HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-03-01 - Orange Coast Pilot--"'-·
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DAILY PILOT
* * * 10' * * *
MONDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH l, 1971.
\IOL. 64. NO. JI, I l aCTICNIL a ,.AOaS
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Fire Crash
7
9 Arre sted
-. Ill· Harbor
Vice Raid s
A Newport Beach" contractor and eight
young wo~n were arrested on pro-
stitution charges Saturday night at two
Harbor Area motels after vice officers
investigated an alleged "dating service"
over the past three weeks.
The arrests came on a combined effort
of Newport Beach police and Orange
County Sheriff's deputies.
Held on charges of procuring is Henry w. Sprague, 52, of 64 Beacon Bay. The
~ight girls arrested on charges of con-
spiring to comrnir prostitution range In
age from 20 to 35.
Arrestin~ officers siege that Sprague
and the girls operated as part of Ex·
ecutive Escort Service In Irvine. It
asserledly offer_sd dates for
"sophisticated executives."
Charges for the dates, according lo
police allegatipns, were $100 per night.
The organization had been in business
for the past month, according to Newport
vice officer John Simon.
Police said Sprague had offices at
2192 Dupont St., Irvine. His business
cards read, "150 beautiful foxy girls
for your dating pleasure."
Simon claims records also produced
a !isl of regular clients, many of whose
names he said he recognized.
He said he and Sheriff's investigator
Les Lever have been investigating the
Executive Escort Service for the past
three weeks after receiving "a number
of" aDO{!lJQOUS complaints.
He said they evidently operated at
(S.. VICE, Paget ZI
Cout
• Weather • Don't let that ·nice warm-lookJng
sun fool you "rue.sday. There'll be
gusty winds keeptna: the tempera-
tures down to S6 along the Orange
Coast., with inland readings tabbed
at 64.
INSIDE t OD A 'l'
K II ro11 wo:i h~re OVf!'r tht
weektt1d., setting an !Lapsed
ti.me reco rd in his Kialoa If
· yacht in 1'1e \Vhltne11 Series
-race around Catalino. See Page
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SUCCUMBS AT 68
Judie Thurmond Cl1rke
Retired Judge
Thurmond Clarke ~
Succumbs at 68
Retired U.S. District Court Judge Thur-
mond Clarke of Corona del Mar, died
Sunday in Good Satntritan Hospital in
Los Angeles where he had been confined
for the past five weeks. He was 68.
Judge Clarke was a prominent
Southern California jurist for 38 years.
unUl his retirement last Sept. I as chief
U.S. judge or the Central California
District.
He was appointed to the federal bench
by Pi:.sid\ln~ Ilwigh< D. Eloenhower,
Sept. 1. 1955, an appointment that nar-
rowly passed the Senate Judiciary Com-
mittee.
Judge Clarke credited the efforlS of
,bis cousin,,Sen. Strom Thurmvnd (R·
South Carolina), for the a;ittee's Con-
firmation of the appoin nl, one of
two Republican judgesbl 1pproved that
year.
Judge Clarke was named chief judge
of the Central California District in 1966
and became the fir:it federal district
judge outside of Washington to ad·
minister the oath of office to 1 member
of the President's cabineL
Last July. Judge Clarke swore into
affice Labor Secretary ~ a m e 1 W.
Hodgson in ceremonies at the Wutern
White House iJI San Clemente.
He .also administered the oath af office
lb former Labor Secretary Georte P.
Schu1t.z: as directar at the (){flee af
nianagement and budgeL ·
In 1M4, Judge Clarke, I.hen a widower,
married Athalie Richardson Irvine,
mother jJf Mrs. Joan Irvine Smith, the
Jargt!tt · minority 8tockholder Jn the
Irvine Company. •
A naUve of Santa Paula. Judge Clarke
(llff CLARKE, P11• ZI '
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• . . II
Prosecutor Calls .Halse
• • •
Death
Bomb Rips
' €ajJtof's· ..
SenateW~g
WASHINGTON (AP) -An e~rly niorn·
ing bo!tlb blast, reportedly linked to
a protest against the U.S.-supported in·
vasion af Laos, ripped up an interior
secLion of the Senate wing af the Capitol
today causing extensive damage but no
injuries.
"This is apparently a polilicaJ born·
bing." said Senate Republican Leader
Hugh Scott af Pennsylvania. He said
the Senate Sergeant at Arm" Rebert
G. Dunphy, told him a letter had been
faund linked to the bombing i;ind referring
to U.S. operations in Laos.
Scott said a male cal)er who contacted
lhe Capital switchboa·rd ta give advance
warning of the blast also referred to
the Laotian invasion.
Capital police and FBI spokesmen,
however, would neither confirm nor deny
the link to antiwar protesters. ,,
Meanwhile, President Nixon issued a
statement through White H o u s e
spokesman Ronald L. Ziegler calling the
bombing "a shocking act af violence
that will outrage all Americans."
The blast pulverized a men's room
and damage d other rooms, but did not
touch the Senate chamber itseU.
Perhaps coincidentally, it came 17
years to the day after Puerto Rican
nationalists shot and wounded five con·
gressmen from the visitors' gallery of
the House of Representatives. It alset
caused the most extf;!nsive damage ta
the building aince the British set it
alire in 1814.
Scott said the effect of the bambing
will be unfortunate, both iii this country
and internationally.
"It's likely-to be exaagerated," he
said. .iThey won't realize that it's one
bomb in one washroom."
Scott alsa took the occasion lo crltlcite
federal judges in the District af Colum·
bia, accusing them of too much lcnency.
He said even if the person who placed
the bomb is arrested "my guess would
be lhey11 nev,. go to jail, not with
the type at appellate court we have
jn the District of Columbia."
P~lice, army and FBI Investigators
were seeking clues to the identity of
the male caller who warned lhe Capilol
. switchbaard: "The Capitol building will
blow up in 30 minutes."
Half an hoor later. at 1:32 ~.m. EST.
the bomb exploded. Capitol Police Chief
James Powell said one af his officers
wu within 200 [eet of the blut but
escaped injury despite window• bruking "rtp;ht O\ler his head.••
The blast gutted 1 men's room directly.
across from the Old ~nate Chamber.
blasted doors aft their hinges In severl.I
surrounding rooms, and blew aut wlnl
dows all the way out to the Senate 's
· front ' door -perhaps 125 feel.
Bricks. doors, lighting and other fix-
turea were piled hiJb In a cOrrtdor
(See CAPITOL, Page II
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Nears
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. ' UPI T"'-lllt9
lndicatirig he definitely Is not one of your straight-faced ecbtesiastical
leaders, Dr. Arttiur Michael Ramsey (right), England's Archbishop of
Canlerb"ury, breaks up during visit w~ ~wty·cpnsecrated Bishop of
Worcester, tbe Rev. Robin Woods. Subject is a cardinal' secret.
• -Hulse.'s Drug Addiction
Called 'Exa~gerated'
L By TOM BARLEY , !leneghan.told the Jury,
or 1111 DellJ' l"lllt 111H ~ • Lashing the 17·ye&r old defendant as
A hardhittin. prf!secutor today urged "grossly selfish, call()lls, lrre$ponsible
an Qrange CoUnty Superiar Court Jury and criminally impulsive," Heneg~an
to reject "grossly exaggerated" defense asked the jury to agree with him that the
accounts of Arthur Craig "Moose" milrder of Carlin was "plihried and
Hul$e's addiction ta drugs and convict premeditated'' and the defense had not
I.he youth af first degree murder. proved what they said wu Hulae 'i
Deputy Disbict Attorney Martin .J , diminished capacity. '
Heneghan· tald the panel af eight women Re reminded the jury that 111 four
and faur men In his 1inal argwnent psychiatrists that have testified in the
to ,give · the concluding 1tatemenb of Hulse trial havt agreed that the GarcWI
the defense as mud\ consideration a.s Grove youth was not psychotic.
-Hulse gave the plea of service station Hulse, J&. at '(he Ume af the murder.
attendant Jerry, Wayne Carlln last June can not be sentericed to death if the
1. jury convicts him. Such a verdict 'would
Carlin's cries ar "don't hit me In raise the likelihood that he may be
the head" were rewarded with a · ser1e.s comm itted to an lnslltuUon for a life
of blows delivered with the hatchet Hulse term as person In danger of addlc:Uon
c11rrled inta the Santa Ana gas station, to narcotics.
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Four
Costa Mesa
Badly Hun
By ARTJIUR R. VINSEL
Of fM DI/Ir l"lltt IJaff '
The de~at'h toll near e d tour
today Jn the aftermath of a. tragif p:i&ta
M'esa collision in which a fireman'• car
heading .to a fatal fire· collided with cne
carrying four teenagers ..
One . boy whose sister was· killed
outright remained Jn critical condlUon
at Hoag Memorial Hospit.a.I today wUb
brain injuries.
Dead following tbe related ~ps
are:
-Marie L. Rattey, 7.4, of 666 W. 19th
St., c:Osta Me.!!f.
Claire Arbuckle, 14.. af 2002 Maple
Sc. Costa Mesa .
Edward L. Hernandez, 19, or 2183 Na-
tional Ave .• Co!l~a ·Mesa.
Miss Arbuckle 's brother Paul, 17; cf
the same, address, -was listed by hospital
officials aS being if critical condition.
He remains in a cama, spokesmen
said, but has shown some slight Im·
provement.
The fourth teenager injured. Jn the.
grinding, beadon collisian near Estancia
High School was listed in fair canditian.
Paur R. Baldwin, 19, af Mira Loma,
ls also under treatment at H~g
Memorial ,Hospital.
Costa Mesa Fire-Department Battalion
Chief Ron Coleman, ·whose car wa.s
demolished . in. the · crash on Placentia
Avenue near Joaon Street, was listed
in good condition today. .
He was admitted to Costa Mesa
~Jemorial Hasp"ital today fa 11 o w i n g '
surgery an a fractured t~g.
"He's lucky ta be alive," remarked
a newspaper photographer who arrtve.d
Dn the see~ shortf,Y. .iter the mllisioo
gfiOl't.ly before midnJght. ·
"He's in pretty good spirits taday,
though," added a colleague.
Fellow fire investigators said today
they planned ta re-survey Mrs. Rattey'a
Bethel Towers apartment, where her
bedroom was gutted by the blaze.
TentativeJy blamed on smoking in bed,
the Ure caused addiUonaI minor damagt
due to waler seeping into the un it below.
The fire was the ttyrd reported at
the 18-story retirement t.ower. but also
the first fatal one.
A:i families scheduled fllneral servlcts
for Ule victims -scattered over the
roadway, resulting in the crash -
California Highway Pattol officers con-
. tiriued their investigation. "'
The CHP baodlJs probes in which
municipal police .,. fire · wiita are in-
volved.
All thr .. victims' rit .. wm be llandltd
by St. Joachim's Catholic Churth ii>
Cof;la Mesa. '
Rosary for Miss Arbuckl'e 1 n d
Hernandei will be tonight al 7 p.m.
•
In Baltz Mortuary Chapel. ·
Requiem mau for the &i~l ·w\11 be ./
Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. in the cb~
preceded by requiem mass (of Hernandes
(S.. TRAGEDY, Pop II
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J DAILY. PILOT S
Presideni
Faces Iowa
Protestors
w ASmNGTON (UPI) -Prtsldent
Nta:on's five-hour visit to the heart of
the farm belt today is the first chapter
of a new campaign to build state-by-state
support for his rtvenue sharing.
The President, who was scheduled to
depart at 9:30 ~a.m. (EST) for Des
Moines, Iowa, p~tel to re-tell hls
domestic legislative proposals to the
governors of four states and the Iowa
legislature, with particular emphasis on
how hi.s .plan to share more federal
money \l'ith the stales would speed up
rural development. .
But ~·hlle the trip was tinged with
an empb4!isJ>n farm and rul'.al ptoble~.._
the Pres1dent faced prote&ts from two
other segments of the populatioD ~
organized labor and peace group1.
Iowa labor unioii members and con..
structlon workers called ~lr forces
together at the Iowa capltol to decry
Nixon's decision to fl&)lt lnf\atlon by
'ng to force a downtrend in con-
ction induslry wages and prices. Last
k Nixon suspended a depression-era
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MOl'lday, March 1, 1971
UP I Ttltfi'lell
law which, required contractors in
federal and federally assisted projects
lQ pay going 'IJ&ge . rates -U5\1:1llY
union SCJ/e -to anyone_ they hired
to work on 1,uch projects.
ARROW INDICATES AREA OF EXPLOSION AT CAPITOL
The Bomb Was Pl1nttd in a Rest Room
AdmJrtiltntlcn economists said the
move WU lntended to put a damper
on tile construction industry wage-price
,,,;ral. which bu. been rlalng at almoat
twice the rate of the rest of the economy.
Peaee groups said they would gather
l() voice displeasure at U.S. involv.ement
in the current South Vietnamese invasion
of Laos.
The demonstrators drew a late-starting
recruit Sunday night when Bernadette
Devlin, Northern lreland'1 Rom a n
Catholic civil rights leader, sald, she
would joln the gathering. In Des Moines
for a college campus appearance, Miss
Devlin said she was thrilled when she
fotmd out "thls ls where he ls biding
out tomorrow."
·At lea!t six cabinet officers as well
as Mrs. Nixon were included in the
presidential party. In addition to the
remarks at the joint state legislative
session, the President's schedule called
for a meetin&' with the governors of
Iowa, Illinois, Missouri and Wisconsin
plus a background briefing for farm-
orientecl members of the news Media.
Tbe Iowa trip, to be followed by
another: one-day foray to Rochester. N.Y.
Friday, was the first of several trips
planned to .plug the Nixon leg!Jlative
layout, lncludlng his $16 blllion revenue
sharing proposal.
From Pqe I
TRAGEDY.-..
at 9:00 a.m., with both burials at Good
Shepherd Cemetery.
t Miss Arbuckle leaves her parent.s, Mr.
and Mrf. Francis Arbuckle, plus three
other brothers, Desmond, Martin and
Kevin and three si.Sters, Stella, Lorraine
and Darlene.
Hernandez leaves his partnls, Mr. and
Mrs. Louis Hernandez, brothers Michael
and Mark. a sbter Linda and a
grandmother, Mrs. Anna Kennedy, of
Wyoming.
Mrs. Rattey's rosary will be Tuesday
at 7 p.m. in Bell Broadway Mortuary,
with requiem mas,, Wednesday at 9 a.m.
in St. Joachim's Church.
Sile leaves a daughter, ?.trs. Madeline
Morrison, brothers Armand, Sylvil,
Honorus and Emile C.Ote, all of Canada,
five grandchildren and two great·
grandchildren.
OIAN•I COAST
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From Page I
CAPITOL BOMBING • ••
when newsmen were allowed a brief
inspection about six hours after the blast.
The men's room -open to the public
but generally only known about by people
working in the area -was a grey
hulk filled with 1iny pieces of plumbing
fixtures and grey plaster rubble. It was
almost impossible lo lell it had been
a rest room.
A red brick wall on one side of Uie
men's room was badly cracked and bulg·
in,g out into the corrkior. Plaster molding
on the corridor wall was blown away
and littered the floor along with glass
from broken windows.
Gold lace curtains were pushed out
against and sometimes through broken
windows all the way do1,1,·n to the ornatel y
painted committee and reception roonu
on the north end of the Senate chamber.
The front door, another 50 feet away,
was broken..
The Senate barber shop, across a small
hallway from the men's room, was badly
littered and mirrors and windows were
shattered but the barber chairs a n d
other heavy equipment were not mangled
or moved.
Tbe outside of,the hlstoric Old Senate
Chamber, which was used from 1800
to 1808 and was the scene of Presiden t
John Adams, inauguraUon, NGv. 22, 1800,
was not damaged. The ·door was closed
and newsmen did not look inside.
Capitol police said there had been
six bomb threats since Christmas. Chief
Powell said routine procedures we.re used
between l a.m. and 1:32 a.m. when
the blast· occurred.
Sen. George Aiken (R·VL), returned
from viewing the damage and said he
believes the warning phone call and
its early.morning timing bear the
"earmarks of organization." '
Engineers in the oUice of the architect
of the Capitol looked for possible struc·
tural Injury to the historic and ancient
west front
. Thomas Y. Clancy, supe rv is i ng
englneer of the Capitol. said through
a spokesman that it was too early to
determine the full extent of the dam age.
Windows were blasted out directly
above the huge wooden beams thal were
braced against the \Vest front several
)'ears ago, but there were no visible
Two Laguna Meri
Saved; Capsized
lrt Stormy Seas
Two Laguna Beach men. hidden by
darkness and driftlng in 40 knot winds,
spent an hour Saturday evening clinging
to their capsized boat CJf{ Hei~ler Park
8! a Coast Guard cutler and Laguna
Beach lifeguards attempted a dif ficult
rescue.
The men, finally plucked from the
choppy sea at about 7 p.m., "·ere iden·
tified as John Cox. of 177 Canyon Acres
Drive, and Jim Davidso n, of 2944 Dorn
C.Ourt. They were suffering from cul
hands and exposure to the cold v.•nter
following their ordeal, but 1,1,'ere in i,:ood
condition, lifeguards. said.
The incident occurrtd at about 6 p.m.
when the men's catamaran capsized
about a half mih! off· Heisler Park.
The Coast Guard was called. but before
the cutter and lifeguards could get to
the men ellnglng to thefr craft, the
strong winds b11d blown the boat south
to Woods C.Ove at the foot of Moss
Street.
Police and llftguards could see the
men from shore but the Coast Guard
rescue craft was unabfe to locate the
t~-o victims because of darkness. Using
a radio and a searchlight, lifeguards
"talked" the cutter to the capsized boa t
and the men were rescued. The
catamaran was also recovered un·
c;LamAe:ed.
cracks or any other damage in the
wall itself.
There were cracks, however. in the
inte rior section of another 1,1,·all some
distance from the \Vest front close lo
the blast area.
The Senate Chamber itseU, in a newer
sec.lion of Ole building, was not damaged.
\Vashington, D.C. Police, FBI and
Army bomb experts from nearby .Ft.
Mct~air searched the b.u i Id in g.
\VashingtDn police used Germ an
Shepherd dogs, and combed other parts
of the Capitol looking for any other
bombs.
The Capitol had closed to the public
at 5 p.m. EST Sunday. Officials said
all custodial personnel had lert the
building some hours before the explosion.
Only members, of the Capitol police force
were inside at the time.
* * * Nixon, Senators
Express Shock
Over Bombing
'WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix·
on and members of the Senate expressed
shoc k today over an eXiilosion that caus-
ed extensive damage to ·the Senate wing
of the Capitol building.
"A shocking act of violence tha t w i 11
outrage all Americans," was Nixon'!!
description in a statement telephoned
from aboard Air Force One as the
President flew to Des Moines. Iowa.
''The President feels that this act
of violence is totally deplorable and
will be condemned by all Americans,"
&aid press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler.
"The President feels that the Capitol
Is a building that belongs to all
Americans and symbolizes a form of
government that for 192 years has pro-
vided a means for peaceful change,"
Ziegler said.
Earlier. v.·hen he learned of the ex-
plosion, Nixon called FBI D.irector J.
Edgar lioover fro m the \Vh1te House
for an assessment of the damage.
On board the presidential plane, Nixon
called Senate Pi.fajority Leader Pi.like
Mansfi eld as senators expressed the ir
amazement and outrage over the ex-
plosion.
"This is apparently a political bomb-
. ing." said Repub lican Leader Hugh
Senti of Pennsylvania. \\"ho sai d a Senate
official had told him a letter,..had been
found linked to the explosion an d refer·
ring to U.S. operations in Laos.
Seott said reaction CJf the explosion
v.•111 bi unfortunate, both at home and
abroad. The effect, he said. is "likely
to be exaggerated . They won·t realize
that irs one bom b in one \vashroom."
Bui Scott said. •·we"re not going to
be terrified by these v.•ould be terrorists."
I-le 'aid the Capitol building once again
should be thrown open to the public.
"\\'e cannot be led by this riction
to any lor1n or repressive tactic," he
SN id.
ViCf.' President Spiro T. A1::new. Y.'hO
r.crvc~ as president of lhe Senate. called
the explosion .. a calcu lated act of outrage
v.•h1ch \\'111 be neither tolerated nor con·
doned by Americans v.·ho value our
svstem and its institutions."
... 'Sen. Robert Byrd. the. Democratic
\\'hip. attributed the bombing to
"saboteurs or a saboteur'' and said at
leas! certain areas of the Capitol should
be better policed. He did not elaborate.
"In recent months too many ptOple
ha\'e been lulled into believing these
violent acts have passed from the scene,''
Byrd sliid.
Sen. John L. tllcClellan f().Ark. ), v.·ho
conducted extensive Investigative hea r-
ings IA!t year Into rhe then-current wave
of political bombings, said he was not
greatly surp rised at the explosion 1t
the Capitol. r
I
Tribes s. V2e ts
10,000 Tro?ps Mount R enewed Laos Drit1e
SAIGON (UPI) -A CIA·tralned force
of 2.500 hill tribesmen in Laos hu moved
Into the Sepone area to block another
section oI the Ho Chi l.linh Trail • and
backstop a renewed drive into Laos
by tl\ousands of South Vieetnamese rein·
forcements, military sources said today.
With more than 10,000 Souti.._ Viet-
namese troops and hundreds air'! U.S.
helicopters preparing for a new drive
toward Sepone, Laotian Premier Prince
SouvaMa Phouma was disclosed to have
Winds Switch· Course;
Santa Anas Due Next
Northwesterly winds responsible for the desert areas.
weekeild's spectacular clean air views, Dramatic bill.owing clouds. ~ung. over
... d h. ~ h. h d cont;" ed distan t rp~t ms clearly v1S1ble 1n the 1n w 1p~... 1g ways an ,.,JJ · 1 ·r
h crisp, c ear . small crafl warnings along t e Orange
Coast will shift tonight to bring a mild
Santa Ana condition .Tuesday. Fro111 Page J
The National Weather' Service forecast
said the cool breezes that gusted \o
50 and 60 miles an hour in the mountains.
and deserts of Southern California should
shift to the northeast tonight. \Vinds
tomorrow will be localized to the canyons
norm ally affected by Santa Ana winds.
Temperatures will warm slightly with
the high tomorrow along the Orange
Qlast expected to reacp 63 after a low
tonight of 40. Inland pOrtions of Orange
County can expect overnight · 1ow~ near
38.
Orange County Harbor l?.!;P_!rtment
said weekend sailors piloting 12-foot craft
learned 15 to JO knot gusts are not
recommended for small craft. Indeed,
small craft warnings along the coast
continued into the fifth day today. as
the northern chill air continued to whip
up seas.
The winds are blamed for at least
one death. PCJJice said Barbara Crane,
41 , of Norco. died Saturday of injuries
received when her small car was blown
out of control near Riverside, and struck
a tree,
Wind-blown sand, chur ned by gusts
up to 60 miles an hour damaged
numerous automobiles on the high
deserts north of San Bernardino, Sunday.
Highway Patrol warnings for campers
and trailers lo stay off wind • blown
highways remained in effect through
today from Barstow to the coast.
\Veathermen noted the gusty winds
resulted from a second cold front follow-
ing on the heel! of the one experienced
late last week when the high northerly
winds began. The frontal system ex·
peeled to clear Southern California today • ·
brought snow showers to mountain and
Peter Ford , 20,
Accident Victirn,
Rites Tliursday
Funeral services for music student
Peter Ford, 20, 'who died Thursday in
Bakersfield, 11 days after his bicycle
v.·as hit by a car, will be held Tuesday
in Costa J\1esa.
Mr. Ford, who attended Cal State,
Bakersfield on a scholarship 1,1,·on at
his 1970 graduation from Orange Coast
College. succumbed due to complications
of his injuries.
Rites will be al 10:30 a.m. in Westcliff
Pi.lortuary Chapeel. 1,1,·ith local Baha'i lead-
er Leo Rovi n officiating and interment
following in El Toro Cemetery.
The 1968 Costa Mesa High School
graduate is survived by his mother,
l\1 rs. Elsie Ford , of 12560 Hasler St.,
f:arden Grove and sisters Mrs. ·..Ellanie
I1erry. Mrs. Roberta Bulling and Miss
Zan Ford.
He wa s struck by a pickup truck
on the Bakersfield campus Feb. 15, ac·
cording to Bakersfield police.
CLARKE ...
was the son of Judge and Mrs. Robert
. M. Clarke. He was appointed to the
municipal court In Los Angeles by Gov.
James Rolph in 1932.
In 1935 Gov. Frank Merriam elevated
him to ihe Superior Court, an office
to which he was elected in 1936. 1942,
1948 and 1954.
Among his most notable court rulings
wa s his 1953 decision that overturned
califomia 's law that barred aliens from
owning land.
Judge Clarke ruled the legislation was
aimed solely at persons of Japanese
ancestry and the legislation thus violated
due process and an equal protection
clause of the 14th amemdment. The
State Supreme Court later upheld his
ruling.
Judge Clarke answered critics v.·ho
claimed he was too lenient with the
defense that hls practices \'.'ere •·fair''.
rather than lenient.
He said that on the bench he believed
he had .. sincerely tried to temper just ice
with mercy" ever since be visited San
Quentin's death row.
Judge Clarke was graduated in 1920
fro.m Los Angeles High School where
he distinguished himself as an ou tstan-
ding athlete. He held the 440-yard dash
championships for the city, Southern
California and the state. One of his
track records stood until 1941.
'He attended St~nford University and
ear~ his law degree at US..C. He was
admitted to the state bar '111 1927 and
served as deputy district attorney for
Los Angeles County from 1927·29. In
1929, be became deputy city attorney
for Los Angeles. a post he held until
his Municipal Court appointment.
Judge ctarke retained his offices in
Los Angeles following his retirement to
the post of senior judge last Sept. I.
I-le v.·as a member of the Ame rican,
State and Los Angeles County bar
associations, wa s a past president of
the Stanford Club of Los Angeles and
a past president of the Los Angeles
High School Alumni Association. lie was
a member of Zeta Psi and Phi Delta
Phi fraternities.
Judge Clarke belonged to the Irvine
Coast Country Club, the NeW)Xlrt Harbor
Yacht Club, the Bohemian Club of San
l•'rancisco, Native Sons of the Golden
\Vest, Pasadena Parlor ; California Club,
Valley Hunt Club, Annandale Golf Club
and the Eldorado Country Club at Palm
Desert.
Since his retirement. he spent time f#. his farm in Virginia and his home
in the Cameo Shores section of Corona
de! Pi.1ar.
He is survive~ his \\'id ow, or -4333
Brighton Road , aughter. Pi.trs. Franceo;;
Clarke Raye o Rtlchester. N.Y .. : his
5tepdaughter, ~1rs. Smith of Middleburg,
Va : t\\'O sisters. J\1rs. Susan Clarke
Hoos and l\1rs. Harold Bacon. both of
Palo Alto. and seven grandchildren.
Fwteral arrangements are pend ing ;if.
the Turner Stevens Mortuary i n
Pasadena.
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NEED
CASH?
We Buy Almost
Anything .
' e Diamond·
• Jewelry • Stereoi.
appealed to UN Secretary General
Thant that he intervene with the great
po\\'ers to remove all foreign troops
from La os.
The heavy fighting or the past week
in Laos died down today but a South
Vietnamese infantry unit of 900 men
abandoned another fire support base in
the bogged down fight to cut the ~om·
muni sts' Ho Chi Minh Tran supply hnes,
front dispatches reported.
The abandoned base. called bolh Hotel
2 and Hong Ha II , lies six miles south
of Route 9 and nine miles west or
the border It was the third major sup-
port base · abandoned in Laos in the
face of heavy Communist press ure. Khe
Sanh dispatches said the unit fougJ:tt
through encirclement under U.S. air
power, carrying V.'ounded wi~h thei:n.
The South Vietnamese 1ncurs1on by
16,000 men has been stalled for two
weeks 16 miles inside the border. 1'he
main target or the drive. which began
Feb. 8. was Sepone, a hub of the Com·
munists' supply trail Tl miles inside
Laos where mountain passes open from
lhe north.
J\Ulitary sources in Saigon said the
La otian hill tribesmen trained, financed
and equipped by the Central Intelligence
Agency over the past years, h~d ~en
moved in to block the key road 1unct1on
of Muong Phine in Laos.
North-south route 23 an d east-west
route 9 -lhe axis of the South Viet·
namese drive into Laos -cross at
Pi.luong Phine. Muong Phine is about
10 air miles !ooth1,1,•est of Sepone, and
its capture would block a major sector
of the Ho Ch i Minh Trail. Qlmmunist
supplies were reported passing through
there after the South Vietnamese cut
mail;!. high\\'ay 914.
~· .
Red Tank Cre\vs
Beli eved Sealed
Inside Vehicles
LAOS (UPI) -The command er of
a South Vietnamese armored column
said Sun<iay he believed North Viet-
namese tanks crews were locked in their
vehicles and told to "~vin or die."
Col. Nguyen Trong Luat, commander
of the 17th Armored Regimen!, said
he sa\v more than 15 communist P1'76
tanks go up in names but did not
see a single man leave the tank5.
"Ir was remarkable. The tanks were
burning, but kept moving and firing,"
he said. •·Not one crewman got out
cf ·those tanks. I think their leaders
locked the tank doors before the battle."
Luat added that "I think we killed
more than 300 NVA (North Vnelnamesel
troops. We sent our troops lo search
the east side (of the battleground ) and
they counted many, many bodies.
"This is a new point. This I! the
first time we fought tanks against tank!'!
tn th e Vietnam war. l\oly men feel very
proud."
Fron• Page l
VICE ...
various motels In Ne\\'J)Ort Beach and
throughout the county and were available
almost on an "on-cau·• basis.
Simon alleges that three of the girl!
\\'el"t delivered to hi1n and two other
v.·ailing dctecl i\"es at the Corona del
Pi.far motel \\'bile Lever accompanied
him to the county hotel v:here agents
also had reserved individual rooms.
.Jhe wo men were identified as Beverly
Anne Poehlamn. 24, of Cyp ress: Barbara
Jean Savior, 25, of Santa Ana; Rena
She ree Aiidre\VS, 24. of \Vest .Hollywood;
Mary Agnes Nielson, 34, of Anaheim;
Dix ie Lee Mritriscino. 30, of Santa Ana :
Gwen Patrice Worthington, 22. of
Anaheim : l.AJree Isenberg, 35, of Anaheim
and Elaine Komara, 20, of Anaheim.
• Power Tools
• Eltctronlc
Equipment
• •
Guns
Sewin9
Machln11
Or What HOY• You.
J
WE BUY, SELL OR TRADE
• Come In and see what we
offer our customers. A new
and unusual experience in
in shop p in CJ enjoyment.
Where people in t,he know
save money every time they
buy. -
1002 ITEMS FOR Y9U TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST
Raciti's COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
' I
1838 NEWPORT BLVD· PHONE 646·7741
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Dnii!lngton Beaeh Today'• Final
VOL. 64, NO. 51, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH I, 1'71 •• TEN CENTS
Beach's Free Clini·c to Get Coun~y, Support
By ALAN D!RKIN
01 .... 0.llJ ,.llol ll•lt
The Orange County Health Department
ls· supporting the free health clinic that
will open soon in downtown Huntington
Beach.
The county's chief htalth officer, Dr.
John R. Philip, com mented this moming,
"\Ve see these free clinics as one nf
the good ways of combatting d~g and
venereal disease problems. The kids trust
lhem."
He said that the health department
would supply the clinic with antibiotics
for the treatment of infections. No equip-
ment or personnel would be provided.
• •
"We will give them the 1ntibiotics
and they will conform by reporting tht
John R. Philp ~dded.
The antibiotics would be for the treat.
ment of venereal diseases which have
more than doubled in the county in
the last two years:
"Gonorrhea is the. main problem ," he
said. "The only good thing about it
is that there is a good treatment for
it."
The clinic, which will be in a moderh
building next to the city's personneV
office at Fifth Street and Olive Avenu~
is gaining support at community level,
too. ·
I 0
Barbor Arrests
9 Held . ·in Vice
Raids at Motels
A Newport Beach contractor and eight
young women were arrested. on pro-
stitution charges Saturday night at two
Harbor Area motels after vice officers
Investigated an alleged )'dating service"
over the past thret weeks.
The arreSts came on a combined effort
DAILY P'1LOT 11111 P'lletto
SUCCUM!S AT 68
Judge Thurmond Clarke
of Newport Beach police and Orange
County Sheriff's deputies.
Held en· cb'arges of procuring is Henry
W. Sprague, U, of M Beacon Bay. The
tight &irJs arrested on cbarees of con·
spLring to commit pTOltitution range m·
age from 20 to 35.
Arresting officers alledge that Sprague
and the girls operated as part of Ex·
ecutive Escort 'Service in Irvine. It
assertedly offered dates for
"sophisticated executives ...
Charges for the dates, accordiiig tc
police allegations, were $100 per night. ,
The crganization had been In business
for the past month. accordlng to Newport
vice cfficer John Simon.
Police said Sprague had cffices at
2192 Dupont St., Irvine. His business
cards read, "150 beautiful foxy ~irls
for your dating pl easure.''
Simon claims records also prcduced ·
a list or regular clients , many of whose
names be said he recognized.
He said he and Sheriff's investigator.
Les Lever have been investiga ting the
Executive Escort Service for the past
three weeks after receiving "a number
of" anonymous complaints. ·
He said they evidently operated at
varicus moteb: in Newport Beach and
throughout the county and were available
almost on an "qn-call '' basis.
Simon all eges that three of the girls
were delivered to him and two oth er
waiting detectives at the Corona del
Mar motel While Lever accompanied
him to the county betel where agents
also had reserved individual rooms .
The women were Identified as Beverly
Anne Poehlamn. 24, of Cypress; Barbara
Jean· Baylor, 25, of Santa Ana : Rena
Sheree Andrews, 24, of West Hollywood;
t ·Mary Agnes Nielson, 34, cf Anaheim ;
Dixie Lee Matriscino, 30, of Santa Ana:
Gwen Patrice Worthington. 22. of
Anaheim; Loree lsenbe.rg, 35, of Anaheim
and Elaine Komara, 20, of Anaheim.
,
Police Cbief Earle Robl!aille bu been
assured by its sponsors -volunteers
who run the Huntington Beach Help
Line phone counseling StU"Vice -that
It will be run professionally anci is back-
ing the project.
Robert Terry, head of the Downtown
Property Owners Association, also is
supporting it. ·
"These are sincere people who wish
to run the clinic on a profeSsional basis
and I think they should be givc11 a
chance," he commented,
And Mrs. Ora Brimer, who organized
a petition against the proposed cllnlC
six months ago when , It was r-.. oonced
• om
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that It would .open on Main Street. said
ahe no longer b in cpposition.
Mrs. Brimer, who owns lhe Huntington
Beach Art Gallery on Main Street, said,
"If Chief Robitaille thinks they deserve
a chance, then I'll go along with it.
1 respect his judgment."
What made believeN of Chief Robitaille
and Terry was a presentation las~ week ·
by Dr. Ralph Sher, and Mrs. Hannah
Alekoumbldes, founders cf Help Line.
They explained that a full range of
medical servi ces will be offered ~
prenatal care, baby care. dental care,
pregnancy tests -in addition to drug
abuse coua.seling and venereal disease
treatment.
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II will be .open 1even days a week
l'.rom about 3 p.m. ·to 10 p.m.
•·But it will be run just like any
medicaJ clinic," Dr. Sher .said. ''When
people come Jn they will be given an
appointm~nt and told to return at ·.that
time -we.. won't have people hanging
around."
Dr. Sher also pointed out that all
persons receiving treatment will be oblig-
ed le see a staff counselor.
• Target for opening the clinic ls early
April before the Easter vacaticn. A one-
yea r lease en the buHdlng has been
signed.
About 40 doctors, two dentis~s and
........... ' . .v
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30 counselors have volunteered to donate
their time to the clinic. Commwtity dona-
tions will be needed for the ·rent and
already several servk• Glubs have
agreed to make donations.
Others wishing to donate are asked
lo call Mrs, .Alelwwnbides at 897-3833,
Dr. Sher at 842-4401 , or William Osborne.
a !amilY counSe!or who will be the clinic
direetor, at 84:7-7188.
o;You can't really tell with thue clinics
-some work well, otben dOn't." Chie.f
Robitaille said. "It depends who cperates
them -the kids or professional pecple.
Professionals seem to be be.hind this
one."
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Senate W.ing·
Damaged
By Blast
WASHINGTON' {AP) -An early morn-.
tn& bomb blast, reportedly linttd to
a pretest J!gainst the U.S.-supported in·
vasion of Laos, ripped up an interior
aection cf the Senate wing of tbe Capitol
today causin& exten5ive damap but no
injuries.
''Thi,t ia -appatently a polilicaH>om•
~.-" said Senate Republican Leader
Hugh Scott ot Pennsylvania. He said
the Senate Sergeant at Arms, Robert
G. Dunphy, told him a letter had been
found linked tc the bombing and referrina:
to U.S. operations in Laos.
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Scott said a male caller who contacted
tbe Capitcl switchb<iard ·to give advance
warning of the bla.St a!S<I referred to
the Laotian invasion.
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POLICE WALK THROUGH WRECKAGE .Of ts'ARBER SHOP IN THE 'NATION'S CAPITOL
No Injuries Reported Aft1~ Pre-daw.n Blast; Authorities S1y Damage Extensive
"
Capitol police and FBI spokesmen,
hcwe ver, would neither confirm nor deny
the link to antiwar prclesters .
Meanwhile, President Nixon issued a
statement through White H o u s e
spokesman Rcnald L. Ziegler calling the
bombing "a shocking act of viclence
that will outrage all Americans."
6oat, 6· ~hoard,. Missing . -
Haystack Bl.aze
•
Burns l5 Hours
The blast pulverized a men's room..
and damaged other rooms. but did not
touch tbe Senate chamber il~elf.
Perhaps coincidentally, it came 17
years to the day after Puertc Rican
naUonalists sbot and wcunded five ccn·
gressmen from the visitcrs' gallery or
the House of Representatives. It also
caused the most extensive damage le
the building since the British aet it
afire in 1814.
On · Way tel Sunset Beach .
In H untingwn
A Coast Guard cutter ind tWo
helicopters were out searching this mon1·
ing for a cabin cruiser wilh six aboard
missing in rough seas on a trip frorri
Cat.a.Jina Island to Sunset Beach.
The 82-foot Point Hobard was out in
eight to lG-foot seas with 25-30 knot
winds in the search for the ~foot cruiser
Toad II. Two helicopters are also aiding
the searCh ranging from Oceanside to
Point Fermio.
Children pliiying with matches ap-..... Scott said the effect of the bombing
boat bad not return,ed. parently tg~lted a haystack fire in Hun-will !>e unfo~tunate, both in this ccuntry
· The boat · is believed f.(t-gine tJngton. Beach that burned 15 hours -and 1nternauonally.
difficulties. Mrs. Eckers to! e Coast from 3:30 p.m. Sunday until 6:30 a.m. "It's likely to be exaggerated.~ he
Guar.d that three other , per . ns who . tcday. ·1 ' . said. ''.The y won't reali.~e that it's fine
were. oo boar~ w.t\en the crut r went · Flreme'n salit· the· blaze made ashes bomb in one washroom. . ' ...
on the fishing · trip .tp Avalon turned• ·Or .. .f,OOO bales ·of hay worth $20,000. Scott ~!so took the occ.as1~n to cr1t1c1ze
by plane to Lang Beach becaus of the :The · hay was stacked at Ed's Dairy t~deral Ju~ges ln the D1stnct of Colum·
engl11e difficulties. A young bay, J~eph Hell Avenue and Bolsa Chica Road. ' b1a, acc~mg th~m of too much lenency.
Eckers was afnong those who returned ''We covered another haystack with He said even tf the person whc placed by pla~. the bomb is arre~t~d "my guess wculd
All these on board the auiser are tarps and saved fl5.ooo worth o( hay," be they'll never go to jail, not wit h
belleved to be from El Monte. Listed Division Chief Doug Splcard aald today. tbe type of appeUate court we have
as missing art John Eckers, 36, Frank He said juveniles with matches and in the District of Co lumbia."
Eckers. 52, Greg Eckers, 18, Dennis cigarettes were seen running from the Police, army and FBI Investigators
Montgomery, 20, Paul Wedde, 24 and haystack jwt before the blar.e erupted were seeking clues tc the identity of
-~-~-~ ~ ~----b~ "But we don't know if It was deliberate switchboard : "The Capitol building will
or an accident" fSee CAPITOL, Page %)
Retirtd Judge
Thurmond Clarke
Succumbs at 68 ,
Retired U.S. Dislrict Court Judge Thur·
mond Clarke-. ·or Corona de1 Mar, died
Sunday in Good Samaritan Hospital in
Los Angeles where he had been cottlined
for the past five week!. He was 68.
The beat was due back at Sunset
Beach marina at 3 p.m. Sunday. Mrs.
Gayle Eckers, the wife of the skipper
John Eckers, called the r.oast Guard
\33 p.m. Sunday to report that the
Mesa Fire· Tragedy Toll 3 Three engines, two trucka and a tariker
rushed to the fire when it was first
reported . After the . lnillal blaze ~was
controll~yone ensine company WU Jeft
overnlgnno ·watch IC.
Orange Coast
Judge Clarke was a prominent
Southern CalUornia jurist for 38 years.
until his reti rement last Sept. J ... ;is chief
U.S. Judge of the Centra l California
District.
He was appointed Lo the federal bench
by Pres1dent Dwight D. Eisenhower,
Sept. J. 1955. an appointment that nar·
rowly passed the Senate Judiciary Com·
mitlee.
Judge Clarke credited the efforts of
his cousin , Sen. Strom Thurll'Kind <R·
South Ciirolina ), for the committee's con-
firmallon of the appointment, one of
two Republican judgeships approved that
year.
Judge Clarke was named chief judge
or the Central California District in 1966
and became the first federal district
judge outside of Washington to ad-
minister the ocf1h of office to a member
of the President's cabinet.
Last July, Judge Clarke swore into
office Labor Secretary James W.
llodgson in ceremonies at the Western
White !louse in San Clemente.
He also administered the oath of office
(See CLARKE, Page 2)
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Girl Victim's Brother • in Coma; Fireman Injured
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 ffMi Diiiy P'l1tl Stiff
The death toll neared four
today In the aftermath of a tragic "Costa
1.1esa collision in which i fireman 's car
heading to .a fatal fire co!Udtd with cne
carrying foor teenagers.
One boy whcse sister was killed
outright remained In critical ccnditlon
at Hoag Memofial Hospital today with
brain injuries.
Dead 1cllowing the related mishlps
are:
Marie L. Ra ttey, 74, (If 66' W, 19th
St., Costa Mesa.
Claire Arbuckle: 14., of 2002 Maple
SI .. Cosla Mesa. J:
Edward L. Hernan ez. lt, of 2183 Na-
tional Ave .• Costa Mesa.
Miss Arbuckle's brolher Paul, 17. of
the same, 1ddress, was listed by hoaplt•l
flfflclals as being In critical condition.
He remains ln ti coma, •Pokesmen
slid, but has show n some slight Im-
• ' •
provement.
The fourth teenager injured in the
grinding, headon collision near Estancia
Hlgh School was listed in fair condition.
Paul R. Baldwin. 19, of Mira L-Oma,
is also under treatment at Hoag
Memorial Hospital .
Costa Mesa Fire Department Battalion.
Chief Ron Coleman, wbose car .,as
demolished in the crash on PlacenUa
Avenue near Jcann Street, wu listed
·In-good condition today.
He was admitted to C.0,,ta Mesa
Memorial Hospital tod ay I al Io w I n &
surgery on •fractured leg.
"He's lucky to be alive,'' remarked
1 newspaper photographer who arrived
on the scene shortly after the collision
lhorUy belore midnight.
"He's in prelty good splrlt.s today,
though," added a coll~gue.
Fellow fire lnvesUgatqr1 sald to.Ill
they planned to re-surver Mrt itattey • .
Bethel Towers apartment. wbera htr
1
be~oom was gutted by the blaze.
Tentatively blamed on smoking in bed,
the fire caused additional minor damage
due to water seeping Jntc the unit below.
Tht fire was the third repo at
the lktory retirement towe r, b also
the first falll one.
AA fam!Ue1 scheduled f a services
for the vlcUms -ICl.Uer over tht
·roadway, reaultlnt in the'-crash -
California Hiahway Patioh.orocen coo-:
Unued their irivestlgation.
The CHP handles probes ln which
municipal pollce or fire units are in·
volved.
All' \Jlrot victims' rites will be h•ndled
by St. Joachim's Ctthollc· Owrob In
Coala Mesa. • :
Rotary for Miss Arbucklt 1 n d
llerpandcr will be tCnl&ht at r p.m.
tn Ball1 Mort'J~ ry Ct.~~cl.
t
'Mle last embers were extinguished
at 6:30 this morning, Chle' Spicard said.
Spicard said hay fires are near!Y im·
possible to put out. ·
"Adding water just makes It 1molder
longer, because It wlll burn fottver inside
th<>.!ie bales." he explained. "So we let
it burn the bulk down until we can
get at better."
A few fences were scorched, but
nothing elJe was damaged-. and there
were no Injuries becaust o fthe tlre,
Spicatd aalcl.
Speaker ·Sets Limit
·WASHINGTON (UPll ~ House
Speaker Carl Albtrt, 62, says he ~ill
retire at age 70, but be does not fetl
that .should nectSSarily be the retirement
age for any other member ol congress.
"The Job of spea ker 11 difficult and
I don't want to carry on the job when
I get old," Albert 18id' Sunday) ''f li)mk
the last twO • iJ)Ukers 'were able to
do ll. ev~n to 80, but different people
are constituted dlflerenlly."
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Weather
Don't let that nice warm-looking
sun fool you Tuesday. There'll be
gusty winds keeping the temper.II·
tures down to 56 along the Orange
Coast. with inland readings tabbed
at 64. ,.
INSmE TODAY
Kilroy UICI here over the
weeklnd. setting an · elopstd
· tiJM record in .his, KiQloa ll
L#(K'ht in the \Vhitl'ltJI Series
race a.round Coklina. See Page s.
l lrtlot
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C1Tlltr11l1
tti.<•1111 u.
ClmtflM C-lcf
Cm1W0111
DM!ll Mtlkft
01-Clf IOlt.111 ,. ...
l111trl1ln1M11t
P1n1111:1 M1ni\nff
" • " • ..,.
" " " " • " ""' "
A1111 LAllllltr1 \t Mlvln l•
M1tllnll """ ~.s 0!"11191 CMllll'f 11
SYl•ll l'tortW 19 IMm t)•l4
119(11 M.lrl .. lt ICloU
T111V1t1111 11 Tlll1ten ,II' 11
W11111tr • W91fttfl't Mtwtl IJ.lf
Wtrtcl M.W. «'.
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.. I. DAILY PILOl H lilondl)', MM'h l, 1971
T"---...----...-.--------..-.--.-.·1 (
From P .. e J
,.,•'.to ·1 .,
l f. _1.~ __
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· The Queen's M~ving Day
Snarls Traffic on Shore
By ALMON LOCKABEf
D1Ur 1'1111 hllfal •flttr
IN THE MERCllM'T J\.farine it's called "moving !hip."
Jt means moving the ship from one dock or berth to another for the pur-
pose of loading or unloading cargo, fueling, elc.
No big thing.
Usually a skeleton crew and the. htlp of a couple of tugs.
On Saturday I started to Terminal Ialand to O?Vtr the start of_ Los
' Angele.s Y1cht Club's Midwinter Catalina Island race in-
volving some 57 yacht&.
No big thing.
The start of. one yacht race looks about the same as
another. On Long Beach's Ocean Boulevard 1 noti~ that
traffic WJ.S heavier and slower than usual for that time of
day. By 11 o'clock -scheduled time for the start of the
yacht race -1 was no farther toward Terminal Island
than the Long Buch end of the new bridge.
TOO LATE. I'd missed the start.
J made an illegal u.turn and started back toward the Pacific Coast Club
to try and }lustle a game of aquaah. Jn the PC parking lot J looked out across the harbor toward Pier J.
S9methlng new had been added. There was the Queen Mary. Black hull, white superstructure, th ree
canted orange stacka. . , THEN 1 remembered. Thi! was "moving ship ' day for the_ Queen J\.1ary.
Hundreds of small crafts cut wakes in the barber as they circled the new
borne of the ''Queen."
A mJddle.a&ed woman walked acros~ the parking lot and stopped to
look at Pkt J.
"Jm't that beautiful?" she asked in awe.
.. Yes ma'am " I said aloud. ' . To myaelf I thought: "Enjoy it. It'1 costing you.'
Hundreds of persons lined the shQre to· gaze at the Queen hfary in her
ntW and final berth. Traffic on Ocean BouJevard was still at a crawl as motor·
ists gaped.
SUDDENLY I had a mental picture of the gnarled old Limey AB (able-
bodied -Haman) who crawled through a batch on the foredeck of the Queen
Mary on the day &he arrived at Long Beach. He blinked at the thousands of
horn-tooting, bell·rlnging small craft that swarmed around the Queen ~lary,
hampering her every maneuver.
"Otee-sus," he growled. "All dat fuss for dis old heap 01 rust?"
••Amen," J breathed as I headed for the locker room.
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Mesa Teen Abducted,
Gets Ride to Valley
A teen.aged snack bar employe at the
CO.ta Meu Goll aod Cowitry Club !Did
police Sunday she wu kJdnaped and
tattn for e five-mile rlde, .before ht!r
drlnl<-dutchllli abcluclor got out In FOWi·
lain Valley.
He wu dropped oU at a service station ·
Valley's Council .
Braced for Weed
Abatement Fight
Fountain Valley City Councilmen will
tackle a seedy problem Tuesday night
-weeds and the protesta from people
who bad to pay to kill the weeds.
It's time for the semi-annual weed
abatement public hearings. Every si.J
m9nlhs the city sends weed tlillng crews
out to clear property which hu been
declared a nuisance.
Property owners who haven't done the
job themselves are the n charged for
the city's work, but allowed to protest
U they feel the charge wu ·unreasonable
or unnecessary.
The wee~atemerlt program l! one ol two .pub arings aet for Tuesday'•
8 p.m. co session.
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Cl...wtM A'"'"'" '41•1671
-with 'lbll goU bag and clubs -an
account ·corrober1tea for police by the
attendant on duty.
An&ela'"'-Rosati, 17, of Costa Mt11,
was slap~et during the incident
but not hann!d. ·
Inveltigatorf tentatively blamed the
abduction on a drunken joke by three
duffers, but the principal auspect ' -
on whom they have a good lead -
may not find Jt ao funny.
He called a friend from a pay phone
about 6 p.m. and the long distance
record was given to police.
Miss Rosati said ahe had just gotten
Into ber car al 5:10 p.m., after the
snack bar at 1701 Goll Course Drive
closed.
Suddenly, she said, a man waved at
her to stop so she did . at which time
he and two jolly companions began
flirting.
She said the prime SUlpecl is a latln
man John. while the second was fat,
never addressed by name, and the third
was a 30ish goller named Art.
Breakitig Vp ..
CLARKE ...
' to former X..bor Sectltary George P.
Schultz u dlttttor of the office of
management and bud&eL
Jn 1M4, Judie Clarke, then a widower,
married Athalle Rlchardaon Irvine,
mother of Mn. Joan Irvine Smltb, the
largeat mlnorlly 11Dckholder In tho
lrvlnt Company.
A naUve of Santa Paula, Ju<fa:e Clarke
was the !!OD of Judge and Mrs. Robert
M, Clarke, He was appointed to the
municipal court in Los Angeles by Gov.
James Rolph in 1932.
Jn 1935, Gov. Frank Merriam.elevated
him to the Superior Court. an office
to which he .was elected in 1936, 1942,
1948 and 1954.
Among his most notable court rulin.:s
was his 1953 dicision tha t overturned_,
California's Jaw that barred aliens from
owning land.
Judge Clarke-ruled the legislation was
aimed solely at persons of Japanese
ancestry and the legislation thus violated
due process and an equal protection
clause of the 14th amemdment. The
State Supreme Court later upheld his
ruling.
Judge Clarke answered critics who
claimed he was too lenient with the
defense that his practices were "fair"
rather than lenient. "
He said that on "the bench he believed
he had "sincerely tried to temper justice
with mercy" ever since he vlsited San
Quentin's death row.
Judge Clarke was graduated in 1920
from l..os Angeles High School where
he disting uished himself as an outstan-
ding athlete. He held the 440-yard dash
championships for the city. Southern
California and the state. One of his
track records stood until 1941.
He attended Stanford Universi ty and
earned his la w degree at USC. He was
admitted to the state bar in 1927 and
.. served as deputy district attorney for
Los Angeles County from 1927-29. In
1929. he became deputy city attorney
for Los Angeles, a post he held until
his Municipal Court appointment.
Judge Clar ke retained his offices in
Los Angeles following his retirement to
the post of senior judge last Sepl L
He was a member of the American,
State and Los Angeles County bar
associations, was a past president of
the Stanford Club of Los Angeles an d
a past president of the Los. Angeles
High il!Jlllbl Alumni Association. He was
a member of Zeta Psi and Phi Delta
Phi fraternities.
Judge Clarke belonged to the Irvine ·
Coast Collntry ·Club , the Newport Harbor
Yacht Club, the Bohemian Clu b of San
Francisco~ Native Sons or the Golden
West, Pasadena Parlor; California Club.
Valley Hunt Club, Annanda le Golf Club ·
and lhe Eldorado Country Club at Palm
Desert •
Since hi! retirement, he spent time
al his farm in Vlrginia and his home
in the Cameo Shores section of Corona
de! Mar.
2 Bandits Rob
Valley Market
Two bandits armed with a pistol closed
a small Fountain Valley market six
minutes early Sunday night, then took
$400 for their work.
Police said the bandits walked in the
Stop and Go Market on Magnolia Street
and Garfield Avenue at 10:54 p.m .• fl ash-
ed a small pistol, and ordered three
employes and one customer to stand
in the store room.
The bandits then cleaned out credit
ca rds and cash from the employes
and customer and rang out the day's
total on the cash register.
Both bandits then shoved the f&Ur
victims into the sto re cooling room and
told the m to wait here 10 minutes.
No one was injured during the robbery,
police said.
Ufll Tt!Hl'lttl
Indicating he definittily is not one of your straight·faced ecclesiastical
leaders, Dr. Arthur Michael Ramsey (right), England's Archbishop ot
Canterbury, breaks up during visi t '"ith ne'\'IY consecrated Bishop or
Worcester, the Rev. Robin Woods. Subject is a cardinal secre t.
'
•
U,.I Tll~ll ARROW INDICATES AREA OF EXPLOSION AT CAPITOL
Tht Bomb Wis Pl1nt1d in a Rest Room
From Page 1
CAPITOL BOMBI NG .. :
blow up in 30 minutes."
Hall an hour later, at 1 :32· a.m. EST,
the bomb exploded. Capitol Police Chief
James Powell 11ald one ·or his officers
was within 200 feet • of the blast but
escaped injury despite windo~s breaking
"right over his head.''
The blast gutted a men's room directly
across fro m the Old Senate Chamber,
blasted doors off their hinges in several
surrounding rooms, and blew out v.·in-
dows all the way out to the Senate's
front doqr .-perhaps 125 feet.
Bricks, doors, lighting and other fix-
tures were piled high in a corridor
when newsmen were allowed a brie.f
inspection about siJ. hours after the blast.
The men's room -open to the public
but generally only known about by people
working in the area -was a grey
hulk filled with tiny pieces or plumbing
fixtures and grey plaster rubble. It was
almost Impossible to tell it had been
a rest room.
A red brick wall on one side of the
men's room was badly cracked and bulg-
ing out into the C(lrridor. Plaster molding
on the corridor wall was blown away
and littered the fl oor along with glass
fro m broken windows.
Gold lace curtains were pushed ou't
against and someti mes through· broken
windows all the way down to the ornately
painted committee and reception rooms
on the north end of the Senate chamber.
The front door, another 50 feet a\vay,
was broken.
The Senate barber shop , across a small
Environ1nent Series
Set a t Golden Wes t
A four.week series to give a laymen
a grasp of local and world environmental
problems will be presented by Golden
West Evening Col!ege the first · four
Tuesdays in March, beginning this week.
The series, "Man and Environment."
will begin at '1:30 p.m. Tuesday in the
college cenler. It will be ope n to the
pu blic al no charge.
NEED
.CASH?
hallway from the men's room, was badly
littered and mirrors and Windows \Vere
shattered but the barber chairs a n d
other heavy equipment were not mangled
or moved.
The outside of the historic Old Senate
Chamber, which was used from 1800
to 1808 and was the scene of President
John .'\.dams, inauguration, Nov. 22, 1800,
\\'as not damaged. The door '"'SS closed
and newsmen did not look inside.
Capitol police said there had been . . six bomb threats since Cijristmas. Chief
Powell said routine procedutes were user.I
between 1 a.m. and 1:32 a.m. when
the blast occurred.
Sen, George Aiken (R·Vt.), returned
from viewing the da mage and said be
believes the warning phone call and
its early-morning timing bear tbe
"e"armarki ~r 'Organization."
EDJ{ineers in the office of the architect
of the Capitol look"ed for possible struc-
tura l injury to the historic and ancient
west front.
Thomas Y. Clancy, s uper v Is.in g
engi neer of the Capitol, said through
a spokesman that it was too early to
determine the full extent of the damage.
Windov.·s were blasted out directly
above the huge wooden beams that were
braced against the West front several
years ago, but there were no visible
cracks or any other damage in the
\vall itself.
There \\'ere cracks, however. In the
interior section of anothe\ wall some
distance from the West front close to
the blast area.
The Senate Chamber itself, In a newer
section of the building, \\.'as not damaged.
Washington, D.C. Police, FBI and
Army bomb experts from nearby Ft.
f\lcI~air searched the b u i Id in g.
Washington police us>O G ~r m a n
Shepherd dogs, and combed other part.s
of the Capitol looking for any othe r
bombs.
The Capitol had closed to the public
at 5 p.m. EST Sunday. Officials said
all custodial personnel had left the
building some hours before the explosion.
Only members of the Capitol police force
were inside at the time.
We Buy Almost
Anythin9
e Diamond-/
• Jewelry e StertoJ
,
Explosion
Irks Nixon ,
. \ .
Se11ators
•
"" WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix·
on and members of the Senate expre!aed
shock today over an explosion that ca_us·
ed extensive damage to the Senate \VJOg
of the Capitol building.
•rK shocking act of violence that Yi 11 I
cutrage all A'mericans. ·• was Nuon'~
description in a statement telephoned
from aboard Air Force One as the
President flew to Des f\1oines. Iowa.
'"The President feels that this act
of violence is totally deplorable and
,1·ill be condemned by atl Americans,''
said press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler.
"The President feels that the Capitol
Is a building that belongs to all
Americans and symbolizes a form of
·government that for 192 years bas pre>
vided a means for peaceful change.··
Ziegler said.
Earlier when he learned of the ex·
plosion Nixon called FBI Director J.
Edgar ' Hoover from the \Yhile House
for an a~essment of the damage.
On board the presidentia l plane, Nixon
called Senate Majority Leader Mike
Mansfield as 'senators expressed their
amaze ment and outrage over the ex·
plosion. ~· ~
"This is apparently a political bomb-
ing " said Republican Leader H u i h S~tt of Pennsylvania. who said a Senate
official had told him a letter had been
found linked to the explosion and refer·
ring lo U.S. operations in Laos.
Scott said reaction of the explosion
will be unfortunate, both at home and
abroad. The effect, he said, is '"likely
ro be exaggeraled. They \von't reahze
that it's one bomb in one \vashroom."
But Scott said. "we're not going to
be terrified by these would be terrorists.''
He ,aid the Capitol building once again
should be thrown open to the publij'.
"We cannot be led by this action
to any form or repressive tactic," he
·said. ·1111 '
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, who
!ierves as prtsident of the Senate, called
the explosion "a calculated act of outrage
which will· be neither tolerated nor con-
doned by Americans \\'ho. value our
system and its institutions.''
01arles Watson
Arraigned in
Tate Slayings ·
LOS ANGELES CUPI) -Charles
''Tex'' Watson, who spent the past three
months in a menta l hospital. y.•as ar-
raigned today for the Tale·LaBianca
slayings but his trial is not expected
to begin fCf' months.
With a jury now hearing final evidence
to decide a sentence for Charles Manson
and three young women, Watson ap-
peared in a courtroom dow n the corridor
and showed apparent rationality as he
brie!ly answered questions by the judge
and prosecution.
The 24-year-o!d Watson had suc·
cess'fully resisted extradition r r om
McKinney, Texas, until well after the
Tate trial started so he was separated
from his co-defendants. Shortly after
he arr'lved in Los Angeles. psychiatrists
declared he "was turning into a
vegetable" and he was sent to a state
mental hospital.
'Vatson was returned here a Utile
more than a week ago after being
certified as mentally capable or standing
trial. His attorney, Samuel Rubrick, In.
dicated to newsmen, however, that the
defense would enter a plea for Watson
of innocent by reason of insanity.
In the Tate triai itself, Steve Grogan,
who ran away from home at the age
of 14, has joined with Manson's co-defen-
dan ts in an attempt to save the cult
leader from the gas chamber.
• Power Took e Gu"'
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Or What Hove You.
~
WE BUY, SELL OR TRADE
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in s h o p p I n g enjoyment.
Where people in the know
save money every time they
buy.
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Ratiti's . COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
1838 NEWPORT BLVD· ) PHONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -Bttw-Hubor A Bro1dw1y
•
(
•
•
•
DAILY PILOT PhO,. bf ll:lcll1'11 ICMlll•
\
t.lO•lf!ly, ~·.art'1 l , llJ71 M ' DAILY PILO'I ,' 3
' Tribes Back S. Viet ·s
•
•
10,000 Troops Mount Renewed Laos Drii1e
SAl&N (UPI) -A ClA-tralned force supplies were reported pasaing throuih at the U.N. aaked U Thant to intervene
of 2,500 hill trlbe1men in l.101 has moved there alter tht Sou\b Vietnamese cut with the ireat powers to restore the
Into the Sepone area to block another miln highway 91t 1952 Geneva accordl and secure the
Spokesmen said the guerrillas tn cne withdrawal of all foreign troops operaUnc
section of the Ho Chl Minh Trail and operation la.sL week deslzoyed a doien in Laoli'' Phoum1 uld. "Without these
backstop a renewed drive into Lacs Communist supply ltucka, blew up a forelsn troops our difficulties cil:li be
by thouund11 of South Vleetn1meae rein. bridge and drove off tt.e aecurlty. detail quicklf and effectinb' 10lved.
forcements, military sources said today, guarding tbe North Vietn•mese convoy. "Tbt war in Laol J.t_not 1 war hetwten
With more than 10,000 ; South Viet. ·. U,PI , correapondent K1rn , WillelllOD the government and tlie (pro-Comnwnf1t)
namese troops and bundrtds flf U.S.· reported from Vlentlane t'na t Premier Patbet Lao. It ls a war between
helicopters preparing for a new drive SouvaMa disclosed his appeal to Thant capitalism and '10Clali.!m. That J1 •hY
toward Sepone, Laotian Premier Prince in a speech to students Saturday. The we tried to 1v0Jd tbe conflkt and &any
Souvanna Phouma wa1 di1cloaed to have speech wt! made public today In tbe enter into the 1962 accordl, but tbl
appealed to UN Secretary General Laotian capital. ... accords f8l1ed because 1dtolC)fk:1l tn--
Thant that he intervene with the great "A few days aao my representative· terests are put above evetythin& elJe."
powers to remove all foreign troops
from Laos.
The heavy fighting ol the past w,.t
In Laos died down today but a South
Viel! ime!e infantry unit of 900 men
abanovned another fire 11upport base ln
the bo~ed down fight to cut the Col1·
munists Ho Chl Minh Trail supply lines,
front dispatches reported. ·
Taxing Prohle10
Buckling_ ,Up-Safety or ·vanity
LONDON (UPI ) -Cha!llty bell& are not "ulety dev!Co&" -11111'11
for wearing . At l~ast according t.o British customs and oclH oU1clala.
.HARBOR PATROL COMES TO THE, RESCUE OF SUNDAY SAILORS DUMPED BY HIGH WINDS
Even in Newport Harbor, the Northw11t1rll11 Made It W•t Going for Hardy Winter Yachtsmen
The abandoned base, called both Hotel
2 apd tlong Ha II, lies aix miles south
of Route 9. and nine miles west of
the border. It was the third major sup-
port base abandoned in Laos in the
face of heavy Communist pressure. Khe
Sanh di11patches said the unit fought
through encirclement . under U.S. air
power, carrying wounded with them .
Brltillh craftsmen who make the wrought·iror\ belts wh1cb. are e_xport.ed
mainly to the United States: and SWeden, asked customs io ei:empt thtin from
sale• tai: on grounds they are "safety devk:e1."
•
Winds Switch Course;
Santa Anas ,Due Next
Northwesterly winds responsible for the
we.ekend's spectacular clean air views,
wind whipped highways and continued
small craft wamings along the Orange
Coast will shift tonight to bring a mild
Santa Ana condition Tuesday.
The National Weather Service forecast
Pill Distribution
Decision Slated
For High Court
WASHI NGTON (AP) -The Supreme
Court agreed today to decide whether
Massachusetts officials may pro~ibit the
dislrlbulion of birth. control devices to
unmarried people.
The prohibition ls contained in a 91-
year-old slate Jaw that was declared
invalid last July by the U.S. Circuit
Court in Boston with a finding that
it "conflicts with fundamental human
rights."
The slate, in an appea l filed last
October. said ~1assachusetls has a right
to protect '"purity and chas~ily,"
The hearing will be held next fall
with a decision expected by June 1972.
~1assachusctts is one of 25 states with
law s that make it a crime to dilltrlbute
conlraccplives to unn1arried persons.
\\'illiam R. Baird, an advocate of birth
control, tested the law at Boston
University in 19fi7 by inviting students
attending his lecture to help themselves
to contraceptives he had brought with
him. Baird handed a package of vaginal
foam to an urimarried woman.
said the cool breezes that gusted lo
50 and 60 miles an hour in the moWJtalns
and deserts of Southern California should
shift to the northeast tonight. Winds
tomorrow will be Jocalized lo the canyons
normally affected by Santa Ana winds.
Temperatures will warm slighlly with
the high tomorrow along the Orange
Coast expected to reach 83 after a low
tonight of 40. Inland portions of Orange
County can expect overnight Iowa near
38.
Orange County 11arbor Department
said weekend sallor11 piloti ng 12-foot craft
learned IS to SO knot gusts are not
recommended for small craft. Indeed_,
small craft warning.s al ong the coast
continued into the fiflh day today, as
tl;le northern chill air continue<! lo whip
up seas.
The winds are blamed for at least
one deat!i. Police !aid Barbara Crane,
41 , of Norco, died Saturday of Injuries
received when her small car was blown
out of control near Riverside, and struck
a tree. ·
\Vind-blown sa nd , churned by gwts
up to 60 miles An hour damaged
numerous automobiles on the high
deser!s north of San Bernardino, Sunday.
Highway Patrol warnings for campers
and trailers to stay off wind -blown
highways remained in effect lhrough
today from Barstow to the coast.
Weathermen noted the gusty winds
r~lted from a second cold front follow-
ing On the heels of the one experienced
late last week when the high northerly
winds began. The frontal system ex·
peeled to clear Southern California today
brought snow showers to mountain and
de.!lert areas.
Dramatic billowing cloud.! hung over
distant mountains clearly visible in the
crl.!lp, clear air.
Nixon Launcl1es
Revenue 8l1aring
Plan in lolva
W ASHJNGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon·s five-hour visit to the heart of
the farm belt today is the firat chapter
of a new campaign to build state-by-state
support for hilt rev enue .!haring.
The President, who was scheduled lo
depart at 9:30 a.m. (EST) for Des
Moines, Iowa, planned 'to re-tell his
domestic legislative proposals to the
governors of four states and the Iowa
leglslature, with particular emphasis on
how his plan to share more federal
money with the states would speed up
rural development.
But while the trip was tinged with
an emphasis on farm and rural problems,
thE;. President faced protests from two
other segments of the population -
organized labor and peace groups.
Iowa labor union members and con·
struclion workers called their forces
together at the Iowa capitol to decry
Nixon's deci!ion to fight inflation by
trying to force a downtrend In con-
struclion industry wages and prices. Last
week Nixon suspended a depression~ra
law which, required contractor11 Jn
federal and federally assisted projeclll
to pay going wage rates -usually
union scale -to anyone they hired
to work ·on such projects.
Administration economists sa id the
move was intended to put a damper
on the -<:onstruction industry wage-price •
spiral, which ha s been rising al almost
twice the ·rate of the rest of the economy.
Peace groups said they would gather
to vo ice displeasure at U.S. involvement
in the current South Vietnamese invasion
of Laos.
The demonstrators drew a late-starting
recruit Sunday night )Vhen Bernadette
Devlin, Northern Ireland 's Rom a n
Catholic civil rights leader, said she
Yloutd join the gathering.
The South Vletnameae Incursion by
18.000 men has been stalled for two
weeks 16 miles inside the bOrder. The
main target of the drive, which began
Feb. 8, was Sepone, a hub of the Com-
munisls' supply trail 27 miles inside
Laos where mountain passes open fro~
tbt north.
Milltary sources In Saigon. said the
Laotian hlll tribesmen trained, financed
and equipped by the Central Intelligence
Agency over lhe past years, had betn
moved In to block the key road juncUOn
of Muong Phine In Laos. ·
North-south route 23 and easttwest
route 9 -the axis of the South Viet-
namese drl\l.C Into Lao11 -cross at
Muong Phine. Muong Phine ii 1bout
10 ·air miles aouthwest flf Sepone, and
its capture would block a rna)or aector
of the Ho Chi Minh Trail. CommuniJt
* * * Red Tank Crews
Believed Sealed
l11side Vehicles
LAOS (UPI) -The commander of
a .. South Vietnamese armored column
11aid Sunday he belie_ved North Viel·
narnese tanks crews were locked in their
vehicles and told to "win or die."
Col. Nguyen Trong Luat, commander
of the 17th Armored Regiment, said
he saw more than 15 communist PT76
tanks go up in flames but did not
see a single man leave the tan ks .
"It was rem arkable. The tank! were
burning, but kept moving and firing,·•
he said. "Not one crewman got out
ot those tanks. I think their leaders
locked the tank doors before the battle."
Luat added that "I thi nk we · kllled
more than 300 NVA (North Vietnamese)
troop11. We sent our troops to search
the eaat side (of the baltleground) and
they counted many, many bodies.
"This is a new point. This Is the
first time we fouJ?hl t.11nks aizai'l~I tank~
In the Vietnam war. r.fy men feel very
proud."
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Not ao, ruled the government. A Spokesman for customs and aclae
said "of course, these belta are not safety devices. They don't uve you from
a broken leg or a broken arm, do they? They are most definitely for •eartna.'•
Robin Hugeuen, who firm marketa the btltl, said '}the Irony of tt aJf ii
th!lt the belta, which come with padlock and two ~ey1, were orlpWI1 made
for uae as ornaments. You can place a potted plant In tbem and sUlpeDd them like a buket.
"However, when wl started getting requeats for the belts wilb t'Ual
1tatilltic1 11uppUed, '!e realized they were being wom," be II.Id.
•
Hulse's Drug Addiction
Called 'Exa~gerated'
•
By TOM BARLEY
Of fflt OlllY ,lllf Sl•ff
A hardhltting pro11ecutor today ur1ed
an Orange County Superior Court Jury
to reject "1rouly exauerated" defense
accounts of Ar thur Crall 1'Mooae''
Hul1e'1 addiction to dru&a and convict
the youth of flrat degree murder.
Deputy District Attorney Martin 'J.
Heneghan told lhe panel of eighl women
and four men in his final argument -
to give the concludlna 1latement1 of
the defeme as much consideration as
Hulse gave the plea of tervice station
attendant Jerry Wayne Clrlln last June
I.
Carlin's cries of "don't hit me in
the hiad" were rewarded with • series
of blows deJJvered with the hatchet Hu~e
carried into the Santa Ana 1as station,
Heneghan told the jury.
Lashing the _U.Jiear old defendant IS
''grossly semlh,. · callou1, trre1ponsible
and criminally lmpul11lve," Heneghan
asked the jury to agree with him that the
murder of Carlin was "planned and
premeditated" and the· defense had not
proved wha t they said was Hulse '•
dlmlnillhed capacity.
He reminded the jnry th11t all four
psychiatrist& that have tettlfled In the
Hulle trial have agreed that the Garden
Grove youth wu not psychotic.
Hulse, 18, at the time of the murder,
can not be sentenced to death if the
jury convicts him. Such a verdict would
raise the likelihood that he May be "'
committed to an inStitutkln for a life
tenn u person 1n dan1er of addlctlon
to narcotics.
. .Defenae attorneys Robert Green .nd
Michael Gerbo1l will deliver their final
argumenti to the jury late In tho dly
before Judge Ronald Croobhlnt an.
tlnlctl the panel
Hulse, outwardly apathtt!c and moreet,
stared at the coun1el table throuahout
the morning session as Henegban at.-
ticked the defendant'• It.or)' of the quan-
tity ol druga be took In 1111 llouJ'I ~
to the Carlin killing.
'"I· don't believe bo took 20 to 2S
'reds' (depreuant)," Hene&ban II.Id. ••u
he had !liken them bt'd be dead or
asleep a the Ume of the mur~r and
1 look on his sta tement •• part of
r . a remarkably well·lallored def e.n ••
story."
Whatever lbe verdict In the current
trial. Hulse also must face trial for
the killin1 Jut JWM: 3 of Miaaioo VltJo
teacher tJorence Nancy Brown.
Also charaed with that klillD& are l
Steven Craia Hurd, 20 and Herman lfd.
drlck Taylor, 17 both tran1Jent1, and
Christopher "Gypsy" Gibboney, 17, of
Portland, Ore.
They, and HulJe, wtre rounded up
and accused of involvement in the "devil
cult" i.illin1 ef Mra. Brown, 11, of El
Toro.
•
This week, make it Italian! Serve a. platterful of pasta, drenched in r ich 1&vory sauce ••• sprinkle it witJi ch~se ••• ·M?VI rabbit
cacciatore , • , WMh it down with hearty Chianti ••• enjoy all the pleasures of old world goodneM ••• with eue &nd economy •••
'\'hen yo u begin it all at El Ranchol And enjoy the savings on Glo!)e Al Spaghetti ••• 1 pound package.
Bertolli Chianti .... ~1 99
Dry nnd ruby red ••. the '''ftY to complement 11pnghetti ! Quart.
Serve it c11.cciatore, u you "'ould chicken! So deliciou!! '.
Beef Liver .............. ,., ...... ,FMSH .•••.••.•••. : ........... 69b
SerYe it often ••• grent ~vu rce oi iron..and other nulriental
' Sliced Bacon ... . ........... R.li:H srru .................. 59~
El Ra.ncho's O\\'n ••• sliced a little ihicktr t or !lavorl
Spaghetti S~uce lt
Progrt!ao's, •• re&lly It.8.li&n ! Marina.ta, Meat or :h-1ushroom! 16 oz.
Pricts in. tfftct Jtfon., Tue!., Wed.,
Mar. I, I, 3. No 1aJe1 to dt.altrl.
..
Grated Chee59 .... 3t
Kra!t'a ••• S oz. thakers .•• choose either Parmea!n or Roma.NL
Romaine ............... 15'
Crisp leaves ••• make a dresa.ing with oil and wine vine,&r f
Mo•ta Cheese ..................................... 89'
'Gtneroua aiud b&lla ••• 18 ounceg bif ••• from Frigo!
. 'IG( Italian Dtesslng ................ : ........................... ,,
Wiahbont ••• tlatt.ers tho fin .. t ,,...,. I 8 oi. bottl•.
ARCADIA : PASADENA: SOUTH PASADENA: HUNTIHfiTON BEACH · MEWPORT BEACH: 111 1 N'"'''" mwit ""1
Sun~el and llunt1nglon Dr {ll R.i11t!1u Ltu!i:11 "lL .,_,\ Culu1J~u bl~o f 'Pition! and Hunt1ng!on Or Vla1ner anu ~l:'nnq1111· \R11 11« 11~ ( • •11 ' r ;i 111'i I 'thlnll r1r (I .i\!lilid t ~:'I 1"1 l1111 ' rl .
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4 IWLV PILOl
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The General aent me/'
Share Plan
For Debts
Moodiy, Mmh I, 1'71
North h·islt
Firebombs
l\.ill T_ommy
BELFAST, Norll\em· Ireland (UPI) -
A British • soldier burned to death ill
Londonderry early today when terrorists
firebombed his piti-01 car. Two other
·sotdiers in tbe ·.•'\llo escaped with minor
injuries. : '
Troops 'in. ~Uul traded ahola With
a sniper-in the Catholic lA:lwer Falls
Road area early today. Later, a 16-year·
old youth w~s taken to a hospital \Vilh
gumhot-wounds in ths stomach, but
an army spokesman said it was not
known if he was 'lhe sniper.
... The firebombing took place in l.AJn·
donderry's Roman Catholic Bogslde area.
AbQut 15 to 20 youths confronted the
three· ma ft patrol in their Land Rover
and threw some 10 firebombs at the
By DICK WEST auto. three or four of which exploded
WASHINGTON (UPI) _ Pmident against the car and set i~ on•fire.
The auto ran into a wall, but the ?li.xo~ r~venue-~haring plan ~as erl6 driver managed to gel out and arrest
countered such formidable opposition in one of the youths. Residents ii\ the
Congress it may never get off the draw· area pulled the injured soldier from
ing board. · _..--. . ......_.__ the burning auto and cared for him
. . Mtuntil help arrived, but he· died. They But that doesn t necessar1ly mean the · also .cared for the third soldier in the
concept of the federal government shar· trol who was suffering from shock.
ing its finances wtth 't~~-states won 't pa The ' soldier, 'Ao'ho was not identified eventual!~ berome a reality. pending notification of the relatives, was
Th.ere 1s. of coune. mor~. to federal ... th' d ·B ·u h Id' killed in finan{'('s than revenue. So if Congress u1e •r r1 s. so ier
re(uses Jo a;ive the states 8 $5 billion Northern Ireland. 1n le~s than a~month.
share al federal .revenue, as the Presi• T.,.,·o other sold.1ers. d.1ed ~s a result
h 5 proposed perhaps it will con-of a Feb. S shooting 1nc1dent 1n Belfast. :~er fettlng them 'have a $5 billion share Today 's fatalit y .brought the . year's
of the federal deficit. known death !oil 1n the . province_ to
.AS OF NOW, according to the official ~3 -three sold1~rs, t"'·~ poli~men k1.lled
t5t imate the deficit for fiscal 1972 is 1n BeUast Friday rught, and eight
expec_ted' to top $11 billion, The· ad· civil!a~~ known ~:a~. There was the
vantagu of sharing that with the states pcss1b1hty so~e c1v1ha~ dead were t.a,ken
ls obvious to 8.nyone who has mastered away and ~W:ied by fr1~~ds or relatives
TRICIA'S ENGAG EMENT ANNOUNCEMENT EXPECTED SOON
Nixon's Daughter •nd Edw•rd CoJC to W•lk Aisle?
Tri~ia Trothing
But Ca1i Ni xo1is , Coxes Co-exist?
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Now thal rumors of Tricia Nixon's engagement
to Harvard law student Edward Finch Cox seem to be on firmer ground, a
new report is circulating that .the parents of the prospective bridal couple don 't
get along.
President and ftfrs. Nixon are expected to announce their elder daughter's
engagement to Cox. 24. on J\1arch 16 dur1ng a \Vh ite House celebration of the
first lady's 59th birthday. ~ .... The wedding date is expected to be about June 12. j
But new reports indicate the ~ixons and Coxes are not fond · of each
other. Mrs. Nixon has branded the reports "ridiculous."
Mrs. Nixon is .a fonner teache r born in a Colorado mining camp. The
--president is the son of a California grOC1!r. Col. Ho\\'ard Ellis Cox is a promi-fl
?'I nent lawyer listed in the New York Social Register and his v.·ife traces her ~\
ancestry from the American Revolution:
Cox propo&?d to Tricia in November al Camp David, 1.Jd., according to
inrormed sources. But engagement rumors have been denied by the White
House in such terms as. "We have nothing lo announce at this time."
,
Earlfl Withdrawal
Russ .Ask Big 4
To Prod Israel·
By Tbe A1aoclated Prus
The Soviet Union called on Brit.a.in
and other big Western powers today
to ~ress Israel into an early withdrawal
from their war-won Arab territories as
part q.f a general Mlddle<East settlement.
'Ibe move came in London when the
Soviet Ambassador Mikhail Smirnovsky
met at his own request with Prime
Minister Edward Heath and argued that
Israel's latest refusal to pull out of
war-occupied Arab territories set back
prospects for peace.
Soviet ambassador~ in P a r i s and
Washington were malting similar ap-
proaches to the chiefs of the French
d U.S. governmenl!, diP.lomats in Lon·
do aid.
London inlormanls said Smirnovsky
in bis talks with Heath urged that it
was the duty of all countries -and
particularly the Big Four -to exercise
pressure on the Israelis to meet Arab
demands for full withdrawal.
The a]temative, Smirnovsky w a s
repOrted to have warned, could be. a
renewal of the Arab-Israeli conflict.
The Soviet diplomatic intervention
came as Arab-Israeli peace moves,
through the mission cf U.N. mediator
Gunnar V. Jarring entered a delicate
new phaGe. Israel 's reply to recent Egyp-
tian suggestions has just been delivered.
There have been signs of Israeli will·
lngness to consider some aspects of
the Egyptian proposals while resisting,
at least initially, others.
3rd Ship Sinks
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The Soviet Union has long pressed
the view that only big power pressurti
can force 1srael to abandoo at least
some · of the occupied territory It has
been holding since the 1967 t.1iddle East
war.
Israel has made clear its readiness
to discuss a withdrawal to "secure and
recognized frontiers" directly with the
Arab states in the cQntext of an over-all
peace agreement.
-The Egyptians have said they are
willing . to CC.me to peace terms wlth
Israel if Israel withdray,·s from war«·
cupied territory. . .
The belief among British aulhor1ties
is that Russia's intervention has been
timed jo build up pressure in advance
of the expiration of the Mideast cease-fire
nut Sunday.
Liechtenstein ,
I Males Vote No :
VADUZ, Liechtens tein (AP) -
The men of Liechtenstein became
•·the top fools in Europe'' Suqday
by again denying \YOmen the vote,
an official lamented. Bul a pro-
moter of the tiny duch y's tourist
industry took a different vie\v ~
;. People expect us to be different.
1'his vote might even improve
business .. ,
Se\•enty percent of the 5,000 eligi.
ble males voled in a referendum
Sunday, casting 1.897 b a 11 o t s
against and 1,8l7 for women's suf-
frage . the science of ec-0nomlcs. without notifying author1t1es.
·-For as Nixon explained to Congress The BeUast ~ting incident climaxed
ea.rlier this year, an unbalanced budget a . day.Jong series of clashes between
Sources now say that barring a sudden change in plans. the announce-
ment or the "'·edding date will be made during an "Irish Evening of entertain-
ment" at the White House with Prime lt1inister and Mrs. John Lynch of Ire-
land as guest.! or honor.
After Hitting Liechtenstein thereby rema ined
the last European nation still
v.·ithout y,·omen voters and one of
five in the world. The others are
Jordan, Kuwa it, Saudi Arabia and
Yemen. Europe's other holdout,
Liechtenstein's 'Ao'estern neighbor,
Switzerland, brought won1en into
the -elcctora1e on F'eb. 7 by a
substantial majority.
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tends to reduce the level of uneJttploy-troops and Roman Ca.thollc youths .. spur·
ment Add if it works for the federa l red on by women 1n combat Jackets
and black berets. The youths threw
bombs. bricks and bottles at the 'troops,
f' . The "Irish Evening" is being planned as an extra special e\rent, with Channel Wreck
! . The .. who retaliated with volleys of rubber
bullets.
At least 11 persons were arrested.
;ill of Nixons' closest friends invited as guests. John Mulcahy, Nixon's New
York industrialist friend who was his host in Ireland during last year's »-'
European tour. will be among them . lnvitations for the event are already out, 1
which is a lot sooner than the White House has acted for past social functions.
DOV:':R, England (UPI) -Coast
Guard boats today added more buoys
around three shipwrecks in the English
Channel. The latest ship went down
Saturday night after plowing into the
wrecks of one or both of the others: I . ' lLI1 ($IHJ'll'IE!JB. I . . t . Si~e j
Tn Ballykinlar, County Down, an ex-
plosion wrecked a hut used by the Ulster
Defense Regiment for weekend activities. 2 Slain When Violenc ~ Officials responsible for safety in the
channel called an urgent meeting to
discuss how tO" make' the ~ipping lanes
safer.
Disgusted young v.·omen carried
signs reading .. We are ashamed
of Liechtenstein" and "\Vhal's h;ip-
pened to your manhood?" on the
streets of Vaduz and other com·
munit ies after the result was an-
nounced. government, there Is no reason why
it 11;ouldn'hvork for the states.
At.ost states, it is lrue, already ha\'e
unbalanced budgets. As a rult, however,
stat.el ire such poor credit risb they
have trouble borrowing enough money
lo nm up a· deficit large enough to
provide meaningful economic stimula-
tion.
N. Viet Troops
Knock Out CIA
Supported Base
Erupts at India Pol
Ten bodies so· far have b'-'n recovered
from the latest victim in the growing
graveyard of ships. Coast Guard officials
believe it is the Greek 2,371-ton fr',ighter
Niki, missing since it sailed Saturday_
night from Dunkirk, France, for Alex-
Women outnumber men in the
tiny monarchy of 21.300 between
· Switzerland and Austria. Its major -
industries are tourism, false teeth,
postage stamps and providing a
tax haven for numerous foreign
companies.
'Die fede ral government. by contrast,
has unbounded credit. There is hardly
any limit to the deficit it can run
up.
In event the deficit-sharing fails to
ease the financial plight of the states,
T \\'OU!d recommend that Congress an~
the administration give some thought
to debt-sharing. .
AT PRESEm', the ceiling on the
national debt is fixed at S395 billion.
But the government is constantly bum-
ping Its head against the ceiling. So
there is a move afoot to raise the
ctiling to $435 billion.
Rather than raise the debt limit by
$<5 billion, why not keep the limit where
it is and give the states a $4}: billion
share of the debt? Do you1 see the
beauty of this~
For the first tinle In years. the national
debt would remain constsnt. creating
an image of solvency which v•ould
strengthen the dollar and otherwise im·
prove America's international monetary
position.
Meanwhile. hard-pressed slates would
have $45 billion in additional indebtedness
at their disposal. In which case their
$5 billion share or the federal revenue
\\o'Ould never be mi.s5'd.
-UPI
VIENTIANE. Laos (APl -North Viet.
namese forces have knocked out a guer·
rilla base supported by the U.S. Central
Intelligence Agency north. of the Plain
of Jars. Western military sources disclos-
ed today. · •
The sources said a North Vietnamese
force of unknown size overran Phu Cum,
134 miles no'trheast of Vientiane, on week
,ago, scattering several companies of
Meo tribesmen.
The tribesmen and several thousand
refugees ned westward, the sources said.
Phu Cum, undel'~hc command or Meo
Gen. Van~ Pao, was one of the few
progovernment positions north of the
• Plain of Jars. lt was used as a jumping
off point for intelligence operations and
guerrilla hatassment against the Com-
munist-led force s that control the area.
The sources a!'scribed the loss of Phu
Cum as "not too seriou~· since ~uam
Long, a similar base, 1'7 miles to the
southwest, is still under government con-
trol.
Patty Duke a J\fotb er
SANTA MONICA (UPI) -Academy
Award wiMing actress Pally Duke has
given birth to a five-pound, seven-ounce
boy named Sean al a hospital here ,
it was revealed during the weekend.
NEW DELHl (AP) -Two persons
were killed and scores injured in India
today at the start of a JO-day national
election for a new Parliamenl
Most of the violence occurred in
eastern Bihar State, where voting had
to be suspended in six polling stations.
T'Ao'O persons were killed and thi"ee in·
jured in a clash. outside a rural voting
booth.
A 23-yeat-old man was stabbed follow-
ing an argument with someone trying
lo get ahead in a long line of voters.
In four other polling stalions i11 Bihar,
men ran qff with thee ballot boxes, forc-
ing suspension of the voting. At one of
the booths the polling officer y,·as assault.
e<I.
Four persons armed with pistols raided
a voting booth in central Rajasthan State,
Jocked up the presiding electoral officer
and stole the ballots. Voting resumed
after new ·ballots arrived.
Voting was suspended In a village
in southern ~1adras fol\O\\'ing a clash
between supporters of rival candid<}.tes.
In t¥fadras, the capital o( the state,
opposing political 'Ao'orkers pelted each.
other with soda bottles, but voting went
on anyway.
Reports from Surat, in central Gujarat
State, said numerous clashes broke out
and several persons \\•ere injured in
a constituency where form;r Deputy
Major Storms Predicted
Prime Minister Morarji Desal, an arch
Joe. of Prime h1inister Indira Gandhi,
is seeking re-election.
andria, Egypt. ..
The ship bad a crew of 22, including
t1ne woman.
J
Swirling· Snoivstorms iii Midwest Mav Only Be Start ' >
C•llfornf•
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of ~your best
frie11ds have a new address.
" Glendale Federal Savings
has moved to Harbor Center.
Lock, stcx;k and safe. People too.
We're now right on the
corne r of Harbo r Boulevard and
Wilson, so if ·you're looking for
Glendale's famous friendly serv-
ice, escrows, Umpteen Ways To
Save or grea t new low rates on
home loans, loo k no furth er.
Glendale Federal/Costa tvleso
is just as nice as it ever was. And
lot~ more convenient.
Mon.-Thur. 9-4;
Fri. 9-6. -Gier.dale federal Sawi1gs·Costa Mesa
Caiw ol llllllor M1•d a Wiii-. (llllllor ea.) -•
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BEA ANDERSON, Editor • l'ett-11
Plea: Hang 10
To Raise Five
' Surf's up -but it is safe to s~1rf? •
Along the Orange Coast, \Vh1ch dra\vs countless thousands of surfers.
novices and professionals fron1 all over lhe Southland, there is n·ot a single
film stressing surfing safety.
Because Huntington Beach has been the home of the U.S. Surfboard
Championships taking place annually for the past 12 years, the Huntington
Beach Junior Woman's Club has been ·made aware of the need to have
a film to acquaint' and supply safety instructions and safety measures to area
surfers. ...___
A 22-minute sound and color film \Vii i be produced by Neil Cross,
\l'it h the assistance and advice of the Hun tington Beach Surf Life Associa·
tiol\ and the Huntington Beach Parks and Recreation Depart1nent. The
~lub also has the support of the Huntington Beach City Cou nc il and ~he
Safety Council in its project. ' ~
Since there may be as many as 3.000 surfboards in the waters within
the city limits on any day word goes out that the "surf's up," the film \Vill
be produced as a co1nmunity service for presentation in area junior and
senior high schools and made available to all civic organizations accord·
ing to Mrs. Cody Evans, safety chairman of the Huntington Beach Juniors .
. Assisting htrs. Evans in her attenipt to raise .funds for the film which
''"ill cost approximately S5,000 to produce are the h~mes. James Shepard,
Cody Taylor, Michael Ton1asick, Richard McDonald, Jim Spears. Daniel
Drageset, Richard Hermes, Robert Howarth, Alan Graves, James Strecansky
and Charles Vranek.
· Juniors are 11equesting community support for lhe undertaking and
to date have received contributions from \Valker Coating Co., Compton;
G & G Stress Relieving Co., Beach City Dodge and J>izza Palace, all from
Jiuntington Beach. .
Anyone wishing lo contribute to the production of the film or wish·
ing further information is invited to call ~1rs. Evans, 968·2122 .
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Fountain Valley Friends feed Fountain When One Second Makes the Difference . • •
Casting their coins in the fountain are Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Stewmon and ?ttrs. Kenneth Martz,·Fiiends
of the Fountain Va~ Llbrary. Members and guests
\Vilt attend a benef luncheon at 11:30 a.m. Friday.
?.!arch 5, in the Hu ·ngton Beach Mercury Savings
and Loan building. Proceeds will be used·to defray"-
expenses incurred in reinstalling the fountain in the
patio of the children's wing. Best-telling nonfiction ·
The importante of liming is stress-ed by Mrs. Velma
BOlitl, winner of last year's Las Ol~s To~stmiktre~s
Clu~'s _fil)eech contest, ·to Mrs. Gene R .. Gravely: .
chairman, and Mrs. Clarence-i>ouble,"'"toastmistress-
for this ye~r's e\lent ~eft to right). The annual CQn-
lest lakes place at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, March JO,
.. in the Huntington Beach Mercury Savings ind Loan
building. and all interested persons are invited to at·
. books also wil! be discussed. tend. ~-
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the Dye Cast? ·A·ncie.nf~,~-Secret. Colors lnt~rpretation
DEAR ANN LANDERS: l read with
Interest the letter from "Joy Girl"
proclaiming it a fact that blondes have
more fun. Her Jetter was a rebuttal
to anolher letter which said blondes
do NOT have more fun -they just
enjoy perpetuating the myth.
J seriously doubt that lhere is a
biological reason why blondes have more
fun, but there might be a sociological
reaSO'n. I quote from the Encyclopedia
Britannica ( 1969) under Prostitution :
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•·The Roman system of regulation was
especially severe. Prostilutes were
plati!d under stringent control and
required to register with lhe police. '
They had to wear distinctive dress and ~
dye the ir hair gold or wear ye11ow wigs.
They were also subjected to variou1
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ANN I.ANDERS
"\ feelings. J\1y diet is falling on its face.
'J'his poses a serious problem because
J was widowed last year and went .into
a <leep depression. My psyclliatrist insisls
that 1 accept invitations and be with
people. So now I must decide which
civil disabilities."
Understa ndably the gals V.'ilh the
golden tresses received many more
propositions in those days -and for
very good reason.
Do you suppose the blondes of ·today
might be subconsciously I a b e I i n g
themselves In some \vay -as their
ancient sisters did? -H.J .
DEAR H.J.: Why don 't you ask 1ome
blondes? But don't be surprised If Y1U
end up with 1 fat lip, Buddy.
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DEAR 'ANN LANDERS: J had surgery .
seven weeks ago and am having a
difficult Ume recovering because I am
overweight. My doctor has put me on
an 800-calorie diet -which is like
nothing.
The social season Is In full flower
ill' our lown and I've been invited to
several dinner parties these past two
weeks although 1 know I &houldn't eat
rich food , I eat everything served
because 1 hate to hurt the tiostess'
•
is more imporU'nl -to accept dinner
invitations and be mentally healthy -
or lo refuse dinner invitations and stick
to my diet. I'd like your advice. -
HOBSON'S CHOICE
DEAR J\fRS. JIOBSON: Both are
equally Important. You need not sacrlfltt
one for the other, ...+iowever. Acetpt the
Invitations -but tell the hostess yoi
will arrive .AFTER dinner. Eat you
lettuce and C41'ltage cbetlie at home,
then join your friends fo r the sociability.
There art DO calories In talk. '
DEAR ANN LANDERS : We have four
children under 12· Years of age. My
husband's brother moved in with us
after a messy divorce. It was supposed
lo be "for a cou ple of weeks ." That
was in 1967 and Lardo is still here.
He's a retired Army man and has told
our children the dirty jokes from the
last three wars.
t.ardo works when he feels like it
and spends the money on golddlggers.
He has never bought so much as a
pork chop for the lable. I do his laundry
and send his dry cleaning out with
my husband'!'. When Lardo gets stirf
he calls long distance all over the country
and our phone bills are wild. I haven•t
had a new coat in live years. No money.
Last night I got IO mad 1 told _my
husband if he didn"t ask Lardo to move
I was seeing a lawyer about a separation
He said. "I am my bi;pther's keeper.••
Who is right-MOLLlE.
DEAR PtfOWE: Your brothtr-ln-l1w
D.ttds a keeper all right, but I fail
to see why you and your husband ahould
continue to be champs.
You ba\'e every rl&hl to Insist that
the freeloader move. Slick with yout
de.mudt.
Is alcoholism a disease? How can
the alcoholic be treated'! Ts there a
cure? Read ijle booklet "Alcoholism -
I-lope and llelp," by -'Ann Landers.
Enclose 35 cents ·ln coin with yO\ft>
~equest and a long stampied, se1r-
addressed envelope In care of the DAIL'(
PILO'I' •
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J 9 DAILY Pllo':" Monday, Mal"Ch ), 1971 '
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.IW T"1111e To Glre'
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Typists are needed by the Westminster-Mid·
way cil!es Boys Club. Typing and bookkeeping will
help ~eep the newly launched building program
organized . .
WELL BABIES
Babies must be measured end we ighed at the
\Veil Baby Clin ics in Stanton and Garden Grove
and there is no one to do It. The Garden Gro\te
hours are 9 to 11 :30 a.m. on the second, third and
fourth li1oodays of the month .
The Stanton hours are from 9 a.m, to noon on
the first and third Mondays.
LANGUAGE STRUGGLE
Tutors are needed to help Mexican·American
adults and youngsters with the English language
at the Huntington Beach Co mmunity Center. Trans·
lations of recipes and basic food facts are \vantcd by
the Orange Coast College Home Econqmic program.
The translations could be completed at home.
SHUT-INS
The life or a shut·in or someone \vho lives
alone wou)d be brightened by one short. reassuring
daily phone call or a we ekly friendl y visit. Call the
West Orange County Volunteer Bu reau for more
information.
GOODIES FOR GIRLS
How-to books, magazines on crafts. sports and
homemaking would he welcome at the Garden
Grove Girls Club. They may ~e lert at the Hunting·
ton Beach United Crusade office.
Looking Th roug h 'L'
Vocabulary Ascending
By ERM! BOMBECK
T don't know if anyone has'
noticed, but J've been doing
this column for the last six
yea rs using a 49 ·Ctnt
dictionary with the l's to the
mac's missing. ·
This hasn't been easy for
me. Do you have any idea
how frustratfng it is lo want
to use words like lagomorpha.
loquat and lygodium and not
be able to?
"I need a new dictionary,''
I said to my husband.
"Wh y, what's the matter
with the old one?"
"The J's to the mac's are
missing. R e a d e r s are
beginning to wonder "'by l
never talk about La t i n
America. or loltygagging (Ir
Loony birds. It just isn't
normal.''
·'Well. if I had a diclionary
that wasn't all there," he said,
''I think the l's woul d be the
part I would mi ss the least .''
AT
WIT'S
END
"Does yt illia m F. Buckley
gel his vocabulary off a
11weatshirt?" I s nor le d.·
"Besides, the E n g Ii s h
language has undergone quite
a fe11,• changes since Otis
dictionary "·as published."
"Nonsense ." he sai d.
''lt1eanings of words never
change."
''Oh yeah. then why Is it
under 'wicks' in my
dictionary, they have, 'A thin
F/IEE
bundle or threads that 1b«lrb
fuel and is used primarily
on front fend ers (If ca rs as
lamps to make driv ini at
nJght possible.'"
"You win." he said. "Go
buy yoursell a new, deluxe
dictionary." •
The next night when be
returned home, the stove was
cold, the kids were playlng
in the traffic and t b e
dictionary was epen to the
J's. .
"Have a libation," I said,
'.'The leftovers are late, the
laundry i:i latent and I am
languishing in lugubriousness.
I looked up 'liberation' today,
Leonard, and you 're j n
trouble.''
Moral: Givi ng women 'L'
is a dangerous thing.
~----
PHONE
642-2851
fOlt RESEll ¥ATION
ORGAN . CLASSES
l'or 'l•v•r• 1nd N•~ '"l•y•rt
PREPARATION FOR PRAYER -Churchwomen throughout the Harbor Area
'\'iii gather Friday, March 5, in St. Michael and All Angels Episcopal Chuich,
Corona de! Mar, to celebrate World Day of Prayer. Discussing plans with the
Rev. John Davis, host minister, are Mr·s. Stanley Mumford (center), president,
and Mrs. John J\.liller.
TUTORS TO TEACH
Youngsters and adults are in need of English
tutors durin~ the afternoon and evening hours.
The ass1stannce will be coordinated by the
Colonial Juarez Independencia.
"That's all you knOw," I
sulked. "All the good novel ·
type words are there . . .
lu!t ful, lush. lewd. lecherous .
Why, I was that close to
writing 'Love Slory,' but I
couldn't spell it."
"You could hav~ copied that
. elf your sweatshirt."
Mii. Fll l D THOMPSON, wlll IM te11c.hln9 11111 e .. cltin9 t1•w
Or9•111 Cleu M•thod et COAST MUSIC, MONDA Y 7:JO
P.M. & f P.M.
COAST MUSIC
1135 NEWPORT BLVD. (•I Harbor) COSTA MESA
Day of Prayer
Churchwomen
Churchwomen (rom t h e
Harbor Area will gather In
St..~ichael and All Angels
Ep~Qpal Church. Corona del
Mar on Friday. March 5, to
celebrate World Day of
Prayer.
Chairman for the day is
Mrs.. Jame! Moor, and pres~t!nt of the sponsoring
organizati1Jn, Churchwomen
United, is Mrs, S t a n I e y
1'1umford.
Al 10 a.m. on Friday \vomcn
In 25.000 communitie.! in the
United States will unite their
prayers with women in 155
countries on six continents to
affirm faith, hope and love
in facing the iuues and needs
of today.
New Life Awaits will be
the theme of the day, which
also will be a preparation for
the Ecumenical Ass em b I y
planned In Wichita April 22·25.
During the prayer da y, the
84lh of its kind, the "'omen
...• tiCifil
SEW 'N SAVE
SPECIALS
\Vuh a.nd "'ellr, con~ists nf 2
dOcron, <Olton, ,;;k, coyon Y~ $1 00 aiid many other~. l\1edfum
ri:>rals, novelty prints and
amall flora.ls.
POLYESTER
DOUBLE KNITS
No Iron flnt•h· 5'1", 60" polye1t1>r
double kn ia In J8C°QU8fd "e'"'~·
mini "'a ft!,~. r:rep1>1, '"!lit. r.t11.·
chine "''""'h and 11,1mbl, d ry.
HARBOR BLVD •• ::.. COSTA MES~j
Un~e
also will participate lh an
offering which will a I d
International students
overseas, women I e a d e r s
abroad. rural €hrlslian women
()Verseas, inigrant farm
workers, Mexican women in
border cities. chil dren In
Africa and Asia and American
Ind iana.
Sisterhood
Dines Out
.•
Geranium
Facts Told
A talk and demonstration
on container culture and
scented geraniums w i 11
provide the program for
members of the San Clemente
Garden Clu b on Wednesday,
March 3.
Mrs. Louts Le ,Count of the
Internation al Gei:anium
Society will bring specimen11
and experience to the 1:30
p.m. session in the San
Clemente VFW Hall.
Plans for the club's 20th
Standard Flower Show on
April Z.1 and 24 will bf!
discussed at 10 a.m. on
Wednesday. Marrh 17, in the
home of Miss Laura Dillon.
Jl.1 embers of 1he Sisterhood The hostess will be assisted
of T@mple Eilat of El Toro by Jl.lrs. Fred Carter.
will welcome new committee This meeting will be he'pful
chairmen tomorrow morni111.g to new e~h.ibitors.
at 11 :30 as th@y mef!t in the1p iiiiiiiliiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
El Toro home of Jl.1rs. Sam 1.000·. OF OIL PAINTINGS
Waldman. WHOLISALI WAltlHOUSI
Servi ng on the board of the OPEN ·to THI PUILIC
grou p \\'hich. work11 ()fl fund· SQ0/0 OFF
raising projects for the uu •. IOINOl"I , 54NTA ANA
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Highlight your hair ...
Roux Frosting Special
15. 00 reg. 25.00
Let our experts fros! your hai r \vith streaks of
lightening. And for a ne\v spring look ,., try our
''Gypsy Girl" cut. ti's all curl, swirl and ..
excilement. Shampoo and sel not includ~ In
1his special. "Gypsy Girl" cut, al~ add itional, 4.oo. r
Be1 uly Stud o
\
Temple are the Mmes. Arthur ,.~lfl• 1u"'"°'
Saydman. Harold Si Iyer. Joel l'!~!!..!·~·~"~'!!'!!.'~·~.,~·~•!•..!=!!!~1~•!'..__!N~o~w~p~o~rt:!:,,_11~1_!F~·~·~h;~•_'.'.n_!l~•l.!_•n~d~,_!N~o~w~p~o~rt~C~o~n'.!_h~•:_•!_!64~4~-~l~l~OO~•~M~o~"~·,_, ~F•c!c;·::· _!l~O:!'O~O~t~H~l ,!9~,)~0!!:_!0~t~h~o~r ~d~•tY•~I 0~1;~11~5~,~lO~ Gallin. Harvey Stearn, Myron l-
Margolis and Waldman.
