng problem" of
Vietnam.
"ijanoi has made the war an Indochina
con.fl id," Nixon stated, with some 240 000
North Vietnamese troops in &uth
(See NIXON, Pap !)
eo .. t
Wea titer
Gusty winds under clear 1kle1
are the lngredienta for Frid&Y'•
weather menu, with coastal temp-
eratures quitting at 60 and inland
mercury registering &4 degrets.
INSIDE TODAY
Orana• Couniv 1ui>erWor1
have apprm>td a human rdlo>
tion.s commission for the COU?t-
tv; bui Ou commtisiim must
prot>t · itt worth within tht year,
Pogo 12.
·'
2 DAILY r1LCif ii
Fount~in Valley Hosts Vital s~hool Meet
"1 TERllY COVJLLE
Ot .. Oe"" Plllt SI.I"
PPBS: Four letters which could eithtr
revoJntlioalM CallfOC'uil educatJoa or
opan molullom qalnlt It.
Either direction may be determined
Friday morning in Fountain Valley when
a state commission opens a public
hearing on the subject.
1 PPBS (Plannina:, Programming,
Budgeting Systems) is a systems-
1nanagen1ent approach taken from the
world of business and applied to the
world of education.
In essence it is supposed to put in
writing, ideas that have long been
theories ln the minds of educaton. It
also asks ed11e1.Uon to thoroughly ouWne
the detalla of bow school money is spent.
The Fountain Vllley School District
From P q e i
NIXON •..
Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos , .including
a few Viet Cong in Cambodia.
"Enemy intentions and capabilities in
Indochina will pose some bard choices
about the-deployment of allied troops
as we pursue our withdrawals ," he
continued, and North Vietnamese actions
ln Laos and Cambodia could require
high levels of American assistance and
air operatlons in order to further
Vietnamlzatlon and our wllhdrawal.s.
His preview suggested that with the
Vietnamese troop strenglh In Indochina
the progres.slve withdrawal of U.S. forces
may be accompanied by high I e v e I s
of military activity, parUcul1rly the
utensive use of American air support.
The theme of frustration i n
peacemaking and danger in world
conditioru pervaded other sections of
the massive report.
Noting the Soviet Union's power
position in the M1ddie East, the Pre.s!dent
&aid any great national effort to dommate
the area would "increase the danger
to world peact." The United States would
not allow lt to succeed, Ni.Jon stated.
In the nucle.ar arms race, be told
Congre!s and the nation that what he
termed greatly increased Soviet power
cculd tempt Moscow into bolder and
more dangerous probing of the West.
He also said t:1e United States would
like to begin lrilproving relations with
mJlnland China, but that nation continues
.. to cast us in the devil's role."
Nixon told the American people that
tie was trying to shape: a new, less:
burdensome policy line for the United
States in world affairs. He appealed
for understanding and perhaps argutd
against any new swing into American
isolationlm!. •·The American people have grown
somewhat weary of 25 years of
international burderu," Nlxon said, "But
we cannot let the pendulum awing in
the other direct.Jon, sweeping u.s toward
an tsolationlsm which could be as
di.!altrous at exceaslve zeal."
Jn his dl.scusllon of Indochina, the
President touched on the military
situation. He declared that ln spite of
heavy loues the North Vietnamese still
pose a "considerable threat" to the first
and teeond (the northern) m 111 ta r y
regions of South Vietnam.
Beach Lawmaker
To Visit School
Slate Assemblyman Robert Burke (R·
Huntington Beach) will stop off Friday
at Harper School, Fountain Valley, to
j ~t the youngsters who plan to visit
f.m in Sacramento.
Burke will preview the tour he plans
fJ give 73 elgblh grade youngsters and
their eight chaperones in the Capitol
March 22.
On that day, the Harper group will
fly by jet to Sacramento. meet Burke
there, then visit the major government
buildings and state officials.
OUN•I COAIT
DAILY PILOT
OAAJllOI ClQrl.IT ruaLllttUtG COM,AHY
l•"'* N. W.M l"NllWll ... ,_.......,
Jack R. Curf.'( \'kl ,,...~ Mt o-n1 ~
Tll•1t1a1 K,.,i(
•.iiw.
n .... a• A. w..,J.11,, Mtnal.,. ..,,.,
Al•• Olt~l111
"' OrM191 c-itt -..1.
Alb.rt W. l1t11 Anode!• Edl!Ot " .. __ .._
17171 had! l•11l1•anl
M•m11t M 4r1u1 P.O. ••• 790. t26 41 --......... 8aldl1 m ,.,., .-~ C.• Midi a W.1 aey St,_. .. ...,.,..-.ell;,.,.,.,..,... hui.tn a. 0-,.1 • H1r1b II CllTlllll ••I
It ooe of 14 dlltrlcll In the 114te uaing
PPBS. Local admlnlatratora say It will
iDCrtMe public knowledge about
educ1Uon, wblle mak1Qg the ICbooll more
effectlve. \
But I slate AllembiYmlll frOlll
llllntlngton Beach bu called PPBS "en
accountJni tool uaable by thc.,... ... 1
managers to mold all of us Into celr
version of utopian man."
Assemblyman Robert Burke ( R •
Huntington Beach) believes the use of
PPBS management teehnlques by the
schools should be limited by the state
Legislature.
In a recent news letter he said there
wu evidence some school dislrlcts were
already mllsuslng PPBS. He didn 't say
whkb districts, or bow it ~ being
misused.
BACK TO BIG 'Q'
lovelorn Car Thief Harvey
Friday's public hearing will involve
speakers from all over Sou.the r n
Clltfornia. 1be bearing opens at t a.m.,
In Fowltaln ValleJ City Co u n c II
chamben, lqlll Sliter Ave.
It wllj Ii< rondUcted by the 114\e
AdVlsoey t.Arnt ntulon on School Diltrlct
Budgeting and Accounting, w h I c h
launched the PPBS pilot studies In 1968.
This is the last year the state will
finance the PPBS studies in the 14
district!. The state commission wlll
listen to public comments on il, then
spend the aftemoon studying Fountain
Valley's use of it. Friday's events will
help determine the future of PPBS in
Cllifornia schools.
Mike Brick, superintendent o[ the
Fountain Valley district, has such faith
in it, he said bis district would conUnue
UP'I Ttl9Jhthll
'I FEAR MY FAULT'
Letter Writer McCl intick
Convict' s Girl Linked
To Bizarre Jailbreak
By ARTHUR VINSEL
Of flla 0•11)1 Piii! Stall
A misunderstood Va\enUne note may
have triggered a San Quentin Prison
inmate's desperate dash to Orange
County Tuesday and truly doomed a
long-awaited wedding.
James D. "Jimmie" Harvey, 24, of
181 Pixley St., Orange, had five months
left to serve of a 11167 auto theft
conviction.
Rosetta McClintick , 24, was waiting
in Fullerton.
The wait may be far longer.
Sometime l\.1onday evening, the lanky
barber from Bee Branch, Ark., slipped
away from a minimum security area
outside the walls of the big pink fortress
by San Francisco Bay.
•·1 don't know what would have made
him do it," Miss l\.1cClintick said
Wednesday.
"l had something to take care of
that couldn't wait," Harvey to Id
reporters after being arraigned the
same day in Marin County 1'.1unicipal
Court.
He ls held in lieu of $200,000 ball
get by Judge Peter A. Smith, on charges
of kidnaping, armed robbery and felony
escape.
Preliminary hearing was set for l\.tarch
3, while a public defender was assigned
to the case, although Harvey asked to
represent himself.
Harvey has been identified by the
wife of a Novato policeman and her
friend as the barefoot escapee who
abducted them at 9:47 p.m. l\.1onday,
along with the officer's two children.
Mrs. Gary Stansfjeld, 30, son Robert,
Administrators
Lose Fo ur-year
Contrac t Bids
The three top administrators of the
Huntington Beach City School District
asked for four year contracts Tuesday
night -"As a vote of confidence."
They were tumtd down.
Di.!ltrlct trustees tabled the request tor further discussion.
$. A. Moffett, Superintendent, 11\d he
was requesting the longer contra~t ln
lieu of pay raises for administrators .
"Teachers and principals were given
pay raises/' Moffett said, "A longer
contract could be a factor of the board
giving us a vote of confldence inltead
of raises."
"1 don't llke four-year contrJct&,"
Tru!tee Jvan Liggett uld. "I'd rather
give you a pay raise.''
"l don't see anything wrona wllh longer
contracts Wlless we'tt1 pltMlng to change
admlnlstrations," Tnatee Orv 111 e
Hanson. interjected.
"I don't have that ln mind,'' added
Trustee Louis DaHarb. "But I'd rather
have a twe>year chopping block.''
Moffett, Deputy Superintendent Charles
Palrntr and Asslatant Superintendent
Betty Funkhouser ere all on thrte-year
contracts which expire June so. 1973.
"I'd like to give It a llttle further
thought," Sttve Holden, c.h1irman of Uie
trustees, said. He then tabled the request
to nO speclrte date.
6. and daugbter SuWllle, 4 montha , wtre
finally released unhanne:d U hours later
on Old Highway 99 in Bakersfield near
a cafe.
She feared their 'bodies might be found
beside some lonely road, but said the
suspect's tenderness and concern toward
the children was reassuring.
He stopped onct - a dangerou!
decision for an escaped convict holding
a lawman ':s wlfe and children hostage
-to get candy for Bobby and milk
for the baby.
Continuing on to Orange County, where
the statewide manhunt was to end only
blocks from Miss McClintick 's
apartment, Harvey released Mrs. Cheryl
Smith, 23, in Anaheim.
"It was the most terrifying 13 hours
of my life,'' the weary young dental
assistant said.
Police anticipating Harvey's arrival
picked up his trail by motorcycle and
patrol car, touching off a frantic chase
in which one shot was fired before
his capture. •
Miss McC\intick said she had expected
to marry llarvey after his parole but
received no mail for so }ong she feared
he was brooding over it.
"I didn't want to forct him to do
something against his will or feel t
was pushing him. So I wrote and told
him he didn't have to marry me when
he got out." ghe explained.
Torn and shredded note paper found
in Harvey's personal effects after he
was found missing at a 10 p.m. bedcheck
gave San Quentin authorities a clue.
"The only thing I can imagine ls
that he misunderstood,'' she said.
~liss McClintick said shortly after the
Valent ine giving him hl.! option of
romantic freedom -he still had the
fact of his bleak dally life for five
months -she learned of a rumor that
she had married.
Quickly, she mailed another nott to
San Quentin.
"I don't think he got that letter before
'this' happened," she said sadly.
Whatever consolation it may be to
the. woman whose boylriend noW' faces
far more than his Initial four years
behind bars, Harvey dented Wednesday
she is to blame.
From Pqe J
CANDID ATE S ...
psychology teacher: Joseph Mizrahi,
Westminster, retired deputy sheriff;
George Logan, HunUngton a e a c h ,
attorney: Edmund C. P. Shtehan,
Westminster, Alcoholic Beverage Control
Board Investigator; Robert E. Dingwall,
Huntington Beach. prlnt shop owner ;
Robert Gordon, Westminster, romputer
systems analyst. and Dennls Msngen,
Huntington Beach, school principal.
One of the two contested seats belongs
to school board Prtsldent Matthew
Weyuktr. The other was held by Or.
Joseph Rib.Ill, removed from his post
last Deccmbt'r for absenting himself
beyond the 90-day limit allowed by la•.
lie wlll be seeking r~lectlon.
\\1ey11ker, an Administrative anlstant
from West minster, said he would seek
re-<'lection but had not filed II O( 11
o'clock this momtng.
the PPBS ouUine wbtther tht 1tata
supports It or not.
"The purpose of It," be explained,
"ii Lo make educaUoo more dilcient
and elfecUve, and to t n c ( e a 1 e
communtcatlon wltll tbe public. 11
The planning part means a di.strict
must put down In wrlUng its philosophy
and goalJ -what it wanu to teacb
or develop in the children.
Programming is outlining how the
district will achieve Its goals -teach
a student to read st a certain level,
for example.
Budgeting involves the accountability
fa ctor. Once a district knows in writing
what It plan1 to do now and how, it can
say wbat the , cost will be. 'nlen it
can see if all the goals can be reached
under the money possibla.
l\'ixo11 Says
'l'hrolllhout th< systtm, th< dillrlct
Is responsible for testing, proving that
certain goals have bttn or can be
readied.
Foun"ln Valley got to the veey bue
of PPBS when It wrote an educational
plan for each of the 13 elementary
schools.
The educational plan -found at e¥ich
school and open to the public for reading
-tells in specific terms what thnt
:school is going to do for children at
any point in tllne, any age and ability .
''You can open up any one of our
educational plans and find a complete
description of the school'• major goals
and activities," Brick said. "lt'a the
only descrlptlYe analysis of educatioa
I know of In lhls country."
Russ Inch Ahead
In Atom Arsenal
WAS!IlNGTON (UPI) -The Soviet
Union has surpassed the United States
In some categorle.s of 1trateglc nuclear
weapons and may be preparing for a
"first strike" capability, Preaident NiJ:on
aaid today.
He said the Soviet Union overhauled
the United State1 in 1969 in the number
of intercontinental ballistic missiles and
is rapidly gaining in numbers of
submarine launched ballistic missiles.
"By any standard, we believe l he
number of Soviet stragetic forces now
exceeds the level needed for delerrence, ·•
Nixon said in his "state of the world''
message.
"Even more important than the grov.·th
in numbers has been the change in
Manson, Girls
Shout Down
Linda Kasabian
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Charles
Manson and his three VI o m en
codefendants shouted angrily at star
prosecution witness Linda Kasabian
\Yednesday when the pigtailed blonde
would not go along with their story
that Manson is blamele.ss in the Tate.
La.Blanca murders.
Mrs. Kasablan, 23, had been brought
back from New Hampshire by Manaon's
lawyer, Irving Kanarek, but she stuck
calmly to her testimony sill: months ago
that the hippie leader ordered both the
Tate and LaBiarica murders.
She was granted complete immunity
in exchange for her testimony for the
atate. As she told the jury that the
three women lied in their stories
absolving Manson, Susan Atkins suddenly
shouted:
"You only got off by putting it on
Manson. Admit it!"
"Why don't you tell your part?" called
out Patricia Krenwink el.
~1rs. Kasabian turned in the witness
chair and looked at the defendants.
"I have," she 111ld. ''Why don 't you
tell your part?"
Then, turning directly to Manson, 1he
said:
"Why don't you te\I your part?"
"Live "'·ith U -it's on your face,"
cried Manson.
PROFESSICNAL
INTERIOR DES16NERS
the nature of the forces the USSR chose
to develop and deploy. These forces
include systems -particularly the SS9
ICBM with large multiple warheads -
"'hcih, if further improved and deployed
in iilfficient numbers, could be uniquely
suitable for a first strike agairui! our
land-based deterrent forces."
In 1965, the United Slates had 934
ICBMs and 4M submarine-launched
ballistic mil!iles compared with %24 and
107 for the Soviet Union. Nixon said
by the ~nd of 1969, the Soviet Union
had 1,109 ICBM.! to 1,054 for the United
State! and in 1970 added 331 more while
the United States maintained the same
level.
Last year the United State& had 656
submarine-launched ballistic missile! -
the same as in 1969 -while the Soviet
Union had 350. an increase or 110 over
1969, the President said.
Nixon said, "By the mid 1970s we
expect the Soviets to have a force or
bal!istlc missile submarines equal in size
to our own . Furthermore. the Soviet
Union has continued to make significant
qualitative improvements In its strategic
forces. These include new and improved
versions of their Minuteman size SSll
missile, continued testing of multiple
warheads. research and testing of AB~i
components, and improved air defense
systems."
He said mainland China by the late
1970s probably will have IC'BMs "capable
of reaching the U.S."
Nixon cautioned that there has been
s o m e slowing In Soviet development
of land-based missile launchers. But he
said "The significance of t h i s
development is not clear."
Tot Smothered
By Crib Blanket
A Huntington Beach mother woke up
Wednesday morning and discovered her
five-month~ld son dead in b1s crib.
Investigators lrom the Orange County
Coroner's Office u id the tot, Brendan
A. Frost, 7112 Sunlight Lane, "'a&
apparently suffocated accidentally by a
blanket.
Attempts to revive the infant through
mouth-~mouth resuscitation p r o v e d
futile. He \\'as pronounced dead on arrival
at Huntington lntercommunlty Ho.spital.
o,... MH., ""'"' • '"· .....
He said PPBS planS have been used
extensively lo private con1pan~s such
as General Moton, Ford, Dupont and
McDonneU-Douglu, At least lt states
also use it as well as many c!Ues
and counties.
Slate authorities are Interested in the
detailed budget PPBS can achieve, while
local authorities have also used tht
management approach to outline their
own educational goals.
Opponents ol PPBS fear It wiU
eventually make child ren nothing more
than computtr punch cards -with thtit -
entire education a tape program in a
big machine.
"That 's not the way it's used,'' Brick
says. •·ror us it's a better way cl
telling the public what we're doing."
No Nig htclu b
Pictures Now
lndiscrett eJ:ecutives in darkened
111ightclubs with dates other than
their wives just tell t b 1
cameragirl: No pictures, please.
A team or bandits who raided
Grove Liquors, 9842 Katella Ave.,
Garden Gro9e, Wednesday night,
were much meaner when they saw
Lbe birdie watching them.
Clerk Robert Sllllion, 27. 1aid
one youth bla!ted the camera off
its wall mounts with a 12-gauge
3hotgun before both fled out the
door with $40 in loot.
From Page J
CENTER • • •
or realigned.
Castle said the city had not yet decided
v"hether to have them capped or keep
them pumping until they run dry.
''It would be foolhardy to cap them
if the return is great," he commented.
"They are on the perimeter of the site
and could be landscaped so they wouJd
not be noticeable."
It was . also Castle who revealed that
it would cost-'24,000 to insure the center
and library planned for the Central Park
against earthquake damage.. T b e
insurance would be a requirement of
the bond sales the public facilities
corporation will authorize al part of
the lease-back financing agreement with
the city.
Architect Kurt Meyer described the
center as a building complex that will
outlive ''fads over styles."'
He elplained that the ground noor
of the administration tower and the
development wing that will run behind
it will be devoted to public services.
The finance, planning and public Work.I
departmenls will be located there.
''The citizens will be able to get what
they wan~ with the minimum of run-
around,'' he sald.
Meyer said that the uper parts ~f
the tower will be like an office building
on Wilshire Boulevard. "In ou r
discussions we felt a good &verage
quality office building would be the right
kind to follow to get the kind of efficiency
that is required," he commented.
The architect said they hoped to to
Into production in the late summer with
public bids being sought in August.
Public Works Director Jim Wheeler
said that the stnictures would uceed
code requirements for earthquake safety.
"I'm convinced that safety factors are
very, very conservatiYe," Wheeler
commented, adding that seismologists
had done thorough research for the city.
"I have no concern, but you must
remember that you cannot de1lgn a
building for the epicenter of an
earthquake if you want to use it."
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COSTA MESA, CALIF.
6U0027' 646°0216
Newport Beaeh
EDITION
VOL. M, NO. 48, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
• e s I en ar-
South Viets
Beat Off
Red Assault
SAIGON (AP) -S-Outh Vietnamese
paratroopers beat off a fierce assault
today by eight North Vietnamese
tanks on their base in Laos, lowering
artillery to point blank range to help
knock out live of them, U.S. officers
!iaid.
While there were no reports of further
South Vietnamese advances into southern
Laos to cut the Ho Chi Minh trail,
Gen. Creighton W. Abrams, U . S •
commander in Vietnam, said the
operation was going well despite heavy
fighting and some setbacks.
The fighting in Laos was at Hill 31,
about 10 miles inside Laos.
The North Vietnamese struck with
tanks in their tirst use of armor since
early in 1969. U.S. officers said the
dirett artillery fire, along with antitank
weapons, helicopter gunships and jet
fighter-bombers, beat off the attack.
Most of the tanks were bagged by
the paratroopers. and the remaining
three fled with U.S. fighter-bombers in
pu rsuit, a U.S. officer in the north said.
He reported the paratroopers still held
the hill and "were holding out and were
doing a good job." A U.S. F4 Phantom
jet was shot down while flying bombing
missions in support of the base. The
U.S. Command said both crew member•
were rescued.
There was no word on casualties at
the base. HiU 31 is five miles southwest
of !he point where a government ranger
base was overrun over the weekend
with severe losses to the South
Vietnamese defenders.
The action at Hill 31 was the latest
in a series of bloody engagements that
have erupted since the S o u t h
(See LAOS, Page %)
Assembly Hints
Regents Guilty
Of Impropriety
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Assembly
Education Committee today reported
"impropriety" may have bet:n involved
in two University of California business
deals involving regents.
The committee agreed the board should
develop new policies covering the
business dealings of its members after
a study by William H. Merrifield, state
auditor general, of deals involving
regents.
Merrifield made the study in response
to a 1970 Assembly resolutioo pressed
by two Republican lawmakers critical
of deals involving Regents Edwin Pauley
and Ed Carter.
The committee, in a San Jose hearing
)ast fall, focused on three controversial
dealings -formation of h o 1 d i n g
corporation to deal with a Pauley oil
firm. purchase of a Los Angeles home
Carter lived in and potential conflicts
of interest over development of the UC
campus at Irvine.
The full membership of the committee
roncluded t.he "UC Regents lack clear
guidelines'' for business transactiont
involving the university and its regents.
"Preliminary evidence demonstrates
that impropriety may have been involved
In at least two University of California
transactions.''
The holding company deal allowed the
university to enter into a buisness offer
by Pauley, chairman of lhe Pauley
Petroleum Co. Merrifield told the
committee an adverse court ruling on
lhe deal might mean the holding
company "and Pauley would owe lhe
Iriternal Revenue Service algnificant
gums for tax avoidance."
The home }lurchase arrangement
allowed Carter lo buy a lifetime right i.o occupy a Los Angeles residence. It
was criticized by the committee "on
the giaiunds that the potential benefit
to Regent C.arter exceeded the potential
benefit to the university."
A third di•puted tramodlon Involved
the Irvine Company.
C11rter is a direct.or of the Irvine
Foundation while another regent. William
French Smith, belongs to the law flrm
representing the lrvlne Company,
The committee noted the university
aald "neither Regent Smith nor Regent
Carter had participated nor intended tO partlclpate in decisions a[fectln&' the
Jn·lnc Company ...
\
OJEG(li
~--~ ...... -
•
COit. 1' "'"
Expert Sees
No Disorder
In Calley
FT. BENNING. Ga. (AP) -An Army
psych1atrisl who followed Lt. William
Calley Jr. to .the witness atand testified
today be could find no evidence that
Calley suffered from "any fo'rm of
mental disorder I could think of" in
the massacre at My Lai.
PACIFIC OCEAN
"One could say the entire incident
is bizarre," Maj, Henry E . Edwards
replied to one question put to him.
He was the first rebuttal wltness for
the pr'lSecution. TJte defense rested
Wednesday after Calley bad spent tw•
days on the witness stand. MAP INDICATES FREEWAY FIGHTERS' 'ALTERNATE ROUTE'
Plan Sketchtd 11 Cotst FrHw1y Showdown 1t Polls Looms Edwards was one of three Walter
Reed Hospital psychiatrists th a t
constituted a sanity board for Calley,
Freeway Fighters Propose, A second member of the team, . Lt.
Col. Franklin G. Jones, followed Edwards
to the witness stand.
Edwards' testimony direclJy
contradicted that of defense psychiatrist.a
who said that Calley did indeed bave
mental impairment that clouded bis
capacity to premeditate bis actions at
My Lai on March 16, '1968. Calley ls
charg~ with . murdering lO'l · village.rs
tha~ day, · · · ,
Alternate Road Projects
Minor expansion ef the San Diego
Freeway cOupltd wlt1i 1 network of four
and six-lane limtteq-access parkways
were propoa:ed Wednesday as alternatives
to the disputed Pacific Coast Freeway
along the Orange CoatL
The latest recommendations. made by
the Harbor Area Freeway Fighters, are
an update of the proposal known as
the Frank C. W()()(b plan, first introduced
last July.
The revised plan says fu ture traffic
flow could he handled i1 the following
manoer:
-Add two lanes to the San Diego
Freeway, beginning in Long Beach south
to the Corona de! Mar Freeway
interchange,
-Re-route the Corona del M a r
Freeway through Bonita and Coyote
canyons to tie back to the adopted route
behind Laguna Beach.
-Create six lanes of limited-access
parkway on the Pacific Coast Highway
through Newport Beach west o f
MacArthur Boulevard. This to be
accomplished through Mariner's Mile by
eliminating on-street parking.
-Extend the parkway along the 5th
Avenue corridor through Corona de! Mar
to join with the re-routed Corona de!
Mar Freeway behind Laguna.
-Widen Sao Joaquin Hills Road to
a six-lane parkway, extending it across
the Upper Newport Bay to 22nd Street
in Costa Mesa.
-Convert existing M a c A r t h u r
Boulevard into 1 six-lane limited access
parkway.
-Convert Jamboree Road. Irvine
Avenue and QJlver Drive to four.Jane,
limited-access parkways.
-Convert University Drive to 1 four-
Jane limited.access parkway, extending
it to Del Mar Avenue in Costa Mesa.
According to Woods, a retired state
land appraiser. the proposed freeway
routing, Itself, "would provide 1
substitute for tbe Coa!1 Fre"ay t9
allOw·tbrouP triffte" itii•*!-pass · •n 'ffUi"
citler involvied" -Newport Beach,
Laguna Beach, Huntington Beach ~and
COsta Mesa.
Under the plan, lbe Newport Freeway
would t.erminate at the Coast Highway,
at Balboa Boulevard. Woods points out
this would be similar to the terminations
of the Harbor, Santa Monica and Long
Beach Freeways.
The San Joaquin Hills Road, Upper
Bay crossing. Woods proposes, would
be via a low-profile bridge extending
between two man-made peninsula-type
fingers from northerly of 22nd Street,
across the bay to the westerly extension
of San Joaquin Hills Road.
Building Permits
Drop in Newport
Building activity in Newport Beach
is off by nearly one-third this fiscal
year, the city's Community Development
Department said today.
A drop to 1,071 in the number of
permits issued during the first seven
months of 197~71, from 1,409 through
February of last year, is reflected in
a substantial decline in valuation.
Permits for construction valued at
$32,603,000 had been issued at this same
point last year, while this year's tOtal
is down nearly $9 million , to $23,099,000.
The sharp decrease bas been felt in
city revenues and the city council bu
ordered spending cuts recently.
January building reflected th e
downward trend dramatically. During:
that month the department issued only
163 permit.a !or buildings valued at $1.1
million . During January, 1970, 265
permits ror construction valued at nearly
$6.8 mllllon were issued.
. ·~·---..c 'afllridW•ll·-11· . q~poni ~I · on ,..wlii~ tl)e
lleiitenantl:i had the capacit+ to 'k a o w
rtahl .!nun wronc, the ab1IJ11. ... do
what M knew was ilgbt and to form
the specUic intent te till.
How did be define the Specific intent
to kill?
"That he had the notion and desire
to end someone's life." Edwards said.
"My opqtion is that there was no
Impairment to his m e n ta I thought
processes on that day. , .the way he
performed he was responding 16 cues
and stimuli around him."
In cross-examination, the psychiatrist
was asked whether the mind could be
conditioned along certain channels, "I'D
say a channel to kill.'•
The question .came in connection with
the so-called Pavlov experiment in which
do~ were condiUoned to respOnd to
certain stimuli. ·
Edwards said be bad not read the
works of Pavlov, a Russian. "I don't
know that he ever made 1 n y
commentary, but a person can be
conditioned to kill," Edwards said.
At another point. tht psychiatrist aaid,
"I believe one can be conditioned." But
he added he did not think it was possible
to condition one section of the mind
without affecting others.
WHO'S YOUR
OSCAR PICK?
The poll! are open for national voting
in the "Oscar Derby." For your chance
to vote 1n·the DAILY PILOT "election''
and , perhaps, go to dinner with your
favorjte 1tar1, tet the ballot today on
Page 14.
Builder Might Back Off
•
May Ask Reconsi.deration Instead of City Lawsuit
The Lido h1gh-rise builder whose
permit was revoked Monday by the
Newport Beach City Cooncil may back
off on lta threat to 1ue the dty, tt
was learned today.
Attorneys for Swan c.onstructors, Inc.,
of San Diego, which beat the high-rise
moratorium tnstituted Monday -or ttied
to -by four daya, 1ald this momlng
the firm may instead simply ask the
council t6 reconsider Jts 1cUon1 •
Swan obtained a foundatkm-only1perinlt
Thursday and began work Immediately.
The council, as expected, Monday nighl
approved a 90-day moratorium on all
high-rise COMtruCUon within t h e
boundaries or the proposed Lower
Ne"l'O't Bay Civic Dl!lrlct.
The Lido project, at the corner of
Lafayette and 32nd Streets, Is within
tho,. boundaries and City At1"mey Tully
Seymour advlaed lht cooncll IO yank
the permit If It wanted the 120-foot to threaten them because we are
condominium included in the ban. committed they know,· we-have told
Otherwise, Seymour said, the builder them, we will do whatever we have to do to protect our cllent't Interests." could conllnue with It& gradini work Lederman uid be expects a de<:lsion
and Jay concre~. after which "no court on the COW'M to be pursued wW be
in the land" would deny permiuion to made by Friday.
finish the entire. 1tructure. '!bl mor•l«l11111 -.:.. lnjt>ked: at. the
Bruce Lederman, an attorney recommenct&Uon. of , the 1peetal
representing the clevelopor, U: S. ~ ~ ~ ll>e
Financi•l COrp. of San Oie(o, uld 11oaihiiiff·li ·~-ii ~ -
Immediately after the action 'lb• ~iiq ifM·~ !OW,!iff,1D4
company would take tM city to court..-* oetanfront: • • , , ·
This morning, ho,....,, h< uid he U ..,piovecl, U.-dlatrlC( •a l>rlng
was.n't IO sure. , -touJ)r new , cootf'Oll. lo all but ~ and
''We are now considerlnc wit.It action two-famUy rtsldtl!Ual construction alona-
to take," he said, dl9doling thBt the tht dty'a coa1Ulne. ~
company would like to come back before mgh-:rise would 'be pennltted In IOmt
the council to review ·the problem more artfft according to a pu:llmlziary report,
fully. but Only If ft met strict requttements
"Our only fear, .. Lederm1tn said, ''Is tnvolring open space .tn4 public acceu
th.al lbt council moy lllink wt art lrylnc IO Iha beacbel.
')
'•'nday's Fln•I
N.Y. Stocks
THURS1lA'I', FEBRUA!tY 25, '197f TEN CENTS
• res1
DAILY PILOT lttff '!""'
Prl~e Ptttkqe
Carie O'Brien is a college stu-
dent and a barmaid at a New-
port Beach watering ·hole. She
wants to be a communication
~:~~·~· ~he'll get her chance '~~~\r~fi!~\'t{J .,
Pr~ss Club drawll!c to.r sing\•
newsmen under 40 re•ts of
age. Winner will ge a date
with Carie. It's all for good
cause -press club scholar-
ship fund.
SA Lawsuit Seen
As Only Course
In Annex Fight
A law1uit is probably the only recourse
left to Santa Ana ill its ~tUe to annex
913 acres of Irvine industrial land
the city claims was promised to if in
196.1.
The Local Agency Formation
Commission refused Wednesday to
.reopen bearings on the boundary of the
proposed city of lrvi,ne.
On f'eb . 10, the LAFC approved
incorporation or the new 18,lfS·acre city,
including the dispute<! property just south
of the Santa An~ Marine Corps Air
Station.
The Irvine Company has acknowledged
the agreement and did ask the. LAFC
lo exclude the acreage from the new
city.
Santa Ana protested Wednesday that
LAFC Chairman Louis R. Reinhardt had
t•intimidated" City Manager Car I
Thornton when he tried lo introduce
a copy or a $1',000 rtudy on the effect
of the Irvine· incorporation on Santa
Ana.
This charge agaiMt Reinhardt, 1
Fullerton city councilman, and other
intimation! that the LAFC had not
operated properly on Aug. IO seemed
to irritate commissioners.
Commissioner Charles Pearson, of
Anaheim, moved that ·the petition for
a re-hearing be derued. He was backed
by lleinl\Ardl and Stanley ·Northrup, a
San Clemente councilman. '
Superviwr Robert Battln continued hiJ
stance opposl:na the Irvine Company by
~oting against the moUon ..
Riots · Leave -17 •Dead ' . . ' ' .... -
Jn,, llpj~stJuinr; l:Qdia
· NEW DEtl!J (UPI) -Seventttn
):iersont died Wednesday in clashes with Police in lhreo Indian ciUe&, press repom
••id today. '
At Kota, an Industrial city ef R1Jasthan
State, police fired on 1 mob. of l,80I>
workers of a synlhetlcs )nlll after some
In the crowd snatched r,iu from police
and begin sbootln,. SeVen persons died
and 1everal others were wounded in·
lhe Jncldtn!, Iha reporl& nld.
en
Nixon Tells
U.S. Role
In World
By JOHN M. IDGBTOWEll
WASHINGTON (AP) -Pmident
Nixon today charged Hanol w 1 t h
broadening the Vietnam war into an
Indochina conflict and predicted the
United States and its allies will have
more hard choices in combatting possible
new enemy thrusts in South Vietnam,
Cambodia and Laos.
In a globe-ranging report officially
direct'ed to Congress but aimed at the
nation and the rest of the world, Nixon
keyed his message to a quest for "a
full generation of peace'' lhia century.
But, he said, "U winding down the
war ls my greatest satisfaction 1n
foreign policy, the failure to end It
is my deepest disappointment."
He pledged to continue the winding
down, the U.S. troop withdrawal from
south Vietnam. But in stark contrast
to hi:! declared global peace goal his
projection for Indochina emphasized the
broadened war and increased American
aid and air support for allied grGUnd
forces.
The 65.000 word report. covering 180
pages and acconipanied by a nationwide
radio speech was the second Nixon report
on the· role of the United States in
world affairs since he took office.
Patttrned after the ctMtitUtl8UUy
mandated State . of the UniQn message,
thi• White House overview of the world
sltuailon di!cl~ no """ U.S. p>licy
departures.
But details were ouUlned and it gave
Nixon an opportunity to tell the story
of his foreign and strategic policies at
midpassage between the 1968 and Im
elections.
Nixon sent the report, which has been
in preparation for several months, to
Congress under the title. "United States
Foreign Policy for the 19708 -Building
for Peace."
In discussing the Indochina cr1sls at
considerable detail Nixon gave a deeply
pessimistic report about the prospects
for a negotiated settlement.
He had "frankly expected'' some kind
of action from the North Vietnamese.
Viet Cong side last year, Nixon stated,
when be expanded political principles
for a settlement and appointed
ambassador David Bruce as peace
negotiatDr.
In this, he indicated, he was completely'
disappointed. BUt "W.e will not give up
on negotiations," he said, "though ,tbe
past year indicated that it will be
extremely difficult to overcome the
enemy's mix of doctrine , calculations
and suspicion.
"There is the additional fact that aa
our forces decline. the role we can
play on many aspects of 1 settlement
is also bound to decline."
Nixon appealed for trust in his
leader.ship as be seeks to •devd._op what
he called a new, more restrained world
role for the United States.
But the major'. concern of the message
throughout was with what he called
the "most anguishing problem" of
Vietnam.
"Hanoi has made the war an Indochina
conflict," Nixon stated, with 110me 24(1,000
North Vietnamese troops in South
(See: NIXON, Pa1e !) •
Weather
Gusty winds under clear sides
are the ingredients for Frlday'1
weather menu, with coastal temp.
eratures quitting '' 60 and inJand
mercury registering ill d.,,.....
INSmE TODAY
Orange County tupcrvbort
have approvid a human reio-
tlans. tommirrion for the c:ov""
ty, but the commtwon. mun
prow its worih within the ~tar.
Pag1 1%.
C1lllWfl.. 11 C:ltecl;"" u, 11 ci.uin.. .._,.
C:-k• ,. ,..,_, n °""' ..... 11 ......... ..
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........ lt
Ml! Ll!lftn 11
; DAJLY 1.,,., 1.111rsd1y, ftbruary 25', 1~.,,
• Wild Pursuit ID Mesa
. Y out.h Se ,ized: in lJ ec_tic Speed Chase
A ~ pelly thief ol It II bflllod
bat1 today, aft.er a wUd, tour-mlle chase
from west t.c. east Coata Mesa Wedneiday
in whJch one burly detective was hit
and ~ 10 feet ~Y the Oeeing car.
R1dl.ard H. GuUme:, of 11>35 Acacia
St., Anaheim, was booked on seven
separate charges after the 3 p.m. pursuit
reaching speeds near 70 miles per hour.
He is charged "with as.sault with a
deadly weapon and assault and battery
on a poUce officer; petty tbelt, receiving
·stolen property, rtsi!Ung meat and
reckleu driving. ·
No ball wu set, pending arraignment
In Harbor Judicial Diltrlct Court
GuUerrei avoided causing a horrendous
traffic accident in at least two instances
on1y by some miracle, said the detective
team who gave chase.
The 1ncident began with a call from
Duan. R. Rub, of Trabaca Products,
831 W. lath St.. with a report that
Manson, Girls
·shout Down
Linda Kasabian
' LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Cliarles
Manson and his three w o m e n
codefeodants ahouted angrily at star
prosecution witness Linda Kasabian
Wednesday when the pigtailed blonde
would not go along with their 1tory
that Manaon is blamelesa tn the Ta~
LaBlanca murdm.
Mrs. KaJablan, 23, bad been broqbt
back from New Hampshire by Manson'•
lawyer, Irving Kanarek, but she stuck
calmly to her tmlmony 1!1 months ago
tbat the hippie leader ordered both the
Tate and LaBianca murders.
She was granted complete Immunity
tn exchange for her testimony for the
state. As she told the jury that the
three women lied in their stories
absolving Manson, Susan Atkins suddenly
ahouttd:
"You onJy got oU by putting it on
Manson. Admit lt!"
"Why don't you tell your part?" called
oat Patrlda Knn,.;nkel.
Mrs. Kasablan URmed In the witnua
chair and looked :at the defendants.
"I have," she said. "Why don't you
tell your part?"
Then, turning directly to Manson, ahe
said: "Wb.Y don' you tell your part?"
"Uve With it -lt'1 on your fa ce,·•
aledMa!llon..
... tlllployt atl<I tnothtt WU IWlllJ1i flherllUI .,...iucu. · _S~ . oqt .the. aree, · detecUvu
Richard Frederlkson and Geor&i Wilton
saJd a youth drove up in an old sedan
near a spot where five motorcycle
helmet.s worth $60 had been hidden
"Police of(icers,'' they shouted. holding
up badges as Gutierrez got into his
car.
He gwuied the engine suddenly B!t
they advanced, witb Frederlltsen leapini
free, while Wilson was bit and tumbled
1lde--ova-.slde down the driveway.
He was ·only stiff and sore today,
but In need of a new pair of trousers,
said Detective Capt. Bob Green.
Detective Frederiksen said th ey
jumped into the car and chased
Gutierrez, who allegedly s t r e a k e d
through the Intersection of Pomona Ave-
nue and West 19th Street in the wrong
lanes.
'~ UPI Tlt ..... tf
PROGRAMMED FDR TV
Fading Guru L~ary
Leary Interview
Slared for KCET
Over Weekend
"Yes, it'• beaTY." Mrt. Kasabiln aaid. A special videotaped interview in which ~ whole thing is insane." Dr. Timothy Leiry disavows drug use JtarwU 'i11k~ tM:r what abe meant aboUt It being Insane. will be carried twice this weekepd by
"I've never been touched by anything Los Angeles' KCET Cba.Jmei 2 8
like thls before .and It's bard to relate educational station.
after being out for 1wblle. To be here The one-hour sho\Y by underground again iJ 1trange, like a drum." Judie Charles H. Older ordered the filmmaker Glen Angell, v.·ho spent four
defendants to be 1iltJlt or be removed days with the Learys and Black Panther
immedlaW_J from UM! courtroom. A few leaders exiled in Algiers, will displace
minutes lat.er Mn. Ka!abian was regular fare.
d1!mlued permane.ntly u a wttness and -1 pr-esum.ably she will return to her Friday 1t w\ I be seen at 9 p,m.
bUlblnd and two children at their home and again: at a _p.m. Sunday. preceded
near Millord, N.H. by an introduction featuring finge\I and
Mrs. Kasablan wa1 followed to the sister station newsman Joe Russin, of
witness stand by Deputy District KQED, Sari FraDcisco.
AUOmey Aaron Stovitz. Black Panther tlinister of lnformatian
StovltJ testified that his off ice made Eldridge Cleaver. who had Dr. Leary
an agreement with Su,,an Atkins' ltW)'tr clamped under recolutJonary arrest last
that the 5t.ate would not ask the dtath .. month to climax a growing philosophlcal
penalty for her If she told the truth rift, will also be seen.
1bout the killings before a grand jury. Leary now says drugs a re
Miss Atkins dJd testify before the Jury inappropriate to the r e v o I u t i o n a r y
but ahe subsequently recanted her struggle in America , which fellow
"confesilon" and then told an entirely conspirator Cleaver calls Babylon.
different story at the trial last wetk. Due to the Friday schedule change,
The defense was erpected to call later the David Susskind Show will begin at
this week psychlatrlsta who will give 10 p.m., and The Advocates will not
their opinions about the effect of UD be shown , while Sunday, The Great
on the aanlty of the defendantl. American Dream Machine will start at
DAILY PILOT
dlNtH Ol)A.f1' PUILISMINO (.OMIWfY .
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Jt•k .. C'11"9y
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ni•"'•' IC' .... 1r .. ,,,,
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M.wltt:tw a•litr
L '•'•' tc,1., trt.......-1 .. di City l lflltr """*' ..... ~ J)JJ N • ..,.rt la11l•••'4
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"""''"""" a..ctl: J1l1li -..ell toulft• ... tM o.-t111N • ..... •1 ·c.m1,. Atli
'
6:30 .and The World We Live. In will
bt dropped.
Woman Injured
In 3~car Cra sh
On Coast Road
A Westmlwter \.\'oman is reported in
good condJUon today at Hoag Memorial
Hospital after she was i njured
Wednesday morning in a three-car craah
on Pacific Coast Highway on the Santa
Ana R.iver bridge between Huntington
Beach and Newport Beach.
Mrs. Frankie B. Coeker. 53, of M5%
Swan St., was the only pt r a o n
h03pit.alized fro m the crash.
A Clllfomla Highway Patrolman 1aid
Mrs. Coeke.r wu southbound.
approachlng the bridge, when a q
unidentified Volkswagen a b r up t I y
changed la'I" tn front of her, caustni
her to Jose control.
Her car crossed Into the oncomlng
lanes where ahe 1truck two cars driven
by Robert C. Wrtlsner. 50, of 510C
Seashore Drive and Clady9 Reich of
206 Orange Ave .. Newport Beach.
Wrelll'ler wu not lnJurtd In the crash
and Mrs. Reich and her daughter and
daughter's rrtend were treated for minor
injuries and re.leased from the hospital.
Phosphate Ban Asked
ll'ASIUNGTON !UPI) -Forty Hou,.
mcmbtrs said today Ibey wculd lntrt'.Kluce
leglslatJon that would outlaw pbQsphatcs
ill detcrccnls produced after June 30,
1m, and t:.in other ingrtdlents also
found lo came water pollution.
He alao ran i 1top 11,n. they aald,
~ .. _1111 llinN&b ht1vy trtlflc oo
a red l!Cbt Ill th• """I 11.., at Htrl>er
Boulevard and Vlctorl• StreeL
A police heUco;iter, meanwbUe, had
Joined the chase from aloft, while black-
and-white patrol cars were converging
on the pursuit by lrylng lo outguess
the swpect's route.
"It was an experience I won't forget,"
remarked Frederiksen today.
Heavy mid·afternoon traffic finally
convinced the suspect that he couldn't
make his escape, investlgalors said.
"He was bottled up tn traffic at Harbor
Boulevard and Wilson Street, so be
wheeled into the Union Station there,
jumped out and threw up bis hands
against the roof of the car," said
Detective Frederiksen.
No shots were fired and Gutierrez
\.\"as taken into custody without further
incident.
From Page J
LAOS ...
Vietnamese drive into Laos began Feb.
8.
Tbe South Vietnamese said that three
fire support bases and three field
positions in Laos were hit by enemy
rockets, mortar and recoilless rifle fite.
CB!llalties were described as light.
The tanks reported used in the attack
on Hill 31 were believed to be PT76s,
a Soviet-made light amphibious type.
It wu the first time enemy tanks
have been reported employed in the
current Laos campaign, although South
Vietnamese spokesmen said earUer that
air and artillery strikes had destroyed
a dozen tanks of thil type inside Laos.
In an interview with Peter A. Jay
of the Washington Post. Abrams
described the campaign in Laos as
critical to the U.S. troop withdrawal
program but added that Its success or
failure will not be apparent before next
fall.
Abrams said if there is no significant
enemy military effort in South Vietnam
after the rainy season ends in July
and before the October presidential
elections in South Vietnam then the
operation can be counttd a success.
Abrams insisted the operation had a
limited objective, the destruction of
enemy aupply stockpiles to-prevtnt a
1971 offensive in the northern provices
of South Vietnam. He said it never
was intended lo seal· off the Ho Chi
Minh trail.
Administration sources in Washington
have said Ont main alIQ of the operation
in Laos is lo destroy stockpiles that
m.Jghl be used neat year at a time
~n the wllhdrawal of U.S. forces ii
ntarlng It. final st.ages.
The South Vietnamese have reported
seWng or destroying huge stores of
munitions and supplies.
* * * Soviets Surpass
U.S. in Nuclear
Weapons-Nixon.
IV ASHINGTON (UPI) -The Soviet
Union has surpassed the United States
in some categories of strategic nuclear
weapons and may be preparing for a
"first strike" capability, President NU: on
said today.
He said the Soviet Union overhauled
the United States In 1909 in the number
of interconUntntal ball.lstic missiles and
is rapidly gaining in numbe.r1 of
submarine launched balliaUc missiles.
"By anl standard, we believe the
number o Soviet 1trageUc forces now
exceeds the level needed for deterrence."
Nixon said in his ·•state ol the world''
message.
"Even more important than the growth
in numbers has been the change in
the nature of the forces the USS R cho.se
to develop and deploy. These forces
include system& -part.icularly the SS9
ICBM with large multiple warheads -
whclh, if further Unproved and deployed
in !Ufficient numbers, could be uniquely
suitable for a first strike against our
land-baaed deterrent forces ."
rn 1965, the United States had 934
tCBMs and 46.f submarine-launched
ballistic missiles compared with 224 and
107 for the Soviet Union. Nixon said
by the tnd of 1961, the Soviet Union
had 1,109 ICBMs to 1,054 tor tht United
States and in 1970 added 331 more while
the Uniled States rnai.nU.ined the same
level.
Last year the United States had 6S6
subrnarlile-launcht!d ballistic missiles -
the same 11 In 19'9 -while the So*t
Union had 350, an increase of 110 over
1969. the President. said.
Nixon said. "By the mid 1970s v.·e
expect the soviets to have a force of
ballistic missile submarines equal in siie
to our own. Furthermore, the Soviet
Union haa conUnued to m11.ke significant
qualitative lmprovementa In lta strategic
forces. Then include new and Improved
verslona of their Mlnutem1n 11.u SSI l
ml1sUe, cmitlnued tesUng ()f multiple
warhe1dl, reseercb and tesUng of AB~f
componenta, and improved air defense
sy!terns."
He nld mainland China by the late
1970s Probably will have ICBMs "capable
of reachlna the U.S."
Nixon cau tioned that there has been
s o m e slowing in Soviet development
of land·b3sed missile launchers. But he
s1ld "The slgnlflc1nce of t b J 1
development 1s not clear."
BACK TO BIG 'Q'
Lovelorn Car Thief Harvey
UPI Ttlt•lltlts
'I FEAR MY FAULT'
Letter Writer Mcclintick
Convict' s Girl Linked
To Bizarre Jailbreak
By ARTHUR VINSEL
Of IM Dallr l'lltl Slllt
A misunderstood Valentine note may
have Lriggered a San Quentin Prison
inmate"s desperate dash to Orange
County Tuesday and truly doomed a
Jong-awaited wedding.
James D. ''Jimmie'' •Iarvey, 24, of
181 Pixley St., Orange, had Uve months
left lo serve or a 1967 auto theft
conviction.
Rosetta McClintick, 2~. was waiting
in Fullerton.
The wait may be far longer.
Sometime Monday evening, the lanky
barber from Bee Branch, Ark., slipped
away from a minimum security area
out.side the walls of the big pink fortress
by San Francisco Bay.
"I don't know what would have made
him do it," Miss fi.fcClinlick said
\Vednesday.
"1 had something to take care of
that couldn't wait," Harvey to Id
reporters after being arraigned th e
same day in Marin County Municipal
Court.
He is held in lieu of $200,000 bail
set by Judge Peter A. Smith, on charges
of kidn1ping, armed robbery and felony
escape.
Newport Can't
Sell Property
Newport Beach has discovered another
truism about the ex.I.sting state of the
economy.
Municipal real estate just isn't selling.
The city"s plans to sell the 1.93-acre
tract it owns at the corner of Brookhurst
and Adams in Huntington Beach is cited
as proof.
The City Council this week authorized
an expenditure of Sl.000 for advel'\.lslng
on the parcel after the city staff reported
only six prospective bidders have
obtained copies of the bid specifications,
Jt had been expected that between 30
and 40 would have been obtained.
City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt told
the council the reason for the la ck of
interest "Is unknown ."
A minimum bid price of $.125,000 bas
been established.
Preliminary hearing was set tor 1'1arch
3, while a public defender was assigned
to the case, althou1h Harvey asked to
represent himself.
Harvey has been identified by the
wife of a Novato policeman and her
friend as the barefoot escapee \Vho
abducted them al 9:47 p.m. 1'.fonday,
along with the officer's two children.
Mrs. Gary Stansfield, 30, son Robert,
6, and daughter Suzanne, 4 months, were
finally released unharmed 12 hours later
on Old Highway 99 in Bakersfield near
a cafe.
She feared their bodies might be found
beside some lonely road, but said the
suspecl's tenderness and concern tov.•ard
the children was reassuring.
He stopped once -a dangerous
decision for an escaped convict holding
a lawman's wife and children hostage
-to get candy for Bobby and milk
for the baby.
Continuing on to Orange County , V.'here
the statewide manhunt was to end only
blocks from Miss McClintick 's
apartment, Harvey relea sed Mrs. Cheryl
Smith, 23. in Anaheim.
"It was the most terrifying 13 hours
of my life," the weary young dental
assistant said.
Police anticipating Harvey's arrival
picked up his trail by motorcycle and
patrol car, touching off 1 frantic chase
in which one shot was fired befor t
his capture.
Miss McClintick said she had expected
to marry Harvey after his parole but
received no mail for so long she feared
he was brooding over it.
"I didn 't want to force him to do
something against his will or feel I
was pushing him. So I wrote and told
him he didn't have to marry me when
he got out," she explained.
Cave Cats to Star
In Television Show
Stray cats that live in caves at Corona
del ~1ar Main Beach. will be the subject
of a television broadcast S u n d a y
afternoon.
The calS will be featured on ''Pet
Set" starring Betty White, at 4:30 p.m.
on KHJ-TV, channel 9.
From P11ge l
NIXON .•.
Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos, lDcludlng
a few Vlet Cong ln Cambodia.
"Enem1 .intentiom and capabilities In
Indochina will pose :t0me hard cboiett
tbout the deployment ol aJlltll 1-
u we pursue our withdr1wala," lie
continued, and North Vif:tnamese actlot
In Laos and Cambodl1 could requlre
high levels of American assist1oce 1nd
air operations in order to further
Vietnamiiation and our withdrawals.
His preview suggested that with the
Vietnamese Lroop strength in lndochl.n1
the progi'esslve withdrawaJ of U.S. forces
may be accompanied by high I eve I 1
af military activity. partlcul1rly the
extensive use of American air support
The theme of frustration I n
peacemaking and danger in world
condHlona pervaded other sections of
the massive report.
Noting the Soviet Union's power
position in the Mid dle East, the President
said any great national effort to dominate
the area would "increase the dange.r
to world peace.'' The United Slates would
not allow it to succeed, Nixon stated.
ln the nuclear arms race, he told
Congress and the nation that what he
termed greatly increased Soviet power
could tempt Moscow into bolder and
mort dangerous probing of the West.
He also said t:1e United States would
like lo begin improving relatklns with
mainland China , but that nation continues
"to cast us in the devil 's role."
NiJon told the American people that
he wu trying to shape a new, Jess
burdensome policy line for the United
States in world affairs. He appealed
for understanding and perhaps argued
against any new swing into American
isolationism.
"The American people have grown
somewhat weary of 25 years of
international burdens," Nixon said, "But
've cannot let the pendulum swing in
the other direction. sweeping us toward
an isolationism Which could be as
disastrous as excessive zeal."
In his discussion of Indochina, the
President touched on the military
situation. He declared that in spite of
heavy losses the North Vielname~ 1till
pose a "considerable threat" to the fir&t
alfd i;econd j U:e northern l m i l i t 1 r y
regions of South Vietnam.
Alternatively, the North Vietnamese
forces step up pressure against the
Cambodian government -or,
presumably, they could work Into
expanded operations in Laos. Nixon said
that in Cambodia and Laos Ha noi bas
tY.·o aims:
••First, and primarily, to use them
as infiltration routes, staging bases. and
sanctuaries for attacks against South
Vietnam. Secondly, to erode
governmental controls in order lo aid
their efforts in South Vietnam and
perhaps take over Laos and Cambodia
themselves.''
However, Nixon expressed confidence
that even without help from American
gr-0und ccombat troops. Laos and
Cambodia can Yt'ithstand e(forts to
deslroy them.
"We believe that the t'"·o governments
can survive through their own efforts,
our various kinds of assistance, and
that of other friends. We look to I.hem
lo shoulder the primary c o m b a t
responslblliUes for their own defense.''
3 Guest Lecturers
Found-Still Jailed
SANTA CRUZ IUPI) -Three
prisoners were supposed to show up
at Soquel High School Wednesday to
talk about drugs and crime prevention.
\Vhen they failed to show up, c a I J 1
·went out to see if there had been a
jailbreak. But !he prisoners were soon
found -behind bars. Prison authorities
thought the 1peaking date was nert
Wednesday.
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COSTA MESA, CALIF,
60-0275 646-0271
Costa Mesa
VOL. 64, NO. 48, 3 SECTI ONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1971
• e s en ar res1
South Viets
Beat Off
Red Assault
SAIGON (AP) -South Vietnamese
paratroopers beat off a fierce assault
today by eight North Vietnamese
tanks on their base in Laos, lowering
artillery to point blank range to help
knock flUt five of them, U.S. offi~rs
said.
While there were no reports of further
South Vietnamese advances lnto southern
Laos to cut the Ho Chi Minh trail,
Gen. Creighton W. Abrams, U.S.
commander in Vietnam, said the
operation was going well despite heavy
fighting and &ome. setbacks.
The fighting in Laos was at Hill 31 ,
ab<lut 10 miles inside Laos.
The North Vietnamese struck with
tanks in their first use. ()f armor since
early in 1969. U.S. offi~rs said the
direct artillery fire, along with antitank
weapons, helicopter gunships and jet
flghter-bombers, beat off the attack.
Most of the tanks were bagged by
the paratroopers, and the remaining
three fled with U.S. fighter.bombers in
pursuit, a U.S. officer in the north said.
He reported the paratroopers still held
the hill and "were holding oul and were
doing a a:ood job." A U.S. F4 Phantom
jet wa! shot down while flying bombing
missions in support of the base. The
U.S. Command said both crew members
were rescued.
There was no word on casualties At
the base. Hill 31 ia five miles southwest
flf the point where a government ranger
base was overrun over the weekend
with severe losses te the South
Vietnamese defenders.
The action at Hill 31 was the late.st
In a series ()f bloody engagements that
have erupted since the So u t b
(Ste LAOS, Par• I )
Assembly Hint,s
Regent,s Guilty
Of Impropriety
SACRAMENTO !AP) -The Assembly
Education Committee today reported
"impropriety" may have been involved
in two University of California business
deals involving regents.
The committee agreed the board should
develop new policies covering the
business dealings ()f its members after
a study by William H. Merrifield, 1tate
auditor general, of deal! involving
regents.
Merrifield made the study in response:
to a 1970 Assembly resolution pressed
by two Republican lawmakers critical
of deals involving Regents Edwin Pauley
and Ed Carter.
The commillee. in a San Jose hearing
last fall, focmed on three controversial
dealings -fonnation of h o I d i n g
corporation to deal with a Pauley ()i)
firm , purchase of .a Lo5 Angeles home
carter lived in and potential conflicts
of interest over development of the UC
campus at Irvine.
The full membership oI the committee
concluded the "UC Regents lack clear
guidelines" for bu!iness transaction•
involving the university and its regents.
"Preliminary evidence dem()nstrates
that impropriety may have been involved
in Bl least two University of California
transactions."
The holding company deal allowed the
university to enter into a t>uisness offer
by Pauley, chairman of the Pauley
Petroleum Co. Merrifield told the
commiUee an adverse court ruling on
the deal might mean the holding
company "and Pauley would owe the
Internal Revenue Service algnificant
5Ul'NI for tax avoida~.''
The home l"lf'Ch:ase arrangement
!Ste REGEN'IS, P11• !)
WHO'S YOUR
OSCA R PICK?
Tht: polls are open for national voting
tn the "Oscar Derby." For your chance
to vote In the DAILY PILOT "eltetlon"
and. perhaps, go to dinner with your
fAvorlte 1tar•, 1ee the ballot today on
Page 14.
UPI Tel..,._119
Light Show
Trail or Minuteman II lntercontinenW Balfulic ~Sorms -, • tacular display over Southern Caillornia. Missile was 1iied from V!.n-
denberg Air Force Base near Lompoc \Vednesday at dusk. Missile
was reported on course down air Force's Western Test Rrange.
Youth Seized Following
Wild Chase Tl1rough Mesa
A suspected petty thief of 19 ls ~hind
hara today, after a wild, four-mile chase
from we.st tc. east Costa Mesa Wednesday
in which one burly detective was hll
and knocked 10 feet by the fieeing car.
Richard H. Gutierrez, of 1035 Acacia
St., Anaheim. was booked on seven
separate charges after the 3 p.m. pursuit
reaching speeds near 70 miles per hour.
He Is charged with assault with a
deadly weapon and assault and battery
on a police officer ; petty theft. receiving
stolen property, resisting arrest and
reckless driving.
No bail was set, pending arraignment
in Harbor Judicial District CourL
Gutierrez avoided causing a horrendous
traffic accident in at least two instances
only by some miracle, said the detective
team who gave chase.
The incident bega n with a call from
Duane R. :Raab, of Trabaca Products,
137 W. 1!th SL, with a report that
one employe said aaolher was atealina:
fiberglass products.
Staking out the area. deteclive1
Richard Frederiben and Geora:e Wilson
a.aid a yputh drove up in an old IM"dan
near a ·spot where five motorcycle
htlmet.s worth t60 bad been hidden
"Police officers." they shouted. holding
up badges as Gutierrez a:ot lnto bis
car.
He gunned the erigine suddenly a~
they advanced, witb Frederiksen leaping
free, while Wilson was hit and tumbled
side-over-side down the driveway.
He was only sUff and 10re today,
but in need af a new pair al trousers,
1aid Detective Capt. Bob Green.
Detective Frederiksen uid t h e y
jumped lnto the car and chased
Gutlerrez, who allegedly • tr·e a k e d
through I.he intersection of Pomona Ave-
nue and West 19th Street in the wrong
lanes.
He also ran A stop sign. they said,
then careened through heavy h"affic on
a red light in the wrong lanes at Harbor
Boulevard and Victoria Street.
A police heliCCJilter, meanwhile. had
joined the chase from aloft, while black-
and-white patrol cars were converging
an the pursuit by trying to ()Utgue!S
the suspect's route.
"It was an experience t won 't forget,"
remarked FrederiWn today .
Heavy mid-afternoon traffic finally
convinced the suspect that he couldn't
(See CHASE, Page %1
Acrobatic Biker
Busted for Pot
U you drink, don't drive, and If you
imoke, don't ride double with a buddy
on the handlebars.
Costa Mesa police stepped a pair of
suspected truants Wedn6day at Harbor
Boulevard aod l9tb Street, intending to
Issue a bicycle citation.
Officer Dennis Hossfeld said o~ was so nervous be became-1U5picious, a!ked
lf he had anything in · his pocket! and if
he woold consent to a search.
"Sure -but there's oothing In this
pocket,'' the boy, 16, declared, paUin11: IL
10 hard Officer Hossfeld heard the tell -
tale crinkle of cigarette paper.
Two marijuana smokes were con!i.scat-
ed and the arrested bOy released t<I hla
mother pending juvenile court action.
Expert Sees
No Disorder
In Calley
FT. BENNING, Ga. (AP) -An Army
psychiatrist who followed Lt. William
Calley Jr. to the wiloess .1tand testified
today he could find no evideoef: tha t
Calley suffered from "any form of
mental disorder 1 could ·think of'' in
the massacre at P.1y Lai.
"One could say the entire incident
Is bizarre:," Maj. He:nry E. Edwards
replied to one question put to him.
He was the first rebuttal witness for
the prosecution. The defense rested
Wednesday after Calley had spent two
days on the witness stand.
Edwards was one of three Walter
Reed Hospital psychiatrists t b a t
constituted a sanity board for Calley.
A second member of the team, Lt.
Col. Franklin G. Jones, followed Edwards
to the witness stand.
Edwards' test l mo n y directly
'
OAILY ,ILOT 11111 PMl9
Prl:e Pukage
e<>ntradicted that of defense pgycbi atrista
who said that Calley did indeed have Carie O'Brien is a. college stu-
mental impairment that clouded bis dent and a barmaid at a New-
capacity to premeditate bis actions at port Beach watering hole. She
My Lal on Mare!! 16, Illa. CaU.7 ,ls ."!!!!I,$ I<> be a com'.')unicatl~
charged ir111i'lm!idtr1n1 lt!l "tl!lagm '" 0""!1fl!Ha!fst. She'll get 1ief cl!M!d!"
that da)'. March 3 wh en &he becomes
Edwards answered affirmatively to all top prize in an Orange County
questions touching ()n wlletber .... f:lit Pres.s Club drawlnf for ·single
li~utenant had the capacity. ~ k no w newsmen under 40 years of
ri ght from wrong, ~e ability to do age . Winner will get a date
what he. kn~w was ~1ght and to form with Carie. It's all fo r good
the specific intent to kill . cause _ press club scholar·
How did he define the speclfic intent ship fund. to kill? -'"'-'....:. _________ _
"That he had the notion and desire
to e:nd someone's life." Edwards said.
"My opinion is that there wa1 no
impairment to his m e n t a I thought
processes on that day .•. the way he
performed he was responding to cue.5
and stimuli around him."
Jn cross-e.-s:amination, the J>!YChiAtrist
Wa3 asked whether the mind couJd be
conditioned along certain channels, "I'll
say a chBnnel to kill."
The: question came in COMtction with
the s<H:alled Pavlov experiment in whicb
dogs were conditioned to respond to
certain stimuli.
Edwards said be had not read the
works of Pavlov, a Russian. "I don't
know that he ever made a n y
commentary, but a person can be
conditioned to kill," Edwards said.
At another JX>int, the psychiatrist said,
•·t believe one can be conditioned." But
he added he did not think it was possible
to condition one section of tbe mind
without affecting others.
On cross-examination, Edwards said
he knew that one witness testified Calley
stood at a ditch for one and a half
hours killing people. with his Ml6 rifle.
Q. Do you consider that bizarre?
A. I didnl consider it bizarre under
the circumatancs.
Q. Did you CC1n.side.r it unusu al'!
A. It would be unusual in a noncombat
situation. . .I did not see. this u a
mental disturban~.
Coin Order Date Set
WASlflNGTON (UPI) -The mint will
begin accepting orders July I for coin
collectors' sets or the new Eisenhower
silver dollar. The C<>st will be SlO for
each "proof" coin and $.'! for each
"uncirculated" coin. The coins will be
40 percent 1ilver and appllcation forms
for the collectors• Rts will be available
June 18.
SA Lawsuit Seen
As Only Course
In Annex Fight
A lawsuit Is probably lhe only recourse:
l!ft to Santa Ana in its batlle to annex
923 acres of Irvine industrial land
the city claims was promised to it in
1963.
The-Local Agency F o r m a t i on
Commission refused Wednesday to
reopen hearings ()n the boundary of the:
proposed city of Irvine.
On Feb. 101 the LAFC approved
incorporatl()n of the new 13,145-acre. city,
including the disputed property just south
()f the Santa Ana Marine Corps Air
Station.
The Irvine Company has Acknowledged
the agreement and did ask the LAFC
to exclude the acreage from the new
cit}'.
Santi Ana protested Wednesday that
LAFC Chairman Louis .R. Reinhardt had
i•intimldated" City Manager Car 1
Thornton when he tried to introduce
a copy of a $15,000 study on the tile.ct
()f the Irvine incorporation oo Sant.a
Ana.
This charge against Reinhardt, a
Fullerton ctty councilman, and other
intlmatlons that the LAFC had not
operated properly ()n Aug. 10 seemed
to in1tate commissloneni.
Commissioner Char:les Pearson, of
Anaheim, moved that the petition for
a re-hea ring be denied. He was backed
by Reinhardt and Sta nley Northrup, a
San Clemente counCl!man.
Hunting Ban Sought
Supervtsor Rot>e.rt Battin continued his
ttanc:e· opposing the Irvine Company by
voting against tM mot.Ion.
Aussies Remain
Sore Over .Cup
Assemblyman Asks End to Mountain Lion Shootings
By ROBERT P. LAUREN<:!
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -W h I lo
HuntJe.y and Brinkley lay quietly on
the floor licking their f o re p aw a ,
Assemblyman John Dunlap announced
today he w11 lntrodocing a bill making
it illegAl to bunt mountain Ilona In
California.
Huntley and Brinkley were two $-year·
old male mountain Uons U111t the
Democratic lawmaker from N 11 p a
brought to a newt CC1nfcrenc1 where
be announctd the lea:l1latlon.
Dunlap walked Into lhe n e w a
conference room. petted HunUey for a
few moments for the televilion camera1,
then talked to newsmen.
"Anyone with 50 cen~ for a tag and
enough money to buy shells for his
gun can hunt the mountain lion todAy,"
he said. "We are selling out the mountain
llon dirt cheap."
The State Department of Fish and
Game estimater that Ctllfomla hai about
liOO mountain llons. Dunlap aAld the
ficure was "a guess a long time ago
and rt!:mains unverified today. The trut
llltus of th• C&lilornla mounialn Uoo
In numbers Is unknown. t would t.hink
we have much lesa than that.
"By tht lntroductioo of thla bill, I
propose a maxim of conse:rvatloo -
when In doubt preservt. We can ·aJwaya
destroy latt:r."
He said 50 of the beaats have been
1hot since last July allhooah 1,579
Ucense.a have been issutd, lndJcatlng "the
Mrlous deplelloo of the mountain Uon
In California."
The lawmaker catted the mountain
Uon "symbolic of man'• a en er al
d!Jrqard for Ilia 1DvlroomanL"
Hearta: Are appar@ntly aliU bleeding on
both aldea of tht Pacific over the pro-
tests in the Amerlca'a Cup ·finals list
September ln which lhe AuslraUans wue
losers on all couqt.s.
In a &l&ne<f article on Page 13 Jack
Wollatoh, 'United Presa IntttnaUonal
boalJog wrl~., qoott1 Sall Magazine, an
Eul Coasl publication, Iha) tho Austral·
Ian pi1rlc:lplt1 In the Amerlco'a cup fu\4b
atilt feel bitterly against the New York
Yachl Club race commlllee which dlsal·
loncl-llltlt ll'otall.
l
Today's Flnal
N.Y. Stocks
TEN CENTS
en
Nixon Tells
U.S. Role
In World
By JOHN M. HIGBTOWE!t
WASHINGTON (AP) -Pn~denl
N'11on tooay charged HAnoi w It b
broadening the Vietnam WAT into an
Indochina conflict and predicted tbe
United States and Its allies wUl have
more hard choices in combatting possible
new enemy thrusts in South Vietnam,
Cambodia and Lao!.
In a globe-ranging report officially
directed to Congress but aimed at the
nation and the rest al the world, Nixon
keyed his message tc a quest for "a
full generation of peace" this century.
But, he 1aid, "If winding down the
war is my greatest satisfaction in
foreign policy, the failure to end it
is my deepest disappointment."
He pledged to continue the winding
down, the U.S. troop withdrawal from
South Vietnam. But In stark contrast
to his declared global peace goal his
projection for Indochina emphasized the
broadened war and increased American
aid and . air 1upport for allied ground
forces. •
The 65,00J word report, cove.ring 160
pages and accompanied by a nationwide
radio speeeh was the aecond N1xon report
on. the role of the United States in
world affairs since he took office.
Patterned after the eonslituUonaily
ma.Ddated State of the Unlon mwage,
this White House overview of the world
situation disclO!ed no new U.S. policy
departures.
But de.tails were ouUined And It gave
Nixon an ()pp<>rtunlty to tell the story
of his /oreign and strategic policies at
midpassage betwee n the 1968 and lm
elections.
Nixon sent the re.port, which has been
in preparation for several months, to
Congress under the title, "United States
Foreign Policy for the 1970s: -Bulldin1
for Pe.ace."
In discu!Sing the Indochina crills at
considerable detail Nix<>n gave a detply
pessimistic report about t.be prospects
for a negolialtd setUeme.nt.
He had "frankly e.xpected'' aome kind
of action from the North Vielnamese-
Viet Cong side last year, Nixon stated,
when he expanded poliUcal principle1
for a settlement and a p p o l n t e d
ambassack>r David Bruce as peace
negotiator.
In this, he indicated, he was completely
disappointed. But "We will not give up
on negotiations," he said, "though the
past year indicated that It will be
extremely dilficult to overcome the.
enemy's mix or doctrine, calculations
and suspicion.
"Tbere is the additional fact that as
our · Torces decline, the role we can
play on many aspects of a settlement
i!I also bound to decline."
Nixon appealed for trust in hill
leadership as he seeks to develop what
he called a new. more re:strained world
role for lhe United States.
But the major concern of the message
throughout was with wbat he caUed
the "most anguishing problem" o(
Vietnam.
"Hanoi has made the war an Indochina.
conflict," Nixon itated. with aome 240 ooo
North Vietnamese troops in &ulh
ISee NIXON, Pase Z)
Weather
GU!ty wind! under clear akfu
are the ingredif!llts for Friday'•
weather menu, with coa1tal temp-
eratures quJtlina at 60 and Inland
mtrcury rtglsierin1 14 degrees.
INSmE TODAY
Orange County supervi.ior1
hove approved 4 11.uman re.to.
tiun.t commi.trion for the coun-
ty, but the commi1.sion maul
provt it& worth within Uu uear,
Pagt 12.
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2 DAILY PIL01 )l.., •• J..J, r~btuary 25, 1r;11
Nixon Says
Reds Ahead
In Weapons
WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -The Soviet
Unlon hu 1Urpassed the United Stat.ea
In some categoriea: of strategic nuclear
~eapons and may be preparing for a
''first strike" capability, President Nixon
aaid today.
· He said the Soviet Union overhauled
the United States in 1969 in the number
of intercopUnentaJ ballistic mls1ll11 and
ts rapidly gaining in nurnbtn of
iubm.arine launched ballistic miuUu.
''B;' any standard, \C'e bt\ieve the
number of Soviet stragelic forces now
exceeds the level needed for deterrence."
Nixon said In bis "state of the world''
.message. BACK TO BIG 'O'
Lovelorn Car Thief Harvey
U,I T••M,._
'I FEAR MY FAULT'
letter Writer McCllntlck
Search for Tina End·s
Girl Left in Mountains Found Dead
CJ\ESTLlNE (AP) -For two months,
J011ph PtteJson te1rched for his ll·year-
old daughter Tina, who was actldentally
left bthlnd when he brought a group
or ch.lldren back from an outing in
the llOOW-COvered San B er n a r d in o
Mountains.
He joined searchers who hunted over
hundreds or miles of the rugged
mountains. Later, he had posters printed
with a picture or his blonde. blue-eyed
girl, and visited towtU he thought might
know of her.
The search ended Wedntsday after
a Boy Seoul found a sock and a child's
shoe wlU1 ''Tina'' written in red ink
on the sole. A sheriff's unit found the
girl's body in a canyon Jn miles
northwest of this mountain community.
t.emperaturt bit the )ls at fli&ht, w1lked
to a cabin at nearby Twin Peaks.
··~fy father went off and left me:•
'nna was quoted as saying to an I-year--
old girl as she asked to use the telephone.
\\'hen the girl told her the cabin had
no telephone, Tina said : ''Then I'm goln41:
to walk to San Bernardino."
Meanwhile, Peterson had returned
home, and in the confw.lon o( coming
home, no one noticed Tina was not
there until the 'next morning. It was
then when Peterson reported Tina
mis.sing.
•·Jt wouJd have taken btr about an
hour and a half to go (rom Twin Peaks
to where we foUlld her, 'f.t Baylis Park,"
Blackwell said.
"She got to a point where U1ere ~ere
no lights in the area but the hgbl.I
of San Bernardino, down In the valley
below. She probably ttiought she could
reach them bul cutting dov.·n the canyon.
It looked to me like she started down,
realized that they v.·ere farther away
than she thought, and tried to climb
out again," he said.
"She couldn't make it.''
Witness Information
"'Even more important than the growfb,.
tn numbers has been the change ii'l.
the nature of the forces the USSR chose
to develop aod deploy. These forces
include systerm -particularly the SS9
ICBM \\'ith large multiple warheada -
whcih , U further improved and deployed
in sufficient numbers, could be uniquely
tuitable for a first 1trike again.!lt our
)and-based deterrent forcea."
Convict's Girl Linked
Peterson, 47, of Long Beach, an
engineer at Northrop Corp. at Anaheim,
and his wife Selma Rose, were told
the sock and shoe bad been found and
were In the area when the girl's body
wa1 found.
Sherill's Lt. Kenneth Blackwell, who
had been )ooklng for Tina .!ince ahe
v.·as left behind Dec. 29. climbed up
a steep canyon and told Peterson the
body had been fOW1d.
Purse Snatch Suspects
Nabbed in Costa Mesa
In 1965, the United States hid 134
tCB~!s and 464 submarlne-l1unched
ballistic mlaslles compared with 224 and
107 for the Soviet Union. Nixon said
by the tnd of 1969, the Soviet Union
had 1,109 ICBMs to l ,OM for the United
States and in 1970 added 331 more while
the United States maintained the same
level.
To Bizarre Jailbreak "I guess It's God'• wiU," 1aid Peterson.
•·rm glad you found her.''
Several witnesses to a COftl Meu
laundromat purse 11natch provided lnfor·
mation lead!Jlg to the arrest of four sus.
pects In a red sporta car Wednesday, OtJe
disabled by cerebral palsy,
Felgar's sister WIS later released with-
out charge. while a 13·year-old girl wa1
charged with la.ck of parental control as
a juvenile and turned over to her par·
en ts.
Last year the United State• had 656
submari.De-launched ballistic missiles -
the aame as in 1969 -while the Soviet
Union bad 3SO, an increase of 110 over
1969, the President sald.
Nixon said, "By the mid 1970! we
expect the Soviels to have a force of
balllstic missile submarines equal in size
to our own. Furthermore, the Sov~t
Union has continued to make slgnilicant
qualitative improvements in !Ls strategic
forces. These Include new and Improved
versions of their Minuteman size SSll
missile, continued testing of mu1tlpte
warheads, research and testing of ABM
components, and improved air de(elllt
systems."
He aa.id mainland China by the late
1970s probably will have ICBM! '1capable
of reaching the U.S."
Nixon cautioned that there bu been
1 o m e slowing in Soviet development
of land-based missile launchers. But he
said "Tbe significance of l hi s
development i& not clear."
*
By AllTllUll VINSEL
Of "'4 ""' Plllt lllff
A mi1t1nderslood Valentine note may
have trlgered a San Quentin Prlaon
inmate's de1perate duh to Orange
((lunty Tuesday and truly doomed a
long-awaited wedding.
James D. "Jimmie" Harvey, 24, of
111 Pixley St., Orange, had five months
left to .uve of a 1957 auto tbtft
conviction.
Rosetta Mj:Clintlck,
Jn Fullerton.
24, wa1 wailiftg
The wait may be far longer. 1
Sometime Monday evening, the lanky
barber from Bee Branch, Ark., slipped
away from a minimum 1ecurity area
outside the walls of the bi& pink fortre11
by. San Franel•co Bay.
"I don't know what would have made
him "do JI," Mis! McCUntlct said
Wednesday.
"I had aomething to take care or
that couldn't wait," Harvey to Id
nporters after beifll arraigned the
same day in Marin County Municipal
Court.
He b held in lieu of $200,000 bail
From Page 1
NIXON ASSESSMENT .. ' '
Vietnam,.CambodJa and Laos, including
a few Viet Cont in Cambodia.
11Enemy intectkms and capablliliea in
Indochina will pose some hard choices
about the deployment of allied troops
as we pursue our withdrawals,'' he
continued, and North Vietnamese actions
in Laos and Cambodia aiuJd require
high levels of Amerlcan assistance and
air operations in order to further
VietnamiiaUon and our withdrawals.
His preview suggested that with the
Vietnamese troop strength in Indochina
lhe progressive withdrawal of U.S. forw
may be accompanied by high I e v e I s
of military activity, particularly the
utenslve use of American air support.
The theme of frustration I n
peacemaking and danger ln world
ainditions pervaded other &tttJom of
the massive report.
Noting the Soviet Union'• po.,,·er
position In the Middle East, the President
said any great naUonal effort tn dominate
the area would "increase the dangtt
to wc~ld peace." The United States would
OAANGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
01tAfrlG£ COAST PUllllHING COM,AN't
Robert N. w,,d
Prn:d•U I nd """'"""'
J•<1r: •· Curley \lk o l"n:slO..,t ,,,. G.w•I M_,..
Tho111•" K•o.,JI
Editor
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Colhl Mn• OHie•
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\
not allow it to succeed, Nixon stated.
In the nuclear anM race, he told
Congress and the naUon that what he
termed greatly increased Soviet power
rouJd tempt Moscow into bolder and
more dangerous probing of the West.
He also 18.id t:1e United Statea wo111d
like to begin improving relations wUh
mainland China, but that nation continues
"to cast us in the devil's role."
Nixon told the American ~pie that
he was trying to shape a new, less
burdensome policy line for the United
States in world affairs. He appealed
for understanding and perhaps argued
against any new swing into American
boiationlsm.
"The American people have grown
somewhat weary of 25 years of
international burdens," Nixon said, "But
we cannot let the pendulum swing In
the other direction. sweeping us toward
an isolationism which could be a.s
disastrous as excessive zeal ."
In his discussion of Indochina, the
President touched on the military
situation. He declared that in spite of
heavy loS!ies the North Vietnamese stUI
pose a "considerable ·trueat" to the first
and second (the northern) military
regions of South Vietnam.
Alternatively, the North Vietn1mese
forces step up pressure agalnst the
Cambodian government -or,
presumably, they could work into
expanded operattons in Laos. Nixon said
that in Cambodia and Laos Hanoi bas
two aims:
"First, and primarily, to use them
as infiltraUon routes, staging bases. and
sanctuaries for attacks against South
Vietnam. Secondly, to er~
governmental controls in order to aid
their effort.I in South Vietnam and
perhaps take over t.aa1 and Cambodia
themselves .''
However, Niitoo erpressed confidence
that even without help from American
ground ccombat troops, Laos and
Cambodia can withstand eHorts to
destroy thtm.
"We believe thal the two 1overnrnents
can sUrVlve throu&h their own tffortl.
our various kinda of assistance, and
that of other friends. We look to them
to shoulder the primary combat
responsiblUUes for their own dertnst.''
Fro"' Pqe I
CHASE •..
make his ucape, lnvatigatora said.
"He was botUtd up In traf(lc at H1rbor
BouJevard arid Wll1<m Strett, so be
wheeled into the Union Stalklil there.
jumped out and threw up hi• hand•
a11inst the nof of the car," 11 Id
Detective Frederiksen.
No abotl wtre fired and Out.lemz
was talcon Into cualody without fw1ber
lncideoL
. --·
set by Judge Peter A. Smith, on charges
of kidnaping, armed robbery and felony
escape.
Preliminary hearing was set for ~tarch
3, while a public defender was assigned
to the case, although Harvey asked to
represent himself.
Harvey has been identified by the
wife of a Novato poliei!man and her
friend as the barefoot escapee who
abducted them at 9:47 p.m. Monday,
·along with the officer's two children.
Mrs. Gary Staru;field, 30, son Robert,
fi, and daughter Suianne, 4 months, were
finally released unharmed 12 hours later
on Old Highway 99 in Bakersfield near
a cafe.
She feared their bodies might bt found
beside some lonely road, but said the
suspect's tenderness and concern toward
the children was reassuring.
He stopped once - a dangerous
decision for an escaped convict holding
a lawman's wife and children hostage
-to get candy for Bobby and milk
for the baby.
Continuing oo to Orange ((lunty, where
the statewide manhunt wu to end only
block& from Miss McCllntick '.!
apartment, Harvey released 1-trs. Cheryl
Smith, 23, in Anaheim.
"It wu the most terrifying 13 hours
of my Uft," the weery young dental
assistant said.
Police anticipating Harwy'.! arrival
picked up his trail by motorcycle and
patrol car, touching off a franti c chase
in which one .!hot was fired before
his capture.
MiN McClintick said she had expected
to marry Harvey after his parole but
received no mail for so long she feared
he was brooding over it.
"I dldn;t want to force him to do
somethi ng against his will or feel I
was pushing hbn. So I wrote and told
him he didn't have to marry me when
he got out." .!he explained.
Tom and shredded note paper found
in Harvey's personal effects after he
was found missing at a 10 p.m. bedcheck
gave San Quentin authorities a clue.
''The only thing I can imagine is
that he misunderstood," she said.
Miss McClintick said shortly after the
\1alentine giving him hls option or
romantic freedom -he still had the
fact of his bleak daily life for fi ve
months -she learned of a rumor that
she had married.
From Page 1
LAOS ...
Vietnamese drive into Laos began Feb.
8.
The South Vietnamese said that three
fire support basts and three field
positions in Laos were hit by enemy
rockets, mortar and recoilless rifle fire.
Casualties were described as light.
The tanks reported ustd In the attack
on Hill 31 were believed to be PT76s,
a Soviet-made light amphibious type.
It was the first time enemy tank s
have been reported employed in the
current Laos campaign, a1though South
Vietnamese spokesmen said earlier that
air and artillery strikes had destroyed
a dozen tanks of this type inside LaOI.
In an interview with Peter A. Jay
of tbe Washington Post, Abrams
described the campaign in Laos as
critical to the U.S. troop withdrawal
proaram but added that its success or
failure will not be appan!nt before next
fall.
Abrams said if there is no significant
enemy military effort in South Vietnam
after the rainy season ends In July
and be.fore the Ociobtt pruldentlal
elections in South Vietnam then the
operation can be counted a success.
Abrams lnsisted the operation had a
limited objective. the destrucUon of
enemy supply stockpUts to prevent a
1971 offensive In the northern provicts
of South Vietnam. He said it never
was Intended to seal off lht Ho Chi
,.1inh trail.
He then went to tell his wife waiting
in their station wagon of the discovery.
Blackwell said Tina apparently died
in lhe anow, that reached three feet,
the night Peterson and 10 children -
seven of them Tina's brothers and sisters
-had driven home from the outing
without her. Mrs. Peterson and two
of thtlr 10 children bad stayed at home.
Peteraon explained that he had put
Tina ln the family station wagon as
lhe group prepared to leave at 4:30
p.m. and then went for the other
children. He said no one noticed that
she had gotten out of the car before
the others got in.
Deputies explained that Tina, who was
wearing only shoes, socb, a sweater
and trousers in the area where the
Radio DJ's Joke
About Big Quake
Tickles Few Ribs
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A rumor
that a disastrou.! earthquake would hit
the San Fernando Valley today started
as a radio disc jockey's joke and ha s
no substan~ in fact, experts said.
The quake prediction was retracted.
But rumors provoked by the report
prompted Loa Angeles Police Otief
Edward Davis to issue a sharp public
disclaimer. saying earthquakes cannot
be predicted.
Davis said be and Mayor Sam Yorty
consulted with eminent seismologist Dr.
Charles Richter. originator of the Richter
Scale of earthquake intensity and ·were
assured. "any such prediction is sheer
poppycock.''
Dick Whittington. a KGIL DJ with
a predilection for stunts, had phoned a
woman while he was on the air
\\'ednesday. identifying her as a
prominent forecaster of the future. She
predicted that early today a major quake
v.·ould rock the San Fernando Valley,
the area hit hardest by the Feb. I
quake . which left 64 dead and millions
of dollars of damage.
"Those who knew Dick knew he was
just puttlnR them on," said KGIL general
manager Stan Warwick, "because the
rest of the conversation was obviouslv
ridiculous. But many people only beard
the beginning."
Mrs. Peggy Willingham said she was
doing the wash at 537 W. !Ith St., about
noon when a lone man wandered ln look·
ing around, then grabbed her handbag.
Running out. carrying the purse like a
football , he jumpe<t into the dl.stinctive
automobile with another man and two
females, police said, but witnesses ob-
tained the lictnse number.
Huttting the eetaway car wit.b police
helicopter and patrol units, officers said.
Detectlve Sgt. Cliff McBride found it and
forced it to the curb at 2999 Mendoza
Drive .
Mrs. Willingham's purse was on the
floor, while the '6 it contained was mis·
sing, police said.
Booked for investigation or burglary
were the disab!M driver, Kinny L. Cragg,
19, of ldyllwild and Douglas F. Felgar,
23. of 3202 Minnesota Ave., Cost.a Mesa .
Burglary charges are brought when an
arrestee is suspected of entering a build·
ing with prior intent to steal.
Man Sentenced
In Kidnaping
Of Mesa Couple
A Laguna Beach man waived hi.s
Orange County Superior · ((lurt trial
Wednesday and pleaded gullty to
kidnaping charges filed shortly afttr he
abducted a young Cosla Mesa couple
at gunpoint.
Judge Byron K. McMillan sentenced
\Villard Larry Partee, 34, of 1464
Glenneyre St., to one to 25 years in
state prison and vacated the scheduled
tria.I date of March I.
Partee, a parole violater, kidnaped
Mary Lou Palenik, 21, and Ralph H.
Johnson. 22, both of 313 \V. 17th St.,
Costa ~Jesa, last Dec. 5 as the couple
thumbed a ride on Laguna Canyon Road.
Partee picked them up but pushed
Johnson cut of the auto near Orange
County Airport and then headed south
with Miss Palenik still a prisoner in
his car.
Johnson phontd police and San
Clemente officers spotted Partee's piclrup
truck 45 minutes later 011 El Camino
Real at Via Socorro. Partee was arrested
and Miss Palenik, who was unharmed,
returned to her home.
One t8undromat patron was a 19-year·
old girl among members of the new youth
phenomena called Jesus Freaks.
She told in her written account or the
in cident that she ga ve the handsome
young purse s111atch suspect a sUMy, sis·
terly, Christian smile when be entered.
"He didn't take my purse, praise the
Lord," she wrote in the report.
"God bless you,'' the young lady COO·
eluded.
From Pa9e 1
REGENTS .•.
allowed Carter to buy a lifetime right
to occupy a Los Angeles residence. It
was criticized by the committee "on
the grounds that the potential benefit
to Regenl Carter exceeded the potential
benefit to the university."
A third disputed transaction Involved
the Irvine Company.
Carter is a director of the Irvine
Foundation while another regent, William
French Smith. belongs to the law firm
representing the Irvine Company.
The aimmittee noted the university
said "neither Regent Smith nor Re1ent
Carter _had participated nor intended
to participate in decisions afieclini the
Irvine Company."
The Irvine Company donated 1,000
acrea to UC as a gift Iowa.rd developmtt1t
of a university campus. Al the time
of tbe gilt lhe company and the
university agreed on a plan for
development of a 10,000 acre clly
surrounding the campus.
''A number of regents have fell thJt
the entire plan for development around
the UC Irvine campus was an area
for potential conflict of interest by tht
regents," states the report.
The auditor general said that I! Smith.
Governor Regan 's personal attorney. or
Carter "participated in the decisions
affecting this area they may be guilty
of impropriety."
Phosphate Ban Asked
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Forty House
members said today they would Jntroduc1
legislation tha t would outlaw phosphates
in detergents produced after June 30,
1973, and ban other ingredients lllo
found to cause waler pollution.
A Nylon
Shag
That's
Young 1n
Looks, and
Young m
Price!
9.95 Sq. YD.
IF YOU CAN'T
COME IN-CALL
646-0215
for an expert
carpet
consultant
who \\1lll
come to
your home
with samples
without any
obligation
to youl
H.J.GARRETT fURNITtJRE Adminbtrallon sources In Washington
have sakt one m1in aim of the operation
In Laos is to destroy stockpilts that
might be wtd nett year at a Uma
when the withdrawal of U.S. forces Is ntarlnJ Its nn1I stages. PROFESSIONAL ll Is HARBOR ILVD.
The South Vietnamt,. have reported INTERIOR DESIGNERS Opto Moo., Tllln. & Fri. hn. COS TA MESA, CALIF.
seizing or destroying bu1e 1t«ta ol 644.0275 M6.0276
mun!Uons and auppUu. "-------------------------------------!
'.
,.. _ ...
!
Saddlehaek
EDITION
:VOC. 64, NO. 48, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES
N.V. Stocks
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25, ·j971 TEN CENTS
Strict Controls on Environment Stressed
Slrict environmental controls art the
only way to eliminate ugliness and
protect a city's heritage.
That's what Edward Carson Beale,
architect and planner, told members of
the San Juan Capistrano Chamber of
Commeret Wednesday.
Praising the city's efforts to prepare
for the future, Beale ouUined the
necessity for controlled growth and ways
in which it can be accomplished.
"First you should deline you r
objectiv~. What is a d e s l r a b I e
environment?
"It is functional. healthy and
CQmfortable , adaptable to its site," said
Beale.
DeaJing first with function , Beale said
a desirable environment meets the needs
of its community, provides industrial
and commercial ateas, a d e q u a t e
circulation J)'Stems for transportation,
Tax Hike Warned
Gloomy Finance
Picture Painted
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Legislative
Analyst A. Alan Post says the financial
condition of state government now "is
even more serious" than when Gov.
Ronald Reagan first came to offiti!.
The Legislature's nonpartisan fiscal
watchdog warns that the state will run
short of cash next fall. some government
programs are underfunded and a tax
increase may be necessary.
Soon after Reagan replaced Democrat
Edmund G. Brown in 1967 the new
governor told Californians in a statewide
telecast that:
But Post did say the picture is even
darker than four years ago and
emphasized that Reagan's 56.73 billion
budget proposal for the next fiscal year
can only be balanced by sharp spending
reductions, a tax increase or a
combination of both.
He pointed out that the state -hard
hit by sluggish recession-era tax revenues
-is spending $277.4 million more than
it i.!1 taking in and expects to end the
fiscal year June 30 with a $124.$ million
deficit. "Not since the bleak days of the
depression have we faced sucll a dark The veteran money watcher said this
picture. • .our state has been looted ''has arious implications" for next
and drained of its financial resources year's budget. He noted the last time
in a manner unique in our history." the state faced a similar situation was
Reagan then pushed through a SI billion in 1967.
statewide tax increase -the major ''This situation," he said, "is even
legislative accomplishment of bis first more serious.''
term -and blamed Democrats for "It is not yet clear how the (next)
ma kin& it necessary. budget ii to ~ funded,,.._ be explained.
'fhe economy-minded govemor-11ow "Cash needs cannot be met from regular
iays· he is "unalterably oppgsed" to -i>orrowlng sources. , .and new taxes
another tax hike and Post,' in 6ls annual or · special outsidi b o r r o w I n g
budget report to the Le c is I at u re arrangements will have to be resorted
Wednesday, dld not recommend one. to."
San Clemente Getting Van
F'or Newspaper Recycling
A donated bin on wheels will arrive
in San Clemente sometime Friday for
a month-long stay at a supennarket
parking lot in a pilot newspaper recycling
program.
City Manager Ken Carr said the van,
donated for a month by the Garden
State Paper Company of Pomona, will
remain at the Mark.et Basket parking
lot.
If Lhe effort is successful through the
month of March, he said, the newspaper
reclamation drive urged by geveral local
WHO'S YOUR
OSCAR PICK?
The polls are open for national volinl
in the "Oscar Derby." For your chance
to vote in the DAILY PILOT ''election''
and, perhaps. go to dinner with your
favorite stars. see the ballot today on
Page 14.
Orufe Cout
Weather
Gusty winds under clear skiea
are the ingredients for Friday's
weather menu, with coastal tern}>'
eraturei'I quitting at 60 and inland
mercury registering 64 degree$.
INSmE TODAY
Ora.nge County $Uptnrisot1
ha ve approvtd o hum.on relo·
tWns commission for the coun-
ty, but the commission must
prove its worth within the year,
Page 12.
C•llfol'lll1 " ..... ...
("-di~ u, " M1 .... I l'VJl4t " Ckottlllet ••• HatWttl ·-.. ._ .. H Ot'l11141 C.wtr " ,,..,_.. .. '""'"' "'""' u
Otl rlil Htllcts " ·-u,,, ....... " Slldl Mlr11tli n.u .. , ....... ., ... • ·-H .. ...,....._"' ... ....... ... ·-,.,, WM-• -.. .._.,, Htws 11·1t ... '-'""" ,, w"" -••
ecology groups would continue.
Garden, State, one of California 's
lar1est recycling firms, products fresh
rolls of newsprint from tom of discarded
newspapers.
Spokesmen for San Clemente 's
Backyard Ecology Group, one of the
organii.ations which has urged the
project, said the donation by Garden
State was noteworthy because of the
reetat drop in the demand {or cast-o£f
paper.
Garden State offered the bin and $5
a ton for all the paper collected iD
the project. The goiDg rate for newsprint
has dropped from a high of S25 a ton,
before the recycling issue grew, to $S
today. ·
In fact, the prices dropped to a point
where tht City of Newport Beach,
collecting old newspapers under a p~ot
program of its own, recently abandoned
the plan because no one would buy
the old paper,
To assist in the active drive to collect
the paper in San Clemente, an estimated
25 high school students have volunteered
to assist -possibly in keeping lhe
area around the bin clean. They also
might join in stacking the hundrtdJ
or pounds of newsprint inside the
receptacle.
Tennis Tourney
Set for Viejo
School Chi1dren
A tennJs tournament for all childrf!n
in the San Joaquin Elementary School
District 1II gradell one through eight
It being plonned for Morclr6 and 7.
Tbe event will take place at the Mission
Viejo Hl&h School tennia c:ourU and
will be for slnglol only. .
Entrier ore $2 and m d .. by March
3. Checkl: are to be made payable to
the Mission Viejo High School Aasoclated
Student Body and can be• mailed to
TcMls Tournament. 25678 Via Vlento,
Mission· Viejo, 92875.
Match times can be scheduled by
calling &17-6083 after $ p.m. on Friday,
March 5 .
Events will be one per player and
gred<s lour through ei(!!lt will be
separated into cHvlslons for boya and
slrlt.
space for privacy and indepetidence.
controlled densities, parks and recreation
areas and "breathing space."
Beale used Palos Verdes, hif' own
community, to illustrate. He said out
of 3,200 acres there are 800 acres for
parks, trails and schools, 750 for public
roads and rights of way, sev~n for
commercial use, none for industrial use,
and room for 4,780 homesites.
"It ls a highly restricted community,"
•
said Beale. "There are b e i g h t
regulations, architectural re£ulations ,
even outdoor color schemes must be
approved."
Beale said a desirable community is
also one that is healthy and comfortable.
Considerations must be made for
accident prevention, smog control, wind
direction, noise levels and green belts
lo provide peaetful surroundings.
Adaptability to site is a further
consideration . Tech n i ca I information
must be available on climal.e, soils,
topography and native vegetation.
.. Ail these thing s can be accomplished
lhrough p I a n n i n g and proper
restrictions," he said.
Commenting on San Juan's attempl
to retain its Spanish heritage, Beale
said the answer is strict zoning.
"Americans need to relate to history.
The/ luckiest cities are those like your
own which have a history to preserve."
to exert itseU and demand quality, evtn
to ~xert itself and demand quality, even
from developers and corpora~ions, and
not to be afraid of creativity.
"Tackle the gas statiorui, a~nts.
parking lots, street signs, mail boxes,
trash cans. clocks, telephone booths.
drinking fountains. None of these things-
need to be ugly."
IXOll a s ar
ar
Down the
Mission
Trail
YMCA Sets Goal
• j; .,.-i ) ~ .,., ... f
In Saddleback
SADDLEBACK VALLEY - A goal
of $28.500 bas been set by the Saddleback
Valley YMCA which launched Jts
membership drive this Week.
The money will be used for operating
expenses and will be Cilllected from
residentiaJ areas in Saldleback Valley
and Leisure World.
Advanced gifts will include $6,000. The
rest will be collected from the two
areas. Ch.airmen for the drive include
Willi.a Hamrick and Joe Peterson, El
Toro, and Joe Adam:i: and Craig Por&t
for Mission Viejo.
e C•n Collection
LAKE FOREST -Wondering what
to do with all those alumlllum soft
drink and beer cans that take up 10
much room in your trash?
Members of the Lake Forest Teen
Club would like you to save them.
The teens will pick them up at a
later date. It's all part of an ecology
lrive to redeem the cans for future
use.
e Pla11 Premieres
CAPISTRANO HIGHLANDS -An
original even act play will be presented
at Valencia Elementary School Saturday.
The melodrama will begin at 7:30
p.m. It is entitled The Perils of Percival
P. Penniless and was written by Sid
'Nutter.
The event ls being sponsored by the
Capistrano Highlands Teen Association.
Admission Is 75 cents and will be placed
in the associaUon'1 treasury.
Cinoo de Mayo
Festival Group
Open to Ideas
Plans are being drawn early for
Mission Viejo'• armual Cinco de Mayo
Festival.
Groups planning to reserve a booth
at the aCUvlty have until March 9 lo
file appllcatkms with booth chalnnan,
Bill Gardner, 24361 Chrlsanta Drive,
Mlstlon Viejo.
This year"• fourth annual event will
tate· place on May 2 at Mission Viejo
High School. It It annually «"::dinated
by the bigh school's Parent.Tiacher
Organlt.atioo.
Entertainment, Mexican food, games.
art dl.n>lays, a parade, amusem~t
booths, bike cont.est and band "battle"
were part of Jut year'• fiesta. Bud
Gonzlles, entertainment chairman, Is
oeen to suggestions. Anyone with bright
lflf'a' may call IJlm 1t 837-2095.
The entire Saddleback Valley has been
invited to participate 1II thil year'•
adivllj<.
(
• 01ce
Sound of Music . . .
Cathie Christie is shown in dress rehearsal for the San Clemente High
School production of "Sound Of Music." She plays Mother Abbott.
The musical will begin in Triton Center at 8 p.m. Friday and Satur·
day and at the same days and times the following weekend.
Planning Board Mum
On Clemente Rezoning
In what is an apparent neutral stand,
San Clemente planning commissioners
could draw no recommendation to
councilmen Wednesday on a plan to
rezone about 10 acres of prime land
once earmarked for a new hospital.
The only motion to come from
extensive discussion Qn the request by
the new owners of the parcel across
from civic center -a move to approve
lhe rezoning for apartment usage -
failed by a 2-3 vote. Commissioners then
went to the next item.
The fallure of the vole, according to
city Attorney F. MacKenzie Brown,
means that applicants Alfred E. Mann
and C. T. DeCinces, will go before
councilmen next week lo seek official
approval of the request.
The request to rezone the land from
"unclassified" to R-3G, would allow tbe
construction of 289 apartment units with
a maximum hei&ht of three stories of
3S feet.
Fiesta Week Project
ea
President
Gives State
Of World
By JOHN M. IDGBTOWEB
WASHINGTON (AP) -President
Nixon today charged Hanoi w i t b
broadening the Vietnam war Into aa
Indochina conflict Mid predicted tha
United States and its allies will have
more hard choices in combatting possible
new enemy thrusts ill South Vietnam,
Cambodia and Laos.
In a globe-ranging report officially
directed to Congress but aimed at the
nation and the rest of the world, Nixon
keyed his message to a quest for "&
full generation of peace" this century.
But, he said, "If winding down the
war is my greatest satisfaction in
Ioreign policy, the failure to end it
Ls my deepest disappointment.''
He pledged to continue the winding
down, the U.S. troop withdrawal frora
South Vietnam. But in stark contrast
to his declared global peace goal his
projection for Indochina emphasized the
broadened war and increased American
aid and air support for allied iround
forces.
The 65,000 word report. covering 180
pages and accompanied by a nationwide
radio speech was the second Nixon report
on the role of the United States in
world affairs since he took office.
Patterned after the constitutionally
mandated State of the Union message,
this White House overview of the world
situation disclosed no new U.S. policy
departures. .
.But details were ouUined and it gave
N1xo~ an ~pportunity to tell the story
of his foreign and strategic policies at
midpassage between the 1968 and 1972
elections. ·
Nixon sent the report, which has been
In preparation for several months, to
Congress under the title, "United States
Foreign Policy for the 1970s -Building
for Peace."
In discussing the Indochina crisis at
cons!de!a~le detail Nixon gave a deeply
pess1m1st1c report about the pr<>&pects
for a negotiated settlement.
He had ••frMkly expected'' some kind
of actlon from the North Vietnamese.
Viet Cong side last year. Nilon stated,
when he expanded political prlnciplell
far a settlement and a p p o 1 n t e d
.ambassador David Bruce as peace
negotiator.
Whiskers Growing in Capo
Beards are sprouting on the faces
of itchy San Juan Capistrano merchants,
anxious to keep out or the "pokey"
during Fiesta Week, Marth U through
20 ..
The "hairiest man in town'' conte11t
will take place. on Saturday, March 13
at t p.m. at the donut $hOp on the
corner of Camino Capistrano and Ortega
highway.
The first event of the aMuaJ Fiesta
de Ls& GoloDdriMs, the cont.est will
precede a week; or events that will
culminate with the 13th annual piirade
OD• Salurdaf, March lil.
(
Judging of . the beards which can be
shaggy or well &haped, mustaches,
goaiets arid side burns wlll result in
a pri.Ze for the ·growth with 'the m'ost
character. T1le winner will be .announcetl
at the post J)8rade awards cert]T\Ot\Y
immediately after the parade-on March
20.
Tr•ditiooally during Fiesta Week the
11ssocl1tion's "t1heriff'' (who will be Al
Jimenez thJ.s year) makes sure that
merchants have grown or rented a bit
of fuzz for their faces.
Those without are assessed. $1 or
thrown in the "pokey"-an old metal
jail ceu located In fr<lnl ol lh• bordwar•
t
store in the E, Adobe Plaza. Tb6 cell
was used tn earnest in Sao Juan
Clplstiano around 1860.
The money collected is donated to
the FiMt.a Assooiallon, treasury to help
pay tor parade expenses and ' other
ecUvitits sponsored by the &f'OUP during
the yu.r.
Fines are also levied by sheriff on
those who do not wear Mexican, Western •
or early California coaa.rmes. But il'i
an in run and most merchants go along
with the activities which once • JeM
herald the return of the awlllon on
March 11.
•
I
(
I
% DAILY PILOT SC Thur~. ~llliaai1 25, 1971
Mrs. I-Iulse 'Paranoid'
PsychiatriSt _Ci.tes Eff-ect on Son
By Tol\I 9AJU.E'y
Of ._ Dtltr P'lltf $1•N
Arthur Craig "Moose'' Hulse's mother
wu dtlcrlbed today during the Orange
County Superior court murder trial of
her IOD as a "paranoid schizopbrenlo''
who beard voices from space and
believed she was under the influence
cl Telstar.
Dr. David Geddes told the jury In
Judge Ronald O'ooklhank'1 courtroom
that Mn. Arthur Hulse Sr. bad a record
of mental illness daUng back to when
&be was 18 and there was "no doubt"
ber form of insanity bad a big effect
oo tbe mmtal development of bet 16-
yur-old aon.
Tiie Santa Ana psychiatrist quoted Mrs.
Hulse u u)'inj: that ahe uw the world
as "squares of life" and that when
each square Is occupied by a member
of the PTA the war in Vietnam will
end.
She also believed, be sltid, tbat TeJstar
-the 1p a ce'-born _,,,11111o&t1 .. 1
satilllte --Miit down plctum lo lier
and wu allo sonwbow involvtd with
the many voices. that spoke t" her from
space.
Dr. Geddes is the first defense witness
in the Hulge trial. The youth is being
tried for the murder last June 1 of
service station attendant Jerry Wayne
Clrlln, 21, of Santa Ana.
He must eventually face trial on charge
of being an accessory to the murder last
June : of Mission Viejo teacher Florence
Nancy Brown who was hacked to death
in an Irvtne orange grove.
Two psychiatrists called by the
prosecution have testified that Hulse was
sane when he used a hatchet to hack
Carlin to death in tbe restroom of the
gas station.
1be youth spent most of Wednesday
at the Orange County Medical Center
undergoing examination on procedures
described · 8' brain wave test!. The
results of lbose testa were not available
Ill~ lllOlt\llll. ' llWlt bas loallfiod from Ille wllllttl
boz tllel he tool: buie quanUtles ol
drugs and drlnk before the Carlln kOUng
and tbat an unremembered remark by
the young attendant prompted hlrn to
pull the hatchet from his belt and "lay
it on" Carlin.
The jury has also heard the youth's
recorded confession, taped by Santa Ana
police Investigators wben they arrested
Hulse a month after the Carlin murder.
HuJse has identified his companion In
that killing as Steven Craig Hurd, 20,
a transient, who is accused of both
the Carlin and Brown murdtrs.
Investigators identify Hurd as the
leader of the drug u!ing band which
devoured portions of the 31·year~ld
woman's body in satan worshiping rites
before burying it near the Ortega
Highway.
Hurd bas been declared to be sane
and able to fa ce trial March 22 on
the dual charges,
Reward Offered Manson, Gj.rls
Shout Down
Linda Kasabian $5,000 on Head of Boy's Slayer
A $5,000 reward has been offered for information leading to the arrest
and conviction of lhe slayer of Mission Viejo gas station attendant Douglas
Ray Wheat Jr .. 17, who died Saturday.
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Charles
~fanson and his three w o m en
codefendants shouted angrily at star
prosecution witness Linda Kasabian
Wednesday when the pigtailed blonde
wouJd not go along with their story
that MaDBOn is blameless in the Tate-
LaBlanca murders.
\Vheat had been paralyzed and UDable to talk since he was shot in the back
of lhe head in the Jan. 30 holdup that netted the slayer less than $100.
The reward has been offered by the Atlantic Richfield Company. owner
of the station at tbe San Diego Freeway and La Paz Road in Mission Viejo.
1be murdered boy wu the son of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Ray Wheat Sr.,
or 24511 Satuma Drive, MJssk:ln Viejo. Mrs. Kaaablan, 23, had been brolJiht
back from New Hamp1hire by Manson's
lawyer, Irving Kanarek, but she stuck
calmly to her testimony six months ago
thal lhe hippie leader ordered both the
Tate and LaBianca murders.
The shertff's department Aid today they are without clues In their in·
vesUgatlon ol the case.
Radio DJ's Joke
About Big Quake
Tickles Few Ribs
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A rumor
that a disastrous earthquake would hit
the San Fernando Valley today started
as a radio d1lc jockey's joke and baa
DO substance iii' facl, experts said.
The quake prediction was retracted.
But rumort provoked by the report
prompted Los Angeles Police Olio!
Edw~ Davis to issue a aharp public
dlsclalmer, saylD& earthquakes c11111oi
be predicted.
Davla aald be and Mayor Sam Yorty ConauJlad wlth emlMol !elllllotogllt Dr.
OtarJea Richter, ottgfnaCor ol the Richter
Scale of earthquake Intensity and were
assured,I "any: such prediction is sheer
poppycock."
Dlclt WblltlJlilon, a KGIL DJ with
a predl.lecUon for 1twita1 had phoned a
woman. wlille be wu on the air
Wednesday, ldenUfying her IS a
prominent forecaster of the future. She
predicted that early today.a major quake
would rock the Sin P'emando Valley,
the area hit hardest. by the Feb. 51
quake, which left N dead and millions
of dollars of damage.
"Those who knew Dick knew be wu
just putting them on," alld KGIL 1ener1l
manager Stan Warwick, "be:caUte tbe
rest of tbe conversaUon was obviously
ridiculous. But many people only beard
the beginning."
Vatican Signs Treaty
WASIUNGTON (API -Archbishop
Lull! Raimondi, Aposlollc Dele111e lo
the United States, today 1lgned the
nuclear non-prollleratlon treaty on behaU
of the Vatican.
DAllY PILOT
QMMa;I COAST ruaUSHIMO COMl'Nft
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PROORAMM!D FOR TV
Fading Guru Loary
Leary Interview
Slated for KCET
Over Weekend
A special videotaped interview In which
Dr. Timothy Leary dlsavow1 drug use
will be carried t~·ice this weekend by
Los Angeles' KCET Channel 2 8
educational station.
The one-hour show by underground
filmmaker Glen Angell, who spent four
days \vith the Lea·rys and Black Panther
leaders exiled in Algiers, will displ ace
regular fare.
Friday It will be &een at 9 p.m.
and again at a p.m. Sunday. preceded
by an introduction featuring Angell and
sister staUon newsnl~n Joe Russin , of
KQED, San FranolscO.
Black Panther Minister of Inrormatlon
Eldridge Cleaver, who had Dr. Leary
clamped under recolutionary arrest last
month to climax a growing philosophical
rift. will also be seen.
Leary now says drugs a re
Inappropriate tothe re vo I u tiona r y
struggle in America, which fellow
conspirator Cleaver calls Babylon .
Due to the Friday schedule change,
the David Su!!kind Show will belfn al
10 p.m., and The Advocates will not
be shown, while Sunday, The Great
American Dream Machine will start at
6:SO and The World We Live Jn will
be dropped.
She was granted complete immunity
Jn exchange for her testimony for the
state. M 1he told the jllfy that the
three women Ued in their stories
absolving Manson, Susan Atkins auddenly
sbouted:
"You only got off by putting It on
Mamon. Admit it!"
"Why doo 't you tell your part?" called
out Patrlcla Krenwlnkel.
Mra. ~asabian turned in the witnes~
chair and looked at the defendants.
''I have," she said. "Why don't you
tell your part?"
Theo, turnlq direeUy lo !lllll!IOn, ahe
oald :
"Why don't you tell your part?"
''Live with tt -it's on your face,''
cried Manton.
"Yes, lt'1 heavy," Mrs. Kasablan said.
''The whole Ullnl Ls· Insane."
Kanarek Wed her what she meant
1boot II being lnune.
'1l've never been touched by anything
like thla before and It's hard to relate
after being out for awhile. To be hue
again b strange, like a dream."
Judie Charles H. Older ordered the
defendants to be allent or be removed
lmmedlately from the courtroom. A few
minutes later Mn. Kaaablan was
dismissed pmnanenUy aa a witueu and
preaumably she will rttum to her
butband Jnd two children at· their home
nar Milford, N.H.
Mrs. Kuabian waa followed to th e
"ltnw stand by Deputy Dlstrlcl
Attorney Aaron Stovltz.
Stovitz testified that his offi ce made
an agreement with Susan Atkins' I1wyer
that the s.tate would not ask the death
penalty for her if she told the truth
about the k.illin&s before a grand jury.
?-.U1s Atkins did testify before the jury
but ahe subsequently recanted her
"confession" and then told an entirely
different story at the trial last week.
The defense was expected to call later
th is week psychiatrists who will give
their opinions abOut the etfect Of LSD
on the sanity ol the defendanta.
A1111ex Question
Delayed in Capo
AMexation of 135 acrt! on ill northern
perimeter to the city of San Juan
Capistrano bas been delayed until March
10 by the Local A1ency Formation
Commissio n.
The delay was voted in order that
the developer, E. B. Akins of the SOuth
Coast Development Corp. coukl work
out pre-annex zoning with the city.
Akins told the LAFC Wtdnesd•y he
plans to build homes on 109 acre! of
the land which bOrdera on the Rancho
Mission Viejo at Rosenbaum Road.
Commissioners were also concerned
over the fact the annexation will leave
a ple-&haped piece of property to the
aaat 11 a semi island.
Hee Haw Game
Students Ride Donkeys for Funds
Donkey buketball "'ill clatter back t.e1m Will be voluntetr talent.
lo Mlsalon Viejo Hllh School on Mascll Followln( the til~ the donkey1 will
19. leave the Ooor and students will play
Thi Mis&ion Vle)o Key Club will faculty in a regular 1ame.
sponsor the fund-raising event al 7:30 Ticktll will be $1.25 ror adults, 75
p.m. centl for students and 50 cents for
P1ayer1 Jn donkey blakttball htlve their children. They will be on sale at the
game complicated by being mounted on gymnnsium ticket orn~.
donkeys. Otherwise the game la almilar A student dance will be held after
to basketball. the 11me1. Proceeds from tbe evtnJn1
Tht student team will consist or the will help finance aer\lice projecLI of
16 top male ticket sellers and the 1& the key club. Past projects have included
lop ltmalL tlokel. 1eller1. Tbe laculiY landscapln& of the taml)lll and pal!IUni.
"
'
MURDER DEFENDANT
Arthur (MooM) HulM
SA Land Bid
Denied; Suit
Now Last Hope
A lawsuit is probably the only recourse
left to Santa Ana in Its battle to annex
923 acres of Irvine industrial land
the city claims was promised to it in
1963.
The Local Agency Formation
Commission refused \Vedne!day to
rt0pen hearings on the boundary of the
propoaed city of Irvine.
On Feb. 10, the LAFC approved
incorporation of the new 18,145-acre city,
including the disputed property just south
of the Santa Ana Marine Corps Air
Station. .
The Irvine Company has acknowledged
the agreement and did ask the LAFC
to exclude the acreage from the new
city.
Santa Ana protested Wednesday that
LAFC Chairman Louis R. Reinhardt had
"intimidated" CI t y Manager Ca r I
Thornton wben he tried to introduce
a copy or a $15,000 study on the effect
of the Irvine incorporation on Santa
Ana.
This cb1rge against Reinhardt. a
Fullerton city councilman, and other
intimations that the LAFC had not
operated properly on Aug. 10 seemed
to Irritate commissioners.
Commissioner Charles Pearson, of
Anaheim, moved that the petition for
a re-hearing be denied. He was backed
by Reinhardt and Stanley Northrup, a
San Clemente councilman.
Supervisor Robert Battin continued his
stance opposing the Irvine Company by
votlng against the moUon.
Laguna Boys Club
Picks 6 Directors
The board of directors of the Boy1
Club of Laiuna Beacb has been brought
up to lts full quota of 2~ with the
election of six new board members.
Joining the board as directors are
t.frs. Faye Nell, widow of the late Dr.
Edward R. Nell, forme:-p~sldent of
the board; t.lrs. 'I'bom11 M. Ske,lton;
Mrs. Peter Hyun , chairman of Pr1r
Environment People (PEP); retired
Marine Col. William H. Roley; William
Exner of Mission Viejo; and Laguna
Be1ch Fire Chief James Latimer.
Nixon Says
Russ Inch Ahead
In Atom Arsenal··
WASfilNGTON (UPI) -Tile Soviet
Union has surpassed the United States
in some categories of strategic nuclear
weapons and may be preparing for a
"first strike" capability, President Nixon
said today.
He said the Soviet Union overhauled
the United Statts in 1969 In the number
of intercontinental ballistic missiles and
is rapidly gaining in numbers of
1;ubmarine launched ballistic missile!.
"By any standard, we believe the
number of Soviet stragetlc forces fl9W
exceeds the level needed for deterrence,"
Nixon said in his "state of the world"
message. "Even more important than the growth
in numbers has been the change in
the natul't!: of the rorces the USSR chose
to develop and deploy. These forces
include systems -particuJarly the SS9
ICBM with large multiple warhead.! -
v;hcih. if furthe r improved and di!ployed
in sufficient numbers, could be uniquely
suitable for a first strike against our
land-based deterrent forces."
Jn 1965, the United States had 93{
JCBMs and 464 submarine-launched
ballistic missiles compared with 224. and
107 for the Soviet Union. Nixon said
by the t!nd of 1969, the Soviet Union
had 1,109 ICBMs to l,054 for the United
States and in 1970 added 331 more \\o'hile
the United States maintained the same
level.
Last year the United States had 656
submarine-launched balll&tic miulles -
the same as in 1969 -while the Soviet
Union had 350, an increase of 110 over
1969, the President said.
Nixon said, "By the mid 1970s we
expect the Soviets to have a forct of
ballistic missile submarines equal In size
to our own. Furthermore, the Soviet
Union has continued to make significant
qualitative improvements in its strategic
forces. These include new and Improved
versions of their Minuteman size SSll
miMlle, continued testing of multiple
warheads, research and tesUng of ABM
components, and improved air defense
systems."
He said msinland China by the late
1970s probably will have ICBMs "capable
Niguel Residents'
Opinions Sought
Residents of the Lagwia Niguel area
will receive a questionnaire Saturday
from Avco Community Dev e 1 ope rs
soliciting their opinion concerning the
future direcUons of their commwlity.
Avco, which purchased the Laguna
Niguel Corporation in 1970, is mapping
the future growth of the area and is
hoping residents will cooperate by
completing the form. As an added
incenllve to relum the completed
questionnaire, Avco will pay 50 cents
per form to a homeowner's association
of the resident's choice.
The form , which wlll be confidential,
\•;iii include qu1allon1 e on c • r n i n g
recreational facllitlea and p o 1 s i b 1 e
expansion of the existing facilities in
the community.
Phosphate Ban Asked
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Forty House
members said today they would introduce
leglslsllon th at would outlaw phosphates
in detergent! produced after June SO,
1973. and ban other Ingredients also
found to cause water pollution.
or reaching the U.S."
Nixon cautioned that there ha! been
g o m e slowing in SQviet development
of land-based missile launchers. But he
said "The significance of th I a
development ls not clear."
Doctor Says
Calley Sane
In Rebuttal
FT. BENNING, Ga. (AP) -An Army
psychiatrist who followed Lt. William
Calley J r. to the witness stand testified
today be could !ind no evidence that
Calley suffered from "any form of
mental disorder I could think of'' in
the massacre at My Lai.
"One could say the entire incident
is bizarre," ?\-1aj. Henry E. Edwards
replied 10 one question put to him.
He was the first rebuttal witness for
the prosecution. The defense rested
Wednesday after Calley had spent two
days on the witness stand.
Edwards was one of three Walter
Reed Hospital psychiatrists l h a t
constituted a sanity board for Calley.
A second member of the team, Lt.
