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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-03-15 - Orange Coast Pilot7 , - .. . .. -. .. . -,-·--. _,_. -· • ,_ ~ ' •Death Dive!) Try ' .. ,:~O~ 200 Newport Off Coast Pier ' . . ' • Lewd Call Raps .• • Halted by Poliee ' I • MONDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH .1 5, 1971 VOL ..... MO. 4J. a llCTIOMS, U PA.Gii TIJr .. t Stalled Force ... of 1·2,000 \ . . . . . Hit S. Viet Post SAIGON (UPI) -Tank! and inl~ntry in a North, Vietnamese force or 12.000 men attacked a South Vietnamese out· poat in Laos Monday ~ md stopped a drive on a huge supply dump 1strkle the Ho Chi Minh Trail. The outpost 1tood 1~ with strong ,U:S. air iupport which knocked out seven tanks. It was . atso· tt\l'ea'led that· Ia:ser-tieam di~ bombs were used in 1 attacb: on the enemy· tanks.· . A major battle ~ppe~r~d to be 'lh1piilg up. , ;Aero~ tpe border, in South Vietnam's northwest corner, Communist gUMers 1Ubjkted the U.S. support base at Khe Sanh to its .heaviest barrage since the Lio1 offensive began Feb. 8, firing 150 mortar and rocket rounds into American pcia!Uom:. No U.S. casualties were r_eport.ed but aome SOulh Vietnamese were hurt and a few American belictipters were damaged. Tile !Qc\14 of action in Laos Monday centered around fire support base Lolo, an outpost nine miles east of the Ho Chi Minh Trail ,center cf Sepone. Brig. Ge. Pham Van Phu, commander of SwCb Vietnam's 1st Infantry Divisicn, Aid Communist pressure on !Alo and other pOiau had blocked lils troop> trying to reach 1 big North Vietnamese am· riilµiitlOJI dump and a fuel'" pipeline. ~ Mid South Vietnamese ddenden of' }oJo f?ll!rt a series ()f clBl!lheS wilh l(Qrth ~ese ofrohruglloset<:ut Ndtth VWthamese forces throughout M~1y In the area, ,Jncludin1 cne two- ~ b1tUe at the base perimeter befcre thi Communists were beaten back. Sovl~t-built 1'34 tanks fired 18 mm gun1 af.1-olo and U.S. Air Force ]'.Jllcll re- .. Orufe We•tller Warmer weather is fu the cffing for Tuesday with high · clooda and temperatures stretchtn1.upward to 75 degrees: along the coast.- INSmE' TODAY ' There's a new 11~hti11g land· tnark on Newport · .Harbor OJ' Bahfa Corhtthian Yacht Club dedicated it.! •150,000 clubhouse ()7' Ba11sid( Drive. Boating Pagt 36. t • ' ported knockout one column of seven CommuniSt tanks in the fight. Three o t h e r tanks were rl!!ported destroyed Sunday. Mllitacy aources said a "cons.iderabll!!'' number of the tanks destroyed by air strikes inside Laos were located by Laser Beam-directed bombs. A .laser beam iJ a high "intensity light beam which does not ditfuse and which produces immense electrical fields when it reaches its target. The sources u.id the Amuican aircraft cperate In teams cf two planes. onl!! of which targets and shoots the beam while a second jet unloads ··smart" bombs which are guided to the objective by 01' lasers. The sources said the last!r beam bombing can local!!! a small opening in a hillside tunnel complex and blow an entire mountain off the map if ammunition supplies there are detonated. Phu aaid the entire 2nd division of thl!! North Vietnamese. army -12,000 men at full 1trength -wa1 moving in units of between 500 and 3,000 troops (See ASIA WAJI., Pase !) Police Hal,t Bid . . For 'Death Dive' Off C~tPier Escape artist D.D. 'Masco is alive and well in Alhanibra today. Seal Beach poli«; ofilcera who 1topPl!!(I him irom attempting a "Dlvl!! to Death" ofl the municipal pier Saturday. 'Mle 32-yl!!ar~ld 1tun~1n was to have jumped into the water, weighted down and shackled by two handcuffs and 25- feet of chain padlocked in three places. Unable to local!!! a boat for his divl!!, the· burly 270-pound "Houdini" IOUght to complete his stunt by taking a leap cff the end of lhe pier. He didn 't get far . Masco was met at lhe head of the pier by Sgt. Martin Black who took him to see Police Chief Lee Case. "The city has an ordinance against jumping off ,the pier," the chil!!f told him. "I'm a!rald we won't ' be able to allow you to go through Vt'.ith this." D~oppoinl<d by the order, the rad- bearded Muco announced to the crowd of 2,000 thrill-aeekert Ualn1 the pier that be would makt &oocl his claim next Saturday, at 2 p.m. A boat from which he can make · his dive has been promised to Masco by pel'!Ons operating a 1port-flshin1 coo- ceuion on the Sul Be1ch pier. The atunt, etplalned MalCO, arose from a challenge by one of hla friends. ' . . . • •• ·r1c.1a • une Ill • Coast .Teen In Plione Rap Jailed A Corona de! Mar man ls ln custody today in Newport Beach, charged with making 200 obscene phone callJ to IW'bor Area women OVl!!r the past year. William Howard waµ, 19, of 04 Poinsettia Ave., was arrested Sunday after police alleged. he went to the Newport home of a victim for a date. Detectives said their file on the cases date back nearly one year when a man who called himself Bill Jackson bl!!gan harassing female rl!!sidents ol Newport, Costa Mesa and Tustin. The victims of the lewd calls range in age from 12 to 75, invl!!Stigators laid. The calls were Jinked by a simllar obscene suggestion and the fact. lhat the caller usually knl!!W the victims' names and Identified himself as BUI Jackson. ' "We probably would have bel!!n able to catch a suspect much sooner U the victims had called us right away," 11id Detective Sue Race. "Unfortunalel.y, some of the women waited unUI they had received aevl!!ral and I'm 11ure some never rl!!ported the calls at all. I! we'd had thia informatkm, a pattern would have been establbbed much earlil!!r," she added. Mrs. Race said at least a half doztn attempts to set up dates with the caller had falled in the past. She cre<tited the unidentified victim with Wall's arrest Shi!! asserted a search or Wall's home turned up a tell!!phone book for the Harbor area with an undetl!!nllined number of phone numbers circled. "It loo~ Ilk!!!· he had ·called nwnbera on l!!very page," shl!! said. Wall, who is being held ln lieu of $6,1~ bail, Is schedWed to appear this afternoon in Hartxr Judicial District Court for arraignment. Office r Struck With Pool Cue A Santa Ana police officer suffered a fractured skull Sunday whl!!n he was &truck with a pool cue whlll!! chasing a suspect. Police said patrolman Alexander T. Paulsen fired two warning ahotl to quiet an angry crowd in a basement pool hall at 231 E. 3rd S• The officer had followed Raul Lopu. 18, Santa Ana, into the uta.b!Js.hment altl!!r hi!! was aeen throwing objecta Jnte the 1talrwel! at tho pool hall. He ran down the. stain, followed br orficer Paulaen. In the 1)001 hall, the assailant. 111 yet unldentilled, atruck tht fleeing youth before hitting the officer. , ' . ' : ' ' ,. 1.1'1 T•lllllMl9 (Cenrltllt N'f N1w1 IM.) . TRICIA AND· ED STRO~l ON SIDEWALKS OF NEW YORic. Wiii Wedding Bell1 Be Sounding June S? Mexican Alien's D_eath O~ Freeway Investigated OCEANSIDE -The Identity of 1 Mei· lean alien :who fell or waa pushed . off • tnick·~ early today and . run over by cara on Inter1tate 5, remains a .mystery. Calito~la Hii:hway patrolman Dennis PQrte,r, ~ •. of Vista apd his partner were aboU~ to turn oH the freeway w~n·they heard the ,thump of a nearby car atr~g aom,lhlng ·about 1:-21'.1 1.m. today. , · • 1 . , Port<r Jumped ' out and pulled the bocty of ~ W.tdenUfied man .out of the way or oncom,ing can. Oceanlldt police ~ ed the canvu-covered truck along State Root< '71, flndln( • . l!"'P <JI alleJis In the back. "No one Is talldnc about the incident," 1 H!gbw:ay P 1 tr o I apokl!!sman 11id todly, noUna im· migration authorlUea wer1 lnvt1tlgat1n1 the Incident. The vlctlm """ about 40 yun eld, 5 root ! Inches .tall an~ \felghed 148 pounds. He wu dressed in grey trousers, a blue shirt and ·, tan jacUL San Dieko Chudy· COroner's office 11 !ffkin1 toformaUon to Identify thl!! man. Ele.Y"l ,other, aliens were. taken Into CWltody. n;ie truck d'river WfS not 1char&· ed; alllborltlet said.' - ' . Labor · Party Leads LONDON (UPI) _; '!'be Labor Party bu an • I pertent ltad over the con. strVIUve government of Prin)e1Minlat.er Ed"'lr<I Heath In tho lal!sr Lou11 Harri• Poll publlahed today In the Diiiy Ex• prea1. • Rites Set I OnJtlne 5th· . . ' Moved Up . . • ' l . . KEY BlscAYNE:, Fla. (UPI) -Tricia Nixon aod Harvard law student Edward Finch Cox· will be rilahied in the· White House on June 5, It was ll!!arned today. The Prt'sident's :S:year4ld daughter originally had plaMed her wedding for June, 12, but moved it up after spending the wee~end with Cox and. his IOCialite family in New York. The formal announcement will be made Tuesday by Presldeht anil Mrs. Nixon. The Nil:ons · are planning a joint celebration of the First Lady'a 59th birth· day and the e.ngageml!!Dt at an "Irish · Evening at the Whlt.e House" program Tuesday evening. lnfOrmed sources said t h e an- nouncement would bl!! made t.itber in lhl!! aftl!!rnoon or evl!!ning. Close nlat.ivu and friends of the Nixons and Cox's parent!, C.01. and Mrs. Howard Ellis Cox, have been invited to the gala gather~ Jng. Prime Minister Jahn Lynch of lrl!!land and Mrs. Lynch will be the guests of hol,'lor after receiving a ceref1l()nial welcome Tuesday on the South Lawn. ' . Dr. Edward G. Latch, the House chapt'ain~ will officiate al tbl!! wedding. He is former pastor of Metropolitan Memorial Methodist Church which tbe 1 Nixons attended durh1.g tbe years when Nixon was vice president. Thl!!re was no .word on how big a wedding Tricia is planning. Her aillter, Jul ie Eisenhower, 22, is e1pected to be her matron of honor. Cox. 24, is eipected to have aa his best man his brother, Howard ElU1 Cox Jr.. an Army officer stationed at the Pentagon ·who was married last Sep- tember to Julia Bolton Dempsey •f Cleveland. Blonde, blue-eyed Tricia bu had ber engagement ring since Jut December. But she Kas kept her' parents sworn to secrecy until Tueaday when she bu given the President the formal 10 ahead to make the announcement. She will be the eighth President's daughter to be married in the White Hou91!!. The most l'l!!Cent waa Lynda Bird Robti, daughter of former Presldent Lyn. don B. Johnson. who "'5 matTied on Dec. 9, 1967, in the East Room in an Episcopallan service. 1 Cox will wind Up hi~ second )'!!r at Harvard Law School June 4. tie plans to complete hi!I course next yell"" and then wUI be' eligible for service in the army. He was ·• member of R01C when he attended Prlncton ,University, 1'hlre ht r~ived his B.A. degree. Cox, a former member or consumer spokesman Ralph Nader/a "Raiden," al"°• 1tucllo4 one yev in Yale's araduate school. He Is expected to work this JU'mmfl with Whitney N. 5eymour, U.S. lttorlllJ' In New York. J • l I I , I 1Wl.Y PILOT s M.....,, Mm 15, 1971 Probing of Aged Bared by Solon WA:;HINGTON (AP) -SocJal Security penllcwr-are being haraaaed by ,... qaesta for information about their teeth, tellpbone call& and happiness, ttnatcts ' ware told today. Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr. (0-N.C.), said that the r.ensus ~ureau i5 utlnc pew nUrees such quesUom 81: "Have you any teeth missing? Do you have any artlficial dentures? Do you or your spowe see or telephone your parents as often as once a week'!' Taking things all together, would you uy you're very happy, pretty happy Latins Unite On 'lll.egal' U.S. Fishing LIMA Pmt (AP) -The foreign mlniste~ of Ecuador, Peru and Chile announced today lhe.lr nations will stand united before any threat or reprisal raised by legal action la.ken against filbing vessels found operating illegally 1n their teITltorlal waters. The statement of solidarity was issUed, the ministers said, in view of "the situa- tion created by the illegal fishing of u .s .. nag tuna boab In Ecuadorian ter- ritorial waters." Since Jan. 11, Ecuadorian authorities have seiz.ed 24 U.S. tuna clippers - one of them twice -:accu.sed ot fishing without licenses inside Ecuador's 21»mile territ.orlal sea limit. The U.S. boats all were released after payment of fines and fees which totaled more than a million dollars. . The American Tunaboat Association In San Diego said the aruiouncement was no surprlae. · ''We will conUnue to carry on fishing operations within the 200-mlle limit if that's where the fl!h are," said Ed Silva. uecuilve vice president of the association. The three-nation statement of solidarity was issued by Jose Maria Ponce Yepez of Ecuador, Gen. Edgardo Mercado of Peru and Clodomiro Almeyda of Oiile, The three are in Uma to attend a meeting of foreign ministers of the five- naUon Andean Group. The three ministers said they felt it "opportune and convenient to reaffirm once more adhersion to the principles oullloed 1n the maritime zone declaration signed iD Santiago, Chile, in 1952" and other measures since. In signing of the 1952 document, all three of the Pacific Coast nations claim. ed jurisdiction over waters extending 200 miles. Since then, 1dx other Latln·American nations have made similar jurisdictional clalml and the 200-mile territorial water• thesis has become a subject for in- ternational disagreement. Most of ·the world's nation recognize a 12-mUe territorial sea limit. 'lbe U.S. government recognizes a three-mile territorial sea llmlt and a 12-mile fishing limit and bas advised U.S. fishing boats that they need not pirchase llctDSes to fish outside a Jl. mile Umlt. U.S. fishing boat owners and fishing companies have been reimbursed by the government for fines levied recently by Ecuador which has become known as the Great TUna War.'' U.S. government officials estimated al least 100 U.S. fishing boats have been seized by Peru and Ecuador alnce the signing of the SantJago declaration. No U.S. boats have been seized by Chile. OIAN•I COOT DAILY PILOT N • .,.,. .._.. --.,..-- " ...... , ...... --s.. Cit: .... OAAJto1 COAST PUILIMUNO CN.1Nft lelt•rt N. w •• 1 ,.,.!'tilt ..... ,,......,.,.. J11k a. Ct.tri•v .. Vice f'nllCIW .... 0.---11 Mll'ltf'l" 1\e1nll IC•1Yil l'•ltw 11.111'11' A. M 1i1r,lil~• Manltlnt MltOt di1r1n H. le•• ltl1h1ril P. Htll ANllllN Ml119111't ltll~ ........ C:.ll ,,_.! :no W•t lrf SI""' N.....,, leKtl: DD ,......,,..., ._,,..,..,. • Ul9YM 1.wi: m "-' •-ttmfinlfllill ltldl: .,,,, a-11 ... ._.. ... ClllMnttl • H_.. El ClllWl9 ~ .. or not too hippy thQe dl)'t?'' Ervin said at a bearing before. hiJ Senai. Coo!tltuilonal R 1ght1 llUJ>. committee that t6ue any other perlOllll questions are sent out 'through coaiputet systems. Tbe pensionen: are not told that the questionnairts are voluntary •·and they receive harassing follow-up inquiries by etttUied mail and telephone to obtain their responses," Ervin said. Ervin Jaid the subcommittee bu also received many protests about the use of social security numbers for general identification purposes. He cited these complaints : An Indiana man said a veterinarian demanded his Social Stcurity number on a credit rtport before he would clip his dog's toe nails for $3. Another man said that before the grave could be opem:d to bury his mother he was required to provide her Social Security nwnber. Secretary ol Health, EducaUon and Welfare Elliot L. Richardson testified that "nothing justllles unwarranted prying into or surveillance of the private lives of our citizens merely because ·we have acquired the technological ca· pacity to do so. • "'Ibis subcommittee deserves artat credit for bringing forcefully to the na· tion's attention \he risks of loss of privacy and possible intrusion on CQO- stltutlonat rights whlch may be threaten- ed by potential misuse -both intentional and careless -of the advances in com- puten and commwlicatioos." Final Arguments Slated for Today In Calley Trial IT. BENNING, Ga, (UPI ) -The government neared the-end of its two- year investlaUon and prosecution of Lt. William L. Calley Jr. today with final arguments on its charge that he "shot down dead in cold blood" at least 102 Vietnamese villagers. The proaecutor in the Calley murder court-martial, Capt.. Aubrey M .. Dani~! Ill wu to begin the summations in ~ afternoon sesaion. 'The defenH will sum up Tuesday, and Daniel will reply to that with more argumt.nl Col. Reid W. Kennedy, the judge, sa~d he believed he could follow with his jury tnatruction1 before that day's tnd. That would put one of the most important and publicized military trials I n American history In the h a n d s of the jury on the third anniversary of I.he My Lai massacre. The Vietnamese 1ubhamlet was hit by an American fnfantry search-and· destroy sweep on March 18, 1968. The army beg a n its investigation of the incident two years ago nei:t month. The government summation opening came on the 48th court day. Daniel said in his opening address four months ago -there have beel'I several lenrthy recesses -that he would ahow Calley, a platoon leader, not only Id.lied In cold blood himself but ordered his men to execute civilians. The premeditated slaughter by Calley and bis men was set in the government charge u totaling at least 102 unarmed and WlTesistmg women, children, and old men. The judge, in a session with both sides Sunday. disclosed he will instruct the six· officer jury that If !t was satisfied only one was killed 1t could convict. He said he also would instruct them Jt ''ls illegal to kill unresisting people" and would discuss the basic laws of was which prohibJt killing of prisoners. The jury is compoaed of four majors and a captain who are Vietnam veterans plus a colonel who·ls acorn.bat veteran of World War It and Korea and aa senior officer is president of the panel. KeMedy scheduled a 11}.minute session with them at midmorning today to clear up some routine business and lo tell them to go borne and pack bags and take them to Olson Hall, a transient officers quarters haU a mile from the courthouse, where they will be se- questered. The jurors have been [ree to go where they please during th! trial. with in· structions not to read or hear news of the caS!. The judge had intended to sequester them during dellbaratlon, but at the suggestion dW'lng the Sunday session or defense Attorney George W . Latimer he also decided to confine them during summatio'ns . Two Teen Girls Killed in Crash Two Anaheim girls were killed Sunday night in a Fullerton accident involvln.g three cars, police reported. Lynn Cheryl Adams , 18, driver of one car was dead oa aniv1l 1t St. Jude -Hospital and Janet WaU1ce. 18. her passenger, died about 9 p.m. at tbe hospital. Offletrs said Miss Adams was t:ast- bound on Chapman Avenue and collided headoo with the car driven by James Farts, 54, Pacolma. Police said they bellevt MW Ad1ms' car swerved over the double yellow line when crowded by 1nother car. The accid@nt la under lnvestiaation. DAJLV ,ILOT , ... 19 "° •1c11M IC ... Nr Nixon's Story ·Personal Life Discussed on TV IV ASillNGTON (UPIJ -President NI.Ion said tod1y the political "moment or truth" that l!d him to run ror presi- dent in 1968 came during a Florida Christmas vacation with his ramily. The decision was a marked change from 1962 when "l had no thoughts ()r prospectl that I had any political future" following his loss of the race for governor of California, Ni:lon sakl. Nixon was interviewed by Barbara 'Vallers on the Today s.bow on NBCTV. The interview was filmed in the While llouse Thunday. The interview ~·as one of two NiJ:on has given in recent days to discuss famil y and personal matters, and specifically first lady Pat Nilon, who will be 59 this week. , The President confirmed what has long been a rumor in Washington politica l circles -that Mrs. Nilon had tried ()n previous· occuion.s to talk him into leaving politics. He said Mrs. Nilon "felt at times It would be best if we left public life" and cited three sepa rate occasions - once in 1952 following the "fund" con· troversy when he wu almost dropped from. the ticket as vice president, when he Jost the race for president in 1960, and was unsuccessful for the California governorship in 1962. But he said Mrs. Nixon, once the decision to run had been made, was bis best campaigner. be could undersland !be co""'rn of )'Dlllll people about the war in Vietnam. But he said unrest in the country came not from the war or other domestic problems, but from the ''insecurity that comes from the old values being torn away." ·• NlXon said although he hsd not ap. pointed a woman cabinet member, his administration had appointed more wtimen to responsible poslUons and given them mort breakthroughs than any previous administrations. "And we have some other appoinlments in mind, too, so don't judge us until we finish our term of office." The President sidestepped questions on outspoken wives of cabinet members and on the expected Tuesday an- nouncement of the engagement of bis daughter Tricia. Although. she was nol mentioned by name. Martha Mi!chell, the outspoken wife ol Att.orney General John N. Mlt. che.11, was the apparent object of a ques-. lion concerning whether wives of cabinet !1'embers should speak out on political issues. "If I can handle my own family, that is enough of a problem. So, I will say that each member of the cabinet and his wife, of course, must be responsl· ble for their own C<lnduct." AMBULANCE ATTENDANTS AID CYCLIST WHO LANDED ON CAR Rider Injured in Rear-end Collision in Costa Mesa Following the political defeats in the early 60s, Nixon said he felt he woul d never hold elective office again, but that changed in 1967. He reealled: "The final decision with regard to running for the presidency again, I made during Christmas vacation ol 1967. ' • Escaped Convict Caught by Police In Costa Mesa Cycle Rider Seriously Hurt in Mesa Crash "I remember we were in Florida at the Ume and we had quite a family discussion about It with llirs. Nixon and our two daughters, Tricia and J u I i e , and by that time 100, David Eisenhower was one who gave us some advice. And after we discussed it I made the declslon and the whole family really campaigned with very great elfectJve- ness in my opinion.'' A convicted robber who fled a minimum security jail branch in Orange was literally caught with his pants dowo Sunday night in a Costa Mesa restroom. Rickey E. Marcum , 22. of 847 Center St.. wu taken into custody by Officer Dennis Hossfeld in a laundromat near his home. He was booked on a warrant charging felony escape, with bail set at $31.250. and turned over to sheriff's detectives for return to a maximum secwity section of Orange County Jail. A Costa Mesa motorcyclist whose at- tention was diverted with a warnlng of a dangerous dip in the road ahead was injured Saturday,-when he con- sequently rammed the tear of a stopped cu. James L. Felkes, 16, of 1570 Orange Ave., was listed in serious condition today at Costa Mesa Memorial Jiospital with leg injuries. 11le victim was rid ing north on Newport Boulevard Saturday at l :40 p.m .. beside fellow cyclist Chris Schall, of 314 Victoria St., when the accident occurnd. Police said the pair were discussing a 2'h loot rise and dip in the pavement ,ahead, apparently caused by a tree root. Big Starr Ranch Put Up for Sale By Newport Firm The 10,14-4-acre Starr Ranch in the southeast part of Orange County near Ortega Highway is up for sale. Recrea- tion Environment Inc. of Newport Beach which planned to develop the area into a $17 million wilderness recreation facili· ty ls the seller. Recreation Environment bought the ranch last May from the Eugene Starr estate. At that lime the county was considering purchase of the property for a regional park. ThoS! plans may be revived with the land back on the market but it is con- sidered wilikely that the county \\'ill move on the opportunity because of the tight money situation. ll has been pointed out that the county If interested could have taken steps to acquire the property during the past year. A study of the park plan was dropped but has been revived. The ranch is located sii: and one half mUes east of San Juan Capistrano near the Cleveland National Fores!. Recreation Environment bought the land for Slt,000 an acre but the asking price today me be $12,000 to $15,000 . The county has 2,300 acres of regional parks now developed or planned. The Star Ranch area is included in a ten-year old study of county parks which totaled 8,900 acres. The entire ranch was not planned as a part of the county sytem. Re.creation Environment is selling the property to raise money for its bankrupt parent company Penn Central Ra ilroad. Tbe Newport Beach firm operates Colo de Caza, the nearby luxury recreation fa cility. He Takes Pipe, But Keeps Life MOUNTAIN VIEW !UPI) -A three.quarter inch steel irrigation pipe tore throUgh the skull of a Los Altos man today when his car shot o(f a freeway , . • but he. survived. Doctors at El Cimino Hospital removed the pipe from the he.ad of Wllliam N. Emery, 22. in an emergt:ncy operation. Emery. a parts manager for a San Carlos trailer finn, was In critical con- dition. The lUghwl)' Patrol s I I d Emery's ear ran off the freeway and Into Ice plants whlch were watettd &y lho IJ'rtg•tlon~pip<. Neither noticed Carlos V. Mendoza, 25, of 924 W. Pine St., Santa Ana. had stopped for a red light at 22nd Street wilil the last minute. Schalt was able to swerve, but Falkes slammed into the back of Mendoza's car, sufftring fractures and other in· juries. f'ro1n Page l ASIA WAR. • • inlo the Lolo area to protect the supply base. U.S. 852 stratofortresses dropped hun· dreds of tons of bombs on the supply base ~1onday aod a communique reported "very big secondary explosions." an in· dicatlon that ammunition and fuel were destroyed. lt was disclosed at the sa me time that U.S. C130 Hercules transport planes operating over Laos were using 15,000. pound bombs as a ta ctical weapon for the first time there. The bombs previous- ly were used to carve out "instant '' landing zones for U.S. helicopters. ~filitary sources said a 15,000 pounder was parachuted lasl week and detonated betv.·een two hills overlooking a strateg,ic pass to the north of Route 9. The sources said the two hills were blown off the map and a lan&slide blocked the area 10 Communiyt truck traffic. Communist antiaircraft fire had kept t:.S. resupply helicopters away from Lolo during the past several days, but a flight of JO helicopters got through to the outpost li-1onday. Tv.·o army helicopter pilots aboard one of the aircraft said five helicopters in the flight v.·ere struck by antiaircraft fire. WO Donald Elmore, 21 , of Prin- ceton. Ill., said one of the damaged helicopters "just made it back to Khe Sanh" but that none of the helicopters was actually shot down. Turning to domestic illsues, Ni:lou aald Boat Abandoned In Heavy Seas Off Laguna A 22·foot sailboat, demasted by the wind and swamped ln heavy seas, was abandoned Saturday by its owner off Laguna Beach after eUorts to save the $4.000 craft failed. The owner, Stewart Weiner, of Los Alamitos, and an unidenlified companion were rescued uninjured from the crart by the Coast Guard at about IS p.m. Saturday. The stricken vessel was first spotted by Laguna Beach lifeguards at 5 p.m. when it was about two miles off Main Beach proceeding north under only its jib. The mainsail of the craft had been torn by the strong wind and lifeguards infonned the Coast Guard of the boat's peril. A cutter was sent to aid the vessel and the small craft was taken into low i11 an effort to bring It safely tC> Newport Beach. However, a Coast Guard spokesman said the craft was almost completely swamped and its main mast had broken. so the owner made the decision to abandon it. The vessel was set adrift near Shaw's Cove and washed ashore at El Morro Bay. The owner and his companion were returned to Newport Beach by the Coast Guard. Teachers Cast Vote REDWOOD CITY !UPI) -BaHois are being distributed today for a vote by San Mateo Junior College District Teachers on whether they have ,coo. fidence in Chancellor Clifford Erickson. Marcum was named in the warrant llued from Central Orange County Judicial District Court Friday, after be fled the Theo Lacy Facilit y. The honor farm is bounded only by a wire fence . Local police received word Sunday that Marcum was in town and Officer Hossfeld missed him at the Center Street apartment by only 10 minutes. Spotted in the nearby laundromat, he was captured after he conveniently entered the restroom, which had no possible ex.it. Young Survivor In Fire Scene Crash Improves A Costa Mesa youth critically lnJured 16 days ago in a collision that killed his sister and a companion is gradually emerging from a coma caused by brain damage. Spokesmen at Hoag Memorial Hospital said today Paul Arbu ckle. 17. of 2002 t.iaple St., ls improving a small bit each day. He '"as one of four teenagers riding in a car shortly before midnight Feb. 26, when it collided with a Costa Mesa Fire Department car en route to a fatal blaze. Claire Arbuckle, 14. of 2002 Maple St. and Edward llemandez, 19, of 2183 National Ave., both in Costa Mesa, were killed in the crash. Fire Department Battalion Chief Ron Coleman suffered two broken legs in the accident on Estancia Avenue at Swan Drive. He is currently listed in good condition at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. · Don't Pay $110 • .. ,,, "'" "' e. $01(111•• .,. .... llllfll tJ119 kl UIC whit. ,.tit -Wlfll 111 )'W .... "' t w.tkll"f fMlld'l. Alllli fMI illlr '•' • Don't Pay $4 7 5 n ;1 1 c. a ,... •llfNlllll tillf w1111 UK Wlllll .. di .... 1111 ...... Wit H Ytnllft 11~ 11111 wMll fff MIS . .,.. tlfl .•• .............. s27500 OUR UNUSUAL MONEY BACK DIAMOND GUARANTEE When you buy • di•mond from us we wlll gu•r•ntee that di1mond to •pprel5e at 40% MORE then you pild for It or your money back. Can you do as wall elsewhere? COMPARE. 1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA. JEWELRY-and LOAN LOAN, IUY, SIU. TlADE 1838 NEWPORT BLVD· PHONE 646·7741 , --DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA--It'-Horbor I. Bro..tw1y • ' I. r' ' 1 · ... -.,. Huntington Beaeh \ • • Toda 'LEl••I N.Y. SCeeks· YOL 64, NO. 63, l SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COl:INTY, CALIFORNIA ~ -.,.. TEN CENTS Fluoride Supporters By ALAN .DIRKIN nuorides are already in the water in °' "-o.11y ,itlltf ,,.,. Soutbun Galifornla. Backers of Oooridation in' Huntington . "U O:iere ls O.S part per million ln Btacb and Fountain" Valk:y took it in the water supply you wor.'t gain much tbt teeth today as a Cat Tech. Pasadena, by going to 0.7 or 1 part pe.r million," health engineer said that increasing ithe he commented. "U you do, there is ftuoride content in the cities' water sup-a poss\bility that children who drink plies may do more harm than good. a Jot of water will consume too much Dr. Jack McKee, environment.al health fluoride~ tncineer with the California Institute \ "If a child ' drinks one litrt (a little of Technology's environmental quality more than a quart) a Cay Jt will be laboratory. pointed out that natural fine._B.ut lf he drinks three litres he Beach Girl Sentenced ' In Murder Martha Riggs of Huntington Beach today was com.milled to an indefinite terin in the California Youth Authority for her role in the killing of 19-year-old Robert Leroy Hermann. Miss Riggs, 19. of 1824 Park St., drew the sentence from Orange County Superior Court Judge Claude M. Owens just 17 days after a jury convicted her of second degree murder. · Robert Eugene Williams, 19, of 1504 Pecan St. Huntington Beach, the man who 11hot Hennann through the back Of the head in the victim's home at 418 15th St. last Nov. 7, is serving a life term in state prison. Miss Riggs , commitment means that her sentence can be reviewed at any time after she has served one year of what is technically a life term in a CYA facility. The girl received her sentence without any visible emotioll and returned quietly to her Orana:e c.ounty Jail ceU ..t1fter Judge Owens rejected defense attorney Chester Smith's motion that probation be allowed. . . . will get mottled teeth. This is a very common condition in Texas • n d Oklahoma, where it is bot and where there Is fluoride in the water." Dr. McKee 's views became known to- day as a new battle over fluoridation loomed. Huntington Beach has from 0.4 to 0.5 ol a part per million In lhe water already and Fountain Valley has 0.6 part per million. Last year. both city councils aulhorjzed adding chemicals to bring I.he content He also rejected Deputy District At· tomey Chatlerton's pleas that Miss Riggs should go to state prison.• The prosecuter argued !hat commitment 10 '! CYA facility was not sufficient puni.!lhment fof a murder conviction. TRICIA AND ED STROLL ON SIDEWALKS OF NEW YORK Will Wedd ing Bells Be Sound ing June 5? Chatterton successfulty argued during the trial that Mis.s Riggs played a major role in the plans to kill Hermann after the couple became convinced that Herm&M'.11 association with Huntington Beach police Jed to the arrest of a group of teenagers -Riggs, Wllliall'l.!I and Hermann among them -on drug ~arges. It was testified during the trial that ~fiss Ri ggs and Williall'l.!I were mistaken tn that belief. F inal Arg uments Slate d for Today In Calley Trial . FT. BENNING . Ga . (UPI) -The government neared the end of its tw~ year investigation and proaecution of Ll. William L. Calley Jr. to da y with. final arguments on its charge that he "shot down dead in cold .blood'' at least 102 Vietnamese villagers. The prosecutor In the Calley murder court-martial, Capt Aubrey M:. Daniel UI, •as to begin the summations in ' the afternoon session. The defense will sum up Tuesday, and Daniel will reply to that with more argument . Col. Reid W. Kenneiiy, the judge, said he believed he could rollow with his jury Instructions before that day's end. That would put one of the most important and publicized military trlals i n Amfrican history In the h a n d s of the jury on the third anniversary of the My Lai mas.ucre. Tricia, Co x Will Marry In White Hou se W ~dding KEY BISCAYNE, F1a. (UPI) -Tricia l\"ixon and Harvard law student Edward Finch Cox will be married in the White House on June 5, it wa s learned today. The President's 2~year-old daughter originally had planned her wedding for June 12. but moved it up after spending the weekend with Cox and his socialite family in New York. The formal announcement will be made Tuesday by President and Mrs. Nixon. The Nixons are planning a joint eelebr11iion of the First Lady's 59th birth- day and the engagement at an "Irish Evening· at the White House" prog ram Tuesday evening. Informed sources sa id t he an· nouncement would be made either in the afternoon or evening. Close relatives and friends of the Nixons and Cox's parents, Col. and A1rs . Howard Ellis Cox, have been invited lo the gala gather· Ing. Prime: Mlnlster John Lynch of Ireland and Mrs. Lynch will be the guests of honor after receiving a ceremonial welcome Tuesday on the South Lawn. Or. Edward G. Latch, the House chaplain, will officiate al t.he wedding. He is former pas{(lr of Metropolitan f.femorial Methodist .Church \\"hich the Nixons attended during the years when Nixon was vi ce president: There was no word an bow big a wedding Tricia is planning. Her · sister, Julie Eisenhower, 22. is , eipected to be her matron of honor. Cox. 24. is expected to have as his best man his broth.er. Howard Ellis Cox J r .. an Army officer stationed at the Per.tagon who was married last Sep- tember to Julia Bolto n Dempsey of Oeveland. Blonde, blue.eyed Tricia has had her engagement ring sirice last December. But she has kept her parents sworn to secrecy until Tuesday when she has given the President the formal go ahead to make the announcement. She will be the eighth President's daughter to be married in t.he While House. The most recent was Lynda Bird Robb, daughler of former President Lyn- don B. Johnson, who was married on Dec. 9, 1967. in the East Room in an Episcopalian service. Cox wlll wind up his seco::.d year -ljt Harvard Law School June 4. He plans to complete his course next year and then will be eligible for &ervice in the army. Beverly HiUs Study Dealt. Blow-in to t part· per million, a figure recom- mended by the state health aervict. This action has been conslatenUy opposed by some residenta: wbo have collected Ptlilions demanding the Issue be put to voters. . , Last 11..X. lhe Huntnngton Buch Citizens for Pure Water announced that they· had copected 4,480 algnatures on a petition calling for a vote only tD learn that they were a month late in returning the petition. \ "Being a novice in this bwi.ness, l should have checked the election code more carefully," Gerald Bogart. the chairman, admitted. "We thought we had six months from the lime we col- lected the fint name but It turns out It was six months from the filing of the petition ." Bogart's group will ask the Huntington Beach council, at its 7::)0 session this evening, to consider puUing the matter to a referendum nevertheless. ... Teeth Anolber group will be siring lb• ""'"di {(I delay fluoridation . the eHCUUve board of the city'& recently c r e a t e d Environmental Council wW requeit tbe councilmen to delay tbe luue until March !I. Mrs. Margaret Carlberg, chairman of the council. said that the group wi&hel: to have time to study Dr. McKee'• work. Meanwhile, officials of bolh Huntington (See FLUORIDE, Pa1• II 'I Dispute Heats Up -Beach Firemen Sue City Over Pay By TERRY COVILLE Of IM DalfY ~lat l .. ff , Huntington Beach firemen are filing · suit to settle their 1lx·montb old salary S"Uit with the city. The town's 120 fire fighters are seeking a writ . of mandate to force the city council to continue salar)' talks "in goOd faith." The C{)Uncil endtd salary discussions last September when It passed an · 8.25. percent pay Increase for all city employe.11, Ignoring ·11 percent pay raises for firemen a~d pollc!men agreed to by City Administrator Doyle MU\e.r. Firemen claim the counCil should have returned to negotiations if it didn 't like the Jl percent pay raise. Sppkesmen for the Firemen's Associa· tion said members of the city council Would receive· coUrt subpoen·a.11 tonight . Jerome. Colton, a ~ng Beach atUlrney representing thF firemen, was sche duled. to meet with , a Superior . Court .judge at 2 p.m. t\)day to talk about the writ of mandate, and the paperwork was tO be filed by 4 R.m. Tlie 'dillerence between the 8.25 percent increase granted ind the 11 percent requested would be about '$61,000 a year, a"ccording . to city estimatts. No money ha s been put alsde by the city for additional (above 8.25 percent) lncre.ases. "Our sUit is primarily to make the city explain ctrta.in actions it bu taken," Bob LeMarsh, a spokesman for the firemen said this morning. "There were some parts ol out .airee- ment with the city they approved, but (See SUIT, Pa&e !) 'Family·' Girl S. Viet Base Holding Offers Alibi " . • . t ;u; a R d F ·:!.:: ~.~~~--~'.~--e . or.ce ' LOS Al'ICELES" (UPI I -One of tlit' "family" 1irll tried ·to prov.Ide an alibi for Cbarltis Mi.nsori ~ay In tf?e closing hoo rs of ~ ·penalty phase of the Tate· La.Bi41nca murder 'trial. Catharine Gillies, 21, said that the hippie lea4e.r was at 1 campsite. near . ' a waterfall ·with another yo1.m1 girl at the time :of the two n.igbta ·or murder, and that &ht 1aW him thtre. Although Manson already h'5· been convicted, of &tven murdera, his ittorney, Irving Kanarek. procttded as U ·hlll In· nocence or auilt was still In question and tried to esla,blish that Mtn.!IOn played no part·ln the ·murders. . The jury i.11 now hearing evidencf only as to whether the pen!-ltY should be life or death. Mis!! Gillies introduced a chilling note into the trial, entering its Ioth month today, when she discussed . the way the girl! felt about murder. "You know, I'm willing to kill for a brother," she said. "We all are. I would have kllle<t if f had gone along . that night (the night of the Tate slaylngs).'' Mls.s Gillies left a looiibole In her ttory when she said that Manson and Stephanie Schramm were ·at the wate.rfaU / in DevU11 canyon at the lime of the slaings, but adrriitted she was camped some distance away .. Manson and the three women defen- dant& were removed from the courtroom last Friday when they disrupted pro- ceedings. 1be three girl!! were back In court today, but Manson li.11tened from an antechamber by loudspeaker. It was erpectde the defense might rest lls case today. Final argument.I to the jury were anticipated by midweek. ·: . " •• ;. UPI Tti.,~1i. Be's N11mber One Notre Dame's Austin Carr, a 6- 3 · guard who sparked 89·82 Irish upset of top-ranked UCLA earlier this year, today was named 1970.71 college basket· ball player-or the year by Unil· ed Press International. Police Halt Bid For 'Death Dive' Off Coast Pier SAIGOI< CUP!) -Tlnb and lnfmit>y In a North Vj<tn""'" loloe ol •12,00I men attacked a South Vietnamese. out,.. post in Laos Monday and stopped1 a drive. on a huge supply dump astride the Ho Chi Minh Trail. The ou~ stood fast with strong U.S. air .11upport which knocked out seven tanks. It was also revealed that laser-beam directed bombs were used in attacks on the enemy . tanks. A major battle appeared to be shaplne up. .Acn:u I.he border, In South Vietnam'• northwest corner, Communist gunners subjected the U.S. suppart base. at Kbe Sanh to it& heaviest barraie si~ the Laos offensive began Feb. 8, firing ISO mortar and rocket rounds into American positions. No U.S. casualtle.s were rsported but some South Vietnamese were hurt and a few American helicopters we~ damaged. The focus of action in Laos Monday centered around fire support base Lolo, an outpost nine miles east of the HD Chi Minh Trail center of Sepone. Brig. Gen. Pham Van Phu, commander of South Vietnam '.11 1st Infantry Division, fiaid Communist preuure on Lolo and other points had blocked his troops trying to reach a big North Vietnamese am· mu.1lUon dump and a fuel pipeline. Phu said SOUth Vietnamese defenders of Lolo fought a aeries of clashes with North Vietnamese forces throughout Monday in the area, including one two- bour battle at the base perimeter before the Communists were bealen back. Soviet-built 'I'.34 tank.!1 fired 88 mm euns at Lolo and U.S. Air Force plJoll re- ported knockout one column of seven Communist tanks In the fight. Three o t h e r t.anka were rtported destroyed Sunday. Military sources &aid a "considerable" number of the tanks de1troyed by air (See ASIA WAii, p .. , II Orange The Vietnamese subhamlel waa hlt bY an American infantry search·and· destroy sweep on ~tarch 16. 1968. The army b e g a n lls Investigation of the incident two years ago next month. 1llt government summation opening came on the 48th court day. Daniel said In his opening addrel.!I four months Jgo -there have beeJ1 several lengthy recuses -that he would show Calley, a platoon leader, not only killed in cold 6lood himself but ordered his men to ex~ute civilians. Youth Drug Use Revealed Eacape artist 0 .0 , Masco Is alive and well in Alhambra today. Seal Beach pqlice officers who stopped bitn from attempting a "Dive to l>eath" off the , municipal pier Saturday. The 32-year--0ld stuntman was to have jumped into the water, weighted down an!! 1hackled ,by two handcuffl and 25- feet of chain padlocked In lhre@ places. Weatlaer Warmer weather fs in the offlnr for Tuesday with high clouds and temperatures 1tretchihc upward to 75 degrees along the coast. -The premeditated slaughter by Calley and hi.11 men was set in the government ·cb1rge as totaling at least 102 unarmed 1od unresisting women, children, and old men. The judge, in a session with both sides Sunday, disclosed he will 'in.WUct the six · officer jury th~t If It wa1 1atisfled only one was tilled Jt could convict. He said he also would ln!truct them Jt "Is Illegal to kHI unreslstlns people'' and would dilCUIS the bu1c lawa of wu. which prohlbll klllJng of prisoners. BEVERLY HILLS (AP) -At least ?5 percent of the teenagers In this ex· elusive community are involved in narcotics and their parenta' med icine cabinets average aboul eight kinds of mood-changing drugs, a city.school district financed report shows. But the re porl, based on 1tn11!\Y In- terviews with 50 junior and senior high school student!, went on to 1ay the high df:ug use doel not mean that Bevttly Hills, (amous for Its wealthy and ctlebri· ty residenta:, is "1ick." Dr. Stephen Rush, a psychologist, wrote In the report he has contacted with hundred.11 of Beverly tUlls youths and "tna1'y teemed restless, angry or 1ll5htly deprused, but I was tmpreued • with their maturity and potential strength." . The report concluded that 60 to 70 percent of the city's young people are mild drug users and 5 to 10 percent are extreme users. · He said marijuana was mainly Uied. P The study ,said one factor Is tne deteriorating home life In some families which struggle to keep their Beverly Hills Identity ''even if they can afford tQ furnish only their living room ." About 15 percent of Beverly Hills homes are run by depressed. dlvorred mothers who "struggle 10· remair. in Bcverl)' Hills lo provide the highly rated school for their otherwise d.:prjved children," the repart added. It 1ald the main narcotiC Is marljuan1. I but many have: tried -but do not "" regularly . -UID and pep and sleep- ing pilla, ab~ant in many mtdiclne cabinetl. . The report Hld Beverly Hills adults seem to UH more of tbe harder drugs. The reJ>O(t 1aJd Beverly Hills youth have a code' all their own of betni "cool" and they follow It rigidly. Jt Is uncool to get "hcloked, bung up" or atrung out" on druas, bUt it Is cool to get a little high or to relu with drugs. the report sakl. The youths compared the use of pep pllls to coffee and marijuana to an after dinner drink. The report was com- plied by lh• Training CommJlt'.ee of lbo Caucus on Dan1erous Drugi. t Unable· to locate a boat for his dive. the burly 2'7p-pound ''Houdini'' llOUght to complete his stunt by taking a leap off tht end of the pier. He didn't get r1r. Muco was met at the head of the pier by Sgt .. Martin Black Yfho took him to BM PoliCe Qifef Lee ease. , HThe · clt1 bas 1n ordln•nce against jumping oil lhe pier," the cllie! lold him. "I'm afraid '1i'e won't be able to allow you to go through with this." D!.<appolnled by the ordtr, the red- bearded Masco announced to I.he crowd of 2,lm thrUl·aeeke11 ltninc the pler that he would mike iood his claim ne1t Saturday, al 2 p.m. INSIDE TOD AY Tlteu'1 a nttD UOChting land- mark on Newport Harbor °' Bahia Corinthian Yacht CJub d<ditattd lta J750,000 club/lo"'' on Bayside Drive. Boating Pa.g1 26. I t • II Mond•r, ~•rth lS, 1971 -Whe11 Told of Fire Dr. Harte Ii us 117 TOM BAJ\LEY aOld that theft WOI omob OO<lllnl !tom ot ttii D111tr r11tt '"" b1J offk:t. And he testified that HaritU111 Reba Vaughn's ex-husband today resumed bis teat at the family dinner testified that Dr. Ebbe Hartellus re-table before leaving the house at Reba 's mained calm, comopsed a n d un. urging. communicative when he got the word The prosecution allege• that Hai'teliUS last April 9 that his Corona de! Mar had already planned the flrt and they ·offices were on fire. pla.nned to use lhe man they believe Ray Vaughn testified as the Orange{ sparked the blaze as their final witness County Superior Court araon-fraud lria today. ol the phyalclan neared the end or the Deputy District Attorney Al Novick prosecution phase that bls blonde ex-wife alleges that Jim Blevins, Reba Vaughn's was the first person In her Costa Mesa brother left the Vaughn home at 887 home to ask her lover what the call W. Wilson St., earlier that evening, drove was about. to Hartelius' office at 2345 E. Coa!t Vaughn said It was "three to five Highway and doused the contents or minutes" before those present in the a file with ga.soline. home learned that Hartd.lw, 50, was Novick claims that the fitt was plaMed Valley Council Faces Four Public Hearings Fountain Valley City Councilmen will face four public hearlng.s and a flurry of special reports when they meet at 8 p.m., Tuesday. 'Jbe four public hearings cover tighter 'architectural controls for lhe city center area, new iodwtrial regulations, and 'an appeal on a denial for apartment zoning. Speclal reports include one on the anti-fluoridation petitions, one from the Orange County Water District and another from a study committee on , •pecial districts. Two of Tuesday's public hearings con· cem an architectural control zone and a scenic corridor in the city. City planners hope to put tighter From Pagel ASIA WAR. •• strikes inside Laos were located by Laser Beam-directed bombs. A laser beam is a high intem1ity light beam which does not diffuse and which produces immense electrical fields when it reaches its target The sources said the American aircraft cperate ln teams of two planes, one of which targcls and shoots the beam while a second jet unloads "•mart" bombs which are guided to the objetUve by the lasers. The sources said the laser beam bombing can locale a amall opening in a hillside tunnel tomplex and blow an enUre mountain off the map if ammunlUon supplies there are detonated. Phu aald the entire 2nd division of the North Vietnamese army -12,000 men at full strength -was moving in units of between 500 and 3,000 troops into the Lolo area to protect the supply base. U.S. BS2 stratofortresses dropped hun· dreds of tons of bombs on the: supply bast Monday and a communique reported "very big secondary explosions," an ln- dicaUon that ammunition and fuel were destroyed. It wu disclosed at the same time that U.S. C130 Hercules transport planes operaUng over Laos were using 15,000. pound bombs as a tactical weapon for the first time there. The bombs previous- ly were used to carve out "instant'' landing zones for U.S. helicopten. Military sourtU said a 15,000 poundtr was parachuted last week and detonated between two bills overlooking a stratealc pass to the north of Route 9. The sources said the two bills were blown off the map and a landslide blocked the arta to Communist truck ltaffl~. OU.N•I COAST DAILY PILOT Otl.ANOI C'OAfT PU•LtlHINO COM,AN't' ReMrt H. W9.4 Pr.1lillllt •1'111 ....... J•ck .... c.,f..,. Viet Ptltlf.nt n ~I Mlflltll" Til•111•• IC•••lf Edllr. l1te••' A. 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MMll\lrr willtllt'Y ... lilll!llfla, iUI .,.....,, • restricUons on developments and a por• lion of Slater Avenue. The control zone covers what city officials consider the "city center" of Fountain Valley. Planners also want a 2&-foof...wtde scenic corridor along the north side of Warner Avenue from Mile Square Park to the Santa Ana River. 'Mle scenic corridor would be heavily landscaped and all buildings would be set back another 35 feet from iL The change in industrial regulations covers minor activities and deHnes the types of industries allowed in the city's industrial zone. GLA Development Company ls ap- pealing the planning cornmi!slon'1 denial for R-4 (high demlty) apartments and commercial zoning at the aouthwett cor- ner of La Alameda and Brookhurst streets. The three reports councilmen will hear cover a <progress report on the Orange County Water District's operations, a recommendation from a county-wide committee that special districts be con· solidated, and .. a memo from the city clerk that anti-fluoride petitions were 113 names short of forcing an election on water fluoridation. Suspect Admits Fountain Valley Armed Robbery One of three men 1ccuted of the $200 armed robbery of a Fountain Valley market bu pleaded guilty to the charges in Orange County Superior Court and wa1 ordered to return April 1 for what could be a five years to life term in state prllon. Judge Byron K. McMillan accepted the guilty plea of JesUJ Miguel Casanova, 19, Santa Ana, and called for a probation department report on the member of an armed trio who held up 1 market at 10$45 Slater Ave. Jut Dec. t. Casanova's companions, Ronald Lee Sanders, 19, and Rudy Perez, 11, both of Santa Ana, were sentenced earlier by Judge McMillan alier IUJng gullty pleas. Sanders is aerving a state pr1Jon term of five years to life with periodic reviews under youthful offender codes and Peret is serving an Indefinite term in a California Youth Authorlty facility. The trio was arrested by police after the store clerk fired four ahots at the getaway vehicle. Offlcer1 found three bullet holes in the halted vehicle. Hunt Under Way For Capsized Coast Vessel Air and surface craft today searehed the Catalina Channel for a 43-fool ca_tamaran which capsli:ed Saturday a mile and a half oU the west end of Catalina Island. ,The 43-foot Iml Loa, owned by A. Victor Stern of Seal Beach, flipped in strong winds and heavy seas while racing with seven other multihull yachts ln the annual Santa Barbara Island race out of Los Angeles. (Race details Page 26) ' Skipper Stern and seven members ot his crew were rescued by a Coast Gu11rd helicopter. The crew clung to the overturned craft while monohull yachts, also in the Santa Barbara Island race stood by. The Coast Guird aald this momlng that the overturned catamaran had not been spotted since the crew was rescued. The ownu wu reported searcltlnJ for the craft with commercial venels. The Im.I Loa capsized ln winds esllmaled at 3>40 knots Jn lull v~w of observm M the Island. Besides Stem, the crew of Im.I Loa consiated of CUrt Huddleson, Seal Beach; Dick Knof, Hunim,ton Beach; Ken Wise and Jerry Mull•nho!I, both or Costa Mesa: Alan Bure, Laguna NlgutJ, and Jerry Winier, S111 Diego. All were erperl~ c1tamaran nllora who had aailed on lml Loa 1n at leaat one Trans·PacUlc multlhulJ race. 'Mte Coast Guard qutoted Stun as aay• Ing that the wet ahttll jammed. prt· \tenlinll' quick release alter a llllt ol wtnd llfltd one bull from the water. • ,. 'Calm' to detlroy ~ and be f1lrtber alleps that Bltvlnl WOI llrilled by llal1eliUI to leave tbt atate. ~ Vaughn a~lted under tong grilling by defense attorney Matthew Kurllich that his e1·wife had been known to Jle fairly frequently during his assocla· lion with her. And tie rejected an apparent move by Kurillch to cast doubt on the legitimacy of his youngest IOll Jerry, 4, by stating that the child was his. ''I hope so ... I believe so," commented the obviously moved wiln6!. Novick confirmed in cross examination that Mrs. Vaughn became pregnant with the youngest of their three children before her bu.sband left her. From Pagel FLUORIDE • • • Beach and Fountain Valley are scheduled to go b,'!ore a board of the state Public Health Service at 10 a.m. Tuesday in the Disneyland Hotel requesting permits to add fluorides to the local supplies. Both Bogart and George Llndegren, leader of the anti-nuoride group in Foun· lain Valley, plan to attend Tuesday's hearing. State officials have indicated, however, that the bearing wlll not be on fluoridation but simply on the equip- ment to be used. ..., Lindegren's group reportedJy fell 113 &ignatures short in its drive to force a public vote in Fountain Valley but he has said that volunteers would con· Unue to seek the additional nazr.es. The wbole issue revolves around the present content ol fluorides and the recommended level. Dr. McKee, who has studied water pollution for more than 20 years, said that the U.S. Public Health ·Service has recommended the desired level be from 0.7 part per million to 1.1 Dr. McKee said that the variance is ac- cordina to the climate of the area. "Obviously in a hot climate the smaller amount is preferred because people drink more water," tie said. Dr. McKee said he believed the 0.7 figure would be the optimum amount in Southern California. "There is a great reduction in decay and cavities up to say 0.5 parts per million but beyond that level it's almost impossible to chart an improvement." Dr. McKee said that cities in the ea st and San Francisco were wise to add chemical fluorides because they bad no natural fluorides. "But people think San Francisco ls progressive and therefore it must be done here," he said. "But ii the city hu 0.5 parta per million already there 's not much sense Jn going to 0.7." Huntington Beach Water Superin- tendent Edward Stang ei:plalned that one part per million was recommended for HunUngton Beach because it rece.Jves cool ocean breezes. He estimated that the cost of fluorida- tion would be $18,000 the fir11t year and $14,000 after that wnb the amount averaging 12 cents per person. A move to put the issue to a vote fn Huntington Beach was defeated by the council 4·2 several months ago with George McCracken and Ted Bartlett in the minority. A1ayor Donald Shipley was absent, but he has since signed the peUtion requesting the matter go to a public vote. Ruling Def erred On Sunset Bay An Orange County Superior Court judge's rullng on the hassle sparked by plans for a multi·milllon dollar development al Sunset Bay has been deferred for at least ~wo week! by Judge Claude M. Owens. Judge Owens declined to issue the writ of mandate which would compel the City of Huntington Beach to withdraw the use variance granted by the city council to Real Property Management or Beverly Hills, builders of the Sunset Bay complex. Oppo.sing the venture Is Arthur Knox, 3322 Easter Circle, Huntlngton Besch. He contends the council's granUng of the variance was illegal The developers plan to construct a complex on the 35.6 acres which would include mulU-story apartment buildings, an 11-story hotel, an office building, several acru of single family homes and 300 boal slips. Beach Man Held On Narcotics Rap A HunUngton Beach man assertedly started a scurne Saturday night when he was arrested by Laguna Beacl, police on suspicion of drug charges and h' is now also being held fer ml!Ung arrest. Police claim two Pounds of marijuana wtre conflscated when the man was taken into custody in the Woodland Drive area. He was Identified u George Franklin Nixon, 2!, of 331 Seventh Street, Huntington Beech . AuthcrJUes allege the man had come lo Laguna Beach to make a "delivery " of the drug wbtn narcotics officers ap- proached him on Woodland Drive. Of. fl«:rs claim Nixon started fightlllg and kicking In an effort to eicape but was finally aubdued. · In addltlon &o rC!sU:Ung, a r re s t , authorities sald, Nl.J:on Js to be arraigned Tuesday on clllr1es of possession of marijuana with intent to aeU. • • _.,. ...... ' ...... DAILY .. ILOT 11111 ,119111 IMAGINATIONS SOAR AS CHILDREN LAUNCH BALLOONS IN HUNTINGTON BEACH Up, Up and Away to Far Away Lands; Who Will Find tht Tag and Win •.Prize? Harassing of Pensioners By Census Men Revealed WASHINGTON (AP) -Social Securily peruloners are being harassed by re- quests for information about their teeth, telephone calls and happiness, senators ware told today. Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr. (0.N.C.), said that the Census Bureau is asking new retirees such questions as : "Have you any teeth missing? Do you have any artificial dentures? Do you or your spouse see or telephone your parents as often as once a week? Taking things all together, would you say you're very happy, pretty happy or not too happy these days?" Ervin said at a hearing before his Senate Constitutional R i g h t s sub- committee that these any other personal questloru: are sent out through computer systems. The perisioners are not told that the quesUonnaira are voluntary "and they rtcelve harassing follow·up inquiries by certHled mall and telephone to obtain their re.sponses," Ervin said. Ervin 1ald the !Ubcommittee has also rtceived many protests about the use of social aeturity numbers for general identification purposes. He cited these complaints: An Indiana man said a veterinarian demanded his Social Security number on a credit report before he would clip his dog's toe nails for $3. Another man said that before the grave could be opened to bury his mother he was required to provide her Social Security number. Rabies Clinic Offered Tonight Dog owners 0 living In Huntington Beach will be able to gel their pooches im· munized against rabies tonight at a clinic in the main city fir e station. Chief Raymond Picard said the Rotary Club-sponsored clinic will be held from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Cost for each sbot is $2. Dog licenses will also be available at the clinic. The fire station ls located at Lake Street and Indianapolis Avenue in downton Huntington Beach. Secretary of Health. Education and Welfare Elliot L. Richardson testifi ed that "nothing justifies unwananted prying into or Sllr'Yeillance of the private lives of our citizens merely because we have acquired the technological ca· pacity to do so. "This subcommittee deserves great credit for bringing forcefully to the na· lion's attention the risks of loss of privacy and possible intrusion on con- stitutional rights which may be threaten· ed by potential misuse -both intentional and careless -of the advances in com· puters and communications." School to Start Cutting at Top. BERKELEY (UPI) -The las! shall be first iI the Berkeley School Dis- trict has to cut wages of teachers and administrators in order to meet an eJ· pected $2.5 million deficit next year. The board of edu cation unanimously agreed Sunday night that "the most highly paid will be redu ced in salary more than the lowest paid," Chairn1an A. L. Grosberg said. The boa rd generally agreed thal an earlier proposal lo eliminate administra- tors of innovative programs such as black studies and humsn relations wou ld not be feasible. And cutli111il: the teaching staff by state law seniority procedures would hit both minorities and lower the quality of ed· ucation, Grosberg :said. Liquor Clerk Held In Store Shooting LOS ANGELES (UPJ) -Ulysses Wright , 27, a liquor .!tore clerk, was arrested on suspic ion of murder Sunday in the death of a man who allegedly tried to steal about $3 worth of groceries. Police said Lloyd P. Landry Jr., 23. tried to shoplift a bottle of w J n e , a package of hotdogs, some cheese and a box of crackers. Police said an argu· ment ensued and Wright fatally shot Landry with a gun he kept in the store. Don't Pay $110 ......... ;. "'It. tlllllk'I ...,.,_ rr~, .. 1• I whll• ..... -WM! l'I ,,. I ..... , .............. ,...,..,..,,,. Balloon Barrage Now Under Way In Huntington During the month of March more than 2,700 children will launch post-card car- rying balloons in Huntington Beach. The children are taking part ln a balloon contest sponsored by the recrea- tion department's Alta's Cool program for youngsters. Each child who sends a balloon up ties a card to it with his nai;ne and the address of the recreation department on it. Whoever finds the balloon is asked to return the card to Huntington Beach. The post card sent back from the longest distance will earn the sende r and the balloon launcher $5 each. Children began filling the sky with helium balloons last \Vedne!il'.iay and will keep up the barrage until March 23 at 27 playgrounds. The last date: (or receiving post cards is April S. Recreation officials said they have already received 25 cards, with the farthest sent from Escondido, near San Diego. Thal balloon was launched from Smith Elementary School. From Page 1 SUIT • • • never gave us, such as education benefits and uniform allowance adjustments," LeMarsh added. Brander Caslle, assistant city ad- ministrator, said th ere is no intention on the city 's part to deny firemen what \vas agreed to on education benefit. and uniform allowance. "lf it wasn't~iven it was a mislake. They will get ·those things," he said today. The city's 144 policemen have Issued no statement, but they al~ are e1pected to file suit today in Superior Court against the city. The Policemen's Association Is also seeking a clarification of the negotiations and the 11 percent salary increase it didn't get. City officials said H police salaries \\'ere increased the ex:tra amounts would be about $43,812 a year more. Policemen have already presented 1 claim for punitive damages to the city amountin g to $650,000 in v.·hich they claim the city has damage d their reputa· lion. . ..... , S89DD Don't Pay $475 OUR UNUSUAL MONEY BACK DIAMOND GUARANTEE ~ T11il 1 (, • ...,, fiMlm ..-. ..,.,. 10( ... ltt ......... "' a.... -...,........ ......_..._..,..fWWS.,_~ ... ···"''"""' S2J600 WMn you buy • diamond from us we wlll gwraftfw that di•mond to appralM at 40'/. MORE th•n you paid for It or . yeur money bitek. C~n you do •• well •IMwhere? COMPARE. .1002 mMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND rr HERE RRST ' COSTA MESA JEWELRY-and LOAN LOAN, IUT, SIU, TIADI . 1838 NEWPORT ILYD· f'HONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA-lo-Har ... r & Broadway I • . . I I ~ .... - 4>2 V.S. DefltllS · . oss 9f -Copters Belo.w Estimates· . SAIGON UPI) -U.S. military "°"""'' said todl,y 85 American hellcopten hlYe been downed In Laos and In •'f'POl't -atlom In Sciuth Vietnam but that "helicopter Jooae1 In the Laos dptratlon have actually been below our advance • alinlatei:" Alien's Death On Freeway Investigated OCEANSIDE -The identity of a Mex- ican alien who ren or was pushed off a truck early today and run over by cars on Interstate 5, remains a mystery. California Highway patrolman Dennis Porter, 36, of Vista and his partner were about to tur n off the freeway when they heard the thump of a nearby car striking something about 1:20 a.m. today. Porter jumped out and pulled the body of the unidentified man out of the way of oncomlng: cars. Oceanside police chas· · td the canvaHOvered truck along State Route 78, finding a group of aliens in the back. "No one Is talking about the incident," a Highway Pa t r o I spokesman said today, noting im· migration authorities •ere investigating the incident. The victim was about 40 years old, 5 foot 6 inches tall and weighed 148 pounds. He was dressed in gray troosers, a ))Jue shirt and a tan jacket. San Diego County Coroner'• office is see king information to identify the man. Boat Abandoned l1i Heavy Seas Off Laguna A 22-foot sailboat. demasted by the \\'ind and swamped in heavy seas, was .abandoned Saturday by Its owner off Laguna Beach after efforts to save the $4,000 craft failed. The owner, Stewart Welner, of Los Alamitos, and an unidentified companion were rescued uninjured from the craft by tbe Coast Guard at about & p.m. Saturday. The stricken veeel was first spotted by Laguna Beach lifeguards at 5 p.m. \\-·hen it was about two miles off Main Beach proceeding north under only its jib. The mainsail of the craft had been torn by the strong wind and lifeguards informed the Coast Guard of the boat'• peril. A cutter \\'as sent to aid the vessel and the small craft was taken into tow ht an effort to bring it safely to Ne\\'port Beach. However, a Coast G"4rd spokesma n said the craft waa aboott compl:?trly swamped and itt ma!., m•~ had broken, so the owner m1d1f the decision to abandol1 it. The IOW'Ctl Mid· mora lhan 30 helicopters allot down in Llot have been recovered and brought hack to SciuUI Vietnam and 'that 20 ol lhe dloppors downed since the operation ln Laos besan Fe~. I hive been repaired and put back into service. Another alx Wert said to be under rtp1lr. ' Tbe sources l&ld same of tbe 20 back in service had been reported urUer J.S "destroyed." 1'le sour~s said 50 helicopters were shot down over Laos and t'4'0 others coltlded in fll&ht and crashed. Twtlve other helicopters were shot down in Vlet.. nam while supporting the Laos operation and three others crashed because of meatal!lcll !illiih. The crashes have cost SZ Ame ricans killed, 53 wounded and 14 missing, lhe U.S. Command said. ·Helic:opter pilots and mechanics in U.S. Army units involved in the Laos opera· tlon say they have no trouble getllng replacements for UHl Huey helicopters Jost or severely dama1ed -if a damaged helicopter cannot be repaired wllhin 10 days, the unit to which it Is assigned is issued another chopper. Pilots say they have been having some trouble getting deliveries of replacement AHl Cobra gunships. The u!s. Command reports that 29 of the helicopters shot down in Laos were UH1 Hueys, as were the two which collided in the air over Lao!. Ten of those shot down over Laos were AHl Cobras. Others shot down in Laos in· eluded two CH47 Chinooks, seven OH6 Cayuse and two OH58 Kiowa I i g h t observaliOn helicopters. Use of the OH6 and OH58 scout helicopters has been restricted over Laos for the past lhree weeks and a slowdown in replacement of them has not curtailed combat opera· tions, pilots say. Staff oftlcers deny any delay in replacement of AH1 Cobras. although they admit deliveries may be slightly slower than UHi Hueys , "simply because there are so many more Hueys in the country, and thus in the pipeline from the maintenance shops. Further, Cobras are more complex and may require more time for repair," the sources said. 400 in Protest Over Abortion More than 400 demonstrators marched in front of the Anaheim Convention 1Center Sunday in protest of the California Medical Association's endorsement of 1 liberalized stand on abortion . The march was led by Dr. Dean Pritchett and Dr. Mary Ann K11ight, two Orange County physicians. Pritchett was formerly a CMA member, but quit over the abortion issue. .,._As the march began, Dr. Malcolm Wa\ls, editor of the CMA .}Ournal -California Medicine had just finished recommending to a CMA committee a long-range study inta the moral and ethical aspects of abortion facing medicine and society. He said there are an Increasing number of conflicta: between reverence for in· dlvtdual life and reverence !or humanity as a whole. .. . u,,,~,._,.ac PRESIDENT NIXON TALKS TO NIC'S IARIARA WAL Tl RS IN IXCLUSIVI INTlllVllW In the White Hou se, a Chat About Drugs, Women's lib and the American Famlly Joan Baez' Mate Released From Jail in Texa s EL PASO, Tex. !AP) -Draft re.!llsler David Harris. husband of folk .=,Inger Joan Baez, was released today from La Tuna Federal Correctional Institution near here after he served 20 months for refusing induction into the armed services. Miss Baez was at lhe prison to greet him when he was released at 7:30 a.m. They immediately took a flight out of El Paso. Harris indicated they "''ere en route to San Francisco by way of Los Angeles. Newsmen who we~ at the airport when Han-is, his wife and their l&-month- old son Gabriel caught the plane asked Harris whether be felt he had proved his point. Harri5, 1 symbol of resistance to the Vietnam War. said, "I think I did. I've got some pearla saved up for 20 months. They can't tape my mouth shut." But he added, "Wait till I get to San Francisco so l can talk." He commented, "If it was a free country, I wouldn 't have been here.'' But as he prepared to board his plane and was asked how it felt to be reunited with his family, he said, "It sure beats being in prison." Harris refused to accept military In- duction and was imprisoned in August of 1969. He served the first part 0£ his sentence at the Safford, Ariz., federal prison camp, but was transferred to La Tuna in March of 1970. He was scheduled for release In July of im. La Tuna Warden W. E. Zachem said Harris was released on orders of the Board of P.arole. Nixon~s Story Personal. Life Disc ussed on TV \VASlllNGTON (UPI) -President Nixon said today lhe political "moment of truth" that led him to run for presi· dent In 1968 came during a Florida Christmas vacation with his family. The decision was 1 marked change from 1962 when "I had no thoughts or prospects that I had any political future" following hts loss of the race for governor of Cllifomia, Nixon said. Nixon was itltervlewed by Barbara \\'al lers on the Today show on NBC-TV. The interview was fllmed In the White House Thursday. The interview \\'as one o( two Nixon has given in recent days to dlscu.!ls family and personal matters, and specifically first lady Pat Nixon, who will be 59 this week. The President coqlirmed what hu long been ~ a rwnor in "W ashi.ngton AOllJ.ieaJ clrcles -.... that Mn. Nixon had tried on preVlOUI OCCUiarl3 to talk him inio leaving politics. , \ · • He said Mrs. Nixon ''felt at times it would be best If we left public life" and cited lhree aeparate occasions - once in 1962 following the ''fund" con- troveray whea he was almost dropped from the ticket aa vice president, when he lost the race for president In 1960, and was unsuceesaful for the CAlllornla governor!hlp In 1962. But he said Mrs. Nlloa, o n c e lhe decision to run had been made, was his best campaigner. Following the political defeats in the early eos, Nixon said he felt he would never hold elective office again, but !bat changed In 1917. He recalled: "The final decision with regard to ruMing ror the presidency again. I made dur~g Christmas vacation of 1967 ••• "I remember we were in Florida at the time and we had quite a family . discussion about Jt with Mrs. NIIon and our two daughters, Tricia and J u I i e , and by that lime tOo, David Eisenhower was one who gave ua some advlce. And after we diSCW1sed it I made the decision and the whole family really campaigned with very great effective- ness in my opinion." Turning to domestic Issues, Nllon said he could unde rstand the concern of young people about the war In Vietnam. But he said unrest In the country tame not Crom the war or other domestic problems, but from the "lnsecurlty that comes from lhe old values beln1 tom away." . ~ NiXon 1a1d although he had not ap. pointed a woman cablnet member, hia adm\llillrl\llOD had' a~ •'mo" women lo responsible positions and given them more breakthroughs than any previous administrations. "And we have some other appointments In mind, too, so don 't judge us until we finish our term of office." The President sidestepped quesUons on outspoken wives of cabinet members and on the expected Tuesday an- nouncement of the engagement of hla daughter Tricia. Although she was not mentioned by name, Martha Mitchell, the outspokea wife of Attorney General John N. Mlt.. cbell, was the apparent object of a ques-- tion concerning whether wlveJ of cabinet memben lhou.ld speak out on poUUcal issues. H DAIL~ PILO\I f Nixon Takes -A Holiday In Florida OllAND CAY, Bahamas (UPI), - l'rtlident NU.., dining "!' f,..11> !WI ,,...,i.t• bf 1111 alllldNa, retued todlJ ~~·==· .-. ..,-., 1111 '1•iooilailo>11 ... pooied bJ hla -b>la• ... .....,, Divld ind l a!ie JllMnhowc', arrlftd bn 1i1111t11J al· -for an ....mp! Ytall to the 'fllla ol New York iJ!dullrlalfll -..i H. Abi>lana1P, I dooo penonal frteDd. While ~ u t In tbt IUD ancl twam In I privllo polm-lrlnpd lqooft, David and JUlle ... -tho /loo Lion n, an io-root !1ahlnf bolt OWllOll by AbpW!llp. '1l>tJr caleh tndll'· d 1111!' berjack, roJlowlall ... _ ... ~ -pr.,.... lw-lbo Pr....,, -· David and • Jtalte ola1"'I .. I ..0 beach house 1lbllo Iba Prloldln~ Abplanalp and C. 8, •011b1" .._, another d oae · Nboo !rtaad, dlaod al the main vma. The Pretldenl ,,.. ·apee1ec1 to _,. to the J'1orlita Wblie llouoe 1111 loda)' Ind fir hack to WI lhlQCIOJ 11111 ....... Mra. -.......... 111i .wt bent and Nlllllnld al --., Key~. Tricia, the Pr<sidanl'• lldtt clavcJillr. WU the only family mtmbe!' mllltng from the vacaUon -'ekend "ftlcb celebrated David'• &ndalllon -a Navy officer tralninC coune, Now an eN/gn, David will <-' l&llr this month to the Navy bue at V1l'&1JP Beach, Va., for traioblg u •navigator, Tricia was visiting in New Yort It the home of Edward Flncb Cos, 1111 Harvard law studenl lbt pl1111 to tlllrTl in June. President and Mn. Nbcon· are UJIOClod to announce Tricia'• enpaement at a White HOU!e rectpllon Tueada,y mnilll· The President will travel w~ to wington, Ky., to dellvor I eulogy. al the funeral or Whitney y..... Jr., Ille eivll righb leader who died Tlmnday In Lagos, Nltleria. Two Teeri Girls Killed in Crash Two Anaheim girh Were killed Sunday night In a fiillertoo aceiAlenl ID..i.toi/ three cars, police reported. Lynn tlleryl Adams, 11, driftr ol -car waa dear on arrival al IL ~ u .. ptlal an4 Janot Wallice, 11, bor. ~er, died about I p.m. at the holpllal. ' ' • Officers said MW Adama wu eat. bound on Chapman Avenue and cnWded headon w1lh the car driv• t.y James Faris, 54, Pacolma. PoUca Aid I.bet believe Miss Adams' car 1wuved over the double yellow llne when crowded by another car. The accident 11 under investigation . use Pact Signed LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Tho Unlmal. ty of Southern California bu alped. a contract which includes a ckleed lbop, clause and a no-strike pledge with a union local repmenting ~ c1orm11or7 and cafeteria workers. El Rancho has the hottest price in town! Corned Beef.~~~.79~ \;el•brate SL Pat's day tho traditional way! Whole or point half, Por k Chops .. ~~ .. -89~ Lean and tender ..• from grain. fed midwestern pork! Compare! Stuffed Poril Chops "'""""~"~,'~""·""" 99~ Ready for you to cook, serve and enjoy! JUJt 1euon and balcel Poril Loin Roast ....... """'~'~" .. " .. ".""89~ Flavo r you're 1ure to uvorl lAan, tender, and more good eatinrl '!'he "anytime" treat from Dol fy Madison ••• lovely fi lled cakes that the kids Jove .,. f or lunch, &fter 1chooJ, for dessert! Pay no attention to the price on the package ••• our price is lOc ••• 110 get enough to give them the fun ot good eatinrl Cabbage .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 fb 8olid .. , fresh! Plan on co med b<cl and cabbage this week! Prices in effect ~Ion., Tnes., lVed., Mar. 15, 16, 11. No 1ales to dealera, Danish Ham ... o.A~~ •• St Imported ,., lean , , , with th at diatinctive Danish Flavor I Mr. ~Fruit Drinks ... 3 i 7t Cal Fame ••• 46 oz. cana .•• in a choice of flavor favorite.I Dow's Handi-Wrap "'""" ... """"··"""":"""" 4r Bltr 200 fL roll al lhi4 price! You11 find 10 m•ny us., tor Ill Calo Cat Food .. ,, ...... "." .............. " ... """ 6 ,. '1 Each 8~ oz. can is a just ritrhl meal." flavor •ariet¥, too. ARCADIA: PASADENA . SOUTH PASADENA: HUNTINGTON BEACH: NEWPORT BEACll: ~111 ~., • 111.: ·· : Sunset and Hu n1 1r11:ton 01 1 I j) 'h' ( ' •• • (1,'111 J' f", I r re1i1nnt and Uunl1nr,ton Or ~·Jarnrr ~nd r.11'!HH]\llil (f)ri,>•(t ~.d~ c~11l··r l /J1J1, r 1 \hl1dl lli (! ,j t'1l,,/t 11:'1 I 'J I I: I I ) ~ ' .• ~ " ,. " " !t " " •• • -·----·--~ MO!Mfly, Marth 15, lm Nearin~ Civil War AFGHANIS"rAN NE\lf 0 DELHI IN DI A 0 CHI NA WIST IAIT AREA: 310,403t~.1l. 55,121' POPULATION: 511111111 721 400 Ml. !\1ohammed Yabya Kahn can effect a compromise, the only solution may be t wo separate countries, neither of which may be able to survive indepen· dently. ' DIVIDED NATION -Pakistan, world's filth most popu1aus nation, divided by a hostile India. and split ··between an over-populated, poverty stricken eastern section and a busUing western section, is moving close to civil war. Unless President Agha ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Wa~ Not Out of Questio1a ~gypt Declares Readiness BJ United Press lnkrn1tioaal Cairo newspapers sakl today Egypt b prepared for all possibilities, including war, in view of Israel's refusal to pledge wi.thdraw'I from all Arab territory ca~ 1 lured in tJie 1967 war. The warning came as Israeli foreign ininister Abba Eban propoaed that Israeli and Egyptian reprtsentatlves hold face· lo-face negotiatons in an effort to resolve !he Middle East crisis. 'Ille mnlofficial Al Ahram of Cairo iaid that "the possibility of an outbrekk lf fightinc leads to all possibilities and ~ Egyptian army ls aware of this." 'l1ie nt!Wspaper added that Egyptian 1rmed forces are now capable of facing ~any laraeU surprise attack and the requir!menta of modem warfare." The newspaper Al Akhbar, commenting •n the de facto 'cease-fire along the iuez Canal front, said "If the Egyptian !orcet have not fired yet, it does not rnean they are not prepared -the 1rmy ts prepared to resume firing at my llme." Egypt refused a formal extension of ihe cealle-fire, which elpired on Pi1arch r. because of Israel's refusal to commit Uelf to withdraw from all occupied 111,a. •, .. and thia one I got from a aiot machin11 in th11 P.X.' Arab territory before a peace settlement. Eban left Jerusalem even as a political storm blew up over a recent interview by prime mlnlster Golda Meir in which she outlined possible Middle East borders. 1'-1rs. Meir, in the interview' with the Times of London published Saturday, said Israel would not surrender Egypt's Sharm el-Sheikh, Syria's Golan Heights, Jordan's East Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip. She also said t he r e v.wld have to be adjustments in the Israeli.Jordanian borders. Two right-wing parties submitted mo- Uons or nonoonfidence in the f\.feir govenµnent v.·hicb will be voted on by the Knesset (parliament) on Tuesday. Neither ·is expe<:ted to win. Eban said "Mrs. Meir did not dnw Explosio1i Rips P odiuni Vacated By Cliil e Cliief • SAI\'TIAGO, Chile (UP I) -An ex· plosion tore a hole in the ceiling above a speakers platfonn Sunday minutes ar~ ter President Salvadore Allende spoke. Firemen blamed an · electrical short circuit but a Socialist Party official charged il \\as caused by a Molotov Cocktail. Allende had leU the platform after an address to 15.000 persons at a Socialist Party rally in the indoor 11porl! stadium ~·hen the blast occurred. He returned to help rel sore order. A hole six-feet loni; and three-feet ~·ide v;as ripped in the ceiling and debr is poured down on the platform where Allende had been speaking. Firemen quickly brought the blaze under control. Sen. Carlos Altamirano, secretary general of the Soclalrst Party, charged that a r-.1olotov Cocktail had been hidden in the ceiling "with criminal intentions." a map." He said she "rather Illustrated a way of bow the boundaries could change." Eban also said Israel is inclined to go ahead with an interim deal v•ltlt Egypt on reopening the Suez Canal for all international shipping. But he said there has been no favorable response from Egypt thus far. The lsraeli foreign minis ter flew to London on the first leg or his diplomatic campaign aimed at getting the Middle East peace negotiation.s under \fay at a neutral spot outside the United Nations. During his trip be also will meet wilh U.N. oUiciala Jn New York and witll U.S. Secretary of State 'WlD.tam P. Rogers !n Washington. -ESCAPES BOMB BLAST Chile's Salvador Allende Tornadoes Sweep Midwest Texas To ,wn Bakes at 101; Mucli of Nation Fair, Dry California $k1H ""''' IUnnY ..... (I,•< OYf' lnMI Cl! 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Dis Motn11 °""°'' Ht lent .._!