Also holdi11g office are th e
Mmes. Elliot Le venso n .
Harvey Kaplan , Burton Allen
and Miss Sadie Meltsner.
Members of the Sisterhood
who earned their donor credit
for the yea r were honored
.11t 11 recent luncheon in Victor
Hugo Init, Laguna Beach.
Sisters
Recruit
An orientation meeting for
women interested in becoming
a Big Sister will take place
al the Santa Ana YWCA at
7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Ma/Eh
3.
Big Sis ler s is an
organ i z all on offering
friendship on a one·to-one
basis lo teenage g l r I 11:.
Unstru ctured activities take
plare as arranged by big and
little sisters.
Anyone interested may call
the YWCA or Mrs. Vernon
Phlllips.
Riviera Golf
Tourney Opens
A three part championship
golf tour11ament Wiil @:et under
way at 9 a.m. on \Vednesday.
f\.tarch 3, as members of the
Riviera Club Gnlf Section
meet al San Clemente Golf
Course.
Parlicipants use the two
best scores frora.I meets on
\Vedncsday. Aprilwt and May
5. All play \\'ill be In San
Clemen1e.
YOGA IS • • •
, .. 111.ufT"
fe11 .. r &: llllMtl - -Special Clru.~ rnr
\\'ornr n 011 /y.'
''" Deme'"tretle111
lNelll•'I• 10 A.M.
Cl .... 1 ltei:f Tl!Mrtdt'I
,yOGA CENTER
UJ I . 111~ II, ltll• I
S(JfS:
• • If you have added unwcfnted pounds and inches there i1 one sure way fo
get back to a slim perfectly shaped figure , , , start now at Gloria Ma r.hail's
where tra ined figure experts qui ckly shape your fig ure to its na tural loveli·
ne11 a nd kHp it there!
PerJonalizeJ olttention
Quick J!.asting J?.esults
{iuaranteeJ J(educing
T•ll us rile dreu si1e you wont to wt or,., 'W9 will tell you
~ how mony vl1if1 ff tokt 1, a nd ouoront.e Jn writing you wlll
, • . rtoch your goal, or let you ho ve FREE any and all fu rther
visits until you do.
. WE ARE NOT~PA OR GYM • NO DISROB ING
NO STRENUOU EXERC ISES • NO MEMBERSH IP
FREE P~YR FACIL1T1ES F 0 R CH ILDREN
I
Re9ular $2.50
THIS WEEK $1 so
ONLY
•
PfR TREATMENT
WEIGHT IS AGING ••• NOTE THE DRAMA TIC
CHANGE IN FACIAL APPEARANCE
When Pot Chad 1!ort•4 at Gloria Morshotl's she weighed
222 lbs, 10 vi1ih loter •ha had already lost 17 in(hes.
In record time she Joit 63 lbs., a nd 55 inches • , • Btfore
starting at Gloria Mor1hall'1, Pot tried everything, Heoltn
Spa Gym1, Hypnosis, Crash Diets, t ills and Shols, bvt
nothln1111 worked ••• until now.
/)fl,-~ % I /J/J Jll iii ~~{ J(g/M/ZfiW_ FIGURE CONTROL SALONS
wo .. LD'S U.lGIST OWN ID AHD 0,EUTID SYSTIM, Deil7 '. 9; s.t. '.,.
•
NEWPORT BEACH A1110MI'", Ce•l11e, c: .. 1h•w~L~~w!:y. Gl•~•I•. Lo••w .. 11. L ..
430 PACIFIC COAST HWY. 642.3630 ...... Lo11t leech. H1wpou hMt!, Herth H•llyweH, , .... tlMe, l•lt Dt.f•, l•111te Alie, S•111t• l •rbltnl, S.1tl•11ll, Tanoq , 11 llHU lent •f lolltee ley Cl"~t To~nc:•, Wlllttle•. , •Jil:";-;:"":<':'!9"S~A-N_r..,A~A-N-:A;;,::-1-B_•o_w_._1_11_h_s,..1_. ,....s •• '3-·9 .. • .. s1 __ ,_,_i _c_o_P_Y"_"_ig_M_I910 Gloria' lfo .. ha/l Mgt. Co. Inc.
'I ... tJ • .~?.. J t ...
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Fountai11 Valley Today's .Flnal
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 64, NO. SI , 2 SECTIONS, 30 P:AGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH I, ·1911 • .TEN CENTS
Beach's Free. Clinic to G~t County. Support
By AL.W DIRKIN
Ot lh1 0.111 l'lltt·llltt
The Orange County Health Department
is supporting the free health clinic that
will open soon in downtown Huntington
Beach.
The e-0unty's chief health officer. Dr.
John R. Philip, commented this morning,
"We see these free clinics as one of
the ioOd wafs of combcltting drug and
venereal disease problems .. The kids. trust
them."
He said that the health depai-tment
would supply the clinic with antibiotics
for the treatment of infections. No equip..
ment or personnel would be provided.
•
"We «n give t.hem the antibict~cs
and they will conform' by reporting ·the
John R. Philp added.
The· anUbiotics Would be for the treat-
ment of venereal diseases whlch have
more than doubled in the county in
tbe last two years.
"Gonorrhea is tbe main problem," he
said. "The only good thing about it
is that there is a good treatment for
it."
The clinic, which will be in a modem
building nes:t to the city 's personnel
office at Fifth Street and Olive Avenue,
is gaining support at community level,
too.
I 0
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Harbor Arrests
9 Held • Ill Vice
Raids at Motels
A Newport Beach contractor and eight of Newport Beach police and Orange
young women' were arrested on prO-County Sheriff's deputies.
stitution chatgts Saturday nigh( ·at two Held on charges of procuring is Henry
}fifbor Area motels aJler Vice officers ·~~Spr~gue, 51. of .M Beacon Bay.~Tb1
investigated an alleged "$.ting service" .... f!t~~~flit~ ,
over the past three weeks. . . a e from 20 to 35.
The arrests came on a combined effort gA « 11. lied lh 8 rresung o 1cers a ge at prague
I
OJ,llY '°llOT Stlfl ,.~oi.
SUCCUMBS AT 68
Judge Thurmond Clarke
Retired Judge
Thurmond Clarke
and the girls operated 1s part of Ex-
ecutive Escort Service in Irvine. It
asserted l y offered dates for
''sophis~icated executives."
Charges for the dates, according to
police allegations, were $100 per night.
The organization had been in business
for the past month, according to Newport
vice officer John Simon.
Police said Sprague had officis at
2192 Dupont St., Irvine . His business
cards read, "150 beautiful foxy girls
for your dating pleasure."
Simon claims records also produced
a list of regular clients, many of whose
names he said ·he recngnized .
He said he an~ Sheriff's · investigator
Les Lever have been investigating the
Executive Escort Service for the past
three weeks after receiving "a number
of'' anonymous complaints.
He said they evidently operated at
various motels in Newport Be.ach and
throughout the cnunty and were available
almost on an "on-call" basis.
s1.,on alleges that three of the girls
were delivered to him and two other
v.·aiting detectives at the Corona del
Mar motel while Lever accompanied
him to the cnunty hotel where agents
also had reserved individual rooms.
The women were identified as Beverly
Anne Poehlamn. 24, of Cypress; Barbara
Jean Baylor, 25, of Santa Ana: Rena
Sheree Andrews, 24, of West Hollywood :
Mary Agnes Nielson, 34, of Anaheim ;
Dixie Lee Matriscino , 30, of Santa Ana ;
Gwen Patrice Worthington ._ 22, of
Anahelm; Loree Isenberg. 35, of Anaheim
and Elaine Komara, 20, of Anaheim.
Police Chief Earle Robitaille has been
assured by its sponsors -volunteers
who run the Huntington Beach Help
Line phone counseling ser!vice -that
it will be run professionally and is back-
ing the project.
Robert Terry, head of the Downtown
Property Owners Association, also is
supporting it.
"These are sincere people who wish
to run the clinic on a professional basis
and I think they shouJd be given a
chance," he commented.
And Mrs. Ora Brimer, who organized
a petition against the proposed clinic
six months ago when it was announced
om
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that it wouJd open on Main Street, said
she no longer is in 9pposition.
Mrs. Brimer, whd ·owns t.he Huntington
Beach Art ,G11llery on Main Street, said.
"If Chief Robitaille thinks they deserve
a c~ance, then I'll go .aJong with it.
I respect his judgment.".
\Vhat made believers of Chief Robitaille
and Terry wa$ a presentation last week
by Dr~ Ralph ·Sher, and Mrs .. Ha Mab
~lekoumbide~. fouilders of Help Ltne. .
They explained that a fajl range of
medical services will be offered ...
prenatal care, baby· care, denlal care.
pregnancy tests -in addition to drug
abuse counseling and venereal disease
treatment. ·
-• •
,
It will be open seven days a week
from about 3 p.m. to 10 p.m.
"But it will be run just like any
medical clinic." Dr. Sher said. "When
people come in they will be. given an
appointment · and ,told to · ({!tum at that
time -we won't have people hangitlg
around."
Or. Sher also pointed out that all
per~ rt;.eeiving lreatment will be oblig·
ed to~ staff counselor.
T'-rget for opening the clinic ls early
April before the Eas1':r vacation. A one-
year lease. on the building . has be_en
signed.
AQout 40 doctors, two dentists and
30 counselors have volunteered 'to donai;
their lime to the clinic. Community dona-
tions wlll be needed for the rent and
already several service ·clubs have·
a~ to make donations. • ·
6thets wishing to donate are asked
to call Mrs. Alekoumbides at Btrl-3833,
Dr. Sher at 842-4401. or William Osborne.
.a family counselor who Will be the. clinicf
director. at 847-7188.
"You can't really tell with these clinic!I
-some work well, others don 't.'' Chief
Robitaille said. "It depends who operates
them -the kids or professional people.
Professionals seem to be behind this
one."
' • • ' o 11ca
• ~-'' • , "-~-~!i Senate Willg
Damaged
'·
• b.i , •
By Blast '--·
WASHINGTON (AP) -An early morn•
-Ing bomb blast, reportedly linked te
a protest against the U.S.-supported m..
vasion of Laos, ripped up an lriterior
section of the Senate wing of the Capjtol
today causing extensive damage but 110
injuries.
"This Is apparenOy a political born·
bing," said Senate Republican Leader
fNa:h Scott of Pennsylvania. R~ . laid
the Senate Sergeant .at ·Arms. Robert
G: Dunphy, told him a letter had been
found linked lo the. bombing and referring
to U.S. operations in Laos.
Scott said a male caller who contacted
the Capitol switchboard to give advance
warning of the blast also referred to ,
the Laotian invasion.
Capitol police and FBI spokesmen,
however, would neither confirm nor deny
the link to al!tiwar protesters.
POLICE WALK THROUGH WRECKAG! OF IARBER SHOP IN THE NATION 'S CAPITOL
No Injuries Reported After PrHlawn Blast; Authorities Say Damage Extensive
Meanwhile, President Nixon issued a
statement through White H o U s e
spokesman Ronald L. Ziegler calling the
bombing "a shocking act of violence
that will outrage all American'S."
Boat, 6 Aboard, Missing
On Way to -Sunset Beach
A Coast Guard cutter and two
helicopters were out search ing this morn-
ing for a cabin cruiser with six aboard
missing in rough seas on a trip from
Catalina Island to Sunset Beach.
The 82-foot Point Hobard was out in
eight to IO-foot seas with ~30 knot
winds in the search for the 26-foot cruiser
Toad II.. Two helicoplers are also aiding
the search ranging from Oceanside to
Point Fermin. '
The boat was due back at Sunset
Beach marina at 3 p.m. Sunday. Mris.
Gayle Eckers, the wife of the skipper
John Eckers, called the Coast Guard
at 7;33 p.m. Sunday to report that lhe
boat had not returnld.
The boat i! believed to have engine
difficulties. Mrs. Eckers told the Coast
Guard that three other persons who
were on board when the cruiser went
on the fishing trip to Avalon returned
by plane to Lang Beach because of the
engine difficulties. A young boy, Joseph
Eckers, was among those who returned
by plane.
All those on board the cruiser are
believed to be from El Monte. Listed
as missing are John Eckers, 36, Frank
Eckers, 52, Greg Eckers, 18, Dennis
Montgomery, 20, Paul Wedde, 24 and
another man .named~il, about SO.
Haystack Blaze
Burns 15 Hours
In Huntington
Childrtn playing with matches ap.
patently ignited a haystack fire in Hun--
tington Beach that burned 15 hours -
from 3:30 p.m. Sunday until 6:30 a.m.
today.
Firemen said the blaze made ashes
of 6,000 bales of hay worth $20,000.
The hay was stacked at Ed's Dairy,
Heil Avenue and Bolsa Chica Road.
·"We covered another haystack with
tarps and saved $15,000 worth of hay,"
Division Chief Doug Spicard said today.
He said juveniles with matches and
cigarettes were seen running from the
haystack just before the blaze erupted
Sunday.
"But we don't know if it wa1·deliberat&.
or an accident."
The blast pulverized a men's room
and damaged other rooms, but did not
touch the Senate chamber itself.
Perhaps coincidentally, it came ·11
years to the day after Puerto Rican
nationalists shot and wounded five con·
gressmen ftom the visitors' gallery of
tM House of Representatives. It alst)
caused the most extensive damage t11
the building since the British set it
.afire in 1814.
Scott said the effect of the bombing
will be unfortunate, both in this country
and internationally.
"It's likely to be exaggerated.'' he
said. "They won't realize that it's ene
bomb in one washroom."
Scott also took the occasion to criticize
federa l judges in the District of Colum·
bis , accusing them of too much lenency.
He said even if the person who placed
the bomb is arrested "my guess would
be they'll never go to jail, not wit h
· the type of appellate court we have
in the District of Columbia."
Police, army and FBI investigators
were seeking clues to the identity of
the male caller who warned the Capitol
switchboard : "The Capitol build.in& will
IS.. CAPITOL, Page !J Succumbs at 68
Retired u.S. District &urt Judge Thur-
mond Clarke of Corona de] Mar, died
Sunday in Good Samarit.aii Hospital in
L05 Angeles where he had been confined
for the past five weeks. Re· was 68.
Mesa Fire. Tragedy Toll 3 Three engines, two trucks and a tanker
rushed to the fire when it was first
reported. After the Initial · blaze was
controlled, one engine company was left
overnight to watch it.
or.-ge Coast
Judge 'Clarke was a prominent
Southern California jurist for 38 years,
until his retirement last Sept. 1 as chief
U.S. judge of the Central , California
District.
He was appointed to the federal bench
by President Dwight D .. Eisenhower.
Sept. l, I~. an appointment that nar-
ro'!YIY passed the Senate Judiciary Com-
mittee. .
Judge Clarke credited the efforts of
his coosin, Se~. Strom Thurmc.nd (ff.-
South Carolina), for the committee's <'iQ.n-
firmation of the appointment; one l'bf·
two Republican judgeships approved that
year.
Judge Clarke was named chief judge
of the Central California District in 1966
and became the first federal district
judge outside of Wa~hinglon to ad·
minister the oath of office lo a member
of the President's cabinet.
L.asl July. Judge Clarke swore into
CJ ff Ice tabor Secretary J a m e s W.
Hodgson in ceremonies at the Western
\Vhite House in San Clemente.
He also admirtlsttrtd the oath of office
1s .. CLARKE. Page !J
,.
Girl Victirn's Brother • in Coma; Fireman Injured
The last embers were es:Unguished
at 6:30 this morning, Chief Spicard said.
Spicard said hay fires are nearly im-
possible to put out.
By ARTHUR R. VI NSEL
ot tltt-0.llJ f'l .. t llllf
The death toll neared four
~· l<>day .in the aftermath of a tragic Costa
Mesa collision in which a fireman's car
heading to a fatal fire collided with one
carrying four teenagers.
One boy whose sister was killed
outright remainecfin· critical condition
at Hoag Memorial Hospital today with
brain injuries.
Dead following the related mishaps
are:
Marie L. Ra"ttey, 74, of 666 W. 19th
St .. Co!ta Mesa.
Claire Arbuckle, lt, of 2002 Maple
St., Costa Mesa.
Edward L. Hernandez, 19, of 2183 Na-
tional Ave., Costa Mesa.
Mlss Arbuckle's brother Peul. 17, of
the same, address, wa1 listed by hospital
efficial1 as being in critical condition.
He rerriains !n 1 coma, 1pokesmen
said, but has shown some 1llgbt Im·
provement.
The fourth teenager injured in the
grinding, beadon collision neat Estancia
High School was listed ia fair condition.
Paul R. Baldwin, 19, of Mira L<>ma,
is also under treatment at Hoag
Memorial Hospital.
Costa Mesa Fire Department Battalion
Chief Ron Coleman, whose car was
demolished in the crash on Placentia
Avenue near Joann Street, was listed
ia good condition today.
He was admitted to Costa· Mesa
Memorial Hospital today f o 11 o w i n g
1urgery on a' ftaciured 1ej.
"He's lucky to be ·alive." remarked
a newspaper photographer who arrived
on the scene shortly after the collision
shortly before midnlght.
"He 's in pretty good spiritt-today,
though," 1dded a colleague.
Fellow firt investigators sai~ ~11
they planned to rwurvey Mrs. ~'
Bethel Towers apartment, wberi • bet
bedroom was gutted by the blaze.
Tentatively blamed on smoking in bed,
the fire caused additional minor damage
_due to water seeping Into the unit below.
The fire was the : third reported at
the 18-story retirement tower, but also
the first fatal one,
"Adding water just makes it 11molder
longer, because it will burn forever inside
those bales," he explained. "So we let
Jt bum the bulk down until we can
get at better.0
A few fences were scorched, but
nothing else was damaged and there
were no injuries because o fthe flre,
Splcard said. ,.. M families scheduled funeral services
for Ut,t rvlctims ...... scaUered over the road~y. resulting Jn . th• crash ~ Speaker Sets Limit
California Highway Patrul officers con--WASHINGTON (UPI} _ H 0 use
tinned their investigation .. -...'1 Speaker Cart Albert, 62, says he will
Ttie CHP handles prolill\ in which retire at ag'° 70, but be' does 1\Clt reel
municipal police or fire -unl~ are in-that should riecessttllY be the retirement
volved. age for any other member of Congress.
All three victims' rftes will be bandied ·~·job of' speaker ft, iSiffltb\t and
by S~ Joachim's . Clt!R>JIC Olurch ll\, .J an\• to C'!'JY on. pi... job-When
Costa .Mesa. · . ~ l ·lel ''. ~L oaid ~undiy, "~ .tbini. J
Rosuy I"; Miu Arblltkl~ a •·d • t1Jt ~~. <liod 1Jielkar '""', able. to ·l!•ni•~• ,wli) be lon!ghl 91 · f p,m.. do tt, 'mil lo 9\1;•bllt '<llffeiint l'fOPI•
bl S.lti llrorlu;ty Ol•pel. .,. cOllSUWted d1!1erently." "j • ~'I ..
Weather
Doii't let that nice warm·looking
sun fool .you Tuesday. There'll be
·gusty winds keeptng the tempera-
tures down to 56 along the Orange
Coast, with inland readings tabbed
at 64.
INSmE TODAY
Kilroy WM here over the
weekend, setting an elapsed
time record in hU Kioloa ll
t1acht · in the Whitneu.-:.SerieL_
.race arou1td Cato.Lina. Ste Page
5,
. .. \.
11
I
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11 ,: .... 11
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"'"'" 11 N•lltfl ll Mtwt W Oflflll. t.vflty 11
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•
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2 DAILY l-11 .. U I H ftJj,)llday, March 1, 1971
The Queen's Moving Day
Snarls Traf fie on Shore
By ALMON LOCKABEY
Dtllr f'Jltf •Ntlttl •tilttr
IN THE MERCHANT Marine it's called "moving ship."
Jt means moving: the ship from one dock or berth. to another for the pur·
pose of loading or unloa~~ cargo, fueling, etc. ,
No big thing:· •
Usually a skeleton crew and the he~p of a couple of tug:s.
On Saturday, J started to Terminal Island to cover the start of Los
Angeles Yacht Club's Midwinter Catalina Island race in·
' volving some 57 yacht,,:.
No big thing.
The start of one yacht race 100"4 about the same as
another. On Long Beach's ocean Boulevard 1 noticed that
lraffic was lfeavier and slower than usual for that tlme of
day. By 11 o'clock -scheduled time for the Start of the
yacht race - I . :was no farther toward Terminal Island
than the Long Beach end of the new bridge.
TOO LATE. I'd missed the start.
I made an illegal U-turn and started back toward the Pacific Coast Club
lo' try and husUe a game of squash. In the PC parking lot I looked out across 'the harbor toward Pier J, ,
Something new had .been added .. 'There was the Queen Mary, Black ~hull, white superstructure, three
canted orange stacks. THEN I remembered. This was "moving shjp" day for the_ Queen ~1ary.
Hundreds of r;mall crafts cut wakes in tbe h3rbor as they c1reled the new
home of the "Queen." A middle-aged woman walked across-the parking lot and stopped to
look at Pier J.
"Isn't that beaullful'!" she asked. in awe.. ·
''Yes. ma'am," I said aloud. ·
To myself I thought: "Enjoy iL It's costing you."
Hundreds of persons lined the shore to gaze at the Queen 1'1ary in her
new and final berth. Traffic on ocean Boulevard was still at a crawl as motor-
1"' gaped.
SUDDENLY I bad a mental picture of the gnarled aid Llmey AB (able-
bodied seaman) who crawled through a hatch on the foredeck of the Queen / Mary on the day &he arrived at Long Beach. He blinked. at the thousands of
horn-tooting, bell·ringing small craft that swarmed aroW1d the Queen f.1ary,
hampering her every maneuver.
"Chee-sus," he growled. "All dat fuss for di1t ol~ heap o' ru.st?11
"Amen," J brtathed as I headed for the locker room.
Mesa Teen Abducted,
Gets Ride to Valley
·-~.--... ,.
Fro'".Page l
CLARKE •.•
to former Labor Secretary George P.
Schultz Al dirtctor of the offlce of·
management and budget.
Jn l!Mi, Judg~ Clarke. then 1 widower,
married Athalie RichardsOn Irvine,
mother or Mrs. Joan Irvine Smith, the
largest minority 1tockbolder in the
lrvlnt Ccmp111y.
A natlve of Santa Paula. Judge Clarke
was the son of Judge and Mrs. Robert
M. Clarke. He was appointed to the
municipal court in Los Angeles by Gov.
J ames Rolph in 1932.
In 1935, Gov. Frank Merriam elevated
him to the Superior Court, an office
to which he was elected in 1936, 1942,
1948 and 1954.
Among his most notable court rulings
was his 1953 decision that overturned
California's law that barred aliens from
owning land.
Judge Clarke ruled the legislation was ·
• aimed solely at persons of Japanese
ancestry and the legislation thus violated
due process and an equal protection
1 clause of the 14th amemdment. The
State Supreme "Court later upheld his
ruling.
Judge Clarke a~ered critics ·who
claimed he was t lenient with the
defense that his p ctices v.·ere "fair"
rather than lenient.
He said that on the bench he believed
he had "sincerely tried to temper justice
with mercy" ever since he visited Sau
Quentin's death row.
Judge Clarke was graduated in 1920
from Los Angeles High School where
he distinguished himself as an outstan·
ding athlete. He held the 440-yard dash
championships for the city, Southern
California and the state. One of his
track records stood until 1941.
He attended Stanford University and
earned his law degree 'at. USC. He was
admitted. to the state bar in 1927 and
r;erved as deputy district attorney for
Los Angeles County from 1927·29. In
1929, he became deputy city attorney
for . Los Angeles, a post he held until
his Municipal Court appointment.
Judge Clarke retained his offices in
Los Angeles following his retirement to
the pOsl of senior judge last Sept. I.
He was a member of the American,
State and Los Angeles County bar
associations, was a past president of
the Stanford Club of Los Angeles and
a past president of the 'Los Angeles
High School Alumni Association. He was
a member of Zeta Psi and Phi Delta
Phi fraternities.
Judge Clarke belonged f(I the Irvine
Coast Country Club, the Newport }!arbor
Yacht Club, the Bohemian Club ol San
Francisco, Native Sons of the Golden
West, Pasadena Parlor; California Club,
Valley Hunt Club, Annandale Goll Club
and the Eldorado Country Club at Palm
Desert.
A tetnapd snack bar emp1oye at the
eo.ta Mtu Goll and Countey Club told
police Sunday ahe was ltidnaped aJJd
taken for a five.mile ride, before her
drlnk-clutchlng abductor 1ot out i..o Foun-
tain Valley.
-with his goU bag and clubs -an
account corroberated for police by the .
attendant on duty.
Slnce his retirement, be spent time
al his farm in Virginia 11-nd his borne
in the Cameo Shores section or Corona
del Mar.
He wu dropped of! at a service station
Valley's Council
Braced for Weed
Abatement Fight
Fountain Valley City Councilmen will
tackle a seedy problem Tuesday night
-weeds and the protesb from people
who had to pay to kill the weeds.
It's time for the semi-annual weed
abatement public hearings. Every six
months the city sends weed killing crews
out to clear property which has been
declared a nuisance. •
Property owners who haven't done the
~ob themselves are then charged for
the city's work, but allowed to protest
if they feel the charge was unreasonable
or unneci!ssary.
The· weed abatement program Is one
of two public hearings set for Tuesday's
8 p.m. council session.
OIAH•I COAST
DAILY PILOT
Ollt.QQ( CX>Al1' f'UILllM1NQ C'OM~ANV'
l ohrt N. Wt.i ,,..li:lwi, .... hlllbW
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Tlitlllt• 1Ctt¥1f
l"ll'ltOI".
lti•••• A. Mw,'11!11.-MMltlnl Editor
A/111 Dir.hi
W•I Orwnpa Counlr Edllor
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T•••••• 17141 '41-4111
Cl_,.4 Aifftttkl1t '41·1671
Angela J . Rosati, 17, ol Costa Mesa,
was slapped <>nee during the incident
but not harmed.
2 Bandits Rob
Valley Market Investigators tentatively blamed lhe
abduction on a dnmken joke by three
duffers, but the principal suspect Two bandits armed with a .Pistol closed
on whom they have a good lead -a small Fountain Valley market six
may not find it so fW1ny. minutes early Sunday night, then took
He called a friend from a pay phone $400 for their work.
about 6 p.m. and the Jong distance Police said the bandits walked in the
record was given to Police. '\-Stop and. Co Market on Magnolia Street . . . . Land Garfield Avenue at 10 :54 p.m., flash·
Miss Rosatt said she had JU:St gotten ed a small pistol, and ordered three
into her car at 5: 10 p.m., after ~he employes and one customer to stand
snack bar at 1701 Golf Course Drive in the store room.
closed. The bandits tlilrl cleaned out credit
Suddenly, she said .. a man v.·aved al cards and cash from the employrs
her to stop so. she did, at _which time and customer and rang out the day's
h~ .and two Jolly companions began total on the cash register.
fhrbng. Both bandits then shoved the four
She said the prime suspect is a latin '·iclims into the store cooling room and
man John, while the second was fat , told them to wait here HI minutts.
,Qever ad.dressed by name, and the third No one 'vas injured during the robbery,
was a 301sh golfer named Art. police said.
•'
Breaking (Jp
Uf'I Tt!ff~ttto
Indicating he definitely is not one or your straight-faced ecclesiastical
leaders, Dr. Arthur Michael Ram!ey (rlghl), England's Archbishop o!
Canterbury, breaks up during visit wlth ne\vly consecrated Bishop or
\Vorcester, the Rev. Robin \VOOds. Subject is a cardinal secret.
I •
. . . . . ' --....
Ul'I Tei.,netto
ARROW INDICATES AREA OF EXPLOSION AT CAPITOL
The Bomb Was Planted in a Rest Room
·From Page 1
CAPITOL BOMBING ...
bi ow up in 30 minutes."
Half an hour later, at 1:32 a.m. EST.
the bomb exploded. Capitol Police Chief
James Powell said one <>f bis <>fficers
was within 200 feet of the blast but
escaped injury despite windows bieaking
"right over his head."
The blast gutted ' men's room ~tly
across from the Old Senate Cham'!!r.
blasted doors off their hinges in several
:surrounding rooms, and blew out win-
dows all the way out to the Senate's
front door -perhaps 125 feet.
Bricks, doors, lighting and other fix·
tures were piled high in a corridor
when newsmen were allowed a brief
inspect.Ion about six hours alter the blast.
The men's room -apen to the public
but generally only known about by people
working in the area -was a grey
hulk filled with tiny pieces of plumbing ·
fi1tures and gcey plaster rubble. It was
almpst impossible to tell it had been_
a rest room.
A red brick wall on one side at the
men's room was badly cracked and bulg·
ing out into the corridor. Plaster molding
on the corridor wall was blown <1way
and littered the floor along .with glass
from broken windows.
Gold lace curtains were pushed out
against and :sometimes through broken
windows all the way down to the ornately
painted committee and reception rooms
on the north end af the Senate chamber.
The front door, another 50 feet av,.ay,
was broken.
The Senate barber shop, across a small
Environment Series
Set at Golden West
A four-week series to giVe a laymen
a grasp of local and \Vorld environmental
problems v.·ill be presented by Golden
West Evening College the first four
Tuesdays in March, beginning this week.
The series. "Man and Environment"
v.·ill 'begin at-.3:3D p.m. Tuesday in the
college center. It will be open to the
public at no charge.
hallway from the men's room, was badly
littered and mirr6r:s and windows were
shattered but the barber chairs a n ~
other heavy equipment were not mangled
or moved.
The outside of the historic Old Senate
Chamber, which was used from 1800
to 1808 and was the scene of President
John .<\dams, inauguration, Nov. 22. 1800,
'\'as not damaged. The door was closed
and newsmen did nc:it look inside.
Capitol police said there had been
six bomb threats since Christmas. Chief
Powell said routine procedures were used
bet~·een l a.m. and 1:32 a.m. v.·hen
the blast occurred.
Sen. George Aiken (R·VI.), returned.
from viewing the damage and said he
believes tfte warning phone call 2nd
ils early·ntorning timing bear the
•·earmarks or organiiation."
Engineers in the office of the architect
of the Capitol looked for possible struc·
tural injury to the historic and ancient
west front.
Thomas Y. Clancy, supervising
engineer of the Capitol, said through _
a spokesman that it was too early to
d~te.rmine the full extent of the damage.
Windows were blasted out directly
above lhe huge wooden beams that were
. braced against the West front several
• years ago, but there were no · visible
cracks or any other damage in the
""wall itself.
There were cracks, however, in the
interior section of another wall some
distance from the West front close to
the blast area.
The Senate Chamber itself. in a newer
section of the building, \Vas not damaged.
\Va.shington, D.C. Police, FBI and
Army bomb experts from nearby Ft.
~1cl{air searched the bu i Id in g,
\Vashington police used C er man
Shepherd dogs, and combed other parts
of the Capitol looking for any other
bombs.
The Capitol had closed to the public
at 5 p.m. EST Sunday. Officials said
all custodial personnel had leit the
building some hours before the explosion.
Only members of the Capitol police force
were inside at the time.
NEED
CASH?
We Buy Almost
Anything
e Otomond·.
• Jewelry • Stereos
•
Explosion
Irks Nixon,
Senators
~YASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix-
on and members of the Senate expressed
shock today over an explosion thJit ca~:s·
ed extensive damage lo the Senate wing
of the Capitol building.
"A shocking act of vio!;nce that."' 11, I
outrage all Americans. was N11on s
description in.. a statement telephoned
from aboard Air Force One as the
President flew to Des Moines. Jo\va.
··The President feels that this act
f.lf violence is totally deplorable and
\\"ill be condemned by all Americans,"
said press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler. r
'·The President feels that lhe Capitol
Is a building that belongs to all
Americans and· symbolizes a form of
government that for 192 years has pr~
vided a means for peaceful change,
Ziegler said.
Earlier \\"hen he learned of the tX·
plosion, Nixon called FBI Director J.
Edgar Hoover from the White Howe
for an assessment of the damage.
On board the presidenli~l plane, Ni1on
called Senate Majority Leader Mike
Mansfield as senators expressed their
amazement and outrage over the ex·
plosion. . .... 4
•·This is apparently a political bomb-
ing," said Republican Leader Hugh
Scott of Pennsylvania, who said a Senate
official had told him a letter had been
fvund linked to the explosion and refer·
ring to U.S. operations in Laos.
Scott said reaction of the uplosion
will be unfortunate, both at home and
abroad. The effect, he said, is "likely
to be exaggerated. They won't realize
that it's one bomb in one washroom."
But Scott said. ''Y.'e're not going to
be terrified by these would be terrorists."
He '3.id the Capitol building once agaln
should be thrown open to the public.
"We cannot be led by this action
to any form of repressive tactic," he
said. ,.
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, who
serves as president of the Senate, called
the explosion "a calculated act of outrage
which will be neither tolerated nor con·
doned by Americans who valu1 our
system and its institutions."
Charles Watson
Arraigned in
Tate Slayings
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Charles
j·Tex" \Yatson, who spent the past three
months in a menta l hospilpl. was ar·
raigned today for the Tate-La.Bianca
slayings but his trial is not .expected
to begin for months.
\Vith a jury·now hearing final evitl!nce
to decide a sentence for Charles Manson
and three young women. Walson ap-
peared in a courtroom down the corridor
and showed apparent rationality as he
briefly-answered questions by the judge
and prosecution.
The 24-year-old Watson had suc.
cessfully resisted extradition r r o m
f\.tcKinney, Texas. until v.•ell after the
Tate trial ltarted so he was separated
from his co-defendants. Shortly alter
he arrived in Los Angeles, psychiatrists
declared he "was turning into •
vegetable" and he was sent to a state
mental hospital.
Watson was returned here a little
more than a week ago after being
certified as mentally capable of :standing
trial. His attorney, Samuel Rubrick, in-
dicated to newsn:ien, however, that the
defense would enter a plea for Watson
of innocent by reason of Insanity.
In the Tate trial itself, Steve Crogan,
\\'ho ran away from home at the age
of 14, has joined with Manson's co-Oefen·
danls in an attempt to save the cull
leader from the gas chamber.
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DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -BtlwHn Htrbor & Broadway
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•
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Newport ~ea~h
VOL 64, NO. 51, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNIA MONDAY, MARCH I, 1971
· Carpenter Asks Mexican Air Halt • Ill
By GEORGE LEIDAL
01 Ille O.Uy 111111 ll•ff
State Senator Dennis Carpenter (R·
Newport Beach) today appealed to Presi·
dent Richard Nixon to halt government
plans to allow Acronaves de Mexico
tO operate out of Orange County Airport.
Cirpenter said he believes only the
Pre11ident can inter'vene in the matter
he described as an example of federal
Harbor Arrests
9 Held •
government Ignoring the will 10{ local
government.
Last week, Orange County Airport
Commissioners joined the City of
Newport Beach in protesting proposed
flights of the Mexican airline out of
the county airstrip.
Although only one fight daily Js con-
templated, airport officials contend the
foreign carrier approval would 11et a
precedent. They argue there is no room
Ill Vice
Raids at Motels
A Newport Beach contract« and eight
young women were arrested on pro-
1tituUon charges Saturday night at two
Harbor Area motels after vice officers
investigl!ted an alleged "dating service"
over the past three weeks.
'I)le ainsts came on a combfned effort
DAILY l'ILOT Stiff l'hei.
SUCCUMBS AT 68
Judge Thur~ond Cl1rka
Retired Judge
Thurmond Clarke
Succ1imhs at 68
Retired U.S. District Court Judge Thur·
mond Clarke of Corona de! Mar, died
Sunday in Good Samaritan Hospital in
Los Angeles where he had been confined
for lhe past fiv~eeks. He was 68.
Judge Clarke was a prominent
Southern Galifornia jurist for 38 years.
until his retirement last Sept. 1 u chitf
U.S. judge of the Central Califor~ia
District.
of Newport Beach police and Orange
County SherifPs deputies.
Held on charges of procuring is Henry
W. Sprague, 52, of 64 Beaain Bay. The
tight girls arrested on charges of con-
spiring to commit prostitution range in
age from 20 to !JS.
Arresting officers aliedie lhat Spraiue
and the girls operated as part of Ex-
ecutive Escort Service in Irvine. It
as1ertedly offertd dates for
•·sophisticated ex~tives."
Charges for the dates, according lo
pOlic-e allegations, were $100 per night.
The organization had .been in business
fot.t4e.,Rast month,'a.f.COtdi!18 to Newport
vice officer John Simon.
Police said Sprague had offices at
2192 Dupont St., Irvine. His business
cards read, "150 beautiful foxy girls
for your dating pleasure."
Simon claims records also produced
a list of regular clients. many of whose
names he said he recognlzed.
He said be and Sheriff's investigator
Les Lever have been invest.igatin& the
Executive Escort Service for the past
three weeks after receiving "a number
of" anonymous complaints.
He said they evidently_o~~•!ed a~
various mctels in Newport Beach and
throughout the county and were available
almost on an "on-call" basis.
Arts Festival ..
Set in Newport
The Newport Beach arts festival
will take place April 2.S from l·S
p.m. on the lawn at City Hall.
4 The exhibit is limited to Newport
Beach artists and craftsmen. A
one dollar fee for each entry will
be charged.
For the •• first time there will
be a category for crafts such as
weaving, macrame and stitchery.
All art and crafts must be suitable
for wall hanging. Prizes will be
awarded for crafts and a r t
separately.
Entires may be brought to the
City Hall April 23 between 9 p.m.
and S p.m. Mrs. William Stabler
is chainnan o( the festival.
in the terminal for addition.al airlines.
Carpenter said Federal Av I at lo n
·Authority (FAA) approval represents a
reversal from the FAA's position taken
within the last year ''that the: quesUon
of airport usage was within the: jurlsdlc-
tlon of the county Board of Supervisors
and Uiat they (the FAA) had no authority
to make determinations about increasing
flight activity at the field."
Carpenter. a former county airport
om
Solom OK
Medi-Cal ·
Proposal
SACRAMENTO (AP) ~ An Assembly
committee. approved legislation today to
restore part of Gov. Reagan's Medi-Cal
cut,, after the Republican author d the
measure clashed with administration of-
ficials.
Assemblyman Gordon Duffy, (R-Han-
ford). author of the proposa.t to restore
aboot a third ot the cutback In medical
services to 'the aged and needy. com·
pJajned he couldn't find out whether the
Republica11 administration was with Jtim
or against him In the plan.
Duffy asked Richard L. Camilli, deputy
director of the $1.24 billion program, when
he would find out whether Reagan shares
the goals of Duffy's bipartisan committee
to prevent any increase in ccunty cOBts
becauie Of"tHe~aitbaeks and to prevent-
reductiot1s in mental health and crippled
children care.
Duffy said he would work with the ad-
ministration.
Camilli said he knew of no change :n
problems when he receivE:d Jpeclflc as-
surances from the governor he backs
those goals, but until then "J would rather
not accept amendments'' from the ad-
Camilli said he knew of no cha11.gee in
Reagan's pledge to prevent increase in
ccunty costs but said his department op-
~ed a section of the Duffy bill to guar·
antee that the state would pick up the
extra costs.
That would be "practically an open
claim on the state General Fund'' that
could cost $20 millio11 to SSO million be-
tween now and June 30, Camilli said.
~n Suspected
In School Blaze
Arsonists s1ruck California School in
Costa Mesa school witb a pair of mo\otov
cocktails Sunday or early today but the
incendiary· OOmbs flickered out after a
momentary fire causing $150 damage.
Fire investigators said the incii'ent
on the elementary school campus at
32.12 California Ave., was discovered by
employes this morning.
A custodian was in the classroom,
hit by bombs thrown through the window
at 1:30 p.m. Sunday, establishing the
18-hour time element.
Investigators said fire damage Included
two scorched desk.Ii, besides I.be 1battered
window.
Handles Newport Money
I
commissioner, also charged that federal
agenci" had not consulted ihe airport
commission. supervisors or legislators
prior to granting use or Orange County
airport to Aeronav.es.
Tile state senator charged the federal
government with "going behind our backs
• •• when the: county has clearly refused
to grant domestic airlines any extension
of' service." He urged supervisors and
airport commissioners to move to block
the federal government agreement with
Aeronaves.
Citing Nixon's revenue sharing plan
to restore local cymtrol, Carpenter · in
his leUer to Nixon said "it is ln·
Conceivable that the federal government
would undertake to impose additional
air traffic in a county operated airport
without the prior consent or local govern.
ment." \
He told Nixon tpe county _does not
'
. ""' T""""' ARROW INDICATES AREA OF EXPLOSION AT CAPITOL
The Bomb W11 Planted In 1 Rast Room
Mesa Fire Crash -neaths
Feared Rising to Four
'
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
ot Ille 0.llY l'lift llfff
The death toll neared fou r
today in the aftermath of a tragic Costa
Mesa collision in which a fireman's' car
heading to a fatal fire collided with one
carrying four teenagers.
One boy whose sister was killed
outright remained in critical condition
at Hoag Memorial Hospital today with
brain injulles.
Dead following the related mishaps
are:
Uonal Ave., Costa Mesa.
Miss Arbuckle's brother Paul , 17, of
the same, address, was listed by hospital
officials as being in critical condition.
He remains in a coma. spokesmen
said, \but has shown some slight im·
provement.
The fourth teenager injured In the
grinding, headon collision near Estancia
High School was listed in fair condition.
Marie L. RaUey, 74, of
St.. Costa Mesa.
Paul R. Baldwin, 19, of Mira L<>ma,
is also under treatment at Hoag
Memcrial Hosplt1l .
666 W. 19th Costa Mesa Fire Department Battalion
Claire Arbuckle, 14. of 2002 Maple
St., Costa Mna. ,
Edward L. Hernandez, 19, of 2183 Na·
Chief Ron Coleman, whose car was
demolis hed in the crash on Placentia
Avenue near Joan n Street, was listed
in good condition today. '
He was admitted to Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital today f o 11 o w I n g
aurgery on a fra ctured leg.
''He 's lucky to be alive," remarked
He was appointed to the federal bench
by President Dwight D. Eisenhower,
Sept. l. 1955, an appointment that nar·
rowly passed the Senate Judiciary Com·
miltee. Judge Clarke credited the efforts of
his cousin, Sen. Strom Thurmvnd (ft-
South Carolina}, for the committee's con-
firmation of the appointment, one of
two Republican judgeships approved that
year.
u ·nion Bank Receives Bid
a newspaper photographer who arrived
on the scene shortly after the collision
shortly before midnight.
"He's in preUy good spirit& today,
though," add~d a colleague.
Judge Clarke was named chie( judge
cf the Ceqal CalifomJa District in 1966
and ~e the first federal district
judge outside of Washington to ad·
minister the oath o( office to a membet
cf the President's cabineL
Last July. Judge Clarke swore into
cfflce Labor Secretary James W.
Hodgson In ceremonies at the Western
White House in San Clemente.
He also administered the oath of office
to former Labor Secretary G~~ge P.
Schultz as director of the office o(
managen'enl and budgeti
In UM4, Judge Clarke, then a widower,
married Alhalie Richardson Irvine.
mother of Mn. Joan lrvlnr. Smith, the
!Stt CLARKE. Page I)
When Newport Beach decided t.o see
if it Cbuld save some money by con-
solidatina: Its scattered checking accounts
for deposit in a single bank, the prospect
provoked a variety of entlcementi from
local financial instituttons. ·
One of them -possibly viewing what
will happen if the upcoming Civic Center
bond Wue fails -went so far as
to say it might build the city a Clty
Hall on a leas'e-back agreement.
Another want'ed to establlstf the. muni-
cipality as a Master Charge merchant so
lf the city auarant.eed to k e e p a
restdents could just sign for their utility
lax bills.
The bid. howevtr, went to Union Bank,
wbose offer cont.alnK more mundane
lnducemenll but will result ln the lar1est
cash savings, according to City Manager
Harvey L. Hurlburt
If the city guaranteed to keep at
$150,'00!f minimum b a I an ct -which
Hurltiurt said would be. no problem -
UniQO Bank . said it would provide free.
payroll and general &«OUnl ~heck:s. an
"on call" armored car service and check
sequencing and register service.
Cenlinela Bank was the Cine prOpo11ing
the city go into the credit busine.v
but Newport National Bank was ·the
originator of the unique bulld)ng scheme
that would have eliminated the need
for the City Council lo take llle ll2
million Civic Center to the votera.
And It was • terlou! pro'pol•L
Gtorge Woodford, Newport N1tlon&1
pr<Sldent, uid !<>day hi! bank 11 1tn1
interested in the idea and wants very
much to talk about it with city officials.
"We need to know a lot more about •
Fellow fire investigators said today
they planned to re-survey Mrs. Rattey'1
Bethel Towers apartment. where her
bedroom was gutted·by the blrie.
Tmtalively blamed on 1m~ in bed.
the fire caused additional minor damage It," Woodford said, "such as details due to water seeping into.the unit below.
on COil, but we would liie to make The fire was the third rtp%ted at
1t fly.'' · • • lhe lS:story retirement tower, but also
Newport Beach currently is working the first fatal one.
on determining those e1act costs but As families scheduled funeral M:rvices
whether the City Council would be will-for the vlcUms -scattered over the
ing to commit to anything other than roadway. resulting in the crasb -
a regular bond 13.sue is not known. California Highway Patrol officers cdn-
The council has gone on record IJ tlnued their lnvestlgaUon.
saying It will Jfut the lssue to a vote The CHP handles probes in which
of the people -problbly In Stptember, municipal pollce or fire un1ll are ln·
although some me.mberc have in· · volved.
dlcal.ed they might !luppoft <emate All three victim!!' rites will be h1ndled
financing methods if general obligttioA by St Joachim'• Catholic Church In
bondin1 IJ rejected. Costa Mesa.
I
Today'• Final
•
.TEN CENTS·
County
want lo expand Orange C".ounty· airpor..
even thoogh people "propbably have use
for flights to Mexico, and to other parts
of the · U.S. from an airport appropriately-
serving the county's growing population."
"Incidents of ~ thi! type ought to
motivate the Airport Commls:sion and
the supervisors to redirect their attention
to the qqesUon or airport planning with.
a renewed vigor," Carpenter concluded.
'
Senate Wing
Damaged
' . .
By Blast
WASHINGTON (AP) -An early morn·
ing bomb blast, reportedly Jinked to
a protest againft the U.S.·supported In-
vasion of Laos, ripped up an interior
section of the Senate wing of the Capitol
today causing extensive damage but no
injuries.
"Tbis is apparently a political born--
bing." said Senate Republican Leader
Hugb Scott of Pennsylvania. He said
the Senate Sergeant at Arms, Robert
G. Dunphy. lold him a lellec. had be<n
found linked lo lbe bombing and referrinl
to U.S. operations fn Laos.
&ott said a male caller who contacted
the Capitol switchboard to give a~vance
warning of the blast also referred to
the Laotian invasion.
Capito police an. d FBr sJii](esmen,
however, would neither confirm nor deny
the ~lllk to antiwar-protesters.
Meanwhile, President Nixon issued a
statement through. White Ho u 1 e
spokesman Ronald L. Ziegler calling the
bombing 11a $ocking act of •lolence
that will outrage all Americans."
The blast pulverized a men's -room
and damaged other rooms. but did not
touch tbe Senate chamber itself.
Perhaps coincidc.ntallyJ it came 17
years to the day after Puerto Rican
nationalists shot and wounded five con·
gressmen from the visitors' gallery o[
the House o( Representatives. It also
ca'used the most extensive damage to
the building since the British set it
afire in tin._
Scott said the effect of the bombing
will be unfortunate, both In this country
and internatipnally.
"It's likely to be exaggerated,'' he
said. "They won 't realize that it's one
bomb in one washroom."
Scott also took the occaslon to criticize
federal judges in the District of Colum·
bia, accusing them of too much lenency.
He said even if the person who placed
the bomb is arrested "my guess would
be they'U never go to jail. not with
the type of appellate court we hava
in the District of Columbia." 1
Police, army and f'VI i.11vesligat.ors
were seeking clues to 'ttT("" Identity of
the male caller who warned the Capitol
switchboard: "The Capitol building will
(See CAPITOL, Page !I
Oruge Coast
Weather
Don't let that nice warm-looking
•sun fool you Tuesday. There'll be
gusty winds keeping the tempera·
lures down to 56 along the Orange
Coast. with inland readings tabbed
at 64.
INSIDE TODAY
Kilroy WG3 here over the
weekend, setting cm elopsed
time Tecord in hit Kialoa 11
yacht in the \Vhitney SeTits
race around Catalina . See Pape
5.
I
'
" • " •~ ...
" " .. .. • " ....
"
AM LMIOtrt 11
IM'fi.. 11
N•lllMl•I Ntw1 ...
Ot-1"" Ctoul!IY 11 '•hll• ...... .,. • lll'Wlt 1W4
, lttc.ll M•ltltb Mon
'Ttft¥111tft 11
Tllttltn 11
WNflltr •
WOl!lt!l'f Nt'" 11-11 w.rlf Nf'W1 •4
'
' ' ' • . ... -
Z DAILY PILOT N Monday, Marth 1, 1971
I
The Queen's Moving Day
•
Snarls Traffic on Shore
·'
By ALMON LOCKABEY
DlltY l'llft 9-11111 • .....,,
IN THE MERCllANT Marine it's called "moving ship."
lt means movtng the ship from one dock or berth to another for the pur-
pose of loa ding or un1oading cargo, fueling , etc.
No big thing.
Usually a skeleton crew and the help of a couple of tugs.
On Saturday, I started to Terminal Island \o cover the start of Los
Angelet Yacht Club's Midwinter Catalina Island race in·
volving aome 57 yaclrta.
No_ big thing.
The sWt of one yacht ract looks about the aame as
another. On Lalli Beach"• OCean Boulevard I noticed lhat
traffic Wal heavier and alower than usual for that time of
day. By 11 o'clock -scheduled time for the start of the
yacht race -I waa no farther toward Terminal Island
than the Long Beach end of the new brl~e.
TOO LATE. I'd missed the start.
I made .tin illegal U-turn and slatted back toward the Pacific Coast Club
to try and husUe a game of sqwuh.
In the PC parlting lot t looked out across the barbor toward Pier J,
Something new had been added.
There waa the Queen Mary. Black hull, w~te superstructure, three
canted orange stacks. THEN I remembered. This wu 0 moving ship" day fctr the Queen Mary.
Hundffiis of small crafts cut wakes in the harbor as they circled the new
~e of the "Queen."
• ~ middl~aged woman walked across the parking lot and stopped to
look at Pier J.
"Isn't that beautiful?" she asked in awe.
"Yea ma'am,". I aa1d aloud.
To mysell l thoughl: "Enjoy IL It's ~ you." ·
Hundreds of person! Uned the shote to gaze at the Queen Mary In her
new and final berth. Traffic on Ocean Boulevard was IUll at a cra:wl as motor--
Isis gaped.
SUDDENLY I had a menlal plclure ol lhe RDMlod old Llmey AB (able-
bodied seaman) who crawled through a batch on the foredeck of the Queen
Mary on .the day she arrived at Uing Beach. He blinked at the thousandS of
hom·looting, bell-ringing small craft that parmed around the Queen Mary
hampering her every maneuver. '
"Chee-sus," he growled. "All dat fuu for dis old heap o' rust'?"
"Amen~" I breathed as I headed for the locker room .
Glavas Elected
To State Post
~
· Newport Beach Police Chief B. James
Gllvas has been elected pruldent of
·the California Pollce:~el1 Association.
Qtlef Glavas is charter member
of the 26>member, rganlz.aUon and has
served on ita execuUve board for the
past three years.
The group wu fint organiud in 1965
to aerVe u a communications devk:e
for California po!iCe chiefs, It helps
dl.aeminate Jn!ormaUon between mem·
hers about Jaw en!orc:ement practices
as well as serving as a voice for the
police leaden on current issues.
• From Pagel
CLARKE •••
largest minority stockholder in the
Irvine Company.
DAILY r1LOT SI.ti r •ll
A native of Santa Paula, Judge Clarke
was the son of Judge and Mrs. Robert
M. Clarke. He was appointed to the
municipal court in Uis Angelei by Gov.
James Rolph in 1932. ·
HEADS STATE GROUP
~•wport Chief Gl1v1s
No Breakfast Milk
In 1935, Gov. Frank ~1errlam elevated
him to the Superior Court, an office
to which he was elected in 1936, 1942,
1948 and 1954. HA?i.flLTON, 8 er mud a (AP)
Bermudans went without fresh milk for
breakfi.st today because the supply of
milk cartons ran out, the island's largest
dairy reported.
Dunkley's Dairy said it has ordered
520,000 milk cartons to be sent by air
and container ship but that neither ship.
ment arrived.
I
OU.Mel COAST
. .
DAILY PILOT .
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0-""4 ~ ... '42·1671
Among his most notable court rulings
was his 1953 decision that overturned
California's law that baned aliens from
owning land .
'.1udge Clarke ruled the legislation was
aimed solely at persons of Japanese
ancestry and the legislation thus violated
due process and an equal protection
clause of the 14th amemdment. 'The
State Supreme Court later upheld his
ruling.
Judge Clarke answe,red critics who
claimed he was too lehlent with the
defense that his practices were "fair"
rather than lenient.
He said that on the bench he believed
he had "sincerely tried to temper justice
with mercy" ever since he visited San
Quentin's death row .
Judge Clarke was graduated In 1920
from Los Angeles High School where
he distinguished himself as an outstan·
ding athlete. He held the 440-yard dash
championships for the city. Sout!lern
California and the state. One of his
, track-record!-stood until 1941.
He attended Stanford Unlvtrsity and
earned his law degree at USC. He was
admitted to the state bar in 1927 and
served as deputy distMct attorney for
Los Angeles County from 1927·29. In
1929, he became deputy city attorney
for Lo!: Angeles, a post he held untU
his Municipal Court appointment.
Judge Clarke retained his offices in
Los Angeles following his retirement to
the post of senior judge last Sept. 1.
He was a member of the American,
State and Los Angeles County bar
associations, was a past president of
the Stanfdhf Club of lcs Angeles and
a past presklent of the Lot Angeles
ffilh SChool Alumni Association. He was
a member of Zeta Psi and Phi Delta
Phi fraternities.
Judge Clarke belonged to the Irvine
Coast Country Club, the Newport Harbor
Yacht Club, the Bohemian Club of San
Francisco, NaUve Sorui of the Golde.n
West, PasadeN P1rlor ; California Club,
Valley Hunt Club, AMandale Golf Club
and the Eldorado Country Club at Palm
Desert.
Since hi$ retirement, he spent time
11t his fann in Virginia and hi!!: home
In the Cameo Shores section of Corona
de! Mar.
• ~ ..... . . -. . -. .. . . . •
• •
Explo sion
Irks Nixon,
Senators
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix·
on and members of the Senate expressed
shock today over an explosion that caus·
ed extensive damage lo 1he Senate wing
of the Capitol building.
"A shocking act of_ violence that w 111
outrage all Americans." was Naon·s
description in a statement telephoned
from aboard Air Force One as the
Fresidenl flew to Des !\1oines. Iowa.
"The President feels that th is act
of violence is totally deplorable and
\.\'ill. be condemned by all Americans,"
said press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler.
GATHERING OF EAGLES -Newport Beach law·
maker Robert Bad.ham carried personal Jetters of
c?ngratulations from Governor Reagan to these
eight new Eagle Scouts, all from Troop 10 sponsor-
ed by St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church. In r ear
(f~om left) a.:e Tim Armour, Wayne Chambers, Ron
0 Rourke, ,Rick Razee and Norm Louvier. In front
(from left) are Frank Nadasdy, Lee Place Jim MaC·
Millan and Assemblyman Badbam. '
'·The President feels that the Capitol
ts a building that belongs to all
Americans and symbolizes a form of
government that for 192 years h11 p~
vided a means ror peaetful chan;a:e,
Ziegler said.
Earlier. ,.,.hen he learned of the ex-
plosion, Nixon called FBI D!rector J.
Edgar Hoover from the White House
for an assessment of the damage.
8 Coast Scouts .
Get Eagle Rank
At Ceremony
It is rare to find a Boy Scout Troop
that produces more than one Eagle Scout ' at a time.
, But Troop 10, sponsored . by St.
• Andrew's Presbyterian Church, In
Newport Beach has honored tight of
its members who earned the Eagle rank.
Three of the eight are sons of men
who were Eagle Scouts.
Dave Chambers, assistant scoutmaster
and one of the former Eagle Scouts,
said he and Ray Louvier. father of
Eagle Scout Norm Louvier, received
their Eagle ranks at the same time
about 25 years ago as members of
Costa Mesa's Troop 6.
Tom Place, whose son Lee is also
one or the new Eagles. is the third
former .Eagle. Place and Loovier used
their own Eagle pins in conferring the
rank upon their sons.
Receiving their Eagle ran}ting at the
ceremonies.'beld in early February were:
Tim Annour, 16, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Elg le Armour, 2400 Margaret Drive,
Newport Beach. ·
Wayne Chambers, 15, son of Mr. and
Mrs. ·Dave Chamber!, 452 Shady Laae,
Costa Mesa:
Norm Louvier, 16, son of Mr. and
Mrs. 14y· Louvier, 2221 Holly Lane,
Newport Beach.
Jim MacMillan , 15, son of Mr. and
Mrs. J.ohn MacMillan, 1624 Highland
Dr.ive, Newport Beach.
Ron O'Rourke, 14, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Gene O'Rourke, 2326 Tustin Ave.,
Newport Beach.
Lee Place, 14. son of Mr. and Mrs.
Tom · Pl.ace, .as Walnut Place, Costa
Mesa.
Frank Nadasdy, 14, son or Mr. and
Mrs. Emery Nadasdy, 523 Catalina
DMve, Newport Beach.
Rick Razee, 14, son of Mr. and Mrs.
.Ru.s Raiee, 431 Alva Lane, Costa Mesa.
Assemblyman Robert Badham (R·
Newport Beach) attended the court of
honor and brought with hinf a fetter
of congratulations to the new Eagles
from Governor Reagan.
Troop 10 is the largest in the Del
fi.1ar District, with 86 members.
Hartelius Trial
Delayed Again;
Jury Pick Slated
A Corona del Mar physician's Orange
County Superior .court trial on charges
of arson and bribery was delayed today
when his lawyer left Judge James F.
Judge·s courtroom to file a writ of
mandate with the Fourth District Court
of Appeals in San Bernardino.
Defense attorney f..1atthew Kurilicb
took the action after Judge Judge denied
a series of motions offered on behalf
of Dr. Ebbe Hartelius, 50, of 2345 E.
. Coast High~·ay.
Judge Judge rejected in pretrial
arguments two motion~ for dismissal
and a molion for a charige of venue.
Appell ate court action not withst and-
ing, Judge Judge has ordered Harteius
to be in his courtroom at 2 p. m, for
jury selection in the long delayed trial.
Hartelius. \vhose home is in Costa
Mesa, was charged 'vit h arson. burnlng
with intent to defraud, burning insured
property and bribing witnesses following
investigation of a fire at his offices
last April 9.
Hartelius spent a brief time in Orange
County jail last week whi!n the pro-
secution's key witness, .).1rs. Reba
Vaughn of Costa ~1esa, told Judge Byron
K. Mcr.-titlan that she was being in-
limidated by Hartelius.
Deputy Dist rict Attorney Alphorisus
'ovlck alleged f..1r s. Vaughn . 'll, had
been threatened with death if she
testified again~t Hartelius. But Judge
Judge restored the physlcian·s bail at
$.10,000 wht"n Kurilich argued th11t it
was impossible t.o adequately represent
his client without bail.
l\urilich 's arguments this mornin& In~
dlcated that he will as~ the apj>ellata
court to halt the superior court trial
on the basis that his client cannot get
a fRir tria l in Orange County.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
FroHt Page 1
.·CAPITOL BOMBING . . ' ,-.
blow up in 30 minutes."
Hall an hour later, at 1:32 a.m. EST,
the bomb exploded. Capitol Police Chier
James Powell said one of his officers
~·as within 200 feet of the bla~t bur
escaped injury despite windows breaking
"right over his head."
The blast gutted a men's room directly
across from the Old Senate Chambec.
blasted doors off their hinges in several
surrounding rooms, and blew -0ut win-
dows all the way out t-0 the Senate's
fr-0nt door -perhaps 125 feet.
Bricks, doors, lighting and other fix.
tures were piled high in a corridor
when newsmen were allowed a brief
inspection about six hours after the blast.
The men's room -open to the public
but ge nerally only known about by people
working in the area -was a grey
hulk filled with tiny pieces of plumbing
fixtures and grey plaster rubble. It was
almost impossible to tell it had been
a rest room.
A rtd brick wall on one side or the
men's room was badly cracked and bulg-
ing out into the corridor. Plaster molding
on the corridor wall was blown away
and littered the floor along with gla~
from broken windo,vs.
Councilmen OK
Hospital Site
F 01• Alcoholics
The Newport Beach City Council has
overturned a planning commission action
and &uthorized the establishment of an
alcoholic rehabilitation center i the Cliff
Haven convalescent hospital.
The planners had denied tM bid of
Raleigh Hills Hospital, Inc., fo r a use
permit, on a 3 to 3 vote, with those
opposed arguing the site. at 1501 East
16th St., was loo close to Newport Harbor
High School, which is located across
the street.
Cowtcilman Lindsley P a r s o n s •
expressing the apparent unanimous
viewpoint of lhe council, pointed out Man·
day this kind of hospi tal is filled with
"remorseful · patients who are anxious
to stay out of sight'' and would very
unlikely ever be the cause of lrouble.
The use permit \\'AS gr a n l c d
unanimously for tv.·o years. on an
amendment offered by Councilman Carl
KylT\.la, requiring the hospital to seek
review by the city at that time.
There was no opposition to the request
voiced by the public.
Gold lace curtains were pushed out
against and sometimes through broken
windO"'.,S all the \\'ay down to the orna!.ely pa~ committee and reception rooms
on the north end of the Senate chamber.
The front door, anolher 50 feet away,
was broken.
The Senate barber shop, across a small
hallway from the men's room, was badly
littered and mirrors and windows were
shattered but the barber chairs a n d
other heavy equipment were not mangled
or moved.
The oulslde of the historic Old Senate
Chamber, which was used from IBOO
to 1808 and \vas the S<:i!ne o( President
John Adams, inauguration,. Nov. 22, 1800,
was not damaged. Th e door wa;; closed
and ne11i·smen did not look inside.
Capitol police said there had been
six bomb threats since Christmas. Chief
Powell said routine procedures were used
between l a.m. and I :32 a.m. when
the blast occurred.
Sen. George Aileen (R-Vt.}, returned
from viewing the damage and said he
believes the warning phone call 2nd
its early-morning timing bear the
"earmarks of organization."
Engineers in the office of the architect
of the Capitol looked for possible-struc-
tural injury to· the historic and ancient
west front.
Thomas Y. Clancy, supe rv ising
engineer" of the Capitol_, ~aid through
a spokesman that it was too early to
determine the full extent of the damage.
\Vlndows were blasted out directly
above the huge wooden beams that were
braced against the West front several
years ago, but there were no visible
cracks or any other damage in the
wall itself.
There were cracks, however. in the
interior section of another wall some
distance from the West front close to
the blast area.
The Senate Chamber itself, in a newer
section -0f the building, was not damaged.
Washillgton, D.C. Police. FBI and
Army bomb experts from nearby Ft.
Mcr~air searched lhe bu i Id in g.
Washington police used G er man
Shepherd dogs, and combed other parts
of the Capitol looking for any other
bombs.
The Capitol had closed to the public
at 5 p.m. EST Sunday. Officials said
all custodial personnel had left the
building some hours before the explosion.
Only members of the capitol police force
were inside at the time.
NEED
CASH?
We Buy Almost -' Anything
e' DiomCHld~.
• Jewalry e Star-
On board the presidential plane, Ni1on
called Senate Majprity Leader ·Mike
Mansfield as senators expressed their
amazement and oulrage over the e1·
plosion.
'·This is apparently a political bomb-
ing:' said Republican Leader Hu g h
Scott of Pennsylvania, who said a Senate
offitial had told him a letter had been
found Jinked to the explosion and refer-
ring to U.S. operations in Laos.
Scott said reaction of the explosion
will be unfortunate, both at home and
abroad. 'The effect, he said, is "likely
to be exaggerated. They won •t realize
_that it's one bomb in one washroom."
But Scott said, "we're not going lo
be terrified by these would be terrorists."
He fiaid the Capitol building once again
should be thrown open to the public.
"\Ve cannot be led by this aclion
to any rorm of repressive tactic," he
said.
Industrial Site
Work Scheduled
Near OC Airport
Emkay Developmenr Company officials
said today they hope to start construction
of their $200 million industrial-com-
mercial complex south of Orange County
Airport this August.
Preliminary utility and grading work
will start '!within a month." aceording
to Edward Ruwaldt, Emkay investment
manager and the man in charge of
building tbe complex on the 196-acre
fonner· Lockheed propel'ty.
Emkay Development Company will go
be_fo~e the Newport Beach Planning Com-
mission Thursday for subdivision on the
tract. Plans for the complex are the
same as were specified when the city
approved a planned community zone for
the parcel in De cember.
Final plans for the complex, which
also will include a hotel-motel and an
automotive center, are still incomplete
Ruwaldt said, but should be ready · bf
late Spring.
He said the first structure to be built
will be a temporary office building to
house offices for Emkay and this should
be completed by lo.fay I. He said the
firm's permanent headquarters will be
located in the complex.
Preliminary plans for the propert y
call for a campus-type development that
will include major light industrial and
business oJfice use s.
_Ruwaldt said the construction
timeta~J~ is still. flexible, but he expects
the original estimate that it will take
five to seven years to complete the
project Is still accurate.
e Pow• Tools • GHS
e Elt<:tronlc e Stwlrtt
Equlpmnt • Modl lnos
0. What Han Y ...
WE BUY, SEU OR TRADE
• Come in and see what we
offer our customen. A new
and unusual experience In
in s h o p p i n 9 enjoyment.
Where people In the know
save money every time they
buy.
1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRSI
Ratiti's COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
1838 NEWPORT BLVD· PHONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -Belwnn Harbor & Broadway
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~men·
BEA ANDERSON, Edito•
M•nOtt, Mtrc~ 1, Ull ,N Plte If "°"
Plea: Ha·ng 10
·To Raise ,Five
Surf's up -but it is safe to surf?
Along the Orange Coast, \\'hich draws.countJ·ess thousands of surfers.
novices and professionals from all over the Southland, there is not a single
film stressing surfing safety.
· Because ~untington Beach has been the home of the U.S. Surfboard
Championships taking place annually for the pasl 12 years. the Huntington
Beach Junior \Voman's Club has been made a\vare of the need to have
a film to ac~uaint and supply safety instructions and safety measures to area
surfers.
A 22-minute sound and color £ilm \Vil! be produced by Neil Cross,
\vith U1e assistance and advice of the Huntingtfn Beach Surf Life Associa-
tion and the Huntington Beach Parks and Recreation Department. The
club also has the 'Support of the Huntington BeaCh Cit y Council and .the
Safety Council in its project. J
Since there may be as many as 3.000 sUrfboards in the 'lvaters within
the city limits on any day word goes out that the "surf's up," the film ~vill
be produced as a community service for presentation in area junior and
senior hi gh schools and made available to all civic organizations accord·
ing to Mrs. Cody Evans, safe ty chairman of the Huntington Beach Juniors.
Assisting fl.frs. Evans in her attcn1pt to raise funds for the film which
\vill cost approximately $5,000 tp produce are the Mmes: James Shepard,
Cody Taylor, ~1ichael Tomasick, RiChard l\1cDonald , Jim Spears, Daniel
Drageset, Richard Hermes, Robert Ho\varth, Alan Graves, James Strecansky
and .Charles Vranek.
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Juniors are requesting community support for the undertaking and
to date have received contributions from Walker Coating Co., Compton;
G & G Stress Relieving Co., Beach City Dodge and Pizza Palace, all from
1-funtington Beach.
Anyone wishing to contribute to the production of the film or wish·
ing further information is invited to call J\1rs. Evans, 968·2122.
SAFE '!O SURF? -Since their city is the home of
the U.S. Surfboa·rd Championships, the Huntington
Beach Juniors have become acutely aware of the
need !or a film stressing instructions and safe surf-
ing measures. Raising funds for the· film are Oeft to
right) Mrs. Richard McDonald. Mrs. James Strecan·
sky and ~trs. Cody Evans. safe ty chairman :
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CofC Women Calling. All Memb ers
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'Sea Circle Racing to Santa Anita
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}..faking an appointment with Dr. William B. San·
born, director of media services for the Ne,vporl·
A1esa Unified School District, to be their speaker
are (left-.to r.igbt)....Jtlrs. Ronald Hardy and ~1rs.
De~1url Tosh, members of the-'\\7omen's Commitke
of the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce. The
group \vill meet for a luncheon on Wednesday,
March· 17, in the Costa 1\-lesa Country Club. Two out· •
standing individuals will receive gold medal awards
durinr;the event.
A day at the races as a funding event is being plan·
ned by tlte Sea Circle of the Florence Crittenton
Services. Santa Anita Race Track is the destination
Friday, March 19. and those joining the all·day
uting will be picked up by_ bu$es at lhe Laguna
Niguel, Irvine Coast and Santa Ana country club5
and at St. Joseph's Hospital, Orange. Trying to get
some betting scoop from Vodka a~Ulard
B. \Vilson (left) and 1'1rs. ~1age--tfif'din . '
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, Is the Dye Cast? A -ncient Secret Colors Interpretation
DEAR ANN LANDLRS: I read wi1h
interesl the letter fron'I "Joy Girl"
proclaiming it a fact that blondes ha ve
niorc fun. Her letter was a rebuttal
to an other letter which said blondes
do NOT have more fun -they just
enjoy perpetuating the myth.
l seriously doubt that there is a
tlfblc1gical reason why blondes have more
fun, but there n1ight be a sociologi cal
reason. I quote from the Encyclopedia
Britannica (1969) under Prostitulion:
"The Roman system of regulation was
especially severe. Prostittttes were
pla ced under stringent control and
required to register with lhe police.
They had to wear dislinctive dress and
dye their hair gold or wear yelk>w wigs.
They were also subjected to various
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ANN LANDERS ~
cil'il disabilities."
unatfstandablY t11e gals with the
golden tresses received many more
propositions in those days -and for
very good reason.
Do you suppose the blondes of today
might be subconsciously 1 a b e I i n g
themselves in some way -as !heir
ancient sisters did? -H.J.
DEAR Jf.J.: Why don'l you ask some
blondes? But don'l be surprised if you
end up with a fat lip, Duddy.
DE~R ANN L~DERS : I had sur.strY
seven weeks ago and ·am havi'ng • a
difficult lime recovering because I am
overweight. My doctor has put me on
an 800.Calorie diet -which is like
nothing.
The social season is in full Oower
in our town and J've been invited to
i.;evcral dinner parliell these past two
weeks although t know 1 shouldn't eat
rich food, I eat everything served
because I hate to hurt the hostess'
feelings . My diet is falling on its fact;.
This poses a serious problem because
1 was widowed last year and went into
a deep depression. My psychiatrist insists
that I accept invitations and bl! with
people. So now l must decide which
Is more important -to accept dinner
. invitations and be mentally hea\lhy _.
or .to refuse dinner invitations and stick
to my diet. T'd like yoUr ad vice. -
P.OBSON'S CHOICE ·
DEAR ~tRS. HOBSON: ·8oth are
equally Important. You need not sacrifice
one · for the other, boWever. Accept the
invltatlon1 -but tell the hostess you . ,
will arrive AFTER dinner. Eat four
leUuce and cotta1e cheese at home,
then jolD your friends for the sociability.
There are no calorlt1 In talk .
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DEAR ANN LA NDERS: We have four
children under 12 years of age. l\1y
husband's brother moved in with us
after a messy divorce. It was supposed
to be 11for a couple or weeks.'' That
\\'as in 1967 and l..ardo is still here.
He's a retired Army man and has told
our children the dirty jokes from the
IBst three wars.
Lardo works when he feels like il
and spends the money on golddiggcrs.
He has never bought so much as a
pork chop for the table. I do his lau ndry
and send his dry cleaning out with
my husband's. When Lardo gels stHf
he calls long distance all over the country
and our phone bills are wUd. l haven't
had a new coat in five years. No money.
Last night I got 10 mad I told my
husband if he didn 't ask Lardo to move
I was see ing a lawyer about a separation
He saii:f, "I am my brother 's keeper."
Who is i:,ight-MOLLIE. _
DEAR ~10WE : Your brother-in-Jaw
needs 2 keeper an right. but I fall
to see why you and your husband should
continue to be chumps.
You have every right to insist that
the freeloader move. Stick with yoir ,
demandf ..
Is alcoholism a disease ·~ H._ow can
the alcohol ic be treated? Is t~ere a
cure? Read ·the booklet "Alcoholism -
Ho pe and Help," by Ann Landers.
Enclose 35 cent! in coin with' Yctir
request and a long stamped, self-·
addressed enve\opr in care of the DAU...Y •
PILOT .
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.115i T11neTo Clre'
Typists are needed by the \Vestminster-Mid·
way cities Boys Club. Typing and bookkeeping will
help ~eep the newly launched building program
organued.
" WELL BABIES
Babies must be measured and weighed at the
\Vell Baby Clinics in Stanton and Garden Grove
and there is no one to do it. The Garden Grove
hours are 9 to 11:30 a.m. on the second, third and
fourth Monda ys of the month.
The Stanton hours are from 9 a.m. to noon on
the first and th ird Mondays. ~
LANGUAGE STRUGGL E
Tutors are needed to help Mexican·Arnerican
adults and youngsters \Vith the English language
at the Huntin gton Beach Community Ce nter. Trans·
lations pl re cipes and ba sic food facts are wanted by
the Orange Co ast College Home Econom ic program.
The translations could be co mpleted at home.
SHUT·I NS
The life of a shul·i n or someone \\•ho lives
alone would be brightened by one short, reassuring
daily phone call or a weekly friendly visit. Call the
West Orange County \1ol unteer Bureau for more
information.
. GOODIES FOR GIRLS
How·to books; magazines on crafts, sports and .
homemaking would "be welcome at the Garden
Grove Girls Club. They may be left at the Hunting·
ton Beach United Crusade office.
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Looking Through 'L'
Vocabulary Ascending
By ERMA BO~tBECK bundle cf threads that absorb fuel and is used primarily
1 don't know if anyone ha!l AT on Troot fenders of cars &!
noticed, but I've been doing lamps to make drivine at
this column for the last six WIT'S night possible.'"
years using • 49·cen t "You win," he :said, ''Go
dictionary with the l's to the -END buy yourself a new, deluxe
mac's missing. , di ctipnary.''
This hasn't been easy for The next night when he
me. Do you ha\'e any idea "Does William F. Buckley returned home, the stove: was
how fru strating it is to want get his vocabulary off a cold, the kids were playing
to use words like lagomorpha, Eweatshirt?" 1 s n 0 r 1 e d. Jn the traffic and the loquat and lygodium and not dictionary was . open to the be able to? "Besides, the Eng I i s h l's.
·"I need a new dictionary," language has undergone quite ,;ffave a libation," T said,
I said lo my husband . a few changes since this ''The leftovers are late, the dictionary was published.'' I dr · I d I "l\'hy, what's the matter aun y 1s atent an am with t lfe· old one?" "Nonsense." he s a i d · languishing in lugubriousness.
"The l's to the mac's are ''Meanings of words never I looked I.IP 'li beration' today,
missing. Re ad er s are change." Ltonard, and-You're l n
beginning t• wonder why I "Oh yeah. the n v.•hy is it trouble."
never talk about Lat in under 'wicks' in my Moral : Giving Women 'L'
America, er lollygagging or dictionary, they have, 'A thin is a dangerous lhing.
Loony birds. It just isn'tl-------'-------::===========
norrrij:ll .'' ~~'4'E "Well, if I had a dictionary
that wasn't all there," he said,
"I think the l'.!1 would be: the FOR RISERYATION
part I would miss the least." ORGAN CLASSES. "That's call you know," I
PHONI
642-2851
l'tr l'l•V•r-l~d Ne11 ..-11ytri
P~EPARATION FOR PRAYER -Churchwomen throughout the Harbor Area
'\1i!J gather Friday, March 5, in St. Mlc hael and All Angels Episcopal Church,
Corona de! 1.1ar, to celebrate World Day of Prayer. Discussing plans with the
Rev. John Davis, host minister, are Mrs. Stanley Mumford (center), president,
and 111rs. John Miller.
TUTORS TO TEACH
Youngster; and adults are in need of English
tutors during lhe afternoon and evening hours.
The assistannce will be coordinated by the
Colonial Juarez Independenci a.
sulked. "All the good novel·
type words are there . . ,
lustful, lush, lewd, lecherous.
Why, I was that close to
writing 'Love Story,' but I
cculdn 't spell it."
"You could have topied that
cff your sweatshirt."
MR. FRED THDMrSON, wUI, ... teac:hlt•t ... e1clth19 HW
Or9a11 Cla11 Method ot COAST MUSIC, MONDAY 7:JD
P.M. &: t P.M.
COAST MUSIC
1835 NEWPORT BLVD. (11 Hnborl COSTA MESA
Day of Prayer
Churchwomen· Unite
Geranium
Facts Told
A talk and demonslralion
on container culture and
!tented geraniums w 11 l
provide the program. fer
members of the San Clemente
Garden Club oo Wednesday,
March 3.
cqurchwomen from t h e
Harbor Area will gather in
St:· Michael a~ All Angels
Episcopal Church. CorOna del
Mar on Friday. March 5, to
celej:lrate World Day of
Prayer.
Chairman for the day ls
Mrs; James Moor, a n d
president of the sporisoring
organization. Churchwomen
United, is !i.Trs. ! ta n I e y
1'.1umford.
At 10 a.m. on Friday y,·omen
In 25.000 communities in the
United States will unite their
prayers with women in 155
countries on six continent! to
affirm faith, hope and love
in facing the issues and needs
of today.
New Life Awaits will be
the theme of the da y, which
al.!IO will be a preparation for
the Ecumenical As s e 'm b 1 y
plan ned in Wichita April 22-25.
During the prayer day, the
84th of its kind, the women
DAILY 10.10, SUNDAY 10·7
also wiU participate ln an
offering which will aid
internationa l student!'!
oversea!'!, women 1 e: a d e r s
abroad, rural Chrl.!ltian-women
overseas, migrant f a r m
workers, Mei:lcan women in
border cities, children in
Africa and Asia and Ameri can
lnd lans.
Sisterhood
Dines Out
Mrs. Louts Ul Count of the
International Ge r·a n i um
Society will bring specimens
and experience to the I :30
p.m. session in the San
Clemente VFW Hall.
Plans for the club's 20th
Standard Flower Show on
April 23 and 24 will be
discussed at 10 a.m. on
Wednesday. March 17, in the
home of ~iiss Laura Dillon.
Members of the Sisterhood The hos tess will be 11ssisled
of Temple Eilat of El Torn by ~1rs. Fred Carter.
will welcome new committee This meeting will be he1pful
chairmen tomorrow morni11g ,;t'ii";;'o;wiii.xiihiii.hg;iitoirsii.iijiiiiiiiiii
at 11 : 30 as they meet in the •
El Toro home of Mrs. Sam. 1,000't OF OIL PAINTINCiS
Waldman. WHOLISAll WAREHOUSI
Serving on the board of the Ol'EN TO THI PUILIC
group which works en fund-§00/0 OFF
rai.cling projects for the ,,,, •. I DINGEll , SANTA ANA
t ' ~
Highlight your hair •..
Roux Frosting Special
15. 00 reg. 25 .00
Let our expert s frost your hair \virh streaks of
lighten ing. And for a ne\'¥' spring look , •• trv our
"Gypsy Girl" cut. It's all cud, swirl and •
excilement. Shampoo and set not included fn
,1his special. "Gypsy Girl'' cut. also additional1 4.00. (
Brauty Stvdio
,. ·. SEW •N SAVE
·SPECIALS Temple are the Mfll.es. Arthur P'hon• 1H"4W
Saydman, Harold Silyer. Joel DIALIEllU WANT ID ~
Galtin, Harvey Stel3rn, Myron
Marsalis and Waldman.
Newport, #I F~ih ion Island, Newport Contor'e 6"4"4-2200 e Mon., Fri., 10:00 ti ll 9:30; Other cla ys 10 t ill 5:30
\\"a~h and v.·,.ar, ronsi~l~ of
dacron, cotlon. 5il k, r11yo11
and many others. ~!Pd1um
florals, novelty prints a.nd
fJTlall flora.ls.
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POLYESTER
DOUBlE KNITS
f'o lron finish. ~ 1>0" pol,1-est1>r
dt1ubl~ knltJ 1n Jarri uard ,,e.,·,.~.
mini "'a.ff]<'!, C'T"l'l"~. t-.. ill~. 1>111·
rhl ne "''uh 11.nd l11mhlf' dl'y.
Also holdi11g office are the
Mmes. Elliot Leve?i so n ,
Har vey Kap!a n, Burton Allen
and Miss Sadie Mel!sner.
Members of the Sisterhood
who eamed their. donor credit
for the year were honored
at a recent luncheon in Victor
Hugo ln11, Laguna Beach.
Sisters
Recruit
An orienta tion meeting for
women Interested in becoming
a Big Sister will take place
at the Santa Ana YWCA at
7:30 p.m. Wednesda y, March
3.
Big Sisler!'! is an
or gen i :r. al ion offering
fr iendship on a one-l<Ktne
basis to teenage g i r 1 s .
Unstructured activities take
place as arranged by big and
Jilt)~ sisters. !
Anyone inte rest.cd may cell
the YWCA or Mrs. Vernon
Phillip! .
Riviera Golf
Tourney Opens
A three part championship
11:olf lourflament wil l get under
way at 9 a.rh. on \Vednesday,
~larch 3, as members of the
Riviera Club Golf Section
meet at San Cl<'men1e GoH
Oourse.·
PHr!icipanls use the (y,•o
besl. scnres fronl meets on
Wednesday, April 7 and May
5. All play y,·ill be in San
Cle1nente.
YOGA 15 . . .
~ , .• llAUTY
l•11t.r I hu1erl
Spl'rral C/(l!! Fnr
\Vnmr.n Only!
P:r" De'"•"•'r11tl•11
Tuetde,, 10 A.Iii ,
Cl11lMt Stort T~;ttd•y
YOGA CENTER
zoo HARBOR BLVD •• :~. o·osTA MESl j ;~ ... ·i ·::~· ..• H •• ""\..'.:~ ___ ....;.. ___ .,
If you have added unwanted pounds and inches there is one sure way to
get back to a slim perfectly shaped figure • , • 1tart now at Gloria Ma rshall's
where trained figure experts quickly shape yo ur figure to its natural loveli~
""' and keep it there!
Personalized cAttention
Quick J:.asting l?.esults
<;,uaranteed /(educing
Tell us the drou i iu you wont to wear ••• ..,... will f'lll you
, how many visits tt takes, a nd guarante o Jn writing you will
. , •. reach your goo!, or let you hove FREE any and all further
vbits until you do.
WE ARE NOT A SPA OR GVM • NO DISROBING
NO STREN UOUS EXERC ISES • NO MEM!ER5HIP
FREE PLAYROOM FAC ILITIES F 0 R CH IL.OREN
Regular $2.50
THIS WEEK $)50
ONlY
PER TREATMENT
WEIGHT IS AGING ; •• NOTE THE DRAMATI C
(HANGE IN FACIAL APPEARANCE
When Pat Chad started at Gloria Marshall's she we ighed
222 lbs. 10 vi1its late r she hod already lost 17 inches.
In re cord time she lost 63 lbs., a nd .55 inchet ••• Before
starting at Glo ria Mars hall's, Pot tried •verything, Health
Spo Gyms, Hypnosis, Crash Diets, Pills a nd Shots, bvt
11othing worked • •• until 11ow,
CAll HOW FOR IRE! COURllSI Yim . NO OBLIGAllON
~~aJwivlt Fii C=R~2·~:~ NS
WOR LD'S UlGIST OWN ED AHD OPIUTlD SYSTlM, Deily t . 9; Ht, 9. S
NEWPORT BEACH A110Ml111, Ce.f110, Ctuthow~L~~.!:,. Gi.11dalo, L•••••••· w
430 PACIFIC COAST HWY v ...... Lo11t .. fth, N•wpou teach, Nortti H•llwwood, PCll41· • 642-3630 de110, So11 Dl .. o, loflta A110, Santo lotboro, Soalottd, Terto11a, IJ l lockt los' of lollllN Irr Cl11bl Torronco, Whltrlo r,
SANTA ANA, 1840 W. 17th St. 543.9457 I J C ' ht 1970 Cl · M h 11 " ""'='"~ ..,.,.. ________ .,.. ________ , __ •_;P_;Y_""__:'Y ~r1a nrs a J.tgt. Co. lnc.
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' VOL. 64, NO. 51, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH I', ·197f
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.I · o · om '
Suspe ct Held
In Mesa Jleut
A bandit robbed a Costa Mesa
bank of an undetermined amount
of c;:ash during the busy noon hour
today and a suspect was taken
into custody laler in Seal Beach.
Details <lf the Crocker Citizens
National Bank holdup at 3390
Bristol St.. were not available at
press time.
Police Lt. John Moquin sai d the
robbery occurred about 12:30 p.m.
and the unidentified suspect was
picked up a half-hour later.
He said there was no gunplay
involved In either the holdup er
subsequent capture of a suspect.
Sofons Okay
.Medi-Cal
Proposals
SACRAMENTO (AP) -An Assembly
committee approved legislation today to
restore part of Gov. Reagan 's Medi-Cal
cuUii after the 1publ.ican author of the
measure clashed wilh adminiatration of-
ficials.
Assem't!.lyman ordon DJffy1 CR-Han-
ford), author al the proposal to rutart
about a third of the cutback in medical
aervices to the aged and needy, com-
plained he couldn't find oo.t whether tPt
Republican aClm.inistration was with him
or agaiMt him in the plan.
Duffy asked Richard L. Camilli, deputy
director of the $1.24 billion program, when
he would find nut wheUfer Reagan shares
the gOats or Duffy's blpartlsan committee
to prevent any increase in county Costs
because of the cutbacks dnd to prevent
reductio11s in mental health and crippled
children care.
Duffy said he would. Work with the ad-
ministration.
Camilli said he knew or no change in
problems when ht received specific as-
surances from the governor he backs
those goals, but until then "I would rather
not accept amendments" from the ad-
Camilli said he knew of no cha11gee in
Reagan's pledge ta prevent increaR in
county costs but said h.is department op-
posed a section of the Duffy bill to guar·
antee that the state would pick up the
extra costs.
That would be "practically an open
claim on the state General Fund'' that
could cost $20 millio fl to $50 million be-
Du!fy said he didn't know how much
his proposal to reinstate Medi.Cal cuts
might cost because the Department of Fi-
nance had given him ni. figures.
Those estimates are expected before
the Assembly Ways and Mean11 Commit·
tee-, which is expected to schedule a hear-
in1 which Duffy called 1'lhe' real show· ·
dMV'll" on the measure sometl.me 1n the
next few days.
Mesa Motorists
Hurt in Crashes
Minutes Apart
A pair of lone Cosla Mesa m$rist!
were injured in accidents 15 m)nutes
apart early Sunday, when one's car hit
a telephone pole and the other victim 's
vehicle rolled over.
One said he fell asleep. at the wheel
and the other said he 11werved ta avoid
a headon collision with a car that swerv-
ed into oncoming lanes.
Joel D. Swenson. 16, of 2872 Monterey
Ave., Cosltl Mesa , was adniitted to Costa
Me!a Memorial Hospilal with a fcactured
left leg and a"nkle,
He told police after the I :20 a.m.
accident in the 800 block of Blfket Stree
that he dozed and lost cont.rol, hitting
Utt pole.
John H. Babbel. 25, of 787 Hudson
Drive, suffered only a gash on lht back
of the head at 1 :35 a.m., when his
car went off Pau1arino Avenue at Yukon
Drive and rolled over.
He walked home and called from the
«ame hospital to report the cr_ash, while
gelling hi1 laceration patched up.
•
Fire Tragedy
Youth Critical
After Collision
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
. Of t1it O.llr PllM 11'H
The death toll neared lout
today in tbe afterrriath of a tragic Costa
Mesa collision in which a fireman's car
eAIL Y .. ILOT SNff PIMM
SUCCUMBS AT 61
Judge Th~rmond Cl1r k1
Retired Judge
Thurmond Clarke
Succumbs at 68
Retired .U.S. Dillt.rict Court Judge Thur·
mond Clarke of Corona del Mar, died
Sunday in Good Samaritan Hospital in
L<ls Angeles where he had been confined
for the past five weeks. He was 68.
Judge Clarke was a ~ r om i n en t
Southern California jurist for 38 years,
until his retirement last Sept. I as chief
U.S. judge of the Central California
District. . ' He was appointed to the federal bench
by President Dwight D. Eisenhower, •
Sept. 1, 1955, an appointment that oar·
rowly passed· the Senate Judiciary Com-
mittee:.
Judge Clarke credited the efforts of
his cousin, Sen. Strom Thurm<ind ( ~
South Carolina ), for the committee's con-
firmation of the a.ppointment, one of
two Republican judgeships approved that
year.
Judge Clarke was named chief judge
of the Central California .District in 1966
and became the first federal district
Judge outside of Wash ington to ad-
minister the oath of office to a member
of the President's cabinet.
Last July. Judge Clarke swore into
(See CLARKE,,J'ogr-21
heading to a fatal fire collided wilh one
carrying four teenagers.
One boy whose sister was killed
outright remained in critical condition
at Hoag Memorial Hospital today with
brain injuries.
Dead foUoWing the related mishaps
are:
Marie .L. Rattey, 74, of 6fJfi W, 19th
SI., Costa Mesa.
C1aire Arbuckle, 14, of 2002 Maple
St., Costa Mesa.
Edward L. Hernandez, 19, of 218.1 Na-
tional Ave ., Costa Mesa.
Miss ·Arbuckle's brother Paul, 17, of
the same, address, was listed by hospital
officials as being in critical coodition.
He remains in a coma, spokesmen
said, but has 11hown aome slight im·
p,rovement.
The fourth teenager Injured In the
gr inding, headon collision near Estancia
High School was listed in fair condition.
Paul R. Baldwin, 19, of Mira Loma,
ls also under treatment at · Hoag
Memorial Hospital. ·
Costa Mesa Fire Department Battalion
Chief Ro n Coleman, whose car was
demolished in the crash on PJ1~a
Avenue near Joann Street, wai lilted
Jn Pd condition 1oday. ' · ' ·
He was admiUed to Costa Meaa
Memorial Hospital today f o I J e w i n &
surgery on a lractured le~.
"He'11 lucky to be alive.'* remarked
1 newspaper photographer who arrived
on the scene shorUy after the collision
shortly before midrUcht.
"He's in pretty good spiri~ today,
though," added a colleague.
Fellcw fire investigatars said today
they planned to re-survey Mrs. Rattey'1
Bethel Towers apartment, where · her
bedroom was gutted by the blaze .
Tentatively blamed en smoking in bed,
the fire caused additional minor damage
due to water seeping into the unit below.
The fire was the third reported at
the 18-story retirement tower, but also
the first fatal one.
As families scheduled funeral services
for the victim! -scattered over the
roadway, resulting in the crash -
California Highway Patrol officers con·
!Set TRAGEDY. Page Z)
Ar son Suspected
In School Blaze
Arsonists struck Califor"nla School Jn
Costa Mesa school with a pair of molotov
cocktails Sunday or early today but the
incendiary bombs flickered out after a
momentary fire causing $150 damage.
Fire investigators said the incident
on • the elementary school campus at
3232 CaJifomla Ave .. was discovered by
employes this morning .
A custodian was in the classroom,
hit by boq1hii thrown through the windoW
at I: 30 p.1il Sunday, establishing the
18·hour tim-e element.
Investigators said fire damage included
two scorched desk.s. besides the shattered
window.
9 Arrested in Newport
'Dating S.ervwd Setup
A Newport Beach contractor and eight
young woffien were arrested on pro-
stitution charres Saturday night at two
Harbor Area motels after vice officers
investigated an alleged "dating service"
over the past three weeks.
The arrests came on a combined effort
cf Newport Beach police and .. Orange
County Sheriff's deputies.
Held on charges of procuring is HetY
W. Sprague, S2, of 64: Beacon Bay. The
tight girls arrested on charges of con-
spiring to commit prostitution .range in
age from 20 to 3E.
Arresting officers alledge that Sprague
and the girl s operated as part of Ex-
ecutive Escort Service in Irvine. It
assertedly offered dates for
"sophisticated executives."
Charges for the dates. according to
police allegations. were $100 per night.
The organization had been in business
for the past month. according to Newpor t
vice officer John Simon.
Police said Sprague had offices at
2192 Dupont St., Irvine. His business
card11 read, "150 beautiful foxy girls
for your dating pleasure.'' •
Simon claims rerords also produced
11 list er regular clients, many of whose
names he said he recognized .
He said ht and Sheriffs investigator
Les Lev'r have been Investigating the
Executive Escort Service for the past
three weeks after receiving "a number
of" anonymous complaints.
He said they evidently operated at
various motels in Newport Beach and
throughout the county and were available
almost on an "on-call" basis.
Simon alleges that three of the girls
were delivered ta him and two other
waiting detectives at the Corona del
Mar motel while Lever a.ccompanled
tiim to the county hotel where agents
also had reserved indJvidual rooms .
Th·e women were idenUlied as Beverly
Anne Poehlamn. 24, of Cypress; Barbara
Jean Baylor, 25, of Santa Ana ; Rena
~heree Andrews , 24. of West Hollywood:
Mary Agnes Nielson, 34, of Anaheim ;
Dixie Lee MatriScino, 30, of Santa Ana;
Gwert Patrice Worthington, 22, of
Anaheim : L<lree Isenberg, 35. of Anaheim
and Elaine Komara, 20, of Anaheim.
Unfinished Home
I ss ue Scheduled
For Councilmen
Carpenter Makes Appeal
A deci sion on what lo do about all
unfinished house in the Marina Highlands
area of the city may be forthcoming
tonight when the Costa Mesa City Council
convenes.
The issue of John Wakula 's home at
1128 Gleneagles Terrace is one among
more than 20 items scheduled for action
Gr discussion. Nixon Asked to Halt Me x ican Flights in County
By GEORGE LEIDAL
01 "'-O.Hr ,1191 II.if
Slate Senator Dennis Carpenter (R·
Newport Beach I today appealed ta Pre.c;i-
denl Richard Nixon to halt government
plans to allow Ac.ronaves de Mexico
ta operate out of Orange O>unty Airport.
Carpenter said he believes only tbe
President can intervene in the matter
be.rdescribed as an ~alJ\Ple of (ede;fal
• government lgrwrlng the will or k>Cai
I
government.. ( ..
Last week. Orange County Airport
Commissioners jolned the City cf.
Newport Beach In prot.sting propootd
CligbU of tht Mexican airline out of
the county airst.rlp.
Although only one flight daily ls con·
templated, •irport officials ·contend the
foreign curicr approval would set a
prectdent. They 1rgu1 thtre ts no. room
in the terminal for additional airlines.
Carpenter said Federal A v I a t I o n
Authority CFAA) approval represents: a
reversal from the FAA's position taken
within the last year "that the question
nf airport usage was within the jurisdic-
tion of the county Board of Supervisors
and that they (the FAA) had no authority
to make determinations about increasing
!light activity at· I.he field."
Carpenter. a (~ county airPQrt
commJuioner, also charged that federal
agencies had not omsulted Ute aJi1M>rt
com.mission, supervlsorr or 1.Jeai.iators
)lfi« to &ranting use ,ol Orarige'l:ounly
airport '9 Aeronaves. • '
The state senator sharged the feilttJI
government with "going heh.ind our-bacl\J
. , , whe.n dii county has clearly rcfu~
ta grant domestic airlines any vten~
(If aervice.'' He urged su rvlP.11 and
alrjiorl o!mmlali0o•r1 to ve to bl'k ,.
'
the federal government agreement with
Aeronaves.
Citing Nixon's revenue sharing plan
lo restore local control, Carpenler In
his Jetter to . Nixon said "it is In·
conceivable that lhe "federal government
would µndertake to lmpOSt addjtlooal
air traffic. In a county operated airport
fi'ithout .the prior consent of local govern.
ment."
He told Nixon the county does .not
want ta expand Orange County airport
even tboug~ people "propbably have use
for flights t;o Mexico, .and ta other parts
of' the l:J.S. lrom 1n airport 1pproprtately
ll!n'lng lhe·counly's growing populaUon ."
"Incidents of thb type ought to
mo!Jvate the Alrpo~ Commission and
the supervisors to redirect their attention
'lb the question of airport planning "'1th
• renewed vigor," Carpenter conctllded.
The business session begins at 8:30 ·
p.m. and' the legislative session follows
o~ hour later.
f\.1embers of Ifie Marina Highlands
Homeowners Association have petiUcned
the city to do something about the un-
finished residence. '
Vand11:ls have smashed w Io do w s •.
teenagen; hang out In its inviting vicinity
and neighbors charge it& condltiori causes
'depr~d property ~s.
City Manager Fred Sorsabal requested
a two-week detay when the controversy
came up Feb. lS to allow blm lime
to . study lt.
Wakula hl!gan CC'lnstruclion on the
hoU.e nearly 10 years ago, long before
Sm-sobal Joined "111•' cltf Jtaff. His
neighbors ha~ gqn• t9 !he· cl\)' for '
help 1evera1 Units.· ' ' 1
T.eday's Flnal
.. N.Y. Steeb
TEN CENTS
'
Senate.Wing
Damaged ·
I
By Blast
WASHINGTON (AP)-An early IMl'll·
Ing bomb bias~ "'port.dly linked to
a protest against the U.S . .gupported In.
vasion ~f Laos, ripped up an interior
section of the Senate wing of the Capital
today causing extensive damage but RC)
injuries.
"This is apparently a political born·
bing," said Senate Republican Leader
Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania. He said
the Senate Sergeant at Arms, Robert
G. Dunphy, told him a Jetter bad been
foond linked to the bombing and referring
to U.S. operatiom in Laos. ·
Scott said a male caller who contacted
tbe C3pitol switchboard lo give advance
warning . of the bl alt also referred to
the Laotian invasion.
Capitol police a n d FBI spokesmen,
however, would neither confirm nor deny:
the link to antiwar protesters. ·
Meanwhile, President Ni1on issued a
statement through White Ho u 1 e
spokesman Ronald L. Ziegler calling the
bombing "a shocking act of violence
that will outrage all Americans."
'fhe ~bl.ast pulverized a men's~rOom
and damaged other roortll!I, but did not
touch the Senate chamber ilsell
Perhaps coincidentally, it iame 17
years. to the day after Puertc Rican
n~tionallsts shot and wounded five con·
ireumen from the visitors' gallery of
the liotJ.111 of Brepresentatives. It also
clUHd the most extensive damage to
U)e building since I.be British aet .it
If.ire in 1814.
Scott said the erfect of the bombing
will be unfortunate, both In this country
and internationally.
"It's likely to be exagg~ated.'' he
said. "They won 't realize that it's "ne
bomb in one washroom."
Scot~also took-the (l(.'Casion to criticize
federal judges in the District af Colum-
bia, accusing them of too much lenency.
He said even if the person who placed
the bomb ls arrested "my guess would
be they'll never go to jail, not with
the type of appellate court we b.ave
in the Dislrict of Columbia."
Police, army and FBI investigators
were seeking clues tc tbe identity cf
the male caller who wa rned the Capitol
switchboard: "The Capitol building will
blow up in 30 minutes.''
Half an hour later, at 1:32 a.m. EST,
the bomb exploded. Capital Police Chief
James Powell said one or bis officers
was within 200 feet of the blast but
escaped injury despite windows breaking
"rii!;ht over bis head .''
The blast gutted a men's room directly
across from the Old Senate Chamber,
blasted doors off their hinges in several
surrounding rooms, and blew out win·
dows all the way out to the Senate's
front door -perhaps 125 feet.
Bricks, doors, lighting and other fix·
lures were piled high in a corridor
when newsmen were allowed a brief
inspection about aix hours after the blast.
The men's room -open ta the public
but generally only known about by people
working in the area ·-was a grey
hulk filled with tiny pieces of plumbing
fixtures and grey plaster rubble. It was
almost impossible to t!ll it had been
a rest room.
A red 'brick wall oa one side of the
men's room was badly cracked and bulg·
!See CAPITOL, Paf' !)
Oruge «:oa1t
Weather
Don'l let that nice warm-looking
sun fool YQU Tuesday. There'll bt
gusty winds keep ing the tempera-
tures down ta 5fii along the Orange
Coast, ~ith inland readin'gs tabbed
at 64.
INSm E TODA l'
Kilroy WM here ovtr th.t
weekend, setting an «lapsed
time record. Jn 1&is Kioloa If
11acht in the Whitntt1 Series
race around Catalina. Set Paoe
~.
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'
% DAILY PILOT c MO<ldar, Mll'Ch l, 1971
•
•
The Queen's Moving Day
Snarls Traffic on Shore
By ALMON LOCKABEY
Del!Y PIWf 9Mtl!lll l fltw
IN THE MERCHANT Marine it's called ''movln& ship.''
Jt muns movln1 the lhtp from oae dock or berth to another for the pur·
J>03e of loading or Wlloading cara:o, fueling, etc.
No big lblni.
Usually a skeleton crew and the help of a couple of tugs.
On Saturday, J started to Terminal Island to cover the start of Los
Angeles Yacht Club's Midwinttr Catalipa Island race in·
volving some S7 yachts.
No big lblni.
'nle 1tart of one yacht race looks about the aame as
another.
On Long Beach'a Ocean Boulevard I noticed that
traffic wa.s heavier and llowtr than usual for that time of
day. By 11 o'clock -ICheduled time for the start of the
yacht race -I was no farther toward Terminal Island
than the Long Beach end of tbe new bridge.
TOO LATE. I'd rii1ued the starl.
I made an illegal U-tum and started back toward lhe Pacific Coast Club
kl try and busUe a game of squash.
In the PC parking Jot I looked out aCrou the harbor towird Pier J.
Something new had been added. · There was the Queen Mary. Black bull, white 1uperstructure, three
canted orange 11tacka. THEN I remembered. Thia: was "moving ahip" day for the Queen Mary.
H1lndred& of small crafta cut wakes in the harbor as they circled the new
home of the "Queen." A mldd!Hged woman walked acrou the parking lot and stopped to
lool: at Pier J. "lln't that bt,au'Qful?" she asked in awe.
"Yes ma'am," l said '&loud. ,
To mysell l lbougbt: "Enjoy ll It's cooling you."
Hundreds of per10111 lined the shore to 1aie at lhe Queen Mary In her
new and final berth. Traffic on Ocean Boule\.ard was 1tlll at a crawl u motor-
1111 gaped.
SUDDENLY I had a mental picture of the gnarled old Limey AB (able-
bodled seaman) who crawled through a hatch on lhe foredeck of the Queen
Mary on the day she arrived at Long Beach. He blinked at the thousands of
born-tooting:, bell-ringing small craft that swarmed around the Queen Mary,
bamperinc her every maneuver.
"O!ee-sus," he growled. 1'All dat ruaa for db: old heap 01 rust?"
"Amen," I breathed u I headed for the locker room.
·Reagan Names Hammett
To Manpower Agency
Cofta Mesa City CouncUman Jack Hamme" bu been appointed by Gov.
Ronald· Reagan to bi.I n~ 11),.member
Committee on Manpower umovation.
The q eney wu created to adviH
the State Board of · MedJcal Examiner1
on education and licensing or physicians'
asalltan ta.
Assembly Bill 2109, 'Signed 1ate lasL
year, authorizes licensing of qualified
medical personnel to aid doctor• in some
routine but time-consu ming aspects of
medical care.
Hammett. administrator of Bri stol
Park Medical Group Inc., Is .the s.lngle
statewide representative from the field
of clinic coordlnaUon in the committee's
table of or1anlzatld;i.
Two member1 •e from the Board
of Medical Examintra, while others will
be a doctor, a registered nurse, or
represent state agencies in tbe area
of health care.
A final member -to be appointed
from among the first 20 physicians'
assistants Ucensed under the new pro-
gram -will be announced later.
The committee's primary responsibility
will be determining criteria and regula·
lions for licensing of p h y s i c.1 a n 1 '
assistants In collaboration with state
agencies.
Hammett, elected to the City Council
10 months ago, Is active in a variety
of other civic affairs.
Hired 11 year11 agG by the Bristol
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motllfll'J'I n'll!llt'( fnllr\flilflt., ti.JS IM!llflly.