Col. Franklin G. Jones, followed Edwards
to the witness stand.
Edv.·ards ' t e st i m o n y directly
contradicted that of defense psychiatrists
who said that Calley did indeed have
mental impairment that clouded bis
capacity to premeditate his actions at
My Lai on ~larch 16, 1968. Calley is
charged with murdering 102 villagers
that day.
Edwards answered affirmatively to all
questions touching on whether tbe
lieutenant had the capacity to k n o w
right from wrong, the ability to do
what he knew was right and to form
the speciflc intent to kill.
How did be define the specific intent
to kill?
''That he had the notion ood desire
to end someone's life," Edwards said.
"My opinion is that there was no
Impairment to his m e n t a 1 thought
processes on that day .• .the way he
performed be was responding to cues
.and stimuli around him."
Jn cross-examination, the psychiatrist
wu asked whether the mind could be
conditioned along certain channels, "I'll
say a channel to kill."
The question came in connection with
the ~alled Pavlov experiment In which
dogs were conditioned to respOnd lo
certain stimuli. · ·
Edwards said he had not read the
\\'orks of Pavlov, a Russian. "l don 't
knO\'I that be ever made a n y
commentary, but a person cao be
conditioned to kill," Edwards said.
At another point, the psychiatrist said,
"I believe one can be conditioned." But
be added be did not think it was possible
to condition one section of the mind
without affecting others.
On cross-examination. Edll·ards said
he knew that one witness te1liried Calley
stood at a ditch for one and a half
hours killing people with bis Ml6 rifle.
Q. Do you consider that bizarre?
A. I didn 't consider it bizarre undu
the circumstancs.
Q. Did you consider it unusual?
A. It would be unusual in a noncombat
situation. . .I did not see this aa a
mental disturbance.
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Laguna Beaeh
EDIT ION
Today's Final~
N.Y. Stoeks
YOC 64, NO. 48, l SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, FEBRUA11Y 25, 1971 TEN CENTS
Laguna Council Approve·s Crowd Control Law
By BARBARA KREIBICH
Of IM Dallf ,llM llttt
Laguna Beach's Christmas happening
added several dinner hours lo its toll
Wednesday evening as the City Council
labored and brought forth an urgency
ordinance designed to prevent a
repetition of the event.
Convening at 5 p.m. for adoption of
the ordinance, already revised once by
city attorney Jack Rimel. councilmen
wandered through two hours of legal
confusion and occasionally p o i n t e d
bickering.
Ultimately. a slightly amended urgency
ordinance, effective Immediately, was
adopted unanimously, with promises that
furl.bet modifications could be made
when the matter reappears as a regular
ordinance.
Applyillg to outdoor gatherings of more
than 2,500 persons, the ordinanct details,
in 11 pages, requirements for permits,
fees , insurance. food and water supplies
medical care, lraUie control, security
and other items.
Mrs. Thomasina Cunn, Laguna Beach
chairman of the American Civil Liberties
Union, read a three.page legal analysis
of the ordinance, pointing out sections
that might not stand up to a court
test. The ACLU, she said, had supported
Tax Hike lfarned
Gloomy Finance
Picture Painted
SACRAMENTO (UP I) -Legislative
Analyst A. Alan Post says the financial
condition of state government now "is
even more serious" than when Gov.
Ronald Reagan first came to office.
The Legislature's nonpartisan fiscal
watchdog warns that the state will run
short of cash next fall. some government
programs are underfunded and a tax
increase may be necessary.
Soon after Reagan replaced Democrat
Edmund G. Brown in 1967 the new
governor told Californiam in a statewide
telecast that:
"Not since the bleak. days of the
deprwion hav! we faced such a dark
picture. • .our state has been looted
and drained of its financial resources
in a manner unique in our history."
Reagan then pushed through a $1 billion
statewide tax increase -the major
JegislaUve accomplishment of his first
term -and blamed Democrats for
making it necessary.
Niguel Citizens
Ask Extension
Of Bus Routes
The Laguna Niguel Homeowners and
Community Association has asked the
city of Laguna Beach t.o consider
e1tending its present one bus public
transportation has asked the city ot
Laguna Beach to consider extending its
present one bU! public transportation
system to the Laguna Niguel shopping
center.
In a lettet to the city council, the
directors of the homeowner group pointed
out that the number of homes in the
Laguna Niguel area is now 1,411 and
increasing rapidly with new construction.
Not only is there a need for bus service,
the letter said , but the city of Laguna
Beach could show a profit by extending
the letter said, but the city of Laguna
Beach could show a profit by e1tending
its bus line, which now stops at Monarch
Bay shopping renter. The city bus service
now operates on a defi cit.
The homeowners asked that the line
be extended several miles inland on
Crown Valley Parkway from t be
Monarch Bay area.
Now would be an opportune lime for
such an extension, the group contended,
as the city is currently negotiating for
1 federal grant to expand its bus service
\l.'ith the purchase of more vehicles.
Oruge Coast
Weather
The economy·mlnded &overnor now
says he Ls "unalterably opposed" to
another tax hike and Post, in his annual
budget report to the Legis l atura
Wednesday, did not recommend one.
But Post did say the picture is even
darker than four years ago and
emphasized that Reagan's $6.73 billion
budget proposal for the next fiscal year
can only be balanced by sharp spending
reductions, a tax increase or a
combination of both.
He pointed out that the state -hard
hit by sluggish recession-era tax revenues
-is spending S277.4 million more than
it is taking in and expects to end the
fix1l year J1111t 30 wltll • 1124.S mjllkm
deficit.
The veteran money watcher &aid this
"bas serious implications'' for DeXt
year's budget. He noll:d the last time
the state f1ctd a similar situation was
In 1967.
"This situation," he said, "is even
more serious."
"It ls not yet clear how the (ntxt)
budget is to be funded," be explained.
"Cash needs cannot be met from regular
borrowing sources. • .and new taxes
or special ou t.side b or r o w I n g
arrangements will have to be resorted
lo."
Post said the Feb. 9 Los Angeles
earthquake will have "&11 unknown
impaet" on state revenues, but that
personal lncome and corporation taxes
will be less due to casualty losses aod
that salu tax revenues will rise because
o f repairs to damaged property.
Despite the gloomy fiscal portrait.
Post recommended that Reagan's budget
be increased by a net $18.'J million.
';There are areas in which good public
policy justifies Increases or smaller
reductions than those proposed in the
budget," he 1aid.
Of the increase, $116.2 million would
be spent for a five percent cost..or.Jiving
salary hike for state employes and a
10 percent raise for Unive rsity of
California and state college faculty.
Another $72 million would replace funds
Reagan proposes to wlthdraw from the
teachers' retirement fund to balance his
budget.
Also, $30 mUUon ln new at.ate aid
would go to elementary and secondary
scboob.
WHO'S Y OUR
OSCAR PICK?
The pol!J are open for nallonal voting
in the "Oscar Derby." For )'OUT chance
to vote in the DAILY PILOT "elecUon"
and, perhaps, ao to dinner with your
favorite stars, Rf: the ballot today on
Page 14.
most or the city's action during the
Christmas happening , but warned against
adoption of a law that might be invalid.
Councilman Charlton Boyd objected to
the "negative" tone of the law and
said the city should welcome gatherings
of 1'benign'' young people and only at·
tempt 1o control I.hose who were not be·
nign. He urged that such e\'cnts lbould be
handled by a revised Disaster Councft
as provided in 1953 legislation.
Councilman F..dward Lorr said he
disagreed with everything Boyd had said
except that rock festivals "certainly are
disasters."
Councilman Roy Holm said he wanted
•
no part or seeinl any ordlnance
admlnistertd by anyone but the city
sWf.
Lorr still thought the crowd figure
should be cut to 500. Holm held out
for 2,500, which would put the ave.rage
gathering out of reach of the law, Rimel
said lhe latter figure probably would
hold up heller ln court.
Holm pointed out that the 500 figure
would ax a proposed Greenbelt tour.
for example. (Presumably it would be
difficult lo supply 15 gallons of water
per person and install flush toilets along
the Greenbelt.)
All agreed that 1 to.day advance date
(or applications might be c a 11 e d
discriminatory and settled for 60 days .
Boyd and Holm found tbe $1 million
inaurance requirements exussive. Rimel
commented that municipalities are "real
pigeons for damage suits" if death or
serious injury are involved.
Lorr pointed out the additional risk
at large rock festivals and HOim agreed,
"People did die out there (at the
happening site) and we never bad any-
body die at Irv ine Bowl."
Councilman Peter Ostrander wondered
If city building codes on temporary
construction wo:.ild suffi ce to avert
collapse of a temporary stage "if
IXOD a s
ar
Judge Orders
Prison Term
For K:idnaper
A Laguna Beach man «lived bis
Orange county Supuior court trial
Wednesday and pleaded guilty to
kidnaping charges filed shortly after be
abducted a young Costa Mesa couple
at gunpoint.
Judge Byron K. McMillan sentenced
Willard Larry Partee, 34, of 1484
Glenneyre St., to one to 2S years in
state prison and vacated the scheduled
lrial date of March 1.
Partee, a parole violater, kidnaped
Mary Lou Palenik, 21, ,lllld Ralph H.
Johnson, 22, both of 313 W. 17th St .•
Costa Mesa. last Dec. S as the couple
thumbed a ride on Laguna ·canyon Road.
Partee picked them up but pushed
Johnson out of the auto near Orange
County Airport and then headed aouth
with Miss Palenik still a prisoner in
his car.
Johnson phoned police and San
Clemente officers spotted Partee's pickup
I.ruck 45 minutes later 011 El Camino
Real at Via Socorro. Partee was arrested
and Miss Palenik, who was unharmed,
returned to her home.
Lagunan Killed
By Falling Tree
A SO.year-old man reportedly from
Laguna Beach was killed Wedntsday
by a falling tree while fishing on the
bank of the Clackamu River near
Oregon City, Ore.
Authorities for the Claclramas County
Sheriff's Department idenUfied t h e
vicUm as Robert W. Carcia and said
he was a reSident of Laguna Beach.
Garcia's street addn!ss was not listed
In the report and attempts by the DAILY
PILOT to locate relatives w e r e
unsuccessful.
Garcia waa fishing about 1 milt
northeast of Oregon City Wednesday
afternoon when a tree was blown over
by a strong wind. When the tree fell
across a road. the top of the tree broke
off and tumbled down the river bank,
striking Garcia.
• 01ce
By Phil lntorl1ndl
"I Am Not J1y..,1lklngl I Mor1ly Stoppod Back To
Admlr• the P1intingl"
Solon Asks Lion Hunt Ban
By ROBERT P. LAURENCE
SACRAMENTO !UPI ) -While
Huntley and Brinkley lay quietly on
the floor licking their fore p a w s ,
Assemblyman John Dunlap announced
today be was Introducing ·a bill making
it illegal to hWlt mountain lions in
California.
Huntley and Brinkley were twc> ·s.year.
old male mountain lioni that the
Democratic lawmaker from Nap a
brought to a news conference where
ht announced the legislation.
Dunlap walked into the n e w 1
conference room. petted HunUey for 1
few moments for tbt television camera:.,
then talked to newslnen.
"Anyone with &a «nta for a ta:c and
enough money to buy shell• for his
iun can hunt the ' mountain lion today,••
he 1aJd. "We are aelli!Jg out the mountain
lion dlrt cheap."
The State Department of Fish and
Game estimate:i that California has about
600 mountain lions. Dunlap said the
flgure wu "a guess a Jong time 1go
and remains unverified today, The true
status of the Cllifornia mountain lion
in number5 Is unknown. I would think
we have much Jess than that.
"By the Introduction of this bill, I
propose a maxim of conservation -
when in doubt preaerve. We can alw1y1
destroy later."
No Trace Found
Of Man Reported
Caught on Cliff
Gusty winds under clear skies
are the lngredienl.S for Friday's
weather menu , with coastal temp-
eratures quitting at 60 and inland
mercury registering 64 degrees.
~ Running So Far
Two Laguna Beech youn&aten wbo
~&ht they saw a man jump from
a cliff into the sea sparked • 45 minute
tearch Wednesday evening by firemen
1nd ll(fp1nls, all to no avail.
'
INSWE TODAY
Orangt Count11 supervisors
havt opprovtd o human rclo·
lions commia:sion for the coun-
t11. bui tht commiuion mu.st
provt ilJ worth within tht uear.
Pagt 12.
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Filing Deadline Tonight
With !be filin& period incb1n1 tow1td
the 5 p.m. deadline today, rive retidenll
bad fUed to nm for 1 four·)'tU' term
on the Laguna Beach stbool hoerd .
However, official• at the county
5Uperintendtnt of 9Cbool1 office In Santa
Ana expected a "rush" of candidates
this altemoon. The April 20 election
will decide wbo will fill three seats
on the live member board of trustees
of the Laguna Beach unmed SC!lool
Di1b1ct .
Two of the poab art !our-year letm.I
I
Wlelplred term m1de avaiJlblo by
rul~ 1ruotoe Wlllllm W~en. The
deadline lor ~ far Wlla>1en'1· ... t II
Mard!I.
Nine residents have showed an lnteiut
In runnln1 for one of the three poatUons
by taklng out election peper1 from the
achool distrk:t off!Cf.I. However, only
five of the nine hid filed paperl by
this morning with_ tht county schools
office, all for one of'~ f9W'·year ~rms.
'!'be resldFnta who have llled an Larry
T1ylor, lncUmbent pre1kleot ol tbt·boorcl
teekinf ....it<Uoa;· hid D'Uldolo,
school toacher; Flomioe Bunt, PT A
Council · pruldenl: Stlllley M111111t.
phllolophy profwor 11 UC frvlnt; and
La(lllll B .. ch attorney earl Mitchell.
Tile other rostdenta who are eithe<
lln<leclded •bout ninnlng for election or
who have not yet flied tbelr paper•
ore Arnold Ladermon, ,...,rch engineer
who NYI he will 1etk the two-year
ter111: A1l.o ,t.nnbruater, salesman, Ulldec!<led: Altrld Jim11Jrlan, housewife,
:~~~~·
The incldtnt occurred at about 6 p.m.
when an· unknown caller told Lifeguard
Skip c.onner thin 1 man was trapped
on tbe cliff at Cre3Ct:Dl Point above
St'1 Rock. IJleguards 1nd ' unit from
the cUy Fin 0.partment responded to
the emergency call, but arrived to find
the man had dlsappeared. Firemen
walked along the edge of the cliff wi th
ie1rchUgbts looking for the stranded m&n
and when be was not round. a search
of the water and rocks below the cliff
was begun.
The operation was called off at ebo·1t
1 p.m. when no sign of the man cou!d
be found. ft was presum~ by, 11uthorltit~
thlt tbO 11110 liad walkA!d to \afely. •
hundreds of people get up ind start
dancing around.''
Mayor-Richard Goldberg tried to stem
the tide or speculation and rhetoric by
pointing out that only time would tell
if the ordinance would be effective, but
something bad better be adopted io head
off an Easter re·run of Christmas.
"It's time to stop ahilly-ahallyina:
around here,'' he said testily.
Rimel precipitated sudden harmony by
pointing out that an urgency ordinance
mu.st win a 415 vole to pass and mu.st
be read in its en tirety unless there
is A unanimous vote to waive the reading.
The council voted unanimously on both
counts.
ar
ea
President
Gives State
Of World
By JOHN M. mGHTOWER
WASHINGTON (AP) -President
Nixon today charged Hanoi w It h
broadening the Vietnam war lnto an
Indochina conflict and predicted the
United States and Jt.s allies will have
more hard cboice.s in combatting possible
new enemy thrusts in South Vietnam,
Cambodia and Laos.
In a globe-ranging report officially
directed to Congress but aimed at the
nation and the re.st or the world, Nixon
keyed his message to a quest for Ha
full generation of peace" this century.
But, he said, "If winding down the
war is my greatest satisfaction In
foreign policy, the failure to end it
is my deepest disappointment.''
He pledged to continue the winding
down, the U.S. troop wllhdrawal from
South Vietnam. But in stark contrast
to his declared global peace goal hit
projection for Indochina emphasized the
broadened war and increased American
aid and air support for allied ground
forces .
The 65,000 word report, covering 180
pages and accompa nied by a netioilwide
radio speech was the second Nlron report
on the role of the United States in
world affairs since he took office.
Patterned after the constitutionally
mandated State of the Unic>n message,
this White House overview of the world
situation disclosed no new U.S. policy,
departures.
But details were ouUined and It gave
Nixon an opportunity to tell the story
(If his foreign and strategic policies at
mldpas.sage between the 1968 and 1972
elections.
Nixon sent the report. which has betn
in preparatlori for stveral months. to
Congress under the tiUe, "United States
Foreign Policy for the 1970s -Building
for Peace."
In di11CUssing the Indochina crisis at
considerable detall Nixon gave a deeply
pessimistic report about the prospect.a
for a negotiated settlement.
He had "frankly expected" !IClme kind
of 1cUon from the North Vietnamese.
Viet Cong side last year, Nixon stated,
when he expanded political principles
for I settlement Jnd a p p o I n t e d
ambass1dor David Bruce 1s peace
negotiator.
In Uti11, he indicated, ht wu completely
disappointed. But "We will nc>t give up
on DCgotlations," he said, "though the
past year Indicated that It will be
extremely dUncuJt to overcome tbt
enemy's mix of doctrine, calculatlON
and suspicion.
"There 11 the additional fact ttv~ u
our r-ortes decl ine , the rnle ·off: can
pl3y on mtiny aspeets of ,. ~tt lement
ll also bound to decline."
Nixon aJ)'>Ci lct1 ',t ln1st In hb
lttl'd1rthip as hf' ~ks to develop what
ht C."'11c1 a -:~1Y, m•re rutrained world
"''" for •:.u lfnlt'!d Str te,.
B• · .rio m4
'' r c ""ce ·n rf thi-mewge
•', t •·c ... • i:I 1v21 wllh what he call~t1
111e ':--·st a:;:?:.il:h!:ig prob:em'' c:f
\.1e.n11m.
Z DAILV PILOT SC
Mrs. Hulse 'Paranoid'
...
Psychiatrist C,i.tes Effect on Son
By '!OM BAIILEY
Of ,._ IMl!r 1'1111 Sl•H
Arthur Craig •·Moose" liulse's mother
was descrtbed today during the Orange
Courity Superior Court murder trial of
her aon as a "paranoid sch.iiophrenlc''
who heard voice.s from space and
believed she was under the Influence
ol Telsw.
Dr. David Geddes told !be jury In
Judge Ronald Crooksbank's courtroom
that Mrs. Arthur Hulse Sr. had a !'Wlrd
of mental Wnes.5 datlng back to when
she was 18 and there was "no doubt"
her lonn of insanity had a big effect
aa the mental development of ber 16-
year-old BO!!.
The Santa Ana. psychiatrist quoted Mrs.
Hulse as saying that she saw the world
as "square1 of life" and that when
each square ls occupied by a member
of the PTA the war in Vietnam will
end.
$be also believed, be said, !bat Te!Jw
-the 1 p ace· born communicaUou
sa1elllto -11Dt down plcturu to her
and wu also somehow involved with
the many valets that spoke t<> her from
space.
Dr. Geddes is the first defeiW: witness
In the Hulse trial. The youth is being
tried lor the murder last June I or
servlee station attendant Jerry Wayne
Carlin, 21, ol Santa Ana.
He must eventually face tri1l on charge
of being at1 accessory to the murder last
June 2 of Mission V1ejo tea cher Florence
Nancy Brown who was hacked to death
in an Irvine orange grove.
Two psychiatrists called by the
prosecution have testified I.hat Hulse was
sane when he used a hatchet to hack
Carlin to death in the restroom of the
gas station.
The youth spent most of Wednesday
at the Orange County Medical Center
undergoing examination on procedures
described as brain wave tests. The
results of those tests were not available
Reward Offered
$5,000 on Head of Bo y's Sla yer
A $5,000 reward has been offered for information leading to the arrest
and conviction of the slayer of MJsaion Viejo gas station attendant Douglas
Ray Wheat Jr., 17, who died Saturday.
Wheat had been paralyzed and unable to talk since he was shot ln the back
of the bead in the Jan. 30 holdup that netted the slayer Jess than $100.
The reward has .been offered by the Atlantic Richfield Company, owner
of the station at the San Diego Freeway and La Paz Road in Missioo Viejo.
The murdered boy was the son of Mr. and ~lrs. Douglas Ray Wheat Sr.,
of 24511 Satuma Drive, Mission Viejo.
The sheriff's department said today they are ·without clues in their in·
vestigation of the case.
Radio DJ's Joke
About Big Quake
Tickles Few Ribs
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A rumor
that a disastrous earthquake would hit
the San Fernando Valley today started
as a radio disc jockey'& joke and bas
rio substance in fact, experts said.
The quake prediction was retracted.
But rumors provoked by the report
promptd Los Angtle1 . Police Chief
Edward Davis to i!sue a sharp public
disclaimer, aaylnl earthquakes cannot
be predicted.
Davis' sald be anarMayor Sam Yorty
ton~ted with emloent seismologist Dr.
Charles Rlcbter, orlginator'of the Richter
Scale of earthquake intensity and were
assured, "IUl)' sucb prediction ls •beer
Poppycock."
Dick Whltllngtoo, a KGIL DJ wilb
a predilection for stunta, had phoned a
woman wblle be wai on the air
Wednesday, kftntlfyi.ng her as a
prominent forecaster of tbe future. She
predicted that early today a major quake
would rock the San Fernando Valley,
the area bit hardest by the Feb. 9
quake, which left 6f dead and mlUions
Clf dollan of damage.
"Those who knew Dick knew be was
just putt.illg them on," sald KGIL general
manager Stan Warwick. "because the
rest of the conversaUon was obviously
ridiculous. But many people only heard
tbe beginning."
Vatican Signs Trea ty
WASIUNGTON (AP) -Archbishop
Luigi. Raimondi, Apostolic Delegate to
the United States, today signed the
nuclear non-proliferation treaty on behalf
o{ the Vatican.
OP.AM•I COAR
DAILY PILOT
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JOI Horft ll C 1111i110 Attl
U~I TtllNo,. PROGRAMMED FOR TV
F1dln9 Guru Leary
Leary Interview
Slated for KCET
Ove r Wee kend
A special videotaped interview in which
Dr. Timothy Leary disavov.·s drug use
~·ill . be carried lw ice this weekend by
Los Angeles' KCET ChaMel 2 3
educational station.
The one-hour sho\v by underground
filmmaker Glen Angell , who spent four
days with the Learys and Black Panther
leaders e1lled ln Algiers, will displace
regular rare.
Friday it will be seen at 9 p.m.
and again at 8 p.m. Sunday, preceded
by an introduction featuring Angell and
sister station newsman Joe Russin, o[
KQED, San Francisco.
Black Panther ?.finlster of Information
Eldridge Cleaver, who had Dr. Leary
clamped under recolutionary arrest last
month to climax-a growing philosophical
rift, vdll also be seen.
Leary now says drugs are
Inappropriate to there vo I u t ion a ry
struggle in America. which fellow
C<Jnspirator Cleaver calls Babylon .
Due lo lhe Friday schedule change,
the David Susskind Show will begin at
JO p.m .. and 'The Advocates Vl ill not
be shown, while Sunday, The Great
American Dream Machine will start at
6:30 and The World We Live In will
be dropped.
11111 ~.
Hulse bu leltUltd from 1bo wltneu
box that be took huge quanUt~s of
drugs and drtnk before the Carlln killing
and that an unremembered remark by
the young allendant prompted him to
pull the hatchet from his belt and "lay
it on" Carlin .
Tbe jury has also heard the youth'!
recorded confesslon, taped by Santa Ana
police Investigators when they arrested
Hulse a month after the Carlin murder.
Hulse has identified his companion In
that killing as Steven Craig Hurd, 20,
a transient, who is accused of both
the Carlin and Brown murders.
Investigators identify Hurd as the
leader of the drug using band which
devoured portions of the 31-year-old
V.'oman's body in satan worshiping rites
before burylng it near lhe Ortega
Highway.
Hurd has been declared to be sane
and able to face trial Ma rch 22 on
the dual charges.
Manson, Girls
Shout Down
Linda Kasabian
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Charles
Manson and his three w o m e n
coderendants shouted angrily at star
prosecution witness Linda Kasabian
Wednesday when the pigtailed blonde
would not go along with their story
lhat Manson is blameless in the Tate-
LaBianca murders.
Mrs. Kasa blan. 23, had been brought
back from New Hampshire by Manson's
lawyer, Irving Kanarek, but she stuck
calmly to her testimony six months ago
that the hippie leader ordered both the
Tate and LaBianca murder s.
She was granted complete immunity
in exchange for her testimony for the
slate. As she told the jury that the
three wome n lied in lheir stories
absolving Manson, Susan Alkins suddenly
shouted :
"You only got off by putting it ofi
itanson. Admit it!"
"Why don't you tell your part~" called
out Patricia Krenwinkel
Mrs. Kasablan turned in the v.•itness
chair and looked at the defendants.
"I have," she said. "Why don't you
tell your part?"
Then, turning direcUy to Manson, she
said:
"Why don't YOll tell your part?''
"Live wJth Jt -it's on your face,''
cried Manson.
"Yes, Jt's heavy." Mrs . Kasabian said.
"The whole thin« il Insane."
Kanarek a.!ked her what she meant
about Jt being insane.
"l 've never been touched by anything
like this before and it's hard to relate
after being out for awhile. To be here
again is strange, like a dream."
Judge Charles H. Older ordered the
defendants to be silerit or be removed
Immediately from the courtrOom. A few
minute! later Mrs. Kuablan was
dismis.sed permanently as a witness and
presumably she will return to her
husband and two children at their home
near Milford, N.H.
Mrs. Kaaabian was: followed to the
witne:s1 stand by Deputy District
Attorney Aaron Stovitz.
Stovitz testified that his o[fice made
an agreement with Susan Atkins ' lawyer
that the state would not ask the death
penalty for her if she told the truth
about the killings berore a grand jury.
M.is.s Atkins did tesury berore the jury
but she subsequently recanted her
"confession" and then told an entirely
different story at the trial last week.
The defense was expected to call later
this week psychiatrists wbo will give
their opinions about the effect ol LSD
on the sanity of the defendants.
Annex Ques tion
Delayed in Capo
Annexation of 135 acres on its northern
perimeter to the city of San Juan
Cap!straoo has been df.layed until Afarch
10 by the Local Agency Formation
Commission.
The delay was voted in order that
the developer, E. B. Akins ot the South
Coast Development Corp. cquld work
out jire-annex zoning with the city.
Akins told the LA.Fe Wednesday he
plans to build homes on 109 acres or
the land which borders on the Rancho
A-fission VJejo at Rosenbaum Road.
Commissioners were also concerned
over the rad the annexation will leave
a pie-shaped piece or property to the
east as a semi island.
DA ILY PIUJJ. wllll _..ldl h atM .... fill irf~ It ""'""" •Hy ftCfOt ~ .,. 111 ...,.rei. •n'°"" flor ~ hMtt. ,......,, l "dl. CDli. Miu, HlllltlntlM l..cfl.. ~'" V1llly, l 1n ~
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Students Ride Do1ikeys for Funds
Donkey basketball wilt clatter back
to ?.fission Viejo High .school on flt.arch
19.
The Mission Viejo Key Club will
sponsor the fund-raising event at 7:30
p.m.
Players In donkey basketball have thttr
game complicated by be ing mounted on
donkeys. Otherwise the game Is similar
to basketball .
The student team will consist of the
ts top male Uckel i;ellera and th!!! 15
top female Ucket aeller1. The faculty
team will M volunteer talent.
Following the tilt, the donkeys will
leave I.he floor and atudents will play
faculty In a regular gamt.
Tickets will be $1.25 for adults, 75
cents for students and 60 ttnta for
children. They will' ~ on ta.le at the
gymnasium ticket olfict.
A student dance will be held 1rter
the gamts. Proceeds from the evening
will help finance service projects of
the key club. Past projects hive Jnc.tuded
land>.,.plng of !be campus aod palnU.,.
MURDER DEFENDANT
Arthur {Moose) Hulse
SA Land Bid
Denied; Sriit
Now Last Hope
A la.,.,'suit is probably the only recourse
left to Santa Ana iA its batlle to annex
923 acres or Irvine industrial land
the city claims was promlsed to it ln
1963.
The Local Agency Formation
Commission refused. Wednesday to
reopen hearings on the boundary of the
proposed city of Irvine.
On Feb. 10, the LAFC approved
incorporation of the new 18,145-acre city,
including the disputed property just south
of the Santa Ana Marine Corps Air
Station.
The Irvine Company has acknowledged
the agreement and did ask the LAFC
to exclude the acreage fr om the new
city.
Santa Ana protested Wednesday that
LAFC Chairman Louis R. Reinhardt had
''intimidated" City Manager Car I
Thornton when he tried to introduce
a copy or a $15,000 study on the effect
of lhe Irvine incorporation on Santa
Ana.
This charge again.st Reinhardt. a
Fu!lerton city councilman, and other
intimations that the LAFC had not
operated properly on Aug. JO seemed
to irritate commissioners.
Commissioner Charles Pearson, of
Anaheim, moved that the petition for
a re-bearing be denied. He was backed
by Reinhardt and Stanley Northrup, a
San Clemente councilman.
Supervisor Robert Battin continued his
stance opposing the Irvine Company by
voting against the motion.
Laguna Boys Club
Picks 6 Directors
Tbe board of directors of the Boys
Club or Laguna Beach bas been brought
up to its full quota of 25 with the
election of six new board members.
Joining the board as directors are
Mrs. Faye Nell, widow of the late Dr.
Edward R. Nell, fonner president of
the board: ~1rs. Thomas M. Skelton;
~1rs. Peter Hyun. chairman of Pro-
Environment People (PEP); retired
Marine Col. William H. Roley; William
Exner of ?.llssion Viejo; and Laguna
Beach Fire Chief James Latimer.
Nixon Sais
Russ Inch Ahead
In Atom Ars·enal ··
WASfDNGTON (UPI) -The Soviet
Union has surpassed the United States
tn some categories of strategic nuclear
weapons and may be preparing for a
"first sU'lke" capability, President Nixon
H id lcxlay.
lie said the Soviet Union overhauled
the United Statea in 19&9 ln the number or intercontinental balllsUc missiles and
is r apidly gaining in numbers or
i;ubmarine launched ballistic missiles.
"By any standard, we believe the
riumber of Soviet stragetic forces now
exceeds the level needed for deterrence,"
Nixon said in his "state of the world''
message.
"Even more impoMant than the growth
in numbers has been the change in
the nature or the. forces the USSR c~e
to develop and deploy. These forces
include systellll!I -particularly the SSt
ICBM with large multiple warheads -
"'hcih, if further improved and deployed
in sufficient numbers, could be uniquely
suitable for a fint strike against our
land-based deterrent forces."
In 1965, the United States had 934
lCBMs and 464 submarine-launched
ballistic missiles compared with 224 and
107 for the Sov iet Union. Nixon saiil
by the 'nd of 1969, the Soviet Union
had 1,109 ICBMs to 1,054 for the United
Slates and in 1970 added 3.'ll more while
the United States main~ained the same
level.
Last year the United State!!I bed 656
submarine-launched ballistic missiles -
the same as in 1969 -while the Soviet
Unian bad 350, an increase of 110 over
1969, the President said.
Nixon said, "By the mid 1970s we
expect the Soviets to have a force of
ballistic missile submarines equal in size
lo our own. Furthermore, the Soviet
Union has continued to make significant
qualitative improvements in its strategic
forces. These include new and improved
\•ersions or their Minuteman size S.Sll
missile, continued testing of multi ple
warheads, research and testing of ABM
compo nents, and improved air defense
systems."
He said mainland China by the late
1970s probably will have ICBMs "capable
Niguel Residents'
Opinions Sought
Residents of the Laguna Niguel area
will receive a questionnaire Saturday
from Avco Community Dev el opers
soliciting their opinion concerning the
future directions of their community.
Avco, which purchased the Laguna
Niguel Corporation in 1970, is mapping
the future growth of the area and is
hoping residents will cooperate by
completing the form. As an added
incentive to return the completed
questionnaire, Avco will pay 50 ~nts
per form to a homeowner'1 association
or the resident's choice.
The form, which will be confidentia1,
wili include questions c o n c e r n i n g
recreational facilities and poss i b I e
expansion of the existing facilities in
the community.
Phosphate Ban Asked
WASffiNGTON (UPI) -Forty House
members said today they would introduce
legislation that would outlaw phosphates
in detergents produced after June 30,
1973, and ban other ingredients also
found to cause water pollution.
ol reacliing lhe U.S."
Nixon cautioned that there has been
1 o m e slowing In Soviet development
of land-based missile launchers. But he
said "The significanct of l h 11
development i.! not clear,"
Doctor Says
Calle y Sane
In Rebuttal
FT. BENNING, Ga. \AP) -An Army
psychiatrist who followed Lt. William
Calley Jr. to the witness stand testified
today be could find no evidence that
Calley suffered from ,;any form of
mental disorder I could think of" iD
the massacre at My Lai.
"One could say the entire incident
is bizarre," Maj . Henry E. Edwards
replied to one question put to him.
He was the first rebuttal witness {or
the prosecution. The defense rested
Wednesday after Calley bad spent two
days on the witness stand.
Edwards was one of three Walter
Reed Hospital psychiatrists t h a t
constituted a sanity board for Calley.
A second member of the team, Lt.
CoL Franklin G, Jones, followed Edwards
to the witness stand.
Edwa rds' te s t j mo n y directly
contradicted that of defense psychiatrists
who said that Calley did indeed have
mental impairment that clouded bis
capacity lo premeditate his actions at
My Lai ()fl ~1arcb 16, 1968. Calley is
charged wilh murdering 102 villagers
that day.
Edwards answered affirmatively to all
questions touching on whether the
Jieutenant had the capacity to k n o w
right from v.·rong, the ability to do
what he knew was right and to form
the specific intent to kill.
How did he define the specilic Jntent
to kill?
"That he had the notion and desire
to end someone's life," Edwards said.
"My opinion is that there was no
Impairment to his me n t a l thought
processes on that da y ... the way be
performed he was responding to cues
and stimuli around him."
In cross.examination, the psychiatrist
was asked whether the mind could be
conditioned along certain channels, "I'll
say a channel to kill."
Tbe question came in connection with
the ~called Pavlov experiment in which
dogs were conditioned to respond to
certain stimuli.
Edwards said he had not read the
works ()f Pavlov, a Russian . "l don 't
know that he ever made a n y
commentary, but a person can be
conditioned to kill.'' Edwards said.
At another point, the psychiatrist said.
"I believe one can be conditioned." But
he added he did not think it was possible
to condition one section of the mind
without affecting others.
On cross-examination. Edwards said
he knew that one witness testified Calley
stood at a ditch for one and a half
bours killing peOple with his ,.116 rifle.
Q. Do you consider that bi:r.arre?
A. I didn't consider it bizarre under
the circumstancs.
Q. Did you consider it unusual?
A. It would be unusual in a noncombat
situation. . .I did not see this es a
mental disturbance.
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come to
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with gamples
without any
obligation
to you!
H.J.GARREfT fURNlllJRE
PROFESSIONAL
INTERIOR DESIGNERS Open Moo. 1'ol'L & Fri. Ins.
2215 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA, CA IF
646-0271 646.
"
7
l.
Today's Final San Clemente
Capistrano EDITION N.Y. Stoeks
VOL 6'4, NO. 48, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TH URSDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1971 TEN CENTS
Strict Controls on Environment Stressed
Strict environmental controla are the
only way to eliminate ugliness and
protect a city's heritage.
That's what Edward Carson Beale.
architect and planner, told members of
the San Juan Capistrano Chamber of
Commerce Wednesday.
Praising the city's effort,, to prepare
for the future, Beale ouUlned the
necessity for controlled growth and ways
in which it can be accomplished.
"First you abould define your
ob)ectiva. What iJ a dtairable
environment?
"It ill functional , healthy a n d
comfortable, adaptable to il.3 site," said
Beale.
Dealing first with function, Beale said
a desirable environmel'lt meets the needs
of its community, providea industrial
and commercial areas, a d e q u a t e
circulation systems for transp>rtation,
Tax Bike Warned
Gloomy Finance
Picture Painted
SACRM.tENTO (UPI) -l.egjslative
Analyst A. Alan Posl says the financial
condition of state government now "is
even more serious" than when Gov.
Ronald Reagan first came to office.
The Legislature's nonpartisan fiscal
watchdog warns that the state will run
iihort of cash next fall, some government
programs are underfunded and a tax
increase may be necessary.
Soon alter Reagan replaced Democrat
Edmund G. Brown in 1967 the new
governor told Californians in a statewide
telecast that:
"Not since the bleak days of the
depression have we faced such a dark
picture. • .our state has been looted
and drained of its financial resources
in a manner unique in our history."
Reagan then pushed through a $1 billion
statewide tax increase -the major
legislative accomplishment of his first
term -and blamed Democrats for
making it ntteSSary.
The economy-minded 1ovemor now
1ays he is "unalterably oppoaed" to
another tax hike and P08t, in his annual
budget report to the Legislat u re
Wednesday, did not recommend one.
But Post did say the picture ls even
darker than four years ago and
emphasized that Reagan's '6.73 billion
budget proposal for the next fiscal year
can only be balanced by sharp spending
reductions, a tax increase er a
combinaticn of both.
He painted out that the state -hard
hit by sluggish recession-era tax revenues
-is spending $277 .4 million more than
it is taking in and expects to end the
fiscal year June 30 with a $124.5 million
deficit.
The veteran money watcher said this.
"has serious impli~aUom" for nat
year's budget. He noted the last lime
the slate faced a similar 1ituation was
in 1967.
"This situation," he said, "is even
more serWw."
"It is not yet clear hew the (nerl)
budget>i• .to be IUl)ded," be uplaln«I.
"Cash net!dl cannot be met from regular
borrowing sources. • .arKf new taxes
or ipecial outside b or r ·c w In I
arrangements will have to. be resorted
to."
San Clemente Getting Van
For Newspaper Recycling
A donated bin en wheels wW arrive
in San Clemente sometime Friday for
a month-long stay at a supermarket
parking lot"in a pilot newspaper recycling
program.
City Manager Ken Carr said the van,
dcnated for a mcnth by the Garden
State Paper C-Ompany of Pomona, will
r.emain at the Market Basket parking
lot .
If the effort is successful through the
month of March, he said, the newspaper
reclamation drive urged by several local
WHO'S YOUR
OSCA R PICK?
The polls are open for national voting
in the "Oscar Derby." For your chance
to vote in the DAILY PILOT ';election''
and. perhaps, go to dinner with your
favorite stars, see the ballot today on
Page 14.
Oruge
Weather
Gu!ty wlnds under clear skin
are the ingredient& for Friday's
weather menu, with coastal tern~
eratures quitting at 60 and inland
mercury registering M degrees.
INSWE TODAY
Orange Countu 1uperviior1
have apprOt>td a human rela·
bans commis1ion for the coun-
ty , but tht commission m"3t
,,.,.ove if.! worth within tht ~ear,
Page 12.
c.n~l• "
_ .. .,,
Clledtlft9 u, " Mil!v.11 ,..,,.,. • c.i...ifltll ... H1t-.i -. ,
com•• • Or-• '-" " ,_ • .,,.,.. ,Witt • 0..111 Ntlklt " ·-u.n
"'""" " ltttlr /Mltli. D·11
Ni.I .. '"' • ftle'llllMI " .......... _, ,.,, '"'"" ,.,, ·-D•tl ··-• -" W_.t Hftt U•tt
AMI LIM«t " ·--••
ecology groups would continue.
Garden, State, one of Cllifornia's
largest recycling firms, produces fruh
rolll of newsprint from tons or discarded
newspapers.
Spokesmen for San C I e m e n t e ' s
Backyard Ecology Group, one of the
organizations which has urged the
project, said the donation by Garden
State was noteworthy because cf the
recent drop ·in the. demand for cast.-0ff
paper.
Garden State offered the bin and $5
a ton for all the paper collected in
the project. The going rate for newsprint
has dropped from a high of $25 a ton,
before the recycling issue grew, to $5
today.
tn fact, the prices dropped to a point
where the Ctty or N'e-wpcrt Beach,
collecting old newspapers under a pilot
program of its on. recently abandoned
the plan because bo one would buy
the old paper.
To assist in the active drive lo collect
the paper in San Clemente, an estimated
25 high achoo! students have volunteered
to ... ~t -pou!bly In keeping ...
area around the btn clean. 1bey al.so
might join 1n stacking the hundreds
cf pounds of newaprint inside the
rec<ptacle.
Tennis Tourney
Set for . Viejo
School Children
A tennis tournament for all children
in lbe San JoaqulD Elementuy School
Dl$1rfct ID gradel ooe tluwgh elpt
is being pf""'°" for Mardi I one! 7.
The event will tab pl1oe It the M.Wion
Viejo Hlgb School 1tnn1J courll one!
will be for lincJa oor,.
Entri<I mo 12 llill' on due by Mardi
3. Ch.W ani to be .,..,. payabl6 to
the M!Jslon Viejo Hl(b Scliool Aaodat.d
student Body and can be malled to
TeMb Tournament, 2S67S Via Vltnto,
MiUion Viejo, 12875 •
Match Umes can be sched1ded by
calling 1371083 afttr I p.m. on Friday,
March 5.
Events wl11 be one per p11yer and
grades four throuli> elli>t will be
aeparat.d Into dlvlalonr for boy1 and
lltll.
space for privacy and independence,
controlled densities, parks and recreatlcn
areas and ''breathing space."
Beale used Palos Verdes, his own
community, to illustrate. He said out
of 3,200 acres there are: 800 acres for
parks, trails and schools, 750 for public
roads and rights of way, fieven for
commercial use, none for industrial ll!e,
and room for 4,780 homesites.
"It ill a highly restricted ccmmunity,"
•
said Beale. ''There are he I g ht
regulations, architectural regulations,
even outdoor color schemes must be
approved."
Beale said a desirable community is
also one that is healthy and comfortable.
Considerations must be made for
accident preve.nticn, smog control, wind
dlrecUon. noise levels and green belts
to provide peaceful &W'roundings.
Adaptability to site Is a ftn"ther
consideration. Tech n i ca I informaUon
must be available on climate , soils,
topography and native vegetation.
.. All these things can be accomplished
through p I a n n i n g and proper
restrictions," he said.
Commenting on San Juan's attempt
to retain 11.s Spanistl heritage, Beale
said the answer Is strict zoning.
"Americans need to relate to history,
IXOll a s
ar
Down the
Mission
Trail
YMCA Sets Goal --In Saddleback
SADDLEBACK VALLEY -A 1oal
cf $26,500 has been set by the Saddleback
Valley YMCA which launched its
membership drive this week.
The money will be used for operating
expenses and will be collected from
residential areas in Saldleback Valley
and Leisure World.
Advanced gifts will include $6.000. The
rest will be colltcted from the two
areas. Chainnen for the drive include
WJllia Hamrick and Joe Peter110n, El
Toro. and Joe Adams and Qalg Porst
for Missk>n Viejo.
e Can CoUectlon
LAKE FOREST -Wonderin& what
to do with all those aluminum soft
drink and beer cans that take up so
much room in your trash?
Members cf the Lake Forest Teen
Club would like you to save them.
The teens will pick them up at a
later date. It's all part of an ecology
!rive to redeem lhe cans for future
use.
e Pla11 Premiere•
CAPISTRANO HIGHLANDS -An
original seven act play will be preaented
at Valencia Elementary School Saturday.
The melodrama will begin at 7:30
p.m. It is entitled Tbt Perila cf Percival
P. Penniles,, and Wll written by Sid
Nutter.
The .... 1 ]J being .,... .... d by Ille
Capistrano Highlands Teen Aasoc.i1Uon.
Admiaaloo IJ '7li cenb and will be pbced
in the uaoclation'1 treasury.
Cinco de Mayo
F estiv.al Group
Open to Ideas
P111t1 are btlnf drawn early for
Mtsllion Viejo'• .&MUii Cinco de Mayo
FesUvaI.
• 01ce
DAILY PU.OT l'9tr '""'
Sound of Music
Cathie Christie is shown in dress rehearsal for the San Clemente High
SChool production of "Sound Of Musi c." She plays Mother Abbott.
The musical will begin in Triton Center at 8 p.m. Friday and Satur-
day and at the same days and times the fol1owing weekend.
Planning Board Mum
On Clemente Rezoning
In what is an apparent neutral stand,
San Clemente planning commissioners
could draw no recommendation to
ccuncilrnen Wednesday en a plan lo
rezone about 10 acres cf prime land
once earmarked for a new hospital.
The only motion to come from
extensive discussion on the request by
the new owners of the parcel across
from civic center - a mcve to approve
lhe rezoning for apartment usage -
failed by a 2-3 vote. Qmmissioners then
went to the next Item.
The failure of the vote, aceording to
city Attorney F. MacKenile Brown,
means lhat applicants Alfred E. Mann
and C. T. DeCinces, will go belcre
councilmen next week lo seek official
approval of the request.
The request to rerone the land from
"unclassified" to R-3G, would allcw the
construction of 289 apartment units with
a maximum height of three stories of
~ feeL
Fiesta 1t; eek Project
The luckiest cities are those llke your
own which. bave a history to preserve."
to exert Itself and demand quality, even
to exert itself and demand quality, evert
from developers and corporations, and
nol to be afraid of creativity.
"Tackle the gas statlOr'I!, apartments,
parking lots, street signs, mall boxes.
trash cans, clocks, telephone booth!,
drinking fountains. None of tbeae things
need to be ugly."
ar
ea
President
Gives State
Of World
By JOHN M. IDGH'l'OWER
WASllINGTON !AP) -President
NiJon today charted Hsnoi w 1 t b
·-. broadening the Vietnam war into an
•. Indochina conflict and pre~cted the
United States and it.!I allies will have
mere hard choices in combatting possible
new enemy thrusts in South Vietnam,
Cambodia and Lam.
In a gJobe-ranging report officially
directed lo Congress but aimed at the
nation· and the rest of the world. Nixon
keyed his message to a quest for "a
full gene.ration of peace" this century.
But, he said, "If winding down the
war ls my greatest satisfaction In
foreign policy, the failtire to end it
ls my deepest disappointment."
He pledged to continue the winding
down, the U.S. troop withdrawal from
South VielJlUl. But in stark contrast
to his declared global peace goal his
project.ion for Indochina emphasized the
broadened war and increased AITl!iilili..
aid and air support for allied jroWia""
forces.
The 65,000 word report, covering 180
pages and acccmpanied by a nationwide
radio speech was the second Nixon report
on the role of the United States in
world affairs since he took office.
Patterned after the constitutionally
mandated State of the Union message,
this White House overview cf the world
situation disclosed no new U.S. policy
departures.
But details were outlined and it gave
Nixon an oppcrtunity to tell the story
cf. his foreign and strategic policies at
m1dpassage between the 1968 and 1972
elections.
Nixon sent the report. which has been
in preparation for several months, to
Congress under the title, "United States
Foreign Policy for the 1970s -Buildinf
for Peace."
In discussing the Indochina crisis at
cons!de!a~le detail Nixon gave a deeply
pe¥1m1st1c report about tbe prospects
for a negotiated settlement.
He had "frankly expected" some kind
cf action from the North VietnaD'leJeo
Viet Cong side last year, NIIOIJ stated
when he expan~ed political principl~
for a settlement and a p poi n t e d
ambassador David Bruce as peace
negotiator.
Groups ~~-to ·reserve a booth
al tlie actlvity ~""' unW March I to
file applications wUb booth chainnan,
Bill Gardntr, 243111 Chriaanta Drtv<,
Ml.uloo Viejo.
Whiskers Growing in Capo
Thia y .. r'a fourth IMU&l event will
tab pla<O on May I· at Mlllion Viejo
Hip School. II ii 1111!111l(y <:OOrdlnat.d
by lbe hJib 1Ch>o1'1 Pmont.Teacher
Orgllllzalloll.
Enttrtalmnent, Mexican food, games,
art dl.aplay1, a parade, amusement
bootha:, bike contest Ind band "battle"
were part of Jut year'1 fiatl. Bud
Goniale1, enttrtalnment chalrm1n, IJ
open to auggestlonl. An~ with brilht
Idell may call him II 837411111.
The entire Saddleblclt Valle1 bas been
Invited to partlclpata In !Illa year'•
l cllvl(y.
Beards an IJ>IOUliDI on tlie facu
of lkhy San Juan Caplslraoo merchant3,
anxlow to keep cut of the "po.key''
durlni Flt$ta w .. k, Marclt 11 throuah
20.
The "halritst man In town'l contest
will take place on Saturday, March 13
at I p.m. 1t the donut shop on the
corner of Camino Capistrano and Ortea•
lllghway.
'Jbe flr1t event cf Ult annual Fiesta
de Lis Golondrinas , the c:onttst will
precede ·a ~k of event.a that wilt
culminate with the 13th annual parade
on .Slturd•l" Mmb lO.
•
Judging of the be1rdl which CfD ~
shaggy or well shaped, mustaches.
goatees and side burrui will mull In
1 prfze· for the growth Wlth · the most
charJCter. The wtnner will be announced
at the post J>1r1de awards ceremony
immediately after the: parade. on Marth
20.
Traditionally during Fiesta Week the
11ssoclatlon's "therltr· (who wlU be Al
Jirnenei this year) makes wre that
merchant& have grown or anted • bit
of ruu for their f,aces.
Those without are useued •t or
thrown In the "pokey"-M old metal
J~ cell loClled In IIOnt or the hardware
f
store In lbe E, Adobe Pim. The e<ll
was used 1n eamt.1t tn San Juan
Capi!trano. around 1860.
The money collected ii donat.d to
the Fiesta AssoctaUon Lrtuury to help
pay for parade expe.n.wa ind other
activities sponsored by lhe group durln&:
the year.
Flnes are alao levied by sheriff on
those wbo do not wear Mn.lean, Western,
or early California costumes. But Ill
all In fun and moat merchanll 10 along
with the actJviliea: which onct 1 year
herald the return of the qallon oo
Marclt 19.
•
f
! IWLY PILDl SC
Mrs. I-I ulse 'Paranoid'
Psychiatrist Cites Effect on Son
By 'roM llARLEY
Of IM O.ll't POii Sltff
Arthur Craig "Moose" tJulse 's mother
was described today during the Orange
County Superior Court murder trial of
her aon as a "paranoid schizophrenic''
who beard voices from space and
believed she was under the influence
of Telstar.
Dr. David Geddes told Ibo Jury in
Judge Ronald Crookshank'1 courtroom
that Mrs. Arthur Hulse Sr. bad a record
of mental Ulness dating back to when
1be was 18 and there was "no doubt"
her form of inaanlty bad a big effect
on the mental development of her l&-
)'ear~d son.
The Santa Ana psychiatrist quoted Mrs.
Hulse u aaying that sbe saw the world
as ''squares cf life" and that when
each aquart ls occupied by a member
of the PTA the war in Vietnam will
end.
Sbe also believed, be said, that Telstar
-tbe 1 pace-b c r n commuaJc1Uon1
satellite -sent down pictures to her
and wu abo somehow inwlve<J with
the many voices that spoke t<i her from
space.
Dr. Geddes is the flrst defense witness
in the Hulse trial. The youth is being
tried for the murder last June 1 or
service station attendant Jerry Wayne
C&rlin, 21, of Sa11ta Ana.
He must eventually face trial on charge
<>f being an accessory to the murder last
June 2 of Mission Viejo teacher Florence
Nancy Brown who was hacked to death
in an Irvine orange grove.
Two psychiatrists called by the
prosecution have testified that Hulse wu
sane when he used a hatchet to hack
Carlin to death in the restroom of the
gas station.
The youth spent most of Wednesday
at the Orange County Medical Center
undergoing examination on procedures
described as brain wave tests. The
resulLS of those tests were not available
Reward Offered
$5,000 on Head of Boy's Slayer
A ~·~ reward has bttn offered for information leading to the arrest
and oonv1ction of the slayer of Mission Viejo gas station attendant Douglas
Ray Wheat Jr., 17, who died Saturday. -
Wheat had been paralyzed and unable to talk since he was shot in the back
of the head in the Jan. 30 holdup that netted the slayer less than $100.
The ~eward bas been offered by the Atlantic Richfield Company, owner
of the staUon at the San Diego Freeway and La Pu Road in Pi.fission Viejo.
The murdered boy was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Ray Wheat Sr.
of 24511 Satuma Drive, MJssion Viejo, '
The 1hertfrs department aa.ld today they are without clues in their in·
''estigaUon ol the cue.
Radio DJ's Joke
About Big Quake
Tickles Few Ribs
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A rumor
that a disastrous earthquake would hit
the San Fernando Valley today started
I! a radio disc jockey's joke and bas
no substance in fact, experts said.
The quake prediction was retracted.
~ut rumors provoked by the report
prompt.et Los An&elu Police Otlef
Edward Davis to issue a sharp public
disclaimer, saying earthquake$ cannot
be pr<dicted.
Davis said be and Mayor Sam Yorty
consulted with eminent seismologist Dr.
Charles RJchttr, originator of the Richter
Scale or earthquake intensity and were
assured, "any such predicUon is sheer
poppycock."
Dick Whittington, a KGJL DJ with
1 predilection for 1tun!1, had phoned a
woman while he was on the air
Wednesday, identifying her as a
prominent forecaster of the future. She
predicted that early today a major quake
would rock the San Fernando Valley,
the area hit barde1t by the Feb. 9
quake, which left 64 dead and millions
of dollars of damage.
"Those who knew Dick knew be wu
fust putting them on," said KGIL general
manager Stan Warwick, "because the
rest of the conversation was obviously
ridiculous. But many people only heard
the beginning."
Vatican Signs Treaty
WASffiNG'roN (AP) -Archbishop
Luigi Raimondi, Apostolic Delegate to
the United States, today signed the
nuclear non-proUferaUon treaty on behaU
of the Vatican.
DAllY PILOT
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PROGRAMMED FOR TV
Fading Guru L11ry
Leary Interview
Slated for KCET
Over Weekend
A special videotaped interview In which
Dr. Timothy Leary disavo~·s drug use
will be carried twice this v.'eekend by
Los Angeles' KCET Channel 2 8
educational station.
The one-hour show by underground
filmm aker Glen Angell, who spent four
days with the Learys and Black Panther
leaders exiled in Algiers, will displace
regular rare.
Friday it will be seen at 9 p.m. 1
and again at 8 p.m. Sunday, preceded
by an introduction featur ing Angell and
sister station newsman Joe Russin, of
KQED , San Francbco.
Black Panther Minister of Information
Eldridge Cleaver, who had Dr. Leary
clamped under recolutionary arrest la.st
month to climax a growing phil~ophical
rift, will also be seen.
Leary now says drugs a re
Inappropriate to the rev ol u t Ion a ry
struggle in America, which fellow
conspirator Cleaver call! Babylon.
Due to lhe Friday schedule change,
the David Susskind Show will begin at
10 p.m., and The Advocates will not
be shown, while Sunday, The Great
American Dream Machine w\11 start at
6:30 and The World We Live In will
b< droppe<I.
thll mornin(.
Hulae has te.sUfied from the •ltQea
bo:r that he took huge quantities of
drugs and drink before the Carlln killing
and that an unremembered remark by
the young attendant prompted him to
pull the hatchet from his belt and "lay
it on" Carlin.
The jury has also heard the youth's
recorded confession, laped by Santa Ana
police jnvestlgators when they arrested
Hulse a month after the Carlin murder.
Hulse has identified bis companion in
that killing as Steven Craig Hurd, 20,
a transient, who is accused of both
the Carlln and Brown murders.
Investigators identify Hurd as the
leader of the drug using band wblcb
devoured portions of the 31-year-<ild
woman's body in sat.an worshiplng rites
before burying it near the Ortega
Highway.
Hurd has been declared to be sane
and able to face ttial March 22 on
the dual charges.
Manson, Girls
Shout Down
Linda Kasabian
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Charle!
Manson and his three w o men
c-Odefendants shouted angrily at star
prosecution witness Linda Kasabian
Wednesday when the pigtailed blonde
would not go along with their story
that Manson is blameless in the Tate.
La.Bianca murders.
Mrs. Kasabian, 23, had been brought
back from New Hampshfre by Manson's
lawyer, Irving Kanarek, but she stuck
calmly to her testimony six months ago
that the hippie leader ordered both the
Tate and LaBianca murders.
She was granted complete immunity
In exchange for her testimony for the
1tate. As she told the jury that the
three women lied in their stories
absolving Manson, Swan Atkins suddenly
ahouted:
"You only got off by putting it on
Manson. Admit it!"
"Why don't you tell your part?" called
out Patricia Krenwlnkel
Mrs. Kasablan turned In the witness
chair and looked at the defendant!.
"l have," she said. "Why don't you
tell yoor part?"
Then, lllnling directly to Maruon, ihe
nid:
"Why don't you tell your part?"
"Live with it -it'a oa your face,''
crled Manson.
"Ye.r, it's heavy," Mn. Kuablan said.
''The whole thing ls Insane."
Kanarek asked her what she meant
about it being insane.
"I've never been touched by anything
like this before and it's hard to relate
after being out for awhile. To be here
again is al:l:ange, like a dream."
Judge Charles H. Older ordered Uie
defendants to be silent or be removed
immediately from the courtroom. A few
minutes later Mrs. Katablan was
dismissed permanenUy as a witness and
presumably she will return to her
husband and two chlldrtn at their home
near Milford, N.H.
Mrs. Kasabian was followed to th!
witness stand by Deputy District
Attorney Aaron Stovitt.
Stovitz testified that his offi ce made
an agreement with Susan Atkins' lawyer
that the !.late would not ask th' death
penalty for her if she told the truth
about the kllllngs before a grand jury.
Miss Alkins did testify before the jury
but she subsequently recanted her
"'confession" and then told an entirely
different story at the trial last week.
The defense was expected to call later
thls week psychiatrists wbo will give
their opinions about the effect or LSD
on the sanity or the defendant.a.
Annex Question
Delayed in Capo
AMexation of 135 acres on its northern
perimeter to the city of San Juan
Capistrano has been delayed until March
10 by the Local Agency Fonnatlon
Commission.
The delay was. voted in order that
the developer, E. B. Akins of the South
Coast Development Corp. could work
out pre.anneI zoning with the city.
Akim told the LAFC Wednesday he
plans to build homes on JOSI acres of
the land which borders on the Rancho
Mission Viejo at Rosen~um Road.
Commi ssioners were also concerned
over the fact the annezation will leave
a pie-shaped piece of property to the
east as a semi Island.
Hee Haw Ga1ne
-
Students Ride .Do11keys for Funds
Donkty basketball will clatter back
lo Mlss!on Viejo High School on Mlrch
19.
The Ml.ssion Viejo Key Club will
sponsor t.be fund-raising tvent at 7:30
p.m.
Pl.ayers In donkey biiskctboll have their
game complicated by being mounted on
donkeys. Otherwise the game ls similar
to b:skctbaU.
'The student team "'Ill consist of the
15 top male Ucket sellers and the 15
top female tlcUI 1eller1. 'lb• JaC!llty
team will be voluntetr laltnt.
Followlng !he tU~ the donkeys will
leave the floor aDd. students \\'ill play
faculty ln a rtgular game.
Ticket.I will be $1.2S for adults, 'IS
cents for students and 50 ctnl! for
~hl\dren. They will be on sale at the
gymnasium ticket office.
A student dance wlll be held efter
the games. Proceeds from the evening
will http rinance service proJecta of
the key club. Past project& have Included
Jand.scaplng of the campua am! pa!ntlna.
• r,, '
MURDER DEFENDANT
Arthur (.MooM) HulM
SA Land Bid
Denied; Suit
Now Last Hope
A lawsuit ill probably the only recourse
left to Santa Ana bt its battle to annex
923 acres of Irvine industrial land
the city claims was promi.sed to it in
1963.
The Local Agency F o r m a t-i on.
Commission refused Wednesday to
reopen hearings on the boundary of the
proposed city of Irvlne.
On Feb. 10, the LAFC app roved
incorporation of lbe new 18,lfS.acre city,
including the disputed property just south
of the Santa Ana Marine Corps Air
Station.
The Irvine Company has acknowledged
the agreement and did ask the LAFC
to exc lude the acreage fr om the new
clty.
Santa Ana protested Wednesday that
LAFC Chairman l.Auis R. Reinhardt had
"intimldated" CJ t y Manager Car I
Thornton when he tried to introdu~
a copy of a $15,000 study on the effect
of the Irvine incorporation on Santa
Ana.
This charge against Reinhardt. a
Fullerton city councilman, and other
intimations that the LAFC had not
operated properly on Au g. IO seemed
to Irritate commlssioner!.
Commissioner Charles Pearson, of
Anaheim. moved Lhat the petition for
a re-hearing be denied. He was backed
by Reinhardt and Stanley Northrup, 1
San Clemente councilman.
Supervisor Robert Battin continued his
stance oppo!ling the Irvine Company by
voting against the motion.
Laguna Boys Club
Picks 6 Directors
The board of directors of the Boys
Club of Laguna Beach bas been brought
up to its full quota of 25 with the
election of sir: new board members.
Joining the board as directors are
i trs. Faye Nell. widow of the late Dr.
Edward R. Nell, former president of
the board; Mrs. Thomas ~t. Skelton;
ti.1rs. Peter Hyun. chairman of Pro-
Environment People (PEP): retired
ilarlne Col. William H. Roley; William
Exner of Pi-tission Viejo; and Laguna
Beach Fire Chief James Latimer.
Nixon Says
Russ Inch Ahead
In Atom Arsenal
WASHINGTON (UPJl -The Soviet
Union has surpassed the United States
In some categorles of strategic nuclear
'"'eaponis and may be preparing for a
''flrst strike" capability, President Nixon
said today.
He !laid the SoYiet Union overhauled
the United Stat.es In 1969 in the number
of intercontinental ballistic missiles and
is rapidly gaining in numbers of
llubmarine launched ballistic missiles.
"By any standard, we believe th t
number of Soviet stragetic forces now
exceeds the level needed for deterrence."
Nixon said in his "state of the world''
message.
"Even more important than the growth
tn .numbers has been the change in
the nature of the forces the USSR ehoSe
to develop and deploy. These force.s
incl ude systems -particularly the SS9
ICBM with large multiple warheads -
~ilcih, if further improved and deployed
in sufficient numbers, could be uniquely
suitable for a first st:ike against our
land-based deterrent forces ."
In 1965, the United States had 934
tCBMs and 464 submarine-launched
ballistic missiles compa red with 224 and
107 for the Soviet Union. Ni.I.on said
by the end ol 1969, the Soviet Union
had 1,109 ICBMs to 1,054 for the United
States and in 1970 added 331 more while
the United States maintained the same
level.
Last year the United States bad 656
submarine-launched ballistic missiles -
the same as in 1969 -while the Soviet
Union had 350, an increase ol 110 over
1969, the President said.
Nixon said, "By the mid 1970.s we
expect the Soviets to have a force of
ballistic missile submarines equal in size
to our own, Furthermore, the Soviet
Union has continued to make significant
qualitative improvements in its strategic
forces. These include new and improved
versions of their i tinuteman size SSI l
missil!, continued testing or multiple
warheads, research and testing of ABM
component!, and improved air defense
system!."
He said mainland China by the late
1970s probably will have ICBMs "capable
Niguel Residents'
Opinions Sought
Residents of the Laguna Niguel area
"'ill receive a questionnaire Saturday
from Avco Community Dev e Io per 11
soliciting their opinion concerning the
future directions of their community.
Avco, which purchased the Laguna
Niguel Corporation in 1970, is mapping
the future growth of the area and is
hoping residents will cooperate by
completing the form, As an added
incentive to return the c<lmpleted
questionnaire, Avco will pay SO cents
pe.r form to a homeowner's association
of the resident's choice.
The form, which will be confidential,
'~iii include questions con c er iii n g
recreational facilities and p o s s i b I e
expansion of the existing facilities in
the community.
Phosphate Ban Askecl
\VASHINGTON (UPI) -Forty House
members said today they would introduce
legislation that would outlaw phosphates
in detergents produced after June 30,
1973, and ban other ingredients also
found to cause water pollution.
of reaching the U.S."
Nixon cautioned that there has been
a o m e slowing in Soviet development
of land-based missile launchers. But tie
said •·The significance of th 11
development is not clear."
Doctor Says
Calley Sane
In Rebuttal
FT. BENNING, Ga. (AP) -An Army
psychiatrist who followed Lt. William
Calley Jr. to the witness stand testified
today he c<lUld find no evidence that
Calley suffered from ''any form of
mental disorder I could think of" in
the massacre at My Lai.
"One could say the entire incident
is bizarre," Maj . Henry E. Edwards
replied to one question put to him.
He was the first rebuttal witness for
the prosecution. The defense rested
Wednesday after Calley had spent two
da ys on tbe witness stand.
Edwards was one of three Walter
Reed 11ospita1 psychiatrists t b a t
constituted a sanity board for Calley.
A second member of the team, Lt.
Col. Franklin G. Jones, followed Edwards
to the witness stand.
-Edwards' t e st i m o n y directly
contradicted that of defense psychiatrists
who said that Calley did indeed have
mental impairment that clouded bis
capacity to premeditate his actions at
My Lai on March 16, 1968. Calley is
charged with murdering 102 villagers
that day.
Edwards answered affirmatively to all
questions touching on whether the
lieu tenant had the capacity to k n o w
right from wrong, the ability to do
what he knew was right and to form
the specific intent to kill.
How did be define the specific Intent
to kill?
"That he bad the notion and desire
to end someone's life,'' Edwards said.
"My opinion is that there v.•as no
impairment to his m e. n t a I thought
prcasses on that day. , .the way he
performed he was responding to cues
and stimuli around him."
In cross-e1amination, the psychiatrist
was asked whether the mind could be
conditioned along certain channels, "I'll
say a channel to kill."
The question came in conne(tion with
the so-called Pavlov experiment in which
dogs were conditioned to respond l.o
certain stimuli.
Edwards !laid he had not read the
Y.'orks of Pavlov, a Russian. "! don 't·
know tha t he l"ver made a n y
e<1mmentary, but a person can be
conditioned to kill," Edwards said.
At another point, the psychiatrist said,
"I believe one can be conditioned." But
he added be did not think it was possible
lo condition one section of the mind
without affecting others.
On cross-examination, Edwards said
he knew that one witness testified Calley
stood at a ditch for one and a half
hours killing people with bis M16 rifle.
Q. Do you coru lder that bizarre ?
A. I didn't consider it bizarre under
the circumstancs.
Q. Did you consider it unusual!
A. It would be unusual in a noncombat
situation. , .I did not see this as a
mental disturbance.
A Nylon
Shag .
Thar's
Young In
Looks, and
Young In
Price!
9.95 SQ. YD.
IF YOU CAN'T
COME IN-CALL
64&-027S
to: an expC!rt
carpet
consultant
wbo will
come to
your home
with samples
without any
obligation
to you!
H.J.GARRtfT fURNffURE
PROFESSIONAL
INTERIOR DESIGNERS o,.. Moa .. n.n. & Pri. ltn.
2215 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA, CA IF
646°0275 646.
I
r
I
I
..
Cities
By ALAN DIRKL~
01 fllt DtllY '1'-1 Iliff
Thursday, January 25, 1q71
Seek oc Harbor District Expansion
Newport Betch. The baltle wa11 taken to the Tbe report was suhmitted of the county have objecled C<lastline and in park 1 The district pre 111 n t J y
Essentially, the supervlsors &tale legislature where in January and ls expected to paying llxes le the Harbor development and there is a patrols Newport Harbor, and
A move is developing in and Newport Beach wanted Assemblyman John Bri&gs (R· to be cansidered by the full District ud said that he felt limited time to do it. We also patrols Sunset Aquatic
the League of Cities lo push lo e1pand the district, bea~ed Fullerton) sponsored a League in April. this cbjection would be
I ·f th t ... feel expansicn of the district Harbor near Hun tJ n gt on or ei:pansicn of the Orange by Beaches and Park 1 compromise bill which called Westminster Mayor Derek cvercome 1 e coun Y parl\6
County Harbor District. 01rector Ken Sampson. to for a public referendum on ~fcWhlnney headed t be system, present l y is the best way to accomplish Beach . Newport is happy with
This would be a reversal formally include the 00W1ly's either d is so I u ti on er committee, which did not administered by Sampson's it. the service but in Huntington
of the League 's stand last year parks system. expansio~ of the district. The include a Huntington Beach staff. were formally includtd "If the dislricl were put Beach there is discont.ent.
when it sought dissolution Qf Huntington Beach called for bill died in committee. representative. ~fcWhlnney in the district. into a county department in Huntington Beach Public
the controversial district. the district to be dissolved Now a League s l u d y said that the recommendation Hirth today said that he competition with others there Information OfOctr William
The fight that ended without and re-established as a county commiltee on special districts was propc;lRd by Mayor Ed considered the district had Is a qu estion of whether there Reed sa.td that city lifeguard
a. verdict over the Harbor department . ~tayer J 1 ck in the county is recommending Hirth cf Newpcrt Beach and done "an outstanding job" and would be time for that patrols and county pa\r(l\1 In
District last year involved the Green. president of the that the Harbor District be was accepted with o u l that it should be expanded . changeover or whether that Huntington Harbour overlap.
Le a I! u e , the co u n I y League cf Cities in 1970, won "recognized to form a 11 y argument. "There Is a great deal left body would have the strengttt He aald that this was becauat
1upel'\lisors and ttte cities of the league's support for thi.J include the beaches and AfcWhinney uplained that lD be dOlle in further to operate .effectively," Hirth the city considered the county
Huntin1tion Be a ch and posilion. regicnal park functions." many pecplc !n inland areas development 1 lo n II the &aid. service inadequate . . ·~~~~~~~~~--'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
THEY'RE ALL SHOUTING ''LOWER PRICES''
f, •• ~:
f. •• • :-a. 'x • .
-!· .. .< . '
~
1
i .
' .. . •
. .. ·' ,
~·
' ,l
••
. • •
LUCKY BONDED BEEF-GUARANTEED
IOR FLAVOR & TENDERNESS!
CHUCK ROAST
ILADI 55c CUT lb.
FRESH FRYERS .::::.29c WltOll
IOOY Ill.
RIB ROAST
ITANDING8 3 C LARGE
IND Ill.
Mtt. F1y Bervbt w11 in the check4ut line 1t • LUCKY DISCOUNT SUPERMAllCIT
In Ltkewood when we asked her if she would buy the ex1ct ''"'' Items or com•
p1r1ble brands 1t any other m1rk1t of her own choaslng
MRS. FAY BERUBE COMPARED IDENTICAL ITEMS OF
HER OWN CHOOSING AT ANOTHER SUPERMARKET
She sptint $36.95 at LUCKY ••• The Mm• shopping list at the other marbt COii
her $41 .97 ••• and sh• had to craa flve it•ms off her list •••• The other marbt
didn't stock them. She's ·convinced • , •
SHE REDUCED HER
FOOD COSTS AT LUCKY 13.58~0
PROVE IT TO YOURSELF ••• SHOP LUCKY AND SAVEi
PORTERHOUSE STEAK l:.~--'lll.
SIRLOIN STEAK--'11:.
RIB ROAST=~---·-'11~
GROUND BEEF::l'.'u'::r.~ .... -57~
SLICED HALIBUT STEAKS ... _ 98:,
SHRIMP ~:9.":~~~~ ..... M,_,97"
SAUSAGE :::.:;:;::::r.' 67' .tUY&llfNl-llMllKl,liCUll -
YOUNG TOM TURKEYS =•·•·.36f1.
FILLET OF SOLE "'"··-.. -11 •r •.
CUT UP FRYERS rn~::. ...33:,.
1 -FOLGERS COFFEE:!::._.81' BEEF STROGANOFF ::~:~:. ..... -54'
MORTON MACARONI:::.':.":.'.~ .. 24'
HADDOCK ~:'o'::'::~... '1''
... Kl,&(!.--.
. SUGAR
NAIYUTDAY 60C GIANUl.ATID
r. FOLGER$ INSTANT~:':~· .... -11"
O"' GREEN GIANT PEAS~::_23• r TOMATO JUICE·:::~~ll:~~-.. 291:
REFRIED BEANS ;:~~·~: ........... -.. 31'
;. v-PIE FILLING ~~~:~~.~~~49'
l· O"' CHERRIES'"''"''"""' 27' 1t0L(All.-......... __
O"' FRUIT COCKTAIL l!~i~~ ... -24'
Our LOW EYCT)dayPrice!
NIBLETSCORN 2oc 12·0UNC£ , ..
o-"' PEARS :::~~:~~ ........................ 37'
O"" @ PRUNE JUICE ::::'.:l.".~.'. .. 37'
I ~JUICE :::;~=~~.~~~~~.~~ ....... _ .... 27'
O"" llBBY'S SALMON ~~~.~ .. 99'
.,.-SAUSAGE ~·:~?.~.~~ ... -.......... 48' i.,.-MIRACLE WHIP~:!~~~~.57'
o-4 MAYONNAISE !::\1 ......... _,59•
. ;,,.. BARBECUE SAUCE :::~.n-37'
• C"4 SMUCKERS JELLY ,,..,. •.... 32' aAClllllf,ll'lAWllllT, (lllUllT, llMflllllJ
o-"WELCH ;.~;~:::~.~.~~·--·-·· .. ··· 411.
lll'tUUYOl.llltl 3 .,.. MARMALADEuoL>H-·--1'
.,.. HEINZ PICKLES.:.~~l:.~53'
~ CATSUP ;.·,~~ .................. w .... 29'
.,.. ONION RINGS ~::.'.':'u. .. -... 40'
POTATOES =~~~~~~·.~~ ....... _,,_35c
.,.. ENCHILADAS~'o~:::'.-38' °""' VEG£rABLES :1:.S:~: ............ _.41'
<•t..11 •• If-• ..... •I&-... ............. , ..
w/o.l••IMl-..""-•1"--h"tl
JOHNSTON PIES ,.,., ......... -.. -78'
<llOCtl.ltl1CW1.C111COUnvam,llMOIJaaa
MRS. SMITHS PIEl.·:~:.. ......... -.99'
COOL N CREAMY~~T,';:"'"".. 43'
KOLD KIST CHIU::;.W" 27'
'
... ~8.y!.--.
LADYlll ·
200-<0UMT IOI 23c
'•:;!d!·'· LOW O\SCOUNT PRICES ON HOUSEWARfS 8 BEAUT Y AIDS
SOFT I. DRI SPRAY DEODORANT
A ,ower-oose at protectia1, but 11 S.. 1e11t11 y111 can 11s1 it immedlat111
1J>i1 after 1•1wi1&! Try it 11ow! = .
lJOUNCESllE $149
OUl lOW IVllYDAY PltlCI
BRECK SHAMPOO
•· CIHll lair •lt~Olf 1trlppl11 1•11 IT t•• Hllll 11t11r1l 1ils. nr11 fJPU. !1'1 fir Dry, Ntr•1l or Dill hir.
7CHUICll1Zl 86C
OUI LOW IVUTDAT PllCI
BUFFERIN 100'• Fast. 1tfecti•1 ,ai11 rt·
lief •lthut 0111111
dicutive dl1tt1ss.
OUllOW
lVHTDAY $101 PIUCI
EDGE SHAVE CREAM
na 1~1t1 crtam that b1lps
'"'"I 1111111 olcls "'
""PIS. 6Y•OLStZI 76'
SECRET keeps y11 calm, ca1I 11d com·
fart1•11, 1t11 11l1r stress.
PHU lllC'l-.S Jk Off I.Am. ANTI•P'llSP'lltANT 1 or. 94 . 01 Nil C
IPIAY DIODOIANT 7or.
Olll \OW IVllYfAY P•ICI 1111
LISTERINE MOUTHWASH
lllt SUtlf Ill; kills II Htlltt, t•• 11r11s •~•t ca• c1111 •••
lr11tl. :I00111<t1Dnu $11t
OVI LOWrvmDATPtfCI
SUCRETS SORE THROAT SPRAY (jiltj Wit~ llmt 'Pfll"ll" If U1z1cal1 1 1r fast
t1111,1r1rJ r11!1f af ml·
1or 11r1 t~raat ''''· 77c OUl lOW IYllJDAY PllCI
'
FISH CAKES :~l.',~r."-........... __ 36'
ZUCCHINI STICKsl:r::~ ... -47'
.,.. FRIED CHICKEN=:r.?..~~ .. 11u
... ~8.yf.--.
MAIYIST DAY
29·0UNCI CAN 25c
RITZ CRACKERS :::'1.':. •. _47 •
~CRACKERS n1:Si'.0:0~ .. ".-24c
BREAD 141YUfOifQllllUWlll.IT.,. 37' atll<ICW4Hll.Jf0Ll1U---
-NOODLES :m>:~--27'
O"" MAHATMA RICE :o:,W~ ... 89'
DRY BEANS ~~~::~:~~~-22c
OO'CHEERIOS ::~"t.... 55'
SACCHARIN =r.1.':.~~~ .......... M_42• .r ROMAN MEAL=-~~,'._ 43•
@ CIRCUS PEANUTS ::r.".L31'
.,.. PIZZA PIE MIX :~:l~:L.35'
... ~8.y!.--.
AJAX CLEANER 31 C WINDOW 20.0UNCI aomr
LIPTON BLACK TEA::t.. as·
r C&H SUGAR:l:':'.':'.~-63'
I>" C&H SUGARr::r."t.~-.'1"
BISQUICK:::l'.'.:!'._ .. _,,. __ ,,._53•
O""' SUGAR ~:~!~~~.~-•1 1•
.,... DINNER"'"''"""',_' 49' Cllllll.llOLPll .......... -
-PURINA~":".r:-31'
CAT LtmR:\'l'l;~ 69'
0-0 FllSKIES •• OLW 14'
Uf .... rMUY& 1.1.C.MllMIYI ~
... ~&,!.--.
LUX LIQUID 65C DITllGINT 22.0UJllCI aonu
J.POUND IAG
•. • r , -"
I l , "1 , -~ >
' < •
.,.. KLEENEX TOWELS:::~ ....... 33'
CJ"" CUPS ~.:._~:r.:.~ ...... -.69•
.,.. REYNOLDS FOIL :::=.._ '!"
.,.. GLAD WRAP r:::\" .. u ... -26'
r GLAD BAGS~~l.~~-57'
~ BAGGIES~~~~~·-"--32c
r SHINOLA POLISHl:.'lr.u• .... 18'
.,.c FAB DETERGENT :l:~ ....... -67'
... VOGUE DnERGENT ::::....36'
.,..COLD WATER ALLl'::~.IL... '2"
O"" DETERGENT :~.~~~.......45'
.,... NIAGARA STARCH:;':~w . .59'
... ~8.y!.--.
ZEETISSUE 36C TOILIT
4/•SO COUNT IOUI
~ SANI FLUSH :m'il:~~.49'
I>" MAGIC SIZING ::'tw ... -55'
O"" FANTASTIC :m::t' .. ~_69'
O"" REFILL :::l.~":r:L~_ 69c
CASCADE =-~=~ .... _ ..... -40c
GAIN DmRGENTll'.-:'.=.'.-11"
TIDE DmRGENT ::r:s'.'. . 38' -
JOYLIQUID:f.~~ __ 57•
IVORY FLAKES nn--88'
IVORY BAR .. ·"'·-··---12'
PERSONAL IVORY -·· 30'
••• the few it•PM lht•cf eit thll pog• con ·
•lltute ''"'a smoll t•l'l'lpling of the thous.
and1 of low, d11count prie•• in store for
yo1.1 al lucky.
CANADA DRY BEVERAGE 11 c
1101w ........................ ,,.,,..,,,,,,
~.~~~~~~-~~~ _ )67
~~~;!,A~.--.3''
( .............. ...., .... wltlli~ ......
Shop Any Day ••• Save Every Day ••• With Lucky Low Discount Pricing Policy.-
I\'
P1ic•1 ar• Di1C0'""9d bcepton Fair-Trod.ct
ond Govenuft..rt Controlled llelftl.
FRESH oysms:= ... _11•
T·IONE STEAK::.::... ·'tr.
LADY LEE BACON l':l": ...... _53'
ACON IAtll, WIUOll,UJllOUl. llOMll&. 63' B JUCIDl•POIHllPllo•n•n~-
BACON ~:~:C.. ....... -... "._ 73•
THIN BACON m'l~..'.~ 72'
BAC.ON "'""-""'" ,58' l.u.r11. .. --··-·----
lUCIY II.IND
l·PDUND PIG •
~!·~~o_c.A~~·~·I·~···'""' 49c
AMERICAN CHEESE n':""" 69'
.-. .. ---.i,y 'IWf1I acu ..... ..
~~~;.u~~ ................ 58'
!!2~Rf~.K_S·~"~ $115
PILLSBURY BISCUITS J 1 c
muUJE ........................ l t.!.1'H
L ' • (• • ,~-..,,, ' ' ... , . " 'w ' t"' ,. . ~" ., -~· .. " ' . . ' '
WHIP 0 TOPPING :i'.'ltw.-41'
VELVIDA~:, ______ ,,_~'1"
~PARKAYSO"l'::l.~~41'
CARNATION MILK !::Tc!l.'-19'
FOREMOST SHERBET:".:~ .. -65'
100% CHIQUITA
G~1~D~N1oc BU~l::IS lb.
U.S. NO. 1 RUSSIT
@POTATOES
10'~~:39c
E1J11 SICCll .. 1 lull ltMptl11 fi1rt1
IYICldU ...... at t•11t flav1r p11t
.• , f"flrol 11 I.le-, Stms 11 llW
Eftrr'IJ OISCHll PrltlS.
•
DAILY PILOT 2jJI
Appol"ted
MN. Rosemary It. Ne!·
son of Fountain Valley
has been appointed ex·
cutive director of CUI""
riculum and personnel
for Sullivan Pre-School
Centers of Irvine.
Rebels Need
Drum, Bugl.e
Participants
Lads and lasse.!I between the
ages of 10 and 20 are needed
to fill out the ranks of the
Rebels Drum and Bugle COrps
in Huntington Beach.
The Rebels is a new corps
at.arted this year for lM:al
youths who would like to
compete In state and naUooal
marciµna: compelition.
Soys with er wJthoat
experience are wanted io'blow
bugles from small &oprano
size to the deep toned contra·
bass bugles.
Girls will twirl fla1s, rif1es
and sabers in the Rebels color
guard.
The Rebels Drum and Bugle
Corps pracUcea at Hope VJew
School, 1762% FUntaton• Lane,
from 8:31) p.m. to 9 p.m .•
Wednesdays, and 1 p.m. to
4 p.m., Sundays. For further
information phone J a m e s
Senecal, 893-7'3'7, or Mr1.
Linda Mendez:, 847-2783.
2RTDBuses
Now Going
Into LA
Two more bus trip s
betwetn Huntingten Beach
and Los Angeles have been
added to the Southern
Calllornia Rapid Tr a n 1 i t
Diltrlct (RTD) 15Chedule.
A bus now leaves the
Huntington Beach station at
Pacific Coast Highway and
Main Street at 7:30 a.m. and
arrives in downlclwn Los
Angeles at 9:09 a.m.
A return trlp will leave Los
Angeles at 5:05 p.m. and
arrives in Hu.nUnglcln Beach
at 8:47 p.m.
RTD olllclals said the utra
times were added because or
the demand from Huntington
Beach residents. Other trips
on the RTD Une between
Huntington Beach and Les
Angeles will remain a t
scheduled in the pu~
Flick Fete
Under Way
The Huntington Beach
Public Libriry's Third Annual
0rtatna1 Film CompetiUon is
now underway.
Anyone who wants to enter
the movie making contest
may pick up applications al
the main library, sis Main St.
Deadline for entries is 9
p.m., May 28. Trophies will
be awarded and the top fUmJ
will be shown at the library
film festival June 4.
Fer more informaUon phone
136-1481.
PUEBLO TALK
SCHEDULED
Former Pueblo crewman.
Let R. Hay•• will tpeak abOut
the capture cf bis abip by
North Korea i.n a metttng
1poOJOrld by the John Birch
Society •
Hayes wUJ ,..ke his speech
Friday at I p.m. 1t the
Stvent.ttnth Street S c h o o 1
1Udltorlvm. 71!1 Westminster
Avt., We&tmlnsttr. The
rneeUng II open to the public.
Who C1re1?
Ne eifriM 11•W1p1,., 111 tft.
w•rlcl c1rt1 •ti.e11t yo11r c•n.111w-
11lty likt ~ ••inM1111lty 4•11y .. .,.~,,., 4••t. It'• tfl• DAILY
PILOT. '
l
, ............ --........ . • . . •
f,2 DAILY PILOT SC
Your Mmaey's lVorth OVER THE COUNTER · Complete-N~w York Stock List
Getting a Lot of Mileage
NASO Listings for Wedn1sd1y, Febru1ry 24, 1971
On Drivn1g Cost Deduction '"" llf ,... .. l id
=fr~'' rrl• ACF fnc1 t .0 tMI ~ •M A.t!MClrt _, ll.cf'1•Mkl 1D
NEW YOlllC l"''J rn!I RI!' -ll'lf' lgllQwln~ bid '°"' Pr J•o 4 IVlll'!~ Se l ~' tt\'I 11,1t P t•11 11', "'Odfwn lS. fl\' .1 1:v11 Lo I' ••;•ttF 11 1, ,,.,., ~~,1~, '::
By SYLVIA PORTER
(la collabor1Uoa. with &ht
Bneardi Wdtute of Amerlc• l
U you are entitled to deduct
the allowable costs of driving
your car ror buslne1s,
dlantable or m e d 1 c a I
purposes, or as pa.rt of your
deduetible moving expenses to
a new )Ob, you got a
valuable ta:x break
under a 1970 Treasury ruling
The Treasury lets y o u
elumnate keeping de t a 1 I e d
records of )OUr 1tem1ie<:1
automobile expenses, instead
1t "'tll accept your deduction
based on a standard rruleage
rate for that type of deduchblc
dnmg The break JS that the
Treasury raised all these rates
by 20 percent or more for
1970
lf you re an employe or &elf
employed and you use your
car for business travel yoor
optional deductloo for 70 1s
12 cents a mile for the first
15 000 miles, 9 cents a Pllle
above that (vs 10 cents and
7 cents)
lf you rt u~1ng your own
car for chantable or medical
travel or for deductible
moving expenses y o u r
optional deduction for 1970 is
6 cents a mile (up from 5
cenlli)
Heres another new break
on the optional m 1 I e a g e
deduction on your '69 return,
CIYILIZA TION'S DISEASE
DENTAL CARIES
IC...lttesl
the Treasury 1ns1sted that 1f
you look the optional business
mlle<1ge deduct1on1 you bad
to forfeit denuzed deductons
ror sales tax and interest
allocable to business mileage
of your auto
Now 1l says your use of
the optional mileage deduction
on your '70 return does not
bar )OU from deducllng any
interest and stale and local
taxes on your auto that would
otherwise be deductible -a
pa rt 1 cu I ar ly \aluable
hberahzation 1£ you bought
your car last year and paid
ii.terest on an auto loan plus
slate local sales taxes
If you re an employe who
d e d u c t s ' office-at home 1
expenses you've had to meet
some tough T r easury
requirements to get t b e
deduction -among them that
your employer required 1 you
to have an office at home The
Tax Court re1ected t h 1 s
requirement 1n 1970, said 1t
is enough 11 your ofhcc at
home is ' appropriate and
helpful• tn your \!<Ork even
though not ' required ' by your
employer The Treasury ap.
pealed but the Second C1rcu1t
Court. upheld the Tax Court s
allowance of the deduction
Assuming you plan to rely
on these decisions though be
\'Cry well prepared te> prove
to the courts that your cf(1ce.
at home 1s "appropnate and
helpful ' though not required
by your employer -er you II
lose the deduction anyway
The winner of the court cases
was a salesman er network
TV time who conv 1nced the
Judges that watching TV
programs after hours m his
o f fi ce at-home w as
' appropnate and helpful "
If ycu have the rugged )Ob
l !'ld .,~.. 4UOI.. wit Int llON. ,uPO!l.cl ti' Ytoeln of s upnhrtln" bu s Int s s tht N111on11 A11oc1. He111h 1" I"' " •!!Oft ol SKUt !111 Htnre(I F
e n t e r t a t n m en t expense ~.•1e;;1u,l~,1"'~~· ~r~ ~~.
.< d I b h I ed !Ions 11~1 ire ,,,,. Ho!obm ue UC ions you nlay e e p rt1tn!1!1ve 1n1u Hoov" dt•lfr IH'it'U IS ol Horii Rt b) another court dec1s1on epproic1m11~1v 3 How.-G• Pm .i wlll(fl lhne ~wm I"
knocking cut a sllff Treasury ~:;.u:111n1>een ~~wl:r P~t
I Th T C~ttfd 1·~"1 or IW<1I f> rue e reasury s a ys told cb di "'"' Hf1n c~
generally that travel and ~~:~. ;::~~::.· r~:~', 1r;
entertainment expenses may :1 1t1:iof•Y 1~i~: I~, Ny~
be. deducted only If you keep •tt1 1 m .. ~111> 1n1r••d m1ooown or tom nt Con!
an account l.iook or d1<1ry or ~~· ~':i.P 6 0 1~, !~:'Bw~~
s ome ()ther written"'""',., s J~ l4 1"1 M~u 11 A!O lftt 10 o 10\o in! SYI statement, plus, 1n certain A1Ts '"' .... t\'t 1on1~~"''' AVM (p f lt IO•• II """" situations 11em1zed receipts or Abflrl• '" 21, 1~. J1cob' ,' 'I' s. 10 1~. '•"u n similar documentary evidence A r ind~• l'• l{o'o J,•• •,•' ""lbff H J~o no 6mtl Withoul the \\ntten record or "'111t•h lg . 101. J•m1t>Y
b A!to!IC f"~ J>o Jl!IY Fd• statement, the Treasury ars Allto Ll'ld H • 101 K11,., s1
Th T 'l'r. 81r11 3\/1 lJ,lj Kil!o~I Pl the claim eoure!y e ax A 1 ec1 e" 1on 101. 1C1N•r
C d ... llyn Bl lS 15,,. Kil• Grn ourt agree ,o,1on Geo • •i~ 1Y1m
Rut 1n 1970 the Second ~me18~~ 1~;'! 1:~ ~::1~11T
C I d th Tar "·urt Am E~pr u 't 10 <ellwd trCUl reverse e ....., "'"' Fur" I 1 tV. tr;eull E
and 'eld thal the Treasury's" Gre-er "'' '1\IO (•ye Fib JJ A MPC!ltll 19~1 W tVI CuJ
absolute r""Ulrement of Arr! Tflv 11 u v, 1Cev,1 Pc; "''I AllMU• 8 IJio 14\t Kint Int wntten proof as a cond1t1on ""k'" 1,, 10"" so;\ K1n1• El Arc1 lrlO l'!oo llo Kirk Cl> for your deduction is wrong Ardtn No •\Ii 10 Kn•• vo1 Ar~ MtJP 1l,. IJ~ L""' In You the taxpayer, may have 11,rrow H 31'4 11 ·~•ml Rt1 Arv da l •~• 141•• Lant Wd the alternative of backing up ,,.,cc "1' .ss4 »" L••lOft
b ff I Auto $c I ,,,. f•d• Cp your deduction y a su 1c1en ea rd At ~ 4'1l1t.•h co.1
b 81~u 111\i '1H•ll 1 G amount or property su stan-e111 P&c 1 7V> :.!r: sF
I led I <. ti 9k1m IUI Jj ?~h bitW t a era u;:S mony even e111mr1 !1"' .sl\1 .,0 cc1v ,, k II B•Y tSI 211. ?~ thou&• you ept no wr1 en re seectom .11\/.i 331~," •'"c'
d Sf~I Mtg 11 11-. ~Ync cor Btrlc HI .,.,. "~· 'ol•d GEl
Th •• r dB•: L•b ,,, n,.. ..... I '"' IS case may ion:; () 31 Bl lu PS w 10'" 10h ..... RUY
lo You Ir JOU are .$\UCk Wl\hOUt Bird Son ' -~1 •II~<! C 8 rtthr ~lo 4 M111Gr the wntten records reqwred 111.ck Ht 'si1 1H~ ..... ,, .,, 909ut El 1~) fl'o Yo rowr by the Treasury rule, but Boo "P c 11 1n, v.1u1 tP
8ool AH 11 "I' Quy
YOU!\ be far better Offllos (IP ~I O•Y..clc ~ Brad~n '"' 1\lo Mii if you keep those w r 1 t t e n &rinks In AA u 11o Me<t! n
d I I 8•~• see :tsto 26\\ trld In rerords and avot 1hga ion srwn "'' 11 11 ~ v.IOld t1
h h t I eru1h 61 iq, 1~ ld!e~ w 1c you may no necessar1 y 8u<~N 101, 11 y.iow GT Bunn Co l 3\~ Ml'!• Gas Win Burnup s ~ 31\lo \\lu vrc;.
F ··rtl fl the c rcu1I CIC: Le•• ti. ,.. RKh ors11" ya er 1 c11 wsv ,~,,.&~sci
Court dec1s1on the Tax Court C:mlldli N 7•• 11; M!!hwlc R C•l'IOll M 7• r to n1 Col had another case 1n which t1...,M 11 11 to Moor• P C:•nr~ '"' S OO•I S the laxpayer rehed o n c~o MIG~ ""' 10 Mtoe T•A (IP Sow av. l \:o M19T' wt corroborating evidence to t11> 1ntA s1. s • Motch M (1pTc1> JV. l"' 1 tlub
Prove h 1 s entertainment c1r1e ar ~~ 1~} 0 11, (1rtr Go ?5\11 1~'4 LE e>pense deduet1on i•sc NG 11>,;, ll':\ tJ.' ln<I' l'l'\Tei 42~, 41.l\lt C The Tax Court disallowed en vPs 1 .. -. n 1, ',',,",: , ~tfll L~b 1 • 1\1 his di!ducbon not only be.cause •rl o 4\~ 1;. .. 11, 0,~,0
d m Lee 11 • 11\0 ,., he lacked a written recor Ch" '"d s~ 6V. a11 J:c1
or statement but also because s~r11~l1l Jl~ ~!,'! :: s, ... ,
h d (11rt1t s 11'~1?11Ji N1t vr 1t said hts ct er ev1 ence w as c11r111 Jtf 10s 101 NEn GE
biJ cl CIT!t Ml!I 1Jl-l U\lt NJ N1tG Inadequate IO prove alIII Cjl r V A 20~ ~ jth•n F (II> U8 71 77 >N•I• A Cl Mtg 70'11 20 o NI• s II Clarie Ml 21h 78, car NG Clint Me~ 1~'• 1'' NE11r 0 I
6\• 7l1 Vl•lfO!I ~ 1 'Nt!f'I l<(A ll! 1•~ Adtflf,tl 1'• ?>.. •d1w , ,,.., n~ 1111 Mlt 61~ A11n•LI• I. 1~. 7'.l t it td UV. 11'1 iJn ,VD 1 1$" Ac1n1LI Pl 2
)l\lo l H• 11.tUe tVo JI(, int wn ~" J\~ Aflulrr1 Co-3h ) t 1111 NG jltlt 11 lnsl Mii tth ill~ • I ,'. .\ .•• ' '' •" >•• 1 •L n•· .. 11n Ill(; J • t < Wtbt> Re 11\.'j 11 r~w E ti; 2'i1 Alr Prod 1J'
46'• "6l1 Wtldtrn '""' 114 , .. M w '!,, •~ :/~11':., '":C-1
l~ ! \1 Wtllnt M t Nll Ul'IYtd"V ~ .,. "l'I AJ lnd""lrllS
t lV.11 !r.'7 •• '~10 J~' :'l';i Al1.it1 t"tfr1 • 1•1 AlbtrtoC l7 ti~ )I ~ Al'-""'' 35 n~-'j~ MUTUAL A uin Alum I IQ • 1 , A (0$11'11! lO 11 31 1 AlnMlrt :Mr " 111 .-.uAml.f , .. :i<,o 'lo AllM Cit 10..
14 iW FUNDS Allt11Lud 1 .o ;\~ jlo ~::::\.~ f~~
24 'o 1S Allied Jll I 20 1'~ if~ !J/~'1/l n1t:
::.11 .. i1 Aluld ...... )\o •VII Alllt<:IPd gf ) IG 104 NEW YORIC (APl nvflfOrt Groyp "'llled$1r 1 .0
.i;,, ! • -lhe fQ11owln1 <I'll>-10$ 11111 •~ l 1t Al tied $u1>tr ',J)• ',',, l•llon1 lu111>Ued bv Mui 'fl 10 69 "'•l':;i,:ls Ch 0511 .. • the thtlon•I .IJ,.s«l· l'rOI '13 • .., 'OIA11t ·'° ,',l' ,"', 1!1on 01 Sec~1111e1 Sloi:k 11 t7 20 U ~k P J• m • • o,. to inc !'"' Sf4KI t 1• 9 tJ ,.. oa 1.-10\1 2n. Ille prlu1 II wh di V1r Py 7 lS 'n AmelSllQ 1.60 .10 30J.< m~,. ~11•11 e: nY Iles" '11 J 20 A,MBAC .SO ' • 4 •'°"'IO 111ve llffn 11.i :io 60.11 u Amer es l 20 l • ' • sold lbkl\ or boueM vw 1 11 t 1t ""' es pfl.6(1 11\>1 ll~o111ked) Wedn~Y Hl'tKk 1 •9 13' Am Heu .JOI" ll'ft .~~} akl Alic lOl'ln1ln '21 It 21 lt ~~11f;'' ~ 11Wt 11~ bllrdn 210 lJO ~m• F~"fl10 .. AmAl•lln 111 1~ l•OAdml<~lh' F11!'1d1 (UI 81 11 712012 ~8:ktr '~ 1i l~ f:~ ! ~~ ~ ll Cui IU 19 91 21 n Am~~' 1 ,. ~ ,;~ lnsu 110 t t.o1 C111 It I.SS t :I' Am C1n 2 20 '\" sv. Vtrl 5" St) (Ill Kl ,., 1 4211, C.norl lS ] I ,i, Aefl\f Fil t 15 10 6' CllS K2 S l)J S~ Am (enwnt
ll l4 Afll old 7 '2 107 C111 Sl 11432010A Ch1l"l.60 3.n u~.t.•""' •n 1n '"' s1l03711.l2Acv1"ld 11.s .~ ~ AU Am F 11 15 (UI SJ 111 1$ AOl1lTti 10t 1~ 11 AllJll1t 101111.tt Cus S<1 .f.4S 5(11 Am DutlV••I l'l J'oAl>ht Fd 113'11~2 Poltr 3•1 • AOVVI ol .. 1 19~ 70111Amc•1 '11 6 75 K"kkb 7 30 I 01 AmEll"w 1 10 ,\lo 1 Am us ll1 JM!Knlck GI t•11031 Am E•P Ind
l '.415\1 m 0•1" 106511.UL•nG• Fd 6S1 '!'Am E~P pf l t~ l1~ Am E~tv un1v1ll Grit\ 9 !110 5 AGn8Fd 1Sf
61 • I Amer E•Prtu IK RKll IS J9 16 17 A Gtnlnl 50 7 I 7\ C11>lt a 62 t 'l LllMrtW ' 1, '13 A Gnln (111 • 11 /oll,µ lr.cme tl61013Ll!t ST~ 5SJ 60..AmHol•I ,~
2"' 7S 'o lnv1u I U 9 M Liii Inv 7 4S I 37 A Homt 1 I) 'S~ U\ $PKI A ti Liii(" Nil 11).57 II 50 A HO!N pf 2
• I Sloe" 'Qt ,,, Inv • "' Am HOSP '' ','• ~. "'m Grlll unfYlll Loomh S.v •• "'m lnvsl >0 • 'Am lny snS51 t1n1d l01630MAMlldlc111t "•l.:i tl 1AITI Mui tl9100• Cap!! 1115111SA Mll(IX l 40 ll't AmN C.!11 l U l Sl Miii 14 'll 1• 23 A MllCI• pl 4 1614 11" Andlc!r Gl'Ol>P LIJlh 8ro 17 11 13 A,,, Motor~ llV• :tJ~, C11>ll I 1J t II') Mlf/\I h'I 1 77 9 SI AN1IG11 2 10 ll .. ll>o Grwth 110912 U lnl'M S 04 J 51 Am PMt!O 16
76 1~ llKIT,. 116 19'v.kt Gr!ll •U •U Alta0¥ 0 ..
I'll ' Fd 111'1 • ff t.12 Mll.&IChUsell Co ""' SHI ,, 21 2' vent 40 16 4' II Arn 5rlj• "' "' 40\li A,rron , .. 511 Fre.d I» tlS,t. Srn~ll!O u"' IH~ A•t H-1\ton lnd111> '11 , ... I ArnSoAlr 10 e'o t Fund"' l .. ,,, M•u 1121 un ..,m Sid 1 ]~ :m F11nd a tO t~M·u I"' lS72166l A Sl<l•l•15 ,, 20 Stock •01 16JMll l Gth lltlUOIAm ~!*111 a JJ'it Ul't Stl (p 4 61 SOI 151 Tr U I? U .d AT&T WI 11 H\.'IB•DHlll 9).19).IMl!ts 4.ll f.llAm T&T2ICI ,.. J Be~rtk 1 2' t 01 .... 111\eri 13 11 IS.U AWt!Wk 60 ~ 1~ eacon IJ " 1316 Id A MU 5.51 I 02 Am Zinc ?• 2•V. 8frg l('nt I SS I SS 0001 C• 12 11 lJ 'JO AIT1'•0fl 60
10\'o 10 o Btrk Gii\ 6 le 6 '1 0001 l 12 95 1• U Arntllk .a. 10.1o>o.B!alrFd 6SI 119 IF Fd llDtJlAMF lntfO
l• H\11 &onastk '34 In IF (;tll S.41 S t2 Amiee 10 21 27'\ 80<1on S1 & ,, 190 MuVS Gv 11 Ol 11 11 AMP Inc 6'
5'i ~·Bost Fdn 11 (Jn" u Orne. 5 S4 I 02 Am1>Pg~ llltl .... 7~18o~ton 113 I" u Om!" 10SJl lU A,,,PtK Corp 1S« u .11 Brwn Fd JfU 3 H Y.ut Sh•• 16 22 u 22 A.rnJt•r 1 10 ~V. 10 Bullock C:•lv n 11! Tr11 1 91 1 9t Mn11r pr7 65
311,(,, JI~ B11lkk 11 Cl>>"• "• tt EA Miii 10 30 10 S4 Amit•• pf .. s j\, Candn ltl i'l•t Ind 101(107(Am1ted llCI 1J:i,, \6:« O!vld 172 •01 Nit Srcur St• Amf1I :n t"• t:it r!•f'I!, s, !','•"••I ~ 8•1•n 11 ot n 12 An•COfl I to l'lt tsi• nY .n '~ Band SOS S.51 ArlCh Hoclc I l11't. lS'lt 811sM Fd 7 o.4 111 Olv!d '31 'n Ancor11 Svc I
3S-\o 3S'-" CG Fd ~::. 11 }l Grwt~ 9 2110 ll And CllV 1 10 11•11'-(l!!,a1m{,.... 3 .. 371 Pl 5tlt 7l7 IOS A1>1cl\tCp U 1101•>•~· lS 616 I~ 5(1 5t1Al>(.012'1
6\'o ,., (•P:I Sh: I~ 17 13 lO Sll>Ck • 23 • " AP!. Corp
H 19"111> •n ?n: F 1111 .. G!rh 9 )J '" AP!. pl "°"' 19>, ?Ol< h::~:o I~ 50112 SJ Neuw (el S 11 6 M ARA Svc l 06
28'0 1' \ c St 111 l 19 IVW Fd 10 4' 10"'1 "'rc1t1 O:lt
4J\e:t U • G<;;:;tll 51$ S6)Ntw Wld ISOt 1(11 .. 'C1!tN Pl2 '' ,,i, 76& •:19Ntwton 1••71627 Arth 01n1 13\'1 ll o ~~ 1 ,, 1 f2 Nleh Str1 12 t.o1 12 6.4 Ari! PSv 1 01
.~-... ,. . . .
\.. .
U.S. l11dustry Thrit,es
On Foreign Capitcil
Cllnlon O 4 ' > W NstG Clow Cp 11 , 1' , W P11Sv Coo1• (p S8 60 1'111<1 llK ColllnJ F 14111 1.S Ot\lo ..,.,, Co on STr 3S ~'II Jpt S<1n Com Cir Sl !4 Jrmonl (..,.,, G•$ 11>.:. l'l4. :lilt• TP ComT P1 17 2B J<;er NA Com H Th IO~o I~ ~YC:t! Com P1v lJ•o Uh P•bSI er (omo "' 6 • 1 P•ktn Co (mp C:m II • 1 Pl P1ncol CmD In I S S l!I Pll•lcr Or
l l • (h•st Gr 80• NO•tlSI ls SI u SI .. r!ln! 0 Sir 10\~ 10 • (&Pl\ 6 tO 1.54 "OPh 71( 716 A,rmca SU I 21'.,'12 • F nd 9711QCI m&!ll 6ll '4S rm< pf710 1ov. 11 F~nl 11''15J2 100 Fund 1'01 lS 31 ~~mr '"c"'•• I 3 1 Shrhd !1601746 101 Fur>d 96JIOJ1 ,..,m~I k 11,,.,11 s ti t1ottS newmsu11u73ArmC~ol3IS 11•0.11ilchrmc1 111919 01 Nell 12Ml7l6~'mcRul60 11,..'l'1"'c:o11nl1I 01>1>anh 1111.lli"''o "'"'° 1 • 1 1 Eau!V ( 16 ' SS pp AlfA 11 JO 12 lS Arvl" Incl l 13\'t u ~ F u!'ld un•v• 1 TC SK 10 lS 11 lC ... hid 0 11 110 5S SS\'l Gr"' ~ ~ 7 6 » Patf Fnd J » I 51 A~~d 8"v SVt • tntom '90 10 t2 Paul R1r11 • JI 'OS .... d OG 110
1•1 1 o Vt nl •ti 1• •nn Sq J !J IH A.O Sp 11(11) ll• l''IO Col Grlh 17Nl7Up1 Mui ''' lff ~ll'lsd~!f~M/
., Tlllf GU.HT. IP\
F1>rmentable carbohydrate
foods "Ith a high sugar con·
tent are l>tlfeved to be the chief cause or producing
dental carles Cutting down
on s\\ eets and other sucrose
contairung snacks 1s one of
the fU"St rules of dentaJ
health educahon Strength·
en1ng the hard glossy out
side enamel of the tooth 1s
also important, and this 1s hel~ by the nourufatilon
of drinking "'ater
The next preventive mea.
aure is In ttduc1ng by \Igor ous brushing the amount o(
dental plaque that accumu
Jatl'S at the base of teeth
and gum ]Unctions The
brushml! also helps to t'hm
unate 1nflammat1on of the
1'UmJ and reduce calculus
which could lead to di sease
of the gumfi We carrY a
i:ompl.ete fitock of dental
•'"' YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR
CAN PHOl\'E US when you need a delivery \Ve will de lh er promptly 9.'lthout e~
tra charf?:e A great many
people rtly on us for their
health needs We welcome
f't'<lUE'S~ for dehvery service
and charge accounts. •
Pill LIDO PH.AlMJ.CT
JS1 H_,lffll loo' .. ...,.,, ..... '42·1111 ""o.u._.,
IAP)
Foreign C'OUnlr1es paured a
record amount of money mto
NEW YORK
investments 1n Am e r 1 c a n
business 10 1971>
F'tnanclal sources estimate
the amount spent to estabhslt
or acquire US subsidiaries
at $1 2 bilhon 1'he commerce
Department had reported the
1969 total was $1 b1Jhon
From 11.S very beg1nn1ng the
United States we I come d
foreign capital for
development () r railroads,
canals and natural resources
In 1791 Alexander Hamtlton
the first secretary of the
treasury said of foreign
investment Instead of being
viewed as a rival it ought
to be considered as a me>st
\aluable auxiliary"
The government stt!i holds
()pen the door to mvestors
from abroad At I.he end cf
1970 the total f1re1gn invest
ment here was estimated at
$13 b1U1on Despite the strong
growth since the end of World
\Var ti the sum remains
small eompared with the eslt·
mated $70 b1\\Jon value of d1
rect American investment
our bus1 n•'s 11
le11ure wea r
••flbNru:ard e m••'•r
' fadii•11 hlafld fl•WPOll ~""'·~
cJ.1r9•
6-44 5010
DICK WILSON
SAVs:"•3.000F"P
AA'( ~fa;'. C\IMl&E"
OF •10 OR MOR&. ON
YOUR C>A,
OF MAl<.E!•
I
CmP T~ 6\o 6 .. Parkw H (omr~ ~.. 1'711 P1ut•V P
d Ccn Rock 31\'J llh Pivelle ' The e1tc1tement s t 1 r r e to~1rro ~ '-'"' "" 1 Mt Cont"" 1 ' Fl llttrle T
abroad during the past two l::' s L 1:~ 1~~ p_,." P1c
I Cosm Yr 1Jl lH!o Pl (;&VI decades by the 1nternatlona Crwl•d 11 ' ,5,,. P,-rs1111w• Cron co n~ 33 f<O expansion of U S industry has truich rt 1 • 11• P,~:1,2ub Cvprf$ C 1> 8 """''
tended to d1stnct attenl1on g:~rv L~• 1 ~: 1f" P~~~:1"Hic oi.A 01!6 Dt~ s , sv. Pro Golt from the presence Jn utc oat• GPn 76h 7, Pruo Min
United States of numerous &:~,!" .. : ~ f: ;~~5s NM~
firms afhhated with foreign g:vu• "~~ }~"' }{" ~~~!~":
Pacent companies ' says Mor Deter '" 1 ~ 1 'o P Benne1 Oe1'1b P,Q 61 , '~, POuo C11 gan Guaranty Trust Co of 0,1111 1"1 11i, 11~0 ou.1 CM Oet (~nT II, 17'0 RT SY•I New Yark °"' 1Br 2111, 13V. 111tl'I Pr Dtwev E 3 • 41"1. Riha! C The d1vers1I V of their Oltm Cr 18:1\ 111• q1nsb Et
h Dl~c lne ,., s RIVth CP autput 1s illustrated by sue 0oc:111t1 12 11v. R•~m CP
Sh II O"!d~" L 1• 1A • Recc11 Eq well knov.11 names as e oow Jo" 411 •~ Re•11 En
F D I d Dnvle D8 1••• 75 Re! C•l'd Massey erguson un op an 01mkln o 11 • 11 ... 111ddr Pu
Lever Brothers And not only ~~"~0:1,,1 H 1 g'h ~:r" "~
arc many foreign ft rm s "••1 511 11"' n 1101e1on Eco" Lab 21 'i 13 Rus sro¥
operahng subs1d1ar1es and €ru~.~E? ,?,• .~, Rv•n Ho ~ 5tdller
Joint ventures here more are Elba Sv•t a • • o sc.ni~ E • !Old~• 8t 7:1-o 7 • Stnott !n coming all the time -El Nut 1?,. n,. s1e cp1 lil!rom •~'> s S especially from Europe and El 0111 ti 11 ,',~/p,.5,on~ El Mod~I l'\ 311, Canada ' Emi>S c 1 1s;o 1~" Str •to A e"'rgy c 3•\~ .)6 'I $9arle pl The Commerce Department E"e•or R 1 ,io se1s CmP Entwl1! 41• ''• Sen1lrn reported at the end of 1970 EQu 1 o' 11 , 11 , svc Gr,~
d I Erl" Ttt '') 1, Seven vP nianufactur1ng an petro eum Fa ce!o o;, , ">ca1 W81 Fi b Tele 7 0 J. SoNE T•I that 491 fore ign F•rrjn" 11 1-tosw G•CP
had 76 6 Flndey I 1\IJSWE1Svc companies FM 0 ,, 1 . 3 S1>•t•Y
subs1d1ar1es or arfillates 1n ~~7°8~11 lJ'~ !:,_ s::"'k"" ,
th Unlry FslG llft 1 • 7'lt St1n Hl'c1 IS CO F~tP Mlt 1~•• X\o Sl~IO Str
()\ erseas
The most prolific investors ~:~M,;F~~ 1J ~ 2~1 , ~~';:~~ f!
In American en!A?rpnses are ~~n~P 1!'~ 1~~ f~~! F
concerns whose home bases FG •1 011 11•. n•~ r1 ue1e Form Q 'I 5lll T1v1<1• W are 1n England Canada West FQ•I Vrnl '"• 21 ~TV c~m Fo1om 3 'o • • Ttn"lh! Germany the Netherlands Fr"kl c11 a" '\' rherm "' f<rn~ln E 11\o 11 T !!nv (G and France GRJ Cmp 1 \ l'~ Tlllnt 1n Gtrln~I l~ ~ 1 Tl!t" Gii \'r1ule entry of r ore 1 g n g••A1s~1~ 1s•'t ·~~ T••c to•
("()mpan1cs 1nlo the U S GI<!""' l:\t 21o!'"'ft'0y, r. Lt \ur 'f"1" 1nduslr1al stream 1ntens1hcs .,R1 Est 1. t v. 1r:lM,,obp~ Gll!~n • • S oompet 1t1 on, Amer1can c.1•«~11 ,,,.,v.T•O••,,
h Git~!~ V'I ?l 'o )l YMlll business sources say I ey G1o11 Rub ., , u"111e in • f C.o!d (Y( H 111lo lln ll!U"' prefer that to an increase o Goo.:1 LS 11 ,,,.. un McGll
Th i..,.~ GodwV C ' ~ ''•~S 8-n&t l1nports at 1s IA""'au~c Gr&Pl'I c" "• 11. us Envet
f d b d G r~p~ St )J\1 1 US Tr~l o r e1gn--0v.ne su SI 1ar1es c;1., Mt!I ,, 1'"'1 u11 P1nP
must operate under American G1•tn Ml 11 lo 11 111 Ind
tax-rates and costs of labor
•~lo Com5 6d S02''4Phll 1t601S11Al!CE1t3~
6,,_ 1\o With "'' I'° I Sl P!lttlm 9 7110 '' AllCl,I p15 97 lS If' .. (with [ 1 n 11)6 lne SI 11.,1119 All 'A1 lid
I • t'o(omo As t1•1~~Plon Ent 73S 101 All fl.l:~pfj 21 11 (ompfl 6 ,, ,. Pion Flld 12 JO,," A!IRch 11 10
1\0 2lio cmP 8d 'tl 10 Ql ltn '"" 10 66 '' IS A!l11 Ch:m I 1i•o 1s 01'!'~,Fd •;~1~gp11grth 12761Jt2 Aiits con• l:C. 9, oms1 • I Prkt Fund• ATO Inc 011 57 , S." c,~~01 H ~: lf 1~ Grwlh 2• 17 7• 61 Aurort Prod 2110 21 on,.... II > '' 711 N Er1 t 17 t t1 Aulom 0111 9 , ~.., C:onll Ml N Hor 21H16 16 Autvml" Ind
71 • 74'l l:i'~ <t,'; 1; ~ 1?:? Pro F11rid 10 3110 ll Avco Corp 20~11.(n•v Cen 2111110P•o Por!f 70ll 71SAYCOC1> WI l'• 3h ( WO" 6 :II 116 Provd"t • U S Jl Avco pfl 70 1\o 1 • C~~ WO~I 6 t C 7 SS Prud $1J 10 «t 11.26 Averv Pd 70 '21 ' 2l\\ deVOh M 61 u 63 4' P111n.,., Furnll A•""t l"t 11'• U\ii 0.,11w"'" Grouo Eou t 7 s• I 7C Avne1 1>!7 so
1 1. •• °''"' 1100 1111 Geoe l4171S'°Avo" lld!IO *• •"-o..twr 12t?UU Gt!h tnlolJA.llrcOll Jlt
l'l'llO• Del!.! 110 1t1 Ir.com IOI Ill
S • ~ '()od!I Co~ 1! 1• lSj' l"Vtll 7.M t 24 IH• 11>< 0 ,., 1•111 ll I Vlsl1 1 15 1t1 l:r.'~'1r ~s
6 1 I Orevf Fd 1191llOS Vo~tl 66' 12'9 jlGEll2 ''" t!oo,~1 1.v lldl•11 Rav~re 1012 1111 6: olll•~ 1)1} Jl • Eaton&How1ro R!nlret l S lS H '3 lltnQIH' r "' 25 ?!>. 8• ~" '9110 IS Sehustr IS 111131 Bk llfCI ~ l• 91 ~' ' GrwTh 11 36 lj Sl Scudder Fulllll Bll'll< Ill NY 1 IS t 15lo tntom 6 I 7' Int l"V 11n1v1ll 81n~ Tr 'I 14 21'• 27 SPecl t 71 '5' Sl>CI 31 01 ll 01 BtrbO 2 311 s • Slt ~HK~ ll S2 I' 18 811 1S"' 1S 46 !11rd CR '1$1
41 lo 49'4 Eb'"' 13 ~3 1! 72 com SI 10 Oii 10 Cll ll11lc i;in ~ 'll ?l ~ Egrtt 11 77 • 611 Securl!y Fund• B•!~• Mio .ec;>..•l )Emr; Se 613 610 E<iutv JlS 3i1 n11e,MI 11f l 27 1 ?<Vi En•ro~ l' I~ 12 89 Inv~! 7 t9 I 7' 1'11111 11\0 Me 910 9 ) En!PUO 6 31 6 t0 Ullra '10 1 415 BUlllf! 111'1 SO Jl ll'•EQUllY 9J,1010s.ie<: ... ,,, fS6 103'1 B•uscllLb Ml 6< , 641l:t E<1ut V!h I 66 t f' Sel $pKS 1S '5 17 00 ll1it Liii 11 J 4 ~ E<1ut Pro '!41 • 4 ~enll Glh I .i? t 15 lll1Vk Cl11 50
S StFar!d I012lllJShim Fii lO MlOMRt•rl~s l ?~ 5'<1 Farm 8~ 10 19 10 11 Slit•~ Ap 'IA 90 ll SA eol fdl I
'Ito 'l\:o Fld i?'''GrJu~' h Ots" 17 60 17 60 R.~~~~~ ~'o
'
lt ~~~Fl£:11 : UOJllltSldt t6'105t '8rc10kk JO " ene~ 11Slu1; Som• fufl<IJ 8e-eth"' r 1$ •o So E t llUH.0 C1pll •3110148tjcoPfl SOb '1 '"'1,iv.~ FrJi1 ,1,111•1 invest 11111111 lle dl!n 160 f'-< ' p 11n 1~ • 11 n Tru11 t Oii 9 9' 8tl.,,.tH 60b 7 • ~. s~iem ~ U s n Smit~ I t 60 9 60 8tjt I-low 60 S~1 ' T end 71 ~ U 11 Swtl Inv f 71 t 96 llt 1 jnlrcon
'
',' -',',,, Flnanclll Pro; SwMV GI 6 It J )J B'm • Co 40 ' ' Oynm 'U 4 6' >over Inv lJ l5 H 61 8ff!dj• HO "° ' '°" 1n0u1t J ll 41 70 >11ec1rt 1 tt 1 51 ll•nd • ft! l IS•• 16 'o '"c~m st• 1•SS1Frm Gt un•v~n B-flCP 1.60 18 ' 19 V•nl l JJ I 75 Tllf SI .S,46 ll 15 lle!Wlll pfS 50 } I l ''o F>IF VI 117212 76 S!Ndmt" Furids Benell 1>1' ill
'' 1 n "jF•ll" Oli t 1t lfl ,.,.,, l~d 3 10 'u &enfll of4 .10 71 "1J Fst ll'IG!h J 11 t 61 Asio F 1 36 1 •6 Benuuet ]1 l7 Fsl tnSlk '61 lG 60 Flduc 7 O! 7 6' trk•Y Pho
H ~ ))l'o F•I Multi • Bl '06 Ste!n "'°' Fd1 .rn,.s11 1 '° •s •~,Fs1 Net 7'9 llO Bi! ltl.'llt65 It llrff 60
•'• S .t F11 s1 .. , ~ 14 -' t6 C111 Op a ff t 9' li!f~J£~ 11. 10 •,11 Fie! Cui 622 Stock 1J1lll1l 91111 La11<1l 1S7 > S•llt Flet Fnd S !l Su.,.,..vl1d Inv BlockHR .16 ~~' ~~ ~ F,~ .. ~11";, ~ :: ~if Gr!ll u"tv1!t Blue 8•11 l 70 ' "" Sumi! unav1 I Bobble &rk• I o ' • Founders Grou11 TICh un1v1 I l<ltlllt Co 611 21 11-'.l Grwth U Cl 11 ~ !Yl'ltr Ct • 4110 J7 lklls(M 1Sb '~ 3 11'\tom IJ12U'5rMllt .... IJ371JS18end l~d ll'• 1• Mut•l 111116'1-i fe•cll, 10 11 10 !.4 6oolCMth 111 A 0 t:lo SPt!tl '73 ... fttllncl l Jl I Ot 8 0l"•!l" 1111 S o Pt Fout!~ GIG 10 11 26 Tff1'UI Gt '' (1 76 67 Bor,11War 1 71 l J' Fr11'kl" rOUll Towr MR 5l9 !Jt 8olma•t ..<O ~,~~::' g~T~ \~:~Tr~" C111 741 ll1801Edl1 21• s ~ un 111 '"'r•v E• 10011101 BoosEd •1111 ' J !ntom 1141 t lS TU(lo~ Fd 117' U 43 Bourns Int; 1! ~ ! •. Fd fr Mui 10 u 10 ll TWl'IC Gt 1 •• ] 11 8r111tl .. lrw ' 'F d lrte Grp 1"'"C Ill(" (M 441 8r l11St 2«1• tlo 10\to 't':-nrc ~ ,1 1011 \Jl'I I Mui It I] 11 07 8rllt MW I ?0 1mpac 111 l.,U,,ld 1007109J BrhtMv pf? 3~ 'o 3i'~ Ind l d 17 11ll 11 llnlen lvt (;ro et"'•p~ ~ln\l II Pho! 7..)l 101 eroa.1 139ST~'• r et n6 ... 711 ' ?l ~ l'Und Am 11 ,, t lO N•I Inv 7 61 I" •• WY ._.H•l!.,1, 7 G11ew~ t 07 t 11 u" C.11 •" 1~ 7ft wv ... 11 ,., ·~ • 'G•" see un•v•,l Whl~I> 1'651l., BrlcwrGl1 711 ?)I, ?l \ G1br11!r 7 lO 1 d tJ1'fltd FllfWI• 8~1wnUG In 79 • 3014 Grouo s~ Aetm 1 » 1 fl II row" C:o
,l,ptll F • Ol I " lnCO"t I~ 51 ,. • llw"Shro ff! 88! Fd t ts ll>t Sc en 1 M t :n llwi1Sllo9 1 SO
and materials
Another factor lhat mutes
c:omplarnls 1s that U S
Corporauons particularly
011 and chemical firms -arc
verv achve Jn many foreign
countries
corn SI ,, 'tu 16 V1ritr '~ 10,, llrUftSw\I l? GrlhFd A I ~ '30 UFd C•" '" • 00 fl•''" 'c'' ~
A Grlh Ind lt I! 1• I! VI uot LI"' Fd ::= 0 '1f eCl11elll Guardn U 'i 7' 0 V1t lln & ~4 7 111 l""9FC~I~
l:) H~~l/10<! 4 ~, Sot l11e01n 51• 5<1? 811dotel Ind"
.a_,..,. u S!.'C'" ~ ~l'o:e:tm1"!