<11<1 llld11111P01l, 11;,,. .. , cur l11 V1911 l oul1JWlll1 Mtll'11•llll M ltml M lt.1111t .. Mill""PO!ll N"10rlH~ M .. VOO'll oi..1111om1 Clf'I' """"' f'11 ... S~lltl. P/lhl<!tlPlli. p~-!• f'lttlbo.trtll Pll'tltl!d.Ort, lllttld Cif'I' ·-S1u 1m1ri10 St, Loul1 Stll Ltlct C11V St ri D!tee 5111 l"rlMllQI Sttf'tlt SM1111111 tfl•h l .. !"rte. ,5 31 " " .. '' .GI n •• .. " ~ ,. .. "° 1.e1 " .. " •• " " ~ " " " ~ " " " " " " " " " " ~ ~ " II •I " ~ H •I .. " .. " " K " " " u " ~ • " " ~ " n .. ~ ~ " " u " * • l! " " " ,, •I u " ~ " " .N "' "' ·" .u ... T .N .ff T -~ "' ., -• • • Sece••ion' Threat ' Tensions Flare In E. Pakistan ... DACCA (UPI) -President Agha Mohammad Yahya Khan arrived here today, presumably for c;risis talks with Sheikh Mujibur Rahman in a Jasl·d itclt effort ta stave off the secession of Eas~ Pakistan. Yahya Khan drove from tile airport with hls East Pakistan martial law ad· mlnlstrator, LI. Gen. Tikka Khan. in a convoy of nine trucks filled with lroops holding automatic v;eapons at the alert. There was scattered applause from a crov•d of several hundred gathered at the airport gales, but the spectators mostly were silent. There was no immediate direction when or ~·here Yahya Khan would see Rahman, the leader of East Pakistan's 75 million population who early today announced he was taking over the ad· ministration of the province from Yahya Khan 's military government. Superpowers Begin New. Arms Talks VJENNA (UPI) -The Soviet Union and the United States entered the fourth round of their Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) today ~·ith mutual pledges lo "bend every effort'' toward .. positive results." SALT was opening at a formal greeting ceremony v.·ith Austrian President Franz Jonas. The first substantive meeting will be Tuesday at the Soviet Embassy. The American delegation arrived Fri· day and its leader. Gerard C. Sn1ith, said he had come with President Nixon's instructions lo "bend every effort" toward agreement. "While significant differences between the United States and the Soviet Union still remain to be overcome,·• Smith said, '"the basis of an agreement may be emerging. Thus the fourth phase of our talks may reach a signiOcant s!age." The Soviet delegation. led by Vladimir S. Semenov, arrived by train Sunday morning and said it had orders from Kremlin leaders to negotiate "in a businesslike and constructive spirit, seek- ing to achieve positive results." Despite tllese conciliatory statements, diplomatic sources reported a deep gap between the two superpowers. Prtsident Nixon has called for a "mix· td" agreement that is, o n e establishing limitations of some sort on both ofrensive and defensive missiles. Rahman's action apparently put East Pakistan on the verge of Independence from go.,,ernmenl in West Pakistan - two areas separated by 1,000 miles of 1ndian territory. Rahman called on the 7S million people of East Pakistan to resist "by all means possible" any forct used against them. There are 55 million people Jn West Pakistan. "We cannot be conquered because each or us is determined to die IC need be to ensure thst our future generations can live in rfeedom and with dignity as frfe cllizens of a free country," Rahman said. J.tore than 300 persons have been killed in riots and clashes with government troops in East Pakistan in recent weeks. Rahman said he was taking control on lhe basis or the Awami League's absolute majority in the provincia l assembly and its dominant p<15itlon in the national assembly. The Awami leader, known as ,;The 'Tiger of Bengal," issued 35 ad· ministrative directives. i n c I u di n g suspension of tax collection by the central government, closing of schools and con- tinuation of a st rike by east Pakistani employes o( the central government. Newspapers and radio and television stations v.·ere told "to give a complete version of all statements and news about the people's movement." Police were ordered lo maintain order. assisted if necessary by Awami League party workers. Dock workers v.·ere told to continue handling incoming and outgoing cargo except for "forces or materials v.·hich may be used for repression against the people." Ireland Factory Rocked by Bomb BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) - An explosion extensi\'ely damaged an English-01vned factory 30 miles from Belfast today, an Arn1y spokesman said. There "'ere no injuries. The spokesman said about 20 pounds of explosives were used in the blast at the plant. "'here 180 men "·ere laid orr last "'eek. Security forces also investigated a bombing near where three murdered British soldiers were round. Police said they believed a bomb con· taining about five pounds of explosives v.·as thrown from a car late Sunday night into the Squires Hill Tavern in the suburbaa Legoniel area. There were no injuries. Ul"I T.-Mt. MAKES VIRGINITY COMMENT Cardin1I John HHn•n Virgins' Virtue 'Of ten Depends' 011 the Virgin' LOl\'DON (UPI) -Cardinal John Carmel Heenan believes virginity in ii.self is not a virtue. Heenan, archbishop ot Westminster and Roman Catholic Primate of Britain, \\'as questioned by Britons on the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) "A Chance to Meet. .• " television program. ··The state or virginity as such i:os not in itseU \'irtuous. It is a physical thing .•. virtue is an attitude of the mind -the reason "·hy a person has chosen virginity," he said. "Some people are virgins, men or women. simply because no one will have them . They may have tried time and again to get married. "You cannot say because this person is a virgin, therefore he is a better man or more virtuous than a married man. And that goes for the clergy too. "Just because t am a celibate priest it does not mean I an more virtuous in the eyes of God and man than a per.c:on \\"ith a wife and family,"' he said. Police Shoot Nude Assailant to Death LOS ANGELES (AP) -T"·o policemen said they shot ~ nude man to death after he came at them swinging a ll~~lnch lead pipe and attempts lo disarm him failed. Four officers said Joseph T. Sandoval, 21 .. o( Los Angeles. jumped out of the truck and they exchanged aboul 10 blows with him before the shooting. of your best have a new address. • Glendale Federal Savings Save or great new low rates on has moved to Harbor Center. home loons, look no further. Lock, stock and safe. People too. Glendale Federal/Costa tvlesa We're now right on the is just as nice as it ever was. And corner of Harbor Bou leva rd and lots more convenient. tv\on.-Thur. 9-4; Wilson, so if you're looking for m Glendale's famous friendly serv-GFS ice, escrows, Umpleen Ways To Fri. 9-6. Glendlle Federal S&1•111·C.. Mesa c.om.otttnor ... swdlWl• (lli:t•Cftlr) I > . . l • . . . . ... ... . I ' o ' • • ' •' • • I ~men BEA ANDERSON. Editor Me1H11y, Mlrdl JI. 1'7' H ,_ lJ · Art Scholarships Benefit Association In Disguise Ornamental masks will, be donned \vhen members or the Foun· tain Valley Arts Association and their guests turn out for a Spring Thing. The masked ball will lake place at 8 p.m. Friday, March 26, in the community center. . Bright colors will bloom throughout \vhile merrymakers cele· brate the arrival of spring with entertainment provided by the Voices of Fountain Valley and dancing to the musiclof the association's own 17-piece band. Les Bro\vn's Sounds. Costumes are optional but prizes \viii be awarded for the most unusual mask. First. second and third place \Vinners of the association· sponsored juried art shov.• taking place bet\\'een 2 and 4 p.m. Sunday, Afarch 21 . also \Viii be recognized and presented with awards. Tickets for the ball ~·ill be $2.50 each or $5 per couple and may be obtained at area art stores or through association members. All proceeds \Viii be used to beneCit the association's art scholarship fund . . The juried show will take place in }.·tile Square Country Club and ts open to all association members in \Vestminster, Garden Grove, Hun- tington Beach, Costa l\1esa and Fountain Valley. Entrance fees \Vill be $2 for Fountain Valley members and $3 for all other participants. . . , " . . .. . ' , ....... _ .. ~- • ... • Information forms are available through all art associations and area art stores, and since there is a limited space available for hanging pain.tings, 1hose wishing to participate are advised to enter as soon as possible. Ribbons \\•ill be awarded to both adult and junior participants, with junior awards to be presented at the conclusion of the show. SPRING UNMASKED -Members of the Fountain Valley Arts Association will celebrate the arrival of spring during a masked (costumes optional) ball lak- ing place f'riday, tw1arch 26, in the community center. Planning to attend the colorful affair \vhich will hen· efit the art scholarship fund are Miss Barbara Gard- ner (left) and 1'1rs. Joseph Anderso n. I J .· I 1 j; , Sole Dressed Up for Scholarship Funds Bargains defying description \vi ii be offered and funds \Vil! help pay tuition for children from low-in- come areas when the board of Huntington Beach Community United ti:lethodist Nursery School spon - sors a rummage sale from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, March 20. in the Edison Company's parking lot. Happy \vith their selections are early shoppers (left to right) David Emde, Tommy Kirksey and \Vendy \Vallace. The scholarships provide preschool exper- ience for children who speak littie or no English. GOP Women 'Bringing Them In' for Teo Baiting their hook \\•ith •friendship are (left to right) l\frs. Lloyd Fuglie, l\frs. Stuart Babcock and Mrs. Charles Allen. member! o( ttie ·Huntington ~!arbour Republican \Vomen 's Club. They will be on hand to welcome prospective m~mbers during a_ cham- pagne tea bet\\•een 2 and 4 p.m. Tuesday, March 23, in the Babcock home . New residents and all inter- ested women are invited to attend and additional information may be obtained by calJlng Mrs. Fuglie. 846-1481, or Mrs. Allen, 592-2313. ,\ Phony Potions, Perker-uppers Pose . Perilous Problem DEAR ANN LANDERS : Sever a I months ago someooe wrote to ask where to get powdered reindl'er horns. The fellow had heard from boys who served in Vietnam that powdered reindeer horns ,.,,e re the greatest sex stimulus of all time and he warited to try some. You told him to forget it. Take my word for it, Ann , he \VON'T forget it. He'll go on trying all sorts of phony junk (some of it pretty ex- pensive, too ). He may even do himself aome damage. It Is an interesting fact that nearl;.o all the fake youth-rejuvenating potions and sex perker-uppers sold in this coun- try are advertised as "French" or "Ori· ental." The s11me garbage. when offered in France or the Orient, Is called ··American.·· ANN LANDERS Please tell your readers that all the aphrodisiacs they see advertised in those crummy magazines are w o rt h I e s s , fraudulent and sometimes dangerous. Also tell your readers that they should not monkey around with hormones unless they are under the supervision nf a doctor who kno~·s what he is doing. A woman I work with used to sing soprano in the church choir. She got an overdose. of hormones and now ~he has a beard and sings alto. -THE TOWN CRIER DEAR CRIER : Thank you for an In· formative leUt r. n at last line Is enough to make a pe:rson ml&hty careful. DEAR ANN LANDERS: We are a close f•rnily. My wife and I have three teenagers and two married children who have families of their own. Our Mme is crowded with just the regulars. Our oldest daughter haS rtve kids under 10 years of age. She Jives nearby. 011r son and his wife have two youngsters and a long-haired dog. Sonny has an excellent job, his salary Iii larger than mine and he has a beautiful home a few hundred miles away. · At every opportunity he piles In wilh his whole group. Neither Sonny nor his wife (both college graduates) seem 10 mind the confusion or turmoil . \Ve stumble over bed rolls, dogs and kids for the duration. Tl's a ball for them -camping out with a full refrigerator and built-in baby· llillen:. \\le Jove our kids but we are gelling happier to see them leave each time. To add insult to Injury Uieir childi-tn are allowed to sass both parents wnd grifndParents, stay up late and eat what they please. This happens for several days at a time about every six weeks, p!us holidays. I think we could take it if !hey would at Je11.o:t go to a motel In iileep. \Vhal ii the best way Lo Ceal with this problem? -J.K.D. DEAR J.K.D.: Sing oul :-loud and clear -or you'll be secin& them · more and enjoyin& them less. DEAR ANN LANDERS: It's funny how often parents say to their teena11;ers, "Llslen to Ann Landers .. ."' Well. l~ere are plenly of times when the parents ought to listen to you. For example, a few months ago you wrote, "If you don't approve of lhe boy your daughter is going with let ' her knOw It, but don't knock the guy too hard or she might hang on -jusl to pro\'e she has a mind of her own." I'm in just that spat -going wllh a guy I don't care for any111orc. lie hr~ ~hown me in lot~ or \'IBYl'I that he isn 't lhc perSon 1 thought he was. . . rd really like to scuttle him but I'm ashan1ed lo admit my foUfs were right. If they would just get off m);'. hack I'd dump him . Help mt, Ann. M:aybt they'll see this letter and wise up. - STUBBORN PRIDE DEAR S.P.: Here If Is a11d 1'11 bet al lea1t 10,000 partnts wilt think th is leUer is Intended Cor them. l bope yourt are amoa1 lbtm. G9od luck. lfow far should a teenage couple go?" Can netklng be sate? When doea I\ become too hot lo handle? Send for Ann Landt'rs' booklet. "Necking aod Pet .. ting -\Vhnt Are lhe Limits?" Mall your requ t'SI to Ann Lan<lers in care or the DAILY PILOT enclosing 50 cent• In coin And a long, stamped. self·~, dressed envelope. . . . ... ~-·-· . . -~ • • . ..... ~ ;... . .... .. . ... . ,. . .Horoscope: Gemin.i Locked In TUESDAY MARCH 16 By SYDNEY OMARR ODt of Jue Wltbert', Je1en· dary cltlld a tar, blgge11 lhrilla wa• a birthday gift from Pretlcle1t •"raoldin Roosevelt. It wu a horoscope for Aries- born Jue, which the Chief E1ecatlv1 commlsslo.ned. Ac- cerdlna lo Jane everytbln1 th1t '9'•• 1laled In t h e borolCOpe rnal)'1il came to pa11. ARIES (March 2l ·April llJ): Financial mailers command attentJon. Gain cooperation from Ca.acer . born individual . Spoill&ht o n investme.nl!I, ba!:iceecurity. Take nothing for granted . Check leasl!!s, fine print. TAURUS (April 2G-May 20 ): Go slow. Avoid any tendency to base actions on impulse. Key is to study various possibilities. Older individual may be lll·lnlonned. Do your own Investigating. Base con- clusions on facta. GEMINI <May 2l·June 20): A feellng of be ing "locked Jn" is evident. You want to break loose. Tendency is to lash out in many directions. Wise rourse would be lo lime your moves : measu re actions. CANCER (J une 21-July 22): Avoid extravd.1ance. lifuns don 't overspend money -or emolions. Hold aomethin,c in reserve. Special m e s s a g e could resolve dilemma. Be recepti ve. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Dispute among o Ider in- dividuals could involve you. Strive to be peacemakl!!r. Maintain nt:utral s t 1 n c e . Home altuation 11 spoU!ghted. Diplomatic approa ch g e t s &ood reauJUi. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22)' Hold off on short journeys. Steer clear of disputes with relatives. Check message. Be 11..re your meaning! are ror· rectly interpreted. Gossipy neighbor Is a menace . 1ynthesize I nform a I i o n . Complete assignment. Mate or partner now req uires special attention. Check leaal aspec:ta. SAGl'M'ARJUS <Nov. 22 • Dec. 21 ): Friends may try to involve you in dispute. Avoid being foo lish in this area. Be cooperative, not a&gressive. Share knowledge. Be wary of making promises which are difficult to fulfill. AQUARJUS (Jan. 2n.Feb. 18): Seek alt.ernalive method!. Highlight versatility. Don't feel you are confined to ona area. Those who oppos~ you can be won over "'~.h humor. Avoid trying to force any issue. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): ., Legislative Drama Staged at Meeting LlBRA (Sept. 2.'.J.()ct. 22): ~1ate. partner could apply financial pressure. You are abl~ to successfully utilize past experience. Allies come to your aid . Express con· fidence. You possess hidden assets. Act accordingly. You may find that com· munications are garb I e d . Check messages, directions, reservations. Nol wise to take persons. si tuat io ns for granted. App are "' t minor matter could be irritant. To !l~d ttY! wl!O'• h/C kY !<Ir Yllll ·~ mo"eY and love. orde• Sydn1y Om,•rr't t>ool<let, "Secret Hint\ tcr M•~ •rlf / Wornen " Send b!rtnd11t 1nd lO tin•~ to °"'''' AstrclO';IV S•~•tl'I. II\' DAILY ~ILOT, lloY 3'160. Gr•nd C,'f' lr1I 51•t;on, New Yorlr, N. Y. 10011/ (. Behlnd·lh e·scenes d r a m a that Is part of all legislative 1ctlon will be reenacted whtn 0. H. <GB) Gilbert discusses Sacramento Backstage during a meeting of the Huntington ' Beach Rep ublican Women·s Club. Letislatlve advocate for the Callfornla Ra ilroads, Gilbert will fly down from the Capitol for the meeting. Members and patron members are invited to bring husbands or guests interested in the politically revealing topic. The meeting will take place in the Recrea· lion Center. The apea ker will follow a 1alad buffet prepared by members at 11:30 a.m. Wednesday, f.1ar ch 17. Hostess chairman is Mrs. Richard Dittmar . The membersltlp contest between the Uptowne rs and Downtowners still is con- linuin1 and 40 new members have been added to the roster. To date the Uptowners l\f.i! winning, with the penalty for the losers to be treating the winners to lunch. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 211: Task you have neglected could haun t. Get fa cts together; Former Meson Wed The public is invited lo join club members for a tour of the enlarged and redecorated facilities o f, Westminster Memorial Park S u n d a y , March 21. The hour·loqg tour will depart from the chapel at 2:4S p.m. and will Include viewing of many recently ac· quired paintings and art ob- jects. In Catholic Rites St. John the Baptist Catholic Church, Costa Mesa was the setting for the afternoon nup. tial rites linking Cheryl Mary Bourget and Edward Loran Castillon . The double ring ceremony was performed by the Re v. S R h Anthony McGowan. tar 80C erS Pa<enls of the br;dal couple arl!! Mr. and Mrs. Henri J . Pion Meeting Bourget of Santa Ana, former Costa Mesa residents, and Mr. GIVING A LIFT -Testing out a wheelchair t hey ... hope to provide for a crippled child are Oeft to right) Mrs. Charles P. Foss , Mrs. Robert J, Brytan and Mrs. Margaret Seely of the Newport Harbor Lady Anglers. Benefit fashion show to raise needed funds will take place in the Alrporter lnn on March 17. Trojans Entertain All Interested parent!I are and Mrs. Augustine A. invited to attend the meeting Castillon or Garden Grove . on Wednesda y, March 17, of Miss Gail Bourget was her sister's maid of honor and the Irvin!! Star Reachers 4-P. bridesmaids were the Misses , Club. L" d h • _·orority -~·lanning Benefit Lures Charity Catch Song ond yeti leaders. star in a Bourget er cousin, The gathering is planned lo M · Wood G •.thletes and student body of. begin at 7 p.m. lPJ Culverdale arie . erry Keane, flcers will be joined by pr<r Clubhouse and to conclude at Dana Dahl' and Mrs. John ",:-. , minenl men and women from 8 30 WeltQb '" ·""""' the University of Southern : P!a~':"'will be made for a FloY:er girl was Patr\ria MRS . CASTILLON CaUfornla when the Trojan cake sale, and members will Bourget. cousin of the bride , Tustin Home League of Orange County hear of the Yorba Linda and ring bearer was John entertains area high school Cloverleaf 4·H Club's annual Crow. the br ideg ro om's students during a meeting at community fai r and horse cousin. \llilliam Dorlge. 7:30 p.m. Thursd1y, March show in which all Orange Richa rd Castillon. brot her of The newlyweds both Are bers and 1uesta of Jon Omicron Chapter 0( Siema Phi will hear a am entitled Action, Tools / . e Art of Life when they on Wednesday, March ' .. . Kt!n Cutright will e for th!! 8 p.m. meet ing . the Anaheim home of Mrs. wrence Oudeans. 'Mr1. Frank Stevenson and Mrs. Grant Olson will present : program, and the Girl.of. lhe-)lear will be voted for by iic:iet. ba llot. The winner is · ~be announced In Apri l. •"'nlere will be an election 'If officers for the comln1 ;fear. I Guest1 planning lo be eaent for the evening Include Ole M~s. Fred Roaers, ~r1e Griffin. Bruce Smith, f~IU~ Bertoni and Darrell f!"lllou1hby. • ' Valley TOPS ~-Lettuce·B·TOPS convt.ne at :1:30 p.m. each Tuesda y for ~roarams in Fountain Vailey 1Jlemenlary School. CHERIE BROCKWAY Future Brld1 Date Set In July Costa Mesa's First United Me thohiat Church will bt the setting for a July 31 wed~ing ceremony planned by Cherie Lynn Brockway and J ack Roy Zash'esek, ' The Newport Harbor Lady Anglers are castln& out In· vllational lines to their annual Prelude to Fishing luncheon benefltling handi capped chlldren of Orange County on \Vednesday, March 17, in the Alrporter Inn. Proceeds from the t!vent will enable the 1roup to entertain Garden Flowers Arranged Just In time for spring will be 11 demonstration of flower arranging taking p I a c e Wednesday. March 17, In the Corona del Mar home of Mrs. G. fl. Peirsol. Sponsored by the Women's Aux iliary to the Orange Coon· ty Pharmaceutical Associa· lion. Mrs . Rita Gorenbelh will use varieties of flowers found in home ga rdens for her display. Servlnr;: as hostesses for the 11 :30 a.m. M>Clal hour and approi:lmalely 200 Or an g e County ha'ndicapped children in Costa Mesa Park. The an- nual party wlll feature clown entertainment and gifts for each child. A fashion show coordinated by Mrs. Florence Smales will highlight the luncheon pro. gram. Cocktails will be served at 11:30 a.m .. wi th luncheon at 2:30 p.m. In charge of plan- ning for the oe<:asion are the Mmes. Robert Bryta n. pro- gram chairman : John Harris, co-chairman: Margaret Set!ly, hostt!ss chairman and Ralph Fore. re.servatlons. Benefit proceeds also will go toward the purchase of needed equipment for varioui; schools. Past gifts have In· eluded audio-visual a Ids , orthopedic playground equip- ment. hearing aids and leg bracts. Westward Ho Miss Edilh Redit of Laguna Hllls will host the Westward Ho Chapter of the Daughtt.rs of the British Empire at 12:30 p.m. on Wednesday, March "· 18. ln the Saddleback Inn. County 4·H Clubs art Invited the bridegroom , was best man graduates of Mater De l High Hostin1 the fon.im will be to participate. and guests were seated by School. She a tten d t d Mr. and Mrs. James Walker The event will take place Welter , Richard Neuland. the California State College at of Santa Ana assisted by Mr. in the El ,,Rodeo Riding Club bridegroom's brother.\n-law, Fullerton and he is a student and Mrs. Joh n Thomas and In Carbon Canyon on March James Wilkinson, Jr., Daniel at Fu!lerton Junior College. Mr. and Mrs. William c. 27 and 28. Perez, Phili p Montano and They will reside in Tustin. Hayward. 1~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;~·-·•ili• Mrs. John M. Biiiings Isl chairman of the Tr o Jan forums wh.lch ha ve replaced th!! Trojan mother-daughter teas formerly planned for the rounty. Teach er Does Dervish Dance A presentation of Dervish dancin1 and yog a will be alven by Adnon Sarhan al I p.m. on Wednesday. March 17, in the Laguna Beach Athletic Club. Dervis h dancln1 I~ a relatively unknow n form of medttatlonal dance w h I c h ort1lnated ln the Middle East with the Sufi people. It com· blne~ chanting, movement and sound to create 1 atate ol harmony . according to Sarhan. The workahop Is open to the puh11c al no coal. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • The future bride, whose mother and stepfather are Mr. and Mra. Joseph Abatanl!elo of Costa Meaa. ls a gr11dua1e of Robert E. Lee High School in Staunton, Va. Mr. and Mrs. George Zastresek of Chicago are the parents of the benedict~lect, who was graduated from Kelley High School and the Aero-Sptct Institute of tha t noon luncheon will be Mrs.,-;;~=== l..lie Hall and t.1rs . Pele l.i ~.:MARCH'S BIRTHSTONE ,· . t f ltt +J~u4hla.tl/! • Th11 color of the Aqu•m•rine hu betn liltentd lo a t.bou1•1ul l'af\M!I of 1unllt If& lmprl1onad \a • cup. 8uppoMd lo 1h1rptn the tnlAlllert and rrani rourart, th• Em1i1n1 pl1ctd thtir tout.a o! law and thtlr h ttlt fttldt undt r It• prottclion • T~ Blood1 t.one i1 tba companion ~tout for M1rch. Wem bJ ~"""'-It l1 often tal'ftll with *'90f'J'lll'l•, lnitlal1 or emu. 1 . ' "•r rewr bir1qtnt /nr JM, tlW Sflli IH• fnt11.1t w fli t ,11ct ta •• • '" G1t1u1~• l!rl~,;,~11 Stu~ Ctttl ~1111 -114tl•I t i ''• S t~ Ditto fw.,, Co1!1 Mt11 city. '( Muslard. Mrs. Dean Reavle will preside over the mettlng at which time Una\ pl1ns for Polson Prevention Week will be formulated. On the Botrd1"1lk Hun1ins1on Harbour THE RED BALLOON LTD:.:.r... ,.;;..i . ~ The fine st clothes for childr'n from the best American and European dtsig n,r!i ···~···· the n101t df!llghtf11ll11 11n111ual children'• lliop In tl•e 1011lhla11d 16877 Altonquin St., }l unt1niton Btar.h (714 1 846-1668 B. D. HOWES IS HAVING A SALE i • B. D. HO,VES and SON fl~EJtll'HERS r o A !HHt GE~EAATIOSS NE'm'ORT SE.ICH: :m Vi1Li60 . m·l7ll • • • 'WIND AND WAVE' AIR COMB CUT NATURALLY DONE IN OUR BEAUTY SALON COMPLETE STYLING SPECIALLY PRICED, 8.50 BLOWER-BRUSH DRYING1S A BREEZE! GIVES BODY AND BOUNCE TO SHORT OR LONG HAIR 1 ALL YOU HEED IS THE PUGHT WT• NO LONQ IESSIONS UNDER THE DftYER, YOU11'E OUT OF THE SALON IN NO TIME. NOW ISN'T THIS WHAT YOU'VE BEEN WAITING FOR? IN OUR IEAU1Y SALON. • JltllTOft CONDITIONE1' REVITALIZES YOUR HAIR. • CONIULY OUft Kftl:E IDCP£ftT JN PERMANENT HAllt ftEMOVA1..1 NEWPORT P'ASMION l'OftECAIT f'ft05TING SPECI AL~ REG. VAUJ'E, NOW ONLY 19.90 COMPLETE. 30.00 ROBINSON'S • FASHION ISLAND • 644.2800 1 • • I .. • " Fo11nt ·.11.-... ..ily's Flwal ' . N.Y. Steeb • • VOL 64, NO. 63 , 3 SECTIONS, 32 ·PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,CALIFORNIA I MONDA)',' tiAARCR . IS,' 19if JEN .CENTS Flu ride . Supporters • y ALAN DIBKIN fluorides are ·alrudy In the wat.r In or ""' o.11Y f!ttet '"" • Southern· C&llfornia. ackers of fluoridation in Huntington "If .. tbere . ls' 0.5 part per million in Beach and 'Fountain Vall.ey took it in the_ waler supply you won 't gain much the teeth today as a Cal Tech, Pasadena, by goq--..fo 0.7 !or 1 ~l per million " ~ealth engineer said that increuing the '• be commented.' "U YotJ do. there 'ta fi·1oride content in the cities' water 1up-a Possibility tbatR Chifdren -who drink plies may do more harm than good. :.fa lot o{ water ~Ill cOOiume· tQo much Dr. Jack McKee, envlronmental~health fluOride. .. engineer with . the California lnltltute "'If" .a .child' dri.nka one titre (a little of Technology's environmental q\tality mOte '\han ... a quart) a day it will be laboratory, ~t.d. out that nalllral ~ •• Jluj l('he drlnkl thre< litres he ' Beach Girl Sentenced In Murder Martha Riggs or Huntington Beach today · was committed to an indefinite t.ertn in the California Youth Authority for her role In the killiiig of 19-year-old Robert Leroy Hermann. Miss Riggs. 19. of 1824 Park St., drew the · sentence from drange County Superior Court Judge Claude M. Owens ju.st 17 days after a jury convicted her of second degree murder. Robert Eugene-Williams, 19. of 1504: Pecan St. Huntington Beach, the man who shot Hermann through the back of the ·head in lhe victim's home at 416 15th St. last Nov. 7, is serving • life tenn in state prison. Miss Rlgp, commitme"t means that her ·sentence can be reviewed st any time after she has served one year of wh~t b1 technically a life term in a CYA facility. .. Th• girl received her sentence without any viaible emotion and returned quietly to her Orange County Jail $=ell after Judge Owens njected derenae attorney Chester Smith's motion that probation be all<>w<d. will get motUed teeth. This ls a very common CQlldltion in Te:a:as a 11 d Oklahoma, where it ls hot and where there is Ouoride in the water." - Dt. McKee's vieJ¥:S became known to- day as a MW bat~e over fluoridation M>omed. Huntington Beach has from o.t to 0.5 of a· part per million in the water already· and Fountain Valle)' has 0.6 part per million. Last year both city councils aulharized adding chemicals to bring the. content He also rejected Deputy Di.strict At- torney Chatterton's pleas that Miss Riggs should go to state prison. The prosecuter argued that commitment to a CYA facility was not sufficient punishment for a murder C<lnvlction. Ul'I ......... «-rtlftt.MY!,.... 0IM.J • 'l'RICIA AND ED STROLL ON SJDEWALKS.OF· N!W YORK ' ' , Will Wodding Bells Bt Sounding Junt S'I Chatterton 11uceessfully argued during the trial that Miss Riggs played a major role in the plans to kill Hermann after the couple became convinced that Hermann's association with Huntington Beach police led to the arrest of a group of teenagers -Riggs, Williams and Hermann among them -on drug charges. It was testified during the trial that Miss Riggs and Williams were mistaken in that belief, ·Final Arguments Slated for Today In Calley Trial FT. BENNING , Ga. IUP!) -The covernment neared the end of its tw~ year Investigation and prosecution of Lt. William L. Calley Jr. today with final arguments on its chargf! that he •·shot down dead in cold blood" at least 102 Vietnamese villagers. The prosecutor in the Calley murder court-martial, CapL Aubrey M. Daniel Ill, was to begin the swnmations in the afternoon session. The defense will sum op Tuesday, and Daniel will reply to that with more argument. Col. Reid W. Kennedy, the judge, said he beUeved he could follow with hi1 jury instructions before that day'11 end. That would pul one of the most important 11nd publicized military trials i n American hJstory in the h a o d 1 of the jury on the third anniversary of the My Lal massacre. Tricia, Cox Will Marry . . In White House Wedding KEY BISCAYNE. Fla. (UPI) -Tricia Nixon and Harvard law studect Edward Fincb Cox will be .married in the White House on June 5, It was learned today. The Presi"dent's Z>year-old daughter origina"lly. h·ad pla~ned her wedding for June 12. 1>4t moved it up after spending the weekend with Cox and his socialite family. in New York. The formal announcement will ~ made TueSd~y by. pi,esident aiid Mrs. Nixon. The .Nlxons . are planning a joint celebration of the First Lady's 59th birth· day and the engagement at an "Irish Evtnlng at the White House" program Tue!day evening:"· Informed sources said t h e an· nouncement would be made either In the"afternoon or evening. Close relatives and friends of. the Nii:oru: and Cox's parents, Col. and Mrs. Howard Ellis Cox, have been invited to I.be gala gather· Ing. - Prime. Minister John Lynch .of Ireland and Mrs. Lynch will be the guests of honor after receiving a ceremonial welcome Tuesday on the South Lawn. Dr. 'Edward G. Latch, the House chaplain,, will officiate at the wedding. He is former putor or Metropolitan , , Memorial Methodist . Church which~ the Nixons attended during the years when Nixon was vice president There was no word on how big a wedding Tricia is pl a Ming. Her sister, Julie Eisenhower, · 22, is . expecteo to be her matron of honor. Cox, 24, is expected to 'have as his · best man his brother, Howard Elli! Cox Jr., an Army officer stationed at the Pentagon who was married Ii.St Sep- tember to Julia Bolton Dempsey of · Cleveland. Blonde, blue-eyed Tricia has tad her engagement ring since last December . But she has kept her parents sworn to secrecy until Tuesday when abe has given lhe President the formal go ahead to make the announcement. She will be the eighth President's da11&bter to be married in the White House. The most recent was Lynda Bird Robb, daughter of former President Lyn- don B. Johnson, who was married on Dec. 9. 1967, in the East Room in an Episcopalian service. Cox ·will wind up his second year at Harvard Law School June 4. He plans to con1plete his course next· year and then will be eligible for 1ervice in the army. Beverlfl BiUs Study " Blow...-·in Teeth ' . . . to t part per inlllion, a ficurt' recom- mended by · the state health ·service. This action has be,n consistently opposed by .some resldenta who have collected pt:tltions demanding the Issue be put to voters. 1 • ~t ..week the Hunlnngtbn 1$eacp Citizens for Pure Water announced that they had collected· 4,480 signatures. on a peti\jon oallil'lg for a vote only to learn that · they . were a month late in returning the petition. . "Bein& a novjoe ln Ulla business, I shoUtd · have checked the ltet1lon cbde mort carefully,'' Gerald Bogart, the chairman, admitted. "We. thought we had 11.J montha ·from the time wt col- lected the first name but i~ tuml out it was sli: months from the f1ling of the petition." . Bogart's group will uk the Huntington Beach council, at lta 7:30 session this evening, to consider . putting tilt matter to a refer.endum nevertheleS!. .. ' . ' Another lll'"'P will be •kine the council to delay fluor'ldation. The Uecutlve boara or the city's recenUy created Envlronmenla) Council will requeat ~tbe <OUl!cihnen 'to delay the·laaue.wrtil Mlrcb 31. • Mrs. Margaret Carlberg, chairman of the council, said that the groujJ wtabes to rbave ·time to· study Dr. McKee'• wor~.f~ ·-· M1111wblle, officials of both Huntlngtoo (Se< FLUORIDE, Pop ZI ' ' Dispute ·Heats Up IJeach ·Firemen Sue City Over Pay By TERRY COVILLE or ..._ ~ '"" "'" Huntington Beach fium,en an! 'filinl ruit·to seUle · their •ix·montb old salary auit with lhe city. Tilt town's tJ:> fire fighter• art seeking a writ of mandate to force the cjty council to continue salary talks "ln good faith ." The council e.nded salary discussions last September when It passed an 8.25 percent pay increase for all city employes, ignoring It percent pay raises for firemen and policemen agreed to LOS ANGELES (UPI) -One of t1>o ' . . "famUy" elrll tried to provide an olibl for Charles Manson tQ<tay in1 the clo1lng. boors of the penalty phase Of the Tate- LaBianca murder trial. · Catharine Gillies, 21, said that the hippie leader jiu at a c~psite near 1 woterllll with onother YOllllC Jirl •I the time of the two nights Of murder• and that she sa~ him there. Although Manson already has been con'victed of seven murders, hi.a: attorney, Irving Kanarek, proceeded as if his in- nocence or guilt was still in question and tried to establish that Manson played no part in the murders. The jury is now hearing evidence onJy as to whether the penalty &hould be life or death. Miss Gillies introduced a chilling note into the trial, entering its 10th month today, when she dlacussed the way the girla felt about murder. "You know, J'm willing to kill for a brother,'' she said. "We all are. I would have killed if ( had gone along . that night (the night of the Tate slayings)." Mtss Gillies left a loophole Jn her story when she said that Manson and Stephanie Schramm were at the waterfall in Devil's Canyon at the time of the slaings, but admitted ahe was camped 6011le distance away. Manson and the three women defen- dants were removed from the courtroom last Friday When they disrupted pro. ceedlngs. The th.rte girls were back in court today, but Manson llatened from an antechamber by loudspeaker. · It was ei:pectde the defense might rest Its case today. F'inal arguments to the jury were anticipated by mldwuk. by City Adirilnlstrato'r DoY.le Miller. . Firem1n claim~the council should have returned to negotia,lions lf •lt .df~'t like the 11 percen't RIY raise., Spqkumen for ·the . Flrem~n's AISOCi .. tion said members of the city council would receive cOOrt subpoeOas tonight. Jerome Colton, a Long Beach attorney representing the firemen, was scheduled to meet with a Silperior: Court judge at 2 p.m. today to talk about the writ of mandate, and the paperwork was to !;le filed by 4 p.m. . The difference between the 8.25 percent ' . increase granted and the 11 percent requested would.be about ~f,000 a year. ' ' ace,ordinJ to city estimates. No money ' . .,.1 • has been put alsde by the . city· for .sdditiqnal (abm[e 8'25 pereenl) lncrtoes. "OUr auit is primarily to niake tbl city explain certain actions it hf! .~en," Bob LeMarsh, a 1pokesman for the: firemen said this· morning. "There were 10me parts of our .agree- ment wlth the city they approved, bu: !See SUIT, Pose %) S. Vi~t B~e ·Holding . ' . . - ' • ' I ; -' ' .. Aga·insttBi Red .Ft>~,. . ) .. ' • ' I. Ul"I T•lt•Mte Be'•· J\'1n11ber One Notre Dame's Austin Carr, a S.. 3 guard who .sparked 89-82 Irish upset of top-ranked UC!4 earlier this year, today was named 1970-71 college basket· ball player-of the year by Unil· ed Press International. Police Halt Bid For 'Death Dive' Off Coast Pier Escape arust D.D. Masco · l! alive W~ ,ruPI\ ,.. T~lbd lliaiillf In a North.: \lietntm.,. 'for<:< <t 12,aoo men ottacktd • Sooth V!dn&mea' ·oca. post in LaOs Monday and stopprd. a drive on a huge supply, dump astride the Ho Chl Minh Trail. The outpost stood tast wlti\. ··trong U.S. air support which knocked out seven tanks. It was alao revealed that laser-beam direrj.ed bombs were used in· atlackJ on the ~emy tanks., • A major batile, appeared to be ahaplng up. AcrosS · the botder ,' In South . Vliinam '1 northwUt conwr, Communiat gunners subjected the U.S. support base 1t Khe Sanh to Ill heaviUt barrage since tbe 1ao1 offenllve began Feb.' I, f~ing 1lO mortar and rocket rouncb: lnto •Amerlcan JJOSltions. NO U.S. casuaJties were reported btn some Soulb Vietnamese Were httrt and a few American belicopter1 were damaged. The focUJ of action in Laos MOnday centered around fire support basel Lolo, an outpost nine miles east of" tbe Ho Chi Minh Trail center of Sepooe.. Br.lg. Gen. Pham Van Phu. commander of South Vietnam's lit Infantry DiVision, said Communist pressure on Lolo ,;and other points hid blocked h1' troops tiylng to reach a big North Vletnatneu: am· munition dump and a fuel pipeline. Phu said South Vietnamese defenders of Lolo foulht a aeries of clashes with North Vietnameae forces tlD'oughout Monday in lhe area,. including one two- hour battle at the blae perimeter before 1he Communists were beaten back. Soviet-built nt tanb fired 88 mm guns at Lolo and U.S. Air Force pilots re- pc.rted knockout one column of seven Communist tanks in the fight. 'Ibree o t b e r tanks were reported ·destroyed Sunday. Military sources sald·a uconsiderable'' number of the' tankll ctmfofed by air (See A!IA WAR. Ptp ZI ....... The Vietnamese subhamlet was hit by an American infantry search-and· destroy sweep on March 16. 1968. The army b e g a n its investigation of the incident two years ago next month. The government summation opening came on the 48th court day. Daniel said in his open ing addreu four months ago -I.here have bee• several length y recesses -that be would show Calley, a platoon leader, not only killed in cold blood himself but ordered his men to execute civilians. .Youth Drug Use Revealed and well In Alhambra today. Seal Beach police officera who atopped ~ from aUemptlng a "Dive to Death" off the munlc:lpal · pier Saturday,' The 32-year.old· 1tuntman waa-(o have JUJllped into the water, welghted1 dowo We•dtV Warmer weather is in the offing for Tuesday with biW clouds and temperatures s:~ upward to 75 degrees al01Jr tbe cOuf:.. The premeditated slaughter by Calley and. his men was set in the gt>vernment charge as totaling al least 11)2 unarmed and unresisting Women, children, and old men . The judge, In a session with both sides Sunday, disclosed he will Instruct the siJ ·officer jury that U it was 1atlsfied only one wa1 killed it coo.Id convict. He said he ah10 would in!ttuct them it "'is Illegal to kill unresisting people" and would diM:uss the basic laws of w8', which problblt killing ol prlooners. ... . • but many . bave fried -but ·do not and shackled by two handcuffa and 25- use recularly _LSD and pep arid ,ileep-feet of chain padl,ocked ln'thiee places. ing pilla:, abundant ln many medicine Unable· to locate a 1boat for bJJ' dJve. the burly mpound 'fHOl\(lipl": 110Ught cabinet.. to "~mplett hls _atunt·by :takin& 1 leap ,, The rtp<fl'I uld Beverly llijls adult. oil the end of. the pi<t. . · : seem lo Ule more ·of·the harder drup, He .didn't gei far . Miisco, _was •mtt , tM ~·· , d, Beverly ,l!lllt )'Olllh at;lhe head •f the pier ily SgtiJ: ~r!ln ! , l l!ll tlieir o'lln .of' belna Blaclc who.took bbp to ... Po ct Clllef , ~:fl>Uow It rigidly. . , Let Coae. , , ·;ts u Jo get .''booked,"bu·nc ''Ttie 'clty has an ordlnaf\Ct 1galnlt p r a ., '«Sul'' on drup, ,but It jumpln1 ,off . the pier," the chle( told d!OJ ·to-~t a'liWe high or lo reJax him. ~·1·m afraid we won't .be , able , Ith drulll, the rep/rt said. to lllow you lo go through wltb lhll." , The ynutN compared the uae of pep ~· 'int.<! by->the order, the •~ Dt to cciffee .ADd marijuana to an be Masco announced to the crowd-; .fter dinner drink. The rt:port wa1 com~ of ,000 lhrlll•seekera llnlaC U. plel\ · by the ri-ainlng C:Ommil!e< ol lbt that he · would ""''. good his . claim • <111 on Da111eroU1 llrugJ. . , Jlfxl Saturdoy, at a p.m. r: ' ' INSIDE TODAY . There'• a "''° ~hting l4nd-. . mark on Newport Harbor 'Bahia Corinthian Yacht ulJ !dtHicnud.ilt VSO,OOO:d 11o.,. · on Bauside l>riw. Boating Page 25. . -' ' . .. ' 1...-.v , .• :~· ·-...1. Qll"'1'1fe , llitt.... ..... ... ., aikldlll u, ., °'""' C-lw 1tll ........... rNI ·~'"" ....,,., .. ~f(thleft, ,, '""" • ,,.,. ~ 17 Sttct ~ ...... _.. """'tt , ..... ~ ,. TflW..... ,.. ·~ .. _ • "*'"" .... ............. t4oU ....... .. U'lillN9 l•t• w .......... , ••• ,......_... 14 WwN ,.... ... ,,... ~ 11 • I l .... C ...UL W t-11 .. 0 I " t.londa.y, M11th 15, 1971 Wlien Tolil of Fire Dr. Harte Ii us • llf TOM BARLEY Of "" OtllJr , ... tttff Reba Vaughn's e1·husband today tt.stllled that Dr. Ebbe Hartellus re- mained calm, comopsed a n d un- commwUcative when he got the word Jut April 9 that hi• Corona del Mar oUlces were on fire. Ray Viughn tesUfied a1 the Oran&e Cowity Superior Court anon-fraud trial of the physician neared the end of the prosecuUon pbue that bis blonde· eJ·wife wu the first per10n ln her Costa Mesa heme to ask her lover what the call was abouL Vaughn said It WU "three to five minutes" before UIDR prtsent in the home: learned that Hartelius, SO, waa fold Iha! Ihm WU -.DOUrhli llonl bll oftlc:o. And ... ._ that llai1ellllO -....... 1 at the lllllUJ dlmitr table before leavin, the hooJe at Rtbl'I urging. The prooecutlon al!Ofes that Hartellao had alttady planned the fire and they planned to use the man they believe sparked the blaze as their final witness today. Deputy District Attorney Al Novick alleges that Jim Blevins, Reba Vaughn's brother left the Vaughn home at 887 W, WlllOD St, earlier that evening, drove to Hartelius' afflce at 2345 E. Coast Highway and doused the contents af a file with guollne. Novick.clalma that the fire was p-ed Valley Council Faces Four Public Hearings Fauntain Valley City Councilmen wlll face four public hearings and a nurry of special reports when they meet at 8 p.m., Tuesday. The four public hearings cover tighter architectural controls for the clty ctnter area, new industrial regulations, and an appeal on a denial for apartment :zoning. Special reports include one on the anti-fluoridaUon peUUona. ane £tom the Orange County Water District and another from 1 study committee on tpeClal diJtrlcls. Two of Tuesday's public bearlnp con· cem an archltectural control zone and • a scenic corrldor in the city. CJI)' plonnera hope lo put tighter From Poge J ASIA WAR. • • strikes inside Laos were located by Laser Bea.OM11rected bombs. A laser beam is a hlgh intensity light beam which does not diffuse and which produces immense electrical flekls when it reachu its target The sources said the American aircraft operate in teams of two planes, one of which targets and aboota the betm. while a tecond jet unloadl "amart" bombs wblcb an guided to the ohjecllve by the lase.rs. The sources ukl the laser beam bombln& can locate a anall opening in a hillside tUMel complex and blow an enttre mountain aft the map U ammunition supplies there are detonated. Phu saJd the entire 2nd division of the Nor\b. Vietnamese army -12,000 men at full strength -was moving in units af between 500 and S,000 troops into the Lolo area to protect the 1upply base. · U.S. BS2 strato!ortresse.s dropped btJno dreds of tona af bombs on the 1upply base Monday and a communique reported ''very big secondary exploalons," an in- dication that ammnntuon 1Dd fuel were destroyed. It wu disclosed at the ume Ume thlt U.S. ClSO Hercules tramport planes operatiDg over Laoa were usin1 15.,000. pound bombs as a tactical weapon for the flnt Ume there. Tbe bombl prtviOUJ.- ly were used to carve out "instant" landing :zones !or U.S. bellcopten. Military sources said a 1$,000 pound'1' was parachuted last week and detonated between two bills averlookinl a atrategic pm to the north of Route 9. 'lbe sourcu said the two hills were blown aff the map and a Jands11de blocked the area to Communist truck traffic. OU.Mel COAIT DAILY PILOT OUMOI CClAIT PUILtlHIHe OJMPMY l.Mrt N. w•.4 ..,....., ..... ,.....,.. J11!t L C.rf.f V1cf ""''""' ..... Otl!Wll ,....,, n ••• """'r ldlW. 'J\eMll A. M..,fllU MM811nl 1"•1• Ali• Dlrll• w .. OrMl9 """" ..,.... All .. rt W. 1 .... AllKltlt lfdlfW Mmt ......... OMM 17171 .......... , • .,.'4 M1lllAf >.44r•••: P.O. lin 7t0. t2641 --...... a.c111 m ,..,.. .., ...... <-"' Mell: »t w.i •• , •• ,. ~ ....,., -....,.,,. 9-1,.._, Sen "*"-"': as ~ t:I Cl,,,_ AMI ' -.. - restriction! on developments and a por· Uon or Slater Avenue. The control zone coven: what city officials conalder the "city center" of Fountain Valley. Planners alao want a ~fool-wide scenic corrfdor along the north side of Warner Avenue from Mile Square Park to the Santa Ana River. The scenic corridor would be heavily landscaped and all buildings would be set back another 35 feet from It The change in Industrial regulations covers minor activities and defines the types of industries aUowed in the city's hldusb1al zone. GLA Development Company Is ap- pealing the pllnnillg commlulon'1 denlol !or R-4 (bigh density) 1partmtnta and commercial zonln1 at the southwert cor- ner of La, Alameda and Brookhurst ·~eets. The three report.II councilmen will hear cover a prolfea:• report on the Orange Caunty Water Dlstrlct'1 operations, a recommendation from a county-wide committee that special district! be con· solidated, and a memo from tll! city clerk that anU-fJuorlde petitions were 113 names short of forcing an election on water nuoridation. Suspect Admit.s Fountain V ~ey Armed Robbery One of thne mm 1CC\lled of the $200 armed robbery of a Fountain Valley market hu pleaded guilty to the charges in Orange COunty Superior Court and was ordered to return April 1 for what could be 1 five yean to lUe term in otate prison. Judge Byron K. McMillan accepted the rullty plea of Jea:ua Miguel Caunova, 19, Santa Ana, and called for a probation department report on the member of an umed trJo who held up a market at 10$45 Slater Ave. last Dec. 9. Cuanova'1 companlona, Ronald Lee Sanden, lt, and Rudy Perez, 18, both of Santa. Anl, were 1e11tenced earlier by Judce McMillan afttr lillnl guilty pleaa. Sanden Is IOrvinf a 1tate prison term of five yon to life with periodic reviews under youthful oUender codes and Perez is serving ID indeflnlte term ln a California Youth Authority facility. The trio was arrested by police after the atore clerk fired four ahot1 at the getaway vehicle. Officers found three bullet holes tn the halted vehicle. Hunt Under Way For Capsized Coast Vessel Air and !W'face craft today searched the Catalina Channel for a 43-foot catamaran which capsized SatW"day a mile and a half off the west end of Catalina Island. The 43-foot lmi Loa, owned by A. Victor Stem Of Stal Beach, filpped in st:ong wind!: and heavy stas while racing with seven ether muJUhull yachll in the annual Santa Barbara Island race out of Los Angeles. (Rai:e details, Page 26 ) Skipper Stem and seven members of his crew were rescued by a Coast Guard helicopter. The crew clung to the overturned craft while monohull yachll, also in the Santa Barbara Island race stood by. The Coast Guard said this morning that the avertumed catamaran had not been spotted slnct the crew wu reacued. 'Ibe owner wu reported aearchlng for the craft with commercltl veasela. The !ml 1'>I capsized In winds tsUmated at »-40 knoll 1n full view of obo<rven on the lalond. Besides Stern, the crew of Iml L<ia comiSted of Curt Huddleson. Seal Beach: Dick Knol, Huntlngton Beach; Ken WIM ind Jerry Mullenl>oll, both of Costa Mesa; Alan Burg, Laguna Niguel. and Jtrry Winter, San Diego. AU were experienced catamaran sailors who had sailed on Iml Loa In st lea!lt one Trans.Pacific multlhull race. The Coa1t Guard queoted Stem 11 say• Ing that lhe wet sheets jamm~. prt- \'thUni quiet release after a gust of wind lilted one hull from the water. 'Caliµ' • to cJealn>l records and be lartlllr alJe&el ' that llJIYim WU brJl>ad by lllrlelillo lo leave the llate. Vaughn admitted under long grilling by defense attorney Matthew Kurillch that hla et·Wlfe had been known to ue fairly frequenUy during his assocla· tion with her. And he rejected an apparent move by Kurilich to cast doubt on the Iecitimacy of his yowigest son Jerry, 4. by stating lb.at the child was hil. "I hope so .. J believe ao," commented the obvio11Sly moved witness. Novick confirmed in cross eiaminaUon that Mrs. Vaughn became pregnant with the youngest of their three children before her b11Sband left her. From Poge J FLUORIDE • • • Beach and Fountaln Valley are scheduled to go before a board of the state Public Health Service at 10 a.m. Tuesday In. the Disneyland Hotel requesting permits to add fluorides to the local supplies. Bolh Bogart and George Lindegren, leader of the anti-fluoride group in Foon· lain Valley, plan to attend Tuesda y's hearing. State officials have indicated, however, that the bearing will not be on fluoridation but simply on the equip- ment to be used. Llndegren 's group reportedly fell 113 signatures short in its drive to force a public vote in Fountain Valley but he has said that volunteers would con· tinue to seek the additional names. The whole i!sue revolves around the present content of fluorides and the recommended level. Dr. McKee, who bas studied water pollution for moie than 20 years, said that lhe U.S. Public Health Service bas recommended the desired level be from 0.7 part per million to l.l Dr. McKte 1a.id that the variance is ac- cording to the climate of the area. "Obvioualy in a bot climate the smaller amo11Rt is preferred because people drink more water," be said. Dr. McKee eaid he believed the 0.7 figure would be the optimum 8Jll011nt in Southern California. "There is a great reduction in decay and cavilies up to say 0.5 parts per million but beyond that level it's almost impossi ble to chart an improvement" Dr. McKee said that cities in the east and San Francisco were wise to add chemical fluorides because they had no natural fluorides. "But people think San Francisco Is progressive and therefore it m11St be done bere," be said. "But it the city has 0.5 parts per million already there's not mucb aense in going to 0.7/' Huntington Beach Water Superin· ten.dent Edward Stang explained that ane part per million was recommended for Huntington Beach because It receives cool ocean breezes. He estimated that the cost of fluorida- tion would be $18,000 the first year and $14,000 after that with the amount averaging 12 cents per person. A move to put the issue to a Yole In Huntington Beacb was defeated by the council 4·2 several month! ago with George McCracken and Ted Bartlett in the minority. Mayor Donald Shipley was absent, but he bas since signed the petition requesting the matter go to a public vote. Ruling Def erred On Sunset Bay An Orange County Superior Court judge's rullng on the hassle sparked by plans for a multi-million dollar deYelopment at Sunset Bay has been deferred for at least two weeks by Judge Claude M. Owens. Judge Owens declined tG issue the writ of mandate which would compel the City of Huntirigton Beach to withdraw the use variance granted by the city council to Real Property Management or Beverly Hills, builders of the Sunset Bay complex. Opposing the venture is Arthur Knox, 3322 Easter Circle, HllRtington Beach. He contends the council's granting af the variance was ~gal. The developers plan to construct a complex on the 35.6 acres which would include multi·story apartment buildings, an 11-story hotel, an office bu1lding. several acres of single family homes and 300 boat slips. Beach Man Held On .Narcotics Rap A Huntington Beach man asse.rtedly started a scuffle Saturday night when he was arrested by Laguna Beact, police an suspicion of drug charges and he Is now also being held for resisting arrest. Police claim two pounds of marijuana were confiscated when the man was taken into ciatody in the Woodland Drive area. He was identified u George Franklin Nixon, 23, of 331 seventh Street., Huntington Beach. AuthorlUes allege the man had come to Laguna Beach to make a "d~llvtry" af the drug v;hen narcotics officers ap- proached him on Woodland Drive. Of- ficers claim Nixon started fighting and kic king in an ef(ort to escape but was finp.IJy subdued. rn addition to resisting a r r e s t • lluthorltlts said, Nixon Js to be arraigned Tuesday on charges or Po&Sesslon af marijuana with intent to sell. -· ' - llAILY ,ILOT lllrl Phlll IMAGINATIONS SOAR AS CHILDREN LAUNCH BALLOONS IN HUNTINGTON BEACH Up, Up and Away to Far Away Landa; Who Wiii Find the Tag and Win 1 Prize? Harassing of Pensioners By Census Men Reyealed WASIIlNGTON (AP) -Social Security pensioners are being harused by re-- quests for infonnatlon about their teeth, telephone calls and happiness:, senators ware told today. Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr. (0-N.C.), said that the Census Bureau is asking new retirees such questions as: "Have you any teeth missing? Do you have any artificial dentures? Do you or your spouse see or telephone your parents as often as once a week? Taking things all together, would you say you're very happy, pretty happy or not too happy these days?" Ervin said at a hearing before his Senate eon.rutuUonal R i l !t t s sub- committee that these any other personal questiona are sent out through computer systems. The pensioners are not told that the quesUonnaires are voluntary "and they receive harassing follow·up inquiries by ~rttfled mall and telephone to obtain their reiponses," Ervin said. Ervin aald the subcommittee has also received many protesta about the use of social security numbers for general identification purposes. He cited these complaints: An Indiana man said a veterinarian demanded his Social Security number on a credit report before he would cllp his dog's toe nails (pr $3. Another man sa iCt that before the grave could be opened to bury his mother he was required to provide her Social Security number. Rabies Clinic Offered Tonight Dog owners living 1n Huntington Stach will be able to get their pooches lm· munized against rabies tonight at a clinic in the main city fire station . Chief Raymond Picard said the Rotary Club-sponsored clinic will be held from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Cost for each shot is $2. Dog licenses will also be available at the clinic. Secretary af Health, Education and WeUare Elliot L. Richardson teatifled that "nothing justifies unwarranted prying into oi surveillance of the private live1 of our citizens merely because we have acquired the t.ecbnologlcal ca- pacity to do so. "This subcommittee deserves great credit for bringing forcefully to the na- tion's attention the risks of Jou of privacy and possible Jntnaion on con- stitutional rights which may be thruten· ed by potential misuse -both intenUonal and careless -of the advances in com- puters and comm11Rication1." School to Start Cutting at Top BERKEiEY (UPI) -The lost shall be !Int il the Berkeley School Dis- trict hu to cut wages of teacher1 and administrators in order to meet an a· pected $2.5 million deficit next year. The board or education unallimou!IY agreed Sunday nigb.t that "the most hlgb.ly paid will be reduced Jn salary more than the, lowest paid,'' Chairman A. L. Grosberg said. The board generally agreed that an earlier proposal to eliminate administra· tors of innovative programs such a.ci black studies aod human relations would not be feasible. And cuttil'g the teaching staff by state law seniority procedures would hit both minorities and lower the quality af ed· ucation, Grosberg said. Liquor Clerk Held In Store Shooting LOS ANGELES (UP I) -Ulysses Wright, 27, a 1\quor store clerk, was arrested on suspicion of murder Sunday in the death of a man who allegedly tried to steal about $3 worth or groceries: Balloon, Barrage Now U1ider Way l1i Huntingto11. During the month of March more than 2,700 children will launch post-card car- rying bailoollll tn Huntillglon Beach. The children are taking part In a balloon contest !lponsored by the recrea- tion department's Alla's Cool Pf'Oll'IID for youngsters. Each c~ild who sends a balloon up ties a card to it with his name and the address of the recreation department on it. Whoever finds the balloon Is asked lo return the card to Huntington Beach. The post card sent back from the longest distance will earn the sender and the balloon launcher $5 each. Children began filling the sky with helium balloons last Wednesday and will keep up the barrage witil March 23 at 'l:l playgrounds. The last date for receiving post cards ls April $. Recreation officials said they have already received 25 cardll, with the farthest sent from Escondido, ow San Diego. That · balloon was launched from Smith Elementary School. Frona Pnge 1 SUIT • • • never gave us, such as education bl!lleflts and uniform allowance adjustments.'' LeMarsh added . Brander Castle, assistant city ad- ministrator. said there is no intent.ion on the city's part to deny firemen what was agreed to on education beneUtl and Wliform allowance. "If it wasn 't given it waa a mistake. They will get those things," be nld today. The city's 144 policemen have !!sued no statement, but they also are expected tG file suit today in Superior COurt against the city. The Policemen's Association is also seeking a clarification of lhe negotiations and the 11 percent salary increase it . didn"t get. City officials said I[ police salaries were increased the extra amounts would be about $4.1,812 a year more. Policemen ha,ve already presented a claim for punitive damages to the city am~unting . to $650,000 Jn which they c18lm the city has damaged their reputa- tion. The fire station is located at Lake Street and Indianapolis Avenue in downtown Huntington Beach. Police said Lloyd P. Landry Jr., 23, tried to shoplift a bottle of w In e, a package of hotdogs, some cheese and a box of crackers. Pollce said an argu- ment ensued and Wright fatally shot Landry with a gun he kept In the store. / ..:,..,,~~~+·~~~~~~~~~~~~ Don't Pay $110 • ' • ,.,. !Ill• 14 t , Mtll•l" -•l•nMnl r1r1 Ill UK wllll• "°'"' -wllll 11t rw ........ :1 ......... ....... ... ,.. ...... . ... ""' $8900 Don't Pay $475 nit 1 t. ,. ,.._ .......... """ wM1 Hit """' ..... .-Kat ....... -.....,.,.... ,.......,.... 11111' .... IW Mil.""' ue .,. ... "' • -"' *27&00 OUR llNUSUAl MONEY BACK DIAMOND GllARANTEE Wh.n you buy • diamond frocft us Wll will 9'1ar•ntM that diamond to appralH at 40% MORE tn.., you po ld for tt .,. your money back. Can you do as w.11 elMwhere? COMPARE. .1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY-and LOAN LOAN, IUY, SIU, nADI . 1838 NEWPORT BLVD· PHONE 646·77•U · DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -Be-Horber & B~ay I 17 17 .--, . _t .... • ,. ' .-•• ... ~' • • New·porti: •ea:eh . . ' Today'• Fl••I - N.Y. Steek.s E_OJTfON · . - " • '' . ~Ol.· 64, NO. 63 , 3 SECTIONS, 32 "P'A'6ES · QR:llNGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . fYIONDAY,. t.ilARCH £1 s; . 1-91. ~ 2 Welfare Spons?rs Announced SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Go•. Ronald Reagan today announced that Rep1.1bll· ca~ Sen. Claire Burgener and Assembly· rnab William Campbell will sponsor his welfare and Medi-Cal reform legisla· lion. · nie ·legislation will be ro-sponsored by Aasembly Republican leader Robert T. Monagan, Senate Republican floor leader Fred Marler and Sen. Robert J. Lago- riiarsino (Ji-Ojai). Two of the three welfare bills will re- quire tw'o-third.s approva} of both. houses ol the Democratic-controlled Le~1slature for · piissage. The Medi-Cal bi!( lik~wise, must receive '!I favorable vo tes 1n the Senate and 54 in the Assembl y. The Medi.Cal bill was introduced In the :!lssembly shortly before noon whill!: Bur- gen"r .planned to intrtiduce the Senate packagP during the afterMOn. The Republican lawmakers appeared at a news conference where Reagan introduced them. Burgener said he hoped to have the )egiSl8tion approved and on Reagan's desk tor signature by June 30 but said he would 11ot seek to waive the Leg~sla· tuie's rules to permit early C?mmitte~ hearinfl'.S on the program. lt will be eli. gihle for its first hearing April 15 .. Burgpner (R-San Dieizo) ls cons1.dered 11 "moderate" on most issues by t"o•s r.nl· Jeiilflles and is the 1Padiniz Senate Renub- lican expert on WP.lfare. He Is a formPr rhairman of the Senate Health.and Wel- far~ committee. . , Campbell IR-Hacienda He1(hlS) Is the newlv appointed chairman of~the.. Demo- crii.tic-dominated Assembly healt.h Com· mittee which is .exoected tD consider the M"'1i-Cal revision bill. . He predicted.the "chances of Med1-Ca1 rtform passin( in my ju~gment ar.e mueh better than the cha1tees of wtl· fare.nfnnn J>assio1." . . Sen. 'Fred Marler of Reddiniz .. ~nate R!>nublican leader. said in a television in· fprv\ew sundav he thou1ht the Se¥te COP would siipport Rea,An's welfare pl11" "11lmnst unanimouslv." Asked abOut chances fnr nassalZe nf the nrogr:.m , h!" replied. "I thi11'( it ~"~ bP flnne but It's going to awfully d1ff1· cult." _ Both hoose11 of the -Letisl11ture ha~e D~Mocratic majorities and ~mocral.lc leaders have expressed imnat1~nce wll.h Rtait:an for delayinit: !ntrodu Ction of h1.1 reform measures for so lonjl. . Rtap;al'I press aide9 said the Gover- nor's smoit; control proposal .also will ~ ll'ltrnduced this week. Reoubhcari authors flf the six-bill air pollution paclc~it:e ar'- Sen . H. L. Rirhardson t'lf Arcach11 .. find A!=smblvman W. Craig Bifidl,. o_f River· ~ide P<'ter Schabanim of Cov11'111 and p·,.1e Wilson nf San Diego. One key bill wnuld reouire 196&-70 model cars to be fitted with devlres to co11.troT oxides of nitrogen , the . tJ?lfutant for which it has been most d1ff1cult to c:lt~velon a controlling device. Current de- vices fil ter only hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide. Anot.her bill would set etnlsslon st.i:i~· ards for !955-li5 morlel cars and a th.1rd me11sure wnulrt rewlate foreign cars 1m· wrted to Califorriia. Lewd Call Case ' Suspect Caught A r.ororia del Mar man ts in ~Y today in Newport Beach, charged with making :m -pbolle calls to Harbor Area women over lhe past year· William Howatd Wall, 11, of ill Poinsettia Ave., was arrested Sunday aiter police alleged be went to the NewJ>Ott home of a vktlm for a date. Detectives said thelr file on the cases date bact nearly one year when a man who called himself BUI Jacbon began haras.'!llng female residents of Newport, Costa Mesa and Tustin. The 'victims of the lewd calls range in age from 12 to 75. investigator! ailld. The calls were linked by a 1imllar obscene suggestion and the fact that the caller usually knew the victims' name:1 and \denUfied himself as Bill JacksOn. "We probably-would have been able to catch a suspect much aoonu if the victims had called UI right away," said Detective SUe Ract: SOME STOCK REPORTS FA.IL Some partlons of IJ1' American Stock Exclulnge faile<I to be reported today In electronic transmlsslon from New York. Toda v's stock rcpiOftl are complete ex· cept "1or listings rrom "O" through "Z" on tne American Stock Exchange, 11\e [)All.. V PILOT re.grets lhl1 lnconv~nlence t() Its readers. The New York problem Is expected to b8 corrected befort .rue. day't tr1T1smlssion. ' ' .. -. Ul'I T1llitMle CCWl'rltllt MY Nm lftt,J . , Parking Audit Set Newport .to See W-liere Money Coes . By L. PETER. .KlllEG Of ftlt OtllY Piiiot St.ff Newport Beach Is going to find out U all the nickeli and dimes p 1 i d to parking .meter~ -and all the: dollara paid at parking Jots -are making their way into.the city treaSW'y. The city eouncJl has ayl.ltol:ized Sl,500 fOI a special audit of Newport's P8rkil)g Enterprise. wblch _manages the city'1 l,MIO parking meters and three free parking Iota. 'Family' Girl Offers Alibi For Manson LOS ANGELES (UPI) -One of the ••family'' girls tried to provide an alibl for Charles Man.son today in. the closing ~uy~ Manager l;larvey L. Hurlbutt recommended the study aft.er-1 simllar probe of building department operations uncovered aignlficant revenue losses because of "sloppy" procedures. Hurlburt told the council that parking revenues this year will tOtal more than $340.000, noting that next lo .the buildnng department, this 1 is the largest' city in· come about outside of · the finance depar.tment. · "The purpose of thla projec~" Hurlburt Th,rust ~tolled &aid , "is to re-enmine moriey hlndling proc;e<luru to Insure \ha\ Ibey are being . conducted in the most .. efficient . and secure manner and tha\ accountability is maintained. '1The result.a of these",'!tudiel. inJPt Indicate no ·Deed for chanp, or chanlff in procedure, changers in equipment or: even reuslgnmat of.ifurictJooa,~· he uld. Hurlburt uid the inU:rnal prob& WW (See AVDrr, Pqe I) Force of 12,oo·o Hits S. Viet Post .. TRICIA AND ED STROLL ON SIDEWALKS OF NEW YORK Will Wedding 81111 Be Sounding June S? hours of the penalty phase of the Tate- LaBia nca murder trial. Catharine Gillies, 21, said that the hippie leader was at a camps'ite near r a waterfall with another young &irl at • SAIGON (UPI) -Tanloi and Infantry ln a North Vietnamese force of 12,000 men attacked a South Vietnamese out· post in Laos Monday and atopped a drive on a huge supply dump astride the . Ho Chi Minh Trail. The outpoat stood .fast with strong U.S. air .support which knocked out seven tanks. lt wu also revealed that laser:-beam directed Tricia, Cox Will Marry In ~ite House Wedding the time of the two nights of murder1 , t and that she saw him there. Although Manson already has been C{lnvicted of seven murders, his attorney, Irving Kanarek, proceeded as. lf his in- noctnce or guilt wu still ln question and tried to establilh that MIMOn played no part in the inurders. • bombs were used in attacb :on the enemy tanks. A major battle appeared· to be·abaPlnC up. . KEY BISC/.)'NE,· Fla •. (WI) -Tricia , . ' ' ' Nixlft and Harvard law. ltlJllut Edw~rd FinQ .. Cox will be marrled .in the White HOWJt ·on ·Ja~ S,·lt was learned ioday. Tb't 'President'• 25-year-dd daughter origiilally b'ad ~planned her weddlng for June 12, but moved it up after spending the' weekend with Cox and his aocialite family.in N~w York. Big Starr Ranch Put · V p for Sale ' By N~wport Firm The 10,144-acre Starr Ranch ln the southeast part of Orange County near Ortega Highway is up for sale. Recrea· tion Environment Inc. of Newport Beach which planned to develop the area into a Sl7 million wilderness recreation facili· ty is the seller. Recreation Environment bought the ranch last May from the Eugene Starr estate. · At iJ!at time the county was consideting purchase of the property for a region'at park . Tliose plans may be revived with the land· back on the market but It is con· sidered unlikely that the county will move on the opportunity because of the tight money ~ituation. It has been pointed out that the county if interested cou\d have take.n steps to acquire the pn>perty during the past year. A gtudy of the park plan was ~ but baa been 1'vi•e<I. The ' ranch i! located sii: and one half. miles. east of San Juan Capist.rano ·near the Cleveland National forest. Recreation Environment bought the land for .Sll,000 an acre but the asking price today.me be !12,000 to 115,000. ' Tbe formal ann~}.'"i¥ be made Tueoday 'iy Prul~. Tbe Nixops are .'~ .a .. J~I celebra(ion of the Finl'~'• 5lth '6"trth- day and the engag8mei!C at · an "lrilb Evening at the White House'' ·program Tuesday eveniJ!g. Informed sources said the 1n· nouncement would be made either in the aftemoon·or evening. Close relatives and friends of the Ni1ons and Cox's parents, Col. and Mrs. Howard Ellis Cox, have been invited to the gala gather· ing. Prime Minister John Lynch cf Ireland and Mrs. Lynch will be the guests of honor after receiving a ceremonial welcome Tuesday on lhe South Lawn. Dr. ward G. Latch, the Hou!e cha in. will officiate at the wedding. He 1s former pastor of Metropolitan orial Methodist Church which the ixiins attended during the years when Nixon was vice president. There 'wa's no word on how big a wedding Tricia is planning. Her sister, Julie Eisenhower, 22, is ezpected to be her matron of honor. Cox. 24, is expected to have as his best man his brother, Howard Ellis Cox Jr., an Army officer stationed at the Pentagon who . was married last Sep- tember to Julia Bolton Dempsey ef Cleveland. Blonde, blue-eyed Tricia has had her engagement ring since last December. But She has kept her parent.a sworn to secrecy until Tuesday when she has given the President the formal go ahead to make the announcement. She will be the eighth President's daughter to be married in the White House. The most recent was Lynda Bird Robb, daughter of former President Lyn- don B. Johnson. who was married on Dec. 9, 1967, in the East Room ln an Episcopalian service. Cox will wind up his second year at Harvard Law School June 4. He plans to complete his course next year and then will be eligible for service in the army, The jury is now. hearin& evidence Ollly , Acnlss the bm:d<r, In South' Vletllam'a •• !"rtllWJsl "1~ 'eqp,iqdll . ....-. lllbJtcled the U.S. IUpPorl -at Kbe Sanh to l1a hemut barrap ~· tlit Laoa offensive began' Feb. '· (Irina .150 mortar fand ~t ~ .lnto,AmelicaD positions. No u.s. <UUl!tieo were reported bUt • some South Vietnamese were htirt and a · few .American helicopters were ·ditmaged. H -~~ pe~,.-..-. .. •"' lif,· dr deatli. ) ~ • • r., '" Miss GUliea lnt..Ouced a <l!ifilq MUI Inlo the !rial, entering lla !Otll . O)«lth today, when 1M ·diJcussed tht . way the girls felt about murder. "You know~ I'm willing to kill for a brother," she aald. "We all are. 1 would have killed if . f bad eone along that night (the night of th"e Tate ·~ylngs)." Miu Gillies left 1 loophole in her story when she said that Mlrison and Stephanie Schramm were at the waterfall > .~·ul"lt....- in Devil's Canyon at tht time , of the Be~• Numl>n One · 1laings, but adinitted she was cimped some distance away. Manson .ind tht three women defen--, dant.s Were rtmovetrfrom the courtroom last Friday when they disrupted pro:- ceedings. The three girls were back in court today, but Man.son listened from an antechamber by loudspeaker. It was e1pect.de the defense might reat Its C•se toi:iay. Final arguments ~ the jury were anticipated by midweek. Geri. Patton Sister Dies in Southland SAN MARINO (AP) -Anne W. Pat- ton, the sister of the late Army Ge'n. George S. Patton. is dead at the ·age of 84. She died al her borne here Sunday night Of heart failure. She la survived by two adopted .ons. Navy U.. Cmdr. Peter Patton and Army Maj. David Patton, both of San Marino, and Army Col. George S. PaUon Jr., who commanded an arm«td cavalry regiment in Vietnam two years ago. Funeral services are set for Thursday in San Gabriel. Notre Dame's AUStin Carr, a 6- 3 guard who ~rk<d 8~ Irish up~t-of to,1>l'inked UClJAo1 earlier thiJ year~ .today . was named 1970-71 college basket· ball player-cf the year by Unit· ed Presst Intetnatlorlal. · ' Underground Utility Issue Set for Hearing The: fate of the second Newport Beach underground utUltJea district may be decided at a City C.OUncit public hear· ing March 22. 'I1le proposed district, along the Pacllic Coast Highway frotn Riverstde Avenue to Dover Drive , would also include the Bayahores subdivision -and therein lies the problem. City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt has Informed the City Council that residents · of the Irvine Company_..own~ develo~ ment are opf)osed to the Ide!!! of burying telephone and Power lines. The focus of action in , Lilos Monday centered around fire support base Lo19; an outpost mne miles east or the Ho Chi Minh Trail cinter of Sewne. Biig. Gen: Pham Van Phu, cariunander of South Vietnam's 1st Infantry Divillion, &11id Communist preuure on Lolo ·and other polnta bad blocl<ed his tz:oOpa trying to reach ·a . big· Nortb Vletnameae •m· munition dump and a fuel pipeline. Phu said South Vietnamese defendel'I of Lolo fought a· aerits ()f ell#• with North Vietnamese fon?t1 thtoughout Monday. in tbe area, including one two- hour battle at the ba5' perimeter be.lore the Communira were be.aten back. Soviet-built TM tanb fired 88 mm IUDS at Lolo and U.S. Air Force pilota re- ported knockoul one column of aeven Communist tanks in the fight. Three o t h e r tanks were reparted destroyed Sunday. Military sources said a "consld!rable" number of .the tanks ·destroyed by·_ air strikes inside Laos were located by LAser Beam~rected bomb&. A laser beanl is a high intensity fight. beam which does not diffuse and which produces immense electricai fields when it reaches Its target. The sources said the American alrcraft operate in teams of &)Vo planes, one of which targets and . Shocits the-beam while a -second jet Unload!: "smart•• bombs which .are guid'id "to the' objective by the luers. ThJ: ·sources said the laser beam bombing ca'n locate· a amall <lpening in a hlllltde tunrlel complex and blow an entire rrlountain off the map if ammunition ' ~plies there are detonated. · Pbu said the. entire 2nd ' division of (See ASIA 'WAR. Pap t) Beverly Hills Study Public Works Director Joseph T. Dev· lin estimated the average cost to lndivi. dual residents would be belwetn $100 and $2!)0, ..... .. Youth Drug Use Revealed Hurlburt aald tl1' "llmatd cost of the Weatlter entire project 11 *212,000, of which South.. Warmer weather is in the ofrtn& em Ca1ifomla EdllOn would put up for TUesday with hlch cloudJ and SI 42,000, Pacific Telephone WOY1d pay temperatures stretchinc upward to BEVERLY HILLS ·(AP) -At least 75 pereeiiL ·of the tffna&m in this e1· elusive community are Involved in narcotics and their parents' rrledlclne cabinet.I avera,ge about-:eight klndl of mood-cl>aniinc drugs, • d\y-tehool district financed report ahows. But the · rtporl, baled on Iengllly In. terviewa 1'ilh 50, junior and senior high school studtntl, wtnt on to say the high drug ua doa not mean that Beverly HUis, famous for lb wealthy and celebrl· ty resident$, ls "sick.'' Dr. Skphen Ru•h, 1 Jllychologist, wrote ln the · rtporl he his c:ontacted with bundredl of lk!verly Hills youths and hmany see.med resUw, angry or alig~lly depressed, but I wa1 lmpreued with tbelr maturity and potentiaJ but many have tried -but do not· $5'1~~ would be no cOst to the city, It· 75 degrttS along tbC!! COi~ sirengUI." · "" ,.gu1ar1y -LSD and pep and ''""" sell, he pointed oUt . . INSmE TOD~ Y The report concluded that 60 to 70 Ing pills, abundant. in many medicine Hurlburt tol~ the council at the last per<"'!nt of the city's yoong people are cabinets. meet.int. "lt'would be 1 shame to Jose There's a lilto l/GChUng Jane£. mild drUg users and s to 10 percent ""'--re_. aald Beverly· Hills adultl the, f)l'OJect .. because of • lack o~ home-mark on NtlO'pOTt Harb&r' a.a ·are-extreme users. · , llJIC v-~ u d ked f ~ B4Mi Corinthian Yacht Cl1o1b He .. id mart) ...... waa maWy used. attm to use more.of the harder drugs owners coopera on •n 11 ar a,-· d -. · tar !ft booes of securing Irvine Company •dicat<d 1,. $1$0.000 clubh<iuo• ·The studY aaid .,,. factor Is the Tbe report 111d l!everly ;li)llJ~~..J!!'rtldP1iiof>.11t-the'COll. on .Bav•idt..ll~ooling l'ofl•~ d•ler.ior.i;pg.home Iile In !Orne f"°•mll....,;l"f"-~hA~v,.e~a._,code all their owffl of l!ela( 111e cost::to.Ba)'lbom_real1~~am:b.· -l-"L-=""'-=""'--:..::;+;=.:=1 whtch ~ io keep their Beverly "CXIOI" and .they follow It rigidly. bined Hurlburt said would be between Hilla .lwentlt1 even if they can afford IL is uncool to get 0 hooked, h u n C ss.01xi and S7,000. ' , to furnish only thelr llvtng room." up" or •trung out" on druiS, but it Cooncllm•n Rich.rd Cf(IUl criticized About ts percent of Beverly Hills is cool to get • little hi~ or to. rel11 the nomeownen for their oppolitlon, con· homes ar~ run by depressed, divorced wl~ drug1, the report 1aid. tending they have before the council mother! who "struggle to remain In Tht youths compare4 the use of pep another request -for lan~ping out- Beverly Hills to provide the highly rated pills lo coffee and rriarijuana. to an tide their development alona the Qoasl BChool for their otherwise deprived after dinner drink. The repart Y(as com--Highway -yet they are unwUllng to chlldren1" the report addtd. piled by the Trainin& Comntjttee of the spend a little of their own money (or It said the main narcotic ls marijuana. Clucua on D&niei-oua Drui•· 11milat beauWicaUon purpose1. -, ... . ) .. ' ' • I .~ • ' • • • l I ' -• - 1: DAILY 'JLOI " State to Renegoti·ate 87 L PETEil Kll!EG ot .. o.111 S*·'™' A top · !lffldal of tbi Clalllomia pubUe -~ alkl today the 11'1te will rent(Otlatt lta a&™ment with New· port Beach on the corona d!I Mar Je1 of the fit~ Pacific Coast IOghway. --~·under--the-ttate-hi&bway code we Can't build a freeway without local au· 'tborlty,'' Jerry Russell, legislaUve rep- 'tftientaUve ci the department. told the DAILY PILOT. · Russell noted the overwhelming rejec· 4ion ol tbe freeway by Newport Beach votan 1aat \lt'eik and llid. •·1~nll are alway. 1Ubjecl to .._iau.n. "U'.s been doat aeveral tlmu before IJIYllme. I db' « I COW1\f Wilbot to ,... M,.,U.lt IO .,...,..,, to rtfloct a cbaftle al 1tU-." he tl]>lalned. M I mult of lqj Tuetdoy't lopsided \'_Ole:, the City Council next week i• ex· pected to name a negoti1tlJl1 committee to meet with state olficial1 to try to wort out a bilateral repeal of tht agree. ment. Russell declined to discuss the possibll· Uy of ootright cancellation of the agree· mint but h1I 1tatement was the first in· diCatJoo from, the atate lhat it wiU rec- oplre that Newport Beach ruldenll doa1 -I the fmway _.,here It lj DOW ~· .• '., In that ~lectlon 'residents v~ al· mOll I t• I to aslt lhe Cliy C<Miell to unllaterany rescind the stred~losing agreement alon1 the pl~aed route southeasterly of Upper Newport Bay. In a second mea.!llre, they approved a ~rter amendment requiring referen- duma before any new agreements can be al.gned. The charter amendment, how- ever, 1tJII must 10 btfore the state Jeats- . Jatw"e where protpeCU lor· ralitlc~Uocl are: uncertain. R~ th1' morlllng qld~ council, II tt doea ldrm tbe n•gotlating commllttt, can •ppr<11ch any <»;>e of several points or authority in tht Highway Divislo1 hier· archy. He said, however, the committee will be referred to the chief engineer of ffighway Divis.ion 7, Haig Ayanian. "Mr. Ayanian will meet with the com- mittee to renegotiate the agreement." lbwell said. "and U a new agreement b producld 111 wUI tben forward Jt lo tbt (Publlc Woru) dinelor for ....... Nd 1Ubmllllon to tbt. CaUIOfllla Hiib-,,., cOmmJsaion." ~ RU!Stll's eomments 1ppur JOmewbat c0ntrary to statements i.uued last week by State Highway Commission Chairman 1',red C. Jennings and Ayanian, who both mafutain the city could 1ot u.nl.llterally back out or. the contract. The question of semantics involvlna the city's desire to "rescind" as opposed to the state's apparent willingness lo "rr-- negoliat.e" may prove a alumblin& block 1o future delibe:rauons • Neltl>er J-111p oor Mayor Ed lllt1la c:buJd bo·mched lar "'mmeDI t1111 mar .. lftl altbODgb It lo ltllOlrn Iha! Hlrtb 11 toying with the idea ol. asking the cowt- clJ to write the DJvlaion of Hlgbw1ys Uking if Jt 11would be receptive'' to ne- gotiations. rmmediately alter the landslide vote, Councilma11 Carl Kyml1 had propo.ted the idea or a neaotlating committee and Vice Mayor Howard Rogers had con- curred, although the latter want.s a 80- day deadn.ne attached to any resoluUona. 'Newport Bureau K,.is hn a Se ct , Business Talks i A sking Fund R~ising OK Planned by ·CofC Nol only the Jayett:s and the 4-H Club , but the International Society for Krishna Consclou.mess tonight will petiUon the Q>Sla Mesa City C.OUOcil for approval of a charitable campaign. It la fashionable to talk about youth's apathy toward business thest days but the Newport. Harbor Chamber of Com-- merce propo.!el to do aometblng about it. The Chamber Board of Directors was tdieduled to act at noon today on a plan to provide a businessmen's speakers bureau ta supply Newport Beach schools With guest lecturers. Dr. Nolan Frizzelle, chairman of the Chamber's education committee, said the program would involve Newport Beach business and profeSsional people in dial og with studenl.s at Newport Harbor and Corona de! Mar rugh schools as well a~ the junior high schools in Newport Beach. , "Young people are not oriented to the importance of business in the com- munity," Dr. Friz:zeDe, a Newport op- tometrist, said. Much of youth's apathy !award pursu· tng business careers ts "due to a Jack of informaUon," he believe&. With board approval, the Newport Harbor Chamber would establish a businessmen's speakers bureau to chan- nel "competent an enthusiastic men and women" into classrooms to talk with students about their perceptions of their role in the community. 'Their emphasis will oot be to provide •'just occupational lnformaUon ~though speakers will represent ~elr own fields of endeavor -but rather '° relate tbe nature of the service they provlde the community. ''Young people are turned off by buineas because they thlni: it ii just a device for making money,'' Frlzzelle uid. "Tbey'ri not aware of the other '"Uslactlonl." U approv~ the Clamber will canvu1 .U Newport service. clubs for talent to ~ up a first string team of 2\1 '1M!akers backed up by a second team ef another 20. "'Rellablllty ls a significant factor in the aucoesa of this program," Frtuelle said, Indicating ooce a date was 1et, the backup team would insure a top quality speaker for each class datt. 1be format of each school program will vary according to the need! of I.be speaker or tbe teacher inviUng him. Some will probably involve field trips or informal, sack-lunch meetings. 