DAILY PILOT Slltt PMi.o
APPOINTED BY GOVERNOR
Medical Advltor H1mmett
Park Medical Group, he is currently
writing a thesis on physicians assistanl!
and their role in American medical
service.
The paper is requ ired for his admissio n
to fellowship in the American College
of Clinic f\1anagers.
. Besides his medical career, Coun·
c1lman Hammett Is senior reserve office r
with the Costa 1'.lesa Polict Department
and organizer of tbe Costa Mesa Aviation
Commlttet.
A ~year Navy veteran, he ·ts a past
member of the Costa l\fesa Planning
Commisslon. past president of the Costa
Mesa Chamber of Commerce and an
expert pilot rated for various aircraft. ...
Har~elius Trial
Delayed Again;
Jury Pick ·Slated
A Corona del Mar physician's Orange
County Superior Court trial on charges
of arson and bribery was delayed today
when his lawyer left Judge James F.
Judge's courtroom to file a v.•rit of
mandate with the Fourth District Court
of Apptats in San Bernardino.
Oeftnse attorney ..Atatthf!w Kurllich
took the action after Judge Judge denied
a series of motlona: orftred on behalf
of Dr. Ebbe Hartellus, 50, of 2:145 E.
Coa1t Highway,
Judge Judge rejtcted tn prttrlal
argum,nts two motions for dlsn:ilssa!
and a motion for a change of venue.
Appellate coo.rt ac11on not withstand.
Ina:. Judge Judge has ordered Harleius to be ln his courtroom at 2 p.m. for
jury selection in the long delayed trial.
...
\
i.
',..J ---:..
Police Raid
Firehouse,
Arrest .·Four
Cracking down hard-on the eve ol
a hearing tonight. intended to extinguish
hot performances at the notorious
Firehouse bottomless bar. Costa f\1esa
police raided it over the \\'etkend.
The operator and three dancers wenll
arrested. with a new development added
to the city's continuing combat again11I
Its alleged erotic erosion of mo rality.
Detectives are now being guided by
consulting an expert in California la\v,
as compared to contemporary standards
of community good taste.
(from left) are Tim Armour, Wayne Chambers, Ron
O'Rourke, Rick Razee and Norm Louvier. In front
(f rom left) are Frank Nadasdy, Lee Place , Jim Ma c·
Millan and Assemblyman Badham. .
GATHERING OF EAGLES -Newport Beach law-
maker Robert Badham ca·rried personal letters oC
congratulations from Governor Reagan to these
eight new Eagle Scouts, all from Troop 10 sponsor-
ed by St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church. In rear ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--'-~~
He agi-eed today the conceptual stan-
dards appeared to be violated in the
series of arrests aro\Uld midnight Satur·
day. Vice and Intelligence Detail Sgt. Jack
Calnon said he read reports from the
nightclub at 177 E. 17th St., by phone
to one of the most knowledgeable lawmen
in the field .
8 Coast Scouts
(_;et Eagle Rank
At Ceremony
It ls rare to find a Boy Scout Troop
that produces more than one Eagle Scout
at a time.
But Troop 10. sponsored by St.
Andrew's PresbyterUµl Church, l n
Newport Beach has honored eight of
its members who earned the Eagle rank.
Three of the eight art sons o( men
who were Eagle Scouts.
Dave Chambers, assistant scoutmaster
and one of the former Eagle Scouts,
aald he and Ray Louvier, father of
Eagle Scout Norm Louvier, received
their Eagle ranks at the same time
about 25 years ago as members of
Costa Mesa 's Troop 6.
Tom Place, whose son Let is also
one of the new Eagles, i.s the third
forrQer Eagle. Place and Louvier used
the!r own Eagle pins in conferring the
rank upon their sons.
Receiving their Eagle ranking at the
ceremonies held in early-Februa.rr. were:
Tim Armour, 16, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Elgie Armour, 2400 Margaret Drive,
Newport Beac.h.
Wayne Chambers, 15, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Dave Chambers, 452 Shady Lane,
Costa Mesa.
Norm Louvier. 16, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Louvier, 2221 Holly Lane,
Newport Beach.
Jim MacMillan. 15. son of Mr. and
MrS6 John MacMillan, 1624 Highland
Drive, Newport Beach.
Ron O'Rourke, 14. son of Mr. and
Mrs. Gene O'Rourke, 2326 Tustin Ave.,
Newport Beach.
Lee Place, 14, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Place, 485 Walnut Place, Costa
Mesa .
Frank Nadasdy, 14, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Emery Nadasdy, 5Z3 Catalina
Drive. Newport Beach.
Ri ck Razee. 14, son of 1-.lr. and Mrs.
Rus Razee , 431 Alva Lane, Costa Mesa.
Assemblyman Robert Badham (R-
Newport Beach) attended the c.ourt of
honor and brought with him a letter
of congratu1atlons to the new Eagles
from Governor Reagan.
Troop 10 i.s the largest in the Del
~1ar District, with 86 members.
Frotn Pagel
CLARKE ...
office Labor Secretary J a m e a W.
Hodgson in ceremonies at the Western
White House in San Clemente.
He also administered the oath of olilce
to former Labor Secretary George P .
Schultz as director of the office of
management and budget.
In 1944, Judge Clarke, then a wido\\·er,
married Athalie Richardson Irvine,
mother of Mrs. Joan Irvine Smith , the
largest minority stockholder in the
Irvine Company.
A native of Santa Paula, Judge Clarke
v.•as the son of Judge and ?-.1rs. Robert
M. Clarke. He \\'as appointed to the
municipal court in Los Angeles by Gov.
James Rolph in 1932.
In 1935. Gov. Frank ?iferriam elevated
him lo the Superior Court, an office
to \\'hich he was elected in 1936. 1942,
1948 and 1954.
A1nong his most notable court rulin g!
was his 1953 decision that overturned
California's law that barred aliens from
owning land.
Judge Clarke ruled the legislation Wl!I
aimtd solely at persons of Japanese
ancestry and thf" legislation thus violated
due process and an equal protection
clause of the 14th amemdment. The
State Supreme Court laltr upheld his
ruling.
Judgt Clarke ans\\·ered critics who
clalmed he v.·a1 too lenient with lhe
defense that his practi~ \\'ere "fair"
rather than lenient.
He said that on the bencb he belltved
he had "sincerely tried to temper justice
with mtrcy" evtr since he visited San
Quentin's death row.
Judge Cla rke \\'as graduated ln 1920
from Loi Angeles High School where
he distinguished himself as an out.sl3n•
ding athlete. He held the 44G-y1rd dash
championships tor the city. Southern
CalUornla and the state. One of his
track records stood until 1Hl.
•
From Page l
CAPITOL BOMBING ..•
ing out into I.he corridor. Piaster molding
on the corridor wall was blown aWay
and littered the floor along with glass
from broken windows. ·
' ' Gold lace CUJ1.alns were pushed out
against and sometimes through broken
windows all the way down to the ornately
painted committee and reception room!
on the north end of the Senate chamber.
The front door, another 50 feet away,
was broken.
The Senate barber shop, across a small
hallway from the men's ·room, was badly
llttered and mirrors and windows were
shattered bu t the barber chairs an d
other heavy equipment were not mangled
or moved.
The outside of the historic Old Senate
Chamber, which was used1 from 1800
lo 1808 and was the scene 1-0f President
John Adams, inauguration, Nov. 22, 1800,
was not damaged. The door was closed
and newsmen did not look inside.
Capitol police said there had b<'en
Mesa Teenager
Taken for Ride;
Kid,.iaper Sought
A teenaged snack bar employe at the
Costa Mtsa Golf and Country Club told
police Sunday she was kidnaped and
taken for a five-mile ride, before her
drink-clutching abductor got out in Faun·
lain Valley.
He was dropped ofr at a service-station
-with his golf bag and c.lubs -an
41-Ccount cprroberated for police by the
attendant on duty .
Angela J. Rosati, 17, of Costa Mesa.
was slapped onct during t"Fie incident
but not harmed. t
Investigators tentatively blamed the
abduction on a drunken joke by three
duffers, but the principal suspect -
on whom they have a good lead -
may not find it so funny .
He called a friend from a pay phone
about 6 p.m. and the long distance
record was given to police.
Miss Rosati said she had just gotten
into her car at 5: IO p.m.. after the
snack bar at 1701 Golr Course Dri\'e
closed.
Suddenl y. she said, a man waved at
her to stop so she did. at v.'hich time
he and two jolly companions began
flirting.
She said the prime suspect is a latin
man John, whlle the second was fat,
never addressed by name, and the third
waa a 30ish golfer named Art.
six bomb threats since Christmas. Chief
Powell said routine procedures were used
between 1 a.m. and 1 :32 a.m. when
the blast occurred.
Sen. George Aiken (Jt.VI.), rttumed
from viewing the damage and said he
believes the warning phone call 2nd
its early·morning liming bear the
"earmarks of organization."
E~ineerll in the office of the architect
of the Capitol looked for possible struc-
tural injury to tfte historic and ancient
west front.
Thomas Y. Clancy. s up ervising
engineer of the Capitol, said through
a spokesman that it was too early to
determine the full extent of the damage.
WindoWs were blasted out directly
above the huge wooden i that were ·~aeed a1airut the West ront several
years ago, but there we no visible
cracks or any other age in the
wall itseU.
There wtre crac~ however , In the
interior section of another wall some
distance from the West front close to
the blast area .
The Senate· Chamber Itself, ln a newer
section of the building", wu not damaged.
Washington, D.C. Police, FBI and
Army bomb experts from nearby-Ft.
McI~air searched the b u 11 d i o g •
Washington police used Ger man
Shepherd dogs, and combed other parts
of the Capitol looking for any other
bombs.
The Capitol had closed to the publie
at 5 p.m. EST Sunday. OUicials said
all custodial personnel had left the
building some hours before the explosion.
Only members of the Capitol police force
were inside at the time.
From Pagel
TRAGEDY ...
tinued their investigation.
The CHP handles probes in which
municipal police or fire units are in·
volved.
All three victims' riles will be handled
by St. Joachi m's Catholic Church in
Costa Mesa.
Rosary for Miss Arbu ckle a n d
Hernandez \viii be tonight at 7 p.m.
in Baltz Mortuary Ctl,l!pel.
Mis! Arbuckle lea(D her parents . Mr.
and Mrs. Francis Arbuckle. plus three
other brothers. Desmond. Martin and
Ke vin and three sisters, Stella, Ulrralne
and Oarlene.
Hernandez leaves his parents , Mr. a_nd
Mrs. Uluis Hernandez. brothers Michael
and ~lark. a sister Linda and a
grandmother, Mrs. Anna Kennedy, of
\Vyoming.
HEED
CASH?
We Buy Almost
·Anything
• " • Diamond·.
• Jewelry • SttrHS
He is Los Angeles Police Sgt. llenry
Patroski. Detectives Chano Camarillo and Gene
Norden dropped into the crowded beer
bar late Saturday night to make the
first series of arrests.
Operator Ray Rohm, 2C, was arrested
on charges of sponsoring obscene live
entertainment.
.He faces trial June 7 on Identical
charges in Central Orange County
Judicial District Court along with dancer
Cynthia Drey.
Rohm. convicted Feb. 9 of similar
charges in Harbor Judicial District Court
alofig with 18 dancers in a combined
hearing. v.•as also booked for probation
violation.
Bail v.•as set at $1 ,500 on the combined
charges. ·
Police also arrested three nude dancers
booked Q_n suspicion of obscene live enter·
tainment and indecent exposure.
Sandra J. Vaughn , 22, J-lelen L. Harvey:
26, both of San Bernardino and Dorothy
Fischer. 25. of. La Puente, were freed
on $625 bail each .
Investigators were leaving after Miss
Vaughn and Miss Harvey's arrests when
raucous shouts led them to return.
"Go ... Go ... take it off. The heat
is gone," could be heard emanatin&
from the bar.
They had just issued a citation tG
the management for ope rating a pool
table without a city permit when the
commotion led to f\1iss Fischer's capture.
A hearing is scheduled before the Costa
Mesa City Council to11ight on revocation
of the Firehouse's bus iness license fo r
the unauthorized coin-operated pool table.
Peter Ford , 20,
Accident Victi1n,
Rites Thursday
Funeral SP.rvices for music 1tudent
Peter Ford, 20, \\'ho died Thursday in
Bakersfield, 11 days after his bicycle
was hit by a car, v.·ill be held Tuesday
Jn Costa 1'.1esa.
Mr. Ford, who attended Cal State,
Bakersfield on a scholarshi p won at
his 19'ltl graduation from Orange Coast
College, succumbed due to complicatiorui
of his injuries.
Rites will be at 10:30 a.m. in \Vestcllff
Mortu.ary Chapeel. with local Baha'i lead.
er Leo Rovin officiating and interment
following in El Toro Cemetery.
The 1968 Costa l\1esa High School
graduate is survived by his moUler,
Mrs. Elsie Ford. of 12560 Hasler St.1 Gar.den Grove and sisters 1'.1rs. Ellanie
Perry. Mrs. Roberta Bulling and Miss
Zan Ford . ·
He was struck by a pickup truck
on the Bakersfield campus Feb. IS, ac-
cording to Bakersfield police.
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Equipment Machines
Or Whot Hove You.
WE BUY, SELL OR TRADE
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offer our cu1tomen. A new
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Raciti's COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
1838 NEWPORT BLVD· PHONE 646-7741 ..
\ 11
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Saddlehaek TodaY'• Flilal
N. Y. Stoc"-'
VOL. 64, NO. 5 I, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, C ' MONDAY, MARCH I, 197 1 TEN CENTS
Nixon Asl{s Domestic Support • Ill Farm Belt
WASHINGTON (UPI) -PreMdent
Nixon 's five-hour visit to the heart of
the fBrm belt today is the fi~t chapter
of a new campaign lo build state-by.state
1upport for his revenue sharing.
The President, who "'as scheQuled le
depart at 9:30 a.m. (EST! for Des
Moines. Iowa, planned to re-lell his
domestic legis\alive proposals to the
governors of four stales and the Iowa
legislature. wlth particular emphasis on
hoW his plan to share more federal
•
•
money with the. stat.ts would speed up
ru'ral development.
But while the trip was tinged with
an emphasis on farm and rural problems.
the President fa~d protesl.! from twQ..
other segments of the population -
organized labor and peace.groups.
Iowa labor union members and ron-
struction workers called their forces
together at the Iowa capitol to decry
Nixon 's decision to fight inflation by
trying to force a downtrend in con-
I 0 '
Capo District
Drug Abuse Plan
1 Slat~d · Tonight
A propsal to enlarge drug abuse pro-
blem solving in the Capistrano Unified
School District will be brought to the
trustees at to•ight's 8 p.m. meeting in
Serra School, Capistrano Beach.
The board will be asked to form a
community drug abu se steering com-
mittee to work 'toward the developmen~
Gf a community wide plan for solving
drug abuse problems.
a four man team of administrators,
student, and community representative
to take part in the state drug educatiou
training program.
The formation of this committee is
expected to involve community leaders
from , government, service clubs, school
organizations, professional groups and
law enforcement agencies. .
struction ind_ustry wages and prices. Last
week Ni.J:on suspended a depression-era
law 'which, required contractors in
federal and federally assisted projects
to pay going wage rates -usually
union scale -to anyone they hired
to work on such projects.
Adminislratfon economists S<iid the
move was intended to' put a damper
on the construction industry wage-price
spiral. which has been rising al alpiost
lwice the rate of the resl of µie economy.
om •
Peace groups said they would_ gather
to voice displeasure at U.S. ·involvement
in the current South Vietnamese invasion
or Laos.
The demonstrators drew a late-starting
recruit Sunday rtight when Bernadet~
Devlin. Northern Ireland's Rom a n
Catholic civil rights leader, said she
would join the gathering. In Des Moines
for a college campus aptiearance. MiS!
Devlin said she was thriUed when she
•
found out "this is where he i3 ltidinC
out tomorrow."
At least six cabinet officers ·as well
as Mrs. Nixon were included in the
presidential party. In addition to the
remark! at the joint state legislative
sess ion, the President's schedule caUed
for a . meeting with . the governors 1 of
Iowa, Illinois, Mis~uri and Wisconsin
plus a background briefing for farm-
orlerited members of the news media. ·
The Iowa trip, to be1 followed by
'
another one-day foray to Rochester, N.Y.
Friday, was the firlt ol ·several tn)s
planned to plug the Nixon leitalativl
layout. includirig hi.I .$16 billion revenue
sharing proposal.
The revenQe sharing proposal ba1
already hit rough going in Congte.u.
It would provide $5 billion in new flmdl
for use by states ind cities on a noo
strings-attached basil; the balance or
the nioney would come from a reshuffll.Dg
of existing federal funds .
'
Senate Wing
Damaged
By Blast
WASHINGTON (AP) -An early morn·
\ng bomb blast, reportedly linked to
a protest against the U.S.-supported in·
vasion af Laos, ripped up an interior
&eetion of the Senate wing of the Capltot
today causing eztensive damage. but no
. injilries.
"This is apparently a political born.
bing," said Senate Republican ~adu
Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania. He said
the Sena~ Sergeant at Arms, Robert
G. Dunphy, told .him a let~r had beea
found linked to the bombing and referring
Elements of drug education have
alrr.ady been implemented into the in·
strudional program at the district
achoola in accord ahct with the education ~.according to Jeff Olsen, director or prOJects.
•·Jn developing an overall di strict ap-
proach to teaching students about drug
abuse and dn&g..infor:m.tjoa it is apparent
that tbe ~rale of the schools is limited
to an information type program," said
Olsen. .. to U.S. ·'1perations Jn ,Laos.
The district also rel!fntly appointed
The committee will be formed to work
in areas that the school cannot rea ch.
Palm Preservation · Plea
Goes to County Tuesda y
A San Clemente. councilman's attempt
to reverse county road department policy
to stop the transplanting of a stand
af da~ palm trees will rome before
county supervisors Tuesday.
Councilman Tom O'Keefe annd a city
staff representative will appeal to
supervisors for an amendn'lenl to the
final plans for the widening of Camino
de -Estrella near Grant's Plaza shopping
center.
At stake are aboUt SO ~year-old
date palm which have a high mortality
rate if tra nsplanted according to joint
county-city widening plans.
To keep the trees where they are.
Robert Dahlberg
Tries for Board
\ Robert Dahlberg, former superin-
1endent of the Tustin Union High School
District is a ca ndidate for the special
election' in the Capistrano Unified School
District.
Dahlberg. who resides al 34052 Maro
Drive, Dana Point, is comf>eting in the
fourth area which was left vacant by
the resignation of Tom Winget. -
The candidate. wbo is president of
Marine Capitol Ltd. was inadvertently
left out of Friday's story listing the:
entire slate. f
El Cauaitao Real
o·Ketfe has projXlsed creating parking
wells between the palms-a plan which
still would allow for a four-lane highway
with a complete, landscaped center
divider.
Tuesday's act.k>n by supervisors is the
last chance to keep the trees intact .•
The official county portion or the
roadway is at issue. not the section
to be improved by the city.
Since I.he issue over the trees arose
about a month ago, the awarding of
the city end of the paving and widening
contract has been held up.·
The roadway iS" planned for completion
by June I, the opening date of the
large shopping center. The improvements:
to Estrella will insure proper access
to lhe mercantile area.
If supervisors do not accede to
O'Keefe 's idea. the original specifications
for the project will be employed.
Each of the trees then would be
transplanted 14 feet back from the ex-
isting curb line. One tree in 10 could
die from the-work, It has been estimated.
Each tree will cost1200 to transplant.
The: plan also calls for 1 slight nar·
rowing of the abundant center divider
strip.
O'Keefe has said that creating parking
wells between the trees would proba bly
bf dieapef' tban the transPlanting bill.
His preliminary estimates show that
each well·~ould amount to S~ extra
in curbs and paving, compared tc the
S200 transplant coat per tree.
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f' ,' I ' \ " ' I • ' DAILY' ,/LDT S•ff' ,llfl9
DANA ·HARBOR TAKES SHAPE; PUSH BEGINS FOR SUMMER 'INAUGURAL
Investors Watch To Assess Public ResponM ·To· First S.a10n Of Opetitlon ~~~~~~~~~~-. . '.
3 Marines Held
On LSD Charges
Three Ca mp Pendleton Marines raced
arraignment today on charges of
possession and sale of LSD after their
weekend arrest 1 by San Clemen~ un·
dcrcover pol~ce.
Officers said the three men allegedly
sold hundreds of doses of t h e
hallucina tory drug to police agents over
the past several weeks.
The men, arrested late last Friday.
are Bradley T. Tullous, 20 ; Larry Joseph
Bitner, 19, and Joseph Shimrock Jr.,
20. .
All three were booked on the charges
of sale of the drug.
Officers said tbey arrested the trio
after the last asserted buy of 150 doses
in the 800 block ol South El Camino
Real .
Speaker Sets Limit
WASHINGTON £UPI! -Ho use
Speaker Carl Albert, 62, says he will
retire at age 70, but he does not feel
that should ~essarily be the retirement
age for any other member of CongreS!.
"The job of speaker is difficult and
1 don't want-; to"Carry on the job when
I get old," Albert said Sunday. "! think
the last two speakers were able to
do it , even to 80, but diffe rent people
are constituted differently."
$25 Million Project
Driving of First ·Pi.ling
Slnted for Dana Harbor
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of Ille D&llr ,11t1 lllff
Dana Harbor, merely 1 dream 20 years
ago when the first ideas for the complex
were conceived-will echo with Uthe
sounds of even more equipment th!~
spring Is the last.minute.. push begins
for · 111 inaugural summer season.
No'!" In a very brief slumber, the
$25-million harbor, soon will feel its
first piling being driven hom~ into a
boat basin which soon will house hun-
dreda of smaU craft.
The historic ceremony of the first
piling la scheduled for mid-March, say
officials of Marine Qapital Inc., of
Newport Beach, the firm which holds
the lease for boat facilities.
Slmultaneowly, officials of the county
road deparlmeut will be drafU!lg con-
tract.a with a paving ft.rm whicti will
install all the harbor'• roadways before
the atart of the summer season.
La ndscaping and other finish work to
the public portions will begin as well
this•spring.
Bob Dahlberg, president of Marine
Capital, said this week that his· firm .
is going full bore for a May 1 completion
. date·for the first Increment of slips.
In his details, Dahlberg dispelled
persistent rumors that because of the
hundreds of names on a waiting list,
boat slips will be nearly impossible· to
obtain at the new harbor.
"We have started maltiJJg the fina1
mailing to the Initial 2,500 per!011s wbo
signed the waiting lilt over the ~t
years," be 1aid.
"Obviously, lots of water bu pas!ed
under the bridge and many of those
people would no longer be intereated."
The names have grown on the list
on a first-come, first-served bials.
But despite their numbers, Dahlberg
said' chantea ire very" lood that penoo1
is signing up for aljps now would h~ve
a chance at a berth for thls conung
fall.
In a move to eliminate hoarding or
creating unfair advantage ,Jn, renUng the
precious boat docks, Marine"'C1pJtal will
sold from a harbor dock.
Road Work Due Approval
Bob \l'ingard'; development engineer
for the Orange County Harbor District,
sa id this week •tha t much of the initial
private development of the complex will
become 1 test lube of sorta: for investors
waiting to 1tt the actual impact of
the first 1ummer season. •
Only the downcl!ist b a sin of the:
uniquely-comtructtd twin marinas will
ti,: developed for boat berthS this sum-
rDer, he explained. But by next fall more
90lld plans for the• westerly marina. ~
t~• pa!'C'I eer;marnd for • .boat battling
and 1repair wlll have been.made.
"lf a slip rente r sell• h!J boat, the
new owner will receive prlvUeges no di.£.
ferent than 1 o m e o n e at the tall
ol the waiting !Isl. We rent the a1fp
to the man, Mt to lhe boat," he aaid.
The police would eliminate the practice
ccmmon in Newport Harbor which rarely
results ln a v1cant slip. Subleaa~g o!
ah;ps will ho forllidd"1 at Dana 11 \"II. Al least half or an import.ant road
widening project in the North Beach
-and North El Camino ~e·a1 sections
of San Clemente M!Cms well on its way
to reality this week.
County Road Departmefit aides said
1 city request for matching funds for
the widening and Jmprovemtnl of El
<:amino Real seem destined for county
approval.
The project. which ~ould stretch from
Avenid11 Eatacion to Camino S 1 n
Clemente. \\!OU.Id cost shout •150,000 and
If 1n advisory commltlee approves the
joint lundlng In loll March, CO\lnty
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supervl.S<lrl would Include the plan in
next fiscal year's budget. •
One other phase or road wark In nfal
end of the city, however, has not quallfled
under county 1rteri1l highw1y fUndlng
grants.
San Clemente alsio Griginally had
sougllt financial help to rebuild the
triangle of streets near North Be•ch
and the public beach club.
But a preliminary 1creenin1i committee
ruled that those 111maller streel5 would
not fall under couQIY •Ir criteria.
C'J ty Manager Ken Carr aald lite \as\
week thlt the project now would be
considered as a strictly city undertaking.
The improvements had been. calculated
tt. improve a $200,000 1iarcel of land
bought by the city recenU)t to house
a youth recreaUen cent.tr (ii the April
20 bond ~issue pastes) l.Jld a large
pa rk ing lot for users of North Buch.
Widening of El Camino, the triangle
of side streets and the rooenlly com·
pletcd extension of Avtnida Pico all
are calculated to channel thousands or
beach goerl onto ·Nor1h Beach, In recent
years a piece of shoreline undiscovered
by the general mass of visitors to the,
city.
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Wtngard said despite early spring• ca""
ztruction st.arts, stveral•of the facilities·
set for openihg in the aummer be could
be delayedrparUcularly the reataurant.
l'nd motel ·develOptnenU.
"Both, Peveloper1 are awfully eager ·
~ got •llu't.d, but tl1're ii • lot . of
eOnstructian to be done," the engineer
a&Jd.
(
Many of·· tile lorecaN cper!ng
available boAt space at ·the new_~lna
will beire,.rVed unUl' aumnu•. ljohlbera
aai!f, gJvlng the nr'1''• ll&fl better
chance to evalu.te trends.
Oahlherg, obvioualy ocall/fC at tl!e
potential of the harb9r; terms the Dana
development ·''lantaatlc."
"This Just luls, lo ho 'llie if"loll
hnrl>or ever stevelo~. on 1bi' Weit ~
ni. focllltl" ar• going \) be outstan-
dinJ," be aald. . •
Scott said a male caller who contacted
the · capitol switchboard· to give advance
warning of the blast also referrei:f to
the Laotian invasion .
C8pitol police and FB I · spokesmen.
however, would neither confirm nor deny
the link to antiwar: protesters.
Meanwhile, Pres)de.nt Nixo n Usued a
statement throu1h White House
spokesman Ronald L. Ziegler calling the
bombing "a shocking act of violedce
that will outrage all Americans."
The blast pulveriied a men 's room
and damaged otbir rooms. but did not
touch the Sena~ chamber itself.
Perhaps coincidentally, it came 17
ye.an to the day after Puerto Rican
nationalists shot and wounded five: con--
gressmen from the visitors' gallery of
lhe House of Representatives. It also
caused the most eztensive .damage t.e
tpe building since the British set it
afire in 1814.
Scott said the effect of the bombing
wiU be unfortunate, both in this country
ana internationally.
"It's likely to be exaggerated,'' he
said. "They won't realize that it's one
bomb in one washroom ."
ScoU also tQOk the occasion to criticiz1
federal judge.s In the District of Colum·
bia, accusing them of too much lenency.
He iaid even If the person who placed
the bomb is arrested "my gue!s .would
be they 'll never go to jail, not with
the type "Of appellate court we have
in the District of Columbia."
Police, army and FBI lnvestiiators
were seek.Ing clues to the identity of
the male caller who warned tbe Capitol
switchboard: "The Capitol building will
blow up in 30 minutes."
Oruge C.ut
Weather
Don't let that ntce ·w&nn-looklnr
sun fool you Tuellday. There'll be
gusty winds keeping the tempera-
tures down to 56 along the Orange
Coast, with inland.readings tabbed
at 64. '
INSWE TODAY
L Kilroy was hert ovtr th•
wetktnd, setting an tlapstd
timt retard in· hi$ Kialoo. 11
uacht in..' ttt Whi&~v-,Serita ..
ract arouM Carolina. Stt ~Paa1
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I DAILY PILOT Mond_,, Muth l, 1971
• Hulse 'Irre·sponsihle'
Prosecutor Says Defendant Planned Murder
By TOM BARLEY.
Of .. OtllY PllM Sltff
A hardhitting prosecutor today urged
an Orange County Superior Court Jury
to reject "grossly exaggerated" defense
accounts of Arthur Craig "Moose"
Hulse's addiction to drugs and convict
the youth of first degree murder.
Deputy District Attorney Martin J.
Heneghan told lhe panel of eight women
and four men in his final argument
"-to give the concluding statements of
"1lie defense as much consideration as
Hulse gave the plea of service station
attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin last June
).
Cartin'• cries of "don't hit me in
the head" were rtwarded with 1 series
of blows delivered with the hatchet Hulse
carried into the Santa Ana ga.s station,
Heneghan told the jury.
Lashlng the 17·year old defendant a.s
"grossly selfish, callous, irresponsible
and criminally Impulsive," Henegban
asked the jury to agree with him that \he
murder of Carlin was "planned and
pttmedllat.d" and the defense had not
Laguna Mother
Launches POW
Petition Bid
A variation of the current campaign.
on behalf of American prisoners of war
has been launched by a Laguna Beach
woman, only these petitions will go to
President Nixon instead of the presldtnt
of North Vietnam.
The theme of the petitioner-signing
effort organized bt Gail Gaston is "All
our sons are POWs in Vietnam -
Bring them Home!" Mrs. Gaston, a
member of Mothers for Peace, said
the purpOse or the project is to get
as many signatures as possible on peti·
tions asking President Nixon to withdraw
1upport from the current Laos campaigli.
She wants the President to treat all
POW's and all U.S. troops in a hlimane
fashion by withdrawing from Vielnam
on the withdrawal schedule announced
by the Admlnistrailon.
Mra. Gaston said the dead and wounded
in the war now total well Over · seven
times the population of Laguna Beach
and there are still 337 ,900 American
troops In Vietnam.
As part of the petition etfort, Mrs.
Gaston ts selling pendants and key.chains
bearing the inscription "War Is Not
Healthy for Children and Other Living
Things." The Items, which sell for $3,
are distributed by Another Mother for
Peace, a non-profit organlzation.1
"We hope that people will wear them
as a symbol," Mrs. Gaston said. "and
keep wearing them until the day the
last American soldier leaves Vietnam
to the Vietnamese."
Doctors Check
Burglar Suspect
Orange County Superior Court action
on Steven Eugene Murray's plea of guilty
to burglary charges waa halted Friday
with the possibility that the former San
Clemente may may tie a narcotics addict.
Judge Byron K. McMillan appointed
two physicians to examine the 2J.year-old
son of San Clemente's police chief and
set March 15 as the date on which
he will rule on disposition of lhe five-
month-old case.
Murray was one or two men arrested
In October following the alleged burglary
of a San Clemente home. It was testified
in South Orange County municipal court
that the Costa Mesa resident later sold
a color television set taken in that
burglary to a Dana Point woman for
$100.
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•
•
J)toved w h a I tl>ey said was Hlllte'•
dimlnlabed capacity.
He reminded the jury that all ftlur
psychiatrists that have testified in the
llulse trial have agreed that the Garden
Grove youth was not psychotic.
Hulse, 16, at the .time O( the murder,
can not be sentenced to death if the
jury convicts him. Such a verdict would
raise the likelihood that he may be
commHted to ·an institution for a -life
term as person in danger of addiction
to narcotics. ·
Defense attorneys Robert Green and
Michael Gerbosi will deliver their fina l
arguments to the jury late in the day
before Judge Ronald Crookshank in·
15tructa the panel.
Hulse, outwardly apathetic and morose,
stared at the counsel table throughout
the 01orning session as Heneghan at·
t~cked the defendant's story of the quan·
t1ty of drugs he took in the hours prior
to the Carlin killing.
"I don't believe he took· 20 to 25
1red5' (depressant)," Heneghan said. "It
he bad taken them beld be dead er
uleep .at Q);e Ume of the murder and
I look on b1s 1tattment as part of
a remarkably well·tailored defense
story."
Whatever the verdict in the current
trial, Hulse al so must face trial for
the killing last June 2 of Mission Viejo
teacher Florence Nancy Brown. ·
Also charged with that killing are
St~ven Craig Hurd, 20 and Herman Hen·
drick Taylor, 17 both transients. and
Christopher "Gypsy" Gibboney, 17, of
Portland, Ore.
They , and Hulse, were rounded up
and accused of involvement in the "devil
cult" killing of Mrs. Brown, 31, of El
Toro.
Taylor has testified for the prosecutlon
against Hulse in the Carlin trial and
has promised to gG into the witness
box for all trials inr connection with
the murder of f\.1rs. Br'Gwn.
Hurd is scheduled to face trial March
22. Gibboney's trial date will be set
when Orange County authorities are able
tG extradite the youth from· Oregon.
Winds Switch Course;
Santn Anas Due Next
'* Northwesterly winds responsible for the
weekend's spectacular clean air views,
wind whipped highways and continued
small craft warnings along the Orange
Coast wUl shift tonight to bring a mild
Santa-Ana condition Tuesday.
The National Weather Service rorecast
said the cool breezes that gusted to
50 and 60 miles an hour in the mountains
and deserts of Southern California should
shift to the northeast tol\ight. Winds
tomorrow will be localized to the canyons
normally aUected by Santa Ana wind!,
Temperatures will warm slightly with
the high tomorrow along the Orange
C:Oast e1pected to reach 63 alter a low
Laguna· Probing
$5,000 Burglary
Laguna Beach polict are investigatin~
the theft Jut week of .more than $5,000
worth of merchandise from a vacationing
resident.
Offictrs sald the burglary occurred
at the home of Dolores D. Smith, 1401
S. Coast Highway, some time between
Feb. 21 and 26. Police said Mrs. Srililh
was out or town when an unknown
suspect apparently-forced open the front
door of her apartment.
ltema taken included a fur coat. 'a
suede coat, a glass bottle filled with
silver coins, assorted pieces of jewelry
and several keys , including those to
an expensive sports car. The car was
not stolen, authorities said.
Avalanche Kills 4
DIEMTIGEN, Switzerland (AP)
Four Swiss skiers, two men and two
v.·omen, were killed by an avalanche
which rolled over the 7,487-foot-high Ot·
tern pass in the Bernese Oberland Sun·
day.
Breaking Vp
tonight of 40. Inland portions of Orange
County can expect overnight lows near
38.
Orange County Harbor Department
said weekend sailors piloting 12-foot craft
learned 15 to 30 knot gusts are not
recommended for small ctaft. Indeed,
small craft warnings along the coast
continued into the fjfth day today, as
the northern chill air ·continued to whip
up seas.
The winds are blamed for at least
one death. Police said Barbara Crane,
41 , of Norco, died Saturday of injuries
received when her small car was blown
out of coritrol near Riverside, ilnd struck
a tree.
Wind-blown sand, churned by gusts
up to 60 miles an boor damaged
numerous automobiles on the high
deserts north of San Bernardino, Sunday.
. Highway Patrol warnings for campers
and trailers to stay off wind • blown
highways remained in effect through
today from Barstow to the coast.
Weathermen noted the gusty winds
resulted from a second cold front follow-
ing on the heels of the one experienced
late last week when the high northerly
winds began. The frontal system ex·
pected to clear Southern California today
brought snow showers to mountain and
desert areas.
Dramatic billowing clouds hung over
distant mountains clearly visible in the
crisp, clear air.
Pro-envirorunent
Meeting Scheduled
A general meeting of Pro-environment
People (PEP) will be held at 8 p.m.
Thursday at the United Methodist church,
21632 Wesley Drive in South Laguna.
In announcing the meeting, PEP
chainnan Luisa Hyun said the group's
most recent project of sponsoring the
ecological satire ··t.1other Earth" had
been a "wonderful success." PEP is
made up of residents actively con~rned
with their environment and the meeting
is open to the public.
U'I Ttl••~N
Ind icating he defin itely ls•not one of your straight-fa ced ecclesiastical
leaders, Dr. Arthur ~1ichael Ramsey fright ). England 1s Archbishop of
Canterbury, breaks trp during visit with ne\~·ly co nsecrated Bishop or
Worcester, the Rev. R.obin \Voods . Subject is a card inal secret.
' \
IDAILY PILOT lltlf Pllitle
SUCCUMBS .AT 68
Judge Thurmond Cl1rkt
Retired Judge
Thurmond Clarke
Succumbs at 68
Retired U.S. District Court Judge Thur·
mond Clarke of Corona del Mar, died
Sunday in Good Sama'ritan HO~pital in
Los Angeles where he had been confined
for the past five weeks. He was 68.
Judge Clarke was a prominent
Southern California jurist for 38 years,
until his retirement last Sept. 1 as chief
U.S. judge of the Centra1 California
District.
He was appointed to the federal bench
by President Dwight D. Eisenhower,
Sept. 1, 1955, an appointment that nar·
rowly passed I.he Senate Judiciary · Com-
mittee.
Judge Clarke credited the efforl3 of
his cousjn, Sen. Strom Thurmc.nd (R-
South Carolina). for the committee's con-
firmation of the appointment, one of
two Republican judgeships approved that
year.
Judge Clarke waa named chief judge
of the Central Calilornia District in 1966
and became the first federal distr1ct
judge outside of Washington to ad-
minister the oath of office to a member
of the President's cabinet.
Last July, Judge Clarke swore into
office Labor Seeretary James W.
Hodgson in ·ceremonies at the Western
White House in San Clemente.
He also administered the oath of office
to former Labor Secretary George P.
Schultz -as director of the office of
management and budget.
Jn 1944, Judge Clarke, then a widower,
married Athalie Richardson lrvinl',
mother of Mrs. Joan Irvine Smith, the
largest minority stockholder in the
Irvine Company.
A naUve ofSanla Paula~ Judge Ciarli:e
""as the son of Judge and Mrs. Robert
M. Clarke. He was appointed to the
municipal court In Los Angeles by Gov.
James Rolph in 1932.
In 1935, Gov. Frank Merriam elevated
him lo the Superior Court , an office
to which he was elected in 1936, 1942,
1948 and 1954.
Among his most notable court ru\ini;:s
\\'as his 1953 decision that overturned
California's law that barred aliens from
own ing land.
Judge Clarke ruled the legislation was
aimed solely at persons of Japane~e
ancestry and the legislation thus violated
due process and an equal protection
clause of the 14th amemdment. The
state Supreme Court later upheld his
ruling.
Judge Clarke answered critics whG
claimed he was too lenient with the
defense that his practices \\'ere "fair"
rather than lenient.
He said !hat on the bench he believed
he had "sincerely tried to temper justice
'vith mercy" ever since he visited San
Quentin's death row.
• A • ,
•
The Queen's Moving Day
Snarls Traffic on Sh.01·e
By AJ.llioN LOCKABEY
DlllY Plltl INtlftl lidllor
IN THE MERCHANT Marine it's called 0 moving ship."
lt means moving the sllip from one dock or berth to another for the plll"-
pose of loading or unloading cargo, fueling, etc.
.No big thing. Usually a skeleton crew and the help of a couple of tugs.
On Saturday, J started to Terminal Island to cove~ lhe start of J..:os I~ Angeles Yacht Club's Midwinter ~atahna Island race in-
volving soine 57 yachts.
No big thing.
The st.art of one yacht race looks about the same as
another. On Long Beach's Ocean Boulevard I nolic~ that
traffic was heavier and slower than usual for that time of
day. By 11 o'clock -scheduled time for the s.tart of the
yacht race - I was no farther taward TermlJlal Island
than the Long Beach end of the new bridge.
TOO LATE. I'd missed the start.
I made an illegal U-lurn and started back toward the Pacific Coast Club
lo try and hustle a game of squash. . In the PC parking lot I looked out across the harbor toward Pier J.
Something new had been added. There was the Queen Mary. Black hull, white superstructure. three
cinled orange stacks. · · . . ,, THEN I remembered. This was "moving ship day for the. Queen Mary.
Hundreds of small crafts cut wakes in the harbor as they circled the new
home of the "Queen."
A middle·aged \\'Oman walked across the parking lot and stopped to
took at Pier J. "Isn't that beautiful?'' she asked in awe.
''Yes ma'am," l said aloud. i1
To myself I thought: "Enjoy it. It's costing you... .
Hundreds Qf persons lined the shore to gaze at the Queen Mary 1n her
new and final berth. Traffic on Ocean Boulevard was still at a crawl as motor.
ists gaped. -
SUDDENLY I had a mental picture or the gnarled old Limey AB (able-
boqied seaman) who crawled through a hatch on lhe foredeck of the Qyeen
Mary OD the day she arrived at Long Beach. He blinked at the thousan(f\ of
horn-tooting, bell·ringing small craft that swarmed arOund lhe Queen f\.1ary,
hampering her every maneuver. ,
"Chee-sus." he growled. "All dat fuss for dis old heap o' rust?"
"Amen," I breathed as l headed fGr the locker room,
•
Mesa Fire Crash Deaths
Feared Rising to Four
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
t Of lh• PlllY Pl .. t Sllfl
The death toll near ed four
today in the aftermath of a tragic Costa
Mesa collision jn which a fireman·s car
heading to a fatal fire collided with one
carrying four teenagers.
One boy whose sister was killed
outright remained in critical condition
at Hoag f\.femorial Hospital today with
brain.injuries.
Dead following the related mishaps
are:
-Marie L. Rattey, 74, of 1166 W. 19th
SL, Costa 1.fesa.
Claire Arbuckle, 14, of 2002 f\.1aple
SL. Costa Mesa.
Edward L. Hernandez, 19, of 2183 Na·
tional Ave., Costa Mesa.
Miss Arbuckle's brother Paul, 17. of
the same, address, was listed by hospital
officials as being in critical condition.
He remains in a coma, spokesmen
said, but has shown some slight im·
provement.
The., fourth teenager injured in the
grinding, beadon collision near Estancia
Jligb School was listed in fair condition.
Paul R. Baldwin, 19, or Mira Loma.
is also under treatment at Hoag
Memorial Hospital.
Costa Mesa Fire Department Battalion
Chief Ron' Coleman, whose car was
demolished in the crash on Placentia
Avenue near Joann Street, v.·as listed
in good condition today.
He was admitted to Costa Mesa
11emorial Hospital today f ti 11 o w i n I
surgery on a fractured leg.
"He's lucky to be alive," remarked
a newspaper phologrSpher who arrived
on the scene shortly after the collision
sho rtly before midnight.
"He's in pretty good spirits today,
though," added a colleague.
Fellow fire investigators said today
they planned to re.survey t.1rs. Rattey·s
-.Beth~ Towers _apqrtment. Y•here her
bedroom was gutted by the blaze.
Tentatively blamed on smoking in bed,
the fire caused additional minor damage
due to water seeping into the unit below.
The fire was the third reported at
the IS.story retirement tower, but also
the first fatal one.
As families scheduled funeral services
for the viclims -scattered over the
roadway, resulting in the crash -
California Highway Patrol officers con-
tinued their investigation.
The CHP handles probes In which
municipal police or fire units are in-
volved .
All three victims' rites will be handled
by St. Joachim's Catholic Church in
Costa Mesa.
Rosary for Miss Arbuckle a n d
Hernanpez will be tonight at 7 p.m.
in Baltz Mortuary Chapel.
Requiem mass for the girl will be
Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. in the church,
preceded by requiem mass for Hernandez
at 9:00 a.m., with both burials at Good
Shepherd Ce1netery.
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Lagu11a Beaeh
EDITION
Today'~ Ftn,1
N.Y. Steeb
VOL. 64, NO. 51, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH I, 1971 .TEN CENTS
Controversia~ Development on Council Agenda
By BARBARA KREIBICH
Of rite D&llr Pll•I llaH
Controversy is on the agenda for the
Laguna Beach Planning Commission
meeting tonight _as planners open the
second public hearing on PRO (planned
residential development) standards for
hillside development and re s u m e
discussion of a proposed North Coast
Highway service station.
The PRO draft, prepared after aeveral
atudy sessions, provides for cluster hous·
2 Lagunans
Pulled From
Clioppy Sea
Two Laguna Beach men , hidden by
darkness and drifting in 40 knot winds,
spent an hour Saturday evening clinging
to their capsized boat of( Heisler Park
as a Coast Guard cutter and Laguna
Beach lifeguards attempted a difficult
rescue.
The men, ·finally plucked from the
choppy sea at about 7 p.m .• were iden-
tified as John Cox, Of 177 Canyon Acres
Drive, and Jim Davldson, of 2944 Dorn
Court. They were liuffering from cut
hands and exposure to the cold water
following their ordeal. but were in good
condition, lifeguards, said.
The incident occurred at about 6 p.m.
when the men's catamaran capsized
abou f a ·half mile off HeiSler Park.
The Coast Guard Was called, but before
the cutter and lifeguards could get to
th e men clinging to their craft. the
strong winds had blown the boat south
to Woods Cove at the foot of Moss
Street.
Police and lifeguards could see the
men from shore but th~ Coast Guard
rescue craft was unable 'lo locate the
two victims because of darkness. Using
a radio and a searchlight, lifeguards
"talked" the cutter to the capsized boat
and the men were rescued. The
catamaran was also rec!lvered un·
damaged.
Boy, 7, Swbbed --To Death; Two
Brothers Held
RUBIDOUX (UPI) -Two young men
fatally stabbed their 7-year-old brother
with a barbecue fork and a kitchen
knife early today and wounded four other
fam ily members, police said.
The parents, Charles. 49. and Bernice
Taylor, 44, were critically injured in
the predawn 'attack which began when
2.3-year~ld Bruce Taylor "started acUng
crazy and began stabbing us," said 13-"
year-old Margaret Taylor.
Her younger brother, Terry, died in
the bloody melee.
Officers said they had no motive for
the attack. "We don't really know what
started this thing," said Lt. Jerry Doyle.
~Dating Service'
9 Held
A Newport Beach contractor and eight
young women were arrested on pro-
stitution charges Saturday night at t~o
Harbor Area motel5 after vice officers
investigated an alleged "dating service"
ovtt the past three weeks.
The arrests came on &·combined effort
of Newport Beach police and Orange
County Sheriff's deputies.
Held on chi.rgc~ of procuring Is Henry w. Sprague. 52, of 64 Beacon Bay. The
,ight girls arrested on charges of con·
spiring to commit prostitution range ln
age lrom 20 to 35.
Arresting offiC6s alledge that SpraKUe
and the girts operated as part of Ex·
ecutive E!cori Service in 'trvlne. lt
a1itrtedly offered dates for
"sophisticated exeeutlvts. ·•
Ing ln hillside area! is an alternative
·to existing R~l (single resid~tial) zoning
which requires that each dwelling be
placed on its own S.000-square-foot lot.
Grouping of dwelling units, proponents
of lhe plan maintain, will eliminate the
need for extensive-cut and fill operations
and leave nlare n"atural open space.
Although the draft ordinan·ce under
consideration has redUctd density from
the seven unils per acre pennissible
in R·l to four units per acre, opponents
of the measure believe thia: density should
Miliwry Drug
Abuse Talk Set
The Laguna Beach Chamber of
Commerce will delvt into a topic
of national concern . Wednesday
when an El Toro Marine officer
speaks on "Drug Abuse in the
Military."
Tbe address, to be held at the
Chamber breakfast at 7:30 a.m.
in the Hotel Laguna, will be made
by Lt. Col. Henry Miller, a South
Laguna resident and Vietnam
veteran. In addition to the growing
drug use among G.I.'s, Miller will
discuss how this increase is af-
fecting the civilian community.
Reservations for the breakfast
may be m•de in advance by calling
Ult Chambtr at 494-1018.
Juvenile Officer
To Present Plan
For Youth Center
A Laguna Beach police juvenile offittr
will presQpt a plan for a Youth Services
Center Thursday when the Coordinating
Council meets at 7:30 p.m .
Detective Alex Jimenez will outline
the plan. designed to incorporate com·
munity expertise in helping youngsters
who have. been involved in crime.
Members of the school board. the Boys'
Club, the YMCA, churches and city of·
ficials will be present at the public
meeting, to be held at the Boys' Club,
1085 Laguna Canyon Road.
Such an agency, according to Det.
Jimenez, would attempt to provide
coun.selin& and recreation for youths who
have been arrested or convicted of minor
offenses, aa well as serving as a preven.
tive measure.
Person:ii at t~e center would help aid
the already overburdened probation of·
ficials in counseling youths who have
broken the law. If enough volunteer
support to fund the agency can be found
in Laguna Beach. the Coordinating Coun-
cil also wNI seek to find a suitable
location for such a center and coordinate
initial activities.
U.S. Will Get Bill
be calculated on the· basis of buildable
acreage, not groas acreage as the draft
proyides.
They point out that some areas having
provisions !or planned r e s Id e ii\ i a I
development! allow only two units per
acre.
The .question of hillside density was
one ol the major pre-election issues ,
in the 1970 council campaign, hinging
OR the Cordoba Company's plan to
develop 118 hillskle acres with more
om
Explosion
lrl{s Nixon,
Senators
' WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix·
on and members of the Senate expre.!Sed
shock today over an es.plOiIOn that caus-
ed extensive damage to the Senate wing
of the Capitol building.
"A shocking act of violeoce that w i l t
outrage all Americans," was Nixon's
dtlCl'ipUon in a statement telepl!loned
from aboard Air Force One as the
President flew to Des Moines, Iowa.
"The President feels that this act
of violence is totally · deplorable and
will be condemned by all Americans,"
said press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler.
"The President feels that the Capitol
Is a building that belongs to all
Americans and symbolizes a form of
·government that for 192 years has pro-
vided a means for peaceful change,"
Ziegler said.
Earlier. when he learned of the tJ.·
plosion, Nixon called FBI Director J,
Edgar Hoover from the White House
for an assessment of the damage.
Harry Phillips,
Ex-councilman,
Succumbs at 78
Services will be held at 11 a.m. Tues-
day in the Community Presbyttrian
Church for Harry F. Phillips, former
Laguna Beach councilman who died
Saturday at bis home. He was 78.
Mr. Phillips, of 677 S. Catalina St..
served on the council from 1950 to 1958
and on the board of the Orange County
Mosquito Abatement District, of which
he was president, from 1950 until bis
death.
Prior to his retirement be 11wned the
Laguna Beach .Nursing Home, which he
built in the 1950s.
He is survived by a daughter. Laura
Yeisley of Newport Beach; a twin
brother, Marvey, of Yucaipa, Calif.;
three sisters. living in Kansas: six
grandchildren and a great grand-
--. daughter.
GLASGOW, Scotland (AP) -The Scot· The Rev. Dallas R. Turner will officiate
tish Nationall.st Party said ~ay it will at -the Tuesday services. to be followed
send the United States a btll for $1.2 by burial at Pacific View Memorial
billion "rent" for the U.S. nuclear sub-Park. Sheller Laguna Beach Mortuary,
marine base on ScoUand's west coast. directors,
•
• Ill Prostitution
Charges for the dates, according to
police allegations, were $100 per night.
The organization had been in business
for the past month, according to Newport
vice officer John Simon.
Police said Sprague had offices at
2192 lluj)O!ll SL.. Irvine. Ilia bosinW
can(s read. ''150 beautiful foxy girls
for your dating pleasure." ~
Simon claims records also produced
a list of regular client.s, many of whose
nanles he said he recognized.
He uld be and Sheriff's investigator
Les Lever have been investigating the
Executive Escort Service for the past
thrct weeks a(ter receiving "a number
of" anonymous complaint.s.
Ht said they evidently operated at
various motels in Newport Beach and
throughout the couilty and were ·available
almost on an "on-call" basis.
Simon alleges that three of the girls
were delivered to him and two other
waiting detectives 1t the Corona del
M•r motel while Lever ll'CCOmpanied
\hlm to the county ~hotel where agents
atso had reserved Individual rooms.
The women were identified u Beverly
Anne Poehlamn. 2•, ot' Cypresa ; Barbara
Je1n Baylor, 2S, of Santa Ana: Rena
Sheree Andrews, 24 , o( Wesl Hollywood;
Ma.ry Agnes Nielson, 34, of Anaheim;
Dixie Lee Matrlsclno, 30, of Santa Ana:
Gwen Patrice Worlhlngt.on, %2, of
Anaheim: Lon< lsenber;, 3$, rr Malleim
and Elalne Komara , 20, of An beim.
I
than 700 dwelling units in clwtered ar·
rangemetits.
The plan was condemned as "people
packing·• by opponenl!I . '
Other points of contention in the pro-
posal are the wOrding of the introductory
''intent and purpose" statement which
refers to a need to ,''plan for population
growth and increased urbanizatio n" and
the reduction from lo acres to five
acres of the maximum parcel eligible
for PRD z.oning.
At the initial public hearin& on the
zone , the need for more comprehensive
geological surveys of areas consjdered
for hillside development Was pointed out
and agreed to by commissioners.
Also back for a return e111agement
before the commission is a proposed
Standard. Oil Company service station
at 1251 N'. Coast Highway, to replace
the station at Broadway and Coast
Highway sold to the city in the Main
Beac~ purchase. ,
Commissioners objecteed to the pro-
posed design of the station as not in
'
DAILY l'ILOT l'IMltt W LM l'•YM
FORMER DAVIS CUP ACE CHARLIE PASARELL IN ACTION
An E1timated 500 W1tch1d Brffzy 81n1fit For l•iuna Grffnbllt
Festival Tenn~ Match •
Draws 500 to Laguna •
An estimated 500 tennis buffs braved
cool breezes to watch an e1ciU11g two-
hour exhibition by top professionals on
Laguna's Irvine Bowl courts Sunday.
The Winter Festival feature , presented
as a benefit · for the Laguna Greenbelt,
featured Jack Kramer's tearn of aces,
pitted against local net stars.
Thfee former Davis Cup players, Tony
Trabert, Charlie Pasarell and Hugh
Stewart shared the spotlight with local
aces Art Wahl and Chuck Scribner and
UCLA star Jef[ AU!tin .
is the fifst team to reach eight game.s
with a two-game iead.
With games lied at eight ea.ch, the
pros played a nine-point tie breaker,
rotating service until one team scored
five points, in thia instance the Austin·
Stewart duo with five points lO t h r e e
for Pasarell·Trabert.
Meet Canceled
On Free Clinic Austin replaced DeMls Ralston who
"'-Jelled ~y au Saturday and' c 0 u t d
)lot pl,y u .. ~ . Wahl, Laguna -math' m"' ~holll . .1<"1i>bf tntnrwUoo. mtettas ""'lhe'-
'COllMClor, ·loamed wltb Si.wart In i •Ltgun~ Bellth Fr1" Clinic, ~ul.ed
doub1e3 m.atch Against Scribner and ror, 7:30 this evening at the Hodj of
Trabert, taking an early lead and holding HyUn, 410 Broadway, has been cancel}ed,
It to win 6-4. It was annooncff today.
In 1 singles match. described by Vern ~ bacll-up ln the city iewer . i:naln
Blackman :·of lht sponsorint Lq:una ad11cent.. to th& restaorant. necess1litlng
Beacll Tenrda Asaociatlon, as ''vtry ex· extensive clean-up operations in the
ell~ tenni~" Austin played PasareU, building. made J~ .neeqsary to cell of( ea~ tildng one ,aet. · the mettlng, a' Free Cliftic SP.O.kesman
In · a .final ctllf-hongor, Austin ml ,.Id.
llowart 'played Paaar<U and Trabert A new ttm. and plaoe.torthe meelln&
'IJl.l 11n&I• pro Jtt, In wblch tilt wlnnlr wtJI be announced.
!
keeping with Laguna's village at-
nupbere and rtpttsentatives of the oil
firm are expected to submit an alternate
design.
Since the servire station matt.er ~me
up before the. commission, t,here has
been growlng'oppositipn to the idea ol
permltting any stalkm at the site iJl
quesUon, adjacent to lhe famed stat
pine at u.e northern entry to the city.
Comment to that effect Is e1pected
tonight.
'
Senate Wing
Damaged
By Blast
WASHINGTON (AP) -An early morn·
Ing bomb blast, reportedly linked to
a protest against the U.S .• supported in·
vasion or Laos, ripped up an interior
eection of the Senate wing of the Capitol
today causing extensive damage but 110
injurie.s.
"This IJ appamUy a poliUcal bom·
bing," said Senate Republican Ltader
Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania. He nid
the Senate Ser~ant at Arms, Robert
G. Dunphy, told hlm ca letter had betn
found linked to the bombing and referring
to U.S. operations in Laos;
Scott said a male caller who contacted
the Gapit61 .Switchboard to give advance
warning of t.be blast also referred -to
the Laotian Invasion.
Capitol police a n d FBI spokesmen,
however, would neither confirm nor deny
lhe link to antiwar protesters.
Meanwhile, President Nixon Issued a
statement through White ff o u 1 e
1pokesman Ronald L. Ziegler calling the
bombing "a shocking act of violence
that will outrage· all Americans."
Tbe blast pulverized. a men's roora
and damaged other rooms. but did ndk
touch the Senate chamber itself.
Perhaps coinci dentally, it came 17
years to the day after Puerto Rican
nationalists shot and wounded five con-
gressmen from the visitors' gallery of
the House of Representatives. It also
caused the mOst extensive damage to
the building since the '"'British set Jt
afire in 1814.
Scott said the effect of the bombing ·
will be unfortu nate, both in this country
and internationally.
"It's likely to be exaggerated," he
said. "They won't realize that It's (lne
bomb in one washroom."
Scott also took lhe: occasion to criticize
federal judges In the District or Colum-
bia, accusing them of too much lenency.
He said even If the person who placed
the bomb is arrested "my guess would
be they'll never go to jail, nol with
the type of appellate court we have
in'the DiJtrict of Columbia."
Police, army and FBI investigator!
were seeking clues to the identity of
the male caller who warned the Capitol
switchl?oard : 11The Capitol building will
blow up ln 30 minutes."
Oruge Coast
Weather
Don't let that nice warm-looking
sun fool you Tuesday. There 'll be
gusty winds keeping the tempera-
tures down to 56 along tJ;e Orange
Coast, with Inland readings tabbed
at 64. ...
INSIDE TODAY' ·
Kilrou WO& hfre ovtr the
wee:Und, 1etting an elapred
li17U ~·!'lf!I . in his Kialoa /f l/OC~l l~ tit<· lj:nil"'ll S<li<•'.
• ract around Catalitia. See. Page
5.
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i DAlL 'r Pill.I I ·It
1-Iulse 'lrrespons_ible'
Prosecuwr Says Defendant Planned Murder
lly TOM BARLEY
Gt tM O.lt1 Plitt ll•ff
A hardhitting prosecutor today urged
an Orange ,County Superior Court Jury
to reject "grossly exaggerated" defense
actOUrtts of Arthur Craig "Moose''
Hulst's addiction to drugs and convict
the youth of first degree murder.
Deputy District Attorney Martin J.
Heneghan. told the panel of eight women
and £our men in his final argument
to give the concluding statements of
the defense m much consideration as
Hulse gave the plea of serVice station
attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin last June
J.
Carlin's cries of "don't hit me in
lhe head" were rewarded with a series
of blows delivered wilh the hatchet Hulse
carried into the Santa Ana gas station,
Heneghan told the jury.
Lashing the 17-year old defendant as
''grossly selfish, calfous, irres'ponslble
and criminally impulsive," Heneghan
asked the jury to agree with him that the
murder of Carlin waa: "planned and
premeditated" and the defense had not
Laguna Mother
Launches POW
Petition Bid
A variation of the current campaign
on behalf of American prisoners of war
has been launched by a Laguna Beach
woman, only these petitions will go lo
President Nixon instead of the president
of North Vietnam.
The. theme of tbe petitioner-signing
effort org~ _by Gall Gaston is "All
our sons are POWs in Vietnam -
Bring them Home!" Mrs. Gaston, a
membet of Mothers for Peace, said
the purpose of the project is to get
as many signatures as possible on peti-
tions asking President Nixon to withdraw
1upport from the current Laos campaign.
She wants the President to treat all
P0'7's and all U.S. troops In a humane fas~::on by _ withdrawing from Vietnam
on, the withdrawal schedule announced
by the Administration.
Mrs. Gaston said the dead and wounded
in ~ the war now total well over seven
tillles the population of Laguna Beach
anll there are still 337 ,900 American
lr«lps in Vietnam.
Al part of the peUUon effort, Mrs.
G~ la selling pendants and key-chains
beYing the inscription "War I!l Not H~lhy for Cblldren and Other Uving Tbfngs_.,, The item!:, which sell for $3,
are diatrlbut.ed by Another Mother for
Poace, a ..,._p.,,Bt, organliation.
rwe hopt that people wlll wear them
u a symbol," Mrs. Gaston aaid, "'and
keep wearlni them until the day the
last American &0ldier leaves Vietnam
to, the Vietnamese."
•
.Doctors Check
Burglar Suspect
Orange County Superior Court action
on Steven Eugene Murray's plea of guilty
to burglary charges was halted Friday
with the possibility that the former San
Clemente may may be a narcotics addict.
Judge Byron K. McMill3n appo inted
two physicians to examine the 23-year-old
son t1f San Clemente's police chief and
sel March 15 as the date on which
he will rule on disposition of the five-
month-old case.
Mmray was one of two men arrested
ln October following the alleged burglary
of a San Clemente home. It was testified
in South Orange County municipal court
that the Costa Mesa resident later sold
a color television set taken in that
burglary to a Dana Point woman for
$100.
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proved what they said wu Hul.N'1
dlmlnlshei! capacity.
He reminded the jury that Ill four
psychiatrists that have testified in the
Hulse trial have agreed that the Garden
Grove youth was not psychotic.
Hulse, 18, at the time of the murder.
can not be sentenced to death if the
jury convicts him. Such a verdict would
-raise the likelihood that he may be
committed to an institution ~r a life
term aa person in danger of addiction
to narcotics. ·
Defense attorneys Robert Green and
Michael Gerbosi will deliver their final
aiguments to the jury late in the day
before Judge Ronald Crookshank in-
structs the panel.
Hulse, outwardly apathetic and morose,
stared at the counsel table~hroughout
the morning session as Heneghan at-
t~cked the defendant.'.s-siory of the quan-
tity of drugs he took in the hours prior
to the Carlin killing.
"I don't believe he took 20 to 25
'rtdJ' (depressant)," Henegha n said. "If
be had taken them he'd be dead tr
ul,.p at tl>o timt ol the murder and
I look oo h1a statemeot as part of
a remarkably wen.tailored d e f e n s e
story."
\Vhatever the verdict in the current
trial, Hulse also must face trial for
the killing last June 2 of Mission Viejo
teacher Florence Nancy Brown.
Also charged Y.'ith that killing are
Steven Craig Hurd, 20 and Herman Hen·
drick Taylor. 17 both transients. and
Christopher "Gypsy" Gibboney, 17, of
Portland, Ore.
They. and Hulse. were rounded up
and accused of involvement in the "devil
cult" killing of Mrs. Brown, 31, of El
Toro.
Taylor has testified for the prosecution
against Hulse in the Carlin trial and
has promised to go into the witness
box for all trials in connection with
the murder of Mrs. Brown.
Hurd is scheduled to face trial March
22. Gibboney's trial date will be set
when Orange County authorities are able
• to extradite the youth from oregon.
Winds Switch Course;
Santa Anas Due Next
Northwesterly winds responsible for lhe
weekend's spectacular clean air views,
wind whipped highways and continued
small craft warnings along the Orange
Coast will shift tonight to bring a mild
Santa Ana conditioii Tuesday.
The Nat.iOnaf Weather Service forecast
said the cool breezes that gusted to
so and 60 miles an hour in the mountains
and deserts of Southern CalifOrnia should
shift to the northeast tonight. Winds
tomorrow will be JocaJized to the canyons
normally affected by Santa Ana winds.
Temperatures will warm slightly with
the high tomorrow along the Orange
Coast expected to reach 63 after a low
Laguna Probing
$5,000 Burglary
Laguna Beach police are investigating
the theft last week of more than $5,000
worth of metchandi.5e from a vacationing
resident. ·
Officers said the burglary occurred
at the home of Dolores D. Smith, 1401
S. Coast Highway, some time between
Feb. 21 and 26. Police said Mrs. Smith
was outi of . town when an unknown
suspect apparenUy forced open the front
door of ·her-apartment
Items taken included a fur coat, a
suede coat, a g1ass botUe filled with
silver coins, assorted pieces of jewelry
and several keys, including those to
an expensive sports car. The car was
not stolen, authorities said.
Avalanche Kills 4
DIEMTIGEN, Switzerland (AP)
Four Swiss skiers, two men and two
women, were kl.lied by an avalanche
which rolled over the 7,487·foot·high Ot-
tern pass in the Bernese Oberland Sun·
day .
Breaking lJp
tonight of 40. Inland portions of Orange
County can expect overnight lows near
38.
Orange County Harbor Department
said weekend sailors piloting 12·foot craft
learned 15 to 30 knot gusts are not
recommended for small craft. Indeed,
Small craft wamirigs along tlie Coast
continued into the fifth day today, as
the northern cblll air continued to whip
up seas.
The winds are blamed for at least
one death. Police said Barbara Crane,
41, of Norco, died Saturday of injuries
received when her small car was blown
out of control near Riverside, and struck
a tree.
Wind-blown sand, churned by gw;t.s
up to 60 miles an hour damaged
numerous automobiles on the high
deserts north of San Bernardino, Sunday.
Highway Patrol warnings for campers
and trailers to stay off wind • blOwn
highways remained In effect through
today from Barstow to the coast.
Weathermen noted the gusty winds
resulted from a second cold front follow-
ing on the ·heels of the·one experienced
late last week when the high northerly
winds. began. The frontal system ex-
pected to clear Soutbern California today
brought snow showers to mountain and
desert areas.
Dramatic billowing clouds hung over
distant mountains clearly visible in the
crisp, clear air,
Pro-environment
Meeting Scheduled
A general meeting or P~nvironment
People (PEP) will be held at 8 p.m.
Thursday at the United Methodist church,
21632 Wesley Drive in South Laguna.
In announcing the meeting, PEP
chairman Luisa Hyun said the group's
most recent project or sponsoring the
ecological satire "Mother Earth" had •
been a "wonderful success." PEP is
made up of residents actively concerned
with their environment and the meeting
is open to the public.
Vl'l Ttlt•llo19
Indicating he de(inltely ls not one of your straight-faced ecclesiastical
leaders, Dr. Arthur Michael Ram sey (right), England's Archbishop of
Canterbury, breaks up during visit with newly consecrated Bishop of
Worcester, the Rev. Robin Woods. Subject is a cardlnaJ secret
SUCCUMBS AT 68
Judga Thurmond Clarke
•
Retired Judge
Thurmond Clarke
Succumbs at 68
Retired U.S. District Court Judge Thur-
mond Clarke of Corona del Mar, died
Sunday in Good Samaritan Hospital in
Los Angeles where he had been confined
for lhe past five weeks. He was 68.
Judge Clarke was a prominent
Southern California jurist for 38 years.
until his retirement last Sept. 1 as chief
U.S. judge of the CentraJ California
District. ·
He was appointed to the federal bench
by President Dwight D. Eisenhower,
Sept. I, 1955, an appointment that nar·
rowly passed the Senate Judiciary Com·
mittee. ·
Judge Clarke credited the efforts of
his cousin . Sen. Strom Thurmc.nd (R-
South Carolina), for the committee's con-
firmation of the appointment, one or
two Republican judgeships approved that
year.~
Judge Clarke was named chief judge
or the Central California District in 1966
and became the first federal district
judge outside of Washington to ad-
minister the oath of office to a member
of the President's cabinet.
Last July, Judge Clarke swore into
office Labor Secretary J a m e s W.
Hodgson in ceremonies at the Western
White House in San Clemente.
He also administered the oath of of!ice
to former Labor Secretary George P.
Schultz as director of the office of
management and budget.
In 19441 Judge Clarke, then a widower,
married Athalie Richardson Irvine,
mother of Mrs. Joan Irvine Smith, the
largest minority stockholder in the
Irvine Company •
A native of Santa Paula. Judge Clarke
was the son of -Judge and Mts. Robert
~t Clarke. He was appointed to the
municipal court in Los Angeles by Gov.
James Rolph in 1932.
Jn 1935, Gov. Frank Merriam elevated
him to the Superior Court. an office
to which he was elected in 1936, 1942,
1948 and 1954.
Among his most notable court rulings
was his 1953 decision that overturned
California's Jaw that barred aliens from
owning land.
Jud ge Clarke ruled the legislation was
aimed solely at persons of Japanese
ancestry·and the legislation thus violated
due process and an equal protection
clause of the 14th amemdment. The
State Supreme Court later upheld hi.s
ruling.
Judge Clarke answered critics who
claimed he was too lenient with the
defense that his practices were "fair''
rather than lenient.
1-le said that on the bench he believed
he had "sincerely tried to temper justice
with mercy" ever since he visited San
Quentin's death row.
The Queen's Moving Day
Snarls Traf fie on Shore
By ALMON LOCKABEY
o.nr P'U•I ... 11111 S-fltior
IN THE J\i!ERCRANT J\ifarine it's called "moving ship."
Jt means moving the ship from one dock or berth to another for the pu~
pose of loading or unloading cargo, fueling. etc.
No big thing. Usually a skeleton crew and the help of a couple of tugs.
On Saturday, I started to Terminal J~land Lo 'cove: the slarl of ~s
, Angeles Yacht Club's Midwinter Calalina Island race m-
volving some 57 yachts. ..._
No big thing.
The start of one yacht race looks about the same .~
another. . On Long Beach's Ocean Boulevard I nolic~ that
traffic was heavier and slower than usual for that time of
day By 11 o'clock -scheduled time for the start of the
yacht race -I was no farther toward Terminal Island
than the Long Beach end of the new bridge.
TOO LATE. l'd missed the start ..
I made an illegal U-tum and started back toward the Pacific Coast Club
to try and hustle a game of squash. . In the PC parking Jot I looked Out across the harbor toward Pier J.
Something new had been added. There \\'as the Queen Jli1ary. B\aek hull . white superstructure . three
canted orange stacks. . . ,, THEN J remembered. This v.·as ''moving shlp day for the_ Queen f.1ary.
Hundreds of small crafts cut wakes in the harbor as they circled the new
home of the ''Queen." A middle-aged woman \valked across the parking lot and stopped to
look at Pier J.
''.Isn't that beautiful'?" she asked in awe.
''Yes ma'am," 1 said aloud.
To myself I thought: "Enjoy it. It's costing you.'' .
Hundreds of persons lined the shore to gaze at lhe Queen f..1ary 1n her
new and final berth. Traffic on Ocean Boulevard was still at a crawl as motor•
is~ gaped.
SUDDENLY J .had a mental picture of the gnarled old Limey AB (ab.le:
bodied seaman) who crawled through a hatch on the foredeck of the Queen
J\ifary on the day she arrived at Long Beach. He blinked at the thousands of
hom·tooting, bell-ringing srQall craft that s\\·armed around the Queen .~tary.
hampering her every maneuver.
"Chee-sus." he growled. ''All dat fuss for dis old heap o' rust?"
"Amen," I breathed as I headed for the locker room. •
Mesa Fire Crasl1 Deaths
Feared Rising to Four
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of 1111 D•Hr l'lltl Sl1ff
The de ath toll neared four
today in the aftermath of a tragic Costa
Mesa collision in which a fireman's car
heading to a fatal fire collided wilh one
carrying four teenagers.
One boy whose sister was killed
outright remained in critical condition
at Hoag Memorial Hospital today with
brain injuries.
Dead following : the related mishaps
are:
-Marie L. Ratley, 74, of 666 W. 19th
St., Costa Mesa.
Claire Arbuckle, 14, ot 2002 Maple
SL, Costa Mesa.
Edward L. Hernandez, 19, of 2183 Na·
tional Ave., Costa Mesa.
1-tiss Arbuckle 's brother Paul, 17, of
the same, address, was listed by hospital
officials as being in critical condition.
He remains in a coma, spokesmen
said, but has shown some slight im·
provement.
The fourth teenager injured in the
grinding, beadon collision near Estancia
High School was listed in fair condition.
Paul R. Baldwin, 19, of Mira Loma,
is also under treatment at Hoag
Memorial Hospital.
Costa Mesa Fire Department Battalion
Chief Ron Coleman, whose car was
demolished in the crash on Plclcentia
Avenue near Joann Street, was\ listed
in good condition today.
He was admitted to Costa Mesa
fl.1emorial Hospital today f & t 1 Cl w.i n I
surgery on a fractured leg.
"He's lucky to be alive." remarked
a newspaper photographer who arrived
on the scene shortly after the collision
shortly befo(e midnight.
"He's in pretty good spirits today,
though ," added a colleague.
FellOw fire investigators said today
they planned to re-survey r.trs. Rattey·s
Bethel Towers apartment. where her
bedroom was gutted by the blaze.
Tentatively blamed on smoking in bed.
the fire caused additional minor damage
due lo water seeping into the unit below.
The fire was the third reported at
the 18-story retirement tower, but also
the first fatal one.
As families scheduled funeral services
for the victims -scattered over the
roadY.'ay. resulting in the crash -
California Highway Patrol officers con·
tinued their investigation.
The CHP handles probes in which
municipal police or fire units are in·
volved.
All three victims' riles \l'ill be handled
by St. Joachim's Catholic Church in
Costa f..1esa .
Rosary for Miss Arbuckle and
Hernandez will be tonight at 7 p.m.
in Baltz Mortuary Chapel.
Requiem mass for the girl \l'ill be
Tuesday at 10 :30 a.m. in the church,
preceded by requiem mass ior Hernandez
al 9:00 a.m., with both burials al Good
Shepherd Cemetery.
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7
I
San Cle111enie
Capistrano
VOL. 64, NO. SI, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES
•
EDITION
• OR>,NGE COUNTY, ~ALIFOR~A '
... -. :
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
MO"\DAY, MAR¢H I, 1971 TEN CENTS
Nixon A·sl{s Domestic Support • Ill Farm Belt
WASHINGTON IUPJ) -emidonl •
Nixon's five-hour visit to the heart. of
the farm belt today is the first chapler
of a new campaign to build state-by-state
1upport for his revenue sharing.
The President , who was scheduled to
depart at 9;30 a.m. (EST) for Des
Moines, .Iowa, planned to re-tell his
domestic legislative proposals to the
governors of four states and the Iowa
legislature, with particular emphasis on
how his plan t.o share more federal
•
money with the stales would spttd up
rural development.
But while the trip was tinged with·
an emphasis on farm and rural problems,
the President faced pro)ests from twa,
other segments of the population -
organized labor and peace groups.
Iowa labor union' memberi and ron·
struction workers called their forces
together at the Iowa capitol to decry
· Nixon's decision to fight inflation by
trying to force a downtrend In con·
I 0
Capo Dist.rict
Drug Abuse Plan
Slated Tonight
A propsal lo enlarge drug abuse pr~
blem solving in the Capistrano Unified
School District will be brought to the
trustees at to "ight's 8 p.m. meeting in
Serra School, Capistrano Beach.
The board will be asked to form a
community drug abuse steering com-
mittee to work toward the development
of a community wide plan for solving
drug abuse problems.
Elemen~ of drug education have
already been implemented into the ifl.
structional program at the district
15chools In accordance with the education
code, according to Jeff Olsen, director
of projects.
The district also recently appointed
a four man team Gf administrators,
student, and communilY. representative
to take part in the state drug education
training program.
The formation of this committee 1,
expected to involve rommu nity leaders
from government , service clubs. school
organizations. profesiional groups and
law enforcement agencies.
"In develop ing an overall district ap-
proach to teaching students about drug
abuse and drug Information it is apparent
that the role or the school s is limited
to an information type program," said
Olsen.
The committee will be formed to work
in areas that the school caMot reach.
Palm Preservation Plea
Goes to County Tuesday
A San Clemente councilman's attempt
to reverse county road department policy
to stop the transplanting of a stand
ol date palm trees will come before
county supervisors Tuesday.
Councilman Tom O'Keefe annd a city
1taff representative will appeal to
supervisors for an amendment to the
final plans for the widening of Camino
de Estrella near Grant's Plaza shopping
cenler. A~ stake are about SO 40-year-old
date palm which have a high mortality
rate if transplanted acrordi ng to joint
county-city widening plans.
To keep the trees where they are,
Robert Dahlberg
Tries for Board
Robert Dahlberg, fonner rupe rin·
tendent of the Tustin Union High School
Disti-ict, is a candida te for the spttial
el~ction in the Capistrano Unified School
District.
Dahlbert. who re sides at 34052 Mazo
Drive, Dana Point, is competing in the
fourth area which was left vacant by
the resig nation of T~m Winget.
The candidate, who is president" of
Marine Capitol Ltd. was inadvertently
lert out of Friday's story llstiJ:lg the
entire slate.
El Ca11ai110 Heat
O'Keefe has proposed creating parking
wells between the palms-a plan which
still would all ow for a four-la.ne h.ighway
with a complete, landscaped center
divider.
Tuesday's action by supervisors is the
last chance to keep the trees intact.
The official county portion of the
roadway is at issue, not the section
to be improved by the city.
Since the issue over the trees arose
about a month ago, the awarding of
the city end of the paving and widening
contract has been held up.
The roadway is planned for completion
by June t. the opening date of the
large shopping center. The Improvements
to Estrella will insure proper access
fo the mercantile area.
If rupervisors do not accede tG
O'Keefe '1 idea, the original specifications
for tbe project will be employed.
Each of the trees then would be
transplanted 14 feet back from the ex#
isling curb line. One tree in 10 could
die from the work, It has been estimated.
Eacb tree will cost S200 to transplant.
The plan also calls for a slight nar-
rowing of the abundant center divider
strip.
O'Keefe has said tlia t creating parking
wells between the trees would probably
be cheaper than the trinsplanting bill. ,-4
His preliminary estimates show that eaq, well would amount to $50 extra
in curbs and paving , compared to the
$200 transplant cost per tree.
structlon industry wages and prices. Last
week Nixon suspended a depression-era
law wh.ich, required contractors in
federal and federally assisted projects
to pay going wage rates -wually
union scale -to anyone they hired
to work on such projects.
Administration economists said the
move was intended to put a damper
on the construction indwtry wage-price
-spiral, \l:hich bas been rising at almost
twice the rate of the rest of the economy.
Peace grou ps said they would gather
to voice .displeasure at U.S. involvement
in the current.South Vietnamese invasion
of Laos.
The demonstrators drew a latwtarting
recruit Sunday night when Bernadette
Devlin. ·Northern Ireland's Rom an
Catholic civil rights leader, said she
v.·ould join the gathering. In·Des Moines
for a college ca mpus appearance, Miss
Devlin said she was thrilled when she
found out "this Is where he ls biding
out tomorrow."
At least six cabinet officers as well
as ~1rs. Nixon were included in the
presidential Party. In addition to the
remarks at the joint state Jeglslative
session, the President's schedule called
for a meeting with the governors of
Iowa, Illinois, Missouri and Wisconsin
plus. a background brie fing for farm-
oriented members of the news media.
The Jo'wa trip, to be followed by
another on«fay foray to R~sl.tt, N.Y.
Friday, was the first of several trips
planned to plug the N~on lt:ilslalive
layout. includini hts SIS billion re·venue
sharing proposaj.
The revenue sharing propoul has
already bit rough going in Congress.
ll would provld< $S billion In new lands
for use by states and cities on a Dl)o
strings-attached ~is ; the balance of
the money would come from a reahuffllnl
of existing federal funds.
• • ' om 0 I ICa-
' r
• DAILY •1L~T lftff·r"'• DANA HARBOR TAKES SHAPE; PUSH BEGINS FOR -SUMMER INAUGURAL ' ,
lnv•\tor& Witch To Assen Public Response To First S.11e1n Of Oper1tlon
~~~~~~c:;;~~-
3 Marines Held
On LSD Charges
Three Camp Pendleton Marines faced
arraignment today on cha rges of
possession and sale or LSD after their
weekend arrest by San Clemente un#
dercover police.
Officers said the three men allegedly
sold hundreds of doses of l h e
hallucinatory drug to police agents over
the past several weeks.
The men, arrested late last Friday,
are Bradley T. Tullous, 20 ; Larry Joseph
Bilner, 19, and Joseph Shimrock Jr.,
20.
All three were booked on the charges
of sale of the drug.
Officers said they arrested the trio
after the last asserted buy of 150 doses
in the 800 block of South El Camino
Real.
Speaker Sets Limit
WASHINGTON <UPIJ -ff o use
Speaker Carl Albert. 62, says he will
retire J!t age 70, but he does not feel
that should necessarily be the retirement
age for any other member of Congress.
"The job of speake r is difficult and
I don't want to carry on tM job when
1 get old," Albert said Sunday. "I think
the last two speakers were able to
do il, even to 80. but different people
are constituted differently."
$25 Million Project
Driving of First Piling
Slated for Dana Harbor
By JOUN VAL TERZA
DI t1H1 n.111 •lie! $1111
Dana Harbor, Qlerely a dream 20 years
11.go when the first ideas for the complex
were conceived-will echo with thhe
sounds of even more equipment this
spring as lhe last-minute push begins
for Its inaugural summer season.
Now in a very brief sQer, the
$25-million harbor, soon will feet its
ffrst piling being driven home into a
boat basin which soo.-..will !louse hun-
dreds of small craft.
The hi~toric ceremony or the first
piling is scheduled for mid·March, say
officials of Marine Capital lnc., of
Newport Beach, the firm which holds
the lease for boat facilities. _
Simultaneously_, oUlcia1s of the rounty
road department Wilrbe drafting co°'"
tracts with a paving firm wh.ich wiU·
install all the harbor's roadways before
the start of the summer season.
Landscaping and other finish work to
th~ublic portions will begin as well
this spring.
Bob Dahlberg, president of Marine
c_,Jtal, 1aid this week I.hat his firm
is g'~ing full bore for a May I completion
date for the first increment of slips.
ln his details, Dahlberg dispelled
persistent rumors that because of the
hundreds of names on a waiting list,
boat slips will be nearly impossible to
obtain at the new harbor.
"We have started making the final
mailing to the Initial 1,500 persons who
signed the ·waiting list over the past
yeara," he said.
"Obviou11ly, lots of water ha11 posed:
under the bridge and many of those
people would no longer bf! interested ."
The names have grown on the list
on a first-come, first-served basil.
But deoplt< lb<ir,,nwnb<r1, IJoh!blrl
said chances are very good that persons
is signing up for slips now would have
a. chance at a berth for thb coming
fall .
Jn a move to eliminate hoarding or
creating unfair advantage in renUng the
precious boat dock.Ii, Marine capital will
sold (rom a harbor dock. .
Senate Wing
Damaged .
By Blast
WASHINGTON I AP) -An early morn·
Ing bomb blati:t, reportedly linked to
a protest 1galqst the U.S.-suppart.ed in#
vasion of Lao•. ripped up an interior
ttetion of I.be Senate wing o( the capitol
today_ causing extensive damage but no
injuries.
''The t\ appa~nUy a political bom-
• ~~.:: > flid ~l& J!91~11up t,.eade•
Hugh · Scott of Ptnrl.!)'lvanJL" "He uid
the · SUata Seraeant it Arms, Robert
G. llllnpby, IOld hlnl, 1• l<t!B hicf been
found iulked lo lb< bombing llld referring
lo U.S. operaljons Jn 1-.
Scott 1aid a ma1e '.ca11er who contacted
the Capitol swilchboari:f· to give advance
warning of the blast also referred ta
the Laotian invasion.
Capito) police a n d FBI spakesmen,
however, would neither conlinn·nor deny
the Jink to antiwar prote'sters.
Meanwh.ile, President Nixon !Ssued a
&tatement through White. ·a o u s •
1pokesman Ronald L. Ziegler calling the
bombii;ig "a aboclt!ng act of violence
that will outrage all Americans ...
The blast pulverized a m'en's room
and damaged other rooms, but did not
touch I.be Senate chamber it.self.
Perhaps coincidentally, it came 17
yean to the day after Puerto Rican
nationalists ahot and wouride.ct five· con·
gressmen from the visiton' gallery of
the House of Representatives. It also
caused the most extensive damage 19
the building since the Brltlsh set it
afire in 1814.
Scott said the effect of the t>ombing
will be unfortunate, both itt this country
and inlernationally. r ....,.J.•
"It's likely to be exaggera~." he
said. "They won't realize that it's one
bomb in one washroom."
Scott also took the occalion to criticize
federal judges in the Di.strict of Colum·
bia, accusing them of too much lenency.
He said even if the person who pl aced
the bomb is iu:rested ''my guess would
be they'll Dever go to . jail, not with
tile type of appellate court we have
in the District of. Colwnbla."
Police, arrily and FBI Investigators
were seeking clues to the identity of
ll}e male caller who warned the Capitol
switchboard: ''The Capitol building wW
blow up in 30 minu~s."
Ona••
Weafller
Road Work Due Approval
Bob Wingard, development engineer
for the Or;rnge County Harbor District,
3aid thia week that much of tbt initial
private development of the complex wUI
become a test tube of sorts for investors
waiting to see the-actual impact of
the first summer season.
Only tJv, downcast basin· of Ute
uniquely-constructed twin marinas wl\1
be. developed for boat berths this rum·
mer, he explained. But by next fall more
501ld plans for the westerly marina and
U,. )>ll!UI •armarked 10< bool bauiin
~nd repair will have been made.
"!f a sli p renter sells . his boat, the
new owner will receive priviletts no dif~
ferent than s o m e o n e at the tall
of the waiting list. We rent the slip
lo lhe man, not lo lhe boo I," he said.
The police would eliminate the practice
common In Newport Harbor Which rarely
results In a vacant alfp. Subleasing of
thips will be forbidden at Dana as well.
Don 't let that nlCe wanli.\&\ing
sun fool you Tuesday. The~·u be
gusty winds koep~g the tempera·
tures down tq '6 elong the Orange
Cout. wiih Inland readings l&bbed
• al M.
INSIDE TOD~ Y
•. Kilroy IDlir here oOfr the
At least half of an lmpartant road
widening project in the North Beach
and North El Camino Real secliOM
nf San Clemente seems well on its way
to reality this week.
County Road Department aides said
• 1 city request for matching funds for
the widening and Improvement of El
Cam ino Real seem destined for county
approval.
The project, which would stretch from
Avenida 'Estacion to Camino San
Clemente. would cost 11bout SlS0,000 and
if an advlM>ry committee approves the
joint funding In late March, county -
supervisor& would Include. the plan ln
next fi~al year'• budget.
One other phase of road worj fn that
end of the city, however, has not qualified
under county arterial highway funding
gr an~.
San Clemente also originally had
aought financial help to rebuild the
triangle of streets near North Beach
and-the public beach ctub.
But a prelimlnary screening committee
ruled that those smaller streets would
not fall under rounty air criteria.
City Manager J<en Carr said late_ last
Wetk that Uie project now woula be
considered as a strict)y.dty undertaking.
The improvements had been calculated
to improve ,a $200,000 parcel· of land
bought by the dly recenUY, lo house
a youth recreiltion center (if the April
2(1 bond issue passes) and a large
p11rking lot. for users of North Beach.
Widening of El Camino, the triangle
or side streel5 and · the recently com-
pleted extension of Avenida Pico all
are calculated to channel thousands of
beach goers onto North Beach, in recent
years a piece of 1hortline undiscovered
by. the generaJ ·mass of visitors lo the·
city. ·
•
' Wingard said despite early spring con-
struction starts, several of the facilities
set for opening in the summer be C'Ollld
be delayed-particularly the restaurant
and motel developments. to ,
"Both developers are awfully eager
to get started, but there is ·a lot of
ro:111trUcti011 to be done,'' the tnglneer
1aid.
-.
Many of the rorecasls covering
av.all&ble boa.t •PJCf •" tM1 new marlna
will bt reaerved until summer. DthlberC
said, givtng the Hrm's Staff a better
chance to evaluate trends.
Dahlberg, obvlOU1ly ecstatic at pie
potential of tM harbor, teMl\$ the Dana
development "fantastic.''
"This just has to be the ireatest
harbor ever developed on the West CO.Ill.
The facilities are 10\ng to be outJtan-
ding," he said.
)
'. ~--·~-··
· weekend,. 1etdng an elap1ed
timt record • m. hi.! Ktaloo II
uacitt In the Whitu11 Serit1
race around ,Catalina. Set Page
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•
--r ...
APllOI Monday, Mf! l, 1971
Hulse 'Irre·sponsih.le'
· Prosecutor Sa ys Defent;I,ant Plann ~d Murder
By TOM BARLEY
Of ... Dlil.., PLi.t lMn
A hardhlttlng prosecutor today urged
1n Orange County Superior Court Jury
to rtject ·~groa1ly exagaerated" defense
accounts of Arthur Craig "Moose"
Hulle's addlctlon to drugs and convict
the yOuth of flrst degree murder.
Deputy District Attorney Marlin J,
Heneghan told the panel of eight women
and four men 1n hJs final arcument
to &lvt the concluding statements of
the defense as much consideration as
Hulse gave the plea of servi<:f: station
attendant Jerry \\'ayne Carlin last June
l. '
Carlin's criu of "don't hit me in
the bead" were rewarded with a series
of bJowa delivered with lhe hatchet Hulse
c:an1ed into the Santa Ana gu statJon,
Heneghan told the jury.
Luhing the 17.year old defendant as
"grouly selfish, callous, irrespomible
and criminally Impulsive," Heneghan
asked the jury to agree with him that the
murder ot Carlin was "planned and
premfdita~" and the deftnse hid not
Laguna _Mother
Launches POW ·-·--·
P etition Bid
A variation of the , current campaign
on behalf or American prisoners of war
has been launched by a Laguna Beach
womB.f!, on.ly theae petitions will go to
President Nixon Instead of the president
or North Viebtam.
'lbe theme of the petitioner-signing
effort organiled by Gail Gaston is "All
our sons are POWs in Vietnam -
Bring them Home!" Mrl. Gaston. '•
member of Mothers for Peace, said
the purpoae of the project ls to get
aa many signatures as possible on petl·
lions asking President Nixon to withdraw
1upport from the curttnt Laos campaign.
She wants the President to treat all
P0\"/'1 and all U.S . troops in a humane
fas: ":>n by withdrawing from Vietnam
on the withdrawal schedule announced
by the Admw.traUoo.
Mn. Gaston said the dead and wouru:ied
In tbe war now total well over seven
times the population of Laguna Beach
and there are IW1 S37 ,900 American
troops in Vietnam.
As part of the peUlion effort, Mn.
Gaston ii 11lllng pendants and key-chains
beartn1 the lnlcription "War Ia Not
Helllhy for Ollldr<n and Other Living
ThlDp." The Items, which aell for $3,
are diltribu\ed by Another fi.iother for
Peace,~a.DCID-Of'Ofit q aniuUon.
"We hope that Rf!Ople will wear ·them
u a symbol," Mr\. Gaiton 3&.id, "and
keep wearing them until the day the
Jut American . soldier Jeaves Vietnam to the Vlttnamea<."
Doctors Check
Burglar· Suspect
Orange County Superior Court action on Steyen Eugene Murray's plea of guilty
to burglary charges wu halted Friday
with the poulbillty that the former San
Clemente may may be a narcotia addict.
Judge Byron K. McMillan appointed
two physicians to examine the 23-year-old
son of San Clemente's police chief and
sel March lS as the date on which
he will rule on disposition of the five-
monllH>ld case. ·
Murray was one of two men arrested
tn October fo\lowlng the alleged burglary
of a San Clemente home. It wu testified
in South Orange County municipal court
thal the Coat.a Mesa resident later sold
a color t.elevi!:ion set taken in that
burglary to a Dana Point woman for
llllO.
OIAN•I COAlf
DAllY PILOT
04Wf0:S COAST PUll.IJHIHO (CMP'AN't
lleffrt N. Weul '"'-*"t ~ Plllllllllr
Jack R. C111f..,
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•
proved W b at they oald WU illlllt't
dimln.labed capacity.
He reminded the jury that all four
psychiatrists that have testified in the
Hulse trial have agreed that the Garden
Grove youth was not psychotic.
Hulse, 16, at the time of the murder,
can not be sentenced to death if the
jury c<>nvlcts him. Suell a verdict' would
raise the likelihood that he may be
committed to an institution for a life
term as person in danger of addiction
to narcotics.
Defense attorneys Robert Gretn and
Michael Gerbosi will deliver their final
arguments to the jury late in the day
before Judge Ronald Crookshank in·
slntcts the panel.
Hulst, outwardly apathetic and morose,
stared at the counsel table throughout
the morning session as Heneghan at·
~cktd the defendant's Story of the quan·
tily of drugs he took In the hours prior
to the Carlin killing.
"I don't believe he look 20 to 25
'redst {depressant)," Heneghan said. ''If
be had taken them he'd be dead (Ir
uleep at the time of the murder and
I look an his statement .a part or
a remitrk3.bly wen.tailored d e f e n s e
story."
Whatever the verdict in the current
trial, l:lulse also must race trial for
the killing last June 2 of Mission-Viejo
teacher Florence Nancy Brown.
Also charged v.·ith that killing are
Steven Craig Hurd, 20 and Herman Hen-
drick Taylor, 17 both transienls, an~
Christopher "Gypsy" Gibboney, 17. of
Portland, Ore.
They, and Hulse, v.·ere rounded up
and accused of involvement in the '"devi l
cult'' killing of Afrs. Brown, 31, o! El
Toro.
Taylor has testified £or the prosecution
against Hulse in the Carlin trial ..and
has promised to go into the witness
box for all trials in connection with
the " murder of·Mrs: Brown.
Hurd is scheduled to face trial f\.tarch
22. Gibboney's trial date will be set
when Orange County authorities are able
to extradite the youth from Oregon.
Winds Switch Cours e;
Santa Anas Due Next
Northwesterly winds responsible for the
weeken.d's .spectacular clean air \•lews,
wind whipped h!ghways and continued
small craft warnings along the Orange
Coast will shift tonight to bring a mild
Santa Ana condition Tuesday.
The ..National Weather Service forecast
said the cool breezes that gusted to
50 and 60 miles an hour in the mountains
and deM:rts of Southern California should'
shift to the northeast tonight. Winds
tomorrow will be localized to the canyons
nonnalJy .11.ffected by Santa Ana winds.
Temperatures will warm sll~tly with
the high toinorrow along the '"Orange
Coast expected to reach 63 after a low
Laguna Probing
$5,000 Burglary
Laguna !leach police are lnvesllgaling
the theft last week of more than $5,000
worth al merchandise from a vacationing
resident.
Officen said the burglary occurred
at the home of Dolores D. Smith, 140l
S. Coast Highway, some time between
Feb. 21 and 28: Police said Mrs. Smith
was out of town when an unknown
suspect apparently forced open the front
door of her apartment.
Ilems ta'ken-included a fur coat, a
suede coat, a glass bottle filled with
silver coins. assorted pieces of jewelry
and several keys, including those to
an expensive sports car. The car was
not stolen, authorities said.
Avalanche Ki lls 4
DIEMTIGEN. Switzerland (AP)
Four Swiss skiers, two men and two
women, were killed by an avalanche
which ·rolled over the 7.487.foot·high Ot·
tern pass ln the Bernese Oberland Sun·
day.
·.
Bre aking Vp
tonight of 40.-Inland portions of Orange
County can expect overnight lows near
38.
Orange County Harbor Department
said v.·eekend sailors piloting 12-foot craft
learned 15 to 30 knot gusts are not
recommended for small craft. Indeed,
&mall craft warnings along the coast
continued !nto the fifth day today, as
the northern chill air continued to whip
up ·seas.
The winds are blamed for at least
one death. -Police said Barbara Crane,
41, of Norco, died Saturday of Injuries
received when. her small car was blown
out of control near Riverside, and struck
a tree.
Wind-blowi.i sand, churned by gusts
up to 60 miles an hour damaged
numerous automobiles on the high
deserts north of San Bernardino, Sunday.
Highway Patrol warnings for campers
and trailers to stay off wind -blown
highways remained in effect through
today from Barstow to the coast.
Weathermen noted the gusty winds
resulted from a second cold iront follow-
ing on the heels.of the one experienced
late last v.•eek when the high northerly
wind$ began. The frontal system ex-
pected to clear Southern California today
brought snow shov.·ers to mountain and
desert areas.
Dramatic billowing clouds hung over
distant mountains clearly visible in the
crisp, clear air. ,(
Pro-environment
Meeting Scheduled
A genC'ral meeting of Pro-environment
People lPEP ) will be held at 8 p.m.
Thursday at the United 1'-1ethodist church,
216.12 Wesley Drive in South Laguna.
In announcing the meeting, PEP
chairman Luisa Hyun said the group's
most recent project or sponsoring the
ecological satire "Mother Earth" had
been a "wooderful success." PEP is
made up of residents acti vel y concerned
v.·ith their environment and the meeting
is open to the public.
ll"I T1l..,1Mte
Indicating he delinltely Is not one of your .~traight·faced ecclesiastical
leaders, Dr. Arthur llti chael Ramsey 1right 1, England's Archbishop of
Canterbury, breaks up during visit \\'Ith nl'l:\\·ly ronsecrate.d Bishop oC
'-\Vorcester, the Rev. Robin \Voods. Su bjecl is a cardinal secret.
I
tl41LY Pt1.0T STiii ,. ... ,.
SUCCUMBS AT 68
Judg• Thurmond Clark•
Retired Judge
Thurmond Clarke
Succumbs a t 68
Retired U.S. District Court Judge Thur·
mond Clarke of Corona de! Mar, died
·Sunday in Good Samaritan Hospital in
Los Angeles "'here he had been confined
for the past five weeks. He was 68.
Judge Clarke was a prominent
Southern California jurist !or 38 years,
until his retirement last Sept. 1 as chief
U.S. judge of the Central California
District.
He was appointed to the federal bench
by Prtsident Dwight D. Eisenhower,
Sept. 1, 1955, an appointment that nar-
rowly passed the Senate Judiciary Com·
mittee.
Judge Clarke credited the efforts of
hi"s coosin, Sen. Stroin Thurmc.nd (R-
South Carolina), for the committee's con.
firmation of the appointment, one of
two Republican judgeships approved that
year.
Judge Clarke was named chief judge
of the Central California District in 1966
and became the first federal district
judge outside of Washington to ad-
minister the oath of office to a member
of the President'! cabinet.
Last July, Judge Clarke swore int<>
office Labor Secretary James W.
Hodgson in ceremonies at the Western
Whitt House in San Clemente.
He also administered the oath of office
to former Labor Secretary George P.
Schultz aa director of the office of
management and budget.
In 1944,-:udge Clarke. then a widower,
married Athalie Richardson Irvine,
mother of Mrs. Joan Irvine Smith, the
largest minority stockholder in the
Irvine Company.
A native of Santa Paula, Judge Clarke
wes the son of Judge and Mrs; ·Robert
1\1. Clarke. He was appointed to the
municipal court in Los Angeles by Gov.
J ames Rolph in 1932.
In 1935, Gov. Franlt 1.ierriam elevated
him to the Superior Court. an office
to which he \Yas elected in 1936. 1942,
Jg.is and 1954.
Among his most notable court rulings
"·as his 1953 decision th<t;everturnfd
California's law that barred aliens from
owning land. ·
Judge Clarke ruled the legislation v.•as
aimed solely at persons of Japanese
ancestry and the legislation thus violated
due process and an equal protection
clause of the 14th amemdment. The
State Supreme Court later upheld his
ruling.
Judge Clarke ansv.·ered critics who
claimed he was too lenient with the
defense that his practices were "fair''
rather than lenient.
He said that on the bench he believed
he had "sincerely tried to temper justice
\11ith mercy'' ever since he visited San
Quentin's dealh row.
. '
•
The Qu een's Moving Day
Snarls Traffic on Sl1ore
By ALl\10N LOCKABEY
~Ill" , ... , •NII~• l!"l"r
IN TlfE MERCHANT l\tarine it's called "moving ship."
Jt means moving the ship from ooe dock or berth to another for the pu~
pose of loading or unloading cargo, fuellng , etc. .
No big thing.
Usually a skeleton crew and the help of a couple of tugs.
On Saturday, I started to Terminal Island to cover the start of ~s
,. Angeles Yacht Club's Midwinter Catalina Island race ID-
volving some S7 yachts. .
No big thing.
The start of one yacht race looks about the same a.s
another.
On Long Beach's oCean Boulevard I noticed that
lraflic v.·as heavier and slower than usual for that time of
day. By ll o'clock -scheduled time for the start of the
yacht race -I was no farther toward Terminal Island
than the Long Beach end of the new bridge.
TOO LATE. I'd missed the start.
1 made an illegal U-turn and started back toward the Pacific Coast Club
to try and hustle a game of. squash. . In the PC parkin g lot I looked out across the harbor toward Pier J.
Something new had been added. There was the Queen ~tary. Black hull, white superstructure, three
canted orange stacks.
THEN I remembered. This was "moving ship" day for the Queen Mary.
. lkmdreds or small crafts cut wakes in the harbor as they circled the new
home of the "Queen ."
A middle·aged \\'Oman ~·alked across the parking lot and stopped to
look at Pier J.
..Isn't that beautiful ?" she asked in av.·e.
•·ves ma 'am." l.J;aid aloud.
To myself I thought: "Enjoy it. It's costing you."
Hundreds of persons lined the shore to gaze at the Queen ~Iary in her
new and final berth. Traffic on Ocean Boulevard was still at a crawl as motor-
~Ls gaped. ,J
SUDDENLY I h!"d a mental picture or the gnarled old Limey AB {able-
bodied seaman) who crawled through a hatch on the foredeck of the Queen
Mary on the day she arrived at Long Beach. He blinked at the thousands at
hom·tooting. bell-ringing small craft that swarmed around the Queen Mary,
hampering her every maneuver.
"Chee·sus," he growled. "All dat fuss for dis old heap o' rust?"
"Amen." I breathed as I headed for the locker room.
Mes a Fire C1~a sh Deaths
Feared Rising to Four
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Ot Tiie ~Hy ,.llft Sltff
The dea th toll neared four
today in the aftermath of a tragic Costa
1'-1esa coll ision in which a fireman's -car
heading to a fatal fire collided with one
carrying four teenagers.
One hoy whose sister was killed
outright remained in critical condition
at Hoag Memorial Hospital today with
brain injuries.
Dead following the rela ted mi$haps
are.:
-Marie L. Rattey, 74, of 666 W. 19th
St.. Costa ~1esa. ,
Claire Arbuckle, 14. of 2002 ~laple
St., Costa Mesa.
Edward L. Hernandez, 19, of 2183 Na·
ti onal Ave., Costa J\1esa.
Miss Arbuckle's brother Paul. 17. of
the same, address, was listed by hospital
offi£ials as being ln critical condition.
lie remains in a coma, spokesmen
said. but has shown some slight im·
provement.
The fourth teenager injured in the
grinding, headon collision near Estancia
1-ligh School was listed in fair condition.
Paul R. Baldwin. 19. of Mira Loma.
is also under treatment at Hoag
~1emoriat Hospital .
Costa Mesa Fire Department Battalion
Chie f Ron Coleman, whose car was
demolished in the crash on Placentia
Avenue near J oann Street, was listed
in good condition today.
He v.·as admitted lo Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital today f Cl 11 t win I
surgery on a fractured leg.
"He·s lucky to be alive," remarked
a newspaper photographer who arrived
on !be scene shOrtly after the collision
shortly before midnight.
"He's in pretty good spirits today,
though." added a colleague.
Fellow rire investigators said today
they planned to re·survey Mrs. Rattey's
Bethel Towers apartment. where her
bedroom was gutted by the.blaze.
Tentatively blamed on smokin& In bed,
the fire caused additional miilor damage
due to water seeping int9 the unit below.
The fire was the third reported at
the 18-story retirement to"'er. but also
the first fatal one.
As families scheduled funeral services
for the victims - scattered O\'er the
roadv.·ay, resulting in the crash -
California Highway Patrol officers con·
tinued their investigation.
The CHP handles probes In whi ch
municipa l police or fire units are in·
volved.
All three victims' rites will be. handled
by St. Joachim's Catholic Church in
Costa l\-1esa.
Rosary for l\Uss Arbuckle a n d
Hernandez 'viii be tonight at 7 p.m.
in Baltz Mortuary Chapel.
Requiem mass for the girl will be
Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. in the church,
preceded by requiem mass for Hernandez
at 9:00 a.m .• l\'ith both burials at Good
Shepherd Cemetery,
NEED
CASH?
•
We Buy Almost
Anything -
• Diomond-
• J•w•lry • St•rtos
e Gun;i • Power Tooh • lltctronic.
Equlpm ...
e Stwhtt
MocJ.Tnts
-Or Whot HOY• Yorir.