1 OOO't OF Oil PAINTINGS I,
WHOLESALE WAIEHOUSI ~
OPlM tO THI PUILIC
50°/o OFF
1•1f l. llClltlGl!li tl.tlTA ANA ,. ..... JM*
OIALlll:S WAHTIO
Gii> 1 !' • 14 SPI ~n ! '"' 'llA 11111!1-'(lrt 1 II
LOS A NG ELES -Ht•tior ''1 t 09v~~"'•PI !:fl:;I":!"'~ 60
Monogram Industries Inc ~ .. z [~v ~i~~lill v•n.:""~ ~:: :~ a~nklt ,fr;
and A B Electrolux a la rge~~:, Gor ,~ U ,:;1 1k1,,. t '' ,",' =~~:N:' \f!
d h I H• 1111<' l'7 110H1!IM tn ~' ~ • 8ur1Nor l>f I Swe IS app 1ance1-1'Minn 1~41 uH 1•h Mul?NlC0:1811rN1w 10
( I h enl'r'd H b""l'I ) to l I) W-lllft<tl" t:•OUP Bunth• ICI manu :i:e urer ave 1~M Finl 7'° 133 fKPtr '"--"'1 J'' euM u"'"
an agreement by w h 1 c h1s~,e~•1 , ni • ~ t;:i~ ;; ~~ lt~~
Electrolux will ma r k e I 1ncO<T1 , '' '11 T11C1>v '03 , C1bot CP 10 'f r.,.,.. n on~ T,...., 1•,,1 ""!•d'"'' IM ?i1e>nogram s san1tal1on equ1p-Tt 11ft11 Jj1 1 wei" 1~ • u .. 11 Fl"""' 1mo C•o t 110 i W•tl " 11 l'll ''" 11111>" M1111 ment for aircraft boaU, buse$ 1m11 G1~ 1 s 110 wind ••lft'l'I 1m1111Lt ..s
So th Inc fOll ~ .. ,~. ~d '"" ,,4 I~ 1m1Sol 10 and trains In Europe u 1111111,.... , 11 1 eo ln(D Fd ~AS '1111 d" ""' io r d A Nl'GN J)11¢,~nfl9~ 4 11 ,Y!CO~P•t~:lGI Arlee an some s1an 1"~ c0., 13 19 1·~ tM' "' ,._,, ,,,c•"•lilt 110
t 1"11 I) d ~tn .,... 'lnrtl\ ~., ~Jl'l(tp (8ckll coun rt es 1nw1 Ben u ~, u s1 ,1,,,r 10" n u c1r1>•u" 1 l<I Ctrlblt M -;:~.. r l:~:Ci~1~'
WILSm{mdt
SUM
"'" tt!tl Ill 111/ndl'l!h 1001 """'" ~c:;~1ei'' l::
l)'(fpt for lhOll dll)fMlld fll wtll$ '':rw:fk! ii.
,,.. frldfd 1" 10 1111rt tote 1nd u rrrM •1!!.C llLlll !ft fl.Ill DIVtOENDS -•~nu•1 rift C1Mrlr I 20
U'tl!tU Plhtrw)M klerllfflt<:I fll '"" s~. ~Ol'll fO Pl~•1 lbl lftcl•l'H « .,.1c1 • ftr !Jiil Ctl.ne:l• ' , ••• no 11'1111•r ••Ml (t;) ... Ytnflll .... ~"·" tlM so 1cei,imulllwd dlYldtndfl (fl p1tf 1111 111<0 1n1 lO Yl8r! (•1 (II~ 11lut tledt1 (II 1nr11,.1 :! ::11 •• ... 11 pl111 1toc::-dlvldtrld1 fhl ... Id tl'lll C.1'11,IL! 1 $1 ""r-11i.~1 d wlcltllCI omlt1H1 (t) 11r !'"t l"S 1.20 c..,1 lft 111M:k e1kl lttl y"" 1-1 -t1ttL1E'.I 1 ct11t In 1toc~ tell In 11'9/'ikP\lll!Cl' •!!< t'IMl"w 1-10
ct1v1rslll• 11 rt«••"l11llofl1 (I) ••11'111 l;::P'f!!1' dhtrlblr!lo"t till 1•-dlllldlr!C1 lwL) ffi"TtlU JOI:!
l!D!IS JllM!lll( ... .,.,
14uITTIHGTON. ~
!'All3Sb~ICI!" l:>ll"Pr."
MC:f1, 1lfllJ FRIPAV1 7;,o ..... +. es JO p11111 ~·
""'" 111119'1 (wll w1rr11111t. .,..., f '°I>
FiltACtlONSr ti) lftdlc.I'" tt!IOWl!111 =~~!!SO ol':o llt\11'1 II lr1ctlon Ill 12/ldtl Ill INllctln 1~~1r ..o foll-Int floU,.. b ff•UlClll '" "61hll fr) FI $11 tGo to1W1>11 l!111re l!I lttC!lon lft U.lllu 11 .. n'" Inc
(I) tollGWI"' fleurt It l!'MllClll lft 12tl!I_, 11:~1'11 i/t
Ill fnlt!¢*111 IOll,_1111 flnrt " fl't<llon f~trf~ NY j 1" 16Thl. ~~H •nl\ 1~oo:J0,,..,11mma:111•:m""11I ..... M "'° .. ""'" .JI
.,... k.i llldl ) 141911 LIW C*• (111
l•lt• IOI tMI l HI ... L .. Cl!ltot (II•
11'.or.i.11 160 It-pf 4 l'COttc:er., 11111 ~r•hco 1 71 ~~=r.s1 ...
K'ottr I )0
M•cAnF 10!> M1cDon•111 Mtc•1 Co JO Mtty IUi
1A1cv_pl t 7' Mtll Fd Ill
Mt!I Sa Gt ;~:~;:::x I lfJ10
MtMlnct W.. Min H.n J 12 MAPCO 90 MtD<.pf I l Mt .rh l Ml Mt CC<' 10 ~"or 111 ol2 ""' '"'°"' Mt Mid I 70 Mt•lonlb ..J7 M1 ltn 2711
Mt outt Cem Ml rloll llOt ~ $/\Fd 110 Mt 11nM 110 Mry 0C'111 50
MIKO (D 211 Maoonlle n MllWY ft M1•wY F In MtUMul M
MIU' 0 M1vDS 1 611 Move OK ..56 Mt"tJW !oOfl Mav a.v 1101
MCA nc Ml McoC d 110b M<Co v 1:111 Melle mu b ~gg~~" ~c
McGEd 1«1 McGrwH 00 Mc GH 111110 McG 119 Don Mclnl'o 1 IO Mcltln to. MCLOU!rl S I
Mc/'11 10 MMd (O!"P 1
M4t!I II A'l IO
Me1d 1>1117 IO ME CP
Me-IY Sha IO Memortx C11 Mw«inS 1 «l v.. c~ 1.211 Mttfdll" 10 ~Pt! If Mu 1 on)G
MewbTr 111 tAnlt Mell J MOM ~""" ... MttEpl JfO MG C Inv 10 Mc~GIUI I M~> ... ' M _, 10.
M Cont U M SUll l 01 Mldld 11. l 60 Ml~lbt 110 MIU B 1cl 60 M nnMM 1 l5 M nnPLI 1 lO Mllll Y :JO MP Ctm !60 MoPubS 80b MO!! IOll 1 <10 Mol!•s 1 o Mohwk 011 M•I'"' u Movb pl1SO Mon• cJ'I IO Mor.oam Ind ""°"""It Jg MO" 0E<1 60 Monun 1 80 Mons• pl 11$ Mon OU! .. Mon P Wi i t ~Y~fo3:'
lv'oOrtll\J 2 72 Mer"°~ 15 M g Inv !Jg MO<Ho IO MO!oro 1 60 M!Fvt S l IO MTSl1TT 1 ~ MSL l'ICI AO Mvn1ft9Wr I M-rco 1 xi
"""'" n 1 $11 Mu 1111 011 60 Mu VOh 60
thko Cl\ 10 f.11 co Stl 60
N1otw1C1> •I "I' A n .o N I AVll ffo N111lst1XI NI (In •l NC.enDf llO NllCtVlll n Nt! Clltm !O N1 Cnem WI N1IC Yl 90 NttO s 90 t./D1IPI •lJ NOi• Pl 1!! NI FUI I ~I
Ell Citnl 10 1! (;yp 1 OS r.yp pf• SC
Nn f\clu~ N~ nd Pll 1! NI lft d I N•t P 11 0 1 N1 Svctn 116 N1tS1NI I.I Nat!!& ell f • t-f'ISIN !SO N1! Ttt Ill NllUnEI U Nt om•~ 11 Ntttune ..,
NIV l'gw I ' N.,..111 v I NF"'E I 5' N£ TT ?U ~=.\ f~ N"<WITll 11!• <0 NY HMd !O! NYS f(, !Oii NtgMP 110
N1 MDf lllO N ,,sn M• No<"Ok W J Nor nCP S"r Nerrf1 l'ICI 1 NA Coe 60
No"'"'"" I llOA.mlt~ 1 l'I NM-'~ p1' IJ Noo1.lt~.Pfl11 t:;~ll VI '' rCt nG1 .0 cent th•
No /Gil 'n Non i' 1l1 Nof'IG11 1 60 110 NG 1tlJ tel No NG pfJ 60 Ito NG pU •o
NoJ tPW 1 10 ljS Pw Pll to
NoStnPw "'1 "IS Pw p • 1 N~ Pw pU 10 NS PW pll 60 Not~o 1 1~ N11tt~'°" I Norfllp 1111 •f tlw1I .i.lr .J( t wt•~...e , '° N9W1I ll'd NWt 1111 .ic.s
'=-=:::':...Jon="'::":....::25"-'-l >:..cl.;.I __:SC DAILY PILOT 23
Thw·sday's Oosing Prices-Complete Ne"\v York Sto ck Exchange List
l.IJn Nd ,-~~~~~~~~~~~-
(M1 I IUlfl Ltw CltM 01f. S•lt• No
cw-.1 "'"" ..... c ... Cltf oow J0,.1$ .. .., .... Cl!I I •• Cllel 1 HIP l.1• C;ttl 0... rQ' Y111t(A/'JJI f"I Dow.JO >tl •v.11111
' t II~ I\~ -\\ Su. '11llJ 111 -r 1:1 1'tt ,}: !.t'l'I I Kl QH<1 H h I.OW (olM to5 "t r (~"'
1fl ~ ~!; ~~ = \! Market Frr· m ~~I~ I = u n ll1~ u>-. • ~~ ,~:U r.: ~ ,!\ :l ~41: t t.J lo R u llfi'""'._"•-1 s11 ....,i:1111• PO'v.lv.-""riU11u21•1nu11Ul1.o 1
SwlUCo 10 l~l Ullo :Mlt JS +"" r•ni•Cl~• In 11«t;;1 uMO J11 •Yt ffftt:I b -,ti 'O tlO Mio\ ~"' 51 .... -)l ',~ w:"~ n,,f'' ',,..•.,• _+ •\, Swt"' AGo tt 1•111 134.
2
•"' + \o ~ s k m ., ttl., 1t1 u 2' 1J + 1 .,; IVbrOll loll 1' ):)i.. JO\.\ JO \ -\ l'lllUI l ,JO'I ~C• I 0 1' »~ el\lio ti" ill ,, ,. -~ ~= ion...':: ,: f'N t~\· n ... t t ul'iZ J1 ~ ~ 1~11:~:1-t' J I f.~ "' !l~ t~~ = ~ -T-t.J st• t•1 f«ii~:krH·~1 , 1'~ ~\i liq:Jt •IA \IJ 'f ~·· n ff = ~ In H T d T•" lrd 60 i• J3 ft "'' +l\t ~ ~~ tv1,.. ·~ ' '• ¥!? ;ty,l :: JJ .. 61>1 #f + '' eavy r a e ~= c:;1 l~O 91 ~U Hit t~~ = 1; 11111 Htt Wt llMu,.,. (; ~ • -~
l ,: ~ ff~ fl\?~ t ~:m•:.P~~ ~ ll l~ !t\~ ~; + ~ l~G• I Nit~ I.ft' fltM C. ... ::i';cw2;:i.o J.l ~ i:
ll 11 1 11~• J7 -..... ;•,,~1,,0,C0Mo,, 066 •1 • '•{"'° 0 \li + "-UOI C• 1 ?l ,, 1· ~ t•~ 2'1\\-,,., ~JlrfllCO ! ll" j l .. "·
71• 1, '''-u~ _ , " 1s •ti 2•"' -.. uMc 1nc1 n 2J si,. I 1s111 + "' I• vm 3 1'214 •• 'l t'-, 31 t' ~ .. \ 't•c Mir 09f 6t Ji! ii, '"" -\II Un1rco «I JJ 1 1 \'t IN W1r~Sw1 I JI ~
• H 46,, ~ \t note 111 heavy turnover Thursday 11ex c. ii f:\, uv. 1~ ~ -.... u" ~!.~141, 1 700 ~.._ .,. ..i1ot + '£ 111t1'0.o{9fl.,.
d 1~ ,~ 1~ I ~ NEW YORK (UPI) -Stocks closed on a flr1n ~.T:rEr:F ~ ~i! E~ n~ u~ =la t:i.~,,,;~ ~ .i 11: li: n: _ ~ ~::~1~ ~,e ~· tt -«
U 1~1~ 1~11 111 t' '-The Dow Jones Industrial Average was ahe:id +:~!o' 1~\ '" ~~1; t11~ 11,~: 1 \: ~~~tc g' 'U ,~ 11t: ~ ,r\•--. :::::: ur~ 1
\ 1v. :S: ~ lntt\\~1<a.,"-~ 625at8818"nnea th !lnalbell Standard& T•nnt<:w'" 3 J ... • "':+i'u"'""s. it0""""111o..-+1.i W11"?j'11' •~.,,. _,.. '~IO ~ ·,.:..,:; #~~ .t_ ~ ;) r e ~:z~ ~'.:o50 l~ 1~u ~~I~~ t ~ H~ / ::1 ~ ;rg ;i~ t:Vi ;:Vi -il'I ~:=ti !'. lf ~·· n:e -" ,. F,,.. .. Poor s 500 stock mdex showed a gain of 0 23 at T••JET•" 1 u »i ~ "'-~t1 "°" _ 14 uno ,,, .o m 3,.. 11 ll"" _.., w. • .t .n ' 'l " -"
501'> "" v. + "' 98 96 And ••dvan""~ led declines 743 to 607 al TixG••T 1 u 11 Ul.4 """ JJYI -"'uoct 1 1111 50 10 "'' ,.,,,. ,,. -"""''bl~ eotp ,, "' I ~ ~ 1~ '1 • '• -\It ....,, "-"'° Ttw G .PflJO J JSI\ """ l5~ + "' Lin Pt~ CP 1 ll d'oll •t ... -loi W-41t t r 1.. 1, ~ -\l " s." 5• • s.i • though the margm was sub!ta.nt1ally larger early 1•• a. Sul 60 ~ '°'' ~ ~ -"un1or1 P1c11 , 11 "~ " ... +,,.. w..c 1 l"' •1 1'14 + t~ 1 1410 14, ; i -o T1•1t I"" It> ,.. ).I ll'l.1 5' +I 1 Un .. t< it1 •O • )11. 1111 ~ .,...,Tr ""' , .... "
" ,. • u • 1 '" -" in the session 1•-••'"'' eo " ••~1 ''" •~ -1 un Onlm 1" ~1' J.11/) """ u lllo + ~ ""'"''"" ·~ J! ~ ~ -" ll 1 •• 10 + • Tt•OIGI OS J 61 • •S lJ Unrcwt 10 111 ll\lo ~ 2llll+l,'J""1tn,\fr j1' ±tt
36J 1:: 1: • 11 -'' A volue of around 16 000 000 shares compared t:!~t~t~1 J ~~" ii~? fi'i t ~~~~ti: "'..o' 11c; ,~~ 1 ~ 1~ t,..., ~:1l1'j l • .... \S.':\.. s~ +,,.
• )I ~ i' \\1th 15 930 000 shares tsaded Wednesday ftll U!I I l'l n 5•U SI' !ll\ -"'u" I "'Ir 1 IO ,, 11•1 :w~ l1 -wru 'f 1ft mt ~ -\l 1~ ~h~ U'• ,~:-• T•••on to IS 11.,. ,., 1t1 1-•U11B1""' lO .;50 1•~ \t"1 ,~+~w-nun°"11u:O 't • ti YI -}
s }I ))1 11 •-. B th h I h ed Ch 1 rr Tur Pll.fO , 1'11,. :1'f\.t + Unite• 2J1 ,, lCt 10 10 -\.llwn11E I& ~· 'l~ 6lt 1"41·~ 11 ll~ 1'. JI, 1-11 Closing prices included AT&T 47 1. off IA Te>1Tr Pr10t ' 3'\.l. ll>•• w. --· u 8 cl •fl JO JI 11'1 ,, ... '"'" +" v" u" r"= I 1~ 'ij ~ 10 1
, ,1 19 1, ... \ e le em Slee 2l lf.r u c ang r)sler 2 o T,~.!!"..!!IA .. ,• ~,,,, "', .. •,,~+~vn1Fnc11 11io~10'~ 1"4o -1.i.wnt•"•'1 '' 2Jv. .,, fi-"
". '' ll " ' '"· D p t 138' ' G I El l 108 \L """"' -"' ,.., ·• -"'" Un 1 Gt• ..IO l l '°"' 1 ~ Nit + "lo W1sf\lo pf• r20 10 • ., ~· ~ -.. fll u on " up <& enera ec ric ni up r"°"' tl'lll 411 n :m.. 21'1 21~ -1 un , 1.., 10 , 11 1 1 + "' w1vbl' o 1 -t ),j"" " 1.1. :f -"'
11 5'"t s~·: JS + la .,., "' "I 7S T~ Tho!TIJW '1St : •• ,.. •l't n 11o +1 'Unit MM I JO " ''" '' \ ,,,,. + l\ Wt¥11r ""·'S ~ 111\11 1 ~ I + ""' n1 u;; 111 .. imH• ~ ~ 2"• General "olors 80" up ~ IBM 334 orr 4"• T~ Ill Or 10 102 '1"" """ n' -l~ UnJtr•llkt 1 s ·~ .,., .,~ Wt~tfht. to '' ""' \to \'I -'
12• ,v, 41••,, Sou"ernn Pacil1c 41'L unchange Standard of Jer r1 Corio ''° -10'9 »v. ~+1\o lt" Nue• 4J H1<o ,..., •"--"'wn11t"I" s11 '' 1~ •"' '~-"" lJS n l.'i 111 ... n··+~ Ul .,. 't~•IM. t 2"'41 u 21\\-\oUntPk Mn s 2h }\o ll'o+\t WhttP tt Sllf I ~ '11 "' '11 ' s u u~ 7 " ~ d USS I 31'L I 't1n1tM tttl 'H ''"' n •1 0 Uj FlclG 210 ICJ o '11U •1't+h~•:r: "' l ll" ~\'o 1i1t•l "26,, 211, 10 , sey 5Yaupl7a,an tee 7"of% T• ..... Mr ,... 11s 6 ""'" .u1 -~u F n1 os. ,. Jt\lo "" Jt _1.4w"'°" 1111 J ,,. , 10tt+,~ 1111 1t,11 +~ A th l l l •'-T1m~1n1w 7114 3J1.1M +u u~F ... s1lM •ll'.•l 314+\!t 1 olC t l ),jloio ...,~"-• u 6 1,,1, u, 1 4 mong e more cons rue 1ve 1 ems In uie news T inA 1y 40b " 2"' 1•. ,.,. + • us Lt•SQ 11 '' 11 11•· '™ wn 1 ru " xi !!"' t~ .'L 1 s 11 11 1 I 13 l I h ddl To!> nPck 60 11 :io It 1 lt\11 -\1 Ul PtvCh I t 2'5 32&\ 3 '-)Ni tl\t Wfl t Motot "'1 "o ~ J\\ _.,,.
111110 1r ,ut:-\ \vcrea percen r1se1ncarsaes1n t em1 e TOdd s11 110 10 1s ,,~,s + ... u11c~Df1xi 11 n .11 ,3i"' 1;0w111aktr •01 11• ,,. ~t~
'" 4J•, •1 ' •l ' -third of February a Commerce Department repoct To"'<lol!' 160 , ,,,. :n>.< ''"-u s~DI •• , 's"° 1514 ''"' 14 we~• cor11 1 "' J ~ 3r• -' 1 6' 66 to\ +1'1 TPO!Rol olO!I 5 1'>.lo 11• lllo +"4 U! S"'tll lb :10 ]~\ 11\\ tt\'l -\ll W•b 5t 1'b 1' I ~ !'t-\
,.., J1'• l '• • h -that early s1gnns point lo a slronng economic re T • .,, co tO •& ,, u tn1 -"u si.,e 2 1111 no tu. 31 11~ -~ wl' A011 ..o ' l "'' j'~ j™ + t, " \llllo 12•• 10\ -~, T••nt u 1 20 13 fl 40lii •I ... +I U Tobtc 110 IOJ 3' 3J-' l:l\O +I W rmt II o ~ ]l\t 1 ' ' -\; 1 1'l't ' , '') t Ito CO th l t l d h I th jr•"' w A IOI It JI'-< 11~ + -· Un! u111 tl 6t ,,.., l .., ,...., +1 Wm18 o w1 11 ll ,,,, 1Vt -~
111 1,,.. ,.~ ,.,, very m e irs quar er an a s arp rise n e rnw"', pt 11 1,.., 11141 111-. _ , un 1 u1 11<1 l• 1h •~ el\ w n11 D• 161 1 «H• .ill" ~"' + ~ 14~ J:~ n ! ~~I~ fovernment s idex of leading econom1c indicators l~~!, "t ·rs ~ lh. n~· 1ii: + : ~~ ~: g\1 u ~ ~~-J~,: ~"" t1"t ~ ~~~-• ..,e ,J :i..,. 2·1·Q :~ ± ~ ~: ~~ ~l ~ ~~ ,i, ast month t~::'eo~'t° ~ 'fi1• 1~i"' 1f1~ = \~ ~"~&'~c111lo !lJ Mt, ~i. ~"' _, ~l:~fwp1:~ il~ ,if:? 1ft~ 1P:?-! ll
1 • •• •• •a ~ The index 1s a combination of eight business Tr•llKI 1nv 1ts •1, M fltl un111~ comp us 1• :n ;;"' -1. wise Ps , 1 o 11.r. •1; jl • " .... 1"'9 17 4 I , I Tr11111I °" " s ·~ s + \ UPlohn 1 oO l6S ., ,,,, 4 1/\ + • Wll(oCh t7 :io !'" !" • ~ ' •• ' t u .. h h JI I h d r t h .,. USL•~E 50 n '° 19\.\ )9\11 -I Wo v WW 50 'I :Mi ,~, , .. -1~, " 'it • s a S1JCS w 1c usua y ores a O\I/ u ure c anges • , ..... ir1 aa Jo1 l41• ll'-u usM , "wr 1• 2:1"" n'4 ,,,. -14 womerco u 1•~ "~ l~'--;,11 v,1!~ ~: ;i I 1' in the overall economv Slx of the eight improved ~::t::r~r"',l lJ ;gh ~:: g r\. H':~c~ .~ :u tfi. ~:: ;::~ =1~ ~:".!i~"1 i1 ~~ ~~ 1.rl; .~it t ~ \', ,~ ',','' ',',J~ ~. last month while two declrned Tr con 1 2 • ",, M, ~ ~1,• "c ,', v~ 11" Au<>e 1oe 16~• 16.,. 11.i. wooiw &>12 :io u t7.1 11 11v. l.1 ,. ' -" Trll"9 fld llO ·• -VCA Corp .fO 22 71'!.. 11 Y. 71\l -World Al· W¥ V ,.. ~ 1i. ,, '1"' '! , 61
1 \ .j. 1 Tf'l)fllcl~I :o: rJ: ilm 31.! -'I VC"' CP pt to 1 1fl!. 15 1!\lt -!I Wr I no )I 11 151\'1 15TV! \!I -1
II 1~. lC 1 l~>o + ,, ... .., .. .,,,.,'1::::>IOll!"'~ """'"'"'"""'"'°"""""--!:!::JiCl• \TltW IM 11 l \Ji -t 'Vttdt I oO 71 :Ill\ 31 JI\\ +114 Wu lltte Ml 7 11 1;.;, 1J ,,1,.1' H•+ ,1• :r::.11 iR,ww~!~ .:'~•• :;:J 1._::vtflC!oC060 nu~•• 1~t1 111 0.cCp lO , .. ts"''""'s"+' JI 1 1 I 1 , f ' "' VF Cop 1 0 ' U ~ •1V.. 411.i ~ I nc J5 11':1 jilt 'H,_ + U , • 111 ·~ 1.'1 Solo;1 V11!('1 ll '.N 1:1>.111+ 11ucre it Ill ',, II\' l• +--Twc:snGl!in 101 "'-7'1 11 •-'Vlt comwo 1 1 '° .. ~ 7""'-110 Y1191SDl10 2 11 II ll M l 1 •?, n10 11 Stoke uc pl 1 1ioo 1m 101 15 10 + 1 \HI Clltm 40 11 ,l ni1 11 + " .,.....,,_, Ctn 21' ltV. \'"" 11""' -~• V c1Com11 :II II 2• 2Slllo 2116 t l'l Ztle c~ • e• J" 41!1 lf ' IHI -"" 10 •7 •1 j '6Sl-Wl to 11 •1 40'9 •1 ..-1ufl0Hltl '•'',j ·S1~.)J +t)TYllrClfP 1tl1\li t1ltl1 +l10v11e~ 130 ,,, n.i r• \4l111t&>IAl(I 1 11 l' l2 +u 1 ?•' 'li St-COl'll s& 11\ I\ 11 ""'Ol ptJ11 U1'•1 -"" UV VtComw l(I l0 2•11 1•11lol•lll+~1•p~f•Nn I O 'l!\ '""'-~ 1l ~·: ~ ~ -~51=r",~ ~ u~ ~ ll.+~=~~':, 12 il rn: ~!~';U u.i.L lllC -;,. YJl.t-30 . JO"t+ ~~=~"-,~.: ·~1V.11 1V.""1"'."+1•~~1~i'"'i'ae ~~ ~' Ti!i:"' !J...+lll
tfl l7lN :M J l.:,.j,.1'6 t WDf"' lfO I._.._ 'H~ ••o +~•lllnft ptJ50 , If If '° -\,\UAL 11!"3 :tt tt'4 71 21"-~"-.pl J ylllO n nt~ 11111->.~zur" l'ocl 21 16' >ltN fr:-.. 20 Jl\~ ~I l1111 +YIS...bPtOP160 l2 46\J" "-\J Sun.tlM SlD H 15'\l Int l•'o-Vi UA•CO 110 10 M'\ 1''' ~1 -l\Vor111do 1)6 ,,, H\ 21lio+~COP1rvll!rd bYThtolll\\C 1fof m1 1•11
Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
Siles H1I
!Mt I M\tll L1w (kllt Ch•
Stitt Htl
lllll!..) Kit/I Ll'llf (klM Cllt
Stitt NII
(Ms ) Hit/I L-<• Cll•
S11d Net
tlld1 ) Mltfl L .. (IMI Chi
-T·Z-
H arbor Clubs
Get Funds
Funds totaling mon: than
$3 000 have been granted to
the Boya Club and Girls Oub
or the Harbor Area by lite
C:!llforni1 Commuruty Foun
d;illoa.
Tbe guts wera 1nnounced
by G~brtel C. Duque,
cliaJrman ol the foundat1oo 1
advf.sory C"Ommlttee
Founded ln 1915 and now
the lar.:est such organlullon
oa the Wesl Coast.. Call!omla
Community Foundation hu
gtvra 1wa1 more thin •u
m I 'on
!.:'rt 1 e.ir fl SI million w11
Jr" cd lo 285 cbarIW>le,
mc..,icnl or educ1tlon1 l
o--.. nb:r!tlons In Callromla •~
co ~Jng lo Securoly Paclllo
NaUonal Bank, U. tratee
•
. ~
ff DAILY PILOT Thund<Y, JinUllY 25, 1971
. . . ...
IMAGINE YOURSELF CHOOSING TOP
QUALITY NAME BRAND FURNITURE AT
OUTSTANDING SAVINGS, DISPLAYED
THROUGH-OUT 350 GORGEOUS ROOM
SETTINGS.
,.;.....
STOU HOUIS
MON. T"'U SAT.
10.l.M. 'Tll. lOP,M.,
SUN.· 11".l.M,
1tL,l'.M.
\, ( ifl
Tu U ~1tt0ie 1'11' 8ophL.\ti1!,aWm <1m EIR{JC11t00
al
SPECTACULAR
I 0
4 ·PIECE SECTIONAL WITH FABRIC TRIMMED COR -
NER TABLE ... 158" OF GLAMOROUS VELVET SEAT-
ING SPACE I DEEPLY DIAMOND TUFTED ••• GRACE -
FUL WOOD TRIM ••. CURVED BACKS.
•
REG. PRICED AT OTHER STORES AT $80000
OUR
PRICE
ONLY
COMPLETE PRICE
OR YOU MAY PURCHASE ANY SINGLE PIECE
OF FURNITURE FROM THIS SET, AT THE SAME
OUTSTANDING SAVINGS.
EXTRA BONUS SAVINGS ...
VELVET CHAIR AND OTIOMAN
GENTLY CONTOURED FOR RELAXED SEAT-
ING ... BOTH CHAIR AND ROLLED OTTO-
MAN HANDSOMELY, DIAMOND TUFTED
• •. SUBTLE WOOD ACCENTS .
REG. PRICED AT OTHER STORES AT $260 00
$
OUR
PRI CE
ONLY
95
I
CONVENIENT CREDIT TERMS, ALL MAJOR
CREDIT CARDS HONORED
NOMINAL DEUVERY CHARGES ON ALL~ADVERTISED
MERCHANDISE BECAUSE LOW PRICE PR HIBITS THIS
NORMALLY FREE SERVICt
3731 W. WARNER -SANTA ANA -PH. ( 714) 546-6730
-
I'
CAILV l'ILOT 11111 PMP9
Still Fenced
This chain·link fence which Jast year drew council
attention for a time is still standing on the sands
or Laguna Beach below an apartment complex, 623
S. Coast High\vay. Fence was erected by city permit
before State Supreme Court decisions on public
access. City officials are issuing no more beach
fence permits but the city is not trying to remove
existing structures (to avoid expensive litigation)
pending outcome of litigation in Huntington Beach
and elsewhere.
U.S. Deaths in Battle
Highest in 5 ~ Months
SAJGON (AP) -The U.S. Command
today reported the highest weekly
American death toll in Vietnam in 5%
months. A spokesman said there still
was no forward movement by South
Vietnamese forces in Laos, and a South
Vietnamese base 10 miles across the
border was reported under heavy mortar
and rocket attack for the third day.
The increue in American deaths for
the second suc<:essive v.•eek w a s
attributed to the offensive in Laos to
cut the Ho Chi Minh trail. The U.S.
Command'• weekly casualty summai:y
sald 59 Americans were killed in action
and another 42 died of nonhostile causes,
including helicopter· accidents.
The &otal of JOl Americans was the
Iargelt siift 125 died dming the week
of ,\ug, lllllepl, & when 17 were killed
in action and S8 died from accidents
and lllnt8'.
The U.S. Command· reported 217
American troops wounded in action last
week, the same as the week before.
This raised total American casualtiees
in the war ~ince Jan. 1, 1961, to 44,518
kill~ in atUon. 9,2S3 dead of nonhostile
causes and 295,163 wounded. Another
1,453 Americans wen listed as missing
or captured, including 10 missing in
air crashes in Laos.
The Saigon government reported 432
South Vietnamese killed in action last
week, 46 less than the week before,
and 1,446 \vounded, 287 more than the
previous \veek. The U.S. Command
claimed allied forces killed 2,260 North
Vietnamese and Viet Cong in South
Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. the highest
total claimed since last May.
U.S. officials say no American ground
troops are taking part in the operation
on the Laotian side of the border. but
9,000 of them are acting as a blocking
force in the northern provin ces of South
Vietnam. and an estimated 500 U.S.
helicopters are furnish ing almost all of
the air support for the South Vietnamese
in Laos.
The U.S. Command has acknowledged
the loss or 29 helicopters in operations
on both sides of the border. with 40
Americans killed in them, JS missing
and 26 wounded. But scores of other
helicopters have been damaged by enemy
fire, and there has been no day-to-day
report of casualties aboard these craft.
,.1eanwhile, small-scale but sharp
fighting, ambushes and rocket and
mortar attacks have taken a steady
toll among the U.S. ground force east
of the Laotian border.
Although the American death toll last
\\'eek was the highest in nearly six
months, the casualty totals were only
slightly above those reported in the first
week of the Laotian operation. The
casualty :summary last Thursday for the
week of Feb. 7-13 listed SL Americans
killed in combat, 32 dead (If nonhostile
causes and 217 wounded. The number
killed in action then was more than
double the 24 killed in combat the week ·
before.
Festival Jury
Completes List
With 3 Names
The artist jury for the 1971 Festival
of Arts has been completed with the
festival board's appointment of Jim
Blacketer, Jan Kasprzycki and Jim
Nussbaum as judges.
The three will join the jurors selected
earlier by the exhibiting artists; Herb
Griswold, Heinz Norhausen. A.
\Vellington Smith and Philip Freeman.
The seven-man jury will score works
submitted March 13 for the annual
judging.
New artists and 197(1 exhibitors who
v.•ere asked to re-submit are invited
to bring three art ·works to Irvine Bowl
between"" 7 a.m. and 10 a.m. on that
date. Judging will take place from 10
a.m. to 3 p.m. and work must be picked
up by S p.m.
Artists receiving lhe highest scores
will be assianed to available booth space.
For further information, call the Festival
office, 494-11 '5.
Capo Trustees Weighii1g
Street Repairing. Program
Trustees of the Capistrano Uniried
School District have been asked to
participate in a street. improvement
program in front or their property on
the north end of Camino Capistrano
in San Juan Capistrano.
The improvement project. initiated by
property owners on the opposite side
of the street from lhe school property,
will Include widening Camino Capistrano,
undergrbunding utilities, the construction
Sa fety Measure
To Cost $8,000
Tue Board or Supervisors decided to
frpend $8,000 more Tuesd1y to be certain
that no 11mall children fall into the
11ew Dana Polnt Harbor.
The $8,000 Is what it will cost to
change the spacing between pick~ on
2.1 miles of quay wall to five ~hes
•Part rathtr than eight.
The. whole job, lncluding 69.IM squirt
feet (If concrete walks wlll cost an
Hlimaild !211,119:1 -pJUJ 18,Jm.
of curbs, gutters, storm drain! and
ornamental street lights.
The board of trustees told San Juan's
city engineer Jack Kubota Monday that
they might be interested -providing
the city contributes to the project.
Slnce the majority of the property
owners on the opposite side of tht street
have agreed to form an assessment
di.strict to pay for the improvements.
their side will be improved with or
without the school district's participation.
The improvements will extend from
La 1.anja Street on the west sldt 1.JP
to Mission Street. If the School di.strict
and the Mi$Slon participate th e
Improvement.I wOI Include tbe east side
of the strctt Crom La Zanja up to
Ortega Highway.
The school board plans to dlscw:s their
proposal with the city before their next
meeting.
210 Shocks Recorded
LOS ANGELES lUPJ) -Sei!imologisls
at the Callfomla Institute of Technology
rtpart that more lhan 210 mtasurable
11nershock1 have occurred since the
desJructlve Feb. I wtbquake.
Health Chief:
Sanitarian
True Ecologist
"The original and I.he true ecologist
is the sanitarian," according to Laguna
Beach's new county health department
representative, George Skeith.
"Anything that affects the environment
is an area o( concern for us," he adds.
Skeit h is now assigned to permanent
duty at the Art Colony after spending
11 years in Costa Mesa as the county's
Depattment o( Environmental Health
representative.
He emphasizes that it is not his job
to enforce rules and regulations
regarding health practices, but to advi se
the public of the best steps to take
to avoid health problems.
He spends a great deal of his time
"in the field," making inspections of
restaurants, new housing construction
and other potential health trouble spots.
At the moment. he is concerned with
health precautions regarding the Winter
Festival pancake breaklasts and rodeo.
Skeith is as concerned with rodent
control in the hills as with trash col-
lection on the beach, but he admits
that he is not an expert in any field .
"We don't profess to be trained
engineers or building inspectors," he
says. "I am just a sanitarian trained
to recognize trouble. If I find a problem.
than I call in the expert from the
rounty office."
The county sanitarian will maintain
office. hours in the building department
of city hall daily from 8 a.m. to 9
a.m. and from J p.m. to 1 :30 p.m.
The remainder of his time will be spent
making regular and special field in·
spections in the area extending from
South LagWla to Corona del Mar and
inland as far as Orange County Airport.
During his office hours. Skeith will
be available ror consultation with
residents on any environmental health
matter and may be contacted by phone
at city hall.
Synipho ny Sla ted
For Laguna H igli.
For the first time in many years.
a iymphony orchestra will give. a
performance Sunday in the Art Colony
at 8 p.m. in the Laguna Beach High
School auditorium.
The SS-piece West Covina Symphony
Orchestra, under the direction of Charles
King, will perform a varied program
for residents and Winter Festival goers
at an admission price or only $1 per
person.
The program includes S y m p h on y
number 4, by Mendelssohn, Leroy
Anderson's concerto for two violins, a
woodwind quintet playing ballet music
from Faust, t10prano Marjorie Hanson
3lnging selections from "The Sound or·
Music" and "The Jewel Song," and the
London Suite by Eric Coates.
Tickets to the performance may be
purchased from the Chamber o f
Commerce, 280 · Park Ave.. Fashion
Gallery, 660 N. Coast Highway and at
the door of the auditorium in the 600
block of Park Avenue.
Artists Welcomed
Art is t s wtto wish to give
demoMlraUons and entertainers who
wish to perform are welcome to take
to the bright Jlghts on the Winter
Festival's Stage 8 at the festival grounds
Jn Laguna. Beach.
The Winter festival, ct>ntinuing through
March 19, will attract enough of an
audience to please any performer.
Persons wishing use of the 11tage may
ceontact Bob Hastlngs at 497-140$ to
maU arrangamcnu.
lhursclay, January 25, 1971 s DAILY PILOT 3
Highlight·s Pinpointed
Nixon's State of World Talk at Glance
WASHINGTON (AP) -Following are
main pOlnll in President Nixon's second
aMual State-of-the-World report to
Congress:
VIETNAM
-Posslbllltle1 for a negotiated Vietnam
peace have been stymied by North
Vietnamese dem ands whicb anlounl to
"a guaranteed political takeover" of the
South. "If winding down the war is
my greatest satisraction in foreign policy,
lhs failure to end it is my deepest
disappointment." The Uniteo States "will
not give up on negotiations," and
meanwhile encouraging progress is being
made on the other route to U.S.
di sengagement -the Vietnamization
program for turning over more of the
war burden l(l South Vietnam .
-Hanoi has stepped up the war In
Laos and Cambodia and "we face some.
very serious problems" there against
large masses of enemy troops. Enemy
intentions "will pose some hard choices
about the deployment of allied troops
as we pursue our own withdra.wals •.•
North Vietnamese actions could require
higb levels of American assistance and
air operations in order to further
Vietnamization and our withdra\vals."
J\tlDEAST
The 1\1\dea.st poses the world's most
dangerous situation today because a
flare-up could bring about U,S.-Soviet
controntation. America ls pledged to a
major role in helping bring about an
Arab-Israeli setUement.
ARMS TALKS
-Tbe Unl~d Slates sees U.S.·Soviet
nuclear parity as an opportunity for
spurring negotiations. l>.toscow should
not mistake the U.S. posture by probing
for advantages and risking confrontation.
Soviet performance is mixed so far on
issues ranging from the lo.lideast and
Berlin to Cuba.
-A new U.S. defense study shows
the United States should go forward
with its Safeguard anti-ballistic missile
system in the absence of a disara.ment
agreement at the U .S.-Soviet Stra.tegic
Arms Limitation Ta.lits. The Soviet
proposal at SALT for an ABM curb
is unacceptable because it does not
provide for limiting offensive missiles
at I.he same time. Washington will
e-0ntinue to strive for a broad agreement.
NIXON DOCTRINE
-Tbe Nixon Doctrine reflects changed
\Yorld conditions. America.ns want to
carry less o( the burden around the
world and other countries are
increasingly able lo play a. larger role.
While "cutting back overseas force a
prudently /' the United Sta.tea will still
live up to its treaty commitments.
EUROPE
-''Vltlmakly we may see a sinale
entity making policy for Western Europe
in all fields, including diplomacy and
defense." The European Common Market
countries are invited to set up a mission
in Washington. U.S. al'ld European
defense and foreign policy a r I -
complementary. "European d el ens e .
today as far into the future as I can
see, will require mutual support across
the Atlantic."
la. setklng to improve East-West ,
relations in Europe, the allies must
remain militarily strong, avoid internal
divisions and work for solutions that
are In the common interest. The
breakdown of the Stalinist bloc has ·
created new aspii'ations in both East :
and West Europe.
HEMISPHERE
-ta. Lati n Amerita, "the United States •
must accommodate diversity and seek
to maintain the fabric of hemispheric
unity, •• In a turbulent age, the mandate
for our hemispheric policy is to ad
compassionately, to work cooperatively.·
and to strengthen the bonds of a
maturing partnership."
Our plants are greener.
Penneys Garden Shops.
!
",.-Belgian AzeUn
inbudorbloom
to brighten yaur
garden now.
1 gal.1 OS
s ga1. 459
111
S'*""J buyl
Hanging baskets
planted with
lush green Ivy.
7• basket
Air Fem needs
nothing but air
to Ilw a long.
luxuriant nte.
39~
Chooae hgrent
VeKohIOonlenia
or variegated
green Gold Dust
plants in 1 gsl.
containe rs.
as~ each.
Plen!Gtldlolu1
bulba now and
enJoysumniers of
stately flowers.
Mixed colors.
99~ pl<g.of12
Available at these Penney Garden Ce nter.: FASHION ISLA ND, N ewport Center. Charge It
4 DAILY PILOT
Russians
Blas t U.S.
Laos Mo ve
MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet Union
declared tllday It "cannot re m a I n
Jndllferent to I.he ntw escalation or the
American aggression" in Indochina.
A government statemMt said "the
lnvulon of the United States in Laos
and the threats to step up provocations"
against North Vlelnam "can make the
search for path! toward a peaceful
settlement . . . more difficult ."
"The Soviet people are prepared to
continue giving all necessary aid lo the
fraternal DemocnUc Republic o f
Vietnam, to the patriot.. of Indochina
defending their legitimate rights. fighting
for the realization of thelr vital intereN
and aspirations," said the statement.
carried in the government newspaper
Izvestia arid distributed by Tass. the
<>fficlal news agency.
The statement as.5erted it was a
"dangerous delusion" that the United
States can act with impunity in Indochina
and entails "the most s e r i o u s
ccnsequences, above all for the United
States it.<lelf."
"The Soviet government resolutely
denounces the armed intervention agair.st
Laos as another criminal act by the
United States,'' the statement continued. Shot Full of Holes
. . ... .. ~ . . .
Skippers Arre1ted '
Four Cuba Boats ·-~ ' .
Seized Off U.S.
KEY WEST, Fla. (UPI) -State 11enta
and the Coast Guar4, after 1
jurildictlonal squabble on the hll b aw,
6elzed four Cuban f15hlng boats today,
arreJted their sltjpper• and brought them
to port to race charges of flahlng in
U.S. waters.
Tbe Coast Guard seized the 7S.foot
Cubaa 00.t "Lamda'' and was escorting
three other CUban boats back into
Ultemational waters wbtn the Florida
Marine Patrol intervened and arrested
the m11ten of the three smaller CUbtn
vessels.
Florida Natural Resources Director
IWidolph Hodges said the st.ate arrested
. the skippers of the three smaller CUban
boats after Key Weat fisherman Joe
Fitzgerald swore out affidavits saying
he witnessed all four CUban boal:!I fishing
inside the 12-mile U.S. territorial limit.
The Coast Guard knew of only one
violation. •
Fit:r:eera l d, skipper of the
''Glassbreake.r," swore out a 'second
affidavit char&ing the skipper of one
<>f the Cuban boata attempted to ram
his vessel.
.
the three 1m1Iler CUban fl!hing boll$ _!
to 1 Marina on nearby Stock Island. '·:
In Miami, meanwhile. the bead of :
the CUban exile group "Committee of
100," Dr. Jorge Robeljo, b e g a n
negotiations with the Cuban Embaasy
in Madrid to sttempt to work out a
swap with the Fidel Castro regime for
the retnrn of the fishing boat crewmen
ff'.lf' the release of some political prisoners
being held in CUban jails.
A Coast Guard spokesman in Miami
admit~ "there is some te113ion at this
moment between the Coast Guard I.lid
state authorities."
Tht CC.st Guard said It released the
other three CUb1n vessels ';because there
wu no Coast Guard eyewitness to them
actually fish.Ing in U.S. territorial waters.
We were authorized by our Washington
headquarten to seize only the one boat,''
Ute Coast Guard spokesman said.
The statement wa!I the harshest Soviet
reaction to date on the incursion into
1.a ...
The Soviet Union accused the United
States of carrying "a cynical policy"
to make Asians fight Asians and selected
the South Vietnamese "for the direct
executor of its plans in La~."
An American Cobra helicopter pilot, who was flying
support missions for Saigon's offensive against
the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos. surveys damage to
the rotor blade after he encountered heavy Com·
munist ground fire.
"He rushed at my boat at full throttle,
making funny gestures as it passed
within six feel of my stern," Fib:.gerald
told Florida authorities. He said the
cook of the "Glassbreaker," Lola Purdue,
wall knocked to the deck by the heavy
wake from the Cuban boat and was
111ightly injured.
Interest Rate
On Mortages
Takes Big Dip
"Washington alleges that American
anned force! take a restricted part
in the incursion, supplying fire and
logistics supp:irt to t.be South Vietnamese
troops," the statement said.
"An attack with t.be ~ of air force
and artillery is just the same crime
as an attack wlt.b t.be U!le of ground
forces. It makes no difference to
Laotians who are dying now whether
they are killed by a bullet or a bomb
dropped from the air."
Soviet Union
Receives Envoy
From Vatican
~10SCOW (UPI) -For the first lime
since communi&m came to the Kremlin,
the Soviets today officially received an
emissary ef the Vatican.
Archbishop Agostino Casaroli. one of
the church's smoothest diplomats and
a man experienced in dealing w i th
communist regjm.es, arrived ti A1oscow
late Wednesday snd was g r e e t e d
officially by a repre&entative ef the
Soviet Foreign Ministry.
Officially, Casaroll came to deposit
the Vatican's documents of ratification
<>f the nuclear nonproliferation treaty.
Unofficially, the prelate will slay five
days to see Soviet officials for talks
that co1dd determine the cour&e of future
relations between the atheist Kremlin
and the Roman Catholic Vatican -once
considered irreconcilable enemies.
When asked if he planned to discuss
churcb-state relations with the Soviets,
Casaroli repli~, "J am open ."
Casarol, who speaks Russian, is the
most qualified diplomat of the cburch
for dealing with the Kremlin. He guided
the talks that led to establishment of
diplomatic relations betv.·een the Vatican
and Yugoslavia last year. He also worked
oot tbe rnodu.s vivendi governing relations
with the ·Hungarian regime.
High ranking Soviet officials have
visited the Vatican in recent years. but
not since the 1917 revolu tion has the
Roman Catholic church sent a prelate
to bave official dealings with the Soviets
ln Moscow. Vatican officials have vi!lited
the Soviet Union, but never as official
euesta of the government.
Israel, U.S. Clash Seen
Over New Peace Treaty
By United Pres& l.Dteroational
Premier Golda Meir mel today in
Tel Aviv with her inner cabinet to
approve the final drafl of lsrael's
response to the latest Egyptian Middle
East peace offer. There were reports
Israel was at odds with Washington
on the future ef the Jsraell fortress
at Sharm El Sheikh.
Sharm El Sheikh is the fortress
guarding the Strait of Tiran entrance
to the Gun of Aqaba, the waterway
to the Israeli port of Eilat. The Israelis
captured it in the 1967 war and have
indicated they would never give it up.
Peace proposals put forth by U.N.
Mediator Gunnar V. Jarring have called
for an Israeli withdrawal from the Sinai
Cindy Scrams,
Drops Drawers
LONDON (AP) When
Cinderella made her midnight
Hight she lost more than a glass
dipper.
She lost all her clothes.
Prince Charming snatched up her
panties and told his servants: "Try
Lhem on every girl in the city.
I'll marry the one they fit."
Hundreds of girls tried, bul of
:ourse they fit only Cindy.
Thal's a hippie version of the
children 's classic. as \\'ritten by
.he Rev. Peter Jonfs. He did it
when the youlh club of his
Unitarian chapel undertook a
musical show .
The 39-year-old minister said: "I
did this as a takeoff of the sc>called
:iermissive society. for people to
laugh at.''
For the record, Cinderella does
marry the prince.
Peninsulil including Sharm El Sheikh.
The United States was reported fav orable
to the Jarring proposals.
Political sources in Cairo said Egypt
has asked the United States to bring
pressure on Israel to withdraw from
occupied territory and that it warned
that the Egyplian armed forces are
"fully prepared" to liberate the selied
lands by force if Israel refusea to pull
back.
Mrs. f\1eir's Inner cabinet includes
Deputy Premier Yigal Allon, Foreign
Minister Abba Eban, Defense Minister
Moshe Dayan and Ytsrael Galili , mini&ter
without portfolio. Official sourres said
their reply would be transmitted to
Jarring today or Friday by Israeli U.N.
envoy Yosel Tekoab.
Shouting Match
Disrupts Speech
At Jewish Meet
BRUSSEl.5 <UPI) -The World
Conference on Soviet Jewry disintegrated
into a half-hour shouting match at its
final session today when Me.nahem Begin.
former vice premier of Israel. accused
the conference organizers <>f denouncing
Rabbi Meir Kahane to the police.
Kahane is leader of the militant
American Jewish DefenE.e League tJDL)
and was refused entrance to the
conference when he came here from
New York Wednesday.
"The era when Jew denounces Jew
to the police has passed forever," Btgin
said .
At this point, Dr, WU!iqm A. Wexler
of the United States, member of the
conference's nine.man presi&um, rushed
to the rostrum and sheuted: "You're
a goddam liar and you know it."
Cold Thaws, Waters Rise
Bl.essing in Plains ls Curse to River Areas
California
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Tunnel Sighted
In Berlin; Mass
Escape Thwarted
BERLIN <A P) -A tunnel leading
under the Berlin Wall to the eastern
sector of the city was uncovered today
shortly before 17 refugees from the
Communist regime were scheduled to
flee to the West.
Authorltles said the tunnel , nearly four
feet high and running at least 360 feet
from the cellar of a West Berlin house ,
was discovered Wednesday nieht by
Western police. They sealed off the
western entrance.
Today, East German soldiers began
digging the tunnel out from their side
of the wall.
IL would have been the biggest mass
escape past the wall since 1964 when
57 refugees tunneled through the We 11
Berlin.
Police said seven persons were
involved in the plan to bring out the
17 refugees today or Friday. Three of
the seven involved were found by police
still dJgging the tunnel.
The tunnel was beneath this street
that the 57 made it to the West in
1964. On that occasion the East Germans
said one of their border guards was
shot dead during the escape.
Florida Marine Patrol Lt. E.G. LitllP.
said the three sma!Jer Cuban fishing
boats -two 60 footers and a 50-footer
-were seized by two armed Florida
marine patrol boats, the 3 2 • f o o t
Barracuda and the 23-foot Seabird.
Little said when the two Florida
Marine patrol boats moved in to arrest
the skippers of the three 5maller Cuban
boats, "the Coast Guard cutter Dilligence
took aggressive aclion" toward tht state
boats.
The Coast Guard cutter Capt York,
meanwhile, arrived at its Key West
base with the Cuban bOat "Llmdt "
and ils crew about 10 a.m. EST.
The FIOrida Marine Patrol esct>rted
French Mountaineer
Sa ved on Icy Peak
CHAMONIX . France (UPI ) -A five·
man rescue team landed from helicopters·
today and rescued alpinisl R e n e
Deamaisons from an icy ledce 4,300
feet up the Grandts Joruges Pt ak,
where he had been stranded for a week.
His companion, Serge Gou.sseault, was
dc.td.
The rescuers worked their way 300
feel to the ledge, 2QO feet below the
summit. after several earlier rescue
attempts by air were frustrated by high
winds and icy conditions. Fresh, heavy
snow falls mad~ an expedition el!. foot
impossible.
WASHINGTON (UPll -Interest ratt!!s
on convention&] home m o r t g a g e s
rtc0rded the largest one.month drop in
the eight years that records have be.en
kept last month, the federaJ home loan
bank board reported today.
The board said the average effective
interest rate on conventional mortgages
for the purch&M! of new homes was
8.17 ptrcent in January, dow11 from De·
cember's 8.38 percent and well below the
8.15 percent recorded la st October.
The average effective interest rate.
on convenlional mortgages for the
purchase of new homes was 8.07 percent,
down from Dtcembcr's 8.26 percent and
a sharp drop from the 8:42 percent
recorded in September.
Board Chairman Preston Martin said
th• declines reflecteed increased savings
in mort111e lending in1titutions.
p.trticul1rly 11 a v i n g s and loan
associations.
The decline in conventional mortgage
interest rates has been accompanied by
ll sharp decline in the interest ceiling
on FHA and VA mortgages. That ceiling
was reduced to 7 percent on Feb. 17.
However. during January the ceiling
was 8 percent for the first 12 da y1
and 7.5 percent for the re.st <>f the
month.
In addition to the interest ceiling,
1ender1 in t h e government.backed
programs usually add "points" which
increase the effective cost of lhe loan
above the ceiling. A "point" is .a one-time •t
char1e equal to one percent of the loan ;:
and is usually_paid by the seller rather ::
than the buyer. ;
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Nixon Proposes Public Jobs
In Pushing Welfare Bill
the program would cost $800 billion.
million a year, bul the The revised admin istration
adminislr•lion said the net welfare plan puts a d d e d
cost would be i49i million emphasis on work, and allO
since adults would be taken proposes a tough system of
from welfare rolls and put computerl!ed checking of
on public payrolls. welfare rolla
OAlLY PILOT G
STANDING
ROOM ONLY
CORVALLIS, Ore. (AP) -
A report from T. F. Ad1ms.
director of housing at Ore&o0
State University says someone
slipped into Finley Hall U\11
week, unbolted and m1de off
with 32 tollet seats.
WASHINGTON (UPI I -
The Ni.Ion Administration.
trying to push it.s stalled
welfare refonn p r o g r am
through a balky Congress,
Wednesday proposed a
sweeping $800 million program
that would put 200,000 welfare
adults to work in city and
state jobs.
The administration's overalll!i'"Oiii-OiiiOiii--OiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~"'I
welfare program, includin&I
payments for the first Umc
to )ow.income workin& poor,
would cost about $4.5 billion ,
over present annual federal ,
welfare costs of about H
INTI •
l,IPI Tt l#l'll"'
300 VIPS BOARDED 747 FOR CHAMPAGNE FLIGHT BUT NEVER GOT OFF THE GROUND
L.,,ding Ge1r of Giant Pline Broke Through Asphalt at Denver Runway
The admlnistrallon handed
major welfare changes to tht
House Ways and Meaans
Committee. Com m i l tee
members have wondered
where the jobs would oome
from If welfare adults In 2.7 Latins' Trial
million families were required
llVfll
PATHWAY TO THE SUN
Texas Lawmaker Claims He Jumbo Jet
to go to work. Set M 10
The key feature of the n<W . a Y
program Includes creation of REDWOOD CITY (UPI) -
UNUSUAL IMPORTS
FROM LA.TIN A.MERICA
Was Target of U.S. Spies
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
Texas state legislator told
Congress today he has lost
faith in America, and his wife
her health, because the
mitit.ary spied upon him over
the past decade .
"I can remen1ber thinking
or Uncle Sam as part of the
family." said Curtis ~t
Graves. "But now I think of
repression and surveillance
and miscarriages of justice
" In testimony prepared for
the Senate subcommittee on
constitutional rights .. beaded
by Sam Ervin (D-N .C.),
Graves recowited he recently
learned from a former agent
of the 112th. Mi l itary
Intelligence Group that he was
a snooping target.
Graves said Walter Birdwell
of Houston advised him
"Army Intelligence has had
me under surveillance since
about 1960," and maintained
extensive recrirds on him in
a ;,subversive file."
Birdwell also told him. said
Graves, others in the 112th's
'Clieap, Healthy'
Wide Use of Vegetable
Proteins in Meat Seen
WASIIlNGTON {UPl) -luncheon meats, economists
T. Manley a n d
M. Gallimore
Consumers during the coming
decade will . firid grov.·ing
amounts of cheap but healthy
vegetable protein "extenders"
mixed into meat f o o d , ,
Agriculture Departm en t
experts predicted today.
By 1980 the vegetable
protein from soybeans ;ind
other crops probably will
displace 15 to 20 percent of
the meat in some processed
foodg such as hamburger,
meat loaf, hot dogs and sliced
\Villi am
\Villiam
reported.
The two analysis, in a report
prepared for lhe Agriculture
Department's annual oullook
conference. said mea t
producers probably need not
fear any loss of their present
ma rkets to the developing
substitutes. But the substitutes
probably will capture a share
of the market growth due to
population growth, they said.
2PANTS
SUITS
3-DAY SALE
THURS., FRI., SAT •
rog. $125
now
$
GET EXTRA MILEAGE IN
THESE 2· TR OUSER SUITS
OF WOOL. BOTH SMARTLY
STYLED. SUIT COAT IN THE
POPULAR 2-BUTION CUT,
CENTER OR SI DE VENTED. ALL
POPULAR SIZES. HURRY IN.
DOUILE
IREASTED
SUITS
Rtt· te S145
ftouston file Included Texas
State Sen. Barbara Jordan ,
boxer Muhammad A I i ,
attorneys Ben Levy, James
}lippard and Will G ray,
members of the Ku Klux Klan
and a number of antiwar
activists.
Birdwell reported seeing "a
card li!e on every member
of th e Unitarian Church in
San Antonio," Graves said,
and record s on Black Mus lims
included such p e r s o n a 1
matters as surgical histories.
As for his own case, Graves
saKl. he apparently w a s
marked for surveillance while
participating in 1960 sit-ins at
Houston , aimed a t
desegregation of p u b I i c
accommodations.
Even so, he said, it was
six years before he was first
lipped by a high official in
lhe Catholic church in
Houston .
Thereafte r, he said, it
became obvious his telephone
v.·as tapped, and crudely.
Sometime:ii after mak ing a call
"f would not get another dial
tone . , .for several minut.es."
After his 1966 election to
the state legislature, said
Graves, "I noticed several
times too many microphones
were on platforms where I
v.·as speaking."
In one such case in 1969,
he said, the unaccountable
microphone had a c o r d
running under the wall to an
adjoining room, but "v.·e
couldn't get to the othe r side."
,CLOTHIERS
FORMERLY GENTRY PHONE 540-1 500
Has Jumbo
Headache
200,000 public service jobs in A Superior Court judge on
city parks, hospitals, garbage Wednesday set May 10 for
collection and other service the trial of sii: Latin American
fields. The first year cost for youths after denying a moUon
these jobs would be borne for dismissal or robbery and
by the federal governrr;ent. car theft charges against
DENVER {UPI) _ Some John G. Veneman , them.
300 representatives of the undersecretary of He a 1 t h ' Defense altomeys h a d
news media, travel agencies Education and W el r a re , argued the youths had been
and business firms boarded presented the administration's denied a speedy trial but
a ga la · ·c h amp a g n e' ' public worki; plan along with Judge Robert Kane ruled their
promotional flight aboard a other changes in the long murder trial in San
I
HAND EMBROIDERED PEASANT DltliSSES
SHIRTS, TUNICS BLOUSES, SKIRTS
WOOL SWEATERS
PONCHOS IN DOZENS OF STYLES
GIFTS ANO DECORATORS ITEMS
LAGUNA BEACH
IN BOAT CANYON
I
Continental Boeing 74.7 administration's family Francisco cons t It u te d
\V ednesday. They never got a.s!lst.ance proposal. "adequate reason for the de·
past lhe end of the runway. The public works featuu of Jay." 612 N. COAST HWY ... ~:~~. 494·6877
The 355-ton giant becamel'jiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii wedged in asphalt and 1nud !I
at the edge of Denver
Stapleton International Airport
before it could be co 1n e
airborne. Passengers aboard
the free fli ght rode back to
the airport in a bus.
Airlines spokesmen said the
hour.Jong promotional flight
was intended to inaugurate 1he
start of Co ntinental's 747
service between Dtnver and
Chicago.
No one was injured and
damage to the aircraft's
landing gear, if any, appeared
slight.
Economy Signs
Predict Surge
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Commerce Department says!
leading indicators of U.S.
economic activity jumped one
percent in January. A\
department economist said the 1 rise suggests the economy
•·v.·ill continue to expand in
the months ahead."
The deparlment &aid an
index o[ its eighl leading
indicators jumped to 118.l of
the 1967 base.
DOUILI
KNIT
SUITS
lt911.1l•r S1 IS
• • •
Closing Our Doors
After Serving the Harbor
Area for 19 Year-s
ENTIRE STOCK
2 Acres
of Trees, Shrubs, Fertilizers
Insecticides, Too Is and Fixtures
SAVE AT
WHOLESALE PRICES
AND LOWER!
• NO PHONE ORDERS • • •
• CASH AND CARRY • • •
•BRING A TRUCK OR TRAILER AND SAVE!
SALE STARTS FRI., FEB. 26
CONTINUES DAILY • • • 8:00 A.M. •• 5:00 P .M.
ORANGE COAST NURSERY"
380 W. WILSON ST., COSTA MESA
HAUOR ILYD. AT WILSON ST..-HAUOR SHOPPING CENTER ION THE MALL) COSTA MESA 646-3996
• 1
..
:
•
DAILY PROT.EDITORIAL PAGE
Expand the
Assembl yman John V. Briggs (R·Fullerlonl Is firing
away at the Orange County Harbor District again.
At first he played on a lack of knowledge on the part of the voters by calling for dissolution of the dis·
lrict "as a lax burden benefiting only coastal harbor
areas."
When lhat failed . Briggs introduced a bill calling
for a popular vote. County voters would be asked whetb·
-..... er the harbor distrll't should be dissolved, and if not,
&hall it be expanded to include parks and recreation.
That biU was knocked out in a Senate committee.
No\Y ~says he'll introduce it again.
LaSt ·year Briggs had the support of the Orange
County League of Cities and the city of Huntington
Beach. He still has Huntington Beach's support because
the city considers the harbor district's patrolling service
in Huntington HarbOur inadequate. The city favors con-
verting the district to a couhty department.
But the League of Cities has a committee recom·
mendation before it to expand the harbor district to for·
rnally include the beaches and regional park function.
(The ''formally" refers to the fact that the harbor dis-
trict staff presently administers the county parks system,
even though il is not in the district.) ·
1£ the league accepts the recommendati9n, it Will
join the Board of Supervisors and Newport Beach in
recogni2ing that converting the district to a CoUnty de-
partment would amount to a distinction without a bene-
ficial difference.
EJpanding the harbor district to include parks and
recreation, while formalizing e.xi.sUng operations, could
overcome objections of some inland and north county
residents to paying "harbor district taxes." And the in·
land park program could be greatly strengthened.
As for attitudes among some Huntington Beach oUi·
cials, unles:\ local emnire building is an element in their
ob/'ections. it seems j ( should be possible to iron out diffi·
cu ties with thti harbor district over "under patrolling"
or "duplicate pitrolllng" in their area.
Assemblyman Briggs may, in the end , find that his
efforts to dissolve the harbor district and convert it into
a very possibly less effective county department has be·
come politically unprofi~ble.
He would be serving the county at large as well as
his immediate assembly district to better advantage if
he were to help guide a measure to consolidate two op-
uations into one.
Earthquake Insurance
Contrary to a widely held belief among Californians,
insurance protection to cover catastrophic loss due to
earthquakes has Jong been available to most homeown·
ers at a cost insurance spi>kesmen assert is reasonable.
A rate common to most companies in this field is
approximately $1 .50 per $1 ,000 of protection on a typi·
cal frame stucco house. The annual premium on a $250
ODO house would be about $37.50.
The policies carry a 5 percent deductible provision,
since the objective is to cover major damage. Thu.5 the
insured ·would pay the first $1,250 of damige on that
$25,000 home.
. ·-
/V\AOl.J>.1 ,._,.
The same people \vould pay the same taxes for ·the
same purposes. But their money would not be as likely
to find its way into parks, beaches and harbor develop-
ment if it became subject to the juggling in the county's
general fund instead of being clearly earmarked for the
specific purposes by means of a special district. The
district also has certain other operational advantages,
created by state law, in dealing with other public and
private agencies.
New policies lvon't be 'vritten until 72 hours after
the last of the major a.fter·shocks -but they'll be avail-
able. 'I Wl~H I WA> ~OWN THERE W15HI N6 I WAS UP Hf l\E.''
Congress Wma't Get Dowta to Work
Proposals Need Action Now
WASHINGTON -Anyone who wishes
to understand what is wrong' with
Congreu need only examine the condition
of this great institution at this moment
in February. Con&resa simply will not
get down to v.·ork.
Oh yes, the c<>ngressmen keep busy.
Thfy s p e n d long
hours listening to
testimony on scan-
dals in non-<:0mmis-
sioned officers clubs
in Vietnam. They
respond promptly
enough when the de-
bate level has to be
increased. lt c 11 n
even ~ argued that a
the annual exercise on the filibuster rule
is useful because a new Congre,y ha s
nothing better to do at this stage in its
e1islence.
But when you look behind the dai}y
headlines you find that both the House
and Senate are advancing at the same
pace as usual and are inevitably heading
into a mess next No \'embe r which will
leave unreso19ed some (If the greatest
Jssues of the time.
TO PUT nns ~IA'nER in its ra1,1·est
fonn. a Democratic Congress has
escaped control of its leadership since
the days when Speaker Sam Rayburn
and ?-.1ajority Leader Lyndon 8. Johnson
ran its affairs in an authorit.arian manner
-bene\'olenlly authorita rian, as it
appears in retrospect.
No reflection is intended here on the
abilities and dedication of either Speaker
Carl Albert or Majority Leader Mike
Man srield, nor upon the minori ty leaders
of either house. The prtsent ("Ondilio n
of Congress Is inherently unavoidable
where the White House is controlled
by one party and Congress by the other.
~
I i
~
Rit hard WilaoD
\ ~~-t ~ - . ... a~:.....~. -.. ... _...
Whatever el~ history may say or
Lyndon Johq as President lt w i 11
not be able to say that he failed to
originate and implement a program. He
was able to do it be<:ause he was himself
a skilled congressional leader with a
Congress controlled by his own political
party and he was, in turn, comp\etetY
and wholly in control of lhal party
which he demonstrated right down lo
the end by choosing the man he wished
to succeed Nm.
JUSTORY WILL never be able to say
that Richard M. Nixon failed to originate
a program, but it may very well say
that a Democratically c o n t r o I I e d
Congress pre. v en led him from
implementing it.
Johnson put through his program; its
weaknesses developed and V1·ere exposed
a nd it has undergone proctsses of
change, but its goals have not been,
and will not be, abandoned in any
significant respect. Jn many respects,
in fact, those goals would be
implemented by President Nixon in a
different and perhaps more workable
fonn.
Thus. the process of s c h o o 1
desegregation, medical insurance, publi c
welfare, housing, have been carried long
steps farther under Nixon, and would
be carried farther, still. were it not
for the political stultification of a
Democratically-controlled Congress filled
11·ith presidential cand idates.
\\'HATEVEtt THE merits of Nixon's
proposals, actioa, and not political
debate, is needed on them now : not
next year or the year after that, or
in the next Democratic administration,
bu! now.
The word now seems to have litlle
meaning in Congre.ts as it is presently
constituted. For two years Congre!s has
not even been able to a d o p t
appropriations bills until months after
the beginning of years for which they
were authorized. Congress has refused
to come to grips with the major
programs proposed by Nixon, which
properly can be described as reforms
on a historical scale: Congress will not
even say no, ll says nothing. Or, if
not nothing, then 'alternatives are
proposed, such aa Senator Kennedy"s
compul'°ry national health insurance,
which is even less acceptable In Congress
lhan Nixon's more modest proposals.
mE RESPONSIBILITY ·which falls
upon lhe Democratic Jeadership under
these circumstances is very heavy. Un-
less it is to be classed in President Tru-
man's old no.good, do-nothing category,
the inherent problem of divided political
control of the government must be
overcome.
Oven::oming it calls for far more
statesmanship that has yet been
evident, and this is all the more
su rprising, beeause Speaker Albert and
Majority ·Le:ader ?-.fansfield are both men
with kee.n senses of public responsi bility.
ls it to be said in the end that
Nixon could get nowhere because his
political opposition wished to make him
a one term President? That v.·ould be
a sorry comment on the way the sys tem
works.
Nixon has not presented evil, politically
inspired or ill-considered programs: his
most enthusiastic critics would not say
that. The programs may be controversial
but the problems they addresa are not.
Drug Laws Are • Ill Chaos
f\.linnesota ·s Supreme Court recently
upheld the conviction of an l&-year-old
hippie (or having in the lining or hi!
jacket traces o( mari juana so minute
they could not be chemically tested but
had to be identi fied microscopically. Jn
Washington, D.C., a few days later,
a judge. freed a heroin add ict on the
ground that he was "a sick man" and
t1ot a criminal.
What these two ("Ourt cases illuslrale
111 the random. chaotic state of the law
regarding drug abuse. Paradoxically,
the users of "hard ." addictive drugs
like htroin are gelling a more sympath-
etic hearing from some judges than ire
the u.wrs of non·addiclh•e mari juana.
Not 1lnct Prohlbl!lon has lhe en(orc~
ment or the criminal law been more
IUbjed to confusion and partiality.
---iW-
Thursday. February 25, 1971
Th• <ditori<Jl popt of th< Dolly
Pilot nek• to inform and .ttim-
ulati re.Oder• bu prt.ttntino thit n•w..,.p.n opfnfom ond com.
ftvntafy cm topics of int~est
and sfgniJicanct, b11 providing a /orum for tht e%prt1.tlon of
our rtot.Urt' opinion_.. 011d bu
prt .sentfng the dittrst. vitw.
pofnu oj informed obstrvt rs
and ipokUmtn on topics of tl1t
<1av.
Bo~ N. Weed, Puilflsbcr
••
Editoiiai
R~areJt .
to me ;• Associate JusUce James Otis ~ said in dissent, "that the legislature
tntended 2f} years imprisonment for
possess ing an unusable amount of mari-
juana ( 1/:, 800th or an ounce) which could 1 i neither be so consum ed nor in any other
' way pose a threat to .toeiely." .• ..
EVEN JUORE O~tINOUS a r e ~Iinneapolis police had to vacuum
Indications that heroin traffic is Siirila·s jacket 10 get the microscopic
fl ourls,hing tn certain b\g cilles und er an1ounl of marijuana. The youth 1J)ent
the umbrella or police protection. tv.·o years behind bars on the charge
~ause heroin addicts provide a reliable and now-at age 20-ls out on parole.
and cOnti nuing source of income ooce
th!y are hooked, it has been in the
interests of dealers and crooked police
to dry up the supply of pot.
\Vriting in the nev.•sletter of The Public
Inform ation Center . Jelf Kamen charges :
"Detroit police officers are making
('normous profits on the sale of heroin
In the Motor Clty·s ghetto." He al so
atleces th at o~ Detroit physician who
keeps some 7$0 junk.its off heroin through
methadone maintenance became a
1peclal object of harassment
The physician. Dr, F. \\layne Hollinger.
told Kamen: "l must ht hurting the
dope dealeri more than I figurtd. When
you es tJmate the average junkie spends
in the area of $100 a day for stuff
and multiply that by 7Ml addicts. you
get a bJg chunk ot t.1sh the hoodlums
aren't getting any more.'"
TUE MINNESOTA CASE is one or
the most startling In the history ol
drug prosceutlons. The stalc"s Supreme
Court on Feb. 5 upheld the conviction
of Robert Slirila by a 4-3 vote -
reversing Ill 1970 rullni: that an unusable
amount of marijuana was not enough
for a conviction. .. Jt 1r tnconalvablt
IN TUE DISTRICT of Columbia
decision, Superior Court Judge Tim C.
Murphy on Feb. 10 freed a ~year-old
heroin addict charged with narcotics
possession. The judge called on Congress
to "provide treatment for such people
lnslead ol usin!( criminal law to send
them to jail." His ruling on drug addicts
came five years all.er a similar decision
in the District regarding alcobollcs.
Dear
Gloon1 y
Gus:
\Vhen thtse car v.•111lht1 offer
grii;olinc at ··competitiv e prices.''
1,1ho nrc they con1petlng wlth,
e::ich other?
-G. W. T.
'hi• +.1111r't ""'"" ""'"' """"' "" llt~•u•rflf lNM •I "'9 ........ ,.,. h!lf
..... "' "'"' ............... DWl'I' '""'·
Why It Pays
To Explore
The Moon
E\'ery moonshot -Apollo 14 cost $400
milUon-begets protest that it is a waste
of money which could be put lo better
use ·on earth.
There are at least two v.·eaknesses
in this argument: (1) the mone y could
be put to \ll'orse use,
as in a few days of
killing in southeast ·
Asia; (2) there is ' ~'If no standard f o r
: .::; judgment that A•·...._... "" Apollo 14, or all the ~ ~ ~:!"';: \ Apollo.s , will not bet-'-'~ ··"\ I.er the human con-·~ ' dilion.
That is, no man
on earth can do more than theorize about
the value of lunar exploration, or any
spatt exploration. That value, if any, is
in a potential state. Aside from the fad
that lunar exploration is an exciting test
of human knowledge and technological
capacity, it is a pure gamble. 'Illis
column is addressed to that theme.
HERE \VE ARE in an infinileslmal
corner of the univer se called the Solar
System. lt consists in a dozen cold
spherical bodies revolving about a hot
star. We live on one.
\Ve live betause the aun provides heat,
and because ours i11 a water planet.
It is doubtful if life e1islS on the non·
water planets, though it is a good guess
it e1ists in trillions of other infinite simal
corners which may have water planets .
Besides be ing a heat engine, the sun
has a compulsion to keep the planets
in endless revolution by its gravitational
pull.
Yet heat and v.•ater alone art; not
enough. The water must evaporate in
a cycle to unlock oxygen , which combines
l\'ith olher chemical elemenl.! lo offer
w an atmosphere suitable to life.
Nor is water alone enough. If it stood
inert. it would have dissipated in space
blllions of years ago , and here is where
the moon comes in. As the earth rotates,
the moon joggles the oceans. maintaining
the. evaporation cycle. Without a satellite
of the moon's mass, v.·e wouldn't be
11e ...
SO \\'HAT IS WRONG about d\saiver-
ing v.'hatever our means permit about
the indispensable moon? Y.'hat is it.
whence did it come, v.·hy does it behave
as It does? Are v.·e yet unaware of
its subtle but vital effects on its principal.
True, we cannot change one whit the.
earth-moo n relation. But \\'e can still
learn from it lhe fundamentals of spin-
ning, celestial systems locked In gravita-
tional attraction.
For inslance, there "'a! a speculat i1•e
news story the other day about the
t~like earth wobbling on its axis in
se11en-year cycles, v.·hich may affect
earthquake freq uency. To establ ish such
knowltdge could h11.\•e A direct effect
on all ma nklnd. There is a theory the
moon affects the v•obble.
What v.·e know of the moon after
six men have visited It is practlcally
nothing. a fr w surf~et phenomena. But
given time and v.·ill. \l'C can lncn:uc
our knowledge a hundredfold ,
It Is a dangerous thing to Inhibit
a man's search for kno"-A·ledge merely
because you ran'l perctlve, or because
you fe11 r, where it v.·JJI go. The ancient!
did It and went nowhert, be)·ond ma.kin&
some very messy history.
. .
The Regulation
Of Our Emotions
I was walki ng around \\'ith kind of
a glum face during the recent holida~s
and somebody asked me if anylhing
\Vas v.·rong. ''No/' I said. '0 it"s just
that detern1ined cheerfulness always
1nakes me a little sour."
There is a perve rse stre;ik in 1ny
na!ure Lhal reacts against the extremes
of jollity and gloom.
The relentless mer·
rimenl of Christmas
often gives me a
sense o[ sadness,
while the unre lie\'ed
melancholy of fune-
rab makes me v.·ant
to be flip or fri\·o-
lous.
If this v.·cre just a
personal neurosis, l wouldn't even men-
tion it -but I suspect a great many peo-
ple feel the ,.,.ay I do, only the y manage
lo conceal it more successfully.
ANY "ORGANIZED'' sentiment strikes
me as factitious and a !Hile sterile.
Funeral services arc the worst, and
if I had my wa y, the whole business
would be abandoned -the casket. the
pall-bearers. the oleag inous lies ab out
the deceased. the conventional trappings
o( grief. Mourni ng should be private,
not a public competition or a display.
And the "merriment" or Christmas.
certainly, Is just as conlri\'ed in most
cases. providing a temporary exchange
or hearty sentiments so that people can
feel good about going back lo be their
mean old selves as soon as !he ofricia l
"spirit'' has been declared dead.
THE REGULATION of emo ti o ns
-
'Sydney J: < -~I Harr:1s ~·
"·"""" ~ ." .; l
·~
reminds me of those "spontaneous
demonstrations'' that are held in places
like Russia. \1·here I.he people are prodded
and sti mulated to screain and applaud
and march for some des1>otic hooligan·s
birthday; only in the U.S .• the regula tion
of emotions is co1nmercia\ly rather than
politically exploited.
The fu neral racket is c.:ertain!y among
the worst here, and l have not been
to t"·o funerals out or a hundred tha t
sho\\•ed a modicum of dignity, taste,
honesty, or a truly pious app reciation
of the equilibrium between the precious
gi(t of life and the inexorable demand
of death. Even \\'hen one sinl'erely cared
for the deceased, there is an uneasy
air of hypocrisy about such proc eedings.
IN i\IY \'lE\\', the ix'sl \va y to be
memorialized is lo donate one's body
for medical research and transplant use:
in !his \1•ay. one is be.ing o( some value
to society. present and fulurc, and even
achlc1·es a kind of iminor!atity by pro-
\'iding the <lrgans for so1neonc else to
enjoy Goers gif L ol lile longer than
he o!her"'ise might
lt is mere \'anity that prompts our
currenl funeral and burial pr actices, and
a barbaric kind of vanity at !hat. Jusl
as il is mostl y vanity that propels us
into the fierce exchange or Christmas
gifts as a substitute for the year-round
caring that Jesus stood for.
Attitude W ins the Job
The following letter f rorn an e11t·
plO!JCr to a yo ttn g 1na1t he had re·
jected. for a job tvas supplied b!I
Success f.1 olivolion l11stitutc uf \Vaco,
Texas.
Editor
Dear Kid :
Today you asked me lor a job. From
the look of your shou lders as you \\'alked
oul, 1 suspect you 've been turned down
before, and maybe you believe by now
that kids out of high school can 't find
v.·ork.
But, J hired a te:enager today. You
saw him . i-le \\'as lhe one with polished
shoes and a neckt ie. What was so spec ial
about him? Not experience. ne ilher of
you had any. It was his att itude that
put him on the payroll instead of you,
Altitude. son. .A·T-T·l·T·U-P.E. H e
\11anted a job badly enough lo shuck.
the leather jacket, get a haircut , and
look in lhe phone book lo find out 1,1·hat
lhis company makes. He did his bcsl to
Impress me. Thars y,·here he edged you
out.
\'OU SEE. KID, many of the proplt
Yl'ho hire other people aren 't "1vi!h"
a lot of things. \Ve know more about
foxtrots thAn about discotheques. and
\\"e ha,,e .some Stone Age Ideas about
who owes whom a living. ~taybe th at
makes us prehistoric, bu t there's nothing
\\'!'Ong with the checks: we sign, ;ind
if you want one you'd better tune us
in.
Ever hear of "tmpatby?" It's 1he
trick of seeing the other fellow's sidf!:
of things. I couldn °t have cared lcs!!I
thal you needed "'bread for your pad."
Jlow you pay your rent is your problc1n.
and your landlord's. What I needed ,,.a~
!Ol'T'leone \\•ho'd go out in tilt: plant,
kttp his e)•es open. and "'ork for me
Uke he'd work for himself. lf you ha ve
even the vaguest idea of what I'm trylng
•
.,
Guegt Editorial
J
fo say, let it show U)e next tin1e you
ask for a job. You'll be head and
shoulders over the rest.
LOOK KIO: 'J'he on ly time jobs grew
on lr~s 1vas \\'hile most of our country's
manpower was wearing G.l.'s and pulling
K.P. For all the rest or history you 've
had to get a job like you get a girl:
"Case'" the situation. \1•ear a clean shirt,
and try lo appear reasonably willing.
~laybe jobs aren"t as plentiful right
no11·. but a lot of us can remember
\1hen master craft smen walked the
streets. By comparlson you don'l know
the mean ing of ··scarce ·•
\'ou may not bel1e,•e ii. but all around
you employers are looking for young
n1en smart enough to go after a job
In the old-fashioned \1 ay. \\'hen they
Und a fello\v llkc !hat. they ci1 n't wait
to unload some or their \1·orrlm on
him .
For bolh our s;ikc~. get cager. \\'Ill
rou?
8 11 Geo r ge ---,
Dc;ir George: _
The lady advice e-0lumni1ts
always cRutlon ~-omen ne\'cr ta
Jct men get fresh with lhe m. lo
repulse: the ad\'anccs Qf \\'O\YC!ll
nnd. abo\·c all, to be very
s1J.~plciow: of married men. \Vll:J
don 'I you gh·e such ad,1ct?
WOl'IDER!NG
Dear \\'ondtrlng:
You've got to br klddiJJi.
;
r
' s
s
'
' '
t
r •
t
'
Thursc!ay, January 25, 1~71 DA>LY PILOT 7 ----UCI Extension Class.es for March Listed • Ill F·ull
UC Irvine Extension b
offering a full sl ate ol clnsse.>
and lectures to Orange Coast
Residents in ~larch. Here's
the complete list :
DON'T
MISS
THIS ,
r~~Al
DOUBlE·HEAO
THERMO MEHR
Check both indoor ANO out·
door temperatures! 5-foot
tubing connects lo outdoor
temperature bu!b. 9x2'' gold
plastic case. Brown scale has
easy·to-read white numerals
& rraduations. ~/all brac ket.
CF THE MONTH.
1 PC. AlUMINUM SET
HeJvy-gauge al.iminum lets
you cook \'li!h little or rio
-water to sa1•e vitamins! 1 & 2
qt. covered saucepans, S·qL
covered Dutch oven, 101/2"
skillet {uses Dutch overi lid).
Oven-sale handles & lid knobs.
DISH MASTER • The "Other" Dishwasher.
Great for doing all your
dishes or to com pie~
ment your automatic
for fine china,
pots and pa ns.
New color
front panels
optional at $4.50. R~.
Sl9.81
SALE
Easw to install
SALE-GARDEN HOSE
e ] Ply Nvlrin Ccrd
Reirlicrced.
e IGn~ Re1'1t•nl
e 12 Yr. Gu.u~"t••
ONLY SJ9 9
SO'· 5 /8" INSIDE
Dl~METlR
OF THE MO NTH
j
'
'·' .,;, · 1Sx24•
Size
MAGIC ACllON DOOR MAl
Looks like grass, wears like hon• Dresses up your doorway 1s
1t ~lops trai:ked in dirt Thousands of gre~n g r ~~s like "fingers"
l'lhisk shoes clean :rt sccor.~s. Rugged pOl)cl~:;Jene won't rot,
shed mildew, mold er fade. trre cu!ar color skid proof backing,
' j
l
C1rett1 In M90lclnt. UCI mtOlc•I ~Ellfflc!!:J $,,:., or> .. Tl'lt MIOdll $dtnc:t 1. 7.f:•l ~.m. Adll'llHlon l.<l.'n.· :~:v. ,!~=:;!';;'., n=';~':v I~ 1-1~''·"'· ~1:~1~llon71M~.i)\m1nl!!n Hi lt, 1'M.l•MMIY• Mfrt~ •
c1rc1hw1Kulfr, .--eel l>Y AUOC:ltM Wllfl h Wr-wlll'I Wll•I W1 Atl Al~ a.:.L':"~I::.;. ~-ltllvS:."1~ "-<••< , .. _..•n11 1nd A $ UC I . Doll'IQl Jalln lit . GolOtmlll!. i'..-0 . 111 ~• ... m•:r.-ClllTIDUI., w:leftl.1 UCI ......, --!tit Ell'llrOM'\ll'llal EolOemlolocl't' Uftll, Ell•n1 i.erln on "P1wi.o.n11vllC .. -.-. I lecture hell. MMk •I s.c:~.. C•llfor"ll s1111 Otct•••m.,,, of Puttllc IPlorll .. 1 "' lht Crt1!1¥1 P1ocn1.HI 1 p,... 11t alll\ ifWf -II Lt<lllrfr I I UCtl 1'1 H11m1n!lln Hell 1•1$. 0 p.m
M1rirw L.lle 1<111 me ••rrler Rttt. 1POflMlfMi !" P•Dll••m In SPCl1 AdmLulon u .so.• ' · '
t•ltn1lon •1..,1n.r cooroln•!~· b~ l nforG l. "ltk.,.,, •"or"*~ Go14 _,,, M .... Commofl" t • m .4 pm. l'ft &U lnc:lude1 IUnc:h-. t ncl 11•r~l1111.
:141 ....... y, Mtrtll 1 •
0.~1rtm, ! ,/ P'""1l1t!Oll I ft O
..,wlr""mt~lll BlolotY. 1•1 $lth-llll~I
Htll. • p.m
' O•le s .. l<IQM~ Allin H I n c e ck ECPloaY. " Hun>1nlllt1 H•I~ 7;'3 ~live A"lll-IOhv. G I I> t 1t 1 Fl>Ulldlllen. (r;11<tn1Jon f'l't ~ o.m. Mllllm1l1:.ll MtlllPd.1 In tM !lot;~ Wll>On, •tMl'Cllll ~°'"'°'' end vlc1 "Au1tr•l!1: 111 Lend •n<I llt. I 17• WedlWIGly, Mlrdl t M1rk1•, •. E_~: rd 0 . Tllore, 1>rol-
cn•Trm1n ol ~ 1T1tnl el Rldh:1IM1l' Compuler kl111C1, l·t : P • m • cl lfllfMITl.lfl(I, UC!.~" " Center tor Ille H•1111 Scltr.<:H. UCL I Ad minion i4.50." u,,',M ~.',,'!,~. •,•·,•,~,re•~~-. ,•,01, 0...rlmtnl ol M1tllem• 1. Coffft,
H~l~orlrctG DI=~:';"· P•°;!!e1~1"":1
11111crv. UCI, I ncl "'e nlm, "°" W?wl
1 lov•IV W1r." lE~!tNloro 1errt1 on
"Mi ll ,.111 $ocleh• 111 Wctld W•r I.'')
5clff1Ct Le<llJf• Hiii, 7.10 P.m. Aelmli. 111111 M.2$." -••v, M1rc11 I Qvtin11Ut1!1on of !llt R:ale ol ~""tic !W111111ori U1!1111 a 1otll 1m1,11 ,oon~ed bY 0 Ip. r. "'I ft I 0 • ~-· " d. .. . 4N Plly1lc11 Sdt~c11, :XI D.1n.1 R•~lolorilcll $.cl1J1C11. C' en It r 1 n c 1 TM Mkkl .. E1~t In A .... rlc1n FQrtkln IEJtlellllon 11rln oro "E01Klllen1I ltctur1 ~ Pl'IYllt1fSCllt\Cfl1 4 p.m, t<llnl<111,., F ' • n c I 1 c o AYlll, Rodl1f1llu Unl•utlh, lol>Oll.ored f)y Rocm H·S. Lona a11cl\ Vtltr•n• .-oncv, Stl\lffl " Sol-I. IJJIU•nl Accounl"Pllll'I: E "•I u • 11 o" el lalvrHY, M1rtll • (Ste CLASSES, Page I) Howl111, 1:JC p.m. 11<ot1uor cl Pol lltll Kllntlo UCLA. Attoml>lltlU>Wnl.''I 101 P II Y 1 I t i I Wlll1, Toi1t1 .... T1n1, -.cll'I'. ~::::::;;_:;;::_o:c·--~~--""=oc-~-=--=-~~c~,c___=.=c__c~ -~--!!~~lml!a'Jlml!!!lll!!!lll!!!ml!!!iiil!!!ml!!!''':'+!!llll!!lllElll!!fD!t<!BB!
I
Celebrating 2 New Stores
BUENA PARK-FULLERTON
1321 S. EUCLID St. (Comer of Eudld & Orangethorpe) 87~~0~lic, , .. -AZUSA COVINA 877 S. Azusa Ave.
"""'c."-·""'"!"""·"'·'-' _ . . • (Comer of;3:1~:1•ow Hwy.)
"Sa:tur/aehon GtulP'llntHd"
BRANO
NEW 5.llllll-Ul113
6.lllI15-U5115
5.lill15-5.9JJ15
k"•SIJ!t1S1• f.t.lLlll llQ ......
htrlife INMtlll
Belted or UNlllOYAL
Whitewalls LAREDO
OPEN
DAILY
8:30to9
SUN 9 .. 6
BLACKWALLS
O'-WllITEWALLS
IORD-PLY-CHEV SIZE: 1.15x15 (F78-15.)
BRAND
NEW
FUll
4P1Y
s·
F
0
R
u11ao!ili"''riii£1:£·ss '"4
BRAND NEW FULL 4 PLY sz.95Ellrll I s1s" :i:;·i
,,, s1995 us.14 ..... u ~~~ {G71/14)(G71nS)
·:· 7.0h1J
::: (C7~/1 I)
6.tSx1'«D71/14}i.Jk14(f11114)
7.lSxl 4(171/14) 7.75•1 S(f71/1 S1
•17's
•2295
..,,.,.
(N71/14)
1.SSxlS
Cl71/1Sl
UNIROYAL 6.50x13
TUBELESS
95 '
7.7Sx14 7.7Sxl S 7.00x13 8.2Sx14 8,2Sx15
(F78/14J (F78/IS) 7.35x14 (G78/14) (G78/15J
8.SSx14
(H78/14J
8.SSxl S
(H78/I SJ
9.00xlS 8.8Sx15
(L78/I SJ (J78/I SJ -.·
•26'5 t.IOlf.1 Sa15
(1.71/11) 6.50xl3 .........
h .. +11.11 1111. &. ,. .....
« :~·
w i
@.
$; All ti..~+ $'1.11 .. '2-IT .... fula t••·•• Wlo!ltw•lt•,l.tS flflill .
FREE A PRECISION JOB •••
· IEl $1.95 PRECISION JOB •••
WHICH CAN COST MORE ELSEWHERE
WORLD'S POLYEST UNllUIYAI.
FINEST... • ER. 1:1 GLASS ~~~~!! *Glnsu:~~STRAK" ·1· 9ts I .·~'WHEEL INCUllES, C.O"li'I ."''"· . u...,, &IHI ild1•u1c air·
IGN CIMltilllH Cll'lo ,111 illJ'C" AL ti11 tt stt.1111 l sas,1ui•• FOR All CARS, *ORIGINAL EQUIP on 7.75.is ., • • systu. W1Tll llfY 2 ll•ES , PU•CUSEI ON lS. WS '!RUCIS l CIMPEIS ~ Millions of '10 (~rs ,:{!~ :;
• <! .. • • • • b:1i"-'-ffe TERS for . ·. . -:;:;;.;.:. · ··· tc..,. .
DUPLEX TIRE 5 RADIAL 11!:_1< lillt29' PROTECTION! SP!~~""'""' •~£:'• ~ SPlfCIAL ro POINr •••
·BRAKE RELINE
Wiie~e1s $15':! ~ U.S. CARS~
I. IUNI NEW• 21,DIO.Mll[ 1. CllUS£ & PACKWllm.
liLIAIAKrllD IONDlD UN111C IWINliS
I. LAIOI AHD llfSTAlLITIOH I. All C'tllMDEIS INSIG1tl
INClLIDfD INCUlllNli MASTEi
3. llUCll).lllWUIE 1LL 4 OIUMS CYUN01R INCL 14" & 15" ••• FORD, Pl T. & CHIV.
CRAGAR
Super
Chrome
Wheels •••• •Jt!.!?:
4, All IW:E n1111 AS NEEll£1 l 18TATE WllERS AMI
L MC·lillNll LllOHC AllJ~ST IWES I. llltl SfSTUil & Cla.N ·It. lllUO TEST nHICLE TO
., llCClllC PUT£ AS NtEKI n AlfDllOS-
R.....::::.INT M.riC.llffnteWillMO.lts1 ·r•nAt•Nlra~tJtl!
GUARAllDI * lt••il4 Wlttl c,u1111rs ir llm£D nl1h.15 n. 111 *DRUMS T~1AH II NEEDED 1117 ...••• S1JS IJ.
111.11111111tW1111"' ..,.,., * FIONT CRUSE. SULS II NU:DlD MIJ •• Sl.51 nnt
·a..1tt1n * IULIRN SPllNCS JI NEEDED ttlf •. , •• Sl.21-Q11I '* "'*' hlrrt * M11111 C}I., Mtt:11. W•tlt1rl11s 1jtJ1c11tll ntfff .. ~,,!!! .... Ii, iii"~"'~.,,~-=:;; mimi,.n;;,.
877 s. AZVIA AYL (Co-r of AJUlf!_An. I Arrow Hlghway} ... 334-121.1 N[W AZlJSA ~T O RE
3005 HARBOR BLVD.
CORNER OF BAKER AND HARBOR
COSTA MESA ~NEWPORT BEACH AREA
.557·8000
GARDEN GRDVE-14040 B•ookhurot -530-3200
ANAHEIM · BUENA PARK
6962 Lincoln Blvd. -826-5550
FULLERTON -1321 Euclid St. -870.0100
B DAILY PILOT
CLASSES •..
(Coolloued from Page 7)
(See CLASSES, P11c I)
WHITE
FRONT
EVEN AN
B.EPHANT
CAN1
REMEMBBI
EVERmlNG
ABOUT
IPCOMETAXES
••• WE DOI
• FAST. COUITtOllS SER·
VICE IY TIX W!llS
• COHflt!llllA\1 COMPU· TllllllW. ICCullCY
• CONVl'NIENT. NO IPPOINTMENT NEC!SSAIY
• 10111 fEIElll .1111 SJITE
INCOMETUES
•ENJOY rLICE OF MINt
1111$ Y!AI
AS CONVENIENT
AS YOUR NEAREST
WHITE FRONT.
STORE
-· ...
Thur~ay, JM1uary 25, 1971
SINCE 1929
WHITE
FRONT
CHOICE OF
• HOOi CUSHIONS
• LEISURE lOUNGll
• ROUND IOLSTll
COLORFUL CUSHIONS
Filled with non -allergenic
shredded polyurethane foam
and covered with stain resist-
ant SCOTCHGARD-fabrics.
Bold flora l patterns in decor
color combinations.
COMPARE AT 2.69 EA.
2s
FOR
CURTAIN PANB.S DACRON PILLOWS
Rayon in assorted weaves & de·
signs in pretty pastels. Cheese
54" or 81" lengths.
Red Label Dacrono filled.. .allergi
free, hygienic! Covered in colorful
floral tick. Finish sizes 20x26''
COMPARE II 1.97 TD 2.61 !A. COMPARE AT $3.0D
MEN'S GENUINE
LEATHER FOOTWEAR
MIN'S B'' LEATHER BOOT 750 run grain glove leather in· 1an wi~ ribbed cushion
crepe sole. Goodyear nmc vamp. 61f1·12.
DUI R£GUUR DISCOUNT PllCE l.ll
MEN'S LEATHER OXFORD s7 Tan leather with thick ribbed cushion c1epe
sole. Cushioned heel. In sizes 6'12 to 12.
OUR REIULAR OISCOUNJ PRICE 1.51
CHARGE YOUR PURCHASES TODAY!
. . ··~~·~·········--··········-.. •···
GAFFBIS·SAmBI !·OVEN GAS RANGE
• 30-inch deluxe eye level range • With
extra wide upper and lower ovens • Sep-
arate br~iler, much more.
8277
WESTirllaSE !·CYCLE WASllR
• Two-cycle automatic washer holds
big family size loads • All fabric care
including permanent press. '167 •E 18 LB. All FABRIC •YER
• Two cycles and 4 heat controls • Huge
8 cu. ft. drum • Total fabric care in·
eluding permanent press. '138
WlllRIP• 2-SPfBI AITO. WIAI
• Two speed, 3 cycle automatic • Water
temperature control • lint'filter • And
much more at th is low price. '199
WEBCDR STEREO TAPE RECORDBI
......
DIAL 58Z.
lmRANI
Arrt.i-pers~rant ind deodorant in 5 01.
aerosol spray can.
COMPAllAT1.1t
Vf15DZ.
SllAMPOO. SAVE 'I
8'sl b'! '" quality slla"1)00. DiJ or regular ormul1.
OUI llG. DIKOUNT PllCI 1.lt sac
• trxk. 3 speed rec:ord-
ll'J, 2 mikes, 2 spukirs.
2 year plrtS and Im
wanar.ly.
11111Ec.11$COUMT
Pl1CE IHJJ
'169
SME130Z.
llAlllPRAY
Reiular, super hold or unscented
hi1h quality !lair spray.
COMPAU AT He
llWBIGE
llAVECRUM
S!lavint cream guards 11airist evts
and nicis. 6\4 01. tan.
COMPAllAT1 .1 t
74c
PHILCO 18.4 ~:NO FROST
2 DOOR REFRIGBIATOR
• The big one with 160 lb. freezer featuring 2 shelves, package
& can racks on door • 4 full and I ha~ width cabinet shelves
• Dairy bar and deep bottle shelves on door • Twin crispers,
inside light 30" width.
OuR REG. DISCOUNT PRICE $300
2 YR. PARTS REPLACEMENT & LABOR
WARRANTY ON MOST MAJOR APPLIANCES
PLUS DRIVIRY WITHIN OUR ARIA
• WlllRl.POln. 5 CYCLE, 3 TEMP. DRYER
'129 • Five cycles and 3 temperature controls
• Permanent press cool-down care
• Tumble press control.
ADMIRAL R&RIGBIATDR·FRfflBI
• Full width freezer chest and chiller
drawer • Crisper and 2-glide out shelves.
• Ample 'storage on door shelves. '129
ADMIRAL 2-•R RERllGBIATDR
• 12 cu. ft. family size with automatic
defrosting refrigerator • 2 temperature
controls • Door shelves with dairy bar. '189
ADMIRAL 153 LB. UPRIGHT FRlflfl
• 10 cu. ft. holds 353 lbs • Three fa st-
freeze grid shelves • With additional
stora ge space on door. '149
BRIEFCASE CASSEJTE/IADIO/PHONO
AM/Ell_ radio, cassette
lap• recorder, 3-spnd
phoh); AC/OC ~lry.
OUlll,.DIS<Olllf
PllCI llf.tf ..__ sgg
HOUSEHOLD GADGHS
Small or large nylon turners, .masher, nc basting spoon, paring knives, grapefruit EA.
knives, set of 10 skewers, spoon rest, 4
magnetized hooks, 4 pc. measuring cup
se~ indoor/outdoor thermometers.
12 IN. MIRROR TILES
Cover walls, ceiliJiS, table =~.4ac tops, etc. with mirrored tiles.
Easily appl ied with special
adhesive. ...... EA.
GOLD Y£1N TILES 79f.. ANTIQUE 80LD TILES If. C9Ul&r•u. -All.HU. 11.
..
'' . ' . •
•
FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE ... USE OUR CREDIT TERMS
OR JUST CHARGE IT WITH YOUR CREDIT CARD TODAY ..• !
•
rl
..
, .
'
I • MUST C·LEAR OUT!
WE'RE OVER-STOCKED ••• SO WE'VE SLASHED PRICES!
HURRY! DON'T MISS OUT ON THESE HUGE SAVINGS!!!
ncn
SAVE 810 PHILCO
PORTABLE TV
• Deluxe lightweight personal 1V with built-in
antennas • Solid state VHF and UHF tuners
•. Up-front controls • 3 yr. picture tube re-
placement warranty (excluding labor).
OUR REGUW DISCOUNT PRICE 69.97
RCA 16":,~; DRUXE COLOR PHILCO S1BIEO CONSOlf
• Come up to col111 with the fin-
est made • Co• crattoo for
1~ lire wlleace • 1 ye pMts
& labor ill1ll 3 yr. picbe tlbr
waranties at 110 em cosL
-
29997
81WITAPE
PlAYll
Easy cartridge load;
pushbutton 1mk chang~
OUR IEG.
DIKOUMT
PllCE
lJ.97
849
19997
WIEllE
P.eard )Oii' own !Jnt tapes
fnllll F'M $\tflD ram. pllono.
Willl 2 Slleakm. 2 lllik:es. ....... se I DIKOUNT
PllCl "·'1
~
EUREKA HIGH POWERm UPRIGHT VACUUM
Wl1H mvB'lllfJ 3 WAY AllJllTABlf IANDlE
Power driven Disbntlulatnr ktion cleans deep
down dirt and grit from thickest pile cal]lets.
3-way adjustable handle, all inetal coostruc-
Uon; YO!lf best lxiy on a deluxe upright ra:wn.
SAYE '5 COMPARE AT 49.95
BINA
97
231f
Tl111nd11y, J1nu1.ry 25, 1971
SINCE 1929
WHITE ' FRONT
PRICES EFFEalVE THIU SUN., FEB. 21
'BABYLINE' 3-IN·ONE
'BABYUNE'
HIGH CHAIR
IAVE 14
Deluxe folding hi-
chair, youth and util-
ity chair, all in
one! Wrap-round
tray; cl'lome plate
618" steel bibe con-
sbu:tion; foam pad-
doo printed vinyl
seat and .back.
COIPUE IT 1U7
,,_,
WAllBl-JIMPll SAfEIY CAI IDT
~~=:::i~~:: 888 Oouble-pl•led
sleel tubin&:
spring action;
seat of nylon
vinyl fabric. I
88
Olldl.
=m'r
loo chesl s~ap.
foam-filled . cowA11
Blue, black. AT IS.tr
EXPAllABlf W. SAfEIY GAHi
Keep baby safe, protect-148
ed. Gates install quickly. :!Ir. 1,1 2~
"" 1.11 "" ur
IAVE&FPAll
PANTY
HOSE
GLAMOROUS ENKASHEll•
FIRST QUAUTT
First qual ity Enka-
sheei-nylon micro
mesh pantyhose with
its super stretch -
comes in 3 alluring
colors • • • beige,
coffee, cinnamon. 4
sizes P-M-MT-T.
COMPARE AT $1
c
c·osTA MESA 3088 BRISTOL AYl e JUST Off NEWPORT AYl ·""· ,~~ DAILY NOON TO
1
PM ~ ,.:_,, SAT. 1D AM TO I PM
BETWEEN SAN DIEGO FREEWAY and IAKER ST. . ;,~ SUNDAY 11 AM TO 5 PM
CHARGE IT TODAY
'
OAIL Y PILOT 9
CLASSES ...
(Conttalttd from Pa1e I)
...,lor i.cturtl" '" lllalor'f '""ffi~ f<ld •lrK IOI' al !t6(11fr I I
Cl. IE11'-lon 1"' r. "'I! !loM C(9.lnl1b1Utv: 'I I 11 ,,~ '1 Ao;.< .... llllltlW'llfnl," IOI y' C_t
Sd tflClh, J.t :.tS e.m. ,t,df\'\ 1 °" w.n.•
T1111rM1r . Mlrdl 11 Vt1Hr1llO<I of Ort..n Ind P'h..,,llJI' AM1'1'1l1 111 l"rlll'!Wlln9 !tie Crw!lv1
"roceu. Mwvln S.rt11t0n Mnlor
111.it'VdOt llld 11"1lnl"' ""'"'''· l.M Afltolla P'lnMIM"'llC kc:i.tr Ind l111!11Yte. fE1ltn11oft w in 1 n "P1vci.o.nllvtlc E~PIOl'lllotlt 111 lllfl
C,..11111 PrOCHI,") 1" Hum1nlllea H.il, :1$-10 p.m. Admlttlot! M..lO."
•• , ... ,, Mtrdl :HI
M1n19ll'll"1I llY Olll91;1ivfl, -CllY !!~ltn1l1111 aeml~1r, Guntf\er ICllut, m1n1"r Incl dl•Ktpr1 lnt1lru11 for AC1v1ftellll "l1nnlnt. ~d Room, Mt11 C:ommont. t :JO 1.m. · "JO • m. F .. US lftCIUdfl luMll Ind Plrklfll •.
SURllY, 11\lrdl II
"Or. Jtltyll Ind Mr. H'tllt," ""'' Frlrler. Pll.01! __ 1nl•l1nl pr111._, Cf\lelNll Col-. f'lrtl of I VC
ll"\llc1 l .. ffll 'rii lllfl'l·IKl\lr1 1"111. $:11nc~ 'L':11,or!lm.~1fi. -ic'~°' l~~'r:,:t
CtmpUI, l'te: lo lllend IKll,ofll I nd
r.;1m1 not for" credit, i«i.11111 10 111-1~"" '"' tllm1 tor crldll IJO.OCI. S!ng1~ ldmlt1lon U.00 . ......... , , ""'°' :tl "Toward Mori S.llllvln• LlvN ~
G....,.. Co1mw lln1 tor WIWT>lfl " 5rllr1rr Sdo1.i..-, Ed.O.. lld'urer, l:oun .. 11,..
I"' l!OllClllenll P1vCl\olooY, C1llfornl1 ,,,, Col*"'" II Fulltrton. F1-.1 ol
ttn mHll,..1\ 1:10 -t :JO p.m.., olm. 16'. Humln lits Hill, UC lnrl,,. campus. fH: U0.00. NI 11"!"'· "Undlnl1ndl~ 'TM I'll.,..' I" °'"''' Couftty.' 1 e11rllm• prwram • Judy I . R_,, M.A .. civic; lffdotr.
f,1z'. rm~"' •. : .. 't"ou=.ioa .. 1=r,.; ln19f'f-311'1 l'ou•tlon, 1rvi... TDWfl C!Mtf" llld,., Mir UC lnr\M Cll"JIUI. ,. .. : to •Hend IKluHI wl.,..,,t cre1HI ~1.11111 111 IHtrlCI wlh er.di!, MG.00, no 1lntlel.
T• .... Y Mlrcfr 2J "F.,,,1n111m ;NI th• l'uturt: TM New Am1rle1n Woman," 1 n-courll !or M.,, 11\d Women, LYnn 01.,,
M.A.. ltt•dltf", reu 1rdl1r. FI r t I
mfflillll 01 11 1111JO!'I count, 1 •
t :U 11.m .. RI!>. 'SI, Hum1nllf11 Hill.
UC lrvliw tlmpU1. F .. : wllll Of
wltfloul credit, SSO.OG "° 1lntll!'f. "Tr1um1 11\d 0.11rlv111on I,.. Suburblt," JU).~~ c111, Ph.D., preln.or
1nc1 dl!11 111 "' .... ~Id Pr,.cr.111n" ~v11c1n, :;.!~'r~'u~. ,r,~ 1!t". ·~c 1~~Z E1!1t11~ ltc!Urt ttrl11, "Ed11t1tln11 1111 Clllld Pl Divorced or Rtmarr!tlt F..nllln." 1 • IO:DO p,m . k ltn<I LIC!Urt H1U UC lnrliw u m11111. Ftt: wllh or w1thoiit crtdll, »0.00. Slntlt 1<1mlulon, u .oo. 1 . "lntrod11Ctloni. GrG111 As1!~tft1i., l"tll~y 11111 Prlorltlts, Sc.'-! NurHI Ttlmlw" M1r11r1I Wlllllll'llOllo M.A.. c_.dln1toi:, . ~ Htlllll, Or1"" CCIUflty ~I Ind S1llV Wiiii.mt. M.A., .ctlOOI nurH, Al\IM!ll'I
Union Hiii! Sd'IPol Dl1trlel. Flrtl of
1 UC lnr!ne E1111"ton IKW•t wrln . "N..., ldMt foo.I' Sdlool Nurtes." 1·
. 10 1.m., Rm. l!, llutnl P1•1t.
Hieh Sd'Klol. FM: wllh ot wl!l'llMI cl"ldlt, uo.oo. Ho 1JnalH .
WM-Y, Mlrdr J4 "Tunlnl Ill and Turnln1 Oii: Adven1Ure1 l" EllCO!lnlt r." M1r!1 Edwanu M.A., lktn.Md cHnk•I
P1Yc!IDIOll1t 1 ml<nbtr, S1n1lllv\ty
Tr1lnlR11 Sllff UCLA ln111t ... 11 ot 1ndu1lrfll lhl1llOl'l1. Fin l m~llnt of 1"1 1e1.1lon co.in1, 1 • 10:00 p,m., ~~· ~t .~:....=11/:· ~j~ 7~f PKlmi A'll., 811tn1 P1rk. F" · '5(1.00. no 11111111. "lntrod..etlon to llltl s1.,r1 Nn-1<11," l"flUi. olundt1, f't'l .D., I I 1 I1 I I n I
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... ----·--
J 0 DAILY PILOT Thur~day, January 25, l 1
Asks F111ad Ctatoff
Po st T1·ie s Again
To Scuttle Queen
SACRA?\1ENTO, Ca I i f .
1 UPI ~ -The Cali!or nia
legislature's budget watchdog
is again trying to .sink the
Queen Mary.
construction are paid for. He
also called for ''lhe most
stringent cost and budgetary
{'Ontrols possible u n de r
present law."
. . . . .. . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . -... . . . . . . . •. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . --
Loose Valley Soil May Have Magnified Quake
LOS ANGELES (UPI! -
The force of the Feb. 9
earthquake wblcb c a u s e d
extensive damage and loss of
life was grtatly magnified by
soft soil in the San Fernando
Valley, according to Los
Angeles officials.
R. J. Williams, director of
the city's building and safety
department and c e u n t y
engineer John Lambie made
the statements Wednesday
before a Cong ressi o o a I
he aring on the quake.
Williams said shock waves
from the quake tra~led
through hard rock al 35,000
feet per second. However. he
said they slowed to 12,000 FPS
when they hit the loosely
compacted soil of the valley,
causing a concentration ef
energy far greater than ~ould
have accompanied the trem-
blor.
Williams said lhe force
seemed to be that of a super
quake of 8.0 or higher on
the Richter scale instead of
the actual 6.6 reading.
Lambie said the force ef
the around shaking ' • f a r
exceeded that e1pected of 1 in general and without beller
1.1 earthquake." lnaps of earthquake faults.
Although he said buildings "Without adequate mapplni
met tht requirements thought we're just fooling ourselves,"
necessary for such a quake Lambie said.
some still Vi'ere destroyed. )Ir===========;
He said efforts have been THE BEST
made to Insure safe building
codes, but such attempts are
useless w i t h o u t more
knowledge about earthquakes
R••d••d1lp poll• pr•v• "'••·
11uh" i1 •n• •' th• w•rl .. '1 111•1•
popultr 1.omit •trl111. R•tll it
d1ily 111 the DAILY PILOT.
A. Alan Posl recommended
\Vednesday that the state stop
sharing ils tideland o i I
re venues with the city of Long
Beach because of t h e
skyro c keting costs of
con\'erl1ng the famous ocean
liner into a lourist and
recreation complex.
Li11dsay May Enter
Democratic Primary
SOMETHING FOR NOTHING.
If you purchase 8 gallons or more of Shell
gasoline at a participating. station, you'll get thisigiant
16-ounce glass .... free~
Long Beach bought lhc
Cunard liner in 1967 for
13,450.000 and announced plans
to make her into a drydocked
convention center and
1narilime 1nuseum at a cost
of about $9 million.
The cusl of converting the
once proud ship lo a
landlubber passed $43 million
!as! year. State agencies
estimate ii is now nearing
lhE' $60 million mark -and
work still g~s on .
At least $3J mtllion of that
money has come f r o m
tideland oil revenues which
the slate agreed to share v.·ith
Long Beach in 1964.
Post urged the legislature
to take any necessary actions
to make sure f u I u re
expenditures of I id e 1 a nd s
income on the Queen J\1ary
do not violate provisions of
the oil re venue agreement.
As a short-term measure
to give the state some 1nuscle
in the dispute, P o s t
recommended termination of
the money-sharing: agreement
as soon as projects now under
Tunaboat Still
Being Held
SAN DIEGO IUPI )
American Tunaboat
Association officials awaited
\\'Ord today on the fate of
the 20th tuna clipper seized
in the past six weeks by the
South American nation of
Ecuador.
The seiner Nau tilu s.
skippered by Tom GiaC<Jlone .
was boarded \Vednesday while
fishing about 80 m i I e s
offshore. Ecuador imposes a
200 mile fishing limit. \\'hile
the United Stales recogn izes
only a 12-mile limit
SACRAMENTO (U PI) -
Secretary of State Edmund
G. Brown Jr. bas cleared Jhe
way for Republican Mayor
John V. Lindsay of New York
to enter the 1972 Cali[ornia
De m o c ra l ie Presidential
primary -without changing
regist ration.
··There is nothing in the
election code which prohibits
a person from being a
c:andidate in the Presidential
primary of a party of which
he is not a member," said
Democrat Brown Wednesday.
Lin dsay has said in the past
he v.·ould not change his
re gistration. but peniistent
reports from the east indicate
the mayor of the nation's most
populous city may be close
to changing his mind.
The r or mer Democratic
leader of the New York State
Senate recently visited Paul
Ziffren. r or mer California
Democra tic national commit-
teeman. on b eh alf of a
group backing Lindsay.
The visitor, Sen. J a c k
Bronston of Queens, is a
member or a new ~alled
group of Reform Democrats,
who are urging Lindsay to
bolt the GOP and become a
Democratic presidential con·
tender.
But Brown's interpretation
of !he election code permits
Lindsay to seek Califomia·s
prize of Democratic
nominating conventio n
dclegale votes \\' it ho u t
changing his party
registration.
Because of Ca\ifornia·s
ranking as the most populous
state in the nation. the
delegation from here to the
nominating cconvention will
number 271. the largest of
any state·s contingent.
And in California , unli ke in
other states, the winner of
Teen Molls~
Beware Girl Marauders
LO:\G BEACH •AP) -Bands of young girls, some of
thern still in gramma r schoo l, are terrorizing elderly
~·omen in an organized petty robbery ring. police say.