1be Chamber is discouraging straight lee· tu res, , since a second purpose of the program is to attempt to determine the bases of student attitudes about business. "Speakers will listen and talk. They'll discuss, not just lecture," Frizzelle noted. Eumples of speaker speclalUes that might be offered include a medical doctor illustrating lbe significance of tbe study of chemistry or phy.!liology : persons ac· live in politics meelin& with civics or political science classes, or bankers and accountant. expla.inll!g the re:sult.s of the study of economics. One aim of the proa:ram is to provide claasroom experiences that help students to understand the importance of coursework, "to help make it more rele- vant. Because apeaken will donate their lime, the hambu e1pects the program will not be costly, although Jt will bear malling expenses as the coordinating agency. The program, a first for the Newport· Mesa Unillecl School DlttriA:~ will be limJttd to Newport Beach scboola, Frizr.elle II.Id. "Should it prove 1uc· cestful, the Coata Mesa Chamber may be lntemted in providing a llimllar pro- gram to tbe other dlatrid ochoob." Further, the Oiamber I! lntmsted In 1etunr n acUons from tbe publlc. ••we want to know the communJty's attitude toward such 1 program in order to 1tay within the limits of a constructive mode Of operation,'' F'riuelle lllcl. lf approved, the program will be launched fully In time for the openlng of school nen fall, but lndlvldual speaken may be made available sooner, upon the reque1t of teachers. "Many have already indicated they are amious to help youth get a broaden- ed, more reallaUc picture of the nature of the busineu world." · DAILY PILOT.....,. ff .hllll V1lttnt FIREMAN SURVEYS WRECKAGE OF FIVE-VEHICLE ACCIDENT IN CAPISTRANO BEACH Sund•y Accident in Northbound Lane of San D iego Freeway Inj ured Eight, Otlaytd Traffic: From Page 1 AUDIT ... not end with the parking fund . "When I.bis is completed," he said, "J will approach the council again for a similar project in the parks, beaches and recreation department." THE PBR department h 1 n d I es revenues futalling near $84,000 annually, Hurlburt said. Hurlburt also said that he win propose audits for four other departments - planning, library, police and marinapark -all of which handle significant amounts of money. The audits would be performed during the 1971-72 fiscal year. Eight Hurt in Pileup On San Diego Freeway By JOHN VAL TERZA Of Ille DlllY Pllll Sl1ff Five vehicles -including two large campers -collided in a wild tangle of wood and metal on the San Diego Freeway near Capistrano Beach Sunday evening injuring eight persons and snarl- ing traffic for three hours:. But officers investigating the series o( crashes, which started when a station wagon skidded into oncoming Janes, termed it "nothing short of miraculous" that no one wrui killed or serious ly injured. said, and was ~ideswiped on both sides by oncoming cara. In the tangle. that foJJowed, one camper was upended, strewing debris acrou a ' wide are.a, Still another camper was heavily damaged and two other cars were a total loss. The drivers were : -The Manning woman. 41, who was treated for apparently mlnor injuries at South Coast Hospital. They have served notice to solicit fundJ financing lhe sprtad of their novel gospel. Chances are they will receive counciJ okay. '1111 "What can you do'?" remarked Mayor Robef1 At Wilson when contacted for. comment. "It takes three attorneys at each elbow these days to be a community leader," he adde.d. No Orange Coast commWlity leader will deny the nobility of religious dedi· cation, feeding. the hungry, housing the poor and helping drug-U!ers kick lbeJ.r habit!. . These are all upect.s of the Kridma Consciousness Society'a function, from Se.al Beach ta San Clemente. The problem has been in their melbodr Certain citizens on Balboa Island hav~ complained the Krishna Consciousness sect is loo successful at making other• conscious of their presl!nCI!. They are readily recognizable on the streets compared to. say, Campfire Girls or Jehovah's Witnl!sses. '!'he shaven·headed, white-robed sect'! ch1er method of public worship involves ch~nting the ritual prayer phrase: Hare Knshna. They accompany their joyful noise un· 1o tJ_ie Lord by clasping, banJinJI'. tam· bounnes and dancing, often on the beach. They abhor drugs, tobacco and alcohol passionatelv. La~a Beach merchants Jed a long and Jar,11:ely futiJe campaign to outlaw or at lust control and reduce the decibeJ level of their celeb~aUons. . Since the Krishna Temole was esta~ lrshed at 130 Woodland Drive in that city y,·ell over a year ago. they claim ta have attained more th11n 40 converts Like lhe biblical lilies: of the fi eld. fli .. y have no regard for raiment or sust@n• ance. relving on a commURal life-style." Naturally, resources must come from somewhere. Hartelius Said Composed After Hearing .of Blaze Hurlburt did not say who would be hired to perform the outside investlga· ti on. Hurlburt noted that a random sampling of less than two percent of the 1968 building permits and fees ahowed that nearly $1 ,400 had gone uncollected. As a resul t of the sampling, Jturl burt noted, all but $25 was retrieved and the cost of the audit was recovered.' "The most important benefit," he said, ''was the establishment of new collection procedures and internal s e c u r i t y measures which should benefit the city by many thousands of dollars per year in subsequent years." The mishaps began when an auto driven by Beverly Manning of 302 Avenida Salvador, San Clemente, crossed the unguarded center divider, patrolml!o F rom Page 1 ASIA WAR. -Vergil M. Fleming, 24, or Garden Grove, treated for minor hurts as were his wife, Sally, 72, and their cHildren, Laura, 4, and Brian, 11 months. -Norman E. Bartlett, 31, both treated and Carolyn Bartlett, 31, both treated for minor hurts, They were 41 aootber camper. -Marvin C. Tippie, 51, of Lakewood, unhurt, A passenger, EleanOre Frisbie, 50, of HWltington Beach, WIS slighUy injured, however. Spokesman Charles C. Hensel nr. a name used only for legal and communi· cative purposes, outlines Krishna Qm. sciou!Jless plan.!! for Co.!lta Mt.sa. Converts shed their temporal name.t upon experiencinl{ the call, erchangin" John Smith or Mary Jones for lyrical identities of oriental or asialic erlraction. Hensel's letter of application indicates the Krishna crew will visit Cosll'l Mesa by scheduled time and place to sing tbt pr11ises of Kri shna and solicit. Reba tesUlled By TOM BARLEY Of nit Otllr l"llfl &1111 Vaughn's ex·hwband today that Dr. Ebbe Hartelius re- mained calm, comopsed a n d un- communicative when be got the word last April 9 that his corona del Mar offices were on fire. DAILY PILOT fJRANC#I COAIT ru•LtlNIHO CCMPAHY • l•Mri N. WeM "•IN\f tM PllOlllMr J eck l. cvrt.., VJot· rraN.,.. .,.,.. 0-11 MtMtW T'Mi•f K11•ir Edltot n ...... A. ,.,,.,11;., Mttltt~ l~llW t... ,,,., Ktl•t Ntw1*1 alltOI City ldT1W ,...,..... .... °'""" llll Nt wp•rt lo11l1w•r4 M01lllltf ~4rt••: P.O. I •• 1171, t2l6l .,_.,_ Clttt Mttu Ut WllJ It'( ltrwtt L..-••di: n:r ,._t ........ "" ~\lflllfltto!I e.tcll: 01~ .... ..., .... "' "~ '""""'"! at .... a1 ·c.mn AIM Ray Vaughn tesU!ied as t.he Orange County Supl!rlor Court arson-fraud trial of the physician neared the end of the prosecution phase that his blonde ex-wife was the first person in her Costa Mesa home ta ask her lover what the call was about. Vaughn said it was •·three ta five minutes" before time present in the. home ll!amed that Hartelius, 50, was told that there was smoke pouring from his office. And he testified that Hartellus resumed hla seat at the family dinner table before leaving the house at Reba's urging. Hurlburt also said he Is thinking about the possibility of auditing all building accounts the past three years. Although expensive, he said, the audit likely would show a similar profit. CdM Higli Senior Co uld Go Honie Befo re Su rge ry The prosecution alleges that Harteliu.!1 had already planned the fire and they planned to use the man they believe sparked the blaze as their final witness Scheduled kidney transplant recipient today. Mary French, 18. remains in Oran1e Deputy District Attorney Al Novick CoWlty Medical Center today. but may alleges that Jim Blevins, Reba Vaughn's be allowed to come home Tuesday prior brother left the Vaughn home at 687 to surgery. W. Wilson St., earlier that evening, drove "She hasn't been doing as well as to Hartelius' office at 2345 E. Coast we hoped,'' said her father . Fr1nk Highway and doused tbe contents or French today of the decision on continued a file with gasoline. hospitalization. Novick claims that the fire was planned New fund drives \Vere organized on to destroy records and he further alleges the Orange Coast. mea nv•hile. to hel p that Blevins was bribed by Hartellus finance the costly procedu re. to leave the atatt. The Corona del Mar High School senior Vaughn admitted under long grilling "·as admitted to the center last \\'ed- by defense attorney Matthew KurUJch nesday night, for blood-cleansing dialysis that his er-wife had been known lo treatment after her single remaining lie fairly frequently during bis associa· kidney collapsed. tlon with ber. She is scheduled lo receive a healthy And be rejected an apparent move kidney March 23 from her mother, Jl,lrs. by Kw11ich to cast doubt on Ute Joanne French. lo replace the organ JeglUm1cy ol his youngest son Jerry, crippled by a birth delect that claimed 4, by st.a.Uni lhat the child was hll. the other 14 years ago. "I hope so. • .l believe ao," commented Physicians hope she can return home the obviously moved witness. to 20291 Kline Drive, Santai Ana fleights. • • the North Vietnamese army -12.000 men at full strength -was moving in units of between 500 and 3,000 troops into the Lolo area to protect the supply base. U.S. B52 stralo(ortresses dropped hWl· dreds of tons of bombs on the supply base Monday and a communique·reported •·very big secondary explosions." an in· dication that ammuniUon and fuel were destroyed. -Kathryn A. Isgar, a4, of Redondo Beach, unhurt. One of the most heavily damaged vehicles was Bartlett's camper, which was a total loss after rolling over. The impact ripped the camper from it.s shell and scattered debris which required three hours to clear. The initial impact took place la the northboWld lanes of the freeway at 6:05 p.m. The collisions took: place 1,000 feet north of the Pacific Coast Highway off· ramp. SAVE 400/o to 50°/o Don't Pay $110 •.. fw flllt \lo c. ttlll1ln _ _.._ ""' 19 Hit .. Wftlll ,.1111 -•!flt ft .,... .... "" ' ................ l-.... ,.. ... , .. . Newport Beach officials reluctantl y ap- proved such a pennit recently after a thorough police background check which rl!vealed nothing objectionable. Funds obtained will finance w e e k 1 y free feasts, chant-ins and dances in de- votiOn to Krishna , plus other needs. No additional information was avail· able since the temple telephone had bet" disco~ected. .. ,..,., Don't Pay $475 $8900 OUR UNUSUAL MONEY BACK DIA• GUARANTEE ntk 1 t-• ""· ................. .... wMlt ........ ,.. .... _~ .................... w.. ... c.-.•• Novick confirmed In cross aamlnaUon and horses Sundance and Dunny, who -that Mrs.-Vaughn became..pregnant with -art convenlently stabled behind UlC res i· YIXIIlgtjt_ ~ theb tfuee chlldrO--c!eniir--:;;;::;:-:=:;::::-~;;;--:::c-l•~----.:..;;;;;:;;;; -you buy • dl•mond from ur -w lll guarantee thet cllemond to e ppreise et W.4 MORE then you peld for It or yeur money beck. Can you do •• wtU ol'°""""'T COMPAR E. . . ' tie!ore h.t tiUlbiiidlett oo--:-7euow 4.1r a ub member> will ro -' --=:J002-ll !MS-~Y-OU-10 SELECT ROM • FIND IT HERE RRST 2 Trains Hit Truck OAKLAND (UPI) -A lnl<lt driver escaped with cuta and brulm Sund11 when two tralna gains In oppostte dire<> tlon1 1muhed Into hJJ vehicle and draa- ged ff for U...e blocks. before the Cos ta Mesa City C-Ouncil COSTA MESA JEWELRY d LOAN ~~::: :,er~.~;~w:~:f~nfor a llve-porl . J! --an . Candy and nuts will be sold door·lc>-LOAN. IUT, sa&. TIADI door and In llarbor Area shopping EWPORT BLVD PHONE •~6 7741' centers through June, with • btntfil 1838 N · '" • drawing and M3y 15 pancake breakfasl DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA--· Kirbo< lo lll'Ndway at the Orange County F"aJrground51 plt11 April 3 and JO bake sales. ( I _.. • .. ' ' • • I .-..., ' ~ .. -. . ' ._ • 'Communicati·on Lines Open, Hummin • i' ! " 11 " . Phone lines will hum for philanthropy again this year. as new off1~er1 take over leadership of-the ever-expanding Newport Beach Assistance League. . Installation ceremonies are planned for tomorrow as the high- light of the league's annual luncheon at 11 a.m. in the Newporter Inn . . Assuming ~he p~esidency will be Mrs. Kenneth C. Albright. Vice ~residents \\'ho will assist her include the Mmes. Joseph Clarkson, ~lar­ bn J. Lockney, Orrin W. Wright Jr .. Roy P. Hall, Harry M. Baker, Nel- son Nei ce and Sue Hitchman. O~her ne~ officers for the league, which provides important co1T1 :"·-1ty services such as the Children's Dental Health Center, are the ·;s. Albert H. Maxted, recording secretary, Robert Lucas, cor- rer .'-.ding secretary. and Edward A. Boyd, treasurer. DELEGATES NAMED . hlrs. \Vilbur Reynolds will serve as delegate to the Regional Council., and Mr~. \Villiam C. Brown as alternate. Voting delegates to the National Assistance League will be Mrs. Edward A. Pelegrin and Mrs. Carl W. Service, with the ?ttmes. Lockney and Wright as alter· nates. . . Keeping the lines of conimunication o p e n between all aux· ihar1es as the league whirls into another year of activity is the goal or new officers and chairmen. Hours of volunteer service are donated to the Thrift Shop in NeW)?Ort Beach and to community charities such as Hoag Memorial Hospital, Presbyterian, the American Field Service and scholarship funds for graduates or Orailge Coast College. ' JUNIOR LEADERS Present for the instaUation 'luncheon will be leaders for the Junior Auxiliary, including the new chairman Mrs. Harry C. Johnson Jr. Vice chairmen are the Mmes. James M. Sink, Robert W. Howard and James R. Wood. Others v.•ill include the Mme s. Howard Martyn, recording sec· retary; Robert Ewing, corresponding secretary; Richard Ferda, trea· surer; David Joye, liaison to the chapter and James F. Croul. provi· sional advisor. Besides lending their support to the Dental Health Center and Thrift Shop, junior members plan and execute the Candy Cane Ball to further boost funds for the league's many services. Other luncheon guests \Vill be officers of the Las Reinas Aux- iliary. which mai'1tains a French Rack on the first Thursday of the month at the Thrift Shop, when designer garments are sold at budget prices. New chairman or the group is Mrs. Robert Lang. OTHERS ASSIST Assisting Mrs. Lang will .be the h1mes. Walter J. Hesnault, first vice chairman; Don Metzger, second vice chairman: 0. H. Calhoun, re· cording secretary; William B. Tritt, corresponding secretary, and Mrs. Arthur Coons, treasurer. Philanthropies of the Las Reina s group· have included funds for special equipment in Hoag Hospital's obstetric wing and for the Youth Problem Center in Costa Ji.Iesa. Other leaders of the league's affiliates are Mrs. Walter V. Lord Jr. Assisteen coordinator, and Mrs. Frank R. Herman, chairman of the sustaining membership. Assisting l\Irs. Herman will be the ~1mes. 0. G. Suess, vice chairman; L. H. \Vood , secretary and Williard \V, Bertuleit, treasurer. A new probationary group, the Virginia Castle Auxiliary. will have Mrs. Gerald Kingsley as chairman. Serving with her \viU be the Mmes. John Fletcher, vice chairman; Charles Franklin, recording sec- retary; David Hibbard, corresponding secretary, and Raymond Carpen· ter Jr., treasurer. ' I ' •• I ' '.'\. l '\ "'· ' • bUsJr· '!'J I • • • " BEA ANDERSON, Editor """4!1r, M9rtll u. 1t11 111 '"' 1t All Systems Go Keeping lines of communications open between all auxiliaries as they whirl into a new round of phil· anthropic activities are leaders of the Assistance League of Newport Beach . Manning tbe phones (top, left tD right) are ~1rs. Harry C. Johnson Jr., in· coming chairman for the Juniors: Mrs. Robert Lang, new leader of Las Reinas, and Atrs. Walter V. Lord Jr., Assisteen coordinator, Swinging into action on the carousel are (center) A-trs. Kenneth C. Albright, league president, flanked by two of her vice-presi- dents Oeft), A1rs. Joseph Clarkson and Mrs. Martin J. Lockney. ·' , , . , ~· Phony Potions, Perker-uppers Pose Perilous Problem ANN LANDERS DEAR ANN LANDERS: Se Y tr 1 I months ago someone wrote to ask where to get powdered reindeer horns. The fellow had heard from boys who served in Vietnam that powdered reindeer horns were the erea,!.est sex &timu1us of all time and he wanted to try some. You Please tell your readers that all the: formaUve leUer. nat last line is en1. .. ..,h told him to forget it. aphrod lsi aa they see advertised in those to make a perlOtl mighty cartful. Al eve ry opportunity he piles ln wilh his whole group. Neilhe.r Sonny nor his \\'ife tboth college graduates) seem to mind the confusion or turmoil. We !!tumble over bed rolls. dogs and kids for the duration . lt's a ball for them -camping ool '1 a full relrigeratOr and built-in baby- '· with this problem? -J.K.O. DEAR J .K.O.: Slnf out -loud and clur -or you'll be 1eela1 tbem more and enjoylnc tbtm lts1. J'd really like to scuttle him bul I'm ashamed to admit my folks were ri&hL If they would just get off mf;WC1: J'd dump bim. Help me, An11. Maybe they'll see this letter and wise up. - DEAR ANN LANDERS : It's funny STUBBORN PRIDE how often parents uy to their teenagers. DEAR S.P.: Here It ls aH l'lt bet "Listen to Ann Landers ... " Well. there al least ll,tM parelb wUI u.mee; dais are plmty of limes when the parents letter It intended fer tkm. I l9oPt! J,Gr1 ' • Take my word for il, Ann. he WON'T crurr.r-y magaz.ints .•~ w or h I e 11 • DEAR ANN LANDERS: We art a forae.Ut._H.~':U-~~~~8:'.°:1!::*'~-<"'1"--'UJiil.llOllliolilrll<l.,W~W."'-....,-~.cl<>Se..Wllll)t-My wife alld I ha1t1.....:U-re• of phony junk (some of it pretty ex· Also l'.'ll your readers that they should teenagers andtwo married children who • lo\•e our kids bul we are getting h· 'r to see_ them leave ea ch .. hm-e. To ndd insult to injury their children arc allowed to sass both ~rents itnrl grandparents, stay up late and eat what they please. ought to listen lo you. -are amoag fltem. Good lud:. ": For example, a few month& ago you --"-,~---1 wrote, "If you don"t approve of the How far should a teenage COu~•f pensive. too ). He may even do himself not mo.1l>c.y ar.ound with hormones unless ha ve families or their own. Our home 80mt damage. they are under the supervision nf a is crowded with just the regulars. It is an Interesting fact that nearly doctor who knows what he is doing. Our oldest daughter has five kids u11d.1r all the fake youlh·rejuvenaling potions A woman I work \vlth used to sing 10 years of age. She lives nearby. Q,1r and sex perker..uppers sold In this coun· soprano In the church choir. She got son and his wife have two youngsters try are advertiSed as "French" or "Ori· an overdose of hormonell and now ~he-and a long•haired -dog. Sonny has an enlal." The same garbage, when offered has a beard and sings alto. -THE excellent job, his salary is larger than in France or the OMent, i1 called TOWN CRIER mine ani:I he has a beautiful home a "American." DEAR CRIER : Thank you for an In· rew hundred miles away. ,_. This happens for several da ys at a Hme about. every six \Vceks, plu holidays, I lhink \\'e -could take it if lhey would al least go to a mole) tn i;leep. Whal Is the best way to rleal \ ~y . y~ur daughter is going with let Can necking be safe? When -fl her know It, but don't knock the guy become too hot to handle? Se~ (ot too hard or she mi~ht hang on -,_iust Ann Landers· booklet, "Necking aijfi_'P~t~ to prove she has a mind of her own. ting -What Are the Llmlta?"!~-.all I'm in Just_lhat _spol -golnJ with-your request to-Ann ~rs ,_CINI a guy I don 't care for anymore. lie o( the DAILY PILOT encklltnc: SO cents ha s shown me in lots of w1y1 that · tn e<1ln and 1 long, 1t1mped, ~· he isn't the person 1 lhoughl he \l'aS. dressed envelope. .. • ' . ' ... • • •• t ' • ~_., •• 1-.J .. : ~ ""'.'' .. -#---.;-_ .... .,..., .... ... ~-DAI LY •tLOT -. . ' ' ... , . . . .. ~ . . .Horoscope: Gemini Locked In , TUESDAY MARCH 16 By SYDNEY OMARR ODe of J1ne Wllhtr1', leien· d1 ry child 1t1r, bl11ut thrUl1 w11 a birthday ,tft from P~1ldent Frankllit Roosevelt. lt wu a horoscope for Arits- bora Jane, wblcb tbe Chief Esecative comml11kt.ned. Ao- eordlnr tG Jane everythln1 that wa1 1tated ll l 11 e horoscope na1ytl1 came to pa11. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Financial ma tters command attention. Gain cooperation from Ca.nett • born individual. SpoUl&hl o n Investment!, basic security. Take nolhlng for gr111ted. Chttk leases, fine print. TAURUS (April 2G-May 20): Go slow. Avoid any tendency to base actions on Impulse. Key is to sludy various possibilities. Old er individual may be ill·lnformed. Do your own investigating. Base con- clusions on facts. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): A feeling of being "locked in" ii evident. You want to break loose. Tendency is to lash out in many direclions. Wise course would be to lime your moves; measure actions. CANCER (June 11.July 22): Avoid extravagance. Means don't cverspend money -or emotions. llold something in reserve. Special m essage could resolve dilemma. Be receptive. LEO (July 23-Aug. ti): Dispute among o I d e r in· div\duals could Invol ve you. Strive to be peacemaker. Maintain neutral at an c e • Home situation is spotlighted. Diplomatic approach g e t 1 good result.s. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22): Hold off on short journeys. Steer clear of disputes with relatives. Check message. Be SL.re your meanings are cor- rectly interpreled. G(iuipy neighbor is a menace. · synthesize Info rm al lo n . Complete assignment. titate or partner oow requ.ires specla1 attention. Check legal aspecl!I. SAGmARJUS (Nov. 22 • Dec. 21 ): Friends may try to involve you In dis pute. Avoid being foolish in this area. Be cooperative, not aggressive. Share knowledge. Be wary cf making promises which are difficult to fuUill . AQUARIUS (Jan. ztl..Feb. 18): Seek alternative methods. Highlight versatility. Don'l feel you are confined to one area . Those who oppose you can be won over w(h humor. Avoid trying to force any issue. PISCES (Feb. 19'-March 20): _ Legislative Drama UBRA IS.pt. 23-0cl. ti): Mate, partner could apply financial pressure. You are able lo successfully utilize past experience. Allies come to you r aid. Express con- fidence. You possess hidden a:sset.s. Act accordingly. You may find that com- munications are garb 1 e d . Check messages, directions, reservations. Nol wise to take persons, situations for granted. App are 11 t minor matter could be irritant. • J, Staged at Meeting To lilld oul whli'1 tudtY for YOU In mont¥ tnd !avt. ordtr Syd"tv Om1 r•'• bool<ltl, "Sttrtl HIO!ll lar Mt" ard Womt"." St"" blrthdt tl 1M JO t:t"!I ta Om~tr A1trclO{IV Secrm, ''" 01"L Y Pit OT. SOIL' J'.UO, Grt M Ct"• lrtl Stltkm, New Yar~, N.Y. 10011, Behind-the-scenes dram a th at is part of all leg islative action wHI be reenacted when 0 . H. (Gil ) Gilbert discusses Sacrame nto Backstage during a meeting of the Huntington Beach Republican Women'a Club. Legislati ve advocate for the. California Railroads, Gilbert will fly down from the Capitol for the meeting. Membeni and patron members ere invited to brin g husbands Gr gue:sL, interested in the politically revealing topic. The meeting will take place in the Recrea- tion Center. The speaker will follow a 1a\ad buffet prepared by members at 11 :30 a . m, Wednesda y, 'March 17. Hostess chairman is Mrs. Richard Dittmar. The membership contest between the Uptowners and Downtowners still is con- tinuing and 4<I new members have been added to the roste r. To date the Uptowners are winning, witb the penalty lor the losers to be treating the winners to lunch. The public is invited to join club members for a tour of the. enl arged and redecorated facUilies of Westminster Memorial Park S u n d a y , Afarch 21. The hour-long wur will dt.part from the chapel at 2:4.S p.m. and will include viewing of man y recently ac- quired paintings and art ob- jects. SCORPIO {Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Task you have neglected could haunt. Get facts together; Former Meson Wed In Catholic Rites St. John the Baptist Catholic Church, Costa Mesa was the selling for the afternoon nuir tial riles linking Cheryl Mary Bwrget and Edward Loran Castillon. The double ring ceremony was performed by the Rev, S R h Anthony McGowan. tar eac erS Parenls of the bridal couple are Mr. and Mrs. Henri J. Plan Meeting Bourge t or Sanla Ana, rormer Costa Mesa residents. and Mr. ·GIVING A LIFT -Testing out a wheelchair they hope to provide for a crippled child are Oeft to right) Mrs. Charles P. Foss, Mrs. Robert J. Brytan and Mrs.-- Margaret Seely of the Newport Harbor Lady Anglers. Benefit fashion show to raise needed funds will take place in the Airporter Inn on March 17. Trojans Entertain All interested parents are and Mrs. Augustine A. invited to attend the meeting Castillon of Garden Grove. on Wednesday, March 17, of Miss Gail Bourget was her e:lster's maid or hono r and the Irvine Star Reachers 4-H bridesmaids were the Misses r?orority hPlanning \~Progrcrm . ' --~ • :~~Members and guest s of ~;sllon Omicron Chapler at. •Seta Sigma Phi will hear a :eroerem entitled. Ac tion, Tools / ·!or the Art of Life when they :aather on Wednesday, March !~· :·~~n. Ken Cutright will ;pnside for t~ 8 p.m. meeting ;tn the Ana heim home of Mrs. ~wrence Oudeans. ;· Mrs. Fra11k Stevenson end :Mrs. Grant Olson will present ft~ program, and the Girl-Of· !the-year will be vol'2d for by !secret ballol. The winner is ,to. be announced in April. There will be an election .of offi cers for the coming rear. , Guest~ plan ning to be '.present for the t.vening include the Mmes . Fred Rogers, George Griff in. Bruce Smith . PlUUp Bertoni and Darrell :wmooghby. Valley TOPS ~{,ettuce-B-TOPS convene at 1·:·00 p.m. each Tuesda y for i>rograms in Fountain Valley Elementary School. Ttl• toloro!tht Aquamarine lau bMn ll b ned to a thouund lnro-of auntil lff lmprilontd ia a 1up. 8appeMd to 1h1rptl\ u.. lllUllect. and fTl.11.& ('OUFl(t, the Emti•n• :plac.d tht.ir court.I et Ji.wand thtir battle E 11t1dt.r it. :protection. atone 11 the ctmp1nlon , e for Marth. Wom bJ j ~ jt II often CUT~ with l 1 ~al'l'll, lnldah ortteltl. 'to11r •irtlwlot1.1 /or Jlli io1t '"" 1off frwt._,,r J.111! n. ,1,,. '' t• ... Eia111i~1 lirth1!0~•• Sault. Ce•1+ Plt11 l ri1tol al tli1 s .~ 01.,. fWf, Ce1t1 Mi•• • Benefit Lures Charity Catch Song and yell leaders. star Club. Linda Bourget , her cousin, The gathering is planned In M · Wood G K athletes and student body 0r. b ane . erry eane, egi n at 7 p.m. i1 Culverdale D D hi fi~eni will be joined by pro-Clubhouse and td conc!Uae at w!~t~r. a and Mrs. John ('-~ 1~ m1nenl meo and women fro m 8:30 p.m. the University of Southern Plans will be made for 8 Flower girl was Patricia MRS. CASTILLON Californ ia when the Trojan cake sale, and members will Bourget, cousin of the br ide, Tustin Home League of Orange County hea r of the Yorba Linda and ring bearer was John entertains area high school Cloverleaf 4-H Club's annua l Crow , the b r J d eg r oo m' 1 students during a meeting at community fair and horse cousin . \\'il!iam Dodge. 7:30 p.m. Thursday, March show in which all Orange Richard Castillon, brother of The newlyweds both are . .. CHERIE BROCKWAY Future Bride Date Set In July ' Costa Mesa's First United 1'-1elhod1st Church y,·ill be the setting for a July 31 wedding ceremony planned by Cherie Lynn Brock way and Jack Roy Za:stnsek. The Newport llarbor Lady Anglers are casting out in- vitational lines to their annual Prelude to Fishing luncheon bcnefltling h andic app e d children of Orange County on Wednesday, March 17, In the Airporler Inn . Proceeds from the eve nt will enable the group to entertain Garden Flowers Arranged Just in time for spring will be a demonstration of flower arranging taking p I ac e Wednesday, ~larch 17, in the Corona de! fo.1ar home of Mrs. G. ti. Peirsol. Sponsored by !he Women's Auxiliary to the Orange Coun· ty Pharmaceutical Associa· lion, Mrs. Rila Gorenbein will use vari eties of flowers found in home gardens for her display. Serving as hostesses for the 11 :30 a.n1 . socia l hour and approximately 200 0 ran g e Coonty handicapped chil dren in Costa Mesa Park. The an- nual party will feature clown entertainm ent and gifts for each child. A fa shio11 show coordinated by Mrs. Florence Smales will highlight the luncheon pro- gram . Cocktails will be served at 11:30 a.m., with luncheon at 2:30 p.m. In charge of plan- ning for the occasion are the Mmes. Robert Brylan, pro- gram chairman: John Harris, co-chairman; Margaret Seely, hostess chairma11 and Ralph Fore, reservation~. Benefit proceeds also will go toward the purchase of needed equipment for various :schools. Past gifts ha\'e in· cluded audio-visual aids , orthopedic playground equip- ment. hearing aids and leg braces. Westward Ho Miss Edllh Redit or Laguna Hills will host the Westwa rd Ho Chapter of the D11ughlerll of the British Empire al 12:30 p.m. on Wednesday, March 24. 18. in the Saddleback Inn. Cou nty 4-H Clubs are invited the bridegroom. was best man graduates rir Mater Del High Hosting the forum will be to participate. and guests were seated by School. She a t t en ded Mr. and Mrs. Jame.11 Walker The eve11t will take plact Welter, Richard Neuland, the Ca li fornia State College at of Santa Ana a.11.si:sled by Mr. in the El Rodeo Riding Club bridegroom's brolher-in-law, Fullerton and M is a student and Mrs. John Thomas and in Carbon Canyon on March Jamea Wilkinson, .Jr., Daniel al Fullerton Junior Col!ege. Mr. and Mri. William c.j'.2;7;a~n~d;28;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~P;";';'·~P;h;il~ip~M;;;on;t;an~o;;a;n~d~T;h;e~y;w;i;ll,r,es,id~eiii~n~Tu!!st~in~ .• Hayward. Mni. John M. Billings ts • chairman of the Trojan • • • e forums which have replaced • • • the Trojan mother-daughter e • e • e • e teas for merly planned for the e e e e county. • • • • Teach er Does Dervish Dance A presentstion or Dervish dancing and yoga will be given by Adnon Sarhan al 8 p.m. on Wednesday, March 17, in the Laguna Beach Athletic Club. Dervish dancing is a relativt.ly unknown fonn of med ltational dance w h I e h origina ted In the Middle East with the Sufi people. It com- bines chanting, movement and sound to crea te a &late of harmony. according to Sarhan . The workshop ill cpen to the public at no cost. • • • • • • • • . . ' •.;:>;'\' The future bride , whose mother and stepfather are Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Abatangeln of Cosla Mesa , is a graduate nf Robert E. Lee High School in Staunton, Va. Mr. and ~1rs. George Zastresek of Chicago are lhe parents of I.he benedict-ell"Cl, who was graduated from Kellt'y High School and the Aere>-Spaee Institute. of that city. noon luncheon will be Mrs.•-;;~======== Lee Hall and ~!rs. Petel ~tustarri. Mr,;. Dt"an Re.av ie wi ll preside over the meeting al which time fi nal plans for Po ison Prevention Week will be formulated. On the Boordw11lc Huntington Harbour rr-::=-=== -- THE RED BALLOON LTD.~.,._. ~ ;rbe...fmesLclothes !or children ffom the besl Am erican and European de51gners tlte mod df!lighlfu/111 u11111ual ehllllren'• 1hop ht the· 1oulhland 16877 Al1on!'f\lln St., Hu1111n s;l !'!n Erlich t714J 846-1666 B. D. HOWES IS HAVING A • SALE i B.D. HOWES and SON fl~tJ tWtLtRS f OR THRtt G t~tRATIO~S NEWPORT BE.ICH: 3412 Via Lido · 17S·l1ll • • • • • • •• • • • • • • 'WIND AND WAVE' AIR COMB CUT NATURALLY DONE IN OUR BEAUTY SALON COMPLETE STYllNG SPECIALLY PRICED, 8.50 BLOWER-BRUSH DRYJNG1S A BREEZE~ GIVES BODY AND aouHCE TO SHORT OR LONG HAIR, AU. YOU NEED IS THC JtlGiHT CUT, HO LONG SESSIONS UNDER THE DRYER, YOU1AE OUT 011' THE SAL.ON IN HO TIME, NOW ISN1T THIS WHAT vou1vE BEEN WAITING FOR? IN OUR BEAUTY SAL.ON, • ll:ESTOR CONDITIONER R~rrALIZ ES YOUR HAIR. • CONSULT OUR KREE EXPERT IN PERMANENT HAIR. REMOVAL., P'ASHION FORECAST f'ROSTING SPECIAL~ REG, 30.00 VALUE', HOW ONLY 19.90 COMPLETE, ROBINSON'S NEWPORT • FASHION ISLAND • 644-2 800 7 I I • ' ' ,_ . ' Costa: Mesa ' .. ' . ,. . YOL M, NO. 63, 3 SECTIONS, 32 P.AGES /' . ORANGE·COUNTY, ~~lf0RNIA . . ' • .. ' ' • 2 .Welfare Memo C.rops Up Sponsors Announced SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Jl4nald Reagan today an'nounced that RepubIJ.. ca11s Sen. Claire Burgener and Assembfy· man William Campbell will sponsor !tis welfare . and Mecii:.Ca! reform legisla· ti on. The legislation wilt be . ro-sponsored by Assembly Republican leader Ro~rt T. Monagan, Senate Republican floor leader Fred Marler and Sen. Robert J . Lago- ma rsino IR-Ojail. Two of the three welfare bills will re· quire two-third s approval of both houses of the Democratic-co11trolled Legislature fDI' passage. The Medi.Cal bill, likewise, must receive 27 favqrable votes .in the Senate and S4 in the Assembly.· The Medi-C~J bill was introduced In the assembly shortly before · noon wbilt Bur· gener planned to introduce the Senate package ,during the afternoon. The Republican lawmakers appeared at a news conference whtre Reagan intrQduced .them. Burgener said he hoped to have lhe legislation approved and ' on Reagan's desk for signature by June 30 but said he would aot seek tO waive the Legisla· ture's nlles to permit early committee hearings on the program. It will be eli- 1ible for its first hearing April 15. Burgener (R-San Diego) is considered a "moderate" on most lssues by his col· leagues and is the leading Senate Repub- lican expert on welfare. He is a former chairman of the Senate Health and Wei· fa~e committee. Campbell (R-Hacienda Heights) Is the newly appointed chairman of the Dtmo- cratiNlominated Assembly health com- mittee which is expected to consider the Medi-Cai revision bill. . He predicted the "chances of-Medi..CA1 reform passing in my judiment are much better than thi! chucea: of" wel· fare reform passing." Sen. Fred Marler of Reddln~. Senate Republican Jeader, said in 11 television in· terview Sunday he thought the Senate GOP would support Reagan's welfare plan "almOlt una11imoosly.'' Asked abou t chances for passa ge of the program. he replied, "I think il csn be done but it's going to awfully di.Iii· cult." Both houses of the Legislature ha ve Democratic majorities and Democratic leaders have expressed impati~nce with Reagan for delaying introduction of his reform measures £or so Jong. Witness States Doctor 'CaI.m' As Offices Burn By TOM BARLEY Of '"-DaHY l"llol 11111 Reba Vaughn's ex·husband today testified that Dr. Ebbe Hartelius re- mained calm, comopsed a n d un- communicative when he got the word last April 9 that his Corona del Mar of!ices were on fire. Ray Vaughn testJfied as the Orange County Superior Court arson-fraud trial of the physician neared thP. end of the prosecution phase that his blonde ex-wife wu the first person in her Costa Mesa home to ask her lover what the call WU: about. Vaughn said. it was "three to five minutes" before , those present ln the hdme learned that HarteUus, 50, was told that there was smoke pouting from his office. And he testified that Hartellus resumed his seat at the family dinner table before leaving the house at Reba's urging. The prosecution alleges that Hartelius bsd already planned the fire and they planned to use the man they believe sparked the blue as tbeir final witness today. U,I Tt"""'41t. (Go!IYrltfll NY Ntwt lllC.J TRICIA AND ED STROLL ON SIDEWALKS OF NEW YORK Will Wedding Btlls Bt Sounding Junt 5? Tricia, Cox Will Marry In White House Wedding !Q';Y"lllSOA¥NE, Jlo.~l,}Pl) -Trlc~ Nixon and Harvard law student Edwud Finch Cai• will;be manitd iS'. tht· Whitt House on Ju'ne s; it Wai Jeamed·today. The President's 25-year-old daughter originally' had plar,med her wedding for June 12. but moved it up after spending the weekend with Cox and ·Ills aocialite family· in.Ne"'. York: Jury Decision D~·in Mesa Dr;ug 'Fix' Case An -Orange ·County ·Superior Court jury was asked today t;O rule on tbe guilt or innocence of a ~guna NlglJ!J man accused of ·giving a Costa Mesa patrolman $10,000 to "fix" a potential prosecution witness in a .liquor Uieft case. Judge Ronald ·Crookshank placed the issue before the panel after Deputy District Attorney Martin J. Heneghan argued this morning that he had provided •·overwhelming evidence''· tbat should lead to the ,speedy conviction or Samuel Rosman, 27, of 29351 San Brisa Place. Defense attorney Thomas Lavin warn· ed the jury ·that evidence placed before them during the two-week trial was not sufficient to prove that Rosman gave officer Gary Barwig $10,000 to plant drup in the car of Olarles "Chuck" Dreyer, 31, o( 1645 Sunset Ridge Drive. Laguna Beach. That evidence included the playing in the courtroom of a Series of taped telephone conversations in which a voice identified as tha t of Rosman dilCUSsed details of the plan and the bribe ' with Barwig. Tbe IOl'Jllll •--.twill lll'l!)ldl Tuescloy by President lt1CI Mrs. N-. The Nixons are Planning a joint celebraUon el Ille Flnt body'• Slth·birtl>- day and . the enpgement at an "lri!h Evening at the White House" program Tuesday evening. Informed sources said t b e . an- nouncement wou1d be. made either ·.in the afternoon or evening. Close rtlatives and friends of the Nis:ons and · COt 's parents, Col. and Mrs. Howard Silis Cox, bave been invited to ~ gala gather· ing. Prime .Minister John Lynch of Ireland and Mrs. Lynch will be the gue,sts of honor after receiving a ceretnoniaJ welcome Tuesday on the South Lawn. Dr. Edward G. Latch, the House chaplain, will officiate at the wedding. He is former pastor of Metropolitan Memorial Methodist Church which the Nixons attended durifli the yefrS when Nixon was vice president. There was no word on bow big a wedding Tricia is planning. Her sister, Julie Eisenhower, 22, is expected to be her matron of honor. Cox, 24, is expected to have ·as his best man his brother, Howard Ellis Cox Jr .. an A.fmy officer stationed at the Pentagon who was married last Sep- tember to Julia Bolton Dempsey of Cleveland. Blonde, blue-eyed Tricia has had her engagement ring since last December. But abe has kept her parents sworn to secrecy until Tuesday when she has given the President the formal go ahead to make the 8nnouncement. She will be the eighth President's daughter to be married in the White House. The most recent was Lynda Bird Robb, daughter of former Presidtnt Lyn- don B. Johnson, who was married en Dec. 9, 1967, in the East Room in an Episcopalian service. Cox will wind up his second year at Harvard Law School June 4'. He plans to complete bis courae next year and then will · be eligible for service in the army. Beverly Hills StUdy Pl,anner's Note Against Report? · The issue· of an eigbt·montb~ld memo that aJlegedly contradicts: 1 point of the controversial East Side Study Report on zoning is expected to 1w'face tonight during the Costa Mesa City Council meeting. Councilman William L.-St. Clair wants It discussed in Uie 7:30 p.m. legislati~e sessJon. Mayor Robert M. Wilson -the an- ticipated target -says it will alsD likely ~me up during the 5:30 p.m. Krishna Sect Asking Fund Raising OK Not only the JaycteS and the 4-H Club, but lbe International Society for Krishna Consciousness tonight will petition the Costa Mesa City Council for approval ot a charitable campaign. They have served notice to solicit funds financing tbe spread of their novel cospel. Cl'iances are they will receive council okay. "What can you do?'' remarked Mayor Roberi M. Wi!Jon wbtn oon1'cled [or comment. "It takes three at\omeya, at each elbow these day1 to be . a community l~er, '' be added. No Orqe Coa•t colJlll)llllltY ltader will ~Olll' .!!w ~ or ""flllolt Mlio .cat!,a, foediftg tlle •1iuJ111'7:,· ~·Ille tleor and helplnl drug-01tn -theli' babilt.. , .• J These are all aspects of the Krlstm1 ConsciOUSfiess Society's function, from Seal Beach, to San Clemente. . The problem-hat been in their metJmd1. Certain cltlzens 1'11 Salim Wand have complained the Krishna COmcioasneu sect is too successful at making . of.tiers conscious of their presence. They are readily recognizable on the 11treets compared to, aay, CatnPfire.Gltls or Jehovah's Witnesses. The shaven-headed. white-robed sect's chief method of public worshlf> involves chanting the ritual prayer phrase: Hare Krishna. They accomoanv their joyful·nolse un4 to the [(,rd by cl1spil'li, ban.rinJ! lllf'l'I· bnnrines and dancing. often on the beach. ·They abhor drugs, ·tobacco· and alcohol passionately. La~na Beach merchants led 8 Joni( aad lar~ely futile campai'"1 to outlaw or at least control and reduce the decibel lt'VP.I of their celebr11tions. ~ince the Krlshn11 TPmole wa!I: estab- li~h~ at 130 Wood1and Drive fn that cltv wt.II ovt.r a :vear l!J?n. thev clslm to have athilnerl mnrf' th1>n ~n convert!I:. Like the bibliral Hiies nf the fielrf. thev h1.1ve Tifl re,,.ttrd for rahnPnt (Ir SIJ!tl•.n .. a11,.._ reh•ing nn a r.nl'l"rnunal Jife-~tvTP.. N11tu,.:illv, resources must come from S"'~p1vhere. Snokesrn11n f'.h!!rJe~ r F!'f'nset rrr. " n11me used nnlv for l"llJll anrl rommnni· catlve purpnses. outlinP.~ Kri!l:hna Con· sci,.,usnes5 pl11n11 ff'\r Costa Mesa. Converts shed their teMporal names unon exnerlencin~ the call . exch11nl!'in~ John Smith or Mary Jqnes for lyrical idPntities of'oriel'ltl'll or asiatic extract.ion. Hensel's Jetter of aoplication indicates the Krb~hna crew will visit CostA MP<:..8 by scheduled. time and place to sing the pr11ises of Krishna 11nrt 10licit. Newport Beach officials reluctantly ap- J>roved such a permit recently after a thorough OOllC#! bsu~kirroUT\d ~k which !See KRISHNA, Page I) •• study session ln the conference room behind council chambers. CoWlCilrnan St. Clair maintains the memo from ,Planning Director William L. Dulin, dated Julie lt, ·goes igtin!t the report on proposed EOnin& prepared two years ago. · He accuses Mayor_ Wilson of trying to suppress it.9 contents too. . . Dunn at that time warned of an im• pending apartment crisis In v o 1 v I n g severe vacancy factors and three ' Thrust Stcalfed prtmary recommendatl0111 to1pr!ftftt lt. The East Side Study report, now in councilmen's hands, envisions a major portion of the 260 acres affected· as a ruture high and mediWlfdenaity 1par1- ment' co:ncentratlon. · City officials have generally toughened up conditions and requirements on apart- ment construction throughout ~ com· munity·at Dunn's recommendat~ · During 1970 alone, plans fot .T,~ (See COUNCIL, Paa• II Force of· 12,00.0 Hits s .. ·Viet Post ) \l,J,Tti.llet. Be'• Number One· Notre·Dame's AUstih c,tr1 a:6· 3 guard. who jpll'~d 189-82 Irish UJ>'el of to"p-ranked UCLA earlier this year, today was named \970-71 college basket· ball player-of the year by Ullit- ed ·Press International. Escaped Convict Caught by Police In Costa Mesa A convicted robber who fled 1 minimum security jail branch hi Orange was literally caught with ~ii panta down Sunday, night In a Costa Mesa re.stroom. Rickey E. Marcum, 22, of 847 Center St., waa taken iito custody by Officer Dennis Hossfeld in a laundromat near his home. He was booked on a warrant charging felony escape, with ball set at $3·1.250, and turned over to SherUf'1 detectives for return to a maximum security section of Orange County Jail. Marcum was named ln the warrant Issued from Central Orange County Judicial District Court Friday, after he fled the .Theo Lacy Facility. The honor (arm is bounded only by a' wire. fence. SAIGON !UPI) -Tanlm and inlan!Ty in a North Vietnamese force of 12,000 men attacked a South Vietnamese out· post in Laos Monday and atopped a drive on a huge 11upply dump astri4e the Ho Chi Minh Trail. The outpost stood fast with strong U.S. air 'tupport which knocked out seven tanks. It was also reveAled that lasei--beam directed bombs were used in attacks qD \he enemy tanks. A major battle appeared to be ~Pini up. 'Acroos lhe .border,-In Soulh V)etpaj1t'1 norlhweil C<ll'ller;1 Comm1Ullst "1"""' .1ubJect.s• lhe U.S.'wppart'-II Kho ·~anh to It. heaviest blrral(t ll!>qe tile Liol ol!Wlvi bekan :Feb. I, ~~ l!lorlir one! roclltt !VW>ds Into ~ positkms. No .U.S. casu!ltieS '· were repOrted but .some South Vietnamese Were hurt and a few American bellcopttr1 were damaged. The focqs of ac~ion in Laos Monday cf:ntered around fire support base Lolo, ID outpost nine miles east of the Ho Chi Minh Trail center of sepone. Brig. Gen. Pham Van Phu, commander of sputh Vietnam's 1st Infantry Dlvl!ion. said Communist pressUre on Lc!O and other points bad blocked his troops trying to reach a big North Vietnamese am· munition dump and a fuel pipeline. . Phu said. South Vietnamese defenders of Lolo fought .a aeries of clashea . With North Vietnamese forces throu~t Monday 'in the area,. including orie two- hbur battle at-the base perimeter before the CommWtilts were beaten back. Soviet-built 1'34 tanks fired 88 mm guns at Lolo and U.S. Air Force pilot5 re- ported knockout one column of seven Communist tanks in the fight. Three o t h .e r tanks were reported destroY.ed Sunday. Military sources said a "considerable" number of the tanks destroyed by air strikes inside Laos were located by Laser Beam-directe<I bombs. A laser beam is a high intensity light beam which does not diffuse and which produces Immense electrical fields when it reaches its target. . The sources said the American aircraft operate in teams of .two planes, one of which targets .and .shoots the beam while a second j~t unlOad& "smart•• bombs which are gµldf!d . to the objective by the lasers. 11J.e •· sources said the laser beam bombing can l~te ·a small opening in a · hillside tunnel complex and blow an entire inountain off the map if ammunition supplies Utere are detonated. Phu said the entire •2nd division of !See ASIA · WAR, Pace !) Orange Deputy District Attorney Al Novick alleges that Jim Blevins. Reba Vaughn 's brother left the Vaughn home at 687 W. Wilson St., e8rlier tb!t evening, drove to Hartelius' <1fflce 'at 2345 E. Coast Highway and doused the contents of Youth Drug Use ;Revealed Looal police received t:YOr4 Sunday that Marcum wu in tOwii ind Officer ~ossfeld ,mWed him at t~ Center Street. apartment by only 10 mlnuw. · Spotted In the nearby laundrotnat, he was captured ~fter be ·c;onvenlenJly entered · the restrOom, wbK:h had no possible Ull Weather Warmer weather is in the ofling for Tuesday with high clouda and temperatures stretching upward to 75 degrees along !he coast a file with gasoline. BEVERLY HILU (AP) -At leasl with their m·aturity ind potential Novick claims that the fire was planned to destroy records and he further alleges 75 t>tt'cent o:f the teenagera In this ex; · atr'ength.'' that Blevins was bribed M> Hartelius 't . " d lri The report concluded that 60 to 70 u;, elusive commun1 y are tnVOLVe percent of the city's ymon• -pie are to leave the state. u nc1· ti..·· •-• ed. · ¥-.., t''""' narco cs a ~tr paren..., m 1c1ne~ mild drug· users 'and S to 10 percent Vaughn admitted under long grilling by defense attorney Matthew KuriUch cabinets average about eight kinds of are extreme users. that his ex-wife had been known to mood~hanglng drugs, a city·school He.Hid marijuana was maiflly used. lie fa irly frequently during .hi.::'•:.· "'°"'=='•:..·--;d-Jis!tlr~ict~fli"n~ancod!"'~report •bows. The study aaid one faCtor is the tion with her . __ , ba~on-~-i~----deterioratin1'-home-life-in~90me-fAmilie:s And he rejected R n apparent m;ove teryiews with 50 junior and senior bigb which &truggle to keep their Beverly by Kurilich to cast doubt on the achool students, went on to say the , HiUs JdenUiy· ';even If they can afford legitimacy of hit youngest son Jerr)'. high drug use dots not mean that BeVerly to·furni sh<011ly tMfr living room.'' 4, by stating that the child w•s his. Hills, famous for Jtt v.;ealthy and celebri· AbOut JS percent of Beverly Hills "1 hope so ... l believe so," comme.nted ty residents, 1a "sick.'' homes are run by depressed, divorced the obviously moved witness. Dr. Stephtn . Rush, . a peycholOgt,t, mothers who "struggle to remai~ Novick confirmed in cross examinaUM wrote In the 1rt:port he has contacted Beverly Hills to provide the highly rMM that Mrs. Vaughn becime pregnant wltb with hundreds .of Beverly Rills youths achoo1 for their otherwise ·4e~i.vecl', .. the youngest of their three children and ••m1ny ttemed l'tsUHS, angry or chlldren.0 the report added. -• before ber husband left her. sli5htly depressed, but I was lmpre:ssed It aald the rnaln narcotic ls mariju&na. 0 • ' but many blve tried · -bot do not "" regularly -LSD ond pep ond oleep- ing pills, abundant in many medicine cabinets. The repart said Beverly Hilla adulta seem to use more of the harder ctru&I. The report · sa!d Beverly Hdl! youth hrn~1-0><1e· all-ih•lnwr-.r being "COOi" and they follow it rigidly .. lt is uncool to get "hooked, h u n g up" or strung out'' on drugs, but it is cool to get a Uttle hikb or , to relu wilh drugs, the re~_1_1id . The youths compared lhe "" of pep , pills ·to coffee and ' marijuana to · .. n 1 arteiJ.dinner drink. The rtporl. wai·COrh· piled by the Tulnlili Coinmlttto ol lhe · ~·OO D1111erou.1 Drup. ' ' J .. SOME STOCK . REPORTS FA.IL · Some portions of the American Stock 1 Exchange rolled to be repottl:d todly In electronic transmiMion from New York. Today~,. •tock reportt are complete tx. .. cept for listings lrom 0 0'' through ·"Z'' on the American· Stoci. Exchange. 11'ht DAILY, PILOT regrets this lnconwnlence to IL< r .. ders. Tile !(el,; York pro~lem Is expected to be correcled l>tfore Tpe,. · day's trl?W'hlsslon. INSWE TODAY Th4!re'1 a nt'to yachting land- . mark 4'n Newport Harbor OJ Ba.l!..io Corinthian Yccht Club d•dfccttd it. f(SO,OO(J ~lubhous•. on Bo:uside Qrive. Boat~ng f?age 26:---L I L-> .J ' - \ . _, I~ 2 OAll V PILOT c ' -.Route Talk to ·Re~pen S~twn. of Freeway to. Be Renegotifited ,. . ' . . · By L P£l'EB KRIEG t.. a ruuit of lut Tuuilay'a lof.l!l4od dlima before · oey P'J' -.ref:i\tilo11 cu ot • MIT ... ,. •t•tt vote, the Clty CouncD next -U 11 tX• ht ~. Tht dLattet: am:eMrnent. hoW· A top of!iclal of the CaUlomla poblic peeled to name a n•rotiatlq ~11e• ' evir, •tlll 111UJ1 10 beloreAhe 1tata ielli>- worts department aaid today the state to meet with state offlclala to try to lature where prospects for ratlflcaUoo wW reqotl1te jts agreement with New· work out a bll!teral repe1l of the agree· are uncertain. <pt Beach m lhe Corona del Mar leg of ment. Russell this morning said the council, <the future Pacllic Coast Highway. Russell declined to discU&s the J)0$1lbll· if It does form the negotiating committee, •'Ultder the state highway code we Uy of outright cancellation Of the agree-can approach any one of several points ~1n't build a free'lay wiOK>ut loeal au· ment but his stattment was the first In· of authority in the Highway Divisio• hier· Uiority," Jerry Rus.stll, legislative rep.. dication from the state that it will rec. archy. raentaUve o( the depattment, told the op.lie that Newport Beach residents He .saJd however. the committee will PAIL Y PILOT. don't want the freeway where ii is now be referrtd to the chief engineer of Ru.ssell noted the overwhelming rejec-planned. . . ffig!lway Division 7, Haig Ayanian, lion of the freeway by Newport Beach Jn that election .rei1de~ta voted al· "Mr. Ayanlan will meet with Uie com· voters last week and said. "agreements most 6 to 1 lo ask the Ctty Council lo miltee lo renegotiate the agreement,'' ire alway.s subject to renegotiation. unilaterally rescind the street~losln& Russell said "and ii a new agreement "It's been done several Ume.s before .agreement along the planned route is produced 1he will then forward it to ,anytime a city or a coonty wilihta to re-JOUtbeasterly of Upper Newport Bay. the (Publlc Worlcs) director for review 11tgotlate an agreement to renect a In a second measure, they approved a and submission to the California High· change of attitwlt," he explained. cbarLer amendment requirine referen-way Commission." Calley's Prosecution To Begin Summing Up FT. BENNING, Ga. (UPI) -The government neared the end of lb two- year invesUgatlon and prosecuUon of 1.L William L. Calley Jr. lo d a y with Jinal arguments on its charge that he ''shot down dead in cold blood" at least 102 Vietnamese villagers. 'l1le prosecutor in the Calley murder court-nwtial, Capt. Aubrey M. Da~l UI, was to begin the summaUons !fl the afternoon se:salon. The defense will sum up Tut9day, and Daniel wW reply to that with matt argument. Col. Reid W. Kennedy, the judge, said CdM 19-year-old Lewd Call Case Suspect Caught he believed he could follow with his jw-y instructions before that day's end. That would put one. of the most important and publicized military trials i n American hlstory in the h a n d s -of the jury on ' the third anniversary of the My Lai maasacre. The Vietnamese subhamlet was hit by an American infantry search-and· destroy sweep on March 16, 1968. The army beg I n its investigation Of the incident two years ago next monlll. The government summation opening came on the 4llth court day. Daniel said in his opening address four months alo -there have been several lengthy recesses -:. that he would ishow Calley, a platoon leader, not only killed in cold blood himself but ordered his men to e1ecute civilians. The premeditated slaughter by Calley and his men was set in the government charge as totaling at least 102 ·unarmed and unresisting women, children, and old men. The judge, in a aession with A Corona de.I Mar man ls in cus~y both aides ·Sunday. disclosed be will today in Newport Beach, charged with instruct the six -officer jury that If it making 200 obscene phone calls to Harbor wu satlsfied only one was killed it Area women over the past year. CO\lld c:otlvict. William Howard Will, 19, of ill He iild'be abo would Instruct tbem Poinsettia Ave., was arrested ~day it "is illegal to kill unresisting people" .after police alleged he went to the and would discuss the basic l1w1 of Newport home of a vicUm for a date. -was, wlilCb prohibit killing of prisoners. • Detectives said their file on the cases .date ~k ne.arly one. year when a man • who caned himleH Bill Jacillon began harwlng female mldenta of Newport, COO. 14,.. and Tuatill. Tbe 'YJctims of the lewd calls rege ill qe from 12 to 75, !llvelllgaillra said. • The calls were linked by a similar obscene suggestion and the fact that .the caller usually knew the victims' names and Identified himself as Bill Jackson. "We probably would have been able to catch a suspect much sooner if the victims had called us riJht away," said Detective SUe Race. "Unfortunately, some of the women waited until they had received several and J'm 1Ure some never reported the calls at all. U we'd bad this information, a pattern wouk1 have been established much earlier," !he added. Mrs. Race said at least a half dozen attempts to set up dates with the c1ller had failed in the past. She credited the unidenUfied victim with Wall's arrest She as'serted a search of Wall's borne turned up a telephone book for the Harbor area with an undetennined number of phone numbers circled. "It looks like he had called numbers on every page," sfte said. Wall , who is being held in lieu of $8,125 bail, is scheduled to appear thls afternoon in Harbor Judicial District Court for arraignment. , OIAHC.l COAST DAILY PILOT 011.AlrlGE COAST PUll1$MIHG COM,AHY Rolterf N. W11d Prnldtnl ,,.. f'uOlltflff' J1ck ft . Curley \'IC9 Pml6mt Ind Gtnff•I M11119iir Thotn•• Koewll EdUOI' lhom11 A. Mwrphin1 M1ntg!ng Editor Ch•rlt1 H. Looi ftich1rd P. Nill ANl1!1n; MINIJnu E<lllori Cost• M .. • Offke JJO W11t l1y Str11t M1lll11t Addren: r.o. lox 1560, tJ62i OfMT OffkH FrentPoge I COUNCIL ... apartment unJtJ were either processtd or diml!sed, wllb about 2,000 beillg Jn corutructton 1tagea at year's end. Dunn notes that with an average populaUon increase of 1,500 peraons, COSta Mesa is beaded -if no controls are impostd -rfor a severe overbuilding stl.tuaUon. If all 7 ,000 that came before plaMers last year were built, he maintains, the number of living unlts In the city would have increased by 25 percent This is the kty to Councilman St. Clair's argument against adoption of the East Si::l.e Study Report in its lattst phase. He ran into trouble in an effort to have 1,000 copies of Dunn's memo on apartments and overbuilding printed for distribution among the East Side Proper· ty Owllers Associatioo. This group swifUy organized two weeks ago and is working to convince coun- cilmen not to adopt the zoning recom· mendations. "The mayor countermanded the city manager's ordtr and did not allow the reprinting of the report," St. Clair said today. "I was not notified in any way by the mayor that he. was canceling my order," St. Clair added, accusing Wilson of trying to prevent the proper flow of data. "I regard this aS an attempt to conceal valuable information from the public," St. C!air charged. Mayor Wilson denies any such plot, saying St Oair never asktd permisalon, nor explained to fellow councilmen. his request for t,000 copies at city cost. "He may very well get them,'' Mayor Wilson said today. adding that he simply felt tht request should be handled with council deliberation. "I have since ordered 2,000 C()pin from a private printer at a cost of $75," Councilman SI. Clair revealtd. He i5 a member of the property owners organizat.ion but has been told in definite terms not to try to use it as an early re-election campaign tool. DuM's letter was discussed last sum- mer at a joint council and planning comrnlssion study session and contains three primary recommendations: -Reviewing apartment dulgn policy to enable planners to improve mulUple unit projects proposed. -Review with an ertremely crltlcaJ eye of the city's zone e1ctpllon permit pollcy under whlch multiple unlta are built in areas othe:r"ise zoned. -Firm definition of 1oals and ob- jectives of the commission and council in the realm of residential building. "This recommendation should In no way be vtewed as a mor1tor1um request on apartment ronwucuon." he em· phubed, but only as a method or he1ding off 1 critical problem later. City offid1l1 have explained In similar terms that the East Side Study Report "'1ich property owners have att1cli.ed lJ'onJy (t &uldeJ~e, noL I filt policy. Jr approved, It wou'ld rhange no e.x· fstlnl ionlnf. I . . . Russell'a comments appear somewhat contrary to statements iuued last week by State llighway Commission ChairmllJ'I Fred C. Jennings and Ayanian, who both maintain the city could aot unllaterally back out of the contract. The quest.ion of semantics involving the city's desire to "rescind" as opposed to the state's apparent willingness to "re.- negotiate" may prove a stumbling block to future deliberations. Neither Jennings nor Mayor Ed Hirth could be reached for commenl lhls morn· ing although it is known that Hirth is toylnli: with the idea of asking the coun· cil to write the Division of Highways asking if it "would be receptive" to ne· gotiations. Immediately after the landslide vote, Councilman cart Kymla had proposed the idea of a negotiating committee and Vice Mayor Howard Rogers had con· curred, although the latter wants a 60- day deadlil.ie attached to any resolutions. Young Survivor In Fire Scene Crasl1 Improves A Costa Mesa youlb critically injured 16 days ago in a collision that killed his sister and a companion is gradually emerging from a coma caused by brain damage. Spokesmen at Hoag Memorial Hospital said today Paul Arbuckle, 17, of ioo2 1'-fa)lle St., is improving a · small bit each day. He was one of four teenagers riding in a car shortly before midnight Feb. 26, when it collided with a Costa Mesa Fire Department car en route to a fatal blar:e . Claire Arbuckle, 14, of 2002 Maple St. ind Edward Hernandez, 19. of 2163 National Ave., both in Cosla ?t1esa, were. killed in the craab. Fire Department Battalion Chief Ron Coleman suffered two broken legs in the accident on Estancia Avenue at Swan Drive. He is currenUy listed in good condition at Cosla Mesa Memorial Hospital. Candidate Forum Set for Public In Board Race The public will be. offered an op- portunity in f.1arch to meet the candi· dates in the upcoming Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustees elecllon. The candidates forum, scheduled for 7:30 p.m. f.1arch 31 at Estancia High School is being arranged by the Associa· lion of University Women and the Or· ange Coast League of Women Voters . Candidates are: Donald E. Smallwood , an attorney, in the April 2{I election \981 Kornat St., Costa Mesa, the lone c andidate for the area one seat. Incumbent Marian C. Bergeson, 1721 Tradey,·inds Lane. Newport Beach, who is opposed in trustee area three by Donald T. Bull, a businessman, of 2.548 Westminster Ave., Costa Mesa, and incumbent Selim S. Franklin, an al· torney, 1928 Sanla Ana Ave., Costa Mesa, who is opposed in trustee area six by Herbert H. Stricker, a sales represen· taUve, 445 Redlands Ave., Nevoporl Beach. Art Collector's Home Dama ged Fire that raged out of control for 20 minutes caused heavy damage Sunday to the $50,000 Santa Ana Heights home of Harbor Area art collector and gallery owner Clyde Zulch. The blaze loss was listed at more than $8,000 in tentative estimates by the Orange County Flre Department . No one v.·as In the house at 2603 Redlands Drive. north of the Costa Mesa city limits, v.·hen the fire broke out and no one was injured. Investigators theorized the fire could have been ignited by combustibles stored near a water heater and furnare. The vict.im is owner of Clyde Zulch Original.!, an art caUery recenUy reJocaled from dov.11town Costa Mesa to 3IOO ~. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. Can Join Explorers PGRTl.AND (AP) -Teenaged girls are being invited to join the Explorera, the previoully males-only extensioo of the Boy Scouu of AmerJca. OAIL'('JlLOT Pt.It •r •ld!M9 Ketllltr AMBULANCE ATTENDANTS AID CYCLIST WHO LANDED ON CAR Rider In jured in Rear-end Colli1:on in Co1ta Mew Cycle Rider Seriously Hurt in Mesa Crash A Costa Mesa motorcyclist whose at. tention was diverled with a warning of a dangerous dip in the road ahead was injured Sa turday. v.•hen he con- sequently rammed the rear of a stopped car. James L. Felkes. 16, of 1570 Orange Ave., was listed in serious condition today at Costa ~1esa f\1emorial Hospital with leg injuries. · -~ The victim was riding north on Newport Boulevard Saturday at 1:40 p.m., beside fellow cyclist Chris Schall . of 314 Victoria St .. when the accident From Puge 1 ASIA WAR. • • the North Vietnamese army -12,000 men at full strength -was moving in units of between 500 and 3,000 troOps into the Lolo area to protect the supply b ..... U.S. 852 stratofortresses dropped hun- dreds of tons of bombs on the supply base i1onday and a communique reported •·very big setondary explosions." an in· dication that ammunition and fuel were destroyed. It was disclosed at the same time that U.S. Cl30 Hercules transport planes operaun·g over Laos were using 15,00Q. pound bombs as a tactical weapon for the first time there. The bombs previou!· ly were used to carve out "instant'' landing zones for U.S. he.licopter!. Military sources said a 15,000 pounder was parachuted last week and detonated between two hills overlooking a strategic pass to the north of Roule 9. The sources said the two hills were blown off the map and a landslide blocked the area to Communist truck traffic. Communist antiaircraft fire had kept U.S. resupply helicopters away from Lolo duri ng the past several days, but a flight of 10 helicopters got through to the outpost 11onday. occurred . Police saici the pair were discussing a 21S fool rise and dip in the pa vement ahead. apparently caused by a tree root. Neither noticed Carlos V. Mendoza, 25, of 924 W. Pine SI., Santa Ana . had stopped for a red light at 22nd Street until the last minute. Schalt wa s able to swerve, but Falkes slammed into the back -o( l\1endoza's car, suffering fractures and other in· juries. Police Halt Bid For 'Death Dive' Off Coast Pier Escape artist D.D. Masco Is alive and well in Alhambra today. Seal Beach JX>lice officers \\'ho stopped him from attempting a "Dive to be.ath'' ofl the municipal pier Saturday. The 32-year-old stuntman was Lo have jumped into !he water, weighted down and shackled by two handcuffs and 25- feet of chain padlocked in three places. Unable to locate a boat for his dive, the burly 270..pound "Houdini" sought to complete his stunt by taking a leap off the eod o! the pier. He' didn't get far. Masco was met at the he.ad of the pier by Sgt. Martin Black who took him to see Police Chief Lee Case. "The city has an ordinance against jumping off the pier." the chief told him. "I'm afraid we won't be able to allow you to go through with this ... Disappointed by the order, the red· bearded Masco announced to the crowd or 2.(XIO thrill -seekers lining the pier that he would make good his claim next Saturday, at 2 p.m. SAVE 48°/o to 500/o Don't Pay $110 ••• ,., thit " ( • ...itair. Ht•l•-t !'let Ill 14K Wiii ....... -.,"" " '" •IH "' J -lllt WMt. ...... ,.. .. , ... , 'Sister.' Had Alibi For Manson LOS ANGELES IUPll -Qne o! the "family" girls tried lo provide an alibi for Charles Manson today in the closing hours of the penalty phase of the Tate- LaBianca murder trial. Catharine Gillies, 21, said that the hippie leader was at a campsite near a waterfall y,·ith another young girl at the lime or the two nights of murder, and that she saw him then. Although Manson already has been convicted of seven murders, his attorney, Irving Kanarek, proceedc..d 8J!I if hi.! in- nocence or guilt was st!ll in question and tried to establish thaL Mamon pl1yed no part in the murders. The jury i.! now hearing evidence only as to whether the penally should be life or death. Miss Gillies introduced a chilling note Into the trial, entering its 10th month tuda)r, when she discussed the way the girls felt about mutder. "You know, I'm willing to kill for a brother,'' she said. "We all are. r y,•ould have killed if I had gone along that night (the night ol the Tate slayings).'' Miss Gillies left a loophole In her story when she said that Manson and Stephanie Schramm were at the waterfall in Devil's Canyon at the time of the s\aings, but admitted she was camped some distance away . Big Srorr Ra1ick Put Up for Sale By Newport Firm The 10,I«·acre Starr Ranch In the soulheast part of Orange County near Ortega Highway is up for sale. Recrea· tion Environment Inc. of Newport Beach which planned lo develop the area into a $17 million wilderness recreation facili- ty is the seller . Recreation Environment bought the ranch last ~1ay from the Eugene Starr estate. At tha t time the · county was considering purchase of the property for a regional park. Those plans may be revived with the land back on the market but it is con- sidered unlikely that the county will move on the opportunity because of the tight money situation. It has been pointtd out that lhe county if interested could have taken steps to acquire the property during the past year. A study of the park plan was dropped but has been revived. The ranch is located six and one half miles east or San Juan Capistrano near the Cleveland National Forest. Recreation Environment bought the land for $11,000 an acre but the asking price today me be $12,000 to $15,000. The county has 2,300 acres of regional parks now developed or planned. The Star Ranch area is included in a ten-year old study of county parks which tota led 8.900 acres. The entire ranch was not planned as a part of the county sytem. Recreation Environment is selling the property to raise money for Its bankrupt parent company Perm Central Railroad. The Newport Beach firm operates Coto de Caza, the nearby luxury recrution facility. From Page 1 KRISH NA ... revealed nothing objectionable. Funds obtained Will finance week I y free feasts. cbant·ins and dances in d"' votion to Krishna, plus other needs. No additiona l infonnation was avail· able since the temple telephone had been disconnected. ........ $8900 Don't Pay $475 OUR UNUSUAL MONEY BACK DIAMOND GUARANTEE 1' .• '""" , .. . ,,.., ... ,.,. ""' ..,.. .. wll!M ................... -..,_,Mill •!Nwll9n lltlt fttll fW ws. ,.. c• ... When you buy • diamond from us .,,. will guarantM that dl1mond to eppr•IMi at w;. MOR E then you paid for It or your money Hc:k. Cen you do es well •lsewher•? COMPARE. 1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FIOM • FIND fT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY-.. and LOAN LOAN. IUY, SIU, DADI 1838 NEWPORT BLVD· PHONE 646-n41 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -Ba-Harbor. & Broadway 7 7 • • .. I I • • • \ Saddlehaek N.Y. Stoeka VOl. 64, NO. l>J, 3 SECTIONS, 32 •.PAGES ' f ORANGE coumy., CALIFORNIA ., I , MON9AY; MARCH 15, 1911 • JEN CENTS Hate Mail Flowing In Over F'luOridation Issue . By. JOHN VALTERM Of tlM Dellr l'lllt lt•tf Halt mail alr~ady la nowing in to at. least ope· Cily Councilman who i! 1 ·firril aupporter of fluoridation of San Clemente'• water supply. · Dr. Wide l.Alwer this week conceded that antagonism tcward his latest move to resurrect the issue has grown in recent weeb. 1be councilm~1 •. a retired oral surgeon, Street Work Plans Set F o'r Council C!tY rtaff recommendations submitted aeveral months ago outlining the need for fl least $1.3 million to repair San ·cterdente's nisting substandard streets will come up for city council study in a specia1 aession late this month. Councilmen will meet in an informal study session March 31 to again review costs and guidelines set forth by City •Engineer Phil Pe tu, Finance Director Gerry Teachout and City Manager Ken Carr. In general terms, the report outlines a five.year program ~of upgrading the 1treet1 -but the means fO'I" financin& that program still are in doubt. Tu rate incre.ues to covu the cost.I wooJd amount to a tJ:uge 57.6 cent.a per •JOO of ~ valuation. Another revenu~ alternative ~Id be the pUsa1e of 1eoeral obligation revenue bond!. Present city policy on street main· tenance ii a balance between assessment diltricls on local .neighborhood 1treet! to 1 full~ity payment of construction of arterial highways. Jn some instances tbt county picks up a portion of the bill. Stat. gas taz rebates also are used to ~y for arterial street work. On collector streets. with an avuage 40-foot paved widlh, the city shares costs 50-50 with bordering property owners. L«al street.I are rebuilt and resurfac· td with the u:penae borne by property oWnen under as,,essment district pro- ceeIDngs -rarely a popular proceM. The revenue picture for major 1treel work i! a bleak one. And the five-year period under the presently outlined program would not signify much headway. Peter has told councilmen th1t five years Is aboul the maximum life of any roadway imlfroved . u¢er eurre'nt proce1ses. Another five-year program, he said, JllOl.lld have ta be repeated again five years hence. Al tu. revenue, Teachout explained, ... hU been running about $100,000 a year. With an average budget balance of '300i000, Teachout estimates, a five-}'far acCumulation ol gas tu rebates would anlOUlll lo II.I mllllon. But 1 majcr resurfacing job along Ill& length of El Camino Real alone could wipe oot 1ll thoR fund•. -1.'he apparent timina for the street study 1euloo is to obtain advance diacuaio1 and ttud)' before councilmen be!lln their monlhl Jong round of budgel -l•ler thl• 3J>1"lq. ....... Cout "" .. ' Weatlter . •Wanner we.ther is.in the offing for Tuesday with. b!gh cloud3 and temperaturu strt,tching upward to 75 deirees aloog the coast. ' . . ' INSIDE TODAY Thttrtt's a 17lf!ID ~ch1ti~g land-· mark on NelD'pOf't Harbor ~ Bbhia Corinthian Yacht. Club didicatttd iU 47$0,000 clubhoustt on· Ba11sitU Driw. Boclino -Page 28. ....... M Cllllwllle r C!Mt.klllt U, t c .. 1.mt11 ,,.,, ~=.,. :; Deetll ~ 11 ....,.., , ... ' lll*M......., tt-U '"""'" , .... .......... 1f ' •• '--""' 11 ii ln •Sin Diego today ruearching the fiuoridaUon matter i!rtha.t city. "I've 19tten quite a bit of mall from both ·&ides alread)r, and some of It ia prtUy strong," be said. The councilman, who successfully won unanimous CQUnCil action for a fluorida· Uon study about two weeks ago. said support and offer• of a speaker have come from the Orange County Dental AllOCiailon and other groups within UM FLUORIDATION U.Ol!ONENT Councilman lower Alien 's Death On Freeway Investigated OCEANSIDE -The identity of a Mex- ican alien who fell or was pushed off 1 truck early toda y and run over by cars on Interstate 5, remains a mystery. C&lifomia Highway patrolman Dennis Porter, 36, of Vista and his partner were . about lO turn off the freeway when they heard the thump of a nearby car striking something about J :2tl a.m. toda y. . Porter jumped out and pulled the body of the unidentified man out of the way or oncoming cars. Oceanside poli tt chas- ed the canvas<0vered truck along State Route 78, finding a group. of aliens in the beck. ''No one is ta lking about the incident." .1 Highway Pa t r o 1 spokesman said today. noting im- migration a.utborities were investigating the incident. The victim •as about 40 years old. 5 foot fi inches tall and weighed 148 pounds. He was drel!sed in grey trousers, a blue shirt and a tan jacket. Sin Diego County Coroner's office Is seeking information to identify the man. Eleven other alienll were taken into custody. The truck driver was not charg· ed, authorities aa.Jd. Big ·st.arr Ranch Put Up for Sale By Newport Firm The 10,144-acre Starr Ranch In the toutheut part of Orange County near Ortega. Highway is up for sale. Recre&· tion Environment Inc. of Newport Beach which planned to develop the area Into a $17 million wilderness recreation faclli· ty ts· the sener. Recreation Environment bought the ranch last May from the Eugene Starr esta.t~ .• At tha t time the county wa."S coo.sldering , purchase of the property for. a ·regio/lal park. 'l'b>ee. plaris may be revived with the land back on the market but it Is con· 81dtted unlikely that the county wiU move on the opportunity because of ~~i'f1!2..DeY 1it91tlon. ~ · It hJis 'belii pointed out that the courify tf · ~ could have taken steps to 1cquin the 'property during the ~ yur. " atudy of the par!< plan. -.r.;'1 . ' dr.1?P~ uut 'hill been · revived . -'nit ranch is loc1ted stx and one half nUJea f:lst of San Juan caplstrano near the Clevele.nd Natlon1l Forest, ·Recreation Environment boughl the land for 111,000 an acre bul the Askin.a price today me be 112,000 to 115,000. profess.ion. N. the Idea gathers momentum in San Clemente, upcoast in Huntington Beach Duoridation is nearing reality - at least temporarily. City officials and foes of the addition of the compound to public we.ter supplies will appear Tusday at a special bearing or the State· Public Health Service. The City of Huntington Beach wUJ seek approval by the .state agency of • the equipment tq be installed to add the compound to drinklq wa.ler. Foes of the plan -whilt their chances of thwarttng. the , Ouoridalion . are slim at the Tuesday hearing at'\M'Dlmtyland Hotel -w1u· speat"11alnst the Issue. They rocenUy loll their ·bld ·lo bring the matter to a vote because ol a misiJ.nderataftd!ng ol~the State ~ections Code. Petitions cal\lnr for a~ plebiscite bearln& mort th~·•·• siinatures·wer1 ·1ve-car • .. subinitted too late'tO be le1a1. 1 • N.earby, In Fountain .Valley, .dty of· nciats there 1re P1anntn1 . to nuoridate water u well aild • will abet ·speak '•t the 'Tuesday hearli!J. · ' ' BUt ·the oppostion . In that city 1Ull has an activ~ petition cainP11in to, bring the · mailer o~lo • ~oJl!ll)Jot, ·SlljhtfY more than 100 narr;es ;are1needed•before. the rtferenduln 'petj\~ are:Valid. _ ' some reliable obl6fven of pie situation have said that ' the antroveny· la' not ' . . ~ . ' . . ' . . . . ' . ' widespnad 1n the two adjoining cities • .• that the fots are ay;nbolic ti. one politia! persuasion and are not representatiVe of a larae 1 mus of citizens. - In San ·Clemente, the opposition has not been eorilpletely aaaeSled 11 }'ft. "tt'I growing, thoqcb/1 Dr. Lower ld- mllt<d. -"You wou1dn't btlleve nne of the stuff that's coming Jnlo my mailbox right now," be added. 1es r _eewa FIREMAN SURVEYS WRECKAGE OI' FIVE-V.EHICLE AfCIDENT IN CAPISTRA,NO BEACH Sunday Accident lit Northbound lane of San ·o 1~0 PrHWl'f lnfurecf Eight, Delayed Tr1ffic Group Formed To Support School Bond A citizens ror schools committee has · been formed in support of the $15.3 million bond Issue being sought in a special election April 6 by the San Joa· quin School District. Voting on the school · bond lssue for the sprawling disbict. will be the com- munities of Leisure World, Mi.salon Viejo. El Toro. Capistre.no Highlands, Aegean Hills, Aliso Valley. Irvine e'.nd the Santa AM M~rine Air Facjllty as well as de velopments that Include California Homes. Culverdale, University Park and Turtle Rock. Charles Waltman Is general chairman of the bond iSlllle information campaign. Area chairmen incltide: Diane Kent. Frances Jehle. Loa Young,, W. A. Thompson: R. J. Kiney, M, Peterson, Tom Glenn. Jim Moses, Larry' Ledin, Chuck Boulanger and W1yne Clark. "The bond issue is necessary to allow constructloQ of ab;olrt· lbree new schools a year for the next five.years," Waltman 1aid, noting the district has grown from 1.900 puplls rive yean ago to 9,000 studenl3 this year. "This number could double in the next five years.·· ht 1dded. Waltman said tha'f voters in the San Joaquin district have an uce.llent record approving (ijcal issues. Labo • ' £ ,\ J>.~ty;.Leads ' . LONDON (UP!l -The Labor-P1rty 1ias an 8 percent lead over the con- acrvatlve government of Prime Miniater Edward Heath in the latest Louis Harris Poll published today In the Dail)' Ei· press. V wjo Driver Arre$ted . . . . In Bizarre Auto Crash . A MJsslon Viejo man recovering from · his injuries has ~ arres~ oo felony drunken driving .charges stemming from " bliarre auto crash on the San Diego F'~wa)'. d1.&r'ing driving rain before dawn Saturday. The· accident at 3:.0$ a.m. lncluded a wild series of rollovus and IUrmile-per· hour skids against wrong-Way 'Jraffic near Avery P«Tkway -tl)e entire in· cldent witnwed by· paPin& highway patrolmen. Ronald H. Cusick , 2.1. of 24282 'Toturm Drive, Mission Viejo. was arresttd on ' the felony charges as aides at South Co1st Community ·Hospital treated him for moderate irijur.ies . Patrolmen said Cusick's ne&rly new Chevrolet El Cpmlno : picklJ..p allttgedly smashed 'lnta the rear•ol 'a' slow-moving truck, flipping the -h~aVy Vfl'llfCle over and· pilling. out . the drivec.~KDut B. Sk· . . ' . " jonberg, 28, of 2009 Ma~I~ St:, Co:ita Mesa : :Patrolman sakl r pickup·then began flipping and roUi g :acroS! the center divider strip -the impact lipping off ill roof -then landed upright again and continued on a crazy, quarter-mile course 'i the wrong · ~ · It· tr eled at estimated 80 miles per hour pposing Janes of traffic before, finally careenin& off the freeway and tlammklg into an embankment, officta.Ls said. ·Volunteer 1 Uremen from Se.n Juin Capistrano pried CUslck from ' the wreckage. He was re.ported still under obeervallon at South-COast CommunltY Ho&pital to- day. .. , . . , . Skjonberg was trelifell fol"a leg'tnjury, ciJtl· aqd ~rulies. ~n rel~ased . rrom · treatment over the wteJtend. · Trici~'· C~x Will M~~y .. . . ' ' In · Whii¢ Hou~~ ·.w e~wng ' ' Th. Nix.., "'· ii1•~•c· ' kiiiL ctlebtallon of the Flist'l.ad)'a 9Uibit!JI. day and the' erigage.mtnl ~at 'an "lrlah Evenlna at. lhe WblWI H(Wfl" P.fOll'lm Tueadot ,veo1ni. • ' • " ' " Informed ·!Olircea aald tll'e\ .,,. . nouncement would b6 ~ either iv tbe afternoon or eveltlha. ~qie relatives 1 and frlenda ol the Nllql!• and Cy1_'1 P•"""' Col. and "Mm Hp\Yil<f ·l!iln. cox, bave been.lnvi!Od 16,lhe pla aallior-, ma. · · ·1 Crash Near Capo Beach Injures 8 By JORN VALTEllZA Of ,... Dlfl'll' """' ..... Flvt vebicla -inchwfl .... f1r1 1lrp campen -coWMI in a wild tanaJe ,._of wood and metal on the San Diep .Freeway net.r Capistrano· Beach Sunday 'evenial. injuring eight.perlOM and anarl- ing traffic for three hours. But officers investigating the .erln pf. crashes, whlch started when a station ' ' wagon skidded Into onooming Janes, termed Jt "nothing short of miraculous" that ' no Ont was killed or seriously Injured. The mishaps ,began when an auto driven by Beverly Manning of 30Z Avenida SatVador, San Clemente, cnwed the uncuarded center·dlvidtt, patrolmen aaid, and wl. sideswiped on both aides by onco~ ears. In the tangle that followed, one camper w,I!. upended, strewing debris across a wide area, Still another camper wu heavily dame.ged and two other cars were a total loss. The drivers were : -The Manning woman, 41, who was treated for appuently minor injuries at South Coast Hospital. -Vergll M. Fleming, 24, of Garden Grove, treated for minor hurts as wmi his wife~ Sally, 22, and their childrai, Laura, 4, and Brl,n, 11 molltbs. -Norman. E. Bartlett, 31, both treated aitd Carolyn Bartlett, 31, both truted for minor hurts. They were in another campe,l". -Marvin ·c. Ttppie, 51, of Lakewood, unhurt, A passenger, Eleanore Frisbie, 50, of Huntington Beach, was slightly injured, however. -Kathryn A. Isgar, M, of RedondB Beach, unhurt. One of the lllOll heavily damaged vthicltl!I WIS BarUeU'1 camper, which wu a. total loss after rolling over. The. impact ,rfpped the camper from It.. sh!!ll 8lld · sell.lered debrll which requind three houn to clear. The initial impact took place In the northbound lanes of the rreeway at 6:05 · p.m. The: coU~iona took place 1,000 feet north " the Pacific Colst Highway off. ramp. , Parents Dabble In School Art p.,.j,11 o( juoJor high I c h o o I youncmn wl)I 1et their ,dl•nce lo play wtlb· clay; point, Pl!