WE BUY, SELL OR TRADE
• Come in and see what we
offer our customers. A new
and unusual experience in
in s h o p p i n 9 e.njoyment,
Where peaple in the know
save money every tim e they
b~ -
1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST
Raciti's COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LO ~N
1838 NEWPORT BLVD·
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA-Batwaen
PHONE 646-7741
•
f
'
,
.20 DAILY PILOT SC Mond.iy, ... .rch 1, 1971 • Money's lPorth
Agency Find Yow· job?
Deduct Yow· Charges
Complete-New York Stock List
By SVl..VIA PORTER
"" CllW.Mrftlt~ W•I-tt.1
l.111•rch 1~~ht11i1 11 Am11..:1l
lf you are among the
tntlhons \fho paid employment
agency -0r e mploxmtnt
(;ounsehng fees while Job hun·
ting during 1970's recession,
heed. th ese rules on deducling
your ft-es a.s 1tem1ied e:x-
penses
If you paid an agcney to
get a Job for you and yo11
got the Job. you can deduct
vour fee, says the Treasury.
But tf you paid the fees for
seeking a job 14'1!hout also
gelling lhe job, then you can·
not deduct your exl>('nses.
cy's efforts failed alld you
lhtn found your 1ob on your
own. Here the Tax t'ourt and
the Ntnth Cu-cu1t agreed with
the Treasury that you cannot
deducl the fee.
,.
1'71 "H.V'I' ~CVY'~ CMCV.U.ll •
'
NEW Yo111C CA,. •• Motot11n -!ti• Ntw Ye.~ $!0(~ IE•d'lll'IN 1rlcai1
l•lll .... (M1.J Hit-t..... CIMI Clot.
-A-
"HIE•ll Ill
fl 11! '"" ft MllUlll '"-TJ flltlP ti UI" ~wt J1111 If la .. a 11•' II ltl .. ~1 NW m::..J!Lll~ ~~-1',~ ~~ .. i: ~·1 -. 1! r,f, l!,.1P'°
•• " -''' ' ' ~,. O'ol,;... AC.i.1 Ml~ ;; u ..t! 4,~ !:(~ !:. ~ nr~u -to ilOMtE1 .-n "" lJ'• l•l<o + <.. ~;om,,,,. P.'o AdMltll, )0 11 II'• 1•'• 11 -lo MllltH$ iSji 116 JI :/9'o )Olo 1..1 !nll l l,40 ~:::~ti. 1 JO :Jt ~.'.: i:~ ::~: +111: ~0pt,.ltsa Aaltl•lt pt I l •1 11 11 + 111 ~ •, A·~,..!.'.."t,0(<1> J, IO•t IO'o !O•t f t. nM IC 1 -40
fie-, \., si .. "''• SH> +J•, 'f' o~ illrP•d Pit.IS I Jol(l1, 140\/• h014 1111.svc ' 20 Air PrOd jot> '1 ~~. 501, ~ -t \o I v Inv , Alt II"" ,flkl ... JJ!i ll"I 2J1't -\o 1y111v Bt AJ lnduilrlas U •~ 41• •1 tr n I )I Ak1on. 1• ,_. 40'1\ .o•. ~ _ 1-w 1y s1., illbtrtins .l!> II It ll'1 It + '• lark Eci 1,.0 ill• Gal I.ID •1 l••i '''• 16•0 -•• !1r~ OU .a Ala•k• ln!t" 111 1t'o ll'1 1l'i + II ltV CIU I IO Albe•IOC ,)? II tl•t •l'• •l•o ltvEU11 l,lt Alcan Alum 1 It 11'• n 11'• + 1, l'v Plt!S AlcoS!M1cl )I) t lHo 201.o ~ -•• O<O~ .lit Alf"'-0'' lOt h ll'o ;tt~1 11\o of It lueltPff fO AllA.ml/ }'9 2, IJ U \o 11 + l.o luttTP pf 1
AUH Cp ,20f 2) 114 ll'o ll"a + '' ~.· '"',',-"'10 Alle<;rt.ud 1 tO fO )9! 11'• -• ,. IJf I Al'"l.ud ltf l 7 .wJ t.J\! ~·= =,;; °',,,•.<05~~·,•, Alle9 Pw l.J'/ 132 111 11'• lJ -•1 "' ' Allleoct C~ I 11 141 }ti, U'o H•:. -~ :: ~:':. 1.:! •,•,1C1Mal11 .IQ tl 1''• lt•o 11 .. f ,,c,. ''', -· A.ltf:11~,/ •,; • ?.lo 26 ~ 11~ \j ~Dll p pt],; All'"'S!t I 1(1 I~ ~:: y:i. jJ 0 f' C1>Ulnl iloiji I Alli.a ~uf'tr •I l'-t l''o 1,; 1 • ~ollln~ Rid Alht c~ 059 1" 16't 1'\i 16,,-;,.: olot11111 1 60 Atl•lv!Aul 60 JO ll' 1 1J 'l''J + lo) olt Ind l Al""• P C""' 51 lt:O.. ll"t it'l _ 1, Co" !11 Pit 1$ Alce~ 1 ID St 6•-!t 61 .,,._ tt Colt In 1>11 60 Amll$119 ".O ll 1' 1' 1' + 1 Cl!IS 1.l(lb AMllilC 50 11 u~. 11'~ l1'o + .: CllS pf I ~ E1 1 :IO 1 1J1, Jl<o JJ>:. +-,, Col11G•1 11' Am Hf" Jllr,.. no }01, ~·· !JO.,,_ ..., CoiYPlcl .o .. ilmfH loJ~ Ii. 111', IOll'• !IOllt -1 ColSoOh IM AAlrF!ltr 10 ll Sl', !I' 1 "\ 1 _ ,._ Cmb IE~ JO
Co11s1derablc li11gat1on in
70 Jll}'Olved fairly large fees
aid tb cmployn1ent advisory
agencies The ord ina r y
emplG>yrucpnt agency usuJJ!y
charges you a fee onlv-if
11 secures lhc job -n1ak1ng
the ree deduct ible under Lhe
'J'reasury rul e. But an ad-
visory agency may have
charged you a fee regardless
<if its success 1n finding you
the JOb. \Vhat th en? Here,
In su m, is "'hat the courts
decided on this subject 1n
1970 ·
Stl)' that again you followed
this procedure and that after
·the advisory agency got you
a new JOh, your old e1nployer
offered you a promotJon. You
turned down the new offer
and a.ccepted the. promotipon
fromr-~our old employer. The
Treasury barred the deduction
but the Tax Court said that
since the job offer fron1 the
new employer led yoo to a
better Job v.·11h your old boss.
you can lake lhe deducllon
for the fee you paid.
If you art' a teacher who
travels duruig vacations, a
1970 'tax Court case g1vc·s you
vital guulanc.e on deducting
your travel e:;penses as educa-
tion expenses. The case
covered a husband who taught
Latin and his wife who taught
world history in New York
City high schools and who
traveled through France for
eight su mmer weeks 'They
claimed all lhe11 travel costs
as education expenses: tht>
Treasury disallo\\'ed the entire
CHICAGO DEBUT -Sporty versions of Chevelle and Nova coupes give a IOok
of performance \Vh1le prov1d1ng a sav1 n gs in original price and insurance costs
\Vtth standard size engines.
""' ilir110 .a ll l 111, 11'> ""'" '+ 4' ComlS..!v ,.., ilBBl\t,. 059 IH Jl•o 1911 ll\I +11,C.om lSOI IH"O "B•ncl$ l JO •l •7'o ..i'' ti + ,1 ComwE J,100 ilmBd<!! 1 l'O •• )9\1 79• 1 79< 1 + ,, ComE "'' ,. Am c.1~110 nt •11, •I'• ,1,, c""'E 011 .•1 :mc~~.:;~~rs i! 2:., 'r· 1:'• -• t~O ~;J ,;0
!,r'·"·',',"',~,, )S " 11" 11'> -'• Com!>UI S<I lu l5'• JI J~i 1 _ <. Com161 }O ADUTtl 1011 lot 31•1 JI JI'' -t\ Con~ Mltls ! Am Ou41VOI 1s 11, 1\0 '• ,, , CimnM!O 311 ilDYVI Pl '4.11 1• l• Ii • Conrac .O ilmE IPw !,lo ll• 791, it 79\o _·~Con IEdl• 1 IO ""' £•1> IMI lll ~P.;, 11''4 !Ht -\.o Con Edi• tt Am Eop DI iJIO .SO"o SCI SO _ '• Con Edis 111 I
111 High Gea1'.
ilGnBFd 211A 17 :H!o , ..... :;6•o + loo Con Edit Pl. 5 A Gf"I"' 50 11 lt>io 1a•, 1<11>.;, + ..... ConE pfC•.ls A G~ln pf1 to lt »V. JJll JJ•, + ~. Con I'd\ l JO Am Hoitt '° lj 11 \j, 11"'. l•Yo •.. Con f'd PU.lO " Home 1 10 JO n~ 11'1> ni.; • con "'"~' 1 A Homf Pl 1 1 IOll~ 1011' 10>t,. -l•t Con lt11ln1 ilm Ho10 -1~ 131 :J'I'• J!l• 11 -1; Con~atG 111 ilm ln~•I 50 ll \1'1 I• It -lo COlll Powrr 1 A Medlacl ll HJ ::M'o ll•t lJ•~ -L ·~ ConPw 1>1• .SO
Chevrolet Introducing
•
" Ml!Clx 1 <O 6' lll< ll'-JJ•, -1,0, Con• illt t in
Say you paid an advisory
agency a flat fe~ for ht-Ip
in gelling a job y,•Kh no
,e11a'rantee )C\J'd get one and
then it put you in tou ch \\'llh
a11 emplo\'er \\ho hired vou
The Tax Court held that since
!flo payment 111 fact rl'sull~d
in your JOb you could deduct
the fee
deduction
Two New Sporty.Versions Am Motors HG ,.. ~'• I • Cont C•n I to AN.i~. 2 11 ~41 Jt.O.o """ 'If''> -'' ConlC°" olv 6.m ""°'o .u "' 11-1, n1, n•. 11 Conti (IM"P 1 "llt•Ov ().IQ •• ~, , Jl'o 51 +-1 .. Ct CP p!A? '° Am S•al n J !} ~ 11• I l/'1 -'• Cim!MI• 'O.I :ms~~jf 1':' JO l?!'• ?1'• :'1" -'• C0<1! 0,1 I }O '1"1SoAtr )0 JOI ~' " '''• Con1 O•l 1>t l 4n1SAI• In 10 1:1 ~~,: ~ ::,: +I Con! SU 10
The Tax Court ruled that CARL CARSTENSEN "'Hcav~· Chevy'' decals on
your travel costs are deduc-ot 111. 0,11y ,1 .. , ""' the hood. front fenders and
llble education expenses IF deck lid identify lite s~cial lh alo I f :\ew sport versions of the ,.~ e m r por ion o )OOr ac-Chevelle. which •lso has a l ., d I d' ti Chevelle and Nova coupes ;rre J\'I 1es uring trave irec y corned hood wnh Jocking puis. I th k fl being 1otrOOuced by Chevrolet, main aw or impro1•e e s I s Robert Lund, general sales 'Rally NOva' appei rs in the Say •you "'en! through the
~ame procedure but the agen-required by your teaching Job. n1anager has announced. rear fender portion of the side
Applying lh1s test, the court stripe on the spectal Nova .
LEGAL NOTICE found that the places the Productions of lhe , Heavy The stri"" also extends across
ac-couple v 'l d a d Chevy" Chevel!e and the ..,... L.1V1'e 1s1 e n the rear panel. A left hand , .. 059' CE"TIFICATE OF SUl1NE5S FICTITIOUS NA.ME
studied in France did maintain "Rally' Nova " will begin this remote controlled sport m1r·
d h k·11 month, Lund said. an improve er s I s as a ror, bright drip moldings col· T~1 undt,slgnod dOQ c••tlfv h• !J conductln~ • bu•lntn II P 0. llo~ j6S1. t'vln1. C1lll. '166i, und•• 11>1 flcllllour I •m n1me or TECfOll<O"I •nd l~tt Slid "'"' 11 Cl)tnPO!>l<I o! In• lollowlnQ D•••im "'~oi• n•m• In lull •~d 1>l•ce cl rtsldenc• I• 11 loll"'*'•
teacher of w<Jrld history, but ''These special coupes give or-keyed carpets and heavy
scarcely affected his as a a con temporary look . of duty front and rear suspension
Latin teacher. A deduction performance 1n t\l:o of our are also part of the oplion.
was permllted for half of their most popular car hnes." Lund Chevel!e has been the in-
Mlc~••I C Den11nv(r, 1111 Mf••m•• O• ll•lboa. Cl!ll transporlation costs plus alt said "With the standard-size dustry's top s e 11 i n g in·
the costs of the rented car engine. they also provide termediate-sized car every Oat~ Ftb•~t•Y II, !'11 M C Oenll"'1e• 'Ta TE OF C.Al!~DllNlil, Ollil"IGf: COUl<!TY
1n which they 1rave!ed through substantial sa\"1ngs in ong1nal year since 1ls introduction in·
f-'rance pnct and insuranct costs.'' eluding 1970 despite production On Fl'!>ru&nr 11, 1111 b•lo•t mt, • 'Not1•Y Publ•C In • ..., for •••d SIM•, "••.on11tv '""•••rd Mlch1tl C Oenhn;er •nc"'" "' ,... le l>e th• ""'~°" w"O'• "'"'' rs $o.lb1t••~d lo !ht wl!hln ln•tr.imrn! ''"' ac•""'*l""v•d h• tYKlllf<I lh• 'am•
If you·re an element.ary Both coupes ha ve special losses during the 67 day stnke
sch o o I teacht>r. you pro-black grilles. individualistic r\ova, one of the few cars
bably olten spend your O\\'Tl side st riping and rally wheels. in the 1ndustrv to score a
money for class partiei::. extra The "'Heavy Chevy" option is sales gain in the li'lsl model
reading, arl matenals. etc. available on the Chevelle sport ,·ear. has budt a strong folio"'· IDFFIClill SEAll 11•111 H C1n•!I! 'lotarv Publlt . CalHorn it l'"nCIPll Oft cf •n
Ir this 1s you. vou got a break coupe with any v-8 engine and ing iln1ong 1.:ompact car
under a 1970 Ta-.;: Court the "Rally Nova"' option can buvt'rs. Or1n<1t County
Mv c.,,.,miul"" £~""'' Srot, 1', lflJ
decision which upheld a be ordered on anv 6 cvlinder In a Tt>cenl national survev
teacher's right to deduct thern or V-8 equipped Nova Coupe. of independenl repa ir shop's "''~"'h•d O<Anqf c .... ,1 01,1v P.tot F•b•ul•Y n. Ma .. h '· I, JJ, 1911 .lU 11 as business expenses -except -----'--"'------'------'-----'----'-
LEGAL NOTICE for such items as TV sets,
·whi;h might be in the nature 1=1cTn 1o'U~11:us1 "' or cap1tapl improvements. The
"IAMI! JTATEMEh Treasury had d1saJIOW"ed the l~r IOllOWl"9 PtrlCnS •ro do•n~ • f h t bu•'"P•· •s . deduction or a teac er"s ou •
NU-u, 'c' M1rln• "v•.. l •lbo• or pocket cosls because the l3l~"d, C•lllornl•. tewh G Kish . ..-, t<~uo1ro11e "v•; teacher was not reQulred by C.o•ona drl M~• C•llfo•<1l1, h I I k lh H A, scne11(n11••~""''· •02 ~•Hol•DH is emp oyer o ma e e il vr., CO<"on4 ~~I Mar. C•lllcrnlt. 0Utl3j'S. tewlt G ICl!ll T~1, bu1•nfn h btlnf conducl~d ~.l-----L-E_G_A_'_N_O'f_f_C_E ____ , • n~•'"•tilllp .., Pubhl~ed O•an~~ <o••I o~,1v P"ol, "•b'<Jt•v n, ll••cn 1. 1. I!. 1'11 Jal-11
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE TO Cl!EOITOllS SU l'ElllOI: COURT Of' THE STATE OF C.ilol!FOllNIA FOi! THE COUNTY 0, Oltil NGE
"Ill NOTICE OF INTENOEO l!IUlK Tl{iloNSFEll NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN
No ilo_.!US [!l&tt ol HillllO WE Bllllt<OGSlEY. Oec•~lt<I
T~u • bul-lr•n1ler b• Ge•1ld H Ooolf• tnd 110\W~I M. Ooole,. lie'""
butln~•I •• V&lltv ~l!O" Servi<•. trtn1'••0•• Int bu1"'"" 1dore1' o! whom
!• •35 South "'"OW~~~a. s~~ Be•n••dl...,, Callforth• 91"°1 wh,cn bu1lnen n1"'' " an111 •dlllrfl<. 10 •a• •• thr Tt•n•lt'!l' kNl"'I• " l~e flnlY bu1•ne11 n•"'• •nd NOllCE 15 ~EllEBY GIV[N lo 11>! IHldrfn Ultd llV th• T'an1fe<or dY•I"" cr·~•lor• of lht abovt named drct<ltn! lht !hr"" v••ri L•tl P••t lo Fl!Otr•I !~if ,ill oerion.s htvln1 clafms •91•nsl Sltn ind S!enil C.Oroor11ton a ~l•w1rt tM 11ld llfcrdent ''" rraulted lo Ille corPOt•hon. T•a nsft•te. th~ bu1ln111 lhrm. ':"''h !hf nece .. 1rv YOUChers. 111 add'rr" 01 Which !• Hoel North Main lht •tl•c• ol thr cl••~ ol lht above S!rtt! to. Ante~• c1111ornl• Is 11>0ul '"Utlecl tou<t, •• to ortsent 1hem. wl!ll 10 t1t '.miaa cl tM to!lowlnv' c1u<;rl~ th~ nect"•"' vou<h•r. lo I he ~nne,.lqned •I !he cllltt• ot HARWOOD, orootrr. $'lDE"I & ,-01<1NSON. 550 N<"WPOrl Ce•t~·n tloc:k r~ tfld• •nd tn .. enlory ce~Trr O•IYe. Sul!• 11._ NtWP0'1 er&ch, lnclu<lh>!I 1r9ns, ll9n11,,. a11~l1r1 Ind C•lll1>•n•a. "'hi<~ 11 the Dl•c• 01 buSl~es• •II 1•~~ N>nl•I ~nd melnt•nantf ct tn• 11n<1tr1lgnf~ In 111 m•!T•t1 <onl••cts "l•l•nt tll•,'flo. ln •t1~Kf ...,,111nlnn !o 1ne ••flit 01 \•id d•cedtnl, of 1ne 1iQ11 and adve't"'"!I 1nd ll9Mfnf wl!nin fout mont~i •'"' t~• firil dl11>lav bu1ln•n l0<:1tl'd •I '1! South PUCll••!lon ol lhll no!lct ""aw~ean. S•n l!lernardlnc, C•llfornJ1 D•leO Ftl>"'"'' \9 1')1 t1•°'· BilN'll: DO: il ME'1 1C• T~e 1110, bul~ tr1n1!~r !nd •••IQnment
NATION~L Tll U\l ANO of l~e .i.tor t,•ld •f<Kk '" lt1.<1~. lnvrMonr SAVI NGS i1S50Cl~f1DN ll9h!ln9 d>,aliYI 1nd le••e rentll •nd E1ttutor of '~' Wiii o! m•lntenancf ccn•••C ts wl!! bt midi tnt "001" ""med !!•<•dent •Ml <O"IUl'1mH"" on or •lt~r lhf l!h Hill'!WOOD. SODFM & AOl(IN!ON d&Y cl Ma•cn. 191! 1t l~t o!hce1 """ O!llct 1111 1101 ot M1cdona1d, Hels!td I l•YboY•nr.
t.i1w,0.i le•ch, Ct 11HJ 611 So111h So"ng S!rr•I, lo• Antelt1. T•t ou1 i.u-un Cal!lornl• fOCU. ill11•ntr• It• E•..:wi.r O,r"" Febru••v It, 1911 Publl•~ed Ot1n9t CQ•" 0•11• P!lro! FEDEllill SIGN ilND f•Gru•,. 27. Mlr<ll !. I. !S, lt11 ]9511 SIGNAL COllPOllilo TIO'll
LEGAL l\OTICE
'" Ofnn•S ICe-tl•' ilv1norl1ed Agont
Tr1n1t••~ Pybli V.e<r Or1nte (01'1
Muc~ I. 19n DfrlV P•lol, •Jl -11
LEGAL r\OTICE
.Store lf1iderwuy
f. B .. "Bud'' Grant Oeft) receives heJp from Ana-
heim 1'11ayor Jack Dutton (right) and pretty Anaheim
Pr1ricess D~Dee Osborn at groundbreaking cere·
monies fo the second Grant Boy's surplus store.
The store, • specializes in clothes, camping
gear and guns, is expected to open in Anaheim by
June 1.
Coast Man
In Ne,v Post
Bank Buildi ng Corporation
announced today th11l !\tr.
Kcnnclh D. Young of Ne"'·port
Bench. hai; Joined lhe
corpora1Jon as a market area
manager lor 1lhe western
diYtSIOn.
He will have s ales
r e s p o o s ibilitles for the
southern Californi&r\ and
An7.ona areas.
Young was employed by l..a
Salle Paper Company as vi~
presi dent irf charge of ssll!s
prior to joining Bank Building
Corporation. Previously he
worked Wlth Boi$e Cascade
Corporation as a s :i I e s
represen I a t Ive fnr the
Jionulu!u. Chicago and l...os
Ant;cles areas.
I le received n B S degree
111 engincerins: 1n 1962 1ro1n
LO.!! Angeles Statt(Collcgc,
reported
'-1anage-
tl,m Std I Jl ,, 1S ~ 'I'· -. Com Tel .., A 51<1p1<75 '1J II 1, ,'COll!•OI 0111 ilm S•~•·I •I 'l '•, ·6 16 ,'Con,.._ 190 AT&T wl lOI 10•, i,, IO'•=··c~UA•I }O ilm T&T l Ml JO&ll "I', •'I ~> 'C-rln 1.<0
and service
by Service
1nent and
sto1t1ons
Station
'-lotor ilWatWk 60 11 1", l "• :~•, t ,1 COOPfr Ill Service I.WW SPll 11 no •''· 11 .. II. ' COOll l pt] 15 AW 1>rt1 I 11 140 I' , 11 , 11•. _-1; CoP<l•r>d 1 :10
1nagazines. Nova was voted ::;:,,l,;,,11< ea •1: ~,!,.: ~,,'•,'..' ~,',•,·.· _: :: ~,;",•,',{,'",",•,' "Easiest Car to Serv1c.'t'' 21nd ....,,....1.., • ... ., il MF Int IO 111 JO•, )')•, 301, + ,~ C.orGtW 1JO<I '·Le a s t
Problems''
1'1 e c ban ic al IVnt&c' , ,~•,, 11 '' ..... ...,,, .... i.,c-com AMP ·~ l I ~· 61'4 fJ:.. -.. Co1< Bckl! .JO AmpPpn Ilg J " r Ho f'~ + '• CPC ln!l 1 7Q ::::.,~:. ~°{01> U? lt\o 11i.. ltn t i., C••ne l.llltl
VOLVO WESTERN PLANS :;::•,',~ "', !', ~ J~·i "'::: 3t!; -'• ~~i:~'~111F 1~ ._\ "" "' 9 '.'.l'• 30 JO • ... "• CromplC IO MlWON OOLLAR ""'!" 11 ~» •~• I\• 1i.o + ~ C•ou•eH1n111 1
BUILDING EXPANSION ~~~r~~:·t 4r ~!: ~'· ~'· :..·1~l~=~01~0-~ . •pd C!IV I 10 ..\ I\; IO'' JO\o -.. ~ CrwnZe!I 1,10 G nd break ng C e es '
~ • l9\loo :Jf\1 ""'I CrnZ pU 10 rou 1 er mon1 DAth.CP 1s u !t-lo .16\• 161• -~ CTS corp .., for~ lt.000.000 warehou"" and :f:io0 ... ,1.!'1 14 Js•, 1s•. ~ + 1. cuc1.~1 ,tO• ,r "'" .._ '-•w I ll'< ll" 11\, + I\ CIJd~y pll 15 office expansion to the Volvo A,•,c, ,•,',',~ •"'1 ll \1 u•. 1111 •.. cwu111n .it .. 11 Ill Ut• • Uf'1 -11 C11mmEn ,Q Western Distributing. Inc., ,',',',',',• •. 0:19,, 11 "'' "'• 1t11 , , CuM o,1111 .. " 7 Jl'1 ,, ll . CUt!IHWr ea facilities Cahfornla ha\•e been Arc" Dan 1 •I •n• •1 "" + "cur!Wr" 1 r h 'ddl f h Ar!r P5v I ot ,. JO'' 10•~ 20•' Cul11rH I JO set or t e mi e o Marc , Arl•ns 0$1r 1s 11•1 10•, 101• -1•cv<lco 190 according to Robert J. ~:: .. ~\\v?v ~ ~;: :;:; l'1:.:..:. ,, cvP•uo Min J
S1ncla1r, president. A,•,~, ",,',',o •l6 "''• 11., n1 .... '• ... llOO 61 61 '61 ., t•, Oolll R l~u The fa_ctht.Y Wa.!I originally ",',~• ',',,~,, 11 1'<• l6 ll\• . o .... co 111 ""-J10 S' lf ,_ -I 0••1 lf'ld JOI> completed 1n 1966 v.•1th an """ 1111 1 .o ~ l"~ 11•-, JJ') -,., 0.,1 1n111 pr , . A'o Coro .tO 1• " • It !• -I' D•I• P•O<:f\> architectural av.·ard v.·inning "•vin tnd, l6 JO>o ,. • 10•.,+ 'iO•yco<.p 1,14 b Id. od (' d A$hld O•I I 10 11 11 11' 71• 8 11 ui ing . accom a tng a -A11110 1>11..u 1 ~~ 5s ' "' :1" :~f~H~~i 50 ministrat1ve off1ce <1 and a :~~ A1.··, _., 11 t •, 9'• 1• ; •• s•v1nPL 1 ea 10 •T'• U•o 01J0 + " Pl p!D I •I Paris \\'arehouse serving "" ,',1~~s0,,,'0"",, • i1 :n 11 + ._ Oe~•~co 1 ~ 10 11 ·, 11'> 11" -"O.lm••P 1.t 1 v.•estern sta1e·s. · ,",",,'~,,•, •,•,o 11 "" "'• 11•,.;.. '• o.1Mnro 1.10 n ,.,, 7•" 1•'• -·~ O.na illr .so Sincln1r staled. ''Since that A,',,'",',',!,,•,•,• 790 '° , 60 60 -1·~ o.11K 1n1 " :th 611, IJ' • t6', -\' Cann MIQ ea time the increase Jn Volvo Al!ll ch l>IJ JS zl10 J.11 .. SI'• 51.,. -•• DennMfQ al I illl Ill(~ pf l 16 lll 110'7 111 .. -ti• Oennvll l! ().I sales and general con1pany i111-.ch pr1ao 113 s•11 .s110 "'• -1•, n111>rv1n1 1 . Atlal C~.,., I l• 11 751-, 75\~ -\.o •KO Pl 0 growlh have made 1 t illla• Coro 1s 3•, l l.,. + '• •e<:o 01 B ATO Inc OI• 111 n" I \' UI• -'• S.O!olnc "° necessary to expand our cur· ""•o·~ "•c::t ,, 9'• ''• 911 _ .,. IEJll• 1 . .a
rent facilities." :~r::1,,D1~ J! 5J,1: 5!1• 5~~~/11 1t: ::jM
The expansion includes a :~~gt:':.,, f1,J :1:.: :.r~. ,'l,1<1 ~.v. :ir~f::r~1 -:g
27,000 square fool concrete :~.·. ',",•,, ,-'"
·< ,~: lr: 11•• 11~ + "' •r •m 1 steel hit-up addition to the :~~' "1,;'~ ,0 1q 9111~ t'j:z 1·~;; _,U 1~1.o".:0~1 ·10
parts replacement warehouse •zrecou .m m t7•1' ••• ,,, + ~ rt/:~ ·'Jib
A dd'I' f (] 000 -8--1<1!!11 Eoulp n a 1 1ona , square t•1>c~w 50 11,1, J',VJ lll• jll• +1 ~ IHJ;'~ ~
foot mezzanine will provide B:~'~\l 11~ si lJ'• JJ;; llJI•...: ;~ •fllv n.JO lo' parts warehouse off1CC.!I Bangor Punl it1 11 10-. 1 ..,. ., 11.S..Ao 11~ llnQP pf 1 JJ 'l 1J -'> s1verslr>d 36 The current 11•arehouse 1vill B~ orca1 1 J• 10 ''" ,.,, 11'> .. 11 vM1a l?o '•'••"•"',',v,01 11 ••'• •blo •6 • _ '• OrP•DO!t 36 be revised to include up-to-datt' T ., 62'• 11'. •1. + '' DomrMns 10 Bl•bO l JTI I 4610 '!'~ .. \, Dom~"° :190 receiving docks An ideal S••d cF( 11~ u s• ' ,.. 51•. + -· 0onn1111., •• B••lc l~c IO r. 11•, u u •, OO<lc C<1 .l1 model dealer's part~ depart· 11.io, Mfll » 1r>. 16'> 11" ~ '• oon 011 .. ., 'ii I '--11•1•• Mt ,111 I I ?l>t jl'• ll'o + ~, Oo••• Co If nien! w1 a so lJI." constructed s~1hh1d :!!I 111 11 1·~ 11 + '• Oiiw<~m 161l
h lh l tlhln Dn.~ H ... ..,. ... "4-lf> r:•VoCD l.fll wr! int e present v.·arehousc ilUschLb '° ,i1 11•. 51 , 11•1 + , aurnd , .a
fac1l1ty. t::~ L~~ .. U i11 1::: 1::: 1~;~ -"' ;::::.°!1l·~
The north side of !he present R:!i'n, 11 •1, Ji .• -y,~~ 'ii'':: "" ~t~'i1.,. c'i .A
office building will be ex-~:~~~~~ 0.~ t~ 1~1 .• 1~ .. 1~,~ =. !; ~~: ::: ;J
Panded to offer an addt'lt'onal B•c1 Ok-.:io " i1" 01, 111., + '• Ounl!l•d 1 JOa B•ech "" IS 11 11•1 t$•o U'o D1111l1n .eat 6.000 square fe et for ad· 11r1c1>Ppt SGo :!!I 111. nto 11•. + .. duPot11 1.JS!I Beld!A 1.6-0 I 11 1'I 11 .. duPonl pUJO m1n islrative offices and a lleidnt~ .01> 11 11 1110 11~ -,, duPont i>!lSO Bell H""' I.ii I? fll'o fll''t ol!)l.o -•• Ou-q ll 1 66 dealer personnel tr a in 1 n g B•ll 1n1,con :!!I 11 11• .. l1'1 + •• oa • 15<>11 01 lleml• Co .0 IS 19"> 1''o "'• + \t Oual l •Pl 1 center. A new data processing A,,"1/,' ,'·,~, 18 l'P• Jf« J•'• -•, oo l IJ,,n 11 'II I '--"" S »'• $5'• »-!• + •• gYmo IM r oom WJ a so 111: completed, Bentll<.o 1.llO 101 ''"' ~·· 11 -'' ynam Am
providing for a new !ape drive ~!~~1ue~1 ' so 1?1 11.'; 3/.'.,' ~11; + ~~ )B•I 36() -mpulcr lh ( I Bon11uet In ll d1't t lo 6'o E•e•tPlc fO 1 '-V \\'I e e-ller~ey P~o IOI lO•o lD IO't + >t E•1t0Ca fO communicati ons capabilities. Beth s11 i.xi 1•0 ,1 .. n•• 11•, -•\ E•11 Arr Lin Bl11 lhr~e .60 62 q •, •6 "'• + 10 E•1!G1 l O•t Changes will also take place 111ack o• 11 5t ~ii~ '°"'' 6HO + 1• E•" um 1 .a lll•l•Jo~n •S t I 11•1 18 F1.,l<0!111< 1• fn the present te c h n Jc a J 011., l•uv 1 11 n•, 111. "" 1 " E.io~v. 1 olll
t • d flloc:-Hll M l! l•l'o 7l 71 -i>t Echlin M! Sl ra1n1ng an service ·centers siue een 1 :10 J$ 61'4 67'4' u 1: +1• Eckt•dJ .,..
to allow ror additional modern ~~"t.t1.~ 0~~:~ 11~ 1~· .. 1~f:~ 1;ir· :;;~ ~g'f'c"BI:' 1
.qu'.pmcnl COIJlPICllOn 1· S llo'"!na Co 10 lJJ 17'• 1 11 71'• +110 Elec1 Anoe Bo•1Cas 'Sb ~J.IO 451 , 471• •! +2\\ El Mtm Mio scheduled for July l. 110"" 'nd J "'• H u•• -''• FIMM•" ,,f 1 llOOl<Mth 111 l 14" 1•'~ , •. , + 'l Elpln NAT Bord~n I.JC II• '1>. 16>o 161, -•o EIP1iaNG I llo•aW~r \ 15 H lllo 11•o 11'• -a1 Ell•&CP i :!!I l!o•men1 tO 17 !1'1 1710 111, EMl lid l1r Bos Edl1 71• 71 Jet, ll~< 311, + '1 Fmer El l \6 Capo Man
Promoted
llo• EO I'll.II ?250 117•;,, 111'• 1111, -._ £mervAltF I 'I.our~• tnc 11 u•., tl • JJ\, -" Emh••I r 20 8ra~•t ill•w 11 10'• IO'o !O't -'• Empire G1s 11.,aaSI 2fCl/o 13 61 "°'• 60'1 + ·~ EnvlhM!n Oii B"•! Mv I 10 IJJ 6JI , 6•"' 6•1o -·~ Fng M pft 1~ "'ISIMv of 1 11 fl\, " •11't + • ., e .... 11 Bui J7 Brl! I'~ •Jfo ti ll'o II lllo -'• Eaull GI 120 fldw• Kat, I 20 <I fO 'l «Moo + '~ Eauilllr M
Tlpna.!I B. Stephenson has
been named Product Line
Manager !or General
l\fonnitors, Jnc. in C<ista Mesa.
BdwvH•I al J J •••• n1, '"• +t•• !aurvFo 1or Brkw-rG•• 10 !!• lS' • l"''" lj + 'lot Sii lnc 1 ;o B<rvnUG I 11 O Jiit '6'• 1 ·~ -1 soul•• lO BwnSh•D .10 5 u fl"t 11'1 -·~ """''"' 1 :!(J llwnS"°" 1,511 1' '° ,,...., l•n + 1/o IH'• llf1 M l•u"'""' n 111 11 n•, 71'• + '• 11erlln 01a 8ucv Er 110 l1 71') 16\/t 26"" -·~ !hv! Cu U Budd Co 6S ,,, .. 1' u -Ii flh•l .. n «I llud;F l>f 60 7 I'\ I 11\ + 'i lurolnd 9i. 81.'d~l 11>d ' l'o l'h 111 -''o urotd !n 'S'I Bu!!Fo•11 I 10 JO Jelo 3' JI -1i v1nsPtd IO
lie has respons1b1lily for
new p r o j e c I development,
representative s e r v i c e s ,
Bulov~W 60 ll ni. 11V. 12•,o, -"lo •C.tllO i H Butlll• Ramo n 11'• !1'~ Ii•, + '" •bt•lt .40 Bun~ll ptl 50 l JT\1 Jl>t 31\/t + l'I FttlorA 60b Burl 11\Cf I IO Ill• lllli •5"" tJ'lli -\'I Ftlr(fl C1m Bvr!Nor JI! 'IO I] ~71, •l + ',lo F•lr "llJI I" Bu•INIM" pf 5 11 ,._ 11~ I•~ -·~ Folrmont bur""r .10 4! 11•o 11"• '1'~ -14 J'1/rmn1 Ill I
product p r omo t I o n and Bwrv~ .IO 1110 lOlll IN 1M-tl +'Ii ~llsl~r
-C-F:~\.~f',,: ~~ 1t:: ir• ;111 =a ~::.r:-·~:1n . • rC:&bol CP ,70 marketing services. cmienc• Ind C•I Fln8nl General Monitors snociahzes c~ll•~n "Mno r''-C8mPllLk .•S
In the developmen t a n d ~~::'ii,i! 1.~
od I. f f Cdn P•c J :;o pr uc ton o ga s s a e I y cona111 1 10
C~P C Bdc.!t devices and systems. These c~rb•Y~ 1 50 Car111•• tCI
products detect explosive ~:~: ~~ :·~
gases and gi ve warning in ~:;;1u;r, ;,0
C~•IY!~I olll• 11mt lo prevent hazardous c.•111te-10t1 . , c~trrrr 110 cond1t1ons They are used ~~0 t~~: to
throughout Industry. z::::~~ .i
Stephenson formerly was an ?:~°F~.._,, -»
ed-lo llh EON '{ • Ctn Hvd 1,11 1 r w 1 ,, agaz1ne, <thlllL1 1 '.\ CfnllPS I 20 a major business puhhcation. <~•L~E• 1 , (tf>MPW 1.20
i>ur1ng his four year tenure i:Hfs~;\
with EON, he resenrchcd, l~ic.'1V .;ii)
Cftt t...., ., ~·rote and edited arlh:les c"'n•A" '° (Fl $ti IO• dealing w 1th sophisticated c~o\11b!'~ tnc • .-~lftrb~ ol .,
eleclronlc techniques a rvt ~~!~~.S ~::C,
problem~. \S~~;·,xr~~A/,~
Stcphert!iOn resides at 31345 f~,~: r, 1
~~I JI o r no . S:in ,Junn l~~~t;y0", ;,
C I I • fl · led d '"~•m.,ay ap ~ rano. c is marr 1:1n 1s~•1v~ 114
has three children. c~:;bOC'f:'~;.
OJ I'• l'o 1'1 , FilS !nll 5'1 1''1 !J<, U'I• + ~ Fedd••1 '4(1 JS JH~ 31 17•. -'' FNltr~t 110 ~~ Jro l7' • n•, -\.o Ft<IMot l IO
10 71,~: .,:~ 6r.~ -I ' ~~~~111 N
l' 1•, 11•• l~''IL:it "'PKPIT 11 II ~''• J511 ll'~ -,, F~PnoBd I l'l j,l•, IO'• "'Ill. .a. t\ Fe<!51PnS 60 79 lllo )I•:. lfll\ _.I '\ Fl'd•t•I• •nc !'< l~'• 711 f "' ~ -"' F'•!IOtc!SI• I l'• l?'o "'.1'• -'! Ff'dl!l"ll Dtv
It! :It'• ll'' l'l , -• "•••n cl .>• •llO 31 ''r )' -t• Flbt•ll• l'O l' IS'· I•'• l'1-•-.Flr1111<1Mlao J ,.. • 1• .'•'• .a. •, Flltrol !.«I 1'1 ti ~·~ •1 t 11 Fin l'.clw•I~ I ! t'o • j I~ Fltf!I"' I 10 n 71 1~.. •• ~• F'11 ftrl I It! ll Ull ''• 'I'\ .. ~•!Ml• .S!t • I? 61 • t '• F:1!Nl!lc1 c~ •I •l •1'1 4'\, • 1~ F11NCll1 1.11 l 11 \ II , JI•, -'1 F!l~S• 509 1~ 'I(, H•t 7J'• . "IKhbdl .IO
.. '1''1 *'• ''1 F "f>tF'd Dit ~. '°"' :ttJ\lo + •• Fllll•• kl ti »1'o h 2J -'I Fi.tlEnr 16 U :!(J '"• ?0 + I FM1"9 ..JO 61 •I ff" fi"" 1.t. Fllntkoe i 71 H\lt '• !".+-\'f'IM"'"' 1$11 ,. ?II'• >., lo -1 F nl~I ,,, I~ 11•0 1111 llU. -"°' 'l'i Co••I .W 13 1T', '~ .+ ·~ Fl• •1 10
') )'(I'~ ta•, XI'\ + '• '" ow 1.U '\'' '/ • .... -'\ 111Pw1..1 1,IJ 1! '• >1 •W -'\ ltS!tt l l • I "'f -'• Fluo•Co 1.'lt 61 l'I' .~ , ~'' ~ .. Fluor 0111 l •1 •~ , • F•w Tier ta II JJ' • 11 '~ + '" FIJT1't a!! 7Q It •r" J'I • • ... -'' FMC Co .11
? 1"• 1•" ''''l '1 FocdFtlr '0 111 u i • l• ~, Foott CO 611
t '1 • fl• .. !''\ • '' "'lllllf Mlfl ,~, ,. !' ' I +? roo•t 1'1 I JO JI ,,, ti t 't ,OlllM )ta > 11•1 l o !' ' Fn'M~K~ .~ft It 1'1 .11•: ~ ... • • \lo FM ti!' Dll I~ J90 tJ' 1 ll , 11 1 -1 FO>I Wht IO
•
•
. .. •
DICK TRACY . ~·
"NIVIR SHOOT FIRST AT
DICK TRACV"-HI>.!
TOTIU.. TMll!TRUTM, I L£A~OF~MV
-SNOW-GO"" Fl AST
-At.ID L..05T MV
~AT. L.ET'S
F1 1'-!t~H JT.
•
WM.A.T A GAG t
GOOD·BVE. B UM!
TUMBLEWEEDS
MUTI AND JEFF
JUDGE PARKER
rrs llOltARTH llfMP,
'1HI! 11,ANGMAN !
,.... ------. .uHl{/'1' • .-._,,.,, p -
~ ....... -....... _.__.
1·1
il"-
11 J l ll
~~ 1-:11:1/'f ,-
By Al . Smith
~ NOPE", IT's
NOTSAF'E.
SON!
~
---· -,~, .--,~.,,,..-•• ,---i
11_' ',./
By Harold Le Doux
l ,, .. ~ .. 11'1J!!!!l~""""""'""""'""'~--·-,.-~,,--y-OIJ·,-• ....,,...,~~~.~-~.~.~'r~N~E-'--"'~ ~>;;-:;:;,-;';-;;--:;;;;-;;;:-;:~~;;;;;;;;O" ~ ''""' .,,v ~ ,.. 1~ "YOtJ CAM TELL ME ~T vou~e:
NA.ME TRfMANR SEAR'(~ WAll!ll!AMT, SE.'.RCMIM6 FOt',-I MAY SE-1<15LE TO I WAfM l'OI.
T'REMAJ.lE •. t.IOJl.llNG
eeuflt MAPPEM TO
ABBEY SPENCER!
_,
IVE A SEAll!CM LI EUTEWAMT! Tl-I E MElP YOU! lt.ICI PENTALLY, Tt-115 15
WAIU~ANf! POl..ICE ARE ALWAYS MY ATIOR'NEY, SAM PR'IYER'!
WELCOME TO LOOK
OVER OUll! FARM:
I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R • POWER I PERKINS
ACROSS
l Russian
news
agency
5 Cargc
\l!SS t l
Ill Boorilh
14 Sm1ll:
Sulliit
15 Is land of
Scotland
l!i Pritalnlng
lo ho urs
17 ~oa 1:
2 words
19 Mr. Zola
20 Quern 's -··:
Tr1ditlon1I
horse rac e
21 Re duced
2.) Not flesh :
2 words
25 Prick lr
26 Estlm1trd
times of
arr Iv al:
Abbr. 28 Tl111e pfriod
32 100 cr11t1:
2 words
37 Spe lt
J8 Viscount:
Abbr.
50 Mt ni1I
worktr
51 Oividtd
34 Struggle
38 Prlv1ty
6l Privat t
in,tructor
bl "·· -·-timr was
hid by all":
2 wo1ds
64 ._vala11ch r
Olio Syn\ht tlc.
b7 Prong of
~ lorlc.
68 Fish
sauc r h!i Ct1std
70 P Ian\
dlseasr
71 Lr lsur r
DOWN
1 Cll1r1ctrr-
/stic rate of
activi ty 2 In any way:
2 words
3 V11u1blt
violin:
•
•
12. Post·
C.~r 1 stmas
event
13 Vrhic le
mounted
011 runn er s
18 Pact s l9ned
in 1954:
Abbr.
22 lb. S fr el
24 Caivt rs1tifl1
21 T 11t, plum-
likr lrw tt 2' Bitter JO Boy's
nicknamr
31 Oln t rv rr
32 Not OUll!
'3/117 1
43 Frnc'J in
44 F oolrd
46 Defea ts
badly
47 Of an
island
49 Thing
111 la w S2 Grasping
hands
SJ .A gent th al
restores
body tonf
5S Stt of steps
OVfl I Wiii
5b Vt ins of mineral Cit
57 Ra 1sr
MISS PEACH
"°~ TI<INI<
.lo!!OUT
ME
A l...Oi,
Al<TfiUlt?
~·F!VoNCJNE, :r: DO.
I
:r 7"1-1/NI<
ASOUT' YOU
MY E.VEl<Y
l.VAk.'//\/G
MOMENT".
Ll'L AINER
SALLY BANANAS
GO!IDO
MOON MULLINS
f
SORRY, BUT LORD P.
.JUST LEFT FOF<
!<IS MEMOl'Y
IMPf'OVfMENT
Ci.ASS ...
ALL THE'/
Tl.L.L M!IS
AM GOTOl-IE
F'AULT NO
LADY KIN
STAND.'.'
,' ··~··HANG
I O~··I TH IN!<
H!flLL !IE
BACI< SOON.
;
.... ,,_._,_ ..... -· .. ~-
••
DAILY PlLOT JI)
By Al Capp
By Charles BarsaHI
-
\'.QQ~;
~-
By Gus Arriola •
'.ANIMAL CRACKERS By Roget' Bollen
-AO<illJ/\<,),
I TH IAlK
T>lea></1s
AC1'6EP !
~ 0 1'11 ..... 11 .. -i)'o. tiooo . iF C/00 c:AIJ'r
~<I AOti1Hl!IG GC>O!:>
Nio.Jr A PE"'50!J, DOIJ'r
SW AIJ</f~l/JG AT ALt. I
..
.~UMPER 'S MOTHER
tA~De A ~I FI C
1Mm:S510AJ OAl i.Jll!:..
By Jahn Milet TM( Sflt4NGf WOllO
By Mell
RtALt.Y.
AICT/./Ulc. 1?
MR.MUM
L-..J (O
•ONE lliOP/11(,
'fliJR LUii(!/
IS IN THE
RffRIGEl(~~(tJ----1
DENNIS THE MENACE 39 A s1cr fd
trxt
41 Common
conllactlon
.fl Pa id up ~S P1t1r Fondi
movlt:
Informal
4 Was
vlole11tfy
ag lt1trd
5 Br wrong
b Stud ent
7 Assault
! Tim1pl!Cf
'Applaudtd 10 Lovr 1ff1lr
11 Scit ntlflc
round 33 Number
34 This: Sp.
35 M1c1w
30 Sc.rapt
58 Fret from
danger
59 Actcr
R \chard --
OD Ft.igld
STEVE ROPER By Saunders and Overgard
·-· A>ID, /JV T1IE llAJIWEMO!t NOMF DOl.l V OVEl/-
f
I
2 words
41 Thlnntr
I • 2
11
•••
I"
"" .. " llf JJ "
" ,, " ..
m~ .,
"
" ..
s uffix -7
Jj ,,
' l.l~" ' • ,l.1 "
" ..
"
harst1l1
40 R uss i~n
. ne9at1vt vole · 1· 00
. ,,
"
l1
11' " " l7 .
01 Nin e: l'reflr
b5 Ccmpl t it
ne twork
" " 111
• ' Jil" [·~
" >) " . • .
" ~ " • .. ~' ,, ... ~ f•
" l.,,,o • " "
•
,, ~''l
' -• · .. -·
; ' ,. I r• 71 • •
•
JIEARS A TEl.EPJKWE CONV£/?5ATION /
-By Cf!arles M. Schulz _ ..... ..__,
SOAl:'il.\\ES fT'S E~CI( iO Gel
S0<6ED DC•'N C~MSt Riro/ITS
l
•
< I
Mond'7 """' l , 1971
Monda y ~s Closing Price s-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
$•1ti Hit
Cll•h J Hlfll l ow Cltw Cb1 u 36 .
' 10 t1 r.' • r. r. '" .... -L-
1• ?• •• 2i JI ' ll u. ...
l ll ' • ~ ..
H' ~ 7 lUO l•• " I •• ,, ' . " . ... ". I 26 J
1J I • ~ ll: 61 •5'o
u ~~ ~ ~· I) JI .. rl60 103~ "" " ". " ' . ' , ,, IJ
"11 ' •
'" !' " ' • ~8 109 Ol.lo , ..
' " ". )I 1•
il: • • • " w·
Stock Leader s
MOST SHARES
" ' II 21._
' " ' " J3 651.io 1 111'
' 30\1 lJt 501, " ~ ' ""' -O P-
". "" '"' '"' "' "" ...
"" ... '
s.i. H.t
tii.-.1 Mlt~ Ltw ci.se c~• l•••=m••.,,:>1•11c="""'"',."""" .. :z:::io .... mz::::1 I
'i! !b fill il~~·; P1·ices Atlvanced ll im"11t: iiS t ~ t:~ir-t ,o ..
·l! ll~ i~ ir.: i ~ In Slowe1· T1·ade llJi.-It i. •t' ~ ,. '11'1-1~ l:-&0u
1J J"-n· ir.. + i . l:5:11~'r.1': ,, l!'o \4 ~ ' f-"11•111'•
11 11... ., ..,, + ,, NEW YORK (UPI) -Prices advanced m mod 1,•,-i=.:"'·· !j"' "U'-l '••illli t • :'r.> Y k k h .0 2sa toi. Jt~ " 1-. erate lr4u1ng on the Ne'v or sloe exc ange T• • ' ~~ ,.~ ~~ lfil + ..., f.1onday t:~~.cf ll '! ~" H~ _ '• T~nneco l 1 $1~~ • + \1 Shortly before clos ing bell the Dow Jones tn ''""I< ""' ~ , l?v. 1!1' Ul'I -\ TtnN!t ''" sa ,, 10" 1 It il + i , du str1al Average wa s ahead 4 45 at 883 28 Stand +::tV ,.1 "''l Ti Ji..'! !i!! :\:: -"' ard s & Poor s 500 stock index was up O 22 at 96 97 t••G••~,, s 16: .f7Yi ~~ f1 l'I Ad vances led declines 731 lo 634 on 1 63.2 issues T:!g su1.lll60 7 U ) ] llfilo .+ ~ r,x•• ll'ld 11> '' ,,., ''"I''-~ on th e tape Tt•••11s1 10 17 1,. 1' ~ +. t:, f tJO Gs OS
' l t\\ l' ~ 31•. -• A volum e of around 12 500 000 shares \vas th e TeitPi..a '°° 1 '"'-lr;, 1\'o -\.o Tt• U I l tJ
21 " •'• .Aloj, • lightest 1n about eight weeks T•-' on t0 u I $14 l •-Tt• pl)lll
1.s 11>.a '"" 'I.., -Clostn g prices 1ncl11ded AT&T 49 unchanged ,,~ pf '°
''10 ~10\lo lO' .. + c I 27 " ~ '~' ... us nlt 11lik 1111' -? Bcthlehe1n Steel 21 :1.1 off 14 hryl!i er "" un 71 ' ..,.,e~t .cu t t2"1o thi t\O I( Ttir tDr 111
11 .,., 4'~ • -t DuPont 13511.z General Motors 80~ up '14. Southern '"°""iw 1~ lf irtt ri·~ fe,,.-+ i. Pac1f1c 4J o/, up % Stanrt~rd of Jersey 75% off ;,, i ~.~r ''° n Ii"' fi 04 fl""'~ and US s•·el3l"•orr11.. ~1mf:11 p1 ~il° ) S4ti 5-1'~ 5-lli °'.; \' \.e .,, .. T t~ll IV ~
14 6~ 1 ,,.~ 161"4 ~ One anlyst said the slower turnover reflects Toti 11PcJc 60 4 I 6h 1 l TOll(I' S~ I ~ J.il 111~ 11. 11 , concern over Laoti an and Middle East developments l o e110E' i to 2, l~ U a Ult lOOI Rel ..at! N :>t :rt.,. •1 Another suggested the market is exper1enc1ng a ' •n• co .,
"• 11"' 11 , l I d th l b II '•n1v 120 1 , .. ,, ", + emporary correction 1n a ren a IS as1ca y ' ·~ w ,. ,
11 11~ ~.:, t .. _ upward l ~~:1~ -'"" ~ tt\oo 3~.., ~ ~ -Occidental Petroh.Jem \vas a heavily traded 1.!~:C"'o.i' io' Jn f~ f,'• ~5~ = : issue after a delayed ope ning The oil firm had l~:~f ~n"
s~ tt ~.~ ~, :;-,~ been m a trading halt since the middle of last Fri i !~: ! P:O, 'J , ~~ 411t ~1 1 .!. 1• day s session foll O\\J ng a report that Lt by a wa s pre l~,:, "' 7 1:
~ ~~"' 1! 1 ~! • + paring to take over control of foreign oil companies ~r~~ .:d"lt
1~ 1:1.0 ~\'> ~"-operating there ~11.":ic·~~ ,
0 10 ~ 0 t TRW 1>l4 XI 33: ~ \ ~J'• i! ! t: ~£,x;Nl':'~ ~ t l~*i~m 7~'ub ·; o: i':-7~ :•,<J)\::Wi 'f~'ii~{t~.'2
4 l~11to l~a -11.l •fFf•v •o J, lt•lf''I .o..,..ub P~o w t J, l JI .,, J 1 11 I 1r e I IO"' ' 1 1" 1 If. -\~ uC eH Ill J It ' -• lJ"-l ~~~ ~r· ~:~ Ji i t v. SI :~tfc~ .. 14 r :~ 'r ~ ... ~v. +1'tt ,;a:ne~ ... ~ Ill! J~. E \ + \ VAL .. ~ ')fol\"" 35 ... -A.. ··~·· .... '. I,,. I\ ""Sun0 1Df1~ ... Qi~ 4,S ,, .... \._UAR.CO I to ., ,,l,I '"'• 41'-... "' Sit!' O•vo to 14• 41 ~ 41\.t H. -mbffm Ill ~l' jl \ """ 1l\li + ,, lJG ,,. I 11 '° ~•..., 49 4•'r +"l -'~l l/tl ts 31\oo lS <t -~ uno~lnd 10 •0 ,.., ''"' U-tt 1 UMC nd 72 UO """ ll-., 1'' + Vt '9..W1 90 t i"i•• n"•"' + I' und1 pf) 50 J i ollll/lt •31') fl ' •o Unt co .40 31 114 I' I" .0. \ IOl!I V•rtC I 1 -\ • ....vi M Slb 116 16'11 S ' S'-.. t'llF Uni lid t()e lo SJ«. J,j .. !S .0.\41 lolltV(pf l t lO 11 +u 1111 Va 11 1 10 II 11 1S'OI " Vn NV l )!e
2n s"'• H • 51 'i +"' -W l fD 1• '"' 4>,t •'<+\IF u,.,.o 1 4~ •I I 'lJ')ltl•·~+I unc ... ," •~ N 1•"' J1i.-\, -c""t :!! 4 11\oo II II -* ul>IT'llG,oo j> » • 11>t -11F VnC1 b!de t s116t'i 7S lj 7s ,-1Vt !I01".,.lld 50 ll ..,» ',1!~ 11'<-11oml( Pll lO 1s l~ 3 'l -1 Vn&11 c.o~ • 1 61"o 6 0 + 1 ~oSWor l'O '•' :S ., 60 -0... u vvFd Ila l•S S ~ !11 Slo Un EK 11
's 10{• 10:11 10 . + ~ IW PIA 1 iO "" 44\oo u~ Swink i.o. IO " , ... u -\lo Un El pl6 ol0)
SC DAILY "LOT fl
Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
NEW YOC!I( (,t,I>\ Mll"'dt ¥ s C'l'l'D 11t _.Amer c•n SO(~ E1ch•111e p >Ct )
" " ,, • • " • " n .. ~r·· " " . ' ' -N-20 .,
•• l~to .~ ~1 •
it ~I 1~ ~~
Jlt ~
" ' ·~ • • " ' .. " • )lt•
•• '" • " "' " l' " " .. ' . Jllo
" '" '" ..
" ' . ' ... rt l
" I i1 • '" ~ .. " •• •• '• " ' ' " " ' " ' ,.,
' " ... " '" •
" " 11 'I • ' .+ "
" • ' " "' ' " ' .. • " ' ,.,
' "' '" " " " .. l "' ' ,.
" .i • ' " • • • ,,.
~ J 12 • • 2• •
1u 21 , ,. .,
16 :; • l H 1 ' . ,! ~ I " . ' . lit U" n 21 • Jct • ' .. •6 J\t l 16
u ~ ~ 1l ~, ) . ' -S-
Iii "8 I
1114 ·~ .. " 1!.
'" '" n
" og .. fl '
" • 1,~ • '" ,.
' . "" l
" " N.Y . t f i111 t e1•s a11d Lose1•s
'
N ~W V()lllC It.Pl -t~• lo ow"" I •llow> 1114' 1IO<t;1 l,.,.! Plo~ ..,... ""'
"'" "'0 • .., dO"" ,~ • ....O\I ll>llM on I pe Cf M ol (ft l no, on tt>t New YDMt sroc~
IE• • ~' !'QI Otl c \IO"ft\t "' •nd I"' <tn •9• (n1ntn t t "'9 <I' Ht tnt t M '-¥t i 11'l11¥ o
• t f •nd tod•V ~ Ill II Cl
"" L•> 14 " . .. .
i \ -1 '; ~I • .-. '
,~ . ' .
H ' • :tO _.. I ~
, 1 ~
:ti ... ~ -"\'t lo ~\ i I 1l -I I r,:' ... I ... fl -I I 1 ~;-.. ;,_: .. _._ ..
I -+ II
' uo 8: ' "' ~: "" "' ~: • "" ~:
"' "' ~: "' "' "' "' "'
" I : r. . •• " ~ .. l• , l!
""
• -" --=I'
,,
' J ~
II
' I
'
" ,.: ~t
•
-AB-
,, 11 •
' • " ''" •
,. » n • • • \ " ' ..
' ' • '" • " •• ! " "'
" ,, .. • "' '" ... " "' ... " " '. " " '" " , ..
~· ..
" •• ' " . .. ~ .. .. .,
'
... • ,f' " ' . .. .
" ... n: ,,
" '" • ' " " ' "• " " "' ' ' ' .. '" ' "' ' ' ,j
I 'l " '" '
l• • 36
" " ' " • .. ' " " • " " " ,,
' " "
• • • ...
' " . • "' .. " .. .. • '" '" ' ' • "' ~~I~
16•• " ~. '" • • ~ ls ' .. ' " ' n. ' " ' . 3\ 1 • •• SJ 1 > . " 61 l6 I
' " !9 17
' " . ..
' " 6! 2 •
11 l • ti 7S 1 l 16 1 I
1 17 I • • • JS 12 I ' ' lt 71 •
> ". " . 11 1 i ,6 11 • .. 'l ' 11 .. J6 Jl' " . 3S ! o • 11 ,,, . " sn io.i. 10 10 1 ' .. ' " 11 I • ' ' I~,.
~ t \
• ,1 .. 'l 2: 1": . " " " ' .. 10 1 •
1•1 ' 12• Q " ~ '• : ~ l l 4 • 12• It " . ' . . " l~ ll"
~J ~ I " . •• ];• I"' t1' 1&t.., . " ~: ~ ?
3~ I ' Jl It 11 J ~
~1 11 . ' ' ' • • • ' " • • !! 'l '
)I I o • 10 • l 1i..
ttl I ' 61 11 ' 4a n
l'i ,·. ..
• • • • .. ' . '" • • ' '" . , 11 1. • ttli ....
'" • " 1:i-i ". "" ... " '' " "• ' .. " " .. ,
' ' " ' ,j
" ' " • • " " ' . , .. " . " ' '" ..
'" ". ' . ' ' ' • " " ' '" " ' " " '" .. ' . ~· " . .. ... ' ~ '" ' " 11 ~
" .1 • " . ' . l . • .... " • '"
lit.I Ntt
IM.1.l M .~ L.tw Cltit Cllt
• '. ·,i. ', l
,j
.;J
' " " .. ,\
'• i3~ ,,• • • • • ,)
l' ,\
• 1 .. " " 'I "
"
101 , .. " l ' " ' " ,.. .. ,, •• '" • ... r. . ~ 11": "' n " ..
j'• ...
' I . ,,.
1a10
' ... ,. •
•1 6 • . " " 13• J1 ... ~ 1-:
11 C" IS S , 3: ~l .
"' " •• ' l.o. j ~ " . ' " 107 I\& ~ " ~~ ~.
80 l • 31 1~ I ~ 1 ~ •
SJ IQ •
% "" JI !J
0 II' J 'f•
' " io 15" . ' . 10 11\li 2JI •I
Q J• 't ' .. ' " ' 1 . ,.,
:ll 9! ' rt. ' ,. ~r !~ 0 111.o 118 10'4
' '" 62 ' • l I~ \ Ji ',,
" " 1 : " '" " ,1 • ' . 1\'i.
11 • " "''
Sties Mii
(Ml.I M1911 L.8w tltM Cit
,, ~:: ~ I ,,\~ la • m~~ 1. ' . . t ,, , ••• q l•~ h \ \O~ 10"1 'l , •• lOI ~ 54
I 2 '' 21~' Jt 3 • 3 • I SloJ o
'' • 1 • tl '°"' ... 2 1 • ' J11"1o 11 \
5-ltl•''"" It I 14
Sl lftp I
2' 211 lto • s t h , !1"6 .,,~ , '"' , ...
1 '"' '"' 16 IJ 11'11 11 :ao 11\o':I 16 114 • • lJV, ,,,.,
1' 11\\ \I II f \IJ f'i .,,, ! " 41\11 SI 2C\IF fJ
It ''"' ll loto -TZ-
•
•
f
'
•
•
'
DAILV PILOT .Monday, Marth 1, 1971
Sears
Tire and Auto Center
ALLSTATE
PASSENGER TIRE
GUARANTEE
C.u•ranlO!ed Aaaln•ll All ti,.
h ilurC'1 from oonrW ra.d bauds
or <kftttt in mau.rial Of Wl)fk.
rm11sl11p.
}'or lf.,,.. Lo11•: For die life ol
1hc Oti&inal lttal.l. •
1';'h•t Sean WIU Dot Jn a.
.:bin#' fQt the tire, ttpbce ir.
cltuNn,11: onlr for U.C, proporri<>11;
cf currrot sellic,i price phul'td-
eral E1c1.r Tax tltoc ttpretenrs
ltt..i uloed. 1'.cp&ir nail )>lllKOlrn
&1nod .. ~. ,.
G ......... 1 .. rd Api11111 Tread
....... f-<>U<.
}'or llow J...,n•: The 11umbeTo(
monttr.opec1/1rd.
'What .St:aP'fl 11i'lll Bn: Ja C'IC-
<haAAe lor ti¥' 1itt, ttplace it.
<har.g1n,i: rbc Oltffnl.dling price
Jllu• FC'\k1~\ Elcise Tu lcu the
lollow1n.t allowaix:e..
Mentha
Guara'1tP.ed
18m24
l7m :>~ ;o
TUBELESS
WHITEWALL
175-13 $36 1.94
$41 2.29
36-Month Guaranteed
Silent Guard II
T......._la p...,.,
TUBELESS BLACKWALL
6.50xl3 16.87
7.75x l4 21.87
8.25x 14 24.87
TUBELESS WHITEWALL
6.50x l3 19.87
' 7.35x14 23.87
7.75itl4 . 24.87
8.25x14 27.87
8.55x14 31.87 '
8.15x15 29.87
8.45xl5 32.87
87
• 6.50.13
Tubeless
Blackwall
Plu•
l.76F.E.T.
And Old Tire
F.E.T •.
].76
:?.14
2.32
l .76
• 2.0l
2.14
2.32
2.50
2.35
2.48
Steel Belted with 1 . , Rayon ,Cord ·p~es
. ·RADIAL TffiES ·· . ; .,
l . ' •·. . . : -"""-· -·~..........,. -.L.1_ .. -)~.i J.:til'.~,...~~" .. ~--,;..i;;..........4 .......
e Tn:ad reU.foreed w;1h $3•6· 2 11eel belts. virtually
eliminating all lypes cf
road hazards
•Rayon cord p]ies pro• 17S-1l Tnbele•1WhitrwallPlu1
vide emooth, 15ecureride 1.94 f .l::.T.And Old Ti,..
SEARS ALLSTATE RADIAL
PASSENGER TIRE GUARANTEE
1-TllEAD UFt:nlUGUAIU.."nl:E
c .......... A.-M-• All •in= l•lu..,.
'""" ~ ift ..... m.r.,.. -o-~ J' ....... ._, n. i.r.. dd>c .,...;...a ...... Th•I 5._0,. WiH 0.. & ......... f,.. oiww "'""' ,i..., .. -.Ir b die~ vf 1ttod ... d.
2-Tl:r.ADYJ'..Aa..our ANDlilOAD
HAT.ARD CUAIU1'"f£E
t'.:••roftl....i A.-ooliwtr T..,od wot-al
ti..,farho..,f..,...roodlla•G. .... 11-i.. .... "°'"°® miles. •
""'"' !'.._. .. wm °"'' /u s.e.,..,., •-•· · ~ it fo•. -"'"·Of.., .. ),..~ fwod. ~ ... ia e.IWr c-n&ly ..... 1M _;.,.. d Ibo mii..:.e n:cD...Li.s--1,....,._ • ...,choru •
ADJUSTl.NC
1"ii•X.,J>a,,,c_,ti..,~..;nt.
hotooml. ""f:;.. .. ..,..;1.,. ~"';,, ths U.5.A. n.. priu-.1 • !he Moil cl >Id_.,. i1 •he<~ orlliflrll pro<~. ii> olodi"I oppliaobk fcdeul Wi~ TQ. 1t..a 1~ ~.u • _.., ~1ic.., oJ1u:n_.,. " ....i... n.1, cord ·-i.. ...-...u • .,_ m ..!iwu ... n~
Pick-tip Campers and ·.P.~riel Truck ·Owners! . ' . .
Express Mileage XL W
Nylon T;ruck Tires
Sears Low.
Low Price! 2763
Ph111
2 .. 12 t'.E.T.
• Ad••anccd Dura-Dual Construclion • , , long
wearing tread over cool base rubber
• Narrow tread grooves ••• less squirm, more wear
with great traction. Variable pitch tread
•Extra wide flat tread •.• more rubber on the road
•Wrap arourid tread and low cord angle. Easier
more stab1e steering control.
NO-TRADE IN REQUIRED
. ,
SAJlE •10!
Tacl1ometer
Dwell :Meter
Rep •lar 3 999 $49.9fJ
Fully 1ransis1orizeJ ritcuir.
Automatic volrage selcc·
tion. Works on 6, 11, 24 or
any voltage. Wi1h Dura Cell
bdtter)'.
Timing Light
n.,.Tar 1999 $29.99 1'fed"I
:115
For 6 or 12 ''olt Ayslems.
Solid 111a1e circuitry •••
chrome-plated body. }Vilh
Jong cord ,,, easy to oper-
ale.
·•
SAVE SJ 66 to s5y
<
•
.. SHOCK • ' ABS.ORB ER.·
' SALE
, Regular •4.99
O.E .R.*
Shock Absorbers
33
Each
I
• }'its ruosl ·American-made
'-.,:~,,,/>"~ cars
•O ri~inal Equipment
Replacement
SAVE $2.44!
Heavy Duty Shocks
Regu lar
S7.99 55
Each
• J..onger wear, smoother ride
•Rugged sintered iron piston chrome
plated rod
Booster Shocks
Regular 2 for 26.99
•Extra support, more slahility for car·
rying l1eavy ]oads or pulling trailers
Expert Installation Available
At Sears for a
COMPLETE
BRAKE
JOB Disc ·
. D ? or . rum.
Here's What ~e.ars ~xperts Do: · .
• Carefully r ebuild hydraulic wheel cylinders
e Remove and replace brake shoe r elease springs
e Hcplace hold-down springs
•Remove and replace both front grease seal/
• Carefull y r epack front wheel bearings
• T11r11 a11d true brake drun1s or r e f ace di scs
• Fit new brake shoes or disc pads
•Flush and add hydraulic brake lluid as needed
•Inspect master cylinder and emergency brake
•Finally, we test your brakes .out on the road
COME IN NOW FOR YOUR
~
' I
FREE BRAKE INSPECTION ••• No Obligation!
r ...
A•k About Seara Convenie11l Credit Plan• • ·-IUINA,PAltl TA 1-4400, J21-4i30 ll MONff GI 3-3t11
CANOGA PAlll: 340.ott• OllNDAU af S•100C, Cl 4-4611
COM"ON NI .. 2511, "' 2·5761 HOLLYWOOD HO t•JM1
11AaS,1tOEBtJCKANl>C0° COVINA t6'o0611 IHGUWOOD Ol l-2S21
Shop N191rU-. thrtl Sal. 9'.30 A.M. to 9:~0 P.M., 5unday 12 Noon to S P.M.
•
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,
lOHO UACM Ml S-0121
OLYMt'tC a SOTO AN 1...S21 1
OIANOI ~7·1100
PASADINA •11·3111, ~S1-411t
POMONA HA f·S l61
PICO WI l-4'J62
SANTA ANA Kl 7..Sl71
SANTA ft SNINGS t44•1011
SANTA MONICA IJI: '1-'711
SOUTH COAST PLAZA 140•llll
THOUSAND OAKS 4'7-4SH
TOIUNCI 142·1Sl1
UPlAND tl5·1f17 '
VAUJY PO 3·14ftr fl4.Jl20
YllMONJ PL t •1t11
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OAtLY l'ILOT $1111 l"Mlll
Tougfa (:11sto1taer
Butch Kado. aboard a tough bu\1, appears to have
his hands full during the t\vo days of rodeo at La·
guna .Beach ~-l igh School. I-le was one of about 250
co\vboys fron\ throughout lhe U.S. who came to the
competition. It was watched by an estimated 2500
spectators. The rodeo was part of the second "'eek·
end of the Laguna Beach Winter Festival that
\Vinds up next w_eekend.
Hotel Guest Held
• By Lagu11a Police
On Stabbing Rap
A Ne\\'port Beach man was arresled
Saturday in Laguna Beach after he
allegedly attempted to stab the clerk
and manager "'hen asked to leave the
Hacienda Hotel .
Police idcnlified the suspect as
Clarence Oltver Stout. 21. of 2306 \V.
Ocean Front, and said he "'as to be
arraigned today in South County
Municipal Court on charges of assault
with a deadly weapon.
Authorities. claim the incident occurred
al about 1 p.m. Saturday at the hotel,
1289 S. Coast Highway. Hotel employes
told poli'ce Stout had been making a
general nuisance of himself and had
been asked Ill leave the ~uilding.
When he refused, the desk clerk tried
to escort Stout out the door. Stout
allegedly drew a knife from his waist·
band, slashed at the employe,
The hotel manager assisted the clerk
in subduing the kn1fe.w1eld1ng man. of-
ficers said, and he was held for police.
No injuries v.·ere reported during the
brief fracas.
Fullerton Youth Dies
In Car-cycle Crash
A Fullerlon rnotorcyclist "'as killed
late Sunday \Vhen he collided V.'ith a
car at Valley View Street and Grandview
Avenue in Fullerton. the coroner's office
reported.
Police said nonatd C. Shapiro, 19,
\\'Cstbound on Valley Viev.· Street, was
apparenlly trying to pass a vehicle when
ii made a left turn. The driver of
the car, Jane ,Reynolds, 19, of Fullerton,
was not injured. The accident is under
investigation.
,
Taxing Problem
Buckling Up-Safety or Vanity
LO~DON (UPI) -~aslity bell! are not "safety devices" -lhey're
for wearing. At least according to J:lritish customs and excise officials.
. British craftsmen who make the wroughl·lron bells,. which are eXporled
mainly to lhe United States and Sweden, asked customs tO exempt them from
sales tax on grounds they are "safety devices."
Not so, ruled the government. A spokesman ror customs and excise
said "of course, these belts are not safety devices. They don't save you from
a broken ~eg or a broken arm, do lhey? They are most definitely for wearing.·•
Roblll Hugessen, who firm markets the belts, said ''the irony o! it all is
that the belts, which come with padl ock and two keys. v.·cre originally made
for use as ornaments. You can place a potted plant in them and suspend them
like a basket. ~
"However, when we "started getting requests for the belts with vita l
statistics supplied, we realized they were being worn," he said.
Agnew Says Wl1ite House
Won't Purge GOP Solons
WASIBNGTON (UPI) -Vice Presl·
dent Spiro T. Agnew said today be
foresees no White House purge attempt
in 1972 against any Republican Senators
even ir they do oppose President Nixon's
policies on a sincere basis.
In a copyrighted interview with Lucian
C. Warren uf the Buffalo Evening News,
the Vice President specifically exempted
Sen. Mark Hatfield (R·Ore.), from any
punitive administration action despite
Hatfield 's criticism of Nixon's war
polfcies.
The discussion of a possible purge
came up in connec1ion v.·ith Agnew's
role in the defeat of Republican Sen.
Charles Goodell in New York last Novem-
be,.
The Vice President commented : ''Sen.
Goodell was never attacked or opposed
on the basis or his disagreements with
the administration. The point of
departure came when Sen. Goodell tried
to utilize his opposition positions strictly
as methods of embarrassing his party
and his President. Sometimes, I believe,
he contrived the opposition for this
purpose .. ,
"Sen. Hatfield on lhe other hand has
never adopted this altitude. I am con-
vinced of his sincerity, He may oppose
the President on nearly every issue that
comes along. Ir it comes out with his
conviction and it's handlrd in the spirit
of cooperation and the traditional
moderateness of approach thal goes into
inlraparty disagreements , certainly there
v.•ou/d be no attempt to oppose him
on lhat basis." •
Bikers Pose
Problems
In Clemente
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of rll1 El•ll'f PH1t fllff
Preaching bicycle safety to a youngster
probably is one or the corniest subjeels
around to many on the re~lving end.
Bicycies, they say, are little more
than toys -somtthing dad gives to
his son on· Christma1.
Trouble is, the bikes only become
toys when they tangle with a moving
ca,.
Deadly toys.
What is compounding the danger, at
!east in San Clemente and other coastal
cities is the massive appeal cycles ha~e
fJr high-sc hool-age student.s and adulta
as well.
Ecological considerations, health and
the cKhilaration of moving around in
the freslt air all C<lmbine to create
the demand for a cycle. Furthermore,
says San Clemente's only all-bike
businessman, it's -theap transportation.
But despite efforts by the cycle
Industry and public sa rety agencies to
stress the issue of cycle safety, a new
peri l on the streets is growing.
At San Clemente High School, wher.e
bicycle fever has hit hard, cycles -
old and new (many of them little
brother's castoff) -line the parking
areas.
A steady stream of energetic cyclists
moves back and forth to the school
each da y.
But in spite of acti ve driver training
programs -many of the cyclists have
driver's licenses -police say many
or the adolescent cyclists are terrible
drivers on the tw~wheeler.
"l wish everyone could see , what
happens down at Avenida Pico and Los
Molinos each afternoon when the bikes
come through," said one experienced
patrolman, "It's downright dangerouS."
"The bikes don't stop for a boulevard
stop. For some reason the people just
figure the traffic lav.·s don't apply to
a bicycle."
From that perilous intersection, many
of the cyclists pedal to Shorecliffs up
El Camino Real, dodging fallen boulders
and dirt from the slumping palisades.
Often, they ride in the high-speed
trafric lanes. •
Issuing tickets ror cycle violations isn't
in the plans at present • in tht police
department.
Stressing that cycles are a moving
vehicle, however. Is the first approach.
In fact, cycles, where physically
appli cable, have as much a' place in
the California Vehicle Code (CVC) as
cars.
Bicyclists (ace the same laws at
intersections. on highways and in
neighborhoods as a car.
Here are some excerpl.s from the CVC:
-Every bike has lo have a brake
which will allow the operator to make
one skld on a dry, level patch of
pavement.
-Handlebars with grips above shoulder
level are forbidden, as well as pedals
v."hich are 12 inches or more above
the pavement at lheir lowest point of
lravel.
-'Every cycle ridden at nigh !must
have a white light visible at least 300
feet from the front. Red reflector on
the rear fender Is mandatory a! well.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
• ' . . '" '"' ._, ' . . . • .. i•' )
l •1.~ ~fJ'' ' ' ~ ......
Sottaetfaing Fislay
DAILY PILOT If ..
DAILY PILOT llltf htll
Dee Dee Challis, 13, of Laguna Beach is shown with form tor her saqd
casting "so.mething fi.shy." She was one of about 75 youngsters wB.o
took part 1n the artistic youth event Saturday durin~ the Laguna
Beach \Vinter Festival. Fish were the most popular sub1eCt.
Coordinating
Council Takes
Calendar Job
....
The Laguna Beach ·coordln.ating Coun·
cil bas taken over publicalion of the
Community Calendar for the Art Colony
and will issue lb first scbedule of events
in March. \
J..1rs. Allen Cramp, a former personnel
director. has been placed in charge o[
publicat ion of tbe calendar and she will
be assisted by several other women.
The Community Calendar lists events
occurring in Laguna Beach and will be
distributed with the Council newsletter
as well as lo the news media. A master
calendar is also kept up to date in
the Chamber of Commerce office s<>
that program chairmen may consult it
in scheduling events, thus avoiding a
time conOlct with another group. Items
may be placed en !he calendar by calling
~94·1018.
The calendar Is the most recent en-
deavor undertaken by the Coordinating
Council, wruch serve! to keep residents
jnformed on pertinent community issues.
OAlL Y l"ILOT Sllll l"htl9
NEW CALENDAR HEAD
Mrs. Allen Cr•mp
Drug Usage Program Se t for Laguna High
The Laguna Beach High School Parent-
Teacher Association will sponsor 11 pr~
gram on drug use at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
at the high school cafeteria.
Lt. George Griffith of the Orange Coun·
ty Sheriff'! DepartmPnt v.ill speak on
teenage drug use and the effects or
dangerous drugs on youngsters. Griffith
\vill show residents samples of narcotics
and "·ill answer questions following the
short presentation. The program i! open
to lhe ptiblic.
•
This week, make it Italian: Sen·e a plalterful of past.a, drenched in r ich savory sauce •• , sprinkle it with cheese ••• serve 'rabbit
cacciatQTe , • , wash it dO\\·n \Yith hearty Chianti , • , enjoy 8.11 the pl easures oC old world goodness ••• with ease and economy .• , •
,,·hen you bfgin it all at El Rancho! And enjoy the savings on Globe Al Spaghetti., .1 pound package.
•
Bertolli Chi-.nti .... ~1 99
Dry and ruby red : •• tile ,,·ay to complement spaghetti! Quart.
Rabbit ..... ~H.~ ~~~ .. 89~
Serve iL cucciatore. as you would chicken! So delicious!
Beef Liver ..... . ...... FRESH............ . ...... 69 t
Scr\·e it often.,. great source of iron and other nutrient.I!
11iced Bacon ................ RMIC!f 'mu .................. ss;~
El Rancho's own ••• sliced a little thicker for flavorf
Spaghetti Sauce -39~
Progresso's ••• really Italian! 1'.farinara, Meal or ?tfushroom! 16 oz.
Prices in tffect J.1 011 .1 Tue a., lVed.,
]ti a.r. 1, !, 3. No 1a1.e8 to deal ers.
. •
Grated Cheese ..... 39c
Kraft'a , •• S oz. shnkers ••• choose either Paime&an or Romano.
Romaine ....... : ....... 15c
Crisp leaves ••• make a dressing v.'ith oil and \vine vinegar!
Mozzarella Cheese .~........ . . . . . . .. . . . .......... Br
Generous sized ball!, •• 16 oun ces big .•• from Fri~o :
Italian Dressing ......... ~ ................................ 29«
Wishbone ••• flatters the finest greens! 8 oz. bottle.
ARCADIA: PASADENA: SOUTH PASADENA: HUNiiMGT3H BEACH : NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 Nowporl Blvd "d
~!!.R•JE.1 ~antho Cenler). _ ... 320 1·1cs1.~olorado. Bj~~ • ., f remonl . and Huntmglon D'. V/arner and Algonqum (BD'<1lw .<lk C•·ni<><) 2555 [aslblulf Or. (£aslblulf Villa ge Center) ~ •
'·
•
I
I
'.lllV PILOT
Wlcfu
'Th e General &ent me!'
Share Plan
For Debts
• By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon's revenue-sharing plan has en-
countered such formid able opposition in
Congress .it may never get off the draw·
ing board.~ --· -
But that doesn't necessarily mean the
concept of the federal government shar-
ing its fi nances v.•ith the states v.'on't
eventually become a reality.
There is. of course. more to federal
finances than revenue. So if Congress
refuses to give the slates a $5 billion
share ol federal revenue. as the Presi·
ent has proposed, perhaps it will con-
sider letting them have a $5 billion share
of the federal deficit.
AS OF NO\\', according to the official
estimate, the deficit for fiscal 1972 is
expected to top lll billion. The ad·
\'antages of sharing that with the states
,..-is obvious to anyone .,.,.ho has mastered
the science of ecoMmics. ,
For as Nixon explained to Congress
earlier this year, an unbalanced budget
tends to reduce the level or unemploy-
ment. Add if it works for the federal
r
t '
.The
!Lll <Iii IH171' IEIJR
Side
' '
!
government, there is no reason v.·hy
it wouldn't work for the states.
1-fost states, it is true, already have
unbalanced budgets. As a rule, however,
states are such poor credit risks they
have trouble borrowing enough money
to run up a deficit large enough to
provide meaningful economic stimula·
Lion.
The federal government. by contrast,
has unbounded credit. There is hardly
any limit to the defi cit it can run
up.
fn event the deficH·sharing fails· to
case the financial plight of the slates,
I .,.,·ould reCommend th at Congress and
the administration gi\'e some thought
to debt-sharing.
AT PRESENT. the ceiling on the
national debt is fi xed at $395 billion.
But Lhe governme nt is constantl y bum-
ping its head against the ceiling. So
there is a move afoot lo raise the
ceiling to $435 billion.
Rather tha n raise the debt limit by
$45 blllion, "'hy not keep the li mit y,·here
it is and give th e states a S45 billion
~hare of the debt ? Do YO}! see the
beauty of this?
For the first ti me in years, the national
debt .,.,ould remain constant. creating
an in1age of solvency which would
strengthen the dollar and otherwise im·
prove America's international monetary
positio n.
l'i·lean"·hile. hard.pressed states 0 \\'ould
have $45 hillion in addlti ona l indebtedness
at their disposal. In which case th eir
55 billion share of the federal revenue
\\'Ould never be missed.
-UPI
No11h lrisl1
Firebombs·
IUll Tommy ·
• BELFAST. Norther n Ireland (UPI)
A British soldier burned to death in
Londonderry early today when terrorist.s
firebombed hls patrol car. Two other
soldiers i.n the auto escaped with minor
injuries.
Troops in Belfast traded sliots vl'ith
a sniper ·in the Catholic Lower Falls
Road area early today. Later, a 16-year·
old youtl'i was taken to a hospital with
gµnshot w~ io lhs stomach, but
an army spokesman said it was nol
known if he was the sniper.
The firebombing took pr.ice in Lon·
donderry's Roman Catholic Bog!ide area.
About IS to 20 youths confronted the
three -ma11 patrol in their Land Rover
and threw some 10 firebombs at the
auto. three or four of which exploded
against the car and set it on fire.
The auto ran into a wait. but th e
driver managed to get out and arrest
one or the youths. Residents in the
area pulled the in jured soldier fr~m
the burning auto and cared for him
until help arrived. but he died. They
also cared for the third soldier in the
patrol, who was suffering from ~hoc~ ..
The soldier, who was not identified
pending notification of the relatives, was
the third British soldier killed in
Northe rn Ireland in less than a month.
TY:o other soldiers died as a result
of a Feb. 5 shooting incident in Belfast.
Today's fatality brought the year's
kriown death toll in the provin~ to
13 -three soldiers, tY.'O policemen killed
in Belfast Friday nigbt. and eight
civilians known dead. There \Vas the
possibility some civilian dead were taken
away and buried by friends or relatives
\\'ithout notifying authorities.
The Belfast shooting incident climaxed
a day-long series of clashes bety.·een
troops and Roman Catholic youths. spur·
red on by" women in combat jackets
and black berets. The yollths threw
bombs. bricks and bottles at the troops,
\\•ho retaliated with volleys of rubber
bullets.
At least 11 persons were arrested.
ln Ballykinlar, County Down, an CX·
plosion wrecked a hut used by the Ulste r
Defense Regiment for weekend activities.
N. Viet Troops
J(nock Out CIA
Supported Base
VIENTfANE. Laos (AP) -North Vicf...
namese forces have knocked out a guer-
rilla base supported by the U.S. Central
Intelligence Agency north of the Plain
of Jars, Western military sources disclos-
ed today.
The sources said a North Vietnamese
force of unknown size overran Ph u Cun1 .
134 miles notrheast of Vientiane, on week
ago. scattering several companies of
?-.Ieo trlbesmen:"'
The tribesmen and seve ral thousand
refugees Oed westward, the sourCfs said.
Phu Cum . under the command of Meo
Gen. Vana Pao, was one of the few
progo\·ernment positions north of the
Plain of Jars. It was used as a jumping
off point for intelligence operations and
guerrilla harassment aga inst the Com-
munist·led forces that control the area.
The souret>s described the loss of Phu
Cum as "not too serious" since Bouam
Long, a simila r base, .17 miles to the
southwest, is still under goverrunent con-
trol.
P a tty Duke a !Hother
SANTA t-.·lONICA (UPI \ -Academy
Awa'rd winning actress Patty Duke ha~
given birth to a fivc·pound . seven-ounce
boy named Sean at a hospital here,
it ~·as revealed during the weekend.
• .. ~ • '.
..
TRICIA'S ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCEMENT EXPECTEO SOON
Nixon's Daughter and Edward Cox to Walk Aisle?
r: '~ ~ri~ia Trothing ~
But Can N ixons, Coxes Co-exist? n
" I .
F, WASHINGTON (UPI} -Now that rumo rs of Tricia Nixon's engagement r to Harvard law student Edward Finch Cox seem to be on firmer ground, a
r
ll new report is circulating that the parents of the prospective bridal couple don't
gel along,
President and :r.·frs. Nixon are expected to announce their elder daughter's
1, engagement to Cox, 24, on J\tarch 16 during a White House celebration of the
~ 1 first lady's 59th birthda y.
I~ The wedding date is expected to he about June 12.
But new reports indicate the Nixons and Coxes are not fond of each ;
r
l other. 1'-trs. Nixon has branded the reports "ridit'ulous."
1'.lrs. Nixon is a former Leacher born in a Colorado mining camp. The
.~ president is the son of a California grocer. Col. Hoy.•ard Ellis Cox is a promi· ~ r1 nent la\vyer listed in the New York Social Register and his wile traces her
' ancestry from the American Revolution . U
Cox proposed to Tricia in November at Camp David. r..1d., according to :p
Informed sources. But engagement rumors have been denied by the White 11 House in such terms as. ';We have nothing to announce at this time." ri
, Sourei!s now say that barring a sudden change in plans, the announce-~ ~,,I ment of the wedding dale will be made during an "Iri sh Evening of entertain-11 ~1 ment" at the Whi te House with Priffie ?-.1inister and Mrs. John Lynch of Ire· ~
land as guests of honor.
I r1 ~ The "Irish Evening" ls being planned as an extra special event. with t r all of Nixons' closest friends invlted as guests. John l\.1ulcahy, Nixon's New
l Eu"ropean tour. will be a ng them. Invitations for the event are already out,
' York indust rialist friend~who \\'as his host In Ireland during last year's
which is a lot sooner than t e While •louse has acted for pasl social fwictions. j
2 Slain When Violence
Erupts at India Polls
NEW DELfll (AP) -T\\'O persons
were killed and scores in jured in India
today at the slarl of a 10-day national
election for a new Parliament.
Most of the violence occurred In
eastern Bihar State, \\·here voting had
to be suspended in six polling stations.
Two persons were killed and three in-
jured in a clash outside a rural voting
boolh.
A 23-year-old man \\'as slabbed follo\v-
ing an argument \vith someone trying
to get ahead in a long line of voters.
In four othe r polling stations in Biha r.
men ran off with thee ballot boxes. fo rc-
ing suspension of the \'Oli ng. At one of
the booths the polling officer was assault-
ed.
Four persons armed with pistols raided
a voting booth in central Rajasthan Stale,
locked up the presiding electoral officer
and stole the ballots . Vdting resuined
after ne\V ballots arrived.
Voting was suspended in a village
in southern t-.fadras following a clash
between supporters of rival candida\es.
In t-.1adras. the capital of the sla1c,
opposing political \~orke rs pel ted each
other "'ith soda bottles , but vo ting \\'enl
on any,\·ay.
Reports· from Surat. in ccnlr<tl Guja rat
State, said numerous clashes broke out
and several persons \Vere injured 1n
a consUtuency "'here former Deputy
Prime Minister Morarji Desai. an arch
foe of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi,
is seeking re-election.
Major Storms Predicted
•
Stvirling Snotvstorrns in Midtves t Ma v Only B e Stc1rt
PIEVIEWOFMOAA MATIOMAL WEATHE•SEJIVIC[TO 7:1D A.M. EST a ·1 ~11 T e tt1pe rat11res
Early Wlthdrawal
• Russ ~sk B~g 4
To Prod-1Srael
By Tbe Assocl1ted Pre11
The Soviet Union call~ on Britaln
and other big Western powers today
to press Israel into an early withdrawal
from their war-won Arab territories as
part of a general Middle East settlement.
The move came in 'London when the
Soviet Ambassador Mikhail Smirnovsk'y
met at his own request with Prime
Minister Edward Heath and argued that .
Israel's latest refusal to pull out of
war-occupied Arab territories set back
piospects for peace.
Soviet ·ambassadors in P a r i s and
Washington were making similar ap-
proaches to the ctaiefs of the French
and U.S. governmenls, diplomats in Lon·
don said.
London informants said Smirnovsky
in bis talks with Heath urged that it
was the duty of all countries -and
particularly the Big Four -to exercise
pressure on the 1sraelis to meet Arab
demands fol' full withdrawal.
The alternative, Smirnovsky w as
reported to have warned, could be a
renewal of the Arab-lsraeli conOicl.
The Soviet diplomatic intervention
came as Arab-Israeli peace moves,
through the mission of U.N. mediator
Gunnar V. Jarring entered a delicate
riew phase. Israel's ~ply to recen! Egyp-
tian suggestions has just been delivered.
There have been signs of lsratli will·
lngness to consider some aspects of
the Egyptian proposals while resisting,
at least initially, others.
3rd Ship Sinks
After Hitting
Channel Wreck
DOVER, England (UPI) -Coast
Guard boats today .edded more buoys
around three shipwrecks in the English
Channel. The latest ship went down
Saturday night after plowing into the
wrecks of one or both of the others.
Officials responsible for safety in the
channel called an urgent meeting to
discuss how to make the shipping lanes
safer.
Ten bodies so far have been recovered
from the lattst victim in the growing
graveya rd of ships. Coast Guard officials
believe it is the Greek 2,371-ton freighter
Niki, missing since it sailed Saturday
night from Dunkirk, France, for Alex·
andria , Egypt.
The ship had a crew of 22. including
one woman.
The Soviet Union has Jong pressed
the view that only big power pressure
can force Israel to abandon at least
some of the occupied territory It has
been-holding since the 1967 Middle Easl
war.
Israel has made clear its readiness
to discuss a withdrawal to "secure and
recognized frontiers " directly with the
Arab states in the context of an over.all
peace agreement.
The Egyptians have said they .~re
willing to come to peace terms with
Israel if Israel withdraws from war·OC·
cupied territory.
The belief among British authorities
is that Russia's intervention has been
timed to build up pressure in advant'e
of the expiration of the fo.Udeast cease·fire
next Sunday.
Liechtenstein
Males Vote No
VADUZ, Liechtenstein (APl -
The men of Liechtenstein became
"the top fools in Europe" Sunday
by aga in denying women the vote,
an official lamented. But a pro-
moter or the tiny duchy's tourist
industry took a different vie\v:
''People expect us to be different.
This vote might even improve
business."
Seventy percent 'of the 5,<XXI eJigi.
ble males voted in a referendum
Sunday, casting l,897 b a 11 o Is
against and 1,317 for .,.,·omen·~ suf-
frage.
Liechtenstein thereby remained
lhe lasl European nation sti ll
without women voters and one of
five in the world . The 9thers are
Jordan, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and
Yemen. Europe's other holdout,
Liechtenstein's western neighbor,
Switzerland, brought women into
the electorate on Feb. 7 by a
substantial majority.
Disgusted young \VOmen carried
signs reading ~·\Ve arc ashamed
of Liechtenstein" and "What's hap-
pened to your manhood ?" on Iha
streets of Vaduz and other com·
munities after the result was an·
nounced.
Women outnumber men in the
tiny monarchy of 21.300 bctY.'een
Swil.!erland and Austria. Its maj or
industries are tourism, fal se teeth,
pootage stamps and providing a
tax haven for numerous foreign
companies.
Collfor11io
'' Unl!H P'r•tt 1ni.•Mllon1I
».11119rn c.111ornl1 "''' '!)0'11Y .111• tcde• ...,,.. •1111 &II-P\llh WU\dl
1nd (onlfnlll!d cold te.,,~••Tur•S. In lhf lO!. Angfl•1 ~,~ •• 1od~Y .
1>redlcle!I CIYIC Ctoitr hl9~ Wll 60 com1>1•G'd lo SundtV'\ j'/. The low
!ool11M will bt " bu! "''' JI In ·11 1PI~ coldlf $Ub!lrb1.
Bf{IUH GI !Pit wlr.c11. ,~, •• we\
no tft !rrlto!lon '"''" SMOU I" Ill• Loi Ang~!H 8 1,111 Tiie Alr l'otlu!lon
c ""iro! Dl$1flct will' ml•lmum <>IOM
leYtl1 el .10 P1rl1 oer "'llllon Dt•t\ o! t lr werr •Kordfd In lP>t 1out,,.,1S!
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of your best
frie 1Kls have a new address. 1
8Nchet W9rt 'u11nv 1r.cl wiMy
11'9M wtt"I 1111• to with !hr w11tr
"Mou11111n, Wff't ptr!lf clo<Jll• •I l•me~ wll!I 1lrc1n't 1111•1 !,Ill 10 ~
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h;,Pl1 11 rt .or! 11w t1 rtntfd l1orn
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Hlfl'tt '"'""' trom 4J to $1 111 ,,,..
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Glendale Federal Savings
has moved to Harbor Center.
Lock, stock and safe. People too.
·We're now ri~t on the
corner of Harbor Boulevard and
Wilson, so if you're looking for
Glendale's famous friendly serl-
1ce, escrows, Umpteen Ways To
Save or great new low rates on
home loans, look no furthe r.
Glendale Federa l/Costa tv\esa
is just as nice as it ever was. And
'.lot~ more convenient.
Mon.-ThJJ.r. 94, . .
Fri. 9-0.
Ghndalc l'eclcnll S.••l!P·Costa Mesa
. CG!Nrol llnor lolit1•d• • A (!llllMlf c:.llr)
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Court Will Rule
On Residence Law
. Lasl1es Nixon
Sen. 1-lubert Humphrey
{0-~1inn.) ~said Sunday
the Nixon Administra-
tio n's economic policy
is disastrous. \\•eak·
kneed and ineffective.
Humphrey offered his
own three-point nation·
al incomes policy on a
nationwide te!efo'ision
interview.
United Fund
Gathers In
Record Sum
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
TN: Supreme Court agreed to-
day the rule next term wheth-
er states have the right to re-
quire a one.year residency of
anyone wishing to vote in 1tate
elections,
Accepted for re'View and a
written decision was an appeal
by the state of Tennessee from
a Jo"·er court decision which
declared the state's residency
requirement unconstituticma!. ' . Thirty.two other states have
l'l similar one-year waiting
period. Fifteen others have
a six-month law : one requires
Rail Unions
Still Work;
No Contracts
STARS
By Tbe AsSo<'iatcd Press
Canvassers for the United
Fund raised a record $8.14
million in more than 2.000
American cities in 19711, but
the total was y,·cll below the
campaign goal for the ye ar.
Syd11ey 011111rr ;, •"• •' "'• w•rkl'1 9reet •1Mlot•tt. Hb
·c:ol11m" 11 •"' •f the DAILY l'lLOr s ,,.. •• f••fllNI,
Allhough 1970 giving was up
2.1 percent over the 1969 total.
It fell short of' the. 8 percent
increase scl as a goal, ac-
cording to Hoy,·ard Studd, vice
president of United Way o!
America.
"We went into the year
kno y,·jng it v.·asn't going to
be easy," he said. "But \\'htn
you consider the economic
climate of 1970, any business
Would be happy with the kind
of resutls v.•e got."
You'te invited to May Co and Vogue 's
prints I n patches
• f•bric-f.,hion show, Frid•y, Morch S, 7:00 p.m.
Come experience ~ f~shion adventure. Of prints, new
brights, slit)ier y softs. •nd light crispy f•bric . All snipped ,
tucked, ruffled . draped and stitched into an unfo~qettable
fashion show. There's inspirati i!Sn ! With print on print.
T ai1ored patches. And . just about everything from
overalls to a bridal gown. Come see
Prints n Patches ... Let's Create.
MA'YCO
m•y co. iouth coeit pleie, ,.n die90 fwy ,
et bri,tol, cost• mese : 54lt-~ltl
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DAIL V PILOT 5
Kialoa Sets Record
Newport Yacht Cops Catalina Race
Stephens' new S 6 ·to ot... esults ·in both the Calallnt
;iluminum speedster Lightning Island and Oil Island race1 :
from St. F'r'C; Class B winner c.-1111111 1111114 ••<•
Bl N rl•• -sk·ppc OVEllAll Ul rW,Aw TrODl'IYI -Ill was ue o uoer, ......-I r· "Tib&K111 c11 M1m11. N111t smun, eve,
ed by Su llivan and .Gordon o( tl> S!11r, LloYO Paw1tl. LI YC.
Ye ·-" •· Cl D · CLASS A (l•11-nr111<1lmt<' lrOOllYI LA : •nu. t..... ass win· tw~. -~~~ y~l: fff"itr~ro. •rr_irwi ner wall the Cal-SS Whimsey CLA5S I -""""' EcldY r.-vl II)
JI, skippered by tfugh Rogers, 21'f1,,~:.:i':~.'~¥l, fJft'.:OnJi~e~: LAYC Cnlom•~· LIY . ' CLASS C -ti T1b1,,a, (tl M1m!t t Fifty-seven yachts started flJ Ste•.
lhe race and 11 dropped out 1n~L!~.~ •. -JJ~1 L~~ml~~~J:'i !JI
because of gear failures and Ctnlv•l•n. 't;1f~1m't1 lt'•c. c.
crew fatigue. There was 11~L•l[111 "•. e 4~1, ~t''nzf Ji;~':.:
reported!}' one dis masl ing but l~r.ai~.·~rv,L•~c, u\' "'1M 1•· Raw
::~~ :.::,::
Want toido·your bit
for co11Se1 vc1tion?
One 'Wa'i is to check out the use of energy right in)'OUl'CMn home.
Energy Ja enentlal to th$ your home. You'll be dollars ahead in
economy and to the enviroD!llellt..1 the long.run with proper insulation. '
Without it nearly everything in Incidentally, most homes with electric
your home would atop, including heat are already insulated.
cooking, heating, cooling,
'television viewing and your
water supply.
Outside, most factories would
shutdown.
From time to time other mections
of the nation have faced a
•hortqe of energy-electricity
and fuels auch as oil, coal and
natural gas.
So far, there has be on no shortage
of electricity here and no short-
age of fuels for your residential
requirements. But even 'so, why
use more energy than you really
need-whatever the type?
By not wasting energy you'll be
helping conserve our country's
natural resources, which in tnrn
contributes to the protection of
the environment.
Here are a few auggestiona to
consider:
O Check your home's insulation .
Youeould be using up to 50 % more
energy than necessary to heat or cool
•
·o For the-same reason, install .
weather stripping on doors and ~
windows.
D Keep your damper in your
fireplace closed when not in use.
0 When the weather gets very hot
or cold, draw your drapes and
curtains. Thi s will help reduce the
demands on your heating or air-
conditioning systems.
O If you leave the heat on while
you sleep, set your thermostat
at 60°. Special thermostats are now
available to do thi s automatically.
The lower you set your thermostat,
night or day, the more energy you
will save.
D If you happen to have electric
heating, you probably have separate
thermostats for individual rooms.
If so, you can turn them down
in rooms not in use.
0 Don't use your oven to heat your
apartment or home.
D Turn off lights wlwi not in use.
That seems obvious, but some people
believe it costs more to turn light&·
off and on. Untrue. (An exception fs
fluorescent lights. Turn them off on!t
if you won't be using them with.in
30 minutes.)
O In summertime, set your air·
conditioning thermostat as high as
you can without beingUncomfortable.
Th e greater the difference between
the indoor and outdoor temperature,,
the more it costs you.
O To keep your house cooler, shade
window areas from direct sunlight.
Use awnings or plants that shield
windows.
0 To cut cooling costs, install an
exhaust fan in your attic. It can
reduce heat transmitted through
your ceiling.
O Check the temperaturesettingO!t
your water heater. Controls are set
too high in many homes. And fix
leaking faucets to save water and
energy.
0 Operate your dishwasher only
with a full load. Same holds true for
your washer and dryer.
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f OAILY PILOT _, __ _
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Mond.1y, M&reh }. 1971
Women'• w111z -tricot with a
sheer nylon front
over1ay ••• fashion
pastels ••• sizes S.M·L
Floral and soUd color towel
•nHmble• to mix 'n match and
save on now! Tile tone in solid
colors. Tulip Talk in floral
prints ••• all savings prioed.
Balh lowel · $1
Face towel 600
Wash towel 3()<
• •' •
•
199
Ponn Prest percale sheet apocloll
White never..;ron cotton polyester.
Fitted bottom sheets are Elasta·fiti:t.
Stock up at these penney·wise prtces.
Twin flat 239
or fitted sheets
Full size, flat or fitted, 2.99
Pillow cases 42 X 36", 2for1.51
Specl1I buy! ladies'
vinyl sandals with metal
high heel, extended sole
and metal trim.
Fashion styling ·
in Village colors.
Sizes 5 to 10.
. ·"t· . •'.j
4
•
• •
• • nn1ver
•
•
Special buy! Pennprestt!D Women'a knit tops.
Short sleeve polyester/cotton knit Choose
1 sohd colors or striped mock turtle and placket
style in S·M~t..
2 for •
Value. It still means s
enn
CHARGE THESE VALUES AT Y
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Mond4r. Mart~ I , 1'171, O.lll:V PILOT 1
I:
>
aving was never so exciting.
hoppirlg was·never such fun .
Men'• Permanent Pre11
'sport shirts. Pofyester/cotton.
short sleeves with long point or
buttondown collars. Solids or stripes,
S-M-L·XL
Fantastic slack 1alel
Men's flares itnd conventional
models in gria:t patterns and
solids ••• all the newest colors.
•
f
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• •
' 1 ' " ' • ' • . '
' ' • . "
"''
' .
' ' 'i ·~ i
> i ''i ~.
"
.. . ""
.. ' .
~ ,., ' • ' ..• ~ ' .:t
Special buy! Boys' woven
polyester/cotton sport shirts.
Easy care· never·iron Penn
Prestt11 in solids and stripes.
Long point Or buttondown
collars, sizes &-18.
4tor$5
Special buy!
Boys' Western style
round leg jeans. Flare
style in Penn Prest®
polyester/cotton denim in
navy, brass or avocado.
Sizes 6·18 reg., 6·16 slim.
2tor.$5
" something at Penneys.
Olfl
YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE l
'l
•
•
•
•
Spoclal buy I
Infants' short
sleeve cotton
knit polo shirts.
Pretty patterns
and colors. 1-4.
599
Tllo lllllletic 1hoa tllot
everyone'• weiring. Our
version : expanded vinyl
upper, drill backed with
contrasting stripes In
black on a white ground.
Cushion insoles. herring·
bona design molded rubber
boat soles. Men's. boys'
and youtl\$' sizes .
.,
•
t-..·-
longle.100%
cotton In~
cotora.S-1-4.'
.. ~
\\ I o " I' " ~~ ... ·~ ;~
I ..
I I
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DAD.Y PU..OT EDITORIAL PAGE
Two Airport Questions
•·\ve didn't even know Aeronaves de Mexico had
CivU Aeronautics Board approval (to serve Orange Coun·
ty Airport) until we read about ti recently in a trade
publication."
This statement by Robert J. Bremahan, Orange
County aviation director, capsulizes the lack Of commu·
nications that bas put the county into a new dilemma
involving the already overcrowded county airport.