The youngsters consider the \\'omen an easy mark for
lhie\'erv.
Sg( Jolene Decker of the juvenile bureau says the
Long Beach Police. Department knows of al least l""o
~roups of girls Iha! specialize in victimizing '-''Omen who
are ill or frail.
The sergeant mentioned one group -ages 11. 12 and
13 -that comn1 itted at least ('ight thefts. Total loot :
about $300.
In most cases. the gi rls entered the home of their
\·ictims by pretendi ng that they \\'ere in physical danger:
escaping from pursuers: or they asked to use the tele-
phone. go t.o the bathroo1n or evc.n for a drink of wate r
on a \\'arm da~··
The operation. Sgt. Decker said. v•ould allow one of
the girls frcedo1n lo pro\1·1 about the houSl' looking fo r
pu rses. In the meantime, the other girls V.'OUld engage the
~·ictim in ani1naled con\'ersation.
In some ca ses. v.·on1en ha\'f' been knocked lo the
ground by seemingly friendl y. totall y disarming types.
Any ad\·ice1 "They should ha ve a strong night chain
on 1he door and keep it there so no one can push his v.·ay
inside," the police office r sa~·s. "If they believe it is im·
perative lo allow a phone call. they can do it v.·ithout let·
ting the person inside."
the Presidenllal primary takes
.all t h e delegates to the
convention committed to him
for at least the first ballot.
Brown, the son of
California 's former tw~term
governor and the • n I y
statewide Democratic
officeholder. said lhe direct
primary law for governor,
U.S. Senate and Congress dif·
fers from Uie statute covering
the Presidential primary elec-
tion .
Solon Gives
His Views
On Welfare
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
chainnan fl. the Assembly's
'-''e!fare committee. says "a
little benign neglect'' would
be of great value to
California's welfare system.
fn hearings Wednesday,
Assembly Welfare Co mmittee
Chainnan William Bagley (R-
San Rafael), said "we are
at a mid-point in a five-year
period in which w e If a re
spending v.·ilJ exceed all state
spending of the previous 30
years.
"\\l'hat the whole field of
social welfare needs is a little
benign neglect ... a cessation
of the arm v.•aving and
shou ting . . . the political
rhetoric from all sides -from
all sides. my friends.'1
Bagley's 0 em oc rat-
controled committee heard
reports or five-fold increases
in major welfare programs
in little more than a decade.
Asst. Stale Welfare Director
Philip J\1anrlquez told the
lawmakers that the Aid to
Families with Depe nd ent
Childrtn program -the
state's biggest single welfa re
category -will increase from
577.000 ten years ago to over
two million by next year.
Phone Rate
Hike Hit
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
A state Public Utilit ie 1
Commission attorney s .a y s
Pacific Telephone Co. ra tes
should be reduced by $25
million a year instead of being
raised by $195 million.
Richard Gravelle. the
attorney. made his suggestion
Wednesday as a PUC hearing
got ·under way on t he
company's request for an
increase.
The attorney also said a
PUC staff recommendation
for an increase of $62.8 million
in the com pany's revenu e was
a maximum. A. more re alistic
adjustment v.·ould be $11.4
million, he lidded.
Who C.res7
No other ~•w•pep1r iR tit•
world <1r11 1hout your <ommu•
nity Ii•• your colftmu11ily deity
111w1ptptr clott. lt'1 the DAILY
PILOT •
Choose One of the Many
Coast & Southern Federal
Offices to Serve You:
fl MAlN OPflCl:ttll I Hill, loeArlftle9•123-13S1
Wl&..IH"'l 11 GMllacY PUCl:»S3 W...,I,.
Bl'td., LA. •38t-1215
LA. CIVIC CINftlll: 2nd &. BfOldw•Y I 821-11ot
~ HUHTIMQTOll HACH: 11 Hvntington Center •
1714) 817·1CW7
SANTA AMA. LOAll lllMCa AOIHCY:
1905 N. tMln a.. (714) 5'7"'257
•IAMTA MONICA: 711 Witehl,. llYd. • 3'$0741
•SAN PIDRO: 10th I. PKtffo • "14341
•WllTCOvtNA: e.tltnd Shl)pj)fng Qf, • SS1""2201
•rANOMllACl'TY: 1811V.n NU)'I Blvd.• "2·1171
•TAftZAMA! 11761Ventura8oulr1•rd • '4$-1114
*LONG llACH: 3rdl. \.ocwt •437-7411
•Opeti Sltlrdl}'l-t ltffl te 1 ,. Dlffy ttlwt-t ftll lo 4 p111
ASSETS OVER $800 MILLION
{~,.,,:#Et . ,.
< '
Art Link/attar Shows You
a New Way to Beat Inflation
... Just Join
&he &idem
Club
With a $2:,500 balance tn )'Ollr savings
1ccount, you art eligible to become
a member. SUbltanU1! savings 1r1
1vallablt when purchasing m1ny Items
Including automobllea. furniture,
appliances, Jewelry. Plus many
free services -money orders,
safe deposit boxes, etc.
-.. ' --
. COAST ,
AND SOUTHERN FEDERAL SAVINGS
~ ' • • '< A o •
Coast & Southern Federal
Offers You These
Highest Prevailing Rates:
COMPOUNDl!D DASLY AND PA.ID QUARTULY.•
5.00•1 •• 5.13•1.
Passbook; No Minimum.
5.25 •1 •• 5,39•;.
Three Month Ctrtlficate; No Mlnlmi:.11.
5. 7 5 °/o-5,92 o/o
One-Year Certificate; $1,000 Minimt:"I".
6.00"lo-6.18~·
Two-YearCertificete; SS,000 Minimum.
• Etltcti,. Ann111/ E1mlng1
INSURANCE TO $20,000
tter
ing
es,"
... ...
;t
t
'
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi
"My managemcot-consulting firm doesn't under·_.
stand me." "
CHECKING •UP•
Natives Restless .. '
Tl1ey Get Ulcer s
By L. M. BOYD
THAT THE CAJ\tEL is the
land animal whose image has
been reproduced most ·widely
was reported already. But
what bird's image has been
reproduced most widely? The
owl's, no? , •• HO\V DID
WE come by the notion the
ulcer is an American
cxecuth·e ailment? Can't be.
\\1hcreabouts of the most
sufferers of ulcers is New
Guinea among the
superstitious tribesmen
TELEVISION V l E W E R S
don't pay much attention lo
the commercials at the end
of any particular show. Only
at the beginning. And to a
lesser extent in the middle.
\\'hy J don't know. but the
surveys indicate such lo be
the caY.!.
DON'T PAINT the dining
room blue unles11 you want
to diet. That's the counsel
cf a gentleman 't\"hO has made
a study of how colors influence
us. Blue ruins the appetite,
he claims. Or at I east
diminishes it som cw hat.
Interesting. The decorators
oughl to JUmp right on this.
\Vant to lose weight? Buy
blue. \Vha\'s the matter \vilh
those old boys in the paint·
making business anyway? Do
I have to come up with every
single notion for promotion?
lN THE TO\\'N of Daiquiri.
Cuba, il's reported, lhere 's nol
one public emporium wherein
you can buy a daiquiri ...
AS FAR AS the Libra girl
goes, says our Pl an~t man,
Jove is \\'hat inattcrs, that's
all. The res t is just lagniappe
, •. AT THE AGE of 30
an unattached man ha s 72
chances out of 100 of finding
a matri1nonial partner. an
unattached woman 55 ch<1nces
\Vhat's the best \1•ay to wake
him up?" A. Just say his
name over and over again,
that's what the medical boys
advi se.
110\\' CAN VOU c a 11
yourself an oldtime radio fan ,
if you don't ren1ember a
gentleman named J. Anthony
Smythe? He was the fellow
who played Father Barbour
on the •·one Man's Family"
show. What. yo u don't even
remember Father Barbour?
Son, when I was your age.
no. nevermind . . . NOW
LET'S CLEAR up that matter
finally of what old Will Rogers
actually said. "\\'hen I die."
the record shows he stated,
''my epitaph, or whatever you
call those signs on grave-
stones, is going to read, ''I
joked about every prominent
man or n1y time, but t never
met a man I didn't like."
TO THAT L I ST or
capitalized wards, such as
NOON and SW™S, which look
the same upside down, add
MOW .•• A CITIZ EN in Bar-
ret. Vt.. is required by la w
to take a bath every Saturday
night .• , .Uf ADVISED men
have been milkinj:! cows for
only 400 years. Can that be
right?
THAT COLOR EXPERT
prev iously mentioned says
research indicates bra i n y
people tend to like blue while
athletes are more apt to
prefer red. He further avers
the majority of those citizens
most easy to get along with
seem to go for orange.
RAPID REPLV -No, si r,
when I said it was possible
to undergo some brain surgery
with a local anesthetic.
certainly didn't mean an
anesthetic n eces s a rl l Y
manuiacturtd ln your own
home town.
oul of 100. Your questions and com·
rnent! are welcomed and
CUSTOl\1ER SERVICE -Q. will be used in CHECKING
"Up at the slimmer cabin, UP wherever possible. Ad·
I always take my bath in dress letters to L. M. Boyd,
a slyrofoam picnic cooler, P. o. Box 1875. Newport
because it keeps the wat er Beach, Calif., 92660.
hotter. Tell your flou~hold .=-=="========;!
Hints expert about that." \\1ill
do, little fellow . , Q. "My
son -he's 17 -has taken
to sleepwalking. \Ve've been
told it's dangerous to scare
a person in this condition.
;
STARS
Sydney Om•rr i1 on1 of lh1
world'1 qr11t 11froloqen. Hi1
c:o!um n i1 on1 of the DAILY
PILOT'S gre1t fe1lur•,•·
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e Singer. l~l. rcstorr rt
rlRs!ic sportsear, Singer
'.Jl dismantled ... llur~
it's CHEAP~ Check 9JJ.
• English Spnni;er Spaniel
PuPJliC's, AKC, II \\"Cr.ks,
Good rcts &· hunting dop.
Ck~.
e iii Aert's Clrvel11nd N~.
t10nal Forest C11!Ck & Oak
lrt'E"!. OO!tr 10 Reagan 's
ranch. Sll.JO prr acre.
T<'rms. Ck 150. '
e 'fi.!i J("Pll \\'a5:0nN"r, 1111 rX•
tras. i\fakc 0ff£'r. Ck 9'30.
e 1 DAV Only garage aalc.
Sat 10-4. Ck 112.
'
Thursday, January 2,, 1971 DAILY PILOT J f
Professor's View *******************
Turning on Drugs Turns Off Sex MERCURY SAVINGS
and loan association
By JOSEPH L. MYLER
WASHINGTON (UPI) -If
you have a mind's eye piclure
of drug-crazed h i p p i e s
endlessly Indulging 1n heroic
sex orgies, wash it right out.
As a matler of fact, according
to Dr. Thaddeus Mann, use
of drugs reduces sexual drive.
Mann is a professor of the
physiology of reproduction at
Britain's Cambridge
University. lie discussed sex
and drugs in a recent issue
of the United Nations
quarterly, Impact of Science
on Society.
"Drug dependenC1! in a
man," he said, "is often
traceable to his incompetence
in coping with the opposite
sex. to his unbalanced desire
which stems from low-grade
capability and an expectation
that some drug or other wil l
rid him of his sex ual
inhibition.··
A lot of people in many
parts of the world end in
all ages have had the notion
that certain drugs can make
2666 HARBOR BLVD.
546·7080 COSTA MESA
WEEKDAYS 9 to 9
SATURDAY SUNDAY
'
"
j •
Baker
dam.s
9 to 6
~==
FLOOR
RUNNER
0 Kids muddy feel, D1d'1
boo11doc•er1, the doggi11
9rubbie1, •nd tl1•I
rotten c1I: the ru9 i1
profect1d,
6 ~
Lentth I Jc
GLIDDEN SEMI-GLOSS
LATEX
ENAMEL
'0 lt1 color1.
J79
QT.
Wh1t1 you buv th• p•inl
bri119 •n e mpiy mel•I
9allo11 c•ri •nd we'll gi"•
, you • •. , -FREE GAL. PAINT THINNER
'C
WIRE BRUSH
'
If you don't •nae•
off th1 old 1001•
fl1•y p1inl you'••
throwin11 good money
1wey.
Q Thi1 lou9hie will
rn1k1 it a little ••tier
for you. (Ju1t 1 little
th1t ii. I
49c
7 PAK SANDPAPER
•
D .-.11ort1d grih end if
•nyone putl1 tlt1l old
one •bout, "How
1boul hom iny "
t'll 1cre•m.
0 You h•J lo Jo ii.
OK A1111et11hh99.
SHEPHERD TYPE
CASTERS
9).:".,.,.~"'1~< 0 Mr. Ye11 m•Je llte11 end thoy wo1•
1weU. No m•r•1 011
tho floo1, no 911•911,
,.;.,,1 in •ftY dirt cli•n
withe11t bindin9,
Antique Brass
0 '011 or pl•I• type.
Now whol 4o yo11 '"'
thern o~1
77c l.t..
. .. . .
I
them better performers in the
realm of physical Jove.
Those who have tested this
belie( may think the results
bear out the predictions.
Actually, according to
In dnlp for their presumed
p I e 1!Urt-glvln4 p~perties,
and Jn the hope, however ill·
founded , of prolonging se1ual
gratification. To them the
drugs serve as sex
substitutes."
Jn the case of LSD, .. there
is general. agreemen t," Mann
said, "that the s e x u a I
emotions eveked by
BUENA PARK Mercury S.vinp Bldi., Valley Viow 1tUnc~n
HUNTINGTON BEACH Mercury S.vinp Bldg., Edin1er 11 Belch
lUSTIN Mercury Sevin gs Bldg., Irvine Bl~d. at Newport Av1,
*******************
Mann. •·mainly visual and
euphoric rather than strictly
l)odily sexual after-effects are
probably the essence or the
allegedly pleasurable erotic
experiences or the habitual
opium or hemp (hashish or
marijuana) user."
psychedelic drugs are in lhc 1 _____________ ·~---------
nature of illustory platonic
affections and do not lead to
sexual arousal."
"Voung people.·· f.lann said,
''frequently seem to indulge
,.
•
0 tf you come in b1fore Mitch )rd, we'll 9r11t '/OU
with • bi9 1mile 1nJ op111 ••m1. If you come in
1llet M•tch lrd, we'll •lk, "Where were '/OU 1111
wo 11c7"
FLOWER & YEGET ABLE
..
SEEDS
A lot of people I
•now 1r1 grow~n9
1om1 pretty fine
gerde111.
Thev ••"• mon•'I· fi1ve
• proi1cl to wo•lc on
to91lh1r 11 1 f•mily,
•nd 9et n•lur•I
v1g1tebl11 with no
1pr1y1 or ¥it1min 1011.
7cPK.
Scotts Super Bonus
For Dichonclra
Still ] buck• off the r1g11l1r p•ic1 for
enough lo C0¥1f 2500 1q. fl,
We1J1 1nJ eonlto11 o••• 15 typ11 of we1J1.
includin9 lou9h b1rmuJ1 9••11,
995
LONG HANDLE LOPPER
--
l
,
0 Th1t word 'lopper' it \O
funny I think Mr. Rimi
m1J1 ii up.
0 lul lh1t'1 j111l wli1t ii
do11, ii lops th1 1;mb1
off.
0 Sup•• 1h1rp, i nd
hordwooJ h1ndl1d,
I''
QUIET
SWITCH
0 Th1t 1witch 10 q ui t ! thol
1om1tim1 we even for9el
whe1 1 wt 1tock14 lh1m.
0 tvo1y color, fit right in !he
pl1ce you loolc the old
1n1pper out.
39c
PATIO CLAMP LITE
' •·
• •
Thi1 4111 com11 with 1
20 foot cord, not the•
ft. din~y thi119 the olh1•
9uy 11 lh.
One d1y I'm 9oint lo
11y 1om1thin9 nil• 1bo11I
fh 1 elhtr 9uy Ill h1'JI
know we 11111 Ii•• hi111.
1••
t I
Kids Like To Ask Andy
I I .
GLIDDEN
SPRED
SATIN
99
GAL.
WITH SPRED PURCHASE FREE
* 3 PC. BRUSH SET
ROLLER COYER
9" FRAME
'
* 9"
* * 9x 12 DROPCLOTH
TUNGSTEN CARBIDE
't f "
ROD SAW
0 Thi1 ihin9 will eul 1 fil•
in lwo, or •"•n • coke
bo1tl1.
0 11'1 • 1ittl1 m1r .. 1I ind
fih right on • 1fond1rd
h.tk IOW.
0 Ju1t !h1 thing to ~ut
the c:h•in !001• en
poker night.
169
BLACK & DECKER
..• Dual·Adion
SANDER
Ch1n911 from 1lr•i9ht
line fini 1hin9 to f11t
c:utting orbit1I 1clion I~
11tond1.
0 A lifetime \1nder ,'/•V
don't buy lwit1.
BLACK & DECKER
.. :~, ,'
I ~
HEDGE
TRIMMER
0 A r1li1ble tool fro111
Americ1'1 be1t n•mo,
0 I 1lwey1 the119hl
l•mtr Je1n Goherd
w11 • 9ood n1me,
'
r ' M
DIMMER SWITCH
0 Per lhi1 qu1 lity, th is i1 the b111I ptice,
D I dldn'l 11y who ii w11 b11t for , but lr111l 111 not to
10JI you • flolry thJn"t,.
0 Di el for your mood. 11 1hut mini oH bec1u11 my "'o.d
i1 p•r•11oi•c.J
88
,.
J2 DAILY ,ILOT
For The
Record
Death Notlees
lel•MAVl•a
Mrs. M. Sue lt••lltuUr. ltltYed Wife
ef Ltao'llr• E. 1..-111au1e11 metttv or
Mr.. J1yne G. Mrwtevt. M'1. M. 1Ct11>-
lf'IM Scttt, Mrl. k•• l t r!ltlll lltltr of
MrJ. Jt ne G. Wnc"fr tnd l"rt1* II!.
(; ........ ; 111«1 l/f Mra. A"-Sut Wllllt frlL
AIM turviYM b• lbi t1rtncklllltr111. St ,.,·
lc.1. FriollY. r:• ,.,,,,, Cllwdl ol' lf!9
lt"11ll1•111, Ftr"' L1wi1 G1-tle. l'tr
in! Llwn Menut rt'.
DAUPHIN
11 .. ..-11. D•u1Nn. ""st, ol' 1111 ••~tr
S• .• COSll Mt ... Dalt ol det lll. l'lbrut rr
12. Su"'!"t<I' b• wl11. eu .... ; ....,, bl"llfl.
.,,, C11uo11, Ywon. 1'1r111N1 t l'ld h trt °'"""'"; 1l1!tr. Mn .. 1'11111 ... Aublri, I ll ttf C.Mdt .......... t.ll!ff.I. Tllundtw.
1 PM, lt11 lro-dloltY C111...i. .....,,..,,,
M111, J'rlHY, ro AM. ''· Joltn IM ,,,..
tht Ctll'lclllc Cllu•t/I. lfl!tnfltnt, Good S~Pl'ltfd Ct•rirltrv. ltlf l tMfwlY Mw-
"''"'· DlrKl"'1. DA'tlll
C1n1tyn Jo•ct 01vl1. 11111 Utl'I St,, G1r·
111111 Gro••· Datt of llNlll, l'tbr,,...., n.
Survlvtd by 11u1berld, C.111 dluthtt r.
Dt.IMe 1lltrbtrt••1 ..,.., Tlll'IOll'lf llltr·
blrtrr; 1111""1, O.nnl1 0 111111 ,..,.. ''"·
-.u1M1ro, Syl11l1 tncl "•trlclt 0111lu
,,,.lllt r, 1:11... Hl.,,1lbtr11r1 broth"" J.,,n, c.ti1rl11 .,,.., Gte1rt1 l'ttr; 1l1ltfJ "'°""'' 1111111 WllU1rn1. S1Nl1", l'rldtJ,
1 """-· "'"' 1'1mlly C1l1111t1t trun.,tl ........ F1rnl!J IU91flll th<Mt .,.llhllll to
''"'" m....orltl contrlbutltnt. t l"M oonlrlbult llo !"9 Cl lO!Y" D41¥1t H-• '"''M>Y Ci nar ltt1N"" l"uno. ,..,.. FtrnllJ CllllH'l .. I l'untrll Ho!M, Olrect.r1.
lllltlMCM
LW LJ1111 Frtr>tl'I. Jljil WHll'f Or., Apl.
A, So. L1111t11. 0.11 of Ot1m. l'tbrv.1 .... :n. su,.,.i•M '' 01111Mt r, Mro. ltuHtll
l rook1, looulll L1111ru: M 1r1/Wl01u.n-
ltf1; 11• ''"' .... ''""'"'ld•911. 11nr!c11, 5t hU""dtJ. ""'· 11, 1:JO ,.M, P1clllc View Ci..HI. Enloml>m1tU. "•Clllc VI .... Ml· ,,...,,,1 , .. k. l'ttlllc Vltw Mlll't\larv, 01·
rKI ..... . ., .. ,,,
AM.I 1tw111. At• 11, .t 1noi Anc11 Tr"
LIM, lrwlM. Dlht If 6"11\, I'... 2C.
surv"'wd llY uvelttfr, 11 ... rc1 Whl1.-
"'""' ''"" '''""""'"'" t lt hl ''"'· 1•1MltMl11r..,. lttnr.. l'r1t1r. l'tl. M.
l ·IJ l'M. Jl ... ui""' MIU, l t lufdaJ, '"· 27. 10 AM. botfo ti O\lr Ll o!J OuMn 1!
Antlll (.....,lie Chi.In!!. ltrll Ctret11 '''
MIU Morlul!Y, Ol•ttf.,t.
1CHAl'llt
"""' G. S.C.ht!t•. Alt 7'. ol 161-Q A11t
"1111 S..1!11, L11un1 Hlll1. OtTf ti ftllh,
FMru1r1 n . lvnrlvN OY •l1ttr, Mn.
ll!!llttbtlh H. $1'1'11111, LllUlll Hlll1; '""
,,....,,...... Fr111k "'· Sl'l'llth, llNlt ll{IO
Jll'l'lll G. 11'1'11111, ltlvt nlft. 1'rlv1lt •trv•
kH wtrt Mlf WN111101~, McC.,l'l'llck
L1ti.m1 INC~ Morfll1rJ.
SMIJM
Ct ,,,.IM "'· Sl'l'l!lh. r<ormt r!y Of J11 Ava.
cMG. Co•on• del "'"•'· O.tt ol Gtt!!I, l'"tl-
rv11"l' n . Sur•l•N ltf Ill'-•• Mr1. Llllll
Smlttl Ltkt. ol ••t-h ll,,. '"" Lt
M11tr1 ; "''""'· J""" 11:. w. 1 ... a11. Lon• 1111ci.: 1111merou1 ~lf'Ctl 1/ICI ,...,,,..,,
Stnlc11. Frk11y. 1'"1oru1,., 1', l "NI·
'•Clflc vi.... cn1111. 1rit11rll'llnl, P1clllc
"""' M-rlt l ,..,.,._ '•clfk Vltw Nt.r· t\:t t"Y• Oll'ICIOl"I.
ARBUCKLE ~ SON
WESTCLIFF MORTUARY
4tl E. 11th St Costa ~ftu
'4f-<!U • BALTZ MORTUAIUES
Cerena dtl Pttar ..• OR M4A
Cotbo Mua ...... ML N4l4 • BEIL BROADWAY
MOllTUARY
111 Bto..tway, Ctltl MtM
LI a.sm • McCORMICK LAGUNA
HA.CB M01111/AllY
1711 '-" ConJw llo4.
4N-NJI • PACIFIC VIEW
MDIORliL PAll
OemoRry 111.n.ty
CUpd
1111 ·-Vitt Drtte N ...... 111.U. Cdlonla -• PEn FAMILY
ClOLONIAL n1NEllAL ROME
'1111 Bolla Aft. "-····-• IMll'RS' MORTUAllY
117 111.i. SI.
a r::.,.1w11
-----
With Restraints
County to Try Human Relations Board
By JAClt BROBACK
Ot ,.._ Olllr Pllltr lllft
SANTA ANA -An Orange
County Human Relat lona
Commission •u approved
\VedMsday but only on • trial
basis.
AJ set up by the county
Board ol Supervisors, the
commission will have no legal
authority to issue subpoenas,
no money and no staff and
will have to prove it s
jm1iflcatlon for f u r t h e r
exislence in 11 months.
The unanimous board action
followed 1 31ii·hour debate.
Opponents c a l 1 e d the
propostd group a kangaroo
court, a potential po Ii c e
review board. • n o t h e r
unnecessary cost, a body that
Y1ould do more harm than
good.
of Huntington Beach, head of group r e I a t 1 o n s
the Council on S e n a I b I o communications.
ond
Taxation (COST). and John -Pro vide a resource for
Smlth or Ne~·port Beach, the Individual "'hose problem
form er mayor of Costa Mesa in the social system has been
and former president of the caught up or bypassed in the
Orange County League of bureaucratic structure of the
Cities. e-0mmunity.
The new commission is Stricken from the original
committed to the same ideals outline was the 20-member
outlined in the task force idea which also required that
report to supervisors January at least eight members be
27. These include : Mex i c 8 n. Americans or
-Investigate, study and Negroes.
initiate acUon to resolve Also wiped out was a
problems r e I at in g to prohibition of membership by !
prejudice, discrimination. and an elected government official
disorder in any field of human or full time employe of the
providing no regular alaff, and relations. county or any city.
-R.ectimmena legislation of Also dropped was a proposal denying the commission the au levels of government to to n@me an executive director
right to apply for outside prevent or alleviate soch1I and hire a !talt
funds of any kind. without bl · t l No Ume llmi·t was set for 1 pro ems 1 n emp oymen , approva of th e board of housing and other areas. naming members of' the
supervisors. -Consult • and cooperate commission. Five are to be Supervisor Ralph CI ark ·th bl. d · t named by the boo•d of d wt pu 1c an pr1va e calle tht eiperiment '·a pilot agencies, in de v e Io ping supe rvisors, five by the league
program to try to provide an programs and techniques far of cities and the Jllh by the
-.
Martin's
MATTRESS
I ORTHO-COMFORT
TWIN SIZE .................. Set $58
FULL SIZE ............ : ....... Set $68
QUEEN SIZE ................ Set $118
KING SIZE .................. Set $138
ODD MATlllllS .U IOX
SPltlNGS 9t COIT •11d II·
LOW COST.
llDDING PACKAGll
, ........... , ~lpk•h)
AT WHOLISALI PIUCISI
SIMMONS and SEALY MATRESSES
Beautyrest and Pasterpeclics at DISCOUNT PRICES
HURRY BEFORE THE INVENTORY IS DEPLETED
1865 HARBOR BLVD.
Downtown Costa Meso
PHONE 548-5131
II
ffi Proponents called formation
of the commission an urgent
need. a "'IY to alleviate
tensions, a way to establish
better communications, a
needtd outlet for frustrations,
a way to solve problefll3 of
hunger and poverty.
advisory board between the bl . h · · t other 10.
e st a b I i s h m e n t and the ,....•_c_e_v_m~gc__ann __ 0_0_'°_"_'_1_0_•_r·------------=~===~=="' minorities."
Supervisor David L. Baker
outlined tht arope of the "on
trial" commissions. His
thought! were: backed by the
three other supervisors
present. Supervisor Ronald
Caspers wu absent.
Baker said he bad polled
his constituents and had
become convinced that m9st
of the money spent by county
government wu spent to solve
the same problems t h e
commission would attack.
"\'i'e muat be failing if this
commission is needed," Baker
said.
He then outlined hi s
proposal which inc I u de d
limiting the membership to
11 (20 was the original
propotal), mandating that the
commi11ion could not
aubpflena anyone, offering no
financial backing with the
e1ceptlon of a meeting place:
and parttlme clerical help,
The organization Will only
be successful U th~ volunteers
pitch in to make it so,
Supervisor William PhiUJps
said.
Supervl!Or Robert Battin
said it was important that
the commission be
representative of the entire
community, not just a voice
of dissent.
Leading. the forces in favor
of the commission was Manuel
Mendez of Anaheim, president
of the volunteer H um a n
Relations Council of Orange
County.
He called on 17 persons
including two city councilmen
and several repre.sentalives of
churches and minority groups.
Orange Coast residents
speaking -au opposed -
included Mayor Ed Ju:it of
Fountain Valley; MI ch a el
Gutsch of Huntinglon Beach.
representing his local police
officers associalion and that
of the county; Claire Kell y
Red Cross"'Makes Bid
For Contrib1itions
SANT A AN A -Massive
Red Cross relief to mort than
M,000 J>Utoru in t h e
earthquake-stricken Syimar
area abruld Hrvt to inspire
Orqe County's Red Cross
campalin volunteera to u ceed
this year'• tar1et fiJllre, baak
executive Wll!Jam J. Lloyd
urged \\'ednesday at the
county group's kick.off
luncheon.
"Red Cross ·workers served
108,000 meals to ae.soo persons
in 1 voluntary effort that up
to now h11 coet $787,000 and
wlll coat more than Sl.S
million befort we're throu1h ."
the U.S. National Bank 's
senior \'iet pre.aide11t said.
"Jn 13 days we've had a
quake that left 86 de•d in
the Sylmar 1rta ud tornado
Sierra Club
Slates Movies
SANTA ANA -l\tembers
of the Orange C.Ounty Chapter
of the Sierra Club will view
movies of Cataract Canyon
on the C:Olorado River at their
meeting Tuesday night at 7:30
o·clock at Smedley Junior
High School, 2120 W. Edinger
Ave., Santa Ans.
Tht llCIUnd mo\' ie v.'ill bt
prete.nted by Jay Davis, who
is coordinator fnr Santa Ana
Co I I e I e ' 1 Rldguunners'
annual O>lerado River run.
The DAILY PILOT-
The On1 Tliat C•re1
conditions that killed another
95 in h!iuissippi,'1 Lloyd
added. "These tragedies have
drawn the usual a 11 • o u t
response from the Red Cross,
but \Ye have to remember
that they aJ1:0 represent a
tremendous drain on our
resources, partlcularly our
lunds."
Lloyd was the keynote
speaker at a Santa Ana
lun cheon in which Orange
County campaign chairman
Jim McMahon called for
contributions or $135,000.
Orange County's business
community i! expected to
provide the bulk of the $135.000
needed for the 1971-72 fiscal
year. Funds will also be
allocated lo the organization
from seven of Orange
County's Unit ed Fund
campaigns.
LET'S BE FRIENDLY
It you have new ncir;hbol'll
or know of anyone moving
to our area, tiletu1e tl'll us
so that v.:e may cxll'nd a
friendly ""'clcomc and help
them lo become acquaint~
in their new aurroundings.
So. Coast Visitor
4ff.OS7' _,361
Harbor Visitor
'46-4174
VAN KEPPEL-GFIEEN
INVENTORY
REDUCTION
SALE
20-50°10
SAVINGS
VAN KEPPEL-GREEN
16841 ALGONQUIN
HUNTINGTON HARBOUR
Rug and remnant riot
of values! Area rugs,
• room size rugs, more.
Orig. $13
NOW 788
4 ft. round area rug
in cut and loop pat-
tern nylon pil e.
Skid resistant Latex
backing. Asserted
colors.
Orig. $29-29.88
Now1988
4 x 6 ft area ru gs.
'Granada' Acrilanlf
acryli c pile border
design or 'Shag·
tone' nylon pile.
Ass orted colors,
hand knotted fringe
on both .
Orig. $26
NOW 1688
9 X 12 ft. room size
rug. Cotton/ rayon
plush cut pile with
Latex rubber back-
ing. Assorted co·
lors.
Carpet remnants
Your gas
Choice
Choose from 501• nylons, Acril1n• acry!ics,
polyesters: shags; twists. loops, hi4ow
weaves, random shee11: solid colors.
tweeds, textured effects. Hurry while
selection is best ••. and save now.
Corpet
remnant •lz•• 6 ft.
7 ft.
Clrpet remn111t
3 fl.
x
4 ft. 5 ft.
x x
runner sizes ••• 12 ft. long X 24 ·36 in. wide.
Carpet room
remnants 14ss
4 ft. 4 It. 4 in. 5 ft. 6 IL
• ft
7ft.6\n.
8 ft. x
Orig. $44
NOW 2988
9 X 12 ft. room size
rugs. Nylon pile
'Plushtone', foam
rubber backed or
'Sparta' nylon pile
with block border
design. Assorted
colors.
x
A v
Orig. $16
Now 1088
51h X 8112 ft. oval
area rug. Diamond
pattern on Viscose
rayon pile. Fringed;
choice of colors.
On Tl1• Bo•rd well
714-146-2818
Use Penneys lime peymtnl plen el the following slo.es: FASHIO N ISLAND, Nawpoi'f Cent"; HUNTINGTON CENTER , Huntington a .. ch. Shop Sund1y, loo, 12 to 5 P.M.
' '
DAILY PILOT J:;
America's Cup Losers Take Swipe at NYYC Rulings
By JACK WOIJSTON
NEW YORK (UPI) -Three
Gf the principals in Australia 's
loss lo the United States in
last Summer's America 's Cup
races are still rankled by a
number o f controver5ial
deciJJoas handed down by the
host New York Yachl Cuub
(NYYC).
One of the three claimed
that the NYYC's prot~t
commitltt was "decidedly
an ta go n Is t lc'' toward
Australia. A second described
the committee as "very lax
and very incorrect in their
procedure." A third said one
of his protests against the
design Of the winning
American yacht Intrepid ~·as
"ignored ."
The three Australians are
Alan Payne, Jim Hardy and
Martin Visser. Payne designed
I he AtLStralian challenger.
Gretel Il, which lost the lour-
out-of-seven series to Intrepid;
Hardy was the skipper, and
Visser was co-skipper.
Their discontent is contained
In an article entitled, "We
Too Are Honorable Men .••. "
published t o d a y in the
~1arcb issue of the maguine
Sail. The article is divided
into four parts, three or which
-I, II and IV -are in
Lhe current iS!!ue. Part Ill
will be published in the April
Issue.
According to the magazine,
their slory was recorded oo
tapes before they 1 e f t
Newport, RJ., scene of last
summer's races. and
supplemented by additional
tapes made later in Australia,
Nowhere in the three parts
or their story so far published
does the trio state or even
indicate that they might have
defeated the defendin g
Amerlcan yacht i£ it had nol
been for the NYYC rulings.
But they were highly critical
of the manner in which their
objections to design features
of the Intrepid were handled
by the NYYC and the way
in which the NYYC conducted
hearings on two protested
races.
In summing up at the end
of the material published.
Payne states that · the more
he considers the evldenct "the and NYYC chairman Henry closet. whlch was later plact lhtmselves wmpletely near colllslon at the start.
more steamed up I get at t.1orgaa contended were modi f I e d at Payne's in the hand11 or the NVYC, The NYYC race rorn1nittce.
the NYYC atatcments that simply "extension!!." Insistence, and a th Ir d and be assured of scrupulous headed by B. Devereux
make Gretel n blatantly ind The hull flaps finally were concerned the American fairness. Barker Ill, disallo~·ed both
ridiculously in the wrong. "made legal." Payne said, by yacht's flotaUon. "After the 1970 challenge, protesL,,
"lam riow utterly convinced cutting a slit In them at the " .. .I was sure she was T was disappointed b1 the Hardy <'™nplained that the
that either she was. quite v.·aterline area and filling in floatlnR too deep in the N Y Y C ha n d I in g of committee did not follow tile
within her rights, or she had the void above the slit. water." Payne said. "My measurement questions, in the procedures (or protest s
only fractionally overstepped "We were not very pleased objection was ignored. same way that Marlin and outlined by the Nor th
them, and that Hardy and when we \''ere given to "The only person who Jim ended up be I n g American Yachl Ra c i n g
Visser in this case were. by understand, by the NYYC needed to be satisfied was disappointed wilh the handling Union. "which is the same
no means the blundering people. that the alterations Bob Blumenstock ... again o( racing rule problems." for the Anlerica's Cup."
co\lision·happy country idiots made to Intrepid were made it was A matter or the Parta 11 and lV discussed "We left the prote s t
that some people. in Australia 'just to please us.' nnt lro 'ultimate' aulhorily of the Lhe racing problems. 1nC'eting. like little boys who
as well as in the U.S., have correct any wrongdoing,'' New York Yacht Club . In the firs t protested raC'e, have just heen lectured by
made them out to be." Payne said. "Before 1970, I would have both Gretel II and Intrepid their schoolm1tsler .'' Hardy
Part I. of the Payne, Hardy Another prolcst ;n\·olvrd e~pected th a t challenging filed objections because of said .
mtttlng (In that race the two
yachts collided}, coski ppe r
Visser represented the Aussies
and Ha rdy appeared a1 a
witncs.'>. That meeting evoked :
the follow ing comment from
the two men and Payne :
Hardy: " .. J thought the
commiuee was decide dl y
11ntagonistic. 1 was A witness.
just giving evidence. I fell
no matter what I said lo lhtm
they were not gning to belleve
me . But I did feel they were
very v.·ill ing lo believe Bill
Ficker !skipper of th e
Intrepid! \YherPver there was
!See Ar.1ERICAS, Pege tSI Visser demur ex p res s es installation of Intrepid's water yacht clubs woold be able to maneuvering resulting in a At the second pro t es I Payne's concern at the wayl -------'-------'----------------'----~------------------------
lhe International 12-meter rule
to which America ·a C u p
yachts are built was
interpreted; the way the boats
were measured, and the lack
of any machinery by which
he could prote.st I h o a e
measuremenls.
One Australian objeetion
was lo "fairing strips" or
"flaps" on Intrepid which
Payne cla imed were part of
the hull but which NYYC
measurer Bob Blumenstock
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J .f DAILY PILOT
Earthquake Shook Up City LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOO'ICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
Bakersfield Be ca rne Fi1icr As Result of Jolt
NOTICI °" INT.NT TO "UI LIC HU.lllNGI WILL I E H(LO NOflCI OP TllUSTll'I SALi llOTICI TO CltllUTOlll 0" MOLD PU.LI( NIAlllNDS BY THI COSTA. MllA l'UNNING Ne. lltHI • ILILW TltA.lrtlJlllt IJrMll MUI f'r ... •lt Att ef Ifft COMMISSION 11 the (lt'f' Hell, 71 0.. Mf,f'd'I 11, 1'11, 11 1:0G O'tlOCll l'tocl. '111 -•111 U.C.(.I
kOTI Cf IS Hl!llEI Y (llVIN THAT Ptlr 0rl¥e. ttl!f 1'\Ut, C1tftHt111, P.m .. 11 !I'll-l'IOf1frl Iron! ..,trllKI IO NOf\Ct lt IM•ID' l !Wll It !he (~ •• ·.·~\
7!)11 '·"" ell M•ttll S. Im. It fht 9t 1:)f PM. or 11 -11 -•\~le 1119 0•1-Cou11!J C""rt t+oi.>w, 100 ol f'11111 ot LLOVO E. JO., •
BAKERSFIELD IAP\
On Aug. 22. 19", Bal;ersfleld
was In the throes .>f a
predictablt beat wavt. Then
natur'! nally took hold of thl~
agrlcultural·lndus trlal hub or
the southern San J oaquin
Valley.
An earthquake hit \\'Uh
frightening impact at 3:42
p .m. Ton~ of n\a son~y
rumbled do"'" Into lhe slreelS.
Firt trucks and a mbulances.
sirens SCl'faming. raced to aid
\•ictims. Dust clouds bolled up
and blotled out the sun.
By nightfall, one hundred
cit\' block.'! h ad been
e\·Rcuated and roped off.
The quake. r ated at ti on
Ille Richter scale, h ad taken
the city by its roots and
shaken it unmerc iJully for 10
terrifying seronds.
Only 32 days earlier, a
heavier shock had killed 13
personi; in the n e a r b y
mountain community o (
Tehachapi. But Baktrlt'ield
didn't t:tpecl -and who can
anticipate such things?
another di.\aster so soon and
s1;1 devastat1ng
Only two persons died hel"t.
But 32 othtNi wf!re injured.
Structural damage \VB!in't
app11rent at the outset, but
v.·hen ins pectio ns were
C'Ompletcd 396 building! wer e
declared unsafe and the lt1ss
totaled m ore than $ 4 8. 5
million.
Only \\'hen wrecking crews
tfl(lk over did residents of the
cit~' -3t784 by the 1950
census -realize the extent
of the quake.
There "'as . ho'lrever, an
amazing s nap ·back ,
Bakersfield had been shaken
inlo progress.
Today it h as shimmering
ne"' buildings and a-testim ony
lo careful planning-there v.•as
no damage here a fter the San
Fernando Valley q u a ke
(lfy CIKlllC:H C"-"'111" .. "" Clf\I "'*rNtltr ... Motooill'I', Mtl<;ll •• ''"· Civic , ...... Prlll9 w1.i. 1or ..... 1r w-.1 Tr111tffror. wlltlw M lMH t«l•UI I•
ol L11un1 ll11t11 11 J0$ "-' "-· '"''"'*.,. IM tollowlr141 '"ncotleftl. Ith 51r..,, 111 n.1 Cltv of s111t1 M1, •11.Jt11 11r11t, Hu11tl111to11 1""11. Cou11h cenlertd 8tl miles to th! south. advance 20 to 30 year.s " L1111,,. 1 .. c11. c1t1hl<'1111. lt "" ''""· t. :r-••-•IN ,...., .. "'· 11-n·H. c.i1~11, u,wve:11s TITLE Gu.r.lllAN· o1 0r1111e, s11t• e1 c1111.,.r111. tn•1
• ' 11111 11\d l lM• w1'!9rt1I I flll'ltltl will fer H~d l . V1n 0. W1H11r, !Df TY (OM,.ANY, I (•lllotflll cor"rlllllft, .. illoull< ll1n1i.r II l llwl '° be tn..:1•
Top en g in t tr Ing a nd !"ow, more than ta y ears "" 1111c1 a., ,..... CllY COUNu .., u 111 Hlft'll"""' '""'· co111 MtH. c1111 .. ,, ,.,. """"'' lrv1i" \llldotr ~ DHc1 ,. 0111 z1w11,, l r1111tt'"· • w~·
•rch1'•..,.tural talent CO .. """n· l•l•r ""k•-rield .... ... CITY •n .......... IHllull ... '°' • '°' ......,.,lultn to C:On•t.UC:I I •Mhlotntl1I 1111 T"''' """" ... l.0\11$ J CROAfll, t1111I~• Idell•" 11 100 W11I l"llr.
K.'-' '"°~ • ~ "'" ail\I l!.3 Miu Tr1n1Hrl1!ton C111/11l l"'tr-..,.n1 Yllll In 1ddltlol'I to 111 e11l1!1nt ~•!Mnc1. Jlt. el>d MAltCIA M. CROATll, h\libl"° •wltYllO. Mon!lbfllo. Counly ef Ln
trated on making Bakersfield adjacent subdivlsm house or1n1 11nd•• ,... v1111n M 1 • • w1111 ""' 1<01i.or.r"' M¥t11i-1 111 n ,.., w11,, 11111 •1'1'.0l'Md NOWt'Tlbe• •· A..-,i.., s1111 of c1li tlll.,11. 1 1 1'111
f th h r •-j d < 07 . Tr1>1IPOrt1tlon Acl ol !ti.I, fl. tt1Crc.ef'lm-ln'9 'M\llrM U ft, ltt, 1n toall IOI, ,.111 I" of Oftlclal TM 1ro»er1' IO tit l•1n1t~rtll I otl h .!ill e· roug U!'le O s""' an J,,7,I res1dent&. Mtrft~,, flf tilt' ,,.,bne ,,..,.,, 1n,"tt ,,,, y1rd 1i111Jd: 1« fll• i te....o lt~di _. Or•nt • County Cttl101n!1. ,, 411.J111 srr.ti. M1mll110ton ,.,, •
reinforctd concrete. There jg 8 spaclow clvlc ""' ,,.u..,1111,., tP•Hunon, d..-1tt '"' l1v11 .not en 11 tt. _,"'c"""'"' •lv•n 1'I nc:wrt .. ., 11111.t,11c1owu 111 cwnty"" or1n111. $1t•r t11~111rn1•; ,.,
Art hock! • .i , . vtrvn,,..tnll l 1!1!1n1..,1 1116 Ir 1 nt1 1 for l'llf tlrd floor 11"<'111 CU t I ri-.w vi Gl.ENDM.E ,. ED f It A I. St ill l•OPl•h 11 1111tr n I nt
er s • as expect1:U, center. Jtes1denl.i havt. new H vtlolimtnl 11rotr1m ti "" ()ty ""... ff, ·-'•'!Oft "''-" ""'" bllltir1 .... SAVINO$ ANO l.OAN ASSOCIATION, II! I I I ulllfl'ltnl c 0 n I i n u e d for weeks I i b r a r y h .. p II • I nlnt °"''''"""'· loctltd ,, 1111 l bOYt lntlttd ., Ille '""lrH 10 ft ... ,.r1tle111 •n Unllff !l1tn (Dl'PO+'tlklll. by rtl'Ol'I Alt 110(1< ln trf''· i UfH, '"et Ir~~
t 1dlln111. 11 1111 t!mt ii.fort Ill& dtl' UI lo 1How t rtdutl!1111 el fwe ot ,,,.. bf'ilcll fl/I ctrltln ottiil,IHOn• t nd tOOd will nclUll llf llM Ir•"
Seism ologists speculated that lmprovemt.nts, new churches o1 Mid 1111r1,.. dur1.,. nOl'm•I ottlu "'" ""'1119 ..,,,,, w ,..,.,...., 111rk1,,. ••eurH '"''""'· no1iu 01 wnkfl w11 .,,,,,. "' !~11 ,.,~11 G~1111 c~·' 1 d tJ Bak fl Id t b} II.Self ' hou..,, lo-wltr 1:00 1.m ... J;OO Jl,m., In llW flf 11r11nol(11ltr •1rkl11t lo• FllCOl'clld Nowmtitr 11 ltlO. 111 lllook ~miwn 11 Jonnton I tU · 1 le ers e e m or new schools, numerous annd MOMl•Y 1111outh Frtcr1v. tw1 111ce1, ..,. 1rao1rTY •«••H ,, f't<I, ,.,,, 1,), 01 11111 'or1ieiii •ecordi. 1o<:1•tt1 u 111..Stfl s1,..,1, Hu~•t"'''; "·as ;in aftershock, or \'t'h~t inore attractive commercial Th• tro11c:1 lo tie ••tvklM vnd1r "' H1ml11on St'"'' c,,.11 Min. c 1111 .. 0 111,11, COC1nty. wui NU 11 ,.,1111( •<Krlon a,,,,,, coun11 of o''""''' ) 1 • o
lh t d " h • • Mid IPllllu!lon 11 lltl(tlbtd ., lolloWll 1" 1n 111 ?on1. IO 1111 flltlltll b!Olltr for Clth PIYtbl' C1l llofnl1, ey crme a sympat euc estabhshments. (1) 1..0t111on 01 1111 •101u1: 1111 :i. r-••«,11111 "'""" Mt. z•·n·t•. In i.wiui mOMY o1 "" VllltH 51111, T111 &ulk 1r11111er w0111 bt (on1,um,:11't.d
reaction" t1;1 lht Tehachsni y I ho th f:l!y or l•tvnt ''''" 1nd 11111«1'11 for W•1t1ri• ~-1111on or •••tlstt. 1 •m ,1 ,1 1,,. 11 , o1 ul• wllflOlll Dn or '"'' '"' 1 •fl 1111 0 ••e • I' , t . 1)0 One W l\'88 trf! 11nlM:W'6rlltd llrrhotY fft•ff &tr 1111 !1' S. Wnltfll Av111119, Anal\efm, (1111,, ~Ovenl~l Clor Wlrr:TY t MJlritsH Gt U71 , ti 10 A.IA, II Ant llt lm t~vln~'
quakt. v.·ilJ forget Aug 22 1952 Lttvna IH<h Trtntll Uno. ttr ""''l!Ulon lo neted It. m•~lmum 1,,.,1111111 11 10 1111, -~ilon 0, 1nc1 Lotn Anoc111!1D<>c' 117 w:,.•t 0 Mo;
Many resident.'! he r e slept • ' · \J) Tflt 111111111..i <NT 1nd m1111ocr Pttrml1t!b11 bllnd1,.. 11111M 111ow1nt tncumb..en<n 1,,, 1",;'"" convtYtO 10 ,loYt11u1. Ant~'"'' ounty 11119,
el 11nt rw;J111 1111 Pl'Olfefr l011I ttllrrwltd «tl'tllr11dlon ot 1 1~ ....,11 ,..,i.nllt! I nd llOW 111id 111 ••kl lruilH \ffldt r $Tiit ol Ct!llorn/1. T 1111_,., On lawns white the aftershocks LEGAL. NOTICE cott o1 11111 orolttt r1 1IO.oot. Ftdtttl •••rtmlftl bl>llcl!"' In • c 1 ton•, uld o...i el Tru,1 In 11111 .. 11111 s.. fir •• kmiwn to tht •• • Cttnr •1rllcl•1l!on, Ul,W ttl, I.GUI nOI '9 tWCHCI 11 "orltt In ll<tltM. IDllewl ck•Crlbed pt~frty l•wl!· t ll bu~IMH no'TI•• t l>O' 1t111rt1111 und persi!ted. Some migrant farm 111rllctp1Uon, C:JfV •' LM\1!11 1uc11, "" •M:tlon nt4.f ,, 1iw m11ntcr .. ,1 1.c1;"u 111 Tr•« N•. c'sJ. •• 'lhown bv t~• Tr1n•'••o• for tiw lh1H "''"
k Cho I I th IU,.fllOI COURT 0~ THI •t11trtl or fHtrvt l\lfld 11•"66. (Odt . 111<1 to t llow 10' -n t t r-!no •• 0 -·o ,--o.. In •-·v 1"6, 11'1 Pnl. 1r1. "'Of ers SC 0 eave e ,,,ll (II' (All~ORNIA 1'0 1. I ' ' -I .. • .... ,._ ... ¥, """"' N-(l) Ft m ri..1 1no Wlllltlttl llkt ly ... eu n tU .,. ""' '"'u , 3' ,.1111 Jl :t'I "'° u OI MllCtlll MOU' • '''' COllnty. THf COUNTY 0~ CllLl.N•I te be tl .. IKtd 1w 11>1 •roftd; N-. ui.nblnt<d ttHn t l!d ('OYt•tll u 1ru , MIM litcordi of Oran~ (ounTY. 0.ttd: Ftbr11t 1v •
Ye!, in the meantime. !he ,,,,,,N!;, ..... ~.·.llClltO (O 5!gnl!ktnl t!IYfil• tnYlronmtnlll on Pl'llll~rl'I' loct!ff ~t l50 w, lttrt Ctl~rnlt. f XCtPllM .,,.,.,r_ t i! "'' ~U§ ~ISAll:IS l llKlt I I I ""'lltl OI 1'-i1',.1fef• Slretf, (11111 Mftl, C.t lll. II nc1 Gff!tr flYGl'OCl•bo/I •tnl UH
re b"l.ld;"" began WI.th an t11 tilt' Mllltr ol • a. D ,.t,.El.INE N-. "'°'Kt wm 1ul.t In me~t s. ZMt l1tffl'IM '"""II NI'. 1:1f·1\•fl', 0,,.,• ,,~!: ,•., _,_,,,, 10 -· Ind Eslllf c• l1o~d E. Jahnion -~ ''' <OUl•M'"' •E•fA<. INC .• • ' I ' ' 11 I < -SI '·--· -1 •-¥• "' ·~ ' '"' Tr111sltrtt • ns!" Iha had bef el Ott ''"' ow lfltfl ltl,_11 eor 1 .. wr 1n ~ny, ~" W. ...i. 111 lion 11 Id ltl'ld btlDw tnte ty t never Ore C1Uf0<nlt COl'-t!IM In 1ftt Pl'OCtU aommunll'I', r'tduclftt ...... 1.,. ""dlYldUtl 0.rtor SlrHI. j 1nl1 Ana, C•lll .• for 11 dr 111
11 r ~ f\':t l lttl ii.low BY: Btl!Y Jo Joflllll<ln
'"" OI"• here ol wlnOliw \IP. '"''"' •I wfllcullr lttwl, ttt111 ...,mis.ion 10 <OMtruct 1 19 fl. x • "' YI , wll'"' l r1n1teror ~n n ~ • NOTICE IS HEREBY' GIVEN lo tilt' f1dlifttlM ll'IOvtmtnl ttf tr1n1c. XI tt. 9Jnglf '·~· dlrtdlon1I lltn '"" aurltOI "' tt td l1rtd. bu i;" STAT£ (IF CAl.IFOllNIA
A newsman vi.lilting the city credll"" Ill ""' •btt\lt-lltmell corMrtllon u1 CMfonnlTY "'"""''•M"11v• l•M fo •dYtrlf•t 1111 t111t 11hl o1 hoM•• '"" r!•ht of •nlf'I' UP<t11 ••Id"''~ c:ounrY OF ORANGE ) 11.
r 1'1111 en Mnonl ntYI"' cltlft.1 111ln1I llM end tr1n1PO+"ltllon ,11nnl11t 1~ In l ••d Ne. 1013 (Whldl 11 IOft ltll 6" w111!1n flle -..Id '"' J06 lilt I "''° On Ftbtut,., I, ltn, btlttr• t'llt, the On the second .anniversary 0 H id (O'°°'tllon frl rMUlrtd hi flit lflt Urbln t rfl lllfcfftl~ ,.roJt(f wll1 11 !fl!\ t nd W!lltl1tr. (.,+.. MHt !. IOf' lnr Jllf-V>fMr!W.Vtr. 1' ffltlhOll Unde"ftllM, t J<j{I!~,., ,.Ublft In f 'l(I
the v.•ake was told ren11atedly: ~!"',:,'~, ~ ~".~-~"''''"" ,!!.~ 1ncn1111 ••~•I tf 1r1n111 ""'le• 1n S•lcl 111~ le boo 10f•'-<! ti n11 H•rb"· In 1111 DtH ''"" ~,..~ A. ;:!, 5 tor ult s111t. 1trl0fl&llY ••"''" Gus r -"'" "" .,. ""' _._.. -' • ~ltnnJM 1r11 Ind l fOv/do il'Oltnlltl lll11d.-COl!t Mt1t, Cl lll., In 1 C:1 ',,":', •, ... ~ ',~,,,'' OOO• ~,::n ,....lclti ZlJtkl• Ind ltlty Jo JolllllO" k""'"n "Those 10 seconds of terror °' te '""'n' ,...,.. wJ1h nte:111••Y °' 11rv1ct 10 11111,"'' 1,.11 In tllfd 1-. .... n ..-• • "'" 10 "'' te bf "'' .,.,.,,,., wt'IOH ntm~•
f ed th• ll I V011Ci'l1t$ 10 "'' «rr-•llon 11 41t Etll 61 lrt n111 Nrvlc1. '· i-e•cl'4lM Ptl'n'lll Mt. ?1·71·tl, R1<wd1. , 1r1 1ub1c•lbttl to 1ne wUMn ln1t1um1 nt OrC l!l commun y 0 11111 Sir"!, Cost a Mew, C.lllomLe f1il1, 161 O!lltr tltn!llct nl tcOllOllllc, soc:ltl, 1~r Ktnn•'fl "· Mf"(I, -,. Tht: R••I, Commortl~ k"6Wn ts: 1Jf7 Gulint to d and tclrnowltdg"' lo Mt flltl !he~
which •• lflf otnu of 111 1!101n..,., e• 1nvlron"ltnt1 I 11cton tlffdotd 1w ll'O w. l'1h Jlfffl, cent M~11, c1111.. 51., Cost• M1 .. , Ct l!I. e•«llltd Tht ume. Wl1NESS rnY lltrl'f
51Urn $. F,1nkl!n, ''"' I• 1111 •It« the ••olld~ "•oltt l I• lnt•nded 10 I•• ,,.,..,1,.len to tll~w crll·•I"' 11•r-ln• tor Ille PVll"Ot• of 111v11111 obll•11lon• 1nd c!lk l1I ... 1.
Bars Lo st
By 2,000
In Marines
Heavy Rains Ruin
Aussie Californians
of bu1lne15 ol 1111 COl'JIOf'tllon In Ill rtPll tt tX!iJllnt bu1•• In nm ef 11 ,,,, IU •not .,, w, f"" 5tre•I, !t CUrod by •1111 Off<! o! T'u.t lndud1"' (OFFICIAL ~EAi.i mtl!en 111rl1lnl"' lo cltlm1 11•tn1! rtct•lr, lllwl rlducl119 m1lMMlr>e• fK· Co,I• M•11, Cilll., In ,~lu~fl&n wllll IHI, <h••1t11/>d UPlflilll ti Ille Tru1lff, lltOV W. Gttl Ille etlllt, wlltlln fol.Ir month1 t ller lor t nd trovldlne bt11•r lt1n1ll tt• OPt!l•llan of tn txl•tt111 liter blr tdVl lM:••· 11 1nv, unGtt the 1trm1 el · Nol11v Pub!lc..C1lllon1l1
TM lint 1111bllctllon of IM1 nolltt, cammocl1tlon1 !or 1oc1t 1r1nilt usera. 11 m IY. 19111 s1,.,1. c.,.11 Mei•, ••ld Ottd of T'11tt, lnterHt th1re-on P•!nclo•I CHllte In
DATEO; F.tbrutr'I' 16, 1'11 OATE O; FtbNt tY "· lt71 C:tllf,. 11 1111c11 l "llll blt t nd 13 111!1 S'l1.l15.ff, ln u"11!d prlnclPt l af 0•11191 Ceunlv 8 & 0 Ph1tlln.t IMI AIYln AUll'I' r'lftul•tdl. lh• no!1 u curld by ttld Oetd of Mv Ccmmlnlon E•Plrt'
EeUIPIT\ffll Rtnltl, Int. City ,.!t n"ff Fer 1urlll1r tnformll\on 0,. !tit iDOY~ Tru1t wlll't Jnlornt th•rton lrom J~n• MAY 11. 19~
ev: CJt uOt ('"" City ol ·l 1111r11 Bettn IPPllC1llon1. ltlKJl'lon• IS4-J'U O• ctll '· lt10, ., In ••Id ""'" 1nd DY l1w !!.tu•• .... Tt 1U·IUJ Prt!ldtnf ,.ubli1Md 0•111111 C1111l o.uv 'Hot 1111ie efflce el 111~ 1111nnl11t C1111arl,..otnl. 11rovld1d. Pu~111nld 0•11111• C:11111 0111, ~IJcf. SELIM S, l"lt.tNKt.IN Ftbrve,.., 11, 2', ltn 3'1·11 lllao'" :!Otl, 11 Ftl' Orlve, (otll Meu, 01ltd: Ftbrvt•V If, 1t11 Ftbru1ry 2!, 1911 01-11
Al!Otllly •1 1.-Ctll tornl11• LAWYERS llTLf GUARANTY
WASH!NGTOI'< iUPll
About l,200 Marine Corps
officers will Jose their offi~rs'
ban Sunday and drop into
the enlillted or warrant o[ficer
ranks.
The action has nothing to
do wJtb discipline. 11 is one
more indlcalion or t h e
!hrini:ing size of the armed
forces as the pullout from
Vietnam continues.
Back in 1965, the Marine
Corps v.·as expanding rapidly
to meet the needs of the war.
So beginning in December,
1965. the Corps started making
temporary officers out of
sergeants and w a r r 3 n t
officers.
Altogether. S,000 m c n
beeame temporary mustangs,
the military s lang for an
officer ,.,,ho came up from
the rank.5. ~fosl of these men
\vorked their way up from
second lieutenant through first
lieutenant to captain. A few
of them won permanent
rommlssions along the v.·ay.
While lhert v.·ere 317.000
lea thernecks at the height <'f
t~ war. the ranlt.s have l!O\Y
been depleted to 235,000 and
will fall further to about
200,000.
\\IEE WAA, Australia (UPI)
Devastating r ains and
noods have deluged l he
parched outback of Southern
Australia, drowning the $15
million cotton crop of a colony
or California farmers who
migraced from the SJ n
Joaquin Valley a decade 1go.
None of the 12!1 Americans
v.'ho left the central valley
betause of disenchantment
with conditions in this country
lost his life, but many of t heir
homes were heavily damaged
and life saving~ have been
\\'iped oul.
It was learned via a
telephone interview l hat
nearly all the 25 fa m ilies have
been evacuated by helicopters
to high ground and are llving
in emergency billets or have
moved in with friends.
"There has been .. large
loss of life from the flood s
in New South Wales and
Queensland, but rortunately all
the former Californians are
sare." said ~1rs. Sue Williams,
"·hose husband Richard. 36.
wa~ a former P1;1rterviile
cotton gro~·er.
It "'as the Calilornians who
first introduced native cotton
to Australia.in 1961 when !hey
migrated. Their rich farms
Piel{ Y ou1· Own
'Osca1·' Wii1ners
Tht DAILY PILOT. in cooperation with Ba ena Pnrk'.t
ft1ovit 1011d \Vax ftluseun1 , of/ef's readers a cl1011ce lo porll·
cipate in 'llolionwide balloti11g to select popular tt!i1111ers i11
rht "Oscor Derby." \Veek's vacation for two i11 lt/e:rico Ci1y
or Honolulu and a place of honor at Oie Stars' Hall of Faine
Awards Ba11quet 1n Jlo/l ywood DIQait the ·11a tio11al w11111er.
Vote 'llOW by filling out and clipping out t/t is ballot:
-----1
l\1a.rk an "X" in the box \Yhich appeari; In
front of your selection. Vote for only one person
or film in eac h .categor y . Please be sure to complete
the 25-"·ord s tatement at the end of the ballot and
fill in your name, address and phone number so you
can be contac ted if you \Vin the prize t rip and b an·
quet invitation. All ballots must be retu rned (in
pers on or by mail) to the DAILY PLLOT by 5 p .nl.
on Mo nday. March 29.
Best Artor
0 MELVYN DOUGLAS for "I Never Sang for
l\!y r a ther'' 0 JAMF.S EARL JONF.S for '·The Great White
lfope''
rJ JAC K l\'TC •IOLSON for "Five Easy Pieces" n RYAN O "NEAL fo r ··t.ove S tory"
0 GEORG E C . SCOTT for '"Pattoo"'
Best At•tre••
0 JANE ALEXANDER for "The Great White
Hope"
[] GLENDA JAC K SON fo r "Women In Love"
[] AU MAC' GRA IV for ··Love Story"
0 SARA MTLF.S for "Ryan'i; Daughter''
0 CA RRfE SNODGRESS for 'The Diary of A
Housewife"
Be•t Uotion l'i<'hrre •>f 197(}
0 ''AIRPORT" IUni\'l'r s al)
0 "FIVE EASY PIECES" iC olun1b11.1 1 0 "LOVE STORY" tP aramouoll
O "f\l'A "'S ~l·I" (20t h <.:entur y f'ox\ O "PATTON" !20th Ccol ury ~·ox\
Wf!Y I VOTED YOR THIS PIC T URE tin 25
\vord s or less): ........... .
....... '' ' ..... ' ... ' ..... '.'' .. ' .. ' ....
' ... ~ ......... ' ' ................ .
. ' .. ' .. ' .. '
Name . ' ' . . ' . , • • I • • ' • Phone .....
Street Address ....•• -...•.•.. . ...... .
City ................ ,······. Zip
KltW l.1w s wHllnl t:O~TA M!~lo "LAPJNtNG COMPANY', LEGAL NOTfCE 11' Ettl 111~ Slrttl LEGAL NOTICE COMMl$SION Tru1!1t
grew steadily until they h ad Cot.It M..-. C•llt.f'llll "''' Ci-<.t llll.E5 flECI(, CH.t.l~M .. ~ ... '· A. I LU$H, sUil'lfRIOlt COUltT (I, llil: 40,000 acres in Wee \Vaa. 400 Tet: 1110 .iJ.n.. 1•111111m L. Dun11. secrt11.., i nd v1~e ""'· JlAT.! 0, cilll'O•N•A ,0111t An.,..ey fer "•lllltt11t1 NOllCI OP UITIKllOK TO •NOAGI Oltotelnr Ill il'l1nn1,,.. Alltll: SVl.YI A •·HASSEN, TH• COUHTY 0, ClltAKGI! miles north of S idney. Some Publf•htd Or1ntt Ctttsl 011!1 ~lie! IN TKI t•i.• o~ Al.(CIKOLIC lllV· Publl•l\tll or.,,,, Cot•I D1ltv Pllcl A~•. Secttl•'l' ACI fSlf
20 inches of pelting rain since f;r111"' 11' u •l>d Mtrch ·~.1,'1 llLl.•l'I Februi,.., n ,,11 F•b1111"' '.s. itn 4u.n l'u1t11s:.:'11" or.nee ce111 01111 ,.uot In "'•c'!.!~!~"0,R1~,A:!.r~~K ,.1111.,"
February I r aised !he level , LEG" NOTICE To WHOM tT /.\AY CCIHCE1tN: LEGAL NOTICE l'•bru•,., 21 •nd M1rc1t 4• 11. 1'11 $II of ROBERT SlEPHlfli KARP, AdOllllM
f l '" M · R. · N n.o.. $<1bl•d It ll•~nc:f of fl'tt llctnu Ptrent, 0 UC' ano1 1ver In ew lllPllid ""· l'IOll<• II htrt&r 1lvt11 fhtt •A• '"' THE PEOPl.lf OF THE STATI OF South \\'ales beyond its levees NOTICI o• SCHOOL ~STltlC:T tl'tt un111r.i1nod "'-"'' to ltll t l<Ohollc SU,.l!l lOR COU•T (Ill TKI! LEGAL NOTICE CAl..IFOllNIA:
and flooded the blossoml·n GCIY!"RN!NC IOAICI l'll'CTION llil•trt1n t i 1111 11r1m)ffs, dfKllbed Sri Tl( o~ C,loLll'ORNIA POa T1 HO'wAllD M, DEC KE II:
g NOTICE IS HEll:EIY GIV EN 111•1 ts hlliew1; THI COUNTY OI' Olt,loNll& By ordt' ol t~i! CO\'rl vou lrt ltt•Hv
COtton a month before harvesl .,. Tu1.0.Y, AJtrll 20, 19n I n •lte.tion 110) SUPltlOf' AYt nut, (O'llt Mn1, Nt. A..._ NOTIC• OP TIUlll'R'! SAi.i Clled' Ind reQulrttl la 111111er Ptf\cnl llY
• will be htld' In flll ICl!ool dl1!11ch (1ll1<>1n!t . HOTICI' 01' Nl!,loltK• OP ""TITIOK N•. ,,, ,... ~lore fl'te JIJdtt ol lhlJ Cour1 '" The crop represented 75 lltrtlntfler llsled', Jn Ot•nt• County, Pur1u1nt to IUCll ln!fllllOfl. Ille POI ,..OIATI! 01' WILL AND I.IT· (In ""'"fl llltr, un, II IO;OO ....... 1r., Covntv of Oranee. S•1te of C•lllC'rnlt.
Percent or alJ the COt'"n Ctl!lornlt, tor Tiit llUfNJt ol llldlnt Ul'lder1J~notd II fpplylllll le IM OtP1rlrntnl TEltJ Tl!JTAMl!NlAltY ti 11\t CIYlc C..,ter ClrlYt tnlrl~t ti fllt tovr!M>OITI of D1P1rtmtnl I on
W POVtrnl,,.. boa-rd "'llmbtl'I H tol'-1' Of Alcol\olk 8111ertH C:onltol fOr' lt.1u1n(e Ertilt ol JOSEFINE • JAll:OON lo lht Or1111t County (Ou'1 HcuH, Alrll 15, 1t71 , t i t ;IJ A,M., 01 th1I
growing in Australia. N-rt·~u Unlllod School Ot1trld. by '''"''er 111 •n 1teo11o1tc i.vtr••e oeciosKf. ' ' CITY ttt s1nl1 A,,.., COUlll'f of Or1noe, d1y, 11\tn •nd 11'11•1 10 '"-an1s1,
The ramul.,, lei! lhe1·r Sa , Mtll'ttlert (Trvtlfl Artll 1, a I nd Hunn tor llW11 Prt,,..llel •• fDllowo: NOTICE I! H!.ltEBY GIVEN 1111! $!tit ol C11lfOl'n!1 e•NKERS I.ANO If '"'' whv .. r. •dof>llon •hOUl!I nof . n 61 ON SALE GENfll,lol HERBERT J AltO(IH htJ I/ltd hfte!n IN VEllMENT CCl,Y,,.ANY, I tOfllOtlllon bs t r1nted' tccwdll'lt lo fll• ,.ttltlon Joaqu 'n Val!ty fa ms bee e c .... , Cornmunlly (01!1111 Ol1lrid, lllona Fld1 ~ublfc E1tfn1 flllCI) I 11ll!I011 fer ,.,...,.11 ttf Wiii t nd Uormo rlv 81nktfl tnYttlm•nl COf'hPlnY, Oii flit hert!n. l r aU! 3 Mtmbel'1 !Ttu1ltt Altll J, I 1fld Anv-dHl!ln1 I<> P•Olflt trot luutnc1 IOI' IUUl llCI el Lt!! ,, Ttl!tmtnl ,.., • COfPO+'lllenl, 11 Trvl!H undor ttle GIYtn vncltr "'Y hencl tnd Jtll wl
as Paul Kahl, 52, explained ~I of ruell 11<1n11 m1y 1111 • vtr!fltc1 1111 • • deed of trust 1xKVttd by CARL "'' SYPtrlor (OC1fl' ttf 1111 C011"1V ttf at the lime, ··1ve were Tiie COClnty SWterlnllM!IMI ol Schoolt, Jll"OleJI ,, t l!f title• of fll• o"'.''""""' ~.11:-1cr0~;.,fl;:"::~~~u11'~ ~:hth!~ l!iDWA1to ALI.EN ANO JO AN Al.LEI/.°'"'""· Sttlt of C1Ufornl1, flll1 1"" Ill' lh11 Nollet of Elttllon, h11 ct l!td ol AltCllOlfc lover1<;11 Control, or bv lhl 111'1'1• i nd 19(, el 11• •I n ll'tt 11u1btnd tl'ld wllt incl rKO•dttl AprU d•Y of Jtnut,.,, 1'70.
dissatisfied with conditions at tht 11ec11cn •~ttu1nt 11 • 11e101u1ton m111 10 Th• Ot o1r1,..,•nl 01 A.lcohotlc om ""' bffn' "' 10, ~ire~ n 11, 1t11 In Book m1, ''" J11 ttf Cktl ~Ptrlor C011rt, oronte C111,111TYJ 11'11 Ordlt of tllf G-rnlnt flOlrd l tVtrlJt COt!trot, nu 0 $I·~ e' ~:,, ,, t •» I m In ""' courlr~ Ollld•I ltl'(Ofdl ol Ont,... CounTY. WILLIAM E. ST JOHN home. because of tremendous 01 !tit NeWflorl·M~•• un1111d School Se'r•m•nfa, c11norn11 tsl\4. ll•!ln1 •0 rt · t ·N " 1 91 Id r1 c1111wn11. t lYtn to ..ecvre •n co.in•y c1e11r; •lid
I ·r f Ol•l•IO, 1dOt1lid J1nu•,., J, im. In t rftl!ntl tor 11en111 11 11revldf!d bv 0; .;,:• c:"rc" 0j 1 " cou ~ lndeb!tdnnt !n f1110r of 1!1nktt5 C!rrk ol '"' Su~UIDI' Court oppor uni ICS Or US n 1ccGrd1roce wltti Ill• 11r1111111011s of l!d11t:•· llw. l~• 11•wnl111 ,,, new Llc1tt1•f!d :h• cu,, of ;.ntac!~:r c~?ri:r' 11 Wtst. 1 Mcrllt1<1 t'om11•~Y et c1111or1111, 1 ot '"" s1111 cl c1111crn!1,
Australia." ion Code, Secllans UO), 1)(17, 132.S for tht 1111 01 11eot.ol!c blver11u. Dtted F brut•Y 1, 'un n · ~llOli!lon now owntd i nd ~tld l>V for lho CaunTY ol Or1n1e.
Th I tl>d llO. The form llf WOrllktt1on l'lllY bf. W 1 E ST (I• Sia!• ol C1tllornlt, Public Empl""'"''' llV Arthllr E. li:rt9"r ey COmp ained Of 8 n Oiied' l/lls 4tlt d.i• OI Febru1r;, lt11 , ob!lll'\td lrom I MV tlllct of lh1 (:'~ iv Cl Jrt HN, Rtllr1rn1nt 3Y•lt"' by ro11cn ol the OtlllllY
inability to farm economically 1to11trt M1tthn1, DIP1rh>1tn1. ltOHALO Hn ,..1"NNi11: 11ro1ch ot cert1ln o111!11t1on1 ~•curtd t.OWWI! 1110 ROBERTS
Oe1v1v Ortnt• COllnW MESA LANI!~. INC, Alt.rlll'I' ., 'L•W ll'ttrtDv. natlu al whl<ll Wtl rtCO•ded Ct ... ftllle a11l!•l11t
due to the tax squeeze Suco-er1n1~ndr.n1 ot sc11co11 H1rv1v s.anc:1111 J w"' Tltlrd 11 1 Nc~tmNr Uth, 11111 1n 1oo11 ''"'· "''' 1ru1 1,...1,.. l oultY•r•
d ' Publl1f'lttl Ortnor COtll Dilly l'llef ~rt1llltnl r,1111 Alll (llll9'llr: tntt t14, ot ttlll Otnc111 lt«crdl, B1nlrtrt Tuttl11, Clll,.,1111 t'l4H government crop an acreage F11m11,., 11, 11, 25, 1t11 tt .. n P11b111~'"' Ortnte C114s1 0111r ,.1101 T•'"'"'"": cn•i .,.1 1,,1 l•MI lnvn1m1nt cam••m, , co110l'•llon U11l •ts.ns1
restriclions, a bad labor Ftb'"'"' 21, un 4'7·11 All.,...., ;.,,. ,.111111·_ w111 1111 11 1111bnc 111c1ran le lho Me~"' OHJ f4•nJt
s i t u 8 l j 0 n a n d I h e LEGAL NOTICE ,..,~uif'IKI · ori~t• C<>1•t Dill,. l>llot atfddt r 1ar u1~. ••v1~1e in 11w1u1 mOMv A'::'~~ Pt!llf1n1r LEGAL NOTICE FtbrVt ,.., 1f 70. 1S \'71 31:1-71 61 fll• Vnllld $11111 It 111, llmt of F \I • rt nt• Cn11t w,llr 1'11!11
encroachment or suhdividers ." P"'QJI ' • 1111, wi1111u1 w1rrurtY •l to 1111t , e11ru1rv A, 11, 11, 15, 1,11 t17-n
Th ClltTll'ICATE di< BUltN•SS Clll:Tll'IC:ATI (I~ I UllNl!IS LEGAL NOTICE POUtUlon er 1nc11mbr1nc115, ll'tt lnlt•ttl e lure of 10 cent.! more 1'1CTtT1ous lllAM I!' l'ICTITious NAM• con••Y"' 10 '"° .-ht!d Ll'f u ld LEGAL NOTICE d r I Tr11•IH uncr ... Stld t111H1 of trv1t, ln"--------------per poun o colltln by the no.. 11~nl4Md doe <efl'!f~ lie '' The uno1r1!tMd dtttt C1!rtllY 111e h jt1"••1011 cou1T o,. THI' '"" 10 t1>e rouewrn, dffi:rlbe<I cr-m-.1
A I I• k I d h tond1K!in1 1 t u1f11t!I ti 1tt70 Broek'IUUI, tOnducll"" t bu1lnet1 ti 1101 Bol•t ST•T• O• C•<o•o•••• •OI II .. I ••· Cl-• ,.... Mt•o ·-US ra 1an mar e , an I e Fountain uaueY. [tlllDrnll. 11nd•r tti• Ave .. MkfW•? c11~. c111tOl'nl1, lll>der • u11 n ,... " ""'"' -' Clll!Tfl'ICATI' Cl~ •U11K11s · Jh Jd flctlli0111 firm ntme of ~.J.'s CL!~ 1n1 tlcllllau1 !!rm ntmt 01 ANN'S WIGS TKI COUNlY O" ORAKGI County of Or111t1, Sltlt ol Ctlllornll l'ICTITIOUS NAMI!
promise ey COU grow ag JOINT and Intl ••Id llrm I• comJOOstd OF Ol5TINCTION t fld 11111 11\d firm Ht. A4'Uf W.Wll! I Tht uncltnltMd dot• (•fl'lfy flt 11
much as they pleased, sounded 01 fll• fotlow11111 ""'"""• w11a1r nime 11 <oft'llO!..i 01 "'" lallowlnt "'"""· NOTICE DI' HEAlt lNG OF "•TtTtCIN Proa•rlY Addrtn: '11' Trln1TY or ve, Cllf>dudlne • bui!Mn ti sit w. ""' 111 luH •r>ll Piie• cl re1Jdenc1 I• 11 tol· wllew n1me l?I lull •t'ld pl1ce el rnldenee FCll PIOIATI!' Cll" Wlll. AKO l'O• Co1t1 Mt11, CtlfllM"nll Slrefl, Co1!1 Melt, Ci lllorn!t, uM•r so promising that families JOw•· fl'' la!lows : ll!TTl!RS llSTAMl!'Kl AR Y fllONO LOI "· Tttcl ol(MI, In flit' City tilt' f1ct1tleu1 !!rm nlmt of THE COT·
from M e r c e d • ~1cFarland P•I... J. "l~n•~·~· llO (t lUornl1 l est $1>1!11\ene, 1t'7) D1l1~ AYI.. w,••YE.•1, ••••• '' MO"'' .,,,,, ol (osl• Miii , " "'', mta ~!'~ TAG£ COFFEE SHOP, I nd 11111 ••Id St., Huntl1111ton lt1th. FD<111l1ln UtlJer, Ctlllornla. lltlt ..,.., ' In Book Ill, lltH 1 • tt ,,,,. ~· f1nn It tamil'Oted of n,. fl:lllowlnt atr.on
Clovis, Porterville. Fresno and 01h1d Fe1tru1rv 1. 1t11 o111c1 Filwu•fl' u. 1'7l t lta k-11 £1.Mllt L DltEYElt, MIKtllt MWI Ml••· In "'-111llle1 el w11cw "'"'" 1n 11111 •nil 1111u of •••idenc~
Ch. led lh I Ptter J, Flln1<11n ll!ote s,,11111..,1 ~ftt.ed. the County R.tcorOt r Of $11d C"'"'TY. II 11 tcllc)ws·
ICO Uproo emse ves. Sl•I• of C•lltornf1, ()ran111 Counl'/: Slt1e ot CtUlom/t , Orl'19f COllnl'/' NOTICE IS HE!ll EBY CIVEN Thtl l!)(CE~TING ,rAOM ltlcl ltnd •II 01!1, tnln-Wiiiiam it, Tl'lom11, I U St•tult L•111,
.. Half of us now are On Febru1,., 1, itn, before "''• 1 o.. Ftbo'v1,., ''-un. btfore ~. C!•lrw •· ClrtY., 1111 flltct h-ln • 1r111 •nd ollttr 11y11roc•rbGn •ublltr>ees ,1op1, Dli». NewPOff Beiai. c1111ornr..
A I • · Nlllt,., PubUc 1n ln<I IOI' 111d Sftl1, 1 Not1ry ,.llbllc In i ncl fttr wilt Sltlt, pelitl"" for '~'' ftf wltl •nd for MklW !tit' dtl>lll flf SOii !Ht from !Ill t>tttd Fl!'lwut.., 10, 1'11 ustra ian c1hzerui." said Cliff co-er1on.a11v 1PH••td P1t1r J. Fl.t."'''" ,.,11cn111-., ••11t•rff RoM s.11111..,, 111u1nct 11 Ll'llert Tnt1..,.n11rv lo 1ut11u , but wllllollt "'' ,111'11 Of •n•n-wun1"' It. Tlltttnti Good "We·ve lost e ryth· k-n IO me to ~ tl'll fi11111n who« know.i 11 "" 11 ti. 1111 "'ton wl!osf ~dlllontr 1No l end!, ttft rtne:t 1o w111c11 upon tllt top '°° '"' tl'lertof, •t s1111ttf c1111om11, Ol'tt11rt c0.,..,1y! • v e ing n"r•t l'I 1ubscrlbfd lo 11'11 within 1n-n•mt lo 1ubtcrlbtd te tilt' Yl'lln!n 11 111161 for fur1fltt 11r1ltul1n , llHI ••air!l'll It 1tlt1t1'1f s. Oiiier end On Feb"''"' 10, 1t 11, bolOl't -· We're hoping the Australian Hrwm..,t •ncl tcknowlldtfllf flt e•ttuttd lniJt"""""' 1nd 1dtr10W!ldfl ed s fl e thl'I I~~ llmt i nd ~l1c1 ol l'tt1r11111 olhetJ, b'I tnd r1carlled Jun• lS, 1 Nolerv Public In I nd fol' 11ld Slit•.
t 'JI k Ill• J1m•. t•KUlld fh.f lt mt, l~t '''"' h11 b'tln 111 for M1•c" 1f60.. In bOclk '1U, Ptte1 1)1, 13", 1>et1on1llY 811Ptt'td Wllll1m It. Thomet governmen WI ma t US (OFF1c1"L SE Ai.i (QFFIC:IAI. Sl!A L! n, 1t11, et ,,30 1.m .. tn !fie cour1room HI, •Ml l~f. 0111e111 ll1<c•01. ;n kflown •e ~ 10 11r: 1111 H•lon who••
emergency i.ow-interes t loans. J•IVI L Jabil J11n L Jobst ot De111r1m1n1 No. ' et 11ld ('Ollrt. tht office cl tht county 1trcorde1 n1m1 I• !ubi.c:rlbo!d to tnt w11~1n 1n.
I( NoleN PubTle·Ct li!ornit Ntlle,., P11bllc..C1lltornl1 1t 700 Civic Center Orlve Wt1I, 111 •I •tld C:ounh. 1tru/'l'len1 ll>d lcknOWlt<!l;ieO flt t KKU1t1 " not," Said Good, ""•e Prf"<:lo1I Olllt~ In ~rJndetl Offret In the Cllv ol Stnlt Ant , Cellf0rnl1. fO<" !flt pur11a1e ttf 111yln11 obli111tton1 1"e sime.
don 't know \\lb l "I h 0••~11~ Counlv 011nt• Countv 01ted Ftbru1ry U, 1t71 1eeuted by 1tld llHd includlno lees, !OFFICIAL SE"Ll a Wa; appen MY Ccmm!n lon l!;xolrta MY Com,,..lnlon f!IJ1lre1 W. E. ST JOHN, ,hlf'lltl, tnd tl..-nHs ttf 1111 Trvtlef, M1,., Bell\ Mer1e11
We could have to lea\•e Wee t.1o1re11 ,, 1t13 March t, 1'13 county c11rt , 1ll•tnc11, ii 1ny. undtr '"' 1,,,..,, at Noiarv Pubtl(..Co!l1orn11
\\'aa _ leave here and llBrt Publl•hKf Ortflle C:ottl OtllY ,.llot "ubl!1flld Ort nt• Cu1I 0 1llJ ,.Jlet, COHEN, OST•lt ANO MILLlltfl, tt ld lfttd, lnlerell fl\trtcn 1nd 11,,tU.tS, PrJnclPl l Offltt In FtbrutrY •. 11, II, 15 ltM 16'·71 FtbrutrY lJ t r.II Mtr(/\ •• 11. 11, IY: l.OBIRT M, Ollll 171 uno1ld ptlnel,11 ol lf'lt no!t securtd Or1nce Cl!!lft!V
a lJ OVer again SOfflehere else 1J11 "2f.n 4'H W11I T1rlllt lfrttl, bv ll ld dtH, Wiii! lnttre!f !ht roan MY Ccm'TlfU!on £1plrtl LEGAL NOTICE l1nf1 An1, Ctl~nl• lram J u"' l, 1'10 •• In 11ld 1111te A11rl1 t, 1'71 in Australia." Or. ht' LEGAL NOTICE T1I; 1111) ~J.l'MJ end bv 11w Pt11vloe11. "11bllslled' or11111t (0111 D1l!'I' ~1101
('Oncluded. come back lo the ... Jru ,1o111l'flt11 lttr ".iltltfltr 011111 Feb•u•n-11, 1911 F•bru••~ 11, ''· ,s, Mtrch A. 1911 Jl'-71 Publl511td Ot1nt f Ca.,, Cl•llY ,.lie! ••Nll:ER5 LAND stales. CEll:T,",,',",,T,•,,·.·.·.·.•,•N•ts SU,.l!ltlOI (0Ull 0, THI F~bftll,., It, 20. "· 1171 :llS.71 INVESTMENT COMPAIJ'I', lllT• 0, CAl.tl'ORNIA '011: Los t or dama"ed in the Tnt 11ndt•1J9"'d do ctfl'lry tl\ty ••• fKI' COUNTY 0, o1t•Noa • eer11ar1uon r1a1111111v " e-udlnt 1 buslMH It 717 Liiio P1r~ Ki. ,1o.,,.17 LEGAL NOTICE lltnkl~ lnYttlmtnt Camp1nv, ""'"'" nOQds \VaS their $150,000 Orive. NfWllOfl 811cll, C•ll,Grnll , u....ier NDTICI 01' KliiARING DI' 'l•1T-• 1 tor110rt llonl Trus!tt (l!RTl,ICAll 01' •utlN•SI . I n of CURCI '"' ... 0 I II Bv El1yM L. Aldtldf COiion gin -lhc first in '"" loc!U <>Ill ""' "'"" . ~o• ,..0.ATI( 01" WILL ANO ,OR Cl!ltTl,. ... ATI( ,. •u IN I Aullllnl StcrttltJ FIC TIT IOUS NAMI! lURNE:R COMPANY 111(1 l!ltl u ld !ltm LITlllJ TIJTM\l:NT,loltY PtCTlllOU5 NAMI ,,., 1il11 Tiie Undtrli~ntd dou Cffll"' lhfY •re
Australia -expensive farm 1, tom1101fd of '~' loll<IWlnt 1ertD<>t. E5t111 01 AGNES .1. ll:ES~LER, •bt TM ur.111r11ontd ooee "''llY llt II Publll.lled 0,, .... C<>1~! 0,11.,, ,.1101 co<1<.1uc!lnq 1 i>uolMn 11 11., An1h11,,..
h. d lh • h """''" nt'Tles In 11111 i nd plictt of tnown t s AGNES KE5$L E' Oecetud c-ud!nt t buelntss 11 lntl M1d1r1 F 0 SS _ M 0 • ,1 1111 4., 11 Ave .. CDt!t Mf11. C•lftornl1, vlldtr !ht mac inery an e1r omes ruld•nee '" 1s 1011ow1: NOTICE 15 HfR.EBY GivEN 111., Ln., Hun11n111on 1r1dl. c1n1&rnlt. 11ndtr ' rui ry 1'"' ••C ... ' -tlc1i1;001 "''" nt m• of Cl.IFF'S .. uTo
The ave rag ' fa m i I y Jonn C<11d. 111 YI• Lido Nord , EYtlYn 1<un1 .,,1 flltd llt•iln 1 Ptlll1011 Ille tldlt!ou1 f!l'l'll n11N o1 AEGE .. N l?E,,1,111 end lh11 111t """ i. coni1101..,
· N•,,.,-J>O,t Btt(I\, Ctlllom11, '1UCI. '°' 1>•otr•I• "" wur '"" for tnut nc:t POWEii: .!WEEP ING SERVICE 1nd '"" LEG 'OTICE of tho loll-Int ~••11cni. Wl'l<t1t 11emu 1nves1mcn1 was $100 ,000. l . A, TurMt. llO, l t Vt dtff Tt trl(f, ol l•llers Tnlt'Tl•lllltY .. ,.,,111oner 11ld t1rm 11 <0moo11H1 et Ille followlna AL N In lull .... altCOI ol r11ldtflct tit
Coro111 ""' Mtr, C1lllornlt, t16'0. rt ltronct IG wllkl't 1, "''d• lor furlh•; perlOl'll, Wl'lolt nttnl' ln lull tl>d t lHt 11 l<>llowt1 : D1ttt1 Fe~rtUtrv 10, 1'11 ••fl'leulars, •no 11111 ll'l!t tl/'l'le •rid olict of reddl!nOI 11 11 11111aws: Lo!e ~ul!! Vt1t, l11f lcinwolloll' l'I.,
JOlln Curd ol h•l•l11t ll'lt iamt hot ~en ttl Ot•ld Ltr lilt111 r, IJ'l11 Meder• Ln,, KOTICI INYtTING l lCIS (01!1 Mt•t , C1!1Ta1n!e, t., •· l urntr 1 M r II 1' 1t11 I t )Cl 1 Hunlln•lon lttth. Ctlll. l~e Counlv S1n\llll&n Dl•1tlcl'I et Orbin Cllll011 Ytil, ll'tt ll:mwood
.Siii! ot C1lllcrn\1, Ort n't Cl!!lftty : or 1 ' ' ' 1 · •·"'" n DlllHI Ftb. J3, ltn Or 111111 Ceunty, C1lllo1nt1, w\11 rec:1Ne ~• .. Co1t1 M111, Ct llfornlf, °" FeDru1rv IU, 1,71, btlort 1111, tllt (f"f!f110r>1 °1 Deaif\'~t No. ) 01Yld I.. Rllltr setted bldt untll 11:00 1.rn., Wed'nt1d1y, Dtll!Cl Febtua,., 10. 1111
t Nott,., Pvbl1t In end ll:lr 111lt Sitt., ttf 11 II tour!, ti 700 C:lv.c C•nl•r STAT'E 01" CALIFOlllNl.t.. Mardi l , 1'11, 11 """ltl'I lime I h I V I.Oii Rulf'I v11t H nh aenaneHv tPPfltf!d Jahn Curci 1no I. OtlVt Wt sl. In '"' (lty el Stnle Afll, o••••OE COUNTY· will be 11ubll<lo -nld tnd •~•mlnlHI Orbin Cllllo"'''' al Ur ~ci· · c:1111 ... n11. ""' · ;:;:;, · A. Tuttlf'r known te mt to bt 1119 0 lllOI F•bruuy 73 1111 On FtD, ''· lfn, bflo•e me, • Nel•f'I' II !ht olllct ef tilt Ol1trfe1J, 11114.1 Sit!! ol Cll1lornl1, Ortnof Countv:
CJ Ptr>Onl W~OH ntm<t• trt 1ub1erlbld 1 W 'E ST 'JCIHN ,.ubll( In t lld tor 11111 $lilt, a1t1ontlt~ flil1 Avenue. 'ov11t1!n Vel!ey, Cttltornlt. 0~ Frbrutrv 1t, 1911. bllOtl '"'' to l~@ wflhln ln•lrvm~nt •nd tcktlllwlld1· c.;..niV Clork ' tOPftrfd D1v1d L!'<' Rtdll kn&Wn lft llM' Tiit loll1w!n1 wor~: t Not&,., Publl' tn Ind for ttld Sl•t~. Royalt y ell !hey eu•cu!M tht llmt. CClkONt:l !l!LlM HlltRIHO ,.ll:ANll:Lt N mt to be !ht PlrlOll W"6it ftt"'<! M0 01Fr(ATl0N Of' PAlll:ING Pt•1on1llv IPllfllad l oll Rutll V•il l ftO (0~F!CIAL 1EAL) 1t, Ill! 11111 11,..11, 11 ~Vblttlbfd to lllt within !n1lrum1n! FACILITIES Ortln C!lflofl Yul known lo mt la
I l tmlet M1rfln c 1 M ( llllM' 1 Hitt and 1eknowlM90'11 ht 1~1cu1od llW ''""'· for M I"• aer1on1 Whote n1mH '" subJerlD. No!try l>ub!lt·Ct lifornlt y~, 'ou~1~ .. ~n 11 1 (Ott!dtl St~!l ADMINIJTRATION RUJL OtNG td to !hr wll!lln lnslt~mtnl 1nd V.!NA DEL ti.1AR.. Chile Ortng• Covn!y Allt<ntr fer "•lllltlll• Jt1n L. Jcb!I J•at Kt. l'l•l,.1 1cknowl~11g1d thev t~tcu!ed lht u mf.
(AP) _ 'lari·o o Flo•··erree .1 MY Comm1.,1on !"~•lrts Pub!li~id Ortntt c~1~1 O•llv ,1101 Nol•,., 'ubllt·C•lllornl1 T~t work 11 to ii. 11onr 1eccn!lnq !OFFICIAi. SEALI
" .. S J~n• ?l. 1''1 F1br~.,., ''· ?J •nd Mtrc:ll '· un 41._n Prlncl•tl Oltlct In 11 l~f , 11 n 1 1M wec111e1ll01'11 on Ille M••Y Btth MoMon th hamb11 I Ch.I l'ubU11'tM O•t<>ot Ca.11 01!IY ~1101 O•tn•t Ceun!Y In tilt' oflk • o1 lht Stct1l41y ol 1ne Not1N Publlc-Ct lllornl t e r ger queen 0 1 e Ftbr\jtrt II. 25 •!>Cl Mor(h 4, II, Mv Cammlo lon £~•1ros Ol11tlct tnd tlkl JlllM t nd 1Peclltc1llllfl1 P,lnel111I O!l!tt In
nobert F I 0 we r re~ ' her Ult 3'1·11 LEGAL NOTICE March '· 11!1 .... lo ~ by ''"""'' '""' • ••" Ortntf Covnty
h b d · th ·1k h k il'ubl!!htd Ott nt• Co11t Dtll• 'lie! of 11111 1101lct, My CC!'\mlnl&n E•olrn us an • IS e nu s a ·e LEGAL NOTICE IAI ,.,. i<e11rv1ri 15 •fld M1rc11 4, 11. 11, ll!IC!t'1 ••• ~•rttrv notified the! Apr lt '· 1911
k ing. ,IJ,.t'RIOR COURT 01" lKE 1tfl 416'11 Pll'IU•nl to •rov111cns et '"' l.tbcr ,.ub1l11>1H1 o .. n91 (0111 Otllv ~llcl,
\Vhen th •. co11pl• came In ~·21• "tlAT• (I~ CAl.IPOllMIA FOlt LEGAL NOTICE CDdt ol '"' ''"' of Ct lllorn11. 11'11P:tbru•,.,11, 11, 2s. Mir(~ •• ltn 11•71 •ot: P:ICTITIOUS I UllHl'!J THI COUNTY 0' OkANGI! Betrd of Olr«"!>rt OI C-IV $tnlllllon
Chile in 1%1l, hamburger.~ and NAMI sT.tTIMINT Nt. A4'UI c•1tllPICAll! 0~ 1u s1N1s1 0 111r1e1 No. 1 h11 1sc1rt11ne11 tht '"v•ll· LEGAL N(YJ'ICE ·1• h k Th• lol•ewltlll "'"'°" ., 'llolnt M lneU HOT'IC:I" o~ Hl:ARINO o~ ,.l!TITION ,.ICTITIOUI NAM• Jnt ,,,, el ••• dlfm we1e1 ;,. '~·1----:::;-;;::-:;:--ccc=c-=~--m1 s a es ~· e r I! \'lrtually '" ,Olt ,..OIATI OP Wll.L AND PO• 11\t und..-1ltMd dot1 C~t'l!!Y M It loc•lfty 111 Wfllclt thl• Wfl'l 1$ IO be NCITICI TO (Rl'DITOltJ
unknOl\'n. MAlllNf l!l.ECTR IC, ,101 w. (Ct ll LITT••I T•STAMl"NTAltY <onll~ctln<er • illou1I""" ti W·A w. lflll, "''"''""''' I Plltl(.llbi<I le !ht -•k fa SUPEllllOlt (OUll:T 0, TH,!" N · d JJ Nith1'11f, NtW'Pftrt le1c~. C1lllornl1. 1!1l1t1 -' WALES G. JACK!CIN, Cosio Mt i. (t lif0<n!t ur>dtr ""' Ill dont, lo bf 11 dlftUIHI i nd flltct ST,loTI 0, CAl.l,(IR
ow it ~ i erent. Rl<fltrd F. LIK••Y· ?QI Mtlltt Y Dea111H1. Uctlllovs rrr'M "'"" ;,, CENTRAi. In lht ttflln 01 Ille C°""ty k r1ll1tlen THI COUNTY 01' o~':N~°.11: In the \ViRter -June. July ltOld, "''-' B•ttfl. Cl ll16m11. NOTICE IS Hl!ltEBY GIYEH "'" PSYC:HOLOGICAL Sl!RVICI!' Ind thtt 01.1,Jcll. of o, .... , County. Mt.""''"
A d Se Thb bu1l11111 /J bolnt conoduclN a,y .!"TMEI. Cl. JACKSON tnd ARTHUrt 1,1., firm 11 ce'TlllO-of !tit tot!twlnt Etch blddt r rnwt k llu~~ 1nd £•l•lr of ANNA D SE PICH Ott SH'
ugust an ptem ber in !his •n lndlvldU•L A, JACKSON ht Vt llttd htrtln • ttt!tlon Hf!llft, Who ... ntme In 11111 t l>d P(ICt lllllllltd 1• "rlcr1n Ill• work <onlllntd NOTtCE IS HER.EBY otVEN '.! ~.
part of the \\'Orld _ the Rltlllrd F, LIH:M.., !of l'robt!t OI W 11 I 1nd IOI' ls•ut...::1 of l'ftl6tnce 11 11 lotlowr In 11>t1e dpcumtnl1. (rf'<Hto" of ll\f. '"'°"'' n ,.ubllsned Ot111tt Ca.II 0 1Jty ,.llol of l.tlllt1 Tu t1"'1nf1no lo ,..illlentrJ, v. L. st..-nlrkt , JJS1 Colllornll JI., 111 A ~-•t tut rl nlN el not ltu tfltt Ill l>lflOl\I fll•lnt !~r° d:i-=:~:: f"lowerrees operate a ski lodge Ftbru1no 11. 1s t nd M•tdl 4, n , r.rt,..,,, le w111t~ 11 m.oe ,., ftl'1htr ces11 Mett. '" .., Ptre:1n1 11~1 fl'f th• 1o111 111e 111c1 <1ecec1tnt •rt r 1~ 19 l'llto
and rt>stauranl in the Andes . 1t11 >U.11 11rtklu1ri, 1nd 11111 11\t 11,..,, •nd •I•« Dtltd Ftbiuirv n. i•n Ille! •,,_nt 111111 tc<:OmNn• •tdl bid tlltm, w!th lllt llKt._..,.,"'u hit 1 1----:-:::::-:-:---:-:=::-::=----OI flftrl"' !ht 1UM h11 ~n Ml V , L. Stem!tllrf Ind may 11t In ll!t farm II • bid ll!t olfkt' of flit cleric .,..vOllC 'be" In December. they come to LEGAL N011CE '°' M"~" 11, nn, '' t:Jll 1.m .. In Sitt• of c:1111orn11, Or•n•• C011nt~~ bond ., <••hlll''i ~ ~111111 <'-cit, entl tltd c611r1, 0, to e••sont ti:..• wii~
lhl l I OO I lf'lt ceurtr-.. of Dt1>1rtmt111 No. I On l'tbrvlf'I ,,, 1t'1, btlo"' ''"' ••vt blt lo ll'lf Olll•lcl'I. the l'lf<IU•ry \'ftl/dlf" lo ,r,f S coas n resort, I mi es ,.-IMJI ot ••Id ce11r1, 11 100 c1v1c ""'" 1 "°''"' ,.u1>11c 111 ,.., for 111d 5111~, Pl1n1. 1111<1t1t111an1. •ro110•1I '°'ms 111,.,1,....,, 11 th• llfflc; el IEll.l'iis°
"'f!SI (){ San1iago. and open CERTl,ICATI! 0, I USIKllS Dr lvt .,,.,,,,, In '"' CITY of S111t1 Afll, HflOntllY IPlft•td v, I.. Shlrnl!Ttl ..... !vrtlllr !ntorm1!1on lf'llV be obl1!""" B ... "NGEI, MYERS t fld $Mlllt. At'.
h l FICTltlOUJ NII.Ml Ctll!ornl•. -nawn "' "'' IO llt tltt "''°~ WhOH •• '"' lbtYe loddrtu. ltlt Ph--l<>r"ffl II Ltw 1501 Wtst 1111 0 "'
ll)l I e f Slimmer hamburger Tho u,..,,,,11"'il llctl cer!llJ he II DellHI l'~·~:v~r; J~·H~:· r:,':'~~~I 1:bK~=l~ld :."' ,..::'.'.:' A•tl CO:$ ~:0~6~·1~i1 ~~nb'l~os CIF ~·.£• Bo~11tft,,_N,.._., llt•Cll~ Ctflfo~nl~· pnl~ce. T'A'O bi.I! ch11rcoal (ot\dyct l"" • bull?ltU ,, Or""' County, Ceunl• Cltr~ ec I . 011£ClOllS COUNTY !•NITA "' . w e " !ht •llCI "' bwlllW\I
g r llli;, an elt>c trlc malt mixer c 1111orn11. u<Wlr• ,~. 11c1111e111 l1rm name NOl!M"N I!. 1tuoo1.,.H ~OtF~~~l~L SEAi.) ltCIN OtslrtiCTS ~Cl. 1. ol O••nt; t1ln;::" unoe .. 11n!'d In i n 1'1'11tt~r, •~r-
el OCEAN VIEW I. TD .. Ind ""' ltld 1M swtt Cllt Viti• J ~ E 0 I County Ctf!lernl~ '! ! ' IO '"' ""'' ol llld dlCtdt"'' a nd a s l:i(f or employt.s often firm b camp01tld ttf '"' 1c11-1,.. ••raon. lift c1e11111111, c11u1,~1• 1'l•l1 NO:t~n< "~bn:.:C'u19,,.11 J. w1~.., SYr.tiltr, ""','~fl;• 4 rnon1~1 1l!tr mt llr11 •11bllu11on bare Iv keep up Jth t wl't011 111me .1n lull'"" plte. et rnldtntt Ttl: 1n .un ,.,1roclD•I Otllt•' 111 secil1iry o 1 nouce. • \\' CUS Omer II II lollow1, Alt.,....r ftn P1tlllttltr1 Ott"9t Cou~ty '°Ublillltd Olllltt <ctll DI /Iv Pllof Dlltd Ftbru•n< t, lt1!
d enHlnd. HortY & MOW•rf· 11 '*'' Ml•ln• Orl'll, "wbUontd or1111• Coul Clt!ly ,.110! MY com,..Tnlcn 1!~01,., l'1bru1ry ID, 11. 1t11 311.n ":0111~•1 R. l!Ar'"""'
When busine'' ·1s o 't good L"~"' ticn. • 1· 111111v11y 11, 2s •"" ""'"h J. l•n 411·11 Ju"• 11 1,74 "'" 11t•tor ol ,,,. !1!1!1 of OlllHI FtbtUtN Jt, 1111 011 " 0 • C . 1 lflf tbaYt n1mH dotel'dfnl d I J lh · Jh Hl•"I Ncw•rll Pu 1 td ''"" °'" DtdY 11 l<lf, LE lrlll!lt5, llARAltOl'lll, ur ng Wll mQn ~ 111 e st•TE: OF C.t.1.!FOltNIA, LEGAL NOTICE Frbrverv u •nd M1rc11 •· 11. 11, GAL NOTICE MYllS .,No IMllK ~pring and '"'0 months in th~ Oii.ANGE COUNlYi 1•11 IJ0.1\ 1M1 Wtlltllll D,lve.
I II h 'I On Ftb. l•. 1'11, llrlort om, • Nol•,., LEGAi., NfmCE ,., 0 . I••,,,, i'l · I f' owerree~ g O "vbllc 1n •net tor 111e su1e. a•11on1n" T·11tts """'" Ntlfl'llt'I' 111ch, C1llt1tn11 nu1 Cnrnpfng, flshing and Sigh!Set-aop-.ref Htr,., Hoowtrd ~nown to mt SUPl!llOlt COURT 0, THI "·11'6 CIRTll'ICAtl! 0, tUllN•IS T1h f}U) ~ISM
I d Chil lo l>t '"' Dttllcn Wi'lotf ntmt 11 1vblcr111o STATE Ofl C.t.1.1,0INIA "0111 l'IC:TITIOUS I USINlll Tn ,.ICTlT IOLIS M.llMI A"""'" .... A~ml"t1h'11 .. n~ a roun e . ..i to '"' wl!fl•~ 1 .... 1ru-nl '"" THI CO UNTY (II' Oll;IHGI! NAM• ST"llMINl ' Vndtnltntd dotl (trlt!y ~· 1. Pvtlllsl'lfcl Ortn.tt (<>1111 0111-t ~1-..1
The v.·nrst that c 0 u 1 d K -t>OW)"''"' "' •~ttu!MI Ill!""'~· NOTICI 0, :::..:;tt;" 0' •tTITICIN ll\t l<ollowln1 '""°" 11 'llDillt 11v11 ...... ~=~«1~ .. : ~;':1 -=-~11:~.,":; Ftb. 11, ll , H ~l>d~IF't~·-n~ hap~n she says ,·, 0101 the tOFFiCIA1.,sl!iAL,1 , ••• l'ROIAT• Cll' WILL A .. , ''' "· 0 , "" 11c1111out llrm ,,.,... ot c .. rtDNER LEGAL NOTICE ,,_. • • dnl , rvltftlcl• " UDA EN flt~ltlSES. 1007 W. Utll "ltlnltNG &. MAILING COMl'"NY '"' businesses might bt laztd out Nttf•"" "ublk. c1111e,1111 ~~;!•:~1.1. ::111-.;g"1111t11T••T10N s1 .. co.11 Mne, c1111, ""' ••I'll 11.,,. 1, ,_tc1 "' "'"1----:::;:-;:c,,,,.-,.,__~----
of ,,,.,,,.,e '" • g•1•eroment "•lncl111 Ollk• 1n l!lltho of E~TELLE M. l(ll:IUSE, ltl(!ottf ""'' DU'llt, , • ., I.Iller t.n .. lollowlM ,.,,.,.., wl'IOll "' .... In lull •ICTITtOUI I USIKISS " OrtnM COllnTY ellft ~nown It E$Tfl.l.E MAY ADAMS HUftl1n1ton B•tCfl, (•111, I M •ltct of rttlOtnet tl II !!:tllOw•• H,loMI ST,loTIMIKt
move ;i 1g1lnst culinary im· M• cornm1u1o11 h•l1• KR•llse;, Otc••'"· TM• 11v.1""' "* Ml'19 COl'KIW1t<d by Jt"'" F sld•tdr Jr JtJ s1 • Jutn .,,"',,,•,,, ',',1~w1M '"IO'I' ... • I Feb, U, lt17 NOTICI! IS NEl!E•Y GtVl!;N 11111 en lndlYldv1! I'! .. 1111~, Cl ., " perta Jsn1. "11111osflfll Or1ntt Cots1 0111J" ,.net Mt~'"' l oullt '~••td ~.1 llltd fllrtln 110-. "· Ou!ll Dlltd Ftb, 11, 1911 J.t.Clt'S FAT •s1, w .1 HorDOr 8,..,., Bui :;;,ht IS !'IOI (M'.!1Simi~tiC F•bf1>trr 11, 11 1"'1 M••lll •· II, • ,.iltlon tor t"11bllt DI "'Ill •ftd P1>b!llJ'lld Orenot Cu11 011ty "flol Jtmt , !". SedlK~ Jr Co•lt Mttt '
!'ir1...., lhe Mar.dsl prcs i"dcnl itn w .n !or 'u"'~' 11 lift~•• fl/I Adml .. 1s1r1tlen f1tr111" 11• " •1'1!11 Mtrdl ';,., 1
1\· ~TAT E OF CA1.1ro11N1A Mt~ ~ •• ~:';i.!!." ,',,.",'~',•,·, '~•,'' ~" Yl'lll't !lot wt" '"""""'' rtte~nct It ~ OIANGE COUNTY : lrvl nt. •
S:ll\•ador Allende. wants to LEGAL NOTICE wi.1c11 11 ,,,_ '°" ,,,,,,.., 11r11tv11r1. LEGAL NOTICE 0n Ftllf111,., u, 10 1. """'" ,... l~•• '""1,,.,1 1, 11tint ,_"''"' ,
Pmmotc loorl•m . •nd 11111 "" """' •l'ld el1u o1 11t1r1"" • Nllf.,.,. l'11bli( '" 1....i '°" ~•Id s11"' 1 •""'"•hlo ,r.1111 ""' ••m~ htl bf.t>1 >ti lot Mltell "ICTITIOUI I UllMlll 1t.trwn1tty """'trod JI""'• fl, 51'1111<• JOl\n J, 0...,., ~1rs. F'lowtree I~ 23 and ,ICTlllOUS BUllNllS 1J, ,., ••• , t ·:cl 1.m .. In '"' COlll'lf(l(lm NIMI STIT•Mllfl J,, --" ,..,, le &t 1111 "''°" "~bt11nt11 o •• ,,,, c: ... , ..... ''"• L• NAMI STATlllMINt el Df11r1mfftl No. J ttf will ('(1111'1', T""' followl"' HflonJ t rt dtlM W1-,...,... 11 l\IOl(rlbfd IO ""' Wllllln F fl f j "" .Carne from r Or th Wor!h, Te:ir:: T~t lollCwlnt "'"°" 11 oor"' llvrlntn 11 11111 Civic c"""' O•!"' W•ll, In but1"fu 11; tnllftlftltnl •nf •dtf'IOWitllffll M t r1<utt0 1:11 "'"v •nd M1t1;h 4. ll, 11.
She met her hushAnd ·when 11 "'' c:11v" ~•n•• ...... c1111orn11. kl!Y llo'IA1t1tET Ltauo111. '°" $t, '"' ... ,..,, 'r======================~'"~~·'~' Mill DO~IUT, 1lJ t . 111~ SI .. Celtt OtleO lirbrutrY n, 1'11 trf•IOI SI., $1nt1 AM. tOl"l"l(IAI. SfAll jj both \\'l'rt 1ludenl'I II Tuhu1e ,~ ..... c:1111 ... n11 w. f . ST JOHN, Hfl''"4tn1on a. ce. >Oil s... B•l1to1. M1rv 1•111 Morton
LEGAL NOTICE
Chile Has
'"~
L>nl,crs;t, '" New 0 Jenns J1mt• lv•n• ..,.11.,•w , 7'1'·~ Ltrtll• Cou""' Cltfll ~"" •~•. t11tor-•tton In C1ttf9"'11. N011,.., l>vbllc. <•llfornl1 ·' IH r Ltnr, Sit~•· Ant. C:tlllarnT•. IAMIS A, l llU•M ll'tll D111ln ... It btlr>t (°"'VCft<d DY "•lnc!•ll Oftl« In
Robert F'IOll'trrtt, 26. I~ fmm Tll!1 bVl!nPM rs bfl~• tono!k1111 trr ,,, ,,..at:IKt '"'"' • (Qf'P0t4110n. O•tMt Counrv F11t, ftir, ftclutl, nr,,. I --------------------FAIR
Mall ballot to: "Os,ar'', '/o DAILY PILOT,
PO lox 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 •
Porll.n•. 0-. >•''CrC Ill! In lftdl•!d~tl, 1111 'r•Mltct. C1lllt,nl1 llt,.,.Y .. 111111nto<1 MY Cem1?1l11lon E••lr" lllrtt wo•< t · " '""' '1 I Jlmt'1 EY1n1 Mwnl'!MI Tth 14111 n..,lt lf•ttlGt~t Aorl! ,, nn 1 '""' tip 1t te•1 In father ii associated "'Ith 8 Publl\NCI (1111* Coe1f 0.!!y 'no!, Al™My folt ,tl!tillllt ~~bill~ 0,.11;1 Co-11 01lty l'!!Of ,u~ll1lll"d Ortnlt Coti;I D•llY ~He 1p•11H1n en th1 DAILY rllOl
lu mber bll''•n•••. f'l!l>•uH't' u, 2! t 11d Mt rcft 4, 11, ~Ublllfltd Ort"'t C•t ll 0•!1• lf!lo!JF•\1ru•ry H 1n• Mercn 4-II. II. ,ttrutr'I' U, U, l l'MI Ml telt 41 11 1d!t1r;1f iltlfl I Yt ty dtf,
..... 011 J.Jf>.11 ,_,Drut tr l4. lJ •n'll Mt rd1 I, 011 1lJ'11 ttll fl.1•11 1t11 *""' IC---------------~--~~-----j
DAil y PILOT J IS
(Conllauect •,rom Page 131 1erit1 will be held off Newport event when tt attpulaled that
·a llttJe doubt. 1'1aybe it's in lt73 And d pit thel the ch 11 f d Id w.1.~1:1INGTON (AP) schools." Davls sai d in an into seven regions and we plan workers. AnA he~ Edmund or the necessity of negotlatin" • unfair to say lhat, '"t that · • es e r a enger o recor wou ~·1 " • is lhe ,way 1 felt." "" feelings about the 1970 Rrtes, participate 1 n elimination ~tuskie-for-Preakient staffers Interview. "We want to recruit lo fonn • youth coali!lon in Sll:tus 1ifuskie as the bridge. a just i>eace while tbtir
AMERICA'S CUP ••• M .oskie Supporters Seeking Young
Visser: "I think they \\'ert J)ayne , Hardy atMt Visser trials with one or more of are . launching 8 nalional young blue' collar workers ·every state," he said. ''l sense something new ls friends continue to die over • 1 campaign lo tap the energies from the f a c t o r i e s , When most people lhink of ·very ax and very incorreet probably will be very much the other challengers. and. voteS or tne country's coQstruction trades 8 nd youth, they thlnk of college happening in the country there,'' he sald. "~y don't
i
'in their proceduff: I had to involved two years hence. One thlng is certain -the 11' mill ion oewty enfranchised servlce Industries, as well students, said Davis, "but polltically," he said. "The old want rhetoric. They w1n t
object three times lo f'icker. Their sponsoring R oy a I NYY l&-to-21-year-<1lds. as young professionals. there are sli million young geographic, economic an d out ." When he found Lhat his Sydney Ya~t Squad-n '• one staid and circumspect C, D . I ak . d f I II · h "' •• w h h f ''We're forming a Youth .. avis pans to spe at people out there who hold ethnic groupings on 't mean A recent tour o s x co ege witnesses ( e called two ) were of seven groops repreSenUng v.· ic s.hrinks ro!ll sensation Coalition for Muskie,'' aald vocational schools, factories, down full·time jobs and who much anymore. The young campuses in California-"the
not telling quite what he four countries -Australia. and nororiety. will not get Lanny J. Davis. :>year old junior Kiwanis and Rotary have been overlooked. If given people J see are wary of party heartland of the st udent ~anted'Y he told oolthe witness' France, Britain and Canada involv~ in any disputes in youth coordinator for the clubs and college campuses. a chance, I think they'd work politics. but they're Ydlling lo movement'' -convinced him
s ory. ou are Y allowed -that ha'e s ubmitted 197a. u has decided that any r..taine senator. now No. t in His staff of 15 full-li me for a candidate ." work for someone whom they tha t the war is still an issue to ask questions." h JI t th NYYC f Payne: "It wa s our view ~9;3,enges 0 .e or . protests made during the next the race for next year's volunteers, all veterans of the Davis, former chairman of feel they can trust., with the young.
that the protest comn:ilttec The NYYC cup comm' 1.ltee defense will be ruled on by D e mo c r a ·tic presidential peace moveroent, plans to go the Yale Daily News and a stuDdaevnitss docn~tntlhen1d0sk Prem
51
.ode'ntt "It's wrong to think that
I k. · nomination. into each state and set up 1970 Yale Law Schoo I the campuses are q u i e t was 50 ac ing in proper is expected to a n noun c e a committee drawn ffom "We want to go beyond the !ables in big city office graduate, regards a youth Ni~on will end the war and because the war isn't an issue procedure as to make it shortly the challenger of neutral members of the ' invalid as any kind 0 r ..,... d Th 1 t t large. weJl-knoY.'n universilies buildings to recruit secretaries coalition as one way to narrow are looking for another man or that the kids aren 't
objecti\•e body." r .... "r · e c 0 mm e e International Yacht Racing-and into the high schools, and clerical workers. cultural differences between to support. ''They won't work interested in the '72 election.''
probably will follow the same Union. 5mall colleges and vocational "We 've divided the country young white and hlue collar for someone who merel.v talks he said. ~-"'~'~"-'-''~A_m_•_r_ic_a_'s~cu--'-p---'p~r~oced:.:::u=r~e_::use:.:::d~l~o~r~th=•:...:1::::970 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
.·AM!"ICA'S LARGEST flAMILY CLOTHING CHAIN
t« L , .
~r<. ··""''ti .;-' • .. · · Friday, Saturday
and Sunday Only!
FLARE
LEG
LIN·8ROOK
We 1'91•N•
tM rlghl
to llmlt
q1,1ontltl•1
HARDWAR E
• ,, 2 0.1'-
SPRINKLING CAN
• o."''' 1,rt11kN ., • ...,. fay•rft9 ........ -41
,1ent1.
• 'la1tl1 ce111trvctl•-'mf1
,,..,... po,..tiol• ttt.n
a hoM.
•••. 11 .1•
99'
1 Cu. Pf. ••1
GARDEN BARK
· "A Super luy fre111 flte
Werlrl's largest Petel•,utlleral"
• A great assortment of litt.Stllnt 'lent• ln1lutlln1
snap1, petwnl•s, ,•n•I•• -•••n temat1e1, ptp,er1
•• , .. .,t•••I
H1rlly Jnlflvhh.111 pl1nt....up t• 9 per c1rton.
leg."''
.. ,, ........
DICHONDRA
SEED
"for 'r'•ar 'lcwnd Or•e11/"
• 99.S "/1 i---tio1el11telr •••d ,,...,
• ra1r •• .,,. 1h•"•' 1011.
•••. $1."
·1~9
r••• c .. ,, •
FLOWll
SIEDS
• New d .. t )'•W 1•riNft
9row? lrl9ht •114
1plo1hr with thl• ,,...
1olectlon er 1l11nl• ..
••rnallon•, •••·
•••• "' 5~ ..
Graii'e Ne. I
PATENT ROIES .... '"• '"''"'' '"''""" ., ., . .,, ., .... , ..
De-lt·T•-11 Cl ...
"UNDllGIOUND
SPllNKllR S'fSFIMS"
WM., Mar. t , 7-1 '""An•hel..,
fh11n., Meir. 4, 7•1 ,.in
•Mhllll Y•lle.,
..., M•..-ae~1h-M1
.....,. ~ ft ••t11t .. .,. ......... """ . -., '*"""'
c
1.., Ha•tlletf
GARDEN
TOOLS
"fa Start A Yaril
•••11llllNlfon l'ro••aml"
• To1,1r 1holc• ef lon9·ha1tdled
h•• er 3 pron9 11,1ltlYotor.
• W•tl liolonc•~ooden
handled •
le9. SIAf
99'
10 Ir. Wire
BORDER FENCE
~· PANTS
y;
• lwt1c ,.,. , • .,. ... 11 1r.et ,.,
pc11h1 "'"' th hlllpt, lt'1 1trtld111 111 rtdl ,.,..,. ...