*'. 8lld other •I rriatifi.la TueacJAy. nlllil' In a special PTA progr1m which blenda a atudent progra•n:tporl, with dabblln( m "" Tbe m;.tinl~w91. beJlri lt· 7:)5 .J>.m. In~ the •rt room ·o(' MarCo Forster Jlm1or High School. • tUodef a program p!Mned by .....t- teilcber Mrs. Malcolm Dunn' and Mta. Rtgllllld · P'ernaiidei, pam>ll · will aet •lldel IDd uhlblll of -'"""· then ,...1,. iomO b]ltructlon and -kllD>e Jn 1,varlety of arL m.dl1. • The l"'bllc lo Mlcomo lo'lhe attMly, w&lih "111 follow 1 Sl l'atrlck'a Doy theme. • • I ~All V PILOT SC Coast Teen " In Phone Lagunans Do-Something ·\ To Save Environment Rap Jailed A Corona del Mar man ls µ. custody today in Newport Be,ach, charged with making 200 obscene phone callil to Harbor Area women over the past year. By JACQUELINE COMBS or ,.. Ot.ltr Pllifl ttlfl In an age \\'htn It is camp to tb.lnk ecologically, Arbor Day may seem a UtUe archaJc. Today media masters demand that people wash their plastic bags for re-- use, re-cycle the soap u wdl aa ~ laundry and carry home oraanic food in personal shopping bap to aave wute. But Arbor Day has served nobly lince 1872, previewing the arrival of spring and remiDding people of the beauty in trees. Neatled in their cloL!tered habitat and bukin& in the sun, Laguna Beach resident. are especially att.tntlve to the demands man place upon Mother Earth. When the .wine Is threatened by loomlne hl&h-rlse apartments, Lagunans storm city ball in outrage. SWINGING INTO action Is the Llgwia Greenbelt, Inc., a nonprofit fundraiaing corporaUon which hopes to • ;,1 . enclttle J..aiuna Beach with a 0 greenbelt'' of recrtaUon 1 • ~ area. ~ Concerned with conserving the Art Colony's identity, ~e proponents hope visual and real boundary lines between city and encroach· mg unrbanhallon of Southern Orange County will conUnue to be well-defined. G_reenbelt Week, April 19--25, will emphasize the fund rail~ drive aimed at the first purchase of the S20-acre Sycamore Hills property in Laguna Canyon. The goal Ls the eventaul establishment of a total Greenbelt through El Morro, Laguna, Woods and Aliso canyons. HAVING. GROWN-UP in the tubdivided tractlandl of Southeast Los Angeles County, I can appreclate the coocept immeasurably. As a child I thought cities which had "downtowns" and "main streets" quaint. Shopping centers and intermeshed clUes wtrt all I ever knew. Jl took a trip to Minne- sota before I discovered that western movies didn't have a monopoly on local color. Being a newcomer to Laguna Beach, I have taken up the banner and plastered the car with symbols ci my newly acqu.ired prioritia -bumper •lick· ers ranging from No High Rise to Greenbelt to Keep Caillornia Green. IMAGINE THE SHOCK when I turned into my driveway and found It six feet deep with eucalyptus leaves and branches. Minor pruning, I assured my· self. A look skyward shattered any glimmering hopes for survival. Sky naked: trees fallen. . Four great trees, stretching 50 feet up and spreading lofty anm in a pro- tective embrace around the apartment. It was like Jiving in a treehouse. Each evening we would watch the sea swallow the sun shielded from the night winds by the great limbs of the trees. When Jt rained; the abundance of leaves muffled the aound, allowing only gentle murmun to penetrate. The current of damp air from tbe rain carrJed the IOOtblng ant of eucalyptus into every room. SECURE JN OUR own world, we were shielded from pryin1 eyes by the foresight of a line-thinking man years ago who planted the trees in a neat 10- foot row. He nurtured the shoots, ahaping them tbroueh the years to become strong. A word rrom the landlord and the gnawing of an electric saw quickly felled what no man could create. The landlord claima the tree felling wu in- evitable for the need or ONE more tenant parking space. t•And it waa ao messy wtth all those seedpods lying around." Where were the greenery proponents when this land wu ravished, I asked. But four-year.old Sethly Ann Miller had a more utut.e tzueation for the landlord. ••Did you ask God if you could cut hi& trees down?" the inquired. Four Burglaries Plague Clemente Over Weekend A rash or burglaries -Including what will prove to be a "chickenfeed" safe job at San Clemente High School - plagued San Clemente over the weekend. Officers, who began receiving sevual calls. on separate thefta this morning, saJd Investigators were 1tlll trying to ~ losses In some of the locations. The number of thefts thus far is four. At San Clemente High School's student activities office, school aides opentd up this morning to find a wall safe ripped from its pinnings. But despite the elaborate lengths to steal the safe , no more than $10 was in it over the weekend. Detectives said the thieves entered the office sometime over the weekend, pried off some moulding and stole the safe. DAllY PILOT OltAHGO: C:OAIT .. UIUIHlMO COMPNf't lebett N, W..4 ,FWllllllll .,.. .......... J•c\: R. c-.r1.., Viet ,,_IOllll .,... C.-•I M11Mf111J Tli1rri11 K1t•ll '""' TlieMti A. M-.,.,\l11t M.Nlll"-Ri!IW CJi11'1'1t H. l••• lidii•r4 P. H41f \ ---J A.M .. trw MIMllrll Edltln ........... OMM 222 Fer"t A""" s.. C' •• OMa. JOI Nertll ll C•flll11e llt•I .,_.,.._ eo.t11 ,,_.~ • w-::.::r '""' H....,. a-cttr 13:111 H lotllwe"' Hti111flnfllrl ~I 11171 C..cfl llUlt'ffri .\ They missed a larae hauJ, ho~ever, bteause acbool officials had moved a large amount of money into a larger safe last Friday. M detectives wue lnvest11atlng that case th.ii morning Reglster Reporter Stan Wulif phoned to report hil new1p1per'a office at 101 S. El Cimino Real had been ransacked over the weekend. 'Ibe Joas wu not immedJ1tely known . Burglars using identical means - prying open_ bathroom windowa -hit tl&ewhere in the city over the weekend. DeMis Wayne Hunter of 1400 C. Calle M~ador, ~eturned from Ventura early this morning and discovered lhal h1s apartment had bffn rllled. The Toss in stereo equipment and other Item! was near $200. Kenneth Warden, owner or the Ll8:ht House lighting shop, reported the theft of $152 in caah from a register which had been pried open sometime during the weekend at 1421 North El Camino Real. Both of the latter locations had been entered after someone pried open a bathroom window and clambered into the building. Beach Man Held On Narcotics Rap. A Huntington Beach man assertedly started a scuffle S1turday night when he was arrested by Laguna Bead. police on suspicion of drug char&ea and he Is now alao being held for reslaUna arrest. Pollet claim two pound1 of marijuana were confiscated when the man was taken into custody In the WoodJand Drive area. He wu Jdentltled 11 George Franklin Nixon, 23, of 331 Seventh Street. HuntJnglon Beach. Autboritie1 allege the man had come to Laguna Be1ch to make a "delivery'' of the drug when narcotics officers ap- proached him on Woodland Drive. Of. ficers claim Nbon 1tarted fiahting and kicking In an dfort to tscape but was finally subdued. Jn tddJUon to resi~ng 1 r re a t , autbor!Ucs salt N}zon It !£ be arraigned ' Tuesday on chargea of pouesslon or l1llrijuana with lntenl lo aell. ~ Train--;Jiit Truck OAKLAND ~I) -A truck driver e1eaped with cull and bruftts Sunday when two trains roln1 In oppoalt.e dJrec- Uons amuhed lnto hla vebicle and dr•J"" fed lt for thtt• block" J. I William Howard Wall , 19, or 424 Poinsettia Ave., was arrtsted aJnday after police alleged he went to the Newport borne of a vicUm for 1 date. Detectives said their file on the cases date back nearly one year when a man who called himself Bill Jacbon began hara,,,ing female residents of Newport, Costa Mesa and Tustin. The victims of the lewd caUS nnge in age from 12 to 75, invesUgat.or1 said. The calls were .linked by a similar obscene suggestion and the fact that the caller usually knew the victims' names and identified himulf as Bill Jackson. "We probably would have been able to catch a suspect much sooner if the victims had calied us right away," aaid Detective Sue Race. PRES U,I T.......,. t,_ .. MIC IDENT NIXON TALKS TO NBC'S BARBARA WALTERS IN EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW "Unfortunately, some of the women waited until they had received several and I'm sure some neve r reported Ule calls at all. If we 'd had thiJ informtioD, a pattern would have been eatablilbed much earlier," she added. In the White HouH, a Chat About Drugi, Women'1 Lib and the Americ:an Family Diver Rescued From Heavy Surf By Bystanders Bystanders walking: along D a n a Harbor's west jetty Sunday helped sa 'te a battered Duarte man who was dashed against the rocks by heavy surf as . be tried to retrieve a face mask. San Clemente lifeguirdl said they ar· rived soon afterward to give fin:t aid to Roger White, 36, who bad auffered severe cuta, bruises and injuriea to his blct and arm. Lifeguard Capt. Pbll Stubba said While waa emerging from scuba diving alone when he dropped hi.! mask on the treacherous rocks 100 yard! from the jetty's base. AJ White'• wife and baby looked on, a heavy breaker hit the man and drove h1m into the rocks. BystaJtders pulled him to the top, sparing him from further seriou.s injury. White was admitted at South Coast Community Hospital sbort1y after the 3:20 p.m. mishap. Boat Abandoned In Heavy Seas Off Laguna A 22-foot uilboat, demasted by the wind and swamped in heavy seas, was abandoo.ed Saturday by its owner oft Lagwa Beach after efforts to save the $4,000 crall failed. The owner, Stewart Weiner, of Loa A1amltos, and an unidentified companion ·were rescued uninjured from the craft by the Coast Guard at about 6 p.m. Saturday. The stricken vessel was first spotted by Laguna Beach lifeguards at S p.m. when it was about two miles off Main Beach proceeding north under only its jib. The mainsail of the craft had been torn by the strong wind and lifeguards Informed the Coast Guard of the boat's peril. A cutter was sent to aid the vessel and the small craft was taken into tow hi an effort to bring ft safely to Newport Beach. However, a Coast Guard 1pokesman said the craft was almost completely swamped and its main mast had broken, so the owner made the decL!IM to abandon it. The vessel was set adrift near Shaw's Cove and washed ashore at El Morro Bay. The owner and his companion wett returned to Newport Beach by the Coast Guard. Clemente Driver Arrested After High Speed Crash A ZZ..year<ild San Clemente c I t y employe was arrested on charges of drunken drivlng early today in San Clemente. after a spectacular high-speed crash along South Ola Vista shortly after mldnighl .Polk:e said they arrested RlchJ.rd James He-nry of 106 San Fernando at the sctne of the one-car, non·lnjul')' crash at Qla Vista and Calle Princess. Alter laying about 130 feet of skids, police claim, Henry's auto went airborne for 24 feet more and tore out 1 large stdlon of wooden fence, finally coming to rest atop a concrete bk>clc wall. flenry Is a maintenance employe with the parks department, officers said. The accident occurred at 12:f7 a.m. today and caused damage to reside.nee• al lilOI ond ISO& S. Ola VJJta. I . -, .. Story Personal Life Discussed on TV WASHINGTON fVPI) -President Nixon said today the polltical "moment of truth" that led him to run for presi· .dent in 1966 came during a Florida Christmas vacation with his family. The decision was a marked change from 1962 when "I had no thoughts or pra1pecb that I had any political future" following his Jou or the race for g~etnPr of California, Nixon said. Nllon was interviewed by Barbara Walters on the Today show on NBC-TV. The interview was filmed in the White House Thursday. The interview was one of two Nixon has given in rece.nt days to discuss family and personal matters, and speclfically first lady Pat Nixon, who will be 59 thil week. The President confinned what has long been a rumor in Washington political circles -that Mrs. Nixon had tried on previous occasions to talk him into leavlng polltics. He sald Mrs. Nixon "felt at times it would be best if we left public Ille·• and cited three separate occasions - once in 1952 following the "fund" con· troversy when he was almost dropped from the tJcket as "Vice president, when he Jost the race for president in 1960, an d was unsuccessful for the California governorship in 1962. But he said ~1rs. Nixon, o n c e the decision to run had been made, was his best campaigner. Following the political defeats in the early 60s, Nixon said he fel t he would never hold elective office again, but that changed in 1967. He recalled : "The final decision with regard to running for the presidency again, I made during Christmas vacation of 1967 .•• "f remember we were in Florida at the time and we had quite a family discussion about it with ~1rs. Nixon and our two daughters, Tricia and J u I i e , and by tha t time too, David Eisenhower \Vas one who gave us some advice. And after we discussed It I made the decision and the whole family really campaigned with very great effective- ness in my opinion.'' Turning to domestic issues, Nixon said he could understand the concern of young petiple about the war in Vietnam. But he said unrest in the country came not from the war or other domutlc problems, but from the "insecurity that comes from the old values being torn away." Capsized Craft Hunted Air and surface craft today searched the Catalina Channel for a 43-foot catamaran which capsized Saturday a mile and a half off the west end of Catalina Island. The 43-foot lmi Loa, o~·ned by A. Viet.or Stern of Seal Beach, flipped in strong winds and heavy seas whil e racing with seven other multihull yachts in the annu al Santa Barbara Island race out or Los Angeles. (Race details, Page 261 Skipper Stern and seven members or his crew were rescued by a Coast Guard heli copter. The crew clung to the overturned craft while monohull yachts, also in the Santa Barbara Island race stood by. The Coast Guard said this morning Iha~ the overturned catamaran had not been spotted since the crew was rescued. The owner was reported searching for lhe craft with conunercial ves.sels. The Im! Loa capsized in winds estimated at 3:HO knots in full view of observers on the island. Besides Stem, the crew or Iml Loa consisted of Curt Huddleaon. Seal Beach: Dick Knor, Huntington Beach; Ken Wise and Jerry Mullenho[f, both of Costa Mesa; Alan Burg, Laguna Niguel, and Jerry Winter, San Diego. All were experienced catamaran sailors who had sailed on Imi Loa In at least one Trans-Pacific mu!tihull race. The Coast Guard queoted Stern as say· Ing that th e wet sheets jammed, pre· venting quick release after a gust or wind lifted one hull from the water. SAVE 40°/o to 58°/o Don't Pay $110 .......... 11\(it,M41t•"- ..,. ... --...... ... ltl( ""'''-f"M-•!111 .. ... ..... "' t wtiH11111 ...... ....... ,.. ... , ... Mrs. Race said at least a half dozen attempts to set up dates with the caller had failed in the past. She credited the unidentified victim wllh Wall'• arrest. She asserted a search of Wall'• borne turned up a telephone book for the Harbor area with an undetermined number of phone numbers circled. "It looks like be bad called numbers on every page." she said. 1 Wall, who is being held in lieu of $6, 125 bail, iJ scheduled to appear thl1 afternoon in Harbor Judicial Dislrici Court for arraignment. Police Halt Bid For 'Death Dive' Off Coast Pier Escape artist D.D. Masco ls alive and well in Alhambra today. Seal Beach police offkers stopped h i m from attempting a "Dive to Death·· oU the municipal pier Saturday. The 32-year-old stunbnan was to have jumped into the water, weighted down and shackled by two handcuffs and ~ feet or chain padlocked in three places. Unable to locate a boat for bis divt the burly 270-pound "Houdlnl" soughi te> complete his stunt by taking a leap off the end of the pier. He didn't get far . :P.iasco waa met at the bead of the pier by Sgt. Martin Black who took him to see Police Chief Lee Case. "The city has an ordinance against jumping off the pier," the chief told him. "I'm afraid we won't be able to allow you to go through with this ." Disappointed by the order, the red. bearded Masco announced to the crowd of 2,000 thtill·see.kers lining the pier that he would make good hi.I claim next Saturday, at 2 p.m. A boat from which he can make his dive has been promised to ~1asco by persons operating a sport.fishing coo. cession on the Seal Beach pier. The stunt, explained ?i-1aaco, arose from a challenge by one of his friends. Teachers Cast Vote REDWOOD CITY (UPI ) -Ballois are being distributed today for a vote by San Mateo Junior College District Teachers on w~ther they have COD- fidence in Chancellor Clifford Erickson. .... $8900 Don't Pay $475 OUR lllUSUAL MONEY BACK lllADO GllAllAHTEE """' 1 t. • ..... • •• ,.....,, """ ...... ,. Wl>lt9 .... ~ NM -.............. ,...,.._ 11111 ~•Mn. ... ca .•. When you buy a diamond from us w. wlll guero1ntM that diamond to •pt>rllM at W .4 MORE than you fN iif for It or your money back. Can you do 11 well elMwh1r1'P COMPARE. 1002 ·mMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE RRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY-and LOAN LOAN, IUY, SILL, TUDI 1838 NEWPORT BLVD· PHONE 646-n41 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA-BelwMn Horbo< & 1,..dw1y t .I .. ( , I I I 1 I I I • ' • • ----Lago.11~· Beaeh • • • • VOL. 64, NO. 63, 3 SECTIONS, 32 fAGES ' -ORANG~ <;:OUNJY, <;ALl~~NIA . , MONDAY, MARCH 1$, l97r :TEN CENTS • • e 1c es on _...oas .· - '.thrust Stalled Force of 12,000 Hits S. Viet Post SAIGON (UPI) -Tanks and infantry in a NOrth Vietnamese force of 12,000 men attacked a South Vietnamese out· post in Laos Monday and stopped a drive on a huge supply dump astride the Ho Chi Minh 1'rail. The outpost stood tast with strong U.S. air support which .knocked out seven tanks. It was also revealed that laser-beam directed Alien's Death On Freeway Investigated OCEANSIDE -·The identity of a Mex· lean alien who fell or was pushed off a truck early today and 'run over· by ciµ-s -on Interstate 5, remains a mystery. ,California Highway patrolman Dennis Porter, 36, a( Vista and his partner were fbout to turn . off the fre~w~y when .they heard the , thump or a neart>y car lt;iking 11ouiethiqg at>out ),:zo a.m. today. Porter jumped out and pulled the body of the unidentified man out of the way of oncoming cars. Oceanside police chas. td the canvas-covered truck along State Route -78, finding a group of aliens In the back .. "No one is talking about the Incident," a Highway P a t r o I spokesman said today, noting im· migration authorities were invesUgating the incident. . The victim was about @ years old, S foot 6 inches ta~ and weighed 148 pounds. He was dressed in grey trousers, a blue shirt and a tan jacket. San Diego County Coroner's office is seeking infonnatlon to identify the man. Eleven other aliens were taken into custoc;ly. The truck driver was not charg· ed. authorities said. Signups Taken For Lifeguard Jobs in Laguna Laguna Beach lilegulird chief Skip Con· ner has announced that bis department now is accepting applications from persons wishing to work as lifeguards for the summer. Deadline for .filinl applications is April 2, and on Aprf! 3 those who have applied will be given a qualifyini examination on Main Beach. Applicants will be re- quired to complete a l,OOG-yard swim, a 200-yard buoy swim and a 1,500-yard run, swim. run. · Applicants for positions as seasonal ·lifeguards must ~ 11 years old prior to June 19 and r:Ookie I If e g.u a rd a must be 16 years old. The saliry range for the posit.ions is $2.91 to $3.tS per hour for seasonal and $2 per hour Jor rookies. . Interested persons cai:i obtain an ap- plication from Lifeguard Headquarters, J75 N. Coast Highway. Further in· formation may be obtained from the department at 494-6572. Rites Scheduled For Howard Dale Funeral services will bt conducted Wednesday at 10 :30 1.m. for Howard Dale, a longtime Laguna Beach resident and retired real estate broker who died Saturday at South <:oa,,t Community Hospital . He was Tl. Dr. Gerald Bash or the First Christian Church of Santa Ana will hold tbt' services at Blo•er Brothers Mortuary Chapel. 2525 N. Main Sl, in ~Q;ta Ana. BurlaJ will folJow at Fairhaven Memorial Park. Mt. D>le. who lived ot 495 Qak 6t., ls IW'Vived by his wile. Reba an~ .a brothtr·IJl·laW, Albert Smltber. i bombs were used in att.ack.s on the enemy tanks. A major battle appeared to be shaping up. Across the bo!der, in South Vietnam's . northwest corner, Communist gunners subjected the U.S. :support base at Khe Sanh to its . heaviest barrage since the Laos offensive began Feb. 8, firing 150 mortar ..and. rocket . rounds .into . .American. .. positions. No . U.S. casualties were reported but some South Vietnamese were hurt and a few American helicopters were damaged. The focus or action in Laos Monday centered .around fire suppof.t base Lolo, an outpost nine miles ea9t of the Ho Chi Minh Trail center of Sepone. Brig. Gen. Pham Van Phu, commander of South Vietnam's 1st Infantry Division, said Communist pressure on Lolo and other points had blocked his troops trying to reach a big North Vietnamese am· munition dump and a fuel pipeline . FIREMAN SURVEYS WRECKAGE. OF FIVE-VEHICLE ACCIDENT IN .CAPISTRANO BEACH · Sunday Accident in Northbound Lane of Sin Diego FrHwly Injured Eight,. O.l1y1d Tr1ffic ' . . . . ·Phu said South Vietnamese defenders oJ Lo!o fought a series ()f clashes with North ~ Vietnamese· forces throughout Monday in the area, including one two- hour battle at the base. perimeter before the Communists were beaten back. Soviet-built T34 tanks fired 88 mm guns at Lolo and U.S. Air Force pilots re· ported knockout one column of seven Communist · tanks in the fight. Three o th e r tanks were reported destroyed T . · . ' n :· . D 1-J 5 rieta s .. u:Jg~~.' ~ a1te: . , .u~c.-.,·, , .. ·. Marriage to Edward Cox Set lot Wht,te Horue Sunday. · Military sources said a "considerable" number of the tanks destroyed by air strikes inside Laos were located by Laser Beam-directed bombs. A laser beam is a high intensity light beam which does not diffuse and which produces immense electrical fields when it reaches its target. The sources said the American aircraft -Operate in teams of two planes, one of which targets and shoots the beam while a second jet unloads "smart'' bombs which are guided to the objective by the lasers. The sources said the laser beam bombing can locate a small opening in a hillside tunnel complex and blow an entire mountain off the map if ammunition supplies there are detonated. Phu said the entire 2nd division of tbe North Vietnamese army -12,000 men at full :strength -was moving in units of between 500 and 3,000 troops into the Lolo area to protect the supply base. U.S. BS2 stratofortresses dropped hun- dreds of tons of bombs on the supply base Monday and a communique reported ."very big secondary explosions," an in· dication that ammunition and fuel were aestroyed. It was disclosed at the same time that U.S. Cl30 Hercules transport·planes operating over Laos were using 15,00I). pound bombs as a tactical weapon for tbe fint time there. The born~ previous- ly were used to carve out "instant" landing mnes for U.S. helicopters. Military sources said a 15,000 pounder was parachuted last week and detonated between two bills overlooking a strategic pass to the north of Route 9. The sources said the two hills were blown off the map and a landslide blocked the area to Communist truck traffic. Communist antiaircraft fire had kept U.S. resupply helicopters away from Lolo during the past several days, but a flight of 10 helicopters got through to the outpost Monday. · KEY BISCAYNE, Fla . (UPI) -Triclo Nixon and Harvard law student Edward Finch Cox will be married in the White House on June S, it was learned today. The President's 25-year-old daughter originally bad planned her wedding for June 12, but moved it up after spending the weekend with Cox and hill · socialite family in New York. The formal announcement will be made Tuesday by President and Mrs. Nixon. The Nixons are planning a joint celebration of the First Lady"s 59th birth- day and ·the engagement at an "lrish Evening al the White House" progr:;ni Tuesday evening. Informed sources said t h e an· nouncement would be made either in the afternoon or evening. Close relatives and friends of the Nixons and Cox's parents, .... Col. and Mrs. Howard Ellis Cox, have been invited to the gala gather· ing. Prime Minister John Lynch cf Ireland and Mrs . Lynch ·will be the guests of honor after receiving a ceremonial welcome Tuesday on lhe South Lawn , Chamber to Hear Data on School The lAlguna Beach Chamber 0£ Com· merce will take on a complex su.bject Wednesday when Thurston Intermediate School is explained at the Chamber's '1 : 45 a.m. breakfast meeting. Judy Penney, a volunteer worker at the innovative school will explain the intricate scheduling plan the ltudents use and talk about other facets of the system, The chamber board of directors were recent guests at the achoo! wb:>n students treated them to lunch. The breakfast will be held at the Hotel Laguna and reservations should be made In advance by calling the Chamber 'at 4!)4:1018. ' High Rise Ordinance Dr. Edward G .. Latcb, . the House chaplain. will officiate at the wedding. He is former · ~stor of Melropolitan Memorial Methodist Church which the Nixons attended during the years when Nixon was vice president. There was no word on ho~ big a wedding Tricia · is planning. Her sister, Julie Eisenhower, 22, iJ expected to be her matron of .honor. Cox, 24,, is expected to haVe as his best man his brother, Howarl:I Ellis Cox Jr., an Army officer !t3tioned · at the Pentagon who was married . last Sep- tember · to Julia .Bolton. pempsey eC Cleveland. Blonde,, blue-eyed Tricia has had her engagement ring-. since last Deceinber. But -stie 'has 'kept ·her parents sworn to secrecy until Tuesday when she has given tbe President 'the formal go ahead Big Smrr Ranch Put Up for Sak The 10,144-acre St.arr Ranch in · the southeast part of Orange County near Ortega Highway is up for sale. Recrea· tion Environment Inc. of NeWport. Beach which planned to develop the area into a $17 million wilderness recreaflon facUI· ty is the seller. . Recreation · EnVironme'nt bou,ght the ranch last May from the Eugtne Starr estate. At that Ume · the county was considering purchase of the property for a regional park. . Those plans may be revived with the land back on the market but it is con·• sldered unlikely that the county will move on the opportunity because or the tight money situaUon . It bas been pointed out that the county If interested could have taken steps to acquire the prope'.rty during the past year. A study of .the park plan was dropped but bas been revived. . ' Hearing Slated April 2·1 Official action on a controversial ordinance during Its three public hearings ordinance that would set new standards before the Planning Commission. f beach! t hot t d I The draft ordinance presented aL the or rnn e eve opment in h . Id ~ •tied 1-< t La to 1.-1.-earings wou u.VC ~1 .....,. oo ~a appears ~many weew a~ay. buildings in somt: be&clifront areas. At Jts regular sesston Wednesday ¥1. 1 ,.\ftr ~·heaW, dbcllision, the ~ the City Council ·ls•·schedule(''io ttt ,mltaion +efid" on Fe"1111 to recommend an April 21 date Cor the ne1t public ~ • 11doPtion~ the ~dk'lance by the council, htaring on the CR (commetclal·residen-but with.a 50-loo( he:f&bJ limit. • tJal) or<unance. Two cornmissiahert, Cart Johnson and Hundreds of Lagunans turned out to Jock Eschbach. <NI d~stlalng voltl. proteal high ri,. provl$i0111 of th• Both Nid thty w!!l!I~ !ht fool " limit only In the C.Z """ .where II already, is permitted. · l.n other areas· !hey preferred to maintain the nlstthf , 30-foot height limit. , ' • ~Meanwhile, ·~· the ordlnance, makes . It< way. through •<>lllclal •city channel•, a group of Lagunan1 ""'""' themselws VIII ago LagWlt. 'is puohlll& lft ·laltJatlve drive that W011141, If -ul, place . • · 36-foot lid "" buUdJols•lhroqhout Ole art colony11 ••• to make the ann()uncement. She will be the eighth Pmident'1 daughter to be married 'in the' White House. The most recent-waS\Lynda Bird Robb, daughter of former President Lyn· don 8, Johnson, who was married on Dec. 9, 1967, in the East Room in an EpiscOpalian service .. Cox will wind up bis ' second year · at Harvard Law School June 4. · He plans lo complete bis CQUrse next year and then Will be eligible for service Jn the army. He was a member of ROTC ·when h~ attended • Princton University, where be r~ived ~is 8 .. A. d~gree. Cox. a fonner ~mber ·of consumer spokesman Ralph Nader's "Raiders," also studied one y.ear In Yale's graduate sebool. He is expected to. work this summer with Whitney N. Seymour, U.S. attorney in New 'York. The President said on NBC's "Today" show today that "I would imagine something is go~g to happen in the near future ," when asked if Tricia 's betrothal announcement w·as fortbcom· ing. Library's Lines . ' Go Underground Unsightly wires and utiiit'y poles· in the alley behind Laguna's proposed new library ·will go underground · in a new cony-eniDn p~ject .to •be. (l:nanced 'with . Southern California Edison Company funds, ' Tht $17,000 project wJU all utililitis in the area Ramona .!venue, . Laguna qJenneyre Street. ondergrou~d bouilde"d by Avenue -and Cost of the job will be covered by utility company fµnds set ~side annually for undergrounding projects as reqllifed by the Public 'Utilities · Commission: . This ·will be the second undergrouilding project in Laguna ·under the PUC pro- v'lsiona. The first, 1 · f41,697 contract, cpvered. utilities on Clill~ Drive · fn the Heisler Park ar,ea. t~gW.a:.s4s~t J;Ieltl ·in Buffalo . A 21..year~ld man who gave a Laguna Niguel 1ddres1 was ·attested in Buffalo, lj.Y., Sunday by FederaJ, st.ate and local narcotics agenl$ ,who , 4l1eged. he ~ad 90 pounds of marijuana ln his posses§:loo. Brian Garraway, 23292 Te.lfalr Road, was taken· Jnlil ' cultody a~· a BUtfal\>: hotel ·shortly all<li bt lrrtved in ·the. ' · city by pta.,.. !.a i. ,ta id ll)o· ~"" seit.ed as evidence wouM1hava11 ,..t, value ()f a;:xlm'altly pJ,000. , 1 . ' LaJuna ch {'Ollc. lald tod11 tberh •rt no locll'reco~ an fl!!> IUSfl"CI, 8 Injured In Freeway Collisions By JOHN VALTEllZA or tM DllllY ,.,.., '''" Five vehicles -including two large campers ·-collided in a wild tangle of wood and met.al on the San. Diep Freeway near Capistrano· Beach' Sunday evening injuring eight persol\I and anarJ .. tng traffic ·1or' three hours. But officers inve5*1gaUug the aeries of crashes; which· started when a station wagon skidded into oncoming-'tarie•, tenned it "nothing short of miraculous'' !hat . .no ... one .. ·~as ···killed ··«·· 9eriettsly·· ···· injured. The mishaps began when an auto driven by Beverly Manning -0( 302 Av!nida Salvador, San Clemente, crossed the unguarded center divider, patrolmen said,. and was sideswiped on both tides by ·oncoming cars. In the tangle that followed, one camper was upended, strewing debris across a '¥\'.ide area, Still another camper· was heavily damaged and two other cars were a total loss. The drivers were: -The MaMlng woman, 41. who waa treated for apparently minor injuries at South Coast tfospital. , -Vergil M. Fleming; -24, of Garden Grove,.treated tor ininor hurts ••·were h~ wife, Sally. 22, and their children, Laura, 4, and Brian, 11 montbl·. -Norman E. Bartlett, 31, bOtti '1UWd and Carolyn Bartlet~ 31, both treiltod for rhinor hurts. They were in another camper. -Marvin C. Tippie, 51, or Lakewood, unhurt, A paMenger, Eleanore Frisbie, SO, of Huntington Beach, was alightly injured, however. -Kathryn A. Jsgar, M, of RedOndo Beach, unhurt. One of the most heavily damaged vehicles was Bartlett's camper, which was a total loss after rolling over. The impact ripped the camper from its shell and scattered debris which required three hours to clear. The initial impact took place In the northbound Janes of the freeway at ~:05 p.in .' The collisiOllll took place 1,000 feet north· a{ the PaCific .Coast HJghway off- r!lmp. Police Probing Two Burglaries Laguna Beach police are Investigating two weekend burglaries in which a Jarga amount of cash was stolen from a Jocked safe and two antique lamps were remov• ed from an unlocked house. Authorities said an unk~own . suspect ente red the Vlctor Hugo Inn, 361 Cliff Drive. sometime Friday night and "cracked" the locked safe in the manager's office. The burglar took $1,700 in cash, police said. The second burglary occurred lhe same night betwee.n 10:30 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. when Mercedes Neubauer of 660 Wendt Terrace, went to «finner. During her absence. police said an unknown suspect entered her home through a sliding glass door and stole twe crystal hurricane lamps from the bedroom. The lamps were valued at $500, officers said, Orange Coa1t ' ' ol. '!"', -Weather Wanner weather is in the olfin& for Tuesday with high clouds and temperatures atrttching upward to 71 degrees olang the coast. INSmE TODAY Thtr<'s a new f/OChUng 14114- mork on Ni'lirport Harbor ct Bnll.ia Colin h'ian Yacht Ch'b dtdicated its $750,000 clubhous1 on Boyaidt Drioe. Boctfng Page 26. I • Z DAILY PILOT SC • Lagm.a11s Do Something To Save Environment By JACQVELJNJ!: COMBS Of fllt o.ur r111t 11.r1 In an age when It is camp to think ecologically, Arbor Day may aetm a little archa.k:. Today media masters demand that people wash their plastic hap for re- tLse, r«"ycle the soap u well as the laundry and carry home organic food in persooal shopping bags to save waste. But Arbor Day has served nobly since 1872, previewing the arrival or ,. t spring and reminding people of the beauty in trees. NesUed in their clollt<red babltlt ond buklnt In the sun, Laguna Beadl residents are eapedally attentive to the demands man place upon Mother Earth. When the sealine II lhroalened by looming bJi1>r1ae ' apartment., Lagunans lllorm city llall In outrage. SWINGING INl'O 1ctloo 11 the J..aguno Greenbel~ Inc., a nonprofit fundrailin& corporation whlcb hopes to encircle Laguna Beach with a "greenbtlt'' of recre1Uon .,. area. d Concerned with conserving the Art Colony's ldenUty, the proponent.I hope visual and real boundary lines between city and encroach- ing unrbanizatlon of Southern Orange County will cmtinue to be well-defined. Coast Teen r· ; lnPlwne ; .. Rap Jailed A Corona de! Mar man Is In CWltodJ today in Newport Beach, charged with making 200 obscene phone calls to Harbor Area women over the past year. William ·Howard Wall. 19, of 424 Poinsettia Ave .. was arrested ~ndly after police alleged he went to the Newport home of a victim for a date. Detectives said their tile on the cues date back nearly one year when 1 man who called himself Bill Jack!:on began harassing female residents of Newport, Costa Mesa and Tustin. The victims of the lewd calls range in age from 12 to 75, investigators said. The calls were linked by 1 1imilar obscene suggestion and the fact that the caller usually knew the victims' names and identified himself as Bill Jackson • "We probably would have been Ible lo catch a suspect much sooner if the victims had called us right away," 1aid Detective Sue Race. Greenbelt Wee.k, April 19-25, will empbuiu the fund ra.illlng drive aimed at the first purchase of the 526-acre Sycamore Hllla property In Laguna Canyon. The goal is the eventaul establishment of a total Greenbelt through El Morro, Laguna. Woods and All!O canyons. PRESIDENT NIXON TALKs TD NBc·s BARBARA WALTERS IN excLus1vE 1NT'e1tliirw ·-.... "Unfortunately, some of the women waited Wllil they had ttCtlved several and I'm sure some never reported the calls at all. If we'd had this information, In the White HouN, • Chit About Drugs, Women's Lib ind the American Family HAVING GROWN.IJP in the subdivided tractlandl of Southeut Los Angeles County, I can appreciate the concept tmmeuurably. Al 1 child I thought ciU,. which bad "downtowns" and "main streetl" qualnl Shopping centers and intermeshed clUes were I.ii t ever mew. tt took 1 trip to Minne- sota before I discovered that western !DOM didn't have 1 monopoly on local color. Being a newcomer to Laguna Beach. I have tuen up the banntr and plastered, the car with symbols of my newlf.""!Ulnd prior!Ueo -bumper lllkk· m rangm,g from No High Rise to GreenbeJt to Keep Cal1fom1a Green. IMAGINE TOE SHOCK when I turned min my driveway ond focmd It 111 ... !~t .. ~I!.. ~~. ~~ leaves 1nd branches. Minor pnmtng, I assured my· iielf. A !001 •1<YWanhbattuec1 ony·gllmmerbJ1rbopltfor1111111iv1t ·Sk)' nal<M: ... trees fallen. . Four great trees, stretching 50 feet µp and sprtadina lofty arma in a pro- tective embrace around the apartment. It wu like Uvln1 in a treehouae. Each evening we would watch the sea swallow the aun, shielded from the night winds by the gnat limbs of the trees. When ft rained, the abundance of leaves muffled the sound, allowing only genUe murmurs to penetrate. The current of damp air from the rain carried the aoothing scent of eucalyptus Into every room. SECURE JN OUR own world, we were ahltlded from pryin& eyes by the foresight of a fine-lb.inking man years aeo who planted the trees in a neat 10. foot row. He nurtured the aboot.s, ahaping them through the yean to become sirong. A word from the landlord and the gnawing of an electric saw quickly felled what no man could create. 'lbe landlord claim!I the tree fellln& wu Jn.. evitable for the need of ONE more tenant parking space. ••And It was so messy with all those seedpods lying around." Where were the grttnery proponents when thi.! land was ravished, t asked. But four-year-old Sethty Ann Miller had a more 1stuta queltion for the landlord. "Did you uk God if you could cut h1I trees downf" lhe lnqulrtd. Four Burglaries Plague Clemente Over Weekend A rub of burglarieo -Including what will prove to be a "chickenfeed" safe job at San Clemente High School - plagued San Clemente over the weekend. Officers, who began receiving several calls on separate thefts thla: morning, said tnvatigators were still trying to assess losses in some of the locaUom. The number of thefts thll.1 far is four. Al San Clemente Hlgb School's student activities office, school aides opened up this morning to find a wall safe ripped from ill pinnings. But despite the elaborate lengths to steal the safe, no more than $10 waa in it over the weekend. Detectives said the thieves entered the office sometime over the weekend, pried off aome moulding and 1tole the safe. DAllY PllOT 01'.AKG'i! COAST PUMJIHOfC> COMPNIY l•Mrt N. W•M "~ ... f'llbla.w J .... a. c.r1., Vici Pr9lclent .,., 0...1 M....- nMl•I K•nll ..... n....i,, A. M11r-'ilN Ma"""" 1111Mr Q,,t,, H •. L .. , llcl.11' P. NtR AIMIW ..,,...,.. lifllon ._ __ 222 Fo,.1t A¥•111i10 .. c:._.. OfflMo JOI N•rtlll El Ctrnin• l••I ~..- C.• Mftei -W.t •• , ., ..... H.....,.. hKt\I laD H...,,.... iwltllaN h1111t--llKtli 1711S ._. ............ 'Ibey mWed I large blul, hoftver, because school offidall had moved a large amount of money into 1 larger sale last Fridly. As det.ectfves were Investigating that case this morning Register Reporter Stan Wulff phoned to report hil new1paper'1 office at 101 S. El Cimino Real had betn nnsacted over the weekend. The Jou wu not Immediately known. Bw'gl1r1 using Identical means - prying open bat.broom window• -hit elsewhere in the city over the weekend. Dennis Wayne Hwtter of 1409 C. Calle Mirador, -returned from Ventura early this morning and discovered that his apartment had been rifled. The Ion in stereo equJpment and other Items was near $200. Kenneth Warden, owner of the Light House lighting shop, reported the theft of $152 in cash from a regis~r which had been pried open sometime during the weekend at 1421 North El Camino Real. Both of the JaUer loc•Uons had been entered after someone pried open a bathroom Window and clambered into the building. Beach Man Held On Narcotics Rap. A Huntington Beach man assertedly started a scuffle Saturday night when he was !!Tested by Laguna Beach police on swplclon of drug charges ind he is now also being held for resisUng arrest. Police claim two Pounds of marijuana were confiJcated when the man w11 taken Into CUJlody in the Woodland Drive area. He was ·tdenUfitd 11 George Franklin Nixon, 23, of 331 seventh Slreet, Huntington Beach. Authorities allege the man bad come to Laguno Beach to mob 1 "delivery" of the drug when nlttOllcs offlcen ·~ preached him on Woodland Drive. Of- fictrs claim Nixon ltlrted fighting ond lckking in an tffort to eaicape but WIS finally subdued. Diver Rescued From Heavy Surf By Bystanders ··········Byatandert····Wiliinl····along .... Da.si a · Harbor'• west jetty Sunday helped s'a\e a battered Duarte man who was dashed against the rocks by heavy surf as he tried to retrieve a face mule. San Clemente lifeguards said they ar· rived soon afterward to give first aid to Roger White, 361 who had suffered aevere cuts, bruises and injuries to his back and ann. Lifeguard Capt. Phil Stubbs said White was emerging from scuba Wving alone when he dropped hi.! mask on the treacherous rocks 100 yards from the jetty's base. As White's wife and baby looked on, 1 heavy breaker hit the man and drove him into the rocks. Bystanders pulled him to the top, sparing him from further !erlow: injury. White wu admitted at South clast Comm.unity Hospital sborUy after the ' 3,,., p.m. mishap. Boat Abandoned In Heavy Seas Off Laguna A 22-foot sailboat, demasted by the wind and swamped in heavy seas, was abandoned Saturday by its owner off Laguna Beach alter eUorts to save the fl,000 craft failed. The owner, Stewart Weiner, of Los Alamitos, and an unidentified companion were rescued uninjured from the craft by the Coast Guard at about s p.m. Saturday. The stricken vessel waa first spotted by Laguna Beach lifeguards at 5 p.m. when it was about tv.·o miles off Main Beach procetding north under only its jib. The mainsail of the craft had been torn by the strong wind and lifeguards Wormed the Coast Guard of the boat's peril. A cutter was sent to aid the vessel and the small craft was taken Into tow ia an effort to bring It safely to Newport Beach. However, a Coast Guard spok.wnan said the craft was almost completely swamped and its main mast }\ad broken. so the owner made the decision to abandon iL The veasel was set adrift near Shaw'• Cove and washed ashore at El Morro Bay. The owner and his companion were returned to Newport Beach by the Coast Guud. Clemente Driver Arrested After High Speed Crasl1 A 22-year-old San Clemente c I t y employe was arusted on charges or drunken driving early today in San Clemente lfter a spectacular hlgb..gpH<I crash along Soul.b Ola Villa shortly after midnight Jn 1ddltlon to ml1Un1 a r re a t , authoriUts l&ld1 Nixon 11 to be arraigned Tutsday on cnarges of posseulon of marljlU!na with intent to tell. r Police said they arrested Richard James Henry of 106 San Fernando at the scene of tbe one<ar. non-injury crash al Ola Vista and Calle Princess. · After laylng about 130 feel of akldli, police claim, Henry's auto wt.nt airborne for 24 feel more and tore out a large section of wooden fence , finally coming to rest atop a concrete block wan. I • 2 Trains Hit Truck OAKLAND (VP!) -A truck driver escaped with cuts ind bruises Sund1y wben two trains 1otn1 In oppo1lte dtrec. tfon1 1muhed Into his vehJcle and dras· ged it for lhrte block1. Henry Is a maintenance employe wltb the s>1rkl department, offictra &aid. The accident occurred at 12 :47 1.m. today and uwed damage to rtsldeDCel al 1501 and 1505 S. Ola V1Jt1. Story Personal Life Discussed on TV a pattern would have been established much earlier," she added. Mrs. Race said at least a half dozen attempts to set up dates with the caller had failed in the past. She credited the unidentified victim with Wall'• arrest. She asserted 1 search of Wall's home turned up a telephooe book for the Harbor arta with an undetermined number of phone number• cfrcled • WASHINGTON (UPI) -President 'Nlion··aaid. ·today· the·· PolHicar ·;·,moment of truth'' that led him to run for presi- dent in 1968 came during a Florida Christmas vacatJon with his family. and was unsuccessful for the California "It looks like he bad called numbers governorShip in 1962: · ................... -·····-.. on·every page;""sbe said:...... · · · But · he said Mrs. Nixon, once the \Vall, who is being held in Ilea of decision to run had been made, was $6,125 balJ,_ is scheduled to 'appear this his best campaigner. afternoon in Harbor Judicial Distrlcl The decision was a marked change from 1962 when "I had no thoughts or prO!pecl.! that I had any political future " following his loss of the race for governor of California, Nixon said. Following lhe polilical defeats in the Court for arraignment. Nilon was intervlewed by Barbara Walters on the Today show on NBC.TV. The interview was filmed in the White House Thursday. , , The interview wu one of two Nixon has given in recent days to discuss family and personal matters, and specifically first lady Pat Nixon, who will be 59 this week. The President confirmed what bas long ~en a rumor in Washington political circles -that Mrs. Nixon had tried on previous occasions to talk him into leavtng politica. He said Mrs. Nixon "felt at times it would be best if y,•e 1eft public life'' and cited three separate occasions - once in 1952 following the "fund" con- troversy when he was almost dropped from the ticket as vice president, when he lost the race for president in 1960, early 60s. Nixon said he felt he would never hold elective office again, but that changed in 1967. He recalled : "The final decision with regard to running for the presidency again. I made during Christmas vacation of 1967 ••• .. I remember we were in Florida at the time and we had quite a family discussion about it with Mrs. Nixon and our two daughters, Tricia and J u I i e , and by that time too, David Eisenhower v.·as one who gave us some advice. And after we discussed it 1 made the decision and the whole family really campaigned with very great effective- ness in my opinion." Turning to domestic Issues, Nil:on said he could understand the concern of young people about the war in Vietnam. But he said unrest in the country came not from the war or other domestic problems, but from the "insecurity that comes from the old values being torn away." Capsized Craft Hunted Air and surface craft today searched the Catalina Channel !or a 43-foot catamaran which capsir.ed Saturday a mile and a half of! the west end of Catalina Island. The 43-foot lmi Loa, owned by A. Victor Stern of Seal Beach. flipped in strong winds and heavy seas while racing with seven other multihull yachts in the annual Santa Barbara Island race out of Los Angeles. (Race details, Page 26) Skipper Stern and seven members of his crew were rescued by a Coast Guard helicopter. The crew clung to the overturned craft while monohull yachts. also in the Santa Barbara Island race slood by. The Coast Guard said this morning that the overturned catamaran had not been spotted since the crew was rescued. The owner was reported searching for the craft with commercial vessels, The lmi Loa capsized in winds estimated at 35-40 knots in full view ot observers on the island. Besides Stern, the crew of lml Loa consisted of curt Huddleson, Seal Beach· Dick Knof, lluntlngton Beach; Ken Wi~ and J erry Mullenhoff. both of Costa Mesa; Alan Burg, Laguna Niguel, and Jerry Winter, San Diego. All were experienced calamaran sailors \vho had sailed on Jmi Loa in at least one Trans·Paciflc multlhull race. The Coast Guard queoted Stern as say- ing lhat the wet sheets jammed, pre- venting quick release after a gust of wind lirted one hull from the water. SAVE 40°/o to 500/o Don't Pay $11 D • •• ,., ttlll I'• ~' ••111•1 ... ~···-rl<>t M !UC Wlllte .... -.. 1 .. "' ""' 1"9 ... t ...... l"I ......._ AM J'Oll ,.., •.' Police Halt Bid For 'Death Dive'·· 6ff Coast Pier E.!cape artist O.D. Masco Is alivt and well in Alhambra today. Seal Beach police officers stopped h i m from aUempting a "Dive to Death" off the municipal pier Saturday. The 32-year-old stuntman was lo hav1 jumped into the water, weighted down and shackled by two handcuffs and ~ feet of chain padlocked in three places. Unable to locate a boat for hia djve the burly 270.pound "Houdini" sought to complete his stunt by taking a leap off the end of the pier. He didn't get far. MasCQ was met at the head of the pier by Sgt. Martin Black who took him to see Police Chlel Lee Case. ''The city has an ordinance against jumping off the pier," the chief told him. "I'm afraid we won't be able to allow you to go through with this." Disappointed by the order, the red. bearded ?i.fasco announced to the crowd of 2,000 thrill-seekers lining the pier that he would make good hJs claim next Saturday, at 2 p.m. A boat from which he can make his dive bas been promised to Masco by persons operating a sport-fishing con- cession on the Seal Beach pier. The stunt, explained Masco, arose from a challenge by one of hls friends. Teachers Cast Vote ' REDWOOD CITY (UPI) -Ballots are being dlstrlbuted today for a vott by Sari Mateo Junior College District Teachers on whether they have con- fidence in Chancellor Clifford Erickson. ..... , S8900 Don't Pay ~75 .. OUR UNUSUAL MONEY BACK DIAMOND GUARANTEE .,.,,.. t c. • "'"" _._.. ,.. ..... 1• .....,. .......... ....,,, ~ """"""' ....,.....,..,..ftftoJ.,..c• ... ....... _ .. s27500 Whtn you buy • dlamoncl from UI .. will guarantff that diamond to 1ppr1IM •I 40% MORE then you paid fw it .. your money back. Can you do •• well tlMwhtre? COMPARE. 1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE RRST COSTA MESA JEWELRv-.. and LOAN LOAN, IUY, SELL, TlADI 1838 NEWPORT BLVD· PHONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA-Beiw.o Harllor & Broodway I I I I I I . San~t;Iemente ·· • ·Ca Eo1110N • • •• • • •• •• • ... -' /.l'oday'a Fl••I VOL 64, NO. 63, 3 SECTIOl'IS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFOllNIA MONDAY, MARCH 15, 1971 . ' . TEN CENTS ~ , • • Hate Mai~;~lowing In -O:rer Fluoridation Issue _ :. r. j . By JOHN VALTERZA Hate matt' :.irearly is flowing ln to at least one City Councilman who i11 a firm supporter of fluoridation of San Clemente's water supply. Dr. Wade lower this week oonceded that antagonism toward his latest move to resurrect Che issUe bas grown in recent weeks. i! in ~ !J!ego· tiiday ~ 11>1 ~t"tltoi ~tter'ln \hat city. ;·1 ~ 'g(l~. Quite .A bit of mail from • bdQi sides already, and some of tt la pretty: itrOur." he said. • · profwlon. As the idea gathers momentum lrl San Clemente, upcoast in Huntington Beach fluoridation is nearing reality. - at least temporarily. Clly official• and foes of the a~uon of the compound to publjc water fUpplies will appear Tusday at a special bearing of the Slate Public Health 5ervice. the equipment to be Installed to add the compound to drinking water. ~oe1 of the plan -while thelr chances of thwarting the Ouorldatlon are slim al)l'e Tuesday hearing at the Di!neylall!I Hot.el -will speak against.the lssue. submitted too late to be leaat. Nearby, in Fountain Vllley, city ·of- ficials there are planning to fluoridate water as well and will JI.ISO speak at the Tuesday hearing. . . But tlie oppostlon In, that clty .auu has 1n •acilve petition campaign. to brlDg the matter onto a special baDot. Slightly more than 100 names are n~ before the referendum petitions are vaUd. . • widespread In the two adjoining cities • .. that the foes are symbolic o/. one political persuasion and are not representative of a large mass ol citizens. In San Clemente, the opposition bas not been completely usessed u yet. "lt'a growing, lbouf.h•" Dr. Lower acf. mitted , ~ coun:cun)an, who succesdully WOfl UQaOimoi.1$1 ~ i~ for a fluortda~ lion ~ about two weeks ago, aald •~mt offers 'of a speaker haVf' come. frorD tbe ():toge County Dental The councilman, a retired oral suraeon,. AUoeiiUon and other groups within tbf The City of Huptington Beach ·will seek' approval/by the state agency of 'll><Y ·-ntty lost their bid to bring the matter to a vote because of a misunderstanding of the State Elections Code. Petitions calling f« a plebiscite bearing more than 4,<m al&n•tures were SOme reliable observer& of lhe; situation have said that the controversy 11 .oot "You wouldn't believe aome· of the stuff that's coming into my mailbox right now," he added. Street Work Plans Set For Council City staff reoommendations submitted aeveral months agG ouUinlng the need tor···atl'e!!t'""$1.":t "mllllOii "'lif" repair·· San . ciemente's existing substandard streell will come up for city council .study in a special session late this month . Councilmen will meet in an informal study &ession March 31 to again revie\f costs and guidelines aet forth by Cjty Engineer Phil Peter, Finance Director Gerry Teachout and City Manager Ken Carr. In general terms, the report ouUines a five-year program of upgrading the atreets -but the means for financing t.bat program still 'are in doubt. Tax rate increases to cover the costa wOl;11d amount to a huge 57.6 (:ents per 1100 of Nllased •*•tlDn. AnOtber revenue .,it.ernaUve would be the pauage t>f 1eneral obligation revenue bonds. Preunt clty policy on street main- tenance ls a balance between assessment districts ·on local neighborhood atreets to a full-ci~y paytnhtt of construction of arterial highways. In 50me instances the county picks up a portion of the bill. State gas tax rebates also are used to pay for arterial street work. On collector streets, with an average .(O.foot paved width, the city sllares costs 50-50 with bordering property owners. Local streets are rebuilt and resurfac· ed with the expense borne by property owners under assessment district pro- ceedings -rarely a popular process. The revenue picture for major street work is a bleak one. And the five-year period under the presently . outlined program would not signify much headway. Peter has told councilmen that five years is about the maximum life of any roadway improved under current pn:>ei!SSes. •1 Another five-year progrfm. he said, would have to be repea~ again five years hence. ·• As tax revenue, Tcacho explained, bas been running about $1 000 a year. With an average budget balance of $300,008, Teachout estimate a five-ytar accumulation ·of gas tu r ates would amount to $1.3 million. But a major resurfacinf Job along the length or El Camino Re.al aloce could wipe out all those funds . The apparent timing for the street 1tudy eession ls to obtain advance dlscusslo• aod study before councilmen begin, their monlla long round of budget 11esalona later this spring. ' Oru1e We•t•er Wanner weather is in the offing for Tue!day wilh high clouds and temperatures slretching upward to ~ degrtes a1ong tbt coa.sl INSmE TODAY Thtrt's o ntw uachting land- mark on Newport Harbor t'1I Bahia Corinthian Yacht Clitb dedicofed itt $750,000 clubhoiUe on Ba~sidt Drivt. Booting Page 26. .. lllltt M Mrtfe M-U C1tllltf1\l1 , fllttltftlf ..._.. ..., Clltcllltlt Ut t ON!ltl CtlMIY 1"11 Cltnllllf 11·» ll'Mt ......., 1e (91'f!ICI 1, s-ft. tl-U Cl"IH..... 1, lftdt Mt!'bh 1•19 0.1lfl Jllttltel It , .. ...._ N ••'*1•1 ..... • ~ ... ,. llRflril"'-1 2•15 Wttflltr I ''""' 1•1• w__.. Htwt l).11 .._._ •11 W..111 Nftlt ... ..... .......,. ,, -. -.. FLUORIDATION PROPONENT Councllm1n lower Alien's Death . On Freeway Investigated OCEANSIDE -The identity of a Mex. lean alien who fell or was pushed off a lruck early today and run over by cars on Interstate 5, remains a mystery. California Highway patrolman Dennis Porter, 38, of Vista and his partner were about to turn off the freeway when lhey .heard the thump-of a nearby c~r strikini something about 1 :20 a.m. today. • 1es ' re~ewa . ....... . ......................... -. Crash Near Capo Beach Injures 8 By JOHN V~LTERZA ' OI lllt"DellY f'llM Stl" , Pi,,. Yehlctes -lncludlnf ·two l1rg< 'campers -collided in a wild tangle o[ wood and metal on the San Diego Freeway ntar Capistrano Beach Sunday evening lrijurlng eight persoris and 1nart. 1Dg traffic for thttt hOurs. But officers investigating the series of crashes, which started when a station wagon skidded into occoming Janes, termed it "noUtlng short of miraculous'' that no one was killed or seriously injured. The mishaps began when an auto driven by Beverly Manning of 302 Avtn lda Salvador, San Clemente, crossed the unguarded center divide r, patrolmen said. aµd was sideswiped on both sides by oncoming cars. Porter jumped out and pulled the body of the unidentified man out of the way of oncoming can. Oceanside police chas- ed the · canVas-eovered truck along Slate Route 78, finding 1 group of aliens in the back. "No one is talking about the incident," a Highway P a t r o I spokesman said today , noting im- migration authoritiea were investigating the incident. . FIREMAN SURVEYS ·WRECKAGE OF FIVE•VEHIC~E ACCIDENT 1.N CAPISTRANO BEAC~ Sunday ACcldent In Northboun~ Un. of S~n D lego FrHWIY lniured Eight, Delayed Traffic ~the tangle that followed, one camper wss upended, strewing debris across a ~·ide area, Still another. camper was heavily damaged and two other cars were a total loss. The victim was about 40 years old, S foot 6 inches tall and weighed 148 pounds. He was dressed in grey trousers, a blue shirt and • tan jacket. San Diego County Coroner's office ls seeking information to identify the min. Eleven other a1iens were taken into custody. The truck driver was not charg· ed, autborUies 11ld. Big Starr Ranch Put Up for Sale By Newport Firm Group Formed To Support School Bond A citizens ror schools committee has been formed in support of the SlS.3 million bond issue being 10Ugbt in 1 special election April 6 by the San Joa· quin School District. . VoUng on the school bond 1ssue for the sprawling district Will be the com- munities of Leisure W~ld, Mi!Sion•Viejo, El Toro, Capistrano Highland!, Aegean Hills, Aliso Valley, Irvine and the Santa Ana Marine Air Facility as well as developments that include California Homes, Culverdale, University Park and Turtle Rock. Charles Waltman Is general chairman The 10,144-acre Starr Ranch In the -Of 'the bond issue information campaign. IOUtheast part of Orange County near Area chairmen Include : Diane Kent, Ortega Highway Is,, up for sale. Recrea-Frances Jehle, Loa Young, W; A. Uon Environment Inc. of Newport Be~c~ .. Thompson, R. J. Klney, M. Peter10n, which planned to develop the area mto Tom Glenn Jim Moses Larry Ledin a $17 million wilderness recreation fad.Ii· · Chuck Boul~nger and wafne Clark. ' ly i.s the seller. "The bond issue Is necessary to allow Recreation Envlrorunent bought tl'le COMtructlon of about three new IChools ranch last May from the Eugene Starr a year for the nei:t five years," Wattman estate. At that time the count)' was said . noting the distrid has grown from considering purchase ot the property 1 g()O. pupils five . years ago to 9,000 for a regional park. sludents this year. "This nurriber;.coukl Those plans may be revived with the doubli!' In the next five yeal"I, '"bi! added. land back on the market but it is COr'I• Waltman aajd that YO~ in &he San 1idered unlikely that the county wJll Joaquin dlslrici hlvt' an · ·11enr record move on the opportunity becaYM of approvtna fiKal leluee. the tight money situation. • ; It1hu been pointed out tllat lhe county I! tnterea:ted could have takec steps to acquire the property during the past year. A study of the park plan was dropped but hu been mived. The ranch 15 located sir and one half mile1 east of San Juan Capistrano near.the Oeveland National Fomt. Recreation Environment boUg)lt the llitd for 111,000 111 •ere but the Bikini price.today mt be llJ,OllD to 111,000. Labor Pai:ty liads LONDON (UPI)"-Tb. t.obcir P~y has an a percent lead ovft the cocto aerv1tiv• govemmut of Prtme" Minister Edward Heath In ~ lat..t Louis lUrril Poll publi&bed lod!y tu tht Dally Er· 1'- ' Viejo Driver Arrested In Bizarre Auto Crash A Mlsslon Viejo m'an recovetlng from his injuries · has been arrested on felony drunken driving charges sten;imi.J:!g. from a bizarre auto crash on the San Dlea:o Freeway during driving rain before dawn Saturday. The accident at· 3:05 a·.m. Included a wild series of rollovers and 81).mJ.le-per· hour skids agalns.t wrong-way .traffic near Avery Parkway -the enUre in- cident witnessed by passing highway patrolmen. Ronald H. Cusick, 23. of 24282 Totilra Drive, Mission Viejo, wa1 arrested on the felony charges as aides at South Coast Community Hospital treated him for moderate injuries. Patrolmen said CUsick'1 nearly new Olevrolet El Camino pickup allegedly smashed Into the rear of a slow-moving truck, flipping lhe heavy vehicle over and pilling out the driver, Knul B. Sk· jonberg, · 28, of 2009 Maple St., Costa Mesa. ·PatrOlman said the 'pickup then began flipping and rolling across the center divider 11tr'ip -the Impact ripping off Its roof -then landed upright again and continued on a crazy, quarter.mile course in the wrong lanes. Jt traveled at.an estimated 80 mlJe.. per hour in the opposing lane! of trafHc before finally careeniilg off ~e freeway and slamming into an embankment, officials said. Volunteer firemen from San Juan Capistrano pried CU!ick from tlie wreckage. He was reported sUll under observation at South Coast Community Hospital ·~ day. Skjonberg was treated for a leg Injury, cuts and bruises. then released from treatment over the weekend. Tric~a, Cox Will Marry . .. ' . , ·In. Whit~ House Wedding • KEY BISCA~. Fla.. (UPl)-Trlcla Nlxon and' HarVtrd 11"' •!i!Jdent Edward. Flncli Cot will be m...,Sed In Ule W)lite 1fou11 On' J~ne S, 11 ·wu learned today, The ilr.11dent'1 .15-year..td · dlugilter • ortginatty -hid .~ her wedding for J,..., 11, bat Jn<lVed it up-,afler .•~ the weeltend <with Cor,llld h11•10Clalile famlty •ln New•Yort • The formal an~mentrwill be made • · Tuesday by Preaident llld Mn-. Ntun. \ 'the Nlxo~ are. pllnning a ·joint • celebraUon ol the Fftat Lact¥'• 58tb birth-. daY and the t'l&•gemeut 1!t ·an "lrlsh Evening at tht 'White Home" 'prdlram Tuesday evening. Informed IOUTCU \ said t h f; an· nounctmeot would bl rnade either in · the afternoon or eye,nlng. Close relatives aod Jrleiidl DI Ibo N1lOlll •nit Cox'• , parenta. Col. 1od . Mn. Howai'd EUii Cox, have been Invited to the &all p!lter-. In&. • ' The drive'rs wen!: • -The Manning woman, 41, who was treated for apparently minor Injuries at South OJast Hospital. -Vergil M. Fleming, 24, of Garden Grove, treated for minor hurts as were his wife, Sally, 22, and their childr.en, Laura, 4, and Brian. 11 months. -Norman E. Bartlett. 31, both treated and Carolyn Bartlett, 31, both treated for minor hurts. They were in another camper. -Marvin C. Tipple, 51, of Lakewood, unhurt, A passenger. Eleanore Frisbie, 50, of Huntington Beach, was slightly injured. however. -Kathryn A. Isgar, 54, of Redondo Beach, unhurt. One of the most heavily damaged vehicles was Bartlett's camper, which was a total loss after rolling over. The Impact ripped the camper 1rom its shell anP scattered d#!brls which requirtd three hours to clear. .The Initial impact took place In the northbound lanes of the freeway at &:OS p.m. The collisions took place 1,000 feet north of the Pacific Coast Hlghway off- ramp. Parents Dabble In School Art ,Parents or junior high s c h o o I youngsters wilt get their chance to play with· clay, paint. paper and other 1tl nia•.,.Jab 'Ttjlldof, •n!lllt In 1 Jpe<:lal rtA'' Program. wlil<h '.btenu '& 1!ud0nt plogreis ,.port l'(ith dab~ling Ill art. The meeting will begin at 7:15 p.m. If\ the art room of Marco 'Forster Junior High School. Under a program planned by art teacher Mrs. Matc:o1m OuM and Mrs. Reginald Fernandez, parenp will see '1tldls and exhlblla of 1tildent -k. lhen receive some instruction aod. workUme In a· varif:ty of ari media . 'Iba public Is welcome to the activity, which will lqltow I st. Patrick'• l>a,y theme. I .. w' -• • •••• ~ . . . ·-...... I D.lll.Y PILOT SC • Lagunans Do Something To Save Environment By JACQUELINE COMBS Of .. Dlllr , .... Stiff . In an age wbm it is camp to think ecologically, Arbor Day may seem a JitUe archaic. Today media masters demand that people wash their plastic bags for re- use, ~e the soap u well as the laundry and carry home organic food in perwmal shopping bags to save waste. But Arbor Day has served nobly since 1872, prevlewing the arrival of spring and reminding people of the beauty In trtts. NesUed in their cloistered habitat and baaklng In 1 the sun, Laguna Beach resident. are especially attentive . to the demands man place upon Mother Earth. When the seallne is threatened by looming high-rise · apartments, Lagunans storm city ha11 In outrage. SWINGING INTO action lJ the Laguna Greenbelt, [nc., a nonprofit ftmdrat!ing corporaUon which hopes to encircle Laguna Beach with a "greenbelt" of recreaUoo ,. area. , J Concerned with conserving the Art Colony's identity, the propooenls hope visuaJ and real boundary Jines between city and encroach- ing unrbaniz.aUon of Southem Orange County will continue to be well-defined. Greenbelt Week, April 19-25, will emphasize the fund ralsinl drive aimed at the first purchase .of the 52n-acre Sycamore Hilla property in Lagwta Canyon. The goal is the event.au! establishment of a total Greenbelt through El Morro, Laguna, Woods and Aliso canyoos. BA YING GROWN·tIP in the ~vided tracUands of Southeast Los Angeles County, l can appreciate the concept immeasurably. M a chUd I thought ciUes which had "downtowns" and "main streets" quaint. Shopping centers and intermeshed clUes were all I ever knew. It took a trip to Minne- sota before I discovered that western movies didn't have a monopoly oo local color. Being a newcomer to Laguna Beach, I have taken up the banner and plastered the.car with symbols of my newly acquired priorltie.s -bumper stick· ers ranging from No Hlgb Rise to Greenbelt to Keep Ca1lfomia Green. IMAGINE THE SHOCK when I t~ .. W.to mY. driveway and found tt 1lx feet deep with eucalyptus leaves and branches. Minor pruning, I assured my- self. A look skyward shattered any glimmering hopes for survival Sky naked : trees fallen. · . Four great trees, stretching 50 feet up and spreading lofty arms in a pro- tective embrace around the apartment. J( was like living in a treehouse. Each evening we would watch the sea swallow the sun, shielded from the night winds by the great limbs of the trees. When Jt rained, il)e abundance of leaves muffled the sound, allowing only gentle munnurs to penetrate. The current of damp air from the rain carried the soothing scent of eucalyptus Into every room. SECURE IN OUR own world, we were shielded from prylna: eyes by the fomight of a fine-thinking man years ago who planted the trees in a nut 10- foot row. He nurtured the shoots, shaping them through the years to become strong. A word from the landlord and the gnawing of an electric uw quickly fel)ed what no man could crtate. The landlord claims the tree felling was ln- eVJtahle for the netd of ONE more tenant parking space. "And it was so messy with all those seedpods lying around.'' Where were the greenery proponent. when this !and was nvished I asked. • But four-year-old Sethly Ann Miller bad a more astute question for the landlord. "Did you ask God ii yOI could cut lJjs trees down?" she inquired. Four Burglaries Plague Clemente Over Weekend A rash of burglaries -including what will prove to be a "chickenfeed" ufe job at San Clemente Hlgb School - plagued San Clemente over the weekend. Officers, who began receiving several calls on separate tbefta this morning, said lnvesUgators were still trying to assess losses in some of the locaUons. The number of thefts thus far is four. At San Clemente High School's student aetlvtUes office, school aides opened up this morning to find 1 wall safe ripped from IU pinnings. But despite the elaborate lengUC to steal the sale, no more than $10 was in It over the weekend. Detectives said the thieves entered the oftlce sometime over the weekend, pried off some moulding and stole the safe. DAllY PllOT OltAHG;! ~T POI LtstllNO COMPAM't l•krt H. W.H ,,..l!Mftt ...... , .. ..,.. J•cli It. c.rt..; Vkl PraJdent and 0.-•I ~ 1\••• r...-n ..... lti•M•• A. Mt,,111"9 MMwllrtl Ec1119r C:h•l4•• H. l ••• lJc:litrl P. Nt1' Aff)lftrl: ~ ••• ,.,. Let-.... Offlca 222 krttt AVi1~11• ,__.._ JOI Nerfll II Ct111i~• R••I .,_.,_ c111t11 Mtlll! uo wn t ••r ttrwt N.wpwt INCi'!: ll» NfWllll'(l 9.&vlfVI "" HilnllnftOft IMtfl; 17111 IMdl ICllllt\ltrC • 'l11ey missed a 11l'p hauJ, .however, because school officials hid moved a large amount of money into a larger sale last Friday. As detectives were lnve!tlgating that cue Utls mornlng Register Reporter Stan Wullf phoned to report his newspaper's orfice at 101 S. El Camino Real had been ransacked over the weekend. The loss was not immediately known. Burglan using Identical means - prying open bathroom windows -hlt elsewhere in the city over the weekend. Dennis Wayne Hunter of 1409 C. Calle Mirador, returned from Ventura early this morning and discovered that h1.!I apartment had been rifled. The loss in stereo equipment and other items was near $200, Kenneth Warden, owner of the Light House lighting shop, reported the theft of $152 in cash from a register which had been pried open sometime during the weekend at 1421 North El Camino Real. Both of the latttr )()(!aUons bad been entered after someone pried open a bathroom window and clambered into the building. Beach Man Held On Narcotics Rap A Huntington Beach man 1uertedly started a scufne Saturday night when he was arrested by Laguna Beach police on suspicion of drug charges and he is now also being held for resisUng arrest. Police claim two Pounds or marijuana were coniiscated. when the man was taken into custody ln the Woodland Drive area. He was identified as George Franklin Nixon, 23, of 331 Seventh Street., Huntington Beach. Authorities allege the man had come to Laguna Beach to make a "delivery" of the drug when narcotics officers ap- proached him on Woodland Drive. Of. fieen: claim Nixon atarted flgbUn1 and kicldna: in an effort to escape. but wu fmaUy subdutd. Jn addition to misting arr e 11 t, authorities nld, NiJ:on Is to be arraigned Tuesday on charges or possession of marijuana with intent to .ell. 2 Trains Hit Truck OAKLAND (UPI) -A truck driver esaped with cub Ind brullff Suncjay whtn two trains golna ln opposite direc- tions 1malbtd into his vebk.le and drag· ged It ror three blocks. .. .. Coast Teen · J lnPlwne Rap Jailed A Corona del Mar man ii in custody today in Newport Beach, charged with making 200 obscene phone calls to Harbor Area women over the past year. William Howard Wall, 19, of 424 Poinsettia Ave., was arrested :'.klnday after pollce alleged be went to the Newport home of a victim for a date. 'Detectives said their file on the cases date back nearly one year when a man who called himself Bill Jack.son began harassing female residentl of Newport, Costa Mesa and Tu!tin. Tbe victims or the lewd calls range tn age from 12 to 75, investigators said. 'Ibe calls were linked 'by a similar obscene suggestion and the fact that the caller usually knew the victims' names and identified '1imself as Bill Jackson. "We probably would have been able to catch a suspect much sooner if the victims bad called us right away.'' 1aid Detective Sue Race . . i • • PRES N Uf'I Te"""" t,.,.. .. NIC IDE T NIXON TALKS TD NBC'S BARBARA WALTERS IN EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW "Unfortunately, some of the women \\'ailed until they had received several and I'm sure some never reported the calls at all. If we 'd had this information a pattern would have been established much earlier,'' she added. In the Whitt House, a Chit About Drugs, Women's Lib ind th1 Am1rlc1n F1mily Diver Rescued From Heavy Surf By Bystanders Bystanders walking along D a n a Harbor's west jetty Sunday helped Sa 'te a baUered Duarte man wlfo was dashed against the rocks by heavy 1urr as be tried to retrieve a face mask.~ San Clemente lifeguards said they ar· rived soon afterward to give first aid to Roger Wbit<, 36, who had suffered severe cul.I, brulaes and injuries to hls back and arm. Llfeguard Capt Phil Stubha said Wbil< was emerging from scuba diving alone when be dropped his mask on the treacherous rocks 100 yards from the jetty'• hue. M White's wife and baby looked on, a heavy breaker hit the man and drove him into the rocks. Bysl8Jtders pulled hJm to the top, sparing b1m from further aerlous injury. While was admitted at South Coast Community Hospital 1horUy after the 3,1) p.m. mbhap. Boat Abandoned In Heavy Seas Off Laguna A 22-foot sailboat, demasted by the wind and awamped in heavy seas, was abandoned Saturday by its owner off Laguna Beach after efforts to save the $4,000 craft failed. The owner, Stewart Weiner, of Los Alamitos, and an unidentified CTJmpanion were rescued uninjured from the craft by the Coast Guard at about & p.m. Saturday. The stricken vessel was first spotted by Laguna Beach lifeguards at 5 p.m. when it was about two miles oH Main Beach proceeding north under only its jib. The mainsail of the craft had been torn by the strong wind and lifeguards informed the Coast Guard of the boat's peril. A cutter was sent to aid the vessel and the small craft was taken into tow la an effort lo bring lt safely to Newport Beach. However, a Coast Guard spokesman said the craft was almost completely swamped and its main mast had broken. so the owner made the der:islon to abandon it. The vessel was set adrift near Shaw's Cove and washed ashore at El Morro Bay. The owner and his companion were returned to Newport Beach by the Coast Guard. Clemente Driver Arrested After High Speed Crash A 22-ye:ar-old San Clemente c I t y employe was arrested on charges of drunken driving early today in San Clemente after a spectacular high-speed crash along South Ola Vista ahortly after mldnlJhl. Police said they arrested Richard James Henry of 106 San Fernando at the scene of the one-car. non-injury crash at Ola Vista and catle Prtnctu. After laying 1bout 130 f,.t of skldl, police claim. Henry's auto went airborne for 2f feet more and tore out a large &ectlon of wooden fence , finally coming to rest atop a concrete block wan. IltN'}' ls 1 maintenance employe wl1' the 1>4rka department, offlctrs 11ld. Th• accJdent occurred at 12:41 a .r'I\. today and caused damage to mldencet at 1501 and 1505 S. 011 Vlrl4. I Nixon's Story Personal Life Discussed on TV WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon said today the political "moment of truth" that led him to run for presi- dent in 1968 came during a Florida Christmas vacation with bis family . The decision was a marked change from 1962 when "l bad no thoughts or prO!pects that J had any political future" following his loss of the race for governor of California, Ni.Ion said. Nil.on was interviewed by Barbara Walters on the Today show on NBC.TV. The interview was filmed in the White House Thursday. I' '"1 The interview was one of two Nixon has given in recent days to discuss family and personal matters, and speclficalJy first lady Pat Nixon, who will be 59 this week . The President confirmed what bas long ~en a rumor in Washington political Cll'cles -that Mrs. Nixon had tried on previous occasions to talk him into leaving polltica, He aald Mrs. NiJon "felt at times It would be best if we left public life " and cited three separate occasions - once in 1952 following the "fund" con- troversy when be was almost dropped from the ticket as vice president, when he Jost the race for president in 1960, and was unsuccessful for the California governorship in 1962. But he said Mrs. Nixon, o n c e the decision to run had been made, was his best campaigner. Following the political defeats in the early 60s. Nixon said he felt he would never hold tlective office again, but that changed in 1967. He recalled: "The final decision with regard to running fo r the presidency again. I made during Christmas vacation of 1967 ••• "[ remember we were in F1orlda at the time and ·we had quite a ramily discussion about it with Mrs. Nixon and our two daughters, Tricia and J u I i e , and by that time too, David Eisenhower was one who gave us some advice. And after we discU!lsed it I made the decision and the whole family really campaigned with very great effective- ness in my opiruon." Turning to dome3tic issues, Nixon said he could understand the concern of young people about the war in Vietnam. But he said unrest in the cowitry came not from the war or othe r domestic problems, but from the "in.security that comes from the old \'a1ues being torn away." · Capsized Craft Hunted Air and surface craft today searched the Cat.allna Channel for a 43-foot catamaran which capsized Saturday a mile and a half off the west end of Catalina Island. The 4.1-foot Iml Loa. owned by A. Victor Stern of Seal Beach, flipped in strong winds and heavy seas while racing with seven other multihull yachts in t.he annual Santa Barbara Island race out of Los Angeles. (Race details, Page 26) Skipper Stern and seven members of his crew ·were rescued by a Coast Guard helicopter. The crew clung to the overturned craft while monobull yachts. also In lbe Santa Barbara Jsland race stood by. The Coast Guard said this morning that the overturned catamaran had not been spotted since the crew was rescued. The owner \vas reported .searching for the craft with commercial vessels. 1'.he lmi Loa capsized in winds estimated al ~ knots in fult view or observers on the island. Besides Stern, the crew of Iml Loa consisted of Curt Huddleson, Seal Beach· Dick Knof, Huntington Beach; Keo Wis~ and Jerry Mullenhoff. both of Costa Mesa; Alan Burg, Laguna Niguel, and Jerry Winter, San Diego. All were experienced catamaran sailors who had sailed on Imi Loa in at least one Trans.Pacific multihull race. The Coas t Guard queoted Stem as say- ing that the wet sheets jammed. pre- venUn,e: quick release after a gust of wind lifted one bull from the water. SAVE 40°/o to 58°/o Don't Pay $110 •• ' ,.,. fllll ~ ~. Mllf•lrw Mt...-1 ~11!1 ill Ult wlllM .... -"!11t 9' ,,.. ... eetl...-.int .... a. AMI rM ,_, . • • Mrs. Race said at least a half dozen attempts to set up dates witt1 the caller had failed in th'! past. She credited the unidentified victim with Wall's arrest. She asserted a search of Wall's home turned up a telephone book for the Harbor area with an undetermined number of phone number• clrtled. "It looks like he had called oumbus on every page," she said. Wall, who is being held Jn lieu of $6,125 bail. is scheduled to appear thJs afternoon in Harbor Judicial District Court for arraignment. Police Halt BUI. For 'Death Dive'' Off Coast Pier Escape artist D.D. Masco Is alive and well in Alhambra today. Seal Beach police officers stopped h i m from attempting a "Dive to Death" oU the municipal pier Saturday. The 32-year-old stuntman was to have jumped into the water, weighted dowq and shackled by two handcuffs and 2$- feet or chain padlocked in three places. Unable to locate a boat for his dive the burly 270-pound ''Houdini" sought lo complete his stunt by taking a leap off the end of the pier. He didn't get far. Masco was met at the head of the pier by Sgt. Martin Black who took him to see Police Chlef Lee Case. "The city has an ordinance against jumping off the pier," the chief told him. "I'm afraid we won't be able · to allow you to go through with (his." Disappointed by the order, the red- bearded Masco announced to the crowd of 2,0CXJ thrill-seekers lining the pier that he would make good his claim next Saturday. at 2 p.m. A boat from which be can make his dive has been promised to Masco by persons operating a sport-fishing COD- cession on the Seal Beach pier. The stunt, explained Masco, arose from a challenge by one or his friend!. Tea chers Cast Vo te REDWOOD CITY (UPI) -Ballots are being dlstributtd today for a vote by San Mateo Junior College District Teachers on whether they have con- fidence in Chancellor Clifford Erickson. ···"" S8900 Don't Pay $475 OUR lltllSUAL MONEY BACK DIAMOND GllWNTIE TMt t IL 111 ..... ..,.,.... """ .,. 1C ~ ................ _..._..... ......,.,. Jlllt .... tw WS.,.. c• •. • ............. s27500 -yeu buy • diomond from us -will eu1rantw th1t diamond to •ppr•I .. 1t WI. MORE th•n you paid fo r ~ °"' your money back. C1n you do •• well elMwhtrt? COMPARE. 1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY-and LOAN LOAN, IUT, SIU, TUDI 1838 NEWPORT ILYD· PHONE 646-7741 ! DOWNTOWN COST A MESA-llolwoon H1rbor· I. 1 ... dw1y ,. I I DICK TRACY . TUMBLEWEEDS LOOK C<!ll~V ! AIJNf HILPffARP fJAVE ME A WHOt.E NI CKE~! 4=J.,, Mun AND JEFF JUDGE PARKER l'M 601NfJ ON A ~OPPING SPRl:E! 1Hi:RE'S A e1r;, SAl.E ON AT iHE: GENEAA!. 510Rf! OM, MUTT, WILL. JtxJ se E WHO'S AT ,.ME DOOR? IT l()()l(S A.S TWOUGM nlE POLIC.E ~A.VE Nl ~'7S UMDE~ CONTROL, A&!EY'. ~~~r::::: PLAIN JANE I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by ' A. POWE• I ACR OSS l Sin ger·--· Vaughan 6 Tt mporary structure 10 Rivtr I barriers 14 Hi ving win gs 15 Russ i1n mountain range 16 "··· -·-Rhythri": 2 words 17 Trnpical plant 18 Ft111inlnt n1111e 19 ···-·gin 20 E.xprt sstd con te mpt 22 Mil k sul}&r 24 Sect ion under the ,.,, -t·4 Numtrltal prt fi x ~5 Maidtn In Gt ttlc Mythology 48 Con cavt 51 Wt 1gh t d d!!Wn 52 Sitablt p 1t Cf S of land 54 Providts 58 Pol1tital group S't Nost: P1tfiir bl Pit t t of ~bsorbt nt t lotl1 li2 T ISSU'! bl Rtptile: ln!or"'al b4 Miss RyAn &S M ~n 's nam t bb Miss Ferb er &7 fatly DOW N 11 Lil Ui) 12 ---·-J aw, Sask. 13 Spir lttd t Qulnt 21 A irl in!!' abbrt vi a\ion 23 Soci a! stratum 25 ---·-···· America 27 Plt rce witl1 3, 15171 39 Data supp crting a dtclslon 4? Nat iv t cf a G1t tk island 43 Wom an in Grttk Mytholo111 .tf. US humori st ~1 Legumin ous plant PERKINS MISS PEACH 26 App litd the brakes 27 P111sol • 1 • 30 Sailor l Pouehts 2 Boy's name 3 Breathing a wt aeon 28 lmpuls t 2't Mr. Coward JJ flfpUblit .t a Liabil ities ..;9 Land mass su11oundtd by wattr 31 Fox --32 Fortf1\htrs J7 Pe riod of history 31 Horse players 40 Horst dottlll': Informal I 41 Thost w ~o have r111h 4l Coin of M11\CO I• ' '' , .. " .. ~ " n ' • sound 4 In any eas t : 2 words 5 !'"1rts idt 6 Ont see king ~n oll iet 7 Malt l!Quor 8 Public wa lk 9 Recta ngular column 10 Tw isl ' ., .. • 1 C.1 " • of Central Americ a: 2 words 34 Chamber of a SIOVI! JS That whit~ Is !t it ovtr )!. POl'tito JB Solt tap I " ., ' ,, .. ·if I " I " " ~ l2 "lit 11£r 13 50 Lon11 lno se robe 53 Gemstdne 55 Wide· mouthed jug 5f. Ttar apar t 57 Weavrt's rttd bO Faml!y member " " " ~ ~"" I ~ll l " ,. ~· ~ .. I " ., ••• ~ ~ • u .:• ·~ -" ~ ' r. t< :!' ,• ,,. .. .