Joseph Silberstein, head of the U.S. State Depart·
ment's aviation office, negotiated the department's bl·
lateral pact with ~fexico allowing airlines from both
nations to bid for more routes across the border. The
pact was approved last July 31.
Silberstein now contends that his department's
press releases spelled, out the agreement, including the
fact it included flights from Mexico to Orange County.
Apparently the releases went to eastern public•·
tions and never reached the west coaat or Orange Coun·
ty. At least no public announcement of the Civil Aero-
nautics Board (CAB) hearings reached here.
Now the county -and the beleaguered resident&
near the airport -face a fail accompli, or will if Presi·
dent Nixon aAProves the plan Match 9. He is expected
to do so.
• Aeronaves de Mexico plans one flight a day, begin·
ning April 23. This expan11on of activity m~ht be toler>
able but for the fact Bresnahan and tbe Airport Com·
mission contend the international service would open
the way for two domestic airlines which have been wait·
Ing for entry to county airport facilities.
Continental Airlines bas received CAB approval to
fir nine round trips doily between Orange County Air-
port and Seatile and Portland. Pacific Southwest Air·
lines h~ been awarded rout.es: to the San Francisco Bay
area but is said to be less enthusiastic than Continental
Jbout applying for space at the terminal.
Whatever Continental and PSA may eventually do,
the immediate consideration is two-fol(I:
-Can the President be. rersuaded to modify the
pact with Mexico in the face o the diplomatic complexi·
ties inherent in the Good Neighbor policy toward our
neighbor to the south?
-How can there be communications between the
county and the federal agencies involved which will per·
mit those directly affected -the airport nei~bbors -
to have a voice in the future of their own environment?
These are serious short· and long-range questions
that need to be answered -promptly, in the common
good. ·
Santa ~a Loses Again
Poor Santa Ana!
The county seat city thought it bad a deal with
the Irvine Co. to annex 92_3 ~cres of industrial land just
south of the Marine Corps Air Facility. And it did.
Only the Local Agency Formation Commission (LA·
FC). not being bound by any agreement between the Ir·
vine Co. and the city, apparently feels the 1963 agree-
ment makes no sense now in relation to the planned new
City of Irvine.
It's doubtful you'll bear any outcries from anyone
outside the county seat. In view of Santa Ana's school
aystem, down-at-the-heels mid-town area and general
regressiveness over the years, who'd really want to sign
up to be a voluntary Santa An2.11?
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1 DANGEROUS 12APIDS ! •
~1· ~., -
Great Negro Population Centers Now in North
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Getting
Through to
Our Children
Dear
Gloomy
Gus: Nixon's Policy on Blacks • Ill Cities
In thinking about communicatkm with
children, we have to st.art with the
nonverbal communication that 11 ac-
complished through holding, touchiDg,
caressing them -putting food in tbe.ir
mouths, playing pattycake, rocking thtm
to g}eep. To miM these experiences is
to fail to lay the foundations for the
verbal and abstract communications of
later Ille.
After children learn to talk tbert is
the matter of inter·
prtlation. S m a 11
children are recent
immigrants in our
midst. 11ley ba\'e
trouble botb in un-
derstanding and us-
ing language. The
reader mutt have
noticed many times.
as I havt, mothers
in sup ermark·
ets slapping their
children for disregarding orders which.
as any outside ~rver can tell. lhe
children simply have not understood.
t ONCE READ OF a 3-year-<>ld in
Chicago who fell out of an upper-story
window and was killed. The mother,
v.·ho was out of the house at the time,
was incredul.ous as well as grief-stricken.
•·t always spanked him for going near
the ope.n window," she said. As a matter
of fact she had just spanked him for
the same offense and bad felt so badly
about It thal 1he went to get him some
ice cream when the tragedy happened.
One cannot help wondering U the child
ever understood what he was spanked
for. The idea that he had not understood
-could hardly be expected to un-
derstand at hia age -apparently never
ciCcurred to the mother.
When we learn language, we don't
Just learn worda. We learn at the same
time the rules of language. This fad
Is simply proved. LIUle children oft.en
use such past tenses as "I runned all
the way to the park and swimmed in
the pool."
•·auNNEo·• A.ND ••JWimmed" are
words children do not learn from }tearing
.._others. Thty make them up by analogy
from other past tense forms they have
heard. This means that they learn not
ju!lt words, but also the rules for making,
as in this example, past tense forms.
The trouble Is that the English
language does not have a. consistenl
set ·of rules ror the past tense. for
spelling or for anything else. When the
child proves hlrrt8elf more logical than
the English language, he is criticized
or laughed at. It isn't fair !
Once when my daughter was little.
I was at my type.v.Titer and she was
Public education under lleqan
has regreased alarmingly -to
the point of near collaJ»e. Ex·
penditum: per pupil are down
from Ith to. 2.fth nationally; atate
aid is down, hurting property tax-
payers; teacher salaries have
slipped. and 'now tenure is threat·
ened. It's appalling and fright.n-
ing!
-S. A. R.
on the floor drawing pidures. Suddenly
·the said, "I want to aee the popentole."
I wenl on typing -lhen llopped
and said, "What?"
She said, "I want to aee the popentole."
"Did you say popentole!"
I WAS PUZZLED, but in a few
moments I fugured it out. "You mean
like last Sunday, you want to go to
Lincoln Park and see the totempole?"
''Yes," ahe gaid.
Something many or us overlook Is
the tnmendow: value of mtasage-
acbowledgement. Not "1 agree (or
disagree) with you," nor ••niat's an
excellent (or sillyl idea," but simply
the acknowledgement. "I know you're
around. I htard what you said." What
wu so rtvealing about this incident
ts that she sat singing to herself for
another 20 minutes while she played,
obviously happy • that she bad. com·
municated her message.
A COMMON NAIVE assumption Is
that the way to communicate is to
teD 'em, then tell 'em again, and if
they still don't mind, hit 'em.
Jn Willard Motley's no ve l, "Knock on
Any Door," the central character Nick
ends up in tht death cell convicted
ef murder after a Jong career of delin·
quency and crime. ln the background
of this career Are intense hatred and
fear of his father.
The father is shaken by his son's
terrible fate. "I can't understand it,"
the father says. •·1 told hi.m and told
him and told him, and I always whipped
him when he did wrong."
Btrr THE BOY tn the death cell
doesn't underltand the source of his
trouble.a any more than the father does.
He gives h.ia aunt, who callJ on him
in hia death cell, the following ad vice
for bringing up his newborn nephew:
"Don't let what happened to me happen
to him, Aunt Rosa. Beat the hell out
of him, Aunt Rosa. See that he does
right.''
So th.is whole absurd. self-defeating"
pattern of reliance upon violence as
lhe ultimate method of communication
ts l'&SSed on from generation to genera·
tlon. •
By S. I. Hayakawa
President
San f'rancl1cn State College
~-------By George--------·
Dear George:
Can you see calor les and
vitamins In a microscope and what
do they look like?
Dear Sfudent:
STUDEt-.'T ..,
VitRmln~ are those healthy little
rar.cals. always nexing the.Ir biceps
and 11how1ng off. Ca lories ire the
fat little slobs. Good .._ luck wtth
your homework -after all, tbaf1
what I'm here for. (7)
Dear George:
I have noticed that everal
romediRns. not to mention lhe lt te-
" ' --
hour talk 1ho\f mederators, are
forever pickin& up your gags -
but you seldom get credit. Why
Is this?
YOUR FAN
Dear'V.F.:
I think It'• because they've
checked my credit rating. I may
be the only columnist a:oing who
has been turned down as a bad
risk for Social Security.
(Send your problems to Gtorge.
He can't be much worse o(f than
he ia.l
WASHINGTON -The gr.at Negro
population centera el the nation Are
now in the northern cities -New York,
Chicago, Philadelphia, Los Angeles,
Detroit, Washington. There is eome
rnovemenl tnto the :suburbs but the
atronger black trend
Js upward in the
central cities which
the whites have
been fleeing in un-
pr~ented numb-
era.
ThJs pressure will
inevitably move to-
ward making Presi·
dent NIJ:oo's racial
pollciea more and
more difficult to sustain and· more con·
troversial as lime goes on. When, for
example, a city like Chicago had a few
score thousands of Negroes it was at
least practical to talk in terma of quali·
ty to the extent that it was economically
feasible.
But now, according to the latest census
reports, there are 1,103,000 Negroes in
the city of Chicago, or approximately
ene-third of the central city popu1ation. or 17 large cities with one-third or
more black population, 10 are in the
North which is' a reversal of conditions
as they formerly t:}isted when the
nation'• black popuflition was more
heavily concentrated in the South.
THIS CREATES NOT ONLY bigher
political pressure in the n a t I o n • 1
population centers, but a crisis of
government related to the cost of welfare
and city services and the ability to
raise revenue whlch ls be c o m I n g
intolerable.
Nixon's policy with respect. to this
t.'OncentraUon is thi!: A. The law requires
the maintenance of racially open housing.
The law shall be enfor~ed. B. The law
does not require the federal government
to aubs.idize housing in the suburbs for
blacks as a form of forced integration.
Under existing circumstances that will
not be done.
Hia housing policy. therefore. is: similar
In principle to his opposition to busing
for the purpose of school integration.
LEAVING . ASIDE the moral and
ethical problems involved. the question
arises on whether or not his position
is tenable, politically anjl
administratively. In view of th'
population pressures. Is it possible in
the long run to avoid policies which
will subsidiu the movement of a part
cf the black popu1aUon out of the central
cities into the only place they could
go. the suburban areas?
Evidence has been found that when
movement to the suburbs does occur
it tends to create new enclaves of blacks
so that the social objective of mixed
communities is orten not achieved, at
least to the degree desired.
Social objectives, however. might
conceivably have to take second place
to the urban problems created by a
continuation or such pressures as have
made Chicago. Detroit, St. Louis,
Philadelphia mort than one-third blac.k.
AGAIN EXCLUDING matters o [
morality and social justice. the problem
becomes economic and administrative.
Economic because the income of blacks
is lower than whites. Administrative
because at the lower levels the problem&
of we.Hare and crime Increase.
. Two conflicting social objectives might
thus bave to give way. First, that
ability to pay alone shall continue to
determine where blacks shall live.
Second, the breaking down the barriers
in the suburbs will disperse the black
popu1ations widely into m i x e d
communities.
Reexamination of these fixed ideas
may be the only alternative to the great
cit;es of the North beconilng -except
for the aged and the rich -two thirds
black and poor in the ne1t couple of
dec.ades.
It would be very hard to find anyone
wist. enough to say just y,•hat wiU have
to give way under I.he pressure of the
increasing .black concentrallon Jn the
nalion's major cities.
BUT IT JS INESCAPABLE that this
v.•ill bring pressures on Nixon's policy
of self-determination or the rares. Self-
determination, as it now applies in the
matter of housing, wou ld most certainly
mean a continuation of the trend wh icll
the Census Bureau has now measured,
a steady enlargemen t of areas wholly
black in many major cities or the nation.
This v.·ould be "benign neglect" carried
somewhat beyond the limits lhe policy
was designed for. y,·hich wa :s a kind
of cooling off and adjustment in the
social relationship between the ra ces
until a more reasonable c 1 i m a t e
prevailed.
On"e senses in lhe Nixon administration
an underlying despair over _finding
workable solutions to such problem! as
racial over--concentration in the cities,
and the feeling that Negro leaders are
asking: for more than any administration
can possibly deliver. This may be so.
but the effort to find solutions will have
to conlinue and in the more reasonable
climate now prevailing could be sought
v.•lth more energy. ...
Social Security Hike May Be Larger
WASHINGTON -The price tag Is
going up on that Social Security increase
soon to be pmed by Congress.
A serious move is afoot in the Senate
to raise it to 20 percent.
If anything comes of It. tha t would
quadruple the hike as originally projected
some nine months ago.
Last spring the House overwhelminaly
passed a 5 perc.ent boosL But while
sentiment for a Social Security increase
was just as strong in the Senate. action
was stalled in the Finance Committee.
by the effort of Sen. Russell Long.
D-La .• chairman, to combine this popular
legislation with President NI t on ·s
intensely controversial family assistance
plan.
, ...... r._.-~ . .,.-. ....,..
, ' I )
! Allen·Goldsm~th
~· 1, • ' ..J ~,,.__.____ } . '"'
Social Security increase will be 10
percent or more -aQd if more. how
much more. All &ides are agreed that
whatevtr the raise, il's to be, retroactive
to January J.
As happened last year. the impelling
force of a hike of more than 10 percent
centers in the Senate -specifically
In the Finance Committee, in charge
of this legislation.
There is considerable support in this
key committee for upping t b e
contemplated raise lo 20 percent.
ITS BACKERS are claiming that's
favored by seven of the nine Democratic
committeemen. They also note as
!Significant thal five of the seven
Republican committeemen are up for
re-election next year.
Unqueslior.ably that factor will play
a role -especiaUy with the Democrats
vigorously pressing for 20 percent.
Also ce rtain to exert we ight is a riscal
argument the Democrats already. are
propounding .
In brief -lt"s that a 20 per~nt
across-the-board hike can be paid without
increasing Social Security taxes because
cf a stupendous accu mulating reserve.
Citing Social Securit)' Administratioo
Ft.NALLY, IN December. shortly
berore the session was due to expire,
the Senate approved a 10 percent raise
by an 80 to O vote.
But the bipartisan teadeh of the House
Vt'ays and Meana Committee, where th!!.
What ls Really Meant
increase otlginated .even m oniJI: 1 ... Thoughts at Lar1e1
previously, ~rusquely refused to conSlder Speaki~g of fathers and 'sons, ~hen
the Senate a bela.ted measure. /\J a the distrait parent of a young r.rimlnal
consequence. nothing was done when cries out in self-justification, •·1 gave
Congress had to close down. him everything he wanted," whal the
When the new Congress convened late parent really means is "I ga ve. him
last J!!Onth, the Ways ancl Mean~ nolhing he reall y needed."
Comm1tU:e leaders had a change of heart
~Md announced they now favored the
Stnate's 10 percent figure.
At this point President N I I o n
recommended a 6 percent hike.
THAT p'noPOSAL is being Ignored
In both branches of Congress -by
Republicans as v.•e\I as Democra ts.
The 1_ncy question now is 'o\'hether the
Quotes
David F1el1bb1eker, 33. scion of noled
fJnandaJ famUy, new beadma5ter of SF'
1trJ'1 1chool -"All to our t>encflt Is the
increasing numbtr of 8f0uent people
who are takin~ positions that are nnl
financially rewarding , such as teaching."
• •
Tl's gelling close to
that time of year
when il 's worth re·
flee ting OR F r .a n k
Sullivan's heartfelt
comment: ''To pro-
duce an income tax
return that h.as an)'
depth to IL one m~ust
hs ve Lived -and
Suffered.'' • •
•
•
~1otorlsts drive more carefully for two
er three block!! after witnessing an ac·
cident or seeing a wreck" on the road,
this is about the limit of mankind's
presen l c11paclty for remtmbrance of
things past. • • •
"Thal chubby woman certainly bas
no bu siness wear ing slacks," snickered
the knock-kneed man with 3 paunch
it~ he strode out of the clubhouse in
a polo shirt and Ber1nuda shorts. • • •
Finding on my desk 11 review copy
of a new (anrl rather silly}·book called
"Was Jesus Marr ied?'' my curi~ity im·
pelled me to check lhe: Library ol
~ngress on the fi\•e people who have
Had lhe""Tn0$t books ~ltte:n about tht!m;
they are. in erder named. Jesus.
Shakespeare, Lincoln, Washing ton and
NaPolton . • • •
The people ~·ho love themselves too
mu ch don't create nearly as much
mischief or misery in the world as
-those who hate themselves -ror Rlt
aggression beyond norm11I limits is A
m11n!fest.alion of ln!tnse and unconscious
self-hate.
---------_,_
figures . th~ Democral.s assert this
reserve amounts to $38.1 billion as of
today: will soar lo $44.7 billion by .!une
30, end of this fiscal year .. and to more
than $53 billion by the end of next
fiscal year, June 30, 1972.
TffiS Th1r.1ENSE rese rve Is constantly
growing despite a pay-out of more than
$30 billion annually to some 27 million
Social Security beneficiaries.
According to the Democrats. this Soci11t
Security reserve (or "surplus." as they
call it) is covertly being used for various
purposes. A I lb o ugh admitting they
~n't prove it, they suspect it's being
applied as interest on the nearly MOO
billion national debt, and to help finance
the Vietnam war.
Interest on the gigantic national debt
Is now running around $20 billion a ·
year -a huge debt in itself.
These dizzying figures will be tos5ed
around freely when the House and Senate
take up the Social Security issue in
the coming weeks. They are bound t.n
have Impact. -combined with the
uncertain elections looming next year.
By RObcrt S. Allen
and John A. Goldsmltb
--~--
Monday, March 1. 1971
The editorial p<Jge of the: Da ily I
Pi loi seeks to \inform and. stlm.-1
1date rcaders.Jw presenting thi.J
newspaper's opinions and com-
mc11tary on topics of 1nt.ere1 t
ond signfficonce , bu providitlQ a 1
foritm for t/1c rxp ression oJ
our rea ders' opin1011s, a-nd h!J
presenting the diverse view·
points of informed observer1
ancj spoke smen on topics of tlte
da!J.
Robert N. \Vccd, Publi~her
l
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QUEENIE -"' By Phil lnterlancll
"I'll have the regula?' line of malarkey, the mediocre
swipe at the windshield, and the super gasoline."
CHECKING
•UP•
Here's Why Gals
Tl1row So Funny
·-ALL W0~1EN tend lo be flavored cherry, strawberry.
knock·kneed. maybe y o u nectarine. coconut er pineap-
know. But they al.so lend to pie. Scented likewise .•..
be k n o c k • e I b o w e d , the And fingernails filed square
Jnedicoes say. That's why they are very very now, too. Not ·
look so funny when they try round, not pointed.
to skip rocks or throw darls MEN WHO STAND around
or toss pillov•s <it the cat 'vilh their arms folded across
, . , .YOUNG LADY. IF you their chests must be a
are one of those who can distinctive breed. llitler did
be described as pleasingly that. So did Mussolini. And
p!un1p, don't wear light-col· Napoleon. too. Men who stand
ored slacks and don·l tuck around \\'ith their ha n d s
in your blouse, remember clasped behind thei r backs
that. Such is the counsel of also are a di stinctive breed
a ladies' costume designer. maybe. Prince Philip does
NU !\1EROUS BAVARIAN that. So did John F. Kennedy.
!'t1EN 11t·ear leather shorts. Any And Gener al Eisenhoy,·er.
soldier y,·ho has served in Even the men who stand
Germany remembers that. around with their hands in
The record shO\\'S a crew of the ir pockets could b e
German sailors, decked out in distinctive breed. Like Walter
such lederhosen, once went Cronkite. Or the I a t e
ashore to swim off the Montgomery Clift. Or old Will
beautiful bi?ach of a South Rogers. Something revealing
Sea island. They did not know about how a man handles his
the islanders considere d hands, what?
animal hides a great delicacy. Those natives stole those Yottr questions and com· 11u:nt$ are welcomed and pants abandoned in the sand. 1vill be used i1i. ClfECKING
They stuffed lhcn1 \Yi t h ur wherever possible. Ad·
!o:e21wecd, boiled thcrn br isk!}', dress letters to L. /1-f. Boyd,
and ale thctn. Gourn1ets, r . O. Box 187s. Newport
" .... '
Mond.,v. March 1, 1971 OAll Y PILOT 9
Mexi~ans Wreak Havo~ 011· Telephones
MEXICO CITY (UPI) -
The grafJiti on the &.Ide of
the public telephone booth
counseled : •·Get mad with
anyone but not with this
telephone."
Telefonos de MexlcO, the
M~i;lcan Telephone Company,
might ha ve applauded the
advice. It spends a half million
dollars a year in Mexico cit)'
alone fixing disabled pay
phones.
An average of one out of
five public phones is reported
out of order every month In
Mexico City , the result of
outright va~allsm a n d
uncootrolled angel' when the
pbone "swallows" a 2tkentavo
piece without providing a
connection.
Whole telephone booths have
been carried off, the booths
riddled with bullet holes, cords
cut, diallng discs removed and
speakers screwed off.
"We ha ve even had cases
of persons driving their cars
into the booths and smashing
them to smiU.ercens, '1 said
Mariano Franco Mayoral, a
te.lepbo!le com parl y
spokesman.
Polle. recently arrested a
man and a woman who set
out on a bicycle every night
after midnight to rob the coin
boxes in the pay te.leptiones
in their neighborhood. They
were charged with stealing
$4.320 in a slx·month per'iod.
If nothing Is stolen or
destroyed, the telephones are
rendered useless by t h e
forcing of foreign objects Jn\(I
the coin slots.
Everything from toothpicks,
bobbypins and buttons to
chewing gum have be e n
stuffed Into the slots by
persons trying to filch a free
phone call at the expense or
the telephone cotnpany. A
k>cal Call costs les's than two
cents.
Franco Mayor<1 I Sllid most
of the attacks on th(' 4,860
public telephones in .f\1exico
City occur in upper-class
resiQential neighborhoods and
not in 'M'orking-<:lass districls.
"lo t·h e working-class
di strict the. public phone is
liable to be the only means
oi con1munication and lhc
users of that phone are apt
to treat it as. if it were their
awn ," he said.
lie cited the 'reaction or 3
groa1> of ·users o! II public
phone in a fSoor district on
surprising some you I h s
1! r s I r o y I n g the public
telephone. "-'Phey had---lo be
restrained from I y n c h I n i
them,'' h' said.
On the uth'r hand, in·
Franco Mayoral'! v\,w, "the
rebels without cause in the
nicer neighbo rhoods
demonstrate their lnconform.
1\)' with society by dismantl·
ing the public telephones.''
The destruction or public
telephones in Mexieb is a
federal crime -considered
"an attack against the
channels o( communication."
Our ·59th Anniversary.
Saving w~ never so exciting.
Shopping was ·never such fun.
·'
lt '· ' '
Sale s19s
Reg. 219.95. Penncrestc upright
or c;:he1t freezer. 15 cu. fl upright
freezer has 541 pound capacity,
slide--out bulk storage basket, 2
adjustable sheives. 18 cu: fl chest
freezer has 628 pound capacity,
Sne
21.95
'
Save 30.95 on each
.-
I
I
' t·;
,
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I I ! . ., .
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Sal ~69 Re:g. 199.95, Save 30.9S. P•lllilCfftf-
. 4 pc. stereo component 1y1teftl. e 'AM/FM·FMS tuner, lull size changer,
four speaker sound system Vt walnut
enclosures. Dvst cover, connectino
cords.
' I
please note. Be ach, Cl1lif .. 92660.
ANOTJIER APPAR EL FAO ;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,I
among the sv.•ifL girls lately
is overalls \Vithout blouses.
Seems to be taking hold first
in Calirornia. unsurprisingly
.... And 1he cosmetic s men
are pulling out I 1 p s l i ck s
· 2 movable baskets, tum~er-type
lock with 2 keys. Both come in
white, avocado or harvest gold •••
color costs no more at Penneys.
Penncreat• 20 cu. ft. uprlghl
ftff'ZIM'. Reg. 289.95, Sale S231
P•rn11C1MI' 11 cu. rt. cbest
-
LOCAL
No olh•r ne w1p1p1r 11111 yo11
mor1, 1v1ry d1y, 1b11ut wh1t't
qoin9 en in th1 Gr11t1r Or1n9e
Co1.t thin th e OAJLY PILOT.
Beauty Bulletin
from Penneys:
When spring comes, be
ready with a Helene Curtis
'Springtime' perm,
including shampoo,
cut and styling.$10
Or, try the benefits
of Helene Curtis
'Incredible' conditioner,
with shampoo and sel.
3.88
~~w~~
•
l'\ILLl.ITOfOI
O•""""'•I~ '*'""" 7"" 11Mr lll·O'l
ttVii!TtMOTOW lfA(" 11,,.,uno!Ofl c-
11'111 Ooor, 19'1-nTI
••..O•T NAOll ,.,.. .... ·~
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O•"'*" "T"* City~ ~
trHz• Reg. 219.95, Sate $191
P-.iacrnt• 23 ca. ft. chMt
frffzer. Reg. 259.95, Sale ma
P•nncreat• 11 cu. ft. uprlght
tr••zer. Reg. 259.95. Sale $231
I '
Save
21.95
'Reg. 279.15. Penncresl• lmperlel 14 cu. ft.
refrla-r•tor. Has 101 ¥2 pound freezer capacity,
porcelain enamel finish crispers and meat pan.
Rolls out for easy cleaning. Completely frost
free. White. coppertone, avocado or harvest
gold •.• color costs no more at Penneys.
Perfncre1te lmperlal 17 cu. ft. troet free refrlgeretor/frttztr.
White, coppertone, avocado or harvest gOld.
Reg. 359.95, Sne 31 .95. $olo $321
Penncre1t• lmpertel 17 cu. fL refrigerator/freezer with
lee-maker. White, coppertone, avocado or harvest gold.
Reg. 399.95. S ave 31.95. Sale $318
Reg. 199.95, Save 30.'15 PeMCle.tr.
3 pc. stet'eo component system wilh
casselle recorder/player. AM/FM-
FMS tuner. BSR chan9er • .t track
cassette recorder. Microphone,b&ank
c.asseuc, dust co~r.
S I $169 Rog. 199.95. s .. e 30.95. Penn· a e crest \' "Contemporary" •IYI•
stereo console. AMIFM-FMS !u·
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r;f1 d1n9 doors. Walnut Vl'.!neer on
hardwood catunet.. _,_
Re fri gerators , free1ers , components end steraos available at these stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Center,
HUNTINGTON .CENTER, Huntington Beach, Buy it on Penney• Time Payment Plan. >'
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'. . ] 0 DAILY PILOT Mondiy, M.1rtli l , 1971
l ·Hunt for Missi1ig
r ' . .. ~ ·Coed Stepped Up
NAPA •APl - A search
re;:umed today in the ru~ged
hllls northeast of here for a
Seventh Day A d v e n tis l
sophomore coed missing from
Pacific Union College Angwin
11ince last Friday.
Napa County Sheriff Earl
Randol said there "' a s •·absolutely no association''
between the disappearanee of
Lynda Christine Kanes. 20, of
Por!er\·ille. and the Zodiae
mystery kitier who h as
operated in the San Francisco
Bav area before. Other of·
firers said. ho"·ever, that the
Zodiac could not be ruled out
as a possibility.
~1iss K.anes was last seen
Friday morning and her car
was.,Jourtd_,..wilh its radio blar-
ing that afternoon on lonely
Howell Mountain Ro ad
betweel] Angwin and St,
Helena. She had failed to show
up 11t a part time job she
had at the Meadowwood Coun·
try Club.
.There Vias 110 sign or a
struggle, said Sheriff's CRpl.
D'on Townsend. but a brassiere
and a windbrl':aker were found
nearby which "'ere identified
as hers.
1 Aa~trtittrntntl
Artificial Teeth Never·
Felt So Natural Before
Now ••• Plastic Cream Discovery
Revolutlonlzes Denture Wearlnc
For 1he f\nt ttme. '4:1ence otren • ... ani _,, co1'1-ft1flab/y. You may pl3~t1c cream that hold• dentlllft bile hardu, cbew bettu, ut mor1 as th<"y',.e nevtr ~n held before-naturally. •
forrnsan elastic membrane that lulp1 FlltODl!NT laeU for houn. Reei1t#
Ir.old y11w1 dn0Jw1u I~ tlr.1 nalur•l lu· moiJtlll'e. Denturea th1t tit llt.,... '"'·' ~! yaur MV!ll~. l<"ntial to health. See yoor denti1t I 1 ·, a rcvnl111 ronary di~covcry refU/arly. ~t tQY·lo-Wie F1xootP..'T
ta!led F1xooEl\.'T0 for da1lv home Denture Adheuvc Cream at all \I~. rU.S. Patent /J.003.988) drue: countcrg,
FlltoPl!Nl hold' dcnture& fi.rmcr
'
$2 Million
In Heroin
···Grabbed
•
SAN. FRANCISCO (AP)
U.S. Atty. James L. Browning
says -wiretap monitoring o(
phone calls between a Tijuana
supplier and a Fremont,
Calif., dealer resulted in
seizure of high grade heroin
worth nearly $2 million at
retail prices.
Flve men and four womrn
were arrested in the Saturday
night raids that netted nearly
seven kilograms of t h e
narcotic neatl y packaged in
c on t r a ce ptive-proph ylactic
rubbers, Browning tOld a Sun·
day news conference.
He said the investigation
and raids were planned by
the J ust i ce Department's
Organized Crir'ne Strike Force,
based in San Francisco.
An affidavit by Julius Beret..
ta, federal narcotics agent,
reported that the . wire ta p
phone moni tori ng pinpointed
the Feb. 22 heroin pickup in
"Tijuana JOd its delivery ta
a Hayward, Calif., home in·
side a spare automobile tire.
The wiretaps were aulhoriz.
ed by Oliver J. Carter, chief
judg& of the U.S. District
c:ourt in San Frauciseo:"
•
Youth Joins
Witnesses
For Manson
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
Steve Grogan, who ran away
from home al the age of 14
and later became one of
Charles Manson·s "family,"
has joined With the three
young women defendants in
the Tate trial in an attempt
to save the cult leader from
the gas chamber.
Grogan, 19, Was aworn in
Friday as a defense witnt:Sll
at the penalty part of the
trial of Manson, 36, and three
womefi codefendants. He told
Quake Insurance
Scarcity Probed
SACRAMENTO (A P)
"Very, very few persons In
California h1•e earthquake In·
suranoe, '' the chairman o1 the
Assembly F i n a n c e and
Insurance Committee said to-
day. "The concern of this
committee is to find out wliy."
Assemblyman Jack R. Fen-
ton (().Montebello), told his
CT1mmittee's hearing (In the
availability . ..and cost ef earth-
quake insurance that lt "is
available on the epen market
'
at rates that are n e t
necessarily prohibitive .••
"Are persOns Informed of
it! availability, (If is it that
people are just ao opUmistic
that they believe that an
earthquake will never hit
them?"
Fenton called the hearing
in the wake of the Feb. 9
Los 'Angeles quake which
caused an estimated $472
million in damage.
-
how he joined the so-called
''family" Jiving at the Spahn
• ~Ranch near here.
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Del:4rate now. U1e Penney& time payment plan.
'
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He was ta resume his
testimony today and tell what , be knows of the killing cf
grocer Leno LaBianca and hia
wife in August·. ~f 1969, the ·•
night alter actre!fs Sharon
Ta te and four other persons
were murdered at her rented
Benedict Canyon -home.
Reagan Set
To U~eil
Reform Plan
SACRAMENTO !AP)
Gov. Reagan, denied a
legi11lative larum in
Sacramento, will go to Los
Angeles Wednesd:ay to unveil
his welfare reform plan to
an audience of businessmen
and JndusttialisUI.
The Republican governor
announced over the weekend
he had accepted the invitatian -
ol Town Hall of Loe Angeles
to present his plan at a IJ)E!Cial
luncheon meeting at t he
Biltmore Hotel.
Reagan had wan~d to sub-
mit the plan to the California
Legislature in a joint 15ession
(If the Senate and Assembly,
but the Senate's DemQCl'alic
leader rejected him on Friday.
with
.emergenc~
expenses?'
wi uy "yet" to 2,302 loans every week-for
medlcal exponees, blU conaolldatlon, any good
reason.
on approval, you can borrow from $100 to
$5,000, or more; and you'll get our Money-Back
Guarantee (if you find you can do better, return
the money within 5 days at no coat to you}.
And Y0'1J11 gel feat aervlce. You can have the
money the same day your loan Is approved.
Call us today to find out how much your loan
wlll cost.
Morris Plan
673-3700
Newport l11eh -3700 Newport loul1v1rd
Other omen "roughout Ca1itoml1
NOWI LbNG BEACH IS SHORTER
TO NORTHERN CALIFORNIA.
One Large BxlO and
' Six Lovely Wallet-Size
Portraits of Your · Child
5aa
Hurry In now for the most spec:tacular portrait
event In town! You'll get a big, beautiful Bx10
for you and six charming wallet-size for family
and friends. A lino portrait of your child II
always a warm and wanted gift. Remember •••
you con charge It at Penneysl
Lne11• ' ·("
www ....... ....
, ..... 410 .. ~ w ._, .,,.nn
OMtlle -n. ~ ,.._..
•••••. WClf
_,.Rilt.:t~Jn
,..-..... ... Long Beach to Verdes, Wilmington, Torrance, etc.),
,_.. OI ~ Los Angeles (Orange County, Palos
Tiiis S~ JO'-' San Francltco $18 long.Be~hjs like h.ftving your own private . ~ D1p *° S.~ Including tax. airport. ?Ou don't have to figh t the free~ Leave Long Beach: I I I Th • Now you can lly PSA rrom Long Beach 7:4o am way traffic to L.A. nternat ona. ere 1
Airport to Sti n Fra ncisco. Four limes a day. 10:45 am easy pa rking. And the crowds haven't
Mor9 on ·weekends. More flights than 1 :30 pm found II yet. Next time you head north
<:30 pm (or south), haad for Long Bea ch Nrport 1ny other airline. Connect ions to Sacra-Mon thru Thurs & Sat. by my of your trave~egent end PSA . menlo. Or, avoid the freeway and fly lo . MoreflightsFrl&Sun. air.a +meW111Ja-San Diego. If you live any place south of '-----------' r-.,. ... 1 --
•
•
-For The
Record
Deatlo Notices
At.IUCkllf
Monday, March l , 1971 OAILV PILOT JJ
You Work Less
You ~ave Money
Keeps things cleaner without
effort, eliminates bath tub ring s
Soap and clothing last longer
Cl•I•• Arbl,i(klt, ..... l .. of 2002 M41Plt
Ave., Coif• Mtt•· 0..11 ol de11t1, F.ti·
ru11Y '11. !ul'Ylvld by Nrenll, Mr. ind
Mrf. Fr1nc:l1 Arb\K:klt; !Ollr broltltrs,
P•ut, DtSftW'ld, Mtrl!n Ind Knln; lhrtt
•Ill«•• S!ellt, L.orrtlnt I nd Darltnt. R-
1ry, toni.l\l', Moodtr, 1 PM, 81111: Co1t1
MIJI ChtHI. Re-.;letn Miil, Tulld1v.
10..:JIL.M\. SI. JHcblma_t.afblll((._Chutcf>~
lnrerrntflf, Good ShQ>htrd Ctmlllt,.,., 11111
Cost1 Mese Mortutl"o', D!rec10.-..
'I HAVE FAITH IN COMMON SENSE OF OROINARY PEOPLE'
--or.-JoturGcildsmlth-T1lk1 Abour-SolutionMo-Pollutio•n-------1--t
CAI.Tiit
Edl\I C1rter. l4lt E, llurton 51., Anthtlm.
0111 of dtlth, Febr ... .., 11. SUrvlvtd br
nu1Mnd, WtY~ Ct rtw. St,....fcts, Wed-~e!Cltr, 1 PM, Ptell; FtmllY Cotonltl
Funertl Homt.
DAVIS
Cl.on.!, Oav!s. '301 Wtrl!fr Ave., SN CI
,11, Hunlln¢M llHth. Dtlt of 119tth,
Fet1n11"rv 27, Survived br wilt, k111Mrlnt.
M the "-it; llt!tr, Mrs. Erl-i91rtv!1 ~1lltn, Nev..:11. S"vJc., will be htld
Tue1d1Y, l"1Kllk:: VI-Chtpt!, wltll ll:ll'V,
Jame• Kirt. olflCi•!l"9. lnlerrntM, P1cl!lc-
Vitw M.-morl•I '•rk. Directed bY Ptclllc View Mortu.,•y,
Doctor Says En,vironment
Decisions 'Up to People'
Ohbn
Sparkle
Ge-atkto
Baby'1Sld11
Ask About Sears Con~nt Credit Plans
Complete Inslallalion Available! Jusl Ask!
, l'OJl:D
Peter A!n$Ft Ford. A" 20, or 11lo6Q H1s-
ror. G1rd1• Grov .. D1lt of de111!." Fet>-
•u•rv 1$. Su..,lved bY motlltr, E"Uw Ford,
Garden Grt1Y11 1l•ltr1, Miu Zin Ford,
G1rdt11 Grov1; Mro. !ll•nlf' l"tr...,., Cc1t1
Mn•; Mri. Roberll 8ulllno, $1n Dlt11<>.
Servlcet, Tue.Illy, 10::1> AM, Westclllf
(11•"1, "!Ill\ Mr. Leo Robin offlci.11..,.
ln!1rme11t, El Toro Ctmere,...,, Watcllff
cn111er Mortu1rv, M6-491, D!r1c14,
HALEY
Jo•ePh Clffntnl Ht!tY. 161!2 !lrtmhtll
ltnt , H11nli"11lcn llt•ch. Dtlt of <fttlh,
Ftb'1Jt rv 17. Survived by wire, M1ry9!;
"'"'· P1tr lck •rnf Jos"'n1 mo!htr. Mr1. Slell1 01vb. Services. Tutsd1y, 1"i AM,
Pffk P1mlly Col..,,1•1 Funere! Homt.
Hl!llNANDl!l
Edward l . Hern1ndez. Alt U, ol 211]
1-i,u ..... 1 SI .. Cot!• Meu. D•I• of dNlh,
Fi!'b.,.1rv 27. Survived by ••ren11, Mr.
#'>d Mrs. Louis Hern1nder; two broll!t,.,
Miclloel •nd Mark; sister, Lind•: lrlrnf·
rnorher, Mn. Annt ICenntdy, WYC<ni"9.
R"5<'rY,·....,1ollt. Monday, 7 PM. RHC!Uletn
Miu, Twldly, • AM, bc!h •I SI. J ....
cnlml Catholic Church. 1nltrment, Gocd ·
Sheollt•d Cemtftrv. lhl" Colli Mew
Mortutl'Y, Dir...,tors.
KNOlll"I'
Ger!rudt Knor1to. A" 1~. cf 'tlO HtWPOrt
!llvd .. No. t•, Cc111 Mt!I. Ot1t ol d"lh,
Ftb•u•rv a . Survived bv l>u1~11d. ltMl-
erl P. Knorpp, of Ntw Vork; ion. Jo/In
C. Kn(!rp"' d1uthllr, C1rol Knorpp; 1lir
t••. Mrs. ~!h MC!!!!!J. Ind 111{.tf t •J..._nd·
c~lldrt!', ell of Ne,. Yort. S1ryfct1 pend-
ln11 1! Bell l!lro•lfwav M~rlu1rv.
OJIMSIEE
Allen E. Ormsbee. 211 V!1 Eboll. NtwPOrt
Beach. O.t1 of de1th, FK.,.t•Y 71. S11•·
vived by 1-l1!tr. Mrl. Prlcel\1 MOrfl\ou1e.
New Y~ St NlCt l will be lltld Tutselav,
M11rch 1, 11:.10 AM, St. Jlmt1 E1t!oc:o1ttl
Cl>,.rcll, wllh Rev. John B. A1Mr 11ttl.
~l1tin11. 1nurnment, P1clf1c Vltw Mtmo•·
i~I Ptrk. P1clflc \lltw Mor1Y1ry, Dlrt c·
tori.
PHILLIPS
H1rrv Fr1ncl1 Phllll111. •77 $. C1!11Tn1 SI.,
Letun1 llffCh. D1!e of del!h, Ftb•u•rv
''· Surv!v-.1 bv dluthttf', Mr1. L1ur1
Y1111ev. NewDOrl Bt1i:h; twin brother.
H&ry~ Phlll!Pt. Yuc1l1t1, Cel!I., lhrH
1illert, Mrs. M•l>el Evt. Mn . habel1
Morie tnd Mro. Vlolt! Suddbrock, •II ol
K~n•ll; 1ix tranc!chlld•tn. •rte greet·
~r&n<lcllild. Se..,1ce1, TutSC!tY, 11 AM,
Pre1aytMl&n Communlly Chvrch. lttun•
fl~ech, wl!l'I Or. 0111•• Turner otflclt tl...,,
lnlt rm""r, P1clnt VteW Mffno•l•I Pt•t.
~h•lltr L1•un1 Bt•<h Mol'tu1rv, Dlrtc·
tor•. RATTEY
Mtrlt l . Raitt' Age 1~. of 66£ W. 1'111
St .. Cost• Mt1t. D•!t of dt1lh, Feb"'""
1rv 16. Survlvfd by d1u11Mer, Mrs. Mid·
•ltn11 Morr11Cn; l<Nr b•ot111r1, Arm11>d,
Svlvi!. H<>ner\11 •r>d Emllt Cote, tTI If
Cenede; flvt gren<lchildrtn •"'II tw& t reat.
9rendchlldren, Ro,...,, Tun<lev. 7 PM,
!loll 8ro1cfW1Y Cntpet. Reciuletn Mitt.
WP<!netdar, t AM, St Jo1c!\!m1 C1t!>ol!c
C~urch. Interment, Ho!v Cron Cunetery.
Bell llrotdWIY Mortu•..,, Dlrr<loo.
RtTSCHEL
Edn• M. Rl!Jthel. 308 M1rl90ld Av,.,
(O•Ofll dtl Mar. Dete Gf dt1th, FobrutrY
76. su .... lved bY tw1b11'd, Jl•vmolld C. J.
Pir1chel, Cor11n1 dtl Ml•; 1l1lfr, AmY
WM•co11, M111l11, C1lllcrnl1; n•chew,
Ar'f'O_nd WonAcotr. Wt•I Ccvln1. Services
wllf be held We'dnt1dlY, Merch '· TT AM.
Ped!lc Vie-w Chtotl, with Rtv. J1mt'
Kirlc 111<1 ll>t Order of tht E111trn Sttr
Gfflcielln11. Interment. P1clfic View Me-
mcri1I Perk. Peclllc View MorlvtrY. Oi-
"'-i'tttors.
SYKES
,lime F. Svk••· A9t 76. cf lJI Tre11ure
l•l1nd, Sau!ll L1gun1. D•lt of de1111, Ftb-
ruorv 17. SUNlvtd by hu1b1nd, 5vdnov;
10n. Artl'lur. Mtmcrl&! 10..,lce-s. today,
l\ond•Y· l:JO PM, McCormick L1gun1 ~-Dr~ Chep•I, with Rev. fleird (cltln ol
!t, M1rv• £1tl1cop11 Church. eUlcT1tlnt.
Pdv•1t ln1t1menl. McCormick L•eunt
B!eth Morfuerv, Dlrtclcrs. VAi<! OOR!l<I R e~• Ritt Van Doren . .&.~H' ••· ol "'°
Minorct Plac•. Co~la MIJM. Oale cl
dta!n, Fe-t>ru1...,. ?ii. S\lrylved bv lour S<M'll• J~n. p1111, J!-rt tl>d J1mtl Vtn Oortn:
olauvntor, Mn. lltrnlct (hu!t; U t••rnf·
children: Or>t trtal·t•lfldthlM. Rosarv,
Tve•day, 1::11 PM. Re<1ultm M~H. Wed·
nesdiv, 10 AM. both 1! ST. Jchn Ille 811>·
tit! Ca!ho!ic Church. B•ltt Costa MeSI
Mortu1ry, Direc!c.rl. WOO OS
l:rne-st La""°" Wnad' Sr, 190ll Wocd·.v1rof
St Huntinoton 8t1ch. O•!e cl de1lll,
F;bru••Y ?ii. Survlv•d by wife. Evt llnti
d.ouvt11trJ, H11•el G•"'"'" 1nd Fr1ncl1 v;~Ts~; "'"· Ernt1I Woods Jr.; brctll•fl,
Jotin, R alc~ 1nd J. E. Wocd\; 1l1t1r.
("cl Wond•: nlnf' tr1ndchlldre111 l!\tH' 1real·~r111<1<.hlldren. Servlct1. TuHdav, 1
PM, SI. Ansolm'I Eolot""ll Church. 01·
<"tied by P"k Ftmi!Y Colonial Funtr•I
Home.
ARBUCKLE & SON
\VESTCLIFF l\fORTUARV
427 E. 17th St. Costa Me111
641>4881 • BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona del !\tar ... OR 3·1450
Costa Mesa ...... Ml &-W4 • •• BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Costa l\1eu
U Hl33 • McCORMICK LAGUNA '
BEACH MORTUARY
1795 Lapna CanyOI Rod.
491-9411 • PACIFIC VIEW
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
IRVINE -M'lal does an
expert in the fi eld of pollution
and public health think of
other so-called experts v.·ho
are forecasting man's doom
through pollution? ·
"I think this situation calls
for a good deal more maturity
all around," s8.ys Dr. John
Goldsmith, head of t h e
Environmental Epidemiology
Unit of the state Department
of Public Health.
"Especially on the part of
experts who assume their
values are everyone's values.
This should be a Voided."
Goldsmith, who is -visiting
UC Itvine this quarter as a
Regents' (lecturer, is not the
doom·saylng v a r i e t y of
environmental expert.
As he sees it, his function
is_ to inf,orm l@Plul.ex.i.lting
and potential health hazards,
"but the decisions must be
left to the people."
"l have a great deal of
faith in the common sense
of ordinary people and a high
regard for their instincts.
Experts have an obligation to
point out effects. of pollution,
such as the pollution
producing automobiles and the
instances of respiratory
disease.
"But the decision as to what
to do about it, if anything,
is up to the people," he said.
public is · ming more Goldsmi~'th believes t h e
potent in of dollars and
ballots as people become
better informed.
And the need to be infonned
on the effects of man 's
technology on nature is
critically important because
we 're living under conditions
the doctor describes as "an
ongoing experiment."
"We do things like construct
the Los Angeles freeway
system ~fore we know that
tpc large number of cars using
it are going to produce
em issions that create smog.
"And given these types of
problems, v•e need institutions
edu c ational and
Arbor Day
Activities
Outlined
The annual Arbor Day
observances on the Orange
County Fairgrounds in Costa
Mesa will have special
significance this year, three
decades after the area became
a military base.
Just at the outbreak of
\Vorld War II, the property
was designated the Santa Ana
Army Air Base and process£d
110,000· cadet aviators and
support personnel until close d.
Orange Coast residents are
invited to the Sunday. March
7 observance at the Mem orial
Garden •dicated to those
men whO" never returned from
combat.
Ceremonies begin at 2 p.m.
and will feature former Army
Air Corps member H. Rodger
Howell, now an ·attomey.
The spot in the center of
the fairgrounds at 83 Fair
Drive was designated as a
Stale Point of Historical
Interest in 1970, along with
Saddleback Mowitain visible
in the distance.
Boy Scout Troop 339 or
Costa Mesa and the 34-voice
Melodettes from.-W i 11 a rd
Junior High School, Santa
Ana, will be featured ..
governmental -that are constructively. \Ve should ~e
more realistic and can deal able to team so that We don t
in tentative decisions. make the same mistake -
"If v.·e construct an atomic power plan t and then find that or analogous mistakes -more
I Sears I
"'"~'"'""""'"DtQ.
. S<i, Coast Plaza 3333 Bristol St. Ph, 540.3333
Buena Park 8150 La Palma Ave. Pb, 82s.4400
Santa Ana 1716 So. Main St. Pb, 547-3311
than once," he said. it 's creating an eflvironmental.\-----------------------~--------------------------------------problem of some kind, we
should be pre pared t o
dismantle it.
"We can afford it, and I
think the people are willing
to pay for it." he said.
Golds mith said
g o v e n nmental institutions
appear lo be more fle xible
in environmental questions. ··1
think we're going through an
historical phase right now with
a ;:iarticu\arily art i c u I ate
legislature,'' he· commented.
·~~---•w-···-··"'"'~'I"'"·-: ... -, ........ ·--------------··-· .. ,-.. -.~··-~--"'· .......... ---·••"'-••---... -" .. -..... ,.,, ... , ;; _il)
But he also noted that
"leadership gaps" still exist
in the field of pollution.
His department , he said, has
creat~ _a.._filtuiiitlon_ .wb.~r~by
it points out areas where
decisions need lo be made
and money spent, and "I think
they (the Legislature) is
saying '\Ve've had enough,
don 't tell us anymore,' which
is unfortunate."
The ground swell public
opinion has helped activate
legislative a c t i o n says
Goldsmith, who describes anti·
pollution stands taken by
candidates in November's
election as "politically sexy".
He said he feels the ultimate
weapon or the public is
economics.
Some of the ·industries that
are major polluters -autos
and detergents -are victims
of their own adver\ising. As
an example, he cited the auto
industry's; claim about the
difficulties of repla cing the
existing aulo with an identical,
non-polluting one.
"This is a misconception.
'Ve are dri ving cars wlwse
performance characteristics
exceed use, so why do they
have to produce an electr ical
version of the existing suto?
"It's important to
remember,'' Goldsmith added
"lbat those industries which
are victims of their own
adve rtising are that way
because they are vulnerable
to public favor and this is
where public opinion can be
used most signifcantly."
"The important Lhing is to
look for these problems. It
is the responsibility each of
us has to assume. carry out
and see that it gets done.
··we. the experts, must
continue to inform pt<>ple of
what is happening, and the
public must continue lo learn
and then express itself.
''We must take ·care not
to blame the prob lems on
someone els~ and we must
se t goals that are positive,
not futile .
"The challenge of our age
is to adapt well and act
Center Sets
Open House
ORANGE -An open house
will be held at the Orange
County Easter Se al
Reh abilitation Center from
12:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Tuesday in observance of the
center's fifth anniversary.
Staff mem bers will conduct
tours of the center, which is
located at 1800 E. La Veta,
Orange.
tn Its five-year existence,
the center has administered
I ~ r l ' IC
' ,'
-
30,000 treatments to t h ••t-~hrJo;;.. physically handicapped. rn;i
supported by funds raised by
the Easter Seal Society.
"
. •
"
.. • . .r;.~
' --....
"
• . Ji ..
..
.
' ·(
a -over
This. Al Imperial Savings we 're building for a better
future. Our careful plan offers you a broader range of
:
'
·'
. .
. " "~·.
••
"
.,, J •',
.servjce. Greater convenience~ loo. Now the srronger O . ~t\O:
tof sa~ings.give,s yo.,u full family· savings and loan servjce .• ~~iot Sa"'.,M Insured by an·agency 9f Jh9 tecleral· governm·ent.' t.· ~· ·. ·i.
'p1uj'1.the strength of the "nation's thircf'.largest publicly~ow'11~d·~ . ·
3;vlngs and lo'~n holding' company; The kind cif strength .... ·x · "'
necessary for a greater range df linanci~I services." ."· '
' There's strength in numbers. And we!ve ,. got our 0 al.I r
over California. So why not grow With us? You and the'f
stronger o, Imperial SavlnQ;S. ·
\ ••• i
\
~1mPERIAL -SAUl·nss
'" ... ~ ..... ··~ .. ,,,.P•"11 c""po'"""" "' ~ .... i.. Din?' and loa n acsociat1 on (Jf Newport -P ao;odenr.1 -~Newport 8alb0a Savings' new name
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery · Mortuary
Chapel
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport Beach, Californl•
&«-%711 • PEEK FAMILY
Tormenting Rect8lltch
Of Hemorrhoid.al Tissues
·Promptly Relieved
I t' ~11 '
Exetutlve Office: 33&6 Via Lido, Newpo1t Beach, (714) 673-3130
Main Olllce~61 South Lak e Avenue, Pasadena, (21 3) 795·84~1
Coron{l,~el t-far Ollice: 550 Newpor·t Center Drive, Newport Beach, (714) 644-1481
3870 East Footh!ll B oulevard, Pasaden3 . (213) 795·0447 '
134 North G.lend,o/8 Avenue, ~lendo1a, (213) 335-4043
Wood)afld HrO• Ofllce: 19900 Ventura B!Vd., Woodland Hllls .. Callf., (213) 346-3920
~-
COLONIAL .J'.UNERAL
HOME
7801 Bolsa Ave.
Westminster ... lt.l_-3525 • SMITHS' MORTUARY
6%7 Main SL
Uuntbll1'" Beadi 53~
' i IDJllllU', ..... l'l<paration IJ
sf>9prompl,t<mponry...Uel
-ouch pain and itching and •dually helpo ahrink ....wna of homorrhoidal tie-
-... -by inJlammolion. .. Tm "7 doc:tcn an bun-
_dredl oLpotiento lhowed lhil
to be true in many cuee. In
ract, many doctors, them~
eclvee. uee Pr~,.,.mion 1/9 ~
....,,,.,,,,,., ii for their fam.
iliet. Preperatioo H oin~
orouPP>Oi~
. ..
• µ:.r .. _.. ···---·---•.• ..
!. ----. ..... -.~'"'~-~--'"'"~~ ................ N~ ............... ~.:..~~~~ .... ~~.~~--... ~~.~--~~~~-~~~~~"'-'--~~~~ .... ~~ ....... •
I
I
I
•
If OAILV PI LOT
Solid Interest
Rates Expected
WASHINGTON (AP)
While interest rates on
borrowlng cootinue t h e i r
dramatic plunge, the average
American can expect to draw
the same relatively high
return on his nlOdest savings
accoun t in the months ahead .
The reason is competition
(or his savings dollar in the
financial community. And -the
federal government Is n 't
ready to step in and change
t his . best -of-both-worlds
situatiOn for the consumer.
Spokesmen in both the
banking and savings and loan
association fields say they
expect interest rates on
savings accounts to remain
stable while rates f o r
borroy,·ing drop.
This "'ill hold lrue especiaJly
for the small saver, the person
y,·ho puts his money into
pa ssbook accounts. For
savings and loan associations.
· Y.outh Wins
Sales Award
.For County
Corona del Mar High School
senior. Ched Grimshaw, was
selected winner ef the Junior
Achievement Sales Contest for
Orange CcMlnty, it wu &Q-
nounced.
Grimshaw, 17, won in com-
petition with achievers from
centers in Orange County and
Riverside based on his dollar
sales volume of $260.
He is the vice president of
manufacturing for Sp Icy
Industries, a Junior Achieve-
ment company counseled by
the accounting firm of Peat,
11arwick, Mitchell and Co. in
Cost.a Mesa. His company
manufacturers and sells salt
and pepper shaken at $2 per
sel.
the mailmum is currently $
percent. For banks It is f 'h
percent.
"The guys in the business
have not reduced thtir rates
on savlngs accounts because
of the competition from other
institutions," said A n d re w
Mandala of the National
League of Insured Savln1s and
Loan AJsociaUon;s.
A spokesman for t b e.
American Banking Association
said this competition is a big
factor in keeping interest
rates on savings stable. Other
sourees said banks would
probably keep the s a m e
savings rates as a matter of
policy .
But savings have pour~
into financial institutions in
record amounts. •As a re11ult .
some have either discouraged
or abandoned s a v i n g s
certificates drawing interest
rates of 6 percent or more.
"Some have stopped offering
certificates and have stopped
advertising them," Mandala
Slid. "They've got money up
to their ears.'
Preston Martin, chairman of
the Federal Home Loan Bank
Board, agreed that fewer S
& Ls are offering 6 percent
certificates. "There is a
concentration on passbooks,"
he said.
Martin said he regard! thls
u an effective reduction in
interest rates on savings. But
he acknowledged things wtn
remain much the same for
the small saver.
He said mnimum rates on
savings set by ~hb board, the
Federal Reserve Board, and
the Federal Deposit lnsuranct
Corp. are becoming true
ceilings becau,,e ol the policy
of abandoning s av i n I s
certificate!!.
One bank in PenruJylvanl1
has lowered Jta rate on
passbook accounts, but other
banks have not followed suit.
'11J3FlOADW.AY
•
3 DAYS ONLY!
MAR. 1.2:3
COME MEET
MISS RUTH CARTER
1-pec.ialist in the art t1f
copyin1 and H1tori1:11yoar
Gld photo1rapb1. Co1:1111lt
brr "itbout obli1ation.
SALE! 3 DAYS ONLY!
MARCH 1·2-3
Now's the time to bring in your
old family pictures to be copied
395
In the old album you loved as a child, in that old
trunk. in the attic arc favorite family pictures you
tre:uurc ..• dcar ones who'll never trow old to you'
hut whose pictures arc in danicr of beini lc>St or
dama&N by time. Lc:t u1 1an: thnn for rou. Brine
them 10 Miss ~er and 1he will thow you how
fine copies can bC m\de ••. now at this low •le prittl m 11•r tid•'I i1 li•tte•~· ''' UJiJi•••~ ~·•r/~1 /tr
rf1t1r•li1• 11rr "'" 1•l1·tru1J, I••· y,,,. 1n1111J l •rl•rt
t11i/l ., ,,,.,,.,, ,.,,,..,,,,,,,)
Photo4 ,1ph Studi•,:. 11! f leor
-
P~. 1•1.1111 EJt. 211 Miu C1,t1r H1r1 I I '·"'• t1 J P·"'·
ASK FOR YOUR FRllll BR OCHURE!
•
save 1 /3
r ·rucraft
custom-tailored
draperies •
Famous Trucraft is discontinuing twenty-eight decorato r fabr ics
including sheers, open weaves, rayon and acetate antique satins,
rayon and cotton damasks. In 109 lively colors. All fa shionably
tail ored like custom-made draperies. Follow the How-To-Measure Chart
and bring in your window measurements. In just three weeks you'll
have .draperies especially made for your wi ndow. Prices start as
low as 8.93 and we'll custom fit any size window at th e
same l /3 savi ngs. Hurry in and brighten those windows for spring!
may co drapet'ies 113-all 18 ~
e<der by maa or phone MA 6-3535
milit11 rod wkfth
D ~
! ! !
1 1 1 !
~ ! " ~ ;;
0
How to me1sure: Width o( the
rod is the width o( your drape-
ries. Jusl measure from top of rod ·
down to the length you wish
your draperies to be.
may co south co.at pl1u, un di190 fwy 1t bri1tol , co1ta mes•, S46-932l • •
shop mond1y thru uturd1y 10 1.m. to 9:30 p.m., 1und1y noon 'til 5 ·p.m.
' I
~ ~ I
i;
t
•
-.
v
MAVCO
. -'
ESCAPE ARTIST ACCEPTS DARE
M•sco to Be Bound Hand •nd Foot
Escape Artist, -Masco
'Dive to Death' Slated
From Seal Beach Pier
Last week, D.D. Masco ac-
cepted a dare. If he is suc-
cess£ul, he will remain among
the living.
He calls it '"The Dive to
Death" because he plans to
jump off the Seal Beach pier
March 13 locked i n t o
restraints that would riva l
those of the late Harry
Houdini.
A former janitor turned pro--
fessional escape artist, Masco,
who prefers to be known by
only his surname, says his
feat may well be impossible.
He will be checked for hid-
den devices and then manacl-
ed by tv.10 handcuffs so that
they can't be removed once
they're put on.
And if that isn't enough,
he will be tied from head
to foot with 25·feel of chain
padlocked in three places. A
SO.pound weight attached to
the chain will make sure his
body sinks.
"Impossible, that may'very
'Mini-drug'
Class Set
At School
A 2U·hour, "Mini" course in
drug abuse is slated for adults
and students by University
J{igh School. University Park
beginning from 7 to 9 p.m.
March 4.
Richard Caneday, athletics
and activities director. will
conduct the program that ex-
well be, but I am the best
living escape artist and if it
can be done, I will do it,"
be proclaimed.
The 2 p.m. dive will be
witnessed by dare holder
Ralph Yarnell, an ac-
quaintance of Masco's who
also lives in Alhambra.
"I'm re-doing Houdini and
this was a little .!!Ort of a
challenge," e1plained Masco,
who has been in the escape
business for the last four
years.
He added that he would do
th e dive for absolutely nothing
other than the publicity value.
"I'm much like old Harry.
He had the same problem
getting started in th e
business," he laughed.
•·seal Beach is one of my
ravorite spots. lt was one of
the first places I visited when
I came to California and that's
\\'hy I chose it for the location
of the dive," explained
Masco. The escape artist says
this will be one of his biggest
stunts. Often he performs for
parties, escaping from ropes
chains, straightjaciet.s and •s
many as five handcuffs at
one time. All escapu are done
in full view of the audience •
.. I know the secret which
enables me to release myseU
from any type of restraint,"
claims Masco. "In fact, I
challenge anyone to lock me
in a set of handcuffs from
which I cannot escape."
Just to be sure, Masco 11ay1
he will have a signal line
to jiggle from the bottom of
the Seal Beach pier.
"Ifs just insurance," he
laughed.
amines the problem of drugs1-,;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:::;;I
Jn our society. For four years,
Caneday has taught the state
required course in drug abuse 1 for students of Tustin Union
High School district.
Registration for the class
9.'ill be held March 4 in Room
22.1 at University High School,
4771 Campus Drive, Irvine.
There is no fee for the course.
KIDS
LIKE
UNCLE LEN
en"'' -WATER
ffiASTER
-rlirust~ Col,_..
TOILET TANK •ALL ................. ,...
,~ •• ~, w-._ , ... ..,., ......
1h1 flo• cif -........ -....i..,.
7St AT ffAlOWAll SfOlll'
EVERY TUESDAY
AND THURSDAY
FROM 4 P.M. TO
CLOSING IS
"BUCK"
NIGHT
AT GRANTS
FAMILY SPECIALS
$ YOUR CHOICE: * Roast Turkey Dinner * Golden Fried Chicken * Roast Beef Au Jus * Ham Steak Hawaiian
Witt! petatffl. c ... lce ef ,...t.W. er <rMMf
cole tlew, roll a11d b11tt..-.
Monday •nd Wednesday Evening• Only
BRADFORD HOUSE -STEAIC' DINNER'
Sened with to11ed green ••l•d, 2 $3M
potatoe1, hot roll and b11tter. for
BROOKHURST & ADAMS
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Mondi1, March 1. 1CJ71 DAILY PILOT J3
,
save
on a 4-piece wardrobe
AN -NUAL MAYBROOKE
WARDROBE SALE
•
4 piece wardrobe reg. 180.00
imagine! you have our entire exclusive label collection of the newest
men's fashion looks to choose from ... here's what yo u gel:
•any 115.00 one-pant Maybrooke suit from our stock of shaped sly les with wide
lapels. Stripes, patterns and solids. Choose from a hos t of colors, many fabrics.
•any SS.DO Maybrooke sport coat or blazer from our entire stock. Your choice of
lcnit, pure wool or wool and polyester blends. Choose from many colors.
•any two pair of 20.00 MacPhergus slacks from ourenlire stock. You may choose
from knitsorwoolsortake one of each pair if you prefer.
The sale that happens only once a year. An outstanding opporlu nity to save 011
a complete wardrobe of new fashion s for spring and summer. Grea t va lues.
m;iym rnttt's dodring 2f, sportsWear 45 -.all 18 store.; use one of our convenient credit plc1n'i
rMJ ce IMth ... It ,e111, Hn die,..fwy 1t bristol, co1t1 mesa, 546-9321 "'°" IMft<lay thru 11tun1y 10 1m to 9:30 pm, 1und1y noon 'Ill 5 pm
suit sport coat 2 pair slacks
-
-
" ...., I
I ·~
MAVCC>
..
. --
'
11 -
I
\
.-•
J4 DAILY .. LOT Monday, M~h l , 1'~71
FAMILY CIRCVS 1>11 811 Keane
-,i,._ > ·~ ,,, .. ,.....,:._'1_ ~ -_.ct_~
_\.)
..
"J got the mo il for you , MommY J 0
' Society in Review
Social, Criminal Study
Set at Newport Church
Various social and criminal
phenomena in communi!y
society today will be reviewed
Tuesday, featuring three ex·
perts, sponsored jointly by two
agencies.
Admission to the Harbor
Area Coordinating Council and
Costa Mesa Crime Prevention
Committee function at St.
Andrew's Church Felloswhip
Hall in Newport Beach is free .
Coordinating Council Presi-
dent Mrs. Norman Watson
1ays the 7:30 p.m. session
offers an outstanding op-
portunity for Orange Coast
citizens to g a i n new
knowledge.
Speakers will be Dr. Joseph
Tomehak, Dr. Jack Kenny and
Costa Mesa Police Detective
Capt. Robert Green.
Dr. Tomehak is an Orange
Coast College anthrolology in-
structor who has studied the
hippie subculture, parent-child
relationships and the recent ,
controversial Christmas Hap-
pening in Laguna Beach.
He is also preside nt o( the
Laguna Beach Planning Com-
mission and a former city
councilman in Costa !\otesa.
Dr. Kenny is head of · the
public administration depart-
ment at Cal State Long Beach,
former president of the Los
Angeles Police Commission
and former deputy director
of the Stale Justice Depart-
ment.
He has written "Police Work
with Juveniles,'' and authored
other books and articles en
the subject.
Capt. Green heads the Costa
Mesa Police De p a r tme nt
Investigation Division which
has spearheaded a numbe r of
major drug round ups in-
cluding the two largest in
county history.
His recent year-end com-
pilation of drug stalitsics -
from arrests to f a t a I
overdoses -revealed juvenile
narcotics use dropped It per-
cent in 1970 following a 1969
record increase of 248 percent.
Kaiser School /(ids
Make Big Collection
Students at Kaiser Middle
School in Costa Mesa have
donated ~ to the March
of Dimes.
Victor Van Oostendorp. a
teacher al the school and stu-
dent advisor. said the money
was collected in a month-long
contest sponsored by the stu-
dent body.
T w enty-thrce homerooms
competed against each ether
Best Prep
Musicians
Will Play
The best high sc hool
musicians in Orange County
will give a concert at Orange
Coast C.Ollege Saturday as the
All Distri ct Honor Band and
Hnnor Orchestra.
to see who could donate the
largest percentage of money
per student d"uring January.
The winning room, the
seventii grade class of Donald
Rittman, collected more th an
$50, which averaged out to
$2.64 per student
They were given a huge
cake, decorated with a dime.
''This is something the kids
wanted to do themselves,"
Van Oostendorp said. "'They
didn't collect this money. they
donated it. Some of them
emptied lheir piggy banks for
the C<lntest."
Grateful March of Dimes
officials recently visited the
school to give a service award
lo all s tu den I s who
participated in the contest.
"We didn 't expect I h e
award.'' Van Oostendorp said.
"It was really nice. but the
kids didn't do it for Iha!.
They did it because they
wanted to help."
The concert will also include\•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;\
ENROLL HOWi
FOR HlXT
PSYCHO CYBERNETICS
WEEllHD WORKSHOP' M.,.11 C9">n• Clttl!trMCt C1tt1ltr-L•kt ArAWtltH Mtrctt 1'-U En .. ttnoenl LlmnM
Ctll uni ..... tr (114) •ll·UU
a performance by the junior
high school honor · c h o i r .
Students were selected by
1111ditioning at their schools.
There are 80 members each
in the orchestra and band and
200 members in the choi r.
The band will be conducted\~~~~~~~~~::~:::\
by Dr. James Neilson of the
LeBlanc C.Orp .. Ben Bollinger
of Cilrus College will direct
the choir and Dr. Ralph
Malesky, of Utah Stale
University will C<>nd.uct the
orchestra.
The concert "'1ill be at 7:30
p.m. at the OCC Auditorium.
CHU.BREN
LIKE
UNCLE LEN
I See oy Today's
Want Ads
e Go OU! for 11 bitr lo Piii,
1n y()ur "VF.RY 0\VN
rAl'TILr CAFE'" f u 11 y
equipped ·n a nice l"hnrt-
p1nJ:! c-rntf'r. Grr11 t Ou."I·
nc>ss Oppor1un11y, .So
hurry Ck 3)).
e ~1orher Is a CAN't'r ""O·
man? Subs11u1r mother
nttdcd. 3\1 d a y "'ttk,
.... eekends off! l\1ust lnvr 3
)'tar olrl boy. Pr1v111c
mom, TV. Lcn•ely home
lor r1,rht \I-Oman , Ck ilfl.
a /l:e.,.,-port Island 2 Rrlrn1
tu;e LEASE $150 tTK>nth,
Ck ,"\05 for more Info.
•
We II•••,.,,• Tha
l l11ht ta Limit
Quo .. tltlat
90 , .. _ •• ,
REDl·MIX
CONCREFE
"J111r Add W•l•r ond MJ•I"
• J111I Ilka mother
• • '011r yo11r own
walkwa y or pcrlla,
• (OYlr'I I lq, ft,
appro><. on• Inch
!hick.
llltg. 99( '
77'
I•••• rhlcJc Y4 ''
PEGBOARD
PANKS
4 ff ••• ''·
SHEETROCK
"Woll 'r'our1tlf lnl"
• (on1trvttlon
quality
board. • a;9 4 • .. a•
pon1l1 or•
1/2" thick.
Jleg. $2.40 .
$133
12'' Square
STEPPING
STONES
• ltody to ltod you down tht poth-
12" • 12" 1tone1 ort l '/i" thic k,
• Ncilurol
<ofo.rtd -for
gcirdtn1 and
londuopt.
lttg. 42c
27~ ..
l e fter Graefe
R~DWOOD
STUDS
• Grtol for patio d•tking, ltndng,
brll<lng, etc.
•Good. 1olld 2"•4"•1 ft.
redwood 1!ud1 ore
1urf11ctd 4 1Jdes, tnd1
1rlrnm•d with
•o••d •de••· Rtg, 69c
39~
Pre-finisltecf
WOOD-GRAI N
SHELVES
"for Shtll°Con1clou1 Ho"'e-Owntr1/"
, .. trl6"
~~ti~;;.. ;}.:~
$189 •
. .
. ' ' ... ' .r •r••-~ ........ ----.. --· . ·~ ,.. ~ . . ......
_Ofld_Lol Salo
ASSORTED
FIRE SCREENS
''Sit Up and Tak• Notic•I''
• Special group of fir.st quality
screens In widths to flt
standard fir·• places.
fi~m~r~?;K~\~rr~~:;~~ • Tremendaus selection ,..;: of styles and
finishes.
Values to $29.95
Your Choice
•1200 la.
3 Piece
•
FREE·
STANDING
SCREEN
"A Handsome
Home Access~ryl''
• Elegant curtain screen with
satin black frame, flllgre•
base and polished brass
legs.
• Easy-glide
curtains -
38'' wide x
31 "hlgh
screen for I I J
standard
fl replace
openings.
Rog. $15.49 •1000 #89
7 lliece
·,
I.
ETCHED BRASS
ENSEMBLE
''• co..-c~r
WOOD BASKEr
• Attroct1¥e"'V" tl•d1"' b11ket ho1
tGlln bi9~ ""~h.
POLISHED BRASS
ENSEMBLE
• Curtol11 1u·••n wtth "crot1
hatch" flllgr" lto11,
• llock cu,,oln~li•r Dftd
bru1h lnclvde......._.,I" w hfl ..
l 1·• hl9h.
Jleg. 521.9.S "" •1500
• 119 20"•t••;2•;1t1:.-tiol~b
1n1ugh fl"'w•M ti 1•t yeur
werld on flro.
lt19. $3.7t •244
Entire 1970 Stock
FIRESCREENS
25 to 500/o OFFI
• P'ollihed ltro11 frome ha1
doublo "X" flllgre1 lta-
wllh a ndlreftl & 4 ,c. 1101 11t.
lttg. S3S.t9 •.s r10 · •2500
l/Ull
.,..tt-TeWMlf Cl•••
"UNDIRGROUND
SPRINKUR
SYSFIMS"
w,.i,. ~r. 3, 7-1 pm AnelielM
fhur1., Mar. 4, 7-1 pm Peun!aln Vallar
Door "''•-ll•f,..1hmantJ
5ou7, l.t.lt ft fuhll• ""•••! .... !h• •I<>•• .. ........ ~, .. 1., .....
SPECIAL NOTICll
Thate Sala• l"rlca1 Ha11al"9lll
Th"' f9f,, Mar. 6
UtJlftJ·frpe
SHELF BRACKErs
• lnomtl flnhh-ountar 1v11k hola1.
• Palntobl-mok1 '•m bright!
3"><4", •.•• Sc
4"aS", •••• 7 c
.S"a6",,... 9c
6"•1" .••• , 12c
7"><9" ..••• 17c
1",.10" .••• 19c
10"><12" ..• 2 7c
12"a14" ... 39c
t Lii. 8•9
, SHREDDED FOAM
• for cu1hlon1, 1lt 11pon1, lt y1, 11C.
• .Shr1dd1 .. whl11 poly fo11m-
f111thtrw1lght a nd
wc11hobl1.
lt19. 49c
3 9'
12'' Jf 12''
SHAG
CARPET TILE
•.Sill odh111,., 1111 con b1 c11t t• flt
your plon1.
•Toe-tickling
•hog In your
choi<o of
mind·b•ndlng
color1.
59~ ..
111ylo'' by Kwllr•ef
ENTRY
LOCK SEr
• Am•rtcal\ modi -poll1h1d bto••
fll'll1h.
" • lnctud11 all n1c111ory hardwar1 ond
two keys,
rte9. S6.39
1
• Pre .. finJshefl .. ~f.~~;"~ r;
..... ., .. "•' [I ~
ponal1 ore 111 quollty
and prefln/1hed.
3 9~ .....
Jn 4 II. Secllon1
~--:----~ f eJrture r. r J f•ferlor
PL VWOOD SIDING
DECOUPA _GE CLASSES
"Learn to Create Old World Masterpietes The Modern Way I." . . .. -
Visit our gallery of fini shed samples on March
6th and 7th, 13th and 14t h. Let our demonstrat-
ors explain how truly easy this a rt form can
be. Regis,ter on these days for <!a sses to be
held at Anaheim and Fountain Valley.
LIN-BROOK HARDWARE • ANAHEIM . . •
2144 W. LINCOLN 1200 VAROS EAST Of BAOOKHUASTI PHnNF 174 R1no I I 1 " I • " .. .. ''I
'
-
BARBARA DUARTE, 494-9466
MMcl1~, 11\trcll 1, ltll I P191 11
Gardeners
See ·G reen
The countrY's best selling nonfiction novel. 11The
Greening of America," \Vill be brought to the loca l level
as members and friends of the Laguna Beach Garden
Club bedeck themselves in greenery in support of area
greenbelts.
\Vith no more befitting day than SL Patrick's on
\Vednesday, .l\.1arch 17, members and guests v"ill arrive at
the Laguna Beach Woman's Clubhouse al noon for a
Shamrock Shuffl e for the Greenbelt.
Decor for the day wilJ refl ect a \Vee bit of the ;·auld
sod" in shamrocks, ltfprechauns and bells of Ireland -
all focusin g on an authentic harp made in Ireland for
J\irs. John \Veld of Laguna.
A hot gourmet lunch \Vill precede 3\\Parding of more
than 40 prizes donated by area rnerrhants. Bridge and
canasta will follo\v with table prizes for high scorers.
\Vays and Means rhairman Mrs. Irving G. West-
\vood has the able assistanre of a bevy of Irish coll eens
inrluding the l\'Imes. J. \VilJiam Devaney, Wi lliam
Francis Robb and Leonard Davis, a past president and
member qf the Laguna Beach Greenbelt Comn1ittee.
Other lassies contributing effort to the shuffle in·
elude the Mmes. David J. Erikson, Gerald B: Hanna, Ben
L. Hartley, Leonard hf. Johnson. Ho\vard C. Judson ,
La\vrence L. Lantz, Neil J·I. Lewis. Richard Spooner1 Eldon Stark and M~~ Mary Belle Tilt.
Tickets are $2.50 and may be obtained fron1 Mrs.
\Vestwood at 499-2630 or Mrs. Devaney, 494-5063.
Reservations are necessary.
The club has contributed $250 to the Greenbelt. a
])On-profit organization dedicated to preserving the na-
tural beauty of areas surrounding the city.
Profit from the Shamrock ·Shuffle al so \\'ill go to-
\Var d the fund as the garden club's contribution in
"thinking green."
'
'
BELLES OF IRELAND -Green \Vill be the password for mem·
hers of the 1.aguna Beach Garden Club as they arrive fo r a St.
Patrick's Day Shamrock Shuffle in lhe Laguna Beach \Voman's
Clubhouse. Already at \vork bedecking the \Va lls v"ith shamrocks,
leprechauns and bells of Ireland are Oeft to rigb_t) _the Mme~ I_rving
R. Wc st\vood, J. \Villiarn Devaney and l.eonard Davis.
Speakers Talk Way
To District Finals
Three members of the Laguna 'foastmistress Cl uh are ready to
talk themselves into being \vinners In anticipation of a Council speech
contest conducted in Garden Grove by the international organization.
At th at time a r€p resentativc of the Lagun~ Beach club wi ll vie
\Vilh other clubs for the honor of best speaker. ·-.. . ...... -..
Judging of Laguna '''inners ha s been done during tile j}ast
month as speakers \11arn1cd up to tal king tips learned during the past
year -half of the club's existence.
Hono red at a trophy dinner on \Vednesday, J\.1arch 3, \Vi ii be the
?\I mes. Thomas 1'1cKerlie, .J. A. Di ckerso n and Andrew J. \Vood \Vho
walked off wi th \Vinning status in the preliminaries.
During th e evening, one contestant \Viii be selected lo represen t
Laguna Beach in the June speech con test.
Representatives and officials or Oran ge Cou nty Toastmistress
and ·r oastmaster clubs served as judges during preliminary contests.
TOP TALKER -!\U.S. Thomas J\·lcl(erlie (at podium)
captures one of three awards in Laguna 'foastn1istress
Club preliminaries as ~1rs. Irene McClure (right), club
presi dent and Mrs. florin Martin record approval
'
Is .the Dye Cast? Ancient Secret Colors Interpretation
;•/ ,.__
DEAR ANN LANDERS : i read \\'ilh
Interest the letter from "Joy Girl"
proclaiming it a fact-.that blondes have
more run. tier letter was a rebuttal
to another letter v.•hich said blondes
do NOT have more fun -th'cy just
enjoy perpetuating the myth. ' I seriously doubt that there is a
biological reason why blondes have more
run, but there might be a sociological
reason. 1 quote fl'om the Encyclopedia
Britannica (1969) under Prostitution: .. "The Roma n system of regulation was
especially severe. Prostitutes w e r e
. placed under stringent control and
required to register with the police.
They had to wear distinctive dresst and
dye their ha ir gold or wear ye\~1w wigs.
'i11ey were also subjeetcd to various
ANN LANDERS
civil disabilities."
Understandably 1hc gals with the
golden tresses received many more
proposltions in those days -and for
very good reason.
J)Q you su ppose tho blondes of tOda'y
might be subconsciously J a be J in g
then\selvcs in some \vay -as ' their
ancient sisters did ? -H.J.
DEAR ll.J.: \\'by don 't you ask some
blontle!i? But don 't bt surprl std if you
end up vdtb a fat lip, Buddy.
•
DEA R ANN tANOERS: 1 had surgery
seven weeks ago and atn having a
difficult time recovering because I am
overweight. My doctor bas put me on
an 800-calorie diet -ihich is like
nothing.· r . ~ •
The social season is In full f\oWer
in our town and J've been invited to
several dinner parties these pasf two
weeks although J know I shouldn 't eat
,rich r00rt .I .cal everything !k'rved
because I hale to hurt the hostess·
fceling11. My diet Is:. faUing. on its face.
This poses a serious problem because
I 1vas widowed last year and went into
a deep depression. My psychiatrist insists
that I accept invitalions and be with
pcopll'. So now I must decide which
is more important -to accept dinner
invitations and be menta lly healthy -
or to refuse dinner invitations and stick
to my diet. I'd like your advice. -
l!OllSON'S CHOICE
DEAR fl.1RS. HOBSON : Both are
equally important. You need not sacrifice
one for the olher, however. Accept the
Invitations -but tell &he boste11 you
\VIII arrive AFTER dinner . Eal your
lettuce and cottage cheese at home,
then join your friend11 for the aoclabillty.
There arc no calories ln talk.
DEAR ANN LANDERS:-We have four
children under 12 ycurs of age . My
husband's brother moved in with us
after a messy divorce. It was supposed
to be "for a couple of \veeks." That
was in 1967 and Lardo is still here.
He's a retired Army man and has told
our children the dirty jokes from the
last three wars.
' Lardo works v.·hen he feels like It
and spends lhc money on goJddiggcri.
I-le has never bought so much as a
pork chop for the table. I do his laundry
and send his dry cleaning out with
my husband's. \Vhen Lardo gels stiff
he calls long dislance all over the country
and our phone bills arc wild. t ha Ven 't
had e new coal. in five yeer11. No money.
Last ~ight J got so 1nacl I told my
husbllfld If he didn't ask-tartlo =to move
I was seeing 8 lawyer about a separation
He said, "I am my brother's keeper."
Who is right-MOLLI E.
DEAR MOLLIE: Your brotber-in-l~w
needs a keeper aU rig ht, but I fall
lo see why you and your husband should
c:ontinue to be chumps.
You hove every right to insist thol
lhe rree loader move. Stick with your
demands, ~
Is alcoholism a disease? How can
the alcoholic be treated ?· I! then--a
cure' Read the booklet "Alcoholism -
Hope and Help," by Aon La.nde.t! •
Enclo.!e 35 cents in coin with )'OUr
request and a long stamped , .t!lf.
addressed envelope in care of the 0~¥
1-'ILOT. ,;i:;;
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DAILY PILOT Monda~, Marth 1, 1971
,..,,;;., -~
Typists are needed by the \\'estminster·hl id·
way cities Boys Clu b. Typing and bookkeeping will
help keep the ne\\ly launched building program
organized.
WELL BABIES
Babies must be n1easurcd and weighed at the
\\Tell Baby Clinics in Stanton and Garden Grove
and there is no one to do it. The Garden Grove
hours arc 9 to 11 :30 a.m. on the second, third and
fourth J\1ondays of the month.
The Stanton hours are from 9 a.m. to noon on
the first and third ~londays.
LANGUAGE STRUGGLE
Tutors are needed to help 1o1exican·American
adults and youngsters ,1·ith the English language
at the Hun tington Beach Community Center. Trans·
lations of re,·ipes and basic food facts are \Vanted by
the Orange Coast College J-lome Economic program.
The translations could be completed at home.
SHUT-INS
The life of a shut·ln or someone who lives
alone v.'ould be brightened by one short, reassuring
daily phone caJJ or a \vEie kl y friendly visit. Call the
\Vest Orange County \1olunteer Bureau for more
infornlation. •
GOODIES FOR GIRLS
l-Jo11 .. to books, magazines on crafts. sports and
homemaking \\'Ou ld be \\1elcome at the Garden
Grove Girls Club. 'rhey may he left at the Hunting·
ton Beach United C'rusadc office.
. -. . . .. .. . . . . . ~ . .
Lookin g Through 'L'
Vocabulary Ascending ·
By ER~1A 801\lBECK
I don't know if anyone has
noticed. bu t rve been doing
this column for the last six
years using a 4!l·ce nt
dictionary with the l's lo the
mac's missing.
AT
WIT'S
END
This hasn't been easy for ....
me. Do you have any idC'a "Does \Villiam F. Buckley
how frustrating ii is to "·ant get his vocabulary qJf a
:~ri~~~ :~djy~~i~~oi;~JP~~~ sweatshirt?" I snorte d.
be able to? "Besides. the Eng 1 i sh
"I need a new dictionary," language has undergone qu ite
J said to my husba nd. a few changes ~nee this dictiona ry was published." "Why, whal·s the matter ''Nonsense.-" he s a id, 11•ith the old one?" "The rs to the mac's are ··~teanings of words never
change." missing. Re a de rs are
beginning to v.·onder \\by I "Oh yeah, then wby is ii
never talk about Lat i n under ·wic k s' in my
America. or lollygagging ()r dictionary, they have. 'A thin
bundle of lhrca.d.!i tha.t absorb
fuel and is used primarily
on front fenders of cara as
lamps to make drivini at
night possible .' "
"You win ," be said. ''Gn
buy yourself a new, deluxe
dictionary."
The next night when he·
returned home, lhe stove was
cold, the kids were playing
in the traffic and the
dictionary \\'as open to the
J's.
.. Have a libation," I aaid .
''The leftovers are !ale, the
laundry is latent and I am
languishing in · JugubriQusness.
I looked up 'liberation' today.
Leonard, and you"re Jn
trouble."
Moral : Giving women 'L'
Is a dangerous thing. 2 birds. Jt just isn't
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.. \v::i:· if l had a dictionary . ~it!4'E PHONE
that ""'as n"t alt there ." he said, 642·2851
.. , think the l's v.·oul d be the • FOi IESEIYATIOH
P"' I w_ould m:ss the lca'l:" ORGAN CLASSES "Thats all you know,' T
For l't•v•n 1n' Non l'l1yu1. ~ ~ :r, i\!hfli:;t . ,,
.ff'E'PARATION FOR PRAYER -Churchwomen throughout the llarbor Area ~\·1'&:.gathe.r Frid~y, ntarch 5, in St. Michael and All Angels Episcopal Church,
Corona del ·"·far, to celebrate \Vorld Day of Prayer. Discussing plans v,iith the
Rev. John Davis, host minister, are Mrs. Stanley Alumford (center), president,
and nlrs. John ]!filler.
TUTORS TO TEACH
\'oungsle1J5 and adults are in need of English
tutors during lhc afternoon and evening hours.
The assistannce \\'lll be coordinated by the
Col onial Juarez Independencia.
sulked. "All ttie good novel-
type words are there . . .
lu stful. lush, le1l'd. Jc>cherous.
\Vhy, I was that close to
"''riling 'Love Story,' but I
couldn't spell ii."
"You could have copied that
off your sweatshirt."
MR. P.RED THOMPSON. wlll bt t1achl11lJ 011 ••clth1• ll•w
Orqo11 Cl••• Mtthod ot COAST MUSIC, MONDAY 1;l0
P.M, & 9,P.M, I
COAST MUSIC
183S NEWPORT BLVD. (•I H•rbor) COSTA MESA
Doy of Prayer
Churchwomen ·Unite
Geranium
Facts Told
A talk and demonstration
on containe r cultu re and
scented geraniums w i I J
pr<1vide the program for .
members of the San Clemente
Garden Club on \\'cdnesdar,
l\farch 3.
Ch}irchwomen from th e
"'"Harbor Area ~·ill ga!her in
St. ~ f\licha cl :ind All Angels Epis~pal Church. CoronA dcl
l\Lic on Friday. i\larch 5, to
celrbrate \\"orld DJ) of
Prayer.
Chairman for !he da y is
l\lrs. James ~loor. and
pr~idt?nl of the sponsoring
orgenization, Church1\'0men
United, is f\trs. St an le y
1'1umford.
Al IO a.m. on Friday women
in 25:000 communilies in the
C"nileif States will unite the!i'
prayers with women in 155
countries on six continents to
affirm faith, hope and love
in facing the issues and nC€ds
of today.
New Life Awaits \\"ill be
lhe theme of the da y. Vo'hich
also \l'ill be a preparatiDn for
the Ecumenical Ass em b I y
planned in \Vlchita Aprll 22-25.
During the prayer day, the
84th of its kind, the \\'omen
DAILY 10-10, SUNDAY 10-7
1nar-i-1.-
• -~4--¥".r"-M~ --_
SEW 'N SAVE
SPECIALS
POLYESTER
DOU,LE KNITS
f\" 1rnn lln1i.h. ;i.M" fill'' 1 ~•1),....ll'r
dno1hl,, kn11Ji ln jai:.:gutiirl,11r11\Pl>,
h 1n1 11afflr~. ci-rri•"}, 111i1!~. ;\l{I·
( l1111r 11N ,J1 and l\unhl" d 1.1.
also will participate In an
offering' · which will aid
int e r n a ti on a I students
overseas, women I e a d e r s
abroad, rural Christian \l'Omen
overseas, 1nigrant fa r m
\l'Orkers, Mexican ·"omen in
border cities. children in
Africa and Asia and American
Indians.
Sisterhood
Dines Out
\1rs. Louts Le Count of the
Intern ational G e r a n i um
Society will bring si:r.cin1ens
and experience lo the l ::JO
r.m. session in· the San
Clemente VFW H.all.
Plans for the club's 20ih
Standard Flower Show on
April 23 and 24 will be
discussed at 10 a.m. on
\\lednesdav. March 17, in the
home of ·Miss Laura [)1llnn.
\lemocrs flf nu~ Sisterhood The hostess will be ass ist!'d
of Temple E1lat of El Tflro b.v \frs. Fred Carter.
\\'ill "·el come new commitlee This meeting v. ill be he1plul
L'hairmen 1umorrO\¥ mnrn1ng lo ne11· exh1bitori..
<it JI :30 as thry mrel in the ~ .i::... _,'Ji
El 'foro home of 1'1rs. Sam 1.000·. Of OIL PAINT INGS
\Valdman. WHOLESALE WAREHOUSE
Srrving on the tioard or the:,. OPEN TO THE PUILIC
group \1·hich \l'orks on fund~..( SQ0/0 OFF
raising projects for ! he uu E. EDINGER. SANTA l<NA
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Highlight yo4r hair ...
Roux Fr~).sting Special
15. 00 reg. 25.00
Let our experts frost your hair with streaks o(
ligh tening. And for a ne\V spring look ••• try our
"Gypsy Girl" cut. h's all curl, swirl and
excitement. Shampoo and 5el not included In
th is spec tal. "Gypsy Girl'' cut, also additional .
4.00,
Cic.iu!y Stud.o
'T'emple <1re the l\1mes. Arthur ~ "~°"' •lS·4'°' "'
S;i vd man, II <i ro ld Si I vc r, .! ne I 1 _"::::::_·•_,o,,•.::"o:'c:'.:.' .::":;:'::":.:'c::'..:~:__.:._.:._N_:•::_w::.o:p 0::•_:1 •'...::#..'.l.:f'..'.''..'.':'.h'..'.; ':::"_:l::•:::l •::0~d ''-N~ow:!'p'.'."'..'.l_:C~•'.'.:":'.'.'.'''..' ."e'....."o'.'.4:4 -~2~2~0~0_'e!_IM~o'.C" ':!.' ~Fc:6::,, .. _1~0'_':~00"_',I ;olll l'..'.9~:.!_l ~0 ;:_0~1 h~·~•_'d"'o~y~•_ll~O~t~; l!!_I ~5:0:; l~O~
<:;ilJ1 11. I !ar1·ev S!rar;1. l'vll'ron I l\·l nq~olis ;ind \\;;1!drn;ui. ·
Also hnld111~ offi ce ;ire the
r.trnes. Elliot t even son .
Harvey Kaplan. Burton Allen
and l\i iss Sadie l\1rll sner.
l\lcn1bcrs flf the Sistl'rhnod
,,·ho earned 1he1r donor crrdil
fnr the ~·e;rr \1·ere honnrrd
at a rrcent lunchenn in \'ictor
HugC1 Inn. Laguna Beach.
Sisters
Recruit
1\n orienta11on mrcting fnr
\romen 1n!!'rcster1 in hc>coming
;i Big Sister ··will t11kr place
at 1he San1il Anil \"\VCA ?\
7:30 p.m. \\'ednC'sda y, !'>1iirch
J
Big Sisters is an
or ~ an i z a I i o n orf!'ring
frirndsh1 p on a one-10-nnc
ba sis In lccn11ge g i r 1 s .
Lns1ructured i1Ctiri1irs takr
pl;:icc as arranged by big and
little sister$.
An~onc 1ntrrc.<:lC'd mav c;.ill
1hC' \'\\'CA or fllrs. \·crn on
Ph1lhps.
Riviera Golf
Tourney Opens
A thrc>c part champ1nnship
J:!Olf tnurnamcn1 v.·l!I J:Cl under
11·ay at !I a n1 on \\"edn!'sdav.
~larch :J. rl.~ nir n1hrrs nf 1hl'
RI\ ie r;i Club Golf Sc>c11nn
m<'C'l :it San Clrn1cn!e finlf
('ou rsr.
Part1cipn n1.~ IJ~C'" thr !\rl)
hes! scnr<'s fron1 mer1 s on
\\ledncsda.r, April 7 and :'11a~·
S. All play wtll be in San
C.'lC'"1nr11tc. ••
YOGA IS . . .
... llAUTY
! outtr &-li1~r I
Sprruii ('ln.~5 Fnr
l\'n•nrn Ou!11!
frH 0111101ntrotlt11
Tut1do'f, IOeA.M.
C1ou-1 Stort Thu111i11y
YOGA CENTER
.' •'fw.
If you ha ve added unwonted pounds and inches there is one sure way to
get bock to a slim perfectly shaped figure ••• start now at Gloria Marshall 's
where trained figure experts quickly shape your figure to its natural lovel i-
ness and keep it there!
PerJonalizeJ dttention
: . ft Quick J:.aJti;,_g t/?.eJultJ
~\ f;uaranteeJ /1.educing
... ' Tell us the dres~ size you wo nt to weor ••• w11 will tell you ->:~ how many visits it tokes, and guarantee in Writing you wll l
,• . reach your goal, or let you hove FREE a ny and all further
' visils until you do.
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\VE A".E NOT A SPA OR GYM • NO 015f:061NG
NO STRENUOU ) EXERCl.SES • NO MEM6ERSHI P
FR£E PLAYROQ,"A FACILITIES F 0 R CHI LOREN
Regular $2.50
OINlE; $150
PER TREATMENT
WEIGHT IS AGING ••• NOTE THE DRAMATIC
CHANGE IN FAC IAL APPEARANCE
W hen Pol Chad 'tarted al Gloria Morshol1'1 she weighed
222 lbs, 10 visits lorer she hod olreody lost 17 inches.
In record lime she lost 63 lbs., and 55 inches ••• Before
starting at G loria Morsholl'i; Pot tried every1hin;, H•olth
Spa Gyms, Hypnosis, Crash Diets, Pills a nd Shots, b ut
nothing worked • • • unt il now.
•
NEWPORT BEACH A11.t!el11t, Co.J11e, Cr•111how~~f.:,, Gl•11d•I•, Lekft•od, Los
430 PACIFIC COAST HWY Vctoi. L•11, lhth. M••p•rt ''°'"· Htrtll Hollvw••li. ,._.... • · 642-3630 lit110, Son 01090, So11to Alie, ia11to lorboro, Svnl•nd, Teno11e,
12 llock1 lost of lollM111 lll"f Clu b) To.,alltt, W~lftltr.
.l
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US e 111~ SI. 2.@ HARBOR BLVD. w:~. COSTA MESA [ ...... , ..... , ... ,.
._~~~-'-~~~-''
Cull ..,.,.,.
, ... 1111 SANTA ANA, 1840 W. 17th SI. 543.9457 (cl Copywright 1970 Gloria ,.tnrsha/I f.lgt. Co I nc. ·-----------"
L
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. • r.1onday, March l , 19/1 DAILY PILOT J 'l
Charming Design Horoscope: Travel Emphasized for Virgoan~
TUESDAY
MARCH 2. 1971
By SYDNEY 0:.1ARR
Some astrologer•. w b o
1ptc1allte i.n welgbl-watcb.l..ng,
claim lhot Pisces individuals
are most prone to double chins
wbea "·eight contrel i s
Ignored.·
Accent sociability. Some want purchase pricts. \Vhat you do
to be friendly. You could make now could have long.range
first gesture -and profit by effect. Realize this and plan
it. Pull out flo2S on open· ac:Uons accordingly.
mindedness. A=;i.hopes and SCORPIO (Oct. 13-Nov. 21),
basic desires. Caution now is your ally.
LEO (July U.Aug. 22): Avoid drawing conclusions
Health and v.·ork co u Id based on wishful thinking.
converge. Means better Practical approach is fruitful.
pacing, se lf-care Is necessary. Leo lndiVldual can be good ·
Avoid extremes. lieed advice exam p I e. Accent on
from experL You must help partnerships, legal matters.
upset by irresponsible -rsons. jokingly claim you aro a ~ ..... it.. 0•11..'¥' ~t.OT. --"l r-!..-.I f.rllr•I St1t1011o llllililo~ •~
Maintain equilibrium. You wUI "'alklng lie detector. ln effect,;;;;';;";;'"';;;::!!:_;;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;; win. you are intultlvc, capable of11
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. seeing I hr o ugh sham,
18): Whal was planned as pretense. This year you will
surprise. oould ac t u a 11 y de. more traveling than usual,
feature irony. Family meinber will make a basic change
is Involved. Avoid needless connected with op~ite sex
brooding. Setback is only - and, most import.ant, you WOM::°!'Oi~
temporary, You will gain will find constructive outlet m •· 11·~~
valuable experience, insight. for creative efforts. 0 .,. "" ... ~
AHJES (March 21.ApriJ Jg): yourself be.fore others will SAGITI'ARIUS (Nov. 22·
Financial matters demand care enough to lend aid. Dec. 21 ): E m p t 0 y m e n t ,
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): lnTo~Y ~.!.ct.,...\:~:. 1~~ "°!Ya= -,;·
Friendship Bnd trave l n1ay J~~~~"~';~·.,~-~w~t::~;"~·::~"'~s-~"~",~1'/.!i~'...,~'~~~~~~~~~~~~~ comb ine. Short journey may II;: •nd so c•""' 10 Omltr "'lroloeY
be necessary. This i s attention. Purchase of luxury VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 21): special servlcts -th~e grab
items might put dent in Tra\'el associated w i th attention. One who made
b!jlget. Obtain necessities. Do children is e m p h a s I r e d . promises in past must now
some comparison shopping. Change is featured ; so is put up or remain quiet. Be
Insist on quality. Old debt education. You can add to gra cious. But I.et others know
~~:i:~ip w~~.1,:,~ ~~~ ~~ YOUR ·SPRING WARDROBE
now. put rorth best enon s. IS READY NOW !
could be repaid. knowledge and also reach you are not without allies.
TAURUS (April zo _ ~'lay more pers«is ¥.'ith special CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. lF TODAY IS y OUR
20): Added responsibili ty is message. 19): Some who are young, 81 RT IIDA Y you are
No halfway measures. Y111 ,,n 1i.v1 "'' ¥try 11..,.1 ,,,11111 dlllln ~' llt1llllftll
t111m , .. "'"· c-.,., Mt " Ww .,... llt• ...-kllly
.,... c11 le•"'· All Ille -y1m. Hiii ,.H_I .... M,.l .
The KNIT WIT
Phou 545-2112
South Co11t
Pl<11a
Cott• M ... keynote. Don't try to evade lJBRA (Sept. 23 -Oct. 221: enthusiastic can also be somewhat of a mystenous l
·11. A Piscts individual could Practical issues dominate, jealous. Be diplomatic. Don't individual. You are sensitive,
play paramount role. Face, O::;n~c=lu~d~in~g~;~"'~'~";'•;r;i•;•;•~nd;,;:sa~le:·==co;;:::mpo~~un~d~e~rr;o~r.=A;v~01~'d;,,;be;;~n~g=::poe;;l~k~:;;•~nd~y~o~u;r~Jr;;';";d•;;:::::::::;::::;:::::;~:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;:;;;;::;
issues as they exist. Brighten Ir ;;
Shannan
Rodgers
"" Jer1·~1 ~:i •. ~. -
Shannon Rodgers for Jerry Sjlverman carves
out a beautiful V-neck, sets piping into the empire
'vaist -then adds loops and buttons to the center
front opening.
A charming design made up in soft crepe,
satin, panne velvet, chiffon velvet, knits, silk or
lvool jersey, lightweight wool or synthetic blends.
73310 is cut in 1i1i.sses Sizes 10·18.
Size 12 requires approximately 2¥.a yards o(
54" fabric. This precut, preperforated Spadea De-
signer Pattern produces a better fit.
Order 73310 give size. name, address, zip. $2
postpaid. Address SPADEA . Box N, Dept. CX-15,
Milford, N.J . 08848. Books by Classification: Coats
and Suits -$1 postpaid. >
Timely Topic
·Panel Probes Welfare
A general meeting of the
Laguna Beach Branch of the
American Association of
University Women will begin
vdth a 7 p.m. secial hour
on Tuesday, ti1arch 2. in the
Ecology
In Focus
Commun i t y Presbyterian
Church.
Program for the evening
will be a panel discussion or
"'elfare, its causes and effec ts.
On the panel "'iii be G.
C. Peopies. airector of the
Orange County \Ve I fare
Departme nt. who will descrlbe
the organization and major
issues and problems it now
faces.
Richard Parslow, head of
the Family Support Fraud Dr. Peter Green of Golden Division of the Orange County
\Vest College will be the Probation Department, wlll featured spea ker when members or the Fountain reveal legal aspects that
Valley Nc\vcomers Club meet create the greatest problems
in the Meadowlark Country in his division.
Club \Vednesday_, !\-!arch 3. Third panelist will be Mrs .
environme nt. Pu rchase appar.
el ; highlight personality.
GDUNI (~tay 21.June 20):
Obtain hint from Ari ts
message. Some n1 o n e y I
transactions are apt to be I
obscured. \Vait unlil facts are
in. Discard rumors. You need
some privacy. Slo\V pace. Be
aware of games people play.
CANCER tJune 21-July 22):
Mesa League
La Leche League meets the
second Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
~1rs. H. \V. Moore, 545-4359,
will answer questions
regarding ,location.
MARCH'S BIRTHSTONE • e 1he +:l$uattta.tLtt
•
The colol' of lhe Aquamarine
has been likened to a thousand
len.gues of 1unlit·aea impriaoned
in a cup. Suppoaed to sharpe n
the intellect and grant coura ge,
the Egyptians placed their
courts or law and their battle
fields under illl prolection.
The Bloodstone is the compan ion
birthstone for ?!larch. Worn by
nien, it ii often carved with
n1onogrania, initials or crests.
ll'rnr your birlh1lo11e for :;,ft
frr1"-iri11 and good fort101r :w
The pl•c.• lo 90
'" A social hour will begin at ~1iriam Speers, ca s_e w·o r k
11 :30 a.m. and lun ch will be supervisor o[ the cc.un\y Child G•nuin• Birlb1ton•1
served al noon. Dr. Green \Velfare Division. spea king onl---'c:;;;;;:.;:..:_..::.:.c:.c;;__ · · ·d d South Co•1I Pl11• will speak 011 ecology following pr.otect1ve services prov1 e
lunch. for neglected children and Briilol .1 th• s.11 o!e9o fwy,
Accepti ng reservations are coun seling services availabl~ s•o.•o•• Coil• Mei• ., ~trs. Albert Clicker and Mrs., ~l~o~pe~rso~ns~on~w~e~IJ~ar~e~. --~:;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiii;;;;:;:;;;;;iiiiiiiii:ll Don \Vyrick. li
,
the new "linen. Type 11 loo k colorful, dainty', springtime
FLAXTON£ PRINTS COTION PRINTS
mod designs on neutral grounds
COMPARE AT $1.98 YARO
mini designs in lots of colors
graaf for school t ime peas,mnt
dresses, children's dress a nd playwear
m•chine washable
cotton; rayon, flax
44" /45" wid• Il ~ill
yd.
DENIMS
• CHECKS
machine wash
35" /36" wide
famou s dan rivers .
HOYA
• SOLIDS
• STRIPES
• PLAIDS • DOTS • CHECKS • STRIPES
for the western look
in jeans, short pants
and sturdy playwear.
good spring colors
COMPARE AT 98c YARD
• SOLID COLORS
Dan River's beautiful wrinltleshed .
dri-don finish on fine cotton.
sm art for dresses, match-mates,
dress or bu1ine1s wearin g
beautiful selections to choose.
machine wash@Z(, 36" wide Q
yd.
machine wash
no Iron
38"/39" wide Z(Z(yd.
PRINTS! PLAIDS! SOLIDS!
mechine wa sh avril ra yon & co tton "44"/45" e LENO SHEER MINI PRINTS
machiine wash-no iron polyester & cotton 36''
• DAN RIVER PLAIDS 'N SOLIDS
permanent press cotton 44"/45"
• PLAYGROUND SPORT PRINTS
forfrel polyester and cotton 44"/45"
• WEAVER'S "K" .PRINTS 'N SOLIDS
machine washable 44''/45"
99c YD.
·98C YD.
$13? ..
$179
YD.
Crisis Unit
On Display
w Crow111ng Glo1·y
]Jeanty s alo11 s
I SPRl.NG • ACRYLIC SCREEN PRINTS $~.
Demonstrating the equip-
ment used in emergencies
\vill be the Salvation Army
Emergency M ob i 1 e Unit
\l'hlch \l'ill appear at lhc
~!id""·ay City Woman 's Club.
8241 Bolsa Ave., al IO a.m.
tomorrow.
The public Is invited to
view the services v.•hich would
be avai lable in our area in
case or a crisis.
Group Meets
Providence Speech an di
llearing Clinic Auxiliary will
meet at 11 a.m. tomorrow
ln the Park Newport Spa. P.1iss
Diane Vance v.•1 11 discuss Your
\\'orld in Color.
.
................