•aw fllttff t111Hlftr-I ,.., •• 1. r•••-'l•lf 9Nwn,
9rodo N•, 1.
• Y•w chelce •f tiovth er ell..._, 'Ylt9 ........ ,. , ..... ,1. , • .,, "'''"'·
""••11 '"• ,,.,.,. "'' Attfl 7-• lf/111 •114 hfl 011H" ....... "' tt ................. ,., 9'<.
• C•...,i.t•fy
•MMIN
1•l••11lse,. f1nc1.
' . j
' 99
. whil.e they
last
MISSES' SIZIS
10TO11
• fabulous at this unheard-of 1-pri•I
• tho flared-1"9 1tylo thot'1 ,. popvlarl
• 9raup lnd.udn Hiid .. 1-.. -1flnl
• ilppered fly-front and aid•tip 1tylast •a special that's sure to be a sell•utl
•buy younelf a quantity and a variefYI
-···-
•• OPEN SUNDAY
11 • s •
~
..
•
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" } ~ ..
"' .1
/)
I" • I
'
COSTA MESA-1601 Newport Blvd. at 16th
' GARDEN GROVE -12372 Gordon Grave Blvd.
• Det•11 •"" •"" r.telM -'·"""· • c ..... " 12 ·~· h . •fl'pff11hnal•ly I" ttilck. .... 69' .. .
A~ro•· 40•L .. ·~
STEER
MANURE .. ,.._,, , ... ,,,,.. ,. , .... ,, .. ,..
• (•"'" .................. 94. _,. ... ...
• °"""'d •'"' ,.1......tse4--•"fret . . ••1.4•129~
OlfffO•
ISOTOX INSECT
SPRAY KIT
"ftH 1,,..,.,. W/111 r.1•
Q11ef'f el ,...,.dlflcMI"
• c.11,...,,,.,M. -"'· ,...,,... h!Hctlcl--
lrHl1 -9 .i1 ....
l11Mfl'lk v .... ff,96
·s~ ........
• PleM '•'" 11•w •l'ld •••ch ,,,1111 lil•o1t1 Ht •II •v•rt
• ... $2.19 •1!.9
,.,, 20'' .....
DELUXE ROTARY MOWll
"Ml11tt H•I Mell• rite 10• 111n-1111 Its .. ,, Moll•• If t•l)'I"
• .S h.p. lrltt• •nd Strcrtte11 .,.,1,.. with Ncoll 1ta,..r,
• l(flllpfl't4 with ......tr ••ltMd tr91• c<lfc.tt.r Ht-
alppe,..., e,.nl111 W~ ln•, .. n hf;JcMI'.
• ..,.._. ........ , ... _,.,., 110.
.... $62.11
~7G2D
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#35 DELUXE SPRUDER
"W• A«t"' A., t,,,...der 0.. fn14-
f,.e11 Alt 01,. fl1t (•1tl"
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....... , ....... , ......... 4t•l·•·lft9ft•
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99' Nol.~ .lJJo+"'t"~
....... , ..
TAM JUNIPER
"Ha•• a o,.11t-l1tl"
• •••'""'"'' lew 1~dln1 ..... , ..........
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• 119 10Hon 11.se pJ•nt.
l•t• ffc
66~ ..
•o ''· GARDEN
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"J .,. .. , o ... ,.,., •• , ..
t 100% vl11yt
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a•di, kll'llr •t dllp,
•l111t•,.,...f..,... •
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88'
~ -~ .... -. .. --~-. ... ~-. ;:;.,.f--
LIN-BROOK HARDWARE • FOUNTAIN VALLEY
17200., llfHIOl~Hlll!', ! 1:>no vr.nos SOUTH Of WARNfRI PHON£ 9to8 :\311
. ' , ' '
•
'
• '
I
MONTH ·END
CLEARANCE
GREATER MARK-DOWNS
ON SALE MERCHANDISE
Boy's Pants,
T Shirts, Boy's
Cotton/Dacron Shirts-
Girls Pant Dresses-Capris
Dresses-J11mpers-
& Slip-Over Sweaters
1058 IRVINE -WE~TCLIFF PLAZA
NEWPORT BEAC!i
GIANT SIR
Ajax 01sHwAsH1NG
DETERGENT
Cleaning Specials
'
CLEAN $295
ONLY I LIS.
40c PER EACH ADDITIONAL LB.
CLEAN AND JAN JOLDIED 95' ... PANIL DRAPERIES
DRAPERIES 50' LB. (Clean Only)
MONTGOMERY
CLEANERS & LAUNDRY
WESTCLIFF PLAZA
IANJCAMlllCA.RO
Opon Doily i-9 S.turiloy 1-4
f . t
DELTA FAUCET SALE
ONLY
REG. $17.95
Ee1y To Install ~~
DELTA 100 WF SINGLE LEYll KITCHEN FAUCn
Recoml9tMCIH bf Porelttl & Good Ho11Mk"f'l119
RION
HARDWARE
WESTCLIFF PLAZA
642-1133
Open Evenings & Sundays
SPECIALS!
USDA CHOICl-lreih America11
SQUARE CUT
SHOULDER
LAMB ROAST
U.S.D.A. ti-RADE "AA" FRESH
LARGE EGGS
32 GAL.
TRASH CAN
e R"l1t1 croc:lti ~ 111 •ltff .... te111pe:r111t11re1. e RttolM Sh111pa E•en After Rouqh H•11dlltuJ e Keep• Quler 1¥tlt With lto11gh Hc1111dll119
MARKET BASKET
CHEESE
BALL
s119
REG $1.99
CHEESE LOGS
fl(f~{k@j~ NlWf'OltT llACH w .. tcnff ,., .. ,
642-0t72 ~t.iflilm~. OUNGI
T .,,. It Co•11try CHNr
DF0/110 543-1016
AMERICA'S LEADING CHEESE STORES
Of'EN EVENINGS eH SUNDA.'fS
'one-stop' shopping
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OPEN THURSDAY ANO MONDAY EVENINGS
LADIES' BOOTS
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THE NEW LOOK
Hffl• Hlth•r
'"""*
COBBLERS BENCH
S CONVENIENT SHOl'S e CORONA.. DEL MAR -3401 I . C.-Hlfhwiry
• NEWPORT IEACH -l4ll YI. Lkl• e 74 FASHION ISLAND -N•wport leoch e ESTCLIFF ru.v. -11 DI IMN A,.,., -Newpoft a..111
e Rolih1so1'1 ,_..._ 111-4 ~
Optometrist
Dr. Lou Roy Elder
• CONT ACT LENSES • REFRACTING
• EYE WEAR STYLING • PRESCRIBING
1124 IRVINE
WESTCLIFF PLAZA
NEWPORT BEACH 6'12-0720
PAPER
UNLIMITED
WESTCLIFF PLAZA
548. 7921
INTRODUCING •••
MISS SHELLEY
NOW JOINING THE PLAYMATES
AT THE PLAYBOY.
OPEN
SUNDAYS
MEN 'S FORMAL WEAR SPECIALISTS
darrell's dedrick TUX SHOP
SALES -DELUXE RENTALS
FASHION
SQUARE
S•ntt An•
547-6341
L• Habra
691 -0735
/!iill1at. ~
HAIRSTYLING
WESTCLIFF
PLAZA
1130 Irvine
Newpor+ Be.ch
646-8891
FOR THAT "GROOMED" LOOK
You'll do b•+ter • , . bec1u1e you look better. Good groomin 9 is
'" investment in good 1ppe1r1nce and 1ucc.es1.
WESTCLIFF PLAZA BARBERS
1116 IRVINE AVE. 646-9941
. . • . .
I
I
I
I
-~ .......
--._ --_-__ -:::---Theta Assistance Flowers
6Wlen
BEA ANDE RSON, Editor
TllwMar, ,..._,., U. ltll '""' 11
Fou~t h Concer t
Gerhard Samuel
To Take Baton
Works by Berlioz, Mozart and Schumann will
be p·erformed when the L-Os Angeles Philharilonic
Orchestra travels to UCI to present its fourth con-
cert in the current series of seven.
On the podium Saturday, March 13, will be
Gerhard Samuel, associate conductor-elect.
Samuel, during the past IO yea rs, has trans~
formed the Oakland Symphony Orchestra from a
nonprofessional group into a highly polished organ-
ization of international renown.
His performances constantly are making news
because of their excitement. adventurouness and
high standards. This is renected in the tremendous
growth of the number of Oakland symphony-goers
-4800 in 1959 to the present 90,000.
Samuel al so is founder of the Cabrillo Music
F'estival, which he conducted for six years. It at·
tracted nalional attention for its extraordinary
programming, introduction of ne\v works and the
inclusion of such works as Hayden and Rameau
operas.
Orange County Alumnae of Kappa Alpha Theta will travel the
freeways to the Beverly Hilton Thursday, March 4, to be among
the 1000 spectators viewing a spring fa shion collection by Joseph
Magnin 's. The benefit luncheon show is given biennially to raise
funds for various philanthropies, including the Kansas Institute of
Logopedics, the lfarbor Area Girls Club and the Human Outreach
Council of Santa Ana . Readying table centerpieces are Mrs. Don·
ald Ward (left) and Mrs. Fred Howser.
As musical director of the San Francisco Bal·
let, he has triumphantly led that organization 's
orchestra in almost every state since 1960.
Tickets, at $4 .~0. are 'on sale at the Orange
County Philhamonic Society office. 201 W. Coast
Highway, Newport Beach 92660 , phone 646·6411 .
Students tickets are $2.
Parental Preaching No Solution
Teens 'Stamp Out Stupidity'
By JODEAN HASTINGS
01 the 0.HY P'llol Sl1ff
Peer pressure rather than parental preaching
may hold the solution to drug abuse among today's
young people.
Explaining the aetivities of Smarteens to Hu.nt·
ington Beach Republican Women were Jeanine
Cattaneo, 12; Steve Dryburgh, 13, and Brian Hamil·
ton, 11, all students at Gisler Intermediate School.
Since the program was launched a little more
than a year ago, more than half of the approximate
1.000-member student body has filled out applica·
lions to join the Smart Set/Smarteens by· acknov.•-
ledging that using drugs is square. not smart.
Helping the young people in their effort . to
1'Stamp Out Stupidity" (SOS ) is Keith Westly, vi ce
principal and advisor to Smarteens, although he
says he does little advising .
"We felt programs by adults weren't reaching
the kids. In Smarteens the kids do it themselves.
My "fun ction is to occasionally exercise discretion -
see· that they don 't take on more than they are able
to handle or do anything that might involve us in a
lawsuit.
"Sometimes when adults get too involved we
kill the program."
Gisler adopted the Smarteens program after
administrators attend ed a works hop at Stacey Inter·
mediate School. Westmin ster. \\'here in three yea r!i
membership in the youth group has grown from 18
to more than 700.
The meetings at Gi sler, conducted twice "
month during the lunch hour, draw between 200
and 300 Smarteens members.
NO PRESSURE
"No one ever is pressuerd into coming." ex·
plained Jeanine, president of the group. "No attend·
ance records are kept and membership isn't based
on good grades, good conduct reports or bein·g
popular.
"We learn about illegal drugs through films,
literature and speakers so we can Wk about them
intelligently and encourage our friends that using
drugs is uncool." •
Steve is editor of the Smarteens newspaper
.published for the first time last week wit h Mrs.
Robert Kozlowski, teacher, serving as advisor for
the news staff.
"We try to urge our friends to come lo just one
meeting and then if they want to join, they can fill
out an application. We're sponsoring a car wash and
bake sale at school Saturday, Feb. 27, and the
money v.•ill be used to obtain additional literature
and casse ttes for the library," be said. These may
be used either at the school or taken home and
studied by the studerits.
Brian, sixth grade representative, showed win·
ning posters depicting the dangers of drug abuse
from a recent contest spo nsored by the enthusiastic
group.
PREVENTIVE PROGRAM
Geared to the IO to 14 junior hi gh age group.
who probably are not already users, Smarteens is a
preventive type program. We stly explained.
'Since it was introduced in Santa Monica by
Robert K. Squire it has spread to schools all. over
the country and is e~uraged by such noted per·
sonalities as Jack Webb, Art Linklett.er. Bill Cosby
and Greg ~1orris.
Dr. Robert Peterson, superintendent of Orange
Co unty Schools, is a member of the Smart Set/
Smarteens board of direetors. The program to en·
courage young people to be responsible for its own
drug abuse problem through common sense and
education has been endorsed by the county school
board.
Although Westly feels there is no magic cure
in an y program, members or Smarteens are dedi·
cated to helping other young people avoid the drug
kick .
"And if we save even one, it's worth it,'' he
maintains.
Ffeart Full bf Compassion
• DEAR ANN LANDERS' Please doo't
tb1nk I am crazy. I need your help.
l'm a 1irl 15, medium height, and t
wear 1ir.e nine shoes. Js there a med icine
that will thrink reet -or an operation
that might help? I've heard of tall people
belne made aborter through surgery.
I am willing to go through anylhing
to have norm1l •iz.e feet.
Wheoevei-1 110 to buy shoes the clerk
ahakea hia head and brings out the
plalnest looklng clodhoppers yoo can im·
fgine. I'm 10 ashamed of the way my
feet look,, I eould die. To makf matters
•one, 1 am still growing. Tr my feet
get much bigger, I'll have to wear
l\lllbolt.s. Pleau suggest something. 1
am -DESPERATE JN MAINE
, DEAl\ M"AJNE1 A doctor eu't 1bortea
•
ANN LANDERS [il
your feel. But 1lu nlne 11 nothing
to get anglued 1bout ao stop worrying,
I auggest that you like 1 1lroll through
an orthopedic hospital or a ward for
handlcapptd children. You'll come oul
thanking God for two feet that can
take yoU whtr(Ytr yoa want to 10.
DEAR ANN LANDERS, Recently you
printed a letter from an 18-year~ld boy
who signtd himself, "Gay But Not H•p-•
py." You gave him the right advice
and I hope he listens to you. J speak
fl-om experience.
I knew 1·was a homosexual but wAs
convinced that if I married I would
be able to lead a straight life. Jn all
innocence I married a lesbian who was
playing the same game. She didn't know
about me and I didn't know about her.
ti It weren 't so tragic It might have
been funny. The marrlljt 111ted all
••• • :;I', ·--r. \~· ' .. ·~· ... ....,. ,_ I ..
1 >k' ' . " , ' .~ -~·"-.. .• ~ . . ··~ ' ,, ' . ' ... . ,. .. ~ .. "' '\'., • •• ~. f' ·!' ' " ~ ',}n • •• '~:· . , . ,. • 1.. " ,.. ' . • . . ~
Wings Dusted Off for Magic Carpet Ride
Taking a Magic Carpet F1ighl Into Fashion will be
rnembers and guests of Orange County Dusty Win~s
\v hen they gather at 11 a.m Saturday, March 20, 1n
the Newporter lnn. The event is the ninth annual
luncheon show presented for the benefit of the
Salvation Army's Summer Camp Fund. Adding a
magical touch to plans are Mrs. James A. Moroney
Oeft) and Mrs. Kenneth D. Strahm.
'
Secret to Filling Big Shoes
or six months. She" went back to her
girl fr iend and l went back to my
gay pals.
Three years later J married aga in.
Th~ lime I chose a heterosexual woman.
She said she loved me and didn't care
about anything else. We have com-
panionship but no se:r life to speak
of. I realize now J should not fiave
tried to fool the world, or myself. T
!i!hould have hHd therapy and learned
how to live with the problem. I feel
like a heel for having married thi~
woman. She is 11 fine person and 11ay1
the is willing to "settle," but 1 ha ve
done her a grave Injustice.
Please print my letter for those for
whom It moy not be too lite. -MAS.
QUERADE
DEAR MASQUERADE : Thanks for
writing. And n11w • word about your
~Ue. Don't feel guUty. A wom1n
who marries 1 homo1e1aal and Is willing
to "1ettle" 11 getting what 1be wants
-wblch ll mostly lo bt left alone.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My parents
are first generation Orientals. It ls to
be expected Lhat they hnve developed
pattern!J of eating different from those ,
of lhe Western world. One that bothers
me a great deal, especially when guests
are present. I:. the slurping or ~up.
Both parenta: read your C(llumn and
agree wllh your advice. Since I have
been unsucce54ful in 1ettln1 this idea
across to them perhapJ U you would
mention it in your column you might
succeed where l have failed. -
SENSITIVE SON
DEAR SON: Retralntnc p1rent1 Is vt.ry
itlfftcult. I don 't rtt0mmtad IL Ano1bet
foreign custom 11 bekbtns loudly Iller
a meal u 1 tomplime111 to the eook.
Bt Olankf\ll for 1mall fa\'on.
Too many couples go from matrimony
to acrimony. Don't let your marriage
Oop before It gela started. Send for
Ann Lander!!' booklet, "Marriage -Wb11t
tG Expect." Send your request to Ann
Landers in care or the DAILY PILOT
enclosing so cent! In coin and 1 lone.
stomped, 1<U·addrcsstd envelope.
I
I
I
l B D~l y i'llOT . ihul1day, Ftbftlary 25, 1971
' Hear~t · ·'Reporter
..... -... ...._ .
(
By BARBARA DUARTE
01 tllt 0.11\' "* lltlt
"There's no women's vote fact she was ill.
A J.>nlt1; J¥tgfl:UC \li'Oman prtachtd ·, a nioraJ' J(sson In
defense Of ~eri c•untry MOhda~ IIIOl"jlln& tbat . .i,1t few
lislener8 unmove11: ~' l
anymore," she declared, ··we returned W Los
ttcalllnt, he1 coverage of Angeles and l kept my first
women's suffrage a death watch/1 she said. After
mo\'ement prompted by a watching nurses golna: in 1nd
deep conviction women's votes out of the room as she sit
t'ould inject moral values into
• NEWSWOMAN
Adela St. Johns
'
/'
Newspape~man \A:d e I a
Ros•rs St. Johns, 'Jif'bo has
covered some o• lhl:: biggest
news stb'rih for ·~-H_earst
chain in her mor~ a.Lon ' hal(
century of writing, $)lf\ounced
in no uncertain · .#mu tho!
future ol Amer~a lies in,
spiritual ·and moi-al valufs of
its young womeir ...
Q(Joting Ceorfi Washington
01. his birthday as she spoke
for the Town Hall Serles
sponsored by the Assistance
League of 1.aguna Beach, Mrs .
St. Johns reiterated his belief
that ~mocracy must stand
on morality and virtue.
democrac). .
PIGTAILED REPORTER
"Find me a auffragelle
\\'ho's attractive," William
Randolph Jiearst said to his
pigtailed cub reporier one.day.
And find one she dkl· -
an attractive redhead who
toured the country ple1ding
her cause with the young
reporter in tow to record the
stories for her paper.
Jn Texas, ~frs. St. Johns
recalled, the young woman
elected lo address a crowd
in an outdoor park during a
heavy downpour dea:plte the l Home a Hoop Shot
• i Memory.:; Bends Mother
I Uy ERMA BOMBECK 1 went crazy trying to keep
. , . an antiseptic house in a wet· ? "What 1~ heavens nam~ is AT shoestring world. Then one
• that hanging o~,~r your dirty , day I was doing tareteria duty i clothes hamper . asked moth· W /T'S with a mother of Six children
; er. "II looks like a basketball END who said a curious thirig. '
·I hoop m~de out of a bent coat "I wonder how my kids will
• hanger. remember me' Wlll they l ''It's a basketball h~p mad~ so the boys can build up their remember me ·as a mother
! out _of a bent coat anger, muscles." · who never had riDis around
I ~~dlOoi:s terrlbte .l' , The 'rouble ~th mother is the bathtub or will they
"That'S iasy far J'OU to she hai foi"got1'1 what it i:s: ~emembe; the popcorn we ate
• ·· ·"·I s3'.d "You doi'l't have like to live f.n i house in the living room. . ! ~), n1n ihrough dirt y furrrlstiefl irt "Cont~~rer:.y "\Viii they. remember .how
'underwear in your bare feet Children.-'' I used to fight it. many. committees J chaired,
lor find the laundry before too. At ooe time I was so or will they r~membe.r the
you can do it. When the boys naive I thought only edible fresh doughnuts 1n the kitchen
improve on their hook shots things belong~ in the after schooJ?
I'll have it made." refi'igerator. bicycles without ""1111 they remember how
, "What's this?" she' scowled. wh~elf should be discarded cleverly I coordin.11.l.ed the blue
I "You mean that b8.r in the and if you had eight peopl~· in the sofa with the pillow '
door you just cracked your lo dinner, all the glasses had cushions or will they
head on? It's an exercise bar to match. remember I hung the outline t of their hand in the livinp;
I, Assoc1.at1'on Needs ~~n~ir'!k• it was '" original
"It's funny," she said, "I
cami: from a large, famil y
in the hall, she was summoned
to the bedside.
If a man can die for his
country so can a woman, her
friend told her. I know what
the women's vole can do, and
l 'm alad I did it.
Less than an hour later.
the reporter was to Ille a
news story and an obituary.
Using the etample as a
springboard lo what women
can accomplish, the best-
selling author noted the distaff
vote rid the country of the
use of child labor by largl!
industrialists.
And, in later years at the
LORRE LANGOON
Engaged
Friends
Hear News
The forlhcoming
of Lorre Langdon
htesa and John S.
marriage
of Costa
Rance of
·Suffrage Fl·ames
W'a:ini of J_ Edgar Hoover,
Mrs. St. Johns toured 28 1lates
speaking on parole abU!e. M
a result, women f o r m e d
committees to oversee parole
boards and exert pressure
again.st .lndbcrimlnate release
of habitual criminals.
Jn rli: months, parole rules
were tightened up.
"Would you ralher have
chlJd I a b o r or drug
addiction?" ahe asked.
One deatroys the body: the
other the mind, she added.
"Where are the women's
commlltees to eliminate drug
s1lea right on the
acboolgrounds? Where are the
&J"OUps to boycott drua: firms
which produce these drugs?"
It would take women's vote
one year to stop drug abuse,
she charged, and f o r
leadership lhe looks to the
young women of the country.
Recalling some of the great
female flgute1 1he h a s
encountered, the writer cltu
Eleanor Roosevelt who kept
balance in the party and was
the guiding light behind the
President after he w a 11
stricken by polio; author
Rachael Carson who ls quoted
in the Congressional Record
a1.o having prompted a n
ecology movement to save the
cruntry while others turned
their backs, and Elsie Parrish,
an obscure chambennaid in
a third rate. hotel in Spokane,
who stood up to the Supreme
Court to win the battle for
a minimum wage law.
' DEEPLY SPIRITUAL
Mrs. St. Johns ties her deep
spiritu1l conviction to the fact
she wu educated by a
grand.tether whose basic texts
were the Blble and "Pilgrim's
.Progress."
Looking loward a brighter
day for America, she sald
her past two years of travel
in cities across the country
have given her perspective
and a desire to eipress what
she truly feels.
She feels there is a spiritual
rebirth taklng place and cited
a recent talk she gave to
500 high !Chool students who
kept her up until 3 a.m.
diacussing the New
Testament.
"It can take 10 men to
build a city," she declared,
"but 50 rlahteous men could
have 1aved Sodom.
"Somewhere there must be
50 women who ean save
Califol'lli•, and in so doing,
save • country."
Clipped Wings Charmed
Hollywood's Magic CasUe Orange County which will be the Mmes. Louis Abel,
will beguile kings, queens and comprise tbe Los Ana:eles Charles Ball, John Clark,
jokers of Clipped Wings, Chapter. Richard Frescni, Peter
United Air Lines Stewardess Any woman who has served Horton, Kimmino Johnson,
Alumnae. as a United or Capitol Airlines Robert Kleier, Janet Lehman,
' They will gather ror the stewardess is eligible for Madaeo, Leon Pugh, Paul
final social event of the winter membership. Serving as Salata, Jim Shaffer, Michael
season Sunday, Feb. 28. president of the chapter is Sherry, Richard SJ a y t o n ,
Beach
Couple
To Marry
Mr. and Mn. Richard A.
Hulme of Huntington Beacb
have announced the
engagement of t..beir dall&hter,
Camille Diane Hulme to
Vincent Bradley Brew, son of
Mr. and Mra. William BrelF,
also of Huntington Beach.
The announcement w a 1
made during a family pariy
in the Hu1me home.
Miss Hulme, a senior al
Fountain Valley High School
is a past worthy advisor of
the Huntington Beach
Assembly, International Order
of Rainbow for Girls.
Her flance Ls serving In tbt
?.farine Corps. stationed .t
Cherry Poinl. N.C.
No date has been set for
the wedding.
APPRAISALS
DIAMONDS
GFMSTONES
ESTATE JEWELRY
South Co•if Pl•1•
l ri1tol •t s.n Oi•tO Fwy,
Coll• Mei• 540-9066
F o rm e r s t ewardesses, Mr:s. William Radin, Palos Wendell SmJth, Jean Stocki,
husbands and gue1ts will meet Verdes, and vice president is Marshall Stuart, Paul
for a social hour at 6:30 p.m. ?\-frs. Harold Madsen, Orange. Wagenbacb John Wright and
followed by group an dj_A~t~tejndin~· ~g.:f~ro~m~th~~~a~re~a;;_~°'~-~Jo~y~c~e~N~a~n~ce~.iiii~iiiiiiii~iiiiii~f~~ individual magic s ho w .s •
Completing the evening will
be a 9 p.m. dinner in the
Fog Cutten restaurant.
Attending will be members
of the five area groups
including Valley, City West,
Pasadena, South Bay and
The ,Tee
Tattler
TAX CLEARANCE
N•xt Monday Is business Inventory t1x tlm• I W• wlll giv• you this t•x
plus eddltlonal discount If you 11lect your pl1no or organ before M1rch 1.
Come in tod•y •nd uv• I
ASK US
ABOUT
9UICK
PIAN,05 &
ORGANS
! . • F. • d and I can't even remember Comm .l)nlty 'rt .en s what color my bedroom was Long Beach was announced cam02!!!li:ElmOZIC!89
WAYS TO
LEARN
KEYBOARD
MUSIC
Wh~!.:~;~. ~!:';~T •. ~.I .. ·w;; .:u,$549
be t i .. i119 your f•1n ily •nioyrnenl -40 .,,.,.,
fro1n now 1
Volunteers willing to serve
·as Community Friends arc
~needed to participate in the t pilot program developed by
i the Orange County Association
! for Mental Health. j" Mrs. Joseph DiloriO,~prOfKt
•·chairman, announced that the
; program, fK1\W ln I~ third year j in Orange unty, has been
.·so successfu that it is being
)duplicated in several other ~counties by eh ters afflUated
~with the Califon\ .._A · ·
) for Mental Heall .
: After a to.hour training
: program and wilh copUnuing
:support, the Co munity
:·Friends will k vt'ith a
~con\ralescent from
)
i Dimes Do rs
·, I ~ Funds were raised for the
~March of Dimes during an
~annual potluck sponsored by
; the Newport Harbor Business
~and Professional Women's
'. Club in ~ Newport Beach f home of Mrt. H. B. Pearce.
: Mrs. Janice Haines.
! president, presented t h e
{proceeds to Mrs. J. P.
:Sutherland, field representa-
• tive and executive director -0r
; the •Jrietional : Foundaiion.
or if there was mud ill the
hallway or fingerprints around
a mental disorder on a one-to-the light switches. All I can
~~e =s ~~elp;g h~:;~a;~ r::e~~r ~~ ==z~au:~~=~i~~~·
ol everyday living and sett ing hoop my mother made out
in the community: ' or a bent coat hanger and
Volunteers whore cent J y put over the clothes hamper."
cOritpleted their trainin g . _I don't know how the kids
program include the Mmea:; . will remern&er me. Only that
Flo)ld 'Holhuxl. J o .. s e phi ii e the other day l knocked ~n
Metzger aild Gerara·c1ausing the bathroom door and said. . ' "It's your mother," and a Miss Jane Struchen and Clay voice said "Mother who ?"
Wiens. •
A new training session will
begin April I, and anyone
interested in participating in
the project may contact the
1'-1ental H e a I t h Association
office.
Two films on childbirth will
be shown tonight at 8 in
Laguna Federal Saving and
Loan building for members
and guests of Chi'ldbirlh
\Vithout Pain, P r e p a r e d
Parent League, South ~t
Chapter.
The public is iJlviled to view
a French film "Childbirth
Without Pain" and an
American film "Childbirth for
the Joy of lt."
Heart Fund
come see th• new range
• -~ ~'CORNING ... ' . ~
-..
The m o' t r•volutionery
•dv•nc& in coo~in9 irt I 00
y••r1!!
e NO BURNERS
e NO COILS
e NO DRIP PANS
Just • fl•f .. whit• surf.tee..
CornpMit• th•rmcisl•tic
he•t control.
THE COUNTER THAT COOKS!
FACTORY SPECIAL
SAY~ $)00
a ... $5H
INCLUDIS SET OF I CORNIN<i COOKMATE5
lnt•9rity and D•p•nd.bility 1inc • 1947
Old fovodte-
llghtw•ight,
woahobl•
l•r1•y-
traY•ls
better, f•el1
cooler in now
1pring
colarlngi.
Choo•• from
the pick of
during a party for h i s
fraternity, Sigma Pi.
Parents of the engaged cou-
ple are Mr. and tttrs. James
C. Langdon of Indio and Mr.
and Mrs. Edward L. Rance
of Yucca Valley.
The bride-elect ii a graduate
of Newport Harbor High
School and College of the
Desert.
SIDS
COSTA MISA (Vt l it. N .11tlrl St.I
;
411 I. Htfl St.
"4"'1614 MClf ,., Set.,.,
-' ..
El TORO
i.o,.ooa Hilk PJ..
tHett ,. hv·O••
U7•JIJO tlelly 11-6 M/, 10.t
1"' .....
'
84 HUNTINGTON CENTER
HUNTIN•TON l lACH
IN.rt te l•rter ""' ,,,,., .. ,.,
A"91 HI Ollo\M.lllAill MALL
l"U~LlllTOM
DAILY PILOT CARRIERS
HONOR ROLL
The DAILY PILOT ir pToud of its coTps of young salesmen who deliveT the nt!Dspaper to youT door. Thes•
11oung men are the cream of the community. Each month, the be.!t of them will be selected for listin g on thi
Hanor Roll. Each carrieT listed here has obtained at least four new customers during the past month, had no
moTe t/lan one cmtomeT complaint for the month and must have paid hfs bill for the newspapers he bought
''wholesale" on time. Numeral in front of star (• J preceding llis name indicates nu mber of consecutive months
th.at carrier li.a.s been on the Honor Roll.
Cole Htrll Chri1 Schw11J ,. lto91r H1rri1
I. J. ltoridc M•rk MtcOon•hl ,. Oen11i1 St1lono
l ri111 H1i11 K1 .. i11 O'Sulli .. 111 ,. Owithl Althi•il•
Thorn11 C1rry Scott Jordtn ,. J••"Y Mu"'I••
Oe•n lt im111c0Jy ltob1rt Ri nn '. John F-H.le
Nick t-lodt11 ltoll•1t Me F• l' l rtle Underhill
lto111ld Mc0111i11i Ric•y lobd•tl ,. Mik• Spreilr
E4wl11 Stodd•rlll O•vi.i S•in11•• ,. o ... , fletcher
Miki Armilro119 M•rk W!ndtiul ,. II.on Ruuo
Metthew M1uln•r '?r•i9 ~.lt.,.1n ,. C1rl Se••r•
Victor Y111tor11 Ry•n R111o r ,. l••ry C1rn11b1ll
llrutl l oyl•n ltob1rl llru111wic • ,. Jon G1rm1h•u11n
Mtrk Moor• G•r'f l ridt•1t11ck ,. Deryl 01tr1Mler
Mike Wt lh Mike He11lhor" ,. Jeff Rund 1tl
Dout Pillon Robi11 Tullt111r1 ,. Joe 011 .. ,,
Scot Willitmi M l~• 01; ... , ,. Miki Htc1
Don Jone1 Freddy Sheuch•1 ,. M•rco l1li1u
ltob!n Schwtri !ton V•111u11 ,. Tlm Cl1w1011
JERRY MUNYER, 12, COSTA MESA
~ Carrier of the Month
~
Son ef Mr. 111d M,,, J1rom• Munyer, of l461 $1nle Cl1r•, Co1t1 p.1111, 11 • .,,11 ,.11J
J••"Y Mwny•r h•1 '''""'' th• Me1• Wood1 '''' 1ince NoYtmll•r, lt6t. A 6th t rt41t t!v41ent el
l11r Stretl Schiel, J1rrv Ul•t hi1 route pro filt lo lll'lpro~t •rMI td••nc1 h!1 lrtini11t •Ith tht
•c,01411111. Ht 1lr114ly htJ b1111 1tudyit1t !he in1tru111e~t for l'1•1 1,1,..
)' M i~1 l1i!ey ,. lob Runo ,. Pit Cr•in ,. M1 rk Spi•y ,. Alyo Orli1 ,. o,.;4 lr11rn111
•• Mi•• Felde .. 01 .. id o.1m1n11 .. John Moi1e
•• Rcib•rto lune ,. Steve Crtin .. Scott T ttrell •• !coll McK;n1ie ,. Miki P•d1 l90 ,. P•ul And1Jto11 ,. Chri1 l•rlow
ll' lliU ltrrtll , .. lob Holl1nd ,,. Ot vid Cellini
I
i' I
' • • ' . .
Thursd1)', February 25, 1q71 DAILY rllDf J9 \
Horoscope: Capricorn ·changes Direction ' :•
• ·.
FRIDAY should be done as team effort. abllity to perceive future PISCES (Feb. 19-Mart.h 20):1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
FEBRUARY 2b Some who want to back you trend&, cycles. Financial opportunities 11e
need reassurance. Be gentle. C~RlCORN (Dee. 22..Jan. prHenl. Be thorough. Check By SYDNEY 0,\1ARR Display chann. Let others 19): Progress could change details. Your earning capacity
Vlr10 women art shrewd. have spotlight. direction. \Yhat )'OU thought is due for review. Get money's
but Ibey can also out1mart SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): was objective may have only worth. Accent quality. Build
tbemse l\'cs. On the poslll \·e Slow pace. Finish task which been temporary. Shake off on solid foundation. Then you
1lde, these wome-n are perce~ has been delayed, postponed. tendency to be fixed in views. aain.
ti d.rful d U r I • • k nd G · lo fl/Id ollt mo'* •"°"' YOUtltll ve, won " Key is to maint.aJn steady pro-Loo arou . Experiment. a1n •ftd 11rroio.v. 0<aer swaMV 0rn1rr'1
emergtncy 1ltuallons a nd gress. Ignore work associate new ally. !°:.!~,.~,.!:'·b1r1i:i!,. "_':h .. ~~~:
knowledgeable about health. who complains, sings blues. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 10 0m1rr '°'*'•'·the DAILY l'ILOT,
,, The Virgo woman adbon Improve efriciency. l8): Sludy Ciprlcora message. !Ol! 32~. Grind c1n1r11 11w11an. New
I l I lhod Th. -''"""'·c:""°''"·"''~"''"''°------,11 s oven Y peop e, me s. 15 SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22-Be flexible. '-1ake concession ,-
woman knov.·s lb e value of Dec. 21): Good lunar aspect to close relative. A journey, FAIR
money but finds It difficul t coincides with investment op-visil could be featured . F•tl, f1ir, f1ct11•I. Thet•
DTERT
Quallt11 Footwear
For Women and Clllldren
225 E. 17th STREET
COSTA MESA
54a.2n1
tG adjust to a budget. She porlunities. Key ill to have Numerous ideas are available th,., •••'• 111m 11111 f1cf•tt 111
ts bright. lo\'es to read, is confidence in original oon-for more oomplete develop-•111•reti•" •II the DAILY PILOl
a natural teacher and, very1 ~c~e~p~ts~. ~U~til~ize~~y~o~..r~n~a~t~ur~a~I _;m~e~n~l.~;_;::~~~~~~·~'~ito~'~;,~I ~··~·~·~·~"~"~''~'~· ~~!~~~~~~~~iiiiiii:iiii:iiii:iiiiiiiii:iiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ orten, an autt.orlly on nutrl·li
Uon .
Queen
ARIES (~1arch 21-April 19):
Cooperate with others Jn pro-
ject, but don't diminish in-
dividuality. This is 11ot as dif·
ficult as it might appear. State
desires. Listen to others. But
maintain flair of originality.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Be aware of what happens
behind the scenes. Ta k e
nothing for granted. Get
answers to questions. You can
make valuable contacts
through social gal her in g ,
Laugh at your own foibles.
West Grove Council, Beta Sigma Phi cro\vncd 1t1rs.
Dennis Huish Valentine Queen during a corona-
tion ball in Abrahams Hall. Orange. She '''as at·
tended by ?\lrs. Kenneth 1'-loore and Mrs. Donald
Gardner, runner.up.
GE~flNI ·(~fay 21-June 20):
Accent on friendships,
roinance, fu 1ri11 men t of
desires. Key is to be aware
of fine points. Read betv.•een
the lines. Someone is trying
to tell you some thing .
Breakthrough is indicated.
Champagne Brunch CANCER (June 21.July 22):
Put ideas to work. One in
position of authority will now
accept suggesticns. Prestige
is on the line. Investigate
\'atious possibilities. But con-
centrate on ultimate goal. Wedding Plans •Told
SARAH WILCOX
Fall Brid•
A fall wedding is being plan-
ned by Sarah \Vilrox and
}fcnry N. Schwendimann Jr.
News or their engagement
and wedding plans wa s reveal-
ed during a champagne
brunch given by the bridc-
elect 's parents, Air Force
Brig. Gen. (ret.) and Mrs.
William \Vilcox of Newport
Beach.
~liss \Vilcox a l t e n d e d
Louisiana Stal~ University,
Northern Arizona University
and is a graduate of California
State College at Fullerton.
Her fiance, son of Mr. and
ti.1rs. Henry N. Schwendimann
of Santa Ana. is a graduate
or Foothill High School, at-
tended Santa' Ana Junior
College and the University or
Southern Califoniia, ana is a
senior at CSCF:
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You
may feel drawn in two direc-
tions at once. Consult family
member. Be in harmony with
desires of loved one. Going
too far afield could be
mistake. Gain shown through
written word.
VIRGO (Aug. 23.S.pl. 22):
Tax. estate matters are to be
considered. Member of op-
posite sex is \'ery mu ch in
picture. Don't fool yourself.
You \Viii pay ror what is
re<:eh·ed. Interest in occult
may be aroused.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
Accent on marriage.
partnerships. \\1hat you do now
Ski Buffs
Head North
Shades of the Sea
Captured on Canvas
Laguna Niguel Ski Club will
kick off a week of skiing in
Aspen tonight as members
gather in the Laguna Niguel
home or ~tr. and Mrs. ·\Valter
Burris.
fi.1embers joining the hosts
for a ski trip fro m Sunday,
Feb. 28 through Monday,
March 8, include the P.1essrs.
and f\.fmes . Robert
Hez malhalch, Larry Lizotte.
\Valdo Ortega. Ronald Kenny
and Jack Weber.
Capturing the beauty of the
sea on canvas will be ~Trs,
ttlarshall (JoyceJ Clark, who
"·ill appear as guest artist
when the Huntington Beach
Art League meets at 7:30 p.m.
~1onday, 1.1arch 1, in the
recreation center.
Famous for her seascapes,
batiks and mosaics. the
artist's works hang in many
Club Tapes
Panel Talk
An informal panel discussion
of history, goals and training
programs initiated by the
Toastmistress Club will be
presented for the S a n
Clemente club at II a.m. on
~1onday, March I.
Panelists the ~1mes. Harold
itarkham, Charlotte Burgess,
Frank Clewell and Homer Holl
will have their opinions
recorded on tape for television
viewing at a later date.
Hosting the meeting will be
the Mmes. Gordon Fleemer.
Edward H'Ard and Burke
.Cochran. The meeting w i 11
be in the Municipal Golt
Course restaurant.
'Ebell Couples
Take Armchair
To Australia
Narrator Charlton Heston
will lake Laguna Beach Ebell
Club members and husbands
on an armchair tour of Fiji.
Tahiti, New Calendonia, New
Guinea, New Zealand and
Australia on Pi1onday, Pifarch
I .
The ([Im, lo be shown In
the Laguna Beach A r t
ASJOClatlon Gallery, w a s
commissloned by thl':
A1..,lrfl.li&n and New 7..ealand
travel bureaus.
Mr s. John Mudge .
refreshment hostess, wlll be
aulsttd by Mrs. Grace Meluso
and Mrs. Jeff Townsend.
privat~ collections throughout
this country including Hawaii.
She tra\'els the \Yest Coast
and Hawaii frequently
capturing the many faces of
the sea and is considered a
specialist in color, texture and
design.
She will be the inst.ructor
on an art cruise to the Sooth.
Pacific which is scheduled to
get under \vay in the near
future .
Mrs. Clark will be presented
by ~lrs. Ora Brimer, vice
president and p r o gram
chairman, and will offer a
The club meets the second
Tuesday of each month in
P.1onarch Bay Beach Club for
a business session and ski
movies. Upcoming trips.
include outings to P..1ammoth
and Squaw Valley.
Those interested in
JntmHership may c o n t a c t
George 11cMillen. president,
or Mrs. Walter Burris, trip
chairman.
demonstration of her lr========== technique. using vib rant colors.
Her completed painting will
be a\\'arded to a member of
lhe audience.
The public is welcome to
attend the meeting and no
admission is charged.
CiU.DUATE COll:5ETIEJIES
D'1 011d DD'1
"!t Comlo1t1ble In Yovr Cup~··
Sandy's Fluff 'n Stuff
ue ll, ltTll SI.,
Celll Mt"° -Mlllfl'lfl l•lla••
-"1·J4• -
Chris! is the spirit of Truth and Love !hat Jesus
taught and lived. It comes to each one of us \li'hen
we are receptive to it.
No matter how far you may feel from the Christ,
you can discover it for yourself. You can recognize
its power to meet any situation.
You may learn how by coming to our study room
and reading this week's Bible Lesson. Jt conta.ins
ideas that heal.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ~OOM
CMI• Mtu, ,,,., Cllvrcll llf Cll,ht, lci....1111
11ff M•t• V1r111 Or.
tlv"tfnt191! 1~11 • "lrtl CIWrtll llf Ch•ltt, lcffl>ll•l 1lf M•I~ JI.
Hl•llof•! SN(h • l'l"I Cllvrch el Cl\,111, SCl•ftll'I
~u vi. 1.111e "'"'"°r1 ••' • heenf Cllvrch ef t~'111, Sclffll"'
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20 DA!LY PILOT lhul1d.ay. J•ma ry 2S, 1•11
TV Review Master's Dance Prodnction
'First 9 Months ' Engaging
Hy C'fr-i.'THJA LOWRlr They "'ere Ken Berry and
J a ck it Jcwph, James
F1rtonUno and Michele Lee,
and Sonny and Cher Bono.
The progr1m atarted with !he
official' notice they were
"infa ntic ipftina.'' a wor d
somehow inrorporeted in a
prod uct ion number c a 11 e d
"Ladies in Waiting."
E11tertaining at UC l1·vine
KEW YORK CAP ) -"Th•
first Nine Months Are the
Hardest." an NBC 11ptti1l
Wednesday nlaht, was nnt the
most subtle show of lhe
season. but it had a theme
-pregnaney -and the
1ketches and lyrics of its
special music stuck to lhe
comedy premise.
Dick Van Dyke played bosl
And obste trician during the
hour "·hile the joys and
terrors of app r o 1 c hlng
parenlhood we~ de lineated by
three couples who are married
and are rather engaging
professionals. -
It ended. of course, with
the big event.
Every cliche of appro achin11
mothe rhood was e i: p I o r e d
except the one Jnvolving
pickles and ice. c r e a m .
Sketches were buU t around I.he
size of the doctor 's fee,
morning JSickness, prenatal
TV DAILY tOG
Thursday
Even ing
FEBRUARY 25
1:'>11 O l it !Mn .lll'f)' Dun1111r
O QflC Nflnlrvlu Tom Snrdtr.
0 Ttlt AlleR ... T1nt1tivet~
scheduled ruesh 11• Rudy V1l:ee
s•n1u lesley Gore. psychic Kud1
Bu•. comed11n lou15 Nye &1 co .....
0 Sit O'tlod lllt•it: "'Tiit Min
Wiie Sllol Ubtrty Vt luiu" Candu
s1on (wtStern) '62-John W1yne
Ja111e1 Strw1rt, ltt N1rw1n. Veit
M1l1s., £dmond O'Brltn. Alldy De
Mt. Ken Murr1y. When liberty
V1l1nce terrorizes 1 1m1ll welltrn
town. ht is owo•d trr two -
1 r1nther 111~ 1 t1nd1rfoot llW'fll
When he loses IR eltctioil. tht IU1·
mtn cltm1nd1 1 1holiidown.
0 Diet V•n DP•
m "" Flinhttnn
(IJ [t {l) Stu Tr.~
l:lD 0 c-IW c. .. ,. m f\t Flyi~I JllUR
fD .......... "41< m kltdtd fll•/llh11iu!e m TM Dtwrt ltptrt
m Ln Oivld•"'
llJAIC -
I
l:tO IJ ~CJ) JI• H1bol'1 ltnnt,MI
Emie ford i nd J11!11 Budd 111"1. I m T1 TtA tlle Trul~ G1ny Moort
It trost
Wrl t6dell, YlYI , 1no Utfft "'""'"
"· m Olympic l t1in1
ID NET '11yhou1t e• tl!t Jh1rtits
Clifford Od rt1' "Ptr1d111e lost," 1'1rt
t. Ell Wtllith •fld Jo Vi n Flett .iar
in this 1ymp1th1Hc picturt Ill ;ht
dectyin1 middle cl111 of 1111 Dt·
pression, t1rst l)rC>duced on Bro•d
WI J In 1935. -
€Jl) l'lth nt !or I.MRI
11 :>0 IJ 9 ([l Mtn Criffi11
0 l!J) Did Chttt A1J1111 Moort·
ht•d and tl'MI Mitty 'ritty Oil1 a1nd
111u!.
Actress Enigma
Osca.r Hope fuls V nkno·wn
By BOB TH0!\1AS
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -The
appeared in only one previous
movie, "Goodbye Columbus."
All three are Amencans.
NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES
"IMPECCABLE PRODUCTTON ... "m'''"'"' or
filmdom's a:ieat entertainment films of Ille golden d.lys."'
-SOO!Offl'l
"TOUCHING ,,, UNFORGETIABLE
LOVE STORY" (ML\
-MAY MANN. f ABUlOUS LAS VEGAS MAGA.ZIN( \HEW
. !.IJ~ -
11-"'fl ~ -..... _l MllCI• -
ANNA Cll.OER·MARSHALL TIMOTHY DALTON ....
• l!ll ........ c:;,,
._ .. l"O.OI.
~
"GOOD TO LOOK AT.,
·-
beautifully muted tones
mike ii seem e1rthier th in the 1939 version." -t A.1 •1o1 t
EXCLUS l\'E
ENGAGElllENT
f"t P•rltit•x
~iiss Jackson \\'as
nominated for her third film ,
"Women in U;ive." She is
English, as is Sarah Miles.
the only nominee experienced
in f i l m s . Nominated for
·'Ryan's Daughter." she
previously appeared in ''The
Servant." ''Those 1'1agnificent
1'1cn in Their F'!yi n g
1'1ar hincs." "The Cerenlony,"
"Blow.up." and other British
n1ovies.
\Vhy did Academy voters
nomina1e such newcomers'.'
for one thing, the woman's
role in films has b e en
declining ever sincl' \Vorld
\.liar II.
In the 1930s, there poured
forth hundreds of "women·s
pict ures." Female audiences
flocked lo matinees to agonize
!he travails of Norma Shearer,
Bette Davs , Joan Crav.1ord.
Greta Garbo, Barb a r a
Stanwyck and others.
The war brought a ne w
toughness and realism to the
screen. Movie scenes became
bigge r and more action filled,
requiring masculine st a rs .
Televi~ion destroyed theater
matinees.
"\Ve were lucky in the '30s ...
said Bette Davis. ''The studios
created scripts for us. Nobod:.o
writes 'women·s pi c I u r es '
an ymore."
For the last d~carle. "'omen
have been dis11ppcarin~ fr nrn
the Motion Picture Herald's
annual list of top box office
stars. This year's top 10
included only one actress.
Barbra Sleisand. who wa s No.
9.
With fe"•er fcn1ale box
ofrice stars a v a i I a b I e ,
producers have had rn s c e k
Cliff to Sta r
In \Veslern
HOLLYWOOD <UP IJ
Cliff Robertson ·will star in
Universal's "The G r ea I
Northfield, 1'1innesola Raid." newcomfrs.
The masruline tide rn<iy be a horse opera to be filmed
ebbing. H 0 11 r won rl is on location in Oregon and 1
no!oriouslv trend · 1·011~rious. California -not Minnesota.
~~;:~.~ c~~~~w~~I al~eea~,~~~~1·~.;.. ---"''" .....
filrn makers are now lea p1ng 1
on lhe "Love Sto r v ''I j
bandw::igon. Thal means ihey ' ·
will be needing bfight ne w1 ,
aetrcssrs to sta r in the coming 1 I
spa1e of mo vie romances.
-.. THfl f WAS A CROOKED I AN ADULT THEATRE
I<•" DMlt••-""''"' "•"Cl•
MAN"--IU nr;pil1 RESERVED SEAT ENGAGEM ENT\""""'\ "THE ARllA~°GEMENT" 1111 ilVrG \ \ l<otk °'""'11••-"•Y• Dun•wuy Toral~F.ii;1N!l~'.1 1 ~~p::o~R::,~::,~"~-=E=A=-~,-~R~E~1
em •••irtPn .... "' ...,. mn. ,..., lt:JO ID All·Hlrtrl Slrlw. "V.,llt tt ._ lr-==----~--------------<'I
,...hlttork 1'11ntt, ~ "llu11, '*Ydle.
111111" tnd "nit S11• Sh Int• l rl&fll." i
2905 E. COAST HWY., CORONA DEL MAR -67J-4260
tlJ V111b111HM
1:00 I) Mt¥1e: ''T11111wtt'1 P1rtn1r"
~wut1r11) '!l!I -Ron~l6 R11a1n,
Rhond a fltm1n1, John P17n1.
Costa Mesa Civic Pl ayhouse
pr•1•11h
"Here Lies Jeremy Troy" ••
1:051$1 Tt&l·Rttri9b M111k.lt
l:JO D Ill 00 ED '"°"~' ., .... 0...... JACl SHARKIT
o ~rn m-m Orrill 'mt Sllow ''Whit Ytu'~!
Alw1rs Wan!td '9 Kl'IOW About W6m
111." Gut!lt 111 M". NOl"Wlt ll Ylll·
mnt Petit, Gfn~t Clllta. 51t·
Ptb,10 •,.•ll M••.l l ' 8 CM•M11itJ l 1tlltU1 '°''' WEST GATI,
OR.AMGl COUHTT fAlltlJltOUNDS
2:>0 IJ ........ : ''Th• 1"111• (horror) ·r.s "'"'' '"'"' n ... 11"""' .. ""'" ll4Utr CurU1~ ,,_. 1:)1 l'.M. AOet 11 t).lf)Jl
--Annt Htywood, Pt!et Vin [Jtk. !~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;::;:;;;:;:;::;;:::~ Cec~ Pllt.«. I:
Fri day
DAYTIME MOVIES
0 "T'llt ,..,, •• .,, ..,.. {dni-
mt) '51-R•r D1nlo11. J~ l1ndcit, m "TM ,,.. "''°"' (dr1111•i '4> -Pt1 O'Brien, Robtrt ltJ•n.
I :00 m "Tht ltdlelor •n~ 1111 llob'1
t:Ol8 .,..,,,. It LKk(' (m11Slc1I) S.•ff" (tomtd1) '47-t.lrJ Gt1nt.
'43 -M1rJ Mtl11" Dit~ l'owtll Mytn1 lO)'. ~l,ley ftl\'IPI•.
"T1lt Flttt'• , ... ("1~11ctl) '42 -2:00 0 """' Tkl SUI" (com tdJ) '$~
Wllll1m Holdtn Ooroll1y ltmou1. j HtfllY fond1, Anthony Pti rkinl.
'J:JO &"Oll. Mtflf Oii, WtMHI" (um 4:30 II "T'9 Ovitt Min" Conc!u1lo11
td1) '17 -Dan lll!tty. b rll111 (dr11n1) 'S2-Jnhn WtJflt, M1u1"n
!Mii. I O'H111,
RAUCOUS BAWDY COMEDY
Moliere's l NOW PLAYING I
"The Imaginary Invalid"
~ .Jbuth Coast R.ep (;rtofy
. ' ' ' R1strv1tlona I ~ REPERTORY
Mother Earth 646-1363 I
10 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS
e I EST PICTUll.E
e I EST ACTO!':-G1orge C. Stott e I EST DIRECTOR
e IEST STORY •nd 6 MORE NOMINATIONS
"A war movie
tor people
who hate
war movies!"
-R1xR1«/
Hofid•y Mo191111n~
Cllll" 11 lllt'
iii ~ ..... _
10
Hille overdrawn with a shade
too much emphasis on the:
C h r istine-Ezra relationship
rather than on the "eternal
triangle" aspect stressed by
O'Neill. But it is a significant
work that should be seen again
by Uiose, i~cluding this critic,
who were impressed by Miss
Downes' clever utilliatlon of
dance form to express the
s o m e t i me s inexpressible
O'Neill .
lido
MrwfOn llACM -tot .. _
M ltMI-I.loll• hie -01-MIH
Abo Tiii• .t.codemr Wl11llff ··z··
Mon4oy thru Soturdcrf
"Z" Sho•ll crt 7:15
"FUNNT GI RL" -9:21
ACADE·MY AWARD
NOMINATIONS
1-BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR
2-BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS -
HELEN HAYES
3-BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS -
MAUREEN STAPLETON
4-BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
S-BEST COSTUME OESIGN
6--BEST ART OIRECTION
7-BEST FILM EDITING
8-BEST ORIGINAL MUSIC SCORE
9-BEST SOUND
HI-BEST SCREENPLAY
, ROSS KJllllt _,,_
AIRPORT -BURT UM CASTER· DEAM MARTIN
JEAN SEIERG •JACOUEUME BISSET;
I i.("91 ~ • ftCllQIOf"I •,_..I .....
~ -:.:!:" -=-«3
PRl MllilllE liNGAGEMlNTI
All M•cGr•w e Ry•n O'Nt ol
"LOVlt: STO•Y" (GI')
51111. • l n111·t, -"llO • l :ot • U:tO
,rl,•Sll.-j ·l ·U ·IJ '·"'·
521-2223 • ,1111u u .111. , fllUl•lll
E>1!=rw1iwt Drlwt •ln s~owlngl
"Allll'ORT" !GI
, pl11t e D111 ll~~er
F'T Nl COCl(!'fl(O CDWIOYS
ll DM C"'LICD DUNTllY" !GI •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• "cu"¥~ D11¥t·ln S~w1111 1 Wiii Dl1ney All C•IO• t"9w
"WIL D COUNTllY"
p!u1
"IDAfNll<S"
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• -......... • -~· "1·2411
E•Clultve Drlv•ln thew<111I
l ich. l enj•mltl·C•rri. Snoclgrff• !ltl
"Dl•ll'I' 01' A MAD HDUSIWll'E''
'''" "TELL fGI') THIM WILLIE IOY IS Nllltl"
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• -....... _, __ ,_ ,,_ ..
Sl4Ult
l'f'lm!trt D•tv ... 1" E"t•t•m'"tl
c; .. ,,. C. Seo" e Ctl1r
"l'"'TTOlf"
PlMI • AH Sii• (11t • (1l1r
"THE l.~0£51 DAY"
T .. J•-1...-Tl!rlll9" • ~lfr
h en C1-ry ''TNUl'tO•lllALL" IW~I "YOU OHL 'I' LIYI TWICI " l'rt 11tr-C"' l'ltM M•ti:~ I
T1Qe11 t11 1111 "''"
·' •
Thursday, January 25, 1971 DAILY PILOT J 1 .
Thou Shalt Not Film 4 ita Top IO
Law, Orde1· Series Soutli A frica's Censorsliip Strict
OAllY l"llOT Stfff ~.,.
Sad Fa1·ewell
Ruth \Vagner (center) bids goodbye to Beth Titus as
Ron Filian 'vaits for her in the closing scene of Wil·
liam Inge's "A Loss of Roses,'' closing Friday and
Saturday at the Nifty Theater in Huntington Beach.
By KENNETIJ L. WHJTlNC
PRETORIA , South Africa
(AP) Be c au se or
censorship, Clint EaslwoOd
will not appear in a cowboy
movie made in South Africa.
Instead, the film will be
shot In Italy where the star
of television's "Rawhide"
se ries has made several
\Vesterns.
The new Eastwood script
is called •·Thou Sh a 1 t Not
Kill." Icarus Films of Pretoria
planned to shoot it after com·
pleting another Western called
'·Three Bullets for a Long
Gun."
The small studio pinned its
hopes on original local screen
plays, excellent outdoor loca-
tions. good y,·cather. lo.w pro-
duction costs and occasional
casting af such established ac-
tors as Eastwood .
These hope:;; dimtned when
the Pub lic;itions Control Board
made "Three Bullets'' the
first film fro m a local studio
to be banned in this country.
No reasons were given and
no explanation offered.
f\1aj . Ramsey Joynt. di rec-
tor of Icarus, termed the ban
unduly harsh.
''The censors, If they are
lo act logically, should ban
90 percent of all Westerns
released for distribution in
South Africa," Joynt told an
interviewer.
"There is no more violence
or sex in my film than there
is in films which are already
on distribution throughout the
country."
All of Eastwood 's ltalian-
made Westerns have been
shown here , although some
scenes have been cut.
Pretoria-boi-n Beau Brum·
mell, who was a pop singer
in Britain in the early 1960.s,
26 BEST ACADEMY AWARD
NOMINATIONS AT EDWARDS CINEMAS
7 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS FOR "LOVE STORY" INCLUDING:
ALI
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BEST ACTRESS -
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BARBARA HERSHEY ;.
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10 .. OMINATIONS fOl "PA TIOll" UIC1UDllll1
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BEST ACTOR·
BEST DIRECTOR -
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. WEIK
•
wrote the script for "Three
Bulle!J" and "Thou Shalt Not
Kill."
"The plot ef 'Thou Shalt
Not K.111° revolves around the:
Bible and, as in 'Three
Bullets,' good prevails .._over
evil," he said. "As a matter
of fact there is quite a lot
of violence In the Bible."
Despite grumbling by Brum-
mel! and others, there are
no plans to relax movie
censorship. Quite the opposite
is expected. Parliament is
considering legislation which
would effectively tighten con-
trols.
If it passes as expected the
law will prohibit o p e n
discussion on films t he
Publications Control Board
has banned or the cuts made
in movies cleared for screen-
ing in and expurgated version
only.
The new law also would
c 1 amp down on the screening
of privately imported movies.
Prese nt controls monitor only
films designed for public view·
jng. The screening or banned
movies in private homes has
become a fad.
There has been a steady
increase in the last few years
of completely banned film s.
These include "Bonnie and
Clyde," "Guess Who's Coming
to Dinner" and "Jn the Hea t
of the Night.··
Such releases as "The
Gr aduate,'' ' ' f.t id n i g h t
Co\vboy" and ''Goodbye
Columbus'' were shown only
after I.he censors snipped out
certain scenes.
SCR Stages
Two Kinds
Of Satire
DAILY Jl lLOT 11111 Jllle19
Zap!
Hank Sorkin plays a
live \Vire cameo role in
"Generation," playi ng
Friday and Saturday at
the Huntington Beach
Playhouse.
~~~~~~~~~~-
Campanella
In 'Hamlet'
Television star Joseph Cam·
panella has joined two other
profe ss ionals , ~fonte
Markham and Vernon \Veddle,
in the acting company of the
Cal State Fullerton production
of "l-lamlet," which ope ru; a
seven-performance run in the
campus Little Theater on
Thursday. f\1 arch 11.
Appearing as guest artists
with an all-student c a s l ,
Markham, who also has t~·
tensive television and film ex-
perience. will play the title
role while Campanella is
heard as the ghost of Hamlet's
father. \Vedd le will appear as
the murderous King Claudius.
Reserved seals for this
special attraction ma y be ob-
tained by telephoning the Cal
State theater box office, 871)..
3371, y,•eekdays between noon
and 4 p.m.
Stro11g in Ratings
By IUCK DU BROW
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -The
exceptional popularity of law
er.forceme11t figures in
n e twork t ~le v i s ion
entertainment series is holding
up throughout the season in
the national ratings.
According to the program
rankings for the ty,·o ·weeks
ending Feb . 7, roughly one-
third or the top 22 shows have
police (or sherif£) heroes.
In addition, many of the
other series in this top echelon
of popolar programs have
strong authority fi~res. or
are very tradi tional in their
approach lo entert ainment and
American values.
Four of the top 10 shows
have law enforcement heroes.
They are ''Ironside'' lranked
fourth), "Hawaii Fi ve· 0''
(rlfth l, "Gunsmokc'' fse\'enth)
and "Adam 12" (ninthl.
Also in this catee:ory are
"Mod SQuad" (11th ). "The
FBI" (17th) and "The Smith
Family" (22nd). ABC-TV's
n~w h;iU-hour series in which
Hen ry Fonda portrays a police
officer.
Of all the new series entered
bv the networks at midseason.
"The Smith Fnmil\''' is the
only one y,·ith stroiig ratings
success.
The n a I i o n ' s too-ranked
proe:ram. "Marcus W e I by,
l\1.D.," has, of course. a HITT.ire
or authorit.v in its docto r hero
(Robert Youngl. And the
same element in inheren t in
the eithth-ratM ' ' Medic a I
Center" series.
"MAnnix ," v.•hich fini shed
12th, has a J,J:l amorous private
eye type who gives the anti·
law guys a bad time. And
"Bonanza '' and "The Men
From Shiloh" /both tied for
17th with ''The FBI") are
westerns with the u l'i u a I
pioneer he ·man authorilalive
approach.
or the other top-20 show~
with traditional cnncepts of
entertainment and/or value1.
one finds such entri's I.!
Luc ille Ball (ti'd for fifth).
the Walt Disney Hou r (tied
for ninth\, the Ringling Bros .
Circus Specia l (13th), Dean
Martin /14th), '·My Three
Sons" (15th\ 11nd the new
Mary Tyler Moore situation
comedy (16lhl.
The season's biRaesl .-ew
ratin.e.s hit. th' Flip Wilson
Variety Hour. came in third.
right behind the succes,,ful
'"f\.1ovie ol the Week ."
Traditional rural comettv
also showed Its muacle, with
"Grttn Acres" and 1'H~e
Haw" tied for 23rd ,
''Mayberry RFD" fini shini;t
25th and "The B e v e r I y
Hillbillies·• pla cing 31st -not
as hiizh as it used to be,
but still a1nnn2 television 's
priority "top 40.''
"Laugh-in." it seems. mav
riot rise again to the sky·hhth
ratin~s position it used to have
-almost always in the top
ty,•o or three shows. It is doing
very w e 11 , neverthele~s.
coming in 21st -but since
racing ABC-TV's Mo n d a y
ni~ht pro football games in
the fall . It has never quite
sro red as stratospherically as
before.
One rather nice ~urprise
was that Arthur Miiier's "The
Price ," don' for t h e
"Hallmark Hall of Fame."
and starrinJt George C. Scott.
came in 38th. which ·isn't bad
for a dramatic outing on that
occasional series of specials.
Anrl also of inteN'!st was
the fact that CBS-TV's new
situation comedy abou t a
prejudiced m i dd I e -c l 1 11 s
husb and·fat her, "All !rt !hr,
Family," ranked 23rd for lh"'
\Veek ending Feb. 7. althOUf!h
48th for the combined two.
week period ending on thal
date .
Two satirical comedies-<>ne
a 17th century classic and
one which seems to be becom·
ing a kind of mo d ern
classic-will share South Coast
Repertory's stage for the next
six ...,·eeks. Behel With a Cause
r-.1oliere·s biting examination
or quackery "The Jmaginary
Invalid, and the new musica l
revue fln ecology , "Mother
Earth," are schedu1ed for
tandem runs through April 1
al the company 's Th ird Step
Theater in Costa Mesa.
"Invalid" wUI play Fridays
::ind Saturdays, whlle "Mother
Earlh" holds down Wed·
nesday. Thursday and Sunday
slots. All performances are
at 8:30 p.m.
"Both productions have a
kind of similarity in terms
of relevance," according to
David M. Emmes, SCR's ex-
ecutive director. ' 'T he
f\1oliere. having survived for
some 300 years , is still very
much alive today. poking
good-natured but pointed fun
at medicine and its prac·
tit ioners ."
SCR's updated production is
another In a long series of
con1media presentations in·
corporationg a wealth of
'gags' and busi ness from cen-
turies of comi c tradition.
And, although only two
months old, "Mother £i:irth''
is a kind of classic in its
own right-at least in terms
of SCR experience. Combining
improvisational satire with
pop-rock musi c and lyrics, the
production ha s taken SCR and
Southern California by
surprise, completely selling
out its initial run. "Many
people couJdn't get tickets."
Emmes u.id. "so the run
has been held over to ac-
commodate all those who were
di!appointed."
PARK LIDO
CONYALISCINT CINTll
466 Fl ... 111, loed
New,•rt a.-" -64Jol044
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD (AP ) -Can
an actor talk him se lf out of
an Academy award ? Perh aps
so -if the actor happens
to be ti fiery rebel lik e George
C. Scott .
Scott kicked Oscar in his
golden pants this week by
requesting for the second itme
in his career that his name
be wit hdrawn from the lisl
of nominets for the Academy
awards. On Monday he was
nominated for best actor for
his performance in ''Patton."
"I simply do not wish lo
be involved," the actor told
newsmen in Spain, where he
is mak ing a film .
"Peculiar as it may seem,
I mean no offense lo the
academy." He previously had
said it would take too long
of an explanation to outline
his opposition to the awards.
but ·"the whole concept and
voling process could stand a
little overhauling.''
In his telegram to the
academ y, Scott said: "I will
not attend the award s
ceremony nor will a n y
legitimate representative or
mine attend ."
Said a longtime colleague
of Scott: "lsn't that just like
George? He could have won
the Oscar in a walk .•. But
George couldn't lea ve well
OPEN HOUSE
and MARDI GRAS
e ENTERTAINMENT
e REFRESHMENTS
e CRAFT DISPLAY
e DOOR PRIZES
SUNDAY, FEB. 28th
PARK
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Nprt • ._. '41·1044
Hui le """'n "4•Wlll" ..... 11.
11 DIM •t.
1 to S p.m.
enoug h alone. He was born
a rebel and he 'll die a rebel.''
Hebellion has marked t h e
43 years of Geor,ge Campbe ll
Scott and appears lo be the
wellspring of his immense
acting talent.
lie was born in Wise, Va.,
y,·enl to high school in Det'roit,
w he r c his father "'as a
corporation exOCu tive. Gforge
was a tou~h lad to handle,
even for the U.S. lilarines.
He enlisted al 17, began
drinking heavily and acquired
his broken nose dur ing one '
bender.
After fou r yea rs as a
Marine. he enrolled under the
GI Bill in the University of
Missouri School of Journalism .
It didn't lake. ''The deeper
l got into journalism, the
more I realized I wasn't right
for it," he said later. "I was
terribly emba rrassed asking
questions of other people."
He drifted toward the dr a1na
1tepartment -"That did ii:
I was hooked ."
.Just before he w a !
scheduled to graduate, Scott
walked off the campus to
marry a Stephens College
student, Carolyn Hughes. He
never we nt back.
The next yeers were marked
by vain attempts to support
a wife and baby by acting
1n theater stock . The marriage
fail ed, and so did Scott's
attempt to avoid alcoholism.
He bummed around l h e
country, living off fri ends and
relalives.
Finally he began t<> click
In the New York theater. "My
drinking got worse, The more
6uccessful I got, the worse
the drinking bt'came. I'd
,;uffer blac kouts and loss of
memory . Life became a sort
of hazy charade."
1-fis 13-year bender ended
in 1958. when he was starring
in his first Broadway play.
He woke up in jail. "! realized
tiY.:n I had fallen into an abyss
of alcoholism from which I
had to pull mysel L"
He credits his rescue lo
Alcoholici1 Anonymous and his
third wife , actress Collten
Dewhurst.
But i! Scott's a\cohollc
excesses diminished -he
once destroyed n film set on
"The Jlanging Tre'" -his
combativeness seemed little
affected. That q u a 11 t y
contributed to hi s
effectlvene~ ln such films as
"An11.ton1y of a Murder," his
rlrst Academy nomination :
"The Jlusller," lhe flrst
OSCAR, PHOOEY
Scott 1s P1tton
'
nomination he tried Lo
decline ; Dr. Strangelove;''
"The Flim~Flam Man" and
"The List of Adr i a n
Messenger."
His qualities made him
perfect for the role of G e n
George S. Patton Jr., the
eccentric. hard-driving master
of swift tactics in World War
II.
Like Patton, George C. Scott
believes in taking chaflCfl.
"There are only two kinds
of actors. in my opinkln : r isk
actors and safe actors. Safe
actors hold back, experiment
not, dare not. change nolhlng
and have no artistic couraae.
I call them walkers.
"One of my profession al
faults has never been to walk.
I may stagger a Httle now
and then, but I have never
been accu8'!d or walkinc .••
I would rat~r go out thue
and scream to the housetop.1
than play il cool"
I
'%lA DAILY PILOT Thursday, Jariuary 25, 1971
Valley to Get Pre-school?
By TERRY COVILLE Valley School District to slart
~ second pre·school I o r
underprivileged tiny tots.
OI tfl9 ~llJ l"!lel $!1U
A $5,000 windfa11 from the
state may allow the Fountain District officials have been
FESTIVAL SPECIAL
JUMIO SIZE -ROASTED I. SALTED
CASHEWS
Our Regular Price $1.89
s139
SEND A GIFT fllOM LAGUNA
DURING THE WINTER FESTIVAL
NUTS
Gitl~li<
S1IKllt<I
CANDIES
O.mttllc
lmPOrttd
FRUITS
•u1111f11I
Gill 1"1ck•
NU~~~~E
373 SOUTH COAST HWY.
9:30 to 6:00 -7 DAYS
497 -1356
lnfonned they will recelv' the
extra $5,000 on top of the
$32,6f2 already received for
TiUe I projects -pre-school
programs.
To get the w indfall,
however , the di.strict will have
to win approval from state
education authorities for a
pre.school at B u s h a r d
Elementary School.
"If things go "'ell, we might
have a pre-school operating
there by April J," Robert
Sanchis. assistant di s t r i c t
superintendent said. "It will
serve 30 youngsters three and
four years old,.,
The Bushar<l program -
still just a proposal -\vould
be based along the lines of
the operating pre-school in the
Juarez Colony.
'·The basic difference is it r "·ould not be b~-lingual or bi-
cultural, '' Sanchis explained.
The Juarez Colony pre-
school concentrates on equally
developing the , Spanish and
Anglo backgrounds a n d
language s nf Colony
~~~~~~~~"""""'"'"'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'~-y~o)tllungslers.
ACTRO TEAM MEMBER LIMBERS UP FOR TOUR
Sharon Weber Steadies Senior Carla Abbe y
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Cole Slaw • Roll No. 2 DELICIOUS •
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7 DAYS A WEEK
MON-THUR 10:30. 7:30
FRI-SAT 10:30 • 9:00
SUNDAY 11 :00 • 7:00
FISH ~ n CHICK
9041 ATLANTA, HUNT. BEACH
(At Magnolia -Lucky Discount Shopping Center)
FURNITURE
The look ol cane
In a frai h, colorful
live-piece dining set
Metal weave cane, garden
· print satiny vinyl and terrific
design make tile chairs divine.
Mar--proof 42" round table,
· colQr. coordinated in sunny
spring colors.
Acrobats
Scheduled
For Tour
Four girls from I h c
Huntington Beach Uniun High l
Schqol District "'ill show theirl
gymnastic skills to people in l
31 cities this spring.
Going on the six week lour ll
beginning ~1arch I are senior
Carla Abbey and sophomore
Denise Wells. both of
Huntington Beach Hi g hi
School: senior Linda Nelson,
Westminster l·ligh School : and j
sophomore Aleisa s p e a r ,
Fountain Valley High Schoo!. J
The girls form part of the
:>outhern California A c tr ol
Team (SCATt. I
Their coaches are Sharon
\Veber, Huntington B ca chi
High School: Carol
Strausberg, Fountain Valley
High School: and Lii Holey,!
\Veslminster High School. j
The 40--day tour begins in
Seattle. \Vash. with several
stop-0vers until the girls reach
New York City and the
Bahan1as. 'f u Io r s will
1 accon:ipar.y the team so that
1 1he girls won't fall behind in l
!heir class work.
The 35-member SCAT group
belongs to the U.S. Gymnastic
Federation. To beCQme a
member, a girl mus't be rated
an above·average gymnast by
her coach and then undergo !
grueling tryouts.
One of the purposes of the
tour is to raise funds for l
gymnastic exhibitions abroad .
·~or'?"'.. • .,. .....
' .
SHOW TIMES
MON.-FJU. AT 1:00 "·"'·
SATURDAY & SUNDAY
2:00-5:15-8:30
ht .... ,,.fo , ........
1•1\'l"l'f>N
OUTH CORS'f •~c~"" 1AGllNA 8fA(H •9• ""
O,.EN NIGHTLY 6:45 P.M •
SUNDAY AT 1:45 P,M.
JACK
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KAREN Bl.ACK
SUSAN ANSPACH
"fuclnallngl"
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ERB!/
PIECES
IDS ANGEi ES: 6121 Wilshire Blvd. Mirac le Mile: 11040 W. Pico Blvd.; 8840 S, WesJern Ave, ANAHEIM, 1672 W. Lincoln B!KEASFl!lD: 3010 Ming Ave,
Cl!AEMDNT /POMONA, 2321. Foothill COVINA: 945 N. Alusa DOWNEY: 9435 E. Fimlone GLENDALE, 333 N. Cent"I A10. GRANADA HtllS, 10100 Balboa Blvd.
HUNTINGTON BEACH: !9'31 Beach Blvd, IA HABRA: 1720 W, Whill ior IONS 81!CH:2189 lakewcod Blvd, MONTEREY PARK, 415 S. AJlanl ic Blvd.
PASADENA: 85 S. Rosemead RIVERSIDE: 10,000 Magnolia SANTI !HI /TUSTIN: 1703 I.17th St SAN BERNARDINO, 999 S. "["SI. SOUiN BAY: 15533 S. Crenshaw Blvd.
THOUSAND OAKS: 244 ThouS>nd Oaks Blvd, VENTURk 3409 Telegraph Rd. WOOOl!ND HlllS, 22223 Venluri Blvd,
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•
•
Rotary Student Sought
Scliolar to Win Foreign Study Award
One lucky college st udent
who lives in Huntington Beach
might win a year of study
at a universi ty in Paris.
Rome, Melbourne or ~me
other part of lhe \\'Orld.
All he has to do is sign
up with the Hun tington
Beach North Rotary Club.
The club is looking for
applicants for an International
Rotary foreign study
.scholarshi p.
"Any student between the
ages of 18 and 24 who will
have completed two years of
college before the 1972 • 73
academic year can try for
it," Dr. Thomas Laughlin,
Rotary member, explained.
The Huntington Beach North
club will pick one entrant to
compete against other Orange
County Rotary clubs for the
full scholarship.
The Orange County winner
will receive a R o t a r y
scholarship paying round-trip
fair, room and board and
tuition to a univer~ty in some
other part of the \\"orld .
"It's not as hard as it might
sound." Dr. Laugtilih said
"Most Rotary clubs don't
submit any applicants for the
schola rship."
''Artistry in Moving''
1he deadline for applying
is March IS. Laughlin said
anyone interested can phone
him at 847-5413.
Sn1og Hater
DENVER (UPI) -Slate
representative Eric Schmidt
of Boulder has received a let·
ter that was short and te
the point.
"I hate pollution and please
stop it or I'll punch your
nose," the letter writer said.
Sch1nidt said it was signed
only "Carla."
for the
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of
YOUR LIFE
Call:
494-1025
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491 697
boucle pullover
8ody-cOflidolJS ottytic cincf ...aol
boucle pull0'119r Wflh short..__
Fo!.hion striper. i~ cr'I youir fo..oorite 5 78
colors. -, to -or with tf.e new
spring ponh and short$. A foil obit 'f.
in \ire~ 36 l'O 4(1_
windjommer pants
Venotile wMdj<mrMr ponl$
tailored of a wperb rfr(Oft/
cotton bltnd; four-buttori frOllt.,
botk 1ipper to inwre a perfect
fol. Hove it in t»!vral ond llt"W
~pring lime colors. 6 to 16.
Iv'. ale LUCKY your otM-stop shop.
mg h.odqvort.-s IOI lhe newCl51
~pring fashions. You'll be ddighf-
ed with rhestJediol! ••• ortd your
budget '"'1 be Oeliglrfed wifh lht
!o w, low Pficesl
throw pillows
~.:::: ... as~
bedspreads
... .::.. 1497
•
An unusuol 9eometric effect
wilfi both color and te~ture lmlorrt de.:woting! loss-.,,
oppeol. • • "-'itoble IO U!.e Ul'OUfld for G lpOt of Color ond
Rich jocquor(i.weawe des>g111
flO-in:in wo,hobk ill o spot '
5loin, ond mildeJMesi:rl<Mo1
olelin/tottofl blerid.
lor p<1tio and ccrsvo1 oreQo;. comfort. C~e from a wicle-
•••-lt-~iiiiriejj,tyli!of colou and patterns.
thermal blanket
72x90 397
ChiU<hinet with o ligh1 tovd1,
designed foryem1"ovnd seNic t .
$.pi~•
~ t') screwdriver 11. set or
hommer
#1770 76~ #1 74'
"The Ii Ket\", •• oll !Mv
""d h ~o"'e 'ort of a job to
do .•. ond a good hand to
gvlde 1he,,.,, Good qvoli1y.
bed pillow
,,.,. 97~
Yovr h•od MYer hod i1 r.o toftl
N:on-ollergenic:, stcy.ph.irnp
p1tlow at a budget price!
lor/ies' ., .. ,
tape
rule
76~
FM the lady ol tN! hovr.e; her
own 6·h.1le•l lo~ with mar~~
l•Ofl'I 1/32 iMh to l·ft iniervoh.
In o nori·nriting ploo<c: co~t.
70 ato
sheet blanket 297
No sili"'"' whenp nigga.
be'-'t tt-soft a::iltofll ee..ls.
S2x70
plmtlctabl..,.,h ••• 671
chloraseptic 129
60¥..SfK..,
Fast, tff«live relief for~ s-throot poin.
tylenol 230 root•••
Ouidt«lingonti·pa;ri tablets
thot contolri no Olflirirt.
.-t. joseplt 01pWirt
for children 2 a~ 36 , •••
?b?O{ CllAPMA'4 ~VI O~A l<!(,I 1 ll'[l<!IWPtl~T AVI 011,1\T !U\TIM
WUITlllR QI \<l~I M ':i!ll Wl!lllll~ JCI\ HJ(llO I ,\R{lllj r. ~11,f
lA MIRAO/. \~OPPIM( t!M11R \~~IA II 011~ M IR~OA 1•1111'11!~ IJO/I \PPo/t\,!>.111 WI IMM ,
l l01~AllJ M0RA~1Vll MO~W.\l~ !•'>MU Wll(lJJ M""11"1 o ' v .. oll<J Q\1~!\,~!,. Ml<~flj,11~'1 {M
i
' l
"
........... •
Thur!oday, J<1nuary 2~. 1 ~71
Cities Seek oc Harbor District Expansio·n
By ALAN OlRJUN
Of 1M C..lh' ~1111 1!1H
A move Is developing in
the League of Cities to push
for expansion of the Orance
County Harbor District.
This would be a reversal
of the League's stand last year
when It soua;hl dissolution or
the controversia l district.
The fiaht that ended wi thout
a verdict over the Harbor
District last year involved the
'League, the county
supervisors and the cities cf
Huntingtlon Be a ch and
'R • • t • ~ ,.1 ... . I ': .• • ' .1. ~. • • • t ' !• •
n
Newport Betich.
Essenlially. the 1uptrvisors
and Newport Beach wanted
to expand the district, headed
by Beaches and P 1 r k 1
D!rector Ken Sampson, lo
formally include the county's
parks system.
Huntington Beach called for
the district to be disSC1lved
and re-established as a county
department. Mayer J a c k
Green, president of l h e
League of Cities in 1970, won
the league's support for this
position.
lUC/CY BONDED BEEF-GUARANTEED
FOR FLAVOR & TENDERNESS!
The battle w11 taken to the
state legislature w he re
Assemblyman John Brlu s CR·
Fullerton) sponsored a
compromise bill wh ich called
for a public referendum on
either dissolution or
expansion of the district. The
bill died In c<>mmittee.
Now a League study
committee on 6peeial silstricts
in !he county is recommend ing
that the Harbor District be
"reoognized to form a I I y
include the beaches a n d
regional park functions. 0
The report was subm itted
ln January and is expetted
to be considered by the f\J.11
League in April.
Westminster Mayor Derek
McWhinney headed th e
committee, which did not
include a Huntington Beach
r e presentative. McWh.inney
said that the recommendation
was propo!led by Mayor Ed
Hirth of Newport Beach and
was accepted w i t h o u t
argument.
McWhinney explained that
many people in inland areas
of the county have objteted
to paying laxes to the Harbor
District and said that he felt
this objeclion would be
overcome if the county parks
s ystem, presently
administered by Sa mpson's
staff, were fo rmally included
in the district.
Hi rth today said that he
considered the dlstrlct had
done "an cutstanding job" and
that it should be expanded.
"There is a great deal left
to be dooe in further
development a I on g the
coastline and in p a r k s
development and there is a
limited time to do it. \Ve
feel expansion of the dlstrlct
is the best way to accomplish
it.
"lf the aistrict were put
Into a cQunty department In
competition with others there
is a question of whether there
would be time for that
changeover er whether that
body would have the stren11th
to operate effectively," Hirth
said.
The district presently
patrob; Newport Har bor. and
also patrols Sunstt Aquatic
~larbor near Hunting ton
Beach. Newport is happy with
the service but in Hunlington
Beach there is di sconlenL
HuoUngton Beach Public
Information Officer William
R~ed ~aid tha t city lifeguard
patrols ani:I county patrols in
Huntington Harbour overlap.
He 1ald that this was because
the city considered the county
service in1dequate.
CHUCK ROAST
·r.~· 55~.
Mrt, Fay Berube was In the ched:~t line at a LUCKY DISCOUNT SUPERMARKET
In Lakewood when we ask•d her if 1he would buy the exact 11rne items or com-
parable brands 1t any oth•r m1rk .. of h•r own choosing
FRESH FRYERS
MRS. FAY BERUBE COMPARED IDENTICAL ITEMS OF
HER OWN CHOOSING AT ANOTHER SUPERMARKET .... 29c SU.DIA .. ., ..
leDY Jb.
She spent $36.95 at LUCKY ••• The same shopping list st the other market cott
her $41 .97 ••• and she had to crou flv• items off her liat, ••.Thi other market
didn't .stock them. Sh•'• convinced •••
lllCl
SHE REDUCED HER
FOOD COSTS AT LUCKY 13.580/o RIB ROAST
ITAMDIN•a3c
IND lb. PROVE IT TO YOURS!LF ••• SHOP LUCKY AND SAYE!
ROUND STEAK . a•n•95C ~.l..m.8. ......... 89f.,
; CUT II. CHUCK ROAST 6 c
. YOUNG HEN TURKEYS c ifAM··:::;:... 3 ~· : ........... 391b --................. 58, .. ............... " .... -........... --·· . .... };
.,.... FOLGERS COFFEE ::::__a1•
FOLGER$ INSTANTl:'.~'"'·--·'1"
.,.... GREEN GIANT PEAS:l:~3·
TOMATO JUICE':.~:" 29'
RE BE $....... • FRIED AN n•u•• .......... _.31
<OMITO<f<Mtn < o-o PIE FILLING ,, •• m ...... -49
v-CHERRIES~:~~~.~.-27'
o-o FRUIT COCKTAIL :!~i~ ..... 24•
Our LOW Evet)dayPrice!
NIBlnS CORN 2oc
12-0UNCl
UN
O"" PEARS :::r:l:~~-.. ··········-··--37'
.,.c tf)PRUNE JUICE:::~'l'~37'
o-"' JUICE :::;~r.:~~.~~~~~.~~.~ ..... ,,.w_27c
.,.C LIBBY'S SALMON ~~°! .. '19'
.,.c SAUSAGE :'::7;~'.._ ......... 48'
.,.c MIRACLE WHIPl::.'l'.&.~57'
.,.. MAYONNAISE::'.;'.': ....... -59'
ft" BARBECUE SAUCE::~m.37'
<I" SMUCKER$ JELLY ,. .. ,, ....... 32'
•uc•1&11J, ITUWllllf, CllltAlft ....... ,
.,,..WELCH ::~~:::~~.~.--.41'
MtlllUTf
6-0L PICC •
OO"S MARMALADE=L~:.~.=_.31 1
o-« HEINZ PICKLES.:.~:.'-53'
o-c CATSUP::.~ ... -................ 29'
o-« ONION RINGS :::.~;:. __ 40•
POTATOES :::.'.'.:.~~.-35'
.,.. ENCHILADAS~'.'.'.:::'..-38'
o-« VEGn ABLES :':'::L ........ _. 41' c.-i.ti.e t1,_11o ....., .,,......., ••• ,....,.," ..... '"'--..... ~ ..... )
JOHNSTON PIES •"·"'-··-····78'
cllOCOUnlQ.Ul.OIO<OU.ftYftYIT,llMDIKWI
MIS. SMITHS PIE :.~; ............ -99'
COOL N CREAMYl~~~43'
KOLO KIST CHIU::t"::~.-27'
···Klrlktt.--.
FACIAL TISSUE 23c
UDY llf 200-CD•lfTIOX
;~ ... lDW DISCOUNT PRICES ON HOUSiWARES C BEAUTY AIDS
MISS BRECK HAIRSPRAY
A irut l1ldi11 'P"J IJ th p11plt
.... wha knaw •.1ir b1st. Ck11s1 lle11l1r,
!!!".:!.' U1sc111t1•, tr S1per U11sc11t1•.
1J..OUNCISIZI 68<
OUI LOW IVllYDAY PllCI
12 OUNCI SIZI $) 49
OU I LOW IVllYDAYPllCI
BRECK SHAMPOO
I Cl111s h1/r with11t 1trippi11 away It~• 111e~1d 1at1tr1I ells. t•r11 types,
fir 01}, Nor••l·tr Ollr lair.
7OUNCI1111 86<
OUI lOW IVllYDAY PllCI
BUFFERIN 1 OO's
F11~ ofltctlYt palo ro-
liel wlt-111t c11sl1r
111111111 distress.
GUILIW
IVllYDAY $)01 PllCI
... Kly&y/-
EDGE SHAVE CREAM n. •••11 ,,... tut 11111
pr1t1ct 11ai1st 1icks 'J' 1
•'
scr1p1L •v.01.au1 Jee ~ ·
SECRET
Kups ,.. CllM, CHI ... COM·
f1rta~lt, 1r11 ••••r stress. __ ...... _
ANT .. PllSPll.UT , eL
01 .. ll 94• SPIAY DIODOIANY 1 IL en tow nA'TtAY ,11(1 "JI
LISTERINE MOUTHWASH t•• str111111; kllls 11 c11tact. t•• 1•r•s that Cll CllSI ~a•
lrtrtl. IOOUIQIOTTU $ 19
OlllOWIVll\'DAYPllCI I
SUCRETS SORE THROAT SPRAY 9[j w111 •1mt a1r11cau11 11 •11z1c1 t11 1r fast
tt'"llfllJ rtlltl ti Ml·
11r Slrt t•r11t pall. 77•
OUI lOW IVllTDAT PllCI
PORTERHOUSE STEAKi:.'.'._.1 1~.
SIRLOIN STEAK. 'll~ Ill ROAST :I...":. _____ 11l~
GROUND BEEF:~"::'.'. 57~ sucm HALIBUT STEAKS ... -98f.
BEEF STROGANOFF ~:~:. ....... -54'
MORTON MACARONI ::t':~ 24'
HADDOCK ~?:l'::~ .. ·----•1•1
FISH CAKES l~T'.:r. ........... _ 36'
ZUCCHINI STICKS~:~_47•
.,.. FRIED CHICKEN::::;.~.'.: .. 11"
... Kly&y!.--...
CLINGPEACHES 25c HJ.IVUTDAY
29-0UNCICAlll
•> •c ,~ l.;' • • < '"~I i '• -;_((";f ' ~. I , , • I'~ ··~
RITZ CRACKERS ::::::... 47'
CRACKERS flllRDtMA<IC 24< o-« nouor ... __ _
BREAD MAlnlTOll'Cl:UIMllWWUT"' 37' (lltl(I WHOll, M 01. lOAF ••M .. _
~NOODLES ~~T,:!~ ........ -... -27'
.,..MAHATMA RICE l':.~~'.~89'
DRY BEANS ~~:~;:~'~::.':.-2~
.,..CHEERIOS ii~~..... 55'
SACCHARIN :m.':.~~~.. 42'
I>"' ROMAN MEAL:::::.~m'L 43'
@CIRCUS PEANUTS:::'::L31'
o-« PIZZA PIE MIX:~~~:;_35~
... Kly&f!.-"'111
AJAX CLEANER 31 C WINDOW
Jo.OUNCE IOml
LIPTON BLACK TEA::::. 15'
.,.c C&H SUGAR:l:.~~'.~-63'
.,.c C&H SUGAR::' ... ~~-'1"
llSQUICK:'l::l:~.-................ _53•
.,.c SUGAR"""'"""'•·"'' 11" 11ll.141-...... -....... -
0"" DINNER 11'""''11...,"'._a 49' c•ntt 1401. p11 .......... _ .. ,
~ PURJNA:~:WJ'~~ 38'
CAT llrnR~:::" 69'
.,.. FllSKIES ••e1.w.. 14'
"' .... "'""' Mct9 •...r&Oll(DI)
···Klr&tt.--.
LUX LIQUID 65C Dini I INT
12·0UNCI IOml
SHRIMP •lllll&MODCVI ID 97< 1.,.,., "'········---·
SAUSAGE =~~·= 67, AU. 'Jf.11"9-IOlllCI •&Clill •. --
YOUNG TOM TURKEYS :=.., .. 36! ..
FILLn OF SOLE"""-'1" "· CUT UP FRYERS ::~: ... _ .... 33~ •.
iii
... kit/ &yt.-""" .SUGAR ~~~~~lt~:: 60c
S·POUlllD IAG
: ,., '"'·. ,.:;
.'. _.~ 11 ~,t)'!:_.\ M :.:4 ,
.,.. KLEENEX TOWELS ::::;,...._33•
f1l"" CUPS ~~~:~ rx':~~ .... -69'
.,.. REYNOLDS FOIL :!.':'r.""...._ 11"
.,.c GLAD WRAP:::'.\'.~.. 26'
.,.. GLAD BAGS~:.~_57•
.,.. BAGGIES::~~~.. 32'
I>"' SHINOLA POLISHr:." ... w .... 18'
.,.. FAB DITTRGENT ::: .... -67'
~VOGUE DnERGENT :::_36'
o-"COLD WATER All~::" • ._•2"
'1"' DOERGENT;:=.~~;~_45'
.,.c NIAGARA STARCH:?o'<'.w . .59'
()• .... Kly&y/.
, ZEETISSUE 36C JOILIT "1'50 COUNT IOUS
.,.c SANI FLUSH :r.:.'il:'.'.'.'..._49'
I>"' MAGIC SIZING ~~~w-55'
I>"' FANTASTIC l'.1~-~~-69'
_. REFILL '""""'"'""'" 69' V-~ a.u.JIR.UOLITL.._
CASCADE ......... 40' Jl•LIOl .•..••..•.••.•• M-
GAIN DITTRGENT:.~r:.'.~-'1"
TIDE DnERGENT :::r.":.':.-38'
JOY LIQUIDll':~·.r_ ..... -.. 57'
IVORY FLAKES .,,.,.,_, 81'
IVORY BAR-·"'---12'
PERSONAL IVORY --.-30'
, •• the few items li1ted on thi1 poge conJ·
1titut• fu•t a 1111011 &lil'lg of the thous·
and1 of low, d l1eount price1 in stor• fo
yoU at lucky.
5~.~~~~-~~! .. 8.EYERAGE 11 c
~.~~~~~!~.~~.~~ 1 •1
~?.~.!~!!.~.°.~.-.366
tA .. llsMttt""laioft,_...,.,....,...,J
Shop Any Day ••• Save Every Day ••• With Lucky Low Discount Pricing Policy.
Pri<•tore Discounted Except on Fair-Traded
ond Govenoiment Controlled lt.lfll.
FRESH OYSTERS:,,........,.... 78'
T -BONE STEAK:::.., •1r
LADY LEE BACON :".l.":. ... __ 53•
t&tll.nsott......,,llOIM& 1.•c BACON SUCIOl·POUMOP•l.M ...... _ v.J
BACON '""'""" 73• IUCIOl ·LLf'lt..,-•• -.. _
THIN BACON ~tl~"?'-72'
BACON :~:.~~~~-58•
lUCIY llAND
1-POUlllO PIG.
~!~·~o~.A°.°..0.1.~ ........ 49•
AMERICAN CHEESE .. ~~... 69< ,.. ... _....flWl'llAJtU ••• _
~~.u~s. ................ sac
~~~'!.f!,11,~.~ ..... $)15
PILLSBURY BISCUITS 11 c
U!llllUTt: ••. ,., .................. 1 Ill. W
WHIP 0 TOPPING;:',.. ... _ 41'
VELVUTA ,........ '1"
1101.•IG •• --···--
-PARKAY so" l\'ll.',';\.~_41•
CARNATIOH MILK ll':~-19'
FORIMOST SHERBET:\:'.'." __ 65'
~!SCOUNT rtlCID PIODUCf.i.
·•· BANANA-S
100% CHIQUITA
G~1L"il'IN 1 0 ( 1u~1{JfS lb.
U.S. NO. 1 RUSSET
riJ POTATOES I 0 ',:!~: 38 c
bjoy IU<CllHI taslt 1t•pU11 Fltrtt
lflCl,DS , • , Ill It t•tlr flar1r 'Ilk
.•• F1111rtl tt Ltely $tor11 at tow
htl}ltJ Oisctttt Prlcts.
Appolntell
Mrs. Ro•emary R. Nel-
50n of Fountain Valley
has been appointed ex•
cutive director of cur-
riculum and personnel
for Sullivan Pre-School
Centers of Irvine.
Rebels Need
Drum, Bug'le
Participants
Lada and lasse~ between the
ages or 10 and 20 are needed
to nu out tbe ranks of the
Rebels Drum and Bugle Corps
in HWlt.ing:t.on Beach.
The Rebels is a new corps
started this year for loeil
youths who would like to
compete in state and naUonal
marching compeUtlon.
Boys with or wltboat
experience are wanted to blow
bugles from small soprano
size to the d!tp t&ntd contra·
bass bugles.
Girls will twirl flacs. rifles
and sabers In the Rebels color
guard.
The Rebels Drum and Bugle
Corps practices at Hope View
School, 17522 Fllnulone Lane,
from 6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m .•
WednesdaYJ, Md 1 p.m. to
4 p.m., Sundayt. For further
information phone J am r a
Senecal. 893-74.1'7, er Mrs.
Linda Mendti, 817-1783.
2RTDBuses
Now Going
Into LA
Tw6 more bu! trips
betw1en Huntington Beach
and Los Anaele1 have been
added to the Sauther!\
CaIUomia Rapid Tran 11 t
District (RTD) 1<heduJe,
A bus now leaves the
Huntington Btach 11.aUon at
Pacific Goist HfghWay and
Maih Strtet at 7:30 a.m. and
arrives in downtown Loi
Angeles at 9:09 a.m.
A return trip will Jeave Les
Angeles at 5:05 p.rn. and
arrives in Huntington Buch
at 6:47 p.m.
RTD official> aald tho eme
times were added because of
the demand from HunUngtcn
Beach ruldents. Other trips
an the RTD line between
Hunt.inlf,on. Beach and Los
Angelu will remtiio 1 1
1cbeduled In the pa1L
Flick Fete
Under Way
The Huntington Be a ch
Public Library'• 'Third AMual
Origin al Film C.OmpeUUoa ii
now underway •
Anyone who wants to enter
the movie making cante!t
may pick up applications at
the main library, 525 Main St.
Deadline for entries Js t
p.m., May 28. Trophies will
be awarded and the &op films
will be shown at the tibrary
film festival June -4. ·
f'or more information phone
1136-5484 •
PUEBLO TALK
SCHEDULED
Former Pueblo CT'flwman,
Lee R. Hayes will speak about
the capture of bis ship by
North Korea in 1 meetinc
1poNCred by the Jolin Birch
Socttly.
Hayu will 1111ke hi• 1peoch
Friday Jt I p.m. IL the
Seventeenth street s c ho o I
auditorium, 7171 Weslminster
Ave., WtstmJnater. The
metlfnJ lo open lo the pubUc.
Who C.res?
Ne ett,., "'Wl,•fl•' ltt +tie w•rl4 c•r•• •Mut yeur ••rr1r11•·
11lty like your •OMf1'111nlty .lilly
n•ww~,., 4ee" It'• tfl• DAILY
PILOT.
'
22 DAILY PILOT s Th11rsdq January 25 1971
Your Mmiey's Worth Complete-Ne,v York Stock List
•• •iEw \'OIUC ,.,., Wtdn.td•Y'• <omt1•1• 1.•1'1 fill! ~~'r.:i "''" ..... Cllll (ht. NIW Yo Ir. $10¢k £•clll flll 1rlCtt Ulft J "Ith L"' Ci.Ml (ht
I • "·1 ~ .,,,. ..,,,...,, Sir.. H11 hrmt!rOfl 1 :s.. /'..., 11l\ 11h -t. F Y t er ~ '!' ' JO 30 \ + • (M.1.J H"~ lMW ci. .. CJl-I ll1mNY 2.. ~ t~ t l t• 1) + ~. F~l gr p!l Q 1 1 21'4 ,. ..... ~ -r
NASO Listings fo r Wedntid1y, F1bru1ry 24, 1971 A ~~~60 9 ,. ~! :ir~ -'"~M~ /fri ,f i'ii! ~\~ it~ -,'
OVER THE COUNTER Getting a Lot of Mileage ·-''" ,.,........ -'•tlttlt • lfffftlftofM1Y ' ..... ,,_ llAIC. Pric.. • llff llK:W. ...till .,. 11111Q .. _ ...... 'lit -.1111 ......
~"'"'"'''"'°'"'""'"''°"'"""'"'"'K .. '"'"'"'"'"'"""'"'"'"''"' -' 0 ' •2 ,,., ~ t-"" F'OOll 'r fQ '' ti• t o flt -~ -•b•<~• Fo t u .. ti l• -\I t1abe11 04 n •$., •)>• 1'001• C& '° 1 n , 13 . 1)b + • ••• ,,, , oo •s '"• n·· ., .. +>'""I E1tl 111 I 101i L'"'° t i)l.I. Foot• Min S .,,, •••-'1\11 -\• Pr1er Priet .... .. ....... ~a-r,ch MU SPP 227 ''-11\o 1111 -t \,Foo!IDI 22G • ..... + •w .... •1( IW .W::M ••• ~~:..ilf.~ 2 :. t? 1•1o 1:1! ,,i; t . i~ Mii '"pl 22 2•. 221" :UL, ..,. \:. l'o OM 2-'° '~ £,: i'ti... ~ill -,• A<me MU 1b 1 "'-a h '6\o 4' ~I PnwT 2 3' lllo ,','!,• )Jlo -h ~t{~JK~l fg .) lf1-a 1 I 1fu t ,
NEW YOA;K IA Pl rllll "' 11"-)2 11 LD I! 11/ol I' I 17 17~ Adm1£~ Mii ff 1•~ 11',.. l•' \'I ~ RI (l NW I !Ola :IO!o -"°' Fo.1 W~1 Ml lOJ •"'', •,,·~ lftl' I• + ,: -TM '':'.!" ng blO •or• " ,. .. ·-· .. ,,.! 19\0 -•,1,,1 ·.. t\• • Ad Ml !11 20 -3! 11 lN ,, + .. !hoc.1'~11 .l)r to ,... ti.. 't 1. '"' wn pf I • lt' -•
On Driving Cost Deduction
By SYLVIA PORTER
(la eoUaboratloa wltb die
Jte1carr.h lllltltute of Ame.rlc•l
If )OU are t:oUUed lo deducl
the tllowablc CON af dr1v1og
your car for bu s 1ne :s s ,
chantable (Ir m e d I c o. I
purposes, or as p a rt or your
deduct1blt moving expenseii to
a ne\V Job, you got a
valuabl e tax br ea k
.under a 1970 Treasury ruling
The Treasury Jets y o u
ehmmate kcepmg de t a 1 I e d
records of your Jtem1zed
automobile expenses instead
1t wall accept your deduclJon
based on a :standard nuleag'!
rate ror that type of deductible
driving The brt ak 1s that the
Treasury ra ised all these rates
by 20 percent or more for
1970
If you re an employe or self·
employed and you use your
car for bus iness travel, yoor
optional deduction for '70 1s
J2 cents a mile for the first
IS 000 miles 9 cents a mile
above that (vs 10 cents and
7 cents)
If you re u sing )OUr own
c ar for cbantable or medical
travel or for deduct1ble
moving e.q>enses y o ll r
optional deduction for 1970 1s
6 cents a mile (up from S
cents)
Here s another new break
on t~e opUonal m il eage
deduction on your '69 return
f Yff -. Mt .. , .. T1r.,t•o,..
•aweri•t 5"YI<• y •• •ff "' ....... AlL of plll' &•Ila.
TaLEPHONE
ANSWERING BUREAU
835-7777
CIVILIZATION'S DISEASE
DENTAL CARIES
lCnltlesl
the Treasury tnsi.sted that 1f
you took the optional business
m ileage deducuon, you had
to forfeit 1lem1zed deducto ns
for sales to.x and 1nteresL
a llocable to business mileage
of your auto
Now 11 says your use of
the optional mileage deduction
on )Our '70 return does not
b ar you from deducting :toy
interest and :state and local
ta xes o n your auto that woold
o therwise be deductible -a
part icularly v aluable
l1berahzat1on if you bought
your car last year and pald
interest on an auto loan plus
:state local sa les taxes
If you re .an t m ploy e who
dedu c ts 0U1ce at hom e 0
expen:ses you've had to m eet
som e t ough Trea sur y
requirements to get th e
deduction -among them that
your employer required • you
to have an office-at home The
Tax Court rtJected t h ls
requirement In 1970, said 1t
is enough 1f your office-at
home JS ' a pproPr1ate a nd
h elpful ' 1n your work even
though not 'required by your
employer The Treasury a~
pea.led but the Second C1rcu1t
Court upheld the Tax Court s
allowance or the deduction
Assuming you plan to r ely
on these dec1s1ons though be
very well prepared to prove
to the courts that your office
at home is ' appropnate and
helpful " though not required
by your employer -or you ll
lose the deduction a nyway
The w inner or the court cases
was a salesm an of network
TV time who conv inced the
JUdges that watching TV
programs after hours 1n his
office at hom e was
'appropnate and helpful '
U you have the rugged )Ob
•
"'
•,, "'OOO O·O '"" "" .. Add t» I~ •-ll~I :IO~t l\111 + 4\ l'lrlt (;rt,, 10.S IO 1\.1 l •o ( Fo•bO o 22 31•1 ll\o 11'-I
... ~w " 1\.1 ~Vl1 on l~•J 'lf'tln NA Ht 711\Admlril ,, llto Ill'• "f; hncvpf 70r 1 u . 1 n.1 H\t ~Fr•nk !t' ilCl ll 10loo 10 '20 -'f
bu s in .'''<,M!"''''",,""'••,if."''''o'°'oo•'•• >\,;.) ltdJW I" 72 • .~I!~ Mtl 1•,~, •• ·.~A•ln.Ll•lllC!@ "" ••k " 0• ltr 1Prp(I 2 l\jo 11 • Tl•o F OO"I IO 1s !Ho 11 ll~i i ' l'i l(ltl I· " •"Ill 111.1...,. 11n flub • ,. 2 4'1\• .... ~~ •c~•Ol!lfH 'a HI n . ,'j, 11t1 + ... ~~!h1 i 7C n !) 33 n • II Oft OI $tc:ur • Hfnrftl f ""' ]ll(o •elll;I• 7\o l\t 11'19 Wh •!'I $1-~;~~~; l~ 2 C:hr..,..,1 rtt ~ ) ti •1 Tf •• 2ll 1~• )0 , 21.\ I• f. n t er t a 1 n m e n t expense Oe•1e., Inc: •re H,r11 c " 3"1 3 'o w1m NG ,,,,. 11 ln11 Mil '»h 21 • A!le•n i~~ ) ic • 10 • 1 • + ~ Cl\fv'1' '4 .eo 21 1 2.,, U\\ + ...., uQY1 •~ ui -G ~,,.!.,K'"•" ,',,'"'•K• ~."-"Int ~ • •VO •• Tr 10 • I~ !K PL ,, "' 22>, 'I' ....... , l~O ~ 1 • .JO !.(If , i-1 c1...,. BtU 2 40 l2 •Th ,, ,, -"' -d d ct beh I d ., "' n J"' ,,.Wtbb R• 111'1 12 .Vr<llw E 2~ Nii "/ Of%o "IV. •1'1o f~1 GE '" -21 ••I ·" ·• ' ..,LI' C U 10115 YOU m ay e j)C rt1~t1l ¥t ln!tr tt1111yer h ~ • 'lt'tlOll'fl 1:i... IV. Wrlt M W ' A rP Iii "f~ 15 I~"° hOI• 100\• \Ii "n ...,, :JO " ' ,..,. + ,o ~AC Co I& I'll 205Vo 21-. " • t ot1l.r1>tlctti 11 oll1o•l1 Re 10\\11 w11 ,...HI Jl>.:.l•1t1vron'f' E '!~3:~~rRlll' lOu 1• 2'11 nto l ll'I 40 lfa ~,1, ',ttl'°n •,•, ",', :','' ,•,•,<,••,.•o 121 u . 1•\o ~1 b) at!Olhtr COUft dt'CJSJOn IPP•o~lm11e1y J kown:I GI 10'>11 ,.J ll\Clu1!ru 42 •llo 4~t 4'\lo i.., lnG E••,14 ,:'0 O>' •I OS ·~ 16 :n•~ 22 o 12 "' pm 11 wll!ch lht1• Howm In 21V. n Ak10n1 It 3) oo 39\o l'I~• -~. l ~~'' , '' z.,. T -• ~·"' S•o 110 201 •l~• •1 • !?.~ Jl:' knocking out a stiff Treasury -vrtHet COi.iid H11t• Ml sew 6\t Ai. G11 1 10 12 11 16i.. 11 I'' , ... 1l7 'n" ~· •1~ -•mS ot 11s .a 'l 0 4l ,•,•1, '" nt¥t bffn p"r•Hud PP U 31 A1fMI tnttra 11 1' 23 1 m; + 'h "" 131 ~· '1 i.llo + ll-o fmS r' 160 ,. Al ~,'> '
I Th T <h•i.td l•••till or ttvrs1 P t t~ A be ioc 22 Jl •2 ', •t • tl ~ _ ~ ~1:.;,•1fn"•' ,.210 21' * U'-•i" -1•n ""t 4 '' :l9 • ..,.... f,i,. + ;; r ue I! r ea sury s a Y S ,Old tblCll nter v1n CP 21. 21" A bettsn1 :u •O 13 ~ n 13 , + Vi['-'"' r, '' •r.J 27•• """ :rNo + i~ 1rat>fn 110 111 •I • "
ii h t t I d cffotlf• mt oeeo H••TI lnl U\1 Uh MUTUAL A ~n Alum I 20S '' ><" 10 1 ·• jl «I l'I • l'l'.I. +'lo t flOCk IO ~2 20 191• If',,.:+,•, genera Y t a rave a n c~in e !h QUtfl tmt11e sr ID 1~ 0 '" ltyt'\ P 1 Jl I '6 T 4' > .ui 1 +II? a ew•y Ind Jio 1 1 '.k +
entertainment expenses m ay ~I ~~~·~ 1:::1(!:: !::?or Nr~ i~~ l~~ :k1ri*f ~i tl ~:,,: 2~~ ~!~: ~ t: El~~k k~ I 40 ,1 J1: .:~· J~; t ~· ~.:iln~0~p ., 1: 1i: n i ~ I 11 <I l~• 3,, le!;I C ....... It IJ 12 .. ll + MC•rk 01 •o 1] 21 20'~ 20•+'o Gem Jnn S<I• 't J2 'o n. ,.., 1, be deducted Only lf YOU keep ~~~~liloWn ;;:' ~ :, 'font '"" 9~ ~llt11Lu'o ,2~ U l l'• ll > ll <o Cit• C II l !e S 6SI, 4iS\o 65>l + l\ Gtl\Aln~ •lll 11 :n o :Wil 221'1 W
book d
I
I I I m t t V. 2 • FUNDS " "" •1 31>1• 29 0 304• + ~ ClevE: I 1'24 11 :!th 31 , m. + Vi GAmor 60b 2s 39 JI\• :It tin account or 1ary or :\A~1 i~ P 6 0 11, 1~1r ew1~ ,1\ 1 i A1o'i'' Pw r 32 r• 2• i " • 2.i, + \(,, c1ev P 11 J 50 11 uV:i 161, _ v, ~Tr•n l.60 .H ., • ~, •1 ~ +,,..
Som. Oth.r W fl tt e n AF Af'r !> n ~ lft!MuHI 2,1<.1 ,'5 •Lud ylJ 1 "" .... .... Cle•Pll •Pl JO lQ 10 10 -14 en llallt 5' 11 13 0 ll 13 -i... .,, '"' '"' 'I'' In! $r• i·~ .tt~ ~· 'I'd (h zu 222 21 • 21 21to + ... (loroir ?$8 2•3 3' ~ l6 lllto + \lo nCab t eo J~l nlo un t1to + ~
t t t t " o , .•~Bv. "••'MM•ln,.~' •' ll'lo l(t\i JJ:W -tll')Cluel!f'e• tO 1u 23\11 22111131'1 nC1~0~ ,~~ 3''• 3' -~+-:;la emen pus, In cer a1n A,,"M' ,~ •"•, •0 ,~, " .. ,~ • ,, il1SL M"'.... ~6 . ,..,,.. 26'4 v. ci...enP ... 1 ,, ''' ,, .. ,,,~ + ~ 0 ,,, •~ 1p 2, + ~. P ~.. ~" ~ .... n:a.u 'I" • •> '''' ''" I"" -C"• <•"•" • •• .. n cvt I o :SllU8hOnS ltenuzed receipts Or Allf'r e In 2~ 3 •Jacobi C J o '\ ----w • -Al lldStr 1 ~ •• '"" " 112 20 ) 2C 201'.. tn Oyntrn 4l 21 2~0 2''~ Ar ~I• 10 1~ BQU,, 10,. ",~ NEW 'r'Oll:I( IAPl nwtslor• Gr-~I.a SuPt 11: lj,'.! 311• JJ\, t \t (NA Pf Al 10 l6 71 . 76t, 21 . +"' n EIK 160 ™ 1iri 10~1. 1~· +"i :similar documentary evidence A • 1~ou1 J11 t~ •rn w,•• ""-Th• to!11>wln1 :ii 10s ndl •.411 , n A JI• Ch ~ 112 16 • 16 ~ 11~ + ~ f?-,,'•'•"y•'•'•'• "• ~. ¥.\'I: 11s, + v, ~F,'!f! 2 ~, 0 ,t! 2~ n 11'1< ~ Albtt H J o l\o Jtm~1 2.S\11 UIO\ llllon1 •uP!IH«I M..,1 f U 10 ff r!atAUI 60 12 U 2 m vo....., ..., ...,..,. ~" ..., "" I Ht ~. t0\.'> -' Without the wn lten record o r A r.trlt lC, 1cw. J•m"'lo t>.:. ~· "''' Mo•I A•·-p~ , ,, •• AIOI\• P co-5 • ~,,.. + '""~oc• co 1" •s 16<1 15"-• + •• ..nFd1 w » 'l'l• '°'" ~ -• ' ... '' JlllY • J ... J~ ..... .. '' '" I~ '""' ... -"" OCI 8110 M 112 ~ 11. 2t : en liO!ll 141 ~i· 111'1 lf -... Statement' lhe Treasury bar'.'',',",.., >•"loO•'''''" '' 31,. ... 111 tllon OI' Securlllet $toe U t72C .i <M llO 113 ..-v. 'l \o\ 'l~i -'IO o!aPtl l •lt ~I 4711 4 10 "'•+I' 1n 1,.11 JOI 111 V. 21 'I'll + .. .. ... "" ~• 0111r1 Inc •re Slit<! t 14 t 9J AMBAC 50 6S J~I• l:JJ~ 1>" + •• ~-0 I' -, ' 1 " " I I l~ T Alie &l!v Jr >' K1l1SI Pl 10\~ll \'0 "11prf«I11 wr.ICh V1t Pv 11$ 711Amer£, 170 10 :m. 13i: 2lh+ .. glllf!l J kf 1 '1 ~f 't !!(o !\'.,,+'.,. :~1'»,\t11"1J IU '> the c aim ~nure "I .ue ax " !fl'd Ea 10 , •Go!• •"'•' JO ~ 1ho~ .. c~• 1~1 ltV Resl\ .. ,, s 10 Am HIU JOr 212 J2\l .so ,, +2;-, o111111 R1a lf? 1~. 15.,, 15~~ _ \' M 11 1111 1s , ~. ff.1r tti: f ,; Court agreed A ~" B• u 1s11 K• • Grn ' • ·~~ coulO ~•ve bffn 1sie1 2C 60 211• Am1H r,n .so Ji 11.Jlto n o 1u 1, +1¥o 0111n1.t 1 60 0 ~ , u 35 _ 1~ en Mot ba a.a IO~o 7t ~ ,.,,1 ~. Al"" Geg 6 6'li Kevim l I 4 ' 10111 !"id) or bou9hl IYV 1 j9 I 19 AAfrFll 't to •1 51•o S7 SI +1.\0 01t no I Ill )0 , "h It 0 + 'Ill enMOI ~t S J 12,n l't .. 12:'1 I But In 1970 the SC?cond AAmeo'',',',, '\,l 17'11 ,',',', 1f 1114 17~ (11kecl i Wtiln1CIY J Hncock 1 t 1 J4o Am Alrlln iO ~19 11\o 27'{, 21 , I In '" 25 20 Slh s SI + \~ Mo pl l 15 1 s& Sil• -, 8' ,!"° ,•, 1 ''' ••• JOhn11n 21 19 21 lf ,••,•,•,,.w, 105<1 JO Ith n • 19\o -:y, ioll In pll .o s 22\io n • 2..V: -"' enPCem 10 JO 2H 21 • 21"" + j• CU'cu1t reversed the T ax Court "'•~ ,e.~P,• u,•, "•·" ',!!~w,,•, ... KtYllOfl• fufld• .lO uo o <411, ,, 11s 1 «1D :ii. :u1. 11 , 3'\.4 T l Pu~u1 1 60 201 11 ~ 21 . 21, + o '" • .. •• 10 'i I Ht Abtrdn 1 l~ 2 JO >-Pollo , 1, 10 " Am8ou 1 1 20 • 2914 n , 21•• 't ~ e s 01 1 21 2.v. 1Jl• ,,~ + 'h en •1r1c1 "' u •1 ll • 13 , -,. and held tha t the Treasu ry s A Grrei •"' •Iv. •rt F 11 '~ li • Admire l'f' Funot1 CllS e1 it 117012 Am C1n 2 20 n' 11 • ..co1. ,1 , + ~ ot11 G•• 1 14 101 31 • :ia , 3140 ens gn 1 20 s 5'~• ss10 ~ + e1 A MfJOlco 19\o:!O KtYI (us 1S lS\l Grwl~ 4 S3 16 '"'' 82 lt tl l l ll " Cen llfl15 12 21 .... 21 :It o olu Plcl A5r 1'42 11 1 ll o llo/1 1'1'1 t11Sljnl ol t ll!IO'Ao 1tt1,, W -l absolute requirement of Ant Telw 11 JIV•K..,." Pc 10 10~ 1ncom 'u 4 S3 c 115 84 !" t,1.1""' C1ment '° '"° lh 9 olSoO~ ltD 12 ll•• lOO.:. 31 ll en 111n<1 1 u 11 •1 "
f d t :~~1 1 e f~v; ~"Kint 1n1 !. :~Ao'~,•:, \ ~ ~ ri cw 1u " 1 ,1 ~cf.:S"i.:: 'i~ 49 111. 2f :ia + "' ~ En 1 30 12• j911 Slh ~Vi: 11T•lj' •,s2 31t ll , 31 l 31•• t• wr1Uenproo as a con 11on Ank•n1nd 7• 7~KIM1 E1 1 1 ,,
11
.... Fd 9 751066 cvt KJ 5 03 .s so;AC~•nldl ,S h22h 2 \t 2J,_,..m !:p11 10 1 1 l2 TeE plSO .... ,,,. ... :i,;,._.,,. •
f ded I I '
<0> M ••"l >Oh !rk Cp ll .. A OOOOoOO ''" O•> CUI SI 110'2010A-OOIOOOO O 201 ~ ]J :U i "~i Iv 40 St iO 'I HI t l'o ~ TF lt PO'l 1100 11\J ll 't ll •-\t or your uc 1on s wrong ren Kl\OP vot .. c 62 10311132 "' '20>, 201\ 1011o 1, 11m 111 1''° 1 u . ''• J"-TF•Pn~G r.10 1v. 1t 1 19., A k MeP lJ~. ·~ 11\(t Jn '.I. »'4 A 111re • n I n In ',, ADuVt Ill.... ' H lio I' 1' I \• wE ~ "' l'I~. )9\~ ,_ G ... Tlrt lb 183 2''4 2)~ ,, + .. You t he taxpayer m ay h ave " ow H 32~ 31'4 Lend IJJ:es '"' '"'A 1 "m f 11 IJ Cu• SJ 150 AmE1Pw 1 70 211 2'f• 29\li l9'.I. 1, !11mE olt « 1 120 • 120 1 Gen Tl''f' s 160 1• 1• u Avd1 H~1'-bLi>1t Wd 11».u Al1!Me 10\111.6t ~r.,u ~~5~A,,..E•111na 15112\t 17 12 -\lol °"'EPf1 '7 >726~21\'I h 1 Gtnn co 70 ll•::l4 •Jl~1 ll o +•{
t he alternative of bacufkifngi up ::foc s~f' 51"' ':~ :~:,.n CP ,~:: ~~~~:p Fd 1: 11 11 ~~ten Ck~ 1 30 :01 ",.m ,',·0 pl 11i10 51)4 50 .Y.! ~~ ~\1 1r' ': M~ k l~ t r. ~c.:~~1:' In~ 2: n .... 11£? ll": -'• you r deduction by a s IC enl B1lrd AT • "'Lel'I Co.ii 2~ 1v. Arn Bus l l1 J 66 Knick Gt t •1 10 31 n d 2&ci 11 26'> 16 '6'1• + "\ omoul s.:1 335 U'l..i 1:1 4 1 , enulnl'J 1s lo ll'• lt~• 31'.•
b Bt•e 22 .. 12>.io G 14'1(, IS'4 m DY " 10 6j II 64 Ltnall Flil • ,, t '' A Genln•,50 us "\' Uto It i ~ om,1t 1" ' 2S9 6l~ 61 • 62 ' +IV. IPK U IOo lJI $P l 5'1' 51'4 -t Ho alTIOUnt Of property SU Stan-Bl t P&C 1 1~t :.,.:u: 6f ll'il \11/) P.m EQty untv1U tx GM~ 9 11 10 15 A Gnln p( It 31 fl V. 32~• 31~1 ~ Oflt M I~ 1l 2•~ 13 • 20 • + ~1 t•ber 1 11'.1 67 ••I• <C!'·J 41'11 +14o
I ted l ,_ t Ska .... Rt ,, ''"" L ( 6h 1 Amer E11pren Lea RKh u :It 16 n Am HOii! '° " •• IQ.I, 1 •o 1 !Ofl>\Mlo llo lJ 1J'4 U\ii u:w + !7 Gertvg 1 lo 111 lrO\J 7tU. Jt•~ -1· t a ora ~s 1mooy e ven l!t umr1 $n, 52 , ~ ''Cc1,. 1 2 ce~ 1 8 .u t ,, berT~ '14 • n A Homo 110 1$0 n \'I 11,. 73tt + \\ onr•c to 14 l v. 2l 23 + 1,:. Gett• p11.20 • 1, ll 1• -•
t " .... gb y ou kept no written r•-',',',,it~ 2,','. •,•,.,_ ov E!rn 1n 1 1~: lf>(m• t :u 10 2J l..lt• sit s $3 6 IM A Home frl 2 1 ioa 1ae 109 +2\li "" E<11 1 to 1~ 25 • 2w. 2$~~ -lo) ~lanPC ,'!Ol:I 31 u iJU ,•,l.,l _-,., ll\J\ol ... -,... ,. , .. • •• > lnve'lt 1116 t.61 ltl In¥ 1 65 I JI AAm H0 O•O 26 3tJ »lo J2V. 32•1 -\lo on Ed I rT 4036 J 32 ~ 5+1-1 U lbr•ll In 3' 1J"io 7:1;;, ..., -
d B~nl Mo 11 18b •nt h C .... ., Si>ecl 111 inc Nil lo s2 11 50 m ""'' ~o 2s l•, ,,~, 1''1 on Ed ' Pl \ 7 f9 11\'f 19 ldd lewis I« 1J o n~2 11'.4 i , Cor 81k Ht •1v,'9v,V.a1J GET 1?,15\1 SIOCk t Ot fr.t n1 •..t6 "M4'dkal 11 H93l •32 JJ +1 onEdspf l.itif66\'166Vo -2'° llletlfl~O J1S 41'o •l o'7•-j
Thi. Case m ay be of aid Set• Loll d •1 ""11 ·~ ,-;,! ~Am Grth untYall Loomis ~yle1 A MllCI~ 140 111 :].II• 33'11 llV. -% onE OICt iS l ll)O 6'\11 6'111 441> -\Ii GJmbel 8t I at JI lj 31 ~ lS 'o '• 8 llup1 W Hl 10\,Yll R tt ••''"Am Inv ~SI 5U (l nld lO,l(JOI• A Mt C ~p14 1100 ff 100 on Fds 1.20 .WS "I ~-•lh +lt.Gno1 Inc ~O lt t ll !o la t
to you If you are :;tuc k without I! rd son , -•1 ~· kr1 e 121i11 13!J> Am Mut t 19 10 o' C•P 1 11 u 11 u Am Motors 2a1 ,._ 1io 1;; + "' ~ ;11 Pf• 50 6 no 109 Ill +1 II'" A"1en 11' tv. • 9
d ed Blnchr i.i, ' .,.. an« Ml 1:~ 1,iZ AmN Gt~ 3 26 3 5' Mui u 2l 1.t.7l ~~·irr,:1 1 /: \:l ff,~ ',',,•, e,,t' +1v. co!: L::'a?:.O 1 ']; 1/ 3:~ ~ = \t 1:~A~1J'1~1SJ ~ i,~ ~~ '1 ~'41~· the wntten recor s requtr B~t~ ~·. ~,~~;-:y.1'arow~ ]) »:i.:.And>or GrlllJp Ulh Bro 121 71JlO"R•s0~0.ooq lll ,,.. "•''•• .s..i,!;.v,C0nN81G 1.U 117 29:11 29' .. ""+~ lobtl Mtr" ,,, ''" ,,. 11 -·
by the Treasury rule, but11ootie c i1 llVi 'ol•ul LP 11..:11.,. ~~:,fh 1iu1;071, :~~n· 1" :~ tffArri Set t 12 1121 11~ lm uh ·f~~~:owr;J _,?!fl}.• 03llll 3.,114 ~1u~ ,~ ,•• 21 20. I' " Boor AH II 11v,'olcOuv 26 1"° o-m• l lol,•••o ,,. 0,.0,.,ArnShlD.4iOtl m.1111>:29%o -tl"' P '"" '' Ooar cu <1121''9 16'• I '• 11 be f b t t ff • '
" I "" H I'" 9 '"" .,~ " -Smell I 91) -5 SO ConPw Pl• 50 J110 61 6' .it -\'I OOdvr &S IOI JO• JO JO\/o \;, YOU ar f. e r (J e~!.itn•o •1" n:Mt0'Mtl 13"'4 ed Inf 196 9 12 UICl\uK!r Co AmSoA!t 10 ~$1 .a' ~~:ti ~··~Cont "r Ln 152 1~· 15'\• 1514 +~ OJWYA Jl 10 11J 16~ 11 • h
f k '"·se wcitt e n, , , 1 "" o111 ..o'h en! '°M '111 FrttO 11s J 1$Am Mol 11, ''• ,, ,,'Z cont (•n 1 ~ 10 •1 .Ol -IOl'l -\o Gouldlnc 1•0 21 35 .. ::14\o ""-""' I you eep l.HV d l l 11'.~ 'st: ~i~ .. ~~ .... ~Id" I~ """ ii • ~~t,ro~ •.•• t!,." ~ 11 lndtP • 11 6 ,, " Std 014 7$ ,, I? l ~~\~ .,.-, Cont (og lOe •I IQ <I ' lO -' Grace I 5(1 JU9 J.( • ll"' M • +1 ....