~ s " 11 ~ ~ -, .. •• fv:F " .... ''I 61 ., i11 5n 1 • ,. • ' STEVE ROPER PEANUTS By Al Smith HM, .JUST AS I ALWAYS ~OUGk'T, JT·s HOl.LOW! By Frank Baginski U.50 Ll'L AINER -·-- \'JAAT IS 'Ir" TMAT KEEPS -eo1U t.JG POl>JT ACAOEo.t{° (!'OR 'XCl11l/JU GIRLS) IN TOUCH WITH THE w:>R.U> OUTSIDE? 'JT' IS,O!' ;( COURSE _./ GORDO .. , .... ·~~ MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRAC.KERS A!O!!-OOV 1'/W.IZES rHAT AFTER A BRl&Hr, CJ.0UCU55 Si<Y····· By John Miles J ~ ...... By Mell Tl-lE -J.001<, flOSli.l:'T, TMf WOilfLD IS IN F'LAME5, CAR. WE'l'E HAVING A RICESSION, VIOL.ENCE POOL?? J.;;"'1 ~UNS ll•MPANT, Tf'E N•TION IS NONsE.NSE !! 8Pt..1T OOWN T~E A1fDD!...E; -THOSE THINGS "l<E D!SC)l<IENTJNG f J·lf "'""· Overgard r;~ I,:::;,, THf 'TIANGf WOtlO Ml. MUM DAIL V PILO? J f, l y Al Capp euT,~~-'WaW!! W&G~T TO PICK MDT MOtJTH'S!f AL.LREAOl!AS..F'ROtll l5 T01D. Fl LL OUT THIS QU~TIONNAJRE- By Gus Arriola By Roger Bollen Me .rers Jil!All W~EIJ fl' ~NKSt • DENNIS THE MENACE I ' •, • , - 1 I I I I ' ' . 1 ' . \ ~. ' ' . . . ' • }8 DAI LY PILOT SC '-1ondAY, M1rch 15, 191l )Jorae11'• Wortlt Cl1eck Food Label .. "· F 01· ·Best Savings By SYLVIA PORTER Q. \\'hat is lhc differen ce between chicken "patties" and chk:kcn "burgers" -in terms of the amount of cbicken each coniains? A. Chicken burgers must consist of 100 perrent chicken. U cereals or other fillers are used. 01ey must be Jabele<l patties Q Ho11• inuch meat rnust spaghetti with meatballs con· ta in? A. 12 percent or more meat. Q. \Vhat's the difference bet'il·cen "beef and gravy" and "gravy and beef"' A. Jn beef and gravy. the primary ingredient is beef. It's the other \\'&Y around u'1th gravy and beef. These and other v i t a I cittails, which may appear on the labels of hundreds of food products you buy regularly, are your key clues t.o how much or a bargain you are getting for your food dollar. The labels tell you too how much of maJor nutrients, especially protein, are con· ta1ned in each can or package: how much time you are hkely t~ save 1n preparing the food within: how many and "'hat size portions there a r e : \\'hether -0r not you are buying waste. The true value or what you are buying hes 1n Y1hat amounts of basic ingredients you are getting, not simply in the net weight o( the food . Thus, by kno\\•ing the rules for reading f~bels. you can consistently 6lretch your food dollar. Here. therefore. is a run· do\\'n on labels I-Oday which you'll find valuable v.'hen you compare products and prices in the supermarket (I} Undef'federal law t'\ery package of food, drugs or cos· mellcs must contain the following information on its label 1n plain English· name of the product; name and ad- dress of manufacturer. packer or distributor; net amount of Lagu11an Takes Post At Sullivan \Vilham R Rosecrans of Laguna f-each has been ap- pointed director of facilities planning for Su!hvan Pre- Schoo l Centers Sullivan Pre-School Centers. an educational arfihate of Behavioral Research Laboratories of Palo Alto and New York will spend $31): mil- lion this year on construction and furnishing of 10 pre-school center bwldings 1n major pop- ulallon areas of Cahfomia Main offices for SPS are located at 219'l Du Pont dri\'e in the Irvine Indu stria l Complex. ) Rosecrans. a nah\'C or Do\\'ney and former personnel manager for thl' 1\1 a cc o Corporation of f' e 11· po r 1 Beach, 111 a graduate of University of Southern California t\'1\h the i\lBA Jn ad1n1nistra1ive management. At S u I I L v a n Pre-Schools, Rosecrans will be responsible for niarket research and analysis, acquisit ion of pre- school sites and bulld1ng con- struction. Sites have recently been ac- Ci'\Olents: details Of dietary c harl'lcleristics, if ap- propriate: note of whether the product contains artificial col· oring. flavoring or chemical orlng. rJnvoring or chemical preservatives: a list or the 1ngred1cnL~. cxc(.'pt for certa~n products (mayonnaise, macaroni, bread. j ams, ketchup, canned foods and vegetables) ror which federal "standards of tdenti(y" ha ve been established defining basic 1ngredicnts. (2) Next, certain descriptive details are required for cer- tain products. pr1mar1ly can- ned fruits and vegetables· the variety (l'-·hite or yellow corn . for instance); style of pack (\Yhole. diced ); material in 'vhich package (sugar, syrup, water) (3) Ingredients must be listed in descendi Ml: order of their volume (if a beef stew hst sho\\'S beef "-'8Y down and potatoes way up on the list. you have a clue that you are buying n1ostly potatoes). !4) If !he food is an im- itation, this fact mus! be stated, and if there 1s a p1c· ture of the prod uct within, it must bt' accurate (5) Baby food labels must stale the nutritional elements they contain proteins, vitamins, minerals -plus. 1n the case of strained baby foods, a list of the ingredients. (6) ~feats may carry on the maJOr culS of I h e carcasses the U.S Dept. of ,\gri culture 's 1 n s pec ti o 11 stamp. Fede1·a lly inspected poultry, fresh or frozen. car- ri es a stamp •·1nSpected for wholesomeness " 171 Thez1 there a re u n "'"r1tten-unlabeled federal standards covering prepared and convenience f o o d s , especially containing meat or poullry Hot dogs may contau1 no more than 30 percent fat; de\'iled ham, no more than 35 percent fat: corned beef hash must have at least 35 percent beer· beef pol pie, at least 25 percent fresh beef : ·beef \1·1th gravy." at lea:.t 50 percent cooked nleal. Frozen TV meals must con!.301 at least 25 percent cooked meat and the same for meat casseroles. Frozen o r a n g e juice concentrate mltSt be JUSt that, 100 percent orange 1u1ce. And so it goes dovtn a long, long list Many labels ~·111 undergo a marked improvement, in· c1dentally , when the Agriculture Dept completeit its current overhaul of its rules on food labels aod federal standards. But right no\1. you can use th ts guide to help you sho p the labels -and by so doing, st retch your food dollar at least a bit more. 40-year Career With Conipany Lel:lnd J. Valentine or 16:112 Thomas Circle. llunt1nglon Beach, has just completed his fourth decade of service u·1th General Telephone Compan~· Prese nt!~ a marketing stafr representalJ\e for General Telephone 1n Long Beach, Va!cnrine first began his career \I Ith the ut1hty as a pay s1alion collector in his ho1netown, San Bernardino quired for pre-school cen!ers ------------GAL LE NOTICE in F.ountain Valley an d Mission Viejo. ,~ONI --C£•Tll"ICATI! OF IUSINIESS FICTITIO US NAME AnENTlON: T~e IH>!UlrllonlKI de cer!t" "" ... (On01Kl1n9 • b11,l»t1s 1t 10J11 8l11llw"er, Hun!l"fll>ll Btl(~. C11!llorn11 u~der !ht INC(lll:POll:ATEO SMALL loctl!!Cul firm namo of STATE GOVEl!N 'US INES5 .. PAOFES~IONAL MENT AOMINISTllATION lrld 1~11 t&ld CORPORATIONS wit~ firm It (Ol'l'>POsej or 11\1 totl{lwl"' P•,.on•, ONE Olt MOltl EM,LOYEES wl'loit "•mes '" tv!I '"' PllCtS ,, rtsl•"n<• 1"9 .. 1 follows: -Ron11<1 01n!~ ~~"11, Jr,, ?OJI! arvlf· s.so,ooo ,..,1.,.., Hu"l•"lll"" Beach, C1tlfor11•t. N•~cv M H1rrll. 20311 BlvllW•IPlf, GROUP ... unlh>oton BtlCl'I. C•lllor~lt. . 01titd F'tbru••Y ;,, lt11 ' TAX 01!0UCTIBL£ R<IMhl Otnltl H .. ,,,, Jr LIFE INSURANCE N•n(Y M H8rrl' . S!~!~ ot C•lllornll, Q,.n9t (011n1v· 0• Frbr111,.. "· ,,11 , M!Oft ••• • l"Olt Tllf EM1'1.0TE• -I" Noia,.. PvOHc in 1P'!d tor •~let s1.i.. f'rtrnfum1 1rt 'om1tle1RIV T~• I peroon•llv 1111>e1red llon•ld 01ni1t Hurla, Jr , •f>O! Ntn<'I M H1trh k"°wn IO OtdllCUDlt Btnt!lh (In bt '" •• " .. '"' "'"'°"' wno;t n•m•• M .. "' non · mfn•gtm<'~I r1 sub1cr1be'tl !O !ht within ln,irumtn! trnPlo'f .. l ""' ''"""'*led~e<I ... t~e<uted ·~ • ,-olt THE EMl'LOY&E -~•mt IOFFICl"l SE"l ) Liii lns~1•nce Be-x1o11 •t nc> JO>~Pl'I E 01•lJ co~! (tm~:cyer Plf<I ivtrnl~m• NOi••• ""'l!IC•Cllltor~I~ Ir • !rto ot ln<C'T>f !~~) Pnnc;lp1! O!flu I~ e ADOITIOMAL. O•JIONS: Or1n<10 C-!r Mw Commhllo<I E•Plr~I I Hlplle<> tmot.1"11 Ju,,.. 11, it1• f P~l'lll""11 L 1 t o P1>lll,hl!(I Orant• Co111 Di ll'!' Pl!ct, Cln!•l(I -""'rv1•r " '"' Mlr<h • "· "· j'*llh UI~ ~·l~I "" .,,.,, l. W•lwr Ill P1ernovlh •I !Ottlo ,.., .ltlll!ed t' ..Jr'>. ...... • ~ . "'()wntr)fllll t~~ °" '"''"" 1,000'1 Of OIL rAIHTIHllS '°' ••.• ,, I•• 111111111i>t WHOllSAll WAllH9USI I ortH TO THI PUILIC ,.., Mtrt lllftl'"'ll'"-Clflftel OFF lllCtflfl... lftflltlrlet. I~ I 50°/o I rtflolitlnt Ult I. IOOUJf-, SANTA """ OWANGI COUNTY I htnt: '" ..... . IMJ!LOYIRS llHl,IT DtlALl-5 WA NTl"D >..+ . ,LAN$ , Who Cares? I 14$7 s,,.,.., ....... IMwP'f'f 11.u, c.iw. ''''' No olh•1 111wep•••r '" ·~· wc rld Cl,•1 1bo11t yo11' COll'lfl'IY• MS.1470 ftily U•e yo11r com"'unlty 1'11ly ' 11• AM.·l:ft l'.M n1 ... 1p1p1r 4011. It'• lfl• DA ILY ""'""IJ """'"' ,,..,, PJLOT, ' ' NEW MESA. PONTIAC DEALER STRESSES CUSTOMER SERVICE Dive Ross Stands Before R ec1ntly Completed F1cility In High Gear CompJete-New York Stock List -. . H~rv!f·ti~t:"J.c:~tt:~:r-Stloft "" Jlldt.) Ml"' Ltw C"" C~I-1nc-111. vol11me i ..... Ntl I:.~,~~ -™1 • Sf~ !~ . .:..1" ::a ~~~·2~!0 ~ tJ.~ 11'1,:, ff,fil"-; t:. 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A MllClxloiO 396 ?J'h J•.o J)•,-~,co~E ofC465 11' 6''"' IJ'-, 6>'>-+I Glen"I p1Jl5 b 19 1~1 , 19. 4 Am M010t1 }Jo l\t I•,, 11' + '" (on Fd• I 70 •28 •S'~ UV, H>. -'• Glon A!d ol l 101 13 19''< 13 3', A.N&IG~!110 2:10 l~'· li"' 'J.8« Ccn Fdpf<I~ 11111 1·1 1:1 -''GlonAI onis s 39 J1 l9 -1-2 Am P!lo!o 1• lll llh !Jl,1 11{1 + \w Con FttPh• ! 11 l• 3l'• l i + \, Glollal '"''"" 7ll 19t~ lt lf' -'• ~~·1s~~1 ~,¥ 11 ~f!: li~! iri~ +r;: ~E~~~€~::.1 r~: ~~ ~;: i~i~ 1 ,, 8:1~~ 1.a lM r.;: ?l~ ~:: ~1:: Dealership to Costa Mesa By CA RL CARSTENSEN A new name, unfamiliar locally unl1I now, b u l thor-0u ghly General Motors trained is the new Pontiac dealer in Costa Mesa For Dave Ross. JUSt 36. the Grand Ope1o1ng of his dealership is "'hat he calls "real fulhllment '' Although his entire tenure has been wnh Gi\1 producl~ he entered the automobile bus 1 n es s ··striclly by accident." Begiil- n1ng 1n the retail sales depart· men! of a Detroit dealer Ross 1hen was asked to attend GM dealer management school and General Motors lnst1!11te. Later he worked for dealers 1n Kentucky, Florida and Tex- as at the request of G:-01. About three years ago Ross was asked to explore various dealership poss1b1hties 1 n Southern California for Gi\1 and decided then that this was the place to be in the auto business. "I'd haYe been here sooner 1f I'd had the money,'' Ross said. He also added that he was pr-0ba bly fo rtunate that this l'-asn't the case because "\Vhen th~ op- portunity to become the Pon· \lac dealer 1n Costa Mesa de\ eloped I jumped at it" One factor Ross cites as 11 resan !or becoming a Pon- liac dealer is the apparent renewed interest 1n the line. "In the next few months Pon· tlac will re-generate sales in- terest which fell short of ex- pectations the past couple of years," Ross said. He refers to the entire Pontiac hne but more spec1f1cally to the. ne\v Grand Ville series and small Ventura JI The new dealer looks less at the larger sh-Owrooms lh<'n to the service facilities. "The reputation of any dealer 1s made 1n the bac~ shop," he said, ··and 'that's where I ,ex- pect Dave Ross Pontiac to make its unpact " Ross said his concept of a dealership was not going to be built around volum e sell· 1ng but good service and customer sat1sfacr1on. He was quick to add his inventory -0f new cars would be about 140 units and 60 used Along with sa les and service lhe most modern body, fender and pain t shop will be included. Rounding out the manage- ment Staff are 81\1 Hinman, service manager; Bill Tepe. new car sales manager: Duane Banks. used car sales manager and Ed Hacquebord, business manager all arr. ex- perienced Pontiac d e a I e r personnel Ross has pu! his roots in , i;,m S~~r t'~ tl-1 21•. 21~. 16'• +I ConP'* plj so Tfll 61 66 66 Goody• tl !'I• l2 ll'lo 31h + ~· the commu nity, ha s movedArn!>cAtr 10 '' •• ••v. a ••-1'1Con1 Aor ~In llJ 16"• 15'o 11••+11GorJw1vA 1i is 101~ 1•'• t°)"+~· . AmSAlr In 10 2 -1J'~ 'l\) •3<, Conl C•n 1 60 a & •"• •"• 0\11 .j. '' Gouldln< I.•~ 10 31'0 31'0 1 • lo lo Newport Beach and JS Am Sid 1 111 :n1, 26 16'• + "• Ccn!Cao 0111 65 10'> '" 10'' r 'lo Grace 1 50 141 l•~• ll'o :U't .. _ A Std O!A )I t 1•1 • u~, ••''>-,, 1' ~onll Coro 1 61 '''" •; '' Granbv 1 60 111 26lo 1• 16-~ +1•0 already \ooldng to the future Am s1er11 .oa .., w . 111'< 2so... 1 co o1A1 so ' •1' • •I • ''"" Grandun so 11 Jll• 31•0 l214 -'• 'Tb" · \" d ., ATl.T wt &16 ll>o 11 ll'!io+l'o ICp pfBl.50 I '6'1' 40'~ •l•+'~G•anl!vlle 1 6S JO"• l'9'o 30'~-1• · IS organ11.a1on an I S Am la.T 1,60 111 41,,. 41~ '8'h-l't1""'0111so 111 JJ" rl'• J)1•+'•Gr1ntw 150 165 M ''t St 601't+~. AW IW~ 60 •1 U4 lo\.; JJtl + '< O"! 011 111 l 1 •~ <l•'i •I'; Gr~yDrg 110 11 :Jl>,• 31'11 3:!l1 + '• owner intend to se rve We AW~ Jpf '1,,3 110 21., n• 'lll • on1 Tel 10 Jil 11v, 11 :ls'n"' :it Grt A&P 1 » 1u J1'~ JFo 32 -•, ·inlend lo earn our way and •,~,,1:.."' • 1 .,,. '"~ ,.,~ -'conr•cl 0111 111 6S~· 6"• 6~,·· +1•, G!LkOr , ?Oa ..? 1,•,:,• ',',",,' ,',~ .. ,., -· 6 2l'h 21\4 211• + 14 Conwccd I to J 36'~ JS>, 3 ~. -'• GINCtlfon lt '" ., •· h f J I l "A 1te~ i.o.. 11 11\.• 17\'o 11 +;;Cook Uni! .50 50 l,., Jl•• :U'o-+ '• G!NaNek 1 60 19 "9l t '''" •9>;o 1" ~ ere or a ong, ong in1e, A~F Inc'° 21 1 n 31 u + t c-••n 1..0 lot :J••· l3''t JJ·~ + '• GtNN ofAj(I s u i• ,. •• Ro Id d Th Ami ( to n so ... ,., '3" 10,:COCIH!t TR ~ 11•. 11 11 -I• Gt West Finl .t50 11 21·~ 21 '• ss concu e. e new AMIM,.,. 91 61,,, 61" 611•-COCPT ,,u.2s i 11•. 11•,; n •1 c1wnun.1 9{t •9 ll'• J1•; ll'~+" dealership is located al 2480 AmoP~h _Jao 24 9v, 9\.,, '~ t +. ~=If~ 1!Jg ,y H~l ~~ • ~(!-l 1li g~u~~i:'i~ 1·f: 1:c 1·": 1g;: -~:~ ·-~· ·--Am11•• CO•P l9t n i,o ~I 211• i, ~OPWld Sii I 30 l!'o 1''• Hjo -1. ~· GrnGoan! :'6 56 li'o 16 ?6 _-1, Harbor Blvd. ~;::::::r Pl/~s 6\ 40-. .ai. AO'tl-+ '' Corln!hB Dig 9• l5 ).I" lS +1 c.rn Shop ! 'o 51 35 ll1, 35 +117 An.star "'ti , 5l,, ~~~~ 5~~l + \' CotGIW 2 SCI• • lll'• 21.l'' 1J1•· +21) Gnthound 1 151 1t1v. 10 201~ 1• TOYOTA CHOOSES '1ESAN , , 0 ,1,~ •Ccwlu Com ll 10\, lO'o 10'• • Grotlet •D ., 3~ 3J'I 33\, '• J> m•H!<I t H '' 31~11 ll\o -•,\Cc• BOU! :?O !4 18 1 )11• ;~ ' °' Grumm"(p l HO 15'• 1•'•• 15''o o, FOR NEW POST t'~~:.nd~I IS "'' 9'1• '"'f 1,.~PCln!l 1,io )26 38'• J11.1 317o-11Gifl1Hld 259 Jll ..Oh 39·~ IMO.:.!+~. An<hHoc~ 1 •:: ~~:• ~'h ~:P ~0'8nr,,•.~n' ,", t!i• lJ: ll:•-:.:_GlfMOh 1·1c1 I !I'• 19',io II\~. T 'f S I USA ' '.,. ' re<! 11 •v ' '" •v-•-+ ""Gulf Ool 150 ••1 31'• :10'0 31 + '• oynta iv otor a es ,'An<orP Svc • io 19'> 1t,,. 1th -'~ C•ockNll 1 tD •• l9'' l"• 39~, Gull Re~•<P iol 12,, u•:. ii·~+,, I h d h Anet c1., 1.2~ ~31 o •• 4l '31/J + II Cron!1>!1; '° 11 l91o Tl. 11J.. + '• G~URe1 1>1 l~ s !6> Hl 16> nc., as announce I e pro-Ao1cheCP 1s s1 1,,.·, 1.-, 16~• + ,_ rr11U~eH•no 1 .l:i U'• 2•. 1r. -'• Gl1Re' Pt•'JO 1 11,; 111; n~ +: .• mat.ion -Of Robert \Volverlon ~~\.o0c~r~1 ~~ ~~ r~; m: ' . t~~~~cl~or:'' u~ lt!: 1~·: jr~ t 1 •• CllSIUIJI I 04 SJ 1) nv. 2'h -•• h I td [ARA Svcl04 2lll5 i:101.1~1 +,1;crwnZelll.10 11:11 ll l>Jl'•-'l•g~il~8~\:~ Ult6• 6• ~· to t e new y crea e post o Arca!• Ola 196 210. 10 21v, +l~li t.ls ccrp «t 11 n>1 221. 11•, + "0 ,1 .• , .,.. ~ " 61 11 d. · ''''''" , , , '"• '''' '''• + ., Cudahv !'01 .on ?1'1 21 111 , + ~. 0 •,,,.·•",,, .. ,, """ 21•·• U 16'• +1'• Na 11 0 n a I '1erchan 1s1ng ,,,. , .. , •• , .. ' ' • os• •••' ''" ''' 1• ., '° •l l• ~·~· cs1, + 1, u~v pfLlS is 2••.r, 1•" ! ·~ '""" , , .,.. • • •• • S Jo PS \ Of 60 th 2P 7' C~lhaan 21 32 11>1 11\0 II~ + ~ G I> •"" l IO'I IOS'l1 10'1 +)l, . erv1ces Manager. A~l~n~ O su J• u..= 11.,,~ !11/i ".. CummEn .u 1s ,,, , .i1, •I''> -i '" o"',',w •', i 11 J S6''' 56 ui~ + " I ho h ' · · Cunn Orug •l 11•• u:i. 12o/o _.,., u on nd ll 11'1 il\1 1111 •. \Vo verton \\' as spent Ari~ 11wo~ 110 1112 i.\, u v, +I curt<1•Wr &11 3•5 h'• H>t 10,. + 1·, -H·I-' Armco Sii I 391 '° 19\• 1910 +"' Cut1Wr A i • 21%• 21'1 ,.~. T ~ his tntire career in the Anne Pl 2 10 21 11i. 111'> 21\~ -v. CullerH i 10 u 311, 31;, 33~. -1-~ HackW!1 2 70 1 Jlt l8 ll aulomollve fl.eld has •·en •··ilh ,','mm,•,',",·",, vm 6l'J; 12\'> 6211 +1•11 Cvcloo• 1 )16 1• llV• 2• +I'> Hall p, 1 60~ u 311, "~I~ 31,, ••·• I.IC'. ·v Ill 36\o lol\o lol\1 -\1 Cvprus Mino ls,! l••o ll'o JJ~1 -o, ... &lllbu'! ! 05 o106 J,6 SS<.< + (~ T I f th I ArmC• PfJ 15 :100 60 5':0.. IO , 0 ' Hamil Wa! J 5'1 S'o jl'o _ 'o oyo a or ree years. n Arm Ru 1 60 16 39''> :it•• J'V. + •• --Hamm Pap 1 l• 1s 241, ,1 + ,, h;S new poSltiOn he Will ,','~,,C.,0o0 ,90 1 13'• 2J.Oo 7:µ, +lo Dan ftlvpr 61 1P, 11') ll>o Hommf\d •O SI 1J" 131 0 l:Jl1 + '• • 30 30r,, ;JOVt l')Ja • D•na Co I lS IS 19'• lS'o 19io >t-''• Haf>O!lmn U JI• •l•o •Ol.• 4101 -+11, su""rv1se sales promotion, ,•,·~•,•0 0,",,1.,,'IO 13' 11'0 '''• 21i, + ~. oarr 1nd Jiil I'll 31-.. JI•, J~ + ·~ Hao<1 H•r n 1J ll'? 11<~ n •; + '• t"• n ., 1 il' r SJ\-. 531/, -1 .... D'r! 11\d Pl 1 •>>5 il\. •J .;Jt. -\-H'""~ (p YI 193 ll·o lO',o 2!~-t'" special events activities. com-,',''9 ,••.••,..... 21 10 t1~ ''• + ,,,. Dui Procen u•, 16•• 1r.>. +l'. H~nn' M 1 JO 11 s••11 .SJ'> 5,., ), ,., •v 10 41"" •I '• ll\'I -lo L>ftYCOC.~ 1 l• •I 10'~ 19'1 n -·~ Harcour! I /9 4510 CS'• '5:\lo '• merc1al and used vehicle A,,i sl 1.:!0b 1 11v. ll'~ ll"• + v. Oiyco P" 1~ 1100 ,.,,. ,.~ 1•V· +11• Harr11 1n1 1 us 's'• 45" 65,1 + ,, • llUCI llMP 9 11,. 1Ho 111'11 + ''" OIYtnHud . .IO 111 JJh 3"V:o 3"\1-1 Ha•sca CP I .. nt.. 11'> 71'.4 -'· mer c handis1ng \\'o/verton "'"IG~t 1n11 1l& Ith 11•,. """+I''> D•r1nPL 160 111 15•• ?•'• 1s~ • ..-11 H~'1SM•• to .lO 111, 11'.· 11~0 t ;, A1IC1>:EI 1 36 it 14 7J'ro 1l'o -•; DPL PIB l IS •l 54 l • SC HtrvAI I 7ll iO 1• 2J>; 2<1 ,0 resides 1n Costa Mesa. All R1,h11~ 1 111 6t , t i •ti ..i1" + to oPt p10 1.a :100 100 100 100 • • r<ow11 E1 1 •i 16 » m. 30 t " AllR~h Pll,IJ UllO S6'1 S6'tl S6_, -1.:. Oeert Co 2 91 <ll iJ>o •2'• _ 'o Ho••~ Albn 1 1• 16'o Jo•• '''' 0• All Rich ... 3 t HS;'O 11.;•1 115<· +1~ Df!lmatP 1 ll '° 19•1 1~. ,,~. . 1-1.,.,.u;~ IJJ 9•,. t''• ,., ... : VOLKSWAGEN PACIFIC .i.nRc~ pf2 10 11 5!\, 54•0 S•'• -1• Del MnTt 1 10 S• 2n1 27'lo 11\.> _ ·,,i, HCA. Ina • 5'• ,',',!, 5'• + , , ELECTS "lcCORD NE\V V.P. •,,",','.',".•, i •l 2S'I• 14\o 11:.. -'• 0•11• Alt .J.O 7lS ll•• JI'• 31\I + "H•claMn Hr 11 IA'~ 1"°' +OJ; " JDS ]'• l l'• + ·~ Celle< In! t 61o 6,, ti'> '• H~ln1 HJ I 11 •1i; •I Jl"i + 1 All•.,. l>I 1>1< 11~ 16''' 16'.'• 16'1> -+ ~ Oenn M!e 60 so n tt lMo 16'\• -·~ H•'t~( c:~rr I 10'• rav. 10~1 .. ' Volkswagen Pacific has "',',o,.'."',,·<!!I 119 IJ>. ll'• ll'I + •• DennrRu ·°' •SI lllf> 11 1211< + '"' k•ll•r IM ,I(\ lll )I'• n~. 17'o + '\ "" 31 11< I" l~fo Oenl•Plr!Mt I n ?tt, 29,._ ?f> Htller J'" 01 1111 1>1 Ul -J named J H l\1cCord vice Au tcm D~I• ll u v. SJ1• J.6V. + •; Oo<e<o .,1 8 1 si•o ,,~. sl•" · , · HrlmP 401> 1 H'• 1!•~ u•• _,. • ' Avtcmln Ind li• I 11, 7'1 D'SOIOlnc 40 !l XI'' JO ~ -. , 1 ..ielmr~P .20 )l )•'• 11•1, 2•'• + ·~ President to direct the com-Av<cCoro 116 1611151• hl t'~De1E.,.,.1 ,~ 113 n• 11 ''' ,,•H•ml•onc~P ss '" •l'I av.. . AvtnCPwl •• ''• •'• 4\1 '•O. E • 1 • •Homlnc lan t<I 11, ''" 1!,1,-l\o bined operalions of 1 tso1.~(011r120 1• ,,,~ J11 •• ,.~+·•o 'ed"19 l2 ~11111•~i16•i11•"• H•«u1e, 1.9 p1 o\~ 43,~ u -'• Av~•v Pd .70 419• :i••• l.l•• JJ-. -1'• ' d ors.so 1 81 u 18 -'• ke"~F 1 10 JO J~•• 190, :ir,.., •• Volkswagen and Porsche-Audi Avn~I Inc •Cl 1•'• ll'• l'l o t ,,. Deuor 2• 8• 10 191., 19~• .. Heubl .. ~ IS '" .. {, •• '4\o + ~ . . d Avne1 pfl,.IO ? 10 10 10 +2 DlolFon1n .•o •1 11 1~, II'• H•w P~ck 10 u •J il•o 41,, .i. '• d1v1s1ons. it was announce Avn",ori 1 29 l ,,.~ n11-v.01~m1n11 1111 '' 01 '''••I + •,H·~~ vorrge 1 ~ 111, 11i, 1o'!'" II J d I Avon d I 10 IS? ~·• o• 91'~ +•·~ Dl•m Sh•m I lO )J>. Ulo 2l' z t ', kl!ton Holl I '/'9 51 •9''0 SOt\ 1\ by Sam Wei , r., pres1 en . A11tt 011 131 •> if.I. lt'• 111,;, _ \, 011 s~ ofC 1 • :uc, lJ J• . Hob~ri 11~ oo •7 "'~ ,..It 1 Iv II d th d I B D•l5 PIO!)O ?6 19 ll'• lt-11 -•,!"o•ro\W•I 5~ ll S 19•, ll'> 'lt'!o IO eJ sa1 e ec1s1on o - -01c1a1>hone 11 11 11 ,, 11>,_ 1,Hou Eiecirn 3~1 .~0 is·~ 1,:i, I" Cenlrall'e O~rations of the ,•,•,~0••,,, .~1, na JJ:, 32'~ JJ•4 " '• O•e1>c10 •111 •1 I• n 15", • J• i Ho••d~!nn n 111 oi>, ,1,, ,.,,, '• l d · • d Jg ed lO Ball GE 1 2 •69 ll"° l2'1 ll'• -\~ 019,fal Eq~1~ Jiiii ll'• •l'o 61>1 -1 HollY5ua .2011 n l!'o !! U"• + o, 1ro 1v1s1on.s JS es n e.11 G plC• ,10 6:J ft,~ 61 Olllln;hm oo Ill "" 1''• '"' -+1~, Home11~~ •O 61 ?i n n·~ _ '· Three States Planni11g Price Cuts on Drugs I'~ Ill J\\7 Ji• Js1, +I'• OIG•Or'i 60 10 11'1 1•'o 16>, i-'ol"<O!td A. \II'!> I 6~, 61\> 66'h +'I'> SU b S l a n l i a 1 I y .. pand a,,·.~.M, ,',•,nl JS ll'o 11•. t-'" Ollllno pf A 1 j 31 l!'o JI +1 H1><wwll I JO '',,1 lfi,,", '",,,, 1~9,!.' +3'• •,n0\o'l1"2221'1 ~•.o,111na111 112 136 3;1 u +1 o~i'<oo•rBll7ll .. ,_ r Id lair e_, ces lo f,an 81~~ pfl 11 2 ll 11 -'~ Olllon Co 64 l 23'~ 1J., 13" + ''• HO•Plt(o Am '1 39 JI Jl'IO i " le S Ii 1-•L -B~ otC;I 1 J.I ~50 3J J2'' 32'1 +lo Ohney ){I Jlj l!Xl•• 99 \, JD\ ... +'• !io" Intl ,jl J~ l6'o 36'1 J6\'l V. chised Volks1•.'agen a n d ,•,•;,• ',,','••' 1!' ~:~ ~lo •6," t D .. 1se"' 1 10 s J5 '• ,15 15 1 He><iaa111e .60 is 11" 1J 13v. 1• ... ~ > '· 6 '• Olv!ft!f>O! .36 iis ""• !JI• I•••::;: J ... OU9 M:H 10 ~1 1!11 l!'i lS'i ,. Porsche-Audi dealerships ~:;~J·3.:.~~ Ji 12~: ~1;: ;l~: _ ~~ OivMe• 1 oJo 62 •~ 1H. 111. -.: ~g~;~hFQ1J J8 1S61 1"f.',~ 12,\~ ,':;;•, £1~: J. H. "1cCord, formerly",,',",•'"',,·'° .,? ll"• ll '• ll'~ + '• OrPeQper ·36 " 19'1 " 19'• + '• HN•~ Qf25" 11 ,,, , .. '' 1 " B .. 11" 17•1 u;, +'lo OomeMn• llO 16 6' 65'1t 6S1 ~ - '' "tov1 ~ on JI 1 ~·· " -·~ general manager of the com· Bot•• Mt 011 Jo 21 l"' n•. -~• Oom'"" JSo is 9" '"' ''" -'• Hau•t p 1 10 6'~ ~~;z 4.1:;, ~~a · · B~!hlna ie 111 28'• 1', 18'• + !1 Donn•lle~ •4 21'1S l)'o 1S '/l\a + •• Houi1NG• ao '6 •S'o 4.1\'i 06,~ '+ , , Pany's VIV ,,1,151·00 has •-en e1tMn 1112so 11 6\l'l 6Sv. 69'1t Oork c, .n 1• 1•·~ 2J>o 2'') + •1 HcuG 011 so 1 ''' '' " ' • uo;; B~u!Chlb ,aG 36! Ssi. SJ'4 ~.)''> .f?I) Derr Otlver 1 ll lo 11 .. lllo , How Jon" )I o ~Ui Tb d l e B !Llr 11 3(W 11 2? 27'1+1•1 0o~erC• 15 11 '6'n CS<• "4'1+'•How"'e! 1'Q U 29 27'o 11'4+(• NE\V YORK (UPI) -Three or the nation's b i g g e st states-Cahlorn1a, New York 1\1 a s s achusetts-apparently are getting ready to do something about the high price -0r ·prescriplion drugs. Bills have been offered in the legislatures of all three to gl\ c pharmacists the right to ~ubsl!tute the same drug sold under a generic label for a branded drug prescribed by a doctor. The rules of pha1 n1ace ut1cal boards 1n most sla1es presently insist the branded drug be used. even though more and more state and municipal hospitals are refus- ing to pay the higher prices for branded drugs. The price savings by using generic drugs, or forcing the manufacturer of brand ed drugs to slash prices, can be dramatic Miltown, the \Videly used branded tranqu1hzer. lists at $57 a thousand pills. but it can be bought for S7 or $8 under its gencnc name . ~1eprobamale Acro1nycin, a branded tctrntycl1nc a nt 1 - biot ic, lists at S12.S\l a hundred but lhe same Tetracychne can be bought for $1 B5 under the generic name. Ampacillin, another anti-biotic. i5 $12 !iO a hundred generically but lists al $22 10 under the brand nnme, Polycilhn. Tht?se examples were cited ~Y Presideqt Jerr)I 7..clin of Generlca Corp. or Amtrica of "P.,1oonachle. N.J .. and Adolph Stortch, President of .P.urepac Co. of Eli:r,11beth, N.J . The 300 makers or generic prescripti-0n drug! in the United Slates can give other exampl es of dramatic price gaps Ordtnar~· rcrrous sulfcite, l{iYen for iron deficiency. sells for about $1.50 a lhousand pills but yqu might pay $S to $9 for it under a brand name. Rtscrplnc, used to treat ~ name corpora e VJC -B:~k!,' • ,,1 10•1, in"•l' !~\~. CowChm1..60 12• 16 IS'• 16 r'1Hu~b~rd 'n" J6 111, 21'1 i1•~ ... high bl•-d pressure cosL-; 55 d 1 ~rali"ons ol bolh ,_,, , , ,, ,, "'•' + '• ,,, .. -, , -,. -•" ... , . ..,,, ,,, ·, ,, 66 1•'• '''·~ :u"" + " "" . pres\ en -o,.~ = • SI J'ilo J91o J9 + •• c,.;,;J...i 1:::; HD ~" JJ;: J••• + .. HuQh H•t •O ;~ r~:: n .. ',', .• -.",•, centsbuthstsat$4SO under VWand Por sche-Aud1 .l:~~~~·.-Ji n c•1 ••'·•1•i -',•Cr~io1220 10.o>,JO••.iv'•+•.Hu~•c~m1i 1in•.11,,11l'o. lhelradenameserpasJI p ·r· th g ... ch Atr .1.1 lJS 11•, 16' .. Jl',+i}1Drtn•ofB2 ll Jt" J~o :»•1+>,1d~~0Pw 160 11 1i·. ll llll+•. · Volkswagen ac11c, w1 a tlcoPtt SOb 91 21>, n·, n•a .+ ,o,e~1v1c111 i' J1•. 301~ Jo~.-·,1~t8llhi ~0 •1 ,6,, 161, 16"' ... P-d1sone an anl1 arthr1t1c eeioen 1.60 11 ,','··• 11'• <a + h ou11t Pw 1 "° 111 zs in. 1.1. -,, Id••• ot ~ ,, , ,, -,, +• '"' ' -• staff of 450, will nO\V com-Be1dncrl'l 601> is is•,, 7.l'o Ouke 01110 z620 11r v. 111 111 -1 1. 111 C"nt 1,. 10 !('< 331, Jo .:.. 1• can be bought for $9 a dBeUHow60 101 4'1"• •2'1 •l'•+•.Duktof611 l\01 ~.io1 101 111ci.no11so 11 s•·~ si 5l1'-~. Porsche-Audi in executive an fhll 1n1rcoio 5• ll'• ,,,.. 1J1 ~ + "'I DunBrd 1.20,,, lj' 631• 61 6J +1•1 111 PPwr 2 2o ,1 ,,,, 61,, .o•~ _ '• thousand tablets. but may list business managemenl, zone •,•,~J,•, '•'•" 1,•, t!:~ 1•9'• ~9•'' -~··, 0oup1~n , .. , ut •7•• •110 •'I'• +n. 111 Pow cd 10 110 JP, 3ir, 11,,, ~ ., d "" ..., o ,. • -uPonJ So 126 ll9'o ll8'• 11'1'> lmcrlCo Am 619 16'• 16"• 16\\ : .. atover$100undersuchbran 1 de,...itKcrJ JD SI'• ... ~• +1.duPon111r•so 1 n•. 11>, JJ\;-1,1r.iA.co1fll 106 •P· "°'~ •!''):" I l Sa]es, pRr S, serVICe an Ben~ICP \ •O Cl SI S11'o 51 + <o duPont r'J SO 1 SI ~ 51 -11 Income C•o<I l• ll'o ll•o 11" t' names as I\ et 1 co r 1 n e . . BeMll or. io 1 11~ 11 u t '• guo LI u 11 2~. l•'t 1.11. -'' 1n~ ccu ...., 10 10,, lO'I. 1o:o, _ ·~ Chlorlrlmelo'I Is a brand training. B,·.~ •• ',11fl50 t!O ll'~ ll '• JI'• '• Q •IOpf20S l!!O JQ>, :JO• ;l"c,-l,10~ .. ,nHd 8~ 17 ,,,, ... ""''-'• '"' PO 11, !. l \o ,.,. D11J,15cllll ZJOO 261.. '16'· 16'· lndHd pU.lo() 1105•,)CJ'~!OSI)-'• name [or al' a"ll·hJslainine •,•,•,o,,u.~r ,'o, 71 ''• 11, 1•1 . Ovmo '"" n• u•, i., H .,. '•ll'ldntr.~ , n 11 19,, 21,, ~·...., '• • " 296 ll•h l) 121~ t '~ Oyn1m Art! 99 I\, 8 I -,,_ lf>O!ohPL \ 10 59 16 11~< 1Slo -;, packed at $2050, but 1t can ~f~hT~~~e11Z. 1~~ ~1• ~!! ~· ~~ -E·F-1n<1Pt 0•6 11 1101 1D1 102 +1•. h r h $ ,. St l fai·m e•ac• D11 11 sa 6' 63'" 6• • :t 1~ E8QleP1c '° •1 21 •• 11,, 28,, ~ •• 1~~~1 ::~ ~ i it 19 " +" be boug l Or per lip~ J ,;i a e Bl•lrJOh~ .1 ,•0S irs, 1~lo 71 ->, EascoCp 90 10 T.I'• "" lJ'o, , lnQ~d 012.U 'if~;: :~;: ~lt -'l. as chlorphn1ram1ne maleatc. B,',!~•"'•'~.,' j•,·~ 1•1o 15 -'' E:air 11" Lln 5'0 '"' ll · ?2'• + '• tnl•nd su ' in io•. ll'• 19•, t •, ~ n o 36 72•o I• +'lo E1~1G1 .lC•1 •I oO'• •0'• •OI, .r~mont Coro 1'9 11'> 11 l?h '• D1g1tox1n, prescribed for 8,',•,•,',,",',,',", 36 '"' 6'" 10"' _,_, E•11 U1•1 1 •0 10 7~·• 10•, 10'• 1•n•uca 10 n u,. 11>, 1r, + •. P f . t u . )00 1~ 199 -1') E1s1Co<11k 1. .SM 16',, IS'o 16 \1 + ~-ln"I( D!Al a 1J n•, ,,., ,,,, ... ·~ cardiac prtlients can be r·o I s p Bobblf Brlrs 569 11•1 11'> JI~ ~ '• E~IMVa 1 j(I .SJ J~'I ]1'1 18 -'• ln1cifCon i ... .,,, •1 4 '• +••· ' ' BotlngCo ..0 ?;91J', 11\o ll'o-\1l:c<1!onoll.!O 1Jl'i11'1 371.,_1 •~!~•Co171l >19 •6'~ '6\!• ..i'llo+" bought ror $2 Sf) but n1ay COSt Bc11Cas 151> In '~'} 11'' 611~ -'o Ec~ll" Mf 60 I :r:i•o J9 :19 -" •n!rlk Inc I 10 ll 21 16~• ?I + ', Bend Ind ll lj" l]>o ll>• -11 ~ck~rdJ .21! lJ ••'• JJl'.o .,,, + '• l!IM 51(1 l:O J64'1 lf.1 l6l'i -t''" $6or morcunderbrandnamcs I d h BcckM1n 111 s i 1•1• ''" dl•1>116•01 I n 35•, lS'• JS'•• '''ntChm Nc•r ;1J ,6, SJ• .. 561,+''· Harold J Asp un . \\' O Bora~n 110 1i 111• 161.lo 11 • -"'E!G&G 10 61 1R10 11'< 111• +t tntF1~Fr ~nq •lO 1p , 71 ,, 1lli-" Such as Crystodlgen O•. • ••••">O< 'J> >>• -•, 0•c Wo + '' ',',''' 'ft-, : ''·• > 0 >" < <, <o< "O<" ·, •• , 0 SJ> " represents Slate f' a r m Bor....:an i~p o li1~ 11... 11•.<. ettn .-,, Z 11 so·. 11 ... + '• '"' 100;1, "" 1h ,~,: ~t 3::,: .:..: 1, )•letracvclme sells generically , th El T r"-Bo• Ed•• '1• 10 ~o 39 ?t -'" E1 M1m M1Q 1•1 n•. 111, n + '• '"' ,_ ,,, ,, ,,, , .. , ,,,, ,,,, + ,, · Insurance 1n e o v-eo1 l!d ~" 11 1sJ1 117 11c·4 in +i ~IMM~Q f' 1 1s 13 , 11 n -'• •'U ' ,. + for $3 30 but lists under the M' v . ea today Bcu•n• Inc 29 l•I,;, ,. ,.,. .;. '• ~In Na ~ ,,, I ,,, + ,, :~: ~:::,e··· ,~~ :~:: :~.,. ~~!: ... ~: trade name Terramicin at 1ss1on 1eJO ar . Brana Alrw sts 111 , 1c111 10•11 -1 ~t ~10N~ 1 is1 11~, 11•, 1811 _ '• tn N ie~ 1601 ••• •H• "'' cs·~ .fl '• r-e1'ved an advance copy ol'',',",,".','·•,,0•0 11 "'" 6:r:I• "'"1 -'1 ,11'~'0 io ~! '''' 11'• i1'1-'•1n1Pa11 1.1<1 •ji 31 Jt~. l6~-"-' $2048 1:.. 8 '31 66>1 6S'0 66''< -\1 Ml I.Id 09Q "" J'> <1•, ~ o-'•I t R !Ill > ,,,. • •'t,'' • d l B !,rMy pf 2 I 4 1, 41"• •1/,0 +1 Em!' El 1 " 161 '9', 68'• ~9 + '• n ~c er • Hoi;•ever. Zehn and Stortch the firm s year-en repor · B~.1 Pet .•lt 111 10,, ,0,~ ,0,1 Em 1 p1Bto 1 .i1 ... "\• •1·~, ,, \"'~&IT 12s ~~~,~~! ~ .. 2mt 6i,. In lhe report from State e,•,'!~uH,•, 1~1, 1 .v, "°'' 4011 -+ ·\l En.try,.,lrF 1 1 '"• 69 Hlo + 1• .~ht :\o : l60l 11111" ?Im• 201•4 +'S11 agreed II l·s well to remember ~·" ... • ff>, '"'' ff\.:. -11o E,m'gp,"'11 1 Ill •a "° · " ~0~1 -'• 1n1T&T p1H ~ 1J 111 no 110 .. ,,,, ' rusl Asplund was told that BrMwYGit 111 30 :16'• 3' l6 -·~ fmp 11 1·1' 5 J0\1 :lt'I "'' -~ 1T•> 011 , .... , ,,, ,, •. , , •• c,. "• th t th b d i • ••1~n"G 1 n '' '''' ''' '' -m r! G•• 11 1• u•, 1!"' i '• ·-"' "" -a ese ran prces are Tl ·ir '"c · 15 10,~ 10, 10,1 na1"Mln .oo ?lo lO 19 :; +.'4 1n1T&T 111J • 11111 i01 lOf list prices. State Farm .made $ .1 m~ ion l::~s'l.ro o ·'° is 1j.S.. n•t 11·,. -1 • no M ""ls l• itl iei~• 111 -+ ''' l"~Tf T ,~'}~ 3' "'~ "''• °"" 1 ·~ -0n its auto insurance business <IY~s~°" 1 j(I .a J '• ,,,, lll~• ... 1,., In"~ •u1 .31 166 13» 12 il +1 \. i9&T .. fN i?i 1m :r,,: J:'" ?I:~ ... ,:,• Actually, they said, the big . · 11run1w1< .i2 "•• l~;! ?r' il~ +-I•' ~ltLYl ~~ 111 1ti: ~t~ Jt~E ::;-1~ 1n1 um 1.10 11s •l'\ •1•• ,3,0 <fl ~. h I. I [ In 1970 Investment earn1ngs evcv Er11D •j fh, 1l14t i:m+•,\Ecu!YFO '°" "'°1 39,1 31,_ 31,~t1._1n1u11!" _,n •1•1 •11• '\'"•·. p armaceu ica lrpls a r e "'ere "'.2 mill1"on Prof•'ls, In-le!,' '•' ''' '' •• • •• ' Es11 J"" , ia ii :i ., 2) :/)' • t, in1er,,,.ce ' ~ ,, Jl ' • ll l be f cOO t II · "' ....,. ""' C 1 ;,,. 1\o 7,, _ ~~ Es011!r• JO l1 11'<1 16"1 11•, -~. 1.,11Br1~d "° 20 111>0 19'1 ''""' ., 1i ing . orh 0 1 seh . abo md-eluding $1.l m11\ion froml::i':r,rnd60 20 ,,. 911. t1a-i,E11ox1nt 1.'IO n •·l'• •11, •l'•+'•l"'e•s,ew,1 .~• 11 19•, 1•1• 19•,':1"•1 creasing s are o I e1r ran B ffF 110 13 Jt•, lli'• """ +1·~ E•H~ 1112,14 2 S2'l $! n n!ero I•~ n1 U•1 111• 11i, "I' •1 -miscellaneous sources and 8~10M:W' ,60 6J ,1,. 13,, 1p;, _ 11 e,1~r11" .u10 l• 11•. ,.,, "'· 1ow1 Be.r 11 JO•• lo•, JOI!• ed -Output at big discounts to 1 B ri:. ,umo 311 u•, u• .. i.•o . e1~v1 co .14 20 16'1 16'• 2•h _.. •· 1ow~ e1 1 lo ~· 11 10•1 'l -4.: h afler federal taxes o $25,,u.fi: '''' ,, .,., ,, ... h_i,Ethvl on.a i •0'• •n•o •U\,.., 1, 1nv-11Gs 1,J1 11 111, 11•, ''l -•1 hospitals and clinics In many · un" 1 " · '"' :-;,,, 4111 4;" _ 1, Euro!"" '~ " l'O'o 1D'• l\t'• ... 1ew~Pcw 160 JI '6. 1"• '"I '.i.' '• •ases, F'ederal 'fedic•, re of· million. a mo u n t e d tol f~~!No~ .\·;: 51 •l"· d" ,1,~ _ 1~ ev~nsPrd 60 os •l" •«• ,,., -'• 1ow1PSv 116 $•' 21" n1• l"1ct ·1 c " " $78,M".J28, ,•,•,rlNor.o,l,SS 1l 1'r I'> 7'>+'>EJ(tll0 lU 11 n>a 2''• 11" •• \ccC HO\P ,jO 1!1, ?Ho )'l.o"!''I r.c1·ats and stale '"d local ...,... ndy o u 21'' n11 11'• F1b~1H .•o •JI 19 1· • !8 • + t. tTE l•f\P 60 " n'• 1•·~ ,.,, f • The company-wide earnings 11utrch• ·'° 112 ""' 116'· 11t1. +'"' F&ctorA .tDD 111 .,., ..,,,. •2'• -1 11c~ c""~ 1 74 ,n,, Jt'• ·~·· t11 1 wclf,re ofl1c1'als r"luse to pay · B111h u~lv 10 n 1:;•, u ... Fi!rc~ C:tm 111 .ll • Jll. lo..., _,_ •• -J·K-, ' · I t l 4 8 ~rcenl C F•" Hlto .JGe n n•• 11 .. , /l'• + '• th th · \\'ere equ1va en O ,.~ I - -F•lrmonr 1 101 111, 11•, 1•1 .. ·~ J&<k•nA!! 1• SI I•'• ll'o ,,.,_ •1 more an e generic price of 1970 sales (earned Cato! co 10 11 ct~1 "'• "'• -'~ F1111&11 .. ''' •'• ''' + ·~ '"~\'"'' 1>1...10 11 •'• ,,, •·· "' f th d d ' a 11·· 10 10,1 ~; F~m Ir l'I -"~ 199 1411 16 1•'. -'• Jf<!9H XI I 1'1 ,,, 1:\0~ 11 or e rugs u~ in prescr1p-premiums and membership fc:f~~~~~r' '" '' .~· ,., :+' Farn1 ... 1 lf\C " i1•, u·, ll'• -'• J~~11f" 60b 11 '~'· 71 ' 1l•t ... ,,I tlon' e\·en l'( the branded drug " ,.~. H'•' I• + ," 1"1• We.I Fin )J lA'. 1S • II'. _._ ~ J&~n~n 1 61Q JI 101• "· 10 .. l-I . fees) of $1 ,643,989,152. ,:::.&:~L~~5 ii n•,o ~I J1 ... -... FBrtMl!q u ,'j :91, lf'•, ,. ..... '• J•DF lnl1"" 11 "' t 1• fl.lo . -\\'BS used in ol>cdience lo :.late 1 nd d h . c1mp SD ,,.0 •2 :v•. l2'• u•~ +••FAS 1n11 •, -,. •'1 •1 Jt11nP<10 ., 61 :u•, ll. 14 ~ 11 Asp u sat t e years tron Br..w 40 40 '" 11~ ''' Ft<kleo . .a 112 •• 131, " ~ 1, JerCP Dl9 l6 J\10 !1l'1 113 111•411' Ph.rn'acy •·ard rules c , , _ , •• ,, ,,,, ,,. :.:1·· """'''* 1.10 !', 11'• 11 . 11 •" -'•Jewel co 1 so 66 61 ~a•\ .aVi ' "'' · results comparr<I favorably ,',"•, •,•,, .--;• Fl'!IMoq 1 to ~i.; "'' :it~ t ~ J•m w.u ~ i•1 ..a 3911 •o ij Zell'o and Storlch a Is o 6 " '''' •1 • ·.:. •-•·•• ·'' 1010 ,. , o.·o, ,. , • J1mw of '~ 11 u1• " ,,,,. • ' \l'ith those or 1969 when theC1n11• !,!O 'Ull lt\<o 1•,•, -t,'"F;iP~EI u I'" 11.··. 1t-.-1.J1m•>'lt!l~l l rlOlr II "'• l• . \ P-d1cted b1"ll$ will be offered ' C•11 c fldcl• 111 a 11>• c ~ "P•o ,,, ... , t , l" • \• JeflnM&n 1" '' '"' '"• ,,,, , ''" · company lost $91.6 million on C1•D,1111 i.so • •11~ "'~ ','~ + ~ FMf>JoBO 'i' 1 u~. Jl'• ,;: ... , JnhnJch .•o.o +.t• lSit n11 1s11o +, 1n many more s tate C••ll5•~ 60 :n 1~. 11:... '"-~ Ft<1SIQ~S '° 10 n:io '1'-11 •. _ ,, """~ sve ao ' .:t••1 3~·~ l-l1"t;-• I , 1 its Insurance operations and c1roe1.011 s 1111 u o11v1 •11.• -IV! 1e<1~•a•• 1..., >~ 11•, ID>• 1""" _.,, J0111.ov ... 1<1 l )I'? J1•• Sll'I +, eg1s atures to perm 1 t h d . 1 1 . 1 c1ro Pt! 1 '6 11 111, 161' 1rt• f /\ f'l!(l0tp1Str 1 '' ", ut·. ,.,., ± ;.: i-· L•u ., "'• 11•o ,,,, .+ , h . l I lh . JI tnves men income 0 Ciro 1e< I 641 ,, ,,.. n 1l\I 'l'edt••I Dev IS 91, •'• .... \o Jorotnsn 1,)0 ,, 1''\ 721, n·~ -1 p armac1s s o use e1r own •n~.s mi'lllon. Sales ·in 1969 ',',',','o"",', .... fll 1so u1, lll'o )Sii) •t "''r'° CD ~10 u ls" U'• 1l'? .._ 1, Jo.11~· .10 l' J'~ l"i 11•1 i . d t di f lh .,;hi •v l l-11> M'> 3-IVJ 11 f:ll)r~brd 10 70 1-, Jl'1 )\l o -1 Jov Mlt 1 <() SI 53 Sl\t 'l" ·i 111 gmen reg11,r ess o c "'ere It.• billion c,•,•,•,"'.'..f1, ...... l•l " 1•~• ,.,, -1, "'l'1"t1M 1 •O s l'1• J1·~ ~,.,. _ ~. '<~•rsr Alum ' ~1 3~ 3o. ~ , doclors, rescrl ti ... ..... d 'S'• n•1 2s~• -'' • 11ro1 1 40 ~J 1•1• ,,,, ,, .... ~. , "1111 • 11 s u•~ 66 " __. p · p OtlS, ;-============-;jca trlr 1.N Id tP.1 471 .. 41''1 -·~Fin Fflltt~ln 111 U lt\., 111• "-•1 •l<rCfl"'! 'oQ 1~ ll'o ?ll\ "'' -"As •ener1'c drug mnkers cc1 coro •I j t•i Jh + 1>1; Flrntn• 1.60 101 11 ao" .!O'• • •, IC•iC"' p•1 in ,', •,, •, :1 vo, 71,, ·., · c:crcl Pll1S 5,,, n11 lt\'I 1'1JChrt 1.1J1 "l SCI'• 4f '1 ~··~"~'cm 011 11 I•" . we're certainly nOt a"alnst NO. I ON Ceco 0•11 'II 1. ,.., ,.~, ,.1.::·1,F~1M1a Slo;I 11 M'1 H1• ni.+ ... K•,,.M1t .020 11 n·~ 1 tl'~-i· °' Ctlt.,.U(ll 1 llJ jl~• •I 61\~-~fl!Hitl80I l 11S 12'• IJ, li •ill .,CtvPLt )~I ..:.! H lJ"\ lS\11-S e c in g p ha r maceulical Cll'l•n PIA•.ll> , 611'-. 4111~ '°'~ _ •1 r11Nc1~ 1:... ,~~ •• • •~•\ H"• . 1 lt\C "L n'• l\ r,_ 41 '° '° ~1 ' J , • •• '''' •> 4 " + '• F"NSlf .stc ;II •I .,,. 'I • K) Pl Dll '~ '~' ti tl '1 .&,1 manufacturers being aJI0\1ed THE COAST t=Q""a~ i'i \"' 11 11" ')Fl•<hb<~ ,to •~Jr, 1i•1 ,,., .. ••tc>!°"'1r.;1 1 '" 36•1 361.1.-J. d I c~ 1•11<1.1" ) ~.1,.. !r'-j'•"'1'""'tt 1oJ;:i )I ui.1.-l'~•-1 1~ .... , .. ,1 11~,. M'" 1., .. · ,',','!--• to reeoup eve op1nent rosls 1 .1111t1 i.~ ,1 , 1• ""1111,r s~ 11 n•1 1, , • • 1 ..., .,1~ " •· "'/L.' 11,.,j(t 1so "', ,..1., "'i -1 ~1 ... 11E~r 11 1'6 3ii. J~·· l-1'• ln. :~"~""' i \l u '' '• ~,, <jo.11 on new drugs," snld Milin, 1n IPS 1.10 ,, 10,. u, 1<1t'. .. ~ ... Fl9"1\!noi .~ 1.11 ii 1r. 11 1o K•~PL1 131 i11 n•, 6t1 u •a J · h You r Hometown ':11'"1 1 12 211, 11~ ,.r~ t •• p1+n.•011 ' ;;o ~·· 2<. , •, ·, ~.,v •n(I ,,,, i··, ,., 011 ' 'utoncet1epa11ent as run , .,. 12' la 1't·i tri:, 11)', ,,P•ln1fl'IA •.!o 110 •~ u ts +1 1e~1 .. 1~ 1>1w1 u~ .»•-. :n'1 ~··~• I I I Ce~!W11\ "jl'•"'l•1"-+•0 F!IMOIBj H 1-IC '•••••O• •1~'°"'/'•0'1 !'S.•i''>}t', .... OU I ~ems \l'rong 0 see Newsp•per Is 1'M•·'·'·~"11• n ~:. ) I 1· • .. '• f/•E '°"'' ' ,,.,, l<l\1 "'' -~twocB .:rel> ~ I& 111. '~'· ~ ;.! lhe ll\lbll·c. espec•ally o'·'er u ,,,·, • ' :HI'" lt1o Jiit 1-· -a.•~ 'I'" l''• iri, + '• •v·..,.q~ •o • M"• •1" 11'•' ... ·,1 N.I I Oli 1'~ J\ro •• II Pew I 61 SI s•t, ' SJ ' • ' ICr~b••• ! "' ,. M'-. ll•\ el•) .;.3•1 ~pie gou•ed OUl Of m1"l!1"nns I .,1.1"d t j> H 'I"~ 'llllPwl.I 1 11 '' IC'1 p i. Ill ._ '• 0(;~11,.~!n~ 60 I? Jl•, l''• •1' •I ·--' " Th DA ILY PILOT •Ul\_~Alt tit I!"'"!'"-·~-... !ioi$1Jti l j li. !I• ~t., '<•llri• I .., "''1•'• ~4,,., r d Ila pr'ee.s a ~f' 51! IO• l l•t 11r '~ ... 1, c.. 1.lll 11• »'• 11-. jl • '• ""'" I JI! ,., j4 " ;1 ._, o 0 rr; tn exces.'I I idb•n re 'l ~ '• 1, ._ ·-11 lqr .'.Ii• s i.. •I'• r. , • ., '<~~a••• tO '! l• J'o .:1>r ... ' for branded drugs." ,•,•,,','•'•"• 1 "''is +. 'l ft~!'! bllXt u1 It'• ll'• N'• ":enn••c11 ' •· •1 l•" l~ ,.·1 ~I )f>o J)t' Jf'• -I,, FM " .&3 ~J 11•• ,..,, 1f I ... \, Kv"rc~~ 10 dD 111 . 10 . ~" -~ ,' I r , I I I l I .. MondQ, Mvtll ~. lfll SC DAILY PILOT lf r I ......... ~ .-.... ..... ~ .. -.~~-.~····-········ U DAILV PILOT Monday, March 15, 1971 ·Price1 effective thru Tues., 3/16 ·Tubeless Blackwalls •.. Any Size Listed SIZE r.t:.r. SIZE f".f..T. •: ~Glf EACH 6.50xl3 32c 7.35xl4 4lc 5.60x l 5 :J5C 7.75xl4 44c 8.15xl5 Sic 8.25xl4 45c 1087 Plu s F.E.T. Each 1\nd Old Tire Whitewalls Only Sl More Each 12-ln., 3-1-te ight Sturdy Jack Stand Allstate 12-Volt Battery . Low 199 •-orn-out battery wuh a Sears All· fiu many 12-volt ca~s. Replace }'our 1199 Priced ! #1266 stat_e bauery. '\\'hhTnid~·In Adjustable for car or uail Noa. 4J;J84339 er. 12-inchcs high. llSll . .... . . . . v .. " Sears UESTOR GRAND PRIX MARCH 28, 1971 al Ontai:io Motor Speedway SPECIAL SEARS DISCOUNTS -"f .. \Ns tX(·Lus1vf D/'i('Ol;f\.i'J Pl.AN . FOR You ANo Y()LJR f .J\h'fJL y Rrsular Prfr.- tit<IT! Oi.r<.111111 Price '14 •12 •11 •9 SEAllS FAMILY DISCOUNT Pl.AN •10 •7 Buy Any Ticket at Regular Price ... Get AdJi ri unal Tickets (of similar value) for ONL'\'" SJ (or c.1ch Child 16 Years or Under. Pick Up Your Di~cou nt Coupons At Any Sears Auto Cenrer And Get Ti lke1s .at 1he Tickcrrun O utlet At Customer Convenience Counicr S1fY1'.:$1.50! • SAVE$.1 l '/2-'1'011 Rugged Hydraulic Hand Jack l?r~ut.:ir Sl:!!J9 9?,,? 1"wo·piccc lifting handle, huih·in release valve . Wide b3.5e fo r stability. \ Tubeless Blackwalls •.. Any Size Listed SIZE l'.LT. SIZE t".[,T. f.~Cll t:ACH 6.95x 14 1.94 8.25xl 4 2.32 7.35x l4 2.01 7.75x l 5 2.16 7.75xl4 2.14 168 7 PJus F.E.T. [at'h ,\nd· Old 'firt: Whitewalls Only 83 More Per Tire ' HEAVY l)IJTY MOTOR Oil '3.79 Heavy-Duty ~1otor Oil 10-Quart·Can SAVE 80c J\1eets or exceeds all new car nt.inu-2 99 facturers warranty. Stock up now at Sears! Keep your engine in shape. lfr1r< Outv SAVE *2.44! SAVE 010! Po1·Lable Steel Ramp Regular $49.99 W.ork under car in 11afety. Remov-3 9 99 able incliiles, wheel stops. Holds Standard Tune-Up Kits lltgul "S3.'19 199 Tri cludcs: Con dcn/)~, Ru1o r :t nd h Poin1s. f!ac !'hocl.. Ah.orl~r Life1in1e. t:11~r11nle.l'l 1f I lu•r °"" ~"°' k Ab>t>rt> .. 11.1.""" "'t.11111· .. ., • .,,,, ..,,1 ~ftf~''""'h1p "'.., .......... • hol< 0<l•in•I ~ur<k..,., .,...,,. "" ,, "'Ill b< rrp\.cN upo1n '''"'" """ ul <hM)!o,"' r~ l"'r<h..., "''" .... 11 ~ ,..;~""" .... I( '"" dclO< """' .i.o.c~ .... ...,.,,., ..... 1n•11Btd hr ~.n. -M\l tn•r•ll .,..,......,.. ol>- ..,..,., "'"h "" th .... la< up to 2\1 ton•. #1'2' Carhiiretor Auto Air Filter Allstate Spark Plugs • 199 ' Lo~, Low Priced! ' Carburetor air filter rraps harmful dirt before it re.aches your C'ngine. IUINA PAIK TA 1..UOO, 121-4131 IL MONTI GI 2·2911 CANOGA PAllC i.tO·OU1 GUNDALl CM 1•1004, Cl 4·4611 COMPTON Nl 6°2111, NI 2-1761 HOUYWOOD MO t·SMI llAlS,J.OllUCKANDCO, COVINA tU·CM11 IHOUWOOD 01 1·2521 Shop Nlghls Mott. thru Sat. 9:30 A.M. t• t:io P.M., Sunclor I 2 Noo'1 to S P.M • . • lONO •IACH HI ll·01'J1 OLYMPIC & SOTO AN 1·1211 O•ANOI 627·2100 "flAIMNA 6•1-3111, Jll1-4211 '61ilONA NA •·lll61 Booster Cables pt(O WI 1-4262 "'"" Lifetin1e Guaranteed Heavy Duty Shock Ab so1·bers Regular S7.99 Longer wear, smoother ride. Rup;- gcd sintered iron pi~ton and chrome rhucd rod. IANTA ANA tU 7·2311 THOUSAND OAKI 4'7-4SU TOll.ANCI S42·1111 UKAte t•l·1t27 IANTA rt SPllNOI M4•I011 IANTA MOHICA IX 4°1111 lOUTH COAlf MAIA 140·21.JJ YALUT PO a-1461, tl4·2220 \l'llMONf. I\ f ·1t1 I . -- I I I I I f \ I i I \ j IT SEEMS TO BE RAINING MONEY IN LAGUNA BEACH Margaret &land, Peter French end Terri Byington Play Prepared 'Money' Musical at Thurston An estimated 25 percent of the student body at Laguna's Thurston Intermediate School is engaged in preparations for the spring musical, a sprightly comedy titled "Plenty of Money." The fast-paced show wW be presented March 24 throujlh March 27 at 8 p.m. in the school auditorium. All phases of the production are being handled by students, witb Mrs. Ron Rodecker directing the large cast and musical director Jeff Foster groom.Ing the full student orchestra. Principal roles are played by Margaret Bland. Peter French, Scott Morgan, Teresa Byington, Gregg Moore, Anthony Cottam and Mark Christy. Tickets, available at the door, will be priced at 75 cents for students and $1.25 for adulls. Credit System Considered For San Cle1nente School A proposal to a1low certain designated courses at San Clemente High School lo be offered on a credit·no credit basis instead of the traditional A through F. grading system will be considered tonight by trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District. Also on the agenda ·will be cun- sideraiion of the elimination of two graduation requirements at lhe 8 p.m. meeting in Serra School, Capistrano Beach. Bingo Man Stntters WIGAN, England (UPI) -Bingo caller Jack Rigby has lost his job because he deveJoped a slutter. Housewives com· plained that the tension was unbearable as they waited (or him to announce the numbers. Club officials gave him a new job -checking tickets at the door. High iichool principal Darrel Taylor said in a report to the board that the high school administrative council was recommending a credit..no credit system for a few courses to place more emphasis on learning the subject matter rather than competing for a grade. These courses will not be those required for college entrance. In some ·of the classes, the students will ·be given a choice of whether or not to compete for a Jetter grade. The list would include all boys and girls physical education offerings, a few art, business, math, homemaking and science courses and more than 20 English courses, all of which are elective. The board also will be asked to approve the elimination of the fourth year of social studies and a course requirement in the fine or practical arts now necessary for graduation. The courses would still be offered as electives. All changes would go into effect during the 1971-72 school year, if approved by the board. Nixon Takes A Holiday In .Florida . ~ GRAND CAY, Bahamas (UPI) -• Preaident Nlxoo, dining on fresh fish caucl>t by blJ children, relaxed today on a private lalaftd estate overlooking Mermaid Beach. Tbe Preslden~ accompanied by bis son-in-law and daughter David and Julie Eisenhower, arrived here Sunday af .. ternoon for an overnight visit to the vj}Ja of New York industrialist Rob'.ert H. Abplanalp, a close personal friend.· While Nlxoo .sat in the sun tUld swam in a private palm-fringed lagoon, David and Julie were aboard the Sea Uon II, ID ·IO-loot llablng boat owned by Abplanalp. 1belr catdi Included am- berjack, yellowtail and one 15-pound grouper prepared for the President's dinner. David and · Julie stayed In a small beach house while the President. Abplanalp and C. B. "Bel>e" Rebozo, another close Nixon friend, dined at the main vWa. The President was expected to return to the Florida White Hou~e late today and fly back to.. Washingtoa this evening. Mrs. 'Nixon paSsed up the visit here and remained at their home in Key Biscayne. Tricia, the l>ttsident's elder daughter, was the only family member missing from the vacation weekend which celebrated David's graduation from a Navy officer training course. Now an ensign, David will report later this month W the Navy base at Virginia Beach, Va., for training as a navigator. Tricia was visiting in New York at the borne of Edward Finch Cox. lhe Harvard law student ribe plans to marry in June. President and Mrs. Nixon are ~xpected to announce Tricia's engagement at a White House rectption Tuesday evening. The President will travel Wednesday to Lexington, Ky., to deliver a eulogy at the funeral of Whitney Young Jr., the civil rights leader who died Thursday in Lagos, Nigeria. Cricket Tired After 48-hour Clemente Trip After a 48-hour hike that took him from the hills of Laguna Niguel to downtown San Clemente, CrJcket the Boston Bull terrier· ls borne with his mistress, former Laguna Beach vice mayor Helen Keeley. The little dog, which disappeared while on a walk in Laguna Niguel Tuesday afternoon, was spotted on a San Clemente street Thursday evening by market employe Steve Hemmer who shared a doughnut with him. Cricket followed his new friend home. and spent the night at his house. When the Orange County Animal Shelter open- ed Friday morning, Hemmer was able to identify Cricket's owner through his dog license number and called Mrs. Keeley who hastened to San Clemente to retrieve her very weary pet. Thing sare getting pretty hairy In San Juan Capi- strano. It's all part of the community celebration preparing for the traditional return of the swallowa to the 200-year-old mission. Shown .at the hairiest man contest Saturday are from left to right Leslie Duncan, judge; Jon Mondale, entrant; Flank Mul- doon, entrant; and Irene Morales, judge. Wlnnll'I have not been announced. Copter Loses 'Not Bad' 30 Shot Down, But 20 Recovered, U.S. Declares SAIGON UPI) -U.S. military sources said today 6S American helicopters have been downed in Laos and Jn suppart (lperatlons In South Vietnam but that "helicopter losses in the Laos operation have actually been below our advance estimates." The sources said more than 30 helicopters shot down in Laos have been recovered and brought back to South Vietnam and that 20 of the choppers downed since the operailon in Laos began Feb. 8 have been repaired and put back into service. Another six weie said to be under repair. Tbe scurces 11aid some, of tbe 20 back In service had been reported earlier as "destroyed. 1• The sources said 50 helicoptel'll were shot down over Laos and two others collided in flight and cruhed. Twelve other bellcopte:n were lbot down In Viet- nam wblle supporting the Lacis operation aod three others crashed becaUJe of mechanicaJ failure. USC Pact Signed LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The Universi- ty of Southern California has signed a rontract which includes a closed shop clause and a n<Hitrike pledge with a union local representing 350 dormitory and cafeteria workers. The crashes have cost 52 Americans killed, 6.l wounded and lC missing, the U.S. Command said. Heliropler pilots and mechanics in U.S. Army units involved in the Laos opera- tion say they have no trouble getUng replacements for UHl Huey helicopters lost or severely damaged -if a damaged helicopter cannot be repaired within 10 days, the unit to which it is assigned is issued another chopper. Pilots say they have been having some trouble getting deliveries o[ replacement AHl Cobra gunships. ·The· U.S. Command reports that 29 of the helicopters shot down in Laos were Ulll Hueys, aa were the two which collidel1 in the air over Laos, Ten ()f those shot down over La1>1 were AHl Cobras. others sbot down Jn Laos in- cluded two CH47 Chinooks, seven OHS Cayuse and two OHS8 Kiowa 11 g h t observation helicopters. Use of the OH6 and OH58 scout helicopters bas been restricted over Laos for the past three weeks and a slowdown in replacement of them has not curtailed combat opera- tions. pilots say. Staff officers deny any delay Jn replacement of AHi Cobras, although they admit deliveries may be slightly slower than UHl Hueys, "simply because there are so many more Hueys in the country and thus in the pipeline from the maintenance shops. Further, Cobras are more complex and may require more time for repair," the sources said. Pilots In unita operaUng ever Laos also complain that they are not receiving replacements lot pilots tilled. wounded or m.i!sing. However, staff olftcen aay that replacementa are comlDf. ln an d · there are sufficient pilots 'that any pilot who wants an early out <dlscb:ar&e- earlier than scheduled} can get one." Book Discussion Group Forming A Laguna Beach resident hu an-. noilnced plans to organize a Great Books discussion group In the Art Colony modeJ... ed after such groups in other 4'0J:Do muniUes. , Robert Payne, a volunteer coordinatoi, for the Great Books F o u n d11 ti on, publishers of the books, said parllclpanlx will meet informally at borne to cliscusa the important works of civilization from. Homer to Sigmund Freud. Jn order to establish the groaes, Payne said be will first train discusaioft leaders ' through eight weekly sessions on Wednes- day evenings beginning March 24. Once the leaders are tr a In e d, discussion groups will be formed con- sisting of from JO to 15 persons each. Residents wishirig to receive discussion leader training may contact Payne at 494-7627. El Rancho has the hottest price in town! Corned Beef. ~~~f;EI. 79~ (;elebrate St. Pat's day the traditional way I Whole or point lalf. P@rr~ Chops .. ~~·R· . 89~ Lean and tender ... from grain fed rnidv.·estern pork! Comparer Stuffed Pork Chops ........... ~.~~1~~ ........... 99~ Ready for you to cook, serve and enjoy! Just sea.son and bake! Pork Loin Roast ............... ~~.~ ................ 89~ f1avor you're sure to savor! ~n, tender, and more good eatiqt 'l'he "anytime" treat from Dolly Madison ••• lovely filled cakes that the kids Jove ••• for lunch, after aehool, for deuert! Pay no attention to the price on the package ••• our price is lOc ••• so get enough to give them the fun of good eating! Ca~bage ............... 7~ Solid ••• fresh! Plan on corned beef and cabbage this week! . I Price• in effect ltfo'n., Tutt., Wed., Mar. 15, U, 17. No •ile• to dealers, £( ~•t~lto · ._,;>~~--·. . . '' ' ' ' ; .-. ' • ' .. i ' : . !. )~ . . ' Danish Ham ... o.A~·~ •• St Imported ••• Jean ••• with that distinctive Danish FJavorl 4-.oz. Fruit Drinks ... 3 : 7t Gal Fame .•• 46 oz. cans ••• in a cho ice of flavor favorites I . Dow's Handi-Wrap ................ , ...................... 4r Big 200 f~ roll at thiJ pr10e! You 'll find so many uses for itl Calo Cat Food ........................................ '6 .. •1 Each 6\i oz. can is a just right meal ••• flavor variety, too. ARCADIA; PhSADENh --. •. SOUTH PASADENA : HUNTiNGTON BEACH~ -NEWPORT BEACH: -?727 Ncwporl Blvo and Sunset and Huntington Dr ([I Pi(ll~O rrn•. I ~)~,:'ii (r.• i'J'!'' r 11 f'(lltfJnl .-ind Hunt1ngtori Dr 'lhirnl'r and Al gonquin (8oardw1lh Cf'nlr1) 7551J [as!!ilutl Dr (E,l'ilbluff iJdlage Ccntc1) I I I, - I' l • 4 -oall.Y PILOT Nearing Civil War AP'GHANIS TAN ' RAWALPINDI ·"-,• NEW0 DELHI IND I A 0 CHINA Wllf IAIT AllEA: 318,40St,:al. ss,12• PDPULATIOI: 51 •lllJtl 72 • Ml. 400 DIVIDED NATION -Pakistan, world's filth most populous nation, divided by a hostile India, and split between an ove1·populated1 poverty stricken eastern section and a bustling western section, is moving close to civil \Var, Unless President Agha Mohammed Yahya ·Kahn can effect a· compromise, the only solution may be two separate countries, neither of which may be able to survive indepen· dently. War Not Out of Questimi Egypt Declares. Readiness Bf 'United Press lntuni.tlonal Cairo nevispapers said today Egypt Is prepared for all possibilities, including war, in view of Israel's reflLSal to pledge withdrawal from all Arab territory ca~ !ured in the 1967 war. Arab territory before a peace settlement. . Eban left Jerusalem even as a pdlitical storm blew. up over a recent interview ' by prime minister Golda Meir in which . she . outlined possible Middle East borders. Mrs. Meir, in the interview vllth the Times of London published Saturday, said Israel would not surrender Egypt's Sharm el-Sheikh, Syria'& Golan Heights, Jrirdan's East Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip. She 'also said t he r e \\'Ould have to be adjustments in the Israeli.Jordanian borders. a· map."· He said she "rather illustrated a way, of how the boundaries could change.'~ The ·warning came as Israeli foreign minister Abba Eban proposed that Israeli llld Egyptian representatives hold face-. \Cl-face negotiatons in an effort to resolve !he Middle East crisis. Ebp.n also said Israel is , inclined to go ahead. with an interim deal with Egypt o~ reopening t~e Suez Canal for all international shipping. But he said there ,has been no favorable response from Egypt thw far. The semiofficial Al Ahram of Cairo 1aid that "the possibility or an outbrek.k >f fighting leads to all possibilities and lhe Egyptian army is aware of this." nia newspaper added that Egyptian 11nned forces are now capable of facing ··any Israell Surprise attack and the requirements of modem warfare." Two right-wing parties submitted mo- tion.! or nonoonfidence in !he Meir government which wlll be voted on by the Koesset (parliament) on Tuuday. Neither is expected to wtn. Eban said "Mrs. Meir did not draw The : Israeli foreign minister .flew to Loodon on the first •leg of his diplomatic campaign aimed at getting the Middle East peace ne.gotiations under way at a neutral spot outside the United Nations. During his trip he alse will ·meet with U.N. ;officials · in New York and with U.S. Secretary of State William P. Rogers in W asbington. The newspaper Al Akhbar, commenting >n the de facto cease-fire along the ;uez Canal front, said i"lf the Egyptian !orce.s have not fired yet, it does not nean they are not prepared -the inny ts prepared to resume firing at 1ny time." Egypt refused a formal extension or :he cease-fire, which expired on March r. 'because of Israel's refusal to commit .tself to · withdraw from all occupied w,& • ... and thia one I got lrorn a aiot machine Explosion Rips P odiuni Vacated By Chil e Cliief ... SANTIAGO, Chile (UPI) -An ex· plosion tore a hole In the ceiling above a speakers platform Sunday mjnutes af- ter President Salvadore Allende 1poke. Firemen blamed an electrical short circuit but a Socialist Party official charged it v.•as caused by a ltfolotov Cocktail. Allende had lert the platform after an address to 15.000 persons at a Socialist Party rally in the indoor sports stadium when the blast occurred. He returned to help retsore order. A hole six-feel long and three-feet liride was ripped in the ceiling and debris poured do.,.;n on the platform l\'hm Allende had been speaking. Firemen quickly brought the blaze under control. in the P.X.' Sen. Carlos Altamirano, secretary general or the Socialist Party, charged that a hfolotov Cocktail had been hidden tn the ceiling "with criminal Intentions." ESCAPES BOMB BLAST Chile'• S1lv1dor Allende Tornadoes Sweep Midwest Texas To wn Ba kes at 101 ; Mucli of Natio1i Fair , Dry California Skits -fl Wllll'f Ind tit-Ir O'tf f _, Gf Southtm C1Hloml1 toc111 wlllt tM 1-r•lun w•rrnl"' 111111111. A mrw 1lon11 front <lev110Plno In tll4I mld·P1tlllc twld brlnt PttclPH•· llOfl flt !tit lfM by Tutld.., n!1M. ' "' a ...,nny d.., 11 11\t P•••llm~ Cf\llc: C1111... hlth wn 10 tomP•rHI "'"' M $.IWICltf' Ind 711' 1-Pl'tlld "1111 llltte#'I'. TIM low tonlthl .U. T'-Air ~f\ttloft Control Ol1fr1cl nPOl'fM ,.. __, 111 lht 'los Anteln bl1ffl. ' ll:•lfl. ,..,.._, Wll tht lOttttll for mud! of ll'lt .,.. "'"""'" rnldw"" Wfltl ·-•hint dtlll't ''"' ·-... _,,,. ta .1.000""" "'"""·""""ltlft\, hKNs toOIY -. -wltPI h1tr. from to to " IM tlM w11" ~. MOIMfllftl -'''° tvnn'I' ., "" fllOrt .,..., ~ hlth• ... "" .... '" , ... °'""'"· _, ¥111n Pllti. """' 111 1111 ... 'll'llf ..._. vetln' 1'1i111t -Ill tM 1lt tin I 1"""1 .... H""'9 llll'MI.., •"' ~ "'"" '°"" Kt"*• L."" 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A "'''" thul'ldfrsl«lfl lft SI. l ovl1 t (t'Ol'ftNT!ltd II\' JO• rnU1 "' rtottr Wfillft, ctvfl'lllH "'''" • ht" lno:h of rt!~ In a jlllur•rnfriut1 ,.,1od. ,. Coo st al Tiit -11\tr 1llMl9 lhl Or111tt C011! will be rnNllJ !tit todtr wlrh "'""" 11r1Y rnorlll"' low Cloyd\ I~ IOI I nd l)tflt l""Mrtllll't Ch:ellt9. '-••lllrtt •'-"" (Oii! wll1 ''"" 1-• " Q ••111, WllHt lllo ltrod 1111 ,_ ...+It be 4$ " .0. W11er tttn-•lllrt II II ""'"'· SuN, llloon, T ides MONDAY Stcelld low ............ 4~n t .m. IA S«Ot1C1 hfM .. • IO;M '·'"· 4.t Tl,lllDAY ,,,., ..................... •~1111.111, '·' fl lrtl hltll ............ 11:111 t .l!I, J.I ltcOnll It'll' ' ........... 4!l4 ,.fl\. '·' ~ hi.II . . ... ll!OI '·"'· f.I .lurt ltlMI l :CM 1.11'1. kh 1100 1.rn. ~ lltlttt till'·'"· Sttt l :JI 1.m. Tenar.;r,ature• ,., UtOTID ltllS INTlltNATIOMAl TtmP9r1'11r11 Ind prl'(:lpll1tl11t1 f« ~ 24.f'IO\lr PlflOd 111dlnt' 11 4 1,m, Hiii! Ln PrK. Albentr " " Albuq111rau1 • " All111!1 .. ., ·" AllCl\orlRI " ... Bolton .. u fl~ll•lo " .. CMtllO .. • 1.e1 C!11cl11na!I " " CIOVt!lllCI .. " 011111 " " """" • " Oft Mo1.,.t " " .~ 0.lnilt " « .. , Htlell1 • u .._lv!ll " " l11cll1111p011, .. .. ·" K1on11Clty " " L11VtN1 " " loul1vllr1 " y ·" M""'""lt " .. .u Mllrnl " n Ml1Wi'Ulr" " .. ... MlnnMooltt " .. ... "'"~-" n NIWYort n " Olll1,,.,,,. t 1" n " .,.,, .... 1l " •• P1t""S~ ,. " 1'1111Ntl.iile r .. • T ........ 11( " " P l"il:ll.W•ll " " """'""·Ott. " " ·" 11111c1 cnv " " "~ • " 51tr1rn11110 • n ... St. lov!t " " .M 5111 lt-• City " " T 51~ Olfft .. " , .... il'•1no:i.o, n m ... $Nlllt .. " ·" l11c1i;1M " " .., I Seee•sion Threat Tensions Flare In E. Pakistan 4 DACCA {UPI) -President Agha ?wtohammad Yabya Khan arrived here today, presumably for crisis talks with Sheikh P..tujlbur Rahman in a last.ditch effort to stave off the secessjon of East Pakistan. Yahy1 Khan drove from the airport with bis East Paklstan martial law ad- ministrator, Lt. Gen. Tiltka Khan, in a convoy of nine trucks filled with troops holding automatic weapons at the alert. There was scattered applause from a crowd of several hundred gathered at lhe airpoct gates, but the spectators moslly were silent. There was no Immediate: direction when or where Yahya Khan would see Rahman, the leader of East Pakistan's 75 million pop9latlon who early today announced be was taking over the ad- ministration cf the province from Yahya Khan's military government. Superpowers Begin New Arms Talks VIENNA (UPI) -The Soviet Union and the United States entered the fourth round of their Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) today with mutual pledge:i to "bend every effort " tov.·ard "positive results." SALT wu opening at a fonnaJ greeting ceremony with Austrian President Franz Jonas. The first substantive meeting will be Tuesday at the Soviet Embassy. The :A:merican-delegation-·~-Fri· day and its leader, Gerard C. Smith, said he had come with President Nixon's instrucUons to "bend every effort" toward agreement. "While significant differences between the United States and the Soviet Union still remain to be overcome," Smith said, "the basis of an agreement may be emerging. Thus the fourth phase of our talks may reach a significant stage." The So\'iet delegation, led by Vladimir S. Semenov, arrived by train Sunday morning and said it had orders from Kremlin leaders lo negotiate "in a businesslike and constructive spirit, seek- ing to achieve positive results." Despite these conciliatory statements, diplomatic sources reported a deep gap between the two superpowers. President Nixon has called for a "mix· ed'' agreement -thaL is, one establi shing limitatlons or .&ome sort on both offensive and defensive missiles. Rahman's action apparently put East Pakistan on the verge of Independence from government ln West Pakistan - two areas separated by 1,000 miles of Indian ten·itory. Rahman called on the 75 million people of East Pakistan to resist "by all means possible" any force used against them. There are 55 million people in West Pakistan. "We cannot be conquered because each or us is determined to die If need be to ensurt that our future generations can live in r£ffdom and with dignity as free citizens of a free country,•• Rahman said. 1'1ore than 300 persons have been killed in riots and clashes with government troops In East Pakistan in recent weeks. Rahman said be was taking control <ln the basis of the Awami League's absol ute majority in the provincial assembly and its dominant position in the national assembly, The Awami leader, known as ''The Tiger of Bengal." issued 35 ad- ministrative directives, i n c I u d i n g suspension of tax collection by the central government, closing of schools and con- tinuation of a strike by east Pakistani employes of the central government. Newspapers and radio and television stations were told "lo give a complete version of all statements and news about the people 's movement." PoUce were ordered to maintain order, assisted ii necessary by Awami League party workers . Dock workers were told to continue handling incoming and outgoing cargo except for "forces or materials which may be used for repression against the people." -------·-.<-] reland Fa ctory Rocked by Bomb BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) - An explosion extensively damaged an English-owned factory 30 miles from Belfast today, an Army spokesman said. There y,•ere no injuries. The spokesman said about 20 pounds of explosives were used in the blast at the plant, \vhere 180 men were laid off last week. Security forces also investigated a bombing near where three murdered British soldiers were found. Police said they believed a bomb con· taining about five pounds or explosives was thrown from a car late Sunday night into the Squires Hill Tavem in the suburba11. Legoniel area. There \vere no injuries. UPIT ........ MA KES VIRGINITY COMMENT C1rdin•I John H"n•n Virgins' Virtue 'Often Depends' On the Virgin' LONDON (UPI) -Cardinal John Carmel Heenan believes virginity in itself is not a virtue. Heenan, archbishop of Westminster and Roman Catholic Primate or Britain, was questioned by Britons on the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) "A Chance to Meet. .. " television program. "The state of virginity as such is: not in itself virtuous. It is a physical thing. . .virtue is an attitude of the mind -the reason why a person has cha.sen virginity," he said. "Some people are virgins, men or women, simply because no one will have them. They may have tried time and --again ·~o-get-married,.-·----· .. -·--· "You cannot say because this person is a virg in, therefore he is a better man or more virtuous than a married man. And that goes for the clergy too. "Just because I am a celibate: priest it does not mean I an more virtuous in the eyes of God and man than a person with a y:ife and family," he said. Poli ce Shoot Nude Assailant to Death LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ty,·o policemen said they shot a nude man to death after he came at them swinging a 16-inch lead pipe and attempts to disarm him failed. Four officers said Joseph T. Sandoval, 21, of Los Angeles, jumped out of the truck and they exchanged about 10 blows \\'ilh him before the shooting. f 1ie11ds of your best have a new addressa Glendale Federa l Savings has moved to Harbor Center. Lock, stock and safe. Pedple too. We're now right on the corner of Harbor Boulevard and Wilson, so if-you're looking for Glendale's famous friendly serv- ice, escrows, Umpteen Ways To Save or great new low rates on home loans, look no further. Gle ndale Federal/Costa tv\esa is just as nice as it ever was. And lots more convenient. Mon.-Thur. 9-4; Fri. 9-6. Oer.dlle hdall.SIR191·Cost1 Mesa c.-o11111-. ..... d._(Hai_Ctllllr) i" Set~n Die· • l In Huge : House Fire Rattlers Bite Four In Roundup SWEETWATER. Tex . (AP} -The score was 3.900 snake! snared and four men bitten by the vicious rattlers as the 13th annual Sweetwater Rat- tlesnake Roundup ended Sun- day. The anakes weighed 3.702'~ pounds, and two San Angelo men ..... Tommy Young and Bob Turner -won the poun· d1ge ~ntest by catching rep.. tiles weighing a total of 678 pounds. Victor HarMs and Lloyd Webb, both of Sweetwater, caught the biggest rattler, one 69 inches long. GOP Hunts Site For Convention WASHINGTON (U PTl -A spt:eial Republican committee began its search today for a site cf the 1972 GOP Na- ticnal Con"vention. The committee I n v i t e d representative! of M i a m i Beach. Fla .. to appear today, San Francl..!lco and Houston Tuesday and Chicago Wed- nesday. It also will hear spokesmen for news media organizations during the three- day meeting. Easy Rider I . Era Dawns ' SACRAMEN"IO (UPI) - The easy rider 'era lives on in California , where more than a hall million mOt.orcyc\es now roam the roads. The Department of f\.1otor Vehicles reported that 561,621 cycles were registered at thP. end of 1970, an increase of 92,188 -or 19.2 percent - during the year and of 200.000 in the past three years. Auto l'tgistrations climbed to 13,818,869; up 495 ,918 -or 3.7 percerit -from 1969. The department said the figures renected "a relatively poor year in the automobile in- dustr.y." Fonda Big ,Hit . Agents See Protest .Show • FAYE1TEVJLLE. N.C. (UPI) -Jane Fonda's anti· war revue ,attended by military intelligence agents poorty disguised as hippies, played to packed audiences at its premiere near Ft. Bragg. . NearlY 500 ~ldiers greeted the troupe's jibes at the mili- tary and the Indochina war with cries of "right on " and peace symbol gestures at each of the three performances Saturday and Sunday. The appearance by Misa. Fonda. comedian Dick Greg~ nry and actoni Peter Boyle and Donald Sutherland at the Haymarket Square Coffeehouse was the first of 20 engage- ments the troupe plans near U.S. military installations. Soldiers und eterred by telephoned bomb threats and the presence of ~illtary tntelligen~ 1.gents easily recognized In "'igs 1.nd Hippie garb, paid $2.SO each for a hard wooden &eat or standing room along the black. postered-covcred wall s. The Gts roared when Dick Gregory reported that Army lnttllhrence 1.gent.s had spied on him and then quipped : "The Anny 1in't got no intelligence.'' Boyle. star of the motion picture "Joe." and Suther· land. star of "M.A.S.H.". tumed sport caster and ~ave an 1ccount or a Southeast Asi8n battle as if it v.·ere a baseball , ..... 1 "It's too bad the President wasn't here to throw out lht first grenade." Sutherland said. GreJi:ory drew another burst of apnlauM! when he seiz- rested thllt actor John Wayne and other "old men " fight the war In Indochina . The troupe tumed to the lnft·like corf~se and I~ crude comer s!Age v.1hen the Cumberland County Memor- 11! Anditorlu m dcmancled a rqsh deposit. The entertainers had p!11nned origlrially to stage the ghow 1t l)'.i ~ Brl'fR". but LL Gf'n. Jolin J. Tolson. comma nder nf the post. reYlewed the seripl And declared that it would be "detrimental" to tM troops. 9 Arrested In Nebraska Bomb Plot LINCOLN. Neb. <UPI ) - Police arrested nine persons during the weekend In C(ln- nection with an alleged plot to bomb three buildings. in- cluding the Nebraska Capitol. Police Lt. Roger Lapage said the nine were to be ar- raigned today in Lancaster Count.,,v .Court on charges of illicit destri.Jction of property and consipiracy to commit a felony . He declined lo release the names of the suspecls pending arraignment but said all were between 19 and 28 ''hippie looking, with long hair and leather clothes." Eight of the nine are Lincoln -area residents, Lapage said. while the ninth carried identification from Fresno, Louisiana and Illinois. Lapage said a plot to bomb the capitol, th~ Lincoln police station in the city-county building and the Brunswick Corp. building was uncovered during the th.fee-day in· vesti11:ation of v a n d a 1 i sm March 10 at the Brunswick building. The defacement Included painting peace symbols and the words "boom" and "bang'' on a water tower at lhe plant, police said. A local radio station received a telephone call later that night with a lip or, the vand alism, Lagage said. Police declined lo say how they determined the plot In· volved the capitol and police station and also refuffi:I to say whether any explosives were discovered at the .time of the arrests. All-meat Do g Food Under Fire WASHINGTON IUPll . - Clinical tests have shown adverse effects from exclusive feeding of all-meat · dog food, and vetcrinari:ins also have ra ised questions abou t fortified meat dog foods pr1>- motcd as a ''complete'' or "balanced" diet , il was learn· ed today. Two feder11l agencies. the Food 1.nd Drug Administration <FDA) and Federal Trade Commiulon f FTC}. are in- vesting labeling a n d ad· vertising claims for canned dog foods made exclusively of meat and meat byproducts, or of meal and Its byproducts fortified with vitamins and minerals. Heavil)' promoted, these producti have seized a grow- In( trihare of the pet f o o d market, which it3elf M>artd to $1.16 bllllon last year. ·. Mond.Y, Mvcll l.~, 1971 DAILY PILOT .. Mass.Snooping .... - Charges Hinwd Whitney Young's Funeral Tuesday In Army Spying • .•, ··' • • t ' '· " 1mPERIAJ. SAv1·nGS ''.. ·-~_.._.:: • ....-Oll!I 'and loan assoc)atlO'n of Newport·P~sadena .. llewpofl •-s.vtnoo· now...., • btcutlv• Offlte: 3398 Via LldO, ~~ ~,'(71') &t~3131> Mn. bttlc.: tf ~ l&fle Ay""" Palu fl,._ (213) J'H.&«1 Corona~ Mii' Gmce. ~ Nt'1¥p0f1 ·~ Oriott. Nwp011 BMcfh, {7,4) 6'4-1411 3170 E .. t Foachlfl 9oufe\ijfd. Paudenl, (2.1!Jt 715-04(7 , ~ 134 Nor11\Gl9ndor1 1i.Vtnue, Glen<lora, (2.13) ~3 ~ WOOdllfld 1111 Office: 19900 Ventura Blvd,, Woodland Hiiia, Call(., (213) 34&-3ltl20 •• I ' • , . • ' l \ ' . • \ • DARY PILOT EDITORIAL ~A.GE Federal Highhandedness Prot.su to President Nixon against authorWng Aeroo1ves de Mexico to use Orange County Airport for daily filgbu to and from Tijuana have been registered by the Board of Supervisors, the Airport Commission. the cities or Newport Beach and Tustin, and state Sen·· ator Dennis Carpenter. , Adding to these efforts lttst week was a letter from 5th District Supervisor Ronald Caspers to Jorge Perez: y Bouras, director general of the Mexican airline. He pointed out that Aeronaves would be up against the same problem that bas blocked Continental Airlines and Pacific Southwest Airlines from using the county airport for Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB)-authorized lligbls- lack of space. mlnlstrator of Ille county's draft boards. however. She feels il will-be helpful In a difficult situation. The SSS inspector said only one out of every four Orange County youllis cilled In the draft showed up for JnduCtion. This compares to a national rate of one failing to submit to induction for every two called. J~gures com· piled in Sacramento,1 however, indicate a ~970 Orange Co1mty rate closer to.one inductee for 'every three called.) Despite this no-show rat.e, the Co unty's draft boards have a reputation for toughness among students and dra!· tees. While in any draft anywhere some draftees won'·t s~ow up ~cause of illness or accidents, the reported high rate in Orange County and the state indicates much more is involved. ' i C!spers infortned Perez y Bouras that any sublease of Hughes Air West terminal space would require super· visors' approval. He referred also to the "severe environ· mental conflict" and said he wanted Aeronaves to be aware of the problems before spending time and money on the assumptioo that approval would be forthcoming. It remains incredible that the CAB would grant its permission for the flights without notifying the county or other airlines, or holding public hearings. That pro- cedure should be remedied. ''Slacker" used to be an epithet comparable to "coward.11 Jack DempseY-was cursed with it after World _War I for. having worked in a shipyard instead of join· 1ng the armed forces. Later, when the universal draft was adopted for \Vorld War U, war-essential civilian jobs were made · . grounds for deferral. The old 11slacker" became a "draft d,odger" and to be one was to court lifelong disgrace along with a term in prison. The great and growing unpopularity of the war in lndochipa has changed the public attitude to a marked degree. While draft dodgers who flee abroad are still su~ jects or. opprobriu~ gene~alJy, public tolerance is great- er than it has been ID previous conflicts. i I County Draft Dodging Draft dodging is high enough in California to pre>- voke a Selective Service System inspector to state that enforcement of the draft laws here presents problems more acute than anywhere else.in the country. Orange County is a front-runner in the inductee no-show category, according to the Selective Service. As a Tesult, its three draft boards, along with several others , in California, are being investigated by the inspector from Washington. The probe is welcomed by Mrs. Stella Crawley, ad· In t~e case of Orange County's draftee no·sho\vs, the SSS inspector speaks of the high rate compared to naGon~ figures without giving any specifics as to causes. Could it be because the county has a higher proportion of students in the population than elsewhere? Or sharp- er lawyers able to beat the system? · The .s~ven-man inspection team owes It to Orange Count~ c1t1Zens· to ~pell out the exact nature of the prob- lem without resortmg to vague generalities and uneval· uated statistics. Respecting The Child~s Dear Gloomy ' Gus: Locale of Dista1at Thunder Is Heartland Uniqueness Once when our daughter was about three years old, she found the bath loo bot and said, "Make it warmer.'" It took me a moment to figure out what she meant:· "Bring the water more nearly to the condition we call warm," It makes perfectly good sense if you look at it that way. Confronted with unusual formulations such aa those which children often make some adults react with incredible lack of imagination. Often children are laugh- ed at or scolded for "saying silly \bin&S,'' when it only re- quires think · .. lng about them a second time to see" that they are not 1Uly at all. In psychological Uterature you can read a lot about how necessary it is to bave respect for each individual child and how it must be respected and nurtured. NOW, RESPECT for the child is paid lip-service in all democratic societies; that is, respect for every hwnan iJl. dividual, including children. Like all uplifting generalizations, "respect for the individual child" is easy to say and sounds good at teachers' institutes. But it represenls real difficulties in practice betause everyone believes he already respects the individual child -in the same way that e\oeryone believes in "jusUce" and that therefore his own actions are just. If we fail, then, to show sufficient respect for the individual child, that failure is almost always un- conscious. We do not, indeed we cannot, ·know in what ways we are failing, because at the level of awareness, we all believe we are doing fine. This is where a discipline like gema.n- tics can help us -general semantics as eiplained by Stuart Chase in "Power of Words·' or by Wendell Jobroon in "People in Quandaries : The Semantics of Personal Adjustment" Gener a 1 .emantica teaches us to expect and look for the unitjue differences in every ob- ject, event or person, so that we ahall be rtady to undentand not only the uniqueness of each child -not to expect this child to be like any other -but, on the other hand, not to hive a faint Quotes J. ff. Lee, Berkeley -"We should .u ..,m with wonder the Army and Air Force volunteers' attempt to rescue our war prisoners in North Vietnam, and be thankful to them for their Wl.11· 1-lo Ille, such rbks for the -of their bucldlos." 1'" i.cocca1 prttldut, Ford Motor Co. -No dollar vahat an be put on human U... and aull<rinJ. BUI there's nothing """" wfth IJ1i111 lo pul the dollan -. Ibey will do the moat good. £ftr1 addltlorlal f100 lacked onlo the prb of 1 car for new vthkle safety fealam amoanll lo a plll>ll< inVfflmenl o1 -..S a bllllM dollan a year. 'J'bere are a lot of ways to spend a billloo doUan for hJ8hway safely. I thmt lbere is 1 relJ question whclhtr an lddlllOnal public lnv..tment In mon: Ytlllde aalety will offer bet~ returns, In ..... lyea and sulfertng, than an equ1l iq•ellment in ailUng down on drunk drMllC· I Why don't tab1e radios have push buttons like car radios? Sure would make it easier to find your favorite stations. -Mbs K. L. hi• ... hi,. rtlllcts ,........ •llWI. ""' _,.111Y tll9M et "'' ......,.... s.... """ Nf -¥t M OlltmJ 011e. Dllrr Pfllt. dislike for other people's children because they are not like one 's own. THERE'S NO NEED to dwell on this point, but notice what ~e 1ctuall1 do., You m1y say to ygur child, "Why ~n't you stick to your piano practice? Shirley practices two houri a day ," But your child is not Shirlf'Y. "It's high tlme Wilbur began to realize • . . •• But your child is a pricular individual, not a statistical generalization. So when you constantly place your child In judg~ ment against other cttlldren or against a statistical generJ].lzatlon, in a very important sense ydu are not respecting the uniqueness of your child. A more subtle reason for failure to respect a child is what Alfred Korzybski, the founder of general semantics, called the "map-territory confusion.'' We have a certain conception of the child inside our beads. That's the ;·map." Out in the world is the child himself, the ''ler· ritory." Now if we are given to map-terrilory confusion we may well confuse our con- ception of the child with the child bimseU. and therefore have unrealistic expectatiODS or unfounded anxieties about him. Respect for the child, then, means not only. keeping in touch with the child, but open-mindedly in touch with him, so that we can keep our conceptions changing from month to month as the child changes. BUT WHAT HAPPENS becauseoof our language habits ts that we sabotage ourselves in this task. Somewhere along the line we freeze our perceptions into conceptions. We say, "John is the musical one," "Eddie Is so high·slrunk," "Naomi is hopelessly shy," and ''Isn't it a shame about Janet's hair?" Then we are likely to react no longer to John and Eddie and Naomi and Janet as they actually are, but to what we have said about them. Furthennore, some parents say such things, Including extremely uncomplimentary th I n a: s , within earshot of the children themselves, thereby helping to fix, for better or worse -and often for worse -the child's self«>ncept. The individual trained In semantlC'I -as -.i.·ell as many other people gifted with a full share of common Rnse -learns to be careful about this kind""' of labeling behavior. I think It is legitimate for parents, be t w e e n themselves, to discuss their children's talents and shortcomings . 11BAS FRANK GOT any artistic talent" "Well, I'm afraid 'not." But you donl have to say t.hl! ln lront of Frank! Just flS you art c1reful about labeling the children, you should be c1reful about labeling all sorts of other people too. You htar p1rentl saying things like, "Don't play with the Jones ldds. 'They're not our kind of people." tf you are Negro, how do you talk about whftts? If you llJ'e white. how do you talk about Negroes? In talking about national and elhnlc grou ps other than one 's own, many people are casual and thou"1'1!lcss in their use of di8respect.ful tenns. Then UM!y wonder why their chUdrtn grow up prejudiced. By S. J, Jlayaknw1 \ 1're11\dtnt !IJI Fr1ocl1co'Slale College - • Nixon's Political Base Is Eroding W ASIDNGTON -In politics' the voice of doom sometimes goes unheard. Thomas E. Dewey did not hear it 23 years ago as his compaign train wended through the heartland of the nation. A few accompanying reporters heard It fainUy, paid no attention and fore- cast that Dewey would defeat Presi· dent Truman. Again i.n 1967, only four years ago. the distant voice of dis- aster made itself heard when a mid- we I t Democratic governor, insisting on anooymlty, utter· ed then heretical criticism of Lyndon B. Johnson's .style, TV peraoaality, and credibility. Once again the locale of the distant thunder ts the heartland, so-called, and more speciUcally the agricultural-In- dustrial state of Iowa. Iowans have a conceit. They think they are typica l of America as a whole, half urban, half rural and wholly romrnonsensical. They fancy themse lves to be the cut across the center of the pie which reveals its contents. IOWANS WOULD BE willing to share this distinction with some people in Min- nesota, Illinois, Indiana and Ohio but l ........ -·--\...,. _ _.,..J._,,,_ ..... ;..;·,- . ' ' ' with few others, and particularly not with residents of the east or wesl coasts. In short. lhe Iowan thinks he is the American common denominalDr. Maybe he is in politics. The first ramblings of Dewey's oncoming defeat were heard in Iowa and Minnesota. The anonymous Democratic governor, who heralded LBJ's demise. was Harold E. Hughes. now a United States senator lrom Iowa, whose transparent iil- discretion of 1967 caused a flutter in the Johnson White House. Hughes went on to place in nomination Sen. Eugene McCarthy for president and is now testing the appeal of his own brand of political evangelism in the na- tional electoral atmosphere of 1971. Iowa is, or was, Nixon territory. l~e carried the state comfortably in both 1960 ·and 1968. The loss of Iowa, or any other state, now could lead to catastrophe in 1972, but particularly the loss of Iowa would carry with it symbolic . overtones Nixon Would not wish to hear ON NIXoN·s RECEl'o'T visit to the state's capital, Des Moines, he was greelcd on the state house grounds by hostile demonstralors whose efforts he called "amateurish" but who, so far as pr esidents are concerned, were unusual Jn Jowa. HetberL HQOver, on his way down ·in 1932, was greeted more politely. Some of the demonstrators were anti- war and il should not be supposed that the war is an y more popular in Iowa than elsewhere. Others were "hard haf' construction workers now angered by Nixon's wage policies, students, and finally, farmers fnim Iowa and nearby states who are dissatisfied, as they were when Dewey was dear to their com- plaiats. with Republican farm policies. Fanners are not so numerous as they once were, but numeroUs enotigb in Iowa tO count. They count enough so that. an in- contestably Republican establishment ' publica tion called "The Green Sheet" of the Lincoln Club and edited by a Robert A. Taft Republican, John M. Henry. treated Nixon'•s visit coolly . Two mid-1920s cartoons of the late and famous Iowa cartoonist J. N. (Ding) Darling were repr inted as pertinent to the present si tu ation. Both showed the · embattled agricultural west threatening the G.O.P .. with dire consequences on the farm r issue. l.ocAL PRESS REPORTS described Nixon's visit as a "ho.huip." affair largelY, for show and even "The Green Sheet" noted that Nixon and his accompanying cabinet members "touched the public personally but little while here." Some of the demonstrators (A few of whom hurled snowballs suspected of ron ta ining rocks) imagined · that there might be l;uilding a community of i~ terest. at lf!ast so f,ar a.s Nixon is con- cetned. bet~·een such d i s p a r a t e eltments as long·haired students, barcf. hat construction w'orkers, and horny handed farmers. That will be the day. In any case the visit of Nixon 1nd his cabinet members lo Iowa was not °'-resounding political success. This con- Ceivsbly may renect a . 30mewhat .dif· ferent national attitude than prevailed -.i.ilen Nixon was received a year earlier, and prior to last fall 's e1ecuon campaign, in various parts o! the country. The problematical part of it Is that · if Nixon is not enthusiastically received j in a stale he twice carried and where tie lived for seven months during World War II how will he fare in more hostile areas? Setting aside the more controversial issues of war and welfare, there are local issues, such as the farm issue in lowa. eroding Nixon's political base which at best was a very" narrow one in 1968. 'Why Did They Marry Each Other?'· Thoughts at Large: The most foolish and unanswerabl e question I can imagine is: "Why did they marry each other?'' for th e reasons are customarily so tangled and con- tradictory that recomposing the motiva- tions is as futile as trying to unspread butler. • • • One way to reconcile the apparent connict between our "individuality" and our ''commonality" J s to imagine a circle of infinite cir- cumference, w i t h each person stand- ing on one point of it; so that while each of us bas bis own individual ra- dius, each radius extends to a common center. • • • Just imagine how many dozens or things not invented yet will be appliances our grandchildren 'von't be able lo do without. • • • A great many people feel "guilty'' about things they shouldn't feel guilty about, in order to shut oul feelings of guilt about the things they should feel guilty about. • • • What many pollticians still oon ·t seem to understand is that the man wllo ~--B11 George --- Dear George: When I take my girl home i;he will never say goodnight to me until she has first kldttd the screen door. Should I complain? TED Dear Ted : Depends. ls she locking you in lhe l'louse or out of lhe house~ fWhy should you suffer worrte~ in sllence? Write to George and worry everybody.) throws the most mud loses the most ground. • • • ln a democracy like ours. the majority rules everywhere, except in Congress. • • • "Civilization at the crossroads'' is such an outmoded phrase; sintt l hos e frustrating cloverleafs have been devi~· ed : it's now not a quesUon of which )'°ad we take. but of where and how to get off before it's too late. • • • Conferences are often jeered at as e waste of time, but their negative virtue was understood by S c o t t Fitzgerald, when he pointed out: ''No grand idea was ever born in a cptr ference, but a lot of foolish ideas have died there." ; • • • Afler the novelty "'ears off, opposites retract. • • • One man's ''ambrOsia" is anot~er man ·s "ragweed." (If you don'l believe it, look it up.) • • • If every aspirant for public ()[fice were compelled to spend one week in prison before being allowed on the ballot. the ftrst item on every legislative agenda would be for radical prison reform. (And maybe that's the only way it will come.) • • • A "primitive" country is one in which Unions' Abuse of Power At lhe moment, soaring wa ges have passed the point ()f '·keeping up'' with innation. In so me areas. they have become an inUationary force of their own. Fred H. Sexauer, an expert in the field or marketing cooperatives and a long.time observer of the business iicene, suggesls that the monopolistic powers of labor unions should be brought under control just as were the mono)»- Jistic abuses of large indus try 50 or 60 years ago. l\fR. SEXAUER points out that ex.- cessive wage demands are not in the "public Interest". They renect the ex- erc!Je of rights and pri vileges granted to labor unions by the public, and he btlieves IL ls now time that these rights and privileges should be subjected to the same c:ontrols, i.e. Rnlitrust laws, that apply to buslnei;s. Comn1ent.s ~1r. Sexauer. "To the uttnt that labor unions t'xercise thtlr 1rlghl! and prlvilrgcs' ttheir monopolistic powers) In making excessive demands, • Guest EditoriaJ '.) ~ . -these power' should, at that point. be restrained just ai1 corporate monopolistic powers were reslrained under similar circumstances . . . . a n y restraining legislation or legislative program should preserve the Institution of unions just as the instit ution or corporations was preserved under anlitrust and regulatory ltglslation." NO GROUP IN the country should have the power to disrupt with impunity essential servlctS or cripple basic ln-- dustries. '111e!t are the kinds of ~buses that have come as a result of the unrestrained use of~monopotlstlc powers. ExctSslve wage demand! should be treated 11111 a problem of monopoly - not of infiallon. lndurtrlal1 News Review the natives have no need for locks on the doors. • • • What conserv,a.tive religionists stilt do not recognize was expressed by the great philosopher, Whitehead, wany decade~ ago. when he said: "Rel igion will not regain its old power until it can face damage in the same spirit as does science.'' • • • Our penological system is simply an org:inized stupidity of pretending to reform or improve a man by putting him for a long period In the sole company of a thousand other men in desperale need of the same thing, and under the supervision of men as ignorant as themselves. • • • Many a man has flagged t himself into ··heroism" by the terrible ftar that hr: otherw ise might be thought a coward. • • • The same tiresome names keep popping up in news about the international jet·set; which con(inns Chesterton1s comment many years ago: "The globetrotter lives in 1 smaller world than the pe.a$1llll." ) ---i-- Monday, March 15, 1971 The editorial pagt of llu1 Dt1il11 Pilot sttks to inforni and sli.,. ulatt readers by presenting thil newspaper's opinions and com· mcntaru · on topics OJ fnttrest and fign.ificance, by providing G forum for the tzprt.!rion of our rtodt.rs' opinfons, and by p-rl.'Settling the diverse view- points of ht/onntd obstrvtn and !f<>ktsme.n on topics of ii~ c1ov. Robert N. Weed , Publisher • ' • • • • Big Tax Revision Last Tate QUEENIE • Measure Proposed SACllAMENl'O (UPI) - °'4trman Joe-Gonsa.Jve1 ot the · Asaembly Revenue aod Taxation Committee • a I d homeowners are "really a:olng to know" that their eroperty taxes will drop If a pianned '2 billion ta1: revision proposal Is pas!<d. Gonsalves (~La Mirada), ' said Sunday he hopes for Gov. Ronald Reagan 's support of the pl1n which probably will be Introduced Thursday: ' The 12 billion prollOflll Is twice as large a1 the SJ bUlion re•l1lon plan Reagan sponsored and lost last ::1ear. Assembly Speaker Bob Moret- ti (D-Van Nuy1) earlier had said t~ new plan would be at least fl.$ billion. "l don't know if t be Registering Of Youths 'Mandatory' Homosexual, Death Bill Gains Seen SACRAMENTO (AP) Backers of legislation to abol- ish tile death penalty In Calif· ornia and to repeal Jaws against homosexuals expect to win committee votes send- ing both measures to the As- 'embly noor this week. The death penally bill has not reached the floor or either house of the leg islature for a decade. The homosexual bill has never won even the first of four favorable committee and fl oor votes needed to send ft to the governor. But the two bills go before the Assembly Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, a key policy co mmittee the Assembly's new Democratic leadership expanded thi s year to give liberals a voting ma- jority. Assemblyman Alan Sieroty, author of the death penalty repeal , is one of the new members of the nine-member committee. He says he has at least four other votes need- : ed to send his bill to the Assembly floor. ~emblyman Willie Brown Js counting on the same votes for his bill wiping out laws da1ing back to the 18tK>s flgainst adultery. !Odomy and other "unnatural sex acts" between men and women and persons of ~ same sex. 2nd Crash ·Kills Woman BAKERSFmk (UPI) -A woman directing tr a r f I c around an accident she was involved In was struck and killed Sunday by another car which then plowed Into th e wreckage Injuring 12 ptrsons. The aulO of Mrs. Ka y G<Js.oel. 34. had coUided with 1 <:ar driven by Ruth Cooper, 30, in an intersection of Union Avenue, old highway 911, five -miles south of here. A car driven by B. M. • Order a room full of sunshine and save30% .• &I• Rog. -Twin $59 41.30 Full $69 41.3G . a-n $79 55.30 Klag $79 Sl.30 llillcNntl~---- It's Penneys very special decorator conection of sun·splashed bedroom coordinates. Lux· urious Trevira• polyester, Imported from Ger· many, 112 inchn wtdeto make your bedspread in one btautlful ptece-no seams, no design interruption, even In a dual king! Spreads quilled to Kod11• polyester fiberfill, nylon backed, with reverse shams and decorator edges. Practlcal, too-these elegant spreads are completely washable. Match them up with custom made draperies for the aunn l•I room in town. In tolidl end 7 prlnta-28colorcom-- blnatlona In all. Call collect: (714) ~1 for our Shop at Home Service, free. -. l\nnelfl Decorate now. ne Penn•J• Tim• P1yment Plan. . . By Phil lnlerlandi Prison L()Ckup Relaxed flondiy, M11rtl'I 15, }q71 DAJLY PILOT 7 Tough Pollution Crackdown Vowed Our color TV sale. If your talent is saving, come in for a screen test Save 30.95 Sale$419 Rtg.C4t.95.Pwt1ic1e.t• "ContwrftRomY"atyle COMO!• color TV with 23" .tcrHn rneuvred dilgOn.lllJ. Features swivel base cabinet. built-in automatk; color purifier, ... Quick.Pie .. for instant picture. Walnut finfsh on hardbOard. Save 60.95 Sale$499 Aeg. 559. 95. Pennerest • console color TV 'Wilh 25" scrHn meaaured diagonally. Look at these three great features : 25 inch screen measured diagonally (it's the largesl made!) ••• Chromabrite piclure tube (our brlghtest,yet!) ••• Modularchassis(snap-Va snap-out circuit bo~d for easy seNicing). Plus aDnatic fine tunlng, atttoaaticc::dOI purifier ••• much more!Choote "Conlesnporarf', "'Meditenanean" or-i:arty Arnodcan"styleeablnet. .. 3 ,_ picture babe guarantee. Penneys proyides home &ervice on any Penncrest • TV (in-store service on portable TV) for defects in materials or workmtnship ap. pearing within 90 days of purchase. W& replace your picture lube (u~ing a rebuilt picture tube} if defecfive within.3 years on cotor lV. We provide.replacement tor""" part If defective·within '1 year .. ~bot ls extra' after 00 days; Contact Penneys for au thorized service uiider the guarantee. Save 30.95 Sale$419 Reg.44US.Pmi'Ollt9~ style conlOf• colOf' 1V wtlh 23" tcrHR me11Urectd~.Swivel base cabinet, aulomalic fine tuning, built .fn automatic color purifier, "Quick-Ac .. for instant picture. Pecan Veneet" o,, hard board. Sile prlc• eftective through Seturdly. ' Value. It still means something at Penneys. l\nney1 Aveil•ble •f these stcre1: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Center HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Be•ch, Use Penntys Time P•yment Pl•n Taylor. 38. crashed Into the wrtckRJt. 1dlllng Mrs. Cetssel and Injuring 12 persons In· eluding T11ylor. his wirt, Joyce, and their four children.I--------------------------------·:.,.-----------------------------------~------' \ DAILY ,ILOT MonC1•1, Mlf'th 15, lt11 CH~CKING •UP• Why Women Have The Be st Teeth By L. M. BOYD Excellent nollOJ'I. CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q. • Uniforms for Women Workers Gain in V.S. LOS ANGELES (APl -ldea flopped. A Soulhe:rn everybody. Some of oor girls and the pn¥em ·of .ijtlirig vide one woman w1'ttll~t~ Despite women's llber1Uon Callfomla banker report 1, a~ fat. others are thin, and several I b ou 11 n d em· cf unUorm9 thtt and the dau:llna va riety of "We couldn't flnd an outfit a few are six :nonthJ along. ployes., ." lo 18 months. And that'• J;u"' clothes today, more and more li~l~h~1l~~l~oo~k~ed~~g~o~o~di;;;;;'~'i;;;~T~he~nii;iyo~u~th~i~nk~o~f ~the~~co~sl~, -~J~t ~co~s~I~• ~1~boo~tiil200iiiii;;ilo~p~r"i;;;~th~ei;;;1~ta~rjjl.~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliij whilf!.collar woroen are show· ing up for work in unlform1. · The word In the business world though, ls "carter ap- parel." Avoid the connolat.lon of regimentation, you.know .... But as a young bank teller says, "There's no use using fancy names to avoid callin1 these things t.11iforms, because that's exactly what they are." ALL THE SPAGHETTI~~~ EAi WI TH .l:>UR DEL ICIOUS GENOA MEAT SAUCE AND GEN EROUS AMOUNTS OF FRESHL,Y GROUND BEEF I MERCEDES-BENZ ~ mak· iJt1·1arb•ge trucks? Unlikely, most unllkt.ly. But true .•.• "Ctn a wbale jump all the illllim•llilll•lli•llill way oot cf lht watu?" A. Around the country, at First Pennsylvania Bank, American Telephone & Telegraph, Beverly Hills Savings and Loan, at insurance companie1 and department 1 t o r e s uniforms are in. TUES. 16th WED . 17th THURS. 18th MAR. WE SERVE LOW CALO RI E SPAGHETTI SPECIAL ... LET'S GET ACQUAINTED OFFER WaV IT"S HARDER for the Japanese to learn English than for the Chine~ to do 80 1 can't eiplain, but such is r:eporttd to be the ca5fl Ctn do. In fact , a livel y----------- .. , . ONE WOMAN in four gel! gallstones. One man in JO doe.s likewise. Isn 't fair, l.s it? DO YOU REALiZE there att 111.000 catfish farmers? Long been thinking personally of running a trout farm upon reUrtment. As maybe I've menUoned once . Or twice. Or thrice. But these caUlsh: farmers are getting S,000 pounds of fish to the acre. That's $20 milUon worth of catfish a year. Just talked lo o'nt such farmer . "Lik.e the marrl~ man, with the girl downtown.'' he sakl. "trout are fun , but the catlish get! the dinner on the table every day." Something to that. THAT COMMON BELIEF that Delilah personally cut off Samson's hair is wrong. What Delilah did merely was get the old boy to go to sleep. For 1,100 pi~s or silver. It was the Ph ilistines' men who handled the actual hair-cul· ting. A subscriber who has looke~ into the matter want.s that made clear. specimen could cl.ear a boat JO feet high. ~amen h11ve seen tha.t . . . • Q. "Why is it women.' in general tend to have mucb better teeth than men ?" A. Women are more inclined to go lo their dentists regularly, that's all. More women than men eventually lose their teeth. however. But that's just because women ~SIJ:8IIY• li"te longe'r. YOUNG JEWS • by I h • t.hOusands · ·are . 'ieavinf the United Stat.es to go to l!J'ael. You don't hear much about it, but the movemen t's massive. Their average age, 34. Their work, skilled mostly. Jt's not the antisemitism herl':, whatever it 11mounls to. tha t's not what's sending them. It's tht':, crime, drugs in schools, ri9ts, gbetto •dirt, so on, they .. ,. AND IN THE ANIMAL world: Not everybody realiJes most all monkeys 1 r e nearsighted. Thi!: bug men say spiders grow about 1 million to the 1crt, uncultivated. Female frogs don't croak, it should bl': noted. Among Alaskan seals, it's the female, not the male, that goes wandering all over the Pacific. And a lion in the wilds daily eats about 15 pounds of exceedingly fresh meat. OPEN QUESTION: Have the cosmetics boys yet come up w:ith waterproof eyelashes that won't turn loose off the Springtime Recreation Classes Set Springtime aclivities such as , crafUi, classes and athletic programs will begin soon soon under ·Costa Mesa Recreation Department sponsorship. Registration and collectio'1 of fee"s for some is sc heduled Thursday, March 2~ from 6 to 8 p.m. and the next two days from 9 a.m. lo I p.m. at City Hall offices. Designed for all ages. lhe offering includes stitchery, decorative knot-tying. guitar instruClion, yoga and medita· tion, 'plus health and beauty courses. Beginning. intermediate and advanced courses are offered. mostly at the communit)r Recreation Center on the Orange County Fairgroonds. Ranging from ~$7.50 to $20. enrollment fees include most, materials and equipment re-- quired, according to Recrea· lion Director Ke ith Van Holt • Additional information on times. dates and types of ac· tivity may be obtained by call· ing or v i s i t i n g the department's tourth floor City Hall offices. '·J'11 tell you why if you won 't use my name," said 11. financial executive. "It all boils down to the way people look on the job. I went around to all of our of!ices a few years ago and I etiuldn't believe what I saw." Clerks "were dressed in everything from*' housedresses to cocktail fintry with low necklines that showed lhe whole works. It was in- credible." When he offered the employes uniforms the re- jection was nearly, well , uniform. But when a few wore them "pretty soon I sta rted getting petitions demanding uniforms fo r everybody ." Uniform makers say their products inflate employcs' sense of slatus, build company solidarity and esprit de corps and present a favorable image to the public. A young teller here reports, "I would say that 98 percent of lhe girls like our uniforms." Bul the reason isn't spirit. "It's a big saving. We don't have to waste money on clothes for work." The drawba'ck: "Here we are in a suit with a black velvet collar. Nobody is \\'ear· ing suits right now ... That's only one ensemble that I don•t mind being seen on the st.reel in." Some companies say lhe .. I CAN ALWAYS spol a restaurant owner in my place. no matter how big tbe group he's with.'' reports ruie of tiame. "It's the man who tut· reptitlcusly turns his plate over to read tbe mark on the back .'' A SHORTAGE OF electricity and -an overabundance of garbage. that's what was wrong with the city of Milan in Italy. But it fiied that. Set up a oower plant rigged to run on burned garbage. lady's lids in her shower? ,--------------------- Yo ur q~stiotll and com· ml':t1ts art welcomtd and will be W'td in CHECKING UP whertvtr pos.ribll':. Ad· drl':!! ~tttrs to L. M. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, Ntwport Btach, Calif., 92660. Chemical Officials Cancel Sea Dumping WASHI NGTON (AP) -A Pennsylvania chemical com- pany has canceJed the planned octan dumping or waste arsenic compounds at the re- quest of the federal govern- ment . seven years. But the environmental pro- tection administrator, William D. Ruckelsbaus, asked the company to suspend the dum- ping arrangements and seek alternative methods of disposal. Whitmoyer Laboratories of Myerstown, Pa .. a subsidiary of Rohm and Hau Co.. had planned to dump the materials about 150 miles at sea. as has been done for the past Gregory said in a telephone interview the company would be willing to etintinu,e the suspe11sion, ii necessary, ''for any normal period ." • Beauty Bulletin from Penneys: Think 1pring. It'• time for our fro1tlng 1pecial. Come in Monday, Tuesday, or Wednead•Y and a complete f11hion frosting will cost you only 1288 t\nne'I• -- ..... ,. 9e.Aal _ ..... ""' ....... -"" oi-..t..,....~~ idUI OIT 9SM:ll ·--... ,....., ..... ,,,, .. ' ,. f. •, 5 ' • ' ~ --One Large BxlO and Six Lovely Wallet-Size Portraits of .Your · Child 5aa Hurry ln riow for the most spectacular portrait event In town! You 'll get a big, beautiful 8x10 for yoU and six charmin.O wallet·slze for family and friends. A fine portrait of your child Is always a warm and wanted gift Remember ••• you can charge It at Penneys! Lne11• ilUl,l.llTON O••nttlAlr (lfl"' ,... 111111•, 111.l.kl HUHT!NOT'ON 1£ACH WY"'l"'O!Orl (tnte• fNI llOOt, tfl·1''71 o ...... ''T~• (fly# 6Jt·Jtf1 ' HllWl"OltT II.ACM FA1lilM lsll""' JJld froor. "''-Ull ADULTS 95¢ CHILDREN 55¢ UNDll 12 PLU.SE · nlfiony4 SPAGHETTI HOUSE •• :~:;·, .•. MODll N All CONDITIONID, 210 SIAT JIAMILY IESTAUIANT LOCATID AT ,,. HARBOR BLVO. AT McFAODEN SANTA ANA •• , 839·2281 Acr"I ~•I'll Horbor Orlw .. h1 TlleoNr Cl...t Mo11d.y Air conditioners now? Yes, if you want to save 10%! No payments 'til June. Sele prices effective through Saturday onlyl Sale 161 95 Reg. 179.95. Penncre1I® Cuatom 8,000 BTU air conditioner. 2 speed fan and cool ing, 10 position thermostat control, ad justable horizontal and vertical louvers. Qu ick mount kit included. "' • Sale 323 95 Reg. 359.95. Penncreatia Custom 28,000 BTU air oondltlontr. 2 speed fan and cooling, permanent Scott foam filter, adjustable air directors, 10 position thermostat control, sl ide·out chassis. Sale 11245 Reg. 124.15. Penncmt., ~ 5,000 BTU air condlUOner. 2 apeed fan and cooling, 10 pcsltion thermostat control, adjustable horizontal louvers. Ou iek mount kit Included. Sale 206 95 Reg. 229.115. Penncrnt• ~m 11,500 ITU •Ir conditioner. 2 1peed fan and cooling, adjustable thermoetat. tilt-out filter, adjustable ai r dlrec1ors, slide-out chassis. Penncr11t~ 11,000 BTU 1lr condltlon1 r. Reg. 299.15 NOW hie 242.15 Value. It still means sometOing at Penneys . J\nne111 Av1il1blo el lheso slores: FASH ION ISLAND, Newport Confer, HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington 811ch. Buy it on Pennoys time p•ymonl plen. .. .. I -- Suspicion On Viet Wal'Gl'ows ........ Mitaoritu Problems La1·ge Families, Marriages Wl1ile Young Hurt Chances WASHINGTON (UPI). - Tbe credibility of ofDclal U.S. 3tattmenl.!I on Its policies and DAVIS'(UPI) -Ea_rly mar· la,ining the requisite skills for · suggested Instead a policy progress in Vietnam once riages and large families arc upY:ard mobility ," he stated. directed at the "lov.•er class" again is coming under ~avy hurting the chances of The scientists suggested that in general. attack. California's minorities to ad· "social policy" encouraging He said tha t Recent polls showing that vance in society. a population "more llmited reproduction. sp--ikesmen for ti.1 ex i ca n - about seven out of l 0 researcher re P 0 rt e d \Ved· greater (amily stability, or Americans and blacks demand Americans doubt the "[ Gt.IESS GOO CAW•f KEEP UP 1~ ncsday. delays in age at marriage both "economic elevation" and ando he ·t 1'~E "mtf~MA(!IJ6 OEPARTM€N f! \Vh'I · ·t k govemment_'s c r \V n 1 1 e m1nor1 Y spo esmen and childbearing could pro· the right to continue "unique talks about Southeast Asia bl ame society at large for duce beneficial l'hanges for patterns of behavior," they have highlighted a problem -----·-----their plight. '·demographic disndva ntagcd minorities in ultimately must choose be- that bas plagued, three behavior characteristic of Califo rnia." t1veen making changes "that Presidents and helped bring y S • many members of these Noting ii V.'as •·w11ikel)'' will bring greater economic about the early retirement of oga e1•1es groups virtuaUy ensures a that a policy "directed tO\\'ard prosperity" and continuing one. high degree of failure," said specific minority groups would present patterns "with their Not lost on the \Vhite House d J d sOciologist Peter Uhlenberg. be politically acceptable" he attendant disadvantages." Is the fact that the survey. Sche ll e Uhlenberg, an assistanl pro-l--"------'....-,-.-.. -~-... -•• -~-,-,---------1 conducted by the respected fcssor at the University of Gallup organization, shows a A new mies or cicllt No'1h Carnlina, Chapel Hill, Art1"f 1"c1"al lieeth Never greater crisis of confidence courses in the ancient, life· delivered exerpts from a doc· no w than in February, 1967, enriching discipline of yoga toral dissertation he prepared mid·way thrnugh President will be oH.,ed Harbor Area at the Univ.,sity or California F' elt So Natural Before Johnson's first full term in residents by an internationally at Berkeley. office. knO\\'n instructor. The paper focusing on Mex· Several things have con· Lajpatrai Sharma. of Long ican·Americans was presented Now ••• Plastic ~ream Discovery tributed to it: Beach. will begin the eight· at a symposium on population Revolutlonlzes Denture Wearlnc -The decision to use ex· '"eek sessi'on •ta,ch t7 ,·n the problems conducted by the ·' ,, ,. " 1' For tl1e first time. tcienc:c olfen I , .. '"' INlltt r811'Jtn/Q ,y. ou ma1 tensive American airpowe r Unitarian-Universalisl Church, State Assembly Science and p!a~tic (re.am t)lat ti olda denturn bite hartltr, die"' bcucr, e;;t mor• and helicopter support in 1,,9 vo·cto,o·a St., Costa 'fesa. Technology Advisory Council. "'they've n~ver bttn held before-n3tur.111r. · •-• ha · · .w l> funn11 an elm;tic membranr that i.,/p$ Fl'\001:\)..'T las ls for houfs. Re o1st1 Camuuuia after Vang given Lessons begin at 5:4.5 p.m., '·f'or a group with most hold your lltll!H•u 1o 1h1 H~tur•llu· mo1siun:. Dentures 11!ott lit are ts· the impression such bombin g and in c:ise of heav.v e11roll· or 1·1s families t'n the lower ""·' 6/ you• "11111r•. l>(·n11~1 to hcaltl!. See your denli~t 'd Id be · 'di I' 'ted It's " re,·01ul1onary d 1,;rovcry rcrularl~·. Gtt e;111y·to-1,L~ l•1xow;,.;T ra1 s v.·ou r igi Y IIDJ · ment the sessions \Vi\J be split class, a pattern of large fami· <a.lled 110.ol:lf.r.:T• for daily tiome Denture Adtic~ive C ream 1 t 111 -Use of such misleading ;is Yogi Sharn1a did lasl time Jy size effectively precludes "~· (U.S. Pacent t-J.003.!l&li drua; countt.ri. terms as "protective reaction _':::'·h~e"1n~5-0'.'.!'pe:''~'O)lon~s~t~"''.'."':'d~ou~t:_. _ _tJth~e~~··~·~t_1g:e~ner~at~iQ~n~fr~om~~ob-~=="::":;·00:::':::"'::::=h:::~:::''::':::'::°'::'=1t=•"""'='===========I strikes" to describe bombin g\. raids against supply buildups in North Vietnam and • ' u n armed reconnaissance flights'' to mean flights by inlelllgence-gathering planes escorted by coveys of fighter· bombers. -The display of a pipe seg· 1 me.nt by Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird and one of 1 his top aides at a Pentagon briefing which gave the in· 1 correct impression that it w~s 1 from the North Vietnamese 1 pipeline ruptured during thel current Laotian operations. -The central conflict of 1 trying to convince Hanoi it' cannot gain by waiting while I at the same time respondin g! to dbmestic pressur,: for an American pull.out. I In fairness to !lie Nixon Administration, it should be pointed out that it inh~r~ted a vast reservoir of skepticism about the war. The history of the conflict is one of false hopes and optimi s ti c assessments substantiated by questionable statistics. And of (OUrse, President Nixon ' cannot be entirely can· did about "'hat course he in- tends to pursue in Southeast Asia because to do so would be to close certain options and to give the enemy ao invaluable advantage. Not all the fa ult lies with the government. Journalistic shorthand in which "winding down U.S. involvement in the \\'ar'' becomes "winding down the l''at" has helped fuel some of the misconceptions. Recognition of this widening credibility gap is one of the reasons President Nixon held i1 news conference last week u!'fusually close on the heels rf a similar session just two \veeks earlier. Aides say he plans to continue holding news conferences more frequently than during his first two years in office when the average \\"as about one every two ntonths. A compelling urge t o famil iarize Americans with the enormous subtleties of foreig n policy p r o b I e m s underlay t he President's decision to publish an an nual foreign policy review. This vear the document amounted io one of the f r ankest discussions yet of the pro- blems the country f a c e s abroad. Although the \Vhite House ls concerned about this latest trend. !op-level Presidential aides take a philosophic view. t hey concede occasional ef- forts have been made to soften the reaction to unpopular decisions. but insist it has never been the pollcy of the Nixon adminlstration t o mislead the American people. And they express confidence that the basic soundness of the President;s approach to South Vietnam will overcome waning public confidence. Center Sets Film Night A series of live films relating to children \\'ith learn· Ing disabilities will be shown at a f\fardan Center ot EdUC8· tionaJ Therapy open house March 25 in Costa Mesa. The program in the fonncr Costa ~tesa City Hall, &95 W. 19th St., begins at 7:30 p.m .. with screening at a p.m. and no admission will be charged. Coordinator of' Community R<SOllT'CU U.tsy ·Smith sug· gesll making telep honed reservations. ·, 11Vlsu11 Perception 1 n d Failure to Learn" is one film . Child'' Is another . • Brighten up the area with accent rugs at big savings! Sale 5.09 24 )( 35• Reg. S.99. 'Tr1shag' accent rugs. Deep, lhick sha51 w11h luxurfQus fringe n~lon. l ate>C wallle bacK pre~·ents skidding. Vibrant mulli·tone co!ors. 27 x 48", 1eg. 8.99, NOtir 7.59 36 x 60", reg. $17, Now 1•.39 Sale pric~s ellectlve through Wednetd•J only! • ·carou1el' r.hag covers your tloor with thick, foot·cuddhng polyester sha g pile in live lri-t one decoralor colors. BU•lf..jn waffle foam back-no extra padding ,,eeded. 'Wet lbury' sculp1t1red polyester pile gives an elegant look 10 any interior, traditional or contemporary style. Deep, foam rubber backing means you need no eJdra padding. Five decorator color$. 29~? Value. It still means something at Penneys. ' l\nne'fl CHARGE. Tt!l:SI: VALUES AT YOUR \.CJCAL PeflNEV StOr<L . .. rAond.iy, Mo1rch 15, 1971 DAILY PILOT 0 o~ ~ BEFORE YOU BORROW CALL THE America's La1gest Ask for Home's neighborhood Loan Consultant, a man who serves your area only. He can give you valuable guidance and all the facts on the loan you want. On qualified credit and property he will even gi ve you an actual loan commitment, conventional or FHA-VA ..• Compare. See why Old Dependable Home leads all associations in the nation in loans. ... to build • •.• to buy •.. to refinance (to raise cash for any purpose) ... to facilitate a sale on both homes and multiple units. There is a simple explanation for Home's leadership both in savings and in loans. Prudent people borrow ... and save ... where they get the best terms and best service. They choose Home because i t pays to Be S ure at America's Larges t. Phone any Home Savings onicc lOI AHMLDIOU>U7·7"1 761 s.~ettui•too14 CMAIN orFICO ALHAM•M I (Z1S) •«11 •01 £.v.Uq ll'ld.•t$1wra VIN 91101 A NAME lit/ (714) US.21D lOI I , H11llor l ltd • .t Lhal" •zeos AKAOIA/(113)44.-U 60 Elst HIJl'lt!fliltOl'I Driv• •t flflt. 11006" IAllTOWIC714)21'4JJ1 1232 £. M1il'I It. tn the Suptr I SlloppfflC C.lltef • 12411 llVIM.Y HILLS (21Jl 27t.all '2.t5 Wl .. hlr9 lfvd. 11 Rnfc!N Dfi~1 • 90210 llUIHA PARK I (714} l2So4a4 IOlO lkad'l l lvd. at l9 P•lll'll • t0f20 aulUNK/121.1> Ms.nil •40 N. Seti ftfft1ndo l lW. •t l urb1nk llYd. • t l l02 CO"'"'* I 011) aN73I JIOI N. Lona hildl 11\ld. at Golditn • fOU l aNCINO/CZU)7_.,. 17107 V.ntu'11 l lvd .. ftAinMtoJ•fl315 •AltDIHUOYl 01•1....0 1191!'2 lreo-hurtt St. ft Ckl!pm1n • 92640 •LINOM.11 (21S) Z41-410I 620 N. lf'lflf l lYd. at t111 \'lntuni Fwy.• 1120I .... .._ ..... .. .., ..... , .. 1700 N, ~ .. tt. tit A.,. 17 I.A. 90042 HCM.LYWOOO l(IJS) 4M-1Ul lSOD N. VIM 1t Suns.t 90021 HUNTIHOTON PAJtK (213)51U177 7141 PKlllc Bll•d.at flor.,,e-• to255 UQWOOO I (2:1S) lllM90I o4!Hl9 L•kewood Bfvd. at O•I AlllO• 90712 U llilllltAOAI (714) Hl·1l10 15l2'1 £. Jll:OHC,..n• AvL £11t of ... Mir•'d1 l lvd. 90631 LIVUMORE f(415) 441-4MO 21!!1 S. "II." St. 1t 3rd St. ''~50 LOf\18 If.ACM /(Jll) 43M2Sl 201 £•t f irst St. It Looutt ..... MONTllDLO I CZ13} 7-17 1429 ".1:1. 8-'Y llYd. at "'""' • 90640 ........ ,,.,.,_ 250 Eatt 1kll St. Park Bol.lllWfd 01..triet ,..,. SAN I UtNAR.DINO 171-41 W.J.321 301 W. HishJ•nd Av1. •t Arrowh11d • 92406 SAN FRANCISCO (-415) 6"-8900 2~0 M!•1ion St. 1t 21tt St. 9-4110 t AN J0S[f(40t) U7.0107 1221 LimlOln Aw.. Willow Glen Olt!rlct 95125 SANTA ANAf(714)SA1"'11 l 100 North M1Jn St. •t W"l!lflfl:Oll Ave. 92701 SANTA MONICA/(213) IJl.l!Ml 2600 Wi1shi,. Blwd. It 26111 91)(03 STUOIO CfT't' 11213'170.ntl 12051 V1ntUr8 81\ld. •t L1urel C.nyon • 91&04 TOlllftANCE/ (2111 »:NZ44 1511 er.v.t'l$Av1. 11 El Pndo • 90501 VICTOIMLL£1 (714} 24S&IO 14909 7th St. n•1r tti• Vk:tor v~lley Stiopplrlt c.rttr • 92'92 PAIAOINA/(113) 1'K417.4 Wf.S'T' COVINA/CZ1.J} ... 7"l •60 !alt Colorado l \Yl:L 100 Vine.int Av•. at IAll• • 11101 •l tltl San a.rnmtino F'Wy. PtCOltrvatAIClU)-.tGn 91790 9128 [. WhlttMi' 81¥d, EMt WHITTIPl/(tl3) lltl47'11 ef lt..-.cl • 90660 15625 E11t Whlt!l11t ll\l'd. POllONAl(7M)ID-2491 at $1rri• G•rtnlclK 100 l"omOll• Mall WHt 90603 91769 WILS~ ~~~~~ iWwi11t11,. 11wtt.•t0Xford 92371 90010 •. OVER $3t/2 BilLION STRONG Jl-:JZDIUJ.Sa~tmd Loo•l!tnrlneeCoroonlion , X..bor:IZDD&LllomeJAD-s,.i- For Top Sports CQverage Read the DAILY PILOT - . . \ , • I JI 11>1LY PILOT Mondl1, Muth 15, 1971 Vital Statis-ties for the Orange Coast Area Tormenting Rectal Itch Of Hemorrhoidal Tissues ' • Dissolutions Of Marriage DALI: H<IN••d D•I•. Aqe 11, of .. S 011 St., L111un1 l uc,., oa11 of .,,,,h, M1rdl ll. SurvlvM by wlt1, Rtbt E. Dat'1 bro!Mr- ln-l1w, Alber! $. Smhh•r. S.Nltll, Wtd· nt5lllY, 10:311 AM. l lowt r l"'lh.,1 Cll~o­ •I, ms N. M1ln $1., San1• AM . ln- fH'n\Mt, F1lm1v1n M""'°r11r P1rt;. I t-l ro!Mrs Mort111ry, Ol...c:tvr1. eo\VAN Ciiio. 111!1 GIVffl.,0.te of ... tr\, M1rdt 12. Rnldeflt !If 20U 11,.,.I L1M, N- port lll'Kh. survJ\'tolf bY .,.,... 1l1!- Mr1. C1rol Shit, Colli Mtlll Mf'I. K11t!tl'IM Dt1P1"r, lrtOlfWOOlll M". S.r1 Frtsblt, Mlc"l<l•n1 tour nttc:t l, Jttn JOllff, NtwDOrl ltlChl Slllrlt'I' An1kr1or1 I nd NOl'n't Gu•Mhon. Coat• Mt ll; Plf Anidi, NewpO(T 11 ... dl. Strvk11, lodev, Mono1.,., 1G IA.Ni, Wtllcllff ChtM1, with Rtv. l.ort n Ftlck1119t• ofllclt!lnt . lnltr· men!, 1!1 Ton> CefN!lt rY. Wt1lll" ChtHI Morn.ll rY. ....,.... Dlrt!on. MALVORSON iriaoi,i. S. HtlvorlCN'I. 1614 Whlttltr. Cotl• M-. Dt!t of .S..lh, Mtrch IJ. S..r- 'lll•td tw ,.111, Ellt ; ~ht..-, Mn . .t.r- llnt Klfttt -trtnd-. ,_._rtl ..,.... le ... , Wld~"i'. 1 """· E,..,,..l\lltl Lu- llltttn Church, Mol:lfoll9. ltltl (Hit MMt Morh/trY, Dlttciort. MOLT E..,mt Holt. Jlll E. Denn l lwl., .,....,. ""'' IHC:ll. Ololt o1 lh•""· Mt rctl U. \•rvlcK wnl bt hlld 511\trd1v. Mt•cll l'O, ti AM, Pttl!lc VI-(llt lltl. I,.. ttm1W11, Ptclllc \/~ ,,.._111 Ptrlt. Ptclflc VI.., MOr!u~rv. 01~ LOMG Oo<Jti.1 .t.. L-. m2 Sltnt lltlt , lr- 'lllnt. s .... k t 1 Plf'ldl,,. M ltll lrot.Ctwt"f MortuarY. 11.0MIOVOM 81rbtrt lloml>oue~. 590 Slurtton Orlvt, Stn!t .I.Ill. StNICtl 11tndlnt 11 Bt~ BrotdWl"f MortutN. llOSI Ctro!lnt M. RMI. UI B•o.dwtv .... ,,,, A. Cot•t Mtlt. Otlt of llHth, Mt.Ch H. SuNIVld b'( 1ott, JChn C. 11:011 : brotlw!r, Ed WI,,., Plloe<ll•1 1111 .... Lult P1r1on1. Stttllt. $tNlcel, Wednndtv, 11 N.,.,n, Bt!I l~ov Chtl>l!I. lnter..,.nt. Ht•· bor ll:Hf Memct•lt! l'trlt. It!! BrotdwtV Mortutr,, Dlre<to•1, ltOVS$AlllE Hubtrt Nlchol11 Rouutllt . Att 11, ol 1CJ7 Gr1nvlllt Or.. Newoort le1ch, Membtr ot INh1e CountN Club. Otlt c:I Dt1ltl, Mtteh lJ. Survlvll:I bY wUt, k1mm1 I!. 11<•.tUtlle. Ro11n, lon!eht, Mon!lt"f, I """· R....,ltm Mtlt. TIJ'l..,IY, March 1'-10 /loM, bolll ti OW l""' Ouett> ol Anotlt C1111o11c C""'retl, 11t1tr c:oront cMt Mir Morlvt n, Dl•Klorl. l ,.UILIN lrl• C. S'"-'rU11. SfO Pl1rp0lnt Dr., Cosl1 Mtll. 0.lt of detth, Mtrel'I U. Sur-· v!vl'd b'!' h111btnd, l111>1rt1 twa IOllSo 8 111Y Underwood Ind Tlm<rtllr S.Urllll. tlo111 of Co1t1 M""'J -dt\19111-lost LN 51Hlt, H11ntl,,.IM lttch' $11\drt Cindrich, l"lll1t>ur1h1 brolhtr. Mr. G-11 8111i19'1· Mlclllt..,I ltNl'lltf' t nd 1l1ltr-ln-l1w, Johll I,., DortlN Sour- lln; 11ltc1. Jtet1IJ'll"fn 51H.1rtl111 1unt, Lturt GrH!ln: 1rKI thrH trt ndclllkVirn. StNICtt, W1<111e1dtv, 10 AM, 8111 l rctd• w1y Char.el. ln11rnmtnr, Ptcllk Vlt"' Memorft ! Ptrk. Frl11'1d1 mtv c•ll T111 .. t11v. M1rd1 I&, 11 lltll 8r09dwev Cllt•el t•om 10 AM lo ' PM. Btll 8ro1dWIY Mor'IUtl"Y, Dlrtc10'1. THOMPSOM ~,,,· C. ThOmolOft. 66' W, 19th SI., Coot1 Mtlt. Otlt of O.tlll, M1rch lL 511rvlvtt1 bY ton, ..lohn R. T,_.,pclOl'I, Cosl1 Mt11: dt1111llttt, M,.. Mtrtt l'ot, hn Cltmtnlt: II~• t•t~hlldrtni twe t•Hl•lftndd'llldrtn. llll'Clllltm MIH, IO- tlltv, Mondfy, ll:JI) AM, HDIY Crtlt Ctmttvt Cf11pel, lnttrmtftf, HolT Cron Ctmtltn'. ltl!l Cott• MIM M9r'tvlrv. OirK10l'I. I ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY tn E. 17th St .. Co1ta Meu 14MSS8 • BLATZ MORTUARIES Corona del l\1ar .. OR I-MA Cotti Me1a ...... Ml MU.f. • BEl,L BROADWAY MORTUARY Ill Broadway, Costa Me11 LI 1-UU • • McCORllllCK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1711 La&un• C.nyoa Rd. 4tHlll • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery l\ofortaary Chnpel IHI Poe'ftc View DrlYe N...,.... -· Ca1Warol1 tu-tt• • PEEK li'AMILY COLONIAL FUNf:RAL ~ 71ttlloha A.., Wttte1"-IG4SU • SMITH'S MORTUARY C7 l\1ala St. U..tlnteton Belclll 11M131 Dissolutions Of Marriage Dbsolutions M•rriage Dissolutions Of Marriage .. ~ C,..,_.11!, Dlvld f , Ill t nd C1rl• .M WIOtf, FM lond J"'" P. Di~solution• • Of Marriage CtmPbtll, Marv II.. 11111 Ct,._ W, Carncibtll ll1k•r, P1lrlcl1 Strtll tJ'ld Robin C1r1111111tr Marriage Licenses LIC•NSIS lllVID IN OlllAMOI COUNTY DE LORNl!·CAMPBELL-ltoeer J .• 27 of lflM ltlYll'lllllll, Co.It' Miii t lld K1r1111 L .. n ol' C•I• Mtwo. llDWEN·YOUNG--GeM I< .. 2' of lWl Promptly Relieved "' In many cum l'roP1111tloo H tJi-prompl,lallporaryroliel from' -poln and ltdUilg and actually hel.. thrink .wellinr of hemorrholdal ti&- auet cauaed by inftammation. Te1t1 by dodorl on hun- . ' ~"' P1llm1" -thia io be true in many ca.a. In fact, many doctors, them4 aelv•, use Preptiratio'fllll or roaonunenc1 it I<>< thoii""!am· iliel. Preparation H ointmen'; or aupp(!!Jitoriee. Wtrlht', OOl!>ru J. tncl H•rolcl G. Wolford, l(llhlfffl J. Ind Tllom.it D. W11Utm,,_Dor1 Jffn 1nd Elvln NllWtrd $1./llOll. Hiney L. Incl TtffU LYllll Kttnt. Rober! $t1nlott •nd Elttnor ~ loub• lrtvlt, Gr1<1 1. 11111 fMrlOll A. Cll•!11.,.r, llld\lrd and MtrllY" Allll ll:uttell, Wiiii Dt"" and J1ck Ltsll1 Gt llllCltf, WIUl1m J-tnd Dtbor1h P ... wit. Gt rdllll G•-.,_, llor;.rtl---------------------------J .. 10 of U•I DIYlt ltll', Huntl!llllan ... ..,._....., C.rrlt Cll\1'11111 tllll Gtnltvt ...... V•ll•1, Cathryn Rtt and Loul1 J, Ell11btlh JUSTIS.PITEllSOH-Jaltll T .. ti Of and Lindt ,., If of 1 ... 71 l!t,.1, F-••ln \ltllev. H1l1, Prl11;llft £. tnd Kfflntth I . WlllJM'llOll, l1rbtr1 May Md Sldll'Y • Phlll1> Sh.ti-er, 8rltll11 ...t Ptlll Ct no. J-.... AYtlt Md lllt" M«ll Cllrk. itllClrt N, llld 0-W W • Wool..,, lub'I" L. and 0.t'I' L. otirn. J-•· w llchtd 1. JOHH$0N·HONNl!TTE -,M~I O .. If of ZDO$ l ldltlld L_, El Tero •1111 Olftrlt It., 24. GI' 2'.tn ·-Mtrilo U.,., lttllM Nt-1. Wlllltmton. 1111111'1' I , tnd Jerinl• M. 8row11. ll:IOtcu Sue •114 DeMlt kot hff·C-- PAINT SPRAYER "Sfll'rr Aettl•l•tl "•"•'• """*''••'" • Dla,ti,._ .. ...,...,., with , .... ._...elrn.w. I c....,l•ft wtlh cord, I' •Ir ho11, .,.,...,. 9u1t . ,. .. , .... CracJrfe.Jl1ti~~ DEC:OUTIYI SHELVES "*'"'ldl¥• Sfeit·ld•••I" ........ $ J 29 ....... F 1AR sroou ..Stwnly f-r·U.•ted ,,.._,tJ,. \_ ............... -----............... ,. fl...,.__,, •• Uf" ....... ....... c-rr.1 LIGHT DIMMMIR "Corti,./ Any '-"'If ,,_ Teur l•f)' CNltl" •S.U4 1t•l- 1NGt u • .,aww ... 1 .,..... ,.,.,,.,, • D1.1 .. -11,ht--.-., .,_,... ... 1 $7.tS Val-'249 •••••• ''Sht'9411 M•tler'' FOOD SHUDDER "ln1111ro4 Gour"'•' Oad11tryl" • Compl91• with I lntentt.111 .. bl• bk> .. for •••r f1a.i ,...,..,.11on. • Surti.. batto1t1 ha .. tt l1t ploc•. ···-''·" '699 e "To Cover The footprints On The Celling!" • Create excitement overhead with easy to install tongue and groove tiles. • Plain white tiles can be painted to go with the scheme of thing7. : Regular 1 Sc ,, ·.. . , ....... ROOF· TOP VENTILATOR ''Uk• MoYlng Your ffou1• Under A Shad• Tr••I" • RemoYes hot air equivalent to one ton of coellng systMYt. • Costtl nothing to operate -sDYe1 on electric WU. • lowers temperoture1, eliminates attic heirt - fh's every roof. • Jeweled bearings for smooth, noiseless operotlon. Reg. $33.99 •2499 We ,. .. ,.,. tho ritht '" """' --"'"'" Attend the Church of Your Choice Regularly , .... De·"~-Clw 111&1crarc.1' wrarNG" Wl4., "-• 17, 7·1,..,. A......_ '""'"'· ... 11, 7·1,. '-"'·"' v .... , D.-M.,_..frnhrMntt ktty, u.;. 1'11 .u..i. 11 .. 1,. ... 01 Iii• oton., ....... llJ ld.,koH ............ WINDOW SllADIS "%.,.,_.., Mlll•'•••t" •Te ... , tfMi MMlhlM •--ff ,....NM Inell.._ • Vl•)'I .,_.. Cl..,.... wtrtl ..... ...i ..... • ••• $1 .39 89~ .. 20 ...... TRASH CAN • HffV)' .,,, ,s.1111 ,,..,. •lathw with lack-lf•ht lld. •Gullr9fttH4i! Sya.n- avoc_. celar, •••. $3.49 '199 flJc•·•·fl•ir SAW HORSE ..,.. r.., • ., Nerftar• Hnffdl" • Jwt ,.._,en i.wy 2ll.4 end ..... NM)' fff ..... • lhnt flnllh. ••• ~·Mt•lh·• ' 1 . \ • ..... t3~~­t399 ... 10" •• . ..... .,, %'' ELECTRIC DalL' • fUll J.O ...,. IM'f•r--1•-' chvck: .. u,. I Co ......... Wtftl e11J1.lli_, ti• ....... •• .nc ....... .... ''·" • Deen th.t. ....... uty .. , ... , ....... """ 1Mll'•1, •1¥14tra, ... I U, .. J•H WJ4- Ml'-l W•041! flnl1h91. GARDEN TOOLS "To OIY• Your Green Thumb a Helplng Hand/'' • Long-handled flond tools -stvrdy stffl heads, hardwood Jtandlu. • Choose thtff prong cuttlvotw, hoe, rake or ladle• 1hovet--buy one of each at this low prke. •eg. $1 .69 Your Choke He'll Wear Black On St. Pat's Day ' By TOM BARLEY 01 IM O~l!Y Piiot Slffl WE'RE JUST two days away from the Wearin' of the green, but my tie Wednesday will be the solid black that should be any Irishman's color, North ,r South in I.he light ol what's going on today in the Emerald Isle: And that mark of mourning won't be just for the three young British soldiers who w~e shot in Belfast by Irish goons for their effort's to keep the peace. It will be . black for the continued stupid bigotry o! both sides and their continued refusal to accept what any layman of average intelligence would have to agree were honorable and hwnanilarian steps to ensure peace and pro- gress in ·utster. · Yes, Roman Catholics were deprived of their civil rights for .!llany years. But those same civil rights have now been guaranteed by a government which has gone overboard to cbnflrm them to a militant minority. I WAS IN Dublin just five months ago and nine out of 10 liri~en I met practically smacked their lips at-talk of the iMurreclkln In Belfast and the way it had revived ''the troubles" of 1916 And I was assured by a London journalist that many tnstermen were just as determined to rub out the Cath· olic minority that now actually wanted lo get into par· liament on the same terms and with the same privileges as the Protestant majority. Def1·aud Suspect Trial Set SANTA ANA - A Hun- tington Beach woman accused of defrauding the Orange County Wellare Department or more than $1,100 has been ordered to face trial Wed· nesday in Santa Ana municipal court. l\1rs. Josephine Rodriquez Bertucci, 24, of 1108 Acacia St., is accused of drawing Aid lo Families with Dependent Children funds after represen- ting to welfare workers that her husband had abandoned the home and left her to sup- port their one child. It is alleged that Bertucci, a "machinist, had resided at the Acacia Street address since at least July 1970 and that his wife bad been employed at a local bank at th~ time she drew welfare checks of $148 a month. 'I\l:o other women, both fron1 the Fullerton area. face court action on identical charges. Graduation Garb at UCI Up to Profs • P.1on~r. M1rtll lS. 1971 DAILY PILOT JJ To Address Trustees Education 'Expert' S~ted or Uy GEORGE LEIDAL lhe Harbor Forum, a Newport or chitd.rtn age-two lo five Federal aid lt t.ducatioa: Beach luncheon group. to direct their thought pat· "The river or eduCation Is 0t lllt 0&11Y ,iltl 51111 SANTA ANA -A former Following are eicerpts rrom tems be.fO(e J<indeta;arten. polluted and the source ef Glendale school board his talk : Wi'th such -nt•·• •••re-won't n\ember who says he believes On progressive education : -.,. "'"' the pollution is at 'the federal God is on the side of those While the progressive Educa· be a need (or -sensitivity level. The !ederalizatJon ef seeking to preserve traditional tion .Association founded by training later." local school districts was com· educational valtles will ad-John Dewey's f o t Io we r s On plannlng, programming, plete with passage of the: dress the Orange County disbanded in 1955, "it is still Bud1et111;g SyatemJ ~PPBS): Elementary and Secondal"1. Board of Education Thursday, domitiant over traditional "A procea,, or cbang~ and Education Act in 1965. Now,' Check Theft Suspects Face Trial Or. Joseph Bean. w h 0 classroom approaches," Bean budget preparation the sole only 10 percent or decisions resigned ..Jrom the Glfndale said. "H.undreds or thousands function of which is to robotize are made by local school school board last January of teachers today arc the U.S. population and the boards." after two years or service. unashamedly rollectivists." whole world. An agonizingly Drugs: '·To facilitate m&re will speak at 3 p.m. to Orange On Educational innovations: sophisticated endeavor ·to rapid behavioral change in - County trustees at 1 he I r •·ream teaching . television. standardize and average every students, more than 3 million meeting in Santa Ana. computers, flex ible sc hedul· child subjected to its use.'' are being given drugs." His invitation to speak to ing, eliminations of tti e fnur·1r••.;;--------0iii..iiii;iiioi;;i;;ii;iii~-.. the county board came at the wall classroom are all poten· request of conservative board tially good ideas being applied SANTA ANA -Two men member Dr. Dale Rallison or lo bad schools." accused or stealing state Santa Ana . Dr. Rallison said On sensitivity training : "Qc. disability insurance checks he thought Dr. Bean would curs covertly in classrooms of(er the board valuable in--even newspapermen and valued at rnore than $500,000 formation. 'I'rustees agreed to their .. editors have b e e n have been ordered to face hear him . sensitized \vithout knowing It. trial March 22 in Orange Last week, Bean addressed The outgrowth of reality County Superio!' Court. therapy techniques devised by Dr. William Glasser. I don't KeMeth M. Slotnick. 34, SCORE Gels argue with their use with the Garden Grove. and Rich-mentally ill, but object to ap- ard Kenneth Bell, 47. Los C S plying these techniques to Angeles, pleaded not guilty ourt pace healthy individuals in the schools." before Judge Robert L • SANTA NA Th A -e Service On relevanct : "Beginning Corfman after the jurist re· COrps of Retired Executives vdth \he civil rights movement jected their motions for !SCORE) has been given in 1954 topics like lhe Vietnam dismissal. permi ssion to share space in War, ecology. population ex- Both men were arrested in lhe old county courthouse "'ilh plosion, v.:omen's liberation a Costa Mesa tavern last Dec. the Orange County Chamber and now even homosexual 22. of Commerce. liberation are being introduced The Orange County Grand SCORE aids unemployed ex· in the classroom .'' I See by Today's Want Ads • Gue$s \Vhal? in class 854 \\''' now have "BARK. LESS" Afr ican Basenjl pups. Al~. Champion line. ChC'Clt thii; one out To. day~ e Par1y \\'Ould like rental or sale or a Sabot wiU1 al& equipment for August rental. •. Get in 1ouch \11itll party as soon as possible, Ck 008 class. e Food To Go ~1on1·s .\ Pop',; Cafr ••• 011·ncrs must sell going business ••• Here's a chance 11> pick up a little extra cash- $$$$ .•. Don't wait call to- t.lay ••. Class ~. But, as in Palestine, the British soldier is stuck right in the middle or it, flighting blood-hungry zealots of both persuasions with rubber bullets and hoping that a jet from a (Ire hose will cool the lnstincts of gutter rabble longing to put a bullet in his back. A London daily had a feature .story the other week on a weary British sergeant who faced a court martial be- cause be had had the absolute. gall to raise his rifle and threaten two snipers about to open fire on his men. Jury subsequently indicted ecutives in findin& positions On early childhood educa· th or starting their own business Ion: "Watch out for the IRVINE -.Tbe decision to em 0~ cha[ges of fradulent in cooperatiion with the development or pre-schools wear academic regalia in UC possession ° c 0 m PI e t e d federal Small B us i n e s s where federal funds will Irvine graduation ceremonies checks, passing or receiving Administration. establish centers for educatiofi e ~1esa North: 2 story 3 br/. 2 ba, house for sale, Ex• 1r11 large family room. Lovely interior. Ck 100 Costa Mesa. will be up to individual faculty · stolen checks, burg I a r Y ·:1-=:::::::::::::::::::_ _____ ~::::'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'..::'.:'.'.'.~.'..".:~'.'.'.::'.'.'.'.'.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ members. receiving stolen property and HIS OFFENSE was that he had real bullels in the chamber. The Irvine division of the conspiracy to prevent or obstruct justice. "What our lads want," he told the reporter , "is the order to get out of there and let those two bloody bunches of savages get at each other. Let them settle it between themselves for as long iis they like and .. maybe we'll save the world a lot of trouble." UC Academic Senate has The checks were stolen from decided lo relieve faculty the Department of Human members of the requirement Resources office in Santa Ana. lo wear academic dress. Heartfelt, thoroughly understandable and predict· able, yes, but, of rourse, hardly practical. Someone has to get in there and try to keep order even if he gets killed for ii. He'll get no sympathy from I.be world. he'll get even less from the combatants and his contribution to world peace ·will soon be forgolten . THINK ABOUT him while you're wearing your green on \Vednesday. The action followed an ad- ministration request f o r guidan ce on the issue, in view of a shortage of funds to pay for the outfits. While many professors own their own gowns and hoods wbose colors denote academic r a n k , younger professors lacking such garb formerly were sup- plied with gowns for com· mencemenls. Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers The senate action means those not wishing to shell out the money to pu rchase the seldom-worn garb, m a y participate in graduation pro- ceedings in street dress. Play The Advertising Game To Win With This Rule: Get A Good Bird Dog f/"'-4... Wl-IERE OW,WWERE I~ MY WANDERING AD TONIG~T? No problem here-we can tell you exactly where each copy of this paper is purchased. And our ABC audit report assures this paid circulation is all wool and a yard wide. No need to wonder about the full measure we promise. But, If you do, Just ask for proof, verified by the Audit Bureau of Circulations. DAILY PILOT -The Audit Bureau ol Circulations fs a self·regU!atory associa- tion ot owr •.000 advertiaeta, adv~er1i1lng agencies, and pub- 1l1her1, and lt recogniud u a bureau of 111andards tor the print mtjla Industry. ' I I Biology MA For Teachers IRVINE -A master or arts program for biology teachei-s has been approved by the UC Irvine academic senate. The new program "·ill be self-supporting by fees paid by the part time students served by ii. It still must receive final approval by UC Regents. Described by Pi-o fess'or Keith Justice as "the first of its kind in the UC system" the program will allow creden- tialed biology teachers to earn an advanced degree while con· tinuing to teach full time. Fees similar to those charg· ed in summer sessions at UCJ will be charged for coursework taken during the regular school year and in two summer sessions required or completion of the program. You Work Less You Save Money / Keeps-Olings cleaner without effort, eliminates bath tub rings Soap and clothing last lon ge r Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans Complete In s tallation Available! Just Ask! ,,.,, I Sears I Uil>,lOIOU<.~•J<D<U, So. Coast Plaza 3333 Bristol St. Ph. 540-3333 Buena Park 8150 La Palma Ave. Ph. 828-4400 Santa Ana 1716 So . Main St. Pb. 547-3371 NOW' LONG BEACH IS SHORTER TO NORTHERN CALIFORNIA, lsco (Psst Orange Countyl Long Beach lo, Los Angeles (Orange County, Palos 111115111!11 ~ SJ,20 San Franclaco ~-Verdes, Wilminglon, Torrance, elc.), i"oUnd to S.~ Including tax. Long Beach is llko having your own private Leave Long Beach : airport. You don't have to fight the free· Now you can fly PSA from Long Beach 7:<0 am way trafllc to L.A. lntemalional. There'I Airport to San Francisco. Four times a day. 10:45 am easy parking. And the crowds haven't ·More on Weekends. More flights than 1 :30 pm found it yet. Next time you head north any other airline. Connections to Sacra· 4:30 pm (or souUi), head for Long Beach Airport mento. Or, avoid the freeway and Uy to Mon lhru Thurs & Sal. by way of your travel agent and PSA. San Diego. If you live any place SOUlh Of ~-M_o_r._1_11o_h_1._F_r1_&_s_u_n.--' PSA a.Ms JIMI a Ifft. ------" , !· I \ / ' ' DAILY PILOT :: B i rd's Ey e l'iew r: This flightless (reak appears more curious than the t· photographer who took his picture at Lion Country ._, Safari in Laguna Hills. The ostrich weighs in at 300 tl pounds, most of which is feathers and neck. Ostrich ta\J. feathers are considered valuable, even though ta. the bird is fairly ugly. . • !' •• I: l Men's Bar S 1trvives A ssault by W omen NEW YORK (AP) -The regulars sUll quaff thelr ale '1 1n mos Uy male-only sple11dor at McSorley's and the manager at the Biltmore still answers the phone, "Men's Bar." Not much has changed in lhe more than six months since women invaded these bastiou of masculinity. Dist. Court Judge Waller R. Mansfield ordered the 116- year-<ild McSor\ey's Ale House to let women saunter across its sawdust-covered noor to the bar. One male patron was so incensed at the court order he dumped a mug of ale over the head of a feminigt customer. lt was June 25 when U.S. Today, said Daniel Kirwan, manager of the bar, "nobody could care less about the wome11 '' -the few who dG appear. The bar wag "a big curiosity ror the first coupJe weeks," but then interest tapered off, A workshop in Psych~ Kirwan said. He estimated .. Cybernetics, a system that has there had been no more than '" taken ordinary 0 people and a couple hundred women transformed them i n to customers all told since the • • Workshop Scheduled . • renowned go If er s. baseball · sex barrier was broken. players or just happier in· dividuals is coming to the Harbor Area. The session will be Friday, March 12 at 8 p.m. in the Orange Coast Family YMCA, 2300 University Dr Ive, Newport Beach. Instructor will be Carl Beharka, Downey educator and accredited exponent of the process developed by Dr. Maxwell Maltz and made famous as a handbook . Details will be announced at th e workshop for a weekend retreat at Twin Peaks and an August Psychl>-Cybernetics workshop-retreat In Tahiti for further self·image develop- ment. The women who do arrive, said Kirwan, are "all ages and all types, generally i• groups." They drink ale - the only .thing the bar serves. When the court order wag issued. there was t a 1 k McSorley's would have to build a ladies' room. But the rest room facilities have not been expanded said Kirwan, ''nobody complained ." The story was the same at the Biltmore, which served its first female customer Aug. 2S during a -.atlonwide women's strike for equality. "Now that they can come in. they don't,'' the manager said when asked about women customers. ?r----, • APRIL n0 • • wett like to help. This year, pay all your taxes with a loan from Morria Plan, Then achedula payments to flt your budget. On approval, you can borrow from $1 00 to $5,000 or more for taxes , bill consolidallon or any good reason. And you'll get our Monay- Back Guarantee (if you find you can do better, return the money within 5 days at no cost to you). Tolk to the friendly people at Morris Plan aboul money for taxes or any worthwhlla purpose We'd like to help. Morris Plan 673-3700 -,..r1 IHch -3700 Newport lloulovord -- • v ' • •• I • ; • ' " • !'.~,. 1 • spring • IS a variety t I .. [ I· • ; ' • ' I l ,, • ·] J / .. . . ,1 .. , ~.:; < ,:.;:· L ' of enchanting looks from pantsu its to dresses ..• shorty pa nts, too, it's spring '71 Spring is soft and lovely. Spring is bright with a bit of bravado. Spring is smas hing city suits done in bright new print on print Spring is dots and zig.zags on soft textury knits. Rich crepe banded in Bavarian embroidered ribbo n. Spring is you and your individuality expressed .. left: Romantica scoop neck acetate and rayon crepe dress, eggshell, with 111atch - ing triangle stole, 6-14 (20) 80.00 ce nter: Evan Picone belted vile bush shirt, polyester-cotton, navy-white, 8-14 186) • 28.00 straight leg print pants, cotton pique, navy-white,8-14 (86) 22.00 right: Domani long sleeve polyester dress, cinnamon and ecrU, plus jacket, B-16 (119) 66.00 may co iorecast 20, forecast sportswear 861 miss forecast 11 g -representative selection iill stores may co south c011t pl1u1 un diego fwy. at bristol, co1t1 mesa, 546-9321 shop ·mondey thru Nturdly 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., 1und1y noon 'til S p.m. .. MAY.CO .. ' BARBARA DUARTE, 494-9466 M9MIJ, Marc.II IS. ltn ' , ... \I Queenly Fare Brunc ·htime Luau Style A Sunday Luau Bruhch with Polynesia n accent! \Vil! be served by members of the Laguna Beach Queen of Hearts Guild of Childrens llospital of Orange County. The event, designed to help sick and needy chit· dren, \vill begin at 11 a.m. in Don the Beachcomber restaurant in Corona de! ?dar on Sunday, l\tarch .21. Brunch service \Viii end at 3 p.m . Greeting guests will be l\Irs. Horace fritz. presi· dent, and 1'1rs. Thomas Fle1ning. chairman of ways and n1eans. Acting as co-chairn1en of the brunch are l\1rs. Charles Roberts and l\1rs. l\1acauley Ropp. Reservations should be n1ade \\'ith l\Irs. \Villiam Gwinn, 494-2966,. or Mrs. Earl Steer, 494-1854. The luau brunch \vill help support the oul·patient department at CHOC. This department has 28 specialty clinics for children whose parents cannot meet the full cost of medical care. CHOC is a nonprofit, nonsectarian pediatric cente!' \Vhich specializes in the medical care of children from birth to 17 years of age. Il is the only such center from Los Angeles to San Diego. BREWING UP BREAKFAST -Kitchen utensils head the parade as (left to right) Mrs. Leon \Vare. chef A. \V. Speer. John Serence:; and Don Simpkin prepare for a Swallows Day Breakfast. The an· ' • ... .. POLYNESIAN MENU -Qu~en of Hearts Guild n1embers (left lo right) the ~1mes. Ray Cobb, Charles Roberts and Ralph Erickson bid aloha to a Luau Brunch on Sunday, March'21. The affair, designed for the topical setting of Don the Beachcomber restaurant. wi1r raise fund s to support the out-patient department at ChildreD1 Hospital of Orange County. ;,~ '/.~::; ~~~~~~ San Juan Special Swallows Breakfast .. Leads Fiesta Parade • It's nearly tin1e again for San Juan Capistrano's F'iesta de las ~ Golondrinas~ ··:' .• And , as the big \Veckend approaches, members of the \Vomen'I ~ ..• - Club and Rotary are making plans for a Sv.•allo\\•s Day Breakfast in the :· ~ El 1-lorno Street clubhouse on Sa turday, ~tarch 20. •;; Following custom, the clubs '"'ill team up lo prepare a hearty · • :,..' breakfast of orange juice. pancakes, sausage. hot coffee and drinks -1 from 7 until 11 :30 a.m. :.-;. !~ 1'here are a1nple parking facilities at the clu bhouse which is a block from the parade rou te which travels do,.,.n Camino Capistrano. ~ Prices are reasonable and group reservations arc available by ~;~ \\'riling to the breakfast co1nm ittce, P. 0 . Box 215, San Juan Capis· ·' trano. :,r ,j .,. 'rickets also \l'ill be available al the door. . . General chairn1en for the event are l\1rs. Leon \Vare and Mrs. ;.-~ ... } Myrtle Simpkin represe nting the \Vomari's Club and Bruce \Vinton 1 ' ,,, ... _ and John Serences from ltolary. ~~ Other members working on committees are fl.1rs. Josephine ' • Kipp ai:id C. C. Mccary. tickets. and 1i-1rs. Ross Carpenter and J..1rs. . : Elizabeth Stanfield, kitchen chairmen. ., .... Fred Ne\\'hart and A. \V. Speer are the chefs in charge of cook· , ?:. ing the breakfast, assisted by members from both clubs. ., _9;.. The three·day fie sta will open wi th a pageant presented by ...... ~ children from the Mission School. Carnival booths, dancers and festivi· ... ~ nual event on Saturday. ti1arch 20. from 7 to 11 :30 a.m. will pre· cede the 13th Fiesta de las Golondrinas parade in the 1i-1ission City of San Juan Capistrano. ties celebrating th e return of the S\vallows will begin at 3 p.m. on Friday, ti1arch 19. in the mission courtyard. During the next t\VO days. residents and visitors \vill participate in barb&ues, trail rides, dances and other special fiesta events. Phony 'Potions, Perker-uppers Pose Perilous Problem . 1 . . ' '· ·". DEAR ANN LANDERS : Several At every opportunity he piles In wi1h withthlsprob\cm?-J.K.O. I'd really like to scuUle him but rm months ago someone wrote to ask where his whole group. Neither B&nny nor his DEAR J.K.D.: Sing 01Jt -loud and ashamed to admit my rolks were right. to get ~dered reindeer horns. The wi.re (both coll<'ge. graduates) m;em ~ clear -or you 'll be 1eel11g them morr. If they would just get off my hack fellow had heard from boys who served mind the confusion or tunno1\. ~\ t and enjoying them less. rct dump him. Help me. Ann. Ma)lbe in Vietnam that powdered reindeer horns stumble ove~ bed rolls . dogs and kids they'll see lhis letter and wi!W! up. _ \\'ere the greatest sex stimulus of all for the dura11on. DEAR ANN LANDERS: It's funny STUBBORN PRIDE time and he wanted to try some. You Please tell your reader,; that all the formatJve letter. Tbat la st line Is enough tr~ a ball for them -camping out ho1v often parents say to their teena'!er!'i, DEAR S.P.: Here It Is and I'll tiitt· told him to forget It. aphrodiSiacs they see advertised in those to make 1 person mighty careful. with a full refr igcralor and built-in baby· "Listen to •\nn Landers ... " \Yell. t'lert at lust II.toll parenta will think u..ti Take my word for il, Ann. he WON 'T crummy magazines are w or I h I es s, DEAR ANN J.;ANDERS: We are a sitters. arc plenty of times when the parents letter Is Intended for them. I bopt ywii forget it. He'll go oo trying an sorts fraudu len t and sometimes dangerous. close famity. t.ty wife and J have three \\'e lo\'e our kids but we are gelling ought to listen to you. · are amoa1 them. Good luck. ! of phony junk (some of it pretty ex. Also tell your readers that they shoold teenagers and two married children "''ho hap pier to see them leave each titne. For example. a few months pgo you .• " pensive. too ). He may even do himself not monkey around with honnones unless have farriilies of their own. Our hvme To add insult to injury their childrl!TI wrote, "If you don 't approve of lhe How far should a teenage couplt tt1 wme damage. they are under the supcrvlsioo nf a is crowded with just the regulars. are allo'>'·cd to sass bo th parents llnd boy your daughter is going wilh let Can necking be safe ? When doel' tt.., It js an interestill& fact that nearly doctor who knows \\'h11t ht is doing. Our oldest daughter has five kids un.l\'r grandparents, stay up late and eat what her' know 11. but don't knock the guy become too hot to handle? Send for all the fake youth·rejuvenating polions A woman J work wllh used to sing JO years of age. She Jives nearby. o.1r they pl ease. " tqo ha,rd or she n1ight hang on -just Ann Landers' booklet, "Nttklng &Jld Pet~ and sex pcrker-uppers sold Jn this coun--soprano in the ehlirch choir. She got son and his wife have two youngsters This happens for several days a! a to prove she has s mind of her o\vn,'' ting -\Yhat. Are the J.imita?1• Mail try are advertised as "French" or "Ori· an overdose or hormones and now she and a long·haired dog . Sonny has a11 ~· tlmP 11'->onl every six "'eeks. 1l!u~ I'm in just that spot -going with Your request lo Ann Landers in / ' ental." The same garbage. when orrered has a beard and sings alto. -THE excellent job, his salary is larger 1han ho!ld~~s. I think we could lake fl if a guy I don't ca re for anyn1ore. llt of the DAILY PILOT enclosing 50 ccntt in Fral'ICf; or the Orient, Le; called TO\VN CRlER mine and he has a beautiful homt! a lhc,YI 1vould at least go to a motel to has shown n1e in lol.~ of ways !hat in e1:1in and a long, stan1ped, aelf4d, "American." DEAR CRIER: Thank ' you for an in· few hundred miles away. sleep. \Vhat \i the best way to c!eat he isn't the person 1 thought he \\'as. dre$Sed enVclope. \ • • • • " • Horesco e: Gemini L,....., TUESDAY MARCH 16 By SYDNEY OMARl\ Olle of Jiff Wltlwn', lt&eo- dary chUd 1t&r, llJcgen tUUb: wa1 • blrtltday ,ut frtm Pre1ldtnl Franklin Roestvtlt. It ••• • llore1cope for Arie•· .. born Jane, which tk Clltf ExecutJve comml11kuled. At- conlln1 to Jane evayW.g that WU 1tated la t II e boro1COpe .. naly1J1 came to p111. ARIES !March 21-April 19): Financial matters command attention. Gain cooperation from Cancer. born individual. Spotlight on investments, basic security. Take Mlhing tor granted. Check leases. fine print. TAURUS <April 2(>.May 20)· Go 5low. Avoid any tendency to base actions on impu!Se. .Key is to study various possibilities. Older Individual may be ill-infonned . Do your own investigating. Base con- clusions on facts. GEMINI (May 2J.June 20): A feeling or being ''locked ln" is evident. You want to break loose. Tendency is to lash out in many directions. Wise course would be to time your moves : measure actions. CANCER <June 21-July 22): Legislative Drama Staged at Meeting Behlnd·the-scenes d r a ma that is part of all legislative acUon will be reenacted when 0 . H. (Gil) Gilbert discuses Sacramento Backstage during a meeting of the Hun!lngton Besch Repub!Jcan Women's Club. Legislative advocate for lhe. California Railr<lads, GUberl will fly down from the Capitol for the meeting. Members and patron members are invited to bring husbands or guests interested in the polltlcally revealing topic. The meeting will take place in the Rttrea-tion Center. The speaker will follow a salad buffet prepared by members at 11 .30 a. m . Wednesda y, March 17. Hostess chairman is Mrs. Richard Dittmar. The membership contest between the Uptowners and Downtowners still ls con· tinuing and 40 new members have been added to the roster. To date the Uptowners are winning, with the penalty for the losers to be treating the winners lo lunch. The public is invited to join club members for a tour of the enlarged and redecorated facilities of Westminster Memorial Park Su n d a y , Ma rch 21. The hqµr-long tour will depart lrom the chapel at 2:45 p.m. and will include viewing of many recently ac- quired paintings and art ob- jects. Star Reachers Plan Meeting Avoid extrava1ance. Means don't overspend money -or emotions. Hold something in reserve. Special m e s 1 a g e could resolve dilemma. Be receptive. LEO (July 2.1-Aug. 22): Dispute among o I d e r in- dividuals could lnvolve you. Strive t<> be peacemaker. ~1alntaln neutral st a n c e. Home situation Is SP<ltlighted. Dipl6matlc approach g e ts good result!. VIRGO !Aug . 23-S<pt. 22 ): Hold off on short journeys. Steer clear of disputes with relatives. Check message. Be s1..re your meanings are cor· rectly interpreted. Gossipy neighb<>r is a menatt. LIBRA !Sept. 23-0ct. 221: Mate. partner , could apply financial pressure. You are able to sucttssfully utilize past experience. Allies come to your aid. Express con- fidence. You possess hidden assets. Act accordingly, SCORPIO IOct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Task you have neglected could haunt. Get facts together; synthesize informatio n . Complete assignment. ~tale or partner now requires special attention. Cheek legal upecta. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 4 Dec. 211 : Friends may try lo involve you in dispute. Avoid being foolish in lhis area. Be cooperative, nol aggressive. Share knbwledge. Be wary of makU:tg promises which are dHficutl to fulfill. AQUARlUS (Jan. 20-Ftb. 18): Seek alternat ive methods. Highlighl versatility. Don't feel you are confined to one area. Those who oppose you <"an be won over w~h humor. Avoid trying to force any issue. PISC~ !Feb. l!}-March 20): You may find lhal com- munications are garb I ed. Check messages, directions, rese rvatio ns . Not wise to lake persons. situations for granted. A p pa r e 11 t minor matter could be irritant. To Ii"!! wt wl>cl'1 iuckw ~· vnu "' montv tn<I love. order S1a"'v Om•"" ~It•. "Set:rtl 1>11111• for M111 Ind Womt11 " Stnd blr!~O..lt t "<! JO c..,11 to Omerr A1tro109v S..Cr1r1. -OA!LY PILOT. 80~ Jl"'I. Gr111d Ctl\· lrtl .Slltlol\. Ntw Yorlt, N.Y, 10011, Former Meson Wed In Catholic Rites St. John the Baptist Catholic Church. C<lsta Mesa was the setting for the afternoon nu~ tial rites linking Cheryl Mary Bourget and Edward L<iran Castillon. The double ring ceremony was performed by the Rev. Anthony McGowan. I ~.-GIVING A LIFT -Testing out a wheelchair they hope to provide for a crippled child are (left to right) -.Mrs. Charles P. Foss, Mrs. Robert J, Brytan and Mrs. Margaret Seely of the Newport Harbor Lady Anelers. Benefit fa shion show to raise needed funds will take place in the Airporter Inn on March 17. Trojans Entertain Parents of the bridal couple are Mr. and Mrs. Henri J. Bourget of Santa Ana, former Costa Mesa residents. and Mr. All interested parents are and Mrs. Augustine A . invited to attend the meeting Castillon of Garden Grove. on Wednesday, March 17, of Miss Gail Bourget was her the Irvine Star Reachers 4-H sister's maid of honor and Sorority , .. ' • Members and gutsls of · n Omicron Chapter oC ' , Sigma Phi will hear a am entitled Action, Tools the Art of Life when they bu on Wednesday, March ' Ken Cutright will pe for th~ 8 p.m. meeting e Anaheim home of Mrs. wrence Oudeans. Mrs. Frank Stevenson and f'\f_"': Grant Olson \.\'ill present i lht program, and the Girl-of· i°lbe"ytar will be vol~ for by {aecret ballot. The winner is 1to be announced 1n April. t There will be an election lot <lfficers for the CQming : fear. :~ .. Guests planning lo be ;P.rese:nl for the e\'ening include me Mm<:?s. Fred Rogers, lGeorge Griffin. Bruce Smith , !PNJip Bertoni and Darrell illoughby. l• Va lley TOPS L Lettuce-B-TOPS convene at ;!:30 p.m. each Tuesday for ograms in Fountain \'alley mentary School. Benefit Lures Charity Catch CHERIE BROCKWAY Future Bride Date Set In July The Newport Harbor Lady Anglers are casting out in- vitational lines to their annual Prelude to Fishing luncheon bene(illing handicapped children or Orange County on Wednesday. March 17, in the Airporler Inn. Proceeds from the event wi!! enable the group to entertain Garden Flowers Arranged Just in lime For spring will be a demonstration of flowe r arranging taking p 1 a c e Costa Mesa's First United Wednesday. March 17. in the 1'1ethodist Church will be the Corona del Mar home of Mrs. setting for a July 31 wedding G. H. Peir50J. ceremony planned by Cherie Sponsored by the \\'omen's Lynn Brockway and Jack ~oy Auxiliary to the Orange Coun· Zastresek. ly PhArmAceutical Associa· The future bridr, whose lion, Mrs. Rita r.orcnbcin will mother and stepfather are Mr, use varieties or flo\.\·ers foun d and Mrs. Joseph Abatange lo in home gardens for her of Costa Mesa. is a graduale display. or Robert E. Lee High School Serving as hostesses for the in Slaupton, Va. 11 :30 am. social hnur 1\nd approximately 200 0 r a n g e County handicapped children in Costa Mesa Park. The an- nual party' will feature clown entertainm ent and gifts for each child. A fashion show coordinated by Mrs. Florence Smales will highlight the luncheon prtr gram . Cocktails will be served at t I :30 a.m,, with luncheon at 2:30 p.m. In charge of plan- ning for the occasion are the Mmes. Robert Brytan. pro- gram chairman: John Harris, co-chairman : Margaret Seely, hostess chainnan and Ralph Fore. reservations. Benefit proceeds also will go toward the purchase of needed equipment for various schools. Past gifts have in· cluded audio-visual a ids, orthopedic playground equip- ment. hearing aids and leg braces. Westward Ho Miss Edith Redit of Laguna Hills will host the \Vest\.\·ard Ho Chapter of the Daughters of the British Empire at 12:30 p.m. on Wednesday, f\.1arch 24. Mr. and Mrs. Ceo r g e noon luncheon \\'ill be Mrs.1 --;;:==~ Za~tresek of Chicagf) ard the Lr.e Hall and Mrs. Petel ~ parent3 or the benedicl-elect, Muslard. Mrs. Dean Reavie who was graduated from will preside over lhe meeting Kelley High School and the at which lime final plans for Aero-Space Institute of that Poi.son Prevention Week will bridesmaids were the Misses Club. L. d ._ Song and veJI leaders, slar in a Bourget, 1H!r cousin, 1 The gathering is planned to '1 · Wood G athletes aod student bod• of· b . 7 . 1• ane . erry Keane, 1 egin al p.m. 1n Cutverdale D fl~ers will be joined by pro-Clubhouse and to conclude at ana Dahl and Mrs. John ~ r m1nent men and women from 30 \Veller. "' _.,,,.. a: p.m. Fl . I P . the University of Southern Plans will be made for a ower gir was atr1c ia MRS. CASTILLON California when the Trojan cake sale, and members will Bourget, cousin of the bride, Tustin Ho me League of Orange County hear or the Yorba Linda and ring bearer was John entertains area high school Cloverleaf 4-H Club's annual CrO\.\'. the bridegroom's s!udents during a metting at CQmmunity fair and horse cousin. Willi am Dodge. 7:30 p.m. Thursday, March show in \.\'hich all Orange Richard Castillon. brother of The newlyweds both are lli. in the Saddleback Inn. C<lunty 4-H Clubs are invited the bndegroom, \.\'as best man graduates of i\1ater Dei Ri1h Hosting the forum will be to participate. and guests were seated by School. She a t ten ded i\tr. and Mrs. Jame! Walker The event will take place Welter. Richard Neuland, the California Stale College al of Santa Ana assisted by Mr. in the El Rodeo Riding Club bridegroom's brother-in-la\\', Fullerton and he is a student and Mrs. John Thomas and in Carbon Canyon on Mareh James Wilkinson. Jr ., Daniel al Fullerton Junior College. Mr. and Mrs. William c.,_21_a_n_d_2.!_. ________ P_e_re_,_._P_hi_li_p_M_o_n_<an_o_a_nd __ T_he_y_w_il_I _re_s_id_e_in_Tu_sl_in_._ Hayward. l"'P'" .. 'l' .. !"IP'" .. "!!" .. ""'!!"" .. "!" ...................... .. Mrs. John M. Billings Is e • • chairm an or the Trojan e e e e e forums wllich have replaced • • • • • the Trojan mother-daughter e • e • • • • • • • leas formerly planned for the • e e e e • • county. • • • • • • • • Teacher Does Dervish Dance A presentation or Dervish dancing and yoga will be given by Adnon Sarhan al 8 p.m. on Wedne1da y. March 17. in the Laguna Beach Athletic Club. Dervish dancing Is a relatively unknown form of meditational dance w h I ch originated in the Middle East with the Sufi people. It com· hints chanting, movement and !!Ound to create a slate of harmony, according lo Sarhan. The worksho p i~ open to the public st no cost. • • • • • • • • RCH'S BIRTHSTONE , ,_c_H_Y· ________ ••_1_"_m_"_1'_'cd_. ___ _ B. D. HOWES fJ ~wi1114. ti.ltt The color of the Aquam•rine. hu beln likened to a tJiou11nd lea(UU o! 1unlit H• in1pri10n1d ift a cy. Suppoted to 1h1rpfll th• lntellttt and .rr•nt «1Ur•ff, th1 E17pti1n1 pl1ced thtir court. o! Jaw and their blLt.11 1'eld1 undtr ill prolllcticin. l'bt Blood1U.ne i1 the comp1Non J11..~1tona for M1rc h. Worn by ~~.It f1 efllln earrtd 'frilh '~1111, lnltia!t er emu. ' . ' ; ~-, ,.._,. •ir1A1toiu /tr ifl. ~ :1:•...,,. ••IC 1H4 Jrrt.•t W ~ lh• ,1.t1 .. ,. ~~~ l1r .... --,, .. ,1~. lir+h1tt~•' S.11tlri C1•1t '1•1• lrilt1I 11 tll• St~ Ditt• ,..,.,, THE On 1h1 llo1rdw1lk Hun1ing1on Harbour RED BALLOON LTD . .-:. . ..,... -·~ ....... The finest clothes for children from the best American and turopean designers ... ~·· '"" most IUll9/tlfull11 unuruol eltllllre11'1 1/to~ 111 the 1011thland t68n Alconquin St., Huntlngtnn lk'Ach 17141 8-16-1666 .. IS HAVING A SALE i B.D. HOWES and SON Fl~EJEWELERS FOR THREE GE.,ERAT!O~S NEr,PCRT SE.ICH: W2 Via Lido · 1;~·27 11 'WIND AND WAVE' AIR C,OMB CU T NATURALLY DONE IN OUR BEAUTY SALON COMPL ETE STYLING SPECIALLY PR ICE D, 8.50 BLOWER-BRUSH ORYJNG1S A BREEZE! GIVES BODY AND BOUNCE TO SHORT OR LONG HAIR . ALL YOU NEED 15 THE "¢ RJGKT.CUT • NO LONG SESSIONS UNDER THE DRYER, YOU 'RE OUT OF THE SALON IN NO TIME. NOW ISN'T THIS WHAT YOU'VE BEEN WAITING FOR? IN OUR BEAUTY SALON. • RESTOR CONDITIONER REVITALIZES YOUR HAIR. • CONSULT OUR KREE EXPEftT IN PERMANENT KAIR. REMOVAL . NEWPORT FASHION FORECAST FROSTING SPECIALi REG. 30 ,00 VAL.UE, HOW ONLY 19,90 COMPLETE. ROBINSON'S • FASHION ISLAND • 644-2800 • ~~~~~~~---.Bhy~FlliBDiiDiERl~CClr"l'llN~lllP~-iieliC'h~oritorWell NEW YORK (UPI) -Trlda over 200 years. His maternal NiJon ls not marrylng the a: rand father was the boy next -· distinguished jur~t. Edward Jf she married Edward Ridley Flnd,, His father, a Finch Cox -the en1agement much-decortted World War II is schecJuled lo be announced Air Fott&-pik>t, is a partner Tuesdaj -sbe will become in Cox, Treanor an d the wife of a New York Shaughnessy, a ManhaUan law White arist:rocrat who is a cousin finn. of the lat~ Eleanor Roosevelt. HARDWORKING Cox has had extraordinary ad· Young Cox is a hardworking vantages of wealth, education, sophomore at the Harvard emotional security and in· Law School and has been ac-House telligence, live in a district attorney's But Cox is no snob. He program for law students in has been one of the most Cambridge, Mass. He plans fired-up of Ralph Nader's to work for the U.S. Attorney 's "raiders" and ftelped research office in Manhattan next sum· Princess and write the 1969 Nader mer. report which skewered the Tall, boyish at 24, wilh the Federal Trade Commission for same blonde hair, light blue being a toothless watchdog ol eyes and dazzling smile. as consumers interests. H e Tricia, Cox lives like any other Charmed. believes in involvement and student in a modest Cam~ hopes to become a crusading bridge, 1.fass. apartment lawyer. which a friend described as The la\¥ is Jn "Eddie's" "a crummy little hole." His '\ blood. His mother 's famlly has conservative clothes have the practiced Jaw and sat on the typical ivy league rumple and . , - he drives an old ala ion wagon. .. In New York, life ls more Jonna! and be Is no slranger to white tie and tails. Hbme is a small brici. Victorian townhouse near G r a c i e Mansion, the m a y o r ' s residence. Its intimate rooms are full Of ;Hmily helrJOOmS, The Coxes weekend and sum· mer at an unpretenllous JO· - ai;re e!tate at Long Island's Westhampton Beach 1hat has been in ~1rs. Cox's family for 100 years. HERITAGE His father Col. Howard Ellis Cox, came to New York from tiny Carthage, Ill., h ls brithplace. by way of lllrvard Law School. The family . or Mrs. Cox. the lormer Anne FinCh, 1vas prominent in New York even in the 17th cenlury whee it 1vas New Amsterdam, She is a descendant of the Delafield:. Van Rensselaers and Livingstons but is a lhoroughly modern \\'Oman \\'ho cnce headed her own and Eleanor Roosevelt &hared a common ancestor in Robert R. Uv~ ings~, one. of the five drafters of the OeclaraUon of lndeptndence and I a t 'e r chancellor or New. York, ~hose conslitution he atSo helped to draft. Livingston ad· nlini~tered the oath or office to George Washington for his first term as president. The Coxes tiave old-fashion· ed American ideas about home and family. Howard and Anne Cox and their two sons and daughter are a close-knit unit and their Christmas cards in· · variably bear a snapshot of the children or the fa n1ily dog. They share the enjoyment of such sports as tennis and bGaling and are church-going Ei)is6lpalians. There were no juvenile rebellions in th~ Cox household. Cox met Miss Nixon when he was a teenage student at Trinity School, from which -.II' ueted with honon. When she made her JIM debut 1t the lottmational Debutantc · Ball, of which Mrs. Cox is chairman, Cox was her escort. They continued to dale whlle Cox &ot his bachelor's degree al Princeton and enrolled al Ya)e to study architecture. NADER 'S INFLUENCE However, a class at Princeton with Ralph Nader. a visiting Instructor, deepened his interest In law and even· tually led him to drop out cf Yale. After working wi!J'I Nade r's Raiders and writing muckraking a r t I c I e s on pesticides and c I g a r e t t e advertising for The · New Repub)ic magazine. he gave up the Idea of becoming an architect and entered Harvard Law Schoo l. Cox's political vie\\'S have been desc ribed as liberal Republican. left or Miss Nix. on'! but he ha! been careful not to air his opinions to the press. There are ·diplomats in his family tree., too. DAILY PILOT . · ARIST.OCRA:r Edw1rd Finch Cox -. • ' ~ ., ,~.,.