"""""""" ··-
--~ fashion ~chool .. ."
l1verlM Kelly
che nn fashion & modeling
classes bcJ[in hlerch lZI.
call "for reservations
·~
1\lf' 111•M d<'lij1htf11llr \11\lt•llel rhll~lrtn'• 1l1tl"f in the 10111.hl•nd"
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Monday, M.trth 1, 11J71 '
TV Review Westminster Theater
•
Video Stops P1·esses Again 'Carnival' Studies, Elicits Boredom
•By CYNTHIA LOWRY
NEW YORK tAP i -''lnci-
den\ tn San Francisco," tin
ABC film teature and pilot
for 1 projected series. ap-
parently Js based on a theor.v
that ifs about time to gel
bt1c:k 'to thr good old-fashioned
nt.'l\'ZPiiiet melodrama .
Maybe ii is: The Sunday
night program \\'as a busy
lv.•o hours. so well produced
and so updated with con-
temporary 1;i!uations that !hey
alroosi. c.oncealed the presence
of air tht stereotypes found
in ''The Fron! Page," TV's
early "Big Story." and old
Franli',McHugh movies.
The implicit-moral of the
show was "don't ~et in-
volved.'' It was the story of
a man who did , a substanlial
citizen played by Richard
Kiley. He ~·as returning to
s park.Ing lot for his car and
found three young bullies
roughing up an elderly musi-
cian. He waded in on impulse
·.1.nd when two of the toughs
had fled.-one boy had falltn
to his death and the old man
was in critical condition. All
witnesses had disappeared .
The t Good Samaritan found
himself under po I ice ln-
Vl!!stigation. charged ~· i I h
homicide, his job in balance
and stuck, witb an expensive
lawyer's fees.
Enter lhe young reportrr,
played by Christopher Con·
•• tv DAILY LOG
Monday
Everying
MARCH 1
&:00 1J lit: Ntft Jeri)' Dunp:hy.
D KNBC NEWSERVICE * SPECIAL CLOSE-UP ol ·
ORGANIZED 'CR IME in so_ CALIFORNIA
0 QflC NIWW'ritl Tom Sl'l}ldft.
II Tttt AJIH SM
•
1:05 mJ AQlll Tr• PttillM
1:30 D 9 (jJ Kif•'• lllCJ Richtrd Bur•
Inn triu ta sne1k out ol 1 hattl ii'!
1 plumber'• unitGl'm ln •t1k1 Di1•·
bell! Trylar'• f1mout Sl.5 m!llio11
d11mo11d ri111 to 1 Jtwtlef Whtn
Lucy lflbs ll1m and insists 1\1 Iii
!ht 0Hice'1 plumbin1.
0 @ (}} £E Tiit Riii C1111t J1ek
Barry 110111.
nelly \•:ho presumably would
havl!! the lea d in the series.
Ht. prac,tically alone. believed
the me.n's story and sets out
lo find witnessts. There \\'as
the mandatory cynical editor
\\'ilh the heart of gold and
the peppery publisher.
The search for witnesses
turned uJl a s y ndi cll tl?
overload, a victim afraid .his
sordid police history would bP.
publicized. and one eye~1itness
"'ho clammed up until afler
the final commercial -a
silenct which helped bring
about the big fight scene at
the end.
Recital Set
By Organist
Works by Bach. David,
Franc k, Jda1n. ~essiaen and
Dupre will be featured by
organist Clyde Holloway in an
American Gi:i ld of Organ ist!
recital scheduled for 8: 15 p.m.
Tuesday in the First Baptisl
Church , 1010 \\1. 17th SL, San.la
Ana.
•
Top, Awards
To Sinatra
And Ingmar
HOLLYWOOD I AP) -The
Academy of Motion Pictures
Aris and Science:s announced
today that s1ng~tor Frank
By TOM TITUS
01 t~e OlllY l"lltl 11&11
ll is virtually inevitable that
a play built around the theme
of boredom and written by
Qlle or the most boring
playwrlgbb in the theater is
·not #'ling to make for the
most exciting evening. No
matler how yotJ embellish it
wllh imaginqtive staging and
competent per~rmances, the
result Is going \o be one Jone{
yawn, however politely stifled.
SQ It Is wlth ··A Thieves'
Carnival" by Je8n Anouilh
{pronounced -and performed
-as though it were "ennui" I.
A val iant cast from the
Westminster Co mm unit .v
Theater strives mij!:htily to in-
ject a flicker of life it1to I.his
dormant little comedy. but the
Sinatra and "Swea.sh director---•. ,-,-,-,.-,-,-.. ~,-,-,-,-,.-,-,---
lngmar Bergman will recei ve • com"<ly bv Je1n .... ....,.,11,., 111ree1..! bv Sof1.dr1 Ev1n1, DrOCl.,c!I"" ceoral.
IWO of the film industry's most naror J.,.n H•eerl¥. ora<luctlon m•"" Co veted awards. "0'' lt'On Crowlr•. IO!Chn!c•I ClltO!C!Or llurt H•rrlne1on. HI <l••IOn bY ll&r-Sinatra, an Oscar winner for IHI•• H~rrl•• •"" Ru•tv r.ii,o11, P•e-••nt1<1 bv t~e Wfttm!n•tf• Commun. his supporting role In the 195.1 llY Thttte• Fr!<11v~ enCI S•IU•lll Y\ ln•OllGh Mer(!'! 70 •I !~~ Flnle1 S(l>Qcl film "from Here to Eternity," • .,.,uarlym, Eaw1r<11 11 Tr•sk, weir·
THI CAST
l.Wv H11rt S•ll1 C•DWl•Y
was voted the Je.an Hersholt "'1"'1"·
Humanitarian Award by Jhe
academy's board of goyernors. P1terboti0 , Arvld M8~1n~
E~• •... P•I Warn•r
The academy said Bergman
will re cei ve the Irving G.
Thalberg Memorial Award,
th? highest honor the industry
can give to a filmmaker for
"creative producers who.51!!
records reflect a consistent
high quality of motion picture
production."
HKtor Burl W•r"•r
J~Utl11 V•lorlt Harrlt 1/IC1!f't1 Crpwl'v GUlllYf Jell N•wm•n
Lord EC111rll .• J•m~i E. Smo!ll 0Y-1·0Ulorl Sr ... Olck l•Ylor
o...,..,nt Ou1art Jr .... Notl M@<l•;ll• MYl!cll" ............... '. 11111 Cull•n
To"'" C•!tl" ....... J..., l•w•
Nut1•m11<1 • •• .• .. .. Aiko Reich
lownlW(lmlft ..• M1r11\1 l •nt•tl..,.
Fl'11 J10llc1m1n Jol'on Mon••
S1con.d pall<;tmlft Ntll lhl!h
C~lld Jylle H1rrl.,..lon/1Ct!lt C:.O•llon
P.1alnaa captures the reflt'ct ive Weshninster cast are ca~ble Three more \l'eekr.n~s of
resignation o( a man past his of far bcllt'r things. It "'ould proclucllon are scheduled fnr
prime and in over his head. be interesting to watch the .. Thieves' C11rnl\•<1!.'' Fridn.~•
Sally Crowley as the titled same performers i'n "n and Saturda}s through ~tarch
dowager and object of Anouilh piece with some meat 20 at the Finley School
Malnaa's Jightfingered designs on ii. such as "Rini;: Around givt!I a solid performance but the Moon" or, better yet, "The auditorium . Edwards al Trask
hardly appears the SP.X· Rehearsal." in \Vestminsler.
igenarian she portrays. Pat!;::~~~~==============:::::====
\Varner as.her cynical niece I ~ATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES
ls cool and properly elonr.1L--;;::;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~· but rarely reveals the woman
underneath the facade.
Burt \Varner's portrayal of
the Don Juan thief is marred
by an apparent experimenting
with vocal styles which
detracts from his pollshed.
deliberate movements. The
befuddled old Lord Edgard
romes across effectively in TEtllllCGlDl·,Wi1SIOll "-'• Moi•~
the performance of James E. ' I ; I I,. t a I
Smith whose presence un· ---== -l'•l.-1 & 11 P.AA. Sit.-l:Jf.I & !0 ders.cores the comic nature s11n.-1:JO·s,.,n
of the show. _.::::::::::'.~~~~~i!l'.~~:::~~'.".'.::::::_ The young lovers. Jeff __
Newman and Va lorie Harries.
do quite admirably with their
less than inspiring dialogue.
Newman is convincing as th
jWlior thief with a sla bbing
conscience, whHe Miss Harries
sparkles as a young lady
yearning for exc:;itement.
The funniest moments in lhe
play are-fostered by the
peripheraf characters of a
fortune-hu nting Father and son
team. played by Dick Taylor
and Noel 1.1edaitle, the laller
eliciting some of the pla y's
rare laughter with his pouting
and ·whining.
0 ROBERT WAGNER IS * "BANNING"-COLOR!
0 Sb: o'Cltd: Mwlt: .... n11ln1"
{~r1m1) '67 -Robert W11ncr, Jill
SI. John. GI.I)' 51ockwtll. A youn1
19illftnt IOI' PIO bteon!M lnYof'Yed
W1tfl the membtn of !ht ~ntry
di.i.,whtr1 hi works •nd dtvi1n •
ldlitnt to PIY off hb df.bts ll llleir
m DIM frost Show fututtd ii
1 dtbll• on the alleaed m~rder1 of
Bl1d: P111tlltr members by th•
poliu, with author Ed•urd J. [p.
stein inti llttd tllU/lSl!I IOI Ill•
P1nther Pu1}' Cti1r1e.s G1rry.
Members of the Guild 's
Orange County chap ter will
m!'et al the Fireside Room
for dinner al 6·30 p.m. and
watch a "[llm slide tou r of
the organ" under the direction
of Gerald Van Oeventer at
7 JO p.m. before hearing
Holloway's recital.
Aciress Lillian Gish and ac-
tor-director Orson \Velles were.
voted honorary awards. the
academy s aid , ''for
superljiti ve and distinguished
service in the making of m~
task is just too formidable. praise must be reserved for ~ Finally. a v.·ord of hi~h -~~=;~:=r:~~~~~~~§~~~~;--
the characters too bloodless Ule contribution of Bill Cullen {r( ...... R•SERVED Sf.AT ENGAGf.Mf.NT\'
-·· 0 Diet V111 D:rk• m Tiit fll11tJlonH
ID l1}i l}J SI.Ir T1tk
GI Mwtfinllfld ·1h1 Autumn World
#}." Miss Jo hosts this pm1r1m
of ltOriu. tonp,, ind thinp lot
thlldren ttt 'dCI.
ti!) Fb111r F-llf
IJ)-14
mJ Wino Ill AMnt.11
al) LI ~ f1111llllr cell CNIMle
ED,... MIWtllorM/Grttf,
l:lS fl) Art Sludlt
1:30 0 c.JMI C.11111'1 m Tiii F1ytor11 N ..
Ill ........ I.alp
ID UtcW r•1111/Mnla1t
m n. --IE"'-. aJAIC-
J:fJD 8 Cll ._. W11t1r C11111kil1. am Nit "--Dtvfd an11t1ry,
m r.-,s.i ...
tri) 1'1n1r1 !or Livi•I
G!) Mi.-U-V11Hl Aow
9:001) 9 (I) M,,_,.,. RI.0. Howard
Spr11u1, tltt lllJ country clerk,
1110¥1s into 1 1winfin1·1lnale1 1p1rt.
men! buildin1 11 Ille invit1tion of
I b•utiful MWMOman.
D @ (j) m World Premlell
Movie: "llanao11 !tr • Ot1d M111~
{dnm1) '71-Peter Falk, lee G11nt.
Johll fink, Patricia Matlick. A bill·
litnt wom111 lawyers kills htf hu1·
btnd and tries to 01Jtsm1rt !ht ltw.
Alt}'. lulie Willi1ms {Miu G11nl)
kills lier husb1nd, 1 promin1nt lot-
mer sttt1 $1Jpreme court justiu.
Sh• tllfn tctivat11 • dtvtr!y con·
triottd u:Mm1 t imed at comin1 in·
to pouuslon ol !ht lfusl fund b ..
lotlfina: ta het 1tepd1u11tter.
fJ.@(I) 0) UC Wtttcl.IJ Mowit:
''fH•·fla• Man" (comedJ) '67-
Ge0111 C. Scott, Sue lron.
Q) ! lfiCIA I A SWil(i11' Flillf TM
R1111isu11t1, 1 IS·IMmbtl' 111ijilal
trouD:. whirll throu1h Ult Missiall
Bry 1rea ol Stn Dill'lt.
ft) R•litiet '111t World of Henry
Millei.M
Hollo¥,.ay, an as sisslanl
professor of music at Indiana
University, is a winner of the
National Pl ayin~ Competition
of the American Guild of
Organists. A F u 1 b r i g h l
Schol ar, he studied music in
the Netherlands before joining
the Indiana faculty. ----~~ ~j-=---
SEAN CONNERY ,.
JAMES BONO
tion pictures."
The award s
presented April
Angeles at the
presentations.
will be
15 in Los
4Jrd Oscar
Daniel Taradash, academy
pres ident, said Sinatra ''is a
complex, mercurial man with
a deep and abiding concern
for people -a concern which
ha s manifested quietly bul
very materially."
The board of governors
noted numerous benefit fund -
raising appe arances by
Sinalra.
Bergman's credits dating
back to 1943 include "The
Virg in Spring." which won an
Oscar as best foreign language
film of 1960: "Wild Slrawber·
r ies ;" ··summer Interlude :"
''Through a Glass Darkly,"
Oscar winner for 1961, and
''The Passion of Anna ."
and the plot loo vapid and as the musician. who flits in 11ftii1PS "' \ \
oversimplified. and out of the scene. pipinl!'. I ra I 1'i :...'nON.61._lll.tol. .... , "Thiev~s· ~rnival ," like backif'ound mus Jc and • r . Wfft7mt!t71 last season's "Waltz of l he punctuating the di B 1.o.g u e. u 14 ._HA<~ EL~n.·AJU.H 1
Toreadors." Is Anouilh at the Cullen. v.·ho learned his in-,,~=:::=~~~~~~~~~S:.:~~-~.,:~~700~1::=== podium lecturing on life. And strument for the role and
if, as in "Waltz." he can make created his own musical in-
even sex seem a drag. a play terpretations. does more for
centered around the premise the mood of the production
that it's better to be burglariz-than an y other single fa clor.
ed !han bored to death is "Thieves' Carnlval" is. in
nol apt to bring its audience general. a disappointing show
to lhe edge of their seats. because both Anouilh and the
Still. •·Thieves' Carnival" is -----
an attractive piece of work
:ind an ambitious project in
lt.s cos tuming alone . Director
Sondra Evans has gone a lorig
"'RY toward making a silk
puise out or the proverbial
sow 's ear: the style is f\upn~
and the letting eco.norn1cal.ly.
effective. It just is not very
interesting. and the fault lies
more with the source than
the production.
Among th!!! large ca st. the
most effective is A r v i d
Malnaa as th!!! patriarch of
a pocket-picking trio v.·ho Take
their larcenous ineptitude in to
upper class French society.
•
lolbo• f'oR l111ulo
67l·4041 -Open 6:45
II ACADEM't' ,tWAlllD
J+OMlttA!IDNI
Tl4[ NIJUBEi OHC NoY(L C!Jll(
'rW ... JrlOW -MOTIOll ,\CTUllC!
oll'OS.Sll.HlllR--
AIRPDRT
BURT •-,, OUM
WCASTER• MARTIN
PORT THEATRE
2905 E. COASl" HWY., CORONA DEi. MAR-673·6260
10 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS
e BEST PICTURE e BEST ACTOR-Georgt C. Scott e BEST DIRECTOR
e BESl" STORY . .1nd 6 MORE NOMINATIONS
, ,POPULAR PRICES!
• ~1 AwarmoYie
'i 1for people
lwllo hate
r , war lllGlies!'!
-RttR-·/i
,HrJfiday Magazine '}...
T.: .
Jobn Ch1nc1llor, rr1nk McGet. al) Nltldla p k y 0 Ul0 ::"'.;,~~M:.., ,,,.f19(1)""'.., Joh• '"'" ic our wn Dog Voice s WI 11.! (Ont .U11 ts Dr. Jeffrty fnrbes,
JUMSEBERG
JACQUELINE BISSET
ID DrqiMt 1 t111rmi111 p:l!yslei111 w11a t1k!s • HOLLYWOOD IU Pl) -Pat
fE)'nll World 'Wt Un ht "'Tht powtrtul lallCJ' to Doris M1rtl11 .rt« Buttram of ''Green Acres\'
l!>fS•"' .,,..1.: "' ... ~... 1"!J ... 11 • ..... "'' """-'Oscar' w1· nners and Georg• Lindsey 0 r tM wMtl. U NYl'O ~ ''Mayberry R.F-.D .. " provitfe
~ ctrW: t11t U'1111 Wtrd the voices for a pa ir of tire--Ml .. -_ TI (ID Mllllallt/~1 Dest i:w ... ,..... biting f11rm dogs in Disney's
-mis1.,-111111rt• Mlri.I IE Cadlne H Anpttias . . h 8 p k' new "The Aris tocats '' feature-tJl MtwitC ..-a rT1 r,, 1 I Mtt SPICIW The DAILY PILOT. tn l"Ooperalfon Wtt utna or s length cartoon.
· •M ,lO:GO~~P.t ~rr-o'l. ~r•n Wymin 1'1fov1plr.nd \\'ax i\l useum. offtr$ readers a chance .to par~i· ·~~~~~~~~~~~ 7:30 1J a(J)c•11M10,••,,,J", fllltt ~ i nd Tim Conny. r rpote 1n. nat1011trt.de bollot1ng to select. popu~rMwin.nercs .',"
Ltft 1Uut 1t1rs as • •flUl. """ '''" ·'Osca r Dtrb11 " \Vtf'k's vocat1011 fo r two 1n ex1co 1 II ~11ds I MKnidld 01JU1w_unC011tciaUI u Iii ! """ ~t'tin S.nders. or f/0110/u/u nn<I ~ plnre nf hn11nr <U tlie Stars' !lalL of rame
1n tlle tu:er1 1fhr bl!!lll .thot by Bam~~Morri!. Aiuord.~ Brniqi1et in. }Jollywood au·oit tht nat.tonal wuiner. ~"!;it~:1"I • robb•'J' on Part 1 O hM Werl Nm Vo!e now by filling out a11d clipping out this ballot:
D 11' (j) ID Rid ~lftl" Phy!tis .m ~'" GeGi;lt Pllln1m, Htl ris11-• ----- --.. --- - - - -
Dillt1 a:llfstJ IS s lhtriff h1t1r I man. I
Kiiier Diller is w111ted by the law (£1 TrUMI "Golde11 Idol ol rtit . ' 1 1n4 Will shoot tnyo"t we1 r1111 •1 lnt.1l."
iher1fl'1 hit. Red portr1ys Shtnff1 ED World !'Tiii l'inetists 11111yzt I
Detdtyt, who ls 1fr11~ ol Killer blll mtjo( ll!firni!iOnil tvents-.1 In-I ln1d~1rt1nlly h1lps her rob • bent . ter!)ftted b')' mart th111 95 publlU· 1 B .Jelll'lllJ' WoodeR ShMt UCL& lions fron1 frvt continentl.
Ht1d B1s•1t111!I ColCh John Wood· I
tll wls the tot111 lot to!'llltlt'I ID Llcetlll
ltrrit. mJ Hit Ml Motltfllt
fJ (Jt ~ m Ltt's Malt 1 Dell 10:)(10 OtC« Wiak Mt'lit: "fl f.1d1 I
MOll!y H1I, l!osl.1. His Own" (drm1) '46 -OHvi t de 1 Q M~1ilti S MD'rit: "W1k1 Mt H1vi111~d. .lohn Lund. An unwed
Wltll 1r1 OYtf" (comedy) '60 -a•ri 1i¥n her blby tnr tdoDtion to I
[f!lll KOYltl. Don Knotll. A tlaD·1 111end1 who lost lh!•!I. Sil t mHIS I
Im Army vtter1n wtia'• bet11 m11 hl111 y•rs \tier i nd reelize.s !~It 1 t1ke11ly lt·rtcrutttd, winds hill'IM~\ she is his 1111 rriothtl,
lRIO I series ol p1td1ctm1nb on I m Ill ~I lltwi I
rtmol• Ptettic l~tnd whit I ll orflllt! I
81 Trvtlrt • C..ttqMM*I
.. ft , .. I Tltief
fE Cl'1 Wlldltn
(1j).-lO
IE LI DllMI
7:!5 '1:) c..litn ii """"'
m 1m:wlldw .....
ll~ IJ II!! C!J Im -
O :DOO l!J ·-I 0 McMr. "1'"" W'ltlloat l'ltJ"' f
(dr1m1) '61 -Kirt 001111ea. .I m Motie: "t o111111t11d OtclMon• I
(dr11!1I) 'AIJ.-Ct1rk G1blt,
Cl) lut llM Clod: I l:flD 0 0 (J) m Ll•P-1• Guast 1111
Rlc:hlrd Crtnn1 pll'fl s IWI, 1 ll) Wtrld ,,_
c:ltrl'J"ll•ll and IPC)li•srn•n klr 1 I
,._ Yorli: wtlftrt •••~, th1l 11:30 IJ 19 !lJ M...-lirlffi" I
hoinfl r1!11f d!enls !ft plutll hot1!1.1 CJ i» CJ) 8' )11111111 etr.111 I
a ucu l1t1i•n UClA llru~l!I D m Did Cnttt Rithtrd llen!•· 1
"'-U111¥trllt)' ol W1ahl"flnn Hu1k1ts min 1nd t11s witt, Paull PrentlU, 1 tt S..tllo. a"d Na" Sues 111ut.
9 ft (])a> .....,..d C11111 Bob Q) MIWM: "J'rlvlt1 Kell" (my,ttry) 1
[QMnkt hosts. '$( -Slew Coch1111, Howttd Dutt. I
• Tt Ttfl tllt Trwtll 1:00 1J M°""': "Tiie Ylftlshlll1 A111tri· 1
19 .,UT Curmit (wnb li: us" (d11m1) '53 -Scon llrtdy, I
.,... Ir. ms. • l\tw Pl•n"'"•· DD~ I
PtocralMllllll. Bud1*fl111 S,._ let I
the stile ti DUbl!t ithooll.. m Q_ICO kid I
l!l MH tf YIJloll 2:.JO 8 Mont: ..,...._ e4 UM Diii' IEI Miika r btrtltti I (drl MI} ·&~Joftl'I H1d!Mt. I ________________ 1
Tuesday
!\lark an "X" In the box \Vhich appears ln
front of \'our seleclion. Vote for only one person
or film iil earh ca tegory. Please be sure to co mplete
the 25·\\'nrd slalc1ncnt at the end of the ballot and
fill in vnur name, address and phone number so you
can be contacted if you \vin the prize trip and ba~·
quet invitation. All ballots mu st be returned (ln
person or by mail ) to the DAILY PILOT by 5 p.m.
on 1i1onday. !\tarch 29.
Be•t Aclor
-, i\lELVYN DO UGL.A.S for "I Never Sang For -ri.lv Father"
0 .),\O!ES EARL JONES for "The Great Whi!I!
Flope" n J.<\CK NTCHOLSON fC1r "Five Easy Pieces"
r RYAN O'NEAL for "Love Story''
C GEORGE C. SCOIT for "Patton"
Hesl Arlrcss
w JA~E ALEXANDER for "The Great \Vhite
Hope"
0 GLE).IOA .JA CKSON f0r "\Vomen In Love" n ALI i\'lf\C GRA \V for "Love Story'' El SAR . .\ !\f!LES for "Ryan 's Daughter"
O CARRIE SNODGRESS for 'The Diary of A
House~ife" • -' Best 1Uolio11 Pie-lure of 1910
n ".'\JRPORT" fUnivPr~al) n ··FIVE EASY PIECES" (Columbia) r--•·J.o\·r. STORY" /Paramount) t'i ··~t •.<\•S .. 11" !20th Century f'oxl
C "P ,\ 11"0N" \20lh Century fox)
WHY I \'OTED r·on nus PICTURE (in 25
\\·ords or less): .. , ...•.......• , •..... , .... • • ...... -. ' ........... ' ................. '
···················-···················
...... ~ -. ' ' ......... ' ... ' . ' ...... ' . . .
Nam! •... ••••••••••• Phone ••.•. , •.
(OMrttdy) 'SJ -Marjol-141 M1l11. I
My Kilt1dda.. I
0 "A 1111 hf u.• ld11ma) I
DAYTIME MOVIES R:h:~: ~~· Wllll•m B1nd1x, 1 St ree l Address .•.• , •...•.... , ·.· .....•. ,.
,~., ..... c11•., 1......,. f•d·j m .,. .. " urt" (tomtdY} ·s1-1 City ...•. , .•.••............. Zip •.••• , •.
' Wll'li"tt) '$0 _ BUI Wl!!llms. JaM Jud}'~ Hol1ld1y, Rldl11d Conl1. 'CJ 1 - ____ .. -__ ---_ - -__ ---
"frf'I "Stuthllde l·IOOJ" (1dvt11· l:Oll m out et tllt f'1d" (dr1m1) tt '' ,,,.; .., _ °'" "''"" '"''" _,,.""ii••, .. , G"''· Mall ballat to: Oscar , c/o DAILY PILOT,
Klio• I No D """' °"' ""''"'" <co••'1l PO B 1560 C t M CA 92626 , :~a ~111. ,,,. ,. Kittle tll v..i••i · '63-0oit• 011• J~ITIM G•mtf. ct• , os a esa,
R
E.,.. Stto• St•rtto 7 P.M. c ... ,, ••••• "'•'"'
S•t. fre111 5 -S11n. F'•"' 2
~do
ltl'Wl'Olt llA(W; -91 .... _ ... _
.,. ......_UM ttlo .. or., .. .,.
··z··
Mendav thr11 S•t,rdoy
"Z" Shew" •I 7:11
"~UHNY G-l•L" -f :lS
==~:~==-=~ Also larbara He .. 111, In
"THE IAIY MAKER" !RI
WINNER OF 10 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS
INCL. BEST PICTURE -ACTOR 2Q.., .............. ",
IN MlSSION VIEJO ' '. 11.J\'l"l'()N
EDWARDS
GllKIGli C. Sl~ITf a ,t.•Gt••'•":; ..... s ··~·· CINEMA VIEJO
SAN [11fGO rv.v AT I A rAI TUR~OH
810 6'1<)0 l!ll'l KAUI. MAUIEN
-· -----·---.... uo-· -· ----P'l11s-Y"' Mo11ta11d h1 "r'
H~RllOR llvtl. Ar Wit.SOii ar.
COSTA MllA e•l·05lJ
l lllLll SOUTH f IAN OllGO FWY,
Plut-Y•H Mo11to11d 111 "r '
~AlllOlll t lVO. AT WILSON IT,
COSTA MIS• '''·D57J
2 •ILIS J.OUTH Df SM OllGO rwY.
-.-...... __ ........... _ ... .
••9'1;t• ,_ .......... """' ... ....
A!te l tltrt 11Mflt11
"Ttf! T~tm W1lllt t oy I~ II•••"
·::::.~· BEST .~;~~~. JAMES EARL JONES,
"'"'"" -JANE ALEXANDER '
l!rn ''The Great
eoior White.Hope''
diary of a
madhouaawtta
)t !1an1< pery mm
4 __ ...,_..._.... ...__ lao L -='----_J
STARS RICHARD BENJAMIN-CARRIE SNODGRESS
DICK TRACY
'N~l!R 5MOOT FIAST AT '
PICK -mAC'l"-Mii.I
W~A.T A. GA.Gt
G000·9VE, SUM! ,,
TUMBLEWEEDS
Tl-lAT'5 TME
LAST ~O"T"WIRI! VOU~L.RUM INTO.
TOTlU. "T'Mll!:,.R.UTM1 I t.EAPB>OFF~
~ARST
~,;>T~~~
FINl5~ IT.
By Chester Gould
WO SMOTS Rlt-G OUT!
OijL.Y ONE MAN FAU.S.
•
WELl.
LOOK v.\lo's
WANDERED
lf'S HO&ARfH HllMFI 1MI! HANGMAN! I DON'T RECALL
YOUR NAME, ~UT YOUR
NECK LOOKS FAMILIAR
IN FROM'll\E
P!:SERiL
MUn AND JEFF
............. ---..... ,. ....... ~ ... ·-
I DON'T
KNOW--
t\.L. 'TEST
IT!
JUDGE PARKER
I WAZM VOii, 6ET DP oi:: TME POllCE
TREMA.l<IE .. NOT'MHJG AWt> WOTMINC:. WILL,
&ITTER JJAPPEN TO SAM: LET'S T.A.LK TO
ABBEV SPE~CER' ~ fl.IEM ~ ~E'I SOD~t>
~-/'--11 IMPATlEMT!
~~
Jl 11 ~i
By Al Smith
By Harold Le Doux
15 YOUR YOO PIDWT WEEO A IF 'l'Oll CA~ TEll-J.\E WMAT YOU'R'E
NA.ME TREM.UE? SE.A.RCJ.I WARltAJrrr; SEARC.l-llNG ro~. I MAY BE .l.BLE TO
I 'VE A SEAR:CM LIE-tJTEWAMT ~ TME MElP YOll'. llrlCI DENTALLY, Tl-ll!J IS.
WA.11:2,.l<IT ! POU CE ARE A.LWAYS MY .t.TIOin.IEY, S™ DRIVE!i!: ~
WEL(OME TO LOOK ..,,,,,,,.,..~ =~-~
OVE• O<J• FARM ! r
I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by. A POWER I PERKINS
ACROSS
l Rus s ian
news
"agtney S Cargo
vtssrl
9 Boorish J.4 Smatl:
Sulf1t 15 Island of
Scotland
l li Pertaining
lo hour s.
17 Hoax:
2 words
111 Mr. Zola
20 Quern's -:
Trad i!iona l
horse rac e
21 Rtducrd 23 Not fresh:
2 words.
25 Prickle
2& Estimated
t i1'11tS.. al
arrival:
Abbr. 28 T 1,.,, period
32. 100 crnts:
2 WOl'dS
3 7 So oil
38 Viscount:
Abbr.
39 A sacrtd
lt YI •I Common
contraction •z P1id up
-45 Prter Fond a
mov \t :
2 words
~g Th lnnrr
50 Menial
worker
51 01vidrd
54 Sl!ugg lt
58 Privacy
bl P11vat!'
lnstruc\ol
bl"····-·· lim e WIS
ha d by all":
2 wor¢s
b4 Aval1nch e
bli Syntht1 1C
Ii] Prong of
1 lode
LS F i~h
sauc r
f,9 Ceai.ed
70 Plan l
disrase
71 leisur r
DOW N
1 Char 1cter-
lstic rate of
act ivity
2 In any way:
2 fiords 3 Valuab le
violin:
lnfo1ma l
• Was vioh!n1!y
agitated S Be wrong
Ii Stud el'll
7 Assa ul t
8 Tlmepiec!'
q A.ppl1uded
10 love affair
ll Sc ientific
suflll
1' 2 l ' ~! 5
" -' 17
I " rr '
l "
• '
lZ Po sl·
Christmas
e vent
ll Vehicle
mounted
on runners
18 Pact S•gned
in 1954 ;
Abbr.
22 lli.5 let!
24 CCJ1vtrsati1i1
27 Tart, p!urn·
likt fruit 29 Bitter
30 Boy's
nic kname
31 Obstrvtr
32. Nol quite
found
33 Number
J4 Th15: Sp.
JS Maca w
Jb Scrape
harshl'f •o Russian
11t9at1ve volt
3/1171
'13 Fence in
44 Fooled
41i Defeats
badl 'f
'1 7 Of an
island
~9T h inq
in la w 52 G1aspin;
hands
SJ Agent that
resto1ts
body to np
55 Set of steps
over a wa ll
5& Ve fns of
mineral ore
51 Ra .~e 58 Fret from
danger
59 Actor
R 1th~rd --
bD Fr i9id
lil Nin e: Prefi"(
b5 Complex.
nttwor ~ . I' IO . II • " I)
! 11.s
19
21
!) ~ "I .,. . l6 " ~" JO JI
J1 " •
39 0 l!/>~"' " JI 101 Ill .a ,, " .. .!!' ,, .. "
" " i''"' "' ~. ,,;
~ I " " !} " " " " ,_. .. 1-62 • -" " ..
. ~ ·: ~~· ..
•• .. 71
'
MISS PEACH
PO YOU
1"J.4/NIC Aearr ME
~ 1.-01,
Afi!THW<?
; VE~, ;
Fr<ANC.INE, i :r: 00. 1
l
STEVE ROPER
PEANUTS
r Ti-llNIC
A00VTYOU
MY EVE•:Y
lVAKIN.3
MOMeNr.
Ll'L AINER
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
SORRY, BUT LDl>D P.
.JUST lEFT FOi<
~IS MEMORY
IMPROVEMl'Nl
CLASS ...
ANIMAL CRACKERS
AU. 'IME'I
nL.LM!IS
Al-IGOTOOE
FAULT MO
LAD'/ K !N
STANO.'!
4-Cl 1'71 Moll'\. -~
-A~l/WAll,
:I T/-111.lK
T~~5
ACftEeP !
By John Miles
By Mell
By Charles M. Schulz .,...,, .,,...,.,,, 3"'"'--=--, -----
·-
·-·-----·--
TWf StlANOf WOtLD
MR.MUM
DAILY PIL DT J 0
By Al Capp
ByCliarles Barsotti
By Gus Artiola
By Roger BoUen
""'' SlibPP/i/(,
'µJR LUll(H Q
/S llJ THE 11-....J (0
f
I
REfRtfl(lfJY(~J)--1
DENNIS THE MENACE
'lbw M~ Of"™IS 00 I 1\1.\ITA EAT IF
l l(NOW l\\'ATS GOOD FOP..W::?'
•
J
·.
:
'
•
~~ OAll Y PILOT r.~ond111. tJ11rth l , 1971
ltlo1iey's W ortli
Agency Find Your Job?
Deduct Y ottr Charges
By SYLVIA PORTER
Clll nli.IMr•flH •llh I~•
111nnrc-1~1111~11 '' A"'trk•I
t•y's efforts fa iled and yolJ
th:>n fQUnd your job on your
own. llere the Tax Court and
the Ninth Circuit agreed v.'ilh
the Treasury that you cannot
dL'Ciuct the fee.
If you are <1mong the
millions who paid employment
<igency or cmplo y nl cn t
counseling Ices ~·hile job hun·
ting during 1970's recession,
hc<'d these rules on deducting
.)our fees as it emized ex·
penses.
Say that again you fQllqwed IO~~-
this procedure and that after
the adviso ry agency got you
a ne w job. your old employer
()ffered you a promotion. You
turned down the new offer
an d accepted the promolipon
front your old employer. The
Treasury barred the deduction
but the Tax Court .said that
since the job orfer from the
ne\Y em ployer Jed yoo to a
better job with yoi.ir old boss,
you can take the deduclioo
If you patd an age ncy to
ge t a job for you and you
~ol the JOb, you can deduct
.)Our rec, says the Treasury.
But if you paid the fees fo r
seeking a job \l'i1hou! alsq
ge!ling !he Job, then .\'OU can·
not deduc:t your expenses.
1971 RAUY MOY4
Considerable litiga tion in
1970 m\'olved !airly large fees
paid to employment advisory
agencies. The o r d i n a r y
cmploymepnt agency usually
charges yo u a fee oni)' if
it secu res the job - making
the Ice deductible und~r the
Treasury rule. But an ad·
visory agency 1nay have
cha rged you a fee regardless
of its success in finding you
the job. \\lhat then ? Here ,
in sum, is what the court s
decided on this sub jet'I in
J9i0:
for the fee you paid. __ ,
If you are a teacher "'ho
lr•vels during vacation s. a
1970 Tax Court case gives you
vital guidance on deducting
your travel e:rpenses as educa·
tion expenses. The c a s e
covered a husband who tal\ght
Lalin and his wife who taught
world history in New York
City high schools and who
traveled through France for
<'ight s u nl nl c r weeks. They
claimed all their lra\'el costs
as education expenses ; !hr
Treasury disallo~·ed the entire
CHICAGO DEBUT -Sporty versions of Cbevelle and Nova coupes give ·a look
of performance while providing a savin gs in original price and insurance costs
v.·ith standard size engines.
• .•
ha High Ge n•·. •
Chevrolet Introducing
S<iy you paid an advisory
agency a flat fe::: for help
in getting a job with no
guarantee you'd gel one and
then il pul you in touch wit h
an employer "'ho hired yo~.
The Tax Court held that sinrf!
!he paymen l in fact result?d
in your job. you could deduct
·the rec.
deduction.
Two New Sporty Versions
The Tax Court ruled that your travel costs are deduc· CARL CARSTEI'lfSEN ''Heavy Chevy ·• decals 11n
tible education expenses If" ot ,,.. o1Ut .. u.1 si.u the hood. front fenders and
the maj or portion of your at'• New sport versions of the deck lid identify the special
Ch 'Ile ' d N pe ' e Cheve\le, which also has a tivil ies dur ing tra\'el directly ev n ova cou s r mainlain or improve the-skills being introdu ced by Ch!;vrolet, corned hood ~·ith locking pins . /
Say you l1'ent through th e
same procedure but the agen-
""'" t • -d J 1 'Rally Nova' appears In the required by your teaching job. '""""r i..un , genera sa es
manager has announced rear fender portion of the side Applying this test, the court · found that the places the Productions of the "Heavy stripe on the special Nova .
lEGAL NOTICE C .... A " d The stripe also extends across above couple visited and ucv y Chevelle an the the rear panel. A left hand
studied in F'rance did mainta in "Rally Nova" will begin this remote controlled sport mir-
and improvt' her skills as a month. Lund said. P'·40SU CEllTl~ICl,TIE 0~ llUSINESS
FICTITIOU S NAM E
.. hr undiril~nf<! II~• ~rrlltv h~ 1~
ronduclin~ 1 bl.l•inu• 11 P O. 60• 4.liS~.
Irvine, (1111. '1166•. und,r tl>e !ic!lll<><J• !"m '"mt cf TECHNl-CCN 1nd 1n1I
•old fir"' ll COMPOH<I DI 1~t lo!ICWl"9
o• .. on. w~111• nllT'~ In tull 1nd ol•c~
ol rnldenc• I• 11 !allows·
ror, bright drip moldings col-
teacher of world hi story, but "Thes<' special coupes give or-keyed, carpets and heavy
scarcely affected his as a a contemporary look £1 f dut y front and rear suspension
Mlch1•1 C. Oenll"ll•" 1511 /11"1m11 o. .. 61lbo•. Callt.
01ltd Frbru1rv 11. 1t11
M C Ctnll"""'
Sf,. TIE CF CALIFORNIA,
011-"NGE COUNTY·
Latin teacher. A deduction perfor1naoce in t"·o of our arc also part of the option.
was permitted tor half of their most popular car lines." Luod Chevelle has been the in·
transportation costs plus all said. "With the standard-size dustry·s top s e 11 j n g Jn·
the costs of the rented car ·engine. they also provide termediate-sized car every
in which they traveled throu gh substantial savings in original yea r si ncC Its introduction in-
France. price an4 insurance coslS .. , eluding \970 despile production
On Frorulrr II. n1L h<'!Ott ml'.
1 t.:ctarv Pullloc !n 1n!I tor s~id S•11e,
.,.,5.C<'llllY ~oor1'11<1 Mic~tr! C ~nl!nae•
•nc:,.n lo ""' to be the ~""' "'""'"
"'"'' is sub<.ulbf-0 to In• w•lnin
l11tru"'..,' '"" 1ct no,..lfliptd nr r~Ku•eo lhr um•
H yuu·re an elementary Both coupes have special losses dur ing the 67 day strike.
~OFFICt ... L SE~LI
IP•bl H. (&nelll
"'olarv PubUt Ctlllo•nit
Pf111<!P11 Ott.er '"
sch o o I teacher, you pro-black grilles. individualistic Nova. one of the few cars
hab ly often spend your O\\'n side striping and rally wheels. in !he industry to score a
money lor class parties. extra The ··ucavy Chevy'' option is sales gain in the last model
reading. art materials. elc. aVailable on the Che\'elle sporl year. has built a ;;trong rollow·
If this is you . you got a break co upe "'ith any v.tl engine and 1ng an1ong com pact c ar
under a 19iD Tax Court the "Rall y Nova '' option can buyers.
Orantr CounT~
..... '""'"'"'"'" £~~ .. ,., Sep1, II, 1~71
det'Js ion which upheltl a be ordered on any 6 cylinder Jn a recent national survev
teach<'r's right to deduct then1 or V-8 equipped No va coupe. of independent repair shopS l"ubli•~•d O•l"'lt Co••t Dail, Polo!
l'o!>ru••Y )!, M•r<~ 1. I. 15. 1971 :lll>·ll
LEGAL NOTICE
as business exp~nses -excep~ ------'-'-----'------'----'----...:...
ror such items as TV sets,
,.,,,.
il'ICTlllOUS IUSINfSS
NAMf: JTji,TfMENT
ln• lolloWint Pr•~on• 1ro cloon9
bv•,ntj• •~ NU-U, 101 Mor•nf l>Y•. lhl1><11
h lan<I, (alllorni• Lowh G. ICl1h. t07 H•l•OlrOP• Aye ,
Co•ono <l•I M••· C~hlotn.1 H. "· ~chell!ng••~OUI. •O? .... 1.a"OP•
!lwf .• CO!'on1 <IPI M1t. Calilo•nlf.
Ltwl1 G. Kj1~
\\'hich 1night be in the nature or ca pitapl improvements. The
Treasury had disallowed the
deduction for a teacher's out·
of-pocll:el costs becau se the
teacher was no\ requ ired by
his employer lo make the
outlays.
T"'' bu•lnou 11 boint con~~ct'd b• -----------
' P~""Pr1Mp LEGAi~ NOTJCE Put:1l11~fd Or~"~' Cot1I Daily l'ilol •• 1------r ,btUf•Y )1, ff~«~ 1, I, H. 1")1 111·11 ttlll
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTIC£ OF INT£NOED
auLK Tll.ANSFE'lt
NOTICE tS HER£BY GIVEN ·
T~~t • !Kii~ lr•nsl•t bY G•'•ld H
NOTIC£ TO CltEClTOR, Ooolov ind Ro•~• M. Coote•. 00•1'1<1
SUP'EIUO• COU lllT OF TH£ "'""'"S' f 1 V1llev N~ SerYl<o,
STATE OF c ... 1.1FO•NIA FOR l••n1•e•c••· .,,. busiMH •dd•tH OI •!>om
lHE COUNlY OF ORANG£ 11 •:J~ South ... nowl'lt•d. Sfn Bt•n••dlno.
No. "'·6U11 C~lilorn+a '2'02 "'"''" "'"'"'" n•mt ~i~t~~c;"SLE~~ 0.~.:,:,~owf It an(! •OG.'""·"' '~' t\_ Int lrani lt<tP
t OTICE rs HEii.EBY GIVEN , In I ~t\flWS, .. mt Ol'll• bu••llf'U n~m• '"" I . t o '110<!•PU ~••d b• ti>• T••""''0' durinQ .,~,,.,., ol /\• •bo•t n•"'~ d•cta•nf 1ne 1hree ve•r• lad PU! to F-••I •~•I 111 IP'!'•1on1 h1vl"9 c!a'"'' a<>aln111 . '"" 1tld oec•denT .,e ,...,ulrfd 10 tllo ~•9n :"" S•9n•I Co•Po••l•on, 1 Df'l1w1,. 1~em. wilh '"' necossorv voucf'le.,, 1n COt<>O 111on, Tra"''""· I~• butlne~•
tnP o!hc• o! 11>e cl••• of Ille '"°"' •<ldreu 01 wn.c1> is 1100 ~orTh M11n •olltlfd ccu•I. er to P••l<!nr 1nom, wl!~ ~l•ttl, Lo• Anoel••· C•lro•.n••. !1 •!lout 11>• nect n •"' •OU<~•••· l<J t ~ p o ~ mice ol Ille lo+ aw1n1 ceic11otd undr"l~n•<I ,, tile o!!lc•• ot H•UIWOOO, proottlv !'>OEN & ... OIClNSON, SJ.O NtWPO•f , Ct•t.ain ;1oc~ In lr•G• 1nd jn~•n!o•v,
(•nlrr Oii••· 5ullf u~, Jttwp0t1 8•ech, oncl\.111•"11 "~"'· h9hl•ng O"PI••• t nd
Call!otn!t "'"''" ;, tnt olAc• o! bU!IMn alt It•••· ttn!ll and m11n1tnar1<•
iol tll• 'un<le1'1~""' In 111 man.,, <onl•ac1' •riar.n9 ''''"''"· '" te1~t Dot1•inlno rn tn~ n •ott 01 said ~•<eGenl, of mo ••11n tnd aov••h•lng Ind \.111\ltn~
wl!hon IOI.I• mDntll• 1 11" 1•r j,r\! dl1nlaY "'"'"~•• IOCaltd a! •35 Sou!n
pullh<A!lon ol 11111 noli<!. ArroWllP<ld. San 6 trnardinn, C1ll!otn11
C1•eo FtOruf"' 19, 1911 91•1n.
BANK OF ... MF.RIC~ T~• \JI•. tul-•••n·•·· ~nd •1•l9nmenl
N.0.llONAL lll.IJ~l ANO o! !llr alo•••~lct \toe~ Jn Trad•, '"venlQ,...,
S"'l/!NGS ASSOCl.O.l iON ll111\1;n9 Ol•~I••• onn lea ••· .. nial and
(•e<v!o• Df Th• Will n! <n1in1rMn<• <On!fa<h .... 111 b<' mAd• !~f al:io•t nllmM d•,.Genl •nd COrl\umm•TeG gn D• t!lf, !lie 1111
M•~WOOD, SOOE ... & ADKINSON dBY g[ M1rcn, 1911 1! 11\t o!fl<••
Poi! Ottic1 I t• 1!'01 nf Mac<lonald. H111t•d & La•bo~•n•,
"•w•t •l &t•cll. C1. 'lUl tJI So~ll! ~•1"11 5troe•, LDI ... ngelft.
Tpl: tll•t 1••·U1l C1tl•orn;a 9001•.
1>11•r""'' ftr li•oculor 0 11fd. FeC•u•"' 1', 191)
Publl•ht<I 0•1n<1t COl•I O•·IY Pikll l"EOEA: ... L SIGN AMO ... t>ru••Y n. Mltth t. I, IS. 1tll l9i·l1 SIGNAL CO A:POl! ... llON
B• 0Pnnl\ l(ee'•Y
, ... w1
CfltTll'ICfTf OF a u51N£SS
FICllTIOUS NAM£
Aulhoti!td Agfn!
l•aO•IPr~
co~111.,,,..,, Or1n111 Co11t
MM(~ I \HI
LEGAL l\OTJCE
Po!r•.
•JI II
U1tde1·1v11y
E. B. "Bud'' Grant (left) r l.'ce iv cs help fron1 t\na-
hc_i m J\layor Jack Dutton ~right) and prplty Anaheirn
J>r1n cess Dee Dee Osborn at grou ndbreaking cere·
1non1es fo r th e sf'cond Grant Boy's sur plus store.
1'he !'lore. \\h i~h specializes in clolhel'. campin g
gear and gu ns. 1s c~pl'cted to open in Anaheim b\'
June I. •
. .,
~ 1.0llll'a Of OIL PAIHTJNGS
WHOLl5ALI WAllllHOUSE
OPEN TO THI PUIUC
50°/o OFF
'"' I , liOIHCElt, l ... NfA ... N ... ~llln• IH·..ol
OIALllll$ WAHTIO r · •
I
•
Coast Man
In Ne,v Post
Bank Building 'Corporation
announced today that 1-lr.
J\enncth D. '\'oung of Newpor~
Beach. h~ joined the
corporation as a market area
manager for the "·estern
division.
He '>'ill have s ales
resp on s ibilili es for the
southern Califofnia an d
Arizona areas.
''oung 11·as employed by l.ti
S:lltc P;ipcr Company ~s vier
prt'S1dt'lll in charge of ~n le.~
pr1or 10 Joining Bank Buil ding
Corporal1on Previ(lusly h r
\\'Orkrd "·ith Boise Cascade
Corpor:ition ~~ a s a I e s
re 11resen I 11 ti vc for the
Honolulu, Chicago and Los
An,llrles areas.
lie rccl!ived D D.S. degree
In engineering in 1962 from
Los 1\ngclcs Sin!( Colleac.
and service
by Service
ment and
stations reported
Station Manage·
~1olor Service
magazines. Nova was voted
"Easiest Car to Service" and
''Le ast Mechanical
Problems."
VOLVO WESTERN Pl.ANS
A11LLION DOLLAR
BUILDING EXPANSION
Ground breaking ceremonies
for a $1,000,000 warehouse and
office expansion to the Volvo
Western Distributing, Inc .•
facilities California have been
set for the middle of ~·larch,
according to Robert J ,
Sinclair, president.
The facility was originally
completed in 1966 \vith an
architectural a~·ard \Vinning ~
building. accomo<latiog ad-
rn inistralivf!,-offices and a
parts warehouse serving lcn
·western states.
Sinclair stated. "Si nce th at
lime the increase in Volvo
sales and general company
growth have made i t
necessary to expand eµr cur-
rent facilities.'' .
The expansion includes a
27,000 square fool concrete
steel tilt-up addition to the
parts replacement warehouse.
An additional 11,000 square
foot. mezzanine \viii provide
for parts warehou se office s.
'fhe current wareh-Ouse "'ill
be revised to include up-to-date
receiving docks. 1\n ide al
mo<lel dealer's parts depa rt·
nient will also be constructed
within! lhe prese nt \Yarchouse
facility.
The north side of the present
office building '>''ill be ex-
panded to offer an additional
6.000 square feet for ad·
ministrative offices and a
dealer personnel tr a i n i n g
center. A new data processing
room will also be completed.
providing for a new tape drive
IBf\1 360 computer with tele-
comn1unications capabilities.
Changes will also take place
In lhe present te c hni c al
training and service centers
lo allow for additional modern
equipment. Completion i s
scheduled for July I.
:capo Man
PrQmoted
Thomas B. Stephenson has
been named Product Line
1\1anager for G e n c r a I
!\1onnitors, lnc. in Costa ~lesa.
He has responsibility tor
nc\Y p r o j e ct development,
representative s e r v i c e s ,
product promo I ion aod
n1ark-eting services.
General Monitors specializes
In the development a n d
production of gas s a r e t y
devlees and _:zystems. These
products detect explooive
gases and give \\'arning in
time to prevent hazardous
conditions. They arc used
throughout industry,
·Stephenson fonncrly v.·as an
editor with EDN !\1agazine,
a ma10r busi ness publication.
During his four year tenure
ll'ith EON. he restarched.
\1 rote and edited articles
dealing-with sophisticated
electronic t('(hniques and
problems.
Stephenson resides at 31345
El ll or no, San Juan
Capistrano. He Is married and
has three e:blldrcn.
• • • • -• • • • • • • • • .,. #
Finance
Briefs
DETROIT -Ceneral
Motors has disclosed that its
prolit from overseas opera·
tions fell 26 percent to $1 18.145
million in 1970 in spite of
an a percent rise in sales
abroad to $3.652 billion.
\VASJilNGTON Con-
tinental Airlines has asked the
Civil Aeronautics Board to re-
ject the $5 to $10 fare boosts
on the West Coast Hawaii
routes requested by United,
Western and NoJlhwest
Airlines.
Continental said the boosts
wculd knock out the economy
class rates. which it alone
of the carriers, wishes to
preserve.
NEW.YORK -Donbar
Development Corp. has agreed
in principle to license Evans
Products Co. to make and
sell its rotary heat exchanger
lor use in air conditioning
units for -mobile homes and
recreational vehicles. T h e
Oonbar devices eliminates
fans and blowers and is
expected to re s u 1 t in
manufacturing economies of
about 20 percent co mpared
\vith conventional air
conditioners.
PORTLAND, Ore,-\Vast~,
Inc., an Oregon finn. and
Besser Co. of A1pena, Mich.,
have formed a joint venture
to be located at Roanoke, Ill.,
to market the air and water
pollution control equipment
developed or made by both
firms.
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI]
Bank of America, the world's
bi ggest bank, has trimmed its
interest rates on consumer!
loans for the second lime in
two months. In terms of
simple interest, the cul was
•12 or one percent matching
the cut Bank of America made
last Novembe r.
\VASillNGTON (UPI)
Genera l Dynamics Co rp .
received a $21 million Navy
co ntract for production or
sonar systems and associated
cquipn1ent .
Llxkheed Aircraft C o r p .
recei,•ed a $6 million addition
to a Navy contract for gunfire
control systems.
NE\V YORK CUP!)
American Electric P o w e r
System said it plans to spend
more than $475 million for
constru ctio n and upgrading of
generation, transmission and
other electrical s e r vice•
facilities in 1971. Capital ex-
pen!f itwes last year totaled
$498 milli on.
PALO ALTO Synlex
Corp. and Varian Associates
said their joint \'enture finn,
Syva Corp., has developed a
de"icc that will detect tiny
traces ()f hard drugs in the
human body in 15 seconds
al a very IO \V cost. The
mf!chine costs less than
$12,000 and is expected to be
useful in treating narcotic ad·
diets.
JACKSON, MI c h .
Consumers Po1ver Co. will
speng a record $25.1 million 1
on expansion a n d im·
provenlcnt of its properties
this year. The company said
its capital outlays may total
$1.5 billion over the next five
years.
PORTLAND, Ore. -The
country's largest p I y \Yoo d
producer, Georgia P a c i f i c
Corp.. said it is considering
a voluntary freeze on plywood
prices if the present upward
trend shO\\'S signs of getting
out of hand. The company
did not indicate at what level
it believes prices should be
frozen but said it shou1d be
well below the peak prices
of the brief plywood boom
of the 1968-69 winter.
CHICAGO -Factory
shipments of home appliances
rose 14 percent from a year
ago in January to 1.952,600
units. lhe Association of Home
A.pp I i·a n c e Manufacture.rs
riports.
SAN FRANCISOO -Pacific
Gas & Electric Co. has award·
ed a lf!ntatlve contract to
General Electric Co. ror pro-
duction of 1wo nuclear st~m
supply systems. The units will
supply two l.1 million kilo"·att
generators to bt installed at
a planl site in Southern P.ten-
docino COOnty.
NE\V YORK -American
Broadcasting C-Omp•nies is
joining associated TelevlsioJf.
Lld ., of London in a venture
to distribute video cassettes
for the education, industrial
traiorng a n d home
entertainment markets.
Who listens
To landers? •
,
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f.
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•
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I --.J
SINCE
•
SHE'S
ONE
OF
THE
TEN
MOST
INFLUENTIAL
WOMEN
IN
AMERICA • • •
• • • Just
About
Everyone
Does
That's Who
You Can 'Li•ten' to Ann Lande"
Daily i'~ The DAILY PILOT
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------CUT Hlll -PASTI ON YOUl INVILOPI ----·~-
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----·--------··---··---.. -·-----....
JZ DAILY PILOT Mondat, March l, 1971
Fantastic OfJ_er
... ...
4-~ly Nyloll Sears
f:u•r1111lrrd ,4.••inon All tire
f..,Jurc~ 1to111 oorrnal ro.ad huuds
or ,!ffm, ;n rnnerid or "'Ork·
n1'n1~•r. I or 11,.w I.or>•: fOI' the J1(c of
•~ u1>s•n•I n-c.J. ""h11l ~.,,. llo ill Do: In rx·
1ll•ni;:c lot •he'"'" Jc-rl"'c "·
c 1111¥•tl.i: Of'l]y IOI' tb._. J>rOPQffllJll
o! cwrcnc :.rl!i!\,1$ pr11c p!u1 Fed·
.... 1 lu.uc T.a lhar n:r1nt:nrs
"'1:ad u>ed. Rrp,.ir nilll pum'.!W«
11rnQ1h11i;c. ~.u•r•ntrcd "41;ainsl.: Tread
"-'C•f-OUI.
}"nr llo,. l.oes' !hr number of
momru 1p«iht.L
'ti. h111 :-;,.,,.. 'l.'ill Do: In cx-
clun,te fot tfle rirc, rcploct u,
c hU)!1nc 1hc-cv.rrcnt -ell1ng prite
r lus ftdcr•I b c1se Ta ku U.
lol"-1ru: allowmce.
~ ......... .
G tt11r-an1 .. ed 11111>~·( •
27,,, J? .,,
T UBELESS
WHITEWALL
17'>-l:l S36 1.94
JHS-14 S41
Tire and Auto Center
36-Month Guaranteed
Silent,Guard IT
6.'illxl3
Tuhelei.!11
Blackwall
Plu11
l .76 F.E.T.
And Old Tire
'frW ... te F.E.T •. p ......
TUBELESS BLACKWALL
(1.50x l.l 16.87 l.76
7.75x l4 21.87 2.14
8.:?;)x 14 24.87 2.32
7 TUBELESS WHITEWALL
6.50x 13 19.87 1.76
7.3;)x 14 2:t87 ' 2.01
7.7.jx J't . 24.87 2.14,
8.25x14 ' 27.87 2.32
8.5.cix l•J '.!1.87 2.50
8.15xl5 29.87 2.35
8.45x15 32.87 2.48
..... -. .,,, ... ' . -. " .
Steel Belted with ·
Rayon Cord Plies.,-
RADIAL il'IRES __ ....,.._ .. : -
·":\ .. , ... -'· ~\·• ..
... _ .... ·..: ........... !.·• .• ~ ...... -. _......,._.h-_ _,,_...;:_1.-.., . .i.:.-..... -·-
fj-
• Tread reinforced with
2 lilt'el helt11. virluall y
climinatinp: all lypes of
rout.I hazardi>
e Ra yon cord p1ic11 11ro·
vide smooLh,l:>ecu re ride 1 j,j.J3 1"uhel~5! Wh itew•ll l'lu
J .?·t f.~.T. And Old Tire
SEAllS ALl$TATF. RADIAL
PASSE-NGER TIRE GUARANTEE
1 -TRF.All LIFY.n.l!IE GIJA RAllTt:t:
1: •• ,..,.1...r A.la.I••: AU ""' f.,...,....
'""" ~d«-1• ; .......... 1 "" ..... k ..... •h•p. ).,, Uow Lo,..1 T1'c hi< Df oho °'""'ol ••• ..i .. h·• s,..,.. ... in °"' i:..a.-,.,, .......
'"'· <h.rJ>lll ,,.1y I• lk PfVl"1'"""" al O<•lu""l
Z-TRf.o!.hWF..lA.01 rr A~llAOAO
llA7"" MU GU 'RA~lt:•; 1: .. , .... _ .. A,ool-1T,..od•r01-Q11l...,j
,,,., 1.,10 ... tro"' mod h.,.rd•,
J ......... t.o .... , -tQ,000 ""'"° .
,.ho•"~•,. T:m n.,, A•S.-.,.,,.,...,,....,.
c~•-u lot • ..,., """• ttt 11•"" mu • •e-futld, <h"51t111 i• cithcT UK Ol'll• fot Ille
"""""'"''' ol 1bt. ,..,i...,.. oc<e>ted. J.cp• oail pw1<tl•I<> .. ll<Hh.,~<
AOJU..~11""1:
n ;, ""'•• p,,....,.... <•rtGu•llM•• -.int. ,.,..,.'°"" .,., s,,...., ,.,.,1 "'uuloc ""''" •~ tht liS.h. The pnc< ...eJ., th< ~ .... ot
.. 11 ........ ,." tht <Qf-.,.11,,... phco. •• •I.Jone -lo<lhlr fc.lrul [,.,., T..,.11w~
'" ril«I" >1'>n:•·htn: od1Wlm<11• IO .........
n .... ,J "''"' be: 1n><nn:d • ,,..,. J
••llU•ll"<'OL
Express Mileage XLW
Nylon Truck Tires
Scars T .. ow,
Low l'ricb! 2763
Plu• :.?.4:? 1''.E.To
e Adva11cccl Dura.Dual Co nstruct.ion ••• long
wearing tread over cool b<:1se rubber
e Narrow I read grooves ••• less squirm, u1 ore wear
\vi1 l1 grcu t I r~c l ion. \' ariable pitclt . tread 1
•
e Exira wi cle flat Lrca<l ..• tnore ruhl>er on tl1 e rond
• ~'ra 1> around tread a11ll Jo,v cord angle. Eas ier
more stable stecri11 g co11lro l.
NO-TRADE IN REQ UIRED
___ , .... -__ _.,...._,t. •• _.
SAVE'JO!
Tacl1on1clc r
Dwc ll l\l etcr
n,,.,1;,, 3 999
$.l'J.'J'J
Fully transistorizcJ circuit.
.A utomatic volt.1f:C ~t:lcc·
iioa. Works on <i. 11, :.! i or
:tny "Yolugc. With Dura Cell
ba[{crr.
Timjug Ll gbt
]l,, .. 1.. 1999 S'.?9.9<) ~lntlrl
.::11~
For (j nr 12 \Oil ·~,.1c 111~.
:"\n ~d r;tale .-ir.-nirry •••
4·hron1e·platerl had)'. Wi1h
lnng cortl ••• ea:-y.to oper·
ale.
.:.-.~ ... • t • '
SAVE 8166 to s5y
•
SH.OCK . .
ABSORBER
SALE '
SAVE'l66 !
Regular 14.99
O.E.R.*
Shock Absorbers
Each
•Fits most American-made
(__,,.r,~:'.'I cars
•Origi n.al Equipment
Replacement
SAVE $2.44! ·
Heavy Du~y Shocks
Regular
S7.99 55
Each
• T .onger "'"car, smoother ride
•Ragged sintered iron piston chrome
plated rod
Booster Shocks
Regular 2 foe 26.9'J
•Extra support, more stability forcar-
r)ing h eavy loads or J>ulling trailers
Expert Installation Available
At Sears for a
COMPLETE
BRAKE
,,, .~ --~-;
Disc
or Drum?
'· JOB
Herc's Wl1at Scars Experts Do:
e Carefull y rebuild hydraulic wheel cytindero
• Rcmo\'C and replace brake shoe release springs
• Replace hold-down springs
_e Hemove and replace both front grease seals
• Carefully r epack front wheel bearings
• Turn and true brake drums or reface discs
•Fit n ew br~ke shoes'\or disc pads
e Flush and add hydraulic brake nuid as needed
•Inspect master.cylinder and emergency brake
•Finally, we test your brakes out on the r oad
COl\fE IN NOW FOR YOUR
'
I
FREE BRAKE INSPECTION ... No Obligation!
A1k About Senr& Convenient Credit Plan•
, . IUlN.\ PAii( TA 1-4400, 511..4530 IL MONll ·391f
CANOGA P.\lll 340·0661 OllNDAU CH 1•1004, Cl 4-4611
COM'10N NI 6·,Sll, NI 2·1161 HOllTWOOD HO t -1941
SIAIS,ltOl!!UCKANDCQ. COVINA t66-0611 INOLIWOOD Ol 1·1S11
Shop Night• Mon . thru Sat. 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M., Sunday 12 Noon to .5 P.M ..
&ONO HACH ff( S.0121
OlTMPIC & SOTO AN 1·1111
OIANGI 637·1100
PASADINA 611 °3111, 311·4211
POM~NA NA 9·1161
PICO W( l..41d" ~
IAHIA ANA it 7-1l71
JANIA fl IPllNGS t44-1011
SANT.\ MONICA 0: 4·6711
SOUTH COAlf HUA 14WIU
fHOUSAMt OAICI .,,. .......
TOIUNCI 542°1111.
UPI.AND tll·1f27 3:.-:::: ... :a-::,•;, .... 2tte
•
,
•
• • DAILY PILDT l!:J .
Foyt Never Fa.lter·s--Bags -$51,~00 for Win·
ONTARIO -Texan A. J. Foyt and
Ole Wood Brothers put it all together
in fine style Sunday for a hard-fought
lucrative victory in the first Miller-SOO
Grand National race for stockcars.
'lbe race, in br~ sunsnJne and balmy
weather, on the new Ontario Motor
Speedway high-oval course, earned the
veteran driver prize and lap money total·
ing $51,800. It drew 78,000 spec tators.
Foyt piloted a thoroughly prepared
1969 Mercury that seemed never to falter
during the grueling l;hour 43-minufe race
Detroit Ace
I\aline Will
Play Til. '73
• LAKELAND, Fla~ (AP) -Al Kaline,
who last year pondered retirement during
a Detroit Tiger season wracked with
morale problems, says the appointment
of BiJly Martin to manage the team
has influenced him into extending his
career at least through 1972.
''I'm definite ly going to play next "
year," he sald at the close of a recent
spring baseball training practice at
Marchant Stadium in Lakeland. ''I want
to play 20 years."
"I was pretty low at the end of
last season,'' the 36-year-old superstar
rightfielder confessed. "but when they
hired Billy, I fe!_t 1 wanted to stay
around.'!
''He puts everything into the game
and that's the way I like it. I figure
I can learn a lot from him in the
next two years."
From the start of spring training last
year, the Tigers were plagued with poor
attitudes and by a cloud hanging <lver
their heads caused by the question ol
what was to become of pitcher Denny
McLain.
Midway, through the Grapefruit
League season, manager Mayo Smith
blasted his players for "taking money
under false pretenses."
Detroit , a second place team in the
American League's East Division in 1969,
finished fourth last year, 29 games out
of first.
In the •final months, McLain was <ln
his third suspension, catcher Bill Freehan
was hospitalized for back surgery, Willie
Horton had been out sinet: July with
an · ankle injury, and there were nu-
merous lesser i11juries and a general
falldown in performance in every
category.
Last Oct. 2, the 42-year-old Martin
replaced Smith and added a completely
new coaching staff. Also, McLain was
traded to Wa shington.
Kaline, who has a lifetime batting
average of .301 in 18 seasons with Detroit,
said finishing with a .300 lifetime mark
is· "important, but that wonit influence
when I 'll retire."
"When I do stop playing, I want to
stay in the game in some capacity."
"With this club?" the IO.lime Gold
Glove award winner was asked.
''That would be ideal," the greying,
slim slugger responded.
Kaline, who leads active AL players
In games played (2,357) and hits (2,576),
has said he does not want to manage.
Has the Tiger front office ever offered
him a job in il.'5 organiwtion when he
quits playing?
"They haven't said anything to me
about it." he said, squinting into the
bright sky as he waited • outside lhe
clubhouse while some teammates com-
pleted post-practice wind.sprints.
Conigliaro
Cocky After ,,
$10,000 Raise
HOLTVILLE (AP) -Conrident, cocky
Tony Conigliaro says the 36 home runs
he slammed for Boston last year is
nothing to what he plans to do in 1971
with the California Angels. •
"I'm stronger and more confident,"
said lhe slugging right fielder Sunday
as the Angel camp continued to fill
up for the first portion of spring training.
"I want to improve myself in every
category and J know I'm going to hit
more home runs than I did last year.
I'm not going to let a little thing like
a fence bother me. When I hit 'em,
they go."
Conigliaro signed with the Angels
Saturday for an estimated $70.000 after
getting $60,000 a year ago with the
Red Sox before his trade west.
Ao.gel manager Lefty Phillips wall not
with the team today. He returned to
Los Angeles Sunday because of colitis.
He's expected back Tuesday.
The Angels 6egin the hard-core portion
of training Thursday when the squad
m<7Vcs to its permanent spring camp
at Palm Springs. / Sunday, 22-game winning pitcher Clyde
Wright signed a contract worth an
estimated $37 ,500, about Jt&,000 more
than a year ago. Wrig!)I. pjtched a-n~hit
game and was the comeback player
of the year after a 14 season the year
before.
Another left.hander. relief ace Dave
LaRoche, also 1lgned a pact, worth about
$15,000.
Slµtday .. The machine was prtpared and
serviced by the expert Wood Brothers
-one of the world's best pit CnlWS.
. The reputation was tested just before
the .r•ce's half way poi_nt, when Foyt's
ere~ scurri~d to put on two tires and
add ZO gallons or fuel in just 18.2 seconds.
Second, and winning $15,150 for the
effort, was Buddy Baker of Charlotte,
N.C., followed by 'Richard Petty of .
Randleman , N.C., who earned $11,950.
·"Race ·driving is getting 'to be hard
work, but 1 get the same kick out.
'
of wlMing as I did 1$ years ago,"
Foyt said.
"And it always helps the adrenalin
when you win a big one like -this,"
said the 37-year-old, three-time national
driving champion from Houston.
· The veteran racer had bested the best
of NASCAR's drivers on the new ns.5
million course. His average speed -
134.168 m.p.h, ...
Foyl , one or the winningest drivers
the sport has ever known, beat Baker
across the finish line by only 8.5 seconds
with Petty (railing by aoother~Jt secoods.
One of the day 's biggest chunks of
bad luck hit Petty with less than 5
miles to go._ H~ w~ leading with Foyt
a half lap behind when he dived behlnd
~ wall to make a pit stop.
He missed his own pit by several
feet and wa.!' forced to drive around
the track and try again.
During this second attempt he was
passed by Foyt, who never gave back
the lead .
Th• -llklal 1t•ndlno1 In Sl>Nl•Y'• Miii•• 500
11oci.; <tr rt<t , wi•ll laPS complttecl tlld prlft tnd
A. J. FOYT AND SHARON BROWN REFLECT VICTORY AT SUNDAY'S ONTARIO SoO .STOCK CAR RACE.
French Cheer
Yank Girl,
Boo Winners
LYON, France (AP ) -An unrewarded
triumph by Janet Lynn was the high
spot .of a disappointing medal harvest
for Americans at the World Figure
Skating Championships which ended
Satur~ night.
Miss ynn, pert and smiling, dazzled
the c city crowd in the Lyon Sports
Palace with a scintillating free s~ting
exhibition that oompletely charmed spec·
tators and judges alike.
· The· judges gave her the highest marks
passed out during the four nights of
competition -but they weren't enough
to hoist her above fourth place , and
she missed a medal.
Trixi Schuba of Austria had practically
won the women 's gold medal in skating
the compulsory figureli which count for
SO percent of the final total. Her com-
petitors were given only a long.shot
chan~ to overcome her in the free
skating, and none of them could come
close.
Julie Holmes, of South Pasadena. and
Tulsa, took second place, and Karen
Magnussen of Canada third.
Miss Lynn, 17. of Rockf,ord, Ill., had
been placed fifth in the compulsories
and even one of the best free skating
exhibitions or her life oouldn 't pull her
into the lop three.
Boos and whistles of derision broke
out from the crowd when Miss Schuba
went to the victory stand. The same
voices <lf disapproval broke <lUt again
while all three medal winners were in
the center of the ice.
When Miss .Lynn appeared at rinkside
a bedlam of cheering broke out and
the crowd chanted "Lynn, Lynn, Lynn."
Miss Schuba was disheartened by the
display. "I didn 't get any special benefit
·from the rules," she said. "The rules
weren't nlade for me."
The 20-year-old Viennese bookkeeper
is recognizet""as one of the great skaters
of compulsory figures. but only a couple
of hundred people competitors.
coaches and parents -were on hand
when she built up her big lead in a
specialty which has little spectator in·
terest.
Miss Magnussen said ,;I thought it
was very unspc:irt.smanlike for the crowd
to boo a world ctiampion." _
Sports In Brief
Bruins, USC in Crucials $78~0 to Guesser
A pair of Pacific-3 basketball crucials
are on tap tonight when UCLA battles
hOllt Washington in Seattle and USC
invades the noisy, crackerbor gym of
Washington State in Pullman.
Tonight's UCLA Bruin tiff will be
telecast over Channel fi, beginning ·at
8 p.m.
Both teams escaped with narrow vie·
torie!I Saturday night. UCLA got by
Washington State. 57·53. while USC nip-
ped Washington. 81-80.
•
BOLOGNA, 1 ta I y -An unknown bet·
ter won a reconfLMJ.S million lire
f$786;000) in Sunday's ''..Totocalcio," the
popular parimutuel syste:m lottery based
on Italian Soccer League games.
The winner made eight bets on Sun-
day's soccer games, which were plagued
with upsets. He spent a total of 800
lire 1$1.28 ).
The winner guessed all 13 games cor·
reclly on one sheet and had three 11heets
with 12. •
OAKLAND Defenseman Gilles
Marotte soored two goals and forward
Ross Lonsberry added another pair to
spark the Los Angeles Kings to an
8-3 National Hockey League rout of the
California Golden Seals Sunday af·
ternoon. •
RAFAELA, Argentina -Al Unser beat
Lloyd Ruby in the JOO.mile Ind ianapolis
at Rafaela Auto Race and is off to
a good start in defense of his U.S.
Automobile Club driving title.
Unser, at the wheel of a Coll·Ford,
beat Ruby in a Mongoose-Ford, by 30
seconds at an average speed of 167.148
miles per hour for the first section
of ISO miles.
The second section. finished. under
lights as darkness fell , went to Unser
at ··an average speed of 149.750 m.p.h.,
21 seconds ahea'd of Ruby.
Unser thus complied a total of 56
points towards starts the 1971 driving
championship in the USAC 1ponsored
race. Ruby got 54 poinlli.
•
MONTERREY, Mexico -World ban-
tamweight champion Chucho Castillo <lf
Mexico scor-ed a 11i~;ound technical
knockout Sunday 11ight over countryman
Felipe Ursua in• their non-title fight
before 15,IXX> fans in the local bull ring.
The bout was stopped with blood pour·
ing from a cut <lver Ursua's right
eyebrow, The champion dominated the
action and was never in danger.
castillo will defend his title against
former champ Rueben Olivares of Mer-
ico in Lo! Angeles April 2.
•
MACON. Ga. -Zeljko Franulovic of
Yugoslavia , in a sudden~eath last set,
defeated Jllie Nastase of Rumania 6-f,
7-5, 5·7, 3~. 7-6 Sunday tG c\8,im the
sipgles championship in the Macon
International tennis tournament. ·-WINCHESTER, Mass. Billie Jean
King of Long Beach gave an exhibition
of rich and varied shotmaking Sunday
and defeated Rosemary Casals of San
Francisco, 4-6, 6-2, 6-3, to win her fourth
Nati6nal Women 's Indoor singles tennis
championship.
Lakers Near
Division Title
INGLEWOOD (AP ) -Jerry West can-
ned 24 points Sunday night as Los
Angelu buried Cleveland, 107·90, and
reduced to three the Lakers' magic
number in the Pacific Division title chase
of the National Basketball Association .
The Lakers built up a 61·36 halftime
edge as the Cavaliers shot a dismal
24 percent.
The Joss, No. 60 for the first-year
Cavaliers put them within seven defeats
<lf the NBA record for losses.
The Cavaliers have won 12 games.
High scorer for Cleveland was Dave
Sorenson with IS pc:iints.
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U llon ttorn1d1y, S.n Ft•f'llllOO. Ford. 1n l9p1, S!.111.
' Nicklaus PGA Winner
, Br.idge Game Tip·
.
Winning Formula
PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. (AP)
- A tip during a bridge game and
a moonlight putting drill ignited Jack
Nicklaus' "greatest putting tournament
ever."
Nicklaus had lived with a sick putter
for weeks when long lime golfing pal
Deane BenlJin tendered the clue that
led the Qolden Bear to a SundafVictory
in the 53r8 PGA Championship.
"My wife and I got clobbered in the
bridge game," said Nicklaus, "but that
night a week ago saved me."
· Beman told Jack he wasn't finishing
his backswing on the putting,.stroke.
"Deane had bailed me out before,"
he said. ''I picked up a putter at II
p.m. and ·6egan hitt1ilg Dalis on some
Ast roTurf I have next to my pool.''
Seven days after the moonlight practice
session, Nicklaus was the only man ever
to ' win the "big four '' championships
twice with three victories In 'the Masters
and two each in the U.S. Open, PGA
and British Open .
"It feel s great," said Nicklaus, smiJ.
Ing and relaxed. "When you've do n e
something no other man has ac-
complished, you have to feel wonderful .
That's what we're all out here for -
to separate ourselves from the ma sses."
Nicklaus separated himself from a
brilliant group that includes Ben Hogan,
Gary Player and Gene Sarazen. They
had all shared the honor <lf winning
a "grand Alam" of the four major cham-
pionships.
Now, Jack stands alone. He'a done
it twice .
"l always gear for the major events,"
he said. "I've won II now. I want
to win more than any man ever."
Bobby Jones captured 13 big ones
as an amateur. Nicklaus is now tied
for second with Walter Hagen at 11
with Arnold Palmer a distant fourth
with eight. .
"l began pc:iinting for this PGA touma·
_menl last fa l:," said the man who lives
five miles down the road from the PGA
National Golf Club. "I skipped the last
two weeks of the 1970 tour, giving up
any chance of being leading money win~
nIT_ and have seriou~y thought .Qf lilt~
since."
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G••v Pl•v•r, U.IOO 71·13"-6a-ll-2l5
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Bob Lunn, 14.IOO 71·10-IJ.72-2'1
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Jvry McGet, $7.0U 7J.7•11·n-2'1
Bert Yanc1y, s2,oe1 11·11-70-16-7'1
U,ITI~
LAKERS' GAIL GOoDRICH DRIVES FOR TWO IN 107·90 WIN.
This ' was the firs( year since 196$
that the Uftited States has not won·
a gold medal in the world ch11mpionships.
The team had strength in depth this
year but figure skating judge11 t e n d
to respect the primacy of champions
and it will be extremely difficult for
the Americans to upset any of the reign-
ing champions in the Olympics in Sa~
poro, Japan. next year.
I Can Take a B~ating--Plunkett
All the champions said they planned
to try again at the Olympics.
Miss Holme11' silver medal was the
highest American placing. Judy
Schwomeyer of lndianapoli11 and Jim
Sladky of Syracuse, N.Y., got the bronze
medal in the dance event.
' They were faced by a solid bloc of
four votes Jn favor of Rusalana among
the jury of nine and were unable to
overcome the odds.
Jo Jo Starbuck and Ken Shelley of
Downey, captured the bronze medals
in lhe p1ir1 competition.
Two Russian pairs were ahead of them.
W)STON (AP) -The Boston Palriol'I
aren't eraclly fam ous for protecting their
quarterbacks these days, but No. I draft
choice Jim Plunkett isn't losing any
sleep over it.
"l'm a pretty healthy guy," the big,
rugged Hei11man Trophy winner from
Stanford said Sµndaiy on his first visit
to Boston.
"(can take a beating."
If the w1y 'defensi'(e linemen poured
into the Boston backfield last year is
any criterion , he may have to. At the
news C<lnference, for Instance, one ques·
Uoner asked Plunkett if he had seen
any Patriots game fiJm1 and ·another
voice called Gut: "He doesn't like horror
mnvies."
But Plunkett indicated he w111n't wor-
ried.
"1 haven·t .aeen the . game films," he
said, "but T'm sure the team an(I the
coaches and the people involved know
wh11f lhe\V problems were tut year 11nd
will be trying to Improve Jn ij)ose areas."
Aaked what be . expected to be the
most difficult adj ustmenll from ·college
to the National Football League, Plunkett
•
said it ~ifficull to talk about
50mething you hadn't erperlenced yet.
''Probably the mental part," he 1aid,
1'1ike figuring what the defenses are
going to do.''
On the physical aspect. he said the
part of hili own game that he felt
probabJy nctd(d the mo&t WOt'k .. was
"my quickness. learning lo snap the
ball a little more."
And he said he expectrd to find it
neCessary to wor k quite a bit adjusting
to his receivers, just as he had in
college.
Plunkett. the first player chosen in
the entire Nf"C draft as the Pal! got
the No. 1 pick by virtue of having
pooled the season's worst won-lost
record , declined tD predict what bil
role would be next fall.
''.I'm just going to work I'll! hard as
J c:ao and see what happcl$," the 6-foo~.
21S.pound hero of this year's Rose Bowl
game said.
"~OJ><'fully t'\I be a member of tbt
.. team. whether I'm playing nr not at
first, and v.·ill be trying to improve
myself alnng with the team," he added.
<
••
. ,. If DAILY JllLOT Monday, Mirth l, 1971
Crippled GWC Five
Prepares for Vik es
8y CRAIG SHEFF . , ... ~,.. ... "
Two weeks ago l o-d • y ,
Goldtn West would have been
an cverwbelming f1vorlt.e in
II• JC reponal bukelball
playoff game witb Barl1ow
thil Saturday night.
WlLbOUt Ambrotlch, t b e
Rustlers managed to get by
East LA (7~74) to wln the
eonfertnef: championship, but
then teammate Rlclt Barnes
came down with the nu, miss-
Inf the final circuit tilt aod
lbe all·!l.ar game.
the: Rustlers won 't know until
llkr lll1s week .
Coach Dick Stricklin'.s club
wq: also due to find out today
just where they will play the
regional game.
But a pair of allmtnls have
piqued tht Rustlers and
Saturday night's tilt with the
Vikings dot1o'l figure to be
•laugher, by any rneani;.
With both starttrs out,. the
Rustlers fell to l.ACC and
then the All-stars. 93"8& at
Orange Coast.
If Barstow and Golden West
cannot 'agree on a site, then
Barstow can pick 1 school
within tbe SoCal clrcuit to
play the game.
'M'le first incident happened
In t.Pe LA Harbor game v.'htn
the Rwtlers' N~ scorer and
leading rebol.i er B r i a n
And even if the two GWC
starters are able to 1et back
into tM starting lineup against
Barstow, they probably will
not be up lo full capacity,
With Ambrozich and Barnes
in the Jineup, it's hl&hlY
unJikely that Golden Wea:t
would have lost to tht All·
stars.
Ambrotich Slr a knet.
It caused him to m.Iss the
final two conference games
and last Saturday night's till
with a circuit all~tar ag-
areration .
Ambrotlch is expected to
return, but the slluaUon sur,
rounding Barnes is a mystery.
The late1t ·word is that
mononucleosis is feared. but
The All-star group overcame
a very slow st.art and in the
final anaJysis just had too
much fire power and board
strenglb for the RU&tlers.
Golden West's Cb r i a
Mustangs Fall
Anteaters Bid
Thompson put on a fine
shooting performance, hitting
35 points for scoring honors.
He canned 15 of 27 field goals
for the evening.
For 16th Victory
Although the All-star unit
led through most of the second
half, the Rustlers tied it at
80 on a tip-in by Jim Anderson
with 3:15 to go.
By HOW ARD L. HANDY coach Tim Tift sa;id after the
Bul the winners, hitting
from in close, reeled off seven
points in a row lo take a
commanding 87-80 m a r g i n
with 1:50 to go.
Of Ille Driilr f'lltt IMff One game remaJn.s on the
1970.71 basketball schedule for
UC Irvine and perhaps ii ~
just as well the Anteaters
have a week cf rest before
tbe flnal altercation of the
""°"· Jt will take place Satu rday
night at UC ltiverside.
The Anteaters and Cal Poly
!San LuiJ Obispo ) Mustangs
sti:g~ 011e of the most
physical b1tlles of the year
S1turday night before UCl
emerged 1rith • bruising 75-7 1
decision before 1,47$ fans in
Crawford Hall.
game.
"\Vt gave them fSLO) every
chance to get back in the
game by missin( three one,
and-one situtation.s late In Uie
le(':Ond ball."
The physical matchup fopnd
1!1 fouls caUed against UCI
and 26 agatnst the visitors.
Each team hit 19 al the line.
Rlcharij, Clark had one or
his more productive games
with 14 point5 and Troy Rolph
1\•as devastating from 2:0 feet ,
hitting 12 points for the night.
S.lltWR 01 All·Sll" {Q)
" " " " 'N~ • ' , • "'" , ' ' • L. AllC!ef'°" ' • I • Llnnemtn ' • ' ,.
'~ ' ' ' ' ll1n•~ ' I ' " S1utn1T • ' ' " lh1n , ' ' • ~Hv-4 • ' • ' P'•nlfl:ost ' • • " '· Mcltrson • I ' ' To11J1 ~ " " n
$tlftfl Wt1t !Ml
" • " ..
T'*""IO!I " ' 11
C1rlS0<1 • • • ' DMktr • ' ' " AoodtfMn ' • " ·-· ' ' • • "°"" ' • • • Gr1h1rot ' ' , ' ,_ • • ' ' ·-" • , ' ,
H11-1t1 ' • I • Tol1l1 " ~ " ~ The win brings the UCI
season record to 1$-10.
Phil Rhyne v•as below hiJ
se1son average or 19.3 but
did an outstanding job in
stealiqg the ball live times
from th~ Mustangs with alert
li1lfl!me: A!l·S,_rt C. GOklt !I W~I l l
"I thought we played well
in the flnt half but this was
a tough physical battle, •r
Vike, Cl\1
Swimmers
Upended
Potent Foothill High'• swim
forces swept put bolt Marina
and C.O.tl Mesa in a
triangular c:onWntatloo Sflut-
day morning, plllng uf 91
p>int.s to Marina's 36111 and
Calta Mua'a.:13\\.
defet'llive play. •
BIU Moore hit for 14 points
in a sub rote to tie with
Clark for individual game
honors for tbe victors. Bi\1y
Ja ckso n , a Mustang
.sophomore. was high man for
the game with 22.
Collegiate
Basketball
DeMis d'Autremont. no w111
stranger to Crawford }Jail s1. AAtrv•s n. ,. .... ra!n• n
alter Pl.ytng •--•---ball v.11.., .St. ti, C.t tr. fFullel'lonJ ,, u-.:MIJl1411 UCL.A 1'. WIMI"'""' St, !oi
with Ed Burlingham and vK u, w 1Mlfllfon to
al _._ •-f the f'1tltlc N. Leroi. 1s 1ever Ou..::r mem11er1 o uc s..ni. ••rNr• "· Fr11no s1 ... UCI squid, hit the lint nine llC ltfvtflldt m, Chtom•n 71
points for the Mwitangs tnd c.ntonti. "· 0r-SI. 74 U5F ftl. Nf\''41 (ltl""J 11 (lnisbf:d with 14 for the gamP. Sle<ll'nlf!la SI. 70. CMto $1, '4
J H I b t ' UC! Orooon IO. Sl•nlord 75 err/ · U e r S N1vtd1 IL11 ""''J 1:1, Sen!1 Cl•r1 (reshman team continued to S"n11 Ptt.lllt 64. f'orlltftO 61
roll with I 78--71 victory over I AIT
Th Du~• n. StlDf' ll•U 11 the Mustangs year: -:s. e • .,..., s1. 11. P1n.1>u•th '5
Win gives the frosh a 21·1 loa!on Coll .. t If, tlolr C~u St
I F"'<l'ltl!\ 102. )•YU 17 record compared to 20--4 or "'"11 "· v,11 u the-Sl.O ·flrat·~lr squad that N11trr-ou,,. ft, !!. Jo~n·s..,..
V1nlrr finished the season at UCI .. rincttOll 7t, •rown n
........ '"'' ,,,.,. .. ()6\\J, C.tta Ltlllt!I 111, lttt.llftltr '4
Mt4I c»V.I Saturday night. •""'" "'· •11t-ne11 lf * "' .. '" ltt'-Y -l, l'eothlll 1. The UCI frosh play use H1rv1n1 lo.I, CO•l>•ll 'IO
ca.ti MllM. T1m1: 1;.UA. Friday nl•'t •·fore closin' a PrCJ<"ldt!ICt IOJ. Auvm1ulo1> ., :!Ob F,.. -1. l'ttll!Mfte 11'1 1, &'' -0 SI. Fr1nct1 flri.V.I 1.5, LIU '3
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Ml" tM) S. llffl (Cl, Tlmt: l :ft.f. SI. &oMv1nl1lrt t•, C1nl1lv1 "
JO Fr" _ 1, Furnlu tFI ,, l'llu Saturday. NOl"t!l1111.,n n. "'""'°"' st
fMJ 1 ,,.,_.. Cl') ... W1lclto1dl !Cl L UC lrYt. (TIJ SI. Jo1ttll'1 11'•.l W. L•Stllt 5'
WU119m• CMJ, Tlrnt: n .J. •• H tf I• Dtrtmoutll 71. C01u1T1bl~ 71
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UCI Nine
To Face
Vanguards
\JC lrvine baseball team
conllnued its all or nothing
policy in doubleheader action
Saturday afternoon with a
lwin victory over visiting
Chapman CoUege on the
Aoteater diamond.
Tom Dodd, sophomore right
hander, pitched a lhrff.bit
shutout in Ure opentr to sive
UCl a U win and Tom O'Con·
nor came on in a relief role
jn the-nine iMi.ni nightcap
to receipt for the second vi~
tory, S-4.
Tuesday afternoon I he
Anteaters entertain Southern
California College in a 1in1le
game beginning al 2 : 3 O •
Scutbpaw hurler Skip Redondo
is scheduled for mound duty
against the Vanguards' jop
burler. Dick Sivert5e~
Dodd was the master 1n
the first· game Saturday,
ufuiting Chapman to three hits
and not allowing a Pantber
runner beyond second ba.tt.
Only two runners went that
f11r on the base paths.
Irvine collected two runs in
the third and fifth frames for
the victory. Mike Sheline
doubled, Dodd tripled and
Rocky Craig celebrated hls:
return to the lineup wltb a
run-scoring single in the third.
Bobby Farrar's triple spark-
ed a second outburst in the
filth.
In the nightcap, Dennis
Nicholson laid claim to t he
hard-luck pitcher of the year
award as bis mates gave up
four unearned runs and be
was relieved by Greg Pen-
nington and then O'coonnor,
the latter pitching the ninth
and gettine the win.
P"l•IT GAM•
UC l,.,tM (4)
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SY~Ofl, 111
Cr•lt , cl
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H•n1tn. 14
Coron-. ,II
Sheline, t ......
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SECOND GAMI
UC lf'tllllt Ill
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•
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Sites Listed
For Playof fs
Marina High School's second
round CIF AAAA basketball
clash Tuesday night will be
at Founf:aln Valley High
School, while the other Orange
County AAAA survivor, Ser-
vile, metts Rolling Hill! at
Redondo High.
The only other playofr game
in Orange County TuesOay will
be Katella 's AAA clash with
San Bernardino at Anaheim
High Schoo l.
The sites: ......
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JiDI ,,., ••It¥ -I, C•I• Mra.t t.. INIUAANC 11\9119 '4.l·•lff. 'tolllllL t ime: 1;4S.o. :._ ________________________ , •
••
FV, Lions
Qualify 4
Wrestlers
Fountain V a 11 e y and
Westmlmter High S c b o o I
wru:tllng conttnsents wlll send
four quallfiera each to Redon-
do Hl&h School Saturday !or
tbe ClF wrestling finals.
The Sunset (Westminster)
and Irvine (Fountain Valley)
League champs dominated ac-
tion at Rancho Alamito8
Saturday in the secUonals, one
of four setups desJgned to pro-
duce IS finalists at Redondo.
Bob Walker (238) and Dan
Lewis (168) led the FOl!lltain
Valliey crew with first place
efforts while other area grap-
plers to nab flrlts included
Chuck Kehler of Estancia
(98), John Magilavy of
Newport Harbor (141) and
Andy Lassak of Westminster
(171).
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2ll -Htnrv 19vtnl 1'1'11) lllC Mt·
honw lkddlt0tt111 44,
Marina Face s Big Obstacle
In Fast -breaking Mona-r em
By ROGER CARLSON
Of ""' O.llr •li.t 1'9tl
Orange c:owtty'1 represen-
taUoo In lb< CIF baskelball
playou.a baa dwindled to rour
teams, with ooly Marina and
Servile lelt In lb< klrAA
bracket.
Tu'"8day night coach Jlm
Stepbtns and his Marloa Vlk·
lngs wUI be trying lo keep
Jt going when Utey meet tall,
Ulent.ed Morning.side In the
SWJnd round at Fountain
Valley !Dgb School.
Marina got by Mootebello,
53-41, Friday nl&bt. but t h e
Monarchs !rom the s k y
League appear to be a tou&her
nut to crack. bouling a 24-4
overall mark.
In that span the SkY League
champlona dropped a pair of
~e-polnt declsloni to ' Avia,
lion, lost hi Rolling Hllb by
two and to Mira Costa by
five.
Gary Dean, .11 g.5 senior
three-year letterman forward,
Je1ds co1ch Jim Harrick's
fut-breaking crew witb a 17.5
scoring average and earned
second team AU-league honors
last year.
And he haa plenty of help
In the reboundlng department
up front where the Monarchs
are particularly stron1.
Aiding him are a pair of
sophomores, 6-5 f o r w 1 r d
Jack.le Robinson and 6-2 center
Mike Ingram.
The latter replaced M
sophomore Larry Brown, who
has been out with a c:htpped •
ankle bone and is a doubtful
1tartu.
Ingram ls the younger
brother of Bill Ingram. a 6-3
jumping jack who earned first
team All.ClF honors last year
as 1 senior.
The Monarchs boast four
players in double figures with
Robinson hitting In the 16.2
range, guard Ron Rickmon
(S-0 sr.) 11.5 and Brown 10.3.
Morningside (where Marina
football coach Leon Wheeler
was lured away from ) roUed
to a 12.-2 league mark. the
same as Marina, and posted
* * * M-l~t•i.1 , .... ,
~ So\1111 f"'fl~Cf
" tovolt
" "TOfttnce
" Mfr• COii•
" Sin Mt r(DI .. Mlrt Cosrt
" T"'••nc• .. MlrtlH!t • f!lt l.......oocl .. Mt, C•rmlli
" Avlt l!Ol'I
" •oYIL
" Ml. C1rm1t
" •ollln~ Hiiis n Av/1110!\
" ltv•r!T Hiii•
" P'11C11 Vt fcltl .. Culver Citr
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" Culver Cltr
~ Lt<.1tln1tr
" TOl'•t nct .. U ktwoocl
an easy 15-point victory over
Lakewood to gain the 1econd
round.
And Jt's been done prlm1rily
with tremendous rebounding
abllity under the olfenalve
boards. where the Sky League
represenlaUves simply keep
rebounding and putting tbe
ball up unW it finally goes
In.
Barrick voicea concern over
ltfarina't q Cknelll, outa!de
sbooUng and one.two re-
boundlna combina n of Kipp
ll&trd (~I) ancl aa llogdu
(M).
"l wil"v Impressed wltll
Marina. They're bli up froht
and th•y looked good tile nl&ht
t saw them pl1y Newport
Harbor," says the Monarch
mentor.
MD Up ends Viki ngs;
Artist Nine Nip s Un i
Mat<r Dti and Laguna
Beach Hilb baseball te1ms
scored non-league victories
Saturday in an abbreviated
schedule of games. ,
Coach Bob Wil;more's host
Mater Dei nine came lrom
behind with a three-run flurry
in the bottom of the seventh
inning to nlp Marina, 10.9,
while Lagana Beach took the
measurt of University, 5-%, at
MJssion Viejo HJih.
Marina bad come rrom
be.hind with 1 seven·nm out-
burst in the sixlb inning cap-
ped by Mike Beattie's two-run
homer,
Bµt the hosts ignited behind
Billy Clough's two-run double
in the &eventh to lie it, then
Clough raced home with the
winning run when John Kin-
nelly's infield roller was
thrown away on an overthrow
at first base.
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102l!O:c-S 7 1 1111 211 J-IO 11 J L1vu11•8NCh
WITH THIS COUPON·····._.
VW BRAKE J e
5!!,!~!~L :
M•chln• 4 Drum• •
Ov•rh•ul 4 WhMI Cyllnll_.. •
MMI Mf19 tlMMfl!Jtll&f ... ,_...
(lr!OT f'l.O.ltATIO) •
•
Diagnostic Center
for car check-ups.
Penneys Sc ientific Testing Center
can he lp to point out weak spots
in certain vital areas of your car.
In less than one· hour we put your car through a "Series of acientifiC
testS(2 12 of them). Steering. engine, brakes, transmission,
electrlcal and cooling systems. You watch the results come out on an
electrontc typewriter.
The writlen repart shows the results of the tests. It indlcales what teated
parts of your car are weak and what parts are strong. A trained diagnostician
will go over the report wlth you. If you wish, he'll give y0u an
estimate of any necessary repairs costing big money. There's no obligation
to have any of the work done. You decide what to fix and where to fix it.
Tho cost? Only g 88
Not bad for a check-up ·fheM dlys.
•
,
•
Penneys Scientific Testing Center
l\n'l~"· • ..
Charge ii lt eny of these Penney Aulo Centers: BUENA PARK co .. no1tnorou1v111oyV1ewl CARLSBAD
FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH ORANGE "THE CITY"
Dl1gno1tlc 11n,a open Mond1y through 81turd1y.
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Prep Ba·sehall Outlook for 1971
Coron• del Mar
Corona del Mar Rig.h's Sta
Kings could be the sluper
in the lrvJne Leaaue baseball
race where Los Alamitos, San-
ta. An• Vallty and Fountaln
VaUey are the l·Z-3 favorites tor the Ulle.
Coach Tom Trager has
seven returning lettennen In
the program which iocludes
a 1>1ir ol solid pitchers.
Ready to toil on the mound
are rlghthander Dave Vilas
and southpaw John Palmer,
a pair of :seniors.
AnoUw PoSSlble pitcher L,
lefty Keith Samuels, who
usuaUy operates at flrst base.
Other returning Jettennen
are Infielders Mark Johnson,
Stu Karl and Larry Denner
along with catcher Mark
Erick.son.
Palmer and Erickson are
Ct'.>llside,.ed the best threats at
Ule plalr.
Outfielder Bob Palmer is
being counted on to flll a
vacancy while Trager is pin·
rtlng a lot of the Sea Kings'
hopes on the ability of Brad
Baker and Scott Parker, a
couple of junior outfield pro..
spect.s.
others who coWd help the
Corona cause are ouUlelders
Jim Bishop and Doug Starr
(seniors) and juniors Mark
Sears (outfielder) and Reed
Johnson (Pitcher). D a Ye
Neilsen is an infield candidate.
Costa Mesa
Seven returning varsity let-
ltmien dot the Costa Mt!a
high baseball n>!lter and
coach Jlrn ltagey opines: that ,
his team could be a better
overall club thu &he one that
finished second in the Irvine
U!ague la!l year.
The list of monogram win-
ners includes outfielder Kevin
Morrow (who can also operate
at third base and pitch).
righthanded , pitcher D a n
Qulsenbmy, SttOnd basema•
Jlm Salstrom, catcher Dale
Kubesh. !horutop R a n d y
Embrey and outfielder Teen
Sampson, all ien!ors.
The only junior returning
Jetttrman Ls J~ Arthur, who
can double 1t catcher or out·
field .
liagey baa ~vera1 good pro.
spects lo ~hoose from to fill
in with Andy Martinez. Mark
ChristmaA and Mike Caldwell
lhe leading candidate!.
Martinez ls a Jefthanded
pitcher and outfielder while
Christman is tabbed for duty
al first base. Caldwell Is an
outfielder with good speed.
Other help is anticipated
from junior Billy Clark (in-
fielder), and second baseman
Jerry Golden.
Embry. Morrow. Martinez
and Quisenberry are slated
to share mound duties but the
latter is roraidered t h e
Mu stangs' stopper,
E dison
Coach Bill Morris has eight
returriing lettermen in the fold
are trying to improve on last
year's 7-16 mark.
The Chargers ripped the ba1I
at a .270 clip last year as
a team 3nd leading the Edison
conti1gent are Ron Ruff, Ed
WyM and Doug Caldwell .
The latter is the only player
not in the program last year.
J u n I o r ~ Terry Kipper
(catcher). Gus Alba (out!ield)
and Craig Renish (lefthanded
pitcher) figure in M01Tis'
plans while the balance or
returnifl.g lettermen a r e
seniors.
Russ (second base). Wynn
(third base-pitchtr), M i k e
Balch and Terry McNay (out4
fielders) and pitcher John
Fisher complete the Jettennan
list.
Up from lhe tumor varsity
who flgu~ in varsity plans
are juniors Mark Neilsen and
Mark Sigl.
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figure to share the hurllng
IOAd and Morris considers this
the most crucial question
mark Jn the Edison stable.
"It just depends on how
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Estancia
A major overhaul is in the
works at E:11tancia High School
where coach Ken Millard and
his variety baseball team is
preparing for Irvine League
batlle.
Mlllard has only three Yarsi·
"ty let terme• to work with and
must get mileage oul or sev-
eral Junior Y&n:ity lettermen.
Leading the Eagles wlll be
Jefr Zelsdorf, Jim Watson and
Cal Shores, a trio of seniors.
Zelsdorf can move to the
inneld or outfield while Shores
is a pitcher-first baseman,
Watson, at shortstop and
pitcher, -ts the Eagles' No.
1 threat with his. hitting,
fielding, nJMing and pitching.
Up rrom the junior varsity
are Charlie Coall,ley in the
outfield, Mike Powell at third
base, Chuck Sihilling at left
field , infielders Jim Schultz
and Pau l Van Doren and
catchers Rick Coburn and
Tom Johnson.
The pitching duties are up
for grabs wilh Jim Postel,
Shores, Watson a"d Ron
Urmson, a 11 rl~thanders.
vying ror starting berths.
l"ount dn l' alle11
Coach John Cole's Baron!
are a solid threat to the one--
two Irvine League powers or
Los AlamitoJ and Santa Ana
Valley.
The major reason is seYe•
returning letterm en in Cole's
camp.
Uppermost on the list is
11 pair of pitchers.
Righthander Dave Lynch it!
a consistent hurler who can
keep the ball low wblle mate
Vanguards
Fall Twice
To Nevada
Southern Calirornia College
opened the baseball season
Saturday 1 n Jnauspicious
fashion, dropping both end!
of a doubleheader to visiting
University of Nevada (Las
Vegas) at TeWinkle Park in
Cost.a Mesa, 16-2 and 18-1.
The Vanguards oI SoCal
journey to UC Irvine Tuesday
afternoon for a game with
the Anl'eaters beginning at
20311.
Coach Ken Moore will send
Dick Sivertsen to t.he
pitching rubber against Gary
Adams' Irvine nine.
"l"ST GAME
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Saddleback College gol one
ot iU best team shooting
performances or the season
Saturday nlghl and turned it
into a 93-91 Mission Con-
rerence basketball v I c t o r y
over Citrus al Mission Viejo
High.
Rustlers Face Cypress
After Beating Gauchos
Stne For, 1 southpaw with
utellent pitches, gtves Foun-
tain Valley a balanced attack.
Ly.ch WU· a second team
aJl·league player last year.
Other lettennen in the fold
are catcher Wayne Ouellette,
second bueman Mike Shlnut·
ji. third ba3eman Cary-Varney
and outfielders P&t Marley
and Rick Wennekamp.
Up from the junior Yarslty
who figure promine ntly in
Cole's plau are senior out-
fielders Paul Eblen and Louie
Schenk.
And Barry Brainard Cjr.)
and Stnior Joe Mertins figure
to see duty at first base when
not attending to outfield and
infield duties . The Barons al3o
picked op Srulta Ana transfer
Dick Rode.
Randy Renk (jr.) is battling
Ouellette. for the starting
catcher's berth and sophomore
Bill DlMaria is slated to start
at shortstop,
Di~faria's defensive ability
has shown through while
fellow sophomore Ray Eckles
is an all-round perfonner with
his bat and pi tching ability.
plaYtn from Jut year'• Junior
varsity to fill some holts and
the leading e1ndidates are
junJon Rod Harris (outfield),
Rod Brown (second baseman)
alone wtth pitcher Kirk
Ellison and caldler Dan Wells,
a tophomore.
Elllson ls a 6-4 rlghthander.
Others who figure in Allen's
plans are southpaw pitcher
Mike Beattle. rlghthander Ben
O'Dell, lnflelders Steve Roae,
l<lrt Kyler and Ron Swanson
and outfielder Scott Wheeler.
The Vike• picked up one
tran1rer In Carl Torstad, a
junior uWUy prospect.
Beattle ls one of the leading
pJ!cbing candidates, having
burled a pair o[ no-hltltrs
ll"t year for the trosb-soph
team.
Ma ter Del
Coach Bob Wigmor, of
?.fater Oei High has 1 lot
going for him with • new .
diamond and a dozen return-
ing lettermen as they prepare
ror Angelus Lea.gue acUon.
However, despite the abun-
dance of talent and proper
facilities, the Monarchs are
in trouble becaUJe of serioua
shortage In the pitching
department.
the ouUitJd.
The rtst Gf the Sailors' at. lack Uu with junior varslly
lettume.n.
At catcher ls Charlle
Weaver and Hel1 Wbite, a
pair •f junlora. nan Schindler
and Rick Doeabur1 are bat.-
tllng ror the lint base slarUng
nod while juniors Mark. Keller,
Bruce: Wingerd and John
Bowman art second base can-
didates.
Randy Hau.se ls cbaJlenging
Weeda at third while outfield
possibilities come from Bill
_Feme, Larry Halderman and
Edison transfer Bill Gill.
Rick Smith ls ·anetber
pitching possibility.
The season marks the 12th
campaign for Smith u the
Sailor mentor. His last title
team was in 1965.
San Clemente
Coach Marshall Adair'! 1970
Crestview League cbamplons
bave eight rtturning lettermen
as they prepare te defend
·I.heir title in loop play.