'
•coeds and avo1 1tlga ton """" A• '' ,, .... ,, , ,, 1,, o "", .... ~, , ., • 11 M•n 11 21 1111 Am STttll 11 11 82"" +h Conti Coro 7 111 4Hli 4~• •H'o t"'" Granb~ 1 60 u 21 • 20>' 2g1 +11.1i .. •• .... """ ... M ' • ,, .. ~ 26 • Utl 16 ..... -~-.Cl CD olAJ ~ " "6'• " "6 • ~ Gr1noun IO 59 lO 29>.i 3D h h t e Sarlly Bru!.!'I lie 14 • 1H1 Mid !II 3"° ll-Fund !I J 1'0 I St I n. nc l 16"" m Ta. T 2.60 l l!I 49 o """' "1 a + 1< ?on1Mt<1 1 04 111 20\t lfJ.lo 20~ v, GtlnllCtv StO ll ll l>'• o WIC youmaynonecs auc•ev 10;,11 l,\ldwGT lt '20 S:J<k •0166lM•»Cl till Y71lOt T•Tw1 116010>.i.101,,. .... ,,,,,,, 'u'''''' ""+'"• ''', "·\+•• •
' '
,IC G ,, .. ,,. ,, ,, •• , , •••••• , '"''''' AWW ''''" ... ' ... n 1 .... .,. .. "" ¥. 9, JJ . 37 n .,, W unn g 'M" S I \ •• ' ., ~· AW ..,., I 11 18 + h Cent 0 I pl l J ,, "6¥1 ~1 G 1nl W I» fQ jS\11 ~ 1 $5 + h in 8urnyp $ 30\o ii >1 YllU VIG 11 11'1> Babson t 1' 9 M 'II.ales ' ... '..., t!Wk 60 111 ll o ll • ll o COflt 111 to '' 14 n 1l\'t + • Gr•n p f l 75 t iO 59 .51'~ 5, Forshortlyafterthe Circuit ClC L••• 9, '"""""Roen 2'1\ 3 B1vc1< t2• t .Ol'ola!her1 13 1113 11AW pre11 2s Jllo Jri 11:i;, 1 ~ cont •I ao ta 261., 25~. 1v.•+l~Gr•~D • 120 13 291,. 2,"• "'"•-"'" Cel w Sv ;a 11~ Yood Sci 1~. 7'Mo ae1con 13 14 1, 14 'o\IOA Mu s SI t 02 AW • 1r,1 1 '1 1210 n'li n .. 22"' (Of\lrol 0111 l2J S?~• 5! .. 59'\o +I Grl Aa.P I lO 353 ma 29~\ lQ ~ + "'
Court d ec1s1on the Tax Court cm,.IJ!,• •" ,,1~ ..t'" M.•,•,•, •,A~ 14 1•'1-:o Be g Knt • 55 I !5 ...... / Cp ,", ,',",'• •,, ~MF'' nc 90 ie,,3 JO•• JO t ~• + \\ Con-1 90 1l 39"-,, 39 + ~ G LXOr 1 '°" , 31"° ll\'l 11v. C.~ n ou .., \0\10 1(1erk G!h 6 ll 6tl """'"' m nc l \<'I 11. •lit+ ,.CQlll(Unll 50 66 J2 1 .n 'o J2''1 G!NOl'lron 11 , 1114 11 :i. ll • had another Case ln Which Ctn"M 8 71 IO Moor• P 10"4 10t ftlalr FO 6 5! I It MIF I'd I SO 9 JI A,...,eron 40 S6 '1 71 21 -•• COOPe ln I 40 11 JS 3' 1 3' 0 ;. 4' G r.toNe~ 1 .,. ~· •• ,,_ •• C1nrad A ~S oc e S 14 U\•8ond1 ~ 634 4i9l ll"G1n S415 92Am•!t~608 2019e U'l151 -'-\C TR OO O<"O> G ---·•-4 1\+'Jllo
the ta•payer rehed on CaP Mtoe lf\'J 20 1go T•A 21 m, 80• on s1 e " a '° Muus Gv 11(It 11 tt AMI' lr>e " 13 66 • ,5 • ..,. • OOPer ... 5 • IS\• INN 01A '° 1 13 ~ llt~ llV. + ~ .. Cep!ow l >l ... MgTrwl S<•S'olcst f'Cln 11•2l219 yOmG SS4t 02Ampl'gM11t 16 9 0 911 66 -h ~OOl>TPll)f l 2l 0 21~'1 /+:.,GI We!!F nl )U14\'t2J,,.24 +~•
corrobora ting evidence t o Cep In A 5 • .stti 0 "' M 6 , r 11 Bo1tan a 21 a 99 11 om ~ 10 s:i 11 •S "m~•x co ~ 216 2G'-o 19,, 91' + ~ c CP•l•no 1 111 ' 61 • 41 1 63 • Giwnun!I '° t 2P.• I Rt 21•~ + lft
P'o"e hl S enteflalnmentc",',,',"'oo '' ','',,.~t,,<,vt> 15,.16,<,6rw~ Fd 364 3H\olul Sh s 16 22 1'22 Amuar l l!l ll J1'o 31•t ~;•+•oc:~'1"sll5D1D 11 tl; ~~1 li~-i:.g~un~l 1!1 I 110, 2l 21 -i' , ""• t lj 10 Ou lock (llU ft .... u! Tr" I 91 I 91 Atnstr Pl2 65 I Sf o S~>1 $1 .. -o (~ lnt!\8 07 ll JJ .l 1' l1 + I'll G ~I In 50 l• '"' l li, 1¥o + ;)
expense deduction E:;~· N(;G' ~i { 'no ~tr ,~9 11 loo 3}'. ~~~~ 1; ~~it ~ ~!'1" ,:,~1 l~~ :g n :;:::::.; pl,g• l~ .J': ,gv) J'i~ = ~ f0•GI": ? ~= ieov,, ~,1~! 20h; 2011:"! + :~ Ge'~ s~:' l ~ ·:: ~ ~ ~~\~ ~~· + ~·
Co d ii d C•nl•X ,,,., •l • .,0 c ''' ,614 o v~ J n • 01 Ni SecYr •e• Amll'J Jl 1.n a , -.,. or""" ~ • l! J • + 'h reyhound I 120 II'• 11 l:i IH\ + t, The T a' Uri Isa Owe Cf " VP$ lto l9,. r,.g 510''''°' A I "" 8 li CowlosCom 11 t:t;o f 'i' t •I + Go!tr 90 SJ lO ••, "'•+, • N• c.. R I • ''" N&I ,... e .. en I! Of 121' n1con "' J7l 21'1i :xt1i 11 + \to c~ Bdcu 3(1 61 21l\ 211'• 2 G urnm•<• > '' '' ,-, --
l b (~nl Lob 1 1 N!G&O J4loo l ~lli NY VnJ\5 '6l69l e11no l OS55l AnchHoX~I I J6 ,:l5l<J6 ~·~ PC OO" IO •1J o -i._ h is dNluctiOn oot on y ecause Chari o 6l> 1 • •• a , 0 '''' '''• einM Fd 1 °" 1 n 0 .. ,, , " , ... Ancoro Svc 1 1 ,,,_ • .,.-¥o nt 1 •v ' 31~ 31 li 31Vi -~ G IL!Hllil '°' tl 3a1. JI 31 i' (~..., L~ft 11 11 "'" o. < 9•110 11 • "A""C -. 21 o 11 • C a~l 40b 71 35\' 35'4 .J.I • Gl!MOh7 1Qf, Jl to\\o n ' ..-he Jacked a written record C~•• ino 5._ 6\0 'la 1 ,""'• 35'11 :is • "'G " c:.rw1h ~ 2110 11 11 1 20 s• •o • 39 ~ ~-Hi creo1111 FJn 1 '° 11 ., 2a ,,...., ..,, Guir 0 1 1 'lCI •J 31 • JO.I ,,.o liiO.
bu l be '
... U IO ,,,_,, ~ -0 K H • H'• (ept rnf I ~I s, ',', Pl S k 1 31 I OS APechtCP 25 '1 11.,. 16 ~ U 0 + Vo Crt!lllF ~ wl 2 19 It 19 -'-lo Go< '''''' U O" ,,,• 31 t.. t t t t a so cause ~ " "N sno 110 l~oC•P' In" :J '6 1nc11rn s,1 591 AJ>(oO l m .. .u . 11 ~ 111~ c kN11 16f 11~ u ,. .,, • 11 +1.
orsa emenh d E~;s~'~' 1~i .1~11'1 N:· S v~ , .... ,',."'1:~t's5~{1~H 1t;t .·.·~.·,, ',',','•"••~~t c,?t1 .. ', ',,>l• 2l • 21\,.+lli ci:.u.IC 10 2 ~!! u . ;it,:+.'8~~~:·,::~ 11 ;t.: n: H +1. 1t :said his ot er evJ ence was Ch 1,i pt 10' 101 En c:.e h ~• Fu...n~ ,, 20 10 crovlfHlnd 1 ' '', ,,,~ ,,.., _ ,4 GHstu1, 1 °' 335 ., ,, ,',1"'° + i .
hi I (11 r M q 13 !I~• "IJ NatG 19 10 • enn l 57 N~uw C•I 5 12 '3' L Pl 8 5U I 114 11 • 11 • CrowCo I 'll'I ,,, ll~• U • 15~ + a~ Gui/SU 0,4 40 13 0 ;! • 'O 1 01 • -\Ii inadequate to prove 8 c a tm c uz u " a t. ;~%lo ch•n F 'll•• 79 1 ~~n SI 1J ~ 11 19 NeYw Fo 10" 10 " ~RA ,svc0 "' 121 •~v. 111~\ 1:29 + "• c~n Ccrk s11 :n._ 11~ ll ~ _ "' Gull wn so 315 Js; 24 '> , ..... t , Ct1U 8 2' !T i Nt \A 'l l U G ~ 5 5 5 ~New Wld ll011 4 27 n:aa Jg Ol~o 19'•:xt +,Crowl'l(~ol1 '"l'>(l 4~1 -t2 GufW f l50 ' ..... • (I Mtg 201'111 o Ne ~ 8 '' 4' t"NI ji Ntwlcn 1'171627 Arch 01nl 2:i. '"~ J9 (1 1'>+2~)C...,nZr 11!1 11 3'>. 3l'1 JJ.\0-~!GuHW ~t 31T l~l~ 16",2,o l~,. I'< Cl•~ Ml 11 11. Car NG IJ\I> 1l • s:C"'\"' I H, ~ 92 N ch S r1 11 64 l2 64 ~'l' PS0v I ot 52 2 '' 21 21v. + 1. CrnZ Pf• 20 illO ~S\'I " 41 GulfW pl5 IS 1 ' • "" 2
of S\lpportl11g
U.S. Industry Tliri1 ,es
011 Foreign Capitcil
C nlM•~ 16 l it.NE~ 0 1 ) l •c· Gr eo' N«e•U 155115.$1 rini Sr S4 ll~.11.1 lli -t\.:CTS Corp •O 111120 19'1io 70 +'\GYITon lnd ,.1,1,•·•,1.0 1,1•+· c t~on o •• ·~ w N•G IOl lO 1c_15r 1 690 JS40C:ntP~ 11• 121 .l.r!'l'H;oSI I 161 ,o , 20 . 10.\t -.c..,oahv 901 JOI'; 11 20 '120'~+1o -"'' o;;o -h Clew CP ll\o lf\1"IW Pu~v 1 12• F~Po 9)1 J00&0mffl •ll ''5Armc p/2!0 l '911 2tto 1no -~u<li'>l Pl1 1S 19 'l•'> 2Ji1 23'•-\lo -H 1-Cooa• Co 58 Ml Nycl RIC 10\'1 11 F~~t 1!191S!l100 Fu/Id 1'011J 31:rmr,•,","o 1410 •l '> 62 62 _,,,,,Cul 91~ 21 '~ 17• UV, 16•, H&CkWol 'l?(I s l 9'l )fr Co ~s F l''r S Oho Art I I~~ sn ~d 1110 74.1 1~1 Fund 1 13 1011 ms ! 124 Ut :M l6 o CYmrn€n U 61 .io•~ <r(tto 'O;\+ H1 1P ll>Oe ti 3•~-,, Co en S • :J~ ~Ill p S<a/O 1 ~ • 11 Sc•cl t o 9 95 On~ WmS U 111 • II Arm lll:Y 1 60 4 11~• 31h 11~ + ~ Cunn Orvo 11 10\~ 9 0 10 + l Hall bur! 1 OS 2.19 16 • l6 ° l 6 • + • ~~ ~:~ s1.~~.g r:on TP ~1~~;~~~~'ai 11391'C!g:;;~h i:~1 ~~!r~nc~.:,:O il ~~ ~,1 ~ .. +\·~~~~~~ ,60 4~ ~r•, ~~! ;~~.i. i.=:~.!.~.·~ 1 11 :~: 5,•,,,,, 'l:u +~~
(l)mT Pt 71 13 :>~e NA I'• Eau v '6 •'>lOpp ~IM 11 10 1Jll Ashld Ol 120 Ill 21 0 211~ 21••-,cu!leH 120 111 lS • J.i o JS +litH•mrnnd 40 ST 6 15'~+io Com H 1~ 10" 10>..I O•~Ce ll \1 u • Fun<! univ~ 1 TC St< 10 lS 11 11 ~~ BOG""' 32 10 91t 9~ + , Cydoo l 90 U 15 7' ~ 11 ~ Hi no mn 61 2~ li ' ll11 lJ!i + :O< Com P•t ll • H .... Pebs 8• ~ SS Grw h 111 6 79 P•ce Fnd 7 79 I St lou 1 0 1l •1 "6!1> '1 + !o (¥Df111 M ~ J 16 t4 1 6llo 6J • Ha/l<l Htr n • JI ~ ., t~11 ,~ ,f 1 :,_i.~!~~:1 co s~ t 1 t"rc:" ~~ro~~:~n ~~ :?::V~~~ds01,~J~ 1~ fr! r;,_: fr':t '4 C•PrusMw ~1~ 31 , J21-i +'h ~!~!£l°i~ ~l i~i. J~:: if!=:::
cmo In ! S 5 Pa •~ O• lt •l•l.c;o1 Gr1h 11 u 1'l 1ap1 Mui ~69 469!ihto'l:!rltt 133 11 16 1 11\~T l lil H•court 1 1' 50"2 ~ 50 n +;,.
., 1111Y •&ANT, I rtl
F ermentable c ar bohydrale
foods "1th a high sugar con
tent are believed t o be the
chie! cause of p roducing
dentaJ canes CutUng down
on sweets and other s ucr ose
contain1nl! ane.cks 1s one of
the first rules of den1aJ
health ~ucahon S lrength
t n1ng the ha.rd glossy out
side enamel o f the tooth 1s
also important, a nd this is
he lped b,y the fiouridaliLon
of dnnklng water The ne xt preventive mca
s urt' 1s in red ucing by vigor
ous brushing the amount of
d ental plaque that a ccumu
!a tes at the base of tttth
and gum Junctions The
brush ln1: a lso helJl!l to ehm
11nate 1nflamm a t1on o[ the gums and reduce (aJculus
\\hlch could lead to d isease
of the gums We carry a
complete 1tock of drntal ., ...
YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a delivery We ,vfll de
hver promptly ~1th out ex tra eh~e A great m any people rely on us for their
he1!.lth needs \Ve w elcome NQUests for dehvery service
and charge accounts
Pill l1DO PHARMA.CT
35t HMpltel l••d
Newpwt hoc• 642 1110
""0.11..,,
N E\V YORK (AP)
F oreign countries poured a
record a m oWtt crf money into
1nvtstments 1n A m e r 1 c a n
bus iness in 197ll
Financia l sources e stim a te
the amount spent to es tablish
o r acquire U S subs1d1anes
at $1 2 bilhon The commerce
Department had reported the
1969 total was $1 b1lhon
From its v ery beg1nn1ng the
United S tates we l comed
fore i gn ca pital f or
development o f railroads,
canals and natural resources
In 1791 Alexander Hanulton,
the first secreta ry of the
treasury said of foreign
investment Instead of being
viewed as a rival it ought
to be cons idered a s a m ost
valuable auxthary
The government s\Jll holds
open the door to lllVestors
from abroad At the e nd or
1970 the total hre1gn invest
ment he1'e "as estimated a t
$13 b1Jh on Despite !he strong
growth s ince the end of World
War JI the :sum r e m ains
s mall compared w ith the est1
m ated $70 b11J1on value of d1
r ect American investment
cur bu11n•1s is
I• sur• w••r
Lt"\•111ttlc •rd e .,.,,,,, <~•tt•
1 f11fi Of' 1f1ncl "'wport <•"''' 644 5070
overseas C..i~Tec 6 ol"1 p~••w H 9 10(omSflO S01''6 PMla H .W1S71 ft "" 3'1'\~1'0 '•11 01/0 RIY~f 1212 1111l&+•oHlrt llnll "IO •2 -1 ComM 1•1 ''Pauer, P 6~• 1 •Cwtn AB l •O 152 P !trlm 911 1069~\:Rc/lch~f .,2 l lXl4 69 66'14 18 +3~ Oane Q:i 115 U lD \ 3Q lO -~ Hf'1<0CP 1 1if 2'f1,• 6Jlio f.)l;o-v.
d Con Rock ll l'...., avol e ls 1.f\.< cw th c l n I 86 p nt SI 1! H 11 H D 1t5 56 ~ S6 +71o Oert lno :Wb 209 Jl• .}6•1 )7 t + • Hi rTSMr• 80 21"' 12lo +1
The excitement s t 1 r r e Contt•d 9 9 • "oe 1 Ml t • '~" ccmD As 9 I• 10 11 pen e nt 1 :15 t 01 !\1:~ C~!;';. 1 11 26 15" :u•. + If) O•r'I 1<>0 '' 2 1 "31• -:1 , •1i.> HtrvAI 1 XI 1 f 1r:w 11 • 21", + 1.4o t onlr•n lO ?'-Pee11e T 21 '8 comPe 6 • J3'/p 0n FnO ll l01•MATOl 01 m 3 2~ 7f-O•t• Proceu lSt 1• n~ 13'\-tV.H•wl El 1 , Ulo 7J , 13'-ll-'Jtt
abroad during tbe past two Cooper l 19••10t1Pen" l'ie 1/o 1'r'oCom1> !" ~,"B','.~,,P an lnl' I06611 .6S Aurc,."',,J 1011 17• 12 12-<+140IYCoCP 1 4 Jl lt 11 .. 11 • Hiyeo .t.~ "", '.ll ~ ll o JHI + i, Coro S '1" '"' "• GOW '' 25 (Ot\'IO r d , 0• >><•OS•> ""' '4 ' f \• t ~ Oevco "" 15 1110 )~ 1J 71 -I .. 00 n ~~! 11 l~• 11 I Co'm .,., ll\o U'l'I .. • tk • I n gr" .t.u!OM Oe. 116 S!\io so SI~• +P • Oev1nHud JO 11 JJ ll'' 31 H~~· .~ ..... 10 • • • -I ' decade~ by the 1otemationa fr:,! d Co ~2 ~ 1~~ ~:'°'~151W1 5;~ s:,,; ~:i::'ord1 n ~; n :: Ptc:;~~.~Und~,67 'I'' !!~:"'t~r~nd J! 1:1'1 l~~ 1t.1 i ~ giv~n~a l ~ .~~ 1r• -ll~• ~ =l'r'o Ht< ,,.i~ 17r J 1f! 2~ ! 1!ll ! ~
expansion of U S indus try has Cfu!(h R 7h l l'o P.~~ton ub 21 • 13 ~ C1>n-o " 7 •l , IJ N Er• t 91 9 97 Avco co wt 56 4 • 4 ,.,. ~ OPL plD 1 ,, i o 1cs 1os 105 He nt HJ 1 37• JT\t l6 ) ''~ + ,_ CYP ~s ( 1 i, t •~ 9 ' 9•• i°"t J~~ •IQ t ,g N Hor 26 2' II 11 Avco plJ )0 13 ' • 41 ~ , 11 ,1 OHrf (o 2 16 .:I' oJ ~ 'a~-. + Ht •ne Curl 41 9~~ 911 "'
tended to d 1str1c t attention o'',",', '•"' 1•, ,'"" !!,•,•,,1n ... tc 73 "'' ccn Ld 1s 11 11 " P ° Fvnd 10 31 10 33 A~trr Pd 20 '10 3!"< 31 JI'> v. De m1rP 1 1 11' 1~~. 13 , l• + ~ ~:1\e •n,•, ta 211 2o 1 26 ~' _ 'I> r ":IO 11 Ccl;CtPl2111 '80 Prol'orll 7001 UAw>tt lnc 1JOU~il1 ll\~ OflMn e l O ••'it\1 1/lo ?I ... trpGI 1115 l fS l S
h th Oe!a Dts 1 , Sl'll Pro Gctf 3•• J '" c~n wo y 6 (.(t 6 s. P OYlilnl •!I 5 33 Avnf! of2 SO I 12 61 11 +ll• o.i10 Air so lie :u 31 31~ +'It H" me,"0d1 31 161• 16 16 _ •;, fro In t e presence tn e O••~ G•n 2~ , 21 P ud M" 7~1 2 • c woai 6 91 1 se Pruo Sv9 10 '° 11 3' AYll•I Of 1 1 21 11 21 oe 1ec 1n1 1 "'~ 6,, 610 _ 1~ • "' 20 1• 21~. 22 ~ 12 , ,. 1
U d Sit f U De a!n P J 3 ,l'u~SNM,1t1'l1 0eCohM"8 "63 ""u!namf..,nd1 A~on Pd !IO 7'6 9:P,u 97',+2 Oenn Mfg6(1 t12il<o ]S i ?•~+li,.,Hern 1ohCaD ''' "'• l"lo-\o n1te a es O n um ero s o.,, s Fo 6 1 , Pu~ s NC: 11~. 12\/o Dt!awa • Grou~ Eau 1 1 s. 1 24 AzTK" ou 131 " H ,,, lSl-1 15•• oennMfg p1 1 • 1• • 13h 2• 4 .. ~· c~,'· 15e ls1 u ""1'• •J>i
f''m' a lliUated with foreign oa~ Ml • 11;i.11:14 Pub •h 1,, •• Decat 12 oorJ 11 Gf'O•• 1'711JMt -B-o.,..nv 111:11 °' i11101, 10~. 10 'r+'4 "' 1 10 u "''• 21 . nir +~o g•u• Ch 7• IS Pu••Pa I II• Oewr U 9l 1•11 Gr!h t 9llO&S DtnhPYlnt 1 1 11.:, ~!o ~t 1 +l Heubleln as 1• .;J\• 4'1• .,,+ ... ruirentcom panies :;ay:sMor ece In s ,.,1 ,P eonntl 29 1J lO'U 0 11 1101~1 lncom 1 0t 111BebockW5e 711 30'<.lo 301:.+~oe e-roo./8 1 ss s1 sJ H•Nf'ac•20 12Jl1 '''"'•+'• .,..... Oeklb "~ •• '•I POuo CP .I S1' Cod~ Co~ 1$ 24 lS ' lnvt Jt 1.5.1 • ,, l 1k OllT 6S 51l 2'.\io 2t ~ ,. + 4 01Sotolnc "° ,, ;1 • 21 2~ -\\ ~ e,h \lo !ff ~' 12 • 11 11\o + o .. gan G uaranty Trust Co ofDelh Int 1 1 ~11·~Qu11 C M ,.,,.12\\0 orfXt l 1•011' VIII• t 1J 1t1Bel!GEl l7 1263''\i]J\1 34 Dt EOsl 'O 1U21 o ll'h ?1'4 n cn Ho!l l 176 1! .,,,, + .. Del (•nT 11 11'4 RT sv1• ' 1 1 Orevl Flil 11 ,, lJ 0} VCYll I 6S 111 lltnoor Pun~ Jl " IQ. l1 + ~Ott Ed pf<J 1~ J 0 117 1 1 111 _, ~Ol)t I 110 16 ". •3'· ••• + •• New York Du l!lr 21 >ll'Jo Reoen Pr •~• ''Or•YI LY llll "11 ReY•e 106211 61 ~ut11P .. ,P!l I 2l 73 Jl +~OttEd of55e •&I 11 , 81'1<-• DfrnW1 90 37 2S o 2.5'o 2'\-•, Otwey € 3\1 '"' R~h•ll C 11\) 2l •Ea on&How1rd II: ntrer 1515 lS 6J 1ng ,.,l JS I I I'~ 111? 11•~ l 'h Oex!tr 2• 6S 19 it>. Jt + ,,.. Holl EIKlrlO 1 11Po 10 , 1~ + • 'The d1verS1ly Of the1rn •m Cr 181i lR l ~1~1b El 11 1S>,.; 8t An 99J l015 5chu•• 1Sll1'Jl o""•'",','o? 11 ,,, A7 41\', v,OtlFntn lO I 26 151 H o lS 'o -~c 0/.<5 nn 12 106 • .O~o, +•~
h OllC lne '\' S Ra1cMCD 91 9jtfl Grwln 11 3'13SIScuOclef FufldJ In r 4 11 .1 ... •I 61~ ,,.Dem1nll l i0 ~ .U •3'> '' +• no.,ugl )O 6J 11> I ll't -•• QUtpttt JS Jilustrated by :SUC Oocute 11 12 • l!avm Cp 15 1 1*-1ncom 6 1 6 U In! lnw un1v1ll 801~b0c•"'•'s JI 4!•o 'S '5'• iJ DIAm Sham 1 lJ' 1) 12 , "1 + '!! Homei lot '0 111 l~<. 2S • 11"~ + t'o
Shl'On dsnl H U ~RK1>8 E<i21 "'2'l " SPfd t 17tSI S9c1 3l OI Jl01 ''U '26S1V.50 4 11'1>+Ht 0l•Sh r1c1 2 J4 ,J.j l• Honywt !JO 331 10 'i'll o lOIVi1 +1 . v.ell known names as e Dow Jon 11 • 0 4 l!e•P En s , µ-, Stoel!. ll st 11 11 81, is" 15 '46 Be•!c tnc ao 10 ll 2 ll , ll'• -4 01~s • 0 110 a 1s • 1111 1' o ... , Hoov1111 1 10 n 11 • 1,., 21 , + ,. v DI d oa...eon 1' ! R•I C•O l1\lo ~l •Eberll 11 911$1? comStl00810 0ll:~,~~~.so ZI00:191lfl\>lt'4 +~Dcl1Mo~ 6~11• 11 1,11•1 tr,HC>PC0 ,.,.,. a1;:s .Jtl.,.J4"'-"• Massey rerguson un op an Ounkn O ll~1''4Rddr P11 2l 73'1 Eo• 1 111 3 EBSecutl~Funds I I M I 1111~1 1 •11'1..1+•D tb01d '811 S•~J>....68 0 69 ,Mo.sl ln !36 11 34'~.Jt J.1 1'-t
Lever Brolhe' S And not Only 'o,ur1r,~, "' ,•, , ', o ',','•'• eMx "'"" •IV. e"''' Sc 6 J i 10 E<iul~ 3 35 3 61 ,•,,!',.,,",,' II 1; 11 1 21~ + •0 DfGICl'Q 60 31 a o 6 16!1i "' ~, H011d~ ' 60 21 u • 12\o 2 , , • , 121 21\li EMrOV nt91119 11'Ve>I 1H 1 76 8at~ln ... ,.· 1S2 21\/o 26 ~ 21 _._~0101111 £qu ~ l:i.s 11• 60 70 ).L Houdl~l21S l Jl l2 ,, T.
a re many foreign ftrm sE••• Sh n i..11 Rosele~ 9V• 9 i EnlPrso 631690 uu 1 ,90 ,,5 8 p., n 66 &l>.>" +2 01 unohm "' :It •• 1 , u .+~1Hov1 11t u jo JI 1s , u, 1 ~·-Eccn Ltb 21 J Ru• s cv :11 110 Eau tv 9 14 10 it Se tt Am 1 56 lo 34 11::~<('1L: 1to, !• .st • 5J SJ , -•• Ollll ng 1>1 a 1 1 ;1 ll JJ Heu••~" I ~ 11 "6\• •J~. IJ , _ ~
operating s ubhs1d1aries a n d ~",",>.,tel 1 ~.~ 1~, • ~:3~, Ho 6; ! ~": ~:~: ~r~ ~ t: ! ~ s~,?~c~ 1 !~ 1: ~ ::.~1 ci, 150 1
';, i~~ ir! i~': 8 ::1 co)Ot.6• 1,U 1j];. 1 ~',: 1;1 .l-f 1 t::i~ :': ~ ! 1;z ~ 11!, 11: •
Joint ventures ere m ore are ,0 ,,, , .. ,. .., , ',seen n E 5 , s-. Felrld 10 2111 11 ftam Fd lO 11 10" Beoi 1J1 1 '4h " '4h -\'o 0 j'""v "'1 is aa V:i ~ • M"4 .,.31'! H111JiLP 1.20 6S «7~> ,,. , •no_ , • ,-Schol! In µ0 s .. Fa<m 11~ 101111011,,00, Ao llfOllSIOoo<"Oo of o 161 ll • 31>, 31 -11 D11Sta9 llO l Jl Sl o ~! .1.v,H<11i1 NG• 10 26 11 <I 41 _,_,
COm mg aJI the t1me E Nuc Ii 13 •SO< Coo •• > F d !)et! 1 ,.. I ff\\ "l 99 ,, 0 vt rsln(I' 36 1.IS n 2 1! 11 + 'o HouG oll ill 2 " >> ' E trcrn ~ 11 5 '"0 ~ G Sh Oe1n 17 60 11 60 8ec~rnln .50 29 Jl\o 36 ? 31 , +I 4 81~M Q 52• 136 201;1 ~6 'o 26 , How John 74 .... > ., .sl 't -0'o especially from Europe a nd E 0$& 7 7, Seo! Sons 16 f~)"~:~': ~~u:1131tS!<le 966l05t 8ec!OI(• 30 65 .. , •l •J1'o 4'\~ rP••Pltr 36 11)6 25'..~ 11 0 15 +•.HOWmel 70 1:b ~6'0 '''• ''"'·~·
Canada ' EmoS O I 11~n.,,,scrlp!~ .t.. ~·S o E~'•• 111a 1~'° CaPI t l1 101'Be tePe1 50b 11 13 , 22 1 21 , 111 DDm Fno 29p o "" 9 1 t't H~lillltYJ lo t 11 • lltr. 2l i-h ~! M..ovl J'i J'A Sc Joo• H ' E e'( ll !l 1• 19 S gm1 Fund• Beech Air 75 •2> 15 ? JJ , 11:11 i 'lo OcmeMn1 IO 1 '' • 6'\; " , _ \I, Hubb1 d 36<1 51 J 1 19 19 ' + Iii
Ene ev c l•I• 3' ~ Se•rlt Pf 21 1,', F d~I 1\ 93 11 •l 1nvu1 11 11 12 21 11, den l 60 ' 11" 21 , 21•• Vo Donnel ey •• 100 'l o 2l l3Vi _ ..; H\lflft Hu •o ll 17 ! ~r,•, f,.• _ " The Com mer ce Department En•rPv R l lo~· • Cmp 9 " r1n 1~ 1.!1 11 '2 T u'1 9 ot t n l<•ldntH 60b 11 2 '• 11 21~ 1 Ocrlt co 32 1 24 o l•lo 'i , + '" Hun! Chm 1z J I 11~, 11 llh + •"
f En1w111 o • ' 1 enJ n 1 o 21\ s~iem ~ 2& ! JS smnn a 9 6Q 9 60 8e Hew 1i0 1S1 •l ,., ~0''1 •t + 4, Derr o ve 45 ~ • 1 1' , ~ ldthoPw 1 40 ,", "•sh JP' :J'I" _ "• reported a t the end o 1970 E<1v r o 1 1 o 11 n Svc G•u• s" 56 T••""' ~J ~t 2s 11 sw11 Inv t 11 t tt 8111 n «Oft 13 11 ' 11 ~ 1 t>t + ~ OaYe CP 1s ' 01 1 1s , 1.1v. + ld~ar II•• i.o 1610 15.,. ! " E•! T'c ~~ 7 S•v•n P ' ~ F nenc al "'"" Swnv GI 66' 11l leml,Co •O 11 ll"io 10\' 19'• DoWChm,60 l 11'9• 78 70~-•o •ICentl l• ;7 Jl 32 " manufacturing and petroleum Fii CKo • 3 sci °'!''• lS • n ovnm , 2• 4 !t .over Inv ll 11 H 62 Bendlir 1 60 ti :U\'I 3lll ll~• + ,11 O•ti•l"d 1 "° lll J1•1 ~ ~. ~· , -, 111 Ce~ Dll so 21 .soi.;. 59,: llt~ ~·. Fab T•~ o 3 SaNE •e O(l 1 •O o lnllu<I l lJ l 100Po-clre 692 758 Btr">dlK PfJ 1A1 ~ 5• S• 0.•uPI' 220 17 39 ll • ll o + \'O I Powr 110 31 •O 39 3' t h at 4 91 f o r e 1 g n Fe rno 1 , oswGsCP is• is. nc<>rn s1t~UStFrmG1 un•Yel 8,ne11co 166 01 s.~s1 1 s1 -ti Dr•s.r o+B1 JO JS 3•·3"'~ t !Powol2 JS 11oo;u "34,:3j 0 _1••
h d 7 6,"rnt •• i lt:~w ESYC 11 1 19• Vent •D •7!S!e1eS! '5#0 7S BtM/lpf4 j(I Jl0S9 S9 S9 Orevlus CDt IJ'8~?11,7e +o1 1 1 POWPl2 10 il 903ll»Jt~J , COm pan!e S a F nf Do ~. 3 Spacerv 1 <loFslF \I~ l 21 l216Ste•Oman Fund• Btntllpi430 !SJ 11 111 '> 81\o1 +1\'I Ou~e Pw1 40 315 l.S • ,5 ll lrt>PrlCoAm I '"' l1(< l<•+
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Gennany the Netherlan s~r~~ncg 1~:1t"~~~"~c~ 1l•~1! :...~°!'11 ':IJ';!irMR Ap ll31 1357 :::"~~,cotsbo Yi n1: E1~ 22\lo + ,OYntmAm se;:o ·~· ,, .~:ofrc~pAlllS ,l n· ~J,! ?1 ~-\
and France Gii i (n"P ,, ?'1tiuny In lo t l1 Spec! t1J10 6lleach• 1017!05'ftond l<>d .so 15 ~ 1.1 fl •+,\• -• -lnterco 120 19 •6 > "' ···-. G1fo1< i 11 T!!ln G" '• s .. Four111 10 Xt lll6 r..:l'1<1el J 1J 41ltflool<Mh 121 j' ... :ui1 1.;;w+ ~E111,Pc fO 12 11 '1 ~,. .J.•, n8t k nc 110 '2s 1 1s . 2s:o..-,
Wl''ie ent'yorfor e 'gn Ga1 S•C lf'1l6 ,. c , l oFraft~AGroup femor.•,,1,~67 Borden120 l ~ 1 ,,.,, ,.,,EascvCo oO ~l 'l '•~> "'''I M .SlO 2Jl3J9\11 3.16 '"•'>
U S G " c 2 1;+~~~~/ "(? 1q , 1•i~ DNTC' t ro 9 53 Tcw• M• 5:!0 51" Bo'9Wer 1 '5 91 71 ~ :21.>; 1S ? ± 1'E111 Air I.Jn •ll ?I 711 , lD'I + o1 ln!Chm Ncl~ 0()5 •9 t <9 4'1> 'T comp anies \010 fhe G IC n• C I J • T nin O 1 1(1 ) l'(ltt Grw1h 6 29 6 19 Tran C' aP 7 '6 I 11 8orm~n1 <0 J l'V. 2 ~ 12 ~ 4 E11!G1 I 0.1 7 1 is , 3; r JS .. + :., n!Fl1Fr 6Gb 31 611;,o 61 6' _ \
f G l ,JVr T Meh H j '' Ull 6l76 9ft T1vEa 100l1101 80i Edt?l.1 'l 3.!i"o y~~lo +\\E11t U ll l'll l1Pt21 t1!t ln!HfU\I~ 210 )11.lOlo l t>+to 1ndustr1al :stream 1ntens1 1es ~~1 E11 •~ •~r'ko PIJ i. 11 ln{Cffl 111 135 Ylldcr Fe112 n uu eo1Eo Pll ll 168Cll•J1i M2v,11211o -i E111C<>ct1k 11 '" u, 11 '"'..._,,1
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n111,01d l':lt l u~, 1•i. 1 ,~-~. Gf 'n •• l yd • i\;.Fd l•Mul IOIJlOU TwnC Gt 2n Jl1llourn1 Inc lO lol o lJi\ 13"-'11 E1!<111Yo 1-0 1,U ll*lo l1•~ :u•1 1•o n nduit 161 10 1 10 10 -~• c om p e t 1 t 1 o n 1 American Glal!t 1 29 1 l 11 ,r,:,. r Fd 9 lo> Fund inc GrP TwnC •nc • nJ ' ti llr•n 1 A "~ 16• lg 1o 10•• 101, Ectol n Ml S? ·~ JS•t " , JS•~ t 1n,,"M""• "'•" ," 19 , n11o lt \1 t ,
l G!f~1nW11 ~?J y 0 1 Cm r 9•1 1021 Unl!MullD1J ll ~1 8rg9$t ?<(!• l<IC\~M •t.6 ~+1,E<•..,dJ'lt l l,j 4 \lo 40 ~l!,+~t n•t U S1 H lS "'' busines s :sou rces 'ay lleVc:;IOtl Rub J unnec ln ~1 ~3,1, imotc ''''"un 10 JG02 lOtJ ll•!•IM•110 1606' •t..,63 1i-t;Ed11onBr1>1 l JS l\ lS 1~'N"""•'o u llll o 11,n•~-~
f h t to I C.cdCvt 1' 1 S•~Un 'G"'t a t\.'i !nOTrd17 6 l31'UnlonS•cGo Brtl!Ml~I " O rl ,•1:0.:.11 EG&GJO n1Pe11 ,11 '?+•~ t ""' 11 1 ""1'31 43 ~+1• 1 p re er ta a n JnCrease 0 Good LS $ 1!1\IUn "1< l~I; p at 1l3 1 01 8<'0lll l1tS11'\8rll P~ •l• 1•1 1' l l !o + ... E•ct Au oc ~· 6 o 6"'1 64-i 1ntP•P 1.SO 11 l6 l1 :16 0 l o t 0 ~I I be G0<:twvc 1 1 .usB~nc•,o ~,?FurntA""l "~:JC Nt1 !nu1 ~11 ~1Br l'e ln•lt !?1 1Ct 11 EI M•m Mt o 1'6 l0 •10ltlO•• nll'aP1>14 l 10'3 t J t l-t , lmpor ls 11la S CB USC G 11'11 Cn 7 I ~US Envll ~~ 41 Gi fW• t 01 J tl Uft f""IP • ,_ ln I~ lklwv lit f ! 7J )t , 3R JO _ ~ €1MN..,q r \ 18 17 1 1'• .i. l~I Rtctl!lf r 9 I I , I
f ore1gno0wned subs1d1ar1es G0,:m .. ~st ~3 ·~J "tl! p~~~ ,1,.,1 ,~" Sft vn1va 1 wi.ttn 11 ~s 13 ue,•,wvH10•,"'J 1~ .a> ·~ •!~ Eg1~ N1 1~ 1 1 6 0 74"'' lnl!T&T 11s '~ u:o.~ S)I, •1 ~, .., 7'1:. 30 , G bra 1t 1 ta 1 '1 Unl!-cr Fvn<ll 00r uwv00 0 -,, " 'l<'l JJ , :;.; -! 1,, flP•i.oNG I 126 lt 11 o 18 ° 1n1 t'f P!F I 1 151 ' 1~7'io 151 ~ +lta nluSt operate under Anler ic a n GrHn t 11 • 11 ut ' ind c:;rouo SK Act"' 1 ,! 1 •1 ,n ' i r;; n • ,,... + , eu11Cp 1 " )•4 '' • 11 , 211 + ,., I~" 111 P!JH ~ ' 1cs °' 101.,, +1
t •• r ales a nd costs of labor ""~" 10' ,,., inc~ ... 1,.,,.-,,•.~,,•,,co ... 11 11 10• .. 10 1 EMt Ltd »e J' ''• •• ,,_,. niTa.T of ,',,~ .. ,'12 ,1!.l:~ .,.1<o, "" 8al Fd 115 8~' Stien 16'11 JJ P •w 1l U'" 1 ~' llo -1,1o EM In~ 1 '' ., .. ~• I TOT ' ..... -,. "" ,,.,,..+ ComStl't~1•1' V&"" •'.n l0 '1 8¥10S/\oe l SO 1•3'\lt31'•JIV:1+>.1 E"1erE1 11& i110 1 ~0 ,71l + nl O!K• ''& tS1 96 +_.. and mate rials ;,r111F11 ,. 1 51 '30 UF<I' C•~ 7 n 1 00 arun1wx 1 76l JJ 12 , " ~ + .. erne1 pt 8 t<t 1 4 "' 'I t 4 \T _ ~ 11~I~Pr~L ~5,0 130 11 7a 11
A Gr1h Ind 19.15 lt IJ V•luo llne Fd 1u~~ ~r 1 n 11 j6Uo U I 26\< + '1\1 Eml'noAfrF I 11 61 • i ~I I U!T l J.ll 61't ~I o h1lo + • Another factor that mute s c;1·eetllCll t Guere1n 2J 112s 11 v.1 Lin A" 7,. 1~00,1 ~no 3~ • 1111 1• Em1t1r1 110 11 311, .:i6 ~ '' • ... , ~t ui I A .o 1~ lli! ;, • ~~. • , th U S ._, Ht"F11 !on 4 66 SM ln(em S lt J 1't 8ul/Fon:1 1110 1l :ri 0 :d~ :J .II f ;z ~~~,'1 G~~' g ?; : ~: 1 n:, -ti~ l"ffrpact t l 1 :II)>., j~• _ l'o c omplaints IS at 0_ 1 ~ ''' SPI s1 s31 1 n1 1uiov•W .., 2 r 23 "' 22 1J l ~• Er1111~M1n .o 19• 191-?I r ,., .. n••rPC•f 5 1 97 t t211t 9:<,
Corporaltons particularly tO S A N GEL ES -HerbOr •n •D9 nct$$1'll ••S •t~ ~nl<•l!1m1 2ttll7 'ol ll o 12 'ol +•Ent M Pl4 ,I '1 11• 116 ,,,' .s··1~::srt" r 1S 1' l ~l•·1 ·
Oii a nd rhen11cal firm~ -a rc Monogram Indus tr ies 1nc ~t~ [!v :i~~:~i~~=~~l)I ~:~ :~ -~~1.,nJ'l1~G ~: =·~ n: ~l~ +1 .. 1;::~ ~~·,~ 1: ll ,, il; ~~; + ~ 1"''r:1 '61 I . 1"' l! ~ 1r~ l~'! 1.:
vecy ach ve m m any fore urn and A B Electrolux a large ~ti!"~ Gor ,,' ,." ,( '13 At1..!"".. : ~ i:; -~~:~ ~rts 'ii 'J ~ 1 ~ ·~1 +i>o Qu11\,'~ M lO'l " 21 • 21'1 -~ 1::: e,,,, Jo ?I ~1:: il.. ?l.i: • ... , "° "-1 ;tlw11sttn ·~1n14 8undY 70 !l?J.,.?1"'7J +\~1$~~ 1%" J62 lt1434 3' -•tow11G11J1 17 '11 "'"""' countries Sw e di s h a ppl1anc e=•r,,\~'nn 1J:,112 1,w •• 1o Mu 1, .. 1,05 Bu1r11h' 60 491111 111 llS ~+t ""'1~:)) 1: 1i 1'~· 7s :!tz •ow1l'ow 1 60 lJ 1s0i 21 2,
.nuf.cturer h.'e entered Hvbimn t 50 IJ N• 1 notn G -Blltn Un ~ ' 1' lll!t ll (l -\j, o.stxlnt I O D W!o 1l 1 ;J ' + \\ low•PS• l )$ 1 1• l) l t,r, m CM F nl 1 'O I 3l !!:•Dir 7'I )'/?I~' -(_ Ent~ Dll tt 7 11 0 11 0 4 , + l lfto Hosp 44 'I j)l, 1 ~ 1l•t i "'
' 000 . Of on. PAINTINGI
WHOll54ll WA•EHOUSI
OPEN TO THI PUil.iC
50°/o OFF
t by W hlch's' G lvo\I U tl lf tS E1i.rt1" Olo II 16 , lj IO +•'o E ln P IO 1 t 21 1 n ll" •· an agreemen GrwitiwP 101 ,31 Mo o 10 J•11 s1 ~•bol co10 1 .. ,,,., 46 1 '1 1 +VJ !tt>ylCp I' nus. 1•11 ~-0 1e1i:c.,, t4 :io.o. lS J~ .... -h
Electrolux will mark e t 1ncom •:u '" '..:l'lv 103 c:?·~~~~nd ;: 'h: 111• 'j~ I' lflvr 1112• n 411. •1 r o•+•• -J-K-lr .r-•• II til l~ Tru I l!:UU.ll ~ 11 h M 61 111 I 1 1 + l urofnd 95<1 11 lt o 101.< 11 t + ''J cir; A!I ~ Monogram s sanitation cqtnn.. Tr u"11 ltt ln W•t•I 1'1n1 1,11t :,,,•0~L,n& 4 11~• 1"t\~J'!"'P'" .a •1 ~; '1 r1 t Jl'l J• 1" ' S& !• 1J ~ i11,,. ~ I' lmP C8D •J11071 W•ll '1 11 11'1 ,,. ,. ~lit ~ :U,\t + ... '( tllO I H 6'I n . 1l 1l &t9e• 10 li •• '. i.-.+
m e ntforaU"craft boats buses 1mp Gi~ 10s 110 wnc1 •~t 1o m ::;nt!!1!8 1: ~v. 37'' ii:+~• •tltr~..te 3" 1$~ 111. 16 ~+,.j::~::; 1~b '' 17 ' 21 +~
d I Ell So l ... lncfdB 6ft1'6W~1t •~" ~'46••cdn P•(l 30 t •w ,,"', I FKloA ~ ~S •"• '1 '4 4~1 \JoF 1 6l' •~ j -• an tra ns 1n r o pe U 111ndi1rr ~11 s11aw nr•Fd i •~Jottc'""'ni » • ,,.4 ,,, lfv;+ F1jrt~C1m 7il'tt' Jl Jt-1 +1 .J:1,11p1"~'lt s '"' •i o
un 1 Ea1No111 SANTA ANA Afrlro ••d some A s I a n NT<.N ' ~1 1011 1n1 '" • ,, • 11 1~ ... 111 1 lo 102 11' 11• 1r\ 1 4 ~:1~~' ~ '111 111"" ~ 1111,-jttCP :,, u ,2il 1~ ) 1~1" .~,\t £," Pl*!•.,,..... .... Inv eoa I} lt 1' '1 l1c ,, Au ? " lfl c !l<lt"t ll t l ) 2l\~ \"' Fell!~! 99 1'11 I 0 .i •• ~. fW•I Co 1 so IS' 51 • y' u•• t a "------==========:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;;;;;;~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;u;•;t;;;;;;;-------r:";·;·~,~~·~~~·~·~·:·;·;·~';...,;~'~a~,~·;'j •rbru" i;.so 1, 5!' ,,,, Jiit.,. F•m "' .. ,, ,, •• '! ,_ JS w., so lO ,,, • Clolll•S WAN1'1:0 "v11 l o• 12 •? 1' ~' 111,.. 19 lt 11 I• ~rll1l1 I ' 17 1'11 lJ + ~ F•nile•I lllC: l! j'" 1 ~ iJ\6 ,: ~: mW Pf i io Jt • ' ll'<i
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DICK. WILSON
SAYS . •43 OOON'
NN SER.VICE ~AR>E
OF 'IO ORMORE. ON
YOORCAR,R
OF MAKE!'•
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February
Wednesday's Closing Prices-Complete New Y orlc Stock Exchange List
1'171 DJLY r .. r : .....
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Complete Closing Prices -American Stocli Exchange List
I
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(Mt.I Hltll UW CltM Clll
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%4 DAILY PILOT Tllund11, J.1.nuary 25, 1971
IMAGINE YOURSELF CHOOSING TOP
QUALITY NAME BRAND l'URNITURE AT
OUT ST ANDING SAVINGS, DISPLAYED
THROUGH-OUT 350 GORGEOUS ROOM
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SUN, -lfA.M.
'TIL 6 P,M.
'
Tu UPtL1l<Jlie 1% g"f>hU~ <1m Ele{Jl11t00
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Tl!ursday, January 25, 1971 OAJLY PILOT ~If
Rich Allen Making Positive, Fluid Adjustment
VERO BEACH, ;ia. IUPI I -The
firs t thing everyone visiting th is camp
\1•anls to know is: How's Rich Allen?
"Great," says \\1.alt Alston, his new
manager with the Los Angeles Dodgers.
... !e's been absolutely beautiful ," says
Al Campanis, the club's vice president
"Anything 1,1:e've asked him to do, he's
done. And ·more."
Managers and club vice presidents
have been known to become enthusiastic
about ballplayers before. Especially
during spring training. But cl ubhouse
rnen rarely do. They 're the ()nes who
have to . take care of the players
equipment and to thc1n a ballplayer
generally is just a ballplayer.
The Dodgers clubhouse men here are
Nobe Kawano and Jim Mube. Kawano
felt Muhe should tell a visitor of •
recent eplsode concerning AJlen and
urged him to do so. Muhe agreed.
"I've seen a lot of things written
about him,'' P.1uhe said, "and the great
majority or what has been written was
one way. Nothing the other way. That's
i,vhy I'd like. _people to know what Allen
did when be came to Los An15:eles a
few weeks ago. Why didn 't anybody
write about that?"
About what? •·we put on this game every year,'1
Uf'I TtllPIM
RICHIE ALLEN MAKES . NIFTY ADJUSTMENT.
t.
To11gl1 011 E·ve1·yo11e
Gruelling T1·avel Rigors
Deglamo1·ize Pro Life
MILWAUKEE (AP ) -Pam
~1cGlocklin never misses a Mihvaukee
Bucks' home game. It's one of the
few times she gets to see her husband
for two hours at a time.
Actually it's not quite that bad -
but yo11 might have a hard time
convincing any wife of a National
Basketball Association player.
Pam's husband ls Jon McGlocklin. a
starting guard for the Bucks, the
runaway leaders or the NBA's Midwest
Division. \'r'hile he has had his moments
of glory on the court this year. he
usually takes a backseat role to
superstars ~w Alcindor and Oscar
Robertson.
Jon. hov.·ever, is a vital member or
the Bucks and possesses one of the
best long·range shooting touches in pro
basketball.
Like al! NB:\ players, Jon lives on
airplanes and in hotels more than s i x
months a year. His ramily life is
squeezed in between trips around the
country and car rides to the airport.
McGlocklin is one or only two original
members left of the first Bucks team
when Mily,·aukee rece ived an expansJon
franchise in 1968.
But even then he \.\'as an NBA veteran,
having played with the Cincinnati Royals
and San Diego Rockets after a collegiate
career at Indiana .
"We first looked for an apartment
near the airport." Pam remembered.
''The \1·ay they fly in and out of here,
being close to that airport is ni ce.
Pro football teams travel once a week,
usually arriving the day before the game.
sometimes l\VO. The teams fly out
immediately following the contest.·
Baseball teams play in the same city
usually l\\'O to fi ve days, then move
on to another city for an equally long
stay. For pro basketball players. even
an overnight stop is considered an
extended agreement.
"The wors t part is when you play
three or four games in a row," Jon
said. ''ll's not the playing, it's gelling
up between five and seven In the morning
to get an early flight."
~1ajor league baseball tams have a
full complement ol 27 players. a
manager, assorted coaches and C1ther
team personnel. The Los Angeles:
Dodgers. for one, own I.heir own plane.
The others charter a flight or go
scheduled airline.
Pro football teams have 40-mon
traveling squads, p I u s ,administrators,
and charter planes.
The Bucks -and 1hey are a typical
-. NBA squad -flit from city to city
~· wfth 11 players. two coaches and a
~ tritner, a total of 14.
'That means making reg u I a r I y
·• · idaeduled f\i ghl.'I when the plane flies. nOt when the ttam's ready. The players
eat and sleep v.·henever they ean lit
it into the scheduJe.
On a reeent trip to the West Coast,
the Bucks pla.yed In Seattle on a Fridsy
nlgbl. They were awakened at 6 .a.m.
Saturday ror an 8:15 a.m. flighl to
San Francisco v.·here they met the
\Varriors in a night contest.
The next morning they were up at
4:45 a.m. for a 7 a.m. flight to Phoenix,
Ariz .. and a Sunday evning engagement
with the Suns.
Monday, they were able to sleep until
7;45 a.m. before boarding a Milwaukee.
bound plane.
At home, on the day of a game,
Jon usually sleeps until noon. But one
recent Saturday. when the Bucks played
an afternoon game he 1vas up around
10 : 15 a.m.
By noon he was al the Arena, ready
for the 1:30 p.m. game.
Hansen's Rap
Puts UCI Nine
Over LB, 2-1
LONG BEACH -Dan Hansen driUed
a line drive home run over the left field
fence with teammate Je[f Malinoff aboard
in the seventh inning to give UC Irvine's
base ball team a 2-1 victory over hos! Cal
State (Long Beach) WedAesday afternoon.
Hansen , a sophomore sOOrtstop for ths
Anteaters, left little doubt about the tra·
jectory of his round trippeer once it left
the bat. It was the second homer of the
year for Irvine, Rocky Craig gettin,r the
other in the first game of the season.
Hansen's hit was one of four allowed
the Anteaters duriJ1g the afternoon. Mal~
inoff had beaten out an infield grounder
just ahead of the winning blow.
Ray Brown. ace of the CSLB mound
staff, worked the first seven innings a"d
was tagged for the loss. Relief specialist
John Keisler finished up.
Bob Barlow went the distance for coach
Gary Adams' Anteaters and spread seven
base hlts over the nine innirtgs. He struck
out seven while walking two and had a
double In the sixth.
Barlow, given a 2·1 edge in the top ot
the seventh, allowed the first man he
faced in the seventh and eighth to get
on base but set the side down without a
run. He retired the sJae iii order In the
ninth.
1,1(' lltVINE Cl LMt •tt<ll .,,.,,.,.
l="trrt r. H S¥t.er•. Jb
T-to. cl "'"'lh•ofl, Ill
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Alldffto11, t
a1r1crw. •
lotfl1
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M41rtlnt l. u C•lfnltn. )1:1
hid .. "' Lillltdl, rl
°"11111. lb ltrti.rrt. 1f
Dtmarttl, II OMUr, C
D•wl1, Jll a"""", II ,...,,, ~
ICtlJltr. • -·"'
J • 0 ' J t I I
1 0 •• •••• ' I J I ' o I I I 0 0 D • 0 0 1
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• e o o 1 0 , 0
I 0 I 0
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M t 1 I sc-llf 1•111 .. 1 ••• OOIOOOXlll-J l t OOCllDDOOO-tft
Pifuhe said. "tt's strlcUy for charily.
For the Southern California semi-pro
medical fund. Whatever money Is
collected goes for kids who get hurt
ln semi-pro ball. There's no other fund
tor lhat purpose.
"'Anyway,'' Muhe y,·enl on, "some of
the guys on our ball club like Singer,
Crawford and Osteen we r e working out
at the ballpark Utls particular day and
I was telling em about this game. Allen
happened to be in the clubhouse and
heard me talking about it.
"What's it for ? he asked. I told him,
and said it would be great if he came
out. l pointed out to him be didn'l
Wright to lnl{;
9 Other Halos
Still Hold Out
HOLTVILLE -Pitcher Clyde Wright
was reported near agreement Wednesday
C1n a new contract with the California
Angel s, but there was no progress with
the other nine holdouts.
\Vright, who had a record of 22· lZ
last season, was conferring with Angels
general manage r Dick Walsh. The
remaining holdouts included T o n y
Conigliaro.
As· the California Angels v•enl through
their second day or pre-season v.·orkouts.
trade talk brewed around holdout third
baseman Ken McMullen .
General Manager Dick Walsh, never
reticent about pending deals, said the
Chicago White Sox had ()ffered relief
pitcher Wilbur \Vood in txchange for
McMullen, whom the Angels got lasl
year from the Washington Senators.
Walsh said he turned down the trade,
but expressed interest in White Sox
catcher Duane Josephsin. P.1cP.1ullen , one
Clf 12 Angels unsigned, reportedly is
unwilling to take an offered pay cut.
Leading candidate to replace him
would be Syd O'Brien, whom the Angels
got over the winter in another trade
with the Whlte Sox.
McMuJlen made $40,000 last year but
batted .232 in 124 games with California
after he was acquired from Washington.
have to play but ir ne just showed
up and took batting practice it would
n1ean a lot. Would you come? 1 asked
him. Hell, yes, he said.
··The game was played in Pasadena,
near U1e RoR Bowl. AJlen didn't even
know how to get there. He h a d lo
follow Crawford on the freeway •nd
it was about 20 miles. You should've
seen him at the park.
"He was the most enthusiasti(' guy
there. He took batting practice and then
stuck around after the game sign lng
autographs for all the kids. He. was just
perfect. That's what 1 mean. l never
lltt slorles about him llke that in the
paper."
Everyone in the entire D o d I e r
organization is excited about Rich Allen's
arrival. He senses that and it make!!
him feel good to be here.
"l enjoyed my year with St. Lou.ls
and l know I'm going to be happy
in Los Angeles," he s•id. ''I remember
when I was in Philadelphia, the coaches
would talk to the players In the clubhouse
and say Philadelphia ls no different
than anywhere else. No matter where
you go, no matter what city you play
tor, they're all the same.
"That isn't true at all."
Ex-lrnperial Hoopster
Kindness Killing
Blind Iowa Star
DES P.iOINES, Iowa (AP) -The once
bright basketball future of University
of Iowa junior college transfer James
Speed is now a wOrld~of darkness.
A case of bacterial mening itis
complicated by a long-1Landing sinu~
condition cut ·off blood to Speed's optic
nerve and Jett him blind in early
December .
Today he is trying to forge a new
life at the Iowa Commission for Blind's
school here .
"Jim is taking it as well as he can.''
says University of Iowa basketball coach
Dick Schultz who recruited the 6-7
Shreveport, La., native after two
outstanding ·seasons at Imperial Valley
Junior College in California.
.. He has adapted a lot better than
J would," adds Schultz. "and he has
far more to lose including a big pro
contract.''
Six-weeks ago Speed left the ca re
of doctors al Ute University of foy,•a
-whose quick action is credited with
saving his life -and came to Des
Moines to start preparing for a new
way ()[ life.
"~'lllh proper training and attitude Jim
can be as productive, happy and
competitive as anyone," says Kenneth
Jernigan, Director of the J o v.· a
Commission for the Blind.
"Our task is to conv~ him ol that."
adds Jernigan. "I know we can help
him gain the skills and the confidence
it takes." How long will the process
lake?
·'That all depends on Jim, some take
three months, for others U 's a year."
says Jernigan. "I hope that by the
end of the summer he can leave here ."
One of the problems hampering Speed's
progress at the school has-been the
outpouring of kindness from so many
people.
"I think he is mak ing progress,''
.Jernigan says, •·and all this kindnes.~
tov:ard hinl is ni'ce. but in some v.·ays
it makes his adjustment harder:·
Jernigan said Speed rarely spends a
v.•eekend at the commission school and
has returned often to Iowa City and
this may be impeding his progress.
S~~d.'s plight has not gone unnoticed
by Iowans and his frjends.
A James Speed Trust Fund was started
in December to defray hi s rehabilitation
expenses and it has reached nearly
$13,000 in contributions.
"TI1e amount is remarkable once you
consider Jim never played a lick of
basketball where the fans could see
him," says University of Iowa Sports
Information Director George Wine.
Wine aald the envisioned· goal tor the
fund was $5,000, but it ls expected to
at least triple that.
"The contributions are symbolic of
a lot ot different things in a lot of
different ways," says Schultz, who sees
the contributions as Iowans' belief In
the positive value of athletics. His
athletic scholarship awaits him back at
Iowa City and the state: of Iowa is
paying for his sthooling at t h e
commission.
"I want to return to school next fall
and get my degree in recreation," says
Speed who has been overwhelmed by
the outpouring or kindness.
\Viii he make it?
"In the long nin I have hopes that
he will be fine," say! Jernigan, himself
blind. "Jim is basically a sound fellow
acd if he gel.!! in there and sticks with
it 1 see no reaso n for him not to
be back in school next September."
Walt Alston l&l'l sure yet where bt'lt
play AJ!en, At 'first base, lhird baSe:
or the outfield. But he's 11ure his,.._~w
28-year.old slugger wUJ be-in the ltneup
somewhere.
Meanwhile, AlleD is ecjoylng his' !»ti!'
surroundings. The only problem be.tffa:i;
to be having is cutting out cigartCs~ ~
"I'm trying lo quit," he said, bumm!,tll
one from Campanis at breakfasb .(be
other morniqg. "But It's just baked
bread. EveryUme I smell it, l r•b tor it."
Rich Allen smiled.
He looked eucUy tile WI'/ all the
Dodgers describe him. Grade .A.
500 Qualif}1ing
Procedures
Anger Drivers
ONTARIO -The first 20 starting
berths in Sunday's Miller 500 w~ to
be decided at Ontario Motor Speedway
today, and several top drivers were
in danger of not being able to try
for them .
Only two hours, from 1 p.m. to 3
p.m. were to be devoted to time trials
in the first big stock car race at the
new $25.5 million molor sports facility
and 66 drivers have drawn numbers
from a hat giving them priority tiJn~s
for making their runs.
''There's no way they can get 66
drivers to the qualifying line in t.wo
hours," said Uie dejected and so111ewhat
angry A. J. Foyt. a prime contenacr
for one of the three front-row positions.
·under NASCAR rules, each dciver
makes two laps a round the 2.>ffl.ile
speedway while under the timing clocks.
llis best lap of the two is counted
as his qualifying speed.
Since there can be an intervak of
as much as five minutes between ~.
most drivers felt that no moni'. ~an
hair of those eligible would be able
to make their runs.
Foyt, for instance, \vas 60th on the
list. Richard Petty , winner of · the
Daytona 500 a y,•eek ago, was 50th" Jn
National champ, was in 61st pollltion,
while Petty·s speedy teammate Buddy
Baker was 66th.
There was a possibility that NASCAR
officials mig ht extend the qualit,i!ilg
period beyond the 3 p.m. limit. or :'IH8l
some of the drivers \Vho drew qualif'Y,i,og
items might decide not to make lbeir
runs. But Foyt and Baker took little
solace· from these possibilities. '
•·Every driver who drew a qualifying
assignment should be allowed to get
in his two laps on the first day,'' Baker
said.
"Otherwise, he has to make his run
Friday, with 21st position in the field
the best he can hope for. I don't know
any driver v.·ho v.·ould ha ve much chance
winning from that far back."
Foyt had shown in Wednesday's first
practice that he would be the man
to beat for the pole posi tion in the
$200,000 race that will be limitelt 'to
the 51 fastest qualifiers.
The three-tin1e lndianapolis w~· er
turned the faste st practice lap, 14 OJ
miles per hour, in a Mercury. Th 36·
year-0Jd veler'an predicted that todtY'!t
pole speed would be around 150-151 m.p.h.
Other pole contenders included Petty,
who posted 146.812 in his Plymouth :
Baker, who turned 145.436. in a Dodge;
Isaac, whose best praclice speed in A
Dodge was 146.391 ; and bridegroom fete
Hamilion, who got his Dodge up to
145.803.
Celtics Rip LA, 116-96;
l{ings Fall to Minnesota
Uf'I Ttlffllt"
BOSTON -John Havlicek scored Z3
points and helped hold high-scoring Jerry
West to one field goal and 13 points
Wednesday night as the Boston Celti cs
took a 116-96 National Basketball
Association decision from the Los
Angeles Lakers.
The Celtics Jed 54-46 at halftime, then
pulled away with a hot third period
in which they shot 13-for·21 from the
floor while the Lakers could make only
five of their 17 tries.
JoJo White backed up llavlicek with
24 points, while Don NelS<ln had 20
and Hank Finkel IS for Boston.
Wilt Chamberlain led the Lakers with
27 poinls and Happy Hairston had 19.
•
North Stars lo a S.I victory over Lo1
Angeles Wednesday night anl third place
in the National Hockey League WesL
•
ARCADIA -Jockey Laffil Pincay,
Jr., rode a winner for the 17th
consecutive racing day at Santa Anita
Wednesday, breaking a track record of
16 first set in 1947 by Johnny Longden. • •
LOS ANGELES -Football coach John
P.1cKay of lhe University of Southern
California said Wednesday he has
appointed as an assistant Don Lindsey,
an aide lhe past year at the University
of Arkansas.
LEW ALCINDOR BEEFS ABOUT FOUL IN 139-10-I WIN OVER ROCKETS.
ST. PAUL -MINNEAPOLIS -
Newcomer oOug Mobns, 1coring a goal
and Ted Hampson, setting up two by
Bill Goldsworthy, powered the Mlnoesota
Lindsey, 27, was a quarterback at
Arkansas A&M. His previous coaching
jobs were at Washington Slate, Alabama
and Montana State.
Bla~k Golf Pros Still Hard to Find
PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. (AP)
-Pete Brown, the lone black m a n
in the fif!ld of 146 pros who began
play today Jn the PCA golf championship,
docsn·t feel that his eause: i,., completely
hopeless .
"Some day a black man will cfash
through and win a major championship,"
said the 36-yc.ar.old aon of a Mississippi
sharecropper. ;'Then things wlU be
dUrerent .''
"Most of the bla ck kid! who are good
athletes are going into football, baseball
and basketball -even tennis. They've
got heroes they ean relate to.
"Bul not golf. There are llO stars,
so kids are looking elsewhere."
Drown, a strapping &-foot-I and 180
pounds with a thick mustadle and a row
or Jvory·whlle teeth, i! n0t so b r a s h
as to say he's the man who will do
the trick.
"f'm n0t sure it will come from th1
present Negroes most active on the
tour." he P.id. "Charlie SiUord, who
bas worked so hard to break the barrler1,
Is 48. t,ee Elder is 36.
"Bui Jim Bent, from Uls Angeles,
just came out of the PGA school. He
i• only 28, a big man about &-3 and
225 pounds. t think he hits Utt ball
farther than anybody on the tour. He
might do it.
"Then there's Curtis Sifford, Charlie 's
nephew, who is 26. Charles OWtns and
George Johl\IOn ire fine golfers."
Brown's own credentl•ls art
lmpreulve.
Born In Mississippi , the 110n of a
sharercopper and carpenter. he caddied
on a mun icipal course at 13. 11is family
moved to Detroit and later to Los
Angeles.
ln 1950, he was Mcken wtlh poUo.
He lost control of his senses and was
unable to move or speak for a year.
Then he fought hack and regained ,nuch
of his muscular co ntrol , althou~ be
still mwt take special exercises.
Ile started on the pro tour Jn 1962.
Jn 1963, he won only $920. lie won
$56,069 in 1970, Including fin'. pri~ in
the Andy Willi ams event at 8ah Diego
where he beat Tony Jacklin In 1 pJaWtl .t
"l get along great wiUt all the gll)'f~
on the tour," Brown said. "ArnOJi':'
Palmer even Asked me to practice with
him this week. So did Gary Piner.
We're one big hoppy lamlly,"
,. :l§ DAILY PILOT
:Fountain Valley Brothers Click Tall CIF Suffers Injury
Foe Await s Vikes May Lose
Baron Five McGuire for Tiff a'o Make Baron Basketball Potent
GEORGE GERBER MAKES 'EM CLICK.
• • • ~ew El Niguel Aide;
•
freeway Aces Picked
• irn Pape ol Founta in Valley
ha~been hired as an assistant gctl pro at El Niguel Country
Cit.ti in Laguna N i gut I
foU11wing his medical
reti'emenl from the L".S.
Ariby as a captain.
~pe rtcei,·ed !he
Pr11S1dential L"nll Cilalion for p;er~ice and valor. the bronze
stat with "V", a3 well as
twlf.. Vietnam camp a 1 g n
medals and !wo purple hearls.
fir sl'rvrd brirfly 11~ an
asslstant pro ;it the Flatirons
Cotitltrv Club ancl l he lin;;..er~ily Country Cluh in
B n'.o.i I 11 er . Colo hcilorr
returning to the sou1hlan<l
f n l·I n w i n g his .~rrv1ce
dis9harge.
I-As ~olfing rxperience be~an
v.'hitl he was 10 high 5chool
and-CQvers a period of r1J:?:hl
years. He attend~ N e w
•
GWC No. 1 • ' In State Poll -~Iden West C<illege has
Jurol>ed back into the No. I
apot'among the state's junior
colltie basketball t e a m s ,
acCCM"ding lo a poll con ducted
by lbe JC Athletic Bureau.
i\le Rustlers compiled R 23-4
record through lalit week's gan~s. but a loss to LACC
las~; \\'ednesday night could dro~ coach Dick Strickl in's
clul>-out of the top l'J>OI In
ne4week'1 final poll.
Ltng Beach and Cerrilos are
tied: for tht No. 2 spot w11h
Fulllrlon ranked fourth.
York 's Mohawk V a 11 e y
Community College on a golf
scholarship and continued to
play while in the army. • Uls Angeles City College,
recognized by many as the
lop JUn1nr college track and
field po"'er in the stale. will
be favorffl to capture Friday's
Snulhern Californi a
Conference relays at Golden
\\'est.
The meet begins at 3.
In a pair of dual affairs
Friday. Saddleback opens
l\1issio n Conference <'IC!ion at
Grossmnnt while Or a n g e
Coast entertains Mira Costa
1n 11 non circuit encounter. • Troy High dominates the
official listing of the All·
Fretway Leaguf' baskf'tball
learn with three first team
choices .
The "'arriors' Tod Allen was
named player of the year
"'hilc n1ates Greg Huysman
:1nd ~iark Wulfemeyer were
:1lso tabbed. The latter is a
rrcshman.
Coach of the year honor,;
went lo La Hahra's Tex
W11lli~, who guided his team
to a co-championship with
Troy.
Al L·l'l.ll WAY LIAG\K
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HB Sit e Cha nge
Hunllnglon Beach HI g h
School's CIF AAAA basketball
playoff game "'ilh La Serna
High School Friday night "'ill
bf' played :ti Rio Hondo
Collegt in Whittitr.
Tht site of the gamC' was
movtid bt>cau~t I.ht h n i t
Lancers of the \Vhitmnnt
Leasue h11ve a gym :sealing
only 1.200.
I
Gerbers Keep
Pressuring
Enemy Fives
By PHIL ROSS
Of ,... 0 .1 ....... , 11114
Danger Is their business.
They dabble in various
forms of intrigue a n d
espionage.
Their pri~ary mission is to
crawl behind enemy lines and
&abota:ge any pol• n ti a I ly
destructive forces and wea·
pons wielded by I.heir roes.
Ho"·ever. one won't find a
chink in their armor since
they don 'I wear any armor.
In fact, they don't even need
tools or other mechanical
de vic:es as prerequisites,.. lo
their successes.
They si mply are aUired in
the royal blue and gold
basketball uniforms of the
f'ounta1n Valley Barons and
their name smacks of a
particular brand of baby food.
But there's nothing babyish
about George and Pet e
Gerber, the classy, brother
guard duo who'll lead coac h
Dave Brown's squad into the
second round of the CIF AAA
playoffs at Edison H i g h
against Upland Friday night .
While the plaudits have been
subdivided into equal parts as
if the Baron cagers were
valuable real estate acreage,
it's salubrious to say that the
valuation of the Ge c be r
property has at leas t been
increased.
The I a t es l hit of
llkullduggery perpelrated on
the opposition by the Gerbers
was Tuesday's 82·71 victory
over La Quinta in the opening
salvo of the playoffs.
In what was supposed to
be a close contest. the tricky
little brolhers (George is but
~7 ·while Pele is :>-91 spooked
the Aztecs into 39 tumovers
and in turn helped turn the
game into a rout before
exiting with (our min utes to
••• Bui Brown wasn't surprised.
I '
-··
•
Fountain Valley will be
trying to skirt around the I.all
timbers Friday night when the
Barons perform in the second
round of the CIF AAA
basketball playoffs against the
Upland Highlanders at .Edison
ln an 8' o'clock contest.
The Highlanders of coach
Paul Trautwein do well in
living up to their nickname,
for all the Upland starters
1cale lhe tape at 6-0 or higher.
Upland (24-3) is fresh from
humping Crestview League
runnerup Tustin out of the
playoffs wit h a first round
73"'66 triumph, the 15th in a
row for Trautwein'11 crew.
After making it through a
rugged preseason slate with
a 9-3 mark, the Highlanders
2ipped across their 14-game
San Antonio League docket
unscathed_
The trio of preseason
&etbacks dealt Upland were
accrued against teams which
were rated best in their
divisions at the limes the
Highlanders played them.
Upland lost its opener in
December to Compton, 76-58.
At the time, the victorious
Tarbabes were the No. l rated
AAAA team.
The Highlanders were also
turned away by top-rated, top.
&eeded AAA entrant West
O:ivina. 76-67 in a preseason
tiff while also managing a
pre-league split with the top
AA quintet Ontario.
Runnerup Chino was the
closest team to the
llighlanders in the S a n
Antonio race as tbe Cowboys
held' Upland to a 65-55 win
at Chino before succumbing
at Upland, 81·66.
The shortest member of
Trautwei n's starting group
-6..() playmaking guard Louis
Engle-has averaged I I points
and five assists per contest
and he Lriggers the Upland
fast break .
Frank Harris and Leonard
McDonald. a pair of IH
forwards. do the brunt of the
llpland scoring damage with
18.0 and 13.5 averages while
6-6 center Steve Merrill has
plucked 230 rebounds during
the campaign.
Jeff Trobaugh and Rich
Jorgensen, both fi.2, share the
other guard spot next 10
Engle.
ex claiming, ''we forced a lot
of tumovers on e~rybody we
played this season because
the,v (the Ge rbers1 are just PETE GERBER, 2ND HALF OF COMBO.
i;uch a good pai r of guards." ---------'--------------
According to Trautwein,
"we like lo try and run ;as
much as possible -it's one
of the better things we do.
Brown goes one step further,
"George is the best ball
handler I've seen this year
and there's really no way you
can press him .
"Pete has the knack for
being in the right place at
the right Lime," adds Brown.
"They know each other's
moves perfectly and they
almost always make good
pa sses.
"Quickness i! the name of
the game and that's th l!!ir No.
l asse1."
George. a year nlder at 18,
was a partlime srarter last
season while 17-year-<1ld Pete
performed for the junlor
varsity.
As sophomores, George was
a jayvee player anrl Pete &aw
action with thf' soph squad.
Brown claims that Pete has
grown durini;t the last two
years but that the seni11r
1iblings we~ similar in height
while on the Cer leem I\!
freshmen .
The Brothers Gerber work
together al a Go-Karl track
in Tusti n when lhey 're not
on the hardwoods or in their
driveway shooting baskets at
a homemade rim. ·
When they're on I he
hardwoods in lhe Barons'
colors. though, the Gerberli
itre. well, 1till simulating the
Go--Karts.
However, thry don't need
any gasoline If\ i>ump into
their syslem5 -they turn
the Irick on pure. high-octane
adrenalin.
Saddleback
Falls, 83-77
SAN BERNARDINO -San
Bernardino V111\ey Co 11 e g e
wrapped up the Mission
Conference bask e Iba 11
championship \Ve d n e ~ d a y
nighl with a come-from·behind
83-77 victory over Saddleback
on the ~·inners· court.
1,11,,1on '~"''"""'~ "'""'''~ Liii•• Edwt•d• r /f(AOf
HO!mt1
To1111
Orange Coast Suffers
100-80 Los s to SD
"We're tall. but not very
husky, so we don't always
control the boardu.
* * * o''"" '°"'' 1•1 " " ,,
1'<t'llmo1 • • (Of'r.,., J • Mcl..tndo" • ' ltt~tr ' ' Go•wl!ler ' ' • w.n,,. ' ' • 011111 • • ' ~~olbY • ' • (•bit • • ' 51~1cn ' • • Ad•''"" ' • • Tot111 " " " Htlf'll"'f "" 011:M •• oco
JC Cag e
Standings
.. • " " ' " ' • ' • ' • ..
" Wllso11-Dunlo1>-Davis-
Bancroft Tennis Rackets
Wilson T2DOO Steel Rackets
Strung Nylon $32.95
·s·~ !@:~::~: CON ''~01 ~c~!. ::, Pennsylvania Tennis Balls
c~dtev , s •13 1011 Doz $7 50 ,.,_,, ' ' ... ... . .
Rlvt'1ld1 I ~ noa INI ~:~::~." ; : •::: ·:;: Wilson Xtra Duty Tennis Balls
5out~"''""" • t •u 100• D
Grou....,M l 11 tll 1011 OZ $8 35 "tllnt~M c~•"'•loft•~'•-• •
WHntM•V'I Sco•H p 1 , y 11 T . B 11 :::..::;·;;:>';t.:;;;;:0""" " ennsy vama e ow enms a s
"'v'rsldt 111. Gr~'"'""' •Y D $7 95 ~""'~'"'""'~ 110, Clt•us !M DZ .... ~ .. ·· ..... . .
;..~:.~.;; !:·1~~:: Men's Tennis Shorts $5.95
"ll&m•r ot $.tin flernun1..,
Soutl!w_,,t.,n '' G'<!ll'"""1 t7 95-$9 95-$12 95 .. ,,, , .... ,., .... ," ~ . . .
tfl~•ll ,...... ~ ~ ::, ;~ Men's Tennis Shirts $4.95
~ullt'10n JG l t1' 8'1 $6'00 $8 DO ..... _.,_ .. "~ "" . -.
Son OlttB I I .,, t lt
"'' St" ""'0'"0 j • 170 IOA M • T . Sh ..... ... , • •• '"" en s enms oes Or1n11 Co.o•1 I ti Ill IOOI ..... .:.":.~-;::.::·-;: ... ~ Adidas $14.95 Converse $8.50 F11llet10l'I !Oil, SIM! Aftl I I 1:: .. ~'.''.;';'" "' •· "' • lack Purcells $9.50 IOUTHIRN Cll ~OH,IRIHCI '""" • , .. " Ladies' Tennis Shoes ('-e'd•n w .. t o J lilj 14'1 1i"~~';:.; i l tt'1'' !P. Converse and lack Purcells $7.95
~larina High School's
Vikings are co-champ1ons of
the Sunset League today, but
coach · Jln1 Stephens quintet
is still feeling the effects of
circuit action as it prepares
for Friday nighrs CIF AAAA
first round playoff
confrontation \l.'ith invading
Montebello.
A pair of aces are oD the
ambulatory list wilh one a
doubtful participant Friday.
Second team a I I· I ea g u e
playmaker Bill McGuire may
not gee action at all if a
severe charley horse has not
responded to treatment.
The 6-1 senior was injured
in the Westminster fracas last
week.
And Kipp Baird. the Vikings•
6-5 Afi.SUnset League forward,
is sUll bobbled by a leg injury
sustained earlier in t b e
season.
"Kipp still has the bad leg.
Each lime he goes hard he
hurts it a bit more. But I
think he'll be ready to go
Friday," Stephens says.
"As for Bill, you just don 't
know, I couldn't believe he
could continue in the game
against Westminster but lie
did. He certainly won't be
at full i;trength if he does
play.~· &ays Stephens as he
prepares a quintet for the
eliminations for the fourth
straight year.
Stephens coached Garden
Grove to a pair of league
titles before moving to Marina
last year when he gained a
CIF playoff entry as runnerup
to Westminster.
l'\1arina appears to have the
edge against Montebello In the
helghl department witlt Dean
Bogdan i&-61 and Baird in
the front line.
"We can't take them lightly.
But if we play our game it'!
going to take a mighty fine
effort by anybody to heal us,"
Stephens says.
Preparation for the
upcoming struggle has
consisted of the b a s i c
fundamentals and running
early in the week, lo work
on offensive and defensive
patterns Wedne9day.
"We don 't really do anything
differently. we got this far
with what we do, it's just
a question of keeping sharp,''
says Stephens.
With McGuire's status in the
air, Stephens say~ he'll &tart
either Andy Thurm or Je[(
Butt at the apparent vacancy
in the starling lineup.
Butt is a 6-3 senior who
normally operates at forward
while Thurm, a 6-1 senior.
is one of three lettermeo from
la.st year'& contingent.
Playoffs Matter of Habit
For Oil City Hoopsters
season that is fun, it's the
icing on the cake," aays
Combs.
As for his first round
adversary. La Serna, Combs
opines his team's biggest
p1oblem is the height
advantage the opponents
possess.
"They're going to be tough
in the rebounding department.
TMir strongest part of their
game (rebounding) is our
weakest .
"From thats tan d point
they're going to be doubly
tough. It's going to lake work
and aggression on the boards
from our players to solve it.
"We know about Dave
Stroud (La Sema·s 6.£ center)
and Ted Bartscherer (a 6-4
rorward ). I understand Stroud
can hit from anywhere inside
the 15-fool perimeter and
Bartscherer is a good 1.hot
from outside so we'll plan
accordingly," says Cnmbs.
La Serna finished in a three-
way tie for rirst p!ace in the
Whitmont circuit with Pioneer
and ~fontebello. the latter
Marina's first·round foe.
Included in the La Serna
arsenal is 6-8 junior Fred
Haberecht, a transfer from
La Habra.
When he's In the Lancers
move Stroud lo a forward
giving them a 6.S, 6-6, 6-4
front line.
~I
.. , "'" '
mas1er charge . . "' '
Champion Handball Gloves
$3.95-$4.50-$5. 95-$6. 50
Handballs-Outdoor 95c
Indoor $1.1 D
Paddle Ball Rackets $7.95-$8.95
Paddle Tennis Paddles $2. 50
$3.95-$4.95-$9.95
Ping Pong Paddles 95c to $7.95
iable Tennis Sets
Sleeping Bags . $14.95 to $79.50
Backpacks & Bags
Day Bags-Stuff Bags
Duck Feet Fins-Blemish $6.95
Regulars $8.95
Masks $1.19 to $11.95
Bikes-Parts-Accessories
Tires-Tubes
i
~·er ~ ~ 11!
Cvo,tn • I • " "·~· .. ;·;. • .,, ... , ,;,. "' "', Open 9 to 6 -Closed Sundays 538 CENTER ST. 646·1919
l,• ~""l'ft"'Ut lt)rl•llrd f1'1f1 '"™' "----------------------------------------------' fll l ie HonGe --
. . '
Seve n Coast Area Teams
Down League Swim Rivals
Corona del ltlar, Costa P.1esa
and Estancia swim teams
swept to Irv ine League dual
m e e t victories \Vednesclay
arternoon to highlight Orange
Coast area action.
Seven meets were on the
agenda and in each instance
it \vas an area cont ingent that
was victorious .
Corona de! Mar's 1970 CIF
champions eased by invading
Los Alamitos. 69-25, while
Costa r-.1esa took care or
Fountain Valley, 57.JS in the
losers' pool.
Estancia nicked host Edison,
53-40, "'hile lt1ission Viejo took
care of invading San
Clemente, 51-45, in Crestview
hostilities.
And Newport Harbor.
lt1arina and Westminster sped
past their rivals in Sunset
warfare.
Newport belled v is it i n g
Anaheim, 55-36, \Ve.stern fell
to host \Vestm instcr. 53-37,
and f.1a rina wh ipp e d
l·luntington Beach, 72-23 in the
\vinners' pool.
Corona del Mar had three
double winners with Kurt
Krumpho\z capturing the 200
and 400 free in 1:48.l and
3:52.6. Greg Loitz nailed the
100 free and 100 fly with 53.3
and 530. clockings and Garth
Bergeson took the 100 breast
(1 :00.7) and 200 indo (2:08.6).
Ne~Yport's tilatt Greer 1Yas
a double winner in the sprints
with 23.5 and 51.9 times.
Clay Evans was a double
victor for Huntington Beach,
flying to a 55.5 in the 100
butterfly and 4: 14.2 in the 400
free.
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1. Rolt1mel (M) l. H1rrllOl'I (M).
Timt: 1 : n .s . .50 Fly-I. H1U11tlck 4Ml t .
McCon111llrY (Ml J. no 1111n1, TllM:
29.1. 100 Frtl"-1. 8 r1JntV !Ml 1. H!llYt r
(Ml l. no lllird. Tim•: 1:02.0.
50 hck-1. Booltl CM) t. Ferrell
(Ml l . H1rrl10r1 {Ml. Tlfl'll: n.J.
50 llre1s......,1. Rot••""I {Ml 2. Qlr.,.• (Ml J. WllcY fM). Tlll'll : 11.t. 100 Frtt RtllY-1. M1rln1, Time:
1 :J.l.
Vanity
MIHIOll VIII• un f45) lu CIMMfll•
""O Medlty lltLIY -l. Mlnlon Violo. Tlmt : l :JI,
200 Frtt -1. H1rtll'l1n ISi >. An!lrfWt (Ml i, Llneb.ck (SJ. T mt : I :!1.7 50 Frtt -1. $1utfton (Ml 1. Sprlnffr ($) l . BH!tm !Ml. Tlll'lt:
'~-· 1oc 1n<11v1du11 Medler -1. McC»J11e (M) 2. 0. Wll"'" (S 2. Ridg1 (M). limo: 2:!4.l DIV1flll -1. Hobbt 2. McC1rllljl l . Sl•l•r (M). Points: t.O 100 Fly -1. L-llt CM) t. McC1rtln (Sl J. Aikin'°" (Sl. Tlmt• 51.0 100 Frtt -1. SIM'"ll'Hllt< ISi 7. BH!mtn IM) ]. $"r11tn (M). Tlmt :
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4:11.l 100 Brt l•t -l , C1mPlll!! (Ml t . King CSl J. eurr11 CS). Time:
1:09A •DC F•H RellY -I. Slit (ltmflllt. Tlmt · J:36.2 ·-Ml11i.• Viele 191 161 S.1 Clflftflllt ll'Wflll ,_
Tlmt: l :o!S.! Mln i911 Villl U11 (2') 1111 (letllfflt. 11 .. s 7CO Me<lley Rtllv -1. Minion
C•••• M•J• IU) 1111 l'0!.11111111 v1111r Vlt lo. l !mt : 1:11 100 Medle• R• av -I. FOl.int1;n XIO Frtt -I. Curll• IMI 1. 811111 v~lleY Tlmt : 1:S96 !Ml 3. Bene fSl. Time: 2:17.2 700 i:rtt -l. Elr~ IF) 1. Holllt!llf' SO FrH - . Hue!'°" (Ml 1. t.Yll fCI 1. JollnsOf' (Fl. Time: ,.ns.1 (Ml J. M11Jttm1n (51. Time: 11.s SO Frl'f -I. ~'°'~'cl !Fl 1. Lund !DC lndlvld~al M~ln -I, Al!m111 /C\ J, Slow•• !Cl l l,..,•; 7!$ CMI l . 8ruce (Sl 3. 'W1k1nlllon1 100 lndivlclu1! Medley -I. Y1rwoodl tMl. l ime: 1:05.l ~~:...~·,,~,o~~ (C) ), McAd1m1 4F t. {JY r_tyBtls~·l}l~l'l~l. \..'t'•kt nll'lfllll
ll)O Fly -1, Elcll !F! 1. Wh\lmort 100 ''" -'· Hu<lson JM) ,_ fCl J l(uhn (Fl. Time: 1·01,t Susi! (M) J. M1uerm111 (Sl. Tkn•:
100 "Fret -l . Squlte tCl 2. Jolln!>lln 60~ '''' _ l . ,,,_, <•I >. Co•I<• IF) J LofftrlY IF}, lime: 58.7 "" ¥• 100 "Beclr. -1. ROH (Cl '· Ruler tM) l. AurbUl'ft (M). Tlmt: 32.l
i. Ne ttilrdc.l ln'lft 1".S ... 1.......... ... ...... 1. • .... IWMI !. Diiiard IW) J. NI t!llrd, Tim•: t :Jl.f
Olvt ... -1. J1'°""1kl IWI I. Holllnof
(WM) J .11rbln1 CW). Polnll.t.p,jOO 100 ,..,_,, y cw • ~r.:::r-'~&.,1wM1 r1'11uv1 k c.Ji.
100 Jr-1. ••~ (WI 2, 81rfllel tWMI. J No llitrd. T m1: 5'.1 100 hdl~-!"'' IWMI J, YtkOvtllk (W) J 0 11•'4 (W), Time: l;lt.J .00 Fr--1. kOlftll IWI t Dowlll'f
CWMl l . Ne third. Time: '"!I 100 1•••11-1. L.-wll\WM 2. lt-"'ut1 CW)'), No hlrd. Tlf'!ll: :l~. «lei Free A•la'f-1, Wntmln'1tl'. Tlmt: J :S!.I ·-W•lflllllltlt IUI 1411 Wnler11 200 Mtd!tY l.t!I Y-1, Wt1lmln1ltr Tl1nt: 2:01.7 200 Fr-ti Altln• IWM I I· Coitlff CWl J. hmit WL Tim•: 1:\$. st l'•ff-1, J. l'hltU111 IMWI 2.
NOfmli'ICfll tWI l. $..,I IWMI. 11m•: "·' 100 lncll•kfl'll Mldl<IV-1. W, f'h!lllPI f:M! i?.,. lrl~ll1m CWMI !. Jol'MOn "':~ T Fty:. • ..i'.; ~tlltl IN) 2. Htbtf (WMI 1. l.119111 CW). T!mt: , :CM.$
100 Fre .... 1. Norm1ncn1 'WI l 51~1 (WM) J. W1Us (WI, '"''"I !•G:l.J 100 l1tk-1. W. Plllll;>s 1-.Y.Y,! J. Cooler IWI J J, Pl\11.IPI lWMI.
Tll'M: l:IJ.O «ID Fre-1. 51mP IWj 2. I.yi n tWM) J, No tr.In!. Tlmt: 4: '7 IOO Btt11!-!. J'Jto!ton tWI t . 'flF111~1m (WM) i. a11rlfl IWMl. T m1: 1:11.1. «Ill Frtt Rtl1.,-I. Wtlltrn. Tl"'t: 4:01.1
UCI Tennis
UCLA Ill (I) UC trvllla .....
Borowt1k (UI dtf, C~ll 11), i -2, ••• Alv1r1r (UJ def. Oele Ill, 6-6, ••• Aulllll IU) lltf, J1blontkl (!), ._,, ... V11qu11 tU) dtf. PtY1n Ill, •·l, ... S. Corntll CU) del. N1wbr-r. (ll,
6-1 6-1.
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·1o(i Br•IST -I. Y~rwood (Cl 7. Vl rtilY ChlPPtU Incl J1blon1kl (I), 6-J, M . Mn•lr.•bury CC! ]. S!o~tr ((). Time: Ylestmln11...-OJI '"' Wnlll'll Kibe •n!I ~or• (U) Otl. l+wwllrvu9tl l :~J.,6 Frre A•l•Y -I. COl!I v-1~ Tl~; ~~~iv AtlfY-1. Wtllmln!111'. •nd °'''co, 7 ... H , w.
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Timt : ?-11.0 700 Frre -J. G1le1 (C) ?. Ritt
ff\]. WPOllru!I \Fl. T!mf: 1:10.6 50 Frre -• Tonollltfns (Cl 1. Ziv (F) J. C1rotnltr !CJ. T mt:
'\~ Individual Me<llf'Y -l. O<lts"'"'
fFl 1. Ptn!K0>1 (Cl 3. Ffllmwt 4C1. l ,,..,,. 1"06 I l4 Flv-1. ()clllnt< 41') 1. McAncnl~
IC! J. Frltdtr!cl< !Fl T•m•· tt.a 100 Frtt -1, WllllrnorP !Cl 1. i am1>l<•M CCI J, Galtl CCJ, Tlmt•
51J e~c• -I. Fiii.net• (Cl '· WoodrUll CF ) ] Ctrl>l'ntrr IC ). Tlfl'll:
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22~ Frtt Rtll• -l. (01t1 MtMI.
11mt : 1:.$1t,I V1t1lt¥
H1w110<I USl U4l A1111t1lm X10 MedllV R11t¥-l. H-1. TllM:
1·;~· Fre .... 1. A11W (H) 7. Nell '"'
0~~ SKI SALE
CONTINUES
HUGE SAVINGS
UP .TO 65%
balftJlt! Special Group F1 mou1 "&"
Br1nd Ski P1nll. ,
•11ul1r $67,50 .... Slit '24/H •
• SKIS .
FREE-SKIS
Whtn V<IU ..,, !hi bi~dl11011 Yn, \t'I IM, W'I l!lft
..,,, t•ouP 1f ltrftj~.,.~ 1kl1, l uy !ht lllndl.~ft ·~~
ffll 1k!1 ... y~n fr.11 011•11' JUI .i, II 40'!lo lff
•SKI BOOTS
Special Group-5 buckl1
ski boots .•••.•...........••.••...•. Onfy
OlfMn 25% Off
l09ullr $65
•19••
PAIKAS
Insulated •••• 40•/. Off
(Down) ••.... 20"{, Off
AU. WAIMUP
SWIATIU
•• ..,. .... $)0.0I -·-1h OFF
PANTS 'h OFF
KIDI IKll, PANTS
PAIK AS .•• 254111 OFF
HUNDlfDS Of IAIOAINS
fHllf MOH MONrNS Of SICllNO
IAMIAMl•tc •• M•fTlll CMA~ITI ~
NCI llJOl T
kl 7°1141
3 SllPll SPORT SHOPS
•Santi Art1., t i t t. 4ttri 111°5123
• rulltrttfll, '°' s. ltKll• 1n .stu • N1,,,.n Cl1tt1r, #27 fnhllN laftft4 '44-112l
ITOll MOUll1
r..11 .... ltlat11h MM. tllf• frl. lfl..t/lctt, 10..
... -'••·"'lllf!ell1 ........... '11. f 1JO.•
T-..WM1 .• fll1W.·l.i. ••J0.6
Thompson Ma rina Zips Pas t
Top Player FV Sp ikers , 63 -5 5
In Circuit
Chris Thomp$0n, Gnlden
West College's all·tlm '-
basketball scorer, has been
accorded most valuable pl::yer
hooors by the Southern
California Conference
coaches.
Thompson guided Golden
West to the SoCal crown this
season, scoMng 820 points, a
22.I average. He has amassed
1,327 points in two years with
the RusUers.
Team mate B ri an
Ambrozich, a &-5 sophomort:,
also drew first team honors
v.1hile the Rustlers' J i m
Anderson, a freshman, was
selected to the second unit.
Rounding out the first team
are Joel Linneman ( R i o
Hondo), William Cox (LACC),
Lamar Andersor. (LA
Southwest) and Pat Boyer (LA
Harbor).
Th o mp son, Cox and
Anderson were all named to
the first team last season.
All of the members of the
first two teams and the four
honorable mention selections
will be part of an all-star
team that will play Golden
West Saturday night at
Orange Coast College.
Ray Harris of Fountain
Valley High long jumped 23
feet but Marina prevailed In
the meet, 63-55, Wednesday
afternoon In dual track action.
M1rfn1 (HI IU) Fe•11l1l11 VllllY
100 -I. M111 CF! 2, Vtr1!11'1\!tll1
(M) l. M1llby (Ml. llm1: 10.0
ne -I . M1•• !Fl 1. Ve~t1mt11ll1 jM) l. Mal!by {M). Timi: JJ.0
HO -I. JUtl (M) 2.
(FJ l. C•H 11'1. Tll'M: Jl.,
1811 -1, SIYlll fl') J, Mtflln
IM) l . ll011111 !Ml. Tfmt: t :Ol.1
Miii -'· 8•k-Mr IM) 1. t.mis
(F) ,_ 8•1b•lck (M). Tlmt: (il l.!
?·Mii• -I. locl!JNn IMI 2. Pnlllll'I
(Ml 3. Bloom CMI. Tlt'nl: t :M.O
no HM -I. T•~lor [M) 1 • ..,,,.,...,
(Ml 1. Lien• IFI. TlFM: IJ.t
1111 LH -Tl1 lor llrsl belwten
Avt('yl (Ml Incl TtY1of" (Ml l. H•rrlt
Cl'I. Time: It .I
"·' Miit Rtll'f
1 11T19 : l :U.O
I. Madn1, Tlmt:
HJ -I. H1rrls (F! ?. B1s1 (Ml
f. Allf'<b<frry CMl. Htkllll: 6.(1
LJ -I. Ht rrl1 IFI 1. R-y
(M l J. C11e (F), Ol1!111e1; 21.t
PV -1. P1ritl"ton (Fl 2, T•OOI> lFJ l. $thin-{FL HtlaM: 13-6
SP -1. Hosl•!ltr IF I 1. MOl.iH
CM) 3. MUU" CF). OJ111nct: 'l·!\r
'" Mt Tl"I IHI Ut) '"'",''" v1u.,. 100 -1, Glick {Ml 1. 8tlltdlct (Ml J. F091 (M). Tl1M; 10.S no -I. Glkk !Ml 1. BtllldlCI (M) 1. Fllff IMl. Tlll'lf: lj.(
'611 1. Mcln!vrt !Ml 2.
khw1rltlc»1 (M) 3. OllOA (Fl, Tlmt:
1:11.1
132'0 -1, Al1~1n!ltr !Fl 2. Moa"' IFI 3. Bt11111 !Ml. Time: 1,;i,.1
1'0 HH -l. HITtt1 (M) 1. Clllov1rl
I") l. S!tw1rl IMJ. Tim.: 11.4 110 t.H -I. Hlr~ll (M) l. ClllOYtrl
(Fl l. Jord.111 ll'l, TlrM• 14 I
lflO lltlav -I. Mtrl~•.
l :JI.)
Tlftlt
HJ -1. Clllov•rl ('l J.
(Ml, NI third. Htlglll; ).4,
LJ -I. Grou (Ml 7. Hlr1t1
(Ml 3. Clllo~1rl l~I. Ollllntt! 19-Jl'I
PV -1. C.•e•~am tMI Tie
..c.ond bt!w"n Soreemlft (Ml
t.eon1rd {F). Hl'l9111: 11-G
SP -1. Bowm1n !Fl. Tl• !or
11t(CH\d bo'1wttn Rico (M l
(M). 0!1l1nc1: olO-l'h
'"
WESTERN NATIONAL
BOAl
1nd HQlmt1
Ttiursday, J.inuary 25. 1971 OA1LV PILOT
2000 TIRES TO CHOOSE FROM • DISCONTINUED TREAD DESIGNS. •
BLEMISH • ~E-OF·A·KIND • CHANGEOVERS • ODDS AND ENDS •
FACTORY
USED TIRES
Buy Now Sale Ends
Sunday Nightl
SIII TTPI & DUCllPTION
HO TUDE NEEDED .. ,ct
7 M71·14 Mo"''~" 71 i..r1 ... • PlrHrlff 2268
155-14 l-"-'_•_•_-_-_._.,_._•_•_·_· __ 1 __ _ JS --125."f5---··-' ,,, H..... 1910 115·15 hlfl ,._,,.,. W~I!•
-13--(.71-15--AllW-W TIS..loo, ""•
(600-6IS·15) H<i ...... W~I .. rvw Wlft Ti .. \ 2160
-6---J7~ r>..i.1. f"'" .. ,.,"... 59st
NOTICE!!! COSTA MESA STORE ONLT
OPEN SUNDAY
FEB. 28th
2.74
2.J7
2.02
2.96
10-Must Go
Custom power cushion,
poly9l11 tube type bl1ms.
(INCLUDES NEW TUIEJ
St10 678-15 (825-ISJ
10 A.M. TO 4 P.M.
17-Must Go
Custom power cuahion,
yYt•cord-4 ply blems.
(900-llS·lS) :J..WU••·li-o, _1_1 _ --,10-1s--1 ,-_--,-~-.. -,-----1-2-2·0_0_ -,-.-.-
(ns.151 ••-111 rr, Hrl•• ·
blclt•wo" plus S2.IO
... cl. EI, TllI
NO TUPE llEEDED
Sii• 125•1.! tvb+lotu
blockwcll pluo $2.37
Feel. b, Te>•
10 TUDE NEEDED 12--,70.15-~Wlde1 ......
(775-15) lM $tr ...... J rlf Nr~
-.-----f7o:1°5--~ WIH T.....:I
(775-15) Wlllt1 Strl-2 "' N,i..
10-f70.15--1-'-Wl.i.T.....i, tol"*<I
C77S·l S) 1 w~ri. IA....,, 1-~1, Mylo"
9-Must Go
Power tvshlon polyerter,
4 pty-8 ply r1ttd bltms
Sile W114 ktrbeln1
-lo(kwoll p;l11t $2 .9'
fall, h , Te•
ff 1UDI llEEDID
24-Must Go
Power c1nhion,
"Ylon/4 ply blemS'
Ji•• 71S.15 h1M!•u
l>lockwtr!I phn $!.16
f1d, l•. Ta•
NO TUDE NEEDED
GOOD/YEAR
YOUNG & LANE TIRE CO.
LAGUNA BEACH COSTA MESA
412 OCEAN AVE, • Phone 494-6666 I 596 NEWPORT BLVD . • Phone 548-9383
ALSO THEODORE ROBINS FORD -2060 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 642-00 10
' ........................ 111111••••••••1•••············••11111 ........................................ l tttlltltt ~
I
Thursd11, Jnuary 25, 11171
.--------.....
" j:ij,MILEWEEDS
'i.. ".
•
V151elUTV NEAR t.IERO,
AAR:O TO SR'~l.L.f!OCARS
-L~T ALONE ml QUARRV.
Ll'L AINB
ly Tom K. Ryan SAU Y BANANAS
6H!!G0r0Nll
FAIJl.T NO
l..AD'f )(11-J
STAND!'!'
A H IS TOO MUCH OF A
GEJ>JJ>JU LMAJ>J TO MEJ..6HUN IT.'.'
By Charles Barsotti
~~~~~~~~~~
• I! Ii '
OF Al L 1){E N!RV! ! fl!{~,· VOU fRYIO
SHOOTME Wlll!Ai!OW
AN' AllJIOW)fHEN YOU
ASK ME FOR A CUP
O' COfffE! ,,---.../
"llU'Rf: fl 1eHf. •• I SflOU~V
TlA11' ASKt:1':fOR !Ht:
COff EE flRSf.
T.W1~te Bu.t~.b..H lllrnM
~H amJd ' ..C,.~a S~M~
--r;;=;;ai?~---
t
., ....
Mun AND JEFF
JEFF. llERES A DOLLAR!
i;.GiO:lrl:l MY HOUSE AND
. SEE IF I GOT HOME
YET.' . .
JUDGE PARKER
YOU SEE HOW S1\JPID
f.!E IS! AND +.!E'S T+IE
KIND WHO WANiS
SELF GOVERNMENT.'
r!fi~E .lrE Tl-l'fE , nlE DMMAh:EP c:AR
¥6 .. AAI? IT Ml6MT ALSO EXPl.llN
N E PMONE C.A.lt C>flfV E2 MAOE
W\.l lLE I WAS WA..ITIM6 ~Oil
\.1 1M TO 6 ET PRESSEi':
.. TWO .lrtf MUST'VE ~LL OW EC>
M.t.RKE.P POI.IC& RMO WHEM HE WAS
--~c..-.1tS ! ilELEASEP ~llOM JAIL!
"
~IN JANE
\. i. .. ·
• i
i
.....
~'" . '· PERKINS
. .r DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by R A POWE• I
c '· ;
·AC ROSS 59 A.ndy's
partner
b2 Ask lor
c h11Hy
&4 Right-h and
page
h5 Supple
&7 Eutootitn
1hrush
70 1'odlfy
71 !ns\rumtnl
72 Op1111on
73 Cruc ili1cs
74 Ont w 1\h
By Al Smith
S1'UPID? !'OR A DIME I'M N01' YOU COULD HAVE
S1'UPID! rouND OUT BY
YOU'RE TELEPllDNE!
STUPID! ...._-.....,r-"i'~ yOUPAID I
MEA
SLICK!
By Harold Le Don
WMA.T ARE
WE 601NG ro PO?
'NE MAV91'r POfilE AaNTl-llN6
WROWC,, 1-1.t.VE WE? WE'RE 1UST
GOIM6 TO sir HE2E '"' T'ME
HOUSE AMI? 6R'EEf TI-IE POl..l{E
LIKE AMY OTMER LAW-ABlptN6
CITIZENS!
ly Frank Baginski
e . ;
.. .
• • . .
t11s nam e
in l!ghts
75 Moi st
MISS PEACH
DOIH
l Ungulat f
11\lllHl\l l
2. Batttry pot e
.l 1'.cl ol say·
!119 •91111
4 Uses bi d
l1n9u19e
S E1cl111111io11
ol contt ~pl
& Past
7 Tt leph ew1t directory
e ntry
8 F tar gre 1l17
9 Play 1 1o!e
10 Iii . A.111t r1c 111
18 Makes
gas hes In
22 As ian
ltstlval
25 Si9n1!s
211 1111 Dlfl
k!'IOw ll(!gc
21 81othfl'
30 Play 1
stringt4
ln1tr111Mnl
32 Is
uncertain:
2 •ords J3 Small grou p
34 Caltndlf
abbrt•i•llon
35 Cluslrr
or shrt.1bs
2/ZS/7 1
43 Spouse
4b NHL or NFL
Jl'lt mbt r;
lnfor1111 !
-48 ~uth1ess
P!fSQrl
51 Naval
ves se l:
Inform a! 53 Frt aurn t
Ol>fll f~ll .-ovr 1n
bl'idgt :
2 words
55 Obligations
57 Spre ad
hrrt and
11\tlt
S8 Th11rsd1y
• I
I r I
... .,..-. ....
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
11..e 1'71iul'l..-111-.
ly Mell
lnd i•n Trlbt
11 B rine~ of
l b To tht
Inside of
s• w 111111i~' and
tiO Vtnus dt -STEVE ROPER
1 de er's
1 11\lt l S
12. Stron9·
$Ctl'llld
13 Ed Ible se!d
38 City of
Oregon
•l StO'agt
bu tiding:
2. words
&1 Mr. H~rti•ch r:::=====i.::::w;:ex:;.crlY.DO:ill'iinOiD.,lf" ...,_ ~s-·~ ,.,.,,,,..,,,.,;,,-------.,,.,. !tl S1ti1tt JUUiu; .. ~ ;ai..v
&& Vf 1Ch I SUPP05E '!OLI JUS'T ""1M SQiE
118 1'.rab c I oak cw.IGEROU'
119 Vthltl t PLAYMATES/
"
n
STEE·RllCE!
MR.MUM
By Gus Arriola
WOMAN I!> P1<errv
Dl\/lfJi1 -roor •
By Roger BoDen
IUJIJ<i •• :t .
'TI'OOG!!r 'TI'AT1 ~DEJ:)w.J .-
DENNIS THE MENACE
DAILY PILOT
Everyone Has
Something Tha t
Someo ne Else Wants
DAILY PILO,T CLASSIFIED ADS
The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
You Can Sell It,.-.• ;;
Find It, Trade It ;,_,
With e Want Ad ·.',
I
General Coate Mesa I Muntlngton Beedt General
* * elinJa Jj/e Salisbury
Re.Jlty
* * * * TAYLOR CO.
* Sharp 2 BR Triplex I 7°/o 'FHA • Gf'"·
G~ M down.paymeni, $42.000. i 4 BR, 2 BA, like new•COndf..
New offering. Bob Olson, ti N ho 1 .I: -Realtor 546--5580 on. r ' PP lli
Under the market price. O""'n.. ' · Only $26,950. '
er mus! ell i!,llMedlatel)". I East Bluff CoUi!ls It \Vatls 962~
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES BALBOA ISLAND. l BR , \I!:
ba Island eharn1. Lge. Ji\.
nn ('.ood rental. S~O.OCXI. Ask
for BC'tly Lynch
BEAUTIFUL CAMEO SHORES sparkling l bedrm, 2 bath • SPECIALISTS e I c & w · 2 1tory t10me Wilh family & S.\LES • LEASE.ii
53 Linda Isle Drive For the Executive! Luxurious 4 & den home
on lge corner site u•/ocean view. Unusual "·et
bar, l.'!:e pool & cov. lanai. $175,000
bonus room. Heavy shake
root, tuUy carpeted. tantas. f. --, lion1e on lagoon. 5 BR., 4112 ba .. v.•/4 frplcs.,
jacuzzi tub, hd\vd. firs., sep. !iv. rm., din. BALBOA ISLAND. 2 l,;111 ts,
l BR. + l-BR. apt. N!'Br
best bC'ach. Income po1en1-
iaL $63,::,00, Ask for Betty
Lynch
UNHlUf t1()MfS ?\o\v only $30,950. Ca 11 ~t 1
Reduced $1500
tioally l'""""aped • mo... c:.. ~ EASY LIVIN' '
rm., !am. rm. & brk!st. rm ....... $175.000 "Our 26th Y••r" ;>1~1>8424. Deluxe Townhouse, ~R. Atal E1\1M. 175-aOOO
For Complete information on all homes &
lots, please call:
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO ., Realtors
2111 San Joaquin Hills Ro•d THE ROKOS
RESIDENCE \a ~th . Coast
rea ty dble gar., p.ito, b11aAh1kt
new. Best a~a. • 1
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 2-11~ Vista Del Oro Collin."! & \Valls 962--~
NF.\\'POR:r HEIGi-ITS. Love. General General Ne\vpon Reach G44-ll~ 1 O\VNER'S !!harp l BR.J"fil.
"NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910
833 Dover Or., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620 ly ran11ly ho1n1': 11u·ge·1----------1----------A beauci(ul 4 tx-drm. J bath By Owner-Make Offer din rm, blt-ing, crptw;d:fpi.
General
COUNTRY RUSTIC
"PICTURESQUE"
General
4 BEDROOMS
& POOL
rooms. 3 BR. + fan1ily rm. INCOME -HORSES IL ACRE fa mily l10ine with exquisite Tr ... Lined Beauty Beaut park view condo. Im. Jdscpd, nr Springt\s,.l~ "-
New carpets. Kr. scl\00\s. COMMERCIAL LOTS -~z decor. Colorful wall papers, in Costa Mesa. 3 bedt'OOITill mac eond. 3 br. 644-54611 Slater. $28,800. ~'l
?.!any e:(!ra~. This will not IOO'xl75' _Will take six units. deep p!le crpt1, billowing plus Faniily Room. "HARO. 4 BR AIR COHO I • · h JI O\VNER.-2 aty custom frt lrv;ne ., lasl at S39,500. Pricrd right at SIS.951). "ith ' • + • crn."I rte "'a tones. \VOOD" floors thal sparkle. row Bayview Sl0.000 of ..1.
lrrms. 1 Don 't miss the clinker brick 2 luxurious baths. Park·llke 1•7 500 ..,1,50 f ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;,
RV! 'E TERRACE J BR P•l•·o o• ti•· """·1,· bl exttas! J ' . UTI"'" . 0 TED ~ I N • · ·• 75'x360' -Harbor Blvd. Com· $29,900 "' ,,....., eva e yard just rreat for Calitor-IMP R -,r
suprr king size pool, Lo\v merclal. Street at rear 0r1 wall trea1n1ent in lhe. tam. nia living, Appraised and Fountain Valley FOUNTAIN
"" "OLD Attracll\e mode1•n r anch
style home 1vith a beautiful
J8x36 Anthony pool and com-
Unbelievable? Quiet
lined sl. to loads or
\\'ORLD 011\R:\l." Check
all this . 3 hu,i:e BR 's. Loads
or patl('ling. Deep pile shag
cpts. Forced air heating.
\Valk-in cloSl'tS, sP rvict
porch. Pantry, Lois ol stor-
age space. NPW JliUlll in &
out. Covered p11 110 • wa1e1·-
fall. Hea'"y shake roor. Boot
access. Dichondra lawns.
Sprinklered. Double y1u'd.
Dog-run. FHA-VA trrnlS.
Ho1\' can you miss. Only
S25.51Xl. Jfurry & call ~71·1J
962·558.i.
niatnt. yard. Dbl. garage 4-property also. A Bargain ai f . ily room. Tli.ily a hon'le for ready to sell al SU,950. VETS BOAT OR TRAILER?
cov'd. enclosure for boat, S1:i,OOO. Ac1·es of. rol~u1g .rreen tul\s, tM in1aginative al heart. No Do\\'n and minimum
!railer. car, workshop. etc. 241-:i Acrl's . Oceansidr . J'I'· ~ounta.in view u;1 rural set-down to fllA. ANXIOUS! ~~t~bii~;:::cwa:t!,
In airium. ?.texican tile !.n·
try: \.\'OOI carpeting: profess.1
lndscpg., & many extra.s.