~ .. ~--Wiii,•""'"'~· "'''V-',tt! ~W"1£~~'!r"f•~£.'~~....-&-~· )'ri°il'£,QP..TT\'lll'~·V" .... ,., ~· ~VJ-.. -~ • ~ -..,F ·~ .,. .f''\.r" -• .~"'·'\. ;, ,;.~~~'ROl.~~l~.~~i~~· ~~~~~:===~~~~ Did You Kno"!' .'lll~t T0p Water In Orange ColUlty Does NOT : State of Allegiance Exception _Well Taken By ERMA BOMBECK As a l'lative Ohioan. I couldn't help hut eavesdrop on a conversation, in a restaurant here recently. A the size of a gall bladder. snapped it and said, "I was a GI bride." "What kind or crack is lhat?" I whispered to my hus- band. "Cheer up." he grinntd . "She could have been a POW." Rece-ption Surprises Blackburns Magical Romp Lures A magical romp through time is in store for all Foun· lain Valley children \\'hen a movie depicting '•\Vi 11 y McBean and His 'Vishing Machine" is sponSGred by the. Refreshments will be sold for IO cents, and additional . information may be obtained ' by callnng l\1rs. G er al d Wessler. Fountain Valley Woman• s ~~~~~~~~~~~II Approximately 170 relatives Club. i= and friends toasted t h e Two 90--mlnute showings will \\'illiam BI a ck burn 5 of be offered at 1 and 3 p.m.l Saturday, 1'1arch .ZO in the Newport Beach en their 25th Tamura School auditorium. The Stilch1ry Nook C .. lWlll & Hll!Dltl'OIHT IUh & klp11ll1$ • "~••..,. • •11eu111 • • .,,..., Meet The Taste. Standards Qf .Th,e U.S. Public: Health Servlc:e 7 · You ptill 111illions of clotl•r1 , to d1..-1lop • 111ethod of "'•'•• p11rifie11ion i11 1p1c1. Now r1w1ri1 0111101i1 e,11 b1 u11d in the home-\.. r11rifying vour tip w1f•r into tgood dti11kln9 w1l1r, C•ll e114.,. ••t rntl~ •OSMOTIC W9ter ,.,.,._ -... , Si.OD ,..-111~Jttfl.. N• C••tr9ct ho ll1L e U1t11ff • Ct .... mlll1-M1Mn1 • DMC ••rM wedding annivenary during a YoungSlers in grades one LINVIRON PHONE' .. . -· AT WIT 'S END "ls that any way to talk a,bout your state?" I charged. ''You're forgetting Ohio has produced seven United States presidents: Grant, H a y e s , Garfield, Harrison, McKinley, Taft and Harding.'' at their kids, their domestic quarrels, their golf scores and their operaUon, but a light. remark about their home state Is like a declaration ol war. (Once at a luncheon, t saw a Pennsylvania man bite a rork in half when someone remarked. "The second prize was two weeks in Philadelphia.") Take any given group. Put them in a circle and 'ft'ithln minutes they will malign an 50 states for one dumb reason or another. I have seen Florida put doWR for having chill temperatures duMng a $70 a day room In Miami . .. Georgia criticized because the baby threw up on the luggage while pa~ing through Atlanta at 5 p.m. Nel)raska for having a gas station restroom without a key •.. and New Mexico for a crummy hotel room that "''as too deprwing to commit suicide In. surprise champagne reception through six are Invited to at· in the South Shore Sailing lend and admission wilt be CORPORATION 645•0'524) Club. ,_J'°~~ce:o~~~f:o~r~e=a=c~h~ch:i~ld~oJr~~~~~~~~~~~~==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 27' I!. U!h, Ct,lt MHI •0·161' NlllGltllf SOUAlll customer said lo the waitress, "Did I hear you say you're from Michigan?" The waitress nodded hap- pily. ''Me too," said the diner. "rve been in Ohio for the past seven years. How did you get here?" The waitress blew a bubble "And you're forgetting," he said, "Ohio has produced s eve n Uitited Sta t es humorists: Thurber. Hope, Diller, Conway, Winters "and the Wright Brothers." His point was made. Jn traveling about the country. I have noted people can laugh Joining th e Blackbums' adulL daughter Cathy Blackbum as co-hosts for the occasion were th~ honored couple's friends, Mr. and Mrs. Pa Im er Anderson or Newport Beach and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth R. Jngman of Corona del Mar. Married in San Bernardino. the couple had celebrated their silver anniversary earlier 11•ith a tour of the Hawaiian Islands. Members Association Remember to Music Happily. there Is one city !hat takes it for us all . New York. It's polluted. crowded, strike and crime ridden , under-serviced and o v e r • charged. Yet. there are more comedians making a llvinrz at New York's upense than there are people producing automobiles. Why! Because they laugh at themselves first. Dinner Simmers ~1emories will be revived mu sically ll'hen H arr y Lil'csay. pianist, entertains mc:nbers Of !he Am~ricP.n Association of R e t i r e d Persons, Ne\\•porl Be a ch Chapter 121, Thursday, March 18. in the N~wport Harbor Lutheran Church. f ollO\\'ing a noon luncheon, James E. Sawyer. new presi· den t. will conduct a short business meeting. Additional information rega rdirit I he meeting may be obtained by calling him. The chapter also w i 11 sponsor a defensive dri ving course for as s ociation Artist Paints In 'Wild ' Color ''\\'ild'' watercolor techni· ques 'ft ill be demonstrated by Mrs. Rock Duitman for members of the Cre ative Liv~ ing Section of the Riviera Club at 10 a.m. on \Ved r.1!sday, March 24. Membe rs who altend the session in the South Laguna home of the artist are invited to go for a swi m and dine In the Tennis Club following the art demonstration. members and th: National Retired Teachers' Association Wednesday and Thursday, March 24 and 25. The study program will con- sist of lectures by qualified instructors and films prepared by the National Safety ·eoun· cH. It requires attendance at eight one--hour sessions to earn a certificate of merit. Course registration lvill take place at 9:30 a .m. \\'ednesday in the church but reservations must be ma~ in ad vance since attendance is limited. Additional information may be cbtained by calling Lloyd E. ~lorrison. Judge to Talk To Secretaries As my husband was telling me the other day, "Did you hear about the New York "''altress from Michigan who v.•as asktd how she came to New York and she said, "I was a GJ bride~" Now, that 's funny. Eastern Star Meets Friday J\1embers of the Order of Eastern Star, Laguna Beach Chapter 521 'vill meet al B p.m. on Friday, ~larch 19, in the ~'la.sonic Temple. Ma. ~tarry Thompson and Mrs. Guest speaker for the dinner Elgin Burke \Viii be hostesses. Corned beef, cabbage and potatoes will be simmering "'hen Trygve Lie Lodge 90, Sons of Norway, sponsor a Herre Middag (men 's dinner) in the Elks Club, Newport Beach. Reservations for the 7 p.m. event Wednesday, 1.-farch 17, may be made by calling Harold Hammer. Bill ~toss \\'ill preside during the business meeting at 8 p.m. \Vednesday, March 24. Inform at lo n regarding membership may be obtained by calling Moss or Mrs. Ray Nielsen. NB Auxiliary The Ladies' Auxiliary of Ne\\'port Beach Fire Depart- ment gathers the t h i r d Wednesdays at B p.m. in various locations. lnrormalion regarding location may be ob- tained by calling Mrs. T. C. Dalley, 548-9835. Members of Star Club are meeting or Orange County gathering merchandise for a l~arbor Area Legal Secretaries rummage sale in the Laguna on Wednesday, March 17. will Beach \Voman·s Clubhouse lro _________ ;;;il be Judge Everett W. Dickey. from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on The gathering in the Saturday, April IO. Fisherman restaurant in ~fun----:;;;-;s;;;;u;;,.;;;;~!ll . t Be h '11 be t 7 't" .. -"°''!11-"" ting on . ac "'.'1 a 1 :ioo·~ Of OIL PAINTINGS p.m., With cocktails at 6:30. .. WHOLISALI WAllHOUSI Legal secretaries and their ~ OPIN TO THI PUILIC friend s interested in attending so•/o OFF may call P.trs. Gilbert Mueller t' uJJ •· tD•Hoa11, SANTA AHA in West Santa Ana lor 1 ~.._ l1MMI reservations. ~ DtALt•s wAHT•D r: DTEP.Y IU I!. 17tll It. ettl• """' • 14t-t11' Visit the Elizabeth Arden Red Door -, I ~ ... it 's a beautifying experience ~iiiiiil ~ 11 ua • IQ [QI ' DD Let our experts give your ski n a wonderfully refresh ing treat- ment ••. and a new make-up. You'll not only look your best, you'll feel marvelous! Complete treatment with makeup, 10.00. Beauty Sa lon \.l.inicures • Pechc.ures • Facial s • Electrolysis • ' ~ FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER OualiCraft jumps for joy. The springtime joy of bright and breezy dressing! Spruce it up with a twosome of 'ties in gleamy crinkle. One is white. with speed·lace. oblique bump toe. One is beige. girdle-banded and stitched in 899 brown. The fun-sunny ones. so nicely priced at ...... BANKAMERICARD . HUNTINGTON CENTER SOUTH COAST •l'l..UA HUNTINGTON HACH COSTA MISA .. N~.w~p~.~ •••.•• ~,ri:::i:r::-"T.l';;;'lr>r.:;;::::r1-:::;::--..-xill".1"'1in"l0l:T.o~.-.. ~,;• .• "o~:"'rnrT.'1;n:-7'rr:-:"'1":::::-Tll""l!Tl-.:1.o ,~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'-"-S_H_1o_N~S~9_U_A_R_r_._SA~N_TA~A_N~,A~~~~~~~~~-'~~~~ ' ,. • ---------l!lv JO O~N ., f!ri,. O.lfr l"llM 11a1t '"Teichert Ire taug t o teach - only one kind of child -lhat Majority's Public IChooll are lht: same in Newport Bt1ch, Costa MUI, Watts and south Santa AN . The ot1ly difftrtnce ls In the students who attend tht.m . ol his own culture. People mu5t 1dmit how much they don 't know about minorities. "Teachers must admit ig· norance about the children they are teach ing. Then we can tl!ach childrtn for what thty are, not what we want them to be." Challenge It thMe children are of minority r•ees, however. It'• a whole new bill 11me and ttie winning coaches must be apecially tr•lned for their task. The professor said that peo- ple U!llally think of the ad· vintaged as those of their tlwn culture 11nd the disad· vanlaged as those of a dif. ferent one. Stepped Up , Di!cus~ng the problem:. of educating minority children durin1 • mttlin¥ of lht Nt~tt..Co!ta Mesa Branch rtl the Am!rlcan Association t>l University Women were fflllr p e r s o n s rep~enUng various a.rtas ol education. ANGLOS BUSY He predicted that by the year 200(I the majority (Anglos) will be 50 percent of the population and the minorities wilJ be 50 percent. ''The Anglos have been very busy with the Pill." BtCinninf the discussion """ Dr. Philip Hemandtt, professor at San fern1ndo Valley State Colle1e. St. Patrick's Concert Tunes 1n Informality. A pop con~rt will previdt a mlWdl SI. Patrick '• Day eve1Ut11 ffw' m•mbV1 ef tht Adierican Auociatien o f Univtrsity Women, 5 an Past Leaders Pion M .. ting Mtl'nbers of the P 1 • t Prffidtnts' Club of Holy Euchari11 Institute 220, Young Lad.iU lnstltute, will mee:t an Tbunday, Marth Ii, in the Runttncten Bt1ch home llf Mfll. Jack Celllflowtr. Tht fnMJp, of which Mrs. Colliflbwtr i1 president. m!~ls ft'Ml'J\thly. Other officers are Mrk. Tolly Rodri1ut , lecrftary, and Mrs. Robert Kewell, treasurer. . A dinner g1therin1 In 1 Hun· ll.natM Beach restaurant will )lffi:ede tht meetinJ. C I t m e nte-capi1tranO 8ay flrinch and thtir husMnds on Wtdntaday, Mlrth 17." Two groups frcm lht Fine Arts DtParttnenl of Sad. dleback" Collete will perform in St. Clemtnl'• Churth, San Clementt, ll 7:45 M:fore an audience atated at small tiblu arranitd for informal list.eJl.in1. 'Tht Chamber Singen, Uflder the direction o( Oonaild Walker will offtr folk sonas and billidS. Walker, a n·auve of Minneseta. has rectivtd na- tional musical awards and has produced and directed the , firsl nonProfWioniJ Ameri can performances of 1everal hit musicals. ".Speon River Anthology" will be presented In dramatic form with music al ac· comp1nim1nt by a group under the direction of Doyle McKinney, chairman of the department. Speaker Accented George Gilbert, humorous e1pert on the varying speech di:.iltctE in the United Sla tes, will talk to Newport Harbor , Busint.s!I" a n d Proft!Rional Wom~n·s Club members and autsu: on Thursday, March JI. A social hour at 6:30 p.m. will preeede the d In 11 e r1 meeting at 1:15 in the MeRa Verde Counlry Club. Mrs. Lilla Scally and Mrs. Dorothy Wright are taking restrv.!ltions. HEAR Benefit Singer Johnnie Ray has donated an oil painting from hilli private collection lo be sold in iht Artists and Model s of 1971 festival beginning Wed· nesday. March 17, in J . W. Robinson's Pasadena store for the benefit of the HEAR Foun- dation . EMIOSSED SLINKY KNIT PRINTS • ,, • SOLIDS 9r1at desitn• 11'1.I celert fer p1111"t '"' ethl'lic tre111s lt•ld m•~ c•lors en • ~"it d•sitn•d fer f•r out p•nf 1uit11 dre11e1. these •r• th e 1e1son'1 r191 , MACHINE WASH e NO IRON ftilCe Klt9te 44" /II" wl4t -..w ... ~~~.:::.-® ((,,, SOLID COLORS '1" TD. EASTER PARADE PRETIIES for the "•••-thru" leek • "WHISPER " LACE mi11l tleiitn• for Ee1ter • "SUNSET" FLOCKS wee he1rt1 on white! • "SWISSAIRE" LENO WEAVE l:.elcl eelert, exetic: cle1i9n1 • Jecquercl Splendor Prints fer hteutiful Ee1ter dre1111 • Embroiclered Dotted Swiu hith •+vie.I for sprlnj· l u1\1t y• • EMBROIDERcD PIQUE 98',.. $1~! $1~! $2~! $2~! $~!, $J~!. A eac r of minorllY students must .ask herself. then. why 1he cannot com· municale with that student. Or. Hernandez said. "How many ways can you Injure and not be aware?" Offering a fir!lt-hand look at tM problems teachers face in :south Santa Ana was ~1rs. \V . r . Garret!. a community :.iide assigned to ~onte Vist a Sc hoot ''There are problems oot ~ide M:hool that detract children from learning, To work ln Santa Ana the st;iff m u s t want in to set In the bottom of I.he child 's problem ." Lack or a stable fam ily is one problem. "The home is the center of learning. Home is '•"here learning bta:ins ." Other problems are lack of adequate food and housing. -"""-'-----· .. ... . •• -.. ••f .~ ..... A drild _. tnlerated-Ht 'uid tha *31.L,.,iW..,__ "OnL.prriod per aWde.o will in learning if he Is hungry wa1 cut from the Santi A.11.a be allotted per year to mak• or knows he has to go home school bodgei btcaW of the the decisions that will in- to a house with no furniture defeat of the recent lax over· fluence the ml of hb life ... and no beds, she said. ridt. According to recom· Concluding the panel wa~ PARENTS' PRIDE mendaUons for the mluction Mrs. W. E. Wrt11ton, board Children often will come ol educatiou.1 services made mtmbtr in tlle Newport-Mesa by the 1 superintendent. the nicely dressed to school but Sanla Ana school system nert Unified School District. yet be in the free lunch pro-ytar will put iU 12 elementary She feels the biggest pro- ~ram. "Parents have pride ." schools on double or triple blem a school board f,.ce.s Mrs. Garrett said ... They will \l'a.~h their children's clothes ~esilon (10 of 22 were con-is makin1 Its decisions known in the bath tub at night. They demned ). to the public. Also, transport11tion will be put on a front.'' cut down .11nd 6& percent of "rt re q u ires continuous Her job includes finding I.he instructional television cut participation," she said. Some- shoes and clothing f o r out. All the frllts will be one from t v er Y orcartiz.a- lamilies. getting their lighU eliminated including sports, tion should be :.it every school and gas turned back on and music and drama, makini the board meeting, feeding in· finding food ~·hen needed schools 1 .. barren. joyless formation into thtir group." "You say it can't be true. environment .'' In view of all the problem! lt is." faced in educatinJ minority fl.'ext panelist was Jeue NEW RATIO children. what is the bi11est Berry, a Santa Ana school The counselor-Rlude1t ratio asset a school hu'! bosrd mMJber standing for will bt decreased from 400 Or. Hernandez: an.swertd for re-election. to 800 studenlll per counselor. the pant.I : "A tood teachtr." • 5-Ytar Nallonwlde Prot1cllon Plan. Backed by General MOlors.1-yearwar· r&nly for rtpair of any :t dtfeet in the entire product, plus a 4-year Protection Plan for repair of any defect In tht refrigerating sys· tem and ABS cabinet lineron modela so -~.,. equipped. It's big! 15.2 cu. ft. overall with a 10.43 cu. ft. refrigerator section and a4.75cu. ft. freez· er to store up to 166 lbs. Here's the extra space you want. It's Frost-Proof. You'll never defrost again. It's adaptable. Reversa-<Joors may be hinged for right"°r· left-hand openings if you move or remodel. No need to call a serviceman. The switch can easily be made by the man of the house. It'• organized. Keeps every- th ing in its place. Separate compartments for snacks and spreads; twin removable egg servers that reduce break· age, make cooking and clean· Ing easier. 9reet eoler1 tnd fe1i9n1 en cetfen1, reyens, 1ynthetie1 11141 blencl1 · e 16"/45~' witlth1 e mo1t are weshtble BONDED SPRING SUITINGS MACHINE WASH • HANG TO DRY 11111 01111111 111111111111111111111111 111 :','.~,~~·;,:~, ... • ru~ao COORDINATES AND BONDED SCANDIA AC:lY~IC: •ACI AC:ITA Tl nJC:OT IAC:K 14" /II,. wlttth HOUSE OF F•BRICS ..... CW Pf• e,1, .. 1 •• S•11 Di•t• fwy . ea.. •.•• 141-tlU 01 I lll'G M• Oft11 .. fft•rr. ef!4 H•rltt1 ...... 116-ll 4 • M..., ~ 7111 •' Jrht•I Ifft• Aw-MJ·lll1 .... ,_,. ~t. '''"'' 11 St111lo11 IMH PM-ltl-4JJJ l11tegrlt11 a11d Depe11dabill1y Shire 1947 • COSTA MESA 411 l . StYc11t1enth Streit 64'·1H4 dolly 9·t : Sot. f·I EL TORO lagvt11 Hllh 'In• IN•! tf S•¥.otl\ U7.Jll0 dolly 10·6: M/F lO·f $ 95 TUMBLEWEEDS WAATVOU GONNA DO wrrn ALL THAT tJllNE"I, o~HO ? MUTI AND JEFF JUDGE PARKER . , .. • IT l001('5 AS ll-IOUG\.I -' ™E POLIC.E ~A.VE Tl-i l t.16 5 UNDER CONTROL, A.!!EY ! PLAIN JANE .. . .. l'M GOING ON A SHOPPI~ SPR!:E:! 111ERE'S A 91G SAl.E: ON AT THIO GE'NE'RAl. STORE'! OH, MUTT, WILi.. )t)U SEE Wl4o's AT TWE DOOR.:> ~----- ' ' . ~-· .~ ly C litster Gould 19 Y!ARS nr~PRJSON· Cl!U.! l'M "' By Al Smith HM, J UST AS I ALWAYS T140UGl-tT1 IT'S HOl.LOW ! By Harold Le Doux LET TI-IAT ee >.. LESSON 1'0 'KXI, Mil. DRIVER .. POtfT EVER: T~ 6ETTIW6 SMArr WlTM A!!EY 5PE-NCER! By Frank Baginski I DAILY CROSSWORD ••. by R. A POWER I PERKINS ACROSS l Sin9er ---· Vaughan 6 Te11111o rary structur e 10 R lv ~r barr1trs 14 Ha ving win9\ 15 Russian moun \1111 range l!i "··· -- Rhythm": Z words 17 Troo1ta f plant 18 Ftm•n int Jll'l\I! 1'······9i n 20 Expressed contt!l11ll 22 Mil k sugar 24 Srctlon undtr lh t "'" Z!i Applitd the br akes 27 Parasol 30 Saill)I" 31 Fox·--· 32 Forefathers 37 Pfriod ol history -14 Numtr1ci1! prtfllC 45 Ma1tltn in Grttlc Mytholn91 •B Contav~ 51 Wt 19hed down 5Z S11 Jblt p•!t !S of h nd 5• Prov1dt s 58 Po ll\1tal group 5~ Nost: Prtfi'( bl P1ttt of Jhsorbtnt cloth &ZT issu! &J Rtptil t: 1n !orm a1 64 Miss Ryan b5 M~n'5 nam! E>b "'1ss Ferber &7.falt:,' oowrl l Pouches 2 Bay'5 nam e J Breathin lJ t:'>ound 4 In any case: 2 words I YO>I (O(R l~(·~ Sl >I (l (>I T ~('<~( lll1t up lZ ---·-Jaw , Sask. l) Spifiled t 11uine 21Airl1nl! abbrrvi atlon 23 Soc1 ~I stratum 25 ··--···· Amrrica 27 P1f rtt wi\11 a we~llOfl 2a lmpulst 29 lilr. Coward 33 Republic ). 15 171 39 Oata suppcrting a dttislcn "2 N atiYI! of a Greti': island 43 Woma n fn Grreic: lril y!holO?Y 4!i US hum..,11sl "7 lrgumlnous plant 48 l1abi tilii!S 49 Land mass surrounded by watrr 50 L011g loose robe 38 Ho1sfplayrrs 40 Hors! 5 Flrrsi!lt Ii Ont srrking ~n o!fltt of Ct ntral Amt11c a: 2 words )4 ChamDrr cf a stav e 35 That whith is It !t 53 Grmstont 55 w 1df· IT'outhrd jui; 5!i Tear apart 57 Weave1's reed dottOI: Informal 41 ThOSf who ha~t la llh 43 Coln of Mex ito I ' '" " .. ~ ;,;, ;., .. .. ' I :: I • If .. .. - ,. -.. ., • ,. re ,, .. 7 M~lt (l ~uor 8 Public wa lk 9 Ret !an9ul ar column 10 Twist s ["'\U6 ' i' " Y'' ;i ,, " ' " ~ .. n . I~ . I • ~ ~ ever 3b Portico 38 Solt cap • • ~ a' I! " " • . N ' , l, .. •I ~ ~ ..... >!. --i> N .. . . . M ,, " - " " " !iO Fa mily meml?J:r " ,, ~ ~ .. ,I ' " •; . " " " . .. ... " 111517 L MISS PEACH 1"0011: UTTL.E ROfJEll:T I THE Q.41LV CAlr PCOl-SEEh\S (ro::;:;:-·'-....._"TO~ DISOI< NT H~ll r~~ &:inde~tten / • Clcus (l6 j . ! I . STEVE ROPER Ll'L AINIR . - VJAAT rs •rr- ~AT KEEPS "6C)IL1"'6 POll<IT' W.AOEWtl' (!'OR EXCIT'AtJJ.E GIRLS) IN TOUCHWITM iHE \NOR.LD OUTSIDE? ·1T0 15,0F A COURSE ..-/ S·lS GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS • / , MO SOOY /U)J.IZE5 fff).T ,J.F~fi! .4 Sltl~flr, CJ.OUOUSS Sl<Y·"'' By John Mllff .J l'I"),,,... By Mell "klGMT! THOt! ~ING5, PL.US GOING 'TO StMOOl.. /NA DlffEfCENT C.Ai~ l!V£-'Y OAY f J}'{:-,.,, "'""· ' D41L V PILOT J f ly Al C.,, ..... ___ ,.. -·-- By Charles Barsotti By Gus Arriola By Rocier Bollen • nff STIANGI WOtllO MR.MUM DENNIS THE MENACE \ ) ) • ' ,• ., •' -- • • .. ' { I l . l ' . .. :! ·I .. • .. .. ., .. . , .. ;~ ' ,, ., l ' I • ' I I ·: ' . ' ' :: :: '.• . . :; .. • ' ' .. .. ': ' • • I 1 ' I I I • J8 DAILV PILOT s • Mond<lY, Marc.II 15, 1971 Mo11ey's lV01•th c ood Fo1· Best Sa~gs By SVLVIA PORTER Q. \Vh at Is the difference betv>'een chicken "patl-ies" and chicken "burgers" -in terms of the amount or chicken each CQnt.ains? A. Chicken burgers must consist of 100 percent chicken. If cereals or other fillers are used, they must pe labeled patties. Q. Ho\V much m'eat must spaghetti v.1ith meatballs con· ta in'! A. 12 percent or more meat. Q. \\'hat's the dirference betv.·een "beef and gravy" and •·gravy and beef'? A. In beef and gravy. th e primary ingredient is beef. It's the other way around with gravy and heel. These and other v i t a I details, v.·hich may appear on the labels of hundreds of food products you buy regularly, are your key clues to how much of a bargain you are getting for your food dollar. The labels· tell you too how much of major nutrients, especially protein, arc ·con- tained in each can or package: how much time you are 1likely to save in preparing the food within ; how many and what size portions there a r e : '''hether or not you are buying \Vaste. The true value of what you are buyin:;: lies in v;•hat amounts of basic ingredients you are getting. not simply in the net '''eight of the food. Thus, by knov;·ing the rules for reading food labels, you can consistently stretch your !ood dollar. Here, therefore.' is a run- dov;n on labels today which you'll find valuable v;•hen you compare products and p~ices in the supermarket. (1) Under federal la"" every package of food, drugs or cos- meti cs must contain the follov;'ing information on its label in plain English ~ name of lhe product: name and ad- dress of manufacturer, packer or distributor; net amount of Lagllllan Takes Post · At Sullivan William R. Ro:;ccrans of Laguna E·each has been ap- pointed director of faciliti es planning for Sullivan Pre· School Centers. Sullivan Pre-School Centers. an educational affiliate of Behavior a I Re search Laboratories of Palo Alto and New York will spend $3\~ mil· lion !his year on construction and furni shing of 10 pre-school center buildings in major pop- ulat ion areas of California. Main offices for' SPS are located at 2192 Du Pont dr ive in the Irvine J n du s I r i a I Complex. contents; details or dietary characteristics. if ap- propriate; note of whether the product contains artificial col· oring. navoring or chemical oring, flavoring or chemical preservatives; a list of the ingredients, except for certain products (ma yonnai se . nlacaroni. bread, j a nl s , ketchup. canned · f~s and vegetables) for v•hich federal ''standards of identity" have been esta blished defining basic ingredients. (21 Next, certain descriptive details are required for cer· tain products. primarily can· ned fruits and vegetables: the variety ~white or yellow corn. for instance): St)•le of pack (v;·hole, diced); material in "'hi ch package (sughr , syrup, watr.r). (3) Ingredients must bf': listed in descending order of tbeir volume (if a beef ste\v list sho\vs beef way do wn and potatoes v;•ay up on the list. you have a clue !hat you are buying mostly potatoes). ( 4) If the roo<! is an im· itation, this fact must be stated. and if there is a pie· ture of the product within , it must be accurate. (5) Baby food labels must slate the nutritional elements they contain proteins, vitamins, minerals -plus. in the case of strained baby foods, a list of the ingredients. (6) Meats may carry on the major cuts of th e carcasses the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture's inspection stamp. Federally inspected poultry, fresh or frozen. car· ries a stamp "inspected for wholesomeness.'' (7) ·Then the"re are u n 1vritten-unlabeled federa l standards c<>vering prepared and convenience f o o d s • especially containing meat or puultry. Hot dogs may contain no more than 30 percent fat : rleviled ham, no more than 35 percent fat: c<>rned beef hash must have at least 35 percent beef ; beef pot pie, at least 25 percent fresh beef: '"beef with gravy," at least 50 percent cooked meat. F'rozen TV meals must <..'()ntain at least 25 percent cooked meat and the same for meat casseroles. Frozen o r a n g e juice concentrate must be jusf that, 100 percent orange juice. And so it goes dO\vn a long, long list l\1any labels v.·i!I undergo a marked improvement, in· cidental l y, v.'hen the Agriculture Dept. completes its current overhaul of its rules on food labels and federal standard s. But right nov;·. you can use !his guide to help you shop the label s -and by so doing. stretch your food dollar at least a bit more. ,40-year Career With ,Con1pany Rosecrans, a na1ive of Dol\·ne)' aild former personnel manager for the ~1 a c C' o Corporation of Ne \1' p or 1 Leland J. Valentine of 18312 Beach, ·,is a gradua te of Thomas Circle, Huntington University of Sou the r n Beach, has just completed hi s CaJifornia 'l\"i!h !he !'llBA in fourth decade of service with ad111inistrative management . General Telephone Company. Al Su 11 iv a n Pre-Schools, Presently a marketing staff Rosecrans will be re~ponsible representative for General for market n:scarch and Telephone in Long ~C3('h, analysis. acquisition of P.re· Va lentine fir st began hi s school sites and building con-career ll'ith !he utilitv as <i tilruction. pay st ation collector· in his Siles have recently been ac-hometo11·n . San Bernardino. quired for pre-school centers ----LEGAL SOTICE in fountain Valley a n d f\.tissi6(t Viejo. ---. --,. .• 0"1·----- i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiit-iii J CEltTl,ICATIE Oil' lVSlt<IESS FICTITIOUS NAME Tiie urK1er1ltrntotl <10 cer!lfy tllev tro ATTENTION: i(Ollduchn11 1 tkl1lne1s et X1311 11uuw•t••· Hun1Jn11ton It~. C1!!lornl• uno:ler 1118 llc!l!ious f!<m n4m• al !tl4TE GOVERN· MfNT ADMINISTRATION Ind !!>I! s•ld lltm It eoml'O~ or the fo!lowlng oo•s.ons, wflos• n•me1 In lull etld pl•tes of residence •~ es 1ollow1: INCOR,.OR4TEO SM4Ll 8U~INESS & "ROFESStONAL CORPORATIONS w!t" OHi: Ott MORE ll!MPLOVEES sso.ooo GROllP TA~ DEDUCTllLE Ll'l INSURANCE e ,_Ott l'Hf. f.MPLOVIElt - "remlu-ere (cm11te!~IV Te~ P«hl<!lb~ BO!<lt!llh ten 1>t re. tluced lcr !\Of!. m~n1geme~t em1>lr>\'ff'I • FOlt THI EM,.LOYEI - Lift lnutr•n<~ a-1111 •t no coil JtmpJo\'t'r p;ild premiums .trt lrte 111 lncomt teat 1. H"1f'ler 1mountt 2. Ptrmenttll L I ft Ccn1rttl (wllfl u.11 ••lutl J, welwr ol ,.,,..,1~m if tot••• •v dl,ebloct ~. O"f"'M1"1\p Cf~ be esilvr>ed • tilt!• t~• pf1111'ln0 ,_.,. ""'-'• lflftrl'l\llllM-Clntk! ll'Ktlltl•• '"""""'"' fllC., , ... ~"" ,, ORANGI COUNTY IM,LOYlaS llNl,tT .PLANS -1417-,.,.rt. A . H•w,.rt hKll. c.llf. tJ661 645-1470 l!JI A.M. •S:W",..,#1~ M_1, lfl,.,.. ",...' Ron.Id 01nlol HArrls. J•, 10ll1 81ut•-wa!ot, Hu~!lng!cn llt•cll, C•lifornla. N•nc:Y M. H~rrls, l~Jn lllulfw•ltt, Hu~!lntrlon 801tn.,C•llfotnle, 011e<1 Fot1ru1ry 11, 1911 ll:on1ltl 01~le1 H;9'1"tll, J•, NAncy M. H1rrl1 Sl.'llf ot Calllor11!1, Or1n9e Covntv: On Fobru~rv 16, lt11, ~lort ""· e Notary Public in 1no for said Sl1te. Pt't5Q<>lfllv •ooe~red Ron~k:f 01nltl 11•rrls, Jt,. 11\d Non<:v M. Htrrls ~mtwn !c "'' fO bfl 111e o!rtDn• w11<11t names II w~erl~ 1o th<!. wl!Mn ln11tumont ,incl l(~now!«l~ecl 1~•Y •~etutf(f Ille , .... ~. !OFFICl4L SE4LJ JcttPh E. D&vl• NotlrY ,.ubllc-C..illOtnJo Pr1nc:IP1I Offl(t In• Or•t>llC Coon!y M1 C-mlnlM E ~oltu J\lllt 21, 1974 P~tll!•l\fd Orl"ll• to1s! O~llY ,.llo!, Ftllr~rY U •~d M•rcll 6, II, l'O. 1f11 •Sl·ll 1,0GO'• OF OIL rAINTINGS WHOLISALl WAllHOUSl orrN TO THI rUILIC 50°/o OFF 1'lt I. lOIHGlll, SANtA AHA l"lltMI..,_ • DIALlltS WANtlD ~ Who Cares? No tllh•t 111wtp1por i11 tllo worlcl c•r•• 1bout your eom11111• 11lly Ii~• your eoft'l111u11it\' cl•ily 11•wtp1p1r 4001. 11'1 01• DAILY PILOT. ., -.. . . . . .... ., .. ... . ·-• ~" ~~~~~~~--liinance­ Who Listens NEW MESA PONTIAC DEALER STRESSES CUSTOMER S~RVICE Dave Ross St1nd1 Before Recently Completed Facility In High Gear Dave Ross Brings New ·C.ar· Dealership to Costa Mesa " By CARL CARSTENSEN A new name, unfamiliar locally until now, b u t thC1"oughly c~neral ~iotors trained is !he new Pontiac dealer in Costa Mesa. For Dave Ross. just :Jl:i, the Grand Ope1;ing of his dealership is what he calls '"real fulfillment." Although his entire tenure has been with GM products he entered the automobile b u s i n es s "strictly by accident." B~gin­ ning in the retail sales depart- ment o( a Detroit dealer Ross then was asked lo attend GM dealer mana gement school and General l\1otors Institute, Later he v;•orked for dealers in Kentu cky, Florida and Tex- as at the request of G~1. About three years ago Ross was asked to explore various dealership possibilities i n Southern California for GM and decided then that this was the place to b!' in the auto business. "I'd have been here sooner lf I'd had the money," Ross said. He also added that he was probably fortunate that this wasn't the case because "\Vhen the op- portunity to become the Pon· tiac dealer in Costa ~1esa developed I jumpe.d at it.'' One factor Ross cites as a reson for becoming a Pon· liac dealer is the apparent renewed interest in the Jillf':. "Jn the next few months Pon- tiac will re-generate sales in·· terest whi ch ren short of ex· pectalions the past couple of years." Ross said . He refers to the entire Pontiac lino but more spec ifica!Lv to the new Grand Ville series and small Ventura IL · The ne\v dealer looks less at the larger showrooms than to the service facilities. "The reputation of any dealer is made in the back shop," he said. "and that's where I ex· pect Dave Ross Pontiac lo make its impact." Ross said his concept of a dealership was not going to be built around volume sell· ing bu1 good service and customer satisfaction. He was quick to add his inventory of new cars would be about 140 unils and 60 used. Along with sales and service the most modern body, fender and paint shop will be included. Rounding out the manag~­ ment staff are Bill Hinman , s:?rvice manager; Bill Tepe. new car sales manager ; Duane Banks, used car sales manager anrl Ed Hacquebord, business man_ager : all are ex· perienced Pontiac d e a I e r personnel. · Ross has put his roots in the community, has moved lo Newport Beach and is already looking to tm future. '1This organization and its owner intend to serve. \Ve intend to earn our way and be here ror a long, long time,'' Ross concluded. The ne1f dealership is locattd al 2480 Harbor Blvd. TOYOTA CHOOSES ~1.ESAN FOR NEW POST Toyota Motor Sales USA, Inc .. has announced the pro· motion of Robert Wolverton lo the newly created post or Na ti on a I l\.ierchandising Services Manager, Wolverton, who has spent his entire career in the automotive field has been with Toyota for lhree years. In his new position he will supe rvise sales promotion, •special events activitie~. com· mercial ·and used vehicle merchandising. \Vol verton resides in Costa Mesa. VOLKSWAGEN PACIFIC ELECTS !\lcCORO NE\\! V.P. Volks\\'agen Pacific ha s named J. 1-l. McCord vice president to <l1recl the com- bined operations of i I s Volkswagen and Porsch:?·Audi . dh•isions, it was announced by Sam \Veill, .Jr ., president. Three States Planni11g Price Cuts QD Drugs \Veit! said the decision to centralize operations of the two di visions is designed to s ubstantially expand field staff services to fran- chised Volkswa gen a n d Porsch e-Audi dealerships. J, H. McCord. fonnerly gentral manager of the ecm- pany's V\V division, has been named corporate vi c e · president-operations of bot h V\V and Porsche -Audi. Volkswagen Pacific, 11'ilh a staff or 450. will now com· Porsche-Audi in executive and business management. zone sales. parts, service and training . NI-;\V YORK (U PI ) -TI1rec or the nation's b i g g e s t states-California, r>.1ew York f-.1 as s achusetts-apparently are gelling ready to do .something about the high price of pre.'icription drugs . Bills have been offered in the legislatures of all three lo give pharmacists the right to substitute the same drug: so ld under a generic label for a branded drug prescribed bv a doctor. ·The rule s of pharmaceutical hoards in most s t a t e s presently insist the branded drug be used. even thou gh more and more sta le and rnunicipal hospitals are refus- ing to pay the higher prices for branded drugs. The price savings by using generic rlrugs, or forcing the 1nanufactu rer of b ra n de d drugs to slash prices. can be dramatic. ~ Miltown. lht widely used branded !ranquilizer. lists at $57 a thousand pills. but it can be bou,ght for $7 or $8 under its generic n a n1 e , l\leprobamate. Acromycin, a branded tetracycline anti • biotic, lists at $12.flll a hundred but lhe same Tetracycline can be bought for $1.85 under the generic name. Ampacillin, another anti-biotic. is $12.50 a hundred generically but lists al $22JO under the brand name, Polycillin , These exa1nples \Vere cited b)' President Jerry l.clin of Generics Corp. of Americo of l\loonachie, N.J .. and Adolph Stortch, Pr('Sident of Purcpac Co. of Elizabeth , N.J. Thfo 300 makers of generic prescription drugs <in the United States can give other examples of dramatic price gaps. Ordinary rcrf'tl.us sulf att. given for iron deficiency. sells for about $1.50 a thousand pill~ but you 1nli;ht pay $5 lo *' for i~ undtr a bra nd n11n1c. Rese rpine, used to treat high blood pressure. costs SS cents bul lists al $4.50 under the trade name Serpasil. Predisonc, an anti·arthritic. can be. bought for $9 a thousand tablets, but may lisl at ever $100 und er such brand names as l'llelicortinc. Chlortrimcton is a brand name for an anli-histamine packed al $2-0.50, but it can be bought for perhaps $1.95 as chlorphniramine n1aleatc. Digitoxin, prescribed f o r cardiac patients. can be bought for $2 .50 but may cost State Farm Profits Up $6 or more unde r branfl,names liarold .J. Asplund. \vho such as Crystodigen, Ox· represents State F a r m ytetracycline se lls generically Insurance in the El Toro· for $3.30 but lists under the Mission Viejo area. today trade name Tcrra...mycin at received an adi•ance c<>py of $~!~ever. Zclin and Stortch the firm 's year-end report. In the report from State agteed. it is well to remember rust. Asplund was told that that these brand prices are · State Farm made $27.l million list prices, on its auto insurancr business Actually , they said, the big in" 1970. Investment earnings pharmaceutical! firms a re "'ere $S3.Z million. Profits, in· beirig forced to sell an in-creasing share of lheir brand· elud ing $1.1 mill ion fro1n miscellaneous sources and cd output at big discounts to 12 5 hospitals and clinicS. In many after federal taxes of , million, amo unttd to cases, F'ederal Medicare of- ficials and slate and local s78.986,328. v.·elfare officials refuse to pay The company-wide earnings more than the generic price \1·ere equivalent to 4.8 percent of 1970 sales (earned for the drugs used in prescrlp· premiums and member!lhip lion s even if the _branded drug sed . bed. 1 tat fees) of $1,643,989.152. was u in o ience 0 s e Asplund said the year's pharmacy board rules. results compared fa vorably Zelln and Stortch l I":\ o v;•ith those of l!l69, v;·hen the predicted bills will be offered company lost $91.G million on in many more st ate d its insurance nperalions an lcglslatures to P e r ITI i t had investment income or phar1nacists to use their own S63.5 million. Sales in 1969 judg1nent regardless of the ll'ere $1.4 billion doctors' prescripUons. <"'==========~ ''As generic drug makers, \\'e're certainly .not against se eing ph a r maceuUcar manuracturers being allowed to recoup development costs on new drags,'' said Zelin, ''5.ut ooce the p.attcntJiu_r;un. _ nut it seems "'rong to see the. public, espccJally older people, gouged out of mllllons of dollars In excess prices for branded drugs.·• NO. I ON TlIE COAST Your Hometown News pa per Is The DAILY PILOT Briefs C111CAGO -0.Spto. Inc. has bought a 42,ooO· squar< I foot factory al Elgin, Ill .• w'1ere it will produce a line j of specialty paints, including aerosol antiquing kits, and certain chemical coatings. NE\V YORK -Howmedica. Inc .. announced it will build a $.f milllon factory at Limerick, Ireland, to make orthopedic appliances and in- 6truments. MIAA11 -'Vackenhut Corp. has obtained a three-year ex· tensiOn of its contract to pro- vide security services for ' Nevada facilities of the Atomic Energy commission, The contract is valued at $4.7 million for thf': first ye NEWARK. N.J. -CeJanese Plastics Corp, will spend $11 million this year to e:ipand production of polyester film. A major part of the outlay "-'Ul be made at the Celanar Complex at Greer, S.C'., \he company said, I NEW YORK -Pinkerton's, tnc., says it has the approval of Underwriters Laboratories for use in both homes and commercial establishments of its plug-in Minuteman JI Burglar Alarm, which detects moving persons and sounds a siren alarm. PHILADELPHIA -Brewer & Co. announced the forma· tion or the first independent sugar processing cooperative in Hawaii as a joint venlure "'ith Hilo Island coast in· dependent growers. Brewer w i 11 Cilntribute processing assets valued at $10.5 million and cash capital of around $18 million will be raised in Hawaii. More than 400 in- dependent sugar farmers will contri bute about $4.S million of the sum needed t o modernize sugar processing on the Hilo coast Brewer said. NEW YORK -Shares of cigarette makers sho\ved the biggest year-to-year price gain in the stock market at the end of February, Moody 's Investors' Servic:? report.<:. Prices of the cigarette shares as a group were up 55.S per· cent from a year earlier. Higher cigarette prices and diversification by the com- panies appeared to be the principal reasons for the gains, Moody's said. \VASitlNGTON -The Navy l1as ordered prototype air cushion landing craft from Aerojel-General Corp. for about $18 million, of which $1 million v.·i]J be funded at once. The vehicles are lo be JOO feet long and 48 in beam and designed to carry 75 tons on a cushion of air above !~'::!: sea surface at speeds up to 50 knot s. 1 BALTl~IORE Farboil Co.. a division of Bealriet. Foods. says it has developed a multi-layer baked coating. which it says '"ill reduce air and water pollution caused by c!:emical environmental reac· -lion. It is expected to be used for automotive parts, coil coatings. metal shelving and simi lar applications. \VVANDOT'TE, T\!ich. 81\SF' Wyandotte Corp. has raised prices of all grades of caustic soda $5 a ton ef- fective immediately for spot customers. Thf': raise \Viii be. applied to contract customers in accordance with terms of" their, contracts. HOUSTON -Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. and T\1obil Oil Co. of Canada have begun drilling an exploratory test well 280 miles east of Halifax. Nova Scotia in 225 feet of '''ater. The drilling program calls for ~ree \Veils. NEW YORK -The con· tinuing \\'age pattern in the I United States still is in· flalionary, the Federal! Reserve Bank of Ne\v Yorkl says in the March Economic Review. The FED said the published wage increases maY be misleading because many contracts being negotiated call for additional cost or living bonus 1vhen the government price index goes up. ~ CANOGA PARK, Calif. - Informatics Tisco, tnc., has obtained a $4.8 million one· year extension or its contract to operate the Scientific andl Technical Information Facility of the National Aeronautics nnd Science Adn1inistration at College Park, ~d. I CHICAGO -Popcll Brothers, Inc .. ha! sued thc 1 Remington Electric Shaver ! Division of Remington Rand Corp. for infringing its patents on -&etling_hair _ by the use of steam heated and moisten·) ed curlers. Pope ii sued Schick, Electric, Inc., ch a r gin g To Landers? l SINCE SHE'S ONE Of . ! I • THE • TEN MOST INFLUENTIAL WOMEN IN AMERICA • • • • • • • Just About ~veryone Does Tbat 's . Who You Can "Listen' to Ann Landers .. Deily ·~ The DAILY PILOT similar infringement I a 11 we<k. I,,.., ________________ _, • • • ,. f • i • I ' • -· . '" -Buy The DAILY Pl.LOT: For Peanuts! s:,. ·c· ....__.. H1,.'1 here'• CHARLIE BROWN ••• and LUCY.,,and here'• UNUS.,,and ' here·• SCHROEDER .. , and fut but not laut. h1rt'1 SNOOPY Phone 642-4321 (C:lrcnlatlon Department) to have the whole Peanuts gang come and visit you dally • • l ' • 'I d I ,, • • T • ' ' •, . . ... ' .. ---... --~ ~-.......... ~ .. - ZI DAILY PILOT Monday, March 151 1971 --·Price• effectiv~ lhru Tues., 3/16 Tubeless Blackwalls ••• Any Size Listed SIZE r .E.T. SIZE ·r.E:T. EA Cit E.~CH 6.50xl3 3" .c 7.35xl4 4Jc 5.60xl5 3f)c 7.75xl4 44c 8.15xl5 Sic 8.25x 14 45c 1087 Pins F.E.T. Each And Old 'fire Whitewall s Only $1 More Each .• 12-ln., 3-Height Slurdy J ack Stand Allstate 12-Volt Ballery I.ow }99 worn-out battery with a Sears All-fits many 12-volt cars. Rcplai::e yourl 199 l'ricf'd ! ll ~t>fi Stat_c battery. \\ithTr11df-ln Ad iustable fnr car or trail l'\o~.4:t38--t331J cr.12-i nchcs hiF!h. S.ears UESTOR GRAND PRIX MARCH 28,1971 a l 011tario Motor Speed\vay SPECIAL SEAH.S DISCOUNTS Resular •14. •12 •10 Prire ~ .. ar~ n; • .-ounl •11 '9 •7 Price SEARS FAMILY DISCOUNT Pl.AN B"~y Any 1"ickct at Rc,cu\ar Pri1..c ... (;er 1\JJ1un11.il Tickc1s (of si 1nLlar valut"l (nr ONLY S, f11r CJ1..h <~hil,\ 16 Years or Un<ler. Pick Up Your [)1~1..ounr C:oupnns 1\t 1\ny Sc.ir~ Auto Ccntt·r AnJ Get ·rn:kct.'i ;1.1 the T ickt'trnn ()u1k·t At Customer Cvnven1 cncc Counrcr .'S • .tVE $1.50: ] 1/2-'I'o11 Rt1ggcrl Hytlraulic HamlJnck H";!idar Sl:!.•JIJ 9?,? i ·\\1 J·pit1..C' l1hi11,1; h;inJlc, built-111 release v,ilvc. Wi~lc h<isc for stabil1t)'". 0 Tubeless Blackwalls .• Any Size Listed SIZE .... '..T. SIZE .-.1:.T. f. \• :11 l:\CH 1.94 8.25xl4 2.32 2.01 7.75xl5 2.16 2.14 1687 l'er Tire • :~~ i'1 HEAVY DUTY I .. MOJOROIL '3.79 Heavy-Duty l\1otor Oil .IO-Quart Can SA Vt: 80c l !'.I ce ts or e-xtccds al [ new car 111.1.nu-2 99 f;i.c rurers warranty. Stock up now at Se.1rs! Keep your cn.;inc in shapC. ~- lil'~\'V Univ f .· ... .. SAVE 12 .44! . l • SAVE '10! Portable Steel Ramp ' I Regular $49.99 W.ork: under car in safety, Ren1ov4 able inclines, whee l stops. Holds up to 2~ tons. 39?.,~ Standard 'l'un e-Up Kits Regul0<S:t49 199 lncludes: Condenser, Rot,Q!, :tnd 1 Points. eac ' l ~ho•·.k ;\l..orhrr Lif,tirn~ t ;u~rnnlee If Fl~IVV 0.<fl>i>o<k ~b,.nl>­ ~· 1 .. lo ~ .... !U (••'" m•rtt1'1• .,..i .. urknwo•h•~ <>t •·•ituo< •'™lo: <>ui •nll pou<h&><t ,,...,.. c ... ii .-oil M ,..pl..,..J ul>On ,.,.,,"" ;,.. cl <Mp."' rM .,..,..,_ p•i•• ... m be r<fund. td. If,~ d•t..tti.,.. 1Jw>tl ot> ootbo:-r .... '""·<ll•d ~, ~ .... .... .. ,11 .... .ii -1h<l<k ob. oort..:r .. .,b .., <lo•t1• t<>t Allstate Spark Plugs Low, Low Priced! • Carburetor Auto Air Filter Super Value! 199 Carburetor air filter traps harmful dirt bcfOrc ii _ reaches your engine. 11 MOHfl GI 3·lt1.1 'OUNDALI CH 1·1004, Cl 4·4611 HOLLYWOOD HO t •lt41 l!AlS.Jt.OEBUCKANDCO. COVIHA •••••• ,, INGtlWOOD oa 1·2t21 Shop Nights Mon. thru Sat. 9:l0 A.M: to 9;30 P.M., Sunday 12 Noon to S P.M • : lONO llACH HI J·Ol21 OLYMPIC A SOTO AN 1-S21l PAIAOINA 111·2211, .JJ1•421 1 l'OMOHA NA f •S161 • Boo•ler Cahle• PICO WI l-t262 "'""· Lifetime Guaranlecd Heavy Duty Shock Absorbers . l\egnl•r $7 .99 Longer wear, :;moothcr ri de. Rug· ged sin1crcd iron pi~1on and c~romc rlated roJ. IANTA ANA 1:1 7-3371 THOUtANI OAl:l 4t1-f56f TOIMNCI S42·111T UPI.AND tlS·1t27 SANTA n tNINGI '444011 SANTA MONiU IX 4°6711 SOUTH co-.sT MAIA 140-3llS • •• VAUIY fO .J-'461, t1c:2220 vgMOHT Pl .. 1tl1 • . ,. ... ·" ,, '. .. \ DAIL V PllOT ti Palmer~Over the Hill?-Not This Time -Around O!ILANDO, Fla. (AP) -Arnold Palmer bad just scored his aecood vic- tory of the season, moved into I.be No. I money winning 1pot and was 1, happy man. But he wasn't content. "There's a lot more l have to do than just winning,:• he :said Sunday, lbe putty face splitting in that famous grin, "Winning thimpor.tant, ·and-fun. But there are other things I tiave to dO. •"I haven't won a major title sirice UIM. That's the thing that's in my mind." .. ( I· '. '• . And that means be has his 1igh1& • set on Augusla, Ga ... and I.be Mute:rs Tournameftt four wleka from now. It jiu' at 1he 'Matten seVM years a.go 11tllt the most popular player the game bas ever prod~ scored his last major triumph. : He's had a.series.of trials and troubles sfiice then. 'flme arid agai.n he was Writteo oft'-11-a has,bee.n.._ Theni was 11165, when be went Into a protracted slump. But the slope- shou1der millionaire ·from Latrobe, Pl. bounced •back · with seven titles in the nezt two years. Then there wve the horrors of 11189 when he wllbdrtw from the PGA CJwn. pion.ship with buniUs In hls hip and vowed not to play again until he was healthy. "He's through," the skeptics said. ''He'll never win again." But he came back, again scotching the ~~-with consecutive triumphs in t he nnar tWo fuumaments-of the season. And then thett: was la st year, when he suffered through the first non-winning year of t1ll llbled ca,..r. His puttlo( )ouch had !alltd him and the <(1Ucs pointed to Ben Hogan. ''Palmer'• psyched by his puttinc,'' U{ey uid. "Now, fof sure, it'1 over." But be came baCk again, dow at age 41, with a victory in the Bob Hope Desert Classic eafly this season, and became the third double winner of the season when he held off !It-year-old Ju1lus &ros-1n the ftnal round'1Srthe-'1'1!>rida: Citrus Invitation. Palmer had a final 68, four under par on lbe· 8,84•yard Rio Piner ,country Club course, Unlshlnl ta under par-1t 270. Boros was one stroke bf.ck with • ff for 211. "No, this didn't take any preQUTe off," Pilmer replied to a"'qu"Uon. "Jt may have increased it. I know t can win. Now l have to wln to a big ooe." The $30,000 first .place check pUShed his earningg for the year to $19,862 -and his all-time earnlngs·to $1,S40,2fl:- ,..,.1 IC9te$ •nd MOl'll~•Wlf!fll(\Ol In !M ll'IOl"ltl• Cllrut l11vltttlo11•I toll 1-"'l'M!l,ll A•,,.tf 1>11,..r, 1311~ '""""""'""''•o-•~ Ji;t11,11 10.oa. 111.100 114t-'14t-171 Ktl'ffllt Z1r1tv. t lO.uf ....... ~ Brundage Lashes Out Skiing Still Shaky f ! .. For '72 Olympice. tll'I T1..,.,.t. ASSISTANT STARTER BILL ~EIBENSBERG!R DOWN FOR THE COUNT AT READING, PA. He is Shown Rolling Down the Track After S.ln9. Struck. ·He Suffered Fra5tured Shoulder, Leg and Pelvis. Sports In Brief Petty Zips to 50,0 Win; Crash Kills Bike Rider ROCKINGHAM, N.C. -Richard Petty drove his blue Plymouth to victory under the caution flag in the Carolina 500 11t North Carolina Motor Speedway Sunday after a five car crash with only three laps left in the race. It was Petty's third major victory In six starts this season and earned the speedster $17 ,350. The victory boosted P1!tty's earnings to $81,115 for the year. The win was Petty's 122nd in NASCA R racing and marked his 12th on the 5uperspeedways, tying Fred Lorinzen·1 string of wins on major t.tacks. Petty, who led six diffefent ·times (or 198 laps. crossed the finish line after four hours 12 minutes and 55 seconds for an average speed of 118.696 miles per hour. The final caution flag.-seventh in the race. went up after a pileup going into the third tum involving Lorenzen, Leeroy Yarbrough, Bobby Wawak, Elmo Langley and Wendell Scott. Lorenzon. who was a lap behind Petty, slammed into Wawak as he headed for the infield after the Initial impl!cl which involved Yarbrough, Langley and Wawak. • Perez at. Manchester in 1932 and I o s t it to another Briton. Benny Lynch in the same stadium Jn 1935. The 5-foot-5 Brown, a native of this Engliib city, defended his title suc- cessfully four times before being knocked out in the stcand round of a Sept. 8, 1935, bout with Lynch, who died in 191<1, Brown began fighting proressionally in 1926 and retired in 1939. He fought 129 times, winning 97 bouts. He had 36 victories by koockaut. Brawn was knocked down In the second round of his Lynch. a record for the division. e Luker• Rall11 six times bout with flyweight INGLEWOOD -Los Angeles came from behind to win its second game in seven tries without injured' Jerry West beating ths Detroit Pilltons 110-100 in a National Basketball Association game Sunday. The Lakei scor,ing load was shared by Happy Hairston. and Keith Erickson, the starting forwards, who scored 19 and 2:1 pOints reipectively. Guard Gail e Mann Whu Ra"e "' Goodrich pumped in 18 to aid the Lakers. DAYTONA BEACH, FJa.----Californian Dick Mann set a record average speed 11f 104.697 miles per hour to win. Sunday's Daytona ·200, a grueling motorcycle race which cliimed the life of a young Texas rider. Dick Mann, of Richmond, Calif., cap.- lured $5,000 in first prize money and ~2,000 in lap money to best national . champion Gene Romero of Sen Luis Obispo, who .. finished second, and Don Emdee of San Diego, who came in third. Twenty~year-old Rusty Bradley of Dallas was oi1e of three drivers who spilled on the first lap while entering the infield portion or the twisting 3.81 mile oval.and-road course at Daytona Jntemational S'""JM?Cdway. , The mechanical engineering student from the University of Texas at Arlington ~uffered multiple head injuries and died a few hours later in Halifax Hospital. NCAA REGIONAL CAGE PAIRINGS Second round pairings and sites in the second round of the NCAA basketball playoffs Thursday. East Regional at Raleigh, N.C,• Villanova vs. Fordham, P1!nn vs. South Carolina. Mideast Regional at Athens, Ga. - Ohio Stah! vs. Marquette, Kentucky vs. • Western Kentucky. Midwest Regional at Wichita, Kan. -Drake vs. Notre Dame, Kansas vs. Houston. ' • West Regional at Salt Lake City - Cal State. (Long Beach) vs University of the Pacific 8:95 p.m.; UCLA vs. Brigham Young 1:05 p.m. Woman Ump Sues Baseball For $25 Million NEW YORK (AP) -Bernice Gera files a $25 million suit today against organized baseball because, in the words of her attorney, a Democratic con- gre~man, it has "virtually destroyed her career as a baseball umpire." The suit was to be filed in Manhattan Supreme Court. Defendants listed are baseball e<im, missioner Bowie Kuhn, the New York.- Pennsylvania Professional Base b a 11 League and Vincent M, McNamara, its president; and the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues and its president, Philip Piton. Mrs. Gera, a graduate of umpiring schools, contends she has been denied employment because she 's a woman. Biaggi said she took her case to the State Human Rights Commission, which he said three times orde·red she be hired , "but she struck out." "Organized baseball is definitely off. base.'' said Biaggi. In the joint news conferer.ce: wilil Mrs. Gera, a resident of Queens, Biaggi con- tended; ''The constitutional rights of a woman have been denied. This woman is Bernice Gera . the first certified woman baseball umpire." "Bernice has made baseball her life. She eats. sleeps and thinks baseball. Mrs. Gera applied for. was accepted, attended and w a s · graduated from baseball umpiring school on July 17, 1967, "She was hired by baseball on Aug. 31. 1968. They signed a e<>ntract. Then they cancelled the contract," Biaggi e<in. tinued. "She was hired again on J u 1 y 25, 1969. by Vincent M. McNamara. presi- dent ·or the New York-Pennsylvania League as an umpire. "But Philip Piton, the president of tht National Associ11tion of Baseball Leagues. sent her a te,legram on July 31, 1969, invalidating her con- tract." Blaggi said f\.trs. Gera is an e•cellent athlete "but struck out with organized baseball.'' . ' ' LAUSANNE, Swiberland .iAP) :.. The organizers of the 1972 Wlntet Olympic Gatbes in Sapporo, Japan, 1till do not · know whether skilng will be on ·the program. After a meeting of the International : Olympic Committee e,;ecutive board, veteran toe President Avery Brundage told newsmen Sunday: "As far as we are concer ned the program at-Sapporo will ·proceed 11s contemplated". -implying that skiing wil l be retai~d. But at the same news conference he alleged that the International Ski Federa- tion (FIS) "has lost control or its sport which is now comp l etely com- mercialized." Asked if Jt is too late for tht FIS to make amends, Brundage retorted: ... ''for certain skiers it may Well be.'' This suggests Brundage is determined to make an e•ample of certain Alpine ski stars allegedly highly rewarded for commercial promotions. He h a 1 specifically referred to 10 skiers who look part in a sumqier training camp at Mammoth Mountain, Calif., last year. But FIS President Maic Hodler has said' that If these skiers· are barred from Sappof1> then he will propose the withdrawal of Alpine 1kiing from the Qlympic program. He. is confident Nordic gkijng will follow suit. The latest mqve by the , IOC was the decision taken . by its executive board at the weekend lo seek changes in the vital eligibility rule for . t~~ Olympic Gfimes .-. .Rule 26. . Amendments and modifications will immediately be submitte.d to lOC members for a postal vote, the re 1u1 t of which is expected within 30 days. A two-thirds majority will be needed for the changes to be implemented. Brundage confessed he is not happy with the proJ>03als, but declined to in- dicate whether they would "bend" the · rule slighlly to admit borderline cases of alleged professionalism. But he said the most important change is the proposal to set up a special JOC committe&' to veto all competitors entered for the Olympics. ' ·. Brundage firmly, stated that if the lOC is satisfied that the Mammoth Moun· lain camp was purely a commercial enterprise, then all skiers taking pa'rt will be ineligible for Sapporo. Holder claims the 10 were merely giving paJd-elementary skiing lessons, as they are entitled to do 'under the Olympic rules. Brundage commented, '"Ibese boys aren't infants. No amateur s~~ 1houl.d have gone within 1,000 miles of that camp." Brundage said even If a competitor is backed by hii' national Olympic com· mittee and Ns 1ports Jntematlonal federation, the IOC ~till will have the last word on whether or not he takes part in the Games. "They are our Games," he said. "We make the rules and we interpret the rules." • Hopes that a postal vote with four leading questions on Alpine skiers would aettle the issue at Lausanne were dashed when the 83-year-old Iron Man of the Olympic movement said the votes don't count. "It fras a mistake," Brundage ex· plained. "even though it wa~ referred to as 11 mail vole in the official JOC minutes when it was dispatched in January, it was really only meant as a guidance for the executive board." Brul'ldage submitted the four-point questionna ire, asking IOC members for their views on certain points, including the Mammoth Mountain camp and ·an unnamed skier allegedly earning $50,000 from the sport -thought to be a reference to former Austrian World Cup holder Karl Schranz. Unofficial Olympic sources said most IOC members either abstained or ques- tioned the legality of the "vote." Of ~ who 11nswered positively, a ma- jOrity reportedly refused to support Brun• dage's condemnation of the skiers in question. • 49ers Meet Pacific Bruins Face Cougars In NCAA Regionals· SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -Brigham Young University. which won just eight games last year, has romped past Utah State en route to a basketball showdown with defending national champion UCLA. The free-wheeling Cougars, in the midst of a· hot-shooting streak for the past five games, rolled to a 91-82 victory Saturday night over 16th ranked Utah State. Cal State (Long Beach), 17th-ranked and with a l&-game winning streak going, eliminated Big Sky Conference champion Weber State, 77-66. Thursday night's Western Regional at Salt Lake City pits Long Beach against Pacific, West Coast Athletic Association champ, and BYU againat UCLA in the nig'htcap. Stan Watts, BYU coach for the past 22 years, is seriously ill after undergoing a 12'h-hour operation for cancer. Assistant coach Pete Witbeck voiced a cautious note of optimism on his team's chances against UCLA. "Our boys are playing good ball and If they can keep up the shooting, they can go a long way.'' Witbeck said . All season, people had read of the near-legendary Sidney Wicks · and his front-line UCLA helpers, Steve Patterson and Curtis Rowe . But now that the nation'li top-ranked team, ~I, baa: sw-vlved Its sternest scare Jn six years; now that the Bruins have won the PacUic-.8 title; now that they're headed for that Thursday game with upstart Brigham Young, it seems a guy named Ken Booker will lead them. Booker, a ,6-foot..f guard , didn't do It by shooting or rebounding last Satur· day as he led UCLA to an easy 73"62 triumph over rival Southern California. Booker, using the fundamentals so typical of UCLA, defended so tenacioU{llY that at times the man he was guarding just threw the ball at the basket, almost in disgust. And that USC player was highly touted ~nnis Layton, the player of the week before for the third-ranked Trojans, the man who had sparked them to a 24-1 ree-0rd before the game with the Bruins . Booker's defensive heroics came not as most exciting, spectacular offensive pl~~hd~.. Booker resorted to iimple things, like taking the ball out of Layton'B hands while the USC guari:I dribbled. Or batting down an attempted ahot by forward Chrb1 Schrobllgen. Or stop- ping a 2-on--1 USC fast break by swatting a pass out of bound!!. '(he senior, called "one of the best defensive people I've ever coached" by John Wooden, was all over the court. e Football Biggie KNOXVILLE , Tenn. -Tenm!~e and Penn State. both national football powers. will meet for the first timt in a came here .ne•t fall . Rosewall Rips Ashe in A11ssle Fi~als Tht ronlest will be played either Sept. 1 L, 9( Dec. I, Ille dal< to he decided JattrJ • Ex-champ Dies 'MANCHESTER. England -FC>'mer "'rid flyweight boxing ch1mplon Jackie 'Mwn 61, diccLin._.a hospital bere late l;unday. He .had bctn alllng for aevtral ~ars. Re won the title from Tul),i_sian Young SYDNEY, AU3tr1lla (AP) -"I think Arthur lod' confidence when hi.I service wu not ping too ' well,•• "id Ken RMewall. But that wasn't ·all Arthur Ashe lo6t -he ·alao lost $10,080 after Rolewa.11 beat him &-1; 7-$. '"3 Sunday in the Duhlop Ausli'alian Open t<nnls touma· men~ Aahe, ef Richmond, VA., w11 no m.1tch for Rosewall, giving away the first get ln 19 minut.ea 11 his normally fine aervi~ collapsed. Rcsewall of Australia, won the match with break!! in the seventh and ninth games of tht" flnal set, the llrst coming whtn the American missed an easy mash. Margaret Court won the women's title for the 10th lime in U years by belting Evonne Goolagong 2·6, 7-1, 7-6, Jn an all-AustrallAn final . John Newt'Q!Tlbe and Tony Roche of • Australia beat Marty Riessen of Evanston, Ill. and Tom Okker oC The Netherlands 7-6, 6-2 for the men'1 doubles title. Miss Goolagong, the tt·year-old Aborigine sensation, at.arted lw:r match before the crowd or 7,000 at Wbfi.e City Stadium as though 1he wu going to w\pe out Mrs. Court. . Her sparkling backhands had Mn. Court foundtrinR and It took her only 23 minutes to win the first set. Mrs. Court was in trouble again In the second ~t when she double faW:ted away her 1orvJce In the seventh game. But she came back to break M1ss Goolagong, and then after railing on one set point, In the 10th game, she won the tie-breaker, aeven points to one. . "I thought 1 hod It" Mrs. Court 111&. "I dM't think ! play;:i Jiarticufarly-well, but when Evonne gol the cramp 1 took the advantage." J«rr HMrO, tl.IOO ,..., Wtllko,1, 5'..00 Glbtl'I' Gl!btr1, M.#t °"~ $toekl0tl, """' flr•Mk 9Hrcl, M, ... lloMI Hlbttt, I~ .... 0r¥Ult Moody, ll,,fO '°'""'1 ""''°"'· u ... so ClffM 9llfl'llln, U,IJI lot! Mlirllfoy, 17-"0 lOllCIV Mk l!Ol1, ""'° Honw•• ai.nc11, n.1so 9ob Smith, 12,jlO c111 O\J 11oc1r11111tr. n.ou Larrv H!nMn, u .025 fired M~U,015 HVQll 'll0y.,, 1~.ol-' M1.ot1 lllllkltoh. II, .. ic ... auu, 11.3M J•rtV McGM, tlr* Old< Lol1, II,* lot! i!OM. 11.• ... ,........,,, 11""""'-214 10..,....JG-2'11 .... 1#10-21$ ff-70.41 ....... t1t .. ......... 27.S ....S-,.1>-t1• Jl.ff.11·1'-211 1141·11~ .... ,..,.,S-371 6M7.J2.7e-f11 U-11.....,_,,, 70-11·10-10.---211 71""*»-Vf n .. 1 .... n-2n -=~Q=f,:-• ......... 1s-m 1t-*70-11-27' •1·11#11-11• 41·12·1~• 11-'ton.11-21' JEFF TORBORG Torborg Deal Boosts Halos' Hopes for Flag ' PALM SPRINGS (AP) -It was worth something more than $20,000 to the Cali!onlia Angels to get themselves 1 guy who may hit less than .200 this season. He may be the key lo a pennant. Jeff Torborg, a Los Angeles Dodger• catcher for the last seven years in the National League v;as sold~ to the Angels Sunday in a _deal that doesn't on the surface appear important. In the long run, it may be the m.ost Important deal the American League Angels have made in the last 12 months. Torborg was. a little used backsto11 for Los Angeles;1never playing in more than 76 games in any of his seven big-league years. His highest batting average was .24f.I and his longest hitting atreak was four games. But defensively, Jeff Torborg has sparkled. He ha s a good arm, a sound mind and a strong body that block.! the plate like a rock. He also has one great asset: he knows how to handle pitchers and knows how to settle them down on the mound. The main reason the Dodgers didn't use him more was that during the years he was with the club, the· Dodger batting attack was, putting it mildly, weak. "lf the D<>dgers had had Riehle Allen in 1967 and 1968, Torborg would have been their first-string catcher," 1 a Id Angel skipper Lefty Phillips. "As it was, they just couldn 't sacrifice the hitting." And Lefty ought to know : he was the Doelger pitching coach from 1965 until 1968. Torborg caught one of Sandy Koufax's nirhit games and Koufax later com- mended the catcher fQr his well-called game. Torborg has the keen eye of a baseball expert and. in fact, was offered a baseball coaching job at Long ts.land College because of his knowledge of the game. Jle turned down lhe position in hopeS he just might be given a full-time post with the Dodgers. Or somebody. For years he had yelled, "Play me or trade me," but the Dodgers knew they had talent at backstop and held on, Wright Bombed In Angel Loss To Indians, 8-6 PALM SPRINGS (AP) -Roy FO!ter drove in three runs and Buddy Bradford and Ray Fosse chased across two apiece Sunday as the Cleveland Indians stopped the California Angels 8-& in exhibition baseball. The. Indians spotted California a t.e fir11t inning lead when Jim Spencer delivered a sacrifice fly, before pushing over five runs in the second as Angel starter Clyde Wright issued four walks:. John Lowenstein'8 run-scoring\ singlt and a two-base error by Roger Repo1 gave the Tribe two ruM before Bradford dellvered a base:s--loadcd single to .core two more and Foster . chi_pped In witll an RB! si!lgle, ' Tj'Je Angels moved Into contention· In the fifth when they tallied four tlmtt ag Clevellnd hurlers contributed to the big lnnnlng by permitting four walks. Spcnctt ctrove in two runs for the Angels while Ken Berry had a p.11tr of 1lnglcs in 11 losing cause. • DAILY PILOT DEFENDING NCAA CHAMPIONS -UC Irvine will l eave for Spring· field, Mass., Tuesday to defend its swimming championship with nine team members competing. The Anteaters are· two-time defending champs. In the front row from left are: Wade Arens, Jim Cooper, Mike DAILY PILOT Sti ff PMlti Martin and Jim Fergus. Back row: Bill Jewell, assistant coach, Frank Gardner, Mark NeJson, Mike Carnahan, Jack Dickmann, Richard Eason and coach Ed Newland. ' Anteater Nine Hits the Books After 10-l'Win Sizzling Barons Nab Title The UC Irvine baseball team, well ahead of its first year pact that gained an NCAA playoff berth, will take a week away from diamond action to com- plete final examinalions after downing Los Angeles Baptist College Saturday, JO.l , on the winners' field. UCI has a JJ.3 record this year com- pared to last season when the 13th victory wu recorded after seven defeats. The week of action may be just what the doctor ordered for the Anteaters. Next Monday morning they will begin a WE;;ek-long participation in the Anaheim tournament with six games in as many days. First (oe is Southern Illinois al JI o'clock Monday followed by a night encounter with UCLA Tuesday at 8. FV Nine Downs Mar~na Twice to Capture Tourne y Fountain Valley's Barons and the Marina Vikings were scheduled to go al it again today (3:15 p.m.) in pre- Jeague baseball combat on the Mariha diamo,nct_ after the two teams closed out the Huntington Beach tournament over the weekend. Saturday, coach John Cole's sizzling Barons roared to their fifth · and sixth consecutive victories by putting a double whammy on the Vikings of coach Ray Allen in the finals of the Huntington tourney on the Barons' diamond. Dave Lynch was one of the big Foun .. tain Valley heroes of the day u he fashioned a two-hitter in pacing the win· ners to a 3.() blank job. The 6-2!.h, senior also got the starting call for the second half of Saturday's tw in bill and , although he wasn't involved in the decision (southpaw Steve Fox picked up the win in relief ), he wiis around to · see his side capture a 5-3 verdict and the tourqey trophy. Cole showed sound reasoning in assign- ing both starijng roles to Lynch. A hurler who normally expends more than 100 pitches in a regular seven-inning contest, Lynch required only ~9 pitches and just an hour and 25 minutes lo put down the Vikings in the first game. When he indicated to Cole that he was willing to start the nightcap, the second-year head mentor obliged and Lynch tossed another three innings before maklng'way for Fox. All told, L)'nch's Saturday labors amounted to 10 complete innings, six strikeouts, just a single walk, only five hits and no earned runs. In the first game, Ray Eckles and Wayne Ouellette each socked run-pro- ducing ground rule doubl~s to pace the Barons. Fountain Valley took the second tiff despite a 360-foot home run by Marina's Bob Witt with mate Dave Campbell aboard. l'IRST GA.Ml 1'1.,nl1l11 Yl lltV U) M1r1111 .ftl lb r fl rbt ib rflrlll Sfli,...11, lb 1 1 O 0 C1mpbell, u l O O O Wrnnfflmp, If • I 1 O Pemberton, lb J o o o Marley, cl J 0 0 O CrltS<I, ltl J o o O V1rn1y, u J O I I w111, rt J o o o out!ie1.e, < 1 o o O Tawl•, cf J o o o ECll lH, ,, J 1 l 1 W~eeler. II 1 0 0 0 ll•1l111rcl, lb l O 0 O Brown, 7b 1 o I O OIMlrlt, 311 J 0 0 0 WellJ, t 1 0 0 0 lYl>Cll, 0 J 0 I 1 8e1n1~. p 2 0 I 0 ~<>cit, II• 0 0 0 0 T11!1I• 7' ) 4 1 To!1l5 ktrt bV 111"Jn1~ Founi~ln V1lltr Mtrln• "' "' "' "' SICOHD GAME ll 0 l 0 ' ' . I -l • o 0 -0 2 I M1rlg U) '•unlllll YllltV 0) 1llrflrbl 1ll r~r1ll C1mobe11, u 1 1 o o Shlm~u. 1b 3 1 1 o Pem~rton, 111-p' o 1 o C..irgll, ?b a a o a (•el<I. Jb-p • a 1 o Wenn•~•ma, !! 2 1 o o Wiit, rf 4 I l 1 M1rley, Cl • 1 2 0 Towlt , cl J 1 1 0 V1rn1y, ss l I 1 G Brown, lb 1 0 0 0 Ou.ill'!lf, c J 0 2 1 8t1ttlt, lb 1 0 1 1 Ecklet, rf 3 0 I 1 SWtMOt't. lb 1 0 I 0 BralNrcl, lb J ' 0 0 w.11,, c J 0 0 0 OIM1rl1, lb , 0 0 0 Whttler, !f ) o 1 o Lvnch, 11 o o o o Fo•.11 7 000 TO!lls 11373 Tol•ls 25 1 1 4 Sten loV lnnll!I• M1rin1 Foun!lin l/1lltV "' ~· 001 ll'O ' ' . 0 -3 1 2 • -5 J 1 Title to LBCC GW Finishes 3rd In State Playoffs When the 1969-70 basketball season ended, there were thoae that said that Golden West College had one of the worst junior college teams in the state. Who could doubt that statement. The Rustlers had ·just finished with a discouraging S.22 record. And there was one guy who was more discouraged than the rett -Rustler coach Dick Stricklin. But be didn't sit around with a crying towel, Stricklin quieUy went out and recruited some talented freshmen to go with a quartet ot returning lettermen. And he promptly turned them into a cohesive unit that not onJy captured the Southern California Conference title but eventually finished third in the state. The RusUers, although playing without two of their' original five starters, defeated Ventura, 90-85, Saturday night at Santa Marla for the third place st.ate trophy. The victory gave Golden West a final season record, of ~7. quite a comeback from that dlsastrou.s 1969-70 mark. And it could have been an even greater season had &-5 forward Brian Ambrozich and guard Rick Barnes not been ham- pered by injury and illl}ess. Ambrozich Ocoee injury) and Barnes (mononucleosis) viewed Golden West's final victory in street clothes. Both will of course be missed next season, along with scorlDg atar Chris Thompson and reserve forward Jeff Powers. But Stricklin has two talented front liners back in 6-10 center Mark Dekker and 6-5 forward Jim Anderson and they are probably already thinking of another shot at state champion Long Beach. The Rustlers, cold-shooting ud tired, lost to LBCC in the semfina1s, 8~. Long Beach then defeated Cerritos, 57-54, . t9r the state championship. In the victory over Ventura, Anderson Jed a second hall spree in which the Rustlers reeled off 10 straight points to break a 56-58 tie. Anderson scored eight of the 10 points just a few minutes into the second half to give the Rustlers a lead they never relinquished. The former Rancho Alamitos High star finished with 29 points while Thompson ended a brilliant two-year career • at Golden Wesl with 24, giving him 769 for Lhe season and 1,476 for two years. Thompson was accorded all·tournament honors and will certainly be named to the all-state five . Others selected to the alJ.toumey team included Rich Plante, Dave Frost and Gary Anderson of LBCC, and Ev Fopma Calendar and Randy Craig of CerrilOI. Fopma v;as named the tournament's mo.st valuable. . San Joaquin Delta won the consolaUon title (or the seaind season in a row, downing Merced, 76-72. ' Oold111 Wt1I lffl Ytnt~r• IHI " • • " " • Powerl • ' ' • Lishlt y ' ' Ancr1rl0n " ' • ,. Gibbons • ' Oekktr ' • ' " Mtv•r ' ' ThomPWn • • ' " Coulltr • • MoM ' ' ' ' Turntr " • ,_ • ' ' • lel•t•r ' ' arown ' ' 1 ' W11lll ' • Pl11T • ' 1 • ..... • ' MC(OW." • 1 v ... • • T11t1ll " " " ~ Toll!• " .. H1llllmt: GoldM WMI d, Vitnl\lr1 4S. Verh11m Dei Rolls to CIF Cage Crown • • " • " ' " • .. ' • ... • " ' • ' • • 1 ' ' " " 'LOS ANGELES -II can probably be safely said that March. 13, 1971 will not go down as a banner date in the Ure or the Bob Boyd family. First it was father Bob and USC Trojans suffering a 73-61 butchering from rival UCLA ln the afternoon at Westwood, ending the former's aeuon with a second place finish in the Pac-& basketball campajgn with a 24-2 mark. His son Bill is"a 6"7 transfer forward on Crescenta Valley High's team and the Falcons took the floor 20 miles away and five hours later with the same resvJt: The end of the season and.second place with a 29-1 record. Verbum Dei High's Eagles, behind the classy overall play of guard Raymond Lewis and sophomore center Lewi! Brown (&-9), popped the Crescenta Valley bubble with a convincing 51.-t2 ClF AAAA playoff champiomhip victory before 11,089 fans at the Los Angeles SporU Arena, Thus the Eagles of coach Gtorge McQuarn completed a unique triple by winning the 4-A tiUe following crowns in 1969 (AA) and '70 (AAA). Crescenta Valley's front line which consisted of 6-7, 6-7 and 6-8 gianlS, was no match for' the Eagles' .vicious press which turned the ball over on crucial occasions during the second half. As for Bill Boyd and his personal output, the former Foothill High atandout was able to connect on six of 1& from the field and finished with 1& points. Earlier Dos Pueblos downed Bellfiow· er. 49-40, for the AAA crown in a lack· Juster issue. The afternoon confrontations resulted in Chaminade upsetting Brethren for the A title, 54 -52, in double overtime, and· Sonora ripped Central, 71-62, (AA). Sonora's conquest marked the first ClF basketball title for an Orange County team in six years. The Raiders of coach Paul Bush won their last IS in a row. Wednesday it will be the University of California (Berkeley) in a 5 o'clock encounter and then Eastern Michigan in another II o'cloclr. game Thursday. Friday and Saturday action will hinge on the records of the eight participating teams in the first four days of com- petition. In Saturday's game, coach Gary Adams used his bench to advantage. Ben Wet:r.Jer started on the mound and worked the firSt five innings to gain the victory. He also contributed a home run. Santa Ana WI¥ It Fountain-Valley Second Skip Redondo. a southpaw relief tipecialist, came close to setting a UC! record for strikeouts in a single game when he whiffed 11 of 12 batters he faced in four innings. The other reached first on a walk and was thrown out attempting to steal. In Tustin Spike Meet LA 8•111111 Ol UC lrtl"t CIOl Ill t h rlli S"'°veri.r.d. Jb l O O o F1rr1r, H C~ry, n • I I o S~ns~i. I! P1t11>11rthv, c J o 1 1 Sv~or1, lb WrJghl, rf'(;f • 0 0 o lVont, l':> J-. d·P 1 O O O (ra~. cl t11111111m1n, lb • o o o 5Yr.dtr, d k~mhl1, P.rf • o o e M111 .... 11, 111 T1yklr, Ill l O 0 0 Coro!Mda, If p.,.ry, u 1 o o o S••~•. rl T l!d•sco, rl.1 b Han1..,, u $ch ... :. u Grttnwly, 2ti 5hellnt , c s'"""'• c Wt!?l~r, 11 ~ecki...,o, p H I l l 10111• sc1rt bw 1"111111s lb t fl"'' J 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 l 0 0 0 1 1 1 a ' ' 1 0 1 1 I I 1 1 0 0 1 I 0 0 I 0 I l l 2 l ' I 0 0 0 2 0 I I ' l J 2 1 • 0 0 J 0 I 0 2 I I 1 l 0 0 0 34 1011 1 LI. lliPli\I l.IC lrvlMf ' ' . 000 O!O ODO -I 1 ~ 100 to0 ~·~-10 II J The Fountain Valley Barons scored 14'.~ points in the va rsity divisi on to take the runnerup spot behind runaway s8.nta Ana 's 44 markers Saturday in the 12th annual running of the Tustin Relays at Tustin High. Huntington Beach tied with Loara for third in the varsity scoring with 10 points each v:hile other area schools figuring in the scoring were Marina (8), Corona del ti.far (7l, Costa Mesa .. 16) and Estancia (SI. Edison captured the Cee title with 32 points while the Chargers finished second in the sweepstakes (aggregate) totals with 41 points. Santa ·Ana tallied 3417 poinlS to take top S\Veepstakes honors. Cos la Mesa tied the only varsity meet record, of the day as a Mustang trio Top Field Entered ' HB Spike Clnssic Nears r\O less than eight of the Orange Coast area's 14 schools will be involved fn the Golden Anniversary festivities of SaliJrday's SOth aMual Soi.them Counties track and field meet al Huntington Beach. Corona del Mar is slated to bring nlong its sprint crew. feal·ttring i;peedstqs Carlo Tosti 19.9, 22.1), John Miles 110.0) and Matt Cox I 10.4) along with 880 ace Nick Rose, who has a career best of l:M.7 and a seasonal top clocking of I: 58.8. Costa Mesa's mainstays are members of tbe Mustang distance corps, which Includes Bob Gollnick (4:23.5), Tom Olswang (9:$2) and, Doug MacLean; last )'ear·s Irvine League mile champion with a 4:22 mark. Dista.nce runners also roster Edison•• prlrnary bopt.I for Southern Counties polnta u the CAargers showcase junion Mike Alvaru sod John McClure and irtshma.n Dtnnil Wll.900 among U>e:lr ' young stable or prospects. Estancia sophomore Bruce Girasole is a triple threat in the 100, 220 and long jump while junior teammate Eric Olson may double in the 440 and 880, where he has career bests of 48.9 and l:S9.7. Sophomore John Sayles of Fountain Valley could be doubling in the . quarter and ha!( along wilh Olson with 10th grade m111te Rich Unga having already flown 20.2 in the 180 low hurdles. Marina has Its strongest unit in years and hurdlers Gene Taylor (15.3, 19.9) and DeMls Averyt (IS.I, 19.8w). quarter· miler John Jurs (50.6) and sprinler Joe Ventimiglia (10.1, 22.5) lrt the best of the Vikings. Host Huntington · Beach has its own 111ultiple talent Jn Garth Wise (hurdles, Jong jump and mile relay. leg) while Newport Harbor shot putten M111rk Stevens (&Oo<V~) and Terry Albntton 156-4> could pu!ll't thelr marks out t ven further at Southern Counties. of Jon ~tarchiorlatti (6-2 ). Rick Young 16-2) and Dan Baker (5-10) totaled IS.0 in the high jump to equal the meet standard effort established by Western Jn 1965. Huntington's Garth Wise returned to last year's late-season form and leaped to a career best of 22 -8 in lhe long jump, where the Oilers placed fourth behind Santa Ana, Fountain Valley and Buena Park. Vin.Hy ,. Sll~1tlf ~urdl~ -l. S.nlf ,l,n1 .S..4 1 L-•11 ~.t J. Lotr1 JI.I 4, K•tellf SJ.S S. Tuttln 51.1. Ty;g milt rtl1y -1, SA Vlllly l :«I.• 1. Hunt. l<19•on llN~ll t :•l.J J. E1tu1ci. 1:4 ,2 •. LOilrl t,: ... l 5 .. 51"90 ,l,f>t l :Y.J. •«I rt l•V -1. 5.tn!I ,l,n1 ((f l . k1t~ll1 4l,, l i:.uen1 Pint •S.• '· Fount1ln v1U1y ... ] J. M1tln1 .i..l . M«1l1y r1l1v -l. 51nt1 ,t,n1 H:Ol.O l . Corona dtl M1r 11:!l,I l , 5!. JOhn flOl<o ll:H.2 '· LOWlll ll:U.l J. El Mod.n1 11:7t,4, hO r111y -I. S.nt• ,t,n1 1:.12.1 1, Tie ~et"'"" Fount1ln V1111r Ind $A V11i.y 1:>4.S (, (Ot1111• dtl Mir l:l4.7 J. M1rl""' 1:)5.t . High lump -I. Cosll Mn 1 11·0 !Tl" mtel r~ordl 1. M1rln1 11"" l. Sln!f l.n1 1•·10 ( El· llrH:I• 11""1 J. Foun!1ln V11!tv , .. ,. Long !U!'l\I) -1. ~n11 ,t,n1 u.n, 2. F011n111n V•llfV U·f"' J, lu.n1 Pa~ ,1 .. \~ 4, HunH111I011 l11cll 61·S S. S,1, V1U1y Jf.J.\lo, POI• ~···"' -1. S11nt1r 1-11111 :u .. 1. Slnl• An• :)s.<1 ,3. LO'Ntll 17-' 4. Lotti 2U J. Vlllf P1r~ """· Sl>o! WI -I. P:oolltlll 14!\fi 2. Huntl111ton 811cl! 1"9""''• l. L01r1 141·10 •. Sunny Hllft 14-1\1 J. ldil<WI 1'2·• OIKUI l"°"'l~rl.,g} -I, P1hn~1 !Tustin\ IS?-' IM111 rt"COll:t! 2. Cov1rlll11 !Y1ltncl1 ) Hl·l ). Mowry !El Modtnll UM ~. McL1ln tLOltl) !»$\II ~. Yl!ill') 45Vtlt'IY Hllll ) 14 .. 2. T11m Kor"'9 -5fnl1 •~• ••, Faunt1ln V•llty HV,, Hunllnt!O!I lttCll ll'td Liiii ltl tlCll, K1ttll1 f\.,, •~• Pt•• 11'111 Lowt!! t Nch, Mtrln1, Foot· r.111 11\d S11t111Y HUl1 I ~II, Cor0111 dtl M1r t!ld S,t, Y1ll1y 7 tldt, C0tt1 Mnt '· ffltMlt S. Sr. JOl\fl IOICO l . '" Slluttlt llurdlti -lit 11111-n ldllOl'I ll'td fl MOdtnt 51,t, ~ci rt l•v -$1n11 ,t,111 4$.1. Ml!dity rtllV -M1rk'11 ''01 •, UO ttlfy -Tuotlrl 1:35.7, •~IHll rtl•v -~rlfll n ,5.J,J. Miit ri!ty -Ml111Dr1 Vlt!o l:Jt,I lilUh !ump -P1tll1C:1 11.t Ille:. m1t1 rtc:O•d), tone lump -t111t1n ... ~·~. Polt YIUlt -kllllf ),W, Sr.ct wt -knit NII l•t. Tttm 1co•l1111 -S.nt1 Ant 10, Tu1nn 11•1. Plclfkt ll, Mtr1n1 t r>d Min ion Vlt lO 1J Nth, Iii MOd-Ul/t, Kt!t llf U, Trot t \.t, ldlMlll ll'ICI SA V1llt)' I 1tcll. '" 511\11111 llUf'Oltt -Sflllt Ml Jt.t. •«I rel1y -1l111ncLt ".), M~llV rilfV -$A V1ll1y ';tJ,i, QO rel1~ -E1!1nc:l1 1 ;M,4. ·~1no ,..,,v -l!llllOll 11:u .t , """ \"""' -Edi-la.t. Lont ll'"P -l1n11 An1 M-t\.'t. ,.Olt null -Ctrdet Ora" 224 CMftt rt(Mfl; lnol l'UI -lhllton 1 ... 7'\ (MMt rtClll'lll. '""' •COl'l!lt -£dlt0f! tt, SA V.lttt n, S.n11 ,t,111 l'O\\, E.111nc11 lt, G1n!tr1 Oro.,. 101.\, troy " fl!Htll f'.ttla, S"""'1 Hlllf t l'ICI T1111t" 4 N<!I. 1....,.llktl l(Mlri, -'9MI Ant _.~ £•lt111 41, SA Vt11t1 11, Diagnostic Center . , for car check-ups. ..... f1 Penneys Scientific Te sting Cente r ~J can help to point ou t weak spots ~~0o in certain vital areas of your car. In less than one hour we put your car through a series of scientific ~1f;,lljf~ tests (212 of them). Steering, engine, brakes, transmission, :;' electrical and cooling systems. You watch the results come out on an electronic typewriter. The written report shows the results of the tests. It indicates What tested parts of your car are weak and what parts are strong. A trained diagnostician will go over the report with you . If you wish. he'll give you an estimate of any necessary repairs costing big money. There's no obligation to have any of the work done. You decide what to fix and where to fix It. The cost? Only 9 88 Not bad for a check-up,theae dsya. •. Penneys Scientific Testing Center '1\9.~'ll Charge it, at any of these Penney Auto Centeri: BUENA PARK co"n .. thorout v1111yV!ow) CARLS BAO FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH ORAlllGE "THE CITY" Dl1gno1Uc lan11 o.,.n Mon~1y through Slturd1y. . 1 •I • . , • Net, Golf Results For Coast Area Collegiate Basketball Scores NOH TOUltNAMl!NT UCL.A 73, U5C ,2 Putctu. HO, Iowa M Mldli111n '3, WIKonsl11 1J NortllWMhlr11 lS, Mlchltln SI. 61 llllnol1 lOl. IP'M:lll"* 11 K1m11 5"9, Nebr11k1 SI Oreoon 71, Oreoon St. 's TOURNAMENTS Nu.A UIUVEltSITY DIVISION Wnhr11 RQICM11I At ui.n s1111 •Yu ti, Ut11'1 SI. 12 Cll St. (L8) 17, Wet.er SI. 6o1 Mi~1nt R"IOflll Al NOIA 0.IM M1"'11ette 62, Miami COllloJ ,, Wfflfl'>l Ktnlucky 7•. Jatk>Ol'IVlllt n Mldwnt ltHllNI Al Hou1t111 Notr• Oame 102, l(U 94 Hou1ton n, New Mexico SI. 6' 1!111 ... 111 ... 1 Al W11t Vlttlnl1 Penn 10, DU<IUftM 65 Al ... "" Vlllt/'IOVI tJ, SI. J01e11ll'1 7J SI. Jonn•1 Fordll1m 105, Furman 71 ATLANTIC COAST CONl'EltlNCE South C1rolln1 52, North C1rolln1 JI (Cllamllk!n1h!11) MISSOURI VALLEY CON,IRENCE PUYOFF Dnkl 16. Lo11l1vllle 71 (cllamp1on- 1hl11J ' NCAA COLLIOI DIVISION •••ltrri 1t11k11111 Al lutt1l1 H1rtwkk 11, lilut1110 st. 70 Cdl•m• plonJl'llP) Monlctelr SI. to, c.w. Post 69 (con. iol1!k>nl Mld•11I lhtlon1I Al .. Rt1dln1, 1'1. Chey"" 51. 60, PM!1arlohl1 Tu!lle SI (ch1molon1h!p) Akron 77, Ww1ter 63 (coniol1tionl, Wtsttrn Rnlon11 Al l'llftl $Mimi Pug-' $0uNI •s. SNUlt Plclllc 7' ~c111mplonll\loJ (II PolY ISLOJ 1(1, S1n Fr1ml1co SI. H (coftsolal!onl Seulll Alllftlk R•liONll Al Hllrlfllk, VI. Old Dominion 102, No•lolk ~!. ,7 (d'l1m1>fot1Shl1>I Stef'lOfl 91, Roan<*• n (consollllcm) South Rt11ff1I Al t..f1ytttt, LI. SW Loul1i1n1 U, Tennenet 51. 12 (ch1m11lon1hi11J t.oul1l111•/T11Ch 101, UV (N-Or· le•nal • lcon1ot1rlonl N-En1l1M Rtllf"'I At Hrit 8rllll11, C11111. A.num11!ion lGS, (9'\lr1ll {(Pftn. I 77 (Chln'!Plllnlhlp) S1crtd H"rt (Conn.I u , STcnthlll II lcon1e!allonJ HAIA l'U.YOl'FS Al Kl"*-•CllY, ~- f{9f1!\ldlY St. 1111, E11t1rn Mlcnjg1n 42 lch1m1>loniMpl EU11bofttt CJty 51. U, Fllrmont St, 17 lov•rllmr ) lton.olftlcnl . JllAtlONAL CHRISTIAN COLLEGE A11111 P1tl!lc tt, E11ltrn "hitrf"8 16 · ccn1molon~IPI 2 .. 1 ID&t to O•rda fl) l°'J loll ; hk.Um1 U.I WI lo$1 O"''' ILi ~i;t1U~~7-C~~,M -G~~lt.Jurneu ce:1 !Ott to JollNOn. Der~·llrrlft IE) 1-1 1 t W•"""''"" oY~n.\o\I u °"1~11 J01111r:Jmf'N) J~~"r.J:f'. (L) 6-t1 11),,:f, !!'':~·iF!' i'l~l.J."~ , .. ,M ._:rron1wcWr1.J.1'1 ' ...on'"' .. 2. w. Will/I (W) Iott U1 -.. 2, ,.._ ... KrOYl'I' 11\d ~<>ell (W) dtf. SlleUllrd 1nd Trtn'l!.OUI !LI l>-11 ~I .. df· l'111lltl l<'ld SlltKhffa!I <Li U~1 1rid Sml!ll CWI loll N, u1-ios1 ui won '"1 VAltSITY Ut11fll .. ldl CU~) C2Vd Mlnlf• ••• flYiol' (LJ drl. W1lktr (M) 6•1, Tutti• (M) "°' Mllle<ktr {M) 6-0, R.111(111111 (M) l-0, 8olwn111 (L) WOii •·t. f-1, "'· Tibor (LI loll 2 ... -.. 