Other pitchers i n c I u d e
righthanders Steve Andrews,
Don Jo11es, and Kerry Louden-
back, along with lefty Ed
Piller. The latter trio are
juniors while Andrews is a
senior.
The rest of the lineup ap-
pears solid with juniors Billy
Clough and Rick Sheldon at Huntington Beac h ratcher and flrrt b•se plus
Included in the list of
veterans are shortstop· CTilg
Anderson, c a t c b e r Tim
Wright, center fielder Mike
K i e r n a n , infield-outfielder
Pete Selle.rs, southpaw pitcher
Ruben Paramo and "outfielder
Ga ry McKnight, all seniors.
A pair ol juniors are
righlhanded pitcher T er r y
Neilsen and third bastman
/ltari: King.
Coach Don Walker of Hun-infielders Chuck Adams, Tom
tington Beach has only four Cottage and Bob Haupert, a
retumillg lettermen as the trio of senJors.
Oilers prepare ror Sun.set And non-lettermen Chris Looking good in practice
have been sophomore Richard
Dou g l a s s . a pitcher-first
baseman and burler BUI Day,
both righlhanders.
League action. ~1umford end John McElwain ,
However, a couple 0 ( a pair of sophmores, are given
outstanding prospects make an even chance at busting
the Oilers a threat to early into the starting Wield.
season favorites we s t e r n , The out!ield is loaded with
Anaheim and Newport Harbor. senior lette rmen. Back are
Rlghthanded pitcher Paul Ray Sataur, John Broad.
Scott JObanoes is penciled
In at second ·base while Toby
ResChan should see duty at
tteveral spots. Brad Whi!Aker
is also an outfield prospect. Fulham and s 0 p h 0 mo r e Gary Simpson. Jerry LiMert
catcher Sttve Deeter give the Mike Kemmesat and Dave
Oilers a solid b~ttery com4 Witt.
bination. Wigmore's not sure who will
Adair will be alternatillg his
four pitchers throughout the
nonleague campaign In an ef-
fort to find his starting pair
for league pla:y.
Fulham can also operate at be in the pitching rotation
nrst base while Deeter shows but figures he'll get mUeage
excellent potential at the out or Sheldon, Adams and 1'he Tritons figure to play
a bunting and running game
backed up by good defense
-tactics that carried lhem
to the circuit title lut year.
ba ckup spot. McElwaln.
Another top pitching pro-Cottage has shown promi!e
spect is pitcher-first baseman ln the batting department. A
Bill Shubin, a southpaw. giving recent scrimmage with Bolsa
Walker a pair of good hurlers Grande produced a single,
to go with. double and a pair or home
Senior Richard Galle is the runs from Cott.age. University
other monogram w i n n e r The scene at Uni versity
returning. /tli11ion \/fejo High"a baseball field is similar
Up from the junior vanity A strong defense and ade-to football and basketball for who fi gure heavily ln the the Tr j J lh. fi t Oilers' ruture are pitcher-first qua.le pitching are t h_e o ans n is 1t1 year
baseman Steve B r 0 0 k 1 mainstays of Mlsslon Vie Jo of competition with no seniors,
c a t h e r. 0 u tfielder Jen;, Hlgh's hopes for a second no lettermen and the prospect
Ashford, shortstop Kyle Va• straight CIF baseball playoff of playing away from home
Amersf'ort, outfielders Gary berth as the Dlablos prepare for the most part.
Luna and Jim Ashford and for upcoming champ~ign. However, considering the
third baseman Darlowe Trox-.Coach H~rry Hilke s MJs~ion football (4-4) and basketball el. Viejo conbn~t is comp ri.sed (CIF A playoff entrants)
One ol Walker's primary or fJve re~urn1ng lettermen at teams, trungs aren't all that
concerns Is inexperience and ke~ positions along with a grim for . coach Ken Tratar
the Jack or overall hilting solid transfer. and his Trojans.
ability. JeU !"fasters.on, a .righthand· Leading candidates for tbe
ed seruor pitcher with a good varsity are juniors Milre Bue
Lag11no Beat!h slider and fast ball , is Rilke 's (shorl!ltop), Steve Garg o
No. 1 hurler. And ii other (tblrd base) and Ed Call (se-
pitching prospecb come into cond base). Sophomore Phil
focus the Disblos could field Hancock ii a Jeadfug can-
a:nother crack ouUit. didate for pitching and the
The Artisls of Laguna Beach
lHgh will field a veteran
lineup this year in baseball
as they prepare for Orange
League hostilities.
Coach Darreil McKibban
has nine returning lettermen
and a top transfer prospect
to juggle around plus some
promising help from the jWlior
varsity to work with.
Junior Chuck Corwin (.429
last year) and Greg Kessler
( .370 last year ) are the leading
hitlers in camp along with
fellow monogra m winners Ron
McElhany (southpaw pitcher
and first baseman). catcher
'l'om Murphine, third
baseman Jim Held, pitcher
Mark_J_essick and outfleldc~r_s
Dave Brooks, Sheldon Berman
and Tedd Nichols.
Murphine missed the last
round of Crestview League ac-
tion last year when he went
to Central America in the AFS
program.
Challenging Murphlne Is
transfer Mark Harris, a senior
fro m Glendale.
Junior Yarsity Yeterans who
figure to aid the Artists are
catcher Tom Cra wrof'd, first
baseman-outfielder Bob Fee.
shortstop Mike Moorman, out~
fielder Mark Diercks, infielder
Woody White and pitchers
Nick Gillespie and Tim
Sweany.
Available for pitching duty outfield while freshman Bill
Is junior varsity letterman Ruckel has looked good in
Steve A.!hcraft, a southpaw center field.
'A'ith speed, along with John Some of the lineup is still
Wade, a junior who compiled up in the air because of the
a 10-1 mark in his f~hman successs or the basketball
year. leam, which includes baseball
Other possible help in the posslbiles Tom W a I k e r
chucking department inr lude (catcher) and Jef f Styers
righthanders Steve Lackl!y tfirst base ) .
and Brad Harris and lefty Dennis Brothers js also in
Steve Rudisell , all thepictureat catcher.
sophomores. Like most prep teams, the
Four other returning let-major question mark i s
terman have returned, with pitching. Tbe leading can-
infielder Doug Citro (.333 last dldates are Call, Bob Pat-
year) leading the way, He lerson, Styers, Hancock and
was a second te am all -league_.Nlck Surlco.
choice at third base la!t year Tratar considers his teanl's
but Is being switc hed to best asset the versatility
shortstop. available with all live pitchers
Senior Bob Oulich balttd able to play elsewhere.
.290 tor the '70 sea50!1 and
wlll be ba ck in the outfield Westmfnate r
along with senior Richie Price.
And Gary Brown is slated
to take over at catcher for
the departed Mike Gray, the
Dlabloe' nifty b&ckup man
who Is now at Stanford.
Others who are 1n ffilke '!I
plans include second baseman
Joe Jones (jr.)1 sophomores
Nick Galvan and R o b
Fergt110n and Alameda High
tr~.mfer Bob Tilton, a senior.
Westminster Hlgh School'•
varsity baseball outlook ap-
pears similar to last year with
the e1ception of the pitcbing
situation where ace Ed Bane
bas since departed.
However, coach Frank
Munoz bas seven returning
lettermen In the fold and be
currently ls switching several
to shore up key Yacancies.
Coach Roy Stevens' Sad-
dleback crauchos thus com-
pleted the 1971).71 season with
a 13-15 oYerall record snd a
M Mission circuit mark (si1th
place),
Tom Gardner's o u ts id e
jumper with two second! re-
maining gave Saddleback lhe
vlctol')'.
Six playe r:i; hil in double
figures for the Gaucho.1. Steve
Minton poured In 21 and was
followed by Eric Chrl!:tensen
1111. Rick Edward> Oil. Bob
Lllley (15), Pete Hende.r50n
(l!) and Gardner (ll J.
Golden West Co l lege'.$
be seball team , with two
straight wins behind it, was
scheduled to open Southern
Ca!Uorn ia COnfercnct action
Tuesday against Cypress at
La Palma Park (2;30).
The Rustlers edged host
Saddleback, i--0, tn a pltcher'3
duel Saturday. The two tt11m11
were scheduled to meet aga.ln
today on the GWC diemond.
by a pi.l.loh lo oprn the inning.
After a double steal, Hogan
scored on Ma r k Cresse's
sacrifice Oy.
A double by Bob l·fami Jton,
Oslerode'!I sacrirlce and a
Wild pitch got the Rustlers
their second run In the third.
McKlbban considers b Is
team 's major strength the
~mbln11tion or p l t c h e r
McElhany and the hllting or
Kessler, along with better
depth ln the pitching depart-
ment.
Tilton and junlor Jim Wand
are battling for the slartlng
berth at third base.
SCott Talbert I! outfield pro-
spect up from the junior varsl·
ty aJ It G.Blvan .. ferguson
figures In the lnliel<I.
Lellermen Doug Miine is in-
ked in for shortstop while
Mike Dodd fjgures 11t second .
and Jesus Sanchez is at first
and pitcher.
Mario Sanchez (no relation)
Js in the .Jeft field slot while
5am Martinez (st. ttutfielder)
and Stevr Martinez (Again no
r'latlon) l! 11t center lfeld. Wayne~ Van Every fs a let-
lerman utility player.
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' .> 1 11 0 • , • ,,, ,. ,. .,
(lltn '"' f'lft"'"' I t .l 11 • 1' , 11
• J J ll
, • J ' 4 • ' ,,
• 1 1 '' I I I t
t 0 • ' u )1 'Ill "
(•l•\11 $t, S..IMlf~r• 11
Golden West '.!i Gle11n
Oattrode and Dave
Klung:Ttsettf' romblned to
bl•nk the Gauchos on eight
h/1.3. Sltve Shapard was the
hard luck lostr, allowing just
four hJtl.
The R1.1stler1 got the only
run they needed in the first
frame when Jim Hogan doubl-
ed and Wayne Kleier was hit
CIF Basketball
Y~m l>ll tt. Cl'f'll•~nl1t tl
f.1!1!1~1" U, lt H1br' ~
...... " Wt '1 fl) •• • Jim H091n, Cl • I
l(llftr. u ll o
C11rr1"· '1 1 o
Crent. c ' a
Ktlltr. Ill l O
l:tt~!'-'lnM, II } I
JOl'ln li<l•1n, 311 J I
HtmlllO~. fb t I
0 111t&c11. ~ I t
k!wntltlt1fl'. I ! 0
"'""'" lh 1 0 T&l1l1 11 I \1..i1t111~ ff)
Jl(k-. )ti
h~lfl, IJ
S'Tltll!. c
Cimte.11, Jti
MJli,~, I! • ..,1,, ,,
l lldlllt!M. rl ~h.oOlttl, /1 H"''· d Tot1!1
... • ' • ' ' ' ' • • . ' ' . ' ' .. . ,,_ •r '"ftl"''
....
' • Mari na
' ' ' ' ' •
: It 11ppears to be a rebuildin'
1 year for Marina HJgh as co11ch
: Ray Allen and hi! Vikings
• prepare for the It?l 3e.ason. ' ' ' • •
: Allen bas six letltrmen to
• bolld hiJ team around wiht
; third base-pitcher Tony OreM:i
a major factory In the Vikes·
plans. . ... ' . ' ' • • ' . ' . . ' I o ' ' ' ' • •
tiotll•ft W11I
!•ckl'leb4Ct
••• IOI O'JO llOO -I • o mooooooo -o 1,
Outfielder Bob To w I t. •
catcher Bob Witt an d
shortstop Dave C a m p b e 11
round out Lhe list of senior
lettermen wbll.e r t t u r n I n &
juniors I n c l u d e Bcock
Pembcrlon (first b&se·pltchtr)
and Jim C11in (oulfield ).
Allen is countillg on several
Newport BarlJor
Coach Andy Smith bas one
er the best ttams in several
year1 on hand at Newpl)rt
Harbor with pitcher Alvin
While leading a nucleua o(
tlJ' returning varsity let-
termen.
White turned in a ~hitter
and a one-bJtter l&st year and
will carry the major !Gad of
Newport's hopes behind h J s
r!ghl arm.
However, Smith has two
ether acts h a n d y In
rlghthanders: Sieve Hedrick
and Steve Knox.
Mike Easterling and Stu
Weedn figure In the inrJeld
while Phil t-.1el.Zgtr w[JI anchor
Non lettermen who fi&ure
in Munoz·s plans Include G1ry
Rungo and Afike Tessler at
catcher. Randy Tuggel and
Bob Nodling Jn rl&tlt fiefd,
Al Tristan and G t r d e n
Blakeley at third base and
Craig Lundgren at pitcher.
The latler It a senior righthln·
der and rigures to share the
starting mound duUeJ with
Jesus Sancher.
Milne cnuld see actlon in
a 1-tellef role.
Otht!rs who are In the fQld
art Je_ff Siemen, Kevin Milne,
P•l Espinoza and Kurt lfarrls.
Mond.lf, M1~h 1, 1971 DAILY "LDT J
~--.-----..-_-:--:::r-i:
DAll,Y :PROT
WANT ~DS
I: _,,,_ l!fi!J. I ---l~
Ge!eral" ~ IJ General ;::::~;;:::;;;:-;:;;:;;,;rr=.t::.;~;;;;;··;1
2629 Harbor, CM.
54&.8640 ·
Thinking of
SELLING?
Let w l'lf'lp, "~ will buy your house today for it.a
tull value. The only ad-
ditional charge It 1':!' cf
the 1tlllnr price. No
gimmick.a and no add!· tional e.xpensf'. W• MM
houtMI It doesn't cost anything to call and'flnd
out -you might even
GET
EASTS I DE
J HDROOM
$1',SOD
\VO\Y! You better hurry or it will be gone. It
needs aomir work-but
what a pi:lce -call
NO\V ?
ACTION
NICE-N°EASY
\VIII be your rirward
when you see thla charmtt. 3 bedroom doll howir t h a t features han11,1•ood floors cover-ed with rich nylon car-
pet, 2 tiled baths with pullman!I, extra large
"nclosed pat.lo, could be ramlly nn., electric built-In kitchen, sf'Pft·
rate dining room, brick fireplace, 2 car garage
\Vlth eleC'trlc door OP-
ener. '°""'1klng d!1tance to the very best &chools. No down VA Ol' mlnl4
n1um down fHA. Ask· Ing $26,SOO, mn.ke offer.
FASTER
COTIA~E IN
THE CITY
$23,SDO
Stt this hotnf'. It'• lo-catf'd In Costa lftteaa just off Baker. It'• a great
Yalue because you K'f'l 3 good 1lze ~ffll. 2
tpaclOUI blthr, double
garage-, good ntlghbor-
h()(ld. Close to Catholic church & achoo!. No
money dowr1 to vets.
Total pmt. w I I I be
$190.00 per mo. HURRY!
FROM
OWNH SAYS snu
4 IEDRM. ,OOL
owner has moved to northern CeJ/f. Jeavint
thl1 home-v11cant and
must liquidate Immedi-
ately. He has reduced the price fo.r !ut aell. A be11utlful .f bedroom home In the Mesa del Mar developmf'nt. Spa-cious built-in kitchen, 2
queen 1dze bat.hi, •P8r· kllng heated and filter-
ed pool. Nluly Jand-11caped' front A rear. No
down to vets. Reduced
to $29,950. Don't wait on thl11 one!
FARROW
270D SQ. FT.
OF LUXURY
Thl1 Beautiful Sandpoin t home has bttn 11pgT11.d-
rd In every way. J•)b trantfcr rnrces sale.
Now vacant the ownt'r
wants action. 4 KlnJI' .11lz<' bedroom11. 2"' tiled
ba!hs, Bf>TJ. ram. room
with brick flreplact'.
Sep. fo1·m. dining room ..
OrK?n .air cathedral cl?il·
lni;::. Deluxe shag ca.roet-
lng In •II room1 . Floor
ff) t'f"l1ing cu11.tom drap('i::
lncludPd. Profe111lon11lly
landscft pf'd • I I t o r
S43,000. Nf'I down. to
Vets, See It now!
COMMlRCIAL
LOT +
2 IEDROOM
HNTAL UNIT
$1f,5~0
J-lerf''t your chance to lnvnt In your future.
Thll' property is located
In Costa 11e.'la. bu!lnt's:.'I
dl.11trict • It h11.s: a pres-
e-nl inCOmt' of $140.00
Pf'l" mo. a.nd ha., great potrnfllll r f) r futurf' i;"rowth • 11t Sl9,:SOO you
c11n'1 mt~.• . call now!
COSTA MESA
DOLL HOUSE
$23,500
$ee thl& home lmmedl-at~ly, a ch111rmin11: 3 ~ located In & ~le111n ~•JdtnUIJ atta ot COi ..
ta MP111. Vel• buy It fnr
no money d O\\'n, Your 11111.)'TTH!nl lneludlnsr taxes and lnsur11nce Wiii bf' Sl86.00 mo. Hul'I')' • It won't la!'I.
2829 Harbor Blvd.
546-8640
OPEN EYES.
'TILL 8:30
-r;....,, .. ,.. -:.. w-
2629 JCarbai-, C.M.
HORSES-1h ACRE
4 BR. + AIR CDNO.
-$29,900
Actts ol rotllna ~ hllll'.
mountain view in rural tel·
ting. Circular drive. t .inas-
&lve BR'L FORMAL DIN·
ING. Cozy bttarth fiftoplace.
DoublMven built-in kitchen.
Pantry, lf.undry rm. Panel·
.ct family nn. Walk-in cl0&-
l"I•. Cllrpets throout. ful)y
AIR COND. Brick fl'ontate".
Riding trails Ii ring. Fenc·
M . Bus to schOOls. Min. to
treeway1. Unbellevable at,11
vf'ry tow $29,900. A must
to ~. can tn•> 002~1.
IOHl\I I. 01\0\
' " .' A • () •/
19131 Brookhurst Av•.
Huntington Beach
PATIO TIME
Are you ttady frYr 1umml"t'?
This 2'l'Qi' custom patio
with df'COrator 11.atitlng and
palos \"ttde rock water Wl
Is attachrd tu • tarre FOUR
BDRM, DINING RM., FAM·
IL Y RM. HOME in immac~
ulate cOndition. Near thnp-
piflK. ST JOACHIM
CHURCl.f & PAROCHIAL
SCHOOL. rnA Appta,lu.I tn
1.nd ownttr it ready to aeU.
VACANT -JMMEO!ATJ:;
FOSSESSlON.
Evenings Call &t2-7438
HOME & BUSINESS
2 Good Costa Mesa C-2 1oca •
tion.s.
(L) ~tin ottiee .+ 3 BR
home.
{1)' 3 BR born. on Harbor
IJlvd.
N-rt
•t
falryJ.w
646-1111
(anytimt)
Roman Villa
His & .H•n Garl!g•
ExquJal!e Mediterranean ab'!·
ing -hi1 and her prages.
Heavy cathedral ceilings, ~ wan ronnectinr den, ).i'lling
rm., fo)'f.r 6. dining rm.
Space age kitchen. Larre
banna., 2 Ml bath,. Close
to university and 1bopplng.
A muse to see. Dial 6'5-0303.
I ORISI L Ol\11\
1.1r.11L"OP ·
2299 Harbor. Costa Mesa
TIRE OF TAXES?
Le! ua show yOU how lo take
advantage ol new LO\V IN.
TERESf mles and move ~
to your cwn .f bedroom. 2
bath tu deduction. Pay Jes•
than rent and build equit;y •
Thick 1hag, push-button kit-
chen. ud welting for you !
IZl."10.
Walker & Lee
Rf'allot1
7682 Edinger
fn-cJ so.4455 or 540-5140
Spanish Villa
Super 1hl.rp 4 BR, 2 1tory
townhouse, Jge !iv nn., tor.
ma! din area, beaut walnut
et.binet1, 2 bath llll't!U, crp/.t
& dl'Jlt, 2 pools, SC!P. play
yurt, walk to beach k .~hop.
ping. f"P i23.500. GI Dr P'llA
lerms. eau 847.J27l.
1nu Beach Blvd .. Htgn .B¢h
Optn 'tU 9 p.m.
S 15,500 FIXER
A litUtt lm.-glnauon, palnf anrt
tf'ltl'JO' will make ttlla 2 BR,
"orphain" 11 cm:y Nirt\f'. f.:)..
ctilttnt rental area tor ino
vesrorw, M!e lt to believtt tt.
Larwlr\ R11lty, Inc.
21562 Brookhurst, H.B.
546-5411 anytime
CUSTOM FOURPLE X"
Qiol~ Newport Area.. ST4,000
Rm 02'11, M. M:flek ~7-17M
S.Ye )'Otar cv • lt'a nos
ta.rf Just relch b' l'DW' ,,..,.. • .. n Dally PUot
C:asalfltd 642-6878 o.rp
your 11.d • tod-.yt ~
.
'
-. '"'!""""'' 111<(!'h r, i ·111
I~ 1~~.::;]1 11!~1 ;;;;-;;;; .. ;;;; .... ;:,:;l~~l•I -~ .. --·~l~~[ii!iiii----~I~~ 1-:1;;-;;;';;;"'·~l;;;-~j l" _ ....
G.n.ral G•ntr•l GenerAI Geniral Costa Met• Laguna S.ach --------------;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.11 ==::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~'~""""-::::::::c:::::=""~
' .
~nJa J~/e
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES . . ,.
I Linda Isle Ori't't
--spacious 4900 sq. f t. 4 BR .. 4'h bath home.
* * * * * * .2 Story Doll House ·[llJ;':,' ~N:.;, ':'~1.:~ lot, 3 BR, 1 BA ,WTDUndi.ng
TAYLOR Co reafurirli bf.'amN celllnas, F'rank Uoyd Wri1ht fin.
' • , • l'(IUnlry stylf kllchf'ri._ with pla<M! . .$55,000.
bh11$, loads of panellinr and ENGLUND 'REAL. ESiATE
BAYFRONT W ITH POOL-$150,000
5 (or 6) Bedro6n1 home with pier & slip.
F'ormal dining. Oversized p~tio~ Sy apJ?l.
''Our 16th Yeer'~.
shake root. 'fru.ly a unlqut! 318 'nw:l.lla
Eastslde horlie w1t~ beauUiul ••"• 4~-~ t **
l."I'Pl.s. carved eniry door, 7 Larae 'Jabuk>us homes, 4
Spaciou,a: upiitalrs and 711 BR. 4 BA, den, tamUy rm •
Cftr garage. Unbelievable bltina. $99,Cnl & $174,000.
-
. Dining rm., ram. rm ., study & 38 it. \1'ater-·
front 'living rm. 2 Fireplaces. Carpeted &
· · • ·la ndscaped ............... : .. : ...... $164;840 WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO.. Realtol'I
21lt San Joaquin Hills Road
low price • $24.9311. P.S. Good fin. Owner 494-~.
Don't mills the basemen1.
Jui1 listed • tlURRY! Call 1 _Lld~o,,.,1s~l~o:--:--,:;~,,.,0--
l r ..
..
·.
•
•• (
' •
k . I.
l
I
I
.,
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,
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1·
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t .• ..
...
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I: •
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I
L
FOr Complttt"'1 nform1tibn PO 1.11 hom9s a
lots, please-c1.ll: NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 5.JO.Il~_. toperr e\'es.) 1 NEW LISTING ·s=-=-=-----....,
1
L,~. 2.sty .. 3 Bdrm• .. -iiA COi\fF'ORT Ir: Space--3 Br.
R/0, Ji yd, kids & peta. BILL 'GRUNOY, REALTOR Gtnerel,
.833 Do\'tr Or., Suitt 3, N.B. 642-4620 COUNTRY RUSTIC
"PICTURESQUE"
Heritage bath plus dining rn1. home
.. ·.,\L TORI on 45 1t. Jot. Big living rm .
I, with mauive stone t111lc. &
high beam ceiling. $72,500
CORON~ DEL MAR, 2 adj. Term1 baaed on equity .
Rl. some view, nr beach. 642·2171 545-0611
$65~1. May trade. Ait Saving Harbor area 21 yrs.
$185. .
ALA Rentals • 6-15-3908
4 Br. on ~-· ac . Dbl pr, tacd
yd. $200 Lie opt avl.
how0tM> law&OD jll. Uod~r Lhe market Price. O"·n. 1 -:uoitoa _ ·_
er niusl Seu immediately. * EXEC~TIVE YILLA 3416 Vla Lido 675-4562
M~re . R.eal I General
. Estate ot& ---·------·! Prereding Page BE FIRST UnIM>lie,·ablP ' Quiet tr<'f'
' Dover Shores 675-4930. Sattler Mortgage Co.
2 Lots for $300 HARBOR 336 E. 11th Strttt
REST !.t.E.i,10RIAL PARK. f ,..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ..
Bluo Bo.con* '4S.01ll
FIXER Upper--on the !kh.
2 Br. Kids, pets or 1ngll
ok, $1.55. G•ntr al
· TAX REFUNDERS
S28.500 DuP.le): <21 2 sr.. ~noel
E·Side, C~1 Jocalio". Quaint
owners ·un11 + eOOd in<'Orni?
un11.
Undt'r C011Srruct10n ~ ·thfo lined s1. 10 loads of ··OLD
plafloll et 1033 l(f°Uiners Orlvf', \VORLD CtlAR:\I. ·• Check
Do1•er Shores. 4 & .> Bed. all this. 3 huge BR's. Loads
rm.~. 4 & ~ baths, .liclecl of paneling. Deep pile shag
yoor 011 n color11 & custom rpls. Fo1iced air heating.
rie1aili;, All "'ilh ouista.ndin::: \\'a.lk-in cl05ets. Si•rvice
Views. Roy J. \Vard. Rltr. porch. Pantry. Lots Qf stor·
646-1550. Open D<tily. age space. Nl'w paint in & B/i out. CoveJ"ed patio -11•a1er·
(all. Hea1'Y shake roof. Boat
sparkling 3 bedrm, 7 ba1h.£ntertal~rs paradl.Se wi t *TRIPLEX*
2 story hOine with family A ~reten!lous v 1 e w. dDe!ux One oY.ner: cu~ bit. by own.
bonus room. HeaY)' shake I ;JJCKl sq 11 of custom esl&'~ . er/contractor 3 BR. each
root. Jully carpeted. fanfaJI. ~:,atures . in thi& 5 B::; a pJu1 Maid's ~trs. Baytront.
tically landscaped & more. u.,· .t car garage me Ottered' for $230 000
Now .only S30.~. Ca 11 5169·:icJ()· !tlS-7249· 1 .MORGAN· R.EAL TY
54}8~24 . East Bluff
1
.673-6641 67.s.6459
e 'SPECIALISTS e * REDUCED *
SALES • LEASES lmmac. ~ BR., family rm.
......
100
· c· ash Fast '· CHOICE \VESTCLIFF
wr-~E~~DE 1st & 2nd Trust Deeds
· : ., FREE APPRAISALS
Mounteh( De1MiJ Costa Me•• Investment
Resort 174 J41..7ll I enytim•
KLAMATH River, 1-4110 a -
en paved rd. Xlnt. Ji~hing
Ii; hunting. Club privll, 74J1,-------,
mi'11 E. of Yreka off inters ...._.far Rant
Al.A Rentals e
J Bl>R...'1. + family rm., fUll
diniD&' nn., built-Ins., brk.
$390 a month. NO n:E,.
Newport, 540-1720.
?J YEARS OF' act't'Ss. Dicbondrfl lawn.~. COSTA MESA REAL ESTATE SE:RVICE Sprinklered. Double yard.
\o u th ~ (' oas t
. -· -
45 ·rt LOt street.t0-
11treel By app't. only 5. Will sell for orig. \nv.1•·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ c. C. FerTell, tm Oran&:e JI
FAA11LY Nttded-2 Br .
Stove, cpts, encl gar. Sl30.
ALA Rentalll e 6-1~
$90 • Tiny hie W/ nice yd,
ideal matutt ~wnan. Utl pd,
Blue Beacon* 645-0111
POOL-7 Br. Cpt1/drp1.
stove. children & pets. $145.
ALA Rentals • 645--3900
RANOl Size yard-Stove,
ttfrlg. kids I ~ts. $150.
ALA Renlal1 e 64>3900
$120 ind util. l Br • .Stove,
ttfrig. cplll. Avl now .
4 .Pfe,x * $48,000 JN THE HARBOR AREA Oog·run. F1·lA·VA terms I ===~~=,-;""s°'s""'oo (~I 2 Srt units, 11ear golf C'ameo Highlands I-low can you mis~ .. Only PURE PLUSH--$2 ,
.e.ourst. Sleeper . bring pai nt Lge. poolsize Y"'· 76 11. 1,-;oo 11 ··•'! 'I Tbis n1ttgni[i cent littJe rimn·
bru&h ..& iei 1heit rents 11·ide. TralriC tree li\'ing M'll. 9i'2~. sion on lbe norh si e o o5·
$93,750
LIOO REAL TY INC.
·3377 Via Lido 673-7300
Ave, c.~1. 54~77 HoUHS Furnished 300
Real Estate Wanted 184 General
HOMES NEEDED I 0.1.. • urry & ..:.u (71., .d 1 C
h lh '-I · 3· Bd t• 'I•••· \\'alk lo schOol~ II-' tre e)' Vt: ong. Adul! occupied. rms.. " LANDLORDS. OWNERS
r 'IY ' b ti -,·-e and shopping. A li1tle cash '>•14 ,,. r DI O
Mesa Verde
am1 rrn., • <\. !S· •• ~ _., Ls a e l'O $3500. Dol'•n • 6%% loan • For -an•fer-•. W• •• , th• PROP. ERTY MANAGERS I ••6 ~ v.•ill .as!<llme lh ls FHA ·loan 11:·el\ ... ~n h &1~11~~ u .... ... on Y .,.. ·"""· · 'l>O·' eac ~I like new. 3 br. fam. Vacant •"'"lusiv• .,ents for a na. We will reler tenants to you
B h I , H'd with 6* ";(. annual· percent· 28 FP -1-1 4~ ~•9 "" I 1 ,,._ 'I It ac e or s 1 eaway Fountain Valley S .000. . "".,... "" • """'"" tion.al corporation. Call loca1 ~ o ...-..6e .• · .. any
Newpo~t
F.t· •• ,·.w 'flny house~ 7 lxlrmi;., ~mall age mteresl or no do1rn,•,o BOAT.OR TRAILER? Nowport Beach ag<ntbeforeyoull&t-347.6612. desu:able_ tenanls on our
, .. lot. Low maintl'.llaOCe, Yot1 Cl's. N.e w on the mar c . ~~~~~~~~~~~! waiting list • · 646-8811 o\\'n ine. Janel. Taxes on ly J9131 Brookhurst Ave. \Von'l last -CALL CORNER LOT! Brcezev.·ay! FABULOUS VIEW ALA Rentals. * 645.3900
1"'1ytimtl $317, ~orona .de! ,\lar. $,29.500 lluntJng'lon Beach Walker & Lee Boat gate! Cul.de·'8C §1. BAY & OCEAN ri---=-· 11 •l $80 . Util pd. Bach at the bch
675 3000
-
--Ui1•ely 3 BR, 2 BA. Low int Charming 7 Br. 2 Ba. Com. .-... ,__ yrly. Ideal stuclen1.
ALA Rentals • &tS-3!QJ
XLNT LOC-7 Br. R/00 encl
gar. Child ok. $140.
ALA ~ntals • 64$-l!IXI • o~ Realtors loan or VA/flt,\ lf'rms~ , pletely redecorated. w/w ;;;;;;;;·,;;;1~B~l~u~o~B~o~aic~on~~*~'4~5-4~l~ll ----HAFFOAL REAL TY B 1•·· I lond A STONE'S THRO-W 'i'·=• Harbor Blvd. at Adams shag crpt. coun!ry French ••CUNA 1 Br. apt Xint •--.1_•-----'------I
To. THE BACK BAY RUSTIC ·~>9491 n--n 'fJI 9 P~1 842-4-Kl.l Eves: 541·2446 kitchen. Jn e.ll'clusive loca-Busine11 ..,.. ""' v~ 200 Niceiy turn $135 uU pd. LOVELY 3 Br. 2 Ba., qits,
: '$24,950 PR'ICE OJ.te 2 bedroon1 bomr \11th BELOW F-HA BLDR 'S Sal-ritice·Span . .!ltyle lion. $54,500. Opportunity Blue Beacon* 645-0111 drps, bltns. Ye&rlyleaae .
J-bidroom. upal-ate huge · ·large 'family room. JftJCE 1 nu custom'" 4 Br. $32:500. HARRI ET PERRY' -.. • Util pd, Ni""ly_lu,n 1 -Salisbury Realty 6'13-«0'.I lot . Raised brick hea.rih 111 Apprnisal. Huge l BR. blg, $1500 dn. Loaded wl xtras. REALTOR 642.9178 ""'" ~ family Roon1, 2 -Mautifur "'-F pl ~ ·'-·· WOULD YOU Br. w/ •-yd. Sngl ok. Corona del Mer baiil6. Polished hardwood living room. Fireplace & big farn nn 2 ftplcs. ail s, ... ke5. r . ._.pt ..... uuut. FINE FA~r!LY HOME ua
Ooora. To"·ering !!'hade lr~s. ·,Fabulous View BBQ in Family r 0 0 m. bl1ns. crpu. drps; 2 pqtios, 1S0p22m3k!np, hlndscpd, 1 t 'Ac g. Good Heights area. 3 BR INVEST $&OO TO Blue Beacon * 64S.0111 I ·-----.... o---
.11urrouAd thi.!I 150· tt. Ju.rm. Brand New QUICK OC'CUPANC¥. JI i BBQ -real sharp~ Sll.001. ea .sa n ve. "-ramily nn. 2 Baths. Huge Balboa l1l•nd Harbor View
sized lo1.! t;ov·i apprais«I . Pacific panorama in Laguna you are searching · for lhat , GI (Ir FHA terms. call s:Jl·-0~ separate 1naster BR. 2 START A BUSINESS Homes
W apPf'{Ned, Nat one lhin Beach Custon1 built in ne''' •·c 0 UN TR Y ATMOS. 1147·1 2'.'l, I Huntington B11ech Frplcs, Service Po r e h : THAT ' COULD 5 De~~· "'~}~ie!~· d:k ';~~il l bedroom, 2 baths. luxurious '~ime .fOr. Vels. Don'1 dtag . Portofino area. Huge wood PH ERE." TillS IS IT. Only ' --garage on alley, enclosed ?.l arch lst to June 19th
. your feet. CALL p;ine(led masler sul1e. filll $l2.00Q. Cali G75..i93o !+.BIG 4 BR. PLUS POOL yd .. s35.ooo. nrow Grow GROW?? Ask for Etta Freeman ~~~i~:i~;l~~gt1:f~f~a~
Wa Iker & Lee ! \'iew Jiving Tm w_i~h m~~sive .COUSWORTl<f &CQI I 1 GRAHAM REALTY 64&-2~14 ft Salisbury. Realtor 673.6900 ing ove n, fenct'd yard, green
. Palos Verdes fireplace . -l~~L~~i-111• ITI41 Beach 'alvd., _lltgn Bch ONLY $22,250 1' Newport Heights ~~nufrog:;~k151~~~s~n~~ Coit• Mesa belt Ir: park with cabana"
. Realtors l f\Tany extras. Thi, lar~e 4 Open 'til 9 p.m. I CHAR..\IING nearly ne\v 3 urr s k pool only steps away. This ·ai: '" I kitch 10" nOWN ing Machine. nae l BR Ilse Furn 1155/mo. -2790 H.arbQr .Blvd at Adams rni '"'3 :coun er · 1• ...-; * DUPLEX * I Unbelievable! '.'ou ca_n't mis11 bclrms,, 2 b~ths &: Jamily Shops are a proven bus!-· · . · beautiful bomeonlylyr. old. ~9-191 Open :Iii 9 P:\f • fornlal diri.ing : even set up ASSlThrE .LARGE $21,60() - Blk. 10 'ace.an. pfu1·1'.fodirn on a honli> I!~ tb1s. Tree rm .. Large kuchen w/elec._ ness opportunity In.a &ro~·-$50 sec. All util pd. Older . Convenient to Fa.shlon Ia. 1~ an:elevalQr. A must to 6:V.'t~ VA LOAN. Rear Liv. 3 BR 21 b ·. 2 BR hoed st. l\lodern plush decor bllns. Lovely new carpets, ing S5 billion market, a tdUlll, no pell!, no chldrn. land Ii; all sbopplng. $350 pr.
G H C L• • J "'· Die! 645.0303 in" Rm., Den. Three bdro1s. · ·• a. upper, ·• f d ·1 t' 1 Sto-b'pl• 3 G•·•g•s ,,,,. market in V.'hich 80% or 646-8464. month on lo••·. Av·".
ft• · and 1wo baths. Extra large 2 h" 1°nd'"0· · .11 decorative v.•allp.a~r. Que<'n· door. See this before you the-bu_si ness l.S one Y KNO"ITY Pine gue.!11 house. :P.1arch l.st Please phone 0 Ourse lyln D I ., II b I . S62 500 Includ. rom l"t'P pie ca.rpe ing o '"-... . , , "• . d b I;;==.:-=-:-,,-:-,,-,.,--,:--~
rear yard -Dooble garage-. ! e~ t e a. · ii·ne_~ \\-l con-siled bedrooms 2 baths De. buy._ Graham Rlty. 646-2-114. small independent opera· Furnished Ut ilities includtd 644-2013 EvH.
Thi1 large attracrive lnll('r A. stPal at $28,500 _ ACT ~1de1r trade for bome on pen-luxo buiJt.in kifchen · ,h., Sr'lvorado tors. Slli mo 642-5110. I ~c:,:,:::,::_.,c,....c:c..._~~~-1
Ci.· 1 d' · " ·i S 500 1 CLEAN 3 br hse, elee bltins, I'C e home a Joins th~ NO\\I! '· ins .. a. ~ kl A\! -1 · Your $600 to 1 nvest· E Bluff
Mesa Verdi" Goli Coufil", .. ""'"""" .,.. "~ Co,••r•d .. 110 Ga BBQ VERY, ve~ rustic fixer· "" '" .,_iu ........... ,,..0--:----,-.....,.-,--, I Cal'· 67' ~,3 "2·-" Evos. spar e~ · ·c" 1ntercon1. meot -••-ma"'-'""• __ .. ast 7 frplc, 1undeck. Nr: Sc.hi
· ,... · .s · ·~ inventor{.. "'ilh no hiddenr4 br lam nn 1,.-• Avail It strp·g, 531~ Aft 4:30 .YQ:U:JI see 5 targe bedrooms . . B t Ho t·• k'd upper. J br, raistd flllle. . '"-'TII
l ·ba·'"· il"d' a ""nn11neoo""9 .... ~H~ARB~~O~R~·~=~"::A~MESA~iii 'ILJl!!:.,M I I BORDE oa acceil. a cu i ncy !"0$t or ees. No eJ1penenCf' M,; l. 14;o1' mo l . Ref.!I wkdys. uw-•· r [ Lil shaped pool "'Ith an I be $4000 do-wn, t~nn.!I. Sl0,500. 1s nece~ary, and you make ~· · 1 --~-------·I 'vi~\\· of the goll areen. 1 • • equipment. Near beach. 649-2:1>6 no JX'rsonal sales calls. \Ve rec(d. 644-1627 Consider unf. HOUSE WITII PATI0-2 br, S~8.:al..Bll)'' itl? i HARBOR ISLAND' Ve..., low dd"·n. Hu-... Be will train you. counsel you, Hunti~on Beach 2 ba, conservative Cfl!lpie
. This six bedroom, five b'atb ls~1 Call (?l4) 962-~. [j] and secure your locations.I'.""'""'°"",,."",______ or single. SDJ mo, lease.
•
COATS &: den home is located on the MESA DEL MAR , __ ••_•_"_"_"-_-', ~a You srrvice the business In BACHELOR cottage, furn. 440 Dahlia.
· &. most e."<clush~e lslandj11 .~e 220 E 17tli Owner selllnt bl!au.tiful :P.lesa GtrMr1I . .M your spare time, in your \Valk to beach. 1st. la.!11 &. J BR, 2 ba, Lee patio, nr
' WALLACE boy Patio witb plush land· ' OV.'11 car. "1 your own pace. ,.-.. rity I•• ""1~7 beach &: llhopping 1:175 mo ~EALTORS sc:.ip. mg. Deep front terrace E11ening1 Call. 642.7438 Del i\tar home. 3 Bedrooms, The growth of your bus!-.... · >N<r '" • Avail Marth 13. 673-2099 ' .,,'~141_ v.'irh own beach, Pier & ''COLOR ME 2 baths. large 11\>ing room Acreage for salti 150 ne!lll \\'ill depend on youdr Leguna Beech -.,....... · , with flr~placr. Spacious v.oillin"1'nes~. lo v.•ork an 1-...,-"'.:=::'°",--;oo::::o°",-VIEW, View, View. New 2
(Optn Even_ i.nfts) ~lip, $25Q,DOO LONESOME'' kitchen \Vith ,,11 builtinJJ. your desi re to suCCt'ed. * Si1JDIO CO'ITAGE br. 2 ba. Adults only. On
• d I k' I -• 19131 B kh A 0 OME Tr you are a man \11ho be· f.URNISHED lh '· h 1375 I .~ ~'" an oo Ing or a&""" owner. Wa!er softeneT. forced air roo Ul'lll vc, M BILE H d e IJ"<'ac . It. ,.,.,,,,_, T'll lavish you with crystal Hun tington Beach Heves In SUCC("!IS an v.·anl.!1 Artistic studio cottage at C heating. wall to wall carpet.. PARK to 11ee A small Investment Victoria &ach. All wood osta Mesa
Colcl1lvel. !,Banker POOL, shag c.laf'f)('ts; custorn ing Nld drapes thru our. ;:-ro'v lnlo big dlvldi>nd.!I, . --------~-dr._, bogo '-'""'PARATE Go A p I t' I obt'I• It'll nttt th• 0 oupon '·low. paneled, sky_ hghls, trplc. RENTAL -J BR plus dlnl-.--• •1"' Dou ll!e garage and rovered I Less Than One Month's cres. o_ en La m .. ...... ·•
--_ _.i ·~-... ~~ .family room,.M!CIUded palio, pat io. $31 .:JOCr. 5.:11.1nS. Rent do1vn buys thfs 3 bdrlll·' ~me park lil!e. Sn_Jog·lrtt, ~ - - - -i\1ISS)ON$1.&.~~;,~h 494-0731 room plus 2 baths .-$2':iD 10°/o Down -and an unbelievable S28,9j/J. * A-FRAME * ' . tialh area T.01••nho1.1sc, JUSt minutes from Riverside. per mo. hi and laJt plus
' 6 UNITS
Ven· s""cial ono '"'Y dl'· "~lakl''' me home? Trade . , d ht Preliminary engineering in. ADVF.N.'RATITISOENDABLIR,YANDS Newport Beech SlOO dep. dial 66-0303 '' ~ 83'0700 ""2430 2·Si)'. beach home. x!n1 cond. pnnir, rra, .pnce r ig . Forelit E. Olson, In c. ,tgnt! Exr.lw;i~·e \\•lfh us • ~ _.. your home! 3 BR 1,, b ., car gar $20,500. Lg J1v nn, w/w eluding park design ron1· division of Uil 4 BP .. • PJ'iv. stairway to Realton 2'293 Harbor, Costa
Eastside! ! 2 BR. 1 BA each · Wa Iker &-Lee + Bhns".'' ne\\~ cp~~. -Sll!IOO · erp.is. drps. \V/D. ~<'frig. 1; pll'ted. SJ.340 per acre. Sub. 1275 Profit Drive beach. Pool. S850 Yrly. l\fesa.
Bi1n1. rcfrlg, et11lg, drps: n~110 & POOL pM\'.~ F'ull n111 your rerms. For further ~llas, Texa~ 75247 Home Show RltNi 675 -;m ~~~'7'7--,,.-,~..,-I · LEASE/OPTION ,.. RE T am 1ntrrestf'd 1n more In· a-2 BR d·-'• ~,. • letlCi'd \\''complete prival"', Pnce S2U.500 .• G.I. or J."'HA information, please call . . ...,. x-.... t' . ., Reallon 1 4 B fnrmation about makinit Housa Unfurn. 305 dr Stove 1r: ref'ri< &ep&nle pa t!O!I. 2 Btock5 ro 1682 Edinger n1m11r. r., steps to ocean. t.erm.s. Call 847·1221. Knox with money in the "'ending busl-1 ----------apes. .
'171h St. ~hoppin,i:. Pz·eseni ReallY Company ITI4) 847-4455 or ~IO-j140 21~ Ba. Only SJOO per mo. ~ Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc n('s~. I ha\·e ill car 11.nd 6-8 General Pref. adults $170. &G-2758 .
income $850 l)l!r mo. bur DUPLEX wis:Joo op!ion morie~·. I 1818 \V. Chapman A\'e,. hours (lf'r week spar<' lime.1_,,c':".,,.,,,.,,...,._._,...,..,,--3 Br $175; 2 br" $185. 317
should be raised. BALBOA ISLAND POOL HOME CAYWOOD REAL TY Orangt, Calif. ( ) I can invl'St S600 in FREE RENT BOOK E. 18th St. 642-0084, t to
Lachenmyer Rlty l lk'<lroom units v.·ith hrr. -6306 \\'. Coast Hll)'., i\'B I .).IJ .2611 . E\·es.\Vknds ~943S 11 rnut!'. DROP IN AND Sor 5'18-5452 eves&: ... knd.!I.
1 B I 11 ( l 1 can invest ~1500 tn lllac4:'5 & 2 bathi. One.·half 548-1190 1 1·11 each B \'d., · tgn Reh 1 a route. BROWSE EASTSIDE 2 Br, frpl, beam
can .646-3928 E\·eJI: 646.229(1 blotk from N. Baylront, 3 Bedroom. 2 baU1. fan11ly $24 500 Open '111 !I p.m. 76 ACRES Cte\'eland National 3 ~droom, 2 bath, Fireplace, ceil, patio. Adult& only0 no ___ -1 .SS2,500 room, fireplace. hr d w d , Sl8,"50o-F~lf PriU-Forei;L Creek & oak trees. Name ............................. -... CafJ'.>tts and drapes. double pets. $148. 6-12.-8520.
. noors, crpl~. drps, lgl' POOL I 4 Bd. + F amily rm. :l Bedroon1 2 hath, Jj(ll} ~q. r1., Close to Reagan's ranch. Addrtss ........... -.. garage, big fenced yard. HOUSE in court, 2 Br. C!'pl•, ~d\irb( "'1111 plenty 01 decking No down Terms /60.\100 lrnced lot. dblr gar11~t. $13;)(} per acrt. Tcnns. Call c· S . Rent S22J per month, m&ybe drps. patio. ~6 \\I. 17th Sl.
' · 642 8235 67$.3210 Northt'ast Costa ~ll'.'so. or 8.•~un1e J'i'; apr. lo.in rlt'r bltn range & oven. dble 01''ner 837.7119 ily ........ talt' ...... Zip···· lease with OPTJON. No. A, Of. 548-2839.
3069 MADEi RA • S30,j00 and tu1ve p;_1yment~ of only l'efrig., bar . ea!ing 11rr11, car. Apartments for sale 152 /Phone I l . ... ... ............ WALKER & LEE, I BR hse, fencd. flrepl . Pref
_ CJeaJi "Collage" 3 Bedrm HARBOR V J°EW Roy Mc Cerdlt Realtor S\23 a n1on!h. Lar~r rooms pe1s, draprs, panclhng, rnir. Dtpl. •3836C adlts. No pets. 64&-8572 aft
Qu11'.'I S1ret'! Nr Schools HOMES 1810 Ne\\'port Bl
9
vd., C. M. !hru out. 4 bdrm. f:1n11ly rm. rors. storagr roon1. pll'nty j LIDO ISLE -~lust sacritice. S Realtors 5 pm.
New Paln1 Jn t.· Our 548-772 No do\\·n GJ. Open ti! 9 p.m. or clolil'.'1~. r ,\ hca1 P•Y· 6 bea ch apls. All furn. 6 * CANOY UPPL Y 7790 HARBOR BLVD. I A beaut. 5 BR. homr: y,•e1,.,,..,...,..., .... ,....,..,,...., SHARP Ea1tslde J bedroom I! ~1 1in. rnrn!s less than renl · car garage. 7':"'o loan. U>ase DISTR. * AT ADAMS • · Nr11 r Pa!io
r11 .. -;;-, Lo11n
Onl). Sl3.500
DRl\'E BY :!
')ncstl\'1.bc':RcaCtr
546·5990
bar. !ovely shag cptg., self· SHORECLIFF TARBELL 2955 Harbor land to yr. 2018. O\vner. tPART OR FULL Tl'.'.fE) ~per month clean~g ove.ns; ready to Fine home in br ls1ol condi.1 ~ -'l' 642-1097 da)'S. VERY HIGH INCO~lE LEASE Bili Fuller, Realtor 546.0814
ino\'e 111!0! SJ9.500. Jnclud-uon Comp\ v.·Jalr cona HOME & INCOME Commercial Now available in Orange HOU,!' & BUSINESS 3 BR suitable 3 nice children,
ing 11\e land. hun;idity & pollen controi: t62-4471 ( ::!~) 546.S10J p 1 ISi Count)' and surrounding nit. to $200. immed, 646.4326 CORBIN Good 3 bedroo1n home -J.-:t roper Y early Ai\! or eve. -Contact Sill Brnt.i. . . ~nlal units for incom('. A Irvine G h areas_. All Jocation.s are .com. 2 Bed.rm house converted in . Pete Barrett Riiy CHARi\1lN Laguna Beac mere1al or r.a~tory furn1shi:cJ 10 Oentlsl'.!I oHic e + 3 bed. 2 BR'.!I. 1 Bath. Crpts, drps •
M.AR·TIN '"J' Ehuy fory s:i9.500.UD NEW LISTING stor<'s &. apt. on Coast llv.-y. by U!. Qual1f1ed per50n "'ill m hou 14" th $135/mo.
R R FRE Lot 80' X l~· 10 alley. ,__ d' 'bu f r se, ~ per mon 11r C ll 647-5964 * 642 5200 A Ir ,_ l R ' ,_ ...... <'Orne istri tor or OW' tor both. Ed RiddJ• Realtor ~~=~'-'-'c.,C.:C""'-~-1 ----• CHAS. ARNOLD rea Y Cn"'ce B · <n1. O>.l'ner \\1.ll finance ar 7.:i':'b. _ _.. (N ti Pi t , 'N "R H D d• H 'd ' ,., "2 I ca,.uy es cs. an ers, 646·8811 : arbor Hi; New I y ~ G S . I eaway REAL TORS _..7vv "'" toll'nhousE". Beaut. 1 ha e Brok<'r. Tootsit RoUs, f\lilk Duds l•o.=~· ;;;;:=-..,""'"°"=~ decor, 3 br &: tam, 2 ba,
"Fra'.nciscan··r0Dn1a1ns" ff'· TOP 'O THE HILL NO DOWN TO VETS I ~ E. 17lh Sr;, C.i\1. Cll.f11. Large patio & deck· Realonomics Corp. 67~((1 etci. You must have 7 10 8 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATIIS. $275/mo. S4.>-'1885
Ilia.le. Pa ren1 . rell"ea l model j 1 -JO,% Dov.·n 10 others. 646.77SS 1na. Shor1 walk 10 !IChools. Condominiums hr.!I per y,·ttk .!lp&re time available immed. OOSe to
4 BR, 'll,i BA, froni & 11!•r , l arge 3 bedrm ,,•/hrv.·d floor~. t A fine choice for yoor lamtly for sale 160 !days or t ves). xlnt .schools. $~ Per mo. Fountain Valley
.sprinklers, palio, many ex· I NE\V LIS"r1N~. fa.mlly 5lze hl!na, 20x20 rumpU.!1 room. Corona dtl Mar &. only S.36.900 INCLUDING moo CASll REQUIRED w1th 1st and Jul months 4 BR/2 Ba, bltins, dbl car,
tras, Buy GI 111 S~J,000. k.J.1cheo ~lh bltns. 3 lge J;>ed· block "'ail, enclosed rear ( DREAMY LOCATldN the land! POPULAR l\1on lirello split· For mo~ jnfonnation write ; ~nt l"e<I' .. + JlOO deposit. C!'pts/drps.
eheaptr than ne ... ·. Be~t In rms. 2 ba, needs ii little yard. VA 1tppraised at .. , . and dreamy hou~ with 3 bd· i d h"ll 1e11el n10del. 2+2. den, Adult "DISTRmUTOR DIVISION '' Call agenl MG-4141 213: 31!Mim
"'e1.4 un11ngton Beach. T.L.C. hut whar a buy al $24,600 ! ; re I I !(f"Clion. nee&. pool facility, •Z:t. P.O. Bo!< 1739, eo. COZY-1 Br. Clo~ to Huntinnton Be•ch
\erwin Realty, Inc, S2.;.200. Take over 6'iio GI Perron 642 .. 1771 :;'5"i 2 ~att~Q· 1 ~lk: 10A'': I $71.300. 01\'l)('r. 5'1().1•181. ,;na Ca!ir 91122 Include everything, stv, ref., cpts, •
. 21362 Brokhurs1 . 11.B. Joan Rnd a~sun1c ~on~l)• i ~cS~l ;J '" 1~n . .s • · · Rl'ally J Income Property 166 phon~ nuntber or call (213) S~. 7 BR, 11,.1 ba Condo, Sll!O
. -546-5411 .anytime pay1nen1s or only Sl56 incl BEACH KEYS ;sL . ' R I E t t L'nh'. Park Cc111rr. Trv lnf' 3Jt.11i6J Al.A Rental~ • 645-3900 per mo, 4 BR, 2 ba hou!t
II.EACH s-1 t'¥erything:' r·-lih th! 3 BR • d•n e ency ea s • • AAA . $120 • L~ 2 Br. Dplx. Ideal $'210. per mo. Call ?ttr. UNIT · 0 I '-"' "' !\ • « ,-.. 2828 J::. Co11st IJll'y., Cd:\·l Call anyhmr 833·0820 8 UNITS .,. ll So La.rw1n ·Realty, nc. Pine trer. 15hadrd hQITII' nn ! 6-l<j.i 270 CANDY AND cpl, Child ok. Good Joe. oegee, . ulh Coaat
11 rrntal un i1& close 10 beach. 211i6l BrookhUl'!ll .• Jl .B. Ige. ~You O"'" in Jot. Besl L 8 h Sl 1,700 DOWN SNACK SUPPL y Blue Beacon * 64S.011 I R~alton 545-3424.
N......,...rt ShoN's, '"'' 1lu". S4' "I I anytime . CHAR~I ING Oupl<'X h y agune eac \\'ell located close 10 3 BR 2 '· bltn ,_1 _.,_ I ~;100 lt"nns S42 j00 • WE ESTABLISH RENTER'• d"a~-2 B•. • .,.., s,, .. .,.;, Xi t I r •• ~ 14 ' . Ol\ncr. on J\lal'<>'UCl'ile. Xltll I J'e rrelllion &_.shops ,:> .,. .... I __ _, •d Cl t P~11.;~n~n~y llw;.:0
0111. CO.Ol POOL + ~~m~ Sh~w R't~lt~rs.. iocon1c. 0
• ·_ 5 BEDROOMS 1 ~dioom.'1 bath ellCh ALL ROUTES ~:res~2s tnctl Yd, kids & t!;;"; :choo~~rlat :''tu~
f\3'.'50(!, 31'.1~ dn. --j ~.lni: 3 P.T:t., 1· BA art'll Armchair llou~c,hunlui;: •• 67~ ... * I B'ullt for fl IRflt". 11.cti\•t fam. 7 Units turf)ished (Ko selling ln\l(lllled) AU.. Rent~l! • 645-3.C!OO Rtfs. s:iis mo. !'J36..96'72
fjALL G) •••· l • I• horn" in p~i111e Jocation: HnJ. 675-12.25 Costa Mt SI ily. nn cul d(" .sac. t:a.~y r11r(' txccllent renlal record CASH REQUIRED , . 3 BR hse • w/w thruout,
. 11 rs, CTJ)ls . .,s. g~ TRAf'i'SFER g""" spo...... rps pa o
'
d n • d~ hu buH1.1n kildlt?n "ith cli~h· Sho"'l\ ....,.,i return Pl11 n one ••....••.••. $975.00 ON % ac. Sml bu! nice) Br. di ··' d !lo. N .• cl«C. .l:.!~!6 p00t Nel"'Qs AOm~ paint 'YOUR PROBLEJ\I Open House Ever yd•y \\'l\Sh<'r ti l>rcaklast area. $111.ooo Full Price Pian f\\'O .......... Sl62i 00 eottage. UU pd, SISO. pets eail 9G2-&s?B t j f
' 1 f." L T'r 11 .vour grf!@n il'lunib. 01vners l hr on hnn1l'.'11st octrtn \'lr1\• ~pa rate dinh1,11: roo111. Coiy Ph~n 1hree ....•••• $32;() 00 Blue Beacon * 64S.D111 ' or n °
Nt1r·Nt•p•rt 'P1 11 Orfit• tTilll!I. t'P 1$24,%0. GI or lo SPECIALISTS 101, Cul.dl'·.!laC, Job: ol U'Cf'.!1., flreplac<'. Pr1va1r pa tio off Exctllent income tor a few REALLY niC't"-2 Br, rlen, 1•4 Br, $710. Drapes, fe~
REPOSS.ESSJON _s _ rHA 1ernis. Call Sf7·1Zll. P roperty Menegement SU.~50. 10.io Linden Pl. C.i\t. pnN'nfl\ f('trra1. \\'idr RTE''" hours \\'ttkly work. <Days l RIO nu cpts, encl gar. ~r1e. Near ocean.
Sparldlng dean hOmti. Mme ~ Reel E s ta te Ql\ner 01tyJ1: ~197; l1t\\·n11 1n 11ell J11nd~cnJ)"d l."'venings). Rttilling And co: $160.' ·
newly pilitited 41 C•t'JlCtcd. 2. STEPHENS & K~YE Eves~ M7·1122. )'llrd. Dooblc garagr SJ9.900. lecting money trom coin 'lp. ALA RentalJ e 6'1:>-3900 Irvine ~; 4 1' ~ bdrtn1. SOrne "1th &a$.0122 . AN\Tt~E I NO QUALIF'YTNG! . •.With Call. RF.ALTORS crat~ dispeMers y,•ithln a 3 BOR..\I., Family rm .• park ·N-EW-~3-B~R-,-,-BA-.-.,,.-... ·1
pook, '1li\-VA c:onv. lmns, , -~, Ca~h 10 J.~A Loan. l Br. SlNCE 1~:1 qualified 1.rea.. (Ila.Mies like )'ll'd. Co.st& Mesa..,Klds drps, htd comm. pcd A,
from $l7,ooo 10 $40.000.
1
111 II Beach .~lvd,. Htgn Sch Newport Beech address ju~I pt1inled.' Uke new shat ~~O ~a·~ rAme brand candy and OK, .brk., $200 a month. NO m: incl. Prefer famil,y.
C.OUlna" \''•Its Jnc. __ OpcL_lll 9 p.rn. ___ ChamHn1 3 BR, dinlna;/tam· <'Jllll: & kit noors. Li!IM ..,,,/TO~j 16/ 673-4400 .srmc~). For ptr5ana.J ln:er. FEE. 540-1720. S26Q.171i62~lancht a te r .
8843 ~m1 Avt. 962 . .i.12:: SHARP-ANAHEIM lly. Co\'. pa!IG. ~lode.rn lo1. S2.t!«J ... Try S23,{X'M)! Agt REAL ESTATE 4 U"I,.,; 1 Id C \i ew send n11mt, addft'J5 TlREOol-· id •·-\ , 1J3.1..8'110 Sbo be. !U'll Et I I' •• ~ •• yr,o. orner Pnd phonenumber10J\tult1. ' ..... to •wuture .• 7.,.--~~--·---·I m:;-SIEST marketp!act ln P.)' Ollner. 4 br, healed pool. "'~ au u y. ~ ra ' 61~9S9. __ !Qt, l·l BR, ~ J:JA, frplr-: Strh" Distributlna;, lt1c., l.6Sl Its trtlly not tbat bard Mesa Verde
1cw1t. The DAILY PILOT ' J;c indoor. outdoor ~11 r1n. J:A~e~f'HrdaLi:O· i\IESA Verde · art"&, 2 sty, 4M ~1g90 Gleinncyrc ~~ 9 03 6 2·2 DR, 7 BA, I nlcth· \If B d A he\ to replace. Ju~t watch the ----------1
C'llllitl.dl ttttlon. Save Pl<'t hllnii. frplc. !lfany r.X· , • ;.. 4 RH k den. 2•, ~. bltrur, · · · 1 · 1 furn. 2 BR. I BA. 4 p,;t , "''..-..i;a,n~t.JY,;..., ~ .. m. J\irniture l m~llanecr.3 SPO'n..~ 3 br 2 t» ll.
money. time • eUort by 1 ,~, S.10.900, Liberal ttrm.s . 400 f,. 17th SI., C.i\I. 646-32.'i:i SJ!l,;'iOO Bf · ov.'Tlr, alt • -f!OUSE Hun11111? \\'atch lhl' i:n r. C. M. $765. mo. Inc. I Ca. ""(IU '•o-.ouw. columna In the Ousllied fem. J:i86 t.!yrtleWood, Sl40.
~Mii'. l ~7ft.1M7. \\ihlh~ Elephant Dime-A-LIM , 54&-liM OPEi'I' HOUSE coh1mn. S69.9;,o. P. 0 . Box 217. CdM Well help )'OU sell! 642.5678 _s._,t_lo_,_·-------mo. 499·1901. 4S.3!H!t, j
I
'
•
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I Monct.y, lllltCh l, 19"11
l~ 1 ... ,,_rn ..... ~ lr!J [ ----1~ I -· ' ... Ill! 11') [ ..... ··-I~ r~-... ~ lrtlr '-~_ . .:.,_-·iiiiiiii .. -iiiiiiiil~~~· liiiiiiii .... m;· ,.,.,iiiiiiii .. ""iiiiiiii"":'~J[t)~· ,J~I ~~~I .'imiliiiii;;,i;iliiiii~~ l ~iiiiiiiiiiliiiiliiiili~~!• 3
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l·H-•_•_-_Un_fu_rn_. __ 30;.;;;;.S I Ap..:_t_•·_.F'#,.:....''"-·-----:l ,Apb~-·.,.',.."-'"-··---"°-Apt.·Unfom. . , :NS Apt. Unfurn. 36$ Apt. Unfum. ~Ai;'!;;;. or Unfvrn. 37I Ap~::Sn.ol Ui1111m. ll'O ~=...,:;;~. ·'_,,.' --< ~ <
[ _ ... _
Newport ~•ch Coron.~tl Mair' Cost11 Me.111 Cerw ctel M.r Costa Mew Eest Bluft 6 .. ~-......,.-vua. or. .,..
------1-=----=---l·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiim I HunH""°" lloa<h Hvntl ....... loa<h ma!• .W,. l'!i-.'i. oo;. \VA 'ft R r R.O NT bomt: JJUGF. prlY. Bachelor, trplc, •DELUXE 1 &: 2 BR'•· FUm 11 LRG dlx aptJ, iJ..O 2 Br, I lTOWNl@iN}~1ou!UiSE~~Owriu'(F,~· ~1:1~i;;;;;:;~~;;;;;;.,=~;;;;:;;;;~~,.;;;;;;;;,,==l.!IOl!jl>'Jir~mo.~!ll'~l2~NI~\:;_· ~ol
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1
k:_ 3 ~R. l BA, nr beach. No cook 'r . or untum. Blint, Cl'Jlla, ., f160 3 Br, 2 8.1. Htd ·Poot. Br, J Ba, ai.o 2 Br, ~ Q. *. $lS PP, wMJI:' • up ca~ .... ..,patio.J400Per $12S/mo.673-0904,67J....6n9. drp1 , pool, rardena.. ~-..,. Newlydtc:Play)'d,Cptd. &.. Padol. End 1a:r. {J // w/ldtchep.'SZ :J1"·'Wl!k ~~arly. 6.17-063~ or BAOtELOR apt, 2 blkt b'Om NASSAU CP~!S-i.e. lll E. Drpk '· Bltna. PaUa. Child. &75-5033 oJ..a U. inla .....>fSm&O~a • UJI ~.'Morzl.oMHS
' big Corona, 1 adH; no ptts. J :·.:"""::::.;St~."' ;;'~1;,· ~;:;,:;;:::'--a . M 542"'344 LOVELY lts 1 Bl. tnt17, · ROO?ti'foi-ftnt llrpvt b6mit, WALK to Bay or Beach. SllO. Yrly. MU520. DRIVE BY ON TEN ACRES ~. ~.:1P1• AAve. r.u. ...,_ cpts/drpt, CID, rtfrlc, CUUal estate "llvtng. Enter La Quinta Her-•mpl 1Mf7 fril.'d; pvt bail ~tv/rebic. child .ok. SW. Costa fies• 147 nower St. 1 Br IW"nlsb· 1 6 2 BR. l'Urn. 6 unrurr. f i~iiii'io-iiili~"ii'Oii .. iii;' ..,.,-iii;. iiti' f dlhwr, JOOl.. $165. ~· mosal.s lush trwen atmosphere • lttoll t(te-5t0-DH CJil~ ·
Al.A ""tal• • &1;.3000 "'· "'" '°'"~"''' C.>L Flttpla"s I prlv. ,p&tio<. * IRAND NEW* Fountain Valley lined walk WlJS to 'vour apt. -G·-.. ;'.,_ , its FRESH &: Clean . 2 Br. 2 REMARKABLY 64&-0920 Pooll Tvtnia Contnt'l Bkf:at. 1---------·I ALL UTILl'fllS INCLUDID ~· "71:"" ' • • ..
B•. '"•"• """"· 1215. UNRELtEVABLY * DELUXE 1 , BR k 900 sea...,,., CdM ~ I.A OOSTA APTS,.16 'BR. AU. NEW \ 1 BR. Unf. $150 -·Furn. $180 * PR!VATI! ROOM I
ALA Renta!!I • 64~000 EXTRAORDINARILY Bachelor apts. $35 wkly 1 (MacArthur nr Cout Hwy) Bltn1, awlmm~ pool I. ca'.r-VALLEY PARK 2 IR. Unf, $110 ·-,urn. $210 for ~bullq,ry · p•r11o'f •
3 BR, den + lge dorm ot· ' BEAUTIFUL UJ>.J'Ur.n.Jncl utU. Monthl.Y aae. All utll pd. '150 to $170 APARTMENTS 3 Spac. fir. P.lans, decor. fumlablngs: live BrfCht ..,'chtcry prden tur-
!tudlo, 2 ba. Nr beach. $295. Val O'l1ere Garden Apt1 term• avail, 998 El Camino. * COROLIDO APTS * ~o~~~:·Otpeta. '42-t?OB •• !• ,opens ·new doof'I tqr within romantic aetUnc w/lun or privacy. roundlnct:!'"11~ meai..1 644-5049 or.673--3211 Adult~. no pets l,0-546--0C"-'""c,------2 Br. studios A atrfft Jevela, • .,.YOUNG FAMILIES 'Tei-raced pool, prl. iunten iu BBQ'1 w/ Call 54SA1"'1. ·
Santa Ana Puttin& gre<"n, waterfall &: Dana Point Sl&S " up. PenthouRs ·-. WILSON GA'RDEN APTS. 2 Blt •. Apt1 $160 seculded 11atino co.alpL w/Ram1da II FoUD• Re"'al1 t. Sher. ... -stream. tlowera everywhere, _, 2 IR O d .a-t •175 • DELUXE 4 ' BR h s e . 45· pool rec. room billiards SINGLE TV I Dlhwhr. frp}. dbl carporL 2 BR Unf\ml.'t Newly dee. . • er en_,, I• lain. , ~, Sim~o'11er • Timber, S.A.
1
BBQ·s. 'Sauna, tu~ .. unfurn: 123 &: ' lip: ~iJy:1:,~ 1 ,Pool--,·T"...,.,~-"-----New ' .cpJa/drp1, Sp a c 2 IR. Townhouses $1&5 * .Color co-ord. lrit w], lndir•ct li9htln9. ~In RM'~ :ni:;:
()pf.ion to bu,y. Fw info Singles l BR 1 BR + dEn J\farln& lnn, 341.U p)ut Colt• Mtu rrounds. A<:llts. no pets. J ,IR. Apartment $210 * D•lu•• r•nt• I: oven1 * Pllllh th19 'crP.t9. cook' : sd • · • ~1034. 2 BR. '>mm' Sl..3.). See iti Hwy. $140 I mo. ~ Fountain • * Bonus 1tore91 1pac, * Cov. ca;pott Ret1r!t widOw' w.t°T'.:;
University Park 2000 Parson! Rd., 6t2-8670 Huntington Beach W~ E. tHarboc,· .tum w. Pre·st:hool center, Adult pool, * Sculpturtd m1tbl1 pullinan I tll• bttht wt older woman who ·cbil
__. -~tween Harbor Ir Newport, on \Vilson). Oilldren'1 pool, Prlv patioc. * Ele_j•nt r•ct•1tion room ' not dted pty-Empie, Mit
2 Bil< N. 19th. BEAUTlFUC FURN. APTS. * NEW * !i::.:,!it<hens. Will:";: fURNISHEO MOOELS OPIN DAILY •• ,...,. no ·-:Rd11 ~ ~ .. ~ :nu!1~.~~.:::: ~ iiiii*iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiO !l"°:'~~ ... ~!!:_1Pri~:_iia!lo, VILLA CORDOVA er.1 ."B· drpg IE pint i Br. _ ....... • "'~-~· •--· Bllt.Frwyfrom1 Huntington Center,· San Dlego Rq'd. 675--7213. • * * ... \\'ouuroll'l:S, ..... c. w-.:SS\flC ~I a Studio triplex. Fncd ........ .._ _....,... • . .. Go denwest Colleae. ' W"-·. w-.. -
3 BR., 2a baths •····• S285 El p I "-"' lock-' Pool tlo ~ I ... " _,,c.u 'l' 3 BP .. & din. rm ....... S325 uer o m1111• Apt• ~~ ,:·:P· ~· · pa . in blk to ~ l th St. • San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd., So. on betwtt 21 ...-a to :sliaft.
4 en,;, 2~ batl;ia •••••••• $.125 *Bed* * * 17~1naKeei:in W,. (l blk W. l QUIET-SAFE lhop'r. Adlts:. no Vtl. 253 17lU S. Euclid St. Beach 3 bits. to Holt; W. on Holt to • • • 3 br h9e In 1 C.M' .. No
1 room Apts. of Beach Blvd, on Slater). 40 Unit Adult Cabrlllo. 642-0461. ijuat IOUth ot Werner lb UQuint1 Hermosa 714· 847-5441 chlldren. Call Monlia '•t * 842-18<8. Apartment Complu HARBOR GREENS FounWn Volloy ) • '4:1-2000 ni • Sot ""'!!' ("I 111 1(11"11i1 .
---,-lll'uliur
"SINCE 1946"
1st Western Bank Bldg
Universily Park
Days t3:J.OIOI ' Nights
Houses Furn. or
Unfum.
Huntington Beach
310
4 BR, 2 BA, clean. walk to
beach, lease. S275 mo. Ask
fur Jack. 96z..5523 agt.
Duplexes Furn. 345
S~linc~ u~~:s~ti:o ::: cl~B:;:R'-. :.:;;Co:.odo_,-;-o"'n,-,b"to-m-a, I & 2 BEDROOMS GARDEN I' mIDIO APTS Phone (7141 J.tG.4715 Apt. Unfum. 365 Apt1., ~: :l ~i ·~ 6
Qµ
"
•-1 1 1· 1 Entenaininc will bt a plru. &-' ' 2 3 BR' ~-SU" Co F Uni •70 iet Envitonment, on ,_, g, enc pa'°• poo . ...,. .., • •· .. .,... ... a BR, 2 BA. ndo. 2 car Newport •-a-L. urn. or um. • GIRL to shar. mWl J Br
w .. ~ Some furn. Quiet. 1130 ure. Decorating tbll lowly, 1700 Peterson Way ,.. u Y'oo.-• -· ,.._,. uei 1"n street par.....,.. No childrefl, · . • _.... pn.a:e.. ~ • ._mo. t.AM ~-noral houae w/1eme. Cell no pets. 67>5034. 1paC101U apt Will bt t. joy. 546-0370 SJ&.Tm after 5:30 pm. '"' 333-2640 1-5: 648-fMC aft L
1 BR, $135 pe:r month e Special cabinet ipac:e * REGENCY * e Lock garages w/ le ator G•rden Grove MARINER SQUARE 1 BR. furn. $130. 2 BR furn 1 Girl to ahare 1 br ~ OOJ.~:taM~~s'aAve. Tra!:=:~u:~;~"ll e Bm cetl e Lndry e Patios 2 Br, 1 Ba, crpt1l 4rP1, ~u . APARTMENTS $1$. 2 BR unturn. $155. on Pe~. Call n11: •u e DW/dl.spl e Huge gu atve cleanin& cu ovrn, encl pr. 12th MO. FR.E&.EASI'GATE Announces the availablllty <1l Pool. Bltm, crptl, drps, no 675-ll!T; or 61l-M97. o:~~ ~~e~~ U~~ltspd: e Special soundproofina Patios. MS-3600 377 W. WiJ. t?~ ~:di~P6:;~s;a~: 2deA•innS1B10Rllunlv0t~~~odr.1~ultJ. children, no petl. 325-J E. G fo R""_., ,._ MO.RE storage than a house
newly dee 2 Br. Colored
bltn appJiance5. !\lost al·
trac. \Valk to stons. Don't
rent 'Iii you &ee this! $159.50
549.3&13.
LINDBORG CO. 53&-2579 e Deep 2 color lhai; 1t1n. c:rpts, drp8, elec ldtch, .. w s u-.:au 11th Pl. C.M. ~2738. 1ragt1 r l9Rl 'Nlil
-carpets, dnpes *DELUXE l &: 2 BR's. f'1rn laundry facU!tles. Walk to ~.by the aea .in the Pre&-Ce1t1 Mei• FOR motor bqn\u, trall.r.
Laguna Beach GAS&: WATER PAID m· unfurn. Blt111, c;rpta, al»ppinf. Nr frwy. s170 mo. tipus Westcbtt arta of boat,etc.l~NptBlvd.OI.
ro=R;:.,-1,-...,-,'°"'&-."'turn--. °"Oo<-on-I Mo. to Mo. From $140. dtpt, pool, 1arden1 . um Bailey. 897-504.2. NewpoF<tRBe0Mac~230 6C.2821. M2-51~ . 2323 Elden Ave, Of NASSAU PALMS, 1'77 E. • LRG 1 6 2 BR. apts, 10;.;:.;;..;:""',,;:';i;::::C,,-=O'.'"'•I
View. Deck. Adlts only, no (Near Back Bay) I "'"""'-=',cS:.:L:.-CM=:,.· 6':.;:;:1-364.=::;'·'--Huntington Beach For lntonn&tion phone Mr. min from collep, ocean il GARAG'E-Storqe ~I
HOME-like 1 Br. & spac. pets. S250/mo. Uttl. 499-2865 See Mgr, Ted Woodhead l BR. 0up;~x. Stove .&: NEW LOVELY GARDEN Robert Al. Buckley. Manag. could walk tD shop'r. Hu Available Matth 4.
2 Br. Spanking clean, ht.am. Lido Isle 646-0032 Rrfrlr. No child~n. no peta. APT. ' -..... tio .l encl er, at (U4) MS-~ or write laundry fac., carport I' pool. '* Call 1'91-<lfSS * ceil., attrac. S132.50 & I;;...;.;..;..;.;;;.._____ .... 5 .... Rent from $130-U55. Aak STORAGE · · llxM' SI59.50. Walk to major BEAO! Apt.I. Fuml.!hed 1 $105/per mo. SUO W/1ar. cuden. 2 BR, 2 BA. Shag to The OWte cf the Man· pnp, Water .&: • prdener turn. crpts, drps. bltns, encl 1ar. af"r, lifariner Square Apfl, about our discount. lM6 fl). 21,:76 Placmtla Aw., skop'g cen1er. Key at 2260 Bf.. It Bachelor. Garaie. """A w 171h Sl ... o """'• ~., •• '-"-· p•·-0a u-A t H CM ('-) -,._
M l S A E 1200 I-••~ 320 Nord .,,_. . · .no-v"'"· Near beach. 21662 J6t"I ~""IC Ave, NB, C&L ....,.,n -· P . • m n:ar . _...uu.
ape t. pt . 646-59!il. • '""'• .-. . HACIENDA HARBOR St 92664 646-8$4 l·BR. tum .. 1 blk. ocean. $lS p W k & U , ~n_•_• c:.612-<097:c._::;,;_____ 2 BR, crptl, drp1, stow, Brookhunt • Apt B, . Office Rentaf ..
$150 Yrly incl util . No prll, BACH.,ELO•R• 1 BRP 1 Newport •-ach rerrtg. Fenced yard, carace, 646-0841 BAY MEAbOW APTS • ._..,_0 ___ Q"··-·adlts. 642-1272 . & : P9 · Qu' Ad I LI I mature aduJts. No petl or WALK TO OCEAN PARKNEWPORT-care..trff1--------•0 <--~ ~··•
Newport Beach
TV &. maid serv avatl. . ••t u t-"' ng h!Jd Sl40 60-5631 llvr cverlkl' the water. 1 1;--• -i:u-niom, DP to l.CIO 'IC· Duplexes; 450 Victoria, C,M. • BEACH DUPtEX 2 BR. 2 1..:'::.;:,::",:,'::.·.::.::;·c,.;::,,::=·--11 BR. O'pts, drps., aome w/ pools, 7 teMls eta $750,000 Bn~ celllnp, pene ... 15. prl•. fl office sultta. lmmed. ot" F U f 355 I BA. 4 h.ses from ocean. Pk&;, ALL UTIL. PAID NEWLY DECORATED fq)lc A patios, $121).$150/per Bach. 1 or 2 •-. Al'° 2 patiO!, re:creation ·facilities. cu--. n-.... -. urn. or n urn. FURN Bachelor & 1 Br. util pd S155/mo. ill June ,_ 2 Br w/ •••. $130 Adu!'-~ All Adult ....... ..---.. ..... _ .. _.., 1 &: 2 BR's. $150-$170. Shq .... 5 ... mo. ~. 1ty Townhouua. Elec, kt., s, no.,..... /Jrport Irvine Oo~
Batboa Peninsula Exceptionally nicel ,;':;:":::h:_. :::"2-::..::"":::;~-~~ carpets, bJt·lna, encl 1ar. Disposal, water pd. 1176.D LI~DBORG CO. • 536-2579 pri. pat or bal aubtm parkc * 2 BR. from $1'5 * Complex. adj. Atrpomir
2110 Nawport Blvd., CM SlT.i mo. 'til June 15th 2 ages. Swimmina: Pool. Newly 1 _P_l•_.,._,_ .. _A_"'-"'· "-636-4"--""-'--1 BR, crpt.s, drps, n:frir., opt maid Rr cpts· drpa. -Hotel A hataurant, beb.
GOOD .SELECTION
Yearly or winier rentals
· Bu1T White Realtor
mt N'pt. Blvd., NB 67()..1630
lr!l
$30 \VK • l pt.r, w/ kit Br. apt &. gar. ut!l. paid. decor. Beaut. Jandacpd, LGE 3 br, 1,._ ha, c r pt 1, b!tns, $135 mo. incl util. Just N. ot Fi.shion ' tsl at 387 W. Bay St. (btwn Harbor San Dteia Ii: N'pt l'Wy..
S35. f<taid ffr, linens, 1V l or 2 adu1!1, no pet! U5 Adults, no pets. . drps, dshwshr. Downstairs. Also l BR Studio. 2 ba, Jambone & San Joaquin le· Newport Blvd. '-' mi N. uNCROWDED PARKING
& tele. Sealark Motel, 23 St NB. 241 Avocado e f.46..097' No J)f't1, 2 chlldnn ok. Sl65. refrl&., bltns, near ocean. Hills rd. 644·1900 for leasiJJ&: of 19th St). LOw;EST JtATES
2301 Npt Blvd. 646-7445 I BA~CH""E;.;LO:;;,R~.-,~,.-.. ~~.1-ec, call art 4 pm, 545-3215. . $145. Tradewind& Realty lnfo. ' CALL 64&0073 t>wner/mp-. 2JT2 DuPont Dr.
QUIET, studios Sl15, 1 BR's, swim'g pool, el"ICl gar. 1 I !!!!!!!!!!!""~""!!!!!!!!!!!!! I i2'1iBi'roo;i;N>id~1,,..;<·Pv;iv;1-,,P,.>ttiiOo,;<•OCinc:1 &17~u. EASTBLUFF FURN 1 Br. Sl35; 2 Br Rm. a, lWwpcrt Beach '
$125. No chldrn or petJJ. blk from ocean, S140. 210 FAIRWAY gar, 11ti ba. crpt1 I drp1/ * FRESH AIR 1Bdrm.1 ba. apt, All bltnl, uni SIA C'.rptl, drp1,1=---;;;"'""""'--;;;;;";;;--;;;;;;J
21.lS Eldtn AVe. c~r. see Cedar. 548-1131. bltns. No, C~f. $165. AduJtf, ill: carpeted, draptd. F?l>lc. J swim'c pool. Close in. 1451•
mgr Apt 6. * S25 WEEK & uP * --AP" -549·0433. W 3 hlks; to Beach! Y"' old, 1175 Month. E. 18th SL, CM. 548-99-19. FOR Immediate ~ VILLA Ts Beaut. blc 3 BR apt. w/w • in Onnre County'• moi't
PERFECT for yng couple l\fESAJ\fOTEL • * LRG 1 BR. apt. All new crpts, drpa, bltna except 816 A1.nGOs WAY 12,jQ sq ft·lJ 2 Br, 1% ba, lowly prdm comm'l
Apt1. Furn. 360 spanking clean 1 Br. attrac Kitchtn, TV 's, maid strvice. 3 B crpbl, drp!, tile IE paint. refrir. $225. No pets. 536-1711 _ ...... 0 utl rm for wh/dr, patio, complex. Comm'l proleu.
1.,,.--------furn ilure, beam ceil.. bar. Hraled pool. 646-9681 2 & R'1 ~ Bltl'lll. Sl45/mo. MG-<K:iL a, •1..vw pr, cptldp. S165. 54&-8688. iii medical suites. in Ian ~eneral $132.50. )4~3643. OCEANFRONT, beaut. 2 br Private ptlo, pool •. ·v. 998 El Camino, C.!\f. N~A2C!4aB. ~~F ;!~!ab--,,, 5 IUL Huntlqten lea.ch ~~of~~~. _""l.,. to
HOLIDAY PLAZA LG l BR, dshwshr, balcony frplc. $250 per mo. \Yinler laundry fac. A'ITRAC. 2 BR apl Adults: D&J"' _,.,.,....,. __..
DELUXE Spacious 1 BR $130 l\1gr. 7458 James St. Rental. 646--3839. Near Orange C&. Airport A only. Neu Harbor I er1, pool, patio. 8231 Elll8. WESTCLIFF 8"&-2 br 2 ES SP CE
turn apt $135. Heated pool 642-8017 le 646-2278. * 2 Br. apt 'lil J uJy lat. UCI. Adultl only. Wilson, CM. 675-8181 btwn MU477 or M7.39-S7 ba. CJD, frplc, . p~Uo. ON BE ACH I D K A
Ample parking, No chlldttn $14C 1 BR. Sl75 . 2 BR. Sl70/mo. Garqe, 300· to • 20122 S&nta Ana Ave. 8-5. WALK TO BEACHll AduJta. $1~180. 1601 • 305 N•• El C.MiRe AHi
-no pets. 1965 Pomona, UW pd. Pool. Gud•• Llv. btach. 642-3837. Mer. Mn, Joachim. Apt J..A DLX 2 Br, 1t~ Ba, '""ti. LOVELY NEW 1 A 2 BR's. Bedford. Alto new p~n • 1 ,.. .. _ . -S.n .. CIMMf•· " 516-6215 ~ d dshwu"--2 br,' 2 ba, CID, frple, "· ou.uq •••••••••••• -Co6GO
CM ing. 'Adlts, Jio #lets. 740 \V. ON bay. near Lido. l BR J ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; d~, stave, dshwhr, rar. ~tip.:·• 347.J;;7-.. diahwlhr. AdultJJ. 16 85 * 2 Bdnn ······•• from $235J....,===._,=,_.,,,.,.,...1
CHATEAU LAPOINTE 18th St., 0.1. I patio apt Boat !lip avail. EL CORDOVA Apt Children oil, $145. 642--7958. -Irvine across trom CoCl>'s, * 3 Bdrm ••••••••••••• .',$315 c_qRONA1D.I"' MA -
DELUXE furn 2 Br. apt. SINGLES $130 all util. except SlS5 ll'!Onth. 613-6450. S "ntE GABLES'" LGE 2 BR, bltrui, 6' bar, $195. 642-0239. Furniture Available ~uxe offlce ~or ~
Pool. CloSe to shops. $150. elec. modem bar, etc. l ER,,.pool, block to ocean, 2 BR, 1% BA w/ gar. $100. Cl06e to ocean, encl garage, . Cai'pefs.drapes-dahwUher ~.,srnd llr, ~. Sl2SI
Adults, no pets. Adults only. 1975 Parson! Si'ilte adult $135. 833-3:iJ5, 2077 Ch•rle St. 642-4470 Ad.its. Cptl, drps, fncd yd. All util paid, $17~ mo. Newport HelQtlts heated·pool.aaunu-tennis mo U1fl<pd.,O~m.mT
l!»J. Pomona Ave, C.M. (corner Ford). !'.tgr apt No. ~7 eves. Be 1ure 10 see these Charm-2437·D Orange Ave. 636-4120 53fr1766 rec: room-ocean views NEWPORT BEACH Civic CUSTO~f FURNITURE 3. ~2'°'B'°R:.,:.P:_P':.rc.:·:.W~~~k-to~..,-.-,h-. ing 1&:2 BR Spanish style, * BEAUTIFUL 1 &: 2 BR. e WALK to beach, deluxe CLE~·l or 2 .B~. Adult!~· 'patlow'rnple parkina Centri,, 300· tt td 1000 k
RENTAL. &-e ad class 810 1 BR. le 2 BR. 11,2 BA. $250 incl utll. Yearly. Avail prestige apts for adults. Ex. Contemporary Garden Aptl. l & 2 BR, $135 +. No m P".ls· Lg kiL UJ>Sl5CI. Security l\W'dl. AmW. le Secre•ta.rlal . * Call 548-3481 * Cpts, drps; nr shops: pool. _3~/_r._2lo-3c../c.....44_7·_'4<_;;3·c___ tra lrt llv rms, shag cpt'd & Patios, frplcs, pool. $145 • 8umm~r Increases. Royal 24'21 E .. 16th St., NB. HUNTl.NGT()N 675-1601 , '
Balboa ltland Utt:. pd. 1884 l\fonrovla. San Clemente drp'd thruout. Dwbrs, ipac $160 .. Call 546-5163 , Hawaiian, n> 12th St, H.B. ~1*11. PAC. IFIC 5 NEW ofllce1, ·1firi B4!adt
54S-033G-closets, be:aut. pool, rec:. SHARP tri 1 & 2 Br, CHEZ ORO APTS San c 'i1mtnte BL Lowe•t nnfl' •• Call
2 Sty .. 2 Br, den. 2 Ba, e BEAUTIJilJLJ..Y clean· I * WALK lo Shop·, • Altrac =""'=m=. :":':' =""'=·==== cptl/drp1, bltnl, quiet bldg. 8234 Atlanta, 1·2 BR, pool, DEWµ 2. BR 2 Ba 711 OCEAN AVE., H.B. M2-252$ or (213) S9U015.·
Avail immed. Yea rly lse &. 2 br apts. Pool. Crpts 1 BR. rum. Adu Its, .No pets. Infant ok. .SUO private Pl&I"'. Washers, bltintf' drhwhr~ ft.c: ~ (tt4) 5.16-148? 1670 SANTA AHA AVE CM
S2&5. or until June 19, sr;i0. &. drps. Adults only. 1!30 $130/mo. Phone 492.-6313. <l $150. '50-9722, 547-2682 dryers. 5.l&8038; 536-2727 Adults only. $l8o. 4n_2259. OWILUAMfe open lOW....C.U:·T·:~ D00aily ~.:. 300 · .. ~ ·,.. .. ..__·.,it.
'
.,.. ~.,,. Park·Lik• Surroundfnn1 c '·-·• '" -· ,,,.._.,J. to SHiO. 642-2181. BACHELO from ··• ATI'RA like new l·l BR. $150-Very spa_clou!O 2 BR • ~2464 or SC-M.12 1,,c,,:..::....;,..c,-'o"::,.,.~-~ QUIET • DELUXE , n I "'-dl I IDEAL for '1 adult -!urn IU5 mo, 1 BR. All util paid, beach, S80 ~Daid. 1•2 ,_ 3 BR ._........,. -. poo, cpll, ..,.,1, !p, 11Udlo apt. 17674 Van B11ttn S.nt• Ana 5 NEW --· 1-a •• -h
I b f l N I y I 492 '6 "" t"$"•~ utl pd. 1884 Monrovia. J ~Lo~"0:.·~c..J~l__'8~41!:.<Jtl~34~--1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, l Br $155 up-3 BR $180 '"''"""'-••
11
.-.-: r. rp c. 0 pe 5• ear Y Pvt patio. Nrwly turn, * _, FURN. BACHELOR ,.,. ""~".' "•· Patio, pool, c:hlldl'en ok. BL 'Lo1>vest n:ntl IG-2525 S170 incl 1.1tils. 67~2!175 Ad I Qu ' c•o rv.~tt •.r: ~ 4'U _... u ts, 1et. ~. Apt. Unfurn. -s patios * Hid Poolli 2 BR apt · w/w, drps, bltm, VILLA MARSEILLES Jnq. rrntal bonu1 now, or.213: ~..., 1
BalbN Peninsul• Bachttlor apt. compI turn. Nr 1-.op'g * Adllits only e LRG 2 BR. i tud!o: patio, disposal, laundry space. No BRAND NEW ?tfORA KAI Apta. 1S8!1 OFFICE for n:nt-.333 E. 17th General pool, 11,ii ha + 'pwdr rm. " """ a~11 1 inf 1.t e $25 WK-OCEANFROr.-r Incls ulil"s. $110 mo. 2426 ~-,......--=-:....,.-,..,_,....; MARTINIQUE APTS Ira: cloaets· IE atorage. S~ pe · ...,_..,, or 0 SPACIOUS Mon Kai Lant, 7JI blk E. St,. C.M. Furnlsbed,, ·atil
l.ov•IY Bachelors, l • BR. Nev.-port Blvd. 642-8400. Just for Slninle Adults 1 Br. unturn apt EDC! gar, 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apt1. of Beach, GU Garfield, paid,$&). &1>2450. • 1777 Santa Ana Ave, 01 & $160, 2925 Mendoza Dr., 1 tlo 1115 w 1 d · 96' -"-" · · P I Utll SMALL 1 · · 1 SOUTH BA·Y CLUB r& " · mo. •" ' A ult Llvln• ~·~· DESK SPACE ......... &eTV!.ce. oo. . , s eepmg &: s1t1 ng P,fgr. Apt ill 646-~42 C::M.C'C--------84Ml4 • • 675-8740 • room, restroom fac il, S60 ADARTMENTS ~ pd, adlt1 only. 9. Furn. & Unfurn. Newport Be•ch 2'22 Forest ·.a;._nut I~ ·1y ,,.,~ .... ,~ "'.: NEW 3 Br owners unit, frplc, ·~, movi""" allow. N•w 2 ~-hwuh•r. -•,·, -~•--1. "•• GIRL atudt'nl .... ·ants girl to mo. ""seCUl'I · ~ Newport Beach * FREE all bltM, shag crpt8, drps, ...,., .... via "'"" ......... ....,.. ---------1
share ocean fronl apL DUPLEX 1 BR. furn or 88(1 Irvine Ave. closed carage. Jmmed. Qc. Br from SllS. Cpts/drps. ed appliances • plush aha&' VISTA DEL MESA l'.aguna 8eacf.i
Reasonable. 673-4928. unturn. near shop'g. Quiet. <Irvine and 16th) RENTAL SERVICE cupancy. M>-2321. bltllll, fncd patios, p1*y carpet • cbolcw ol 2 color ApartmentS ..._
CH =· "-'ho Nod"""' or cats. 548-2720'." {714) 645-0550 Costa Mesa • Huntington area.' ~7Z17. achemr1 -2 baths -•tall I • 2 BR =·-• u-• o · h-BA Apt. s:urn. DtU a y.,-Beach e Newport Beach ATrRACTfVE lge 2 BR, 2 ., ,s:wna 111• ~I ONti.~inHunttrcton
Penln. Nr ocean, lrg: sundk. LRG I BR w/w crp!g, bltn!, 1 , 3 BR ·-s b•, •pstain, •ocl aarare, Lagun• Beach sho .... ·ers • mirrored ward· wuhrri. Stove and Retrig. Boh N d 1 ottl
1125 o.~ "148 ...... .IU" ~ • robe doo1'I • Indirect light. ~'"A · ' .... R -'-"' e uxe OU ;i·mo . .,.._,, · I adult, 00 pets. $132. Aak about our DlSCOUNT No pets. 557-9278. OCEAN VIEW. Lrg Bachelor .,...,, crpt 1 · ..... r; tt center. av.ail Man:h.15. Crpt1, drps,
B B
Yearly. 642-8520 Cp tng Jn kitchen • brt.&Jdul Occupancy 11'1 March ·-pl• -·~"& •-__ ••con ay RENTAL FINDERS PLAN. Call 636.0220. NEW spaclou! 1 k 2 Br. &: l BR aptl. Is, drp1, bar • hure private fenced RENT Starts n60 .,.. ~,. .. , . ..._..w••
l's'"rN;..G_Cc.;Eo;...l_B_R,_I"-,-.,-,-. -ll-75· IATIRACTfVE E-side Stud io Free Te L1ndlord1 VILLA Ml!SA APTS. Bltns, c~t1, drps. gar. lm· ~t-i~~:.v:.8'~00 wagi·r~ dg:: patio • plush land1caplnc • Tuttin & Mei• Drive 3100 NJ;WPORT BLVD, MB
yrly, 673-8785 nightsi:iJl-41'.XXl :t.~ts.8~~7o. BA. POOi. 645-0111 2 BR, Priv patio. Htd pool. med. occup&ncy. MS.2J2l. Laguna Beach. 4!K-S49S. brick BaJ'o.B.Q'1 -lara:e heat. * 545"-4155 * • ON 11lE BAY •
daya. $155 SHARP 2 BR 4JJW.1t1t1,C .. t• ..... 2 car encl'd 1ar. Children New cozy l BR, fpl, crpt, M V d t.d pools" 11.11a1. BACHELOR & 1 b tJJ 613-.%464 or Ml~ Capistrano Beach • • welcome, no pets pleas•! drps, fenced yd, car. Pets es• er • 3101 So. Bristol St. Nr Bay. 'Eves. 675--;..,~p o~ Busl~•• R•nt•I, 445 ~~~~ oi~164:.~~ts, no pel! Corona del M•r $165 mo. 719 'JN. Willon. .I: chlldrtn welcome. $175. 7iBa upltain. Car. Newly (%Ml. N. of So. Cout Plua) •!M-nso ::'l::::::S o·-"obl• M-~-·
$2!1 \VK. -S98 mo .. fum. 646-1251 MS.:UU decor. Child ok. No pets. Senta An• . :,vrn; VILLI. • ... J\lal
apt. TV, linen~. utiliait's flt S15 per week up NE AR btach &. stores. New 1 F J\t * LRG deluxe 2 &: 3 Br l"'"/mo. 557-8400. PHONE: 557.t200 OCEANFRNT 3 ·br, 2 ba, profea~onal bide, 1711 2
incl., no pets .f92-5078. w/kitchens, $25 per wrek 2 Br &. 3 Br apls. Crpls, SEACL 1 anor Apt s · apta. MESA VERDE area. _, avail Marth l • June 15th. Beacb Blvd, H.B. Par~:
492-jJ.\2, up Apts:. l'ofOTEL, 548-9755. drp5. friilc. pvt patios. S:51 Bacht.k>r, t & 2 BR, I% C&JI ~1034. 2 BR. New crpl, drpa, closed $350/mo. tllO W. ~anfront A Ir colld: Hea tin C
$3 BA, $137.~160. S30 mow 1ar, near shop"g. AduJts, CAN1 BE BEAT Car:pt.tinJ~ Janlklrial '""' VACANCIES Cost money! VACAi'l'CIES C.os! money! 10 2.l. 316 1'1arguerite. in allowance + r rg. 3 Le Br'•. 2 Ba, new cpts, no pet..1145.''645-3515. Senta An• lnqu'-....... _ ·I , --"
•· ho I to •-t ~·--t I 67a-3472 or 213: 797-2300. d"-·-1 erp•-d o '"' ow.. -,.,..., o.cnt )fUf' usr, 11.p ., s re ""'n your ,..,uao:::, ap ., s ott laCUIW • "'• rp;, pa o, drps, no petl, child~ ok. ,.._ h 544}..51lf, •
blda:., etc. lhnl a Daily Pilot bldg .. etc. lhru a Daily Pilol For !hat item under $50, pool, children ok. 1525 Avail now. $165/mo. ~5-7245. Newport -.•C SINGLE STORY LAS PA.LOMAS
Oassilled ad. Oassified acl. try the PtMy Pil"ICher Placentia Ave. 54&-2682. N d ) 2 b ·~ A u _w Way To Liva South Sea Aimo.phe:re APARTMENTS RETAIL ator. avail a.tttt
, __ _
S@\\JtllA-lGt.~s·
The l'unle with the Built./n Chuclcle
O r:;10:111b~ .:! ;!: f.
low to form four liff'!Pi• word5. f
TE ZOLA .
1 • • ••
I i I FECRO
I I I 1 •
SETUG
1
1 Sigri In tho wgetable de-
. f po11111entoftupermorket.-rhe
• Management RHervn the
Right to Pinch Bock When
~------.lady CU.tomon -tho l~·tt •' •
I I ' I 1 • I
11
SUERAQ f-..r-.,;;...;,_;c.,;:._,..~n• . .,_..,. !lw d .. d.i•'".,!.w I ' u by """"' ...... --I' I I I -• \'Oii -loom ... No. 3 -· e :~~tt;':~~~.rrw r r r r r r 1· 1
6 UNSC ..... lf IIITTIS 70 I GR' ANSW!t 111111 ·1
SC~AM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFIED 700
tw e u.xe r apt .:.<11• ,_ 2 BR. • 2 BATH Brand new from $140 Matth 00. · Drt•• ahop
MESA VERDE water. pr, laundry hookup, In Newport le•ch Carpets"' drPI I 1: 2 BR. furn .. unfurn.lt.hed vaca.th1r. '40 E. 17t!t It,
2 BR, cpts, drps, bltns, wash/ $190. ~1309 aft 6. OAKWOOD GARDEN Afr O>ndltloned w 1 t Ji dlahwuher. Healed C.M. 6~140,
dry attach. LockM pr, A NEWLY decor 2 BR. cpts, APARTMENTS Privet• Patloll poo1 " lanai. Ct:ntn.1 ras Sl'OR.E tor le11e. 15 22nd !,~· Ownl..rr ~!~r~.~h!'.!; dl'PI, bltns, 2-car . prqe, On 16th Street btwn HEATED POOC. heating A air-condjtloning. St, N.B. $1Z nio . ....,.,. er~ • .,.,.i#N., •1m 67• -•-•,,. ·-• Dov•r Dr _. .... ,~ .u-Y• .,., • Plenty cf lawn Gas le water paid. Private 531-5383
e NEWLY 1 BR. SlJS/mo util pd. 2 {714) '42-1170 Carport a: Storap patios. Color cbolc. •hal Industrial Rental 4SO
DECORATED Br. S145. Adll!, no pell. FOURPLEX, 3 BR, 2 BA, HIDDEN vn.t.AGE carpettnr. .
QUJET 2 BR's. Gar k Pool . 820 Center St. 642-5848. DW, frplc, tmmed occupy. GARDEN AP'l'S. Santa Ana 5-10.4988 SMALL UNITS
Crpts, drps. AdullJl only. no 2 BR, l\) ba, Cpts, drps, $225. Adults. fnq, 4150 A :1'iOO South s.Ita 1400 West Warner Ave.
peu. + 642-8042 patio. No prt1, $17fi mo Incl Patrice Rd. 642·4387 Santa Ana ~ 5f6J.52S North of South Ccast'Plua COSTA MESA
NEAT 2 BR dupltx, sml utll. 548-8803. 642--1771. Shopplnt Center&; near San $'95. A "181• Ptr Month
tencedyd,newcrpts.--t.Thild ·LGE. 2 Br:, den.' lpl,'gar. 3 BR i A fr-pre Dlep •'N~M:Fl"eda71. ,..lmmedl.ate~
OK, !iml pet. 316A, E. 2llt Cpll, drpi, patln. Shop'i, ttde~ra!ed, oW. $240 me'. Apts., Conwntt.ntly locatt.d 'c0mer New iSOO IQ, ft, ur\lt, l.Sth a
St. C.~t. 64i-3348. Mesa Vtn:le $170. 675-8800 Adults, nr Hoag Hospital. furn. er Unfurn. 370 Warner I< Bristol. :n:e~,t ~: polfllV,
SHARP 3 Bft: 2'~ BA. 1600 $160, 1 Bdr. Dlx. Blt-ln1. Jmmf'd occup, 64.2-4387 or G I See: Robert Natw.., Rltr.
IQ. ft. Studio •Pf, crptl, Cpts/Drps Pr!. bale. Gar. Mi-1771. enera , I[ ~1 Costa Meta 6«2-1'85'
drpa, nr So. Cst Plna. $~ like nu x1iit Joe. 962-4180. BACH apt. Park Nrwport. ltanuls . ,,-nRE SPRINKJ.XR.ED ~i ~~r'~ Valt.DCJL East ~luff ~=~n~· ~=: G~ti~~!: PALM MESA APTS. Flbrrfles mfrn. • wood
EASTSJDE $~. R71-3232 x 2370 days, t BR ·n1u wcrkrn wttl~. 3;750• ~ ~ evei/wknda. u m ·•••••·• $135.00 Rooms 400 Up. Nrw tiltup Wm1tr., nr.
Brand new 2 SR, I BA. $175. l BR turn .• , .•••.••. Sl49.SO frwy.
Crp1a, dtpl, dwhr, .U elitan. NEWPORT BEACH OPEN HOUSE Bachelon Furn!ahed t'Ou.EGE or ~orldng rtrl Alhwtll·8urk" su..a2S2
Ina: ch oven. all wtr &: gila Vflla Granad• Aptt. J ' 2 Br, 2 Ba, CID. bltns. from $135 Balboa Ill, !hr kit <l TV C:OMMERQAl,,INDUSl'RlAL
pd. Hid pool. 3:24 !:. m Four bedrooma with balcon. ~· enc rar. $}!$/up. l BR apta tllS mo. ~~e. ~mo ~ up. 500-1500 1q'·n. lJc to Uc
SI. 646-9IU '" above I: 'lif:low. Cnciou• 7os. mo.Imo. OK * San Clem.nte e&.-lMO•
I ti DELUX J BR, 2 be.th tlvtnf A quiet 1ndtnr •LG. 2 BR studio. l \~ BA, e POOL FURN tGOm in prfv. home, NEW bldr J72l-S:JIXI Ml ft.
Townhse. Bllnl, dshwsr, for Wnlly w1 fhlldrtn, I erptl, drpl, bltN ... OW, • SAUNA Colt.a Meaa: Kitch prlvil Nr Bakt; A ratrvtew, t
t>&)io, pool., clubhl, ms. Near Ccrona d ~ar H11h Ntar lloas-lr&sp. SISO. •JACUZZI _+;;i''iNr~. :C,OCC,::;;.,:54.;; .. _:106~1;.. =:!>"~· '!!'"'=::;·c.:St>~lll:::va~n,::.!"""'42!1~~· ~o. School Flrtpl w•t tm' 642-4331, 64J.tm. 1561 Mese Dr. Santa Ana •NY • EST
1t BEAUTIT\JL 1 &: 2 BR. bu.lit.In kite eP,Uanet .. 1 WESTCLIFF . :J Br, adul.tl, .. ~ _ ~n l)e:n 11 theed~ od!~ ~ Stor•g~ 415
C.ontemporary Carditn Apt.a, IJS AMIGOS AY '44.2991 no pelt, cptafdrps, blbtt, DAJt.Y PILOT DlME -A dtlll.)', .can blay, &t2-561r" STORAC~ b' rtnt.