Thia is a 4•BR. 2~1: ba. home
in the beaut. Turn& Rock
area on the Irvine ~'
Priced at $49,800 with ab u .
1trmable low inl, 1ou~11'")'0U
rORESr [ OL~N • t'-C • • 11e..,1.'rORS '
19131 Brookhu rsl Ave.
Huntington Beach
BUILDERS REPO
One man's Joss . ~·our gain.
Buildrr 1\anls fast sale at j
onl.v $27.9:.0. Costa .\lesa lo.
rauon nl'ar schools & shop-
ping. 3 BC'Clrn1. 2 balh, lan1-
i!y rm, new l'rp\s & pain!.
bltns, lirepla1·r, heavy !'hake
roof, 8prinklers. All terms I
available lncl no do"·n pay-
mC'nt to \'t'!crans. \Vr have
!he key . \'acanl . i:ec any-
time. Cal! ;~10-I\jJ, Hrritagc
Realto1·s. (open c~·es. L
FIXER-UPPER
Nearly 20IXI sq. fl. 4 IX'fhm
on corner lot w/boat ~ate &
lge slab. 17x3.1 F<W)ily rm.
bltn kit 1\·/self cleaning
oven. frnnt & 1·,.ar sprink·
lei's. Gr apprai~rd SW.OOI).
1'ty no do"n, no tn!'-1s for
GI buyer or submit. Ownrr
deo;pi>rate. bou~h! <1.nolht>r I
house.
Larwin Realty, Inc.
11 562 Brookhu1·~1. 11.8,
546-5411 anytime
MESA DELMAR
FHA or VA
On Tahuna Terr. & asking stricted n-sidential adjacent I llng. Circular drJ\'e. 4 mas· The only thing run of lbe w I k & L _, ·= 000 EL "A'llNO COUNITRY iiive BR's. FOR.,1AL DIN-mill about lhls home is the: I a er ee Lovely l BR. 2 BA. Low int
Plelely decked bark \'Brd. 011•Y ~. · to "-' " • · -l VA/FHA I \\I nd rl 1 1 . · (1.UB $119 500 Owner will ING. O:>zy hearth f1repla~. price - a bargain base.men1 oan or erms:
. o 1' ", ~!Ion tor grow. IRVINE TERRACF.. On G:i. carry.' ' Double-oven buill-in 1ri1chen. S·l3.9JO. Better hurry! I Real!ors HAFFDAL REALTY 1ng am1 y 111 open country p 1 d -1 -H,.•·r Bl•'d. •I Ada-g 'M24405 E\'es: ,....,_., • .,, · latea Ten-acr: ha s bes! pos. anft1', aun ry nn . ..-.. ~ -"'"" _...., """ '"'.:........ at~~pher.r ~dJacent 10 !hi' sihle \'ii'\\' (I[ OC'f'an & harbor ed lamily rm. \\'alk·in clos· Ui'llillOOf_ t1()-'"tH a.G-0465 Open 'ti] 9 P:i.t BLDR'S Sacrifice-Span. atylf' ~hs.sion \ ie}O ~rea. tl!A, & lhe night lights or the ets Carpets thniou1, fully ~~ ~~~~iS: -S-horecllffs l BR. nu custom 4 Br. S32.500. 0\.\11 the land! 1 \ I
,\ nr l'On\'enttonal lerm~ AIR COND B · k tro t Lgr. o\\'n your own lot. Sl500 dn. Loaded v.•/ xtras. arr OI\ al a ioial prier or rity. 3 BR. 42: are king·si1.el, R.d. tr' :1 ,nc _ nragt". ~ Det Mll,Callt $3-l 9)() · ~tor:i::.e galort>. l Baths. 1 Ing a1 s 11ng. enc-~~~~~~~~~~ 1 Bf'ach key. Cdl\t best Joca-ShakeR. Frpl. Crpt lhroout. ired hill · ' Triple ga raAe. ~<'. \'iC'W ILV-ed. Bu.i; lo school~. l\fin . to = PERFECT TAX lion. $62.500. Sprnklrs, lndscpd, f n cg .
•
COATS ing rin., \'iC\I' rlining rm., free\.\•ays. Unbt'lie\'able at a SHELTER HorTM Show Raeltors l0223 Pheasant A\·e. R•olty \Jl
Univ. Park Center, .,._,
Call anytime~·
& \'ie\V kilch. + family rm. 220 E.17tH very low $29.900. A must Own TEN ComnlerciaJ. rent. "Armchair Househuntin1f' 537--0380
WALLACE Lge. ht'd. & fil1 'd. pool. By Evenings Call 646-4579 to !M'f'. call in41 962-50&5. al pl dd·ti· 1 ., 353,; E . Coas1 llwy., OU.f Huntington le•ch s u, a 1 ona res1 tnt-67,722S
REAL TORS app't. only. Fabulous View ial & parking income in ___ :.;.:r,.:.:~---
-54~141-EAST !TfH STREET obop. $22 450 rORl:ST E OIS01\ (Open Evenings) Brand New ping complex, Rental in· r
con1i> offsets all expenses in.
eluding payments enabling
huyer to take full deprecia-
tions. Priced 10 sell at
$119,000 with 29~ down. Cal.I
Salisbury '"
R&alty Pacific panorama in Laguna
Beach. Custom built in ne\v 8/8 31 5 ~fARrNE AVE. 673-6900 Portolino area. Huge v.'OOd
:l'J YEARS OF' BALBOA ISLAND panelled master suite. F'ull
RE1\L ESTATE SERVICE l0iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-.1 view Jiving rm v.ith massive
IN THE HARBOR AREA TAX REFUNDERS Palo•. V""" fi.opl•« ·
DUTCH COLONIAL r.ta ny extras. This large 4
Corona del i\1ar . so differ-$28,500 Duplex (2) 2 BR. good
rnt: ! You will lo\'C the E-side, Ci\t location, Quaint
charm nf !his unusual pro~ owners unit + gOOd incomr
erly. The bright blue Durch un it.
door, pegged hd"·d. firs., $.17,000 fourplrx l4l 2 BR
roul!ed hearth trplr. all add units. Gross scheduler! rent
10 the appeal ol this 2-sry. S610 per mo. O\vnrr "'Lil con-
3 BR., family rm. hon1e, sider no dov.•n ro GI.
Sj-1,-500. You o"'" the land.
Bc:rm ha~ counter kilch,
lormal dining . e\'en set up
lor an elevator. A mwit to
st'e, Dial &6.{]303
FORlSl [ OL~O\ .-c
P £A l TOllS
675-3000 Newport 2299 HARBOR, ('{)STA MESA
m111u · ~ llE.\1'11
llEAI:[\' l:\f.
l_ESJ~'i -~~~.I
Roman Villa
His & Hers Garage
••
Fairview
64(>.881!
«anytime)
BEAUTIFUL
HARBOR VIEW
From this great Lusk 4 &Inn.
home. family room, nifty
den plus a pool with Jacuzzi
-also has a built-in BBQ.
Oosc lo beach. schools &:
shopping. S58,60'.l. COSTA MESA
DOLL HOUSE ~xquisit~.1'.1~e:;ranean styl-$23,500 --
1ng -1s a er .g.arages; See this home i1nmediately,
Heavy cathedral ce1hngs, +I a charming l bcdrm located C ldwefl Ba k
11•all connecting den, Jil'lng Ill 3 Clean re siden!iEll area ~o ".lltco.:PAJlf ~ er
rm.. foyer & dining rm. of Cos!a l\1esa. Vet.~ buy it Space ai:e kitchen. Large bdml!;., 2 fun baths. Oose for no money dO\.\'n, your
lo university and shopping, payment induding ta.\:es and lll-0700 644-2430
A niust 10 see, Dial 6ti.030l. insurance ""'ill be S186.00 mo.I'"""""""""""""""""'""
Horry • ii woo·i 1"1. ASSUME A 51/4 °/o
f0Rf5l E OL\11~ ,,~
REA I. TOPS
BACK BAY
CUSTOM BUILT
R£Al rO R S
19131 Orookhurst Ave.
Huntington Be11ch
4 BEDROOM+
FAM. RM.
EXECUTIVE MODEL
Here is a gora:eou1 1900 11q. ft.
Neptune home . profeai;lonal.
ly landscaped with • forest
of towering tree~ . 21~ tiled
ba!hs . all electric built-In
kitchen -separate ta1nily
for details.
room -block v.1lll fence "'i th Evenings Call 548-3265
boa! or trailer acttss . elec-1 ;;; ... i.iiiiiiii;;iiiii;;;i.O.iii~
Irie <""" "°"' . Wal<' WANTED" ~t~ener . a beautiful hO~e I "
1ru11rle and our • Asking
$34,TJO make offer. Have buyer tor 2 houses on
Realtor
:J629 Harbor. C.rtl.
JUST $1 PER
Slj). FT. DOWN
The mos1 oulstandinr value
on today's market in A lux-
ury !nearly 1900 1q. fl. l 3
bedroom home. Consider
these feature1: large ,wpar-
ale fam ily room "'1th "'et
bar, formal dining, 2'.•
bath!, nearly new shag car.
pet, hea\'y shake roof. Only
10% down.
$31,SOO 173-1550
Jot Easrside, CO!lta ?.lesa..
Aak for Oscar.
ANYONE QUALIFIES
For thi.i; sharp 3 bl:.'drm
home -lll8h carpetini &
drape1 & JOxZ5 ~red
patio. 7~'% JnteN°'Sl, no loan
fees. 10% down. Hurry, this
won't las!! Only ...•.•
$23,500
PERRON 642-1771
EASTSIDE COTTAGE
l BEDROOM 2 BATH
$23,500
J BR + Family Rm.
Dream home, larii:e family
rm, oversized kitchen, built.
in1. lireplace. l Bdnns, No
dov.'Tl terms available.
54(}.1720
TARBELL 29S5 Herbor
$147
A Month
Prime area. 3 Bfltrms huge 1
family rm, entry hall; large
rooms lhruout. Payments
leu than rent. MO-l72o
TARBELL 29SS Horbor
Balbo• Peninsula
-4 BR., den, patio
SOxlOO Ft. lot. $59,500
Manha!! Realty fi7H600
CorOM dtl Mar
.Passionate Pofns1ttla
That's Where you wl!J find 11
super smart 3 bedroom, 2
balb homt, ckcorated nice.
ly, on an R-2 rorner, ready ror that 2nd unit.
Just $41,500
University Re•lty
3001 E. Cst. Hwy. 673-6510 * TERRIFIC! * Here's a re&l sharp 2 bdrm., 1~~ ba. hOme. Immac. cond.
Formal din. rm. IIu a view:
11hon v•alk to t h e beach,
1:>4,500
BIG 4 BR. PLUS POOL l••••• BHch 1 -'=":-=~~:'.'.':t I ONLY $22,250 PANORA~! VIEW '
Unbelievable! You c&n't ml611 l bedroom home
on a home like this., Tn!e a secluded hillside
lined st. Modern plu1b deoor unobstructed oceair;.-:.
from deep pile caf1>tting;to from all rooms, yet ""'al
decorative wallpaper. Queen. distance 1o beach. ~ s ·ti:
sized bedrooms. 2 baths. De. large terraced yard. 8)J~
luxe built-in kitchen ltiat in kitchen IL hi·fi :~.
sparkles. Ai\l-nl intercom. generous 11orage • ~.
CM1ered patio. Gas BBQ. $42.~. Call • ~·.J-
Doat accei;s. Healed 'kidr.ey .,,
!4haped pool with all t h e ~ I ,• .. :_
equipment. Near • bear:h. ..,,,/TO e-alf,
Very low dowo. H,,,,,.. ll< I REAL EST•"'
ht. eau (714) 962-5.185. I ... 1190 Glenneyre
494-9473 I OHl\I [ 01\f 1\
PL /f : rO t1 f
19131 Brookhurst Aw.
Huntingron BeachL-
EXCITING VALUE
If you want a l bedroom
home with warmtti and
chann, thi.~ is it. Bri'* fire.
place, ahutters v.i!W. over-
draperies in e\'ery iroom,
"·all 10 wall cari:ieting. Extra
large patio \.\ith built-ln bar.
be.que. CUNed briclc' entry
walk and decorative brick
fence. 1\\'0 years Q1d and
betler than new -1% % as-
sumable Joan.
$30,200 142-2S35
* VIEW HOME
Custom built split 11e!;'.t *
huge lxtrms., 2\1 ba'I ~·
living &:-family rm For.
n1al diu. rm., all \vi opfh
beam ceilings. P..tassiv 11oie
trpl. Wet bar. ·o011
Roman bath in mstr it.
A reaJ gooclle wi!h m 'fl'.-
tras. Good financing. · jd
at $48,000.
ltl:t~
·~ m IO.~ lf\O"t -~CWF. ................ ~
499-2800 ;.--.
HOl'.fE JN TIIE TRE~ilh
vitw of ocean, rustic! ~
ior, 3 BR, 2 BA surroui\ding
Frank Lloyd Wright .fire.
place. ~i:;,OCXI. ·., ~ Realtor 20x37 Anthony Pool. J bed-2 story "11',l?an('<' -;, !Jeri· I 2' b I 2299 Harbor. Costa r.lesa :.!629 Harbor. C.:\ . rooms, -: al Is, large • 1-o·THEREAL I~ ESTATERS
The value of a lifetime _ no
money down to vets • )ow
low down to anybody . Jocat.
ed in Col;ta :O.lesa, it hu •
double garage . forced air
hea1 . l good size berlroc11m
i t'vin baths .don'1 wait
!hi! Ollf' \\ill .11ell FAST!
MORGAN REAL TY
673-6642 675-645'
SEE TIIE BOATS ft'Om 5
rms of lovely ocean view
horn~ only I ro\v b11.ck. 2
br, 2 ba, den, unusual bltns.
Exceptional quality below
S70,000. Owner 673-0609.
10 THE REAL
'""" ESTA'.'ERS
ENGLUND REAL ESTATE
318 1'h1liia ~ ~ rooms. 3 baths, lam il) 11,111m, • .;~:;:.;~:;;,~::;~-I·~·"'°"""'"'~ I k 4 BEDROOMS-roon1•, lots o srorage, wal
large 11\'l ng room. i\·aJk ru: 'TRANSf"ERRED-in cloSl'ts and a beautiful ,....__,_,..,..,..,..,..,
'' ', < 'o I, j r; '•, . ,•
-4 BEDROOM *** 494.8093 ***'·
3 BR. Custom Bit, ~~: 2
Ba., bltn kit, trplc, cfeck11,
2 car gar, vie1\', lnd•cpd,
crpt, d111s. un<feor 1round
utl/'1. Room !or Ire p6al.
S46,500 firm. By Otvner,
494--0407 aft 12 noon. · 1:
All school~. thr park, shop. MUST SELL $23,500 warm .11tone til'('place plua a
ping, r1·s shal'p · sharp. b ho large JOX52 covered patio. HOME & BUSINESS liOO Sq. ft. + 60x~ fenced
lot. l Baths. ~<l· reduffll
to all time low ~950 your
terms. Palog V1f'de 1tone
fireplace in la:/'gt living
l'l)()ln, family roc*n. 1ervlce
$39,500 546-2313 sharp 4 bf>droom home "1th 4 lx'droom, 2 a!h town use A .1,,.. 1 lsrgc h1m1ly room in East-in 1he beaut iful l\-1on!1cello .11sunle a J>T 10 oan. 2: Good Costa Mes• C-2 loca-
Super 11harp 4 BR. 2 slory 1 lm\'Tltlouse, lite liv r n1 .. ror.
maJ. din area, beaut "·alnul I
hl utf. Redecorated in 1970 AN!a. l"u!l use of 11wimmlng $48,500 646-7171
1\•ilh luxuriou~ _.,hag carpel, pool, recreation area and
handson1e 1\'00d paneling t·lub house. Don't do yant
and decorator 1\'all cover· \\'Ork and live a littl<'.
ings. An excellent family $23,500 546-23131~===========
hon1e wi1h an oversized gar-$25,200
age for Dad's u·orkshop. Top
tions. Realtor
(l.J Dentist office: + 3 BR -~"~"="~'~'"°~'~· ~C~.~~l.~-
hon1r. HARBOR VIEW
(2.) :l BR home on Harbor 1 HOMES
Bl\'d. A beau!, 5 BR. b'lme; "'el
CHAR!'.llNG Duplex by
owner, on r.1argutrlte. Xlnt
income.
:t * 6T;>-4943 • *
2 Br, dbl gar, patio,
1 Yrs leJM. $21 5.
No pets. 67S.1034
pnrch, bltn appH4nces, fore. Lido Isle
ffl air heat, c~ts & drap-1 --~::-::--:-c:,,,~,.-_,.
e11, shutter!, oov~tlo, over-NEW LISTl,_,G,
cabinets, 2 bath areas, crprs value.
& drps, 2 pool~. scp. -~ay $44,750
yard, 11·a\k 10 beach & ~hop.1 ping. !'t> S23.500. GI or fl-IA
1
4 UR + FamUy Rm
673-8550 Cua.om designed features. il-~,S~L-A~N=D""7-K'l'T=c"H"Eo;N:;---I Ceran1ic 1il~ kilchen, thick
r.fesa de\ l\'iar • Beautiful, shag c.11rpeung, elegant ~n.
\:ti>' THE REAL ~ESTATERS
•'' • "". ' r ,.
bar, lovely shag cptg., 11elf-
Newport cleanin&: ovens: ready to
move into! $59,500 • Includ. Costa Mt1e ••
Fairview ""' ~ land. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;
646-Hll CORBIN-Fantastic 4
1ized dble g!lJ"8&e, presti1e Lge, 2-tty., 3 Bdrm1., 2 1~
neighborhood, .,._ik to shop. bath plus dining rm.· hoirif.
ping & 1cnool1, / thia cannot on 45 ft. kit. Big living' rm.
be beat. with musive stone ft'Plc. l
high beam ceilin1. $72.;IOQ
terms. Call 847·1221 .
--plush and clean as a whi s1le. try hall. 4 Bedrm, family l1nytlme)
Priced at SJ().900. Name )'~Ur ~l~rge rooms thruoul. I•!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!..,!!!!!!!!!!!!!
terms, owner's ears art' v.·tde TARBELL 2955 Harbor PUTT & SWIM
boa>cml> t-=-"J.; --3416 Via Lido 67S.-4362 MARTIN
REALTORS 644-7662
open and 1'('8dy to listen 10,1~~-~-,-~---On Private Ro&.d in Newport
17141 Beach Blvd Htgn Sch aD offers. y,·e have the kl'y. 6 Room Ea."llsirlr home, beau. Beach. 3 Bdrm. & family FORECLOSURE
Open 'ti] g ·p.m. 1 Realty Company CALL l\ful t'lf'W crpts. 3 bedrooms, rm. plu~ en('IO~ patio. l\1ESA VERDE, 5 Bedroom
Macnab-Irvine
A rare find but ..,., did ii.
Looking tor that new house
feel with 2 beths, 4 bedrm1,
modern rarden tYJle kitchen
and heavy shake roof? Over-
sized corner lot on qUi~t
sll'ttt. Bright, cheery inter.
ior In move-in c:onditlon. All
financing ava.i11ble incl as.
sumable 6~'\:~ loan or no
dO'wn to vrt•. cau S40-ll5t,
Heritage Realtors, (open
eve11.)
* REDUCED * " lmmac. ;; BR., fam!J.Y. ·~
45 Ft Lot llret-Lo, •.
street. By app't. onJ¥ I EASTBLUFF w lk & L 2 baths, Jge tiv rm 11.>ith frplc, NEWPORT Former Lusk i\lodl'I View a er ee dining rm., nic.e kitchen w/ Community pool " putting nxer-upper. 2500 &Cl. rt ..
5-bl' • I l green. $:19,500. need.• aboul evel')'1hin& • HEIGHT Hon1r. Exquisilely rlecora1ed ns, new 1no eum, ser-I E
Once In • w c you get to $93, 750
see a home /uke thi1. It's LIDO REALTY IN.C,
jus1 bf!autlfUU A 3 bedroom 3ln Vi• Lido 67J.73do
& fa.mlly ~. most taste. $19,500
Older but nPa! l ~droom on I
R-2 Lot with lllll'y rntranre,
You'll never beat this,
$19,500 646-7171
·o ·THEREAL
'""" ESTATERS '-. lJ"'"'•;L~l'"I"
It's A Doll House
4 Bedrm. 21 i baths. nr
1ehools. shops & bt'ach. Ask-
lnr $33.500 but who kno11'S'.' !
niA or GI terms. It's '.'!hl\rp
and cltan Ii ready to move-
In.
Larwin Realty, Inc.
2.l:i6:1 Bi•ook hllr<t. 11.li.
546-5411 anytime
4 berlrooni family room ne&llm'll vii::e porch, lge corn('r Jot, DtLency Rea state paint, Cl'Pla, clean up. re.
dinlng roo,;, and breakfasi 2'i90. Harbor Bh·'tl: .&t Adams 21., car gar. w/launrlry rm. 2828 E. Coast Hwy .. CdM pair -you name iL S29,000
roon1. Enrlo.~ed terrace. Call 54a-9491 Open UT 9 PM Price $28,500 tor quick sale.1 "---~&U-.::,.727c:c0:,_,~=~ I Or best otter. llurry!
tor appointment 642-8235. -j-DUPLEX * Leon Vibert, Rltr PRESTIGE ADDRESS ~_.'!.:"....,
Price $";>9,500. Blk. to OCf'an, Pool. Modern MS-0588 Eve11: 67~ Designed to take ad\'11.Mtge OLLEGE REALTY Open House Ev•ryday
l BR. 21,1: b.a. upper : 2 BR., HELPI of the Vlew. Ivan Wells new, ..._1111Jr:i i pa 3 br on immense ocean view
11.!J: bo . loY.>er. $62.500 lnclud. \Ve nef'd homes 10 aell . Yours 4 BR. 3 BA , pwdr nn home I •"'l'~~""'!'!!!''"'~""'"'' I lot. CuJ.de-aac, lot11 of tree11. Macnab-Irvine
tully rlecora~. Lovely free BY 0\VNER: l Br, :J, W.1
t -·' I 40 Ft lot. l..g patkl $69,'5tl onn hea...,,l/ 4-fl tered pool Open every day. 673-26Mi
with therap .. ie pooJ tor re. 545-2512
1RX\ng. Be tint in tlrw. 1~~-=~------I
$4S,t50 1 . 142-25:15 Mu• Vtrdo
642-823S 67S.3210 es 1he 1a11rl. O""·ner v.·lll «in-may be the nne our buyen in Do\'f:r Short!ll. fam nn MESA DEL MAR $24.951'.1, ll»O Linden Pl. C.~f.
sidtr trade for home on pen. IN! u'llltlng tor?! w/trplc I: Wt't bar. Seclud-.f Bedrooms :z b&thf:, ramtly Owner. DaY!I: ~192: $3500. Down • 614% ld'ai5 ~ 'D THC REAL
"""l S fATE:RS ~~~~~~~~~~f in.~ula w lk & L ed pool . Roy J . \V1rd. Rltr.. room, double rarage, Pro. Eves: &42-1122. like new, l br, ram. V•Cil.~'
MESA DEL MAR Call: 613-366.1 &l:Z.225.1 Eve11. a er ee 10-13 r.1ariners, 646-1.'.i.iO. open feuional landscaping. Al-NO QUALIFYING! .•. \Vllh S2.8.IXX!. FP, 400-l90l, ~9
o"·ner selling beau!ilul 1'.tesa dally. most new tarpeting, Iare:e Cash In fl!A Loen. 3 Br. Les1 n .. Ptte Month's Newport Beach ';.I
Del ~lar hon1e. l Bedrooms. '204.1 \Yt'SlcliH Drive (27,950 heated and filtl!red pool. just painted. Like new 1hac Rent down lt>tw1 thia 3 bdnn-
2 baths, large tlvlng room MG.mt Open 'til 9 ~I of SM.fiOO. No dowra to vet-cptr 4 ltit nooni. Llsled 2 bf.th area Townhoute uAReOR HIGHLANDS .,'f".
v.1th firepla~. Spacious REPOSSESSIONS erans. $23.SOO ... Tt)i $23.00Cl! A11: prime aJ?a .. plicf!d rlgh( delil'htful 3 BR hon&
kitcheo "ith gu builtins. Sparidlng clean homes eome No down term• Da)'I &f2.5Ki6 ~s: 54}&108 J _"'"'969c.:..c.c~·-------I $20,500'. Re Uv rtn, w/w .-eparate den -1~ be.
\\'atl'r &afltncr, forced air newly painted It. tari>e°led, 2. 4 Bdmi, huae lamily rm. fire. DOVER SHORES ** 4 Br, 2 ba, c:rpts, drps, crpta:, ~. W/D, retrtr, l&: Kitchen haa er n.&ci1
hc11-llng. wall to wall c&J'Pf'I. 4 BEORM . 2 BATHS :, 4 &: s bdmu, Some with place, dining rm, natunl View home. 1148 s..nu.,o Or, iaTaJl'e, lge fenced yard • paOO l l>()()L prtv.! f''Ull 4' BBQ. all stalnleu stttI,
init 11.nd drnpc11 d1n1 out. pools. IBA.VA conv. terms, "''oOd kitrhtn cl'lhirieta. Park Best buy . apac. 5 BR, 4 ba. patio. SZ4.000. Call 548-3840 Price PJ.;ll .. G.J. or FHA WAik 10 ~t•rlnen .Sd"!'1tiJ
Douhle g1ui1re and c:overed . from Sl7,QOO "' $40,000, like ys.rd. ~1121) Adapt..bl• noor .. 1.... ,_ from 5 to 9 pm. By oWM.r. tema. Clll. M7·l221. l.ibrary, Park uld Wl'stcli
PRtio. S31.500. 55i ·i315, FITT"placr, bltn r11Pni:c: & ovtn, Colllna A:. \Vatta: hK' TARBELL 2955 Harbor " .,..,_,, ..,,-Plaza shoppln&. Sl4.950:"c:wt1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;f auiic1s, dr1pei1, J)8t10. dhlc 8343 Adams Aw.. 96i.5:>23 couple or igf!. family, Newly DUPLEX $31,500, Inc. '3780. South Coaat Re,. 1 to rs l
• garage Nc:ar so. Coast_-~~~~---Newport Beach eddreH decorated. By app'I. S91.000. 2 BR, Stv-rer. Cp!-drp, Gar.
ntANSFER I Anxious Owner Pia•·'· S27.T.'JO. BALBOA POINT Olarm!no l BR, dlnln•/f11m -Bill G nd R Pallo. $3150 down. :ms ''A" MS-84:24. ~ -rr. YOUR PROBLEi\t ... n.... 1 > BR .... .... ' ru y, ealtor S 64>40SS PANORAMIC VIE to SPECIALISTS V~teran1 No Down Roy McCardle Reeltor ..... ~·an .ront. · din rm, lly. COv. patio. Modc:rn kit. 83.l Dover Or., N.U. 642-4620 ..:::"::':::'•c.:::::..:::::. _____ 11n41 Bt#ch Blvd Hip Sch tl Ea~tsidc ~ bcrlrm. t ba, lg l'Sto Ne\\·port Bl,1'.I ., c.~t. den, 3 ba. l(!:e lot. ~.500. Shm\•s beautltully. Extra ta: EASTBLUFf' OW ri.rESA Verde aru., 2 1ty. OPf! 'di t" or Jt!tt)' & main tha.rrnt.L
PropeRrelyalMEesnleagt•'ment fencl'd back >'lrd, dblt a-~r. 541-7729 PETE BARRITT RLJY flm. F1nced yard, $31.000. -HER 4 BR At; den, 2~ btl. bltn1, ~;n p.m. BR., 4 ba.. home w/ JEAN SMITH, RL TR. Bini walch from bed, Frnt $39.500. By OWN', alt 4 .. VILLA I?actfic condo. 3 hr, din. nn., ttudy: 2 ~I
STEPHENS & KAYE ~:""er 1"11':1ng for Arizona. row B11ck Bay lot. 2 tl.y, l St6-17~ I'' ba, '2 1tory. Comer lot, wet bar. Newly red!!:
645-01Zl ANYTIME I anr orter. 125.000, ~*TRIPLEX* 642·5200 -100 E. l7th St .. C.fll. 646-3~1 bd, 3 ba, 25' rte rm wllg VACANCIES Colt r.r pool. Recr•atlonal On 111.ncly beach. $169,a Lachenmyar Rlty Ea,1~\de C0tl11. ~fesl'I trpl "''all added. Hure sun-mone.y? taclllt11!J1. $11.500. 96,._9630 ~I &)islde Dr. By ~p1t
I Call &16-3923 646-~ All 2 BR., lt; mi.th!! Tht! "Yellow Pate•" of Turn unu~~~~e~;,mto quick deck & SIN~ W&ll addtd to Rc:nt )'Our house, ap~ .. 1101<e OAlt.V fpfLOT fQt &ctlcn! 1111 Grundy, Rte II •.
FORTIN CO. • 912·~ c .. llW::::.l::li:::ed:.:.· ·:..·:.:6'::;:'-':::5611::::. _ _._'_'_'"_·_" __ ~ ____ ...J..:m::u:::::1•::,r41.:.· ll:::;:7,:::300::.· "'=·~14:;:50 ~!~i~edtc. ~.!"'•Dal i'1 PUot _ -. Call 6",_5673 A Savel t 833 Dow:r Dr., N.B.
~·
Dlme-A·Une 6'2-5671
•
Newport Bti•ch I Condominium• lkttlnes1 HeKaMI Unfurn. 305 Houlft Unfvrn. 305 Aph. Fum . 360 Apts. Furn.
BALBOA COVES for ••1• IM Opportunity iootlG;.;...en_•_•_•l,.------ll ·H-u_n_tl_nu-ton--8-•_•_d!,__ Balboa Ptnlnsul• Huntington Beach
WATERFRONT REST location ~lontittllo, 3 Build Your Own BusincM FREE RENT BOOK 2 BR, 112: ba Condo, JIGQ e $2S WK-OCEANFRONT BEAUTIFUL F'URN. APTs. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Prlrqo. loc. 3 DR. 2 ha. ailUl;ll" BR, 2 ba., Vacant. No Ex.QepUonal opportunlty for .a.N 4 eo 2 .. _ ....... Lo ly •-he'--I BR •• m• Qu'· ~ lo NEW NEW NEW
N I d F , __ ., reuorw.ble offer relUKd. tut grow1nr: lnoomel For DROP IN '"" D per mo. ..., ,,.. ........ 1e ve &X<C -·· ~ • tt-....... ....1. pnv. pat , atory. e11,· Y <'('OJ', et ... "'U 5-l.>S210. Interview S.ts,...5900 BROWSE S210. per mo. Cttll J\fr. lt1a.ld service. Pool. UUl. 2 wa.n:irobts, frplc, dre~slng
yd. 30 ft. boat al.Ip. Ji5,'°° 3 bedroo 2 bath Fi.rep! e Hoe-gee South Co 11 I e 675...a740 • r m, locked 1ep. go.r. Pool. Bill Grundy, R••ltot Income Property , .... BEAUTY Salon, new equip-"1• • ac • Rea.Jton 5ts.M24. --------•· R -t ble to r1 ht carpets and drapca, dooble'I"'==:..:.::...:=:_--YEARLY -3 rrrui, 2 bft. .:w.iWla. ec rm. 833 l>over Dr., N.B. 6f2...D 4 UNITS, 1 yr old, c:ornu ,"::..: ~":':. 846-STM.1 carage, big ft>:nced yard. 3 BR hie • w/w l.htuout, incl util. 319 Femando St. ln'.ll Kt":ebon Ln. fl blk W.
SECLUDED 3 BR, 2 ba, k>t. l..J DR. 2 .liA frplc· .. ..,, Rt'nl $225 per nlonth, maybe disposal, drps, pAtlo. No Balboa 673~ ol Beach Blvd, on Slater), QUlET-SAfE .
Jo'rplc, remodelt'd kitchen. i.2 BR, 2 BA, i nlcclf FAMILY cate, tully equipped, lease with OPTION. peta. Call 962-8578 for Info -"="'-===----1-*:.,,"2:::::.-7:::"'c::'::.· -----40 Unit Adult • -•'-I ...,,.....,. In 1ho......ing cen1er Moving c_._...,_•_d_•l_Mo_• ___ 1 • 8• & •-c•·1o-•-,1~ pool. • t t C I ~" pauu, e ec .. -... ~· turn. 2 BR, 1 BA. 4 pvt t't" • WALKER & LEE, 4 BR. 2 ha, Conip.lete.ly ... • • ua '"' ,~,.., ...... "par m en omp I X
Extensive garden, nr p r . C. M. $765. mo. tne. eut. &14.2826 I crptd, frplc, comer lot, $200, LGE 1 BR, new pain!, cpls Nr shop'g, utll furn. AdJts, 1 & 2 BEDROOMS
scllOOls le church, Ideal ior $G9,9j(l, P. o . Box-212, CdM Money te Loan 240 Rea tors 1st & last, Rt>t'.s. 8'1~. & drps, $165 mo. 675-2i!lll no pets. Vlc€'roy Apll, 1014 Entertaining will be a pleas.
famUy $39,500. Princlp.111 ' 'PVT=-----1-~16-to-"" 7790 HARBOR BLVD. ,, 0 aft 5:30 nr wknds. Georgia St., ll.B. 536-2914. ure.. Decorating this lovely,
only 64;)....2'JM aft 3 pm. . p.uly wans ..., 1st TD loan !---'-·~~~=---. 4 Br. i .. 1 . Drape1, fenced ---------• u n 1t1 I r o m own c r , AT ADA.i.\1S yard, garage., Near ocean. BACHELOR apt, 2 blks trom 1 BR, S1l5 per month sp<tcious apt will be a joy.
Httwport Height• _ I New ri,o r I / ~f e s a area. 7~0 ~-"~-LEASE , ~'=l&-o.J:..::=·"=·-------big Corona, J adl!, 00 pets. including ut1Jil le1 • Special cabinet space
Ci5rR?iflXG custom bu1t &.~~. __ ---=
7
'.7· 11~, c..~• 1·lrvine $110. Yrly. 642--8520. Tradewind11 RJty 841-B:>il • Lock garages ,,./ lg stor
horn• hkr "'"" 3 Bdrnu .. , Lots for Sol• 170 2nd TD Loan HO!(..£ & BUSINESS • BACHELOR, cloS< to FREE ""'· furn I BR •Pf • Bm "" • Lndry . Pati .. 2 ba. Larie ma~ler bdr1n.
1
__________ ' NE\\! 3 BR, ~ BA, ttptl!, beach, priv patio, refrig, Nr beach, pool. $130 up. • D\\f/displ • Huge i:as stve
11•it.h frplc._ . Extra large " CEMETERY lots. Blue Terms ba3ed on eqUlty. 2 Betlrm house converted in. drps,. h!d co1nm. pool l hot plate. Call 67~3079. 536-3777, 536-7282, 536-1366 • Special soundproof~ "w-< dtntng -N•w S . H-.....__ n-. , 11. + l "-d rec incl. Pr-tier f&mUy. ~'--'-'-C,..=-'-"-'"-'--L B h e Deep 2 color shag ...,........ "'" pruce Retioo. "'"""'r ncsl '42~2171 545-0611 to Dental 1 o ice ""' · $260. l7fi62 ?d a 0 chest• r. Coit• Mei• aguna ••c ('arpets, drapes
MO Apt • .Unh,.n.
Cost• Me1a
YIUA CORDOVA
365 -Coit• M11a
FROM $135
Spanish Carden Apts,
Conwntently Loclted
J le 2 Bedroom&
Built-ins
Carpets &. drape•
En.closed Garages
Pool & Recreation Rnt.
See: 160 W. Wil lOn
REALTORS
.SINCE 1-m
673-4400
cplS/drp~. KilchC'n bltns, 1 MemoriaJ Park s 7 00 . SUV\og Harbor area :n )Tl. rm hoUse, $-12:i per mon1h .. .,., ..,,10 ----------GAS & \VATER PAID elect. gar. dr. ~e thl&I 518-3:11;) Ed R'"d! R<al ......,.....,.. REMARKABLY FOR lease l Br, tum. Ocean LRG dl'\': apts, $140 2 Br, Sattler Morfna.111 Co. for botb, "" '· tor, --:--d I I v· n-k Adlt " -Mo. to Mo. From $140. 11°• 3 B• 0 ea Htd Pool be!~ )'OU bu)'. S39,500 COR.ONA"~o~E~L-U~OO~-,-.dj-.. 1 .. ..:·~oo~~-~'-:·~s~L:::-~-·l i~G4G~·88~\~\~, ;g,>;wj;i:S::fi5l'L't 100.:',-";;;:c;;;;;;p;;;;;-UNRELJEVABLY IC\\,', .....,c . s Or11y, ,... uu ' • ' . GRAHAM RE.ALTY 646-241.f Rl . __..., ....... _._ .>.1'V "'""' EXTRAORDINARI LY pets. S2501mo. Util. 499-2865 2l23 Elden Ave, C.\I "ewly dee. Play yd. Cpld.
• • ~ view, nr .,..aua. 1 BR cottage kids/pets •• fl5 3 Br, 2 Ba. Large patio EA {Ne3r Back Bayl Drps. Blln!. Patio. Child .
Silverado SG5:!.1.. May trade, Ag! Cash Fast ' 1 BR homE', util paid ...• $1110 $450 Mo. Yenrly. v 'o··B U~L Apt , .L::.ic:d::.•...;':..'';:;•_____ ~c r.tgr, Ted \Voodbead ok,
\'ERY, Vf"'" rustic fix~r-_6~7~:;...m)~~· ~~~~~-•, 2 BR kids/pets OK ...... SilS 673-2684, 54.>2511 • ll lre a r en s JlEACJ-1 Apts. Furnished 1 646-0032 1998 f.1aple Ave. 6-12-6.1~·1
'' ' k'd / t•" Adults, no pcls ~~~~~~~~~~ C "'"~-IUJPf'r. :i br, raised frplt'. C-l Lot on \\.'allace St, next lat & 2nd Truit o..di J BR fencW i ~ pe ts .. S . ..., Mas• Verde Putting green, waterfall & Bf •. & Bach1'lor. Garage. ,",.1,.'.,.",.",.'~''.,.'•''',.· ... ,.~ ....... ,.·
$4000 down, tenn&. $10,500. to Arco Station on \\'-19th FREE APPRAISALS 2 BR hor!K' ran~h · ···•• $165 -fl he $200, $225, $250. 320 Nord .
64$--23)6 St, U5,900. 6-16-2673. 3 811, dl'n.' JJOOI ........ $!SS 1 BR. 2 ba. tam rm, bllns, atream, ewers evcryv.· re, 1_,nc:_'::_'_:•:.:•2-4007:::::::.:,_____ * BRAND NEW * .-----1 Costa Me1a lnve1tment STAR*LET n6-73JO 2 car attach._ gar, pool . Nr. 4:)' pool, rec. room. billiards. ,
l;T;;;;;u_;t1;lo;;;;R;0<;;;;;k;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; + M=~nr Desert, 174 1 541-n11 •nytime 4 BEDrtOO~iS~B,\TJ-IS, ~~~ ~:i·s;~~-en Ok. $325 :.:~8, ~~~· 1'~~·-f~r::: I ~N:.:•~w~po:;;;;r~t..;;8:.:•~•~c:.:h___ HACIENDA HARBOR ~~n~~tm!~gs,~~ f: :a~
NOT ONE CENT available ln1med. Clase to,t.c.::.c=·c.c:c..='----2 BR. From $135. See ii! BEACH DUPLEX 2 BR. 2 d I L' · agt<, All util pd, SlOO to $170 ,~, p SPOTL.Eo;;s 3 br ., ha & BA . 4 hse~ from OCt'art. Pkg, Quiet A u t 1v1ng
I" ... ·-· R' 1 •no xlnt schools. ~ er mo. " · -'!Nin Parso•"• P.d., 642-8670 mo. Adults, no -u . • • .[5 nece1sa"" I;> put this ! UJO.•nll•n 1ver, ..., ." [ I~ r •~..., "•·-1 ood ••un -"' '"" util pd $155/mo. Iii June / "'" home In TOP °CoNDJTION _ on pa\-ed rd. Xlnt. fl11tung Ho&w torllnl 11! with 1st and last mooths am . .;;"' OO,..,.,~wM9 • ......,, Bet""'C(>n Hnrbor &. Newport, lJth. 91;75-2Jlj. ALL UTIL. PAID :Jj..1 Avocado, CM. 642.9708
.,, alt·eady "'· 4 ••--.. ra.n1. & .. buntin;. Club privi.1. 24 . rent req., + $100 deposit. mo. 4 . J 1, 4 3 . 2 Blk N. 19th. !I ...::c*:cc,c~~ .. c'E:coE~K~&~U~P-*-1 ' Bl\' s•=11·0 Sh
uu.•1.13 Call agent 346-4141 N t 8 h I.............................. ~,," & s .. .....,.,. 4 • ag ll'ILSON GARDEN APTS. i"· rm. PLUS formal dinin" rni s E. · oI Yttka off. mten -ewpor eac 1' MESA MO'fE'L bl ~ .. 5 Will di f I HORSES OK -4 B 2 Ba. 113 * * * * I carpets,. 1·~. encl , ga1·. 2 BR Unfum. ,Newly dee. nn. 2 Baths. Fireplace .I: ·· ~s or ong. nv. Heusa Furnished 300 . · r: \\'ATERfRONT 3 BR. 4 Ba. Kl!chen, TV's, maid ~rvice. a~s.Sw1n1m1ng Pool.Ne\\·Jy New cpts/drps, Spac
bit.Ins, Asking $4-4,500 IN-C. C. Fe-n:U, 17T1 Orange ----------1 ac .. Kids ""·e.Jc. $250 Lse w/ home, "'wly redec. On El Puerto Mesa Apt1 Healed pool. 646-96SI d Be 1 Jandscpd CLUDING TIIE LAND. \\'e A""'· C.M. 548-3077 General opl.Jon Id bea h 11000 1\1 h * • * * 1~=='-'-""-'-'-'"'---ecor. au. . grounds. Adl1s, no pels. --•-F Bl 8 con* 645-0111 sai Y r · · 'ont 1 Bedroom Apts. BACH in pvt N.B. homt'. Adults, no pets. $140 / mo, 2283 Fountain
su.gge11 yOU see 1his one Ra~s. •rms. LANDLORDS. O\VNERS ue e• . Bill Gt'Undy, Rltr. &i2-4G:'CI Einployed man. Pv1 enl , 241 Avocado e 646-0979 \\'ay E. (Harbor, turn w.
RICITT NOW~ Groves 180 I PROPERTY P.fANAGERS 31 .B,DR~~ ';.~1tlY,~:· part-K'd PARK Lido 3 BR. 2•,; BA. $1.:)j incl. u!itilies. Also furn. deck, vie\\•. $140. :>IS-36SI on \\1ilsonJ.
-;:;;;:;:;;;:;;;::;:;;;::;:;;;;; We \\'ill TI'le-r tenants lo you 1 ~ yllJ-u . .....,,. a nlCl>d. 1 5 Crpts, drps, bit-ins. Pool !i: RecrcaHon area. or 642-5221. • I frtt of charge .•. ?ttany 01 .. , brk., ~:a month. NO F ireplace, $775. 6--l2-8797 Quiet En\'ironment. OU 1 BR, pool. block to ~an, FAIRWAY HARBOR GREENS INVESTMENT desirnble tenan\5 on our FEE. 5-1~ ' NE\VPORT Island 2 br. 1.1n-N tuld Single adult $135. 833-l""i:::i.. GARDEN &: STIJDIO APTS
,va iting list. 3 BU!tl-t. + family nn., full houst' unf. Yr.i.. lse $150 street par .... ,.. 0 c re(}, 644-0037 eve!. Bach. 1, 2, 3 BR's. from $110. OPPORTUNITY ALA Rental<;, * 645-3900 dining nn., built-ina,, brk. mo. 213: 7$-36:i0 alt 5 pm. no pe ts. 2 BR upper • \Valk to beach. VILLA APJS, 7700 Peterson \Vay, C.M.
8·f t.Ctt ranch. Located near ••<1:: UTIL pd N'--I BR. S300 a month. NO FEE. 250 -cl .1 y t A il 54&-0370
Cali,_. ••-H ..._. · · """ N•-~ u•11-. Sant• An• I9j9.196I Maple Av~. S rn ut1 . car y. \'a
' / ' I · 1 1 Ill [) l'ilil.
-· --··1 ll'11ll11r
"SINCE l!MG'' ~ho l.Ululll, uuec Y at bch. Tot pet ok. Vacant. .. .,....., .....,... m Costa Mesa 3/1. 213 / 4--17-M43, 2 & 3 8R'1 2 BR, l BA, Garden Units.
lit Western Bank Bldg. in tht-path or progress with Blue Beacon * 645-0111 LIVE at the be11._ch year DELUXE 4 BR h s #:. Private patio, pool • indiv, Shag crpts, drps, d.shwhr,
Un iversity Park l!f)t'Ct11cular vie\\'. F~lng. round for only $12;; Sunflower 8.-Timber, S.A. LOVELY tum. 2 Br. 10"'er patio, beam ceillngs, trplc,
exttllen.I o.i:altt well and pri-B•lbo• lsl•nd ALA Rt>nla\J! • 64;).3900 Option to buy. for inlo NEW lJlG DELUXE API'S apt .: now until June. laundry fac. gar. 2650 Elden. 537-0062 Daya 833-0101 Night1 I val!' lakt-. S2.~50 per acre _ -· • 546-lOl-l BACH-fur n $139.50 ABBEY REALTY &12-3830 N€'ar Orange Co. Airport f , aft 7 prn & Sun. $l6S/mo. l~-~-~a~l;x~~~~~;; \\'hlch includes t:il.SOO 01 im· 5 BR, 41 ;i ba, on 11·nter. E/SIDE .. 2 Br Coua.ee. yd ·~.--_ ___ 1 BR-fu rn $150 -54-.-C-le-m--e n-te UCT, Adults only. ] / iil'O\·emenls. Consider trade Dt"cK wt vk!v.·: dock privil 6.· gar, child & prt ok. Sl.1'i ~ivers1ty Park 2 BR·furn $180 201Z2 Santa Ana Ave. •DELUXE 1 & 2 BR's. Furn .~. ft•al Eitate, !.JJJJ for commercial or industrial l\Inrf'h1i>t toJuDE"19th Blue Be•con *_64S.01 11 ,_ UNVURN AVAILABLE *WALK to Shop'g . Attrac i\olgr. f.In. Joachim, Apt 3-A 01 unlurn. Bltns, crpts,
GeMral Pl'OPC'rl)', For further infor-Ask for Et1a Freeman BUNGALO\V Retreat. 1 Br4 BR,&. family rm .... $335 ADULTS ONLY, NO PETS t BR. furn. Adults .1 -;;;;;;;;;-i;546;;·6Z1~5-----drps, pool, ga rden s . I ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;~ ma tion. please contact R.E. Sali1bury, R.ealtor 673.6900 home, y11rd &. gar. !90 2 BR., l bath .......... $225 1760 Pomona 642-2015 $130/mo. Phone 492~13. ; i NASSAU PALMS, 177 E.
ll Knox with Costa Mesa ALA Rentals • 64~ 3 BR., 2111 baths ...... SZSS •DELUXE 1 & 2 BR's, Furn Apt. Unfurn. 365 [l CORDOVA AptS 22
nd St. CM. 642-3645.
Acreage for sale 1.SO I Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc. b STEPS to bch, 2 Br. w/view, l BP.·. &,,din. rm ...... • $.1~ or unlurn. Bltns, crpts, General 2 : F~ ~s, stove,
541-21i11 E\les/Wknds 538.9435 3 Bedroom · 2 bat ' sngles or family. Sl;,Q 4 BR., 21' h:'.lthl'l '····" · $3l5 drps, pool, ga rden s, 1----------2077 Charle St. 642-4470 re · e y 'garage,
76 AatE.S Ot'veland Nalional hardwood. ~ra .. d l n l n I Blue Beacon * 645-011 1 NASSAU PAUIS, 177 E. Be sure to see these Ch.'U'm-mature adults. No peta or
rores1. Creek & oak rrets. Real Est.te Wanted 114 ~m. bu1lt:1ru;, dishwasher, -----_, ~ -. -22nd St., Cl-I. 642-3645. In;; 1 Ir 2 BR Spanish sty!€', children. $140. 642-5531.
C!ose ,0 Rea.lf.an'K ranch.
1
disposal, fireplace. Joroed f.nNl llon1e-pe.,ec1 JQr JU.St DRIVE ·ay LGE 3 br, 1* be:, crpt1,
$13.'-i(I per acl'f' Tt'l'm~ Call air heating, p..'lllo. Near you! $SJ. t 1~.....,,,. RENTAL FINDERS prestige apts for adults. Ex-drps, dshwshr. DowruWr11 .
. 83 __ •119· · I HOurr urrnrn. shopping • leau for i1-; ALA Ren1als • "~OMI 147 F101•1er St. l Br furnish-Free To Landlord s tra lrg !iv nns, shl\g cpt'd & No ""Is, 2 children ok. 5165, n11.w • • 1111.'1 nlLllW ...... .,. oo -- ---d B 1 1· · c M drp'd lh--·t Dwhrs •••c ~ -~ _ 1 y~ars or. more ~........ mo. SPREADING ROO:M-3 Br. e , est oca ion in .. · .... ~ · • .. -Call afr 4 pm, 545-3215. A~ents for sal• 152 For tratWerees. We are lhe. Water _p~id. 3061 Loren Lane huge yd, familicK \\'tle. Sl ~i "Slj\;CE l!l-16" 616--0920 645-011 T closc!s, ~aut. pool, .-ec. * LRG 1 BR. apt. All ne1v
N...,,,.. _,,_, ~--·Tel. 545-8609 for 11pr1. Al A Renials e siJ-.~!JOO $14C 1 BR. $175 . 2 BR. ~~§~~~~==== l :roo~m~. ~'~"'~1~•~·~·~· §§ •-it & · 1,~~··S Ne11.•port Shores vtu.aove q;erit.s -a Da· • ~ " lsl \\'eslL'rn Bank Bldg crpts, ""'l's, t e paint. c1olfl.:-to beach. Full utle. tional mrporatkm, Call Joca1 Dana Point fRPLC . 3 Br. in Ba, fncd Universil.v Park Ulil pd. Poot Garden Liv-Balboa li land Bltns. $145/mo. 546-Gi51. ~nt year around agent bekn fO\l lill-847~ FOR lease 3 BR cptd drp1 !or kirli;. & pet. Onl v ~ir.~.. Days 833-0101 N ights lng. AdlU, .., pets, 740 W. Park· Like Surroundings 998 El Camino, C.l\I.
incorne of Sl.600 1no, 14 lgc yd 1~~r 2 Pa.t1os' Blue Beacon* 64.S.0111 18th St .. CM. BAYFRONT, near llf!W -QUIET. DELUXE BRAND ne\\• 3 br downstairs!
Ga.nages. Only 8 l'r11.rs old. ~ ,._: '0 S150 'ctttninir:/' RARE 2 A + le --• DELUXE 1 BR &. Patio. sandy beach, 3 hr. l-l &. l BR APTS $275. T\vo 2 hr upsta!rs $175. $139500 No 2nd To·s. I ........,. m · : · r , .( n. ~iei\·l·l DR., 2'1 balhs ........ $'100 kl Yearly $400/mo. 673--5299 642-4905 or 2U/6~2542. 341 GRAl.IA~t REALTY ,.1••11~ f'will' breaka;te depo11t 49;)..6_"1)3, C'pl ~!O\'l', ;..onr, r •11ld. s.~S:· ,Tur!lr Rock 4 BR, vu .. ·~15 Bacheklr ~~~· S3Sil MW y & E'\"('~ Also ruRN. BACHELOR "oodl nd p c '' I ,,..,.. ., . \I /\ R n! I • Ii :t!lOO ,..., up. Furn. \nu ul . unthly 1----------Prv patios * Hld Pools \, a 1., .1 ·,
Lroo ISLE. 1'1ust sacrilict', Huntington Stach 1
'_ r ll .~ '""" :l BR., 21 ~ halhs •••••••• SJ:iO tcrnis avail. 998 El Camino. Corona del Mar 110\. 1 Bdr. Dl'\':, Blt-ins.J h..,~ JACl\POT-2 r.1·. l"!/O, C'r'11~. 3 BH. 2 Ua. rnm. rm .•• $340 516_0451 Nr sl-.op'g * Adults only
G""'C:. h apL'I. All furn. 6 Bu1in1S.1 I BR duplex, garage, small rlflll!, ~rri, kid~ 1.-pc1 ~. Sl:lO '!BR. 2 ba. home ...... $325 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ) MARTIN IQUE APTS Cpts/Drps, Prl. bale. Gar.
car garege, 7% loan. Lt'aM: "-----"-200 backyard, pat'°, frplc, $160 AI/\ R 1 1 1 • r..i· 3900 • * Studi"o Apt $11O 11 like nu, xlnt loc. 962-4180. l•nd to yr >JI& Ow""' -...-·-·• • " " .r · ITI7 Santa Ans Avo, CM
... ~n: '~f~,.,, Bargain TcANDY SUPPLY L':'~u:~~ch ~~: \'1~~, B•. CP"· i red hill ~~e:c:~ ~!!0
!),. Ci! ·~ Mgr. Apt ll3 "'"'" Oassifted INDEX
at..--;150. 10~~ down. (PAR~l~J':tnt 'I1lrE) * SfUDIO COTTAGE * dry>s. bl1n~. Y<'arly Jea!le REALTY ___ 64:..::S-c.:0::34c:.:_9___ ('/~ HARBOR· Advertising
S33c8DOO 24 hn1. Bkr. VERY mGH 1*'.0ME }'URNISHED ~1~hury Rcul1y 673-6900 Univ, Parle Cenler, Irvine SINGLES $130 a.II ulil. except ON TEN ACRES ~ Celot~,·c:.pts 156 Now available in Costa }Je!a Artistic studio cottage a.t jCorona del Ma r Call Anytime 833-0820 ~l~~u ~y~rnJ97~arPa~~~ 1F~rc2pl:c~~ Furn/ v'r1e. u.n:~~~: TOWNHOUSE [ _____ .. _'_"_._._. _ _JI e and sunwndi-•rl''"~. AU : \tictoria Bea.ch. All ""'oo<l _.._. _.._ ~ • .
locatton1 are comrm'-'""' ... , pnnelctl, sk)_,hghL'I, 1rp c. Ur or 1ew Houns Furn. or 3. b ' oo s is""" n ...., . ·~ -I I H b y (corner Ford). 1\1,.... apt. "o, p I Tenn' "-"t 1•1 Bk"t
3 Cra\T f!\fe! in Gartl1?n of
Remt>mberanct' at
\\'e&tminstrr r.-lemoria.J Pk.
SfOD ea. 962-0306.
Commercial
p,_rty
r . ,._, ........ " I'" 'lo•th -~~=~~=~ roo Sea Lane, Cd~l &U-2611 Classification 100-1"49 actory furnLS•><'.'> by as. """· ". -~ H U f 3 10 1 2217 Harbor, nt'ar \''ilson Qualified penon vnll become MISSION REALT\· 494--01 .. l ~ 0meS . n urn. e BACHELOR APT 9 (~tacArU1ur nr Coast •I\\')') 2 BR. l 'i BA STUDIO Real Esta1t, ~
distributor ft'X" 0 11 r candy I Lido li le .. lx-droom, 2 b.n!hs, luxunous Huntington Beact. 3..17 E. 21st St. TO\\INHOUSE. fl·lO/mo. General .IJ
(Ne!iities Plantus., Toot.sie c::i1~1 &: drapes thruout, all COSTA r.IESA * COROLIDO APTS * e Jleated pool-Adults only ~,,,..-,~-,---
RolJ11 a.ivt Dad etc) Yaa • built-ins including self clean-·1----------l BR. & 2 BR, l~ BA. 2 Br. studios & street levels, • No pets-Adj to shopping _c_r,_,_,_;1_;,_,_+_;0_0_1 ~50.18"4 SI . 11. . ;J BR. 4~~ ha. \\'a.lerfront in" O\'Cn fen«<! yard green 4 BR, 2 BA, clean, 11.·alk to r I~
1 musl have 2 _Ill I hrs per1 hrune w/dock on Lido "orrl belt & ~k "·ith cabana & beach, lease. SZi5 mo. A~k ~1~·pd-. 1~nr1.:=~:.oo1· Sls:i & up. Penthouses $220. * FREE financial • 1----------1 \\'ttk spare t11ne (dap or $1500 ~lonlh pool only sl€'P9 av.'ay This for Jflck, 962-5523 agt. S.13--03l6 Dsh""·hr. frpl, dbl carporr. .
OFFICE BLOG. evesl. I mu Grundy Rllr. &12--1 '.i2D . · U • • p k Pool , fi73.3378 RENTAL SERVICE Ne1 inco1110 s~.uv. SlT;iO CASH REQUIRED ·---------h<.·autift~ home on~y 1 -rr· old. nivarsity ar I• BEAUTIFULLY cl••n I "".JIN Newport Btt•ch ~·-nt t 1' ashlO I UNJQUE new 3 Br, 2 Ba, Costa l\fesa e Huntington Sin",lr tenant "AAA" For more ~ writt. .....,nvenial• 1 " . 1.~ ~1----------·• 2 br "p1s. Pool. "-ts bl /"-dbl r------~
Classificat ion 200-260
l:\nd &. I iopp1ni:: ::;:io " .... ~ Ins, cp1s , .. ~.~. car.! Beach • Ne\\>porl Beach ll ~I Price $270 000 I "DlSTRIBln'OR DJVlS'Jo..V' --' s · P.r. 3 BR/2~: ba. 2-Story, bl tins, & dl'J>!. Adulls only. $130 S27J. 67H719, 673-W:H 1_2_3 BR APTS. Houses for Rant
Rettlrns lgc 10~0 ~n cash it1\'. #Z!A_ P.O. Bas l'B!t, c:o.1" ER. Priv. 1ta1!""'ay to month on l~ase. Avail. fr p I ~. CI tan! CI u b lo $160. 642-2181 .
\Y R DUBOIS lNC vina Calif !112'2 Iadlldi! beach. Pool. $850 ~rly. f.f:'.lnch l.•n. I lease phone p r iv i leges. Avail FURN Bachelor & 1 Br. Costa Maia /\sk about our DISCOUNT ~C-1 ,-,-,;-f-ic-,-1,-0-,-3-0..J0_355 ·• · 5-1:..TIGG * · plion~ numie or tal 12131 Hocoe Show RJtn 61j...7W &-1~:?013 Eves. !~m~}ately? S300/mo iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii PLAN. Call 636-0220. "'"'""'"°"' Exceptionally nice! CltAR~tING L11i.-:un11 Beach 331..sai3 SM C'-mente 2 BR. houat'. Cpt.s., drps, 2110 Newport Blvd., CM HARBOR· VILLA MESA APTS.
I • I C I' HUNT.ING 1 ~~·G prlv. yard &. garage. AdUll:I Condominium• 2 BR, Priv palio. Ji td pool. s Ol'es ap . on oa.~t wy. ... '--"'"-"'' 1 t"WI M 675-4~23 U f 320 S30 \VK -1 ""'r, w/ kit Lot so· x 10~· to alley. Uniqoo .,-~ty. eaabfish Y£A.R..ROUND ltue -on Y....,., 0· a · n urn. r--2 car encl'd gar. Children
[ ...,. __ ,,,, .. ]~
,............ $35. Maid ser, linens, 1V TOWNHOUSE t 1 CJwne.r ""'ill finance II! 7.5~}. ! an agency in )VQr an!a bfauti!ul beach hou' e , Co1ta M esa Costa Me1a & tele. Seulark Motel, w1~~co1ne, nong pets Pease!
Broker. booking hunting & fistrirll{ oulltanding view. Private $ UJ mo. \V. \Vilson, I~
· (Cyp sm 117,::;:-c;:;ZJ;R?RT;;;;::.::I.---------2301 Npt Blvd. 64fr7'45 61&-1251 &
Classification 360-370
Rea.kmo1n iC's Corp. 67:>-6700 trips. \\'P haw a natioailly community ru11 t't!!IJ INe1\· Lrg 3 BR 2 BA ram rm 2217 I-larbor. n!'ar \\'il~on · a Rental• ,.
-----shn\vn TV Mow ~h will S:in Cle-tnt"nlr. On the . 2 fpl's cii>ts, drps, fenced yd' .,/ tf D~LUX 3 UH. 2 ba1h QUIET, !!ludio.::: $115, 1 BR's, • 2 BR. 1 BA TO\VNHOUSE. SHARP 3 BR. 2~~ BA, lliOO ~,-------~
Condominium 1 sell your triPs for you. Put bt';ich. four ~ewls, four :Z c gar. Pets&. children we.1'. To1~11hsC'. BltnB, d1h1~.. $125. No chlrlrn or prL~. All on 1 floor. Sl2J.SlJ:i sq. ft. Studio apt, crpts, Claisifit ation '400--465
for .. le 160 or full time busi.IJeu. Call bettrooms, 34: b 11. 1 h 8, &Q-2413 pa1 10, pool, clubhs, £.o.J 2135 F.lden Ave. CM, see • Heated pool-AdulL~ only drps, nr So. Cst Plaza. $200
days: &15-5656.f!'Ws; 9'11-13'0 pllnia, family room, ~e. !J.4;;..5270. -'~n~c~:..,:,A~p~tc6.~--~--mo. on·v, by 973 Vale•c;•, 11 "'l ~ F t h d 4 BR 2 •·th C t e No pets-Adj to shopping " -Announcementt EXECUTIVE Condominium N ""-••uoiv. urn • e or · .,.. · P 5 D I U f 350 * 1-BR. Quiet, adults. no Call 5'15--0718 r.tgr. in ?<leu. Verde. ?\ext to ewsp•per ..-•fersttip otherwise. Days (714) throughout, ~·ater sorter1er. up exe1 n urn. PE"l~. 2·152 Elden. Sal-7936. )ie!!i!N!!o~ci!h~llidre!in!!!!l!!!l!!!I!!!!!!
Golf Coul'M. 2 Story 3 For L.A. Her111d Enminer in ~m. Mcbts ( 7 l 4) Washer/dryer. $290 mo, tse. Newport Beech AJI 5 • 646-2'168 NE\V 3 BR owners unit, frpt, Cla ssific•tion 500-5 1 O Br/2~ baths, lnti.orcom, C'.>rona dtil r.1ar. Be in busi. 492-2651 5i6-6199 SEACLIFF Ma.nor A p Is . all bltns, shag crp!J, drps, r------~
neg for ....... -Qadl de.. S~1ALL sleeping & silting Bachelor, 1 &. 2 BR, 1 1~ closed gara.,. lmmed. oc-,,,) C111tom Cah inct r y in . ,1vu.<~ 9UICK CASH 4 Br .. ne11.r S:I, Co11sl Plaza. 2 DOORS from Bch, 4 Br ·1 p -" I """-it -d Writes.. .RP room, restroom fac1, SW BA. S137.50-S160. S30 nlO\'e cupancy, S-40-1913 or er10,. .. 1 · Kltchen & &th. Spacious ..... ~ ... ., · . • A_ \'Sil March 1. $230 mo. 2 •-••p-r, .,r.,.~t, "-. I"" · tA"-o"" 21i62 Unroln Ana.he THIOUGH A .,.. .. .-~ ~-,. ... r mo. ""secunty. V'O\l""0'1U'1 in al!owancf' + r" g , st5-2321. . dining & li\'ing room. u·~ __ _ · n. :>iG-2845. Yrly $300. &12-!12~2 '------Classification 525-535 Yours for tlv• price S3.i.500 ,G1\RDE~lNG raute-tor !Qff', AJLY I'll.OT TU F. d I 1 R DUPLEX l BR. fum or di5rount. Crp1s, drp~. p11t io, -EASTSIOE
-\Vil! sell furn ished. See \1 /67 ~. T, ChPY. rrurk D ~~. ~ a\\~a!f~ff. ..~·< Duplexes, unfum. near shop'g. Quiet. ~~nt~hi~~~ ~;_is2.1525 Brand new 2 BR, 1 BA. $175. Lost and Foi.tnd I~
at 3Crn Oub House Circle. I 11/l'11mprr & trb', a_ J 1 WANT AD 515-393-1 * 002..J~. Furn. o r Unfurn. 355 No <log! or cats. 548-7720. Crpts, drps, d~·hr, self clean. _ ~799 for appt Call Ari t'quipl. inc. jobs in C~I . L,IJJ.5,71 AVAIL oow, 7 BR furn. Pool, MESA VERDE ing gas oven, all wtr &: gas
Adair. NB, ll B. $3500, m--r.s:;. .-. 2 BR. Gar, Patio. w/w Newport Beach Rec rm. Good location. No 2 BR, cpta, drps, bllns, wnsh/ pd. lltd pool. 324 E. 20th C la s,ification 650-555
l:;;;;;;;;;;=:;~=========~=~==~====;;;;;=:;=:;;;;;;:;;;;I crptg. 1 small cllild ok. $148. pets or children. 64&-5824. dry attach. Locked ear A st. &10-9148 r------,1 ~
•• ., '
" ••
Yearly. 64l-8520. LGE. 2 BR. 11~ ba., lrpl. I.RG l BR w/w crptg, bltns, slor. Lrg clOlltt~. Nr. shp 'R"· -.=-U-<~G::.:,~B=R---.---lrritrlK:tion TS Q(jQ-0 £\ '-,( f)-C ~Q.• 2 BR. houSt' y,·/garagr. Furn or unf. $225-235 r.to. 1 adult, no pets. Sl32. $150. Owner 540-5.599, So;S-3209 1 l V b · studio; patio, ,........-\:)~ I'-o\J l"J.. -($ IJ(f" ~ Fenced yard, Range. $135. Realtor &12-7000. \'r&rly. 642-8520 *TOWNHO USE_*_ f:.: ~1~111 ~ :10~~~~ ~55 Clas1ificetion 575-580
Th -Puzzl· w1"th th· Ba1"/f 'n C'1c'-'-182 E. \VU!lOn, c .r.t &12-0.i30 1 &: 7 Br All elec. 2 BR. ]~ BA, crpt1, drp~. & $160. 29Z r.lcndoza Dr.,[ c -.--.~-.-.. -.-.~--,~
.. ..::: ..--f, A Al• EASTSlDE 2 Br, frpl, beam I ]f 91 Adlts, Pool-putting gM\ palio. AdulL~. $160, 134 E. CM. -·-· _..
..
'
..__ cell, patio. Adult1 only, M Apartments torftent Bahia Mar Apl>, 5'18-0-192 1'1elody 1.11'._ 5411-']68 "A"°TT==-R-AC~~. ~----0 1!.orn::inge rten Cl ffi9 ,-, ..... -:~ ~48 64,, .. ~.... . . . 6 BR apt, Adult~ f f°'-M' l(fombh>d wor-d1 b.. , \ pell. ... . -...-... ATI'RACTIVE E-aide Studio e NEWL y only, Near Harbor &. Cla~1i ic•tion b00.699
low 10 form f011r ilrnple wordl. 1 BR hge, fel\Cd, flrtpl. Pttf Aph F 360 apL 2 BR. 11,i BA. Pool. DE CORATED 8-W5it.IOn, CM. 675-8181 btwn ·~-:::------''! iJ]
I adlts. No pets. '4i-8512 a.ft • um. No ........ ,_.,u, "'-'10. Em..,,_,, l A P 0 I L .-~"" .,.._ QUTET 2 BR's. Gar & Pool. 5 pm. Gener•I $155 -SHARP 2 BR. C .... ls drns Adults on! no EXCEPT, Nice l Br, bit••,
I I I J1 11 SHARP EMtside, 3 bedroom. He11.ted PooL Adults, no peti ~~.' .... ~2-80 12 y, cpl/drp, enc gar. paii~. Cla11ific•tion 700-710
. . • • . . $16:> ...... monlh ( kl ••• 9'~ I~---------A•llt• -•· s 13 • ~
Bil Full!!!' .. R;,allor 546.0814 1 BR du~lex ulll pd .... $7~ ceen o . U'U· """ I BR. Duple~. Sto\·(' "" ·.--~·"""~=><~·~·~=~'-·I '=-""-"_ ... _.,.._·--~' ~
E I • l Bil pr1\' co11ngc •••••. $7:. 1 BR. Frplc. Patio. Beam Rcfrig. No children, no pets. &l6-l7~;· V
1..-V.-"0-rR-r-l-r<-i lj /"1 .. ll ~ 2 Br., ctpl'g It <In.PH. Lra: 1 BR co ttage ulil pd .... S80 ceJllngs. l adlt. No pel!t $105/ per fTIC'I. \Valer &: NF.1.VT.Y DECORATED
I I I I I' 1. reoced )'llrd. $175/'!"'. _251S lBR.duplextotl petOK •. ~ $137. Yearly. &42-.M3:1. gardneT rum. 972-A W.17Ui Lrg 2 Br V.'/ gar. $130 Cla11ification 800.83b . . . . 1 I Elden Aw., C.~t. ~:>-1657. 1 BR ~est house 1JHI pd ~ * SIS Pn' \\'ttk u P 1 c"=.· ~-::..;:::.:..._____ Dlspmal, \\'ate-r pd. 2176-0 I l [EJ
I !
DMa Point l BR ut1l P'I. Jlntin Sch . 145 w/ldtchtns $25 per Wttk New coiy 1 BR, fpl, crpl, l -'P~l',.:"";c"~'la=,,;A~'~':..· ~= ..... ::...:=llO::__ PW Md Si,wlin 'L,
H Y S U K . l"'==,,-=:-:---l!S:.:T::,A~R'.-'*!.L~E~~T-~n:,:'-7330 up ApU. MOTEL. S48--97SS. dl'Jll, fenced yd, au. Ptll * LRG dtluxe 2 I 3 Br "' l-°'Tl..;..T1-n15c-ilrl Pily the piDOI' ~ He REDECORATED 6 >T old HOLIDAY PUZA l BR, f11rn 11.pt. Pool. Prlv. & dtlldren welcome. $175. apt~. MESA VERDE area. Cla11ification 150-858
.._ .... _ ~-~~.~~.~ ployed tha acxodion so nxft. home, on quiet 11. -4 br, DELUXE ~pacioul 1 BR 1 balrony, $135/mo, 16 E. M~i-211.1 Call a.IG-103t [ ~
•---,,,-,C"".::-:"C=---, ht 's ,.,.1 0 _ saomod\. 3 ba, Lam nn, dbl pr, furn apt $135. Jlealtd pool. I t8th St. ili-m2 $l70 . 2 Rr dtn ~ 13 Li: Br's, 2 Ba. ne,,,-~ ....,.::-~ ] • '* G E W H I T I .... l·i.S' cov palio, lease $ 2? S . Ample p.vklng. No children Dana Point rtl'.lt'c. Cpts, · drp!l ,' rintlo'. tlrps, 1no pctll, children ()k, · tc.. J 1-.:;r-,--,,..-,--,..-oj e Cow.pl.-.. ~ --' 4~1. 49.'hl729. • no pell. l~ Pomona. 1 ~---------11-dj. Mp'g. :iU!-8.'lOl, 213: Avail llO\\', $163/mo. 545.'(?~j. Cfa,sifictfion 900-912 (~ I I' I I' bv tm:i,.t: "9 ""'*'°"'" Sl'ANISJ{ ocettnlron1 villa, C~ SINGLE, TV, pool, JW"I~ ok. 592-5:m NE\VLY d{'(.'Or 2 BR. cp!~.
1 __ • • . . ,.,._, dtvtlop ...... 3 bflo#. •Pleklul ~uded lf'OUl'lds. CHAT EAU LAPOINTE $25 & up. wkly Dana ATTRACT. Like ntw. l. BR. <lrp~. bltM, 2-cflr garagt, Tr>nsportatlon JI•)
'i I' r r I' r I' r r I YllChlltl'J1\n'1 ~l'f.t.liK. sai DELUX"E tum 2 Br. apl. f.l1r lna Inn, Mill Coaat l)l:h11:hr, crpla, drps, bltns. $\,60 673--7009 . -9 f:~l1r:'~u~!£S per mo. 499-.21~· Pool. CloAe to lbops. $100. ,"~"~·~--~-~--ll!!I f.l'!.l"ll. All util pd. Only '2'-"n=n~u~,cr..:.:..,,-,-.-r=_,-,-,-,-id-<'. C la,sificc.tion '115.94;
Fountain v.11 • ., Adults, no pel•. I H untington Beach $150, Inquire ; 3}7 Avoclldo Nn pefl. $13(). $19-3;"~ or r------~ (j ror=:=A~ lttlElSI I I I I I I l I 1941 Pomona AV•,_c_.rit:..... Apt 9, &I~~· 21317;,1-fi643 [ J~ .. NSWERS IN c1.1~ .. ~1e .. -800 ~ BR.12 Ba, blllm, dhl r•r, CUSTQ)l l'URNIT\JRE DELUXE Bachelor Units ·12 nr.. \\'/\!/ !'Jll~. 1lr1~. 1Jl1111 LGF._2_n_r_ •• -d-,-n,-,,-,,-.-.-r. A11totfofs.1, SCRAM·LETS " · ~41111" .-..rvn crpll/dl'JK. RE~'TAL. See ad cla~ 810 ) \\'11.lk lo ~an. Util pd. RIO, !\p1rn.I ~ttt!'f', frpt. Cptf., c1rp~. f)llt lo. Shop'g, Cl 1, ns: m.6721 • C.U ~gt * LINOBORG CO, 5..~2579 SIS.'!:. 14fl E. 18th. 557·6682 ri.tesa Vtrde $170. 61$-8800 ''~! .ic.11 , on 950. 0
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lllYSI
T11Ursda1, January 25, 1971 DAILY PILOT 3
----1~/[ ---1~ 1----1~1 -·-·-~ I~ [ -··---1~[ -~····-J[t] [ ... ui. l~l '-1 _._ .. ···~!~ .. I ~!"!"""'--~·rl ~;;;;;;;;~:1~;;;;~~~;;;;~~~I ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;:;;;;;;;~~ I ~ Af>t. Unfurn. 3'S Apt. Unfurn. 365 Aptt., Apt1., Apt1., Apts., Office Rental 440 lndustrlal R1nt1·1 450
...;._______ Fum. or Unfu rn. 370 Fum. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. "7D Coit• Mesa Huntl"9ton Beach ____ ..;,.;;.;,;;...;;;._;;;.;__;,.;:.;,;.;:.;.;.;._;;:,:;.;:;,;:;...;;;':..: 13700 NEWPORT BLVD, NB COMMERCJAVl.NDUSI'RIAL
1--------¥·' Huntington 811ch Huntington Buct. N1wport Boach New-"-n-1-'-· •ON 111E BAY • 500-l:ID sq ft, l3c 10 12c
"TIIE GABLJO:.'>" 1 BR, t tpls, drps, refri.a: .• ==,,,;:,,,=--.,======;,.,===== -;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;i,...;; ·;;;;-;;•"i;;;;;;;;;;;;; i ~61>-~2'64~~o~r--~-'M':'l~·5032~ * San Clemente 4.91>-1840* 2 DR, 11.ii BA Y.'/ gar. $150. b.llns, SJJ,5 mo. incl ulil. •
Adlts. Cp~, drps, tncd yd. Also 1 BR Studio, 2 ba, .l!a Q. .Ji FOR $135* ON the ~a.n In Huntington NE\V bldg, 1728-2300 sq ft 2·l31-D Orange Ave , 636-1120 refrJg., bltns, near ocean. Sch -New deluxe oUices Nr Baker & Fairview, l
190 V 3 114.:J. Tra~\\-·lnds rualtv Uinla ermoJa avail March 15. Crpt.1, drps, yr. lease, Sullivan, 540-4429 . . A AIL /l. Non.s1T1oker, ' le kl "° ~19 817-SSll. amp par ng . ...,.,...~:i Storage 455
l Adulr, S!V, re{rig, drapes.,~"--='====----=----! casual estate living. Enter La Qulnta Her. 'II I 54><536 * FRESH AIR mosa's lush green atmosphere & stroll tre.. we 9 ve you: Buslne11 Rental 445 STORAGE ''"" •" r.no,
2 Br. Children ok. No pt>ls. Walk 3 b1ks to Beach! lined walk ways to your apt. Olympic size pool e billiards • saunas fenced yd, covered,
Htd pool. Cpts I drps. 126 Boaut. big 3 BR apt. w/IY ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED e tennis pro shop & lessons e color TV SUITES avail.able, Medical yr..arouncl rental 545--84£1.
ltfonte Vista. 642-5790 crpt1>, drps. bltns except t BR. Unf. $150 _ Furn. $180 lounge • healfrh clubs • indoor golf driving professlona.I bldg, 17612 Re ntals Wanted 460
NEW Spaciou.s l & 2 BR, 1-cfrig. $225. No pell. 5$-17ll 2 SR. Unf. $lSO _ Furn. s210 range • whirlpool baths • partf room Beach Blvd, H.B. Parking: _______ ,.......
bltns crpts cl rps, garage ftn 6• •--3 S fir 1 d 1 nlsbin 11 • resident tennis pro e full time activities A.Ir con d : H eat I n g 2 CAR Garage in Co1ta • . · I.GE 2 BR. b s, ....., , pac. . p ans, ecor. ur gs: ve dir d ea,,,.11 J 1 . 1 •1 T ··-ed 1-lmm•d ~..... """ ~""3 ector e Sun ay brunches ng : an tona -rv esa. o ..., us u• · ""~" .. cy .... .,.....,, Close to ocean, encl garage, within romantic setting w/fun or J:rlvacy. ·-or 545--2321. AO 11 ., 11-' BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS·. s1·ngles, ~~u,1~'. SUlte 8, or call storage. Call Terry, The ut pa.i . '" mo. Terraced pool, pri. sunken gas B Q's w/ .,.,.,... ,.... Real F.statrn 546-2313 • REAUTIFUL 1 & 2 BR. DR ms mo, i a r a i e . uld d tin L ,,,,._ d & F 1 & 2 Bedrooms, furnished & unfurnished 1 7.c'-'--'-=7"-"'-.'--'--~=I Contemporal)' Garden Apts. 5.'.4-1766 sec e sea g comp W1 ,1.Al.1.l.a a OUD• REASONABLE RENT•: Singles from RE"l'AlL store 11vail after Misc. Rentals 465
Patios, ff1>).c!, pool, n"5 -· WALK TO OCEAN . tainl. d k' .J• , $135. 1 Bedrooms from $155. 2 Bedrooms 1i1arch 15th. Dress shop ---------1
1160. CaU .,. ~63 *Coor co-or . 1t w/ ing1rect l1nhtlnn. .,..,,,·"g "O E 11th St DBL ... rage, storage, ~' 1 llR. Crp .1--. / .. .. from $225. 2 roommates can rent for as low .. " · ,.. · ·· .. -~'"" ,_ 1 • 2 "", "·· ... ~J...1J0$150me/w *Deluxe renna & oven•* PIU1h 1han crptn. CM 6.,., "l"' $40/mo. Storage lot 90x63,
.:>nl'\.(U' "l' Pl I I Ir ~ per .. .. .. as $75 ea (and we'll help you find a room-·' · •.>-\/ • cars. ""'· tioa•· etc. <p1'/d-•, bit"•, , .. ;.t bldg. l"Jl c patios. · * 8onu1 1tore9• spec.a tr; Cov. carport STORE 1 1 -.,. " ...... mo Adults * S I 1 , bl 1 & 'I b th mate if you need one). Low move in charges. or ease, 109 22nd 543-4059. No pets. Infant ok. s130 Lll\i>ooRG ·ro. • 536-2S79 cu p ureg m•r. • p u man t1 e a • . St N 8 si i· & SI50. ~9722. s.a7-2fi82 * Elegent rec reation room. No lease reqwred. ' · · ~ ino. O FENCED storage area,
A1TRAC like ne\v 1_2 BR. $140 FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY Mod•ls Open Dally 10 am to 8 pm. 531•5363 oil surfaced; Costa l\lesa.
Lg """'· '''" d''" di'''· A.'U< •bout ow-disrount pion! Blk from Huntington Center, San Diego SOUTH BAY CLUB OAKWOOD GARDEN Industrial Rental 450 _c_a1_t _616--0_28_1._00_2_-7_81_3. __ ,
utl pd, 1884 Dlonrovia. 2 BR, cm~•· drps, bltins. car. Frwy .. Goldenwest Colleae.
54 port $25 Move-In Allow-San n· Frwy t B h Bl d So A TIME FOR 8--0n6. ant;', 725 Utica: 536-2462. iego . o eac v ., . on partments A~rtments SM * BF.AUTI FUL 1 & 2 BR. ----Beach 3 bllts. to Holt; W. on Holt to . . • (just ror single people) (rl'sort Jlvinll'. for ALL UNITS
Contomporacy G•nloo Apl•. "BEE, .. A2CHBL2UBAFFd'~hpts h LaQuinta Hermosa 714: 847-5441 880 IRVINE AVE. ''"''' • marclod •dulul COSTA MESA QUICK CASH Pnlio~. frpl cs. pool .j ·~ -. BR, . , ui was·~...,,,..,..,====""""'""'=-===~~ 1700 16th STREET $9:;, & $167. Per Mon!b $145-$160. Call 5'IG-:>lG3. I ers, pool, pauo. 8231 Etlls. ~ <Irvine I& 16th) {on 16th bh\'11 Irvine Immediate Occupancy THROUGH A 1---------842-8477 or 847.3957 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apts., &: Dover Dr.) N £""" 1 • QUIET 2 br. Adul1s only _...::::..:.::.:....:::.:::.:.;=--t·"--------Furn. or Unfurn. 370 714: 645.()SSO 714: 642.a170 ew """"sq. t. unit, 18th & DAILY PILOT
no pers. Bltns, crpts & drp·s:' • \\"ALK to beach, deluxe Newport Beach ---------• Rent subject tn location \Yhlttl er, ll0-220 power,
S\35. ~0-8100 1 & 2 BR. $135 +. No Cost• Mesa ~~~~~~~~~ plenty of parking. su1nn1rr incM."ascs. Rnyal WESTCLIFF area-2 br, 2 .;.;.________ ~ ---See : Robe rt Nattress, Rltr. WANT AD
NR ne\I.• 2 BR, 11,2 BA. Cp ts, Jlav.aiia n, Z20 12th St, H.B. ba, C/D, frp!c, palio. SAY MEADOW APTS. Costa Mesa 642-1485
drps, stv-dv.·hr. gar. No --CHEZ ORO APTS AduH s. $170-$180. 16 0 1 R1nllls 1~ I 1iiiiiiiif.iiiiiiiiiii.;.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
pets. 766 W. \Vilson. 642-79.)8 823~ Atlanla 1_2 BR, pool, Bedford. Also nc\Y garden Beam ttilings, panellng, priv. R1n11I~ ~I '*
LOVELY Q"let l BR C > , ' W h 2 br, 2 ba, CID, frpl r. u· ti f illtl• * * * * * . .. . p s. pnvate garage. a! ers, dishwshr. Adult~. 166 5 pa OS, recrea on ac s.l••·------drps, patio. pool. $123. 1762 dryers. 536-8038: 536-2727 J-"-'"'°'' lrom Co , 1 All Adults, no pets.
Kenwood. 61fi...!09S. •v1o... " ro 5· \ * 2 BR. from !165 •
1
2 BR apt • 1v/w, drps, bltns, $195. ~2--0239.
Da n a Point di.<.po~al, laundry space. No • $15 PER w~k -up ---------
l:S'.".P'.OE'.".CT=Acu=LA-R--oco-&nl-r-nt pe,s. 962-8578 for info * BA YFRONT * J 387 \V. Bay St. lbtwn Harbor w/kilchens. $25 per ?.'eek SUPER-DELUXE QUALITY
I.Ge· 2 8 1u Ba Srudf Deluxe newly decor, new & Newpon Blvd. ~ mi N. . up Apts. J\IOTEL. S4S-9Ta.5 I·"• -m. "P to 3,000 gq. \•iew, 2 BR, 2 ba, slm•e, •~· r.. .,. • o. l 19th SIJ ~ '"" " M."frig_ cpts & drps. $225. Patio. adults, no pets. $150. draperies. 2 BR'!, 2 BA's. 0 · FURNISHED, util pd, \V/klt, fl. oUlce 1ultes. Imm~. oc-
837-5370 4.10 Huntington St. $375. 3121 \V. Coast Hwy, Npt CALL 64&-0073 female only. Close to OCC, cupancy. Orange County.
I SHARP Bl If 3 8 111 LRG 1 & 2 BR apls 10 $10 -r mo. 642-852.(l. Jirport ltvine Commero East Bluff I l Br. unfurn apt. Enc gar, u s r., · · ,..
---------lrg p111io. $115 1110. Water ba .• Nr, pool. Avai~. mw mln from college, ocean & 1-2 Gentleman, Master Br. Complex, adj. Al.rporter
pd. adl!s only. &,12-4549. $325 i\!o, Lse. Agent ljia--5930 could walk to shop'g, Ha.s ref. heated pool, tennis bch Hotel & Restaurant, banks,
NEWPORT BEACH II N 2 S Cl I laundry tac., carport & pool. atta. 536-8518. San Diego &. N'pt Fwys. S.'j! moving a ow. ew •n emen e Rent from SUO-$l55. Mk ---------UNCROWDED PARKING Villa Gran.ada Apts, Br from $l35. Cptstdrps, ---------FURN. pvt ent, in quie! N.B. LOWEST RATES
Rooms 400 Office Rental.
Trader's Paradise
F'our bedroom~ IYllh balcon. bltn~. fnc>d patios, play DELUXE 2 BR., 2 Ba.. about our ·:iiscount. !346 home . Employed man. $00 ic~ abo\'e & "c'lo11._ Graciou! an·a S46-i2TI. bll!ns, dshwhr, rec. room. Placentia Jl.fg:r. Apt H. mo. 54~ or 642-5221. Vw;__~:~.g~e~~U:::~:hor.1 ~'."."'-""".::':'."':'"" ___________ _,i
Jiving & quirt rurrot•nding 1 --·. Adults only. SlSO. 492-:z:.ti9. ~"'~&-8564~~-=-~~~ 83J.3223 Courtesy to Brokers for f;imil.v 11'i!h .:hi!drrn. Huntington Harbour Santa Ana 1 BR. furn. •130. 2 BR turn SINGLE rm in pvt home, 'Ii.! ?ifustang GT-Super sharp
lines
times
dollars
<f gf!nt preferred, $10 wk.
Near Corona del ~IAr 1-ligh DECORATOR'S 2 br, 2 ha, $155. 2 BR unfurn. SJS5. Fountain Vallf!y. 962-4879 $100 MONTH Stereo tape, radio, futt pw.·,
School. Fireplace, wet bar& frplc. Waterfront w/35' VILLA MARSEILLES Pool. Bllns, crpts, drp!, no 4 nu tires: very clean inter.
built-in kitchen appliMces. boot dip, SSOO. n4/846-2929. children, no pets. ~ E. Guest Home lS All Utilities Paid '11 llc, Lo mi. Trd eq, for
&35 A~fIGOS V.'AY &t4-2991 Laguna Beach BRAND NEW 17th Pl. C.M. 548-2738. * PRIVATE ROOM Nicely decorated ofllce, am-"p'-lo_k_·u.op_o_r_?_M_G_.97_59_· __
Co\dv.·ell. Banker & Co. SPACIOUS l &. 2 br roomy lurn & for ambulatory per s 0 n. pie parking. 1860 B Newport Beaut 2·acre parcels on
Managing Agent 541-5221 OCEAN VIE\V. Lrg Bachelor 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. unfurn. Gar, lawn1, patlO!I, Br1ght • che@ry i:arden sur-Blvd., Costa M~sa. large!t lake In Callf. Ce.mp.
TO\VNHOUSE _ Ql\·ner'S°4 & t BR apts. Cpl!, drps, Adult Living !dry, olf st."park, Well-llted, roundlngs. Nut:r1tloUs meals. W. E. Lachenmyer, Ing, hunting. fishing, v.·a-
Br, 3 Sn, alro 2 Br, 21,j, blt-ins, patio. \Valk'g di.st. Furn. & Unfurn. qu iet, adults. $130 up, .2020 Call 548.41:>3. Realtor ten:kiing. Trade for other
Ba. Patios. Encl gar . to town. 100 CIHf Dr, Di!h\l.'uher -color coordinat· 1 Fullf!rton. ~=-===s~h~--~-1 1861) Newport Blvd., C.P.1. property or ? 547.r,507
675-5033 ;..ai,-urtil Beach. 494-5498. ed appliances . plush shag t l250 •q ft Ii 2 Br, 11'• b&, Rentals to are 430 Call 646-3928 Eves: 673-4577
f 2 Hartley Walnut Grove in
Fountain Valley Mesa Verde ca:et • c~lc~ ~ co: utl nn for wh/dr, patio, \VlLI ahare my beaut Cd..~ --CONSU-LT.l_N_G __ VlaaHa.. Val. corner lrontge
5C mes • a • st gar, cpt/dp. $165. 546-8688. 3 BR, 3 ha. view home on 2 busy hwy•, $2'"a00/A
ALL NE\V showers . mirrored ward-ASSOCIATES VALLEY PARK ./ 2 BR ups(airs. Gar. Nf!wly robe donr5 _ Indirect light· Huntington hach w/responsible y,·ork'g gal. FOR O.C. Income prop,
decor. Child ok. No pe ts. -;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;:;;; 644-0603. WANTED $65,000 !!<I· Bkr/onr 645-0-141. APARTMENTS $15D/mo. ~7-8400. lng in kitchen -breakfast ;. 2 BR tum Balboa v.'Orkl ?ttarketing. Financial. Tech-
• .. opens new c!oors !or ~,~B~R~N--7,-.,..--_-,-1....,-.r bar· huge pri\•ate f~nced ON BEACH! penon 10 ·~hare w/cpl S-: nica.I. To share office sull@ ~P~~~~u.~:~a~t~~I~~: YOUNG FAMILIES · ew crp • ....... ~. c patio • plllllh landscaping • mo + ,m·l "lil · ln Npt Center. 714/557-6076, """...,., • • • gar, near 1hop'g. Adults, ..__, kB B Q' 1·-• h t • " .vacant-TRADE for Io w 2 BR. Apts $160 no 1iets. $14.5. &15-3515. LJnC ar-. s -~.. ea ·1 . 673-1716 Bob PO Box 4050, Irvine, Calif.
2 BR G d A t $175 1 ed pools & lana i. * 1 Bdrm ............ $205 rental property.
• ar en P 5 New rt Beach 3101 So B · t I St • 2 Bdrm from""'" 2' -old •••rking g;•l n--"• FOR immediate occupancy Call M" 6227 l BR. Townhouses $185 po ' ris 0 · I ........ ,,.....,, .. J • .. u .. """ in Orange C.ounty'1 most ----===-:.::~.:::'---;::;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;::;;;;;;;;\{~~ML N. of So. Const Plaza) * 3 Bdrm ••• , •••••••••• $375 roommate I share 2 BR hsf! 1 rd •1 J 11nlts In RlveJ'l!!dr. income 3 BR. Apartment $110 1 Santa Ana F'urnlture Available on Isl yrly Sl50 each. Ph: love Y ga en c 0 mm 13300 -. v,,... 119,!00.
S A 6r:>-4641. con1plex. Comm''l profes!f. J' .....
Pre-scl100l center. Adult pool.
Ol)ldren's pool, Priv patios.
Elcc kitchens. \Vall to wall
closet~ & carpe!s. 2 play-
grounds. Carpor!s & stor·
age.
17256 S. Euclid St.
(just south of \\"arncr in
Fountain Valley)
Phone (71 41 540-4785
NE\V 2 BR., 2 BA. Patio.
Garage. Disbv.·ashrr . Full
new carpeting. $180/mo. .......,.,.
3 BR, 2 BA. Condo. 2 ca.r
g11rage. Pool. S225/mo. Call
53&7723 Blier 5:30 pm.
Garden Gr ove
MARINER QU RE PHONE: 557-8200 Carpets.drape&-dishwaa~r I----------&. medical suHes, In San Trad.:? for boat or !a le mo.
APARTMENTS 'J:::==::i=::i=::i=::i:Z:= heat~ pool.aaun11.1-tenn11 GIRL \Wlnted to ~hare apt Juan Capistrano 1.dj to del car. Darling Realty,
Annoonces the availability of11 -rec room-ocean views w/3 others near N.B. Pool. Bank of America. 835-8035. r.::11:.:4/c.:686-:::.7:.:1:::61::.. ----
2 •. J BR u. nits I.or adults CAN'T BE BEAT patlo!-ample P4fk!ni C>\ler 21. $40 m9. 646-3166
Se · nl DESK SPACE Have ocean view lot, 41xi5' cles1nng to hve amidst beau. curity gua 0s. WORKING lady would like w/ club membership, San
IY by the sea in the pres· SINGLE SJ'ORY HUNTINGT N same to llhare apt, 1-1.B. 305 No. El Cimino Real An!onlo Shores, J\1ex. $11 M.
tigW1.1s \Yestclilf area ol South Sea Atmosphere PACIFIC Call SC?~ until 2:30 pm. S.:1n Clemente Trd $5 M eq. for TD, inc.
Ne\.\ port Beach. 2 BR.. 2 BATH \VILL llhatt my 2 br, 2 49Z-tt20 prop. or J?. 0\'lncr 642-5.583
FROM $230 Carpets & drps ill OCEAN AVE., ll.B. ba, pool, •pt w/student or CORONA DEL MAR For 111formati0n phone J\lr. Air Conditio-d (Il.fi) 536-1487 \\'ant Hi Desert Calif -out. "" working girl. N.B. 642-89TI Deluxe otfice or busine1J! 1 h t h Jf Cl Rot>t>rt M. Buckley. Manas· Private Patios Ofc open 10 am-6 pm Dally o -state, ea I. . ave
er, at (Ilt) 64~0252 or \vrite HEATED POOL WILLIAi'd WALTERS CO. Garages for Rent 435 space, gmd flr, prka". $125/ comer 90:<117 2 bldgs. Eq mo UtH pd. OWNER 673·6757 •A""f F p ~~·f · I,,_ to The Office ol the ~Ian-Plenty of lawn .ru•• · · . ,,...,.. inc. ·•~->
ager. ?ilariner Squarf! Apt.a, Carport & Storage 2 Br $155 up-3 BR $180 FOR motor hOmes trailer LARGE o ! t Ice w/reeep. mo. Owner C.i\f. 646-8558.
1244 Irvine Ave, NB. Ca.I. HIDDEN VILLAGE up. Patio, pool, children ok. boat. etc. 1652 Npt Blvd, CM'. tlon!st area & s!orage Ho~ ranch 0f'll.n~e Park
926&1. GARDEN APTS. lnq. rentaJ bonus now. 6.fi2.28Zl, 642-5106. 11pa.ce. 1500 Adams, <e A 4 BR ·3 •-· 1ooo cre1J. , ...... pooJ,.e1r
-·----2SOO South Salta MORA KAI Apts, .i.onol Office Rental 440 -'°::c'•c.C::·::M::.· ______ cond. 1 Acre +. 10941
P1\RK NE\VPORT care Santa Ana U 54&-1525 Mora Ka.I Lanf!, !AG~~ lEd. NEWPORT BEAOI Civic Meads Ave., I.rd. for fted-
free Jlvg overlkg 1hc wa1er. ol Beach, oU 11.1ue • ---------Ce11ter, 300 ft to 1000 fl. ,. c-• _, -
'''"""""""""""""""""' !16>-8994 DESK SPACE init ...... prop. o.).;H):J~J. 7 JX)'•I~. 7 tenn~ cts S7:i0.0001~ .::::...:=·-~~---Answ. & Sec r 11 tar I a I. ---
'pa. I-Tom $175 to $4j() • Apts., Newport &each 67f>...1Wl % Acre, val. $16,IXNJ, c)(clus. 222 Forest Avenuo 1 --• 1 h Bach. 1 or 2 Br .• Abo 2 Fum. or Unfurn. 370 ¥--------ve area, wua1 or orses. ... 5 NEW olflce1, 17877 Beach !-~ &. I TRD d 12th r..fO. FREE-EASTGATE sty Townhouses. Elcc. kt., BAOIELOR & 1 hr apts. Lt.iguna Bet.ich Bl. Loy,·rst rent.I. Ca 11 ree c ear. as n,
AREA Clean, spariuus 2 BR pri. vat or bal Subtm parkg General Nr Bay. Eves. 675-7876 or 494-9'66 M2-2.52.5 or !21.l) 394-00l5. pyt . nn free & <'lear hme, 1i~ BA studio apr. Pa!io, opt maid ser, cpls, drps. 494-2250 ---------1d inc prop. bkr 642·2436
crpts, drps, eler kit ch. ,Just N. of Fashion ls\ at PALM MESA APTS S NEW otticet, 17877 Beach 1670 SANTA ANA AVE, CM
laundry tncllltie.~. \Valk to Jamhoi°t'e & San Joaq11ln , OCEANFRNT 3 hr, 2 ba, Bl. Lowe1t rent& 842--2525 From 300 sq. ft. 35c llq fl. * ~hopping. Nr fr,1'Y_.$iiO mo. J-111\s rd. 64~-1900 !or leaslng avail J\farch l • June 15th. or ZlJ: 3!M-0015 675-2464 or Ml·5032
12092 Bnilt'y. 89i-50~2. info. l BR unfum ••••..•• $135.00 675-1410 eves/wkncls. * *
3 BR, 2~~ ba Baycrcst,
$-ID.COO eq, For: lots or Jand ,
TD's, waterfrnt or 1 $18,000
bal. at 5~% U!Ume. WW
help !or rite deaJ. 673-7784
PIANO, Early American
style, with padded bench, 2
yrs old, \Vith 8 yr warranty.
Trade !or automobile or f 1
496.24\j
'&1 Chevy 6 cyl h ton pick-
up \·alued SIOOO. Sharp.
Trade for VW dune buggy
with top, Call 9 Al\l only,
642-4!179.
ro.2 BR units Cl\! $125 l\1.
Loan $.i.;,8QO a~sumablf! I I
l6':"t.. 'l'rade for clear home
rhis area $25-$30i\f & owner
t:arry 2nd. A.i;r 549-0218,
\Viii trade my 1968 HONDA,
175 Twin, \1•/dlrl eqtp: For
~ 1965 or Newer CORY AIR
or VW.
* * &16-2892 **
Have oceanfront duplex.
Wanf small home with stu-
dio, coastal area to Enclnl.
ta.s. Rich Irwin, Realtor
,675-6060
Lake GI't"gory lo! -utilitif!s,
paved road. Want T.D., Or.
angf' property. Timr R.E.
835-2525 or ask for Audrey
838-2896.
35~: RETURN. $40,IXNJ eq in
2 o! the flnesl laundromat!
in 0.C. Trade (or apts, com·
m'! or ]and. s:u-3535 or G44.Q637 eves.
\Vhat do you have to trade?
List It here -In Orange
County's large~t read trad.
lng post.642-5678
* *
Huntington Beach--EAST BLUFF 1 BR furn ........... $149.50 Newport Heights c ______ [¥J j ~
2 f3R. 7 ba. view npt. All Ba.chelon Furnl!hed 1---------Ap11lni.nl1lorRer1t ..... ,Ap1rtment1lorRent I Ap•rlment$IO!"Rent Apartrnent1I01"Renl 9
NEW LOVELY GARDEN bltns. carpeted & draped. l from $135 NICE 2 br, pool, 1ar, edits, ~-----~' ~
APT. Lrg patio & encl year old. $2.15 Mo. 2 BR apts $175 mo. m pell. Unf $150, fum Sl6S. ••••• .. ••••I•••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••• garden. 2 BR, 2 BA. Shag 816 A.'11GOS \VAY mo.Imo. OK 642-8'.IOI, 642-8006 A t A t Apt A t e POOL ps., ps., 1., p s.,
Near beach. 21662 , , 475-6050 •SAUNA .-370 crplll, drps, bltns, encl gar . '' "WEED It & reap", .clean Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Fur n . or Unfum.
Brookhunt St. Apt B, • JACUZZI out the treasure• I: truh • General General General General
616-08-11 --------~"~·~·11JC. __ 1se1 Mesa Dr. Santa Ana. 1 -:;;~;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;::::::;;;:;;;;;;:,;;;;;:;:;:=:;:;::,;;::;;;:;::;::;;:;;:::;~
WALK To BEACH,-, I turn into ca.sh thru a Daily
BACH apt,. Park Ne",TIOrl. Dall" Pilat-Wan;. Ads ha
LOVELY NE\V I & 2 BR'!. A I V G m J ools J ve Pilot Classified ad. 6-iZ-5678 \" mlY. iew. Y ·. . . ' bargains galore.
Cnib rlrps, rlsh1\·11~hrrs. Trnni~ cl ubs. Arlivilles. A
i09 Pain1 • 8~7-39j7 $1 !li ~il-3232 x 2370 days, pts., Apts.,
6l l-00f.l eves/.,.,·knds. Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Dally Pilot \Vant Aas have .,c.,..:.cc:_.,..,c_~==---·1-------------------
barga.iM galore. Dime-A-Line 64z.$i8 Santa Ana Santa An1 .-;;;;~~~~1 ::.::::..:::.:::.._~~.::::::::..:::::.........~~ Apts., Apts.,
Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370
Ne wport Beach Newport B•ach
Brand Spanking New
Vista Del Mesa
Apartments
1 and 2 Bedroom•
Fu rnished and Unfurnished
Adult Living
Apartm•
Tustin & Me .. Drive
545.495
My Daddy Uf$,
''Live end feem"
I loly Mammy says. r
'7/oal'• w11y.,.. ,,,. at·
for chlfdren
and their parwtts" ·
A who6t MW conaipt In
...
•• ,.
;
I
..
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.,
. ~. . , . ' ' ',. .
3% OAllY PILOT ,._.,.,J....., 25, 1971 ·a -----
[ --.. I~ I Loo••-
510 Found UrH ads)
I wtll m longl!r be COLJ.JE, Bnutiful, we 11
~•porui:lbla lot any debts kl!pt, lemalP, O\'~'f'ight,
othl!r than my o-Nn. John found K·'.\1an Sh o p p i n i
CUlford Bttchf-r. Cent Parkin& 101. 00-7316
I will not be ttsponlible for FOt.1ND toy ~·hite poodle
any dt'bt. other than my 11.·lth 1old collar and De•
01\'fl. Kathryn Schommer, collar. Vic. Red~·ood C.)l.
When You
Want it done
right ...
5j7-7524
I~ f'OUND Rabbit . Victoria St.
bhl·n Npt Blvd & Harbor.
Phone & descrlbl!. 6-12-9657
Call one of
the experts
listed below//
1~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1rouNo in Nev.'PClrt. Setter·l~~~~;;;~~~f~~~=~~~ PerSOMls 530 type young ma.le d og./~ J
__ A_D_V_E_N_T_U_R_E __ F~~ 0 a ch sh u nd' [ SeMcel and Replin JGCl l,, 'jjS«vjjjjjj<ajjjj;jj..,jjjj••jj,..jj·jj,~jjjj~I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~11
SAILING CRUISE =7 brown, Identity. --~ i
J..j(I ft. 3 ma.s1 Squar" Rigger. ~ · ! G I S · Leavini 3115171 1 0 r 3 L.ARGE. orangt slrlped 1nale Accounting
1
enera erv1ces Painting &
.. _ cat u·nh flta coUar 1\Iesa . Paperhanging monhu. ).ltn & U'Omen "·ant-Verde area 5-1>3ffi.l . RAD'. Gutters In st a JI ed . 1 _________ _
('(i u·/desire for ad\•enture · S:'-1 bus1nes..~ n t e d Qua.lily u'Ork. Rl!asonable, i * EXTERIOR-INTERIOR *
& tra\·eJ & ability 10 share CALICO cat wl pla.stic collar, dependab_le, acc~te_ & reas Free est. 968-2Xl8 \Von't be underbid Custom
e,\"pcnses-. For lnformation South Laguna. bookke<>ping done · \\ill pick Husband Busy7 Call :\!oose 11.i:irk, finest pain!!:. Free
call Pam Reynolds. -199-lll2 up. fH&-9781 !">.15---0820 alter &-Repair e.sUcolor consulting. Ref.s,
{2131 37S.2605 BLACK & gray shaggy dog Babysitting Build-Serv Most Things , Ii .... , bonded. Full fi1W'ICi.n&"
FULLY LICENSED * w/stub 1ail & red collar, Gardening avail. 492-5338, 5G-5085
Renowned Hindu Spiritualist vie Emerald Bay. 4~-9306 COSTA MESA No \Va.111ing
Advice on all matt~1ii;. ;\!ALE rabbit found a 1 PRE-SCHOOL AL'S G.ARDE.~ING * WALLPAPER *
Lo\:e. 1\flll"!"lage, Business PelC"rson School. IStl: k l'>lonrovia, ;2 day + {or gard_en1ng &. s ma l 1 \\'Mn you c.all "~tac" Reading~ given 7 days o 5::6-3361 full day sessions. Planned I Jand~capmg ~rvt~s. call 548-1444 &l6-1n1
u·eek, lO am • lO pm. rE)tALE puppy, ~iesa del program, hot lunches. Ages ~G-:il9S. Serving Nev .. >port, LESCO Paintlng Contractor
312 N. El Camino Real, '.I C ~ 2-6 hrs 6·:30 MI.G:OO p)1. Cd;\!, ~la l\1esa, Dover l nl/•<I. 2 Sto...., S"".,,.,1,.,1.
San Clem,nte · ar area'"~...;,,,,. sti "'k-COl\IPARE! 642_..0j() Shores, WestcllH. ·~ ,, •.
492-9136, 49UXl76 .,...,.""""' o• 83S-5237. PR01',ESSIONAL main-Also, accoust. ceil.
555 • spraying. Lie & ins.
PALM READINGS Lost Vll.L b b .1 h"ld . tenance, pruning, tree \\'Ork, 64J.-2399
CARDS ----------\ 8 ysi your C' 1 in sprinklC'rs pests disease =~===~=~~=.II
Ancient Sand Readings YOU;\G cat lost in r.1eadow my Hc.ensed home, ages .2 v.eed conU.01. Cle~n up jobs: YOU SUPPLY THE PAINT Lar~ Golf Courst 11:rea. Has ~hr'\l ;), l\ton lhru Fri. Terms. George. 646-5893. \Viii paint any rm SlO.
Spiritual Reading.! n1C"d 1um long hair. dark 5tl--1038. I . . Int I exter. Free t'SI. 45 yrs
697.9272. 10 Al\1-10 P~I grl!y 11.ilh touches of orange, CHILD Ca.re my home Jncd JOHNSON S GARDENIKG exp. Also carpenter '''Ork,
ZlO \V. \Vhilller, La Ha bra Her nam' is "CHAIDlEY". yard play rm, bai'.anced Yard . care, cle_an-ups ,I any kind. 540-7().16,
-11 • 1~ R E IV ARD' d1nne_rs. t~ys, trans p . 962-2035 EXPER. Painter. Inter. & Ntxt to La Habra Thealt'r & she is u·earing a flea . · planl1ng, s Pr 1 n k I er s · 1
oA....-CE Classes-S12 per mo. ..v a.. o7'J • • 646-1503 64.>-31~7 E k b h X1 • Jazz rxercise, Tah!l i an da\!: &16-2888 Eves: ' . I AL.!, Landscaplng. Tree x~er. ~\·or .Y r. nl g.i-3-86 HIGH school glf'l \\'anls 1 y nl _, 1. refs. Dick Fielding, Hun· ~awaiian, tumbling, ballet. i bah ·sif!in afternoons trom remova . _a reuivue ing. tington Beach. 968-40&5.
Jazz photography forGQLDEi\' Labrador ma!C" 1.30~ Pgf N , t Trash hauling, lot cle8Ilup.I ..
models. All ages. Begiflll('rs lost Cdi\1: Rew~rd for Hrights-::e:~ Jean~ ~f~~ I RC'pair sprlnkler_s. 673-1Hi6 CUSfOi\1 Pa~r _Hang111~, 1n-
v.·eJcome. s..M)....l.'">40. return or mformaUon. Call . . D & K's Gardening service. I ter/Pxte_r. pa1ntmg. Sa\e on
SINGLE? WIDOWED? 67J...OOI05 to7pm. *\\ILL Babysit· my home Complete La\Yn paper. 531-7991.
behind Pomona 8chool · p A I NT J N G · H Divorced? Over 21 ? Bl.ACK Scottie dog Jost \'ic IH&-58!» i\1a1ntenanc:e. Free e Ii t. . on I! s I.
For a selJ e.~planatory n1es. \Vrstmont rract, F o u n I f>.18-0824 guaranteed work. Llc'd.
sage 24 hn; a day call Valley. Call 8 4 7-2 4 2 8 CARE for your child-m~ NE\V Lawns, re-seed. Compl Local ref'11. Call 675-5'140
496·4801 or 5<11·9991 Re11.·ard. lovely, lge, cl~~n home. $6j lawn care. Clean up by )ob aft 5·
FOR Jadit's only, S5 massage FE:'>IALE German Shrpherd, mo. C.M. &1&-_5537· or nio. F~e est. For info 1 "LA~R~R~Y~·s-1",-t<-r~lo-,-,,-qu-ol~liy
special S.'i. 17434 Beach ans"·s to ··c1'elchen.'' Lost ~'E\VPORT Height5 area. Lrg 897-241 7 or 846-0932. painting & cu 1 tom
Blvd. 1-1.B. 847-9213 Vic: Goldenwesl & \Varner, yard, sa~ box. Balanced EX p ER T Japanese draperies. 6 4 5 • 5350,
' SJG n1·d. 678-Z381 674-4858 lunch. Xln t care. 645-2754 gardener. Complete garden-557_74;.;,, A L COHOLfC!; Anonvmousl~:.;.::.;.:::-=~=~·.::cc..:=-L~====--~.,--=~==~---=Phone 5-12-7217 or \\Tite to BEIGE ~hagh)I JJO?OOle lost BABYSJTIIN~J. u·eekdays, !~~ n~s:;_rv. ice. Free es t · PAlNTING/papenng. 18 yrs
P .O. Box 1223 Costa r.Iesa. NB. FnC"ndl~·. pink nose. my hon1e, F.v., Fncd yard, '".rv.n... I in Harbor area. Lie &:
''Sam.'· Call 548-2490 eves. certified teacher. 540-593.1 LA\VN care; mo u· i n g . bonded. Ref's furn. 642-2356.
COLLIE, sable 2 )T old SPECIAL child care for edging, vacuuming. First PAINTING, professional. All
loltandfound I~ female, Vic; 16th & Santa 11.,.3 yr old of nite \~'Orking cutting free. Call alu;r 6 \vo rk guArn . Color . DJ Ana, Feb lifh. 646-li97 parents. 646-6JjJ. PM 841-5140 specialist. 646-7081; 547·1441
LOST -female collie. sablt' CHILD Care m.v home, 3-5 EX.PER. Ha\\•aiian Gardener PROFESSIONAL painting &
550 & white. in area of O.C.C. yrs. l'\1on·Fri. Hot lunches. Com PI e I e Ga rd en in g paper hanging. 23 yrs exper. Found (fr ff ads) Rt"11.-ard. 531-549-1 F.V. 531-9712. Service. Kamalani, &16-4676. Ref's. Free est. ~19.U.
I-=--------S:'YL\LL black fem cat ,,....,en LOVING Child Ca.re ~1on S)IALL Land 5 ca Ping• INT & E.'(ler. Pa,·ntlng.I FOUND al m 'Ibo n r . ' .,. -' G I Cl & H I' • 111 x . collar, ,-ic Cnyn Arres, Lag thru Friday. Fairview enera eanup au ing. Lic'd, ins. Free _est. 30 yrs I
Gunderson s Drug, 11.'0n1enE'. Bch. R'"Md. 833-0~1 Baker area, C.l'\1. 546-3124 6-16-2183 or 6-12-0;)70. Ch k 64.)....()lll9 bi-local glasses. 716 ....,., exper. uc • ·
Balboa 81\'d, Balboa GRAY-\\ll. huskie/shepherd BABYSITTING my homl!. C0:\1PLETE yard c_: are· lST CLASS Painting &
. femal,, m!"d size. ReiA'ard. Incd yard, rers. Costa :\1esa I Cleanup. !rash hauling by paper-hanging. Inlt'r/Exler.
PART Doberman/Shep/Point-67, ~.6 ,11 5 pm area &12-0384 job or mo . 897-2417, 846-0932 F·•• '''· ••,· _,.,.9 er mix. J\fa]e hlack w/ tan .....,..,.., · · · • -' ""' .n
mrkgs. Vic Del r.lar &. Npt AFGHAN Jost vie Zlst & Builders Hauling PAINTING/papering. 18 yrs
Blvd, C.;\f. 548-3843 Santa Ana, C.)I. Greyish· YARD, Garage cleanups. in Harbor area. Lie &
r.tALE Boxer found vie bro"·n. Reward. 645--5869 BRICK, block, concrete, trees dirt ivy removal, skip bonded. Ref's furn. 642-2356.
\Varner &: Gothard, J-1.B. BRASS candlestick in Fashion carpp.ntry, house le\'eling, lcmdC"r, hackhoe. 962-8745. P laster, Patch, Repair
847·'.t906. Island. REWARD, all types remodeling. No lp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;mj11 ____ <~!>1~·2286~:_--~1 job too small. Lie. Contr.
VERY TA~1E RACOON 962-6945
TRASH & Garage clean-up,
7 days. $10 a loart Free
C'~t. Anytime, 548-5031.
CLASSIFIED
HOURS
HARBOR VIE\V HILLS Carpenter !\10VING. Garage clean-up
CARPENTRY rree estimates. 645-1602
•PATCH PLASTERING
All types. Free rstlmates
Call 540-6825
Plumbing 111~~~·~64~4-~13~7~,~·~~~'.l::~[A:~~~r[: & lite hauling. Reasonble.
8:00 a.m. t o 5 p.m. MINOR R.EPATRS. No Job i YARD CLEANUP Plumbing. Elect. Repair ~1~~~~~h$a 11:J;3:: IMlruction J!l•I Too Small. Cabinet in_ gar-!·Hauling 5-IS-0412 $7.50 per hr
Advertiser& may piac@' II~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;· ~~I ages ~ . o th' r cnb1ne1s. Housecleaning 642-2T:Xi &12-():;o&I
thcir ads by telephone 545·1117:i 1f no an~1ver leave -===---"""-,----,, PLU:'>lBTNG REPAIR
COSTA 1'.IESA OFflCE Schools & mllg. at 646-2372. H. 0 . EXPERIENCED lady \\'Clulcl No job too ~mall
330 w. Bay Anderson. likP houseclC"anlng. Call all 1 e 642·3128 e
G42-S67S instructions 575 RE)IODEUNG &: Repai r a. ~~--------11 547-4727
1
Roofing
NEWPORT BEACH IT'S YOUR MOVE Specialist, Comm"!, residcn-2211 W. Balboa. Blvd. tial. Paneling, cab I nets, HOUSECLEAi'lilNG ---------11
642-5678 marlite, formica. 6.U.l;i98. By Day. OiAn Transportation I LEE Ro..illng co. Roofing oJ INDUSTRY CAREERS 83&-0648 all type!. Rerover, repairs.I
HUfl.."11NGTON BEACH \\'ODD production Part s . . roof coatings. Lie/bonded I
17875 Beach Bl\'d. cabinet work, boat l\1esa Cl.ean1ng Service since .41_ &lZ-'1222.
540·1220 AIRLINE & TRAVEL ca rpe nt ry . 646-5219, Carpets, Windov.·s, Floors etc. ~-~-~~---·'' 544-CM37 . Resid. & Commc'l. 548-4111 1.'· Guy Roofing. Deal
LAGUNA BEACH Dln'!ct. I no my OW1l \\'Ork.
222 forf'St Ave. ~ OPERATIONS AGENT Carpet Servic• EXP ER. Lad Y, own 64:-r-2780. 548 ... 9590. 494-9466 transpor1a tion. By Day. ~~,...C-',.,7--~---11
•TICKET SALES --"='·~7ll0=--l_•_ll_6_Pc.'_' __ 1 Sewlng/Alterat1ons SAN CLEl\tE~"TE e RF.SERVATIONS Diamond Carppt Cleanlni;: ..,.
305 N. El CaminG Real e AIR FREIGHT-CARGO Avg size room SS lncom• Tax 492-4420 . fl cor.IMUNICATIONS Repairinf .!r Installations ALTERATIONS, restyl.ing,
• TRAVEL AGENT Fett E... ..,.1,11 Sm1·1ey Tax Serv1·ce Ex"'rt 1111... Too ...... , NORTH COUl\.'TY N.B. area. 646-2704 Call i' d.ial free 540..1220 Airline Schools Pacific Cement, Concrete Ruth Call
610 E. 17th, Senta Ana I• 13th YEAR LOCALLY • · CLASSIFIED 54)..6596 1----CR=ET=E--.I-Qualified • Reasonable I EUROPEAN dressmaking
DEADLINES ===':,..:...:.:c~---1 ··. CON . . F oors, \I/ A SMILEY all custom Jilted. Very l BRIDGE instruction 1, patios. drives. sldei~~llts, Certibed Pubiic Acrounl't wasonable. 673--1849. I Deadllneforcopy&:kill! llf'gin'n. 2 les~ns v.·k, slab.!'l. Reas. Don 642-&114. 1 ~~-~.c-'---=~=~il
is 5:30 p.m. the day be· ~Ton-\Ved . or Tues-Thun, PATIOS, 1''8.lks, drives, ln-642-2221 anylJme 64&-9666 Alterations -642·5845
fore publication, exet>ril 7: 30-9: 30 p.m. Fee S2 per it all new la um. saw, break. Central Business service.~ Neat, accurate, 20 yean exp.
for ].1onday Edition ltsson. Classes bl!gin ?t1ar ?'!move. 548-8668 for est. eTHE TAX ADVISORS Tile u·hen deadline is SalW'· day, 12 noon. 1 & 2. &ffi-2().12 eves. CEMENT WORK. no job too Perm. oUice-Reas Rates
PIANO LESSONS small, reasonable. Fr p e 328 No. Newport BIVd.
CLASSIFIED Yl)Ur home. Certified Estim. H. Stufllck, 54&-8615 Opposite Hoag Hospital
REGULATIONS 1eachers. ?t1usic S~tems. Block Walls • Sidewalks For Appl. Call 64>o400
ERRORS: Ad\'erlis!!nr; '! JI th k ""!"~ should ch1tk their ads 1' r. a coc ·.,...,.. .-.. Dri\'ev.·a~ • Pallos INCOME TAX SERV
daily & report errors PIA~O LESSONS -learn ~9-3173. 1\lom. or eve. $4 k up. 9 am-9 pm wkdys.
immediately. THE theQry. sight reading etc. Child Cere Open eves/\vknds. Appts
DAILY PILOT l!'ISSUmt'S Call Bruce 546-4478 (U .C.I. avail 548-0588. 1842 Ne~'JlOrt,
liability for the first in-music background.) C.l\1. correct lnsertion only, LICENSED ~.:..::~~~~--~~ 11.ITORING grades l-6. Gordon N. Warren P .A.
CANCELLATIONS: tocludea modern math. Std Day Care for Children Since 1951. 675-3345
When killing an ad be I! 1 em e n far y credential•. Mothl!r of 3 u'i\I catt for your
sure to makt" a l"CeQrd S48-l;J5\ child u•hile you u·ork. Hot Ironing ot the KILL NUr.lBER glwn you~ your ad • CHINA PAINTING lunch & snacks provided,
taker as-m:elpt ot your LESSONS day .l evenini fenced yarrl, playmates. De-IRONING 20e P/U Del. riOc
cancellatJon. This kill classes. Cail 892-8\07 sire child 2 yn old, or older. ea. \\'ay, wash xtra. Can
number must be ~ Vic of fo.1agnolla Ii Edinger take fe\V n1or~. Re t . sent~ by thi: •dverU&er In Fountain Va!lev 11croJ1s646-·:.::.~9~558=,.-~-~~-in casl!' ol a dUpute. ,--1 lrom v1,·,.· y,·,w • TIME FOR "~ moNtNG my home $1.25 pu
CANCELLATION OR school. 847-7181 Sunna;.--fl-1. hr. Brin& own baJti'uS.
CORRECTION OF" NEW da..v alternoon. $20 wk per s.tS-7641 AD BEFORE RUNNY.NG : chilt1 ,
•Verne, 11ie Tile Man *
Cost. v.·ork. Install & N'pAin.
No )ob too sml. Plaster
patching. Le11.king shower
repatr. 841-l!f"i1/846-0206.
CERAMIC tile new &
remodel. Frte t'SI. Small
job~ \velcomt'. 536-2426.
5.16-B885
Tree Service
TREES. Hedgts, Tnf'I, Trim.
cut removl!d. h11uJ,d. Ins.
64i-4o30 Big John.
Upholstery
LTC Upholslel'e.r ~ Quality
v.'Ork. Anthony'• Up h.
Service. 642-5827 N.B.
&very effort is made tn
kill or <Xlf'l'f!Ct • new ad
thJ.t has bt'en ordcn!d,
but we cannot .~aran·
tft to do so unlU the ad
has appeared. tn the Pl• .....
DIM&.A·IJNE ADS:
QUICK CASH IC-•n-tr•c-tor --11
MY \\'ay, quality home
repair. \Vall s, ceillnc. floors
etc, No job too small . THROUGH A S47-oo36, 24 hr ans. lt:rv.
Classified ad• are
1efUIJ rouse ,j and lotc
in cost. These ads are strlcUy
cash In advanctt by mall
or at •n.v one of our of· tlon.. NO phone-Ordl!rs.
nr£ DAILY PILOT tc·
acrves thl!' ~ht to clas-
sify. edit. ttnSOr or re--f\lle aey advertjaement,
and to wnae tts l'Jt(':r;
• re~tJaha wlthou1
prfor notlee.
CLASSIFIED
MAILING ADDRESS
P. 0 . -1560, Coal& Mta ._
RD<nt Addi!~"'· L. T.
Conlltruction. Single 11.oty or
2. Estlm., p\&n.1 • layout.
DAILY PILOT :~~G De<k C..t~• ol
WANT AD
642-5678
all typell, Lee Roorin1 Co,
c .r.t &12-7222 tree es!.
AddlUon.s * Remodellna
Gerwlck & Sons, Lie.
67l-&'.l41 * M9-217fl
Llc'd Contr. Remocll!linl"
Additions, Plan1, LAYoUt
J\arl E. Kendll.11 MS.ll\.17
i .. :::a
Call usl
~42·5678
for results!
Are You Letting Cash
Slip Through Your Fingers
See If You Have Any
Of These Things A
DAILY PILOT
WANT-AD
1. Stove
2. Guitar
3. Baby Crib
4. Electric S1w
S. Camera
6. Washer
7. Outboard Motor
I. Stereo Set
9. Couch
10. Clarinet
11. Refrigerator
12. Pickup Truck
13. Sewing Machin•
14. Surfboard
15. Machine Tools
16. Dishwasher
17. Puppy
18. Cabin Cruiser
19. Golf Ca rt
20. Barometer
21 . Stamp Collection
22. Dinette S•t
23. Play Pon
24. Bowling Ball
25. Wat•r Skis
26. Frffter
27. Suitcase
28. Clock
Will Sell Fast!
29. Bicycl•
30. Typewriter
31. Bar Stools
32. Encytlopedia
33. Vacullm Cleaner
34. Tropical Fish
35. Hot Rod Equipm't
36. File Cabin•t
37, Golf Clubs
38. Sterling Silver
39. V ictorian Mirror
40. Bedroom Set
41. Slid• Projector
42. Lawn Mower
43. Pool Table
44. Tir••
45. Piano
46. Fur Coat
47. Drapes
48. Linens
49. Hortt
50. A irplane
51. Orgtn
52. Ex•rcycle
53. Rare Books
54. Ski Boots
55. High Chair
56. Coins
57. Electric Train
58. Kitt•n
59. Classic Auto
60. Coffe• T1ble
61. Motorcycle
62. Accordion
63. Skis
64. TV S.t
65. Workbench
66. Diamond Watch
67. Go-Kirt
68. Ironer
69. Camping Tr1iltr
10. Antique Furniture
71. Tape R•corder
72. Sailboat
73. Sports Car
74. Mattress Box Spg1
75. lnboud Speedboat
76. Shotgun
77, Saddle
78. Dart Game
79. Punching Bag
80. Baby Carri1g1
81. Drums
82. Riffe
83. Desk
84. SCUBA Gt1r
These or any other extra thin9s around the house
can be turned into cash with a
DAILY PILOT WANT-AD
so
Don't Just Sit There~
DIAL DIRECT
642-5678
•
r
" l
' •
• • • • ' • • • • • • • •
' ' • • • • I
• '
• •
,.
• ,. . s
: ~
~
' , •• ..
•' ' • "
' ' I '
'
~ .. -· -~ ;;,_ .. , .. ;-. ,, .. ,._ , ... --~~-... ~,~~ ... ·--·~-
Buy a
Bargain
Border
to
Border
Every dassilied want ad in the DA ILY
PILOT appe.!lri 1n every edition every
day. That means your ad will be 5een
1n papers delivered to home5 and 5old
from newsracks from border to border
all along the Orange Co.st ••• all the
way from
Seal Beach
to
San Clemente
You
Get
It
All • • •
Huntington Beach
Fountain Valley
Costa Mesa
Newport Beach
Laguna Beach
Saddleback
San Clemente
Capistrano
.
(Plus the daily
newsrack edition)
For One Price
With A
I • t l I
Classified Ad
Phone 642-5678
Thursday, January 25, 1971 DAILY PILOT 33
![IlJI L-_ ....... _, ...... _J[IlJI L----·-l[IlJ ;;;I ;;;'""'";;;"""'~l[IlJ~t~
1
:;;1 ;;;~;;;·-~l~[DJ I ,.;.,,.... J[IlJ ;;;I ;;;"""'·;;;-~~~~!
Job W•nttd, M•I• 700 Help W•nted, M & F 710 H•lp W•nted, M & F 710 Help W•nted, M & F 710 Help W•nted, M & F 710 Help W•nted, M & F 71 0 1.F_u_r_n_11_u_re _____ 1_10-I
e ADV. ARTIST e **COOK GARDENING, \\'Alering e l.c. NEW OR EXPERIENCED SERVICE E11tab'd. F'uUl'r YOUNG tnternatlonal C().
,. . **DISHWASHERS In exchange for 1 ~R turn. SALESi\1AN, LARWJN Bn.111h rt,, $12>$17;', wk. to &et'kln.g mina.a;ement. l-".Jirn WHY BUY
J ONE·MAN ART I>EPT. Exp'd. Must be clean, neat 11.111, Hunt Sch. 673-3293 gr C0~1PANY Rt5ale Division 11., alto pf. time ~i.t.l. to SlOOO plu11 per n10. I Paste up, layout, Illus. ! and over 21. Apply in pt'r~n and llt't'\' 847--0932 Mf'f'dll sevtrl..l general ~al * SHAMPOO GIRL * V11.ril1hle hOurs. O.t JI I FURNITURE?
Frttlance nr staff, 18 yrs ue:· only S!!rf b Sir!o(n, 5930 GAS St11.llon attr.ndanL Day& t"S!ll.11' agl"nts. New 0H1~ 1 B 1 . 333--1681 2·~ pm Thurs or
fW'r. 232 I.a_ Brea, Lag II. W, Coast Hwy., N.B. & rve~. part .r., lull 1irnt. has opened In Huntin51:1on ~ltanti,H ~au~ ci~111' Hair·j F'ri. Be Flexible!
Beach. 491-0557 COOKS • Must know good BAYSI DE ti6 &ach. Lisling lE>adi, n18jor . •rs, "r Styh~ta, Ma~-R11n1 mo. to mo. with
1 Job Wo1nted, Fem•I• 702
1
soups & aauces. Hours 6 1101 Bayi;ide DrivP, NB. nif'dical in.o;urancti paid by icurli•s, ~~p.iioniil, H11.ir l ll ~l 100'!. Purchas.e Ontlon
I 2 M C II ""•t t'OmP'">' ln~·rntivr contests Models & Girl r rie-nds. Call : I I r
I I am o pm, on tbru 11 67:>-AP"l-.1 · R.oy Alvarado HAIR HUNT Mercn.ndila '· Jnd. tl'.m self'cUon
RO<:'KKEEPER -G rt Fri. All holidays olf. paid -GIRL FRIDA-y-and bonu11 plan. Gtt In on • • 24 Hr. Dely.
N.B./CdM. Sn1. congenial vacation. Call 833-8666 EXP'D.TELEPHONE with us. Call Larwin Realty !!Vf'. CUSTOM I
Frtriay. PE>rm. Part.t\mf' 1 niPdical insurant•f' 2 week~ ~ thf' ground floor and grow ERS SALON 6+1·:1151 day or
ollice. Mature, dept'ndable. ---Matut'{'. 11ahle & a11rac In<'., 21Zi62 Brookhur~•. e SHEET STEEL e Antique• aoG ) Furniture R•nto1I
644--0767 COOK~DIETICIAN To arrange tel!'. appts ,,.,/ Hul'!tington 8"actt. M&-Ml1 1 517 W. 19th, C.M. ~.3481
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F:xpd. Call Ann. 64"-2770, VP mmedi1te openinr for SCRAM LETS A h n~""""" EXPER. proper Eng 1 i i1; h ) .,.. bu.~. executives for fran-• confldf'nce kept, precision cabinet • · ~a~;';, ~;;8
nanny • reg. nurse seek~ Wesrcl iU P~rsonn;.t Agency, chist" de\'el. ol Nat'! Organ-* PART TIME l1yout Mechanics "A " ~
I livr-in posit.ion w/family or 204.l Westchtf Dn\'e, N.B. iiation. Cuarn, ~lartg salary * LITE Quality work necessary, ANSWERS 3 RIGHT hand dr. white
bachelor lather. 4M-7627 * COOK • ORDERLY Exp $400 i:>er mo + bonu.~es thlll BOOKKEEPING Quali!icd only need appl)'o 10 cu. fl. refrigt, in good
I AIDES For convalescen<:i!, prPC°d. Park Lido Con\'a1es. could bring lncomf' to SGOO ·!· Profit sharuig & relire-('(Ind, Sj(I f'a . 2 new ottief!s
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.. 1 H "2 "'JO -r "'" C•ll Mr Willo'ams Mon. thru Sat. No typing, Pallid -Lo"r -llo•ky -"' ••m-r rrfn'g'o, '''5 ••· elderly care or family catt. ""'" osp. O't ·~ r · · · · · H ment plan, life & heall.h " ,.... ..,. -~iiii ...... iiiiiiii'"'iiii""[."fo~r~io~te~rv~i•~w~, ~&1~2:-'~"7011__ I ~ job. Benetilt & eahh 1'winge -\VRJNKLED 2 l!l" portable B/W TV's Home1naken, 54.7-6681. * Dent I II t 14·0 . insuranCf', insurance, good w11gr1. Pity thP poor musician: 11t in fl:(I04:I condition, $49 ea.
PRACTICAL NURSING • a s:s · ;i GIRL FRIDAY, 0 .C. Airport !\1ARK C BLOOME CO Kl"nrwlh C. Holloway \nc,
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each are a . G 0 0 D 1' rnt ore., Prev. den1a] f'Xper area. J\~usr be l'xp'd bkkpr. l 3D05 Harbor Blvd., C.M." 16680 Arm5lrong Ave. played the lH'('()Nlion ~ murh UFF, 1885 Harbor Blvd,
REFERENCES. &15-06.~ w/kriov.' I ol X·ray, bkkpng, type 50wpn1, understand A k f !\1 J h lrvine Industrial Complex ht'J got a WRINKLED 11001. ,<~>~I~.~""~"-~"="~~-~~-! I -* StP~/RP.ept. s:lj() office procedurP!. Pt 1in1e 11 • or r. 0 nson . S.A. Apply • P.!\f. ach, BRANO nf'W 5 pc dinettP
NURSE, COMPANION Gnod job tor gal w min. ex. rt()w. $3 hr. Rr~~nlt. Writf' 1 PART time sale1 opportunlly , COLLECTABLES ~et~. $35 Sf'!. t ritw black
I COOK . PE;Rt\1ANENT I per. Req 's accur. rypin°g :,a ClatistfiPd ad NO. 120 Daily !or 3 licensed .Rral E:sta!P SHIPPING SUPERVISOR Vei·y rtnP. Nersukes, snutf vi nyl !'f'clloer $79. 1 like
; e 64&-11!22 • \.\'.p.m. \Vil] train on PBX. Piiot, P.O. Bnx \;,60 Costa r;alPspMp!P'. Pr1\'111e ~t~k & Exprrienced Only bo!JI~~. $2°'4l50, Original I ne,.,i al'OC:11:dO ro e ker
SECRETARY • Girl ~'riday, * Exf'C Sec'y SGOO !\1esa. CalH, 9262fi phone. Cal! for interview. * ;,.io.4jll • photogi'1!pllie plates Imm recl iner, $6!1, ! like nPw
' mature, exper., reliable. Top skill.!;, frnt olc poise. Bek. -HOTEL . I Y!· E. Lachenmyer • STEEL Cur1i.~ <.'Ollection ol Ameri· 1 high bar.k vinyl rhalrs, $4!}
Part tin1e. 4!f4.;.J79 s:md in ronsrr or relalt'd DESK CLERK 186-0 NPwport Rive!., ~·M; FABRICATION e ran Indians s:n ea. Hand-1'11. Uff, JS85 Harbor Blvd,
Help Wanted M & F 710 field. I C11l! 646-392R Evf's: 61,l.4.l77 • F:XPERJENCED • coJON'd plates.Englis h kin)!;5 Cl\f. 5(g..!M57 . -;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;~';:;;:;;;;;:;;;;;, * Sec'y $.l:i<l Hl'avy experience PHONE canvasser, nor Sheet Metal Grinder I • knights in 21 rmour.from MUST sell, beau1. Meehl.·
1 ~ SH 90 type 70-, Good v.o l undPr ti.:. Sales exper prl'f'ri. !or electronic cabtnPtry \\'illiam Meyrick Ctll!ectinn I tPrranE'an Jurniture. Gold 9'
A .Better_ Poi;llion li,irur~s. • APPLY TN PER..."ON e ~7)::>.0, Sill. + comm 64~ Nf'Nl. man who take~ I s4o Pa. ~·020l, Suue 206.' I sol11. & love u.111. $275. Col·
L11: Reinders • Engr Cll'rk s~oo NEWPORT ER INN 4949 pri<l e in quality finish. JPe & end tables. Velvet
Personnel Agency Accor '"Ping gd v.•/df'tail. 1107 Jamboree R.d. I e PRESS BRAKE Xlnt. benefils, good wa&· A~OTHER truckload 01 high back chrs. Blk naugh. 4°"" Cantpu Dr NB . •;r • f,ha~lern Oak.: Roun~ 1ahll"s, 8' sof;i, & love ~"'•I. S1"'1 . ......., s . ·· · • · NPwport Bf'ach OPER. e e~. C b 1 ,, h ! "" Cali For Appointment Service Cenler Emp Agf'ncy K•noeth c. lfollowoy Jn.. ina ca ine s, · r . 0 0 Game 1ec . lamps, pirtures. ·~ N C R I Must ha~·e know!cdize or .... hoosl' clocks ( s per 1 a I l 546-2118 '""' f'll'l)Orl entPr Dr. N.B. H 0 TEL DPsk-e1erv11.t on b 1i:.:o" Arm,ironrr Ave. · all 2 1nos old 714· 897-$651 s . ~1') ' .,. k 1 blueprints and a ili l)' to """" .. DressPrS w/mirrur s1;. l&:'l . . . I ~~ Ulle "" <r<4-498J Cler , I\ ust have f'XJ!f'f. Jn·ine Jndustrlal Comp!PX p,,,,1,,, A .. , 'f '', 1 I 0 \ r.1ASSIVE Spani~h 8 ...,. AIDE Homaker assis1 career Call l\.1gr. or Aud11or !or do aiiy type or setup -1 4 p ,1 ~ , , ,..~
• Ho L GUNA IOI"'''"'' -+ or Q!O S.A. App y ·". "'o32.''l 9, .... 9 BR Sf'I, 1:ompl v.•/ queen
I 11oma.n 11~ sub~ ti I u t" DENTAL ASSISI'ANT -iippt.. TEL A , " • '" • · • NO"" .;o. '"
mo Thrr, j'z ..:a.v \l'l'ek. ! Desk only. Dental exp. nee. 4!14-11.it. Xlnt llf'ne-fits, good wages, SOFTBALi. p I TC HER A N T I Q U E ! run k , ~~11.~~~· q~~enenhMoo;ra~:~. ~ wknrf~ off, l\.lusl Jove 3 ~·r Ins .. acc\'s rec., some Sat's. HOSPITALITY H 0 S TE SS J\pnnelh C, Hollo\\•ay Inc, nerdtd. Good tram. P\ta5e rec1angu!ar, o1•er 70 years drawer drrsser v.·/ mirror,
nlrl hoy . Pr. rm, 'JV, lovPly Fringe ben's. H.B. RJ'ea. SERV!C1'::. has openings in J6680 Armstrong Avt. call 642-4802 oJri $40, good condition. 2 lrg 2 drawer nice stand~.
home for ri.':hl \\o()m11.n. S20Cl Call 1lam-9p1n, 846-J540. Irvine area r or mature Jr.,ine Industrial CompleK TELEPHONE APPT SEC"Y. ~,')-{1906. like riew cond, $~29. 6
pPr mo, D~ys: 833-7636, * DENT AI. ASSISI' ANT * -w 0 n1 en took in g for 1 !'.A. Apply 4 P.t-1. Pt.rim,., our otrire, Cdil1, .f. Applio1nces 102 rlr11wtr rl res s e r W/'O
nilr~: fl73.0AA.J. One yr or more l'."<pcr. Onll in!erestin,11:, pnrt limr work, PROFESSIONAi. phonP 8 pm. NeedPri: self assured mirrors, $25 ea. Uf~". 1885
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A.RE:.; u MF: put your
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.:.ppl}. X-Ra~. Pc. or ii wl"leoming tlf'Wromers to solicilor • Dana Poinl, s.<in busines:ot person who E'njoys KENMORE 11.uro washer $6.i. Harhor Blvd, Cl\.L 518-94!'17
application on TOP. \Ve •imr. 548-8844.. your arra. Sales t X p , Clf'menlr, Capi~ll'l'HIO 11rf'11 . rallinx: strangers. S3J.J656 or Also l\l'nm?re l!'.11' dryer DUAL King bed oomplete,
t'flnipose $; print :=,o copie~ DEN 1 , des1rablP. Musi hovl' car. Work in yo11r own home . 675-1089. $40. 8?'h Xln1 C'Onrl. Guar bk hdb d S9" . 1 1x>d
. ONLY $1 5.00. C&ll 646-085--1 TA ' ass 1• t'Xper, part CALL: :,.i7.3095 1 Rf'~I rie11I in at•ea. l'hone TE LEPHON E d 1. . I & dehvettd. 5 4 6-8 612, case r ·:>,singe or full limt. l\.f11.!urf'. __ ~ • . .00 a ver iz1ng S4.7-8JJj l'ompl, hdbrd $30. red linen
fur appoinlmE'nl ! * 968-5782 *' H OU SEKEEPER/Con1pan-! 146.'l bel.,.,een 9· a .m. from our ple11.sant Newport I . II' t'Ouch $85, 9 drav.·r chest e ASSEMBLY , ion, lil·e in 10 care for and noon. ollicf'~. Hrly \Vllgf'~. KENMORE auto \\'ll~her & S'.!O, 2 brraklas1 tbb &: chn
OPERATORS e Dental Assistant Pldl'rlv wo~an in lovely j RECEPTIONJS'I' -ORAL Morning or tv,_, shifts. 64~ matchin.I:' rlec dryrr, Xlnl Sli Pa. colree thl w/matrh
Exp. neccss. 546-.)61.l (9-.5• home •00 Balboa wa!f'rlronl . SURGER\'. Experienced. 3030 ll, Mr. l\.1adrirl I rond, $ll0. Guar & delivered. f'nd thlJ S.~:l, 6'x4 ~i ' walnut f~xperil'ncrd f\.10S openings 546-8672 84.7~1 \5 avilable days anri swing DRUG STORE CLERK ma. Pv1 , hPdrn1 S.· hath. ~.ive 54~37:t ---TRAINEES ' · · , hreaklrnt, 1528 Cornwall Ln,
shill. Non-s!andard wef'k 1ure LADY only, full '1ime. rrlrr~~ces & txper. Y.r1~P '. *Reliable Apt. Mgrs. l s t & lnd Shifts *, .GAS riryers .~ rPblt I N.B. 646-1048
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' d•". • • 2 day, off oth",r Call 4!19-2204. C!a$S!hPd ari No. l!Y.l, Dail~ Handvm•" "harming <lfir l , " . f I I \\&Shers, $~. \\ill ri f' I FURNITURF. returned trom ~ ~~ ,., P'l p 0 Bo l"i:JJ C . "• ... . ·. immru. op!'nln)!:S or n1rn O I !\ Ch M I '.
l"·nS•t.&Son.IAl<ograve. *DRIVERS* tot, · · )I·' osla ien11,vi !t Relirl'dor•Rpr. I 'nd · h d I wgui1r. 1str R· 11.ytag displaystud1os mode\hom· '"' MeAA carr 9262fi ·• · · earn t ustr1a1 an M"IV· rf'pa° 531-8637 , yard shirt 12: 30 an1 to 7: 30 : · ' 1 • • f'rrnces. 50 unit~. C a l 1 ing Call Now• 9 Al\! 'Iii -irman. '· · · e;., decorators cancellation. No Experience HOUSEKEEPER -Maturr• 642.:\64.1 or .'14:..07~. 9 pi\1, · REfRIG \VIL~ t"REEZ~R Al! Brand New
a c oLLINS RADIO Necessary'. woman. live our. Hrs ·7.:30 1RESTAURANT: Now taking ORANGE COAST GUARANTEf~D ' '' S35 RD FURNITURE
19700JA-MBOREE RD. 10 :i:30. 1 school.age rhild. appli1·ations 'ror EMPLOYMENT * * 64&-7s2o * * 184CNewportBl.,C.M.
NEWPORT BEACH .\fuJ>I have clean California 671-0013 aft 6 pni. Rel.~ * \VA IT Rt: s sf. s, AGENCY GAS stove, gd C(Jnd. Like 1 Mon., Thur. &< Fri 'Tit t
Equal opportunity entp!oyrr driving record. Apply rl'q'ri. * o Is H w As Ht; Rs , 124 Broariwav C.~I. 64.'i.~lll ne~. ~voc11.dt>, Auto/timer. Wed., S3t. A: Sun 'Til 6
.::.:cc;c.::-"'"'---':...C-'-·-'---YELLOW CAB CO. HSKPRS Emplyr pay~ fee. •COOKS, No-one undrl' IR ·' $18:i. ~'!7-1172 1 i;i· SPANISH ~fa & Jovf'
Auto \ 186 E. 16th St., C.M. GP.Orge Allen Byland Agney nen-' appl'" co 1.0" y WANTED Men 10 1how new -F--.1 llO 2 SALESMEN """ 1" urnt ure seat set in red/greenlbeig~ DRAFJSMAN Designer/ 106·B F.. l61h. S.A. :'147--0:i~;i, KITCHEN. ·3211 Harbor roating. M11intenance lrl'e.I floral print, ssa set. 1 8'
Nted :i rombination ne\\' & f,:-;periilor \\'flh some ton( HOUSEKEEPER & Child B!\'d., C.\1. 5 Yr.al' proleccion under nor-EXCESS Jurnitu~ &a.le . gold ,50fa & chair gel in ll~o• ao1n salesmen. Excr!. 1 d "I 'I dh · 10 " I & I I -" drsi)!:nexprrieneepreC!'rr~d . ('are,9::\0am-6pm.\Veek!y *SALES CLERKS ma eon ..... n a es1on r.11s .rrn 'ee ca.ae good cond, S70 set. 11'
lent com~is.sio~ & drmo Salary open, Phone P~le hasis. Salary open. Rel's. al: mrlals liber)!:l~. glass, tu~niture. Sola & chair ~t. S69 lf'1.
pl,n, hosp11allzauon & medt. Hutrhini:.on 49:t-45R6 Noc undPr 27). 540.9212 i.:f'ramics, ~. lilf', terra:w, 65'l'lo nll. Uft', 1885 Harbor Blvd cil. I full and pan time b , k I f & Tf'ri Mick1."' 1866 N Tu~tin
SEE AL TETREAULT I
EMP. LO. YMENT. O>unselor~. HOU.SE\,l,'JVES-3 n pen 1 n g PPl y nc "\\'&I, countPrs, urn. ~. · • CM . 548-9437
-A • -concrP!f'. t'ini~h 5 urface, CO~•;•~··~·~~~~=---I :S'M:Ri'F!icr-::-Lli;->;;;;
SALES MANAGER 1ra1n1ng pro. v1riP<l, no exp. P,/time. Aver.. S.l ~r hr. The Tobacconi&t Inc. = SACRIFICE • Like new
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A I N nf' w 1 For prolf'CI~ against rust, 15'.reasP, COLDSPar r11frig $6(1· extra ·
HARBOR AMERICA
N nee .. pp1rar1ons f!RC'h o exp. <". e r111n. HunHnglon c,_ntPr, J-1.B. · · Mediterranean lll tyle 23"
evening at R PJ\1 , 32.l 14th app!. c11ll M~. Mull!'r gasolinr, solvPnt.11:, mOl!I di'. lnn11: t\\·in bl'd S40; F'r color 1V consolr: 7 •
1969 Harbor, Costa M esa St. No, 7, •J.B. * 546-..'>770 * SALESLADIES pt lime for Jutf'd aciri.o: & 11.lk11line. AJ$0, Pmvln Cll.Mpy bt-d 1e1. davenport, tablE', cha.ir &
B-ABYSt""'ER . "'' home, ma!ernily specially chain, rPmain.~ tlexibl!P. unrif'r widt'1 ~B--07'15 11 k' . b d •' EXEctrrrVF. SECRETARY, *' * HOSTESS-Experie:ncrd Gd d '' o oman, 1ng.s1ze e ,
C.M., 2 pre·schoolers agrs male or !emaJe. profiCil'n\ in nn!y, not under 21. Apply . s&lary, beau!. e!'our, r11.ngP. of trmperatures, is CARRIER air conditionPr headboarrl, 7 end table~. 1m
l k '.t Mon.f'ri. 7:4j lo hookk·ep,'og /"'P•.n•. 27 plf'<1.~. work . rond's. Statf' heal rt's1s!11.111 & will tMJt sup..! $7j, RPcl!nf'r, nl"'v.' $.')(). dinefte .llf't. Call !'"0 """" .,. ·~ "' JO:.'\ll-JJ :JO f'eb 26 &_ th. p Q Bo J46 C ,,...,....,/Yf
5: Jj. 61.>.3872 11f!er 5 4g.1.8989 or 499 .. m;.1 NO-p~nP call~. o o N ~~f ·-r.1a~ 92625." orona poCrhl fla~e.1 A , ~~.~!d/whl n;11.rbJe end table ; PRIVATE PARTY rn u 1 1
I BARYS!TIER nreded for 2 ---JOSE RESTAURANT 90!t1 •mica &&OClates ~· 646-84.l s11.crilicp like nev.· 6 rooms
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rhildrrn in my homP, Mon ESCROW ~LER~ E. Ariams, Hunlington Salesmen·Saleswom•.n of California 8' SOFA, never used, quilleri of mosl elegani .MediL
lhni ~'ri. Call 962-7127 Ex.Pd. ~all Loraine. 64:)-mo, Bearh I S800 guarantee lo qualified e Any Indu.~triat or Relail I floral, zcolchgua.rdl'd $125. lurnishillg~. 10-~ Fr, Sal &
BEER Maid, under :io. Nn "'estclitr P~rsonnel AgPnry, IN . s To RE d r a per y persons. Busine~~ C11.n Call t"or Dem-Matchi ng loveseat $ 7 ~, Sun al 13071 Red HiU,
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exp. nccl"i:sary. No Go.Co 2043 W,..srch!f Dr., N.B._ sll.lPsperson. 5 rlay week. Sper.tred Co~porat1nn opening ooitration. 5:'!.;..1!1.'i5 Tuslin
or Toples~. Apply in prrVln EXPERTENCF.:D 11rlvPrti~ing \Ved thru Sun. Subslantial 1 neY! location in Newport (714) S'&.3277 I QUALITY furn. 2 lrg tbl I "!~LL_N_E-SS_m_•_k-.,-il-,-.-,-,-,.,-;.1
at 1!130 Placen!i!I, CM ~ion 11gency person, .~trong (.."OPY company·!1P\\' In c 11. I i on Beach, To.p 5All's pPrs?~net * WAITRESS-EXP'D l11mpit, 7 uphol. chri;, twin ty to sell all 10 rooms of
7_!l PM. K; some crea11ve lay~ut. oprnfni::. 714/119.1-244~ nreriPd.ro 1ntrodUCl'rxc1r11i&:, Not under :?1. NO PHONE br11~~ hrihn1~. 1e11k coffee our nr new Medit furn
BOOKKEEPER F/C ror Xlnt ?pportun1~y r~p1dly INTERESTING Te\ephon!' r~v0Ju11onary bf'auty . r~ch. CALLS. Apply in pPrMn, tbl, 644-:~12:-i all 9 AM. che~p. Example • I' b!k
accountin.1: ofc P /I i me , rxpand1n.1: mar1ne-0nr-nll'd \\·ork lrom hnmr. fl.1u~c h11.vP niqul', All 11rra~. Unl1mllrri s rf "-s· I . 5930 W C l MUST Jacriticf' velvet Wfll naug sofa & loves,.al, nt'Mr
I Accor. 1ypisl. Mini skirt t"Orp. Send resume to P .O. private linE'-;:incl al lea.~t earning polrntioJ. f.1iss MeL j~~· Nl~oin, " . oas & lovf' 1eat, 1,11s 1h11n ~) U$trl $150. 213: 925-.l622
OK. Hrs open. 833-3443 Box 171 · Balboa Island. lnur hourll daily. Wril,, ner, 646-l6l 5. y., · · ot wh111 J paid 2 moz ago. e QUALITY 9' &nfa, 6 yn
1 ctay/ni!f'. EXP'D. &rvice Sia. i\f~r , Cl11ssifil'd ad No. 0lOR, Da ily • SALESWOMEN k * W.~JTRE:s. Colte~ ~p, 671-6926 old. neeri11 reuphol&Lering,
I * BOOKKEEPER * 1/1-.':alfnna~e unll. Xlnl 1(1(", Pllo1, P. 0 . Box 1.i60, Co1ta i\1ature, part limt. e,..",.~nn' M•',',· 1~',',! 17'0°3 DESK. :ix5, wooden, divld~ -'~"'-·-•_1_;..i;_,,._, ______ 1 atlrarlive sal p I u it prof MesR. Cal if. !IW21i. \'DUNG MATF:RNITY' "" _' "' .~ ,f~!l ch~g.txpPr .. ihn~:;11.; ~nai·in~. For 1nr·v. ron1ar1 SHOPS ~~~~.M. 646·3~ ~~~er~nd:Yr;,:~~er 0~!~: Gar•g• Sale 112
I II ust x nl 1ypist. "-Bnti Scuddr1·. 2liOO \\', Coa~1 • , So. Coast Pla~.a. c.~I. e WELDER e 642-.'1676.
I fr>r Rpf'!I. JJv.·y. N.B, 1 to 9 pm 11k. I SEAMSTRESS.rs-Sheri Slef!I J.'11.brication --'-'-------
CHILD r11rr. t<laturt woman day.•. ::::.· l•I & 2nd Sh1'fts Co . h11~ immt<iiate ()flt'n· BED divan, like new, Oli\'f' FURN, Appliances, Tools, :_~ I weed SiO Hnu.~ewarr, C I o I h i n r ,
01· c0lle~e ~lu<lrn\ fnr 1 F. X p F: R JEN CEO SHOE • _ ings ror rertifif'd w1-!rler,ll. ~ ~2-8l71 * Sporl.ing gooc15, M&ny \ikP
rlnlr!. 2 In 5: :t() pn1. Ball'Mla !'ALESLADY, Childrrns & ~ lmmrd, openings niust be Nef'd men with high qual•
I I • C II ,., ~1' f• fi _,, ril!rd 1hi, wk, Powrr ~pw. g· ,,., ood ·~ Alm , new. No junk, mu11 AP.II. s ann. a 1,-.-,.,..,. " 11 \\'omen.~. Ph: 644-422.~ Hemp. • ily 11.n.d efficiency record. an, g .. ,,,. (')~ ing m11.r.h. expl'r. dr.otirable. ... . new f'lecti-ir 2 burner hot No. 4C, Vendome Ap11, !Mj I CLEANTNG \\.'OmAn, vac..int hill".ot Shnrs, •54 f'ashion C N 9 M .. 9 p Xlnt. uo:nelils and good An11.helm, C.M. Ctnrer St. APl~. i\111~! hP exp;'<l, Full Island. N.B. , nil ov.·. · A til M. wagf'~. plRte $lO. 67~205· side. Sal & Sun.
or pl lime. Call al! 6 pm, ORANGE COAST Kennelh C. Ho!low11y Inc. SOFA & Chair S:lO, 3 walnut J--='"c=-,==--1 ~J.i'i-fi lRO. EX.PERTENCED MOLDERS EMPLOYMENT lf&-0 Arm.ottron, Avr. !ahle~ S2.i, Stereo s,;o. l MOVING SALE!
Day1 or Nlghls ID'VJNE PERSONNEL NCY L/R TABLE SET "-AGE • Jrvin< Jodo"ri•I Complex 541>-7.i'l> '" 5. ' r.111r.Gregor Y11.cht Corr. SER!VICES 1,. 8 CM ,. 11 lCE MAKER, REFER . Clerk Typi&t J631 P!arrnti~. C.1\.1. .f'AGENCY ,... roadway, ·1 ' O'f,\.:11 S.A. Apply• P.i\l.I NE~V walnu! dini.ng roo~I Bt~DS ~ONE 4 POSTER
rn i'f'l'f1'R1ion11l center of ju:-.:. 488 L. 17th (a t Irvine) C.M. , \VORT< rnr elrt,rlv m 11 n. sulle v.•/ 6 chair:c. $295. 101:i A -VALENCIA, C.M.
uty 11pt~. Renl <:OllPrtio11.~. e FRY COOK e 642 .. 1470 * * ~ Sl':A~STRESSF.S Wi1lin1: +o 1P11.~n ~aw l-R11vln~ area. 54&-tl769 SAT 2/27 & Sun 2/2R
l'f.lmplaints from !enanrs. • ExpPrienr.erJ s1ng!e needle . . , I , full time . · 1 operator,, 548-9495 sharpening, 1ti6.l SupPr1or 9 so.-A wl matching c.h.11ir, GARACE Sale • F urnHurf',
Tyl)f' 5().60. APPLY JN PERSON *LVN 3 to 11 P .M.* Av. C.M. s::ri>en. very good rconri1t1on. clothr1, linen11 "-· misc. 10
(MISS EXEC AGENCY I M9..l0fi1 S•c'v $525 x ·.RA,. TECJ. tNOLOGIST. ' S).'.1(1/bolh. 644-."'46.l to ~. Fri. Sat Ir, Sun. n.J
410 \\', Coa~1 Hwy .. NB W lh lho I G SOF Sa I THE RIGGER LVN·3:00 to 11:00 relief •hif1. t°!'e P11id. Beautiful o!cg, good 1 or Wl ut 21pecia 8' Bl.AC!< NAU . A pph no, Balboa Is.
\ 646-3939 Park Lido Convalesctnl JO<' SH + E~crow Clr Joan procl'dUl'P!t. South Co~~1 f'.'Pvrr u.~Prt It $100 GARAGE S11Je! Thur& • Suo.
NO. 16 FASHION ISLAND Cenlrr G42-8044 J pk~ni background. Community Hn~pit1tl. 311172 *' 21:t/92a.:1622 • ~~urn, bahy uems, WI)!:•, -.-CLERICAL-Part time.
CALL 542.i;77g
CONSULTANT. Gen"\ food~
needs 7 women for Vlvia.ne I
\Voodarrl Cosme!lr~. W'
train, D:er pos's avail. 5m
Inv. 544-1464
•
, S I jAJ r J ~l Coa~t Hwv., So. Laguna. COUCH ~ h . d t hl & 1''E\VPORT REACJ-f Member1h1p a et !IO el' o 1714~ 4~1.l11 Ext. 136 , c airs, en a eli. I n1g! Lost 4'.J' Misc! 3009
$125.$200 Wkly straight sllll's I NEWPORT I 1ampit & colfe~ table Good I l!ayes. CM ~7-t)JS.
FURNITURE -mm;,,;00 lnd•P'nri•ot Personnel Anency for $200. 51'11 S.'JO. 548·3'263 GARAC.E SALE• "' , -.v · · • Turn unusl'd ltrm1 into qu ick I • · uin f r m _SALES _ ro111r11c1or basl~. m•n or 833 Dover Dr., N .B. · j ... ~Daily Pilot Clasliified rurn. golf clubs & Jota: more!
Fr1r local dept. slore wom11n, civic orl,nled. w/ 642·3870 cash, ca!! 642--567.11 Ari. 642--5678 540-6038
e TOP COMMISSION mf'mbrrship •alf'a ability for I e CO. BENEFITS l~ading ChamOOr of Com. SECRETARY
Qua!iry line lo sell mPrre in Oranie Co. Senrl Allrarlive, Xlnt ryping 1kills
Apply In per~on photo"-resume lo Classified I nt'<'l'litary, ithnrthand dP•ir.
to MI'!I. ThompSlln ad •63. Daily Pllol, P.O. ahlr. Rf'al f'!tllllr land sa!rs w. T. GRANT CO. Bn."< W60, Cos1a Mesa, Calif. k thorouahbred horse lnvE'51·
Per50nnel Otlice 926'2fi. I ml'nr. Off.ice in N.R. Call
9811 Acklms Ave., Grant Plaza MANICURIST !or in!E>rview 11.ppl 6734131.
Brookhur:i;I A: Adams. For N.B. S11lon 673.6.m I SECRETARY. maT~tina/
Htg. Bea<"h . MARRIED m11n lo ll'!Ume 1u1!e~. Must bi:t skill~ typ •
An equal Clflportun1ty Fuller Bni5h roule, Mr. Is!. l.itP itl'IOrthand. Sa.181)'
l'mployr.r Hollman R32--0548. I C."Otl1men~uratt!' v.•f l'XJ!f'ri·
_ • • 1 en1•e. \Vri1e Classiflrd ad
I FULL Charge Bookket!'per -~OLDER.I), Fi~qi;lus·Exp d 1 No. 76. Daily Piiot, Box lSM, ~Un. 5 y!'ars cxf)('rientf'. in hand lay·ufl. Apply in Ptr· Co~ta MeAA, Ca. 92626,
A\'iation orien!('d J11 nri ~n 940 w. J71h St., C.M,.1 SECRETARY
NOW'S THE I
l TIME FOR
rievrlopment ro. XI n 1 Coa~tal Recreation Jnr..
k. od ·1· o.1 IGoort ~kills. Exccllenl Salary. w4'r ing C'.'O 1 ions. ~ ary Mott! maids, EXPERJENC· Call Ann, fiC.~2710. WericllH
opl'n. Nl'.wport Be a ch · ED ONLY. Apply ln perwon, Per.'iOnnrl A 1 ency, 2043
~7~277. Coara Mrsa Inn, CM. 1 \V l'H o N 8 l'SIC i r., .. * GffiL FRIDA y * NEED tr ,. \•'•'rt 1 SER C . 0 ·' Wilh exprrirncc in arnl'rAI ~ . e.x 11 mnney ·. • · VI E Sta ..... esml'.n, 1·
ff. .. I° 1 1 1 d lookinlJ !or man11i11r111J.typr full 1in1e/l·pt llme, al !ta.~!
I QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
o ice vu ir1 n nru I' ....... ,1 .. In hrl ux inane.,.,, 2 N nd 2 hookkrcplna 111.x N'lurnJ .. ~¥ P yrg rxp. ot u er 1, ·1 Ab'lll ' bu~lt1l'~S. full or p~rt t!me . prel m11rrird Se11 ,Jt'1rry .accoun1s r('C pll.y. i y In C 11 <•• "'l 2 •o•g " · · deal with pt'Oplr anri Mndh• II ~ or 64 ..,..,.. I 1Am·4::illpm, 2590 Nf'wpc:>rr
ont girt olc, Age 25--35. NURSE~ AIOF: in larJl" ""R;.,l';'~·=C~·~"~·c--:c,--;-.,,--J
medical practicr . Pre If r SERVICF: Sta Allendant, •
J . .J. KNICKERBOCKER womrn nv11r lO V.'ho likl' I }'u!I nr pt 1lmf', Over 18.
DAILY PILOT CARPF.1' CO. Huntington II) v.'Tlrk "'l!h chlldren, Srnd Mu~t b(' neat. IOOl'l i.pptar·
I Btar h. 962-33~. Cllll for ap-resuml! lo Rox 11:l8 , anre & pl"~nllblr \v/cood
' po!ntment. Bring b r I e f Ncwpc:>rt B1"11rh. C11l rPfs. 3006 HRrbor, C.M.
WANT AD resum,_.
1
-----IHou .. Hun<ina! W•lr.h
------...... --_o-.tm_•_·A_·L_ln_•_M_W6_11 ___ ~:Dl HOUSE ttilumn .
th• 1 DAILY PILCJr for aclionl
tall 612--56~ A &.vt!
,_
Hl.IJ ~ ' W.U. lt
~· .A.7J..at.-90
"
'
I
'
134 DAILY PILOT Th111sday, Joinuar~ 25, 1971
lf§l I l~I -1§1 [ .~ .. ~ ..
Garage Sale 111 1 Mi•cellaneous 111 Pi1no1/0r9an1 116 HOME wanted tor p,..uy
housebroken +. RJ'Own male
kitten. Part 1u1aora with
middle-aged or-o Ider
~plt', :i-48~19$1 , 10
Ar.t-tPat. 2/~
WV ABLE ya: female minlat.
C. Shep, 1 yr ~l&e blk
mask vtr'J ientle
906 Cycles, 8lke1, Antiques/Classic.s 953 Auto Service, Parts 9'6·
..,---------Scooter• 915 "
Bo.ts, Power
G'~~~ .~~;..~:".~~:! * AUCTION * I CLEARANCE 18' D1vrng I:. .t'1&1ung SkiU1 ----------1SINGER ·;,.1, 1-estored classic HI Stlill Hem1 torque.
All glass, ope11 w/cent'r sportscar. Sin&er '53 ((lnvertfr I: fleit ph1.tt $1"1
:o;tarid stttting. '69 Evlnrude ~ d is man I\ e d (Cheap). Milodon oliu1g S)'Stem f.or ~ hp y,•/selectrlc ~hlft, 30 THIHI 213/861).19'!1. Mopor 8 & lleml engines
gal ga~ C'&pae lty, HO DA '.ll ~IG-TD. Sil\'er VI/rt'(\ SjO,Torque--fiitetranM:aNt-
fa1hOrne1er, C. C. &ppnh'eU, N leather seats. Xlgt corul. ,type, Like new cond, $135.
615-$6:i 2/2a
ADORABLE puppies 11 vld
English Shffp &. ~,
d&hwshr, plng-pon; tbl. 1132 Friday 7 :00 P .M. SALE
O>rona In, C.!.I. 1 February 26th (h1er 100 Pianos ~ Organs
" I', Buffs above BANKRUPTC'" ""ueed tor lmmtd. IA t. \IJANTl':D good home for 'IOV!NG Sal I REPO'S & I R~ I
Bal. Bay Clut;i. Look fur Buy Now & Savel "5chooodle", lemale 7 mo.
Surry in dr1\'e\\'it)'. ~8-SJ;.,o Bdrni ~ls, T\\ in ThOniui'llle Opc'n Daily 10 Ill Ii cute 1tfftclionate \\' e 11
st>ls, Divan.~. Lovese&lli. Dln. ,. 0 9 S 2 >
1
Doberman rree to i;:ood
home. ~7-1121! 'Jt21
"PEGG\' Sue" lovable
blk/\l.'ht remall' Terrier 9
mo. shots, hsbrk. friendly
548-2153 alt 6 2/25
J.lALE 6 ~'ki Ctrman
Shepherd pup. 2287 Pacillc
Avr., CM 2/2;)
lrg "hi ACE U'lr. All IOp -$20!)), 893-872"1 633-5;)76. shape. 646-8289. -"'A-"-"--,w~-.,-,-d~---..,9=61 ''fRlfDLAHDfR'l Dun• Buggies 956 utoi an • So~COASI' 18' inboard WE PAY TOP
I DAY only Kii.rage s <1 I e r: 1 · * un l • behaved. Loves children.
Sut. 10 to ·I. 21.l2 E, Ocean f'ttt&. Chei;is, De~ks, 5e\\'lng COAST MUSIC 64+-t3·19. 2/'lj
Blvd, Balboa Penin. uiachUlt'. Vacuunii, Laniii:1, NEWPORT & llARBOR LOVABLE Pood · Con1n1odes Bullets l\111.p!e ! le Ten-1er
chaU's & IMr-stool'i.' Colored , Costa Me!a * fi4Z..2851 mix pups .. '1 \l.·eeks old. Male
Lapstrake -
interior &
962-8637
\ a r nfshed
deck. $1500.
GARAGE Sale · l\1iac J1en1s.
Sa t & &n lron1 11 to 4.
3007 Harl>Or Vie"' DT, Cd:-11
TV'~. Stereos, Ne1v carpet· PRACTICE and female. 1 \\'ht wtb!k
· I\ t · F s spots and l brown .. To good ing, e r1g s, reeur, 101·. ORGANS hoine! 548--0Bll '2/TI
ts. \\'as.he~ & much n101't!
WINDY'S AUCTION
LONG-hair Chihuahua 4-5
lbs. Over l yr, Ownt'r sick.
836-4493 2/25
33' l!=l&I O\\'ENS FBRGLS
BRIGANTINE, $17,500, BY
O\VNER, TI4 I 424-5135.
Boats, Rent/Chart'r 9G8
Prices )'OU won't bellevr! LOVABLE n1ed size blk/br.
\\'ARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO yg ~pa)·cd femalr dog long
1819 Newpor1 Bh·d, &IZ-84114 1 hair lulbrk. Needs good CO)t~.
0
BR?\\'SE AROUND llA:'>J~IONO, ~I e in 11 11 y , ho.m ~ t e need y 1!_ rd 1 Yr old Shepherd/Oober· 40' NEW?ORTER for bare
Xl1;J ~ ;>.;e\\·pon 81\'d. j Yarnaha. NC\I.' & Ust'd 1-521-1339 :./Tl man PJns<:her, Likes kids.. boat l·harier. S95/day .. Call
Re hind Tony's Bldg i\laflJ pianos of most makt>~. Bcsl I l\lALE AND FEMALE &?5-S!Q4.. 2125 -'-'-'-'~· _646-_955ll_·--•-l~• -'---1
Co:.111 ~fesa * 646-8686 buys in So. Calil .. ar Schmidt SETTER A~D Coll le 3 Puppies. ·~ Reg'd .. ShelLil'. 32' Twinscrew ChFis, fully
tll'• IU.Cll INW'f, "' I 537-6824 • 893-7566
NEW-USED-SE RV.
nn.n.n.n
'68 DUNE BUGGY
$1000 CASH
tor used can. & rrucks, JU1l
call us !or free estimates.
GROTH CHEVROLET
Ask lot Sales l\fanq:u
18nt Beach Blvd.
lluntington Beach
$47.6087 KI ~
Misc•llaneous 818 ,
1"""'-.------1 LIKE ne11·, 'l )'r. 0 Id
\\'Nigev.'OOd R!in.gc• v. I
1el\on grlddle $75. Assortt'd
lamps, wUee & end tablt>"
s,; l'a, Bl't'aklas1 litble \\ l'l
cha1Ts, 11\Jng rocnn S('t, ('\e.
This week on!~. ~"28..;9
ROYAL f'lectric typev.·ruer,
20"' carrJagt> $100.. RoyaJ
s1andard f)'pt'11-rltt>r s1:i. I
Rem i ngton tlectr 11'
1ype\\·r11t'r $18.l Ba re }
electric stapler $1 3. 6"'6-0076
aftl'r -4 pn1.
OPE.." DAlLY 9 lo '1 r.tusic Co .• 1907 N. Main., puppies 10 mo .. uutside dogs, ~Iommie-llred. Females. equip'd .. Fishing or Cruis·
ORANGE COAST Santa Ana . all shots. xln1 w/child. 646-203.1 2/'!1 o'~"~•·-"-.. ~""~-· ---~=I
COLLEGE I SI'UDlO b'fand, :1'6", Xlnt , 1~7-ll25 afll'r Ii Pi\!. 2125 GERt.t AN Shepherd pup, 4 Boats, Sail 909
NO MONEY DOWN
(OACJ $40.25 P<!r ?tfo. (36 !\lo,
OACJ Lie .. WlB 13 lntere.st
computed on 12% auton10.
tive d1scow11 rate. \\'hich is
equivalent to 21.2 % AMl.131
Percentage Rate. Delerre:l
payment price is $1459 .. 28 in ..
eluding all interest, all tiiXeS
and license or ii you prefer -~W~E~P~A=Y~C~A~S~H~--1
to P"Y "'h. lh• '"" peke ia only $1073 .. 00 Including t&x
and!;"""' and"'' 0"' pen. FOR YOUR CAR ny more.
FORENSIC CLUB I (.'O!id. L\lake olfC'f. Pvt ply .. I LOVABLE charcoal gray mos. okl. Free to good home * CAL 20 outboard-Wat '64 YAMAHA ~QCC i~ holding :. 968-264:i. Cock . A • Poo 1 yr old. M~ 2121 hath, hinged mas!, 3 mains, Good dependable t;IJ~. Btt:n
SWA BALD\\'IN Ofl::\O & speakPr 968-8139 alt ;):JO needs a ADORABLE German 2 jibs, $:!-l50. &W-0~ days; l'lddcn approx. 3 nios, 1n
BILL YATES CONNELL
VOLKSWAGEN CHEVROLET
P MEET l1k+> new, Juli p e d a j good home. 2/2:) shepht>rd pup&, & wks old. 67:..-2927 eves. las1 tv.·o years, on slreet.
kt>yboard, $1600 .. &14-4?17. 1 J YR old cockapoo, blark. 675-S~. 2/2;) , , , 5 Speed. New baltery, front
!~VALID bed 111! & f'r.d
rable, cost $800. !>'<'II /\1r
Sl j(I, AdJUS1able hospital
bf'd $.iO: new lgP 1\·hl'~I
chair $80. :HS--0261 beforr
6 pn1
Frid;i~ Feb. 26 ~ a.in.-1 p.n1. UPRIGHT Piano, 11 c. w Cllildrens dog, Looks like BEAUTIFUL BLACK MALE l~u~ D~n~l~a7/~:e~PS:: rire, clutch. S~ or trade
.0.C.C, Studl'nl Cenrer keyboa.rd, runed. Xlnl tone.. ~lf' \l.'hen clipped. cat. well behaved. Approx .. Balboa. 673-0240_ for P .U. or stanon wgn, ol
S..iurd.iy f"c·h. 2i AU Day $17J.. :YIS.j258 all 2 pni 897~72 2/25 2 yrs old, 548.:)242 2/2j equal \'aluc. 534-6996
32852 Valle Road 282S Harbor Blvd ..
San Juan Capistrano
a,. f · tl 9 wk old P"PPY. j\ted. size. JIOBIE CAT I YR OLD 837.4800/493·4all/499-'l261 Cosia ~lesa ~6·l'l00
· · · .... airgroun ~ HOBART i\I, Cable-Up righr . PERFECT CONDJTION
------"' 1 Ir, ti-IG-620l 1 Shepherd. Loves kid B. Pets and.:-.......... °LJ 1 dune buggie~. S1reet legal, TOP DOLLAR Bargains! Barg a ins I I piano. in goor1 cond Sl!kl Par1 Terrier. Cocker &
1
J[EJ \\''TRAILER 642.s:l56 ' (TEI" I '70 licensed Cali I
*LIQUIDATING* ARE )'Ou looking for a Kood or s 0 ~r.. · I j.1(~ .. :;66() 2/2j _._ ~ IHOBJE Cat l •I' 1970 '.\'/1rlr , lo mi's, fully equip 'd ,
Contl'nts of Large Honie I buy~ Conie & sel' ours. Sewing Machines 828 CUTE fenilt.ie Ge r man & extras, Xlnt cond, $1Q2j. Various (."Qlors, Your choice, fQr
Color 1V"s, couch€>~. piano;
1
g~ni~~f~:;1· ~;~~ngh~~· ';!~ ,70 SINGER Zig·Za~ tiuto, Shepherd pup rree to good P•ts, General 850 67:-..1340.. ' , , : • , Sl!J50. 644-1408, 614...()753 alt CLEAN USED CARS
rt'frig,, tables, BR sels & .~l'L ;\lagnavox w!or combo blink hem, !\iakes horn(', call 8·17·1927 alt 3;30 NO. '1612 Lido 14·Tr!r & l-'~p~m~·~~=~~~--Sec Andy Brown ~~9 Le 1 s nl'gOtJalr' TV. \Vasht>r, dryrr. deep buttonholes, o\·ercasl, 1•il'. p.m. 2/2J FOR Sale: Pet cluckens co11er. Glassed CB & rudder. 1960 CORVAIR THEODORE
lrl'ezr. ('hair.~. pa1nlings.
1
\\'/beautilu! 11·alnut cab1ne1 5 Adorable G. Shep and Lab. ducks & cages. Manx cats'. I 1"11U race, $1350. 673.6112 "66 6aO TRIUMPfl S:fJJ. illake Oller ROBINS FORD
S ILVER • Go r h ;1 m \11nu'O~raph ni at· hi n <', $37.50 cash or sm. payments mix pups 1 v.·eeks 3 blk Call 540-2333. '69 COLU?.1BlA 28. Days, Chopped, Extf'~tcd fork<>, ~-7817 After 6 Pl\f 206() Harbor Blvd,
··eurtrrcup". Also ~ilver 1~1lf'11r11er. A1npro ltinim arranged. 545-811~ 2 Brindle need good homes Dogs 854 'lll• 636-0757· f'Ves· 71~ Inquire lnsD \lallace SI., OU E ) R b Costa l\lesa
I
· ·-' · ' · · No. A, Cill.. N Buggy <custom · .e II patritems.fr~nc 1 scan :<Our"' proiettor, rape REPAIRS 548-338.~ 2/'rJ
1
6-IG-3724, '113· 333-J..138 engine ;\fany l'Xtras .. Sll9j &12-0010
"Oesrrt Rose" dJnll('rn·are. ret-ord1'r~.l"lt.180 11 lgh0r , .. /LOVABLE male DIVORCE forces sale of CATA.\IARAN 18' Phoentxl968 KA\VASAKI li5 644-4ri9. 1 PORTS ED
set lnr 6, Rl'asonablr. Pvi Laguna Beach. C.1e<tn, oil .. adJU51 any sc1~·1n5 mrdium brf'~u~f1; amJ tan beaut female German ii/trlr, '2 yrs oh1 Buchwhacker. Rebl1. bored I l:ll \\'ANT
pty, 642-4002 !rROLJC Jn The sno11 ·[~~thin<'. 2 v.·ks only $j.9J. shellie mtx loves children Shepherd. AKC champion • lJS..lOl9 * 10 201. A·l Gd. Shape. $32:> Sports, Race, Rods 959 %~g; ~'!;~
HELP! Gelhng niarr1ed! mountain cabin, sips 6, JIJ·8238 has shots. '5-f2·i096 2t'lJ I stock, very gentle, 2 yrs SABOT-ID mo <>Id, Jully Call alt J; :,JG-3905. BlLL l\.lAXEY TOYOTA Sacrifice~ . Complel" ~" t S'.Kl/\\·k. Also " kn d 5 · J Sporting Goods 830 FREE to you, GOOD FILL: old. 540-30()9 Ci11, eves rigged. Mobile Homes 935 '56 Chev Y !'omad-!\ever 18SS1 Beach Bl\'d,
dn.uns, chain saw. Tr1urnr>h 1 ~7-4021
1
need placl' in Laguna 10 except Tues &. Thurs; If $ISO • * * 5J6....7433 raced, n('w 327/4jl} hp, Iroot
TR--3 bu!'kel 5eat. chron1t• 2~ CHAXi'\EL CB radio ... 27~ RErt1INGTON n1odel 'iiiO I dump 8 0 0 'I a rd s, flO answer try later. LIDO 14 11/traUer, )';o. "o". CON YEM PO end, hyd ro. custom lnt., H. Beach.. Ph. 847-855a
baskets 962-1614 aft 6. 1 Cobra ('am .~s. s11per ma):: with \\leaver K-4 M'Op1•, 497_1426. 2126 2 Silky puppies, male & !em, $850. U01.1 street or strip. S.1000 in it, \\'E PAY TOP OOLLAR
SHAKLEE Dislrlburor _ <1ntl'nna. :ii' cahlr. Bes! Redfif'ld moun1g, 2 l'xrra PLASTIC 1 .... 1 h . AKC (em. toy poodle, 8 mus.. !ll!ik $1000 or best oiler. FOR TOP USED CARS
non -Po 11 llring org<1nic offer over Sli.i. 1142-I.697 clip~ $1 '1.I. I rll<. . '1'dm s1111e c ha1~. champagnr. Also 2 malt 10Y Call 9 an1.noon 5.16.tl'lO COMMUNITIES 1 ~6'~>~132::..::'-~~~=---I Ir your car is extra clean, · · I --a inv;i 1 ; po!!y c air · h ""0142 e LIOO 14 •122 e 60 C '''"'first, cleanf'rs, t"Qsn1c11cs & 26"' LINDELL y ARD Swaps 834 disguised as easy chair. minis. c ampagne .. u'n..1· . • Ford, 427 I, cam.
\'ilamins. Barbara &rnh11rt S\l"F.F:PEH XLi\.T COND. I S·l&-2!~ 'l/'16 <>r a.1S..102'l. 333 E, lirh St., $19.J • • 673-486;; balanced, solids, beefed BAUER BUICK
54+-2382 r illUST SE~L! -I TRADE branil ne~\' surfboard BLACJ\ Cocker spaniel male~ c .a1. CAPE COD CAT BOAT 2~301L~1't'i~~o~~~L~R. ~~1~: c~'lt~a~~1 ~~'~1 ~Ter l~~d Cosla ;;:s:· 17
th St .. MS-Ti6.5
e SKI FAMILIES .. Hl!·9~i7 for "'et su 1I 11•1th sleeves I pedigree, 3 yrs Q]d free lo Al<C, Alasklln ~talamule, 18', ftirb!s .. (2l3) 834-3883. (Corner ol Moul1on Pkwy) or trade .. 780 s. Coast }hl'y -
Reservr 110\\'! cabin at l\l;un.. DECORATIVE pJ!lo11·s lor &12-81101 goo 1t home. Papers choice 9 "'k male puppy. Boats, Slips/Docks 910 Prestige adult community, No. 1, Laguna Beach. Autos, Imported 97o
moth Mounrain .. Sip.~ 7. Fire. children's rooms very ~·utr, 1 TV Radio Hi Fi included. 892-14:)(} 2/2~ guaranteed. Alw 1 Yr d" t · AUDI pt etc, SIS-$20 per day. 962-4119 f ' ' • --proven male al "tu d, 15 TO z;. Fr. slir>s avail. ll Jacen 10 L e 1 s u r c '66 CHEVELLE S.S. 396 tu · St•reo 836 GROOVY puppies-3 blttc.k ,,.,,7228 \Vorld .. BeautlfuJ surrou,nd-in, 4 •nd. n"w tire·. " ·-----~---1 .J31-3374 days .. · ~· \DCO "~Ii J't<)-for po'.1-'er boats. Priva1e ~ " iv -,~1 II<" nias~agC'J', I Labs, 4 Shepherds, 2 fluflys. Jngs, .all Juxury appcnnt. mi's. $1000 fin11. :148-04'"· 'JO AUDI JOO LS
rl P · d DA ( H S H UND lagoon, \\later & elec. avail. ..., MAMMOTH MNTN. nt>vf'r u~e .. r1re ~lAGNAVOX TV ~lerro & 6 ll'k.s old. 11;; E .. 2lsl St., · pups , Bayside Village, JOO E. nienls, putting green, hobby T k 962 ~lobile home & cabin, income I $1&.'.l!Sl'tl SSO. Ph; '.">ll>-1:)61 I Rerord Player l' o n1 b o . I C :\1. 'l/26 mlniatutf', AKC, Black & Coast Hwy. NB shop, much more. rue s
property, Sale or 1rade. 117 Yards . Avocado shag Exeellent l..'Ond. $ 2 00. LONGHAlRED s i am e s e tan & mahogany t e d · CALL SJ0.3900 l----------
jJ1.3J74 I cn:J)I"' .• fine condirion. Call 67.l-ti72'6 I male, yr old, shots, very 714/Gll--4018. Boats, Speed & Ski 911 0 SANTA ANA '69 D,atsun Pickup
LIGHT fixlU!'('S, Sp a n 1 sh 1 G~;>-192i I~" Packan:l·Bt>ll c-otor TV. lovable. 4~569 2/2.'i ENG Springer S P an I f" I 17' BELLBOY '69 Jo hrs 4GS(l \V .. FIRST ST., S.A.
s1ylr. 1 rach: d1n·g rm GAS DH YER. , . 12:1 X!nt f'Ond. $2~i0 or offer. FREE puppy to good home. puppies-,\KC, 8 ll'ks. Good 120 !'llerc Cruiser'. lB/08; FAa!IL\."" communi!y, abun .. \Vith 48" Parris Vallt>y Camp.
chandelirr, entry, S\\'ai: & DINF:ITE SET., S2,j 673--»18. /Call before 3 pm. pels & hunting dogs. llT .. elC'cl gauges, many dance of recre:uion for chil-('f .. dlr. $1eeps 4 people.
ba1h. S!IO rakl's <1ll. 1133-061,~ • • .i~~299'l • • LATE n!Odrl 2j" color TV R42-4967, 2/'lJ 962--053-1 xtras. Ne\\· lrlr. S2S50, Tel. dren. nr: gd_ schools, shop. IYN\V287) \\"ill take car Jn
RCA I h. 1· s~ I --OU-EEN-MARY--nnnsolr. C••h o• 1••d•. AKC Afghan S!OO/hc~I olf11r, !'Vi's. Gl2-9367 ping, pnv cluti house, tr.ide or rtnance priva1e ""'r .. conso e 1 1 """· ldbl' -.v ' • ' LirrLE black gu1 puppy 8 C,\LL 839-3880 ,.... crib & m:illr $1 ::i. clotht''s I Lloyd·~ of London cer11£ica1e :.:.i?-24811. 1078 ~!Lss1on. C.;\I \\'ks, "Daisy·lype". 497_1inf1 hlk. I-' .. moving .. ll mo. gd. -J7' Sle\'ens SK ski boat Buy the mobile borne ty .. Call 546-Si36 or 49+6Sll.
.·~ .f Door Sedan. Black wilh
beige interior .. Jmmaculatet
Only 714 acwa1 miles, (87'· •
CBY),
BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGEN
328:i2 Valle Road
San Juan Capistrano
837 .48(I0/ 493-45ll/499-2261 & misc, 540-9346 .:tfl ;; I s:~ . .'>-IS-0201, ~uile 200. natured, 5J6...J602. 374 Olds rng. S12:)(} '6] I , I U kd I 2/21 • '"''"" • ol Y'"' ohoioe, mo"' nternat1ona p
\\' ys.. SJG:'\S. silo-cards, posters, I I!' 2 F'E:'>IALE short haired in lo any Ont of our AUSTIN HEALEY
GENUINE Aquamarine I w111rlov.·s, trucks, low prJ~·e.1 fret to Y~ Persians, 10 mo old, Take BEAUT. "'"ht Sam 0 Ye d' 16 rT F'ibrgls rllnaboul, 4:, "OPEN" parks.. 6 ""linder. radio. dlr. H••I· ·
slones from Bra1.il. Cut & !\lorn or Cl'es 962-3S87. 1 · . both. '"~ A910 2/21 male, 4 mos. old. No I-IP mtr, Tilt trlr, l::xtras NOW OPEN!! ,, faceted. Onll' $1 2 <'ach & M " II ... ,,..., papers. $:JO, l\1ust have $750. 213: 79fr?.roD alt ~1 pm . er .. CAZ 1·12. \\'il! t'.:lke car in '6S SPRITE, likt ne1v, l~
..
11
.. ~~ ,,
6
·-,
3
.0002 1sce aneous , ~1lXED breed puppies fr!:'e, lell('ed yard 646-2739 S 91 trade or finance priva1e par· nii. lr'!I beautiful, but mu~t
up, ..... ) · · wu Wanted 820 IF REE newspaper.;, 116 ·llst See to appr('{'tate. 2 n10.~. * AKC DO~ER~1AN ·PUPS Boats, tor age l l 1Frij;j;;-"VV;;ii&C.mtii-l~•Y~· ~C~'1~1~:,~J6~.8~7~36'=°'o'~'"~1..,~l~l:... srll. 9 to S, SJG..528'1; a!t &,
REilt lNGTON standard ;, vr 51. .. N.B., 673-7878 2127 1 old. 8~6-1:J..11 :!.121 • !\t/~'. 175 & UP • LOCKED, fenced storage fol' Triple Wide Cornell 1960 Chev. ,,_ T. P.U. vo. s30.893G.
o!d typewriter, rebli. \\"ANTED: Plain '~ooden FREE . 1 d" '" t'.:ontinental •Paramount "l ---'~~-----1 AntiqUl' "'alnut bcdslrnd. J'(){·king chair. ,\Ju~\ be lrt'e ~ icr Pan! -you 1g.-I 1-"'REE to )Oil Cock.a.Poo TER:\1S~ ;i.i7-6846 hoat l'.!r campers. ;i0c fll'l' Barrington • Universal Sid. tJ'ans. S3!1.1. F'aull<ner BMW
64 or at noniinal l'Osl. 5-!~'1279 1 208 21st St., C.:-01. 212~ pupp1r• 1 11·eeks o I d REGISTERED toy F 0 x foo1, prr n1onlh. Call Flamingo • Gene!'al Alowe1· Shop 1122 llarbor,
&-6000 all 5 P.~1 . BER:llUDA l,'l'as~. 642--0829 ';./27 Terrier P"Ppies. Champion G·!Z-6j(j(J. Droadmoop e SlnP Cal.6 ·8-8~'1-\V-1600-------I DINING !able & 6 rhrs. S = I ' "' I~~~~-~----· I ·' · Red, f'X .. corn!. sinlge brd.. poii•er !"eel CE L\l ENT BL QC Ks 54 ·4=3 2 25 7 Handsonie par! German Nircd .. 549-131 4 llill~st • Cambridge 1966 .!!• Ton Chevy custom Xtra c!ican! fl1usl sell $1845.
mov.·ei, hand mOll'er ,f,, \\'Ai\"TED. S1Jilablc for ADORABLE beagle puppies, Shepherd puppies. 3045 OOBER.\IAN, remale pup, 10 I I~ CHAPMAN c11mper V·fi, 4 i;pd, camper :)44-803.t
iiileel ham'!. 644-650.l 1 hu1ld1n~ boOk :;hf:Jve.~. CaU ~ wks old :i.1&-145'1, 2/25 1'1adeira. C.~1. 54S.744() 2/27 \\'eeks, grea! \l.'ith childt'!'n.. Transporta1ion I'll MOBILE HOMES shell. l\lany extras. Owner, l ---~D-A~T~S~U-N---I•
REFRIG & gas rnnge, l\-l;iple 6·1G-161iJ all. :i:OO pm. I Yr old female minia1ure 7 ~lo. o!d G•'rman Shepherd Bargain priced S25. 830-1822 · 1206 N .. Harbor, S.A. f ..C54~ .. ~'='~'1=·-------·---------·I
double hiKh poster bed . 'i-pc-Office Furniture/ J Poodle. :>16-1906 2126 pup. Ge nilr & lovabll'. GfijMAN Shepherrl pup~. * TIU53l.Sl05 * '64 Daisun P.U.. truck.. New '71 Datsun
kitchen srt, c:.-ouch & bunk Equip. 824 1-\IITENS, free .. 8lf..-09:i:l 01 f('nHll" .. fi.)..2&3-1 2/2j shnw or pet, AKC, 1nale Campers, Sale/Rent 920 THE BEST OF IRR\'883) $10 delivers, S:l.50
beds .. 543--{)436. f 816--3770 2/'17 l~D sprcial adul1 home I & female, 6 \l.'k.". 842-7279 BOTH WORLDS a week payn1ents. 1945 1£i00 OllC, P ickup with camp.
2 Rf _ HOYAL rll'clric rvpe11·riter, • for 2 hmid, youn:; als BE~UTIFUL AKC Be 1 CAMPER F be Uf 1 ho Harbor Bll·d, C.i\I. er. Sal<' price $2099 dlr. erig'5 S1J~.s20.1no1or~ 20" carriaf:e s1cio. Royal }'REE refrigeraror,youpick c:,121· ' ngl' or a au u !Tie', lo'v°""""'·-=~=::c.~.,..-I # PW214j2T/OJ \\li!ttake
flee .t: gas, zo bike spAre ! ~tand;i rd IVfll'\\'ritfr $7. up. G46-9:,.i8 2127 ;~1&-:r>GG bf'f. 4 pm. pups, 2•~ mo's old. Very maintenance and architecur. 'G7 Dodge Van w/1rindo\l.'S, car in trade, \Vill finanC'e
parts,. po\\ er mo\\·~r $12. R 11 m 1ng 1 0 n c 1 ec 1 r 1~ , , \V ~[ 1 TE ELEPHANTS" 2 CH A IR s. need Reas. 12131 5!12-5303.. CLEARANCE SAL£ ally impre6Slve design See V-8 <1uto. Asking $1400. pril'ate party. Call 5.iS-87l6
6-16-5419.. I typev.Titer SJ.&j, 8 a 1 es overrunning )\}Ur house ? reupholstrrlog, 644-4j22 2/27 VIZSLA AKC; f'ie!d/Show/ the (!XCitln~ new "Villagel ,06~7>-~1~59.f::cc._~~-~~-I or 494.6811 .
Daily Pilot \Vant Ad!! have ele<:tric stapler SlZI. 6*&-9076 "Cash" .... sell them thru The "Y!'l!ow Pages" or Pet. X-Rayed. 213/334-6211/ Large selection pre '71 lfouse'" by Levitt ?tfobile '65 Chevy ~, Ton Pickup -o=~~--=---1
bargains galorf'. af1er 4 pm. Daily Pilot Classified clas..,ificd ... 64.2-5(;78 txt 6309 dys, 673-1865 eve5, Ca N SI d Sys1em~ on display now a t Vil, Radio, !feater SlOOO Fir m '69 Datsun Wagon -mprrs ow ashe to BAY HARBOR 6.J6...63J9.
USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK. WE PAY POSTAGE!
l\liniature SCHNAU ZER $ 9 OVER l~C'--='-----~-puppies, AKC rt'~. 7 wk".. 4 ACTUAL MOBILE HOMES 1959 Doch:e ·~ ton pick·up,
...... Call 64.4--'l·lll * * FACTOIY 142j Baker St... Costa r.tesa I!' bed Hemi beefed lOrt1Ue
--INVO ICE Just S, of S.D. F1l'y at Harbor flighl.. 54-0-9857.
5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE--NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES i\llNIATURE Shor I -ha 1 r 714/-10-9-1~0
pups. Beautilully muked, ~HQ\VCASE "' 1 Auto Leasing
' TIMt:S. • TIMES
1
11MIS " 'TIMES
6 \\'ks old $10 each. :>1;;....2S.'il. DEALER Triple Wide Corn•ll
FOR l lillcrcst • Flamingo
DALMATIANS • A.KC rC'i:;is. ELDORAOO CA:\1PERS Paramount e UniversAI
1ered. Days: 616-7203: Artrr ! THEODORE Ban-ington e Broadmoor
--:. P111 : 548-9-176. 1 ROBINS FORD Conth1ental ti Star
-- ---I CUTE hlack m In i 11 I u r e General e Hillcrest
$6.80 $10.65 $15.90 poodle pups, 7 1\'Pf'ks. Sli 2060 !-!ARBOR BLVD.. CHAPMAN
----1-----' Call 962-6-1116 COST,\ l\.IESA 642.0010 MOBILE HOMES
• WE LEASE
All MAKES
964
$S.10 $8.28 $13.10 $20.10 e pOODLE Pups, purf'tired 1968 ~1· Jan1ily \\·agon 12331 Beach Blvd. G.G.
1----·I----n1inia. 8 \\1ks. 2 Blk !en1aJ-l."'ampt'r l"an. Air rond, ~lps * 71 1153()...2930'•
& MODELS
4 speed. dlr. R & H. (Y\VT •
917) Take car in trade or
finance private pa r I y,
:l-IS-8736 or 494-6811..
DOT DATSUN
OPEN DAILY
AND
SUNDAYS
18835 Beach Blvd.
Huntil1gton Beach
8(2. 7781 or ~G-04U
I $6.00 $9.76 $15.SS $24 30 es, 54i°">-180Ci. 4 adulls or 2 adults & 4 NE\\'PORT HARBOR "REA 1.w-----'-----.L. ___ J ____ .L ___ _J._..:_ _____ .:__:._:~.::.::_:_::~·=-/ <'h1ld ren. i'.lany extras .. Must • " I' AIREDALE terrier puppies. :sell. s29;-0, :H'{....()4..IO. New 22X53 l\lodular 1\1anor. BAUER
BUI.CK
'65 Datsun Wagon
4 ~. d!r. lt.lus1 sacrifioe!
\Vilt take car in trade nr
I
f1n11oce private p a r ty.
'54£.8736 or 494-£811. PAYMENT ENCLOSED
' D SEND Bill 0 19 1vks. Pv1 ply. Champion """-=:::....::.,...:c...::_ __ , completely :setup & ready
10 FIG>Ull COST sired. :>1~1058 FOH salr-1965 }·ord VS "• to mol'f' 111 h:i. In cool Costa
ton PU. tru<'k \\'/196S 101~· i\1esa's delux Greenleal 'ul onlv •"• wout ;,. ••~J. AUTO. elec. Olympia Di11o c I l C II
'69 DATSUN 2 dr. Tape
Ikck. like new, $1475
:»6-.Jii1 r'"l'~ ,,, •••••••• ' •••• 1. b.,;,.~;~, •·············•·······•·•···
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.
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......... ......................................................... .
City •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• "'·"· •••••••••••••••••••••• ' •
I
a 1 . raniper. a t'V\"'5 i Park. 17.'ll) \\'h1U1er A1·r. ' 1 1 ; machine .. $10. o -1· 3116 •I'•'' •oo~t. nc 11 • vo .. r !O . ·• 1-. &12-l:tiO nr j.J(;...6.j\I in
odd•••• •• pho"• """'b••· * Call 962-6607 "11 C:ABOVER caniper on r·ord NE\\'. llesali•s, Factory 01. COSTA 7h t <tul 1f ,.our 1111 J. ti the DAl.i'1~T11AN Pup, ~ h
1
ou• v.·/nev.· 1ran!I. Fully 81'lf <."On· l'{'rt "In Park Setups"
• .,4 el lll• I;,.. on wl>ick lh • f polentia, Lo\'l'S prop t . I <>I $1600 <•<11-· · &12-1937. ai ei · · ,,..,,... "''-United Mobile Homes
ltd word of vour •Ill h wri t. I C 1 B'k -<•-3 <• MESA i .... Add s1,oo ••"• a ,... SILKY fem . AKC-no ~hed, ye es, 1 es, .... ~. i..., GJJ...2961 '
,.,,,.. 11,. of DAILY 'ILOT odorlcs1, 8Mt1. \31vk.c, .. Good ! Scooters 925 20x44 Con1p setup, ::...star pk. "
DATSUN pickup, t<'built
rng., good lire~. good cond,
must sell 400..2079.
'66 Datsun 1600 Roads!tt
HT ·New cond .
$1195 . 'T.0.P.
l tY , •• ~;,, wi!h "''"'' ••• 'T 0 r Costa ?.if'sa 548 776.j I pet. Cheap. 543-8136. Top Anah loc .. $1000 dn & -3·1 E . 17th St..
STANDARD Poodle, beao1i.. . ·~ llO~OA lGO · · · 7141772-4.UJ. e · FIAT
pli••· , ful hlk fem .. puppy, chanip.. !\~\\· TIRES, Cl.IA!~ RE~10DELED 42"X8 a.i r<0nd. I C:::~""".O'.".' _____ _ -----·-------1 ion sirtd 49'1-8364 alt 6 I S2'2J or offer. G7J.!0~., $2900. !'ipacr rent 1:)5. Pool. LEASE '69 f'iat 124 spor1 roupe. Red e ELEG~NT Afghan Pups, irOND_~ il!INI TRJl:lL ,jt), lj(i() Placentia, NB .. !'JilS-4:lf;.l A NE\V 1971 11'/hlk int. ~l111helin X !-------------CVT HIRI -PASTI ON YOUR INYILO,I
•
Pmq,
WiU Bo PUd ..,.
Ad-
IUSINESS ~EPLY MAIL
Orongt Coast DAILY PILOT
• ~. 0. lox 1560
Coate MtlG, Calif, 92626
Cl11alflff Dtpt.
• '
•• l'omCt Sttap
-~ U Malk4 11 01t
Uirilri St1te1
•
t.h:C .. Black ma~ked &ill'er. $1 1.), .G<r;ar1 $jQ, Rx3.'i ROADLINER·l bednn, PINTO radials, n1ag 'l'hls Lucas
1
962-69:16 Rf1 4. * 6iJ..12G7 • lull bath. sso.oo mo . I !ri\"lng ligh!! 830-4-189.
*Golden Retri•ver 1 \:A~lAllA t.:nduro 2:io. \!lii!I Sli9j *** SKl-7'1~ (::S mo.) '70FIAT Spor!Spyr!er,J'.l.SOO
Al\C 1141:'3'1.~ 1~ X!"! COtlChHon. $49,i t:all I !Oxj,J Reau! Corn!. ;1 Siar open f'nd : 1n1 "s, AM/f~1 r:1(1in. Best
613-14'.lli Park in Costa 1\tesa. O"·ner RENT offer, mll~I 5"11. ~17-1363.
Hors•• 156 ·10 Sutukl TS90. Too many ·'>lS-40·11i 1\ NE\V J91J l
I I=~~-~------BROOOi\IARF: -Doub1f' bred f'xtrat 10 1.u. S1reei or tn1ll, Trailers Trav•l ,45 PINTO
Joe Reed II, Jn loal to s3;:,, &7: .. :~. ' $4 DAY
Pnlleo's .. Nott' make orler, ·s,; RSA G50 Lightning Run$l·.,-,-T-,-,-,-,l-E-,.-.,.,..--,,,~,~.~,.-., A.VD
(7141 737·5&19 Norm. ~·. En.i: ,. Rrblt; Asking T II' i n 8,. d, ( u 11 y
S.'>9:1 •• Jls-566:• ~ft. .;i;l) pm. ~11-contaJll('d. TV antenflll. 4¢ MILE
I ~ * 19i0 :'>!OTO GUZZI : S,000 f'a~y roll canopy. Like ne\I.'' PUT A Ll'ITLF: I ~~~;,.,t J .. J/l mi. A·! Shapr, full tires~. )JG! Sonora Rd. C.\1. KtCK JN ''OUR
c. mmmmmm.:~lC,-~ o" . .,-""="-1
7· ==c,-,7--~·l20' TANDE:'>! A~lr, dlx, sell-LIFE! 1 • '67 30~ llONO,\ Sc'rambl('r rontalrlf'rl. NI'\\' llC\'1'r t:ttn THEODORE
G•neral
I l'l' ALUl\llNUill
& CUSHIONS, $7:i.
• MG--00.ll *
Boals, Power
900
BOAT
906
block. Likt> nc11, $300. 11sed .. Below v.·Ml~SQIO, by ROBINS FORD
49l-487G 01••nrr. n<t/531-7800. 2000 lfARBOR BL\10 .•
'69 Kt\\VASAKT !ltJ.Bol'f'1I Trail•rs, Uti01i.::ty::.:..~,-4~7 I COSTA .1\-1£SA
J\1111\y f'~lr;1~. "lust sell. $300 /-----------/----~·l=".="°'='----
or best ttlfrr !l6S-2\ll~ 14, Tande T .1 _ ----m r11•r
TRIU!\IPH j(X) Dayton11 . Xln! \\"11h ~ \\he-f'I•. All lill'{'I 1\eJrl. i\NY Day is the BEST day to
cotK1, $7,"i(I or lies!. 6ij...()i06 I'd consu11cuoii 1" Steel ruo an ad! Don 1 t
or 6Tj...687•1 dt'tk plaHni:. \\,111 ' sell or delay .. call lodii.y, &t'l-"6~8
r'or lhat ilc11t1 urnlcr ,JjO, 1r11dc lor pickup 3166 Slcll lrems "'Ith ea~e. u...r Daiey
TIME FOR
9UICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5 678
try !hr Prnny Pifl('hrr l\lrAA V~rdr• (,,.1, )', Piiot Clas1iUed .. 612-0078
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Auto•, Imported 970 •A•u•,.•,•, •1.,•po•r•tod•••..,•o I Autos, Imported
l§J 1.__l _ ..... _ ...... _,]§111
.__I _ ..... _ ..... ·_,)§] l ___ .... _ .. ,_,. ... __Jl§JI Autos for Sale
FIAT I --:::=P::-00':-Rs,...c""'H'""E,,....... I
n.l'UV'V'l1 NEW '70 911T
''THINK'' I Emt'rald . ireen with black
• leather interior. ~f/FM.
970 Autos, Imported 97d Autos, ,UHd 990 Autot, UMd 990 Autot, UMd 990
OLDSMOBILE VOLKSWAGEN
· LEASE A
NEW '71 VW
VOLKSWAGEN BUICY. CORVAIR MERCURY
-=:-:~~:,-:-:-'69 RIVIERA C, S. All Mere. '70 Monterey I '69 Olds 442 2 Dr HT '68 YW SEDAN p<l\1;er, A..:\1/fM ate~ ta.pt, '65 Co1v111r {YDY100) S299 Convert. ON"E OWN"ER. i4,000 P.11.
chrome whee I s, $3700. ~~l:'.i ~~1~bo T~m; aCvaUable. TIIE SPORTY ONE Bt1uUtu1 silver fQJC mist fin.
No 'ION~ DOIVN (0ACl 646-l46.1 -ar r v ' .!\!. Thi d . I " "'.. !. l!::i.shly tulip yellow with lf.h with buf'iUn y 1nteror.
DAILY PILOT 3$
l§J
Autos, UMd
PLYMOUTH
19'9 PLYMOUTH
SPORT SUBURBAN
3 Seat St<'ltlon Wagon
12.~95 /lBfiJD lh~BILL 0YAID
s.. VOLKSWAGEN
$51.89
~r. Mo.+ Tax
AT
$48.69 Per Mo. '69 BUICK Riveria "loaded"! • '62 CORVAIR • black top & Interior. Auto. Equip?ffl with auto trans.,
2;, COO ml'!i 2 yr warr $3450 RUNS GOOD! CLEANI moh1le has been driven or.ly radio, healer, pl)\\'tt 1teer.
136 Mo, OAC) L~. YXR 79-t ~I pry.' &1~7 o ~ Sl.50. M>90?1 Da\'e 12,000 ml. and must be attn 1~, power. brakes, power 383 cu. in., 1 bbl. Engine
Intef1!st cm11puted on 12 " 67J..3762. '63 Corvalr Convt Spyder aod driven to appreciate. I v•1ndo11.·s. air cond. If yt)U Aulomanc transmission
"FRIEDLANDER" 32S.'i2 Valle Road
San Juan Capistrano BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGEN
autoinotive discount rsle, • Good CO"d • F II · h nl j j CADILLAC " t1 y equipped \vilh IHllO. lite a to p ca!le, p l!Ase Pov,.er steer!n<> \\'hich is equivalent to 21.2"'· L.,., .. 6''' ~~~i d · l ·~ "' .. ,,.., . ..., trans, radto. heater, power on't n11u this f n e car. Power dise brakes 13750 IUCH ILYD.
(Hwy. Jtl
S9:J.7566 • 537.6824
NEW-USEO-SERV.
8l7 .4S00/ 493-4:>11/499·22fil
'63 Porsche Super
C~. Bahania yellow with blk
interior, A'.\l/f't-1. chrome
32852 Valle Road
San JJJan Capistrano
837 ·4S00/49l-t51 l/499.Z261
annual pt<rcentage race de. . ,61 CORVA-I R 175--t 0 b k I ZLG1!8 J h & So 2·~ I f!rred IM\)'ment price is A l\lodez:n Classic. 70 ~rd. s c ring, po11·er ra cs, ac. · o nson · n, o .. ., Powpr rear windo1v
Sli'53.04 including au Inter. au10 air, lull pwr, ~· • &-;2.5697 • air cond., etc. 4 near new 1 tlarbor Bl.. Costa riiesa, Tilt steering wheel
est. All taxes arn:l li~nse or contacl Commercial Nat 1 CORVETIE--tires. Ask (or demonstralion. 5'IO·j6J(), Air conditioning
ilyou prefer to pay cash, the Bank, Derek Lock1na:, !Il<ll (70SAZP) Johtlson & Son, '64 OLDS Lict"n~e YPT .Il7 UV'liftl"l.I
'69 124 SPYDER
wheel5'. recent en&' l n e L11rne Selection full priee is on!y St.289.00 in.1="~'"'~"~0~. --~--~ 1 ~-Harbor Bl., Costa Mesa l CutlaSll, buckel seats, p/11, Exct'llent condition
eluding tax and license and '63 CAD CQnvt-Top cond. '62 VETTE-327-:mo 1-lP V«.>ry ~0-5630. I plb, good 11re~. new paint. -10,l'.XXI miles P:\"\\'9S:J ._...,
RM ll'1th Black interior, 5
Speed Tran~. iZVG6a.ll
$2195
$2399 Of VW Campers,
CHICK IVERSON [ Vans, Kombis,
not one penny more. Full pM. Reasonable. Pvt sharp · flf1111y P!iltrn~. SJ~/ 1970 MERCURY Xln't cond. S42S or best orf.
$1200 pty. 673-50-!8 or 557-2257 oiler 1r11.cle for c.iG-500CC bike MARQUIS CPE. er. a.iS-8778. See at the DAILY PILOT,
BILL YATES CAMARO ph" "t. &14-43'3. SHOWROOM TYPE OF CAR PLYMOUTH 3J<J """ Bay SO...t, vw 1 Buses, New & Used e 'G.i CUSTO'.\! CORVE"ITE 11000 rif!LES , Costa l\lesa , ask for VOLKSWAGEN c A '.\1 A R O • 6 g, 3 2 7 ·I -Sell or trade. \Vorth Sl8l0. Attr.u:th·e n1eclium 1.urq.uoise I '.\la.rgaret Greenman Bill Jones' lmmediat• Delivery
B.J. Sportscar Center ;,..1!).31)31 Ext 66 or 67
19i0 HARBOR BLVD,
COSTA ~IESA
CHICK IVERSON vw
328~ Valle Road lnintaculate, stereo, Radial &l-1--0913. ~1st f1n1sh \\1th v.·hite 1nter-1
San Juan Capistrano fn'('s, R/H, $1650. &14-5678 '63 CORVEITE FASTBACK tr.ir and landau roof imm11c. 1969 PLYMOUTH '64 Plymouth Sports Fury
8J7.4S00/493-1511/.J.99.2261 .67 CA'.\tARO, auto, Power 3Z7, 4 ~('l!'eri, mags. Call ula1e~ prcn11um equipped, SPORT SATELLITE I Ne1v 383 engif'l!, ported "" HJ~Gt~R-491 1 --... ,5"'7"9'°'1_2:--~9-3031 Ext, 66 or 61
1970 HAHBOR BLVD.
everything. Fae air, Radio. alter 5 ~92-1911. a.ui~ u·ans. anl lnt 5trrco trearb, hi-rise k quad, B '64 VW BUG 513.:ll. 64-1--ms COUGAR radio. heat('r, power &ttt~· i 'J\o.·o-<toor sedan. , .$1.995 I & !\l lorqUf·Olte, &:•ugea.
COSTA rin:s.-\ RO\V 399 1ng, po1rer hra.kes, Fae air 318 Cu. In., 2 bbl. Engine bucket seat!, floor shllta,
$799 • '69 CAJl.1ARO RS-Orange, r\'11lriil1011 Truly spotless A'Honiatic transmission mags. l\lf.'llT CONDITION. JAGUAR
HEAD9UARTERS
5 speed. A'.\l/F''.\1 Stereo Tarie.
Rl;d v.·i\h Black incertor,
{UYH914! '66 VW SEDAN Air coOO, disc braker;, auto 1--:---------$980 "' "16 '69 Cougar X'R7 Ori.\'.:. Oi\'Ol'r, aorl like ne1v 4 near new Po""er steenng · · ~ · CHICK IVERSON l-k_an_•_.=l2.l00~=·~61J...18=~1~1=· --j low mlleaat, lll-2V, PIS, !11•es etc, See and ask for Air L'OndH1onini 1966 PLY SPORT FURY
The only authorized JAGUAR
d~aler in the entire Harbor
BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGEN '
R&H. fZB\V 2SO) VW CHEVELLE po"·er disc brakes, au1 0. dc:n1onsrratk1n. 916 BEQ. Only 18,000 mi on eni;ine * New eng .. tirt'S,
conw le, A..\1-F~t $le~. Johnson & Son, 2626 ~[arbor License ZVE 497 * brakes. 3,000 miles
Area. $895.00 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 '66 CHEVEl.LE SS 396 blue ext., 11'ht!e learher & Bl., Costa ~!rs::i. 540·56.10. ExceUent cond1t1on. .,_ a~. X1nl cond.
1970 HARBOR BLVD. ;I speed. bucket seats. vi.n~l in.terior "'i th wal'1.Ut Mere .• 69-Ma rqui' * J\Iust sell $775 32852 Valle Road
San Juan Capistrano
837 .4800 / 49J.45U / 49!1-2261 Harbour V .W. l --=CO~S~TA'°. -,'~'E~S~A=--I positraction, tachometer. grain tr1m, radials, tac:h 4 OHT See at !he DAn.Y PrLOT, 642-8532 '69 VW SEDAN Carefully maintained by clock, ~01neter, :e_:e~! tune. A\\'ARD WINNING STYLING 330 \\'est Day S1reet.
ROVER
tAf'r.•ANN GHIA
'65 VW Karmann Ghia $2197
S825. 543-6393 1970 TOYOTA CORONA SED
RADIO, HEATER. MERCEDES BENZ I AUTOMATIC. DEMO •1826
Sunroof, R&H. (WHI 908)
$.1275.00
Company for manager up. $28.)(1 f1rm . .>4.;.4~ Allractive Ji<>ht ivy yellow Cos1a lllesa, ask for
642-nn. "" ~t G l-"-'-c"7==~~=--1'67 COUGAR. Air, recent 1\•l!h dark Ivy green interior. a.r;:aret reenman R&l-1. ZBK617
$1295.00
Harbour V.W.
18711 BEACH BL. 842-4435
HUNTINGTON BEACH
'68 vw
DOUBLE CAB PICKUP
VEU.084
$1799
CHICK IVERSON
CHEVROLET tune-up, 4 nt>w Tires. Good Black interior & la ndau roof
mileage. S1595. 8 9 7 -8174 LtLxury equip~ throughou1: '66 CHEVELLE eves !, v.·knds. Auto. tran1., radio heat,r,
2 Door. Automatic, VS.
(SST 8081
$899
BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGEN
32852 Valle Roed
San Juan Capistrano
837 . .fS00/ 4934511/ 499-2261
'69 Cougar, air ronrl, \!1")'1 powl'r stet:r ing, po~·er brak.
top, new tires. !o hlue book, es, po1ver windows etc. This
$2300, Call aft 4· 30 pm -excl'l\ent cn.r reflects \·ery
549-3163. careful mainttnance, Driven
1969 XR7. lllaroon. F'ull only 2lOOO mile!. See k
po1ver. A:\1/F:'II . Lo blue drl\'e io appreciate condition.
book. MS-4rJ6 (\VYB 9231 Johnso11 &: Son,
.,_ '61 XR7-Auto. air, Janrlau 2626 Harbor BL, Costa Mesa
top. l'.\L\lACULATE S1625.lco'4=C_5630~===~~~
05936 .,_ &16-2698 1962 ~1ERCURY 2-dr .
vw ,~,6~8 =MA=us=u ~wA=Go=N
5\!J.3031 Ext, 66 ot· 67
DODGE P~lpb. 1ur S22i Runs good.
6.19-7450 or 833-0925 at! 5
19';'() HARBOR BLVD. Automat1e, Radio, J-lrater dlr. 1969 DART SWINGER:
COST~ l\1ESA __ l~!J J.)41 l\-tust Sell. \\Iii! TllE Pl'.:RFOR'.\IER' ---------
-7'6~3~V~W7' SEDAN Trade or finance. Call Fl11shy compctftion orange 'JQ MACH J ~~·7744 1111h \\'h1te stripe~. Landau
MUSTANG
1969 PLYMOUTH
SPORT SUBURBAN
3 Seat Sta t ion Wagon
$2,695
3S3 cu . in., 2 bbl. Engin~
Automatic transmissior.
Pov.'er g\eering
Power brake!, disc front
Pov.·er windows
Po11.1er seat
A··tomatic si>eed control
Po1\'er rear windo1v
Atr conditioning
License XSS -453
Esce\ltnl condilton,
41.000 niiles
R&H , !ASL SJ.Ii 'S8 32j El Camino, new :t Eri~iipped l\'ilh J·IO 4 V8. automa!lc, AM Fri1 gler-
AU. 197l'S IN STOCK chocolate bro"''" pain I. en;.:iru.-, 4 speed !rans., eo, fact. air. Loaded (487-
MKII CORONA ·COROLLA $765 autom, buckets, air, pM radio. hrarer, etc. This be~u. AGUI Take oJr!er trade or
Harbour V.W. See at the DAILY PILOT
JM \Vest Bay Street
Costa l\Jesa. ask for
Margaret Greenman
PONTIAC
1906 PONT I AC GTO,
hardtop, tac:tory air, P/S.
P/B, auto trans., w/8 track
stereo, great condition. r;ee
to app~iate. $1,400, pOOae
sr~1382.
'70 LeMans .sta w~Aum
trans, Pl I pb, '71 Ile.
lmmn.c cond. $29 ~0 .
962-5607.
'70 GRAND Prix. One owner.
AM·FM. All p<iwer. Yellow,
vinyl !OP. ~ 67344.>I
1965 Pontiao Catalina 2-dr.
\Vh!te. Radio. air. 52,000 mi
$995. 968-1168.
RAMBLER
1967 Amba,sador 990
SOLID VALUE!
"
nou Lnii~, 1 181'11 BEACH BL. 842-4435 strg. wide racing tire~. J\lag 111ful car showdHlar;.tui n1a1n. sm. dn. v,rill fin. pvt. ply.
tAUL UIJW HUNTINGTON BEAQ-1 rims. Very we][ cared for. enanc~ an OVlng rar:. dlr. 540-3100 Call Pat.
9 to 5, 83(}-5282: 6 to 9.1 Drive tt torlav. Only SlnJ. =~===~~=-TOYOTA '68 VW BUG 83<Hl936. IX-V.12.\61. Joi""°" & Soo. '68 MUSTANG PS. P/di'<
VTS-907 [ 1sn1 BEACH BL. 842.4·135 2626 Harbor BL. Cos1a t\1esa. brakes, air, vinyl top. Orig
1.,. Hubnr. C.'1 . 646.9303 I $1299 HUNTINGTON BEACH '64 IMPALA '4C"630 Owo" 61l-8'93.
2-dr. hardtop, Gold metallic
finish w/match1ng interior.
Air condiuoning, powe r
steering. po .... ·cr brakes, auto.
•. ~5.1'"°"P"LY"'"1"o"m=H""°'l~d'°,-. '°b~1,~,k~.1 trans., radio, heater, near
orig cond, 19 mpg S:rrt or new tires, etc. Drives beau.
Trade. 6-1~681, tilully. Only S950. (\VAR889l.
===01 '67 CORONA I VW '6.1 Dodge D"t d•IW<• GT. 196' MUSTA NG . V8, aoto, CHICK IVERSON '65 Camper Door Hmltop. di•. Full 1300. 5.1>-ll6l .,, 1,. Dno "'"YI top. lo mo. 1 °"'""· 1969 PLYMOUTH VW Fully equ1rired. li3•1 BSG po11·er .:... air cond. ~1n~1 1 or Dave l\1t1st Sac~ Sl995. 83!l-1796. CUSTOM SUBURBAN .............
~THINK ~"~"
''FRIEDLANDER"
1JUO IEACH l MWY. '"
893-7566 • 537-6824
NEW-USED·SERV.
~
MGB
4 Door. Auto1na11c. Owned by
little old lady from Lelsun! 1 !:H9-3031 Ext. 66 or 67
\V Id 1970 HARBOR BLVD. or , 16,000 actual miles. I COSTA 1\t ESA
(UOA 76jJ Take small down. '
\Vill finance pvt. pl y. Call '65 V\V , J mm 11 c u I ate
Pai 54G-3IOO dlr. aft 10 am. CDLR87o .. o $10 delivers. SIO
a week payments. 194.';
Harbor. C.1-1.
$1499 sell' S 195 full price. Call ~ 'f;.l DOflge Polara ~. P/R, J.1UST SELL '65 r.1ustang V·8, ~ 3 Seit Sta tion Wagon
CHICK IVERSON 49-1-7744. PIS P/\\I Air conn SSSO automatic transmtr.sion, $2,195
GET the best transpor1at1on 67:;-0787. . ' ••• ~!M.7152 *••
YW $150 can buy; a "JUSI grt 1965 DODGE Dari: 2 rlr 1968 MUSTA~G V8. au1o, 318 cu. in., 2 bbl. Engine
549.3031 Ext. 66 or li7 rne there .:ind back" 1961 itick. slant 6. Gd cond. ~5.'iO: r/h, air, t::ipe deck. f.tinf Automatic transm1s31on
19iQ HARBOR BLVD. ChetTo!et Impala. 348 en· Eves: 61'5-3iB2. CoM. 675--8583 Po111pr steering
COSTA t.!ESA g1ne runs well, three gpeed ,68 Doc! ·I nrf •67 MUSTANG-Auto VB. Power disc brakes BILL 11AXEY
!TIOIYfOJTlAl
~--t /fu rst shifter, chrome V 0 't' ·.,"", >1°1t ook, LIKE NE\V. $128j, ' Power rear l\'lndow
'60 V\V Bug. Mecha111cs '64 Ch--ry VW Bug ·t 1 · 1 · good -o, su o. " us se ma e Air condftionini:' S""Cial -running cond. but er . II iees, new. iner:ior, offer. 545-6.i19 962-1782. D5936 *** &i&-2ti98 L•"•"·· YPU 440 .. -body and paJnt f\Vllh e11:cep . .:::::::..:..:::.:.;;.~·o:.::::..:.c:::_.l-•'-ft.POUi"'ii"i"-' "-
needs \\'Ork. Has 11 license. tion ol on, smllh*"' ..... ar FORD OLDSMOBILE Good condition, 50.000 ml. $165. 5-1~218. Rebuilt f'llglne & transm, = .... 18881 BEACH BLVD. =-,,~~----,.-·I New pa1n1. '-=''~"-·'~'~1._&1_4·~''°~1.~-~-----------1 Hunt. Beach 147-lSSS '68 V\V Camper. pop-top, C;i.ll &12-1413 1'60 Chevy 2-dr hrdtp , --=,-,,.-----1·59 OLDS Delta 88 Custom. See at the DAILY PILOT,
lmt N. of O>alt Hwy, an Bd: tent, stereo F~I tape deck .. ~--~-~--~' Immaculate. { Q v J JjO ! '65 Country 4 Dr. S@da.n. !\1u!ft ~II! 330 West Bay Strtct,
5 TI!g &-4 off-road tires, V\V • '64 Beetle • Very good Terms n.vail, $299. See a t 37,001 mi. Air. All el.!C. Co9t11. !\Iesa, ask for
J ohnson & Son, 2626 Harbor
BL, Costa !\-1esa_ 54G-5630
'65 AMBASSADOR
Air, auto. trans .. power stttr.
ing, power brake5, 995URP.
$575.
Harbor American
646-0261
1 '16~ HARBOR, COSTA Mf<;A
'68 RAMBLER Rebel wagon.
Loaded with extr11.11. S1SOO
Ori~nal owner. 842-758!
'63 Rambler, p/b, pfs, fact
air, n e tv I y Jic'd. $300.
962-1844.
T·BIRD
1 '67 LANO CRUISER I Xtra nice, $2695, 675--5396. mech. cond. 1945 Harbor Blvd .. C.J\.I. S • W New tire~, r;!locks, .$289.i f.fara:aret Grt!<'nman
6 VW CAMPER $850 • •• ,...."''-. ~~~7."C".,.,__,,, 1 quire agon 1---------\ 1 5 ~~~~--~-,.._,1 ·71 Chevy Super Van-10, V8 545--2220 '66 T·Bird w/all the whistles e 1966 J\.1GB • 4 'vheel drive, \\larren hubs, '70 VW Camper-Pop top. f'ng. lo mi's, Extras, ·n VS auromanc. dlr. Pnwer 'fiJ Holi.dny 4 Dr. I-IT, Pis. BANK re[lOssession, 1~ &. bells! fSAA928) SID
EXCELLENT cor---nITION new rubber. dlr. Take clear Fully Equlpped . NQXS99 fully equipd. 10,500 mi. conim'l plates, 50.000/5 yr 5t~ering. 1 l!).I PX!\ \\/iii take p/h, air cond .: ne~. pa int. Plymouth Barracuda 4 spd. deliven. $10 a week
$1250. eee 492-4139-1 car in trade or ~mall down. $l 5S5,00 Good cond. S.1100. 49-t-3320. warranty, $2975. Eves : . hr;ikl's; good tJ~s. \\i tll lake Xlnt c:ond, Bes! offer over payments. See at 1945
OPEL fTRB 3321 Sacrilice! Call •66 VW GHIA 548-3926. car in trade or ii·i][ fin;ince trade as part. 6~2-M64. S550. Call btof 5 P!\.f, 642-9511 Harbor Blvd, C.?.f.
I "' ===---~ pnvate party, Cal! S.J6·8736 -I ·.,.-,--,,-'---~= I ra .,..0.3100 or 49'J-i303 alt . '65 CHEVELLE !\fa!ibu SS or -l'.1-1-6811_ Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Aulot, New 980
to A.l\1. Yello11•, v.•1th Black landau v8 h dt 38 ~ . P/S ·~~~===~===\-----------------------------;
'69 YELLO\V w/ blk int top, new valve joti XNH6~1 all!O.r p,R/H~ ~~ ~·s / w :' '64 COUNTRY SQUIRE OPEL Kadelt 1965. $452. A.I
c:ond. Economy car, 35 mpg.
546-4355 Cl\f 7 am-10 pm.
PORSCHE
'66 912
Dark Green with Black inter-
10r, Al\-t/F!\f. 4 Spetd.
(N0S421) Real Nice!
BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGEN
Corona Coupe, Like new. 18711 BEACH BL. 842-4435 $1199 675-4819
Low mi. Sl650, 962-3190 I HUNTINGTON BEACH CHICK IVERSON 1 '·1=0~,~,~al~ib-u-, -.,,-,-,.~34~00~m~l'll, Station \Vagon, V8, Automatic: TRIUMPH dk grn w/la ndau. lull pwr dlr. PO\\'C'r Steer in i::
I •52 YW BUS VW & e1r. S28l'5. 67:>-:.323. fOTVllS~l !\lust SeU. Full
--,7-l_S_P_l_T-Fl_R_E_S_ SUNROOF S49·303t E'i. 66 "67 '57 CHEVY GDcONO I Pno, 1H5. Coll "'·1744
Now ON DISPLAY II nl I. I ., I . 1970 HARBOR BLVD. $400. 642.0611 A l\10DERN Cla~~ic. '70
a to tnc muue , 1mmac11-__ _'C~O~S~T~A:.,>~1~E;.sA~--l hlt'iSTS.;;Jtil~W.:ok'1
C 1 I · latP. ~ent Pngine NUV767 i\1UST Sell I h Ls Week '671 Cnrri, at1!o, air. all pil'r, ome n or l!I lest dn\'e! $799 WANTED Chevy 4 d Perfect Cond. Sfi~. Contact Commerc1al
FRITZ WARREN'S r. . Natt B11nk. Derek Locking,
SPORT CAR CENTER CHICK IVERSON I'lt pay top dollar for ~'Our !\lakl'.' Offer. 518--0816. 171 41 1127 ... 1310.
710 E l t S SA 547-0764 VOLKSWAGEN 1oday, Ca.11 '56 CHEVY Nomarl-&e Hot /--. ~--~~~t
Open da~ly 9~9: cio~rl Sunday YW and ask for Ron P1nchot, Rnd column. Clas~if1cahon 1 1~91 t f on.o hcustomll 4 PD/R .
°'9·3031 E>t. 66·67. 67J.-0900. 9j9. 6·15-112'1. I ... n 1nrc 11n1ce y. s. '69 !\1k 111 S · 1· bik l 9l'fl HARBOR BLVD. J'1 ~~~-"-~-~~= R/H. Polyi:;las 11re~. Best . pll lr~ conv., COSTA !11ESA .~ " 328.12 Valle Road lthr int. Jow mileage. Im-, I '69 VW BUG 67 Che~y Impala. RIH, 1 offer 962-.qa.13 after 5 p.m.
San Juan Capistrano maculate. Sl 29J firn1 . Estate '67 VW fsthk, 38,000 n11.. ZVC 708 e.1r,Een,::-ine_~lnt. $1600. 11;:, STN \Vgn-.-nrw ::iu!n
8a7-4S00 1493-4511/499·2261 I &alt-. 49s.29'i6 I eng, 1ntPr, body like ne"' $1599 ves Oiuy; 494~24~ tran~. rvn., greal, look~
S • •57 C GT I •. 70 GT 6 WHITE•' $1049. Rick l\lacnab. days e '&j Biscayne 4-dr VS, i:ood. Sljl), 6T'.r2S02 or
, pel!uster an:er11. I • . . . &12-8233: eve 675-8693 CHICK IVERSON I &h f t · •w Exceptional cond. Extremely ExceJlpnt conchtJOn. 1 , ! c ean, r · ac ory air. ,.,,,,.J. fi73-267R
r11.r,. Reb!r eng, blue $2950. • + • 494.5696 1 64 V\V Camper, pane~lcd. VW 8:l3-l79t. I -.,-,-F-O~R-D-LT_D_c~,-,..,,-Sq-u-i-...,·I
radial tires. Laguna Be11.ch XI ri 129~ • • Rood corm, make o f r . 54'}.3031 Ext li6 or 67 xlnt conrf. $~. h-14-6348.
w/black inl, continental 70 TRIUMPH GT-6 \\!hite RIH. Nu moTor. snow 11rt>S, I CHRYSLER lD pass st::i 11'3.,1!, Jn mi's,
4!M-46i2 • nt con . : . &16-47511. 1:170 HARBOR BLVD. IMPERIAL 1967 . *4!1..J-.'l696... COSTA l\lESA 'j9 FORD. S2SO or &51 orfer
r ·s.l PORSCHE-Restored, 1.68 GT,, ......,,...,. .. ,.; .... "''L'• 11964 VW Bug .. New seat I l\.1UST SELL! Ne\v 11ni;t1nr. good tires, · h bit ' "" .. v .... ,.~. ~.... ru ' cover~ """"" nres not a 2 d ha dt D k H 612 -, O Konis, c rn1 rims, re 1 overdrive. lAflC , lo nti. · .5''"" • VOLVO · r. r op. ar green RJ . -;J;3 .
tJ:ans, tiew 5-90 en~. Sl5SS. DJ936, &l&-2f.'.1S dent. SO.'iO. 962-0306. metallic finish With malch •. 64 FORD y~,~,00-,~V'"-s,....c41
M.1 /f:'ll. Beaultful. $125(). I '69 V\V Camper, 23.000 mi'~.1 ing lca1her. Fully equipped ~rired inust ~rll $400 . or
6i:r7747 I VOLKSWAGEN 1 01\•ner , S26:i0. 6i;).38G(I ci!! $2896 incl. Air Conditioning. pov.•. I bt'st oiler t;tt;..~7F..
'00 . Porsche 911-S Targa. • 4 pm & wknd~. 1970 VOLVO 14-1 SEDAN" er stee'"!ng, po1>o'er brakes, • '66 fORD_G_A_L/\X_"l_E_•-t
Si I VI' r. 5 . spd. mags, '70 VW BUG ** 1967 VAN •* RADIO. HEATER. J)O\\'e_r windows, ~\\·er seat, I .,_ f"1\CTORY AIR *
Blaupunkt rad to, S 7 2 SO.
1
Fct reb!t motor. '.\I/sell AUT0l\1ATIC, DEl\10 all to, trans., radio, hea t~r. SG,'j() • 5'l5--2!l92 546-8801 (L1ndal. 217 AGT 1mmed. S1500. 544-7543 ar1 5 •lS7! etc., etc. Priced for qu1ck 1 =~,.--,-
$1699 r;otlc. Only S1200. fVOY 7361. 19fl2 Forrl Galaxic 4 dr. '61 PORSCHE, Silver w/blk '69 V\\' Squareb3ck Stn "'·gn, ,lohnson I: Son 2626 Hi'lrbor serlan, r;1rlio. heater. pwr
int, 5-sf)(I, Al\I/Fl\I, c:hrm CHICK JVERSON 1tu10, 11695 Alt Ii PM: I NO\V 1:-.l STOCI\ Bl. ""•ta Mes~. c•n 5630 1 sir, brlcl;, Sl50. 5!~1393. wbls. $37:l0, 714t956-ll82 1 962-401'i Day~· GE 1-6535. 1971 142E • ....__. "'" VW . . 1967 Chry•l•r 300 -* 1963 FORD VAN-• 1962 PORSCHE Super 90 '63 V\V Bus camper w/rblt 4 SPEED &. AUT0~1ATIC,
Coupe. Sk1 & !uggagl' rack. 549.JOll Ext. 66 or 67 '65 ~ng. Radio, ether xtras.
1
164 SEDANS oonvt-1..o.aded. Red w/blk Xlnt cond, $595. 673.5625
SUOO. 5'1~1267. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. Aller S p.m. 642·1520 Oversea~ OeHvtry Spec. top. 40.000 mi. Pvt pty. Will ls.i7 FORD st11tton wagon
PO RSCHE 91 2 COSTA MESA .61 V\V Fastback. X 1 n t ti L • trade. $1500. 543-746.1 eves. • Cood cond. ~lake oUer.
Red \V /bl k int. Tuned exh. 1965 VW Bu&-1500 eng, ?>111ny cond ition. Original C\\'ncr eaJt. WJtA COMET 544-0489
; ohnn whl•. Tom 6T:l-2050. I ""'"'· "''' oUu. 646-3418 ll.000. c.i1, 494.11361. I . VOLVO JEEP
E
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61, ~•2 o• «• ~., * •67 C0,, 1ET WAGON * v .l-UIJO • • .,.......,.,.. • '64 1600, new paint & rubber,
Ro ET VERY CLEAN $775 '62 CAB L '66 V\V FAST'BACK ex:hanst, cam. whls, Joa.di 1900 Harbor C.?-I. &i&-9303 • 897-6'705 • '66 JEEP \Vagon,.er, 11tl
RebtJilt eng, 6,000 mi. $r,,O. of extras! .$800 548-2938. 1 -----'·-----·1-~~;_,;,:,,.,~:,.c=~-•1 •-It 2318
Blu,. 11•1th Bun;undy rntP.nor.
113lfll.01
BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGEN
S11n Ju::in rap1!trano
Sli -IS00/ 493-·l:l\ 11499· 2261
C NTINENTAL extras. ,, a.... o er.
897-<705 e '69 VW-Sharp. lhw mil". ' - - - -• 0 Ho!Moy, N.B. S<S..7831 '63 VW SQUARE BACK
1
11.19S. Coll 673-:mt •• W - - --1 .......... -.,.----:--,. .c.==~1-N.,cC:,..cc.oL~Nco--ozx 061 5'6-t120. ~ tHINK CONn . '62. «Ir, Xlnt ''""'· L 0
$499 •• ·70 VW-Lo m 11 e 5. 'VOLVO' tull po\\'er. clean color. Pvt
CHICK IVERSON I ""~"'· 11495. Call 67:l-227! 18 pty 1675· 6""""'-!967 4 d• Cootl"'""l·Shorp,
(It' ~5-4120. '66 COUPE, LE AT HER , lilt> blu,, w/wh r \rin,yl top.
VW vw FASTBACK '""' R<blt "fRIEOllNOER" AIR, PGWER. MUST SELt. All Xtrao: Xlnt Con<!. ]~70 HARBOR BLVD. ~ng. $600. 642--4000/~xt 11, I LA SU.iO. Zll: 592-:2418 968-5818.
ES lVM ••ACM IMWY, '" 9UICK CASH COSTA '1 A 9-5 A<k Jnr MoK,,odry 11!)3."66 • •11-• J9i0 PDP.SCHE 911S. 21.fnl =~~~=~~-~ ,,--.:,-===~'-== -
1\'11 Xlnt Mnil . r;i,1 Ill['{' 'iO V\\I BUS: SttU under • 'M KARMANN GHlA NEW·USEDaSERV. THROUGH A MERCURY
S650f1 ~9.)..4424 WBrranty. Xlnt Cond. S2950. f.spd , RA:h, Air. new paint. Ill ------... TPn;;ct;es.11. , '""· _'•i6-t528 Att6 p.m. 1835. o,..;. 646-2S98. .________.... DAILY PILOT
m.aas. ltathe.r int. nt. CUJt !'63 vw BUG \V/SUNROOf' '61 V\V. Gd tor dune buagy l '67 Volvo 2 Dr. f i ne WANT AD
paint. 26,<m orii mi's REBLT E~G. XLNT CON"D or transportation cir. condition. Am-rm. 2 spkn, 642•5678 6~2(}.13. AFT 8. !'>48·7848 673--2043. I stan lran1'. $1195. 64:>-.1771.
'68 ri10i'1TEGO MX, p/1, eir,
RI){, tUllo, vtnyl t~, good
NJnd!tlon A•lrini; t 19 9 5,
~lake lllfer ~776
16
PER MONTH
qMONTHS
$190
. DOWN PAYMENT S 190 •t lht1 totol dOW1! pGV'fl•nt ond $$4 16 1 h
ll'lcl11d ing tat, '71 llcen1• Ol'ld oU fino ... ~,· h • t ti lotol monthly paym1n1
'8 h "-f '"' c orgt11 01'1 approved crrtdit I mont I. """ erred ~Ym•nl prict It t 2789 9 , or
t horg11, tow11, '71 lict1ritt or if you priftr lo .6 includlno oM flno,.ct1
It only $2101 .8.5 /ndudl!lg aolt1t IOJt ,71 lk pay ~dih, tht fttll co1h ririct1
TfHloy, ' •nit.UT er l'eur PU.I•
AN NUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 1.5.95%
WE BELIEVE OUR DOWN PAYMENT AND TERMS ARE THE BEST
AVAILABLE. IF YOU CAN DO BETTER ••• SHOW USI
• •
).
I
•
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Thursday, Ja nuary 25, 1971
Here's your chance to take advanta9e of the hottest auto sale in Huntington Beach
in years! All old price ta9s have been burned. itThe boss is determined to move every
new and used car now in stock, and ' he's decided that red-hot pricin9 is the way
to get it done! Come in today. Drive in your present car. And let us show you
how you can save during this red-hot sale.
CHRYSLER'S ALL NEW CRICKET for '71
$
Ston dard (q11iprM1tf lnclwdft:
111iulo1, pawer fr ont dlK brakes.
rodlol pl., tiraa. h1difld11ol hont
b1Kk.t MOh, rock l ,1111011
1tfff'i119, coil l print 1111pet11lot1
1r1ta1n. A powarful heatl119 nd
flow ttlrough vet1tilcrtla11 1y1t.,,..
14 cubic foot tT111k with COii•
ceoled 5f>C11te tire & m1t11y, -ny
arilen. S..rlol 1:4141%1 •0 5775,,
St«k t 0005.
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
.BRAND NEW
IM·MEDIATE DELIVERY
2 door 1pon co1pe. Stolldfl!'d ect•f,.
-llf l11eh1dff K onomlcal 'cyllll4ef, J
tPffd co/111111 lflfft, be11Cb MGt, Yh1yl
l11t•rlor and all 1to11dotd fCM:tory 1ot.fy
~11lpme111 . .:tVL2tilET 17430 Stock •
118,. AH Prlttl Phil TIX lnod LI<"""· Ad•I, prlcn good '!!I 'O P.M., M ..... ty, Mir. ltt. Advt. ctn Slltlltcl M IN'itr .....
USED CAR CLEARANCE
'62 Chrysler
300
IPWX 975 1
s195
'66 Riviera
IRRK 8S4 )
ALL MU ST BE SOLD THIS WEEKEND
'64 Valiant '62 Dodge '56 De Soto
IOTJ 162 1 IGHN 4HI IGND 236 1
sgg
'66 Chevy '63 Mercury '67 Valiant
IRUG 6581 I FRK 057) IV,TL 818 1
s795
'62 Imperial
IBDK 302)
s295
'65 Plymouth
IYXR 03Sl
7