Patlot, fr pie•, pool, ColdwtU\~nka A Co. I 1'T28 Bedford Ln. $175. ·LINES eo&t 10'J JU.II pt~ Item• with rue, UH Da.lly f•netd 1d. coverJd,
Slts.SlM. Call Sf6..Sl63. Man.,m, ~nt 541.mt 541-75ll. rdn: a de.Jt, PUot Oaullled. 6d-Slm YJ"-&tOUrld n11tal $0-Mlt.
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•
.-
DAILY JILOT Mondq, Mildl 1, 1971
..... I it I· .. ,..., .... llilJ I llilJI l--_ .. , ... _, .... ___ ](11]
Rental• Wanted 5.50 When You
Holp Wa-, M .. I' 710 Holp Wanted, M & F 710 Halp Wanted, M & F 710 Holp Wanted, M & F 711 ----------
d A Better Position J<ELL\BLE "'"~' "''"' .... KITfEN ~~-,, .. , Wont it one (1) bfdroom apatlmt-nt collar w/&'Qld bells found T 'l'fl J
Mar be•ch (clt11nl lwln In field on Collere Ave, • hf
beds, Aupst If Stplemb!r. h!twn Bakl"r A \Vatson. fig • • • ~ J •
Tel. nt: 327~ or 977 ~119. II f ......_ '"" s. JUverside Dr., Palm OiIHUAHUA puppy..Black Ca one 0 I.tr RVNOl.U • r..--r .lt!'*'f' ~ -•1 t n neck 4:SI» c-,.., °'· • N""-' .,._..-, _. •Oii· W/wn le Jp) o ' the experf1> .._ ~ a,_,, c-, AITJ«I 1 or 2 br unfllrn house or .found in downtown Hijj. ~ PlioM '46-1111 ~t 01:m!'~~tb la~ ~ts~ c~~~:~d black, t&Jl {lj-/jsfecJ be/owll LqaJ Sec'y Court },orma $600
Approx $100 mo. Needed by &. grey malt puppy found I Exec, Sec'y Computers $600
Mar. 26. Refere nc e&. on Newport Blvd, Call alt Sec'yMf&r&ckground $580
MS-2'.!31 aft 6 pm or Su.n. 6, 549-Ta54. ~ Sec'y Ceri'l Office $550
2 CAR Gange. Jn Cmta CAT-Young --bl1ck f 1-----1~ 1-s.nm..r~ 1f&l ·1~iiiil ft.piin I -Sec'y6ftman-orf'rench$700 Mesa. To be \lied for found vie Oriole &: Ca.nary _ serAtet ft "lfllin: . ~ . _ ~ _ . Sec'y Stock Mkt Ex'per S61>
ab:n1t. Call Ten')'. The St1, (Republic H omes), Sec'y Enrlneerlng $515
Real Estate.rs St&-2313 C.M. ~5-1549. p . f l &. Banlc Teller $400
R I • ., FIBERG' • .,., su rfboard Baby1itting Contr actor a1n ng Accountants Degrtt $8400
Check Here
with the
Job Kin.gs!
Misc. enta • _, found ~the beach nr P ttp1rh1ngfn51 CPA ChMtruction $ISM
e FENCED atona:e area, Newport pier. Iden 1Ify . COSTA MESA ~pa,lr:~~s."'!1:,, =~ Tax Accts State/Fed $14M *<lur 2 Offices CoverW
oil &U~; Co!ta Mesa. MS-3023 PRE~SCHOOL No Wuting Oiemlst Rubber Comp SW.I Call~ 9S-18U. !Sth Ii: Monnwia. Iii day ·+ etc. No job too imall. , ALLPAPER * ,.a .. For &--u .. tment All Of Or1nge County DACHSHUND. black, ferna:Je. full day ~. PlaMed 54.1-0036, ii hr'ans. Rrv. *W:n )'OU eaD "Mac'' -.u ,............
chain c.olla.r, near poet ottice program, bot lunches. Ages ROOM Additions:. L. T. 548-1"4 s.s.1m ACCOUNTING CLERK ][4ltJ) South Laiuna. 499-1100 u, hrs 6:30 AM-6:00 PM. Constructioll. Single story or Ex'pd · all pha 1 ~ H.B. area: Female Siamese J1B wk.COMPARE! 642-4050 2. EsUm.. planJ I la,yout. LESCO Palnting ContraclDr UI ses 0 ac-J:.iliiiiiiiliiiliiiliiilii;-~; 1 -'· 0• -·-. S47-15ll lnVexl 2 Story specialist. counHng. tbru gen.era I cat, chocolate brown '-vwr. • ~· Also ac c oust . ceil. ledger trial balance, m the
968-5656. WILL babysit your child in \VALKING Deck c.oatiflgs of spra).ing Lie 1 ins. Real E.'itate development
Parson1l1 530 Found Silver Husky, female my licensed borne, qes 2 all types. Lff Roofin& Co, 645-2399 ' field. Salary open. Send
·~-----..,,..,---Feb 9th 633.fli02, Orange. thnJ 5, l.!on thru Fri. C.M. 6tZ-121J ftt.e est. re!llme-to Box 15011. San· • RE YOU SUPPLY THE PAINT ADVENTU Loat 555 549-4038. Additions * RemodeJ.inl:" Will paint any nn $lO. ta Ana. SAi LING CRU ISE GH hool •-1 •· Gerwick & Son&, Lie. 1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil HI sc gu wan ... 6_ .,,.~, * S49-7l70 Int / exter. Free est. t5 yrsl'*Admln. Mono•or $800 150 fl 3 IIUlil Square RlDl!r. LOSf: White male Cock-babysihina: afternoons from ·~ exp. Also carpenter \\'Ork, . •
Leavini ~l/15171 1ot 3 a-poo, fMostly Poodle) Vic: ]:311. f refer Newport Llc'd Contr. Remodeling an kind. S40-?046. To suJ)l!r\11~ order dept of
months. Men & women want. Huntgtn Bch. Reward • He!Diti area. Jean. 642-0022 Additions, Plans, Layout Y faat growing spartswear
e<l w/desire fOf' adventun! ==="'='°,.,,· -,..,,-,,..,--;;:;::= CARE for your child-my Karl E. Kendall 548-1531 EXPER. Painter. Inlet. & mfgr AC'Ctng bckgrnd es-
FEMALE
EXEC. SEC'Y
From $500 A Mo.
Sharp girl free to travel.
Type 60, SH 100. &: tnvel & abWtu to share :: . u ive 1 u:o;: Exter. v.'ork by hr. Xin't 5enti~l v WHITE Cat tort 1n n rs· lovely, Jge, clean home . .,..., General Services ret's. Dick Fielding, Hun-Service.Center Emp Agency =:'~ ie~rmation ~u!":'y!~ .. ~;:~~c;l::~ mo. C.M. 646-5531. H111band BUJ:y? Call Moose tlngton Beach; 968-4065. 500 Newport Center Dr, N.B. ACCOUNTING TICH
(2lJ) 378-2605 call 833-1461. CIDLD Care my home, ntes 545-0Sro after &.Repair CUSTOM Paper Hangtn,, in-SU!te S3S / &U-4981 From $545 A Mo. ;;~7'-7:::;_..,,,.--,,::;::::l ID Sllit you. f7e-Schooler1 Build-Serv Most nlings ter/exter. paintizl&. Save on1~~ ... ~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ... I Exper in cost accounting FULLY LICENSED * LDST-Wy's gold Bulova pref'd. 54.5-1506. paper . 5.11-7991. I ATTRACTIVE woman, retail Renowned Hindu Splrltualllt tch w/stretch band Sen-Gardening Advice on all matters. Yl3. • NEWPORT Heights area. l.rr PA INT ING : II ones t, u.les. Sat & Sun ortly, Ten.
Lave, Murlage, Bu.sinea tlmental value. Rl:ward. yard, sand box. Balanced AL'S GARDENil"G i'Uata:Dleed work. Ll c'd. nis AH.air. 64>ffi45. EXPER BOOKKEEPER
Readinp pven 1 d-.ys a 644-~. lunch. Xln't care. MS·2T~ for gardenina Ii: a: mall Local ref's. C&ll 67S-5740 AMBULANCE DRIVER full $600 A Mo.
week, 10 am -10 pm. GOLDEN Labrador male SPECIAL chl!d care for landscapicg services, call aft 5. time, s ingle, not under 21. Tbru trial bal. Must know
l12 N. El Camino Real, lost CdM. Reward for llii-3 yr old ot nite worlcing ~. Servin&: Ne~ LARRY'S Interiors, quallty,-;',E><:;cp'--'p'-re_f._MS-34$ ___ . ___ , p;rofit & loss stmta.
San Clemente return or tnlonn&tion. Call pa.ttntll, 64&-6.355. CdM, O:lsta ~et.a. Dove paintlnf It custom'Auto
492-9136. ez.oo76 673-6010 5 to 1 pm. Bu1'ider1 Shores, Westclitt. d ra peri e'. 64 5-5350, 2 SALESMEN 'L OFFICE
eYOGA FOR WOMEN Fa~ q~~P~t * LANDSCAPINrinklG * 5.17-7455. Need 3 combination new & F~~N $400 A Mo.
Day class• Frtt demorutra-Vic: Golden~~st It Warner, BRICK, btoclc, concrete. New. law ns, IP en, DUTCH Boy quality serv. used auto salesmen. ExW-Type 50, SH ~
tion Tues. at 10 AM! Start SlO rwd. 618-2381, 674-4858 carpentry, house leveling, drams, walks,. arbor1, pa-$38 avg rm . Delux l coats. Jent commis8'on It demo Acct.I Payable &: Reeelvable
TbW'L Vitali!)'! Peace! Yoga all types ~mode~. No tios, fences. Lic'd contr. ll Uc., ins. 962-5.185 Gilmore. plan, hospitalization&. medi.
Cl'nttr 445 E. 17th St., C.M, ~: ma.11. Uc. Contr. yn loe. exP-536·1225. PAINTING/paperinl:. 18 yn cal.
~-lf;l PROFESSIONAL mai~ In Harbor am. Ue &. SEE AL TETREAULT
SINGLE? WIDOWED? ~;;;';-iiii;iiii;iiii;~~tf!iiiiiiii C•rpenter tenance, pruning. tree work, bonded. Ref's furn. 642-2356, SALES MANAGER
Divorced? Ov1r 21? CARPENTRY sprinklers. peits, ~ue. PAINTING, profeulonal. All HARBOR AMERICA
ForaaeUe.xplanatorymes-MINOR REPAIRS. No J ob weedoontrol.Cleanup;p;ibs. w ork guarn. Color 1969Herbor,CostaMese
saae 24 bn a day call Schools & 575 Too Small. Cabinet in gar .• To,'""'"""="-'="""''"646-0893.=== specialist. ~7081; 541-1441
496-4801 or 5'1·9991 1n1tructlon1 ages &: 0 th er cablne!J:. JOHNSON'S GARDENING INT & Exler. Painting. ASSEMBLER
FOR ladies only, S5 muu1e 'D'°"'is_eo_v_o_r_o"'G""ro-o'=t"'.N:-:"ow-545-8115 ii no answer leave Y~H~att, s~lrei~~i~~:'. Lic'd, inl, Free ~sl 30 yrs lllAJNEES
gpeclal $5. llC34 Beach CarHr With The msg. at 646-2372. H. 0, P • 6'.per. Chuck. 64>-0819. . ~13 Andenon. 962-2035 1SI' CLASS Painting I< 10 Immed. openings for girls ,_m_..i~··_H_._B_._MT_____ AIRLINES REJMODELING & "-pair AL'S Land5Cllping. Tree paper-hanging. fnter!Exter. w/good ~r dexterity. All
DANCE leasons; Latin &: removal. Ymt remodeling, positions muat be filled by
American. Introductory off. Specialist, Comm'!, reslden-Trash hauling, lot cleanup. Free est. 545·3459 l\londay. Call Now, 9 AJ\.1 'lil _,,•A_,."'-. 613-n.85 • ..... _, .,_ :,,,..., .. -plo lial. Panelirl&", cab I n e t s , Re..,·r apr inklers. 613-1166 PAINTING/papetina:, 18 yrs 9 PM 1 I Sa.,,_, ~ ~ r-'"' ,,. ......... ~ ... ~ .. ~v marlite, fonnica. 644-7598. in Harbor. krea. Uc &: • nc' •wvay. IA-c'LCO="'H°'o"u""c"s,..--,Aoo=o=,.......=:::::-.1 who want u citement plus! ~--~~----1 NE\V Lawns, rl!'-fted. Comp! ORANGE COAST
P'hooe su.-m1 or write to Ticket Arent! Air Freight? Carpet Service lawn care. aean up by job bonded. Refs furn. 6'2-23S6. EMPLOYMENT
P. o. Box 1223 Colta P.lesa. Station agent! Reserva.. Diamond CUpet Oeaninc or mo. Fn!e est. For info Plaster, Pitch, Repair AGENCY
Soci1I Clubs 5l5 tions! Ramp or travel Avg size room $8 891-2411 or 846-0932. 124 Broadway, C.P.f. 64S.31ll
qt:nt! We'll train )'00 for Repairing A: inltallatlons EXPERT J apanese •PATCH PLAS!ERING ffiVINE COASf C ountry
Cub Membenhip tot Sale.
Call ~l.U.1. Ext ~.
these and mott, day er nite. Free E.sl 645-1311 a:ardener. Complete garden-All types. Fttt estimates BABYSITI'ER--lite hskpng,
We mclude placement u-ing auvice. Frtt est. Call 540-6825 3:30 PM-evly eve daily. si&tance. Cement, Concrete 645-m45. Live In /out. Full ' ===-..,,..-,===::-: Plumbing
al E!l. 21 YfS. Approved for
1
-1 LOil lftd r.... l Vettrans. Elig!ble i:natitution . _ under the federally insured ·~-jj;jj;jj;jj;~~;~ student }Od.n proiram.,
Found (frM adsl 550 Airltn• Schooli P•cific
LARGE white' fema le •tDE.17th,SantaAna
German Shepherd, recently --.;;-;;54:;;;-U;-;;;59;;;';;;;;;;--
pregnant, very fa ith f u I, PIANO LESSONS
found nr, 17th & On.nge. Your home. Certified
64S-2442.. teachen. MW!ilc Systems.
BABY pigeollll, prob ab I Y Mr. Hathcock, ~IJSS.
taken from private aviary. VIRGO·-swim 11ehool lessons
Netd owner to identity or 6 months lhru adult. Garden
pigeon expert with feeding Grove le Balboa f s I •
sceaHons. MS-845.5 '656--2550.
•• CONCRETE. Floors. 1 EXPER. Hawaiian Gardener I ~;;:::::;:;:;-;;;::::;--;;:::;:·l~'~;m;...SO~~m~m;,•~r-c...::67~>-~1104~':-=·I patios., drives, sldewslks, Complete Garden ing Plumbing. Elect -Repair BABYSrM'ER • my borne,
llabs. Reas. Don 642-8514. Service. Kamalanl. 646--4676. $7.SO per hr C.M., 2 pre-schoolers ages
PATIOS, v.·alk!, drives, in-&\.!ALL Landscaping, 642-27'53 642--0506 1 & 3. Mon-Fri, 7:45 to
st&ll new lawns, saw, break, Genera] Cleanup & Hauling. PLU;\fBING REPAIR 5:15. 645-3812 after 5
remove. Ms-8668 for ut. 646-2188 or 642-0570. No job too 1mall
CEMENT \VORK, no job too CO:'dPLETE yard Ca re . I =-~•-64_2_·3_128_• ___ Betty Bruce
small, reuonable. Free Cleanup, truh hauling by Roofing
Estim. H. Stufllck, 548-8615 job or mo. 897-2417, 846-0932
Block \Valls • Sidewalks Gardening Service
Driveways • Patios by experienced Japanese
!l49-J173. Morn. or eve. e 96&--0183 e
LEE Ro.lling cO. Roofing oJ
all types. Rerove.r, repairl,
root coatinp:. Uctbonded
since '47. 642-7222.
Child Care Hauling T. Guy Roo~. Deal
Gxec
LICENSE D y ••AR"".:D-• .;..,G~""-g-•-~cl~•·,.~,~,~s. g~~'so.l ~~~~wn \Wrk.
Day Cara for Children trte!I din ivy removal., drip 1 ~-~""7~~~---a Secretary
fo.fother of 3 will care for )'(!Ur loader, backhoe. 962-8745. Sewing/ Alterations To operations mgr. Type 60,
SOLDERERS
From $1 .95 Hr.
6 Mo's to l Yr. ex-per.
SINGLE NEEDLE
OPERATORS
$1.65 Per Hr.
Swimsuit Experience
MALE
PHARMACY
$12,000 A YHr
Calif. Uc. Mfil' exper.
ELEC. ENGINEER
$1,000 A Mo.
Oil field experience.
LUMBER
From $500 A Mo.
Counterman, re.tall ex-per.
MAINT. MECHANIC
$500 A Mo.
Lawnmower A: tractor
exper.
* * * * *
'"""""'""°"'"'"'::---.,..,,.--1 SH 90. 3-5 Yrs exper, JOO.us. child whlle you work. Hot TRASH & Garage clean-up, ALTERATIONS, restyling, trial bckgrnd good. BRAKE MECHANIC * lunch &: anacks provided, 7 daya. SID a load. Free Expert fi tter. Top rer11. ~ $2.80 Per Hr.
fenced yard, playmates. De· est. Anytime, 54g.{i)Jl. N.B. tttta. ~2704 Call E xec. Secretary rront end exper. Own tools. I~-------------------.,! ~ire child 2 yn old, or older, J\lOVING Gar~ clean-up Ruth Cali. FO'I' bldr of luxury apts. 1 I. Vic of l\18i'J'IOtla & Edingtr & Ille hauling. Reasonble.
Trader's Paradise
HaYe octan view lat, 44x75'
w/ c\ub membership, San
Antonio Shores, l\1ex. $ll l.f.
Trd $5 M el-for TD, inc.
prop. or ?! . Owner 642.55&1
Want Hi Deurt Calif . out·
of.stale, health. Jtave a
earner 90xll7 2 bldgs. Eq
SOM. F.P. $68~1 inc. $4G
mo. Owner C.T\-1. M6-8558.
Horse ranch Orange'! Park
Acres, 4 BR,' 3 ba, pool, lir'
eond. l Acre .._. 10941
i\1eads Avt., trd. for Red.
:tine.. Cal. prop. 83.>892 1
~ Acre. val. $16.000, exclus.
ive area. zoned for horse1.
f'n:e & clear, TRD as '1n.
pyL on rrfe &. clear hn1e,
rd Inc prop. bkr 642-2436
2 BR, 2 ba lea1ed wtrlrnl
cando w/allp. Htg Hrbr. ari-
pt'0:4; S141'.f eq F'OR Inc. prop
:>r 4 BR hat, NB or ~i:: \'le,
nJ/585-11571 evt1/.,.,•knd1.
3 Bft, 2',; ha 8 aycn 1t.
$40,000 eq, For; Jots or la.M,
TO's wattrfrnt or ~ $1!.000
bal. ~t 5\~% usumt , \t'lll
help for rite de•l. fi73.71'84
HORSE • rldlni, 7 yrs.
Sound, trained. WU! tradt
for hl·ft or !
Call &W-M49
ormml
WUt do yea ba"'ll (0 tndl?
Ult It ha. -In en.
CounT.Y'• lafltll r.s tnd.
lni: poot.&UOr!I
* *
lines
times
dollars
10.2 BR u.n1t& a.t Sill fo.f.
Loan $55,800 auumable at
3.6%. Trade for de&r hOme
rbis area $25-S30l.t &. owner
carry 2nd. Agt 549-D218.
IVilJ trade my 1968 }lQNDA,
(7;, Tv.•1n, w/dirt eqtp: For
l 1965 or Newer CORV AIR
:ir VW. * ~ &IS-289'1 • *
Have oceanfront duplex,
\Vant small home With sl1J·
dio, coastal arta to Encinl·
ta&, Rich Irwin, ~altor
'"""° Lake'! Gregory Jot' . utilities,
paved road. \Vant T.D., Or.
ange proper1y. Time R.E.
B3!).252j or ask for Audrey
RJ!I • 2896.
35% RETUR.N, $<10,000 eq 1n
2 ot the finest Jaundroriats
\n 0.C. Trade for apts, com-
m'I or Jand.
833-m!i or M4•Cl631 eVf's.
Have 21' sloop w/head & re·
lrlg. liad slrokr, unable 10
use It. Could use small mo-
bilt homl' tor tvo"O. Anybod.i.•
"ant tn s\\'8p;-53&-2593 I
Have Th·· la.bit> modil rt" 1
mote oontroJ TV Jn :\.1n1
rond. \Vant port&ble remote
rontrnl TV in >..1nt ooM. I
• 536-tln *
San Frand.co Ptnln. GI
appraial S40,000. 3 Br 2 ba,
view of hay, l" yn old.
Trade: far IOC&I prop.
613-7714
*
EUROPEAN drtsamaking Girl ofc, typing. SH, lite in Fountain Valle)'. across rree estimates. t>t>l602 v all custom filled. ery 'bkkpng. sb"e<'t from Vlsta View H I • reasonable. 673-1849. hool .,7 7181 S _, Fri ousec ean1ng gc . '" -Unuay-• •d
day afternoon, S20 wk per r..tesa Cleaning Sel'\>i ce Alterations -642-5145 G irl Fri •Y
child. Carpets, Windows, F1oors etc. Neat, accurate, 20 years eXP. No skills ~ss. Heavy phone
Tbe
DAILY
PILOT
ORANGE
COAST'S
leading
Marketplace
Resld. & Commc'l. 548-4111 Tile W?rk. "!n't telephone te<'h·
n1que. No sales. Bay&. Beach Janitorial -*~Vo---~Th=-~T=il,,-~M~,.-c.-1 erne, e e Crpts. "''indows, floors -etc. Cust. '"·ork. Install & repairs. Secretary
Res. &. Comm'], 646-l40l No job too sml. Plaster Young, just out of sec·y
HOUSE OF CLEAN patching. Le1k \ng shower school l nexperienced, xln't
C:Omp!ete House Cleaning repair. 847-1951/8'6-0206. typist.' SH, 10 key adder.
h--,,c=.,-,"'0:'.2-68::-'-'----CERAMIC tile new &
Income Tax remodel. frl'e est. Small A/ Receivabl•
johs welcome. s·36·24 26 , Gen '\ acctng. Typing 5(Mj(),
536-8885 Smiley Tax Service
Tree Servrce General Office e 1JU1 YEAR LOCALLY e . Gond ,,·/graphic!;. K now
Qualified • Reuonable I TREES, Hedges, Top, Trim, pa111e-up & lavout. GE'n1 bck·
\V. A S!'.ULEY l cut, remo~ed, hauled. Ins. grnd in desiin. art & color.
Certified Public Accollnt'l 642--4030 Big John. Somt art education.
642-2221 anytime 646-9666 phol1tery
Central Busineu Services
~eTHE TAX ADVISORS
Perm. offi~Reas Rates
328 No. Newport Blvd.
Opposite HO.Ill Hospital
For Appl, Call 64.5-0400
------...,Qc-w...,,-· ·I Clerk Typist.
LIC k UphoAistholorey'r u' •hly In recreational center of Jux.
'"'Or . n n • P · R <Ollom Service. 64.2.-M27 N.B. ury ap.ts. ent ons,
compla1nr~ f r o rn tenants.
Type S0-60.
INCOME TAX SERV "!!~~~~~~~! 410 W. Coo.t Hwy.
$4 & up, 9 am·9 pm \\'kdys. r lllll Newport Beach
Open ews/wknds. Appls E"llloyment _By Appt. 646-3939
av1iL ~. lM2 Ne\\'j)Ort, . PBX Tel. Ans. Strv. Wrirk
C.f\t In Laguna Bch. Exp'd, :a11
Gordon N. Warren P.A. Job W•nted, Male 700 ana serv pper {25-50 prcl)
Since 1951. 675-3345 Fl linic 3--'U shi.U 494--71'5.).
SKOUSEN Ta."\'. Sforvict', your SCRAM-LETS BOOKKEEPER -ruu Charge (
home, cornpt audit pro-Arlvertl!lng Agency nttds
teclion. 546·4.i28 eves /\\•knds ANSWERS exp re bookkeeper th ru
11 · trial bala~ & payroll ron1n9 taxes. Start l\lart'h 15th.
IRONING my hOme $1.2.; pr-r 7.ea1lot-fortr--Cue.st -&-nd resume to Clasiihed
hr Bring own hangers I Squar r -SQUEEZE Ad Nn. 5, Da.ily Pilot. P.O.
545.-7&4J. · Sign In lhe \·evtable de· Bo.' 1500, Costa f\1m, 921626.
I tpartntcnt of 1upermar~t:
Janitorial "'IM MAn Ag;t'.ml'nt Re~!'·es Oer1ca.\
SPARKLE Jan11ortal . \\'ln· the Right 10 Pinch B•ck \\'he~ RUTH RYAN
I dov.'ll, tloon. ~rpts k eons!?' Lady cus.1~mers SQUEEZE AGENCY
1 cleanup. A C'Ompleie comm'! r~ f'rull. SPECJALJZJ.."G
M"rv. for frt'C tit ca.ti, Job Wanted, Female 702 IN
962-0672. omCE PERSOfl.'NEl.
AIDES For convalescence, 1793 fl,'ev.'PQn. G>ita l\!esa
eld•rly c1tt or f11mlly care. 646-4!,;,4
Qu11lity M111nt. E:Kpcl\ru ptr. Hom•m11kf'n. S.7-6681. 17931 Bf'ach Blvd,, HB
110nal <'I N> of comm'J kl J\'URSE, COMPANION 547.9611
ttsid. pn>f!trtY. f'rtc esl. ~ COOK. 1PEru.tANENT
<f9'J.-OIMO. • 646-1822 • Cosme101oE1n. Jlc'd for JalOfl
1'u.rn unu~ lt1ms into quick Ass~t lo owntr. Top aa.luy
cask, ta.ll 642-567& ·I-. M2.6S51.
TRAINEES
(Beach Area)
From $2 Per Hr.
MALE &
FEMALE
MUL TIGRAPH OPR.
From $2 Par Hr.
Exper. on printed labels.
A.PEX
Employment
Agency
•THE EA SY \VAY
(a.sk us v:hy)
1873 HARIOR
~BLVD.
11 , block So of 19th)
COSTA MESA
548-3426
BLUE DOLPHIN
e }"'RY COOK Experienced.
Apply in penon, 33SQ Via
Udo, Newport Beach.
CHUROf ORGAN SALES-
MAN • Demonstrate pipe I<
electronic. Lee terr!IDry.
NEWPORT ORGAN S,
64.:S.15.30
COASTAL
AGENCY
MORTGAGE
TRAINEE
Wof'kina w/rella. finn Illini
typlng akills. Plush ofc. Fan.
tutic future. Start $400. Call
Helen Hayes.
TELETYPE OPR.
Exper. w/brokerage co. help..
ful, Good starting: salary.
Call Sally Hart.
MECHANIC·
WELDER
Arch Weldina: & lathe & mill·
ing machines. Start $0000.
Call Helen llayes,
SECRETARY
Gd akWJ, SH, type, lire bkkp.
ni, top archl!ect. Start $450.
Call Sally Hart.
WAITRESS
Working w/sharp family rest.
All new plus sUlTOlllKlings,
Start $1.65 + tips. cau Hel-
en Hayes.
GEN'L OFFICE
Gd peraonality on phone, lite
type, some otc. know'!. S2
per hr + c.omm. Call Sally
Han.
540-6055
2790 Harbor Blvd.
Coste Mesa
e WAITRESSES
Apply In P1r1on
71 Fashion lsl•nd
N1wport Beach
FURNITURE
-SALES-
For loca.t dept. store e TOP COMMISSION"
• CO. BENEFITS
Quality llne to sell
AppJy in i>fnon
to Mn:. 'Thomp10n
W. T. GRANT CO,
Pef80nnel OUlce
9811 Adams Ave., Grant P1.ul
Brookhurst le Adams.
Htg. Bearh
An equal opportunitJ
employer
e FRY COOK •
full tim<
APPLY IN PERSON
THE RIGGER
NO. 16 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
GIRL, sharp in appe~.
Phone exper if pogalble, lit:!
secretarial. Must be p .
Salary open. S6-32.18.
GIRL FRIDAY -
EXP'D-TELEPHON!:
Mature, atable le: attne ro· arrange. le.le. appta ,.,.;
bus.. executives tor VP frln-
chise devel. of Nat'I Orpn·
intion. Guam. startg salary
$400 per mo + bonuser that
could bring inootne tO S600 +
per mo, Call Mr. Williams
tor Interview. SU.!M10
GIRL FRIDAY, O.C. Airport
area. Mu.gt be exp'd bkkpr.
type SOwpm, undentand
oUice procedllftl. Pt time
now, S3 hr. Resume. Wrltt
Oasaified ad No. m Daily
Pilot, P.O. Box 1560 Costa
Mesa. Calif. 92626
* HEAD WAITRESS-6 Da
wk. Dinner H~. Perm.
Interview1 9 to U noon.
SA?.l 'S SEAFOOD 16278
Pacific Hwy. Hunt. Bch.
e HELP WANTED e
Luhrs Boat Company
849 West 18th St.
Costa fo.fesa, Calli.
Mechanics helper. carpenters,
painters helper, varnl.lher,
electrician and detailer. lm-
mediate opens avail, Apply
S.IQ AM.
HOSPITALITY HOSTESS
SERVICE. has ope.nina;s in
Irvine area Io r mature
women lookinc fo r
in!Presfing, part time work,
welcoming newcomen to
your area. Sales exp .
desirable. Must have Cll'.
CALL: 547-3095
HOUSEKEEPER. child care,
9:30 am-6 pm wkly buis.
Salary open. ~·· 54G-9212.
H 0 U SEKEEPER!Compan-
ion, live in. to cue fo r
elderly woman tn lovely
home on Balboa waterfront.
Pvt. bedtrn & bath. Give
re.ference11 k expt>r. Write,
Ossslfied ad No. 109, Dally CONSULTANT. Gen"I foods Pil t p Q Bo •= ~-·~ V o •.. x.......,,~-
nttds 1 women for iviane Mella, Calli. 926.26
Woodard Cosmetic!!. We I c.=""""°===-c--=cl train. Exl'!c poa'• avail, sm HSKPRS Emplyr pays fee.
inv. 544-1464 Geoi"ge AUen Byland Asncy
_., 106-B E. 16th, S.A. 547~. COOKS • fo.fu.st know guuu
*COOK jl ORDEttLY Exp HOUSEWIVES-3 opening
pref'd. Park Lido Convale.s. P/Ume, Aver. $3 per hr.
... No exp. nee. We train. For cent Hosp. 642 .... to appt, call fo.froi:. Muller
COOK/HSKPER. Nu rs in a: * 546-5110 *
duties. $11 pt'r day, Fri, I iiiiiiiiii""""""""""""'""
Sa.f, Sun. ea. wk. Live in.
Ph: 613-3528.
COOKS -fo.fust know good
&0up1 & sauces. Hours 6
am tG 2 pm, lt1on thru
rri. All holidays off, p11id
medical insurance, 2 v.~eks
vacation. Call 83J-8666.
COUPLE to manage 33-unit
motel at Laguna Beach.
Salary &: 2-room 1uite
w/kitchtn. Bonus if income
increased. State exJ!'rience
in motel v.·ork & qualiflca·
lions. \Vrite Cl1isitied ad
No, 11, Daily Pllot. P. 0.
Box 156ll, Costa J'\.lesa !12626.
CUSl'ODIAN Days for se:-v
contra.ctor. Coun ties tin,st
bide, een'l cleaning exp.
only. Southco, 546-5.122.
e DENTAL ASSISTANT ~
De1k only. Dental exp, nee.
Ins .• acct's ~c., some Sat's.
Fringe ben's. H.B. area.
Call sam.9pm. 846-3540.
DENTAL ASSISTANT-
Chairside ass'! for Hunt.
Bch. practice. Exp'd or re<'
sch! irad. Gd salary. Call
res. 830-3309.
• DENTAL ASSISTANT *
One yr "r more exper_ only,
need apply. x.Ray. Pt. or fl
time. 548-8844.
DENTAL ass'!, exper,
or full time. lt1aturt.
• 968·5782 •
*DRIVERS*-
No Ex.,,rlence
Necessary!
rtfust have clean California
drlvln& record. Apply
YELLOW CAB CO.
186 E. 16th St, C.1'.1.
ECG TEOlNlCI/.N • Soll!h
Coast Community Hospital.
31872 Cout Hv.'Y. So La&una
499.-1111 ext 356.
Gr1phlc Al'fi1t
Laycut, pasreup a: came-ra
ready for ll!l gTaphic art
media. Portfolio of oJ'ia, art
""'Ork rtq'd. Top L.A. firm
mo\f\Ilg to thia area S\lmmer
.ii
Secretary
Gd :skills, rntgrnr, mktns or
sal's background,
Records Clerk
Mature, some "'Orir expt>t .
helpful, ma.th aptitude. Oe·
tail minded. BeautifU] oo.
Secretary
E9CrOW or R.E. e){fltt. help-
ful. Initiative & gd judgment.
Gd skills, xln"t potential,
Acctng Clerk
AIR exper., typing 50. 10 k'>'
add,r. Cooc1 eo. bendll1.
S•c'y/BookkHpor
Type 50, figUre aptitude I.:
some· bkkpng exper. Atlen.
tion to detail. No SH rtq'd.
Warehouse Manag1r e.s. or B.A. decree k e:icpe_r.
in dlsltihulion or v.•attbou~
inc.
488 E. 17th (a.1 lrvinef C.M.
642-1470
EXP'D. Service St8. i\fcr. INSTRUCTOR in gun Wety.
Hi-gallonage uni!. Xlnt loc, Must have Interest in
attraclive sal p 1 u s prof baUl11ics, Will tnln, Ph:
sharing. For int'v. contact 548-2259.
Bob Srudder. 2800 W, Coast "m"TE=REST=""'m"G,.---T"'•"l•"flho=-...
JlW)'. N.B. 1 to 9 pm Wk. work from homfl. P.tuirt have
day11. prlvatt line a~t leut
EXPDl.TENCED Flbtral•• four hour• dally, Writf.
fl'lol~r. CATALJ1'A YACHTS Cl•••lfied •d Nt>. 108, Dally
'311 Lan~nllim 81\'d. l'o'o. Pilo!, P. 0 , Box 15"0, Co!ta
HoU)"'·ood, Calif. !l1605 1tf~1a, C'11f, 92626.
•
&JI
tr
Sal
M Ho
con ..
m•
1 ..
Part
Full
wor
for
ME
p
OR
Ty
F/
....
REC
'"' pref
ofti
typ;
btf
for
L
0 aoo· ••' " "'• ' ''" mo
th;
mo
ha
Bot
'"' ' I
hav
tho
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"
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LC
AN
Om
MondQ, M«ttb l , 1971 DAILV PILOT 29
I~ ~I _ ...... _ ... ~I[§]~~,:;;' _ ... -~I:;;;;[§] ·1 ,. .. ~~--llB I T~-·Uoo 1•1 ~' ___ ...... ;;;.;I§);/~'_ ... _,.,.._ .... iij;.ijl§l;;.1
H•lp W•nt..i, M & F 710 Htlp W•nfocl, M & F 710 LtlqU.s IOO Ml1coll•.-1 llllPl•nos/Or9on1 .m Dogs 1$4 Cycl11, Blko1, Trucks '6: Aut os, Imported 970
l[ll] I 1rm I -
lfrlpAoy11••l
*LYN J to 11 P .M.* "st'R'ii'ii:~~'~;.,!':t" _C_O_L_L_E_C-TA_B_L_E_S_ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiil PRACTICE e SCHANUZER PUPS-Rare Scooton tU Wont Old•r P .U. DAJSUN
liMiiARRlliiiiiiiEi<'inii'51-;~;;; .. ;;;-;;,o~u;;ou;;me;;:;l--:-:-:.::543.tl3~::::':::3--,--l v~es~ ~~~·Ori= UNIQUE AUCTION ORGANS =~im:.'":i~. •tud, T~~~~:: ~~~~~ ~~P:~s:! ~~T:.a ~c.,_N_e_w_"',-7"'1.....,,D"'a_ts_u_n_I
Fuller Bnllh route. Mr, * SALES CLERKS pholog:raphic plaits lroni Prices )'Ou \\'On't believe! Horses 856 or 6'7S-68T4 534-9996
"-
... "'"" .,,,..,, CUrtit coUtctlon ot Ameri· l"ARO'S SALDI"!" STUDIO 'OO ~.. II N . 1600 OHC, Pickup with camp.
.... ~.na Full and part time can Indlana $25 ea, Hand. ANTIQUES.IMPORTS }v819 Newport B~v~~ &12.848'1 =-------TACO 22-4 HP . L\Nno ne • ew pw1t, er. Sale price $2099 dlr.
MEDICAL RECORD -APPLY-colored plattt:·'"""llsh kinir1 UNREDEEMED TREi\1, buy, rec. A.QJl., 15 Xlnt cond $75. 548-1961 1n""'x1n'' ste.rti0nd, ~~I!~· ntt1 s r• PL.521452270) WUl ta.kt ~.·=?,-~~d/•u~. Th• Tobacconist Inc. & kmrhts in ~W'-~~ PLEDGES Sewing Machines 828 hand$, CrullQ S yr. nuirt, 'TO • '7t Honda CL JS, 3000 t eo · vw-~ a 1 S. Q.t in trade. WUl firw1ce
·• Hwrtingto Ce t H 9 Willlam Meyrick collection &ire Van(jy 11, acntle $930. orig mi's. $150 Incl helmet. Auto L•••lng 964 private party, Call 546-8736 trllllcription, ll time claya.1 ~~-'=•;,:.;;:•c:":..:·..=·::;·c..i ••• ea ... •Mi Suite ~ • COAST PAWN & '70 SINGER. Zig.zag auto, ~3008. .. .... ""~··. or 4., 68ll
Sal comm. \\'/exp. Contact S1le1men-S1le1women ~ • .,..,..,IJJ ' ........ blink hem , ?.fakes====~~--.,.-~~,,~=~.,-·~~==~-LEASE. 1.::c.o:~.:.·.:::::·=-::=---·I
Mn. Fran1ks, Pac ific a $&X1 cuarantee to qualltied • ROU.·T?.~ DESKS, ROLL AUCTION HOUSE Wbu!!_~nboltilu!es, ovalercast, b~tc. BJ~OO~~AR~I~ ~ub/;a~re: HONDA trail 90-1968 {two) A NEW 1m f1A f
Hosp. U2-06U. persons. ** ~1446 ** '""au w nut ca inet &llto N 650 mi. Perteet cond. $225 PINTO
Membership· -S•les -Spectred Corporation opening DEACONS Bench, very-old March--3rd;-7:30--pm --$31:50-cuh·or-snr.-paymen~-(n41 ;~7-~~. oiler. ench;-962-41.30: ""':_1--$50 00 mo'
I d ' ~ 2110 n-....... arranged. S45-8238 -.,.-.,-..,.----"-= '70 YAMAHA '" END 0 ' ' ~ Wkly arraight sales nev1 ocation In Newport an 1n ex. CO•N· ........ '6,. 642 8400 -.-, .u.i UR
commission. lndependenl ae:!1d Top Weis penonnt.11~•;.v.;;o.~CM=·-----= 12426 New,;rt Blvd., CM REPAIRS Livestock 858 • $-t~il after 5, 544-5Uf ~=nm«"o~
contractor buis, man or ue .tointroduceexdting, Ap;li1nc11 I02 Clean, oil, adjust any sewing BANTAM Sale. All C<llors RENT
woman, civic oriented, wf revo.l.11.tionacy beauty tech· machine. 2 wks only ~.9'5. & sizes 10 at $1.10 at Sl.50, Honda M ini Trail 50· A NEW 197'1
membuship sales ability for n!que, AU areas. Unlimited KENMORE auto wuher, * AUCTION * 5'15.8238 2612 S. E. lt1esa. Or. Upper Good <:<lnd $150. 673.'i2t7 PINTO
leading Clamber ot Coin-eaMtlng potential, l\1iss l\lel late model, xlnt cond, $75. Fine Furniture 1.,..-,.--,.-...,---,..83:0 Bay Mobile' Homes 935
mercto in Orangt-Co. Send ner, 6454121.. Also GE auto washer, good &: A pl1ance Sporting Goods ~~~~~~~~~ $4 DAY
photo & ttswne to aaszitied SARAH Coventry needs n. ~:<'-S4012 • 84Gu7-8<rU&S delivered. AucUona ~da,y, 'l:~ p.m •. no REMINGTON model 760 I 11..C, -•. ;;ll;;:;;l~;;;l;:l;;f;:..,;;_,;;f ,;;,,,;:l;l.;IN;; AND ad •63, Daily Pilot, P.O. or pt time help. No in· ...........,., • · W d 'th w KI Botts and ____ 2 ___ !!_ __ :! __ ~ 4¢ MILE """"""'°"'"==""""'°·=·I in y's Auction Barn ""'1 raver .. iCOpo?, Mano. (Qulpmlnt Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Calif. vestment. \Vill train, min • REF RIG ER AT 0 R , Redfield mounts., 2 extra PUT A LITJ1..E
92626. age 20. 530-1407 & 543-9066. cross-top freezer, 2 yrs old. 2075~i Ne•1port, CM 646.8686 cllps $125. Finest Adult Pk KICK IN YOUR
Secretary $500 $Th Behind Tony'a Bldg. Mal'!. p A I PO BELLY BOARD Boats, P 0wer 906 , IN SOUTHERN CALIF. LIFE! 1IOLDERS, Fiberglass-Exp'd
in hand Jay-up. Apply in per.
son 940 w. 17th St., C.hf.,
Coastal Recreation Inc.
NEED 4 SALESMEN
Manufacturing. Assured fu-* 64~1446 * ROYAL metric typeY.Tlter, -Hardly used. e 18 yr min. age for THEODORE
lute, Stable non4efense Ir-KENMORE auto wuher &: ~·· ~ $100. Royal $30. *** 675-1123 33' 1964 OWENS FBRGLS family ROBINS FORD
vine co. Lovtly ofcs, Top matching elec dryer, Xlnt atandard typewrltt"r $75. TV R di 'F l BRIGANTINE, $17,500, BY • Spaces from $81.50 • <'ln<!n 1-IARBOR BLVD.,
benefits, Call l\liss Laura, <:<lnd, $80. Guar & delivered. Re: m rn I ton t It ctr ic ' 1 o, Hi 1 O\~ER, 714 I 424·5135. • 105 fioor plan _...,COSTA MESA
o•o 0~2 841 ... "' tun.>writtr no:.. Bates Stereo 136 e o G I'
l"lolVUVI
"THINK"
llB14D ...
"FRIEDLAll>Br'
11710 Ill.CH ILYD.
(Hwy. Jf)
89J.'IS66 • 537.Ql2C
NEW-USEO-SERV.
l.l'Vuvt.I '
'69 124 SPYDER 557..£122, Abigail Abbot Per. ........-au• , -0.u..1 -..r-.,....., Boats, Rent/Chart'r 908 range rove ,eaven 64.2-00IO
sonnel Agency, 230 \V. \\'ar. • GAS dryers k reblt electric staplu Sl5. 644>-90T6 25" Adntlral color TV , • $300,000 club facility Red I h m k lnterl 5
ner, Suite 2U, S.A. • wuhers, $50, Will de l after 4 pm. modern walnut cabinet, 1 40' NE\VPORTER for bare • Small pet approved Auto Service, Parts 966 S~ -h.a ~ZVG884)or, {Not under 20)
Part time $100 \\'k.
Yul! time $225 wk
Wetrk in Orange County but
tor interview call Mr.
Goodwin, Edgey,•ater Hyatt
House· 2l.3-434-M50. Cnll
Tue1. & Wed. 9-6 PM only.
SECRETARY w/guar. Matr Chg.'Maytag e SKI FAMILIES yr left on warranty, Xlnt boat charter. $95/itay. Call e G<>lf.Car y,•ash,Lawnhowl 1959 CADILLAC $2 195 ,
Good akills, Excellent Salary. repainnan. 531-8637. Reserve now! Cabin at Mam· cond, $235. 642--0584. Fred, 646-9550 aft 6 • l\1ove in Today! AIR CONDITIONER Biii Jones'
ean Ann, 64;;.2770. \Vestclitt REFRIG \VtLG FREEZER ~~1~0~~~ s1~ ~ ~:,:r~~~~~~~=~ Boats, Sail 909 it:· ~ t~ J~ttttr ~> RADro BJ S"ortscar Center
Personnel Agency, 2043 GU~f~·.,; *$35 531.3374 days. llr .Ill VICTORY 21 (CF 4753 BS) *'~f4/J32':'85is ';'. WIN~~':.,,lPER '' ~
\Vestclitr Dr., N.B. rrie to Y0ta needs v.'Ork, Ste at THE BEST OF • MOTOR 1811 Harbor, C.M. 5404491 SECRETARY~. Newport AUTOMATIC h«"avy duty MAMMOTH MNTN. l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;:;~;; Bayshores Marina. ?11akr B MUST DISPOSE OF ntESE '69 Fiat 124 sport coupe, Red
nawport.
personnel
agency
Beach are&. Type 60. SH electric dryer In excellent Mobilto home & cabin, income I~ offer over S51Xl, ( 213 ) OTH WORLDS ITEMS THIS WEEK-END w/blk int, Michelin x
g), knowledge of gen'!. or-condition, $30. 67~2692. properiy, Sale or trade. LOVABLE yng adult male 382-3087 eve11. For a beauUfuI home, )ow S42-Jl20 radials, mag whla, LuC4$
tice procedures req'cl. Send KENMORE Gu range: A-1 531-3374 standard Poodle & Sheepdog co Lu MB I A 26 ~1ark maintenance and architecur. FOR APPOINTMENT driving llgbta 830-4489.
re 'u me to : BO I SE condition $35. 14m Wilaon, GEN U IN E Aquamarine mix. All white. Needs good JI-Custom interior, · x I n t ally impressive d«"sign, See
CASCADE Residential Com· Midway City. stones from Brazil. Cut & home w/feneed yard . cond. Professional ly the exciting new "Village 1959 CADll •• LAC JAGUAR
munities, 9841 Airport Blvd . WHIRLPOOL auto washer & faceted. OnJy Sl2 each & 548--0813 or 836-4493 3/2 maintained. 557-6981. H.ouse" by Levitt Mobile TRANSl\-lISSlON 833 Dover Drive
Newpon Beach Suite 700, Los Angeles, gas dryer, Both xlnt cond, up. Hutcy! 673.0802 LOVABLE min. G. Shep. cJ.2~'-A"'q_u_"_'_t_C~a---'ta'-m-,-r-,-,· I System11 on display now at READY TO TAKE AWAY! 1---J-A_G_U_A_R---1
Callf. Attn.: Penonn«"l. S60 each. Guar &: delivered. 2 Re!rig's S7S &: $20, motors Beige and blk gentle loves 'v/car top carriers, Good MBOAa1L~AHRg~RES E~~~~ ~g~~ITION -
SECRETARY • Experience S46-867Z, 847-8ll5. elec &: gas, 20" bike spare childl't'? needs good home concl, Cost $800 ney,•, Asking 542 3120 HEADQUARTERS
reqUired. Call 642--0542 tor ~F"'u-r-n"it~u-ro-----1~,~0 parts, power niower $12. 645-3965 3/ 1 $425. 673-6257. J~~ s~ie:,;~~~ H!:r FoR APpQINTMENT The only authorized JAGUAR
""3870
ACCOUNTANT
(Construction)
Tet $18,COO
appointment. 646-5479. NEED a:o:od home for lovable '69 COLUJ\1BIA 28. Duys, 1""' • "'r dealer in the entirt Harbor
SERVICE CENTER WHY Buy PARACHUTE 30' 7-TU, gentle charcoal grey male 21~: 6~757; eve~: 714: 714!540-M7o ·~ C~o~ P~;1!;!r 1.!;;~al:i,t Area.
mil.in chute ~pack 26' Rip cock-a-poo l yr 0 Id · 646-5724, 213: 333-3438 NOW OPEN · ...... E I t A Stop -•e-•e, hetm'et. $10. 968:-3139 alt 5:30. 3/1 Falcon, Comet, etc. 260 VS. Complete
SALES
SERVICE
PARTS
BAUER
MECH. ASSEMBLER
1 Yr Experie.ntt
mpoymen gency FURNITURE? '" •• 14' Quality f iberg la s CONTEMPO. auto. trans, rear end, front
• Jump boots $15. ~1250 aft CUTE pup 6 monlhs 1.6 Runabout, like ne\v $150 LAGUNA HILLS windshield. '56 Chev t dr,
*Keypunch Opr $450 6. Cocker and t,S Shellie. Loves * 646-9550 * 23301 RIDGE ROUTE QR. Wagon parts 549-l690.
Min, 1 Yr tXper/gd co/xln't Be Flexible I LOW heat «IOkwate Rt -children hsbrk. has had I ~C~A~P~E~C~O~D~C~A~T~B~O"'A~T= I (Comer of l\loulton pi....:..., I ~~-='-'--"''=~---! PAYROLL CLERK
Type 40, great co. benefits, · Rent mo. to mo, with stainless steel , waterless. shots. 54~ 3/'l .. .,.,r 1958 Chev 4-283, auto,
I 18', fbrbls. (213) 834-3883. LAGUNA HILLS driveshaft & I't'ar end. BUICK
JN *Sec'y $550 00°/. Purcha1e Option Box nevtt opened. Sold on BLACK miniature poodle Prestige adult community ad. Complete &: running $05 or
Top skills, SH & typing/<:<ln-Ind. item selection home demo plan $309. Take free to a god home, \Veil Boats, Slipsf Docks 910 jacent 10 Leisure World. o!fer 546-lTTS. ORDER DESK/SEC'Y
Type 45, gel phone voice str or related bckgrnd im· 24CHUrS.TDO•Mly. S74 cash. 968-0036. trained. 646-1320 3/1 15 TO 25 FT. slips avail. Beautiful surroundings, an Autos Wanted
portant I plush otc I great HOME soda fountain, FREE puppies, 6 wks old, for power boat§. Private luxury appointments, put· 968 COSTA ·MESA
23.f E. 17th Street
S4S.TI65 • SALES REPS
Male & Fema.lt
F /C BOOKKEEPER
SECRETARY
(Construction)
CLERK TYPIST
OOsses. Furniture Rental reCrigerated w/C02 $50. pt Beagle, pt Labrador. lagoon. \IJater &. elec. avail_ ting green, hobby ahop,
*PBX/Recept. $450 517 W, 19th, C.hf, 548·3481 Belt vibrator $20. New dune 546--0636 3/1 Bayside Village, 300 E. n1uch more.
Exper. on 55.5 cord board/ac. Anaheim 774-2800 buggy top w/side curtain.11, BEAUTIFUL yng a cl u I t Coast Hwy, NB CAU. 830-3900
cur typist/xln't co, La.Habra 694-3708 make offer. 645-1400. Bluepoint Siam,.ese female. 33' Sllp, S75tmo. Pr\v3tc NE\\IPORT .HARBOR AREA
*Steno Recept, $350 SACRIFICE, by 0 w n er; 26" LINDELL YARD 546-7301 3/1 bath. No. 2 Balboa Coves, New 22X53 Modular Manor,
Gd job for gal w/min. exper/ Quality cusbn Vectta sofa S\\'EEPER 1XLNT COND. SPAYED female cal, 4 yrs. N.B. Call 675-4331. con1pletely aetup &: ready
req's aecur typing$ w.p.m./ & loveseat. 2 matchi.~ MUST SELL. old. To good home. 673-4868 Boats, Speed & Ski 911 10 move in to. In cool Costa
will train on PBX. Melody velvet chai rs . 548-9477 aft 6 pm. 3/2 l\tesa's delux Greenleaf
*Receptionist $375 Beaut. lamps. 11 e d l t CAi'1PER jacks $35, maple PUPPIES _ l\ilxed breed 17' BELLBOY '69, lo hn;. Park, 1750 \Vhittier Ave.
WE PAY TOP CASH '59 Jaguar 3.4. aed. 37,000
mi's. Near new 3.1 eng,
radlals, orig. paint. mech.·
perfect. $1000. 549-0022. tor used cars &: truck.a, Just --
can ., ror "" ••"'"'"'· MERCEDES BENZ GROTH CHEVROLET
Fun job rneefjng the public/ cocktail & commode .et. rocker, go~d almost new $50, 6 \\'k&. Free 10 good honle: 120 J\olerc Cniiser, IB!OB, 642-llSO or 536-6511
req's gen'l etfc know'! & accur Also set of decorator tables. 9 fl. , quilted couch $40. 536-4174 3,2 HT, elect gauges, n1any lt"llx-,50'°"' ""d"•l"'u.--m"'ob"il"e"'•,_ho-m-,-.1
* PART TIME · Herculon hicle-a·bed. 2 ;~,.~~-~·---~--\TiJi;-£00<lJ;;;;;;::<;n;;;;t;; xtras. New trlr. ~2850. 'fel.
-Ask lor Sales Manager
18211 Beach Blvd,
Huntington Beach
'64 l\fercedes Benz 300 SE, 4.
door, automatic, power steer-
ing, air cond. SV A 464,
12195.oo. typing, _.. "' setup ln nice adlt pk, see * LITE BKKPG. *Sec'y p/time $2.60 hr 1'1edit qu~n-<louble bdrm SLATE It bl 8' 4' d TO a good home, 6 month eves. £42-9367 to apprecialt'. Aft 5 &
M thru S N · sets. Dinettt", Guns. Stereo poo 8 e, x 'US«' old spayed kitty 530-1679· on. at. o typing. Must be xln't typist/If.: clays . M' . bik W 11 1 month. $300, Call &ftu 548-439S ' lli Boats, Storage 912 wknds: 548-2897.
Good job. Benefits&: Health Mon-Fri. equip. int -e, a >5~544-~5~1ll~==,,,...,.--.\'iiiliOO<i!;;;;;;:J'ediiii:O 1-==-------plaques, Must see to ap. ::::' TO good home-Pedigree LOCKED, fenced &torage for '70 • 24' x 60' Mobile hme, l=~-BLOOME ro. 500 Newport Center Dr .. NB preciate. 642-9492 F~~!1;. :i;-!1'~~~. ~ ~~tin rabbit, ~ roo~~ o~~am:~th. OOcC ~~ ~~~~~. S~plbel~~alrri~~
847-6087 Kl 9-3111
WE PAY CASH'
FOR YOUR CAR
~im 6lemoui 3005 Harbor Blvd., C.l\L Suite 535 / t)C4.4981 MUST sell, beaut. Medit· Pesek, 543-9409 .,,2 ~=" furn. 53&-2494.
Ask tor 1\1f. Johnson terranean furniture. Gold 9' =~~=~-.-~-.-ADULT invalld potty .,., -oJOU. ~~===~~~-t
SERVICE Sta Salesmen, 1· &Ofa &: love seat, $275. Col· MEDALLION design Persian disguised as easy chair ~~~~~~~~~: 18'c35 ROAOLINER-1 bedrm, JM PORTS
AUTHORIZED DEALER
110 \V, Warner PRQFESSIONAL phone full time/1-pl time, at least fee le end tables. Velvet rug~· x 9' excelletnt $45. ~2150 1/3., ~ [iJ ruu bath.
soUcilDr. Dana Point, San 2 ).TS exp. Not under 21, hlgh back chrs. Blk naugh.1 -'\!l~oc~•g~ro~•~t~64~&-4;:;506~."7--\i';Ei™'AN'Si;;j;iITTdiP®'-:: Tr1nsporto1tiort I rh $1795 *** 540-7258
Clement«", Capistrano area. r J d •· J 8' sofa & love seat, $150. QUEEN MARY GERMAN Shepherd. pup -~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~liEI=~· o-l~llx~55~B~e-a-ut~Co-oo~. ~,-,S~t.-, Work in your O\.\'n home. pl't' marr e . .,.,e erry 4 wks old. Free to good Be~t deal in area. Phone 7am-4:30pn1, 2590 Newport Game set, lamps, pictures. Lloyd's of London certificate home. 54S-386o 3/1 Park in Costa l\lesa. Owner
Bl d c ~1 all 2 mos old. 714: 897-8651. $50. 548-0201, Suite 206. ~8-4046. 835-1465, between 9:00 a.m. 1 =='="="-~· ~~,_·,,..,,.... B G LOVABLE lab/Weimaraner Campers, Sale/ Rent 920 =R=E=•i~o"n"E"'L"E=D"'<">x°'s~.-,.r-~-,d7.1 and noon. SERVICE Estab'd, FulleT AR AINS; l\1ust s e 11, TENT TraUer, add · on tt"nt. male, 5 yrs. Perfect for " -..."
RECEPTIONIST for rapidly 'Brush rte, $125-$175 wk. to Stove.. refrig. min _beds, Sleeps-1. Extras,-l!ke new. children/guard. 642-1949 3/2 -CAMPER .s2900~ Space rent $55 .. Poot
growing Co. Some ex.per st., also pt. time 546-.5745. bedrn1 sets, couches, un-$400. CaU aft 5: 846-9596. LONG & shorlhaired cats-T 1560 Placentia, NB. 548-4264
pl't'f'd, Good benefits, Front SOFTBALL P ITCHER finished camper, 825 Oar· M I 11 t t 822 Trailers, Tr•vel 945
Ou'·-•ppe·-··e & ~.1 rell, C.M. u1 ct n1 rumen • mos. to 2 YI"!· 546-7308 3/1 CLEARANCE SALE
..... <Lf.""''" """"' needed. Good team. Please '---------FREE l'ttl · to ood typing skills a must. Apply MOVING must sell a I 11 • 1 e mice 5
before March 3rd, 842-7722 1,,:'=al'CI ,c64c,2-l""S0'=2~=~== furniture and house ho Id PlANO & Voice leaaons, fully home. 642-3767 311
TELEPHONE APPT SEC'Y. goods. 78ll Talbert Ave. Apt credentialed teacher, Free WHITE New Zealand rabbi!.
RESTAURANT: Now taking Pt·time, our ottice, CdM, 4. No, 17 A, H.B. lesson every 3rd mo. 462-5930 .,12 ap plicatietns for Nedd u ed 540-4757. v * w A IT RESSE S, 8 pm. e e : se assur 8' SOFA, never ·used, quilted RABB IT \\'ilh hutch * DISHW A SHERS, business person \\1ho enjoys floral, scotchguarded Sll5. FENDER electric piano, S4S-3200 312
•COOKS. No-one under 18 calling strangers, 833.3656 or l\fatching loveseat s 7 5. dual showman bot Io m • ·1:~~~~~~~~~
need apply. co Lo Ny 1,,:G.,c<>,,:lc,08:c9:,. =~--~~ 53.>-1955 "' Gibson base. alto sax. Xlnt
2 b TELEPHONE d .. ==-,,.,.---,--,,-,.,-, cond. Need money. 494-5884.1 11~1 KITOIEN, 3 11 1-l a r or a vertismg DESK. axS, wooden, divided Pats and iupplo•
Bl d C M from our pleasant Ne\"""'rl 25 \Va I t Tremelo/reverb · v .. .: . ..r~ drawers, Typewriter tbl, . IR·-E~su-,-,E~S--pu_t_y_o_uc--ap. olfices. Hrly wages. Morn. Xlnt cond, A1ake oU~r. amplifier and Fend e r1 .. •••••••IJl!I!
plication on TOP. \\'e com· ing or eve. ahift.s. 645,3030 642-5676. i:~T. amp. Be1t offerl'g...,.s 85'1
pose .ti: print 50 copies -33· Mr. Madrid BLUE velv«"t couch-out of -·-·-------1
ONLY $15.00. Call 646-0854 WANTED Men tet show nt"W stor. w/carvings, $60, Dan. Office Furniture/ TWO Purebred Silkys. 2 mos,
for appointment. roe.ting. Maintenance tree. mod. much. nu uphol, grn Equip. 824 old, One male, one fem.,
LOOKING FOR A 5 Year protection under nor. $50. 548-5750. xlnt pedigree, AKC Reg.
GOOD SOL I 0 mal cond. Xln't adhesion to GREEN NAU G AH y DE ROY AL «"iectric typewriter, lnten>sted parties on I y .
CAREER? at metals, fibergls, gla1s, HIDE-A-BED $50. 20'' carriage $100. Royal please. 646-0142 or 548-1022
Large selection pre '71
Campers Now Slashed to $4·9 ... ~~~~L FACTORY
INVOICE
SHO\YCASE
DEALER
FOR
ELDORADO CAMPERS
THEODORE
ROBINS FORD
2060 HARBOR BLVD.
COST A MESA 642-0010
'69 Travel Eze Trailt"r, 20'.
Tw in B<!d, fully
scU-rontained. TV antenna,
easy roll canopy. Like new?
864 Sonora Rd, Cl\f.
20' TANDEM Axle, dlx, self·
contained. New never been
used. Below wholesale, by
own('r, 714/531-7800.
Trailers, Utility 947
14' Tandem Trailer
With 4 wheels. All steel weld.
cd construction. ~" Steel
deck pla!ing. WHJ sell or
trade tor pickup. 3166 Siclly,
(Mesa Verde) C.M. Cycles, Sikes,
Scooters 925 I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii--------One that really click&? ceramics, v.'OOd, tile, terraw, * 54;,..3025 * standard typewriter $15. 333 E. 17th St, C~I.
Don't overlook real estate brickwaU, counters, furn. & 9• SOFA w/ matching chair, Remington e lectric AKC LHASA Apso pups ~
aales. • ,a career in real ooncl't'te. Finilh surface, green, very good condition. tylpewyiter 1$185115. ~: !.:7s Champ sired, tOp quality, THINK
«"state sales can be reward. prptectll against rust, grease, S200/both. 644-546;) e.,eom4c stap er . .....,...., 6 adorable shaggy I i t t 1 e HOND' n. I ·---------gasoline, solvents, most-de. ter pm. people l overs. (714) ~ Dune Buggies 956
ing in a number of ways. • • luted acids • alkaline, Aho, FURNITURE stripping-Any Pl•noi/Or••nl 126 487-5561. financially .• ,pri~ o{ per. average chair or rocker • SU (TEN) '70 licensed Calif
aonaJ accomplishn1tnt, . . remains Oexibl.e under wide stripped $.i 642-3445. DACHSHUND pu P s' "''FRIEDLANDER'• dune buggies. Street legal,
more time to enjoy the good rang«' of temperatures, is CLEARANCE miniature, AKC, Black & lo mi's, fully e q U'I P , d , heat I't'&i&"lant &: will not sup. NE\V 'valnut dining room SALE tan & mabog8"y red . ,,,,. •••at cHWY. '" thlnits of life. , .and many 't I 6 I · """'. Various colors, Your chok~e. port tlame. sui e v.· c iairs . .....,:i. 714/633-4(118 537·6824 • 8!J3.7:J6G more! Yes, you'll have to Le · 548-6769 Ovtr 100 Pl.anett &: Organ · $1850. 644-1408, 6#-0153 all have a real "state license. Chemical Associ•tes av1ng area. n_.a d t tm-·,· I • AKC German Shepherd pups NEW-USED·SERV. 6 pm. of Coliforni• Gar•--• Sale 812 ~uct or .. ~. aa e. . . · But Y.'e can help. With «'vcn. • Buy Now&. S•vel R1n-nn-T1n b!CtOd llnc, 6 ~ 1960 CORVAIR
111g classes you can keep • Any Industrial or Retail a HOUSEHOLD FURN e Open Dally 10 til 6 wks. 837-5487. , Make Ofter
CONNELL
CHEVROLET 417 w. Warner 281$ Harbor Blvd. San!a Ana 546-4114 Cos(a Jdeaa 548-1200
---'70 Mercedes Benz 280 SL TOP DOLLAR Coupe Road•ter. 912.ASM,
tor
CLEAN USED CARS
See Andy Brown
THEODORE
ROBINS FORD
206() Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
su.0010
L'f PORTS WANTED
Orange Countiee
TOPS BUYER
BlLL MAXEY TOYOTA
18881 Beach Blvd.
H. Beach. Ph. 847-8555
WE PAY TOP DOLl..Aft
FOR TOP USED CARS
If your car ls extra clean,
see us first.
excellent conditJon,. $1295.
ilim Slemoui
IMPORTS
AUTHORIZED DEALER
417 w. Warner, Santa Ana
54-0-2512
'67 Mercedes Benz 200 D, 4
door, automatic, air cond.
UOP 8U, $2195.
itim 6lemoui
BAUER BUICK IMPORTS
234 E. 17th St. ~UTHORIZED DEALER
Costa Mesa 548-7765 120 w, Warner
Autos, Imported 970 411 W. Warner --.,.,,,.....,--.._-,'='..,.. Santa Ana 546-4114
AUSTIN HEALEY '67 Mec"ed" B•"' 231) SL
-=---------1 Coupe Roadster, TUR 560, '68 SPRITE, like new, 15000 orAIKI!:. G Car ..,.,.,,,. reat • , ml. It's beautiful, but must
""· , .. s. 830-5282; .,, 6. ~im 830-8936, '\)
1964 AUSTIN HEALEY ·~I ~
-"'"' m ..... t". ~· emou\' Reasonable. H.B. 842-7636. IMPORTS
DATSUN AUTHORIZED DEALER ,·our present job Whlle you Buslnes11 Can Call For Dem. • ELEGANT Af •·· p All day Sat & Sun 1978 Fr: 10.9 * Sun 12-$ g,_, ups, 546-7817 After 6 PM
learn with us. When ~u onstration. Mission Dr. C.M. 5.i7-2488. COAST MUSIC AKC. Black masked silver.
have your license issued by (714) 548-3277 OLARO NEWPORT " HARBOR 962-69:JS aft 4. Sports, Race, Roda 959
~~~~-~~~-~~_,.,.,,.,,.,,~~·I l~W.Warner '68 DATSUN Santa !~ W, Warne~..utl P ID camera, !am rm ...
the State etf California (you * WAITRESS..EXP'D bar, 1011 clubs, chUd'1 Costa Mesa * 642-2851 * Golden Rttritvers '66 DlEVELLE S.S. 396 cu
may be iurprisecJ how l•&t Not under 21. NO PHONE swing set, misc, 226 Col.ton, HAMMOND Steinway AKC 714/532.6588 ln, 4 spd, new 1\res, lo 4 Door. Automatic, air cond.
dli-. CWQT 714) Will take
trade or flnance private par.
you can qualify), you are CALLS Awl ·, pe"o" NB "'2 1-& • ' tn l'i;, SlOOO firm. 548-0!12 . . .....,, · · Y 1 • ·..., -"' Yamaha. New & used AKC • ·•2 maleso 1 y('IJow, well on the ,vay to a hi .... y s rl & s·r1 ln 5930 W C t ~~
•
1 u 1 0 • • oas M•chlntry 116 pianos of most makes. Best 1 black. 9 wks. Reas. Trucks 962 respected, high earnina: ca. H N B wy., · · buys In So. Calif. at Schmidt 646-3478 or 548-3042. ty. Can 546-8736 or 494-6811.
:!~_..top Land lnvtstmept * WAITRESS·EXP'O • LINCOLN • Music Co., 1907 N. 1.lain, GERMAN Shepherd, AKC
Corpocau·o", publicly held Not 1.1nde.r 71..' NO PHONE A/C -ARC WELDERS ~ta Alla. -re•i.tered, 8 tnQ, $100. 1 ..:::=;-;:~~::=
CALLS A l I -'64-YAMAHA-:ISDGC-&nd tait growing. We need · PP Y n person, SALE * M&-4739 •
people in this area to grow Surf & Sirloin, 5930 W, Coast 180 Amp. 225 Amp I Practice orpns • 2 manual, * AJ<C DOBERMAN PUPS C.ood dependable bike. Been
Hwy NB 08 32 pedal All Bald · ridden approx, 3 mos. Jn with us. S1ncere people. , • " · • $Hl3 SJ • en, win, e MIF. $75 & UP e 1 Wllh an honest desire -to be. * \VA l TR E,SS-DINNER Bpth models. are I ArUun, \VLttUtur &o plpe, TERMS! 557""946 ast lY.'O years, on street.
HOUSE E d food T & d N S Speed. New ba!t('ry front come a part of our co~ny, . xp -& complel<' with: 1 t'tms _tra es. ewport DALJ\1AT1ANS • AKC regis. tire, clutch. S2oo' or ' trade Call • Or come in • y,·e wUJ eetektalls -6 clA wk, l,pter .. • Helmet & f iller Jense I Organs, 64.,.1530, t d D"v , 646-7203· After
be pleased to hllV«" )'OU look vl('Ws 9 tet).2 noon, SAM 'S 1 e El('Ctrode hOlder &
1
• STlJDJO -and, 5.6 .. Xlnt 5ere ·. ~::~16 ' for P.U. or s!ation y,•gn. ol
S"' ~D 16278 p ·1 &• • pm. """""" · equal value. 534·6996 us over and learn more .c.JU'vv • ac1 ic 20' cable. cor.cl. ~1ake offer. Pvt ply. _
about bOw a cllJ"eer in real Hwy., Hunt. Sch. e Ground clamp & IS' cable 96&-2645. REGISTERED. toy 1' 0 x '66 ti.30 TRTU~f Pl[ $:Jil
t " ll k" f · e G' J bl & I Terrier pupp1es. Champion Chop~ E•toodod tocks «•lalesa ts may cc orw ol\1AN wantt!d for nputcae BALDMNork:an&apeaker, lred.549-1314 1"'"• "'" .,
)'OU. l\to~ important., ·"·e houi;e\\'Qrk. 6 hrs, 2 day11 "''all plug. 1 llke new, full pedal s . , CHN UZER Inquire 1980 \ValJace Sr ..
v.-ould like you to kllO\v how per wk, S2 ~r hr, own , ktyboard, Sl600. &t4-4277. Mlruature S A "N.'o •. _A_. _c_M_. ----~
wt "click''. lrans. Call Aft 6 wetkday1 Alao a complete stock puppies, AKC l't'.i· 1 wkis. 1963 KA \VAS AK 1 11:,
Orana:e County A~ea • or \\'knds 847-5310 o( \\'elcl'•"• & cuttln1 UPRIGHT Planet, nc: w ** Call 644-2411 ** Buchwhacker. Rebk, borel "'6 ktyboard, tuned. Xlnt tone. --
(TI4) 335.3233 \VOO\tAN to help in Pe.t Shop, equipment, 1upplle!s le $l75. S48-525S alt 2 pm e POODLE Pups, purtbred to 201. A·l Cd . Shnpe. $3:!5.
Riwraidt Art a • wUJ 1 r a 1 n . gr 0 0 m 1 n a , weldlnc!brazlna: rods. mini a. 8 Wks, 2 Blk temal-Call 1111 5: 5..l&-3905.
(714) '193.3.i80 642-4818 or ~3885 V.B. ANDERSON HOBART M, Cablt Upright e11 545-1805. -RA-C~l-N_G_d.lr_t _b~; k-~-.-.6
Los Anplt1 Area • -·x . RAV TECiiiGOwcrsr. 104 \Y. 16th St,, CM ~la~. In eood~nd, ;;w AtREDALE te.rrll!r pupplc1, Montt5tt Scorpion 250r:I',
(213) 981.SOSO With or without special PH : M2·5230 or btat etlfer. 1• 9 wks. f>vt pty. Champion 2000 rnt ''· Xlhl cond, Sls:i
LCOA INVESTMENT procedures. South Coast HAVE A NICE DAY WE loan-Buy.Sell anything. 1lml. 54~1058 673.-77~6 aft 5 pm.
AND REAL TY, INC. Community Hospllal. 31872 NO matter what 11 ts. )'Ou C:O.•t Pawn It AuctJetn, 2"26 DALMATIAN Pup. ah ow Late '70 KAWASAKI S::.00.
A Subsidiary of t..rid Co1111t lfwy., So. Ll'l'l\lna. can 11111 lt with a OAll.Y Ntwport Blvd. 642.8400. pottnlial. Lovts peopl e. ,Jmmnculate. E:'<lrM. S745.
Conaultana of America, Inc. CTI41 499-1311 £x1. 35& Pit.OT WA~r '""' 'i'~ ... !".lii~ ror besl result.a! Mi-5671 642-1937. ~h151 st'f', 64~385 ---~ --------
. . '71 FORD % TON DOT DATSUN
OPEN DAILY
AND
SUNDAYS
•
vs pickup truck. Remo.inlna
Will'Tanty. Priced for quick
so.le. ( 855'12C)
$3099 18835 .. , ... Blvd. '59 MERCEDES 220 S
HunUnaton 8eAth $1090. 673-5954
842·7781 or YG-0442 ~--t '69 MB 230, new eng, tnns,
CONNELL '69 Datsun Wagon "">'n"'. '"· •mllm, 1m-
CHEVROLET moc. 1"00· 51 ... 3355.
2828 Harbor Blvd, 4 $;>ttd. cllr. R It H. (YW'f. MG
Costa "'te~a 546·1203 ~17) Take car In 1rade or1---------
hnanee pr1va1e party, 1.!111 -.-.....-....-.. 169 Datsun Pickup .. .., .. or 494.GSll', ·------ -
'65 D ctsun V.Ja.-on "~6'' ·~-1 &THINK
\Viti\ 4S" Pa~s Valley camp. 4 ipct'd, dlr, Mu~t s:t('rllitt! r1·. d!r. .::jeepg 4 pcoplt. \VU 1 ( 'IN\V287) Will lake car In . I In <e cnr In trc.dt ar
lrAdt'.' or f!nancn private pn.r. linani:;t pr!~~t! r arty. ''f", •.r..·DLA. NllCI>". ty. Call 546.8736 or 49H311.. _S1S·Si?l.eGf" 4-~,.1 1. _ t\ . UU\•1
~~-f'·250-rord Ptck-UP: '66 Oa!: n ICOO UOAds!er
Good C'Ondilion 42 000 miles lIT·Nciv co nd,
8' hC'd, New. b'auery. i ~ T.0.1>, IS~~.ss.~
01vnt'r. $1199, Call 8•17-35~ The "Y('llow p~ .. l'~""":""""of
fJT s.1ri-1r .. 1U. ·~..,.,,... ,.,,. -··it
1'7ft •&o\CH l'tWY, •I
&93·'r.A36 • 5.17.QJ24
NEW-USED-SERV. I
,...~
1
•
_:JO DAIW PILOT
I . _ ..... ··I§] I ~ A..... · l§J I A~...... ·I~ I _,,,.. I~ _,,,.. §11 ---I§] I .,,.;,., ... _ ]~1 1 ........... ' l§l I -...... I~ :-.~~~~:1 :-;;....;~~~~ .
Aum. Imported 970 Autos, lmportod 970 Auto•, Imported '70 ""'°'• lrnpor!M m Avtot, Uood 990 Autos, Ueod 990 AvtO., Utod 990 Autot, UM<! 990 Autot, Utod 990
VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN CADILLAC CONTINENTAL MERCURY, OLDSMOBILE PLYMOUTH
1--'--..;_ ___ _
MGI TOYOTA
'7.Q YW IUG '68 Cadl.Uac Convertlble, tully •52 Liftt'cln O:int'I Mere. '70 Monterey e '&7 MGB Gt e
GOOD SHAPE' Sl!JOO
... 53&-2266 ••
'69 YELLOW w/ blk Lttt
COrona Coupe. Like new.
Low ml. $1650. 967-3190
'64 VW IUG ..WPP«. VHll 655. rood Conv rt '64 OLDS ROW m 21T ACT condition. $2995. ~td-Xln~~· THE sro:n ONE Cutlus, bucket 11tAt!, p/11, 1969 Pl VMOUTH
$1699 il *** 1 Th! 0 hi twl 11 .th p/b, good "'"· new "'"'· CUSTOM SUBURBAN $799 · CHIOK-IVERSON f... ~~~~~ry~idf:~~ b~a~u,; k i~t;~;~ A:o.1 Xln't cond.1425 or btst oU..' 3 Seat St1tlon Wagon
CHICK IVERSON VW ... I n<WISilO, """°'' moOU. lw "''" dnvoo only "· 543-11'113. $2,l~S , Vw -~1--... ~ :t:: 12,000 ml. and must be .seerr '63 Oldi 88 Holiday, P/S,
TRIUMPH OPEL
'68 Ope.I St11non \\'11gon, il'ood 1
1 condition, \\'VK 7~. S79:!.00.
'71 SPITFIRES · 549-3031 Ext. ti6 Oi' 61 ~· ....... ''" llfiU .l:JncOln Cont~nta!. 4. a'nd driven to appN!clate. P~B. Air L'Ond. new brakes, 318 cu. in., 2 bbl. Engine
NOW ON DISPLAY 549-30.11 ExL 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD, ·1M'°1'TS Dr. air. le1ther, $5,200. Call Fully equipped with auio. ()fJg . owner. xlnt. 962-0045, Automatic transmiaslon
·-jlfm
Slemoni
Come in for-a-t~t-dri\'411-~O.J-lARBQR BLVD. COST MESA 675-&43. tran....-radio, beater, 'power -.LYMOUTH PO\\lf'f steering
FRITZ WARREN'S COSTA MESA '70 vw BUS: Still under ~AUTHOR IZED OEA\.fft .CORD steering, power brakes, fae. ~ Power dlsc brakes
SPORT CAR CENTER , __ 6_9_VW __ S_E ____ , warranty, Xlnt Ccind. $2950. l2o W, w,mer alr oond., etc. 4 ntar new PO\\'er rear window
710 E. 1st St., S.A. 54.7-0764 ' DAN 546-4628 Alt 6 p.m. 41T W, Warner . tires, Allk for demonstralion. Air conditioning
Open daily 9-9; closed Sunday '63 VW BUC W/SUNR.OOF Santa Ana ~114 A MODERN CIU&J.c. '70 (705AZPl. Johnson a. Son, 1969 PLYMOUTH Lict>nse \'PU 440
IMPORTS
AUTHORIZED DEALER
1~ W. W&ml'r
R&H. ZBK617 REBLT ENG ~ .. -CONDA Modt'rn Clauic. •76 CDrd I Cord, auto, a.ir, all P~· 2626 Harbor Bi. Cost.a Mt>sa SPORT SUBURBAN Good condition, ;,Q,00) ml. '68 GT-6 coupe, Wi.rr whls, 51295 OO • ~" . 1 ll ' $6500. Contact O>mmerc:ial ....,,. ....,~.. ' S S · W I ovt>rdrivt', tape, Jo mJ. . • AFT 6: 543-7843 auto all', u P"'.'1'· ~ N t'I -a ... i. Derek , .....i.;~ ......, • ......,.,, 3 eat tat1on agon , a>ntact Commercial .Nat'I a ....... ..., LU\.""~· , $2,495 See at the DAILY Pn.or,
S15Si. D5936. 646-2698 VW SQBCK 67, xln't cond. Bank Derl!llc Lockina <ntl ITI41 m...c:no. 67 Mercury Cyclone Sport 330 West Bay Street.
'69 Triumph, gd cond. Sl05ll reblt e.gg, $1495. 12'1-tiUI. " C. ORV AIR Coupe, VIZ 346, 11195. Must 383 cu. In. 2 bbl. Engine Costa Mt>sa,' ask for
or best offer, &16-4240 after 968-5782 ace to appreci.1te, · · !dargaret G!"ffnman
4 PM. 1S711 BEACH BL. M2-«15 VOLVO ·~.~d !i~;. '1f· !~,ma! '63 <X>RVAJR SPYDER il ;:e~as~~=smi!Sion 642-4321
417 W, "'arner
Santa Ana 546-4U4
PORSCHE
·59 Porsche 911 s. 5 spttd,'ex-
cctlent condition, YY J 438.
$l99>.00.
ilim ~ltmoni
IMPORTS
AUTHORIZED DEALER
120 W, \Varner
117 W. \Varne.r
Santa Ana 546-4114
I
'6.'i Triumph .mo Conv. Red , HUNTINGTON BEA.CH lea~. S5lm or Ql5 mo 4 SPD. MAGS $W i... Power disc brakea
\1•/new white top, xln't · ~~~~_;,...~=='-'--$2196 lease. 644-109(; -2059 FEDERAL, CM . .... Power rear window
cond. SJOO. 961-1514, 1966 We&tfalia VW camper.. SJ j pop-top, tront mount ipa.n: 1970 VOLVO 14"4 SEDAN • CREAM Putt-1961 Cad. CORYETIE •MtOU Tilt &leering Wheel VOLKSWAGEN tin!, lua:aie rack, f\l!W RAOlt>, HEATER, Sedan DeVille. 1 owner. Stt '-11• Air conditioning
radio, stove, cork tile insul . AIJl'OMA11C, DEMO ?t1gr, 3121 W. Cout Hwy, '70 CORVE'M'E .,,•/re.tr roof IMPORTS License YPT 357
'66 Volkswagen f astback, Lo mi. Good mech cond. •l.871 NB. _ i full pwr:, air, 350 eng, auto: AUTHORIZED DEALER Excellent condition
UJS 367, must 1tt to apprec-1 $u;.(I. 67~!.l.17 alt 6 pm. '63 CAD convt-"Top cond. Yellow, 16,000 mi, Xlnt 120 w. Warner 40,000 miles
late. $895. '61 VW NOW JN STOCK Full pwr, ~uonable . Pvt cond. $4700. Pvt PI Y. 417 w. Warner
. DOUBLE CAB PICKUP l.971142.E pty, 673-5048" or 557-2257 644--4m or 64S--45«1. Santa Ana 546-4114 See at the DAILY PILOT, • VEU-084 am $1799 Slemoni CHICK IYERSQN
IMPORTS vw
AUTHORIZEO DEALER 5-t!l-3031 Ext. 66 or 57
1970 HARBOR BLVD, 120 w. Warner COSTA MESA 411 W. \Varner VW Van converted to camper Santa Ana 546--4111
4 SPEED &-Alfl'OMA11C, 68 330 We.st Bay Street,
IS-I SEDANS -CAMARO ' OJrvette · <;:oupe, Mint ee.1970 MONTEREY ••-I Costa Mesa, ask for
Oveneas Delivery Spec, · cond, :Air, ,F:M tape Jt~reo, P/B, P/S, air, 8000 mi. Margaret Greenman
• '69 CAMARO RS-Orqe, ~r?:;· ~~ appreciate. "Prlv. pty 492111371: art 5:30 642-4321 L8,...:1 Air· cond, disc brakes, auto ~~;2-\!::',,~~-~~-=J-'.:.;_'f,f,--;~~~ii-'::.:::..
....... ... ... S231Xl. 67:1-5111. • .. C....tt., <Z1, 4 •pd. Will MUSTANG
Lyo CAM'AR"O '58, 327. sell or trade. Cheap• Call . ...__ -'70 MACH I Immaculate, stereo, Rlidial ---------I
6469303 tlm, R/H, 11650· 644-5678 COUGAR CHEYELLE V8, automatic, AM FM 1ter-
1966 Harbor, C.M.
8 A N K repo11session, 1965
Plymouth Barracuda 4 spd,
, X!nt oond. ~est offer over
S550. Cail bet 5 PM, M2-9511
1969 PLYMOUTH,
SPORT SATELLITE
Two-door sedan. •. $1.995
31S Cu, In., 2 bbl, En.rine
Automatic transmission
Po.,.,·er steerinil'
A!r conditioning
On!y 18.000 mi on engir~
License ZVE 497
Excellent condition,
See at the DAILY Pfl.QT,
3.10 Wt>st Bay Smet,,
Costa Mesa, esk tor
Margaret Greenman
612·4321
'63 Porsche Super
Cpe. Bahama yellow with blk
interior, A:\1/fM, chrome
wherls, recent e n i i n e
PX\\'98.2
$2399
CHICK IVERSON vw
'68 VW BUG
VTS-007
$1299
1 - -..... • '69 Courar, air cond, villyl eo. fact. air, Loaded {4S7-'53 Pl.Yl\10UTH 2 dr, black, ~ 911!11 ~t -...... -'66 CHEV-ELLE SS 395 ~.new tires, lo blue book, AGU) Take older trade or orig cond, 19 mpg $:nl orl --~P~O=N=Tl~A~C~-
-4 speed, bucket 1 eat1, $2300. Call aft 4:30 pm -sm. dn. Will fln. pvt. pry, "'="';d•:,:·,;,64~5--468~7.70-. o-=~~ 'VOL_YN p 0 s.itraction, . tachorntler. 5'9-316.1. dlr. 540-3100 cau Pat. 1i7 BARRACUDA, vs. Air' ---------"! Canifully maintained by '67 COUGAR. Air, recent '65 Mustang fastback-perfect power. Xlnl rubber, Clean,• '68 2~r Bonneville ha.rdtp,
by Sun Dial. Elec retria:. I
whl1, big tires,· special
paint. Only 5,(XX] mi since
complete rebuild. Chasis I.Ii /
a '5.9, but we have $5IXKl
CMICK IYERSON
YW
inw1ted. Must aee .Ii. <1rive , Compa.dy for ma11arer tune--up, 4 new tires. GOOd cond, For appt call SI250. 833-2369. i-·u11 po11o·er, Jn c lud1n,g
to appreciate. $2800 firm. •'FRIEDLANDER'' 642-7122. mileage. $159i. 8 9 7-S l 7 4 644-8909 .67 Fury III, fact air cond, Al\t /Fi\t rad Io, New
5.\9-3031 Ext, 66 or 67
1970 HARBOR BLVD. !>19-3031 Ext. 66 or 67
1970 HARBOR 3LVD.
1499 Monrovia, -N .B . CH evea&wknds. calibrated polyglau
646-445.l day1 only, ll7M •SAClll CMWT. •1 EVROLET DODGE OLDSMOBILE P.1any xtras. Orig. ownr, premium tires, Xlnl cond, • VW C · I 393--'1566 • 5.37-6821 xln 't care. 545--7992. R 65 amn.r NEW-USl!O..SERV. 1i6 Chevn>let tr. V!, 2 door -'69 Olds •-· 2 Dr HT Orig o11o·rJCr, Sl8!15. ea: ... -'"" 49>412.\, Bus: 4!»-07611. COSTA l\;IESA
COSTA MESA rutJy equipped . 634 BSG ----~--~ hardtop, TFR 116, $1095. 11969 DART SWING-ER ONE OWNER . .14,000 J\11. 1969 PLYMOUTH
$149t ~ il THE PERFORMER~ Beautiful silver fax mist fin. s'PORT SUBURBAN '66 GTO 389 tri-power, 4
• ~ h -b" · speed, posi, mags, $1900 or CHICK IVERSON Autos, Used 990 ftft r~~Y wh it:r:n::; i:':!~ ~;~ b:~n:~t0in::~~~: 3 Seat St;;,i:;5 Wagon besl otrrr. M:.-3864.
VW COLONEL Franklin Atty, -~1--on·~ J'OO!. Equipped with 34(1 4 radio, heater, power stet'r-'70 GRAND Prix. One owner.
549_3031 Ext: 66 or 61 personal car & Co. cat.r,6 ~· ._,,,, " BBL engine, 4 speed tran!., ing, power brakes, power 383 cu. In., 2 bbl. Engine AM-FJ\.l, Ali power, Yellow,
1910 "HARBOR Bl.VD. '64 Malibu '.1-dr S 00. IMPORTS radio, beater, etc. Thia beau-windows, air cond. Jf you-Automatic transmission vinyl !op, $3850 6734154
Muslang, PIS. Fae air tiful car shows careful main-are hard to please •. please Powor ,,.,,,.". RAMBLER COSTA MESA Sll95. 5< .. 7111 AUTHORIZED DEALER d 1 -' ·~ tenan~ an ov1ng care.. don't miss this t ! n e car. Power brakes disc front
1970 p0RSCHE 9115, "21.000
mi. Xlnt cond. F:'-1 tape
$6500. 495-4424
'69 VW BUG
'64 Cfier·ry VW BU(. BUICK 11-0 W, Warner Drive ll today. Only $1775. Zl.GllS. Johnson & Son, 2626 Pow1>r windo~s
417 W. Warner fXVJl:Ail. Johnson & Son, Harbor Bl., Cos!a Mesa. Power seat
RENAULT
LEAVING country. Musi sell
'69 Renault 1edan wagon.
S!m 494--5279
SUNBEAM
zvc 708
$1599
CHICK IYERSON vw
5+9-3031 Ext. 66 or 67
1970 HARBOR BLVD,
C'OSTA MESA
Rebuilt eni::ine & transm.
New painl.
Cail 642-141.1
'68 VW au tomatic-Red
w/blk int, AM/FM, runs
aood, tire• a:d. S950. 543-5405
aft 5.
'61 KARMANN GHIA: Blk
w/wbite eonv lop, P.blt
1967 SU~BEAJ\f l\tinx: 4 dr Lal1)e Selection eng, Extremely depepdable
sedan. Lo ml. clean, Be1t I Of YW C _ traru:. S475. Eve.1 4%-1380.
oller takes. 54&-1669 ampe ••• '63 VW SQUAREBACK
TOYOTA \ Vans, Kombls, ozx .. 1
1--'""""~--, Buses, Now l Used $499
$219co7 ED Immediato Dollv•ry CHICK IYERSON 1970 ~~~;';~HE:~::. s CHICK IVERSON VW
AUTOJ\IATIC. DEMO a 7826 VW 1970 HARBOR BLVD.
'70 BUICK Sania Ana 546-4ll4 2626 Harbor Bl., Costa Mesa. 540-5630. A !omatic .s~d rontroJ
GET the bl!ist transportation 5411-56.30 '66 DYNAMIC '88' Power f't'IU' window
1.E SABRE CUSTOM
4 Dr. H.T. V!, automatic, R&
H, power 1teerinr & brake1,
tal'.'lory air, factory wa.rn.n.
ty. (55fADNl
$3795
$l!C ean bey: a "jUJ;t gel '69 CHARGER R /T-440 · Air conditioning
me there and back" 1961 magnum, auto, P/1, disc License XSS 453
O\evrolel Impala, 348 e.n-bra.ke1. air cond, $2200. NO 2 Dr. Hardtop. Qlr. Must !'iCll. Excellt>nt condition,
gine runi well, three ipee.d SALES TAX. 6JCl.-0450 or Full prier S895r IZUE 36,jJ 41,000 miles
Hurst 1hifter, chrome M4-!i066. cCa=ll_<:.:94;_-TI;___;_«c.-___ _
wheels, new interior, rood '63 Dodie Dart deluxe GT. '66 4-Dr Cutlas5 Supreme--.
bod,y and paint (wifh excep. UXI. ~1167 ulc tor Don P/1, auto, air. Nice tari:Ji!y
tion of one smuhed nar or Dave car. 1950. 846-1165
BAUER BUICK tenderl, 644-7201. '64 Dodge Polan 500, P/B, '60 01.DS 88 fact air. All
234 E. 17th St. 'Sli Che v y Nomad-Never PIS, P/W, Air CCIDCI, $850:. elec, Xln't eond, 642-5845.
See at the DATL Y Pllm
330 \\'est Bay Strttt
Cost.1 l'ltesa. ask for
Margaret Greenman
642-4321
Colita Mesa ~7765 raced, new 321/450 hp, front 6Th--0787. 64&-1715 aft 5.
'69 RIVIERA G S All end, hydro,. custom Int., FALCON A good want ad is a iood Sell idle lte.ms now!
' ~ atreel or •tnp. MOOO In ii, i -t Call 64" -18 N • power, AM/FM 1te~ tape, ask SHXXI er best · ottu nvesuuen """° ow.
chrome wh ee I 1o $3700, 64,;..1324 · 'IO Fa1con-Good body ~ Autos New 980 Autos, New 64&-1461 · enrine, no traru;mi11ion. ;.' _________ ;..,. __ _
'71 Chevy Super Va~lO, VI Best oHtr. 673-2531.
1967 Ambassador 990
SOLID VALUE:
2-dr. hardr5°p. Gold meta.Uk
finish w/matching 1nleriet.
·Air conditioning, powe r
steering, power brake~. aultl,
!rans., radio, heater, nev
ne.w tires, elc. Drivt's beau •.
tifully. Only $950. (WAR.889).f
Johnson & Son, 2626 Harbo!'l
Bl., Costa Mesa. 540-$30
T-lllRD
./ '62 T-BIRD #
Has Everything! Gd
condition $600 6Ml30
ALL 1971'S JN' STOCK
r.OOI CORONA • COROll.A
eng, lo mi's, EJ1tra1, ·n
549-3031 Ext. 6S or n comm'! plates, 50,000/S yr
1970 HARBOR. BLVD, VW '89 Bug, 111.1nrt, lo mi 's, CUSTOM warranty, $2975. Eves ;
COSTA MESA xl nt co nd. J\.fuat It'll be1t Full powu, 1al'tory alr condi. ~26 .
COSTA MESA '70 RIVIERA FORD COMET. For '71 '64 COUNTRY SQUIRE
...DeMLe.wi4 QP TOYOTA
'69 VW FASTBACK olr. Aft 6; 67>2476· tionin;, AM-FM stereo ra. '&:; CHE'""V"E"LL""'E"""M"aJ"'n~.,~SS
YWD 177 '52 YW IUS d!Q, villyl_J'OQJ, factory war-VS hrdtp, 38,900 mi'•. PJS, Stallon Waron, VS, Automatic
$1299 SUNROOF ranty. 1'794AFBl -a uto, R/H, w /1 /w. -dlr. Power Stee r l_n_g
CHICK IYERSON $4295 "'"'819 IOTV88<1 M"'t S.JL FWl Hud to find model, lmmacu-'S!I Chevy Impala Convt, tan, Price 1475. ca!1 494-7144
VW late, recen$t
7
,
99
ncine NtN167 1 BAUER BUICK wht top, reblt tr1.111, sh!rec>,
549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 tape de<:k. $425 or best oJ-
1970 HARBOR BLVD, CHICK IYERSON 234 E. J7tb SL '"-642-4736.
4 Door. Automatic. OY.'ned by ,-=~~CO~ST~A_M_ES~A---1 YW Costa Mesa 543.77651---,~,~3~N~O~V-A--
littJe. old lady from Leisure • '69 VW-Sharp. Low miles. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. '69 BUIC~ Riveria "loaded'' 4 Door. Automatic. dlr. g cyl
World, 16,000 actual mlles. Sl395. C4ll 673-2271 or COSTA MESA 25,000 m1 lo 2 yr warr. $3450. 1563 BSO I Must sell. 1395 tuti
(UQA 76.5) Take small do11o11. .54'.'.&-<::::'.Cl~20'.:. ______ [ ;,-.,,...,=:-::=:-:::::;--= Pvt pty. 6-12-Qi67 or · ...... ,, •"·n··-
Will linance pl'!. ply, CalJ ;* '70 V\V-Lo miles. '65VW1'U115~rygood. must •6~73-~!1~62~-=====o-·l"'p-nc--C•i--~'56-W,~Uj()r~, .• -
Pat 540-3100 dlr. aft 10 am. Extras. $1495.. Call 673-2271 sell Immediately! S 550 ··70 BUICK ESTATE • '56 WAGON • or 545-41.20. 536-1821 305 ll!h St. Hun.,!. 4 dr. 6 cyl. 3 1pd.
Bill. l\fAXEY SUNROOF 1968 VW-lmm<e. !kh. su; FIRM .... 1""
Perfect tor summer. All the '69 VW Bug, Xlnt cond, New "'.AGON '67 Impala cp, v.8, auto
ITIOIYIOITIAI extras. Must sell, 544--4092. whl wa.lts, brk1 & tuntup.1 V8, automatic, P .S._ P.B., ra. fact air:, r /h, mint. Pvl pty
• ~ -., ~ • Orher xtras. $1450 cash. dlo, heater, factory air, 9 $ll50, 1194 Augusta St, CM
18881 BEACH BLVD. '66 YW GHIA 5<1>'72SL ""· """" wunnty. Low CHRYSLER
Hunt. Beach 147-8555 \'ello\Y, with Black landau ·68 BUG-Auto & radio, 1900 mileage. CZBE432l
I ml N. tit Cout Hwy. on Bch top, new valve job XNH6~t mi. Sl39fl. '67 Ghi•-Chrm $4795 IMPERIAL 1967
646-9303
-,67 CORONA 1910 Ford Van, E-200 VB,
automatic radio a: heater.
Completely pane 11 e d in-
terior, 15,000 m.i. Fae. Warr.
Ava.ii. $289$. 645-1~.
'67 fairlane convt-Below
wh11Je book S19.i Sharp &::
red. New brakes, clutch.
lo mi. 3 • spd, VS, P/S.
846-U65.
1962 Ford Galaxie 4 dr.
sedan, radio. heater. pwr
Jtr., brka. Slj(I. 548-1395.
1963 Ford. 1954 S cyl.
Chrysler. for aaJe for parts.
646-6761.
HORNET I $ 1199 whls, wide tires, AM/Flot MUST SELL' '67 LANO CRUISER CHICK IYERSON 11495· Pvt pty. 962-7498 BAUER BUICK 2-dr. hndlop. 08'k """ '70 HORNET SST
I "·h-1 d•lve, wa-· h"'·,' VW ** 1967 VAN ** 234 E 17th St metallic finish with match-2 Dr, aulomatic. power steer .
.. """ , '""' w. I Fcl reblt motor. M/sell Costa Mesa' S<!s.7765 Ing lealher. Fully eq\llpped \ng, power brakes, radio,
new rubber. dlr. Take clear 549-3031 Ext. 66 Or 67 lmmed. U500. 544-7543 aft 5 incl, A1r Olnditionlna:, pow. heattr. 734ADT. $1975.
••• J trad o Jl d 1962 Buick V-8 , ...... , •'-. · -b -•--...... n e r ~ma O"'n. 1970 HARBOR Bl.VD. '69 VW Squareback Stn WJn, .,..... "" er steering, p:rwer r....,s,
CTRB 3321 Sacrifice! C8.ll COSTA .MESA auto, $1695. Aft 6 PM: -::t.5.Joo~uns eood. Sl.95. power windows, poWt:r seat, Harbor American
Ira 540.3100 or 494-7503 att --..:.Wc..:.A_N:.:T.::E::D.:....._ ~962"!:::-4035~'-· £D~"'~'~G~E21~-<WS~· ~-J ,.:.::;-"'i~"Ciiiliiiil--1 auto. tran1., radio, beatu,
ID A.M. '69 BUICK '"· "'-Pri«d tor qwclt '63 VW Bus camper w/rblt '68 Toyota Corona, R/H, Im-I't! pay top dollar for your ,65 ena:. Radio, other xtras. .181e. Only $1200. (VOY736J.
~;! Ol~'
1~t• HA ~BOR C0',TA "'E~I.
MERCURY maculate. 270 Robin Hood VOJ..KS\VAGEN today_ Call After 5 p.m. 642.1520 ELECTRA 125 Johnson le Son. 2626 Harbor
Ln. Ci\1. 6~5--3110, 642--0460. ! and ask for Ron P inchot,
1
4. Dr. H.T. vs, auti'matie, Bl., Costa Meta. 541).5530
IT'S \\'UNDERFUl. 1 he 549-3031 Ext. 66-67. 673-a900. '69 BUG Al}TO poy.·er 1teuin1 &: brake1, '68 CHRYSLER
many buys In appliance' V\V . '64 Beetle • Very iood Super clea~, Will trade, S1450. Jactory air, vinyl roof, fac.
1970 MERCURY
MARQUIS CPE.
SHOWROOM TYPE or CAR
you 11nd in the Classllled mech. rond. Ca 11 Nick; 642-0261, or tory warranty. IYWR373) NEW YORKER.
Ad•. Ch"k thorn now' S8lO • • * 968-4205 537 3'35 I $3395 llllOO MILES
Attractive medium turquoise
mist finish with white inter.
ior and landau roof immac·
ulate! premium equipped,
allto trans, am fm gtereo
radio, heater, power 1teer-
l;==r:~~~~~:::::::::::::::~:-~·;~===-< D•. H.T. Fltll po..., oqulp. men! pJua factory air cond\.
STAR. GAZEK1<¥. BAUER BUICK "'""""$'"2"'49""5(. iVID232)
F-"-'"-''-',',..---• '-4' 234 E. 17th St. .41111 ll1CLAY ..... PO Costa Mesa 548-7765 .1"1 ,.i1i1.11 M: Yow Dolly Adi~Ily ~ M 'ufl' ~~'rt,_ ~Af/.1, Y ,l,ceordl119 to f~• Stars. Y ,· ~~ '66 Buick Wildcat PIS. PfB,
17-'22.J.S.45 Todevelopmtssoge,for,Tundoy1 ~1~'' PfW. Air cond. Xlnt cond.
BAUER BUICK Ing, power b<&k.,, Fao .~
234 E. 17th Sf. condition. Truly gpotle&.s
59-65#90 reod worm c:orrespoiid1rVJ to rvnbm S1360. 642-4043. Co!"ta Me&a 548-7'765 and like new 4 nf!&r new
tirt1 etc. See and ask for of your Zodi«J>irthslgn. '68 BUICK
• , ""' 3' -· "()tdt ...
196' Chrysler Newport demonstration. 916 BEQ.
2 Door HT John50n &. Son, 2626 Harbor 2T~k ,32.Y_. 62.811t 3 Da!l't !lllht 630..
4 P~rJOl'llll 34 Pl'tlllOtdl 6' T Ill'
S 8ti 35 Ml'ld 45 ldml
6 L1aUant 36 Of 66 Llqly 1 A 37 S.:W.. 67 Of
-I r.-d 31 W 61 T cdcsy
9~ 29Wllh MSlort IOShockl AOTollo, 101r1 •
11 n.:..;., 4 I T rci..iWtt 71 A I~""'"""' 120-. •2 ic1rw1 n Of 13 Se A.1To 73 Ufe
f4i..t ~""' 140f ISSo.ich 4ST.... 15~
16 Pwr:ipit A6 To. 76 Y-
17 ""' ,, Of 77 ""*"-I I Ard d~ 7t~
19Dllf ,,... "°"' 20 T odo<f .50 Good m Fn..ily
21 ~ 51 °"" ., ,, ..... ~_ .. 72~ &lW.._ 11"" :u x.._ 53 Win ., Att4
~~To 54$o ;o ll<N "4Klate •1•. ~~U:~ .... °""' -'5,.,_,, l5ts.1od• -> 1. :. 261ndlcdo !16To-16bptrlelu
71 r.-.. 57 ~ 11Hfodli PISCO 3:~ =~ ==~ m.rtb_ 30~ 60,..... '° .,,.i.."U ~Cool ®...a-{)NJ.~ tr..~
·-
SKYI.ARK CUSTOM BARGAIN Or THE WEEK Bl., Cotta Mesa. ~.
2 Dr. H.T. VS automatic, R& The very popular Newport Mere. '69 ~Mirqu la
H. po11o·er steering le brakes Cpe. equipped with auto
factory air, Vinyl roof. buck: tran•. radio, heater, power 4 DHT.
et se:at.._ IWEF1971 1ttt:r in1. po11o·er brake1, new AWARD\\'INNING STYUNG
$1995 cat lradf. in nini beautiful-Attn.ctive li&ht ·1vy yellow
I .............., . with dark Ivy green interior. y, ,..,,\111\1, Air oontl. $SM. Bl •·~
John.t0n l Son, o Harbor, ack Interior l ....... au root,
BAUER BUICK C.:"d. 540-5630. Luxury ~pped throughout 1,-,=~=-~--~c I Auto. trans., radio. he._ter,
234E.11UISI. 19&7 C hry1ltr 300 po"·eritee:ring,powf!rbrak.
Colla Mesa ;,u.7165 convt-Lcaded. Red w/blk es, power•windov.-s tic. This CADILLAC top. 40·~ ml. Pvt pty, WilJ exc:tlltnt car reOtcts vtry
trade. si!al. 54&-1463 eVt:a. canft.11 maintenance. Driven
1966 CADILLAC Convtrtiblt 'Sl Chr)'ller Stn Wagon, ~ onJ.y 2-4,00) mllcs. Set It
w/blue jop Ir le11ther in-PA". dual aJr. PIS, PfB, drtvt to aPPttclate condition.
trrior, Orlcinal own tr , SIC. Otan1 -$3iO; ~ (WYB 92J) John~u &-Son.
492--0996. 1COMn a lfarbor Bl., Costa Mesa
'&!! Convtrtlbh!. Io a It e d , 54().."4'30
S4!00. Can fll'l&J1Ct. prlv. . 1963 COMET 6, AtrrO. 'SS MONTEREY : RI H .
pty., San rJlrmente n4: VF.RY Cl.£AN. PVT PTY: Stronr. Solid &: Quiet. $615
492-2acwl. $4j0 146-4162 Pvt pty: ~ -~~----
Lincoln Mercury's All New Sub Compact
BRAND
NEW '71 COMET 2 DR.
6 Cy! .. radio, he•ter, white sidew•ll tires, fully factory equippeCI.
Seria l '#.I K31 U532849
•
FULL
PRICE
JOHNSON & SON
~
LINCOLN CONTINENTAL e MARK Ill e MERCURY e COUGAR.
2'2' HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
. '