3 ... ,, '"· Jay (l) 'NOii 6-0, 6·2. 6--1, .. 1. .., ... McC1rler Ind LeG•YI (t I 51>111 with Mevll1la 1M McOon1la (Ml. .. 2, S.1; llel. Knllz lfl(I Hel>et1 (Ml. .. I. 6·3. J•cot>M>n end Rober11on (l) w0t1 •. ,, .. 4, .. 1. 6-1. JUNIOR VARSITY l.1111111 ... ,~ ttt\1:11 17\.\J MIHlf" ..... $1111196 8tothlrton (LJ de!. C1ll (Ml, 6-0. Brown (Ml .. 1, HeOetl CM) .. 2, K110111!1d !Ml .... Pede<i CLI won t-3. .. 4. t-0. M. Pursof CLl won ...,., 1P!lt 1.1, won ,.,, •·t. ; Fisselle (LI 11>ilt 1-7, 7-1, won '-J, 6.0.. O.Ulolt5 Schirm Ind l09e ... ) dtf. 8l11•!ewc1 and Wilton CMJ .. 2, ..._., def. erown INI Hell (Ml 1·5, .. 3. M1r1:1 Ind C11trcll'Oll (L} lost ~4. 2·6. 24, 1 ... Junklr V1r'lllY CdM (14\1:11 U\1:11 Gtrftn orev• $l111rn Wetoster IC) tied Coors (G) .. ;, dtl MC:Mlhcn {GI .. 1. Gulick (C) won 6-1, f·I. A!Jred (CJ def JOflnMin IG) .. Ji d1f Kl11t (GJ 6--2, Acn.clo CCI lost U, 64, ...... A""ew.C1rpenter (CJ split w1111 OeWlll·R~ (G) 1-2, 34; tPfl! will! 01nltll-ltnboY (G) '"'-.. 4. Hetlher·AtllltY (Cl won ... 1, "'· ... 2, .. ,. Junior Vl'"111Y L1111n1 '"!" on 111 Tv1t1n lfllllS Ptel'30I tll loit 1).6, 2·6, wen 6·3, 7.5, Broll'lerlon tLl ....,n 1·6, .. t 6-0. 6"'.Jay (L) loll 4-6, won 6--3, 6·3, •·J. F1adl1 (U, Joli U, W, 3'6, -n 1-5. I ~ Dlollb ... L111~t ind R.oblrt1on Ill lost ,.,, won 6·:Z. 64. 6--2. T11".T.' '"" Ptdtn !LI lost ).6, wen •·1, •· • 6--0. Junltr v•r" l'oothlll lltl fl •1t1nci. '"'" McCr1nn (E) Iott lo Brown (F) 114, 1011 lo M(lnnls (Fl u Homn1ffd (El won 6--1, 6·1 Chd1m1~ /El 1 ..... 1 M MorlOll (Fl ,4, IC'SI to Arb (F) 14 En1ll¥ (E) tool 14. 2·6 Dlulllff Grottt1hul1 I nd McOUHlt (E) IC~! lo ~mlth 11\d H1rrllM (F) 04, ~-a Thom°'°" Ind · Rtta !El IO'll lo Mcl111Vt1 •nd Thorp {Fl 0.., 24 J'"'ltr V1nt1Y Mart"' 111'1.W~~v.1 1'1c111c.1 , f!:.11~~1'fP1 ('ll. ~~·1u11uf~1 ~1 !n3c; v~n111111 CP/ •> Stuckfr Ml lost 14, •-4, •4: won .. 'kew11h!m1 IMI loll U ; "'°" 6'11 loH 2"; wpn M ZKk (Ml loll 1·6, ... , 24. 5.7 Dlllbln ~w1l11-We•t fMJ clrf, Gla•tr.C1oser "\ M, 6--fi· dtf. Dunnev-Andlrscn IP 6-3; llr. .7 W~~m.,1rr¥ ., IMI SPiii 1-5, S.1 ; G11f Mll'llll flt) 1111 Los Al1mllOl M~rtlJcn (Ml 1•, del Ltllm1n (L) n. 5.1. Lees (M) 71, def LIPP ILi 79, 4.,, Ambrolt fM) 6•, lltf Alie! Ill 66. •·2 .• Kim !Ml 66, def (;1ull !L) 69, •·1 .• Rl1>l1nd (Ml 79, Josi lo Burns {LI 7J, l·S.• Llnfry (Ml 71. lost lo D&ltY IL) 71. l·S.' •1s hole•. Pro Cage, Hockey Standings ..,. ...... It ... l11ltr11 C1111tr111c1 Atllllllc OlvMtll WM .... ••• c·N..., Yo•• • " .... Phllldtl"111 .. " '" 80tlOl'I " • . .. 8UllllO " ., ,,,, Cll'Utll Ohol•lf• e·ll!Hlft0!'1 ~ " ·'" Af11nt1 u .. .. . Cl11elnntll n .. ,410 Cltvt!lnd " ~ .lff W111trt Clllftflflct Mldwtll Olvl1 .. n t·Mltw111kM " .. ,,, ClllClto • " ,. Pholfll• .. " ,., Dttrolt ~ " .$51 l'•clflc 01¥111011 c-Le• An~e!ts .. " .~l Sall F•tnclKO • • ... Stn 01"° " •• ... Se11n1 » ., .162 Porll1nd " u ·"' c-cllndltd dlvl1lon llt!e, s1111rc11r'1 •••"'"' New VDJ'li: IOI, Mllwtukee 103 C!nclftnlll 1.W, All1n11 "' Chlctl~ 111, Pholll!11 " Sin F<tlKIKt JU, Delr11ll 101 Sin 01-121. 81lllmci•• 11' OnlY times lche<!uled . Slillldlr'• Rtwlll &oston 117, Chle100 llM Alltnll IOI. Pnlltdt!Phl• "' P!M>tnl• 115. Mll ... IUkH llJ LOS AneelH 110, Dttrolt 100 5111111 111., Btltlmora 121 Porl11nd lH, Butf1lo 112 C!11elnMll 11,, Clty1!1nd IOJ OnlY ''""' 1chtdultd. TK1r'1 G1m" No 91mn t.ehedultd. T1111c11v•1 01"''' L.Ot Ane•IH II N-Yort: Atl1nt1 11 Pflll1d~lphl1 e1nlmor1 11 Chke10 MUw1u¥.11 11 Photnl11 C:lnclnMtl 11 e uttalo ~an Fr1ncl1ce 11 ClllYtltnd DnlV tames tcl!tll\lltd. . .. EIH DIYllllll w .. Loll ""· Vlttlnl1 .. " .• 53 Ktnl\ICt~ " u .~. N..., Yo<~ • • .5U Plthburoh " « .GI F!orla11n1 ll ~ .~10 C1rclln1 " ~ Wut DIYl•lfn "" U!tl'I " Tl "" Ind lent " " .... Mtmpl'li1 " • .•93 Oe<lver " d ... TtXll " .. ... 51Nrd1y't R.1 ... lli Kt~lvckY 151, Pl1t1b\lroh in Vl"!llnla Uf, 1na11n1 111 Tex11 112, Cuoll"• 122 Onlv time• 1o;hedvled. JulldaY'I ltnull• Vfrtlnl1 "'' Ktnt11ckY 111 Ul~h lU, C1roll111 103 lndllNI Ul, Dl!nVlr 111 T11111 132. Memllllls 12J l'lorldl1"' 117, P lflibllrth 111 TrdlY'S Ollftfl Np pmn KhtOlll.cl. T¥11d•Y'1 G1m11 •• •• • .. ' "' " " " " ' 10\\ " " .. • 10"• "" , .. ~ "'' ' "" " .. t~dlt~1 ..... Pl!tabUrgh 11 kanluckV Meml>hl' rt C...ver Ntw Vort: 11 Kentlld<.'f Only 11mu 1cnedultd. ... £111 01Yiil ... WLTP1'. Beller> 51 10 7 109 Htw Yo•~ 4• l• 11 " Mon,,MI '3S 20 13 ll Tal'lNll~ :U 2f 6 16 8111!01o n J1 ll JI Ot~ll --:~rj'~>~>O~M ... ~ Vltl(Oll'ltr Wt H D1vlilf11 W L TPtl. Cl!IClllO •l l' f f 163 51. l..ouh 21 23 17 75 1110 MlftM>Oll 7i J(I 15 65 10'1 Phlled~i>h!1 lS 30 1J '3 '101 Plllibutlitl '10 31 II 51 102 LOI Anoelfl 20 35 12 57 761 C1lllornl1 17 47 5 Jt 2n S1t111dlY'1 1tn11ll1 Ch!CIOO •• Monlretl 1 Phli.dtlohl• 3, Toranlo ' Bolton '· V1ncouvtr l LQI A.n11lt1 5, Oetro!I t St. Loul1 t, 8ufftlo It MJ11nei.o!1 O, P!lhburtl'I It. lie OhlY "'""' $Ched~i..t. . , 11111d1y'1 •n11111 St. tcu!s ' Cll!GIOO '· lie Dflroit I, Ctlltornl1 S Monlr11I s. Pllhb""'oh New York 1, Toronto o 8ulf1lc 5, Ml11ne10l1 It Orll)' 11me' 11:n.cr11ltd. TttlaY'• 01mn Ho 01mes sthtdulrd. 'f ALLOW FOR EXTRA ROLL'TO RAISED.,GREEN Tho noxt Ume you ploy 1 shot to 1 ralsid areen, bear In mind that It 'l"ill usuaUy roll forther than a normal approach shot. • Thi$ is because . the shot to • raised ereefl is still moYins more forward and less downward when It contacts the ground. ·Simply allow for more roll On these shots.' Play 'tho bell to land well short ol the llaptlck. ®.-0 1n11W\.-.""'- IRON OUT THOSE IRON SHOTS! AtlKlld P•ltMr'1 booki.t "Hittin1 th• Irons" giYl5 ch1mpion1hip Jipt to help t.h•r~n )'Our lron·thot techniqu1. Send 20e 1nd 1 stamped, fllurn tnvllopt to Arnold P1lm1r, in ctr. of thi1 newspaptr. Vike Swimmers Win Lowell Title The Marina Vikings and coach Chuck Morris weren't worrying about any lottery Saturday at the Lowell lnvita· tional swim meet at IAwell High in La Habra. Marina's mermen annexed both the varsity and Bee titles while being edged out by coach Doug Burt's young Mission Viejo Dlablos for the Cee crown. .4 Marina collected18.1in: and 58 points in capturing the varsity and Bee divisions while the Diablos eked past · the Vikings for top Cee honors, 68-66. Mission Viejo managed six points in the v:.riiity and 15 in Bees while the only other area entrant Fountain ey -had 31 in varsity, 36 1 Bees and 31 .Jn the Cees. The Vikings' Colin Hardy was the area 's only individual varsity winner with a 1:06.3 100 breaststroke ~locking. Hardy also placed fourth in the 200 individual medley and was a member of Marina's fourth place (1 :50.1) medley relay combo. 100 !1fff1t -1, H1rclt CMlr!rll) 1:06.J 2. Wllll•m• (Mlrlr11) l;Ol.6 1. 8rklgn (LowtlO. «JO Fr .. Rtl1V -1, Lowell 2. SIYIMI 1 llutnl l'tr1:, Of!len: Mlrtlll J :ll.O.. Storlnt : Mtrln1 UJ\.11. ~!I UO, llrM 1""1'r. 01111ra: foullft ln V1lllY 31, Minkin Vl1lo '-•-200 Medley Re!rv -1. Mltlr111 1 :11.0 2. Fountain VtlltY l :Sol.J J, Krn....,.,, Ot ..... n : MIUlon VlelO 1:5t.O. 200 FfN -l. HoPO (fl'O'YI 2. M1llb't' IM1tl111I 2'01 .t 3. 8"""' (Low1ll) •. 011'11••: Eich {F-l1ln Vtllll') 1:05.J. I $(1 Fr" -I, MtY•ri (t..'~I) 2. S111rtton (Mllolon Vlelol 1'.• 3. IU•tre!IUY (8rH) .. RoOlt111on (Mar• In•) 'll.3. O lhtr1 ; F1hr1nkru1 (Mtrlne) 2S..$. 100 lncllvlaii.I Medi•~ -1. M11i; kew1 CTrov) 7. •ert•nd ce .... 1. 01hlrJ: $Milon lFouni.ln VllllYl 1 :(I.lo '· 8rvwn (FOl.llltaln VtlleY) l :0•.1. 100. Fl~ -I. Ly .. (Ml1slon Vltlcl 1:01.f 2. S/\flton 1Foun111n V1llnl 1:02.1 l. K•11l1r (K.........,.,). Otti.rl: 01n1ei. (M&rlM) l;OS.3, Eleh cFoun- !1ln Vl11tYl I :OS.3. 100 "'" -I. MaillklWI fTl'OY) 2. MotVtr• IL-Ill J, RoOlnlOft fM1rlntJ 56.1. Ollltn; Do1lb1um CMlrln1J St ... 0th•••: Sl111rd (l'ount1!11 VllltYI $1.•. 100 8.C:k -1, Kt11ler (K9'1ntd'Yl '· MOITOW 1Tr0¥) l. Prime 1Mar1rll) 1:"6.t. Others: RV!et tFounlt ln VI I. ltv) l :ot.f. ..00 Fret -I. Mtlltl\t IM1rlr11) •:11,s 7. 01111 tTrovJ l. ll1rt1nd (8•111. Othtr1: Ftntrrikr1111 CMl•l111I ..... 1. 1(1) 11'"'' -l. El-btllr fl(.,.. ntdV) 2. llrownt (FoY11leln V1111r) 1:10.I 3. Dollb111m ,......,,1,..1 1:10.t . .00 FrM R1l1y -\, L-11 J. Tm J. M1tlna ,, ... s t. Fountth• Vt ll•Y l :50.J. Storlftl: M1rlnt SI, Lowell H\~, Trov 11, Foun11l11 Vtt!•Y u. 0t111rt1 v1r11tr Ml11lon Vlela 15. 200 Medley R1t1v -l . T•ov 1. C111o B1et 3. ~I 6. M•rlnt l:G.!1.1. lQO MedltV Rt!tv -1. MllllOfl Olllfr1 7. Founltln VIiify f :5'.I . V11lo l:SS.2 7. M1rlr11 1:56.0 J. 7UI· 200 Fret -l. C•owtlt (TrorJ 2. Hu. Otl\f.,: Fou11t1in V1lltY 7:01.5, R08Ch (8111n1 P1l1c) 3. FlnlltY ?OD FrH -I. Rk!ve (Mlulon Vltlol (Marini) 1:51.0. 2:00.0 2. Reill"' CM«INI) 2:a::r ... J. so Frff -t. W1ltM (Lo,..elll 7. Ot"-rl: Rice CFoun111n VtlltYl 7:12.2. MIS.UklWI (TrO'fl J. WIUll'"-(Ml· 50 Free -1. llr..,nen ( ...... rlM) rlne) 23.f •, FllH (M1rl111) 2•.o. 2•.t 2. 1(1111 IM•rllll) 25.2 ], And....., 100 lnGlv!dWI Mtdle\t -l. Rcl)ln· (Mission Vlelol 2.5.4. »n !Sono••l 2. Morein !Sav1nN1) J, 100 lndlvld<>tl MeGltY -I. lit be· BrldGt• CLowtll) 4, Nll'dY CM.,.lna) tw""n Rock CM1rln1) Ind Allmln ?:14.5, Olhtra: Sct!olel {M1r1 ... 1 J;l1.J, IMIHlon Vie1o) l :OJ.J l. Ron (5.a· Wommack Noth !Fountain V•llr'l'I 2:23.5. vann1l. Otn!'11: ocn1nfl" CF01mt1rn Divin• -l. Miiion (8r11J 2. V1ll•YI 1:!'14.f. Manasco (Butnl P•r1:J l . CIH 5D Fly -I. Kint 1Mar1Nll 27.3 t, (LCIW'ell) •. HoObl (Minion Vlllo) $, Altman CMIHlon Vl1fo) 11.5 J, Rock Exhibition Baseball Gets 4th A fourth place finish by Golden West College's Dave Wommack in the 125-pourld division was the t o,..p performance turned in by the Rustlers and Orange Coast in the state JC Wrestling meet held Friday and Saturday at El Camino. Cerritos captured the state title with Fresno finishing se· cond. The top effort from Orange Coast was produced by 157· pound sophomore Bob curry \•:ho placed fiftfi:" Another OCC entry, Guy Morrison, suffered a cut over an eye while winning bis first rourn:I 142-pound match. After four stitches repaired the cut, Morrison suffered a broken nose while wrestling a second round foe . He lost the match and was forced to forfeit lo a third round opponent. Three other Golden West wrestlers -Steve Kurtz (150), Doug Hilliard (177) and Tom Foss (1S4) all lost first round matches. Amtr'ltlfl L111w w l I'd . Mllwauk« ' ' .17! CM ergo ' ' .u• Ml11"t1<1!1 • , .661 01kl1NI ' ' .611 CltYell"d ' ' .621 Boston ' • ·'" B•ltlmort ' ' ·"' Wa1hln1to~ • • "' Krnw• Clly , • . .. Detroit , • "" Hew York ' • ·"' C1Jlfcr11le ' • .143 'h1l1n1I L~IUI w l l'ct. Pllllbvrttn • ' ,,. Lei A"'el1a ' ' .714 St. Loui5 ' ' .w .... ,M ' • "" Ntw York ' , .5!6 San FrlfttlS'O ' ' ·"' Att;;n!a ' ' ·"" Chic"° , ' .«• C!nclnnell ' > .371 P~liadtlPhil ' • .lll Sen Dlriro , > .796 Monll'<l!ll ' ' ·"' S1tvrd1r'1 R1111!11 AtllMI ,, B1ltlmo•• 0 combi~f<ll tQUld (81Ulmort. W•th· l~''""' Atl1nt1, Mon! ... ai, l.O• A~lt!fl) 7, N•w Vork IA) S NIW Yort: fN) '· Los Antel11 , C!nclnnetl S, SI. Lou!1 G Dell'flll ,, Botton , Phlltll1lphl1 7, K1nu1 City ' ChlCltO (A) ,,, MOnt•11I IJ, 10 I"' nln11 Oakl1nd (, San Francisco ' Chlc100 CN) 1, Tokyo Lotte Orlen• J Tokyo Gl111f1 '· Minn•ot1 l Cltvlllnd YI. 51~ Oleto ., Yum1. Arl1., Clnttlto, du•I 1!orm. Mllw1111(" ¥1, C1IUornl1 1t P).1m Sprl"I•• Cellf., cancel!td, •tin Swnd1r't ltnwtts w,uhl"•ton J, New York !Al f C11mblned iq~d ISl. Louh, PMIJdel· ph!1, Hew Yatk, NJ I. Clnclftnafl • ChlCllO {A) I , Blttlrnort S Mlnr1eto!1 10, Bo1ton 1 o O.kl1nd I, Tokyo L"lt Orion1 1 Hiii IFOUllllln VIiie¥!. IM1rl111) 21.0. 100 Flv -J, Rotllt1S011 CSonor•l 7. 100 F•t• -1. Rolll~t (Marini ) s.t.t IC1n111 CJty J, kou1ton 2 1101.... (Tustin) l. l.""""' (Mlllk>n '· And•~ (MIH~ VltlO) 51.4 3. MonltHI 4, Alll"ll" 2 Vlelol SI.I. Dllltr1: 12. 8coll'I (Marl"'l Bully !Tu1!l11I. SI. Lovl1 2, Dttrolt 1 l :ot.O Larnmt•i IFO\lflltJn V•lltvl 50 B.c:k -1. R.tl4enb1u1~ l$onol.t1) Pllbburth $, Lo•AnttlU s 1:05.!. '· Ballev (T111tln) i. Woodrvfl (F01.111- Phll1dtlplli1 l, Nrw York (Nl 100 Frte--1. Jloacn tllu•ne P••kl lain V1!ley! JI.I. Sin Frlntl1cc $, Clllcago (NI t. OUnwortl'I (K911n.e<1y) S. MllUklwl SO B•N!I -1. Campbell {MIHlon Mltw1uk" S-J, S111 0!9'0 ).1 tTroY) Olher" File• IMtrln•) 5~,6 I. Vlt!c) JJ.O 1. Hottm1n (LowtllJ CllYeland f, Ct!llor"l1 6 C~rd1n•1 IMtrllll) 5•.~. l. Karrnldl (Ti:.ntln) •. Evin' (FOun- ToNY'I 0 1m11 100 Back -t. l!&t>ow !Sonor•I 2. tein Vellt¥) 34.l. D!htr1: R.11Tame1 Naw York ('4) VI. Mln1111ot1 11 Or· Jol\nllon (S1v1n'll) l. WH!e•ftld (M•rlhl) ]1.0. !e~~~nl~11,;.1, Mtlllrlll 11 HGmttltill, !Fovnt11n VllleY) l :~l.2 •. Sc!M>ln 200 FrH lllelav -I. Mtrln• 1:45.,. Fii . · (M1•!111) 1:0..0. 2. Ml11lon VltlP 1:•5.l l. 11111..-P•rt:. C!ll<'.111"11!1 vs. Hoviton tt Cocoa. Flt. «lO Fret -I . Crow1!1 ftroYI !. Othl!l'1: Founllln Vallt\t l :•t.1. Tol!;yo G!1nl1 YI. l"hlfldtlPl'lll 11 FlnntY fM1rl111) 1:11.$, l , NNll Sc'.orlnt: Ml11lon Vlelo 61, M1rln1 crea,...1rr..,., Fl•. IFounttl11 V•!lnl •:11.6. "· T1r1Un 36. San Fr1ncl1c1 YI. Clll<lto (NI ,.1 ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;mjjl Scotlidl!1, Arli. II .. ;:::~·~,,.'." """'"'' " .... Why It Pays to Know Mllw1uk .. YJ. S.n 01Hc 11 Yum•, Arli. Ballon 111. B•l!lmora 11 M11ml, Fl•. C11tc1.c {A) vs. Nirw York (A) al BOB PALEY Ft. L1u01rd11e, Fl•. Ot!rclt VI. SI. LOI.Ill 11 SI. Pettn• burt, Fii, K1Mea Clfy VI. W1Ml"•'011 I I '"'"" "'"° Beech, Fl1. TU•ttl1y'I Olmtf LOS Anvtltl vt. ltllll'nOl"t ti Mltml, Ft1. 8o1tan VS. Wtlhl"l!on ti PGmP•no Be~th. Fla, H...,York {Al Vi. Cllltlt O (AJ 11 car1c11, v-1u111, 11loht Ntw York (ff) VI. D11ro11 '' ltk• l•nd, Fii. Montre11 VI, K1n11J City .. I"!. MYtrt, I'll, MlnNllO!I YI. A!ltnt• It Wtll Palm e11ch, Fii. C!Mlftnlll vs. 51, Lovls II SI. Ptttrl· bliro, Fir. HOllll01! VI. Phlllllll1>hl1 II Clt1•· Wtltr, Flt. To!IYO Gl1nt1 VI. P!lltburth I I ,, .. dt"'°", F 11. Olkllnd w•. Cltv~lnd 1t T11uon. Arlr. Srn l'fln(llco YI, MllwlllkH 11 T.,,,p,, Aflt, 2ol!;vo O•lon1 vs. Ctlllornl1 t t P1lm SPrlnos. Ctlll. ChltllO (NJ YJ. $In 0 1Mo t i Yuml, A.tr. ~ •AF•t:a tNllUAANCE h!. P•l•y7 It N • treet wtfltf· ., 1111 tff claslc MllM .t, ..,, fir• G-otclt ''Jim Lottd .. 7 D••'t "'"' •e•• ..... 1 ~ h tit• ty,. tltet ..... ,., • IM1111MtlHk I• 1111 ttol IM1, tto tltlttkt • "lf·N•I ... h • mldflf ko1to 4'MY1n , Srlll, If y•11 w•t tomeorlt te ,,.,. ,a. wltt. yo11r ltt111ruc1 pr•bl1111 •1114 ,_. ., • wlttfft, ye• co•'t ,1c11 •• e Mttw MCI• t110111 loll ,. .. ,. If yoe to.I , ••• ,. '"""' ... lftttt •• tM .,....... .t sol id pr•tfftl••• tHt't feH 11111..., two, loforo yo1 tff declto4, bit t•o4, cell •• hb. He'• hi •19 .,.,.., nltlttt for thti bell st 474 I. 17tti St., C•sttt M .... f'lltllO 142·6100 t,onday, Mar th 151 1~71 DAILY PllOT J3 Newpor-t, ~ons-·in Baseball-Toumey--- Palringi have been rtlea!ed !or Ibo •vtnih ann~al Santa Ana Elki-Club b a se b aH 'tounuunent ltblch begins April s. ,The l~team eUmlnatlons art spread over six diamonds with a pair of games taking place at four locations in the inlUal round. Westml.Dster will open up al Santa Ana Volley Hiih wllb confl'Olltations with Foothill and lbe host Falcons. AP•ll 5 At SA College Garden Grove vs KeMedy 10:30 a.m. Anaheim vs VUla Park 1:30 a.m. Sant¥ Ana vs savanna 1:30 a.m. Al Saddltbott ,HJP Sunny Hills vs Katel11 ·10:30 a.m. Saddleback vs Magnolia 1:30 p.m • At S.nta Au Valley Hl&h Foothill vs Newport Harbor IO:SO a.m. Orange Coast 1 r e a Newport Harbor nines and At &Uta Ami Hltb Loara vs Orange 10:30 a.m. SA Valley vs Westmlnater 1:30 .p.m. Anniversary specials! Wide profile fiber glass belted tire. , ForelllOIP T111r•belt 220 with 2 belts of fiber glass on • 2 ply nylon cord body . · Bl.ckW•ll tubel••• Siie Fed t1x Price F78-14 .............. 2 .54 .............. 23.88 G78-1~ .............. 2.69 .............. 25.88 Specl1I Buyt Penneys 'El Tlgre• 12 volt battery. Features solid rubber case. Engi neered for heavy electrical demands. Larger plates than High Volt line. •with trade In of your old battery. '1:1 Tll,.'40 mo. Gu1ta1111a Stiould .ny Fotemo:nt 'Et Tlgre' 011t1ry fall (not me1e1v cllsch1r~I w ithin 15 mot'lths from tht lli!t ol ourcn.tt, 11t11rn I! to ~"n•y~ ind It will bl 1ept.1c111 I•« of ch1rqe. Alter 15 mnnlh< l)ul p1100' 10 111t expir•tlon date ol the 9111•1nl18, J. C. Penney en. w ilt r1p11t.t th• oauerv char9inq only tor tht pefiod of ownorsnlo, ~ted on lhl current price •I '"" Urnt ol r•turn, pro '"ed over tt11 st1ttd gu••tlllM mon•h~. 88 plus 1.88 fed. tax and old Ure.. 87S.13 bl1ekw1ll tubeless. Dual whlt•w•ll tubel11a Size Fed. tax -878--13 .............. 1.88 ............. 21.11 E78-t4 .............. 2.37 ...... -.... 24.18 F78· 14 .............. 2.54 ..... -..... 21• G78-14 .............. 2.69 ......... -.21.18 H78-14 .............. 2.95._ ......... 30.I& G78-15 .............. 2:80 .............. 21.U H78-1 S .............. 3.0t .............. 30.ll 900.15 .............. 2.96 .............. .32.18 Plus Fed. tax and old tire Service 3 days onlyl (Mon., Tues., Wed.) Foremost engine tune-up 15~8w. Includes: new points. plugs, rotor. condenser and distributor cap; adj ustment of carburetor, timing and dwell angle • Most 6 cylinder American cars .......... 19.81 Most 8 cylinder American cars ......... 23.81 Y11, vow c111 1ho11 12 to S Sun loo, 11 1n~ of tf.111 Ptnnrv AYt" C1nl111: FASHION ISLAND, i"9tt" 811ch. ~11 P1;111y1 !fa p Newport C1n11r, HUNTINGTO N CENTEll:, H 1111t cFASHION ISLAND, Newport Center, HUNTINGTON CENTER, Hunt ington Beoch. Use Penneys lime payment plan. • ,, ' %4 DAIL V PILOT t Record Award6 ma TV G.rammies Going Big Timec By ~1ARY C.UIPBELL /'\EW YORK t AP) -Tht! elite <1f the record industry gather Tuesday to honor tht best of last year 's popular n1usic with Grammy Award! -statuettes shaped like old- fashioned gramaphones. For the first time. tcleYision l--~.:len:c.s_f_~oss the rountry will be able -lo v.•atch the presentalion ,of lhe Grammys •·hich are to the recording industry what the Oscars are to the movies. ABC "''ill present a 90- minute telecast from Los Angeles. one of five cities in v•hich presentation banquets -- are bemg held. Although lhert alSo are cert>moniH i n Nashville. Allanta, Chicago and New York , it u.suall)' turns out that most or the winners attend the one in Los Angele-1. Tbe only television coverage ror the past seven years ha s been an NBC show, "The Best on Record." with film cllps of Grammy winners perform· ing shown some lime after the presentation. The winners are chosen in voting by the members of the National Academy Of Recording Arts and Sciences. Songs nominated for awards in ty,·o of the 43 categories will bt perrormed on the te1evis.ion show. Both are com- posers' awards -for the bea:t song of the year and for the best country song of the year. Vu." Crosby, Still• Nash and Young ; "Elton John.:' Elion John, and "Sweet Baby James,'' James Taylor. Nominees for best new artist or the year are the brother-sister team. t h ~ Carpenters; the British singer· son~·riter, Elton John: the star o( "Purlie" on Broady,•ay. 1t1elba ltfoore; the Canadian singer. Anne i\turray. and TV·s the Partridge Family. 1 ·f TV HILY· .LOG Nominated for best song are: •'Bridge over Troubled Water,·• by Paul Simon: ''Everything is Beautiru~ ·• by R~ Stevell.$: "Fire fl n d Rain," by James Taylor : •·1..et it Be,'' by .John LA!nnon and Paul tilcCartney. and "We're Only Just Begun." by Roger Nichols and P a u I Willia ms. The country songs nominated are "The Fightin' Side of Me," by Merle Hag- gard; "For the Good Times," by Kris Kristofferson ; "Is An}'body Goin' to San Antone?" by Glenn 1'1artin and Dave Kirby; "tify Woman. lofy Woman, lily Wife." by Afarty Robbins. and "'Rose Garden,'' by Joe South. J'iominees for c l a ss i ca l album of the yP.:ar are "Beethoven Edition 1 9 7 O • • ' various artist.s: ''Berlioz.; La Troyens," Colin Davis con- ducting the Royal Op e r a House Orchestra and Oiorus: •·Brahms: Double Concerto," by David Oistrakh a n d lifstislav Rostropovicb; "Ives: Mondoy Evening MARCH 15 1:00 ll 111 ,...., .llrry Dunphy. 0 KNIC lf""'IYiQ Toni Stlydar O TM Allt!i S• 0 Sil: O'Otd; .... (t) (90)1 .. ,,.,. Mwf' (wtsttlll) '50 - JamH Sttwut, Otbfa l'qtl Jtn Chandler. Codlist, Ult lfUI l11clil11 111drr, 11rees to • tempou111 11tn in tilt w11 1Uu • ftontittsma• be· __ ,... come$ his frirn~ but ~ieious wt.nu aft.ct tht lfldians. ' fJ Diet V• DJ't m TM FlilrtmlCI IE @CV St. T1tt ED 11111t1i111Md "W'"1H World #I.~ ~Ci) .... , ....... ,_ mr111r11rr .. itf ttl llittitittt J4 m Wlllp tt AdMflf11 al) LI Mn r .. 11ier c.111 CMllllle Q) Nin Jin! Hewlllofnt. ; 15 fD Art Stlldlie »Ota* c....-1 m TM n,i111 II•• 12) (I) NIC fkowt: fD~plM1• ~OO CIS""" m s.iecW r111ts/M•1W<1lt m Tiie lkisMt •tpllt mi la omtldee muc .... 1*1 D CIS .... Wttt,r C1orik1tt. 0 m "" ,..., Oall'id fl rinkl•J. .loltll Cfl1nttlkir, fr1nk McGH. i. COIWTflce N111 llCll to 1ut fw his Htl111M llOS4I. 0 "'" o az rn m '" •• ,, .. m DIN frwt a-Guuts 111 M1ra1 locld. ClelYOR Littll, Cllief Din Georp Ind Norm1 Liii. m_,,,_ m ''""' • liritr m .,...,...,. ,... .,. t:OJ u s rn .. .,...,, 1.1.1. Goobef" \IOlunltHI his ten'icts II I fl/idt t!1 the JUnillf WGodslllell Clll •· plo!e xnne ewes and ttien prompt- ly pis himself loll hom tl'll othtn. o ~oo m--­•: (C) (2 ,.,, ..... ,.. .. (drtl'lll) '70 -01rr1n McGnill.. Anlarittt• Comer. HeB Eilelm1n, .lo• ftmr. Robtrl: F«llH stirs II I priwalt dtttdi'r"t • lllcomes • tlritt himself IS ht tries • OH • mu1der c:ommitttd with his own we1pon in his Olll'll otfic~. ODI f11itift O @IIJ!DUC ·-"""' ('C) (? _,, ...... llltdit( lk Mint?" (CO!MCIJ) '67-Jlm Hlltlon. Dototl!y PYwiM, Milton Stilt. Youn1 m111 1m!>lo1ed by tht U.S. Miiii loses $50,000 !ft C\lireney, ind h• dtYiKS 1 p11n to perlflnite th• Mint Oii 1 weekeftCI tnd la print tilt OITrlfttY. ID TM 1""'9n fD le.nties "l"akt Me OUt of the 8111 GHat." An w111inrtion tf \POffl IS I r!flettioft of !11ditiot11/ Ame1ir.111 1tt~ i nd n lues. Grammy Awards generally are said to be for the best recordings of the previous year. However, the actual date of record release to be elig ible for these Grammys is Nov. 2. 1969, to Oct 15. 1970. Nominees for record of the year are "Bridge over Troubl· ed Water" performed by Simon and Garfunkel. "Close to You'' by the Carpenters. ''Everything is Beau tiful"' by Ray Stevem, "Fire and Rain"' by James Taylor and "Let It Be" by the Beattles. Album of the year nominees are "Bridge over Troubled Water," Simon and Garfunkel: "O:iicago," Chicago: "Close to You," the Carpenters: "Deja Joe's Sho'v A Ki1ockout Three Places ill New England and Ruggles: Sun Trader," 1.1ichael Tilson Thomas con- ducting t.he Boston Symphony, and "Shostakovich: Symphony No. 13," Eugene Ormandy conducting the Philadelphia Orchestra. Seventeen awards will be made on the TV show. Calegories are record or the year, album of the year, classical album of the year. song of the year, best new artist. be st contemporary vocal performance -male. female and duo or group. best rythm and blues v o c a I performance -male and female, best country perform ance -male and female. best country song. best comedy recording, best jazz performance by seven pieces or less, best jazz performance by eig ht pieces or more. best original score written for a movie'" or TV special. Johnny Carson l NCLLNE VILLAGE. Nev, fUPIJ -Ring biz or sho\V biz is all the same to ~·orld heav)'\\'eight champ J oe <..:ouvalescin!! Frazier. '-' He temporarily rorgets the r..1EW YORK (AP) -Johnny former and picks up the latter Carson is recovering rrom a 1t1arch 25 y,·hen his rock group. mild case of hepatitis and '"the Knockouts." opens a hopes. to be back as host of three-day engagement a I the "Tonight" show March 23. Kings Castle Hotel~ino. An NBC spokesman said m 30 MMtn Prior to going into serfous Ca rson, who y,·as ™*pitalized €E "°' I raining for the successful Sunday. had been taken off defense of his title against the infectious list by his doc· a:;J "Nell• Aiuhammad Ali. Frazier and !ors. O Wklt'1 lltJ U.e! m IHI cm "" '"" m"'""' ' t :lO E 9 (J) Deris 11y Dolls Mi"f· his group appeared for a short In his absence from the lij'.i younc -itt-1. Apr~ Tolliver. engagement al a South Lake shovr Joey Bishop bas been 11~ 1 111iddlt.ol·lhe-ni(ht visit 10 Tahoe casino. stand ing in. @(J)hi!i• Boossom.-ua~k~Busy . Actor Tur1is Director Witli 'lnval.id' 2 Networks Bring Back News Shows Aller 1 year aod 1 half of trying his theatrical wings up oorth, Ron Boussom is bt!ck where be started, at Sooth Coast Repertory, and busier than ever before. &lissom. who returned from San Francisco I n September, jwnped into the major role of John Grass in SCR's production or "lndians,'' took the leading role of Stanley in "'The Birthday Party" and Is now making his debut as a directo! wilh '"The imaginary Invalid. now on stage at the company's Thin:I Step Theater in Costa ti.1esa. By RICK OU BROW For Boussom, 2-4, directing HOLl.YWOOD (UPI) is a wbole new experience Both NBCT'Vand CBS-TV wl.ll -and he vows he"IJ "think have major, prime time news· twiCf. during his next acting documentary serie.. next assignment belore bringing any additional problems to an season-despite program redu c· already overloaded director. ti on caused by the governme11t "I never realized y,·hat a cutback on net~~:ork broad-director has to face," he casting hours. comments. "Acting is so mu ch NBC TV previously a11nounc-less complex -you 're nol ed it would bring back its concerned wjth c o s t u m e s , monthly, two-hour • • F i r 5 t lighting, budgets. personnel. The director's responsible fo r Tuesday" program. switching so many things; the whole it to Fridays, with, of course, thing resls on his shoulders." a new title. The diminutive Boossom has And now it has been reveal. taken a heavier load than ed officially that • ' C B S most directors on his own Reports" will also be shoulders. Apart from staging presented as a monthly. two-the production of "Invalid," hour e11try starting this fall , he also provides the live musical background a n d airing on Thursdays.' en1ertains V.'ith Reginald Rook Among other things, lhe two in a mime show at moves mean viewers "''ill not intermission. be faced with a head-on co n-Boussom's beginnings in the flict between the programs. theater sJretch back to high as there has been between school where he was advised ''First Tuesday" and CBS-TV's "60 minutes." to try drama but not to major in it. When the network prime lime cu tback to three hours ··~1aybe that's what did it," nightly was Ursl ordered by he says. "Sometxxly telling th e Federal Communications . me I shouldn't always makes Commission. t o encourage me want to do it -I see loca l and independent pro-it as a kind or a challenge." duct ion, it y,•as f ea r ed He attended Long Beach dOCtJmenlary series such as City College \\'ilh an interest "First 'ftiesday'' would be in art and "'·riling : but one eliminated from key evening acting class with LBCC drama hours ror eronomic reasons. instructor David Emmes - Less prime time obviously who also is executive director mean t belt-lightening at the1---- netwOrks, and public affairs program:o; usually don't dra v.· BACK WITH SCR Ron Bous10m of South Coast Repertory - y.•as enough. Bousson1 dropped everything, changed his major to theater and proceeded to play leading roles in eighl college product ions. "/ y.•as searching for that particular med I u m of cc.mmunication where I could do everything," he explains, "Theater was it -you can do so niany things." Bou.ssom joined Emmes' SCR company in 1966 with a small role in "Juno and the Paycock." then took the lead in •·ttail Scrawdyke" and ""Playboy of the \Yestern \Vorld ." He also appeared in "Sergeant ~1 us g ra ve's Dance." "The ~1andragola" and ":\merica Hurrah "' before taking ofr on his own personal sabbatical. \\'ith the Amefican Conservatory Thealcr (ACT) in San Francisco, he pltinged into a four-month training congress, taking classes in spee<:h, voice, a cl in g , movement and. what is fast becoming his specialty. mime. A, fotinding member of ACT"s mime troupe. Botissom toured for eight months to high schools, collq:K and clubS, doing ovtr 100 shows. He Is currently pt.u'Sulng hi• interest in the art by fanning a mlme troupe at SCR which "'IU be available ror local bOokings in March. A su: . .mer ol playing In Shakcspelre at the Ashland, Oregon, festival completed hia wanderings and B o u s 1 o m returned to SCR in time to join the 1970..71 season. Sinco his return, he also has been involved in the production or short efperimental films. Boussom's future may hold 60me more film work (" f'd like to try the actor'r technique in another media") btit the theater will alway' remain the center of his art. ""l question those people who say that theater is dead," he comments . "It's just changfng. Perhaps it won't exist tomorrow as we know it today. but that doesn't make it dead ."' Boussom believes strongly in the artist's role as a socia l comn1entator. •·As long a11 there are people, someone has to comment on the society, '1 he inaintains. "And who's going to do it if the artist doesn't~" Boussom's particular comments. In the form o! • • T b e Imaginary Invalid, .. may be seen Fridays and Saturdays al the SCR theater, running in repertory with '·)!other Earth'' thr ough ?-.1!rch 27. Boyle Signed For 'Baskin' NEW YORK (AP) -Peter Boyle, y,·ho won critical ac- claim for his performance in ''Joe," has been signed to co- star \vilh Candiet! Bergen In Paramount Pictures' "T, R. Baskin," it was recently an· nounced. Boyle currtntly Is appearing in .. Story Theater" in New York City. -------------- the ratings or advertising money I h a t entertainment series auract i 'fhererore, lhe ne t w ork decisions in favor of "First I FIRST TIME IN COLOR! e FRAZIER vs. All FIGHT PICTURES BATTLE OF THE CENTURY! Tuesday" and "CBS Reports" can only be applauded by re sponsible membe rs of ihe ' lelevision industry. not lo 1 me"tion viewers faithful to realily programming. I Dl~ECT FROM RINGSIDE Rouftd by Round! Blow by Blowl rrom Cirwramn Rell(Uini;: Corp.-WILL NOT BE SHOWN ON HOME TV FOR • M06. IN ADDITION TO REGULAR FEATURE -POPULAR PRICES! e NOW AT 2 EDWARDS CINEMAS e EDWARDS HUNTINGTON CINEMA EDWARDS CINEMA WEST #1 fll) Tiie Wcwtl Wt l1N 11 "The Winners." TIM eno1rnousl1 tOlarlul 1"4 comple1 world of Insects. QI Cl) TrwUI • Ctft$1qlllflfA• Doris f(I lfflt ,..,. •ihitt 1111 tiow ,---------------=--------·. lo pitch uo her 1111rri11e, wtiich i1 crurnblill1 \>etaust llet calte11 student.lrnsb111d, f'tter. c1n't st1nd '\ tilt lhoulhl tf becof!linl I ltllltr. ' f:J C.ndid c. .... @Il)Mu**/1'1Aw'1W "' m CHna • b1111t111 ~ 847-9608 WESTMINSTER -892-449J . " -7 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS 'Nriuo11;c BEST PICTURE m airt1t ... LiYi111 w.• g)Mi_,,,...TI (Il:)Si~ M•lil Cl)lllM& ... 7:30 fJ ~(])Ci-" M11ll'lf1 Od· I011 hu 1 lon1. ti.rd 1iclt btek to Dodi• City with 1 prilorltr w1low 11n1 pul'IUes tMrn birl •oPe•IJ out. 'lint1t4 i nd 1utdist1nced by !hf m1n.ll11--tintil lie s101IS to 1e:swe I preptnl \nltlll lirl lound ill ind iniurtd-iR tlll rebrordcasl of '"Wl<:D.~ o in CJJ m .... Sl•ltM SH••· llln CAibot llJfslL ' 10:00 ll IS (J) c."' lllrMtt SitW fhMlt• r1br1y i nd !lrll ""' 1111st 0 I ii 5 hwl Jl:1rin Slfldtn, Berney MctrTis. 011111f W•4 """ m,... l'Ulnll'll/fishrnln. ID MM: lii1t11,, Wll TrMI fD I IJlt!A I CATY MMunp IE-"' G!') Hit ., """""' !D Vlftinle ,,.. S119w Guesb lll:30 O ._. w.-Merit: (t hr45 1n) 111dlldt [d McMallol'I, POncy Ames, · "Tiit "* tt Sinppert• (rom111t1) C. C. flu~~ 1nd Clf1 B. Stokts. 'JI _ Bob Hopt, Bini CIQSby, 0 @ (1) tl) Uf'I Ma" 1 Dt1l Don>l:hy l11110C1r. Two low11 of ttlt Mollfy Hill hos!1. w1 1™1 h1ters of ll'lttrimonr turn t!p ill Sii~n. W)ltft tllry melt I 0 M!lliofl S Mnll: IC) 12 hi ) 1,,1 with m1rri1it on het l'ftincl. "WI loin.I tht lil1WJ'' (COITlfd~) '62:-lltnneth Mor~ Lloyd l'lol1n. m lilt loll111 """ .lo111 O"Britn. Youn1 N1v~I O/lictr (D lnmtiduMbl• ask' too rn1ny 1m~1n1ss1n1 qun· 1tons i nd 111er bemc bouncr1d t1om 11:00 l1 a00 m News one sl1tion 10 l "°lhfr. wlnlk tJP IS !ht lltftl bf I rt\IOhlfiOll. 0 1!i3' @ m ..... m 1nrt11 ., ton1t111111K• om,.... W II T1kn • Tllitl ID City Wlfclltfl mcm.• JO €m LI D1i.n1 0 frtflrit-: 111t Sift DJ11" (drama) '64 -fr1ncoist Dotlu c. Je•n Oesailly. m Nm.: "Tlle lllu111111f1 Clloll:'" (mystery) '44-lon Ch1ney. m Mowir. "Tiie l lut ll•p" (111)'1- J:SS a:;J C.... H Stpllffs 1ery) 'SI -01rk Bo1116t. 1:00 EJ !)} @ m l111ll·l1 CAimtor f.D WorW ""I 1111sts lnduclc Grort' R11t, fu 111/ldo Limit •llCI D1"1h Short 11.JO l1 ~CJ) Mn C1illlfl °"'' Johnt0n 1nd Al1n Sun pl•yl Q @ 11) m JW!nnr Ctr9011 .IOtf 1 Jlussi1n lhfhl msltuctllf •llCI '" Bishop subs ., host. {1Jpti1n lraintf. 1 o @ rn m "'wlJwt«I '""' m Tt Ttll thit T1lllll m cm111t Cw.it& CS lllM ., flliH 0) Musla y E1t11n1t o m .~id. c.rett ttoo IHI IIl °"' tmtt 12:l0 m Mft'il: "'ht«t I ~111(' (tll1" ttr'J') '40 -8ori1 lbtloff. 1:00 l1 MGM: "1ttyt )et" (16\ltntute} .,, -HumollrtJ Bo11rt. QO Ntw11 1:30 fJ eij (JJ Ht11'1 LIKJ' (R) 5'rn·i mJ D1vii Jr. l1nd~ ht 1111 l.llC'I ~011 2:SO 0 Litt Litt SllM' "H61tl ltt11Yt" • tontl•,,, tompll'tlon IS sht lllJSI (dr1m1) '(6-Jtlfltl MIMft. Tuesdoy DAYTIME MOVIES 0 "Wtll."11 u-... (tdW!lturt) '&J -Jlobtrt YGtJn&. 0.111 .llUfl". m tt> ~ w.h1 " ....,.. (1dw11tur1) ''5 -Toahh MNu11t. l:Oll m •A YW: ill till W" (llMntllrt) '®O .,.._ MlllN( (~ 't l-TJTOM,._,, '&6 -Pet O'lrlel • .,,... °"' Z:llO (C} .,._._,....,.. (COl'Mlf1) lwtr(' (19111Ct} 'SS -~ ·~.tohn WIYfll, Dototl!J LlfllOOf. totlll!. [VI S.rtok. • ' 10 0 .,..... ~-.. ..,.. <•11· •:•. "'Clttle .... " ........ rn11 ''° ~ Ctof'I' Rift, #H ltft· ("tlltm) '54 -l1rb1r1 Sii~ "''I. W1!1t1 f'idpon. Ro11all ltl1p11, CtM E'lllS, • Aalt About s.ar. Con•eni•n.t Credit Plans , ""' Behilld'· tlle-Eor SAVE :f;lO to .'{;50! Behind-the-Ear Hearing Aids Regalar$19' '""' • Jlingtd baUery compartment -easter In insert battery • Sepilr.atl!" on/off switch~' blilUtrJ lire; plllstlccaw. s139 s,lflf;'JOI ,229 J\et•l•t mt, /lllt, ••••.•.•..... ' ..• '' .....•••••• \4 VF.'c1!;[ ""'a"' fte'pi•r id, ,_ .. , ........ , , ......... , , ...... .tit 'ti· ~c -.111: • arHH.1a ............................. 269 ~ii i E 'f(j{ R<plul3tt, l1IU •................ c .......... ~289 ~'W-___ ........................ ~299 Rt:mtUJ AWs Al A Pm Y• Ca11 Alford ., . Backe4 ~A CGmpuJ Yo. C.a Oeptlld: 0.. RetriJIC Aw. Are An.illb~ at tlie FoUowirJa &.:nS&oret --.,...... rft.CIUmpi11 WALTDllNEY PaGDUCT~··~'ji'fi' ~"'"'~· I trrunru9.IX I •EW'°tT IUC" • Oil I.USO EXCLUSIVE Elliott Gould Don Sutherl1nd Marcia Rodd IN "THE LITTLE MURDERS" ALSO Bri1n K•lth H•lmut Griem "THE McKENZIE BREAK" 1-...dilt SMw St..r!'t 7 P.M. CtRf, S.t. ••4 S1.i. ffeiw 1 WWW2l&Ll4 ap ! Best Actor . Ryo~ O'Neol ... ~· PMUIOJlt PO~S 1'11.Sl~IS ,, 'Best Actnss. Ah MocGraw .1 \ , .. ':'P t , . · Ah Mac6raw UJlE fGP -~l~~~NeaJ \~~~ ACADIMT AWARD NOMINIE • 81ST SUPPORTING ACTOR . Ch;d Doo G"'ll•-- ,......,..,..,,.,,~OS"""~-"''" ..... __ .. ___ .. __ _ Aha Barblr"f IMnhey ~ _''THI BABT MAKEi" (I) IN MISSION VIEJO EDWARDS CINEMA VIEJO \l'l 01! ,I) l"l\-¥ > l~ <'At Tl'~~('IH 6.ll) ~~'J{' 2 • I SOUfll SNI DllGO nf"f Now Al llolh IDWARDS CHM.AS W"""11'Dl-l•Oll!ft ..,,c.. .... ..., ...... _, ..... , ........... ·--~ ··~·-· ~ """'"'' ... , .... •.....C DUSTIN HOffMAN' ~LITTlI 816 MAN " ~·li!chnic:ob• ~­CWIEF DAN GEORGE· FAYE DUNAWAY ACADEMY .BEST ACTOR -JAMES EARL JONES, :::. ACTRESS • JANE ALEXANDER ~ "TheGreat eoior White Hope" i . "diary of a ~mad housewHe" Iii l!!l ... 1- • LA Philharmmaie , . Samuel Notable In UCI Concert • • Mo11d11, Mmll 15, 1971 OAILV PILOT Jll '· Ar.te •Breaking Ont' 'V ~ry Inte resti ng' Special Comi1ig Up By VERNON SCO'l'T HOLLYWOOD tUPll them king before J came lo 'Laugh-In.' " ' By TOM BARLEY Of !M CMI"' l"lltt 11111 Gerhard Samuel Is an un· familiar figure ln our .Orange County concert hall!! but he has done enough In his few appearances here to convince those who have not watched this capable Germgn work with the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra at its home ba~ that he is a first class e<1nduclor and a more than worthy deputy for Zubin Mehta. phrased. especially towards the close of the movement. Arte Johnson, the Gennan soldier, the Russian loser 1nd t.he dirty old man of ''Rowan and Martin 's Laugh.In," wit! star in his own te\evl ·on special tilled ' ' V e r • r Interesting." Johnson has a .quick wit and a sharp tongue In the -..~ .. ~Lake of~parte:lf"e--'1 Samuel was no less master- ly in the beautitully delivered menuetto, another s u b t 1. y phrased passage that gives us Mozart at his most sensitive and which took on a new allure under the Samuel baton. A very fine "Jupitu" indeed by a hard working orchestra under the direction of this most capable assistant con- ductor. ·- One of the nriginal :r.anies of the "Laugh·l'n ," Johnson may follow Judy Ca rne, Goldie Hawn, Joanne Worley and olhers who have left the highly rated show . "I don 't know if I'll be wl1h the series next year," the little comedian siid. Indeed. he out·Mehtad eve n Mehla Saturday night at UCI in t.be LAPO's fourth concert of the Orange County P!Plharmonlc Soc;iety's 1970-71 season w Ith a ~ozart .. Jupi· None of this is to detract r from lhe merit of l h e Schumann Second tha~ cloud this almost flawless concert. Here again, Samuel exerted an admirable discipline If not quite to the extent that made his Mozart so memorable. CHRISTMAS GI FT -Chuck Schicker is pained as he accepts a present from 10· "I've fulfilled my four.year contract and my obligations to the produC"ers. This special J'm doing is a pilot. If H's sold as a series o! its ov.·n, naturally I'll do ii. ymphony that c o u I d be described as flawless in very and Interpretation. rl is quite obviously Herr Samuel's cup of tea and he made that abundantly clear with a sensitive reading that was particularly so in the se- cond and third movements or a work that seems to comprise a little bit of everything in its four stages. SamueJ's work in the an- dante cantalbie was especially noteworthy and he drew from his orchestra the kind of response that Is not always , evident in other translations of this finely scored second movement. We quarrel with our program ·s description of the movement as "florid, somewhat operatic": to our mind it is one of the most tender passages in the Mozart portfolio, replete with swiftly changing melodies and richly Musicians' Judg es Set ,.hirteen leading musician!\ and teachers have been chosen as judges for the 1971 Young Artists Auditions. The audi- tions, to be held at Santa Ana High School March 21 and 2.8, are sponsored annually by the Musical Arts Club of Orange. T ina Chosen HOLLYWOOD !UPI) Tina Aumonl as chosen by director John Huston to e<>slar with George C. Scott in MGM's "The Last Run ." The drawback, lo our mind, was in the scherzo which was never really that 'and an allegro vivace which seemed to suffer from a tight Samuel hand on the reins. But this workmanlike conductor, Wh() quite obviously has no room on his podium for flamboyance and the airy graces affected by so many of his craft. was more than forgiven for the sheer magnificence of the allegro molto vivace that e<>n· eludes tbi! t owering Schumann work. That splendid final move- ment and the glowing sostenuto assai that opens the work were the highlights or this fine Schumann and both amply served to demonstrate the prowess of a string section that responded nobly to Samuel's urging. Mehta's deputy served very clear not.ice Saturday night that even his master's shoes can be filled at a momenl's notice. Charisma , he hasn't. but competence, solid craftsmanship and an uner- ring baton he certainly has. 'l is to be hoped that this fin e<>nductor will not be limited, in future seasons, to the one Orange County ap- pearance allotted to him for the 1976-71 session. His was a most refreshing a n d welcome visit. There were two breaks between the Mozart a n d Schumann: Gyorgy Llgetti's ';Lllntano" and l he in- termission. The intermission proved to be of much greattr value in musical terms. Enough said? Pick Your Own 'Oscar' Winners The DAILY PILOT, in cooperation with Bueno: Pork·'~ Movieland \l/ru: fif useum. offers readers a chance .to par~· cipate in natio-nwide balloting to select popu~r wi~ners .'n the "03car Derby." Week's vacation for two in Menco City or Honolulu and a place of hon01' at the Stars' !iaU of !am.e Award.$ Banquet in Hollywood await the nattonaL totnner. Vote now by filling out and clipping out this ball.at: -- --. --- -- ---I Mark an "X" In the box which appears in 1 front of your selection. Vote for only one person or film in each category. Please be sure to complete the 25·word statement at the end of the ballot and fill in your name address and phone number so you can be contacted' if you win the prize trip and ba~­ quet invitation. All ballots must be returned (1n person or by mail) to the DAILY PILOT by 5 p.m, on :rvtonday, March 29. Best. Actor 0 MELVYN DOUGLAS for "I Never Sang For My Father" O JAMES EARL JONES for "The Great White Hope" 0 JACK mCHOLSON for "Five Easy Pieces" 0 RYAN O'NEAL for "Love Story" 0 GEORGE C. SCOTT for "Patton" • Bert Actress 0 JANE ALEXANDER for "The Great White Hope" 0 GLENDA JACKSON for "Women In Love" 0 ALI MAC GRAW for "Love Story" 0 SARA MILES for "Ryan's Daughter" 0 CA RRIE SNODGRESS for "The Diary of A Housewife" Best itlotion Picture ot 1970 0 "AIRPORT" (Universal) 0 "FIVE EASY PIECES" (Columbia) 0 "LOVE STORY" (Paramount) B "M' A •s•H" (20th Century Fox) "PATTON" (20th Century Fox) WHY I VOTED FOR THIS PICTURE (in 25 words or less): ............. , ..... , .... , .. • ' ' • • • • ' • • ' • • • ' ' ' • ' o • ' ' I • • ' ' ' ' ' ' • I ' ' • • ' ......... ' ' .. ' . ' ....... ' . ' ...... ' ... ' .. ............. ' ... ' ............. ' ...... . Name .................... Phone ...... .. Street Address .....•.......... , ....... .. City ........................ Zip ....... . ------------------- MDII bDllDt to: "01cDr", c/o DAILY Pl~OT, l'O Box 1560 , Costa Mesa, CA 9:Z6:Z6 year·old Scott Scbicker "-'hile Russell ~1artin "'t.tches in a scene from "\Vho'U Save the Plowboy?" at the San Clemente Community Theater. "But I can't walk away Crom 'Laugh-In' blindly." San Clemente Tlteate~ 'Plowbo y' Gripping Drama Johnson, as in th e case of all "Laugh-In" performers. ls featured in blackouts, quick hits, one-liners and visual gags. The pa~e of the show precludes long sketches. ··The special give5 me an opportunity to say something beyond one or two lines," he fly TOM TITUS 01 tll1 Oally l"llet 51111 With •'Who'll Save "WHO'\.L SAV• THI" l"lDWIDVr" A dr1m1 fl• Frink Gllrov dlrectl'd the bv M1rw E11!m•"· 1111• m1n111r Jwnne Aeoleettt. 111 d~tor fl• Stlirllv 8tlJ, Kii.ind 1fld 1111111,.. b• Joe Del ll:osi.o, l<t...,tl'd T II 11 r t ti' 1 I ftlr-11 S1turdlv1 until Mtrch 11 tt !flt $.Jn Cl-I• Commlltll"' fll11!tr, :rn A¥tt11d1 Ctbrlllo, 5111 Cllt'Mn!t. Plowboy~·· the San Clemente Community Theater has come up with its most outstanding production in memory and one of the most gripping and in- volving dramas set on a local theater stage this season. f"rank Gilroy"s mode r n THI C.1.IT Albt'1 Cobb ...• ··-Auu.n "'"•Hn Heier> Cot>fl . . .••• M••9'1 lrt<ll•Y LI'" Oo,i. ..••••.... Cllllck Sdllcktr M ... Oo'rle ........... ,. Oo1Ue Smllh T~t OCICIOI" . . •• •• •• • A.., Hulclll"t' Th~ min """•1•1 . . Fr•nk Ul11n1nn ?~e ""' .... . •. kell kll!cktr tragedy. 'l-'hile falling a few ---------- cuts below his more notable "The Subject Was Roses," is the rarest and most effective form of drama -lhe sort of theater that knots the stomach muscles and haun ts you with lhe harsh. cruel reality of Jts premise all dur- ing the Jong ride home. II is uncomfortable. unset- tling theater, outspoken in its dialogue and un compromising in its grij:i on the playgoer's sensibilities. And It e<>ntsins three of the most impressive performances of the seai;.on in 11..oi principal roles. expertly guided by the craftsmanlike directorial hands of Mary Eastman. Miss Eastman has long been known for first rate pro- ductions and keen attention to dramatic detail. and her enviable reputation is heightened with the stark dramati c insight of "Plowboy.'' Her characters tick like walking time bombs, and the aud ience sucks in its breath in anticipation of the explosion. The atmosphere ls tense, filled with hate and dis trust, as the play opens. A middle aged failure and hs shrewish wife. v.·ho have long since ceased to communicate, await the visit of his old wartime buddy who sav('d his life in combat 15 years ago . And as they strain for cordiality in his presence. the hero burns inside with the krK.wledge that his courageous act will soon claim his own life. Russell t.iartin Is t h e "plowboy," the rustic. inept bumpkin to whom both far m- ing and truck driving hold a frightening responsibility, and so he now reads electric meters for a living. His is a performance of immense power, and he captures the reality and painful honesty or his character In a hal f-com- pleted move or a futile "Husbands ls1 a1er~at, . 'lmportant·fllm!" -JAY COCKS, TIME . ,_,~Al RUBAN· =SAM SHAW ;:,:;;:JOHN CASSAVETES ·,tOM COLUMBIA PICTURES iO!'! -~ STARTS WEDNESDAY MARCH 17 FIRST TIME IN COLOR!.___. The Super Battle of the Century Direct from lngslde Every Thrilling ment Ro~nd R~nd lJlow by Blow NOW PLAYING Will not be 1how on Home TV for 6 months POPUW PRSI gesture. Jt is a masterful piece of acting by a newcomer to the serious phase of theater. His cold and unrelentingly callous wife is superbly played by ~farge Bradley. whose reasons for her behavior are bottled up tightly until late in the' play v.·hen she gives vent to her inner torment in a scene of raw , brutal power. Chuck Schicker -g;ves his best performance yet as the visiting buddy, a somber shadow of the brash young GI who risked death to drag his friend lo safety. Schicker's' inner torture al seeing the man he rescued living so miserably is po i g n a n t I y delivered. The appearance of Dottie Smith as Schicker's mother is a dramatic high point of the show. Her cold, glaring presence deepens the icy mood, and the effect of her story on the "plowboy " and his wife Is shattering in its implications. Others in the cast "'ho ap- pear briefly bul effectively are Ren Hutchings as the doc- tnr. Frank Utzmann as the upstairs trumpet player and 1()..year-<>ld Scott Schicker as the central figu re in the play·s final , heartbreaking scene. Gilroy's script is powerful . but it is frayed in several spots with the thin dramatic thread of contrivance, the most fragile being !he wife's explanation for remaining wilh her husband. whom she despises. It is a minor flaw , but one which tarn ishes the stark reality of the play. ''Who'll Save the Plowboy?" 111 a depressi ng , disttirbing evening -and one of the most dramatically satisfying productio ns or the searon. It continues for two more weekends, Thursdays through Saturdays, at. the Cabrillo Playhouse. 202 A v e n i d a Ccibrillo. SAn Clemente. Exclusive Showing · LIMITED ENGAGEMENT THE BATTLE OF THE BUTT! THE CHALLENGE: .s---r---~ Every m~n. woman, and child . to quit smoking for 30 days ... • ..Jor your country, for your honor, ~ ">;r for S25,000,000! I. .. ---ALSO PLAYING --- Angela Lansbury • Michael York , , • the basic black comedy. "Something for Everyon•" •• also is posseased of a patemal pride in such diverse idiot!! as Tyrone, Ro~menko and 'Yolfgang. He ,,.,...,,. new fa cets or the " per · alities surfacing his spe al. Joyfullr, he announcerL. that Wolfgan~ would sing ori the stiow. He spea ks of Rosmenko using the character's first name, Pyotr. TAKING SPOTLIGHT Arte Johnaon '·Every character I play I~ an underdog." he sAid. "That's why audiences have taken ht lherii. The public will get tn • know them better on my special which is a relum to the old form of variety show. said. "1 ha ve a chance to '"The at;dience won't have! give my characters some lo sit on the edge · of its seat depth and also to show au-! pre;umably as . they do to diences the real Arle Johnson. keep up with 'Laugh-In'). Tl's , "I'll be doing sketches v.•it h morC like the old Sid Caesar Elke Sommer and Bing Crnsby show." usi ng Rosmenko (the half·bak· Johnson may or may not ed Russian ). Tyrone tlhe dirty ma~e i~ as the star or his · nld man) and Wolfgang lthe own weekly show. But he does hel•eted German yardbird) recognize that he would be along with the professo r. _ just another 'not-too-familiar "These characters are at comedian were it nol for Ule least 20 years old. I was using NBC comedy show. The H1rbor Are1's Rocking Chair" Thuter -IALIOA PININSULA- IALIOA ILYD. AT MAIM OPIN 6:41 e 67J.404t Out fo r A Good Time? Visit Us and 511 Two of the Season's Top Comedy Films Now-~----- ,,,..... :-- BEGINNING MARCH 24th A ONE WEEK LIMITED ENGAGEMENT SPECI AL STUD ENT & GROUP RA TES AVA ILABLE CON TACT MANA GER NOW FOR GROUP INFORM ATI ON ~I Ji11jis:iUs CAE No grander Caesar ... Nogteater castl JuUus Caesar ·-Charlton Beston .Jason Robards . John GlelfUd [21• t@;}f;Jt VALDEZ IS COMING • \, ., .• .- • • zt DAILY PI LOT -BCYC in N~ew Home $750,000 Building Open.s Officially There's 1 new yachting landmark on Newport Harbor. It's the plush new home ol . Bahia Corinthian , Yacht Club. Several hi.Jndred mtmbers and guests were on deck Sun· day to witness the Southland 's newest yachting establish- n1ent, built at ii C08l of ap. proximately $178,000 at 1601 Bayside Drive, Corona del Mar. Commodore John Hooten presided at the dedication .I L'etemonie.s which attJacted yachtfng dignitaries f r o m throughout the Southland plus city. county and stale oUiclals. The program started at 11 a.m. with the piping aboard of club officers by a delegation of local Sea Scouts ·V.'bo also provided the color guard for the ceremonies. At 11:30 a.m. a three-gun salute signaUed to all ,\\'ithin hearing that the new club was officially opened. A highlight ol the festivities '"'as the transfer of sea v.·ater from the berth of P a t Dougan's 12-meler Columbia to the base or the flagpole. The Columbia has been the flagship of BCYC since she first participated in t he America's Cup trials in 1964 under her owner, Dougan. Dedication addresses were given by Dougan, and Da vid Domanski,' both staff com- modores of the club. Commodore Hooten a n d house ~committee chairman Jerry Devirian officially cut the ribbons that aJlowed the guests entrance to a 11 departments of the new clubhouse. The facUity v.·as designed by arehited William P. Ficker and was built by contractor Paul R. Suder of Orange. Interior-decoration -war by Robert Wilson & Associates. The strilcture has 24,000 square feel and is built on three levels. Winds Ruin LA Regatta ''Hurricane gulch" In Los Angeles .Harbor lived up to its name Saturday when 35 knot winds blew Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club's Hurricane Gulch Snipe Regatta right out of the v.•ater. But the game Jilli e !&- footers came hac k on Sunday and bra"ved 20-25 knots for three races. Several boats were capsized in the rough going, buj skippers righted them ancf continued in the race. Jerry Thompson of Alamitos Bay Yacht Club "'as the: win- ner in the A div ision : Basil Rallis of CBYC won Class B and Mike Eisenberg of Del Rey YC y,·as the winner in the junior division. Trophy winners in each class: CLASS A (I) Jerry Thompson. ABVC: 12) Jim Boldt. Kl!YC ; f3) Jack Steele, CBYC; (4) John Merchant, ABYC: l5l Mike Eisenberg. DRYC. The '-nrst revel. or '·ap- pro~ately &,3(/0 square feet, housea the storage a n d mechanical areas. men's and women's locker rooms, snack bar, Junior quarters1 lounge and protest room. The second level, with 12,500 square feet hbuses the ad- ministrative offices, race com- mittee. l'OOl?li commodore's and ~.iigeU,o.fOc:e:, the bar, lounge, entrance lobby difling- ballroom, kitchen facn1ues and rest rooms. The bar has been oCffcially chr.Istened the Colwnbia Room. 1be third level, wilb, 3,200 square fee.t, houses t h e library·board room, c a .r d rooms for men and \\'omen and rest rooms. The building occupies two acres of waterfront and is converiienUy located within five minutes of the jetty en- trance. ln addition to the clubhouse. the property includes boat storage, auto parking and a swimming pool. The dedication markep the coming of age of BCYC wit h an official membership of over 500 "golden f I a g ' ' rnem· berships sold to finance the clubhouse. The club has a limit of 750 members. The cl ub itseU first saw the light of day J"uly 23, 1958 when it was incorporated with headquarters at the Balboa Bay Club. More than a yiar later, Sept. 16, 1959, the club was admitted lo membe(ship in the Southern California Yachting Association and the "''ell-known ''star-on-diamond" burgee began to show up more frequenUy in Southland yach~ races. The club was admitted to membership in the North Arru:r1~ag_X.a~bt.R@~il!g_ UpJ011 in 1962. It was admitted to the ranks of the Yacht Racing Union of Southern Calilornia in 1966. But it was Pat Dougan's purchase and campaigning of the Columbia in 1964 thal first brought national fame lo BCYC. When Dougan brou,ht the Col umbia to Newport arler the campaign she was greeted by a host or local yachts and escorted to her new berth at Ardell ~farina by Harbor Department fireboa ts. Columbia again rompeted in the America's CUp trials in 1967 ·and was the last boat to be eliminated after her defeat by Intrepid. It was the 1967 campaign, in which Ficker was co- helsman. that gained him the honor of skippering Intrepid in the 1970 America 's Cup defense. BCYC members fi rst started looking for a permanent home in 1967. Unable to ac· quire waterfront properly wit h its then membership , the club propo.'led a merger with hvo other "lelterhe.ad clubs" in the ar9a -the struggling Orange ~t Yacht Club, and the long-established V o y a g e r s Yacht Club. OCYC accepted the merger iftoposal but VYC members chose to relain their OY.'n identity. The tv.·o clubs y,·ere officially Race Ruined By Weather Strong gusty winds In the Santa Monica Bay Arca Satur· day decimated King Harbor Yacht Club's Malibu Race. Out of the 83 entries in five classes. thtre were some 25 boats which failed lo start or did not finish. There Y.'ere no serious mishaps. Final results: OCEAN RACI NG -(I) Illusion, Ed McDowe ll, KHYC; 121 Nova Kai. John Jordan. KHYC; 131 Vivant, Robe.rt Harty,·ell, CYC. PHRF-A 11) Legacy, Carter · Gage. KHY C: (2) Serene, Bob Mc.rris, KHYC ; 13) Aquarian. Ha l ,.,100fllllead. KHYC; 14) Plum Spirit, Brad Dodfre. KHYC. PHRF'-B fll Magic, Henry Peper, SMYC; (2) C- ./im, Mike Cook, KHYC; (3) Pirouette, M i I es Davidson, WCYC; (4) Allegro , Bi ll Johnson, KHYC; (5J Jimpat II. Wayne Fey, KHYC .6 PHRF-C -(I I Quissett, Johri Traeger. KHY C; (2) Gunginir, Bob Soufl, SBYRC, MORF -II) Su-Dy III, Andy Lockton. CYC : (2) Jada. Charles Behctol, CYC; (3) Hurricane, Jon \VI 11 i ams , CYC; f4) Orange Blossom, ~tichael Kinne)', P!\fYC : 15) Witchcraft, Fred Dutton, CYC. Kialoa Agai11 Win11er Kilro y' s Yawl Has 2 Elaps ed Tin-ie Marks By AL~ION LOCKABEY aMll•t l:tHlw Two elapsed time reco rds Jn two slor m drive n races within two weeks. That's the record of Jim Kilroy's powerful 73-fool ya\\'I KiaJoa U. In Saturday's 87-mile Santa Barbara Island race out of Los Angeles Yachl C I u b Kialoa U blazed home ahead of 12 survivors of the gale- lashed race which had 41 en- tries and 31 starters. The mortality rate was the highest in a single yacht race In recent years. Every class bed more than its share of mishaps. including everything from tWo dismaslings to gear failures, blown out sail s a n d crew fatigue, The wont mishap came in an e.ighl·boa~ neet of ocean racing catamarans. One of the cats was believed sunk and the other seven abandoned lbt race for various reasons, The lost boat was Vi<' Stem's 43-foot Ifni Loa y,·hich capsized about ave miles off the west end oC C.talina, dum- ping all e.ighl crewmen Jn the chilly, storm-tossed waters. Several or the monohulla in the Santa Barbar• Island race v.·ent to the: aalst.ance or lmi ··t.oa. Tom Schock.'• S.ntana-37 Bettina IV WU the first on the set:ne and tvased ltfe· jackets to the catamaran crew and stood by unlll Coest Guard .11ssl.stancie arrived. The men "ere Jn the water tor more than • half-hour before • Coast G u 1 r d helicopter arrived and plucked them off the capsized crart. They were taken to the Catalina Isthmus where they were placed aOOard a Coast Guard cutter for transfer beck to the maml.and. None of the cre~·men w'ils injured. A crewman on the tmi Loa said a gust of· wind caused the bil cat to fly one hull. and before the sheets could be eased another gust caugh t !mi Loa underneath and fl ip- ped her over. A crewman on Bettina IV said: "We saw I n1i Loa cOm- ing up astern 1rith tine hull out of the water. In another insta nt we looked back again and she wa sn't there." Although tbey were engaged in a shorter race, the Midget Ocean Racing Fleet in the Llllle Whitney Series race around tbe Huntington Beach oil towers were also hit hard. There were 23 sta rters and only 14 finishers. Kialoa Il's new record in the 87-mlle circuit 1,ras 11 hours and 16 minutes. Tbe old record. also held by Klaloa JI since 1961. was 13 houri and 46 minutes. Two other Class A yachts: also finished under Ute aid record. Thty wert K e n De Meuse's 73-foot BllCkrin and Theo Stephens' 59-foot 11lumlnum sloop Lightning. Blackfin finished ltss than three minutts behind Kialoa IL Klaloa was unable le save -her lime far handicap hono1's, surrendering that to Light- ning. Klaloa JI was second overall on corrected time and a Class C yadit. Star. skip- pered by Lloyd Powell of Long Beach Yacht Club was thii;d. In the Class breakdown, Lightning was first in Class A: Eneore, <:&skippered by Bill Lawhorn and Dick Blat- terman of Balboa Yacht Club was the winner in Class B: Star was the Class C winner and Larry Folsom 's Centu rion. Seal Beach Yacht Club, ,..,as the Class 0 winner. Here are the final rC'sulls: OVERALL -( 1) I Light- ning: 12) Kialoa II : (3) Star, Lloyd, Powell , LBYC. CLASS A -{1) Lightning: {2) Kialoa JI; (3) Blackfln. CLASS B -Encore . LIHvhom a n d Blatlerman. BYC: (2) Sundancer, Ed Sundberg, CYC: (31 'Blue Stniak. Tom Corkett, NHYC. CLASS C -(I) Star: (2) Viva, Gorham Getchell. WYC: t3) Summerwin , R i c h a rd i\1elne, LA YC. CLASS 0 (ll Centurlon, Larry Folsom SJ BVC: (2) lndependence, John Llnskey . WYC. l\10RF Overa -fl ) Finalt., Roy CUndlfl, ~I BYC: <21 Retreat Two, bert ·Smith, P~tYC: 13) fer, Rod Palmer, CBYC. CLASS A -(I) Retrea1 T~·o: (3) CLASS B -(1) ~ . Flor· crty, f"rer Patricio. 12l A'Tr. ltomcr CB,'C: t3l Assail, Ted LOYC. AUTOMATIC , TRANSMISSION FLUID 11 .... , .......... .... 36 MOJITH GUAlANTlE AUTQ. IULIS CARO OF 2 19C 44C QUA.If' I 21·9099 ' TRANSMISSION FILL.E"A 66( 31·1 121'1 BUENA PARK ._ .. 11"4. .. ~t.t­ Sl01 IHcll lh-L • SJJ.J 040 • ···1010 103' BUENA PARI Lhlt•I• "' Y•Jk.y Yfw 1115 Lhc• ··-12 .. 1101 'COSTA MESA H~ M . .tWllMtt 1200 ............. SANTA AllA 1411.-r s...t llt ...,.., 1400 l lllJ'"'9f' S4~11J2 Ma.1112 WESTllllSTER • ...................... 11441 IMtlri ltff. ~----tt:r~:r••• • - THE BEST R••'•rthlp pollt "9•• "'••· 1111h" h •"• •f th. _,,, •• "''" pep"'•' telflie ttrill•· Rt•' It 4•ilT t11 tt.• DAILY itflOT. • ( ,. ( .. • • • • • OAl•V PILOT 17 . . .. ' ',Ev l'Y,one He1 :oA~IL¥. ·Pl'LOT el-4SSIFIED ADS You-C•n Sell It, Find II, Trade It With •_Want Ad . : Someth ing Th•t · Someone Else :Wants . . .. . . ' :.rf1e ·Bigg~t MarkQtplace. 011 the Orange Coast-Dial ~642-5678 for Fast Results • • • I ' ' ' I • . . .1;! _..,.._!"•""m::l~~ie I: -.. ~.·1~1 .. ~~-~· IJiJI o.nwe. ~ ·:. Gefttral ._ · · • , ~r•~',', • · , • ~r•I . '.) ;1 I~._[ _-_ ... _ .......... !~ i _ ..... ~ ..... I~ I I~[ I~ l~I ........... ' ...._forSlla -.... Gener•I Corona clol fo\lr Fount•ln Velley ·r~==;;;;:;:;;~ ~~~~I * i,;.· · .-f * * · TAX mtlNDERS . I . Spacious Tri-level NEAR PARK! j " DUPLEX NEAR GOL~I . • I SOUTH-Of.THE · 'CAR GARAGEJ . ' ·~:·~bor,t CM. 546-8640 Tijin)ing 11f SELLING? Let UI help, 'We w'ID buy your hoUse today for its f\ftl v8lue. "Tbe' only. ad-4ltionol .~·b ·l % ol fhP •ellbig:Ffce. No 'ad- ditional .·~·e. We t1eM heuiMtl 'It dOHn't eo11t anyttrlnc to call and find· (ldt-)'oU rnfah~ even 1ave!l , GET ·'.·:' ~ DIRTY•IAROAIN . . '"·"" !Dcatid lh £&Its.Ide COB· ta .Mesa thta 3 b@droom ho~ tw 2 baths. a double ~rt. lar;:e feneed Ysril! "-'aiklnlt dlstan-ce· tb' achools and shoPR~ ~)lee.di some paint .ahd :l'.t.C. but· at this prici ~r tota'I PllJ'!l'eftl \'C>'Ul ' be nnly $1~.00 per month. Hur- _r_y, w9n't tut. A-CTION HA°LIClllST SPICTACULAR This hu tQ be the best buy on the-market . at $77;000. Thrtt large• ~roomi, 2. api.cious · baths, sparkllni: built-in . kitchen, new olive green hlt:h-lOw ·carpeting ove-r e-xtra thick pad. bfautl- ful land5Clplng front a.nd rear -... hujre cover· ea pat!O and 20 x 20 paneled rumpua room. FHA//VA tf.rma. °"'n- er ls anxious -l\1ake offer! · FAST·ER MINIATURI HOllS! RANCH SJ0,000 Sltuate-d In C05ta Mesa on a * acre of land. 1'hb: ho~e la ~inis· r;ent of a uclud.ed coun- try ~tl't'&t complete "-1th 'knotty pine J>&nel· Ing, ieparat'. family room and 'Wide npen llfll~. Zon.ed 'for horse-s and the pil'ce ls rlaht Stt It and name your lf'nns. FROM. OfllN AIR LUXURY 2711 ~~ "· ·. Th.la beautltul IJ)(lclnos «xecutlve· home-11 only 1~% year1 old. •A home to be proud of,.2 storlett ot n.mbllng p~Ug•. lavish cm-oetlim over deh1x~ pad, expenslve Corsican drapes flow from cathedral ceiling tn floor -.:. Plaborate m11.<1t.er bedroom suite "'Ith · private· t~rratt and lu:'<Urloll!I tiled bath -home Is now v1canl 11.nd owner la anxlnus. No ~;:i to Vets or all· sum@ .present VA loan. Asking $43,000. ·FARROW ~~!;!>~!~~. Attention Realtors 103 0o.~ SOUTH . 'COAST REAL , ESTATE u ws '"" '°'auty •"" ~"' tnda <! e HIGHWAY·. ·spanw. • 11«1.oom + d'" you're lookina: for then be Crptd, drpd, lovely yard. ..,.to...,thl•ol'iant.,..._ PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES 2 rufty 2 hodroom uruta lo TERMS!!! $29,950 tt;e home 'with 3 \argt bed· one of C.Orona del Man best HAFFDAL REAL TY rooms, 3 bath&, tamil)' room I Linda Isle Drive -Open Sunday duplex k>cationa. Make an &U-4405 Eves: $(1.iwfi Is pl .. sod to announce the opening of their SHARP SHARP. , seqmd oHite at UOO Adams Blvd., Costa a Units on ~· Alesa St,· . Mesa OD ~P.ril 1st, 1971. This ot(ice will be .,.,itb v.>et bar. FORMAL Spacious 4900 sq. ft. 4 BR ., 4in bath home. ln~alment that ha.a a lu· BLDR'S Sacrifice.Span. 1tyhi DlNlNG ROOM and a 1e9&r· Dining rm., fam. rm., study & 38 Ct. water-ture, call now for in.lorma.-nu curtom 4 Br. $32,!IOO. $31,950 . localed on the ground floor adjacent to the maJli· tlllry of the-mU!U'story professional· ate, large dlnlnz area oU 'the front Jiving rm. 2 Fireplaces. Carpeted &: tion at 673-3550 $1500 dn. Lolded w/ xtru. kitchen. Lovely ll'ffT\ car-landscaped .......... , ...... , . , ..... '164,840 Only Sfi,950 Sbakl"&. l'rpl. Crpt tbruout. TERRIFIC Tl\l!'LEX liuildin'f.-pets and newly painted in· Spmkln, lndscpd, tn c I · terior make lt a true For complete lnform1tion on 111 homes &. , 10223 Pheasant Ave. Prertnt .Income S420 mo.· ·We are-presenUy seeking 8 experienced and PHA 'J!Rraisal ~ sales price professional men or women {brokers or a.s· $39,500 , . . sociatesJ to staff this exceptional location. OREM! HOUSE. You'll lots1 pleasa c11l: S37-aJ80 really use the 3 car garagr BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 1 ..::==.::F.;::;;::;;:;=::::;:~ I Huntington Beach FAJ'lCY F-O-URPLEX . SboU!d you . be contemplating a change ' "'"d;o ~o; BA .... pl•~·· eDNus AJPLANk "ro54~e4% and it's ail topped oU wilh a 833 Do O S 3 B 20 * 325 Mtirlgold * HEAVY SHAKE ROOF •t ver r., uilo 'N. · 642"'6 S...,, 3 BR.. ll< ha. EaH,,. BITS Of SPANISH $36,950 need \\1! say more ?!· 1~""""~""""""'""""""""""""""""""""""" area. in Jtitch. plus fonna.l * ·* *' * • . COATS Gonerol IGonoral ~~;,,.~~-~~,';;'; GIANT 4 BR-$28,500 &, pltnty of parking. 0\.1.'ner WALLACE e Optn Sun. 1-5 e "n2Uirnt6 anxious. Spaniah walled hon pie ' REALTORS 1617 Porl Abbey W•y " M.ORGAN REALTY rourty•rd'"tcy.<klnr·•"" NeWpert-* If " 6 " 1.,. bedrooms, 2% batlu:. Walk·in -'in-.. 4'-4141-H&rbor View Hon1es, CdM 6 BEDROOMS · 673-6642 7-59 closets, Vaulted celllnp, ..,.,..n Evenlnts) (off Ford Rd.) 5 BR. Beaut. Brand new 6 bedroom home DREAMY LOCATION Massive family room wUh Geniri l Gener•I Flirvlew i---.---..-------------- 646-Slll · ·(•nytime) MESA DEL MAR RmEAT · * * * * * TAYLOR -CO •. BALBOA IS.LAND -$46,500 * ijurry to s~e this· attractive 2-story Cape Cod with 3 bdrms., fireplace & nice patio. . . "Our 26th Veer'' WESLEY -N. TAYLOR CO.; Realtors • •211 I 51n Joaquin Hiiis ROid NEWP,ORT CENT&R -11 · home \v/many extras, ready and dreamy house with 3 bd· crack1inr llttplaee. '·-·-to move Into. un,500 • In· \\ilh family room, fonnal ~ -..6 .. MARINERS SCHOOL -1· · !both 1th rm .. , 2 baths. 'ii Blk. to ttie gourmet kitchen, Lau...:i-. Onl ~. Blk eluding the \Md! iving room . w ,,.....,. Y ~ .. o Ii. away. Re-1911 p W b "d frplcl, self cleaning oven, 3 belt:h. Try 10% down. Ask· center. Patio. J.cAR GAJt.. decorated apeclou1 Three 0~ •Y ri 9• car garage & concrtte drive. ing $54,900. AGE. Play yard for the kids. Bdrm. ~'O Ba.th home with Harbor View Homes, CdM j wa>·· Only 2 left, one with a DeLency Real Estate Only 3 yrs. old, Low down. extra Jarp Master Bdrm. (off Ford Rd.) Lge. 4 BR., view, Asking $43.950. Will ac. 2828 E. Coast Hwy., Cd.L'1 Must see for younett at this closets'. and dresaing area. beaut. decor. Pam. rm. 2 ~pt VA no down or your 644-1270 low, low $28.500. Hu.rry and An this Pi1.111 large patio and trpl. S56.ooo.. otter? 'c"os-t'"•...,.Mo...:C,"1.::.::....___ call cn4) 962-5585. SPARIQ.JNG" POOL. Two 2133 M1r1m1r car garage • Nice. land!ICRP-Bal~ Penin., in best resl- ing. Being ofrertd at only dential area. 5 BR.; l blk. $38,950. • to ba yor ocean. S79.~. ')llrsa\"iro, '.l\rntiv • 546-5990 Vacant $18,990 . Pure & Plush -$21,500 I ORl\I L 01 \0\ ' Nf A t ro,q< •• ia magnificent lllUe man- sion on the norlh side of Costa Mesa. Walk lo 1choola and 1hoppin1. A little cuh 19131 Brookhunt Ave. stneu the pines -As coxy 3' it it We!')! hidden· ill the AJps, Ankle deep carpetJni even Jn the counter kitchen, 3 bil' bedrooms -Famlly room -Li Ve ·outside on large' 20x20 ·patio encirded by 'A'ell kept grounda. SchooJs -Colle-ge Ir. Shop. ping r-Clese-. Only $.11,500, J,GO~ .. -,-.,~------G~..,.--,.-1"°"~---- CORBIN· ·MARTIN l Bedrm Townhouse in elC-will a.ssume this FHA 1otn Huntington Beach ctollent area. Close to 1wry. wlrh 6% 'i'o annuat perc.nt· c4~B~E=D~R~oo=M~+~=P~OO~L thine. 2 Bath areas, w/w age interest or no down to Makes for a happy family. cpts & drps, bltn ranre Gl'a. New on Ike market. Owner is being tramferred Hllf')', dial 64.S-~. I ORI.\ I L Ol\O\ '" NE,,,£ TOP< 22!19 HARBOR, COSTA.MEsA ON THE WATERFRONT . Just Wled! 4 Bedrooms 3 baths and den PLUS apac- lous panelled bonUJJ room. AU the amenitiea of grac. , BUILDERS- !NVESTORS Big ll2'x.fxr lot in EAST· SJOE COSTA ME5A with FOUR Ol~ homei. Fine location close' lo all Schools, ~lntrches and. stiot>Plng. \1/ilJ 8ell aibJect to 18·20 Unlls Pei.roll. Submit trades \.\.'11h cash now. or terms. Priced at only $52,000. EXCEL- IE"l'I' . VA.LUE. c.au tor more information. k>us but cattfrtt Jiving · at I .:ll!l!!l!l!llll!l!l!l••fl:. the beach. Ir OnlY. St!J,SC(I OPEN SUN. 1-5 2'l7 Canal St. Newport Shores or Ca.11 673-8550 FREEDOM SPECIAL Big corner lot With a 4 bed· room, 2 bath family home. Bir 6% 'i'o uswnable Joan at $165 a month for every. thing. $24,750 REALTORS 644-7662 B/B oven + reJrig. Outdoor (iv. Won't lai;t ·CALL! and has to aell thla; &harp, 22YEARSOr ltig, shume board, terutrs. Walker & ·tee· clean home. Wan to fnll pool, BBQ. H's ready for carpeta, drape1, 111\arg front WESTCLIFF REAL ESTATE SERVICE you! Full price $18,990, Sub-Realtors yard landscaping ' with New Listing IN THE HARBOR.JAREA mit your temis. Call &17-1221 27Bo Harbor Blvd. at Adams aprinkleni. All this and an Delightful 3 BR. home in Beyfront Lovely . mM M5-949l. <>Pen 'til 9 PM assumable 6% VA loan,~-'· choice location. Family A real boe.t \.\.'8.tchel'1.deh~ht I ableS21.0permo. Total coats room. Pretty yard. Short wtth 1a . ~at swunming Y,?._U'lLb"dLovHolthhli~-~autiful $33,SOO. "-'alk to l\tarinen School le bea~h. 1hls.cust. home can '-1:1.m ,, ge g ..,..,.. home Parle. $46.500. f'lU!ily be 1ncr~ased to 5 1n41 Bea.ch Blvd., l!tgn Sch on quiet cul-d~sac. 3 large If 46·0555 Eveninp Call 64&45't9 · BR. Lowest pnce on thr .... ..Ooi..,i;"i;'.;,Hi;I .;,',;p;,;.m;;·.,.,.. bedrooms -2 or them shut- N-port --Big Bay . $97.SOO. tered, 2 baUu1, family room, 961-4471 ( :=) 146-1103 2 fireplaces, new lush shag •t 675-3000 ESTCLIFF """~· ''""'c buiJi.;,.. SI8.4""· Qtn>:r 2 b<droom Feirview Cokhw:l.Blmlkar W . LoW!ly bsckyard with patio, ~:ea: or011~ne~~~t U:~ -~ • near schools and ahopplng. .. Will $33.000 with a s %. % All bltra, dble a:ar, dining 6 816 ROOMS auumable loan call 546-7413 and excellent re1identlaJ (1nytlrne) 1 ,,•.,ll-00!!!!7000!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!644-!!!!!!!2430..,I~~~~~~~~~ SPANISH STYLE _ beauti-area. Owner will seU for u low u 10 percent down. ";======= $49,500 INCL. LOT !uUy '"'' < Bodroom 2 bath Call '45-8424 South Cout O THE REAL ··"'-ESTA7ERS • $1500 UNDER -~-homo wHh '"" famUy Roalton. ll--Ev~"'~;"=''"'~Cal~l~646-4~5~1'!~. _ lt'1 Good To Be Home MARKET VALUE LJ "SELL" says room, plush carpeting, MESA VERDE · Especi~y when il'r a lovely p S . 1parklini bltn kitchen, fan- 3 bedroom, 2 bath C-ORta and we can prow It. lf )'OO've WESTCLIFF alm prings owner! tastic covered patio with [~~INDEX) I -..... I~ .. HARBOR HiGHLANDS PICK ONE M•g horn< • ...,.. '°"""" "'" waWng '"that RIGHT CHARM Amold & Fr.ud m..,;.., "'"" BBQ. 132.950 Beautiful homes _ BeaUtllul style kitchen, park lift yard home at a RIGHT price with 388 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa -urume low interest Joan with many trtts:Beautiful RIGHT tenna ~u walt Is Immaculate Cabinet makrr's 646-7755 or FHA/VA NO DOWN. area -Take )"OUr pick: over. A big 1900 1q. ft. home home. Adult o<icupi!d wilh 3 """"""""""""""""""I Tenn& available. Ca I I 1--Super ahup.3 1-Fam. So covered patlo. Perfect Joca. with 3 bechooms 2~ baths roomy bedrooms & 2 tiled 524,950 545-8424, Sooth Co at t A delightfi.11 3 bedroom home clean it aqoetks -$31,500. tlon, close to school• & pari« • ' .__ · Real lo and aeparale den~ 1%. batli'I i-Comer for boat Ir trailer Prlettl at only $26,500. High large aeilarate family room uo.ths _with Walnut cabinets. ,;:::::::.:"'"=· ------ ,&fireplace. Kttthen haa bltn : plua 4 'BR It Fam Rm _ ·~able 6% loan. Only with wet bar form&J dining Beautiful atrium off dining 4 Bdr. & Den Dover Shores and a hu .... 'wen kept rear room • covered patio in Park like-yard With large * UNEXCELLED range &: oven, dishwasher • ·$!9,950. por mo indude!! taxes ...,.._ · J "~ lit 1 ho i'. · ·--'.Only "".500. VA-FHA, Ja.ndsca.P<d re,.ar yard. built-11'A'1m poo. ocao u me, VIEW B~Q, &II iii atairilesa '1.iee. 3-&eR&rate ftfa.rter Bdrm &. insuranl"!. can 546-5880 ~"'" .,.,.., J b JI J hro hoot Walk M . conv. 10% down. n ca uiets in garage. A arge rooms t ug , Picture""ue Eu........,an itYI• to anners school, plan, 3 BR. + Fa.m -topen eves.}. '""' .. ,.,,950 CALL 6754930 cen ..... ' floor plao. Luxur. ..., • .....,.. Cl•ssific1tion I 00-149 b1IE1t1tt. ~ General ""=-=-,..--,,' cr.ssific•fion · 150.114 lib k and W cl·u .. 'Mt"" "' -·· • • u iu hut contempor•""' .. eonven. rary, par . . . est L ._,,,50 -FHA/VA OK. Jou..: kltchen. No down -; • I~ Plaza &hopping •. Best for the I m.a.rz IBITM ~•GI• I ~&CO.I terms! Open til 9 Pl\f. lent. for fa.m Uy &. enttrtain-._ __ ,;_.,_"'_"' __ • money at $.14.950. ca 1 l ~ •• ...... ~'~n-•nt 540.1720 Ing. 5 baths, 4-car garage + _ . I ORI.\ I L 01~0\ Ma.MU. ' TARBELL 2955 Horbor many xtn. features. $69,SOO. ,. OPE N DAILY 1 5 548-7249 Cl11sific1tion 200-260 JUST LISTED · -OOvERsHoREs '~;.:...;;:-=--~~~~ ~rAlr(lp <. GUEST HOUSE?? 29t Broadway, C.M. Mesa dei Mar, owner, well 2299 Harbor, Costa Mesa Finally, a hOme wlttl a gtlfst Delighttul PBrk Mesa. 3 bed· 6 Room Eastside home, beau-Under construction see the kept 3 BR, 2 BA, trplc, hoUse that evel')'One can at· nru. large Uving room & tiful new ct'Pls, 3 bedroom!, plans at 1011 Mariners Drive, on over 10,000 sq. ft. cul-de· lord. Spotless ;ewe) '•\'ith family room. Pride of own-2 baths, lge liv nn with ftplc, Dover Shorea. 4 &: 5 Bed-u.c lot. Pro!. lndscpd & New Orleans. YiUa large k:itcben, dining roonr, ership home. Nicely carpet. dining rm., nice l itchen w/ J1Tls, 4 & 5 ~ths, select decorated. Hrdwd raised and living room. l.cvely, ed · and draped. Quiet bltns. & new linoleum. ser· )'Ollr own colors & custom floor, luxury crptd. FHA Super &harp 4 BR, 2 story rich deep • pile carpeting $11,500. Call 540-1151. !open vice porch, Jge cor.ier Jot, details, All with outstanding 5"4%. $33,900. 546-5891 OCEANFRONT ~uild a dream house townhouse, lge !iv rm., for-thnl out. Two huge bed· eves.l. 211: car gar. w/l<t!Jndry rm . Views. Roy J, Ward Rltr. 1-v-'•c"A-NT-'-'"3__,B,-+-f_am_rm_, maI din ltrea, bei.ut w8.Inut rooms. And in back a 1 bed-Price $26.900 for quick sale. _6'16-=::.1550=·-°"'::.c.:::.".cD::•::ile;Y·c.· __ . 2 b.a, bltns •. Crpts/drps, _..,_ I~ Classific1tion 300-355 I -..n-b.., _ J !!l Cl111ific1tion 360-370 cabinets, 2 bath area&, crpis room guest home. Great I ~ HlllTAGEI ~eon Vibert, Rltr Builders or lnve1tor1 fJ'1llc, lrg Yd. 2 Yrs old. I! &I HIRl'S YOUR · DOLL & drps, 2 pool.I, sep, ·play Eaatside Co&ta J\olesa. Call _ · :~ u BTAn. ~-0588 Eves: 673-6534 R-3 zone ll<tx.307.5. }las 6 Good location, Take over Rent.II ,. ~· Ho·un tlt,tSO yard, close 10 beach & shop. before it's gone. unit11• Can add JO mol'f'. 6tt. "-VA $215. per mo. total. '~=a~~r!~: ,!;:~~t f~~ ping. FP $23,500, GI or FHA Wa Iker &. lee ''LIST & SELL.... .CAN.YON S~TE Price $69.500. Nets $5089. _0wn_.,_1_A"g1_, ..... __ •o_. --Cl1ssific1tion '400-•65 thlldren: The residence ·terms, Call 84i7·l221, \\'~e the action i:t. BUY· With partial <X.'e&n view, 2 now w/assumable $30,500 BY owner, &side 3 BR, 2 r jj .;j is Yel'Y neat 11nd: clean --2790 Harbor Blvd. at AdamJ ERS WAITING. Have you Bed~ & de~, 2 bath + loan 11t 6%i'hi . BA, crpts, drps, !irepl. Lrg 1 Anl!OYnC«ntnls rc;~ 1!~: s~~~:~ 545-0465 Open 'tit 9'i>M seen our 110ld SiiJ'ls? LIST beaut~ful family r°?m 07.'< JEAN SMITH, RL TR loJ. sprinklers. On a U to see ft!. . .. . JtEALTORS'• TODAY. SELL TOMOR. 371 wllh flagst~e fireplace, 400 E. 17th St., Ci\t 646-3255 :: ~~Well kept. Cl1111ific1tion 500.510 4 llDIOoM RANCH tn41 Beach Blvd., lltgn Bch SINCE 1944 ROW. We've httn In the apeci.al ponelh.ng, ~moked REDUCED $5000 · ' I~ STYLI o~n 'lil 9 P·~·. 673-44:00 busine!ls 29 year~ RlBSJ "-'lndo"-·!I, S26R.750. 1 Ba.ycrest By Owner: Vacant Owner 6:JA •f. VA Lo•n PtrsoNI• 1 ... This home ls 7 yean old 1 1 ---:-S;:fjl§inilii,.~~M\~~~~~~~~~~ Realty Comri"ny w lk ,. L Roy McCardle, ea tor 3 hr, 2% ha, like new. $55,000 $4000 cash. 4 BR, 2 BA, 2000 . • and ia absolutf'ly . gor-. I vu LIKE TO FOOT LOOSE & a er ee 1810 Nt"-v"irt Blvd .. C.i\t. 673-7784 sq. ft. $33,300. $270 mo. Cl11sific1tion 525-515 1eow:. thf!· ·e11terlor is $151 A Month FANCY FREE 548-7729 Belboa lsl1nd P.l.T.J. Imm. Pou. No qua.1-[SJ .,!.tt'ented by comblnln'I' l Bel. &. O.n · TRA YEL 7 2043 We-stclitt Drive lfylng. 557-Q, 548-0588. Lost ft fCU1d I used briek and rustle Low • 4 BR. 3 bath -Sma.r\ly dee-MS-m.t Open 'tiJ 9 PM 3 BD, 2 ba + covert-pr ~~ beautifully manl· monthly payments. En. But 'A'ant a home lo return orated -Cholct location and -EASTS I DE 3 BDRM gst hse w/~ ba. Nr wat $22,500. ·.NO QUALIFYING! ~I Jll!l~rd t;-t~htr~ . try ha.II, fine quail~ built· '1o? \\'e have the 90Jutkin!! The BlLtffi best buy, HOT SPOT Cu!e older home near Coun-lrpl, pat, oovd fncd, $10 10% dn w/2nd TD. Exist. C111sific1tion 550-555 lined with . a mi>lus1on tN, :ture ~~-1..arie ,A Joxurious, beauti!UUy ap-$46.700. Rntaurant anll 4 BR home. try Club & Golf COW'Se, hrd· c'::'..:do:"::.· ::_Gn-6:.:.:::"':::..· ---~A·~~=inc'.::· •-.,.,--...,----j[llJ) ot JurUlJen, ·Inside •ii cove pal.kl, vvi:-n W 9 pointed 3 bedroom 2~ bath Mme owner for yean~ .,.d Un, !rplc and many fntit "6'· k lnttruction I .. I I h P?.I 541).1''"" v~·v bo I .. h Bl ,._.. 3 BDRM'S, ~~ lol. S.f7,500. for ANN COATS) equa Y •Pf!C cu ar. ""I ' · '"' ~· me n I e u .. · "i\fama' 'say1 SEIL -"Pa-trees. 10% Down or FHA/ $10 i\f dn," carry l!it TD. ,;::..,;:~,;=:.::.:.::...,.,,...,...,:.-1 i:~uu~t~: bed:l'°ri'n~ TARBELL 2955 Harbor 11· will be-"-'altlng for you 642"'2JS pa" sa,ys OK. Busy c.2 Jlar-VA terms. Asiong. • • IM Topaz. 673--0232 l~i BR, llv'g rm. kit Ir. ba. Cl1•sific1fion 575.580 l -U1 -m • f'-· 2 STORY ~ Just Jhe way ~u left It on 67S.3210 bor Blvd. location. $24,500 $17,900, $4000 Dwn, balance r------,~ ..... '"" u" •AT~ "-U p Corona del Mer ,~ D twn c M ... -·· I I l'I••-"-'d Md Ill your re1urn -.... .-.. o..a -.. ER RON 64" tnt )'I), "''" •• O'fV""JO.M, .__._ __ -~- bunt..·1n ki.tche-n~ 8,.. .. ?1~ 4 Bdrm. a Femily Rm. U1 BEl''ORE you leave -* 5 BEDROOMS * VI ,. The ~'Just Rl,.,;r;--_..._:,::,.:."::";...-~----I _T ...... _ • 'l II l th h $24,951 . =-. .. ..... Ha~ v;ow Hom.. nco Realty -• s v B I o-wa carpe rour; • v•.rovw '""'--VACANT Duplex ME A erde. y Owner. 3 Classi ic1tio(I 600-699 aut. Seto •thlk 1u;m1e to-Prime location! . Prest~ re1. w/wet bar, lovely 20'29 1-larbor, Of &f6-00J3 _, bdrm, 1% BA. Dble frplc ai.Y-~lnu asJdni $34,-home area. owner desp!,.. ca.rv.: aelf-cleanlng.,,o,ve:M; For teaae $475 mo.; or Ml-IC •. Not too big, not too $30500 545--M I lfi~l 150 ''"" app111laal. ate. Price reduced to $24,Sso. ftady to move into. ·$59.&00 3 BR CONDOMINIUM $69,500, Cu~!om Bay~rest 3 small. Two separate unlta 1550 sq. ft. • · 75· ~Yfl*lt ' · · BR '"'"elled den dtn rm wl!h a nice yard ln bet"'·een. E11t Bluff . . " . sn. ,tOt Hup fa mily rm. en1 .... ha.U. Jncludinll' tilt land. In cholCf' sectlo f ~1 ti ' ...... ' ·· ""J .,. n ° on · self clenn pool. .. Perfectly soiled for the own. Cl1 ssific.1tion 700.710 ;'~··~·=~•II. 1·~ b1t.;n """. ov.n • d;.i.. Color Mo lonesome CORBIN-"""· complotoly """"""L PETE BARRffi RLJY " ""°"''"'· """ pdcod •EXCLUSIVE ~GEN'!S • 1-•-·-·-11~1 .(Mty T yean old, It hll s wuher. 540-l720 and looki"&" for a good~ ed incli.ding new caii>e!a. RIGHT at $42.500. CJ.f.'C'c J.ZASES ~ ~ l:fUUt-ln kU.chcn forct'd TARBELL 2'55 H•rbor e-r. I'll lavish )'OU wttti Cl'Y• . M·ARTIN Priced below market. Act CALL 673..s.s.50 --.....i : tlr, 1'td. Can b< .,.,.,,. REPOSSESSIONS . W POO' h"-.ovonl...i fut on thJ, ""'· 642·5200 EXCLUSIVE p1id lmmedltitely. Hur-.,. .... ¥ $20 500 Cl11,sific1tion 100.136 ~-on this Or)e." s~;.ho~t:."2~ ::::m~~!:ak~~.;.;: REALTORS 644-76'2 ·P:::i:::R:::R:O=N=·==64=2=·='n='1 •CBORRO·N·A D!~ MAh R ., '-~ M' . [ ;.1•1nd"'·--u..... 1r~1 Z, 4 I: 5 bdrint:. Some wltll l.amDy room, alfduded pa· * 6 UNITS *-Ii • en. °"ac pnvi · ~' _. r\ 2&. 29 ff. bt! BMf P<>Ob. FHA-VA conv. tenna, tio, and all for only -.lllO. ~-1r •-1•• •t56,000 T"•N"'~ YCN own the land. I n ty . •r r f -000 to •~ 000 ..., .,. _, _.,..._,. n.n ~ """' Xln1 tenns. $42.500 ,,:;::;::::::::;:;:::====== Cl111Hication 850-858 O ,. rom •~, ~. • MAKE M£ 110'1E!! Tnd< Good locatloo. conm'~ • YOUR PROBLEM PROV. ~ • ""t • So H~. O.UIM • w •-J ......,, Home Show Reeltors ~' · -, a... nc. ,,....,_, "'"'rkioc •---ooo + b> SPEC"'·-0p~,m. h"-1,·v rm, ill4 VULta Dtl Oro • . Clf •sift SM.1 Ada.ms: Av!!. 962-5523 w..,_.. r· ... ,.,v.,,.. '""" ' uu...>i~ "Armchair HoosehWltin1f ' '"" .... ¥ .:·. J'IV1I 'IU -MESA ' a Iker & Lee Call"""" 642-2253 ""'' Property M1n19omonl = E. r ...... """"' C<l'1 lmly rm. 2 BR 2 BA, Jl.2, Nowpon Boach "4-Ul3 . ,. * · VERDE ~ · Rul Estele 67S.72lS ctbl gar •lre1'd for e-xpa.lll Fountain V•lley ,. • J..c>\·cb', tm~c. borne. tat STEPHENS It KAYE l :ii:tra lncm. Move-in cond. ;.;;;;.;;;:;;;;:..;:;;;;;.<.. __ .-.-op~ .rvr. S. """""· "'•"t. .....,... Roal'"'' ~ ANYTIME 8 UNITS "' carn1llon. 0wi>r BOAT OR TRAILER L 1.L Qw pitlo Kew COPP" 1m F.di"1t< . 6'2-8199 Su..,. sMrP. < BR "1ol• bom< 'TU 138 pl~b't aii: fl) cOlf COUl'le. 'n4) l4~-"SS ()It MO-S141> OIILOREN WANTED • " East eo.tn. l\fell I IRVINE TERRACE on IC cor }Ot. Xlnt lncbepf, i' · 1 : $33..SOO. FINAL TWO 4PLEXlS bdrm .. 2 bath-ram rm Pride tlf ~?'llhln prop 5 yrs .YOUOJ. f hr, l ba. +~ UK40 cov paUo. Oale to Chorte Wltllemson CWitGm, S'/S,cm • .t:m Dana TRIPLEX. 2 BR. ea, Colla -2 atory..lse fenced )'a.rd. Joe Fortier Rlty.... . -powder rm, family rm, lf'P. tchooJ, new ahas crplg, ~'l'Oft Rd, Newport B. 4228 H.iJ.u.. Mesa, Sell or t:xchanp up, Cul de •e fOI," aafety. No -• 64S-3tl0 * a.rate dlnlna rm. Great fam. drps, water IOtlener. A bar· 67l-f350 · •6UJ.56« EVES. 18 \Vay, NB. 213/Ml-7039 11&me area. traWc -owner arudoua. The ta.steal draw in the. West ( IJy houu . For aate·by own-pin II $31,500. 1-~l~ Cl111ific1tion t00-912 llil Cl1ssifictlion 915.94; 1· ......... 1~- : ., ~gt l:IUbor, CM: A good ·wt·dt "' la a eood llouMt Hunllns;? Watch the FORTIN CO. &4WIXKI ":(GENT 675-4!).10 r111t rtsultJ are Just a phone. er. 11().lt Dolphi n Terra,'e. Elll ... Sc:hrader Rltrt, 1-;ilii]!!i!!................... tnvntment OPEN llOUSE eolvmn. \Ve'll he)p you 1etl! 642-6673 Dtmt-A·Llnt 64~ caU away · 6'2-li67& ! 01K'n ~un 1 to 5 pm. ( m-6606 ., ·-~---. .. Cl111ilic1tion t&O~ '" J ' I ' ' • !I DAILY PILOT M~, M"<h 15, 1971 J~I -... · .. ·I~ I .-'·We I~ .__I -"-·~'--'-·~"__,I~ ..__I _ ..... _ .. __,]~I -hi'-l~I _,., .... Huntlnston lluK!i Hu~tlngton Beith. lncom• Pr•Portv lU Monoy to LNn 240 Housu Unfum. 305 -Unfurn. " ACRE hot'H ranch-Pool, UDO JSLE-32U Nord. 61 1 ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I General Laguna Beach S1nt1 Ana Heights 305 Apn. Fum. compltttly fenced, OU t btach aptl, Furn. Gar. 80' Cash Fast '· bldj:s, $48.00'J. 54>-8148. beach. Leuebold yr, 2014. $160 • Spac 3 Br, &tr, yd, LEASE LQ:ima filiutl 3 Br. ASSUME 6V•% FHA Asking 1140,000. Consider cbUdnn .t pttt \ticlcomt. l 2 Ba home. $28$. Extru. 3 Bedroom., oew urpeu. Tuttln trade. 642-4097 ~2211 ext 1st & 2nd Trust DMda Blue &.•con* ~Ill I Atlractlvely klcated. Latte cove~ 1>1tio. lt'a 228 ' ' FREE .APPRAISALS L ndl d...OW 49C-47~. •99-1111 H~~ :m~l~nt~~~n~~~ vc'a'u'";,; _mo~-~~~ today. ~~~;re1:°!'~u~ 07~~: P'n ~~· wants 16 to al Co1t1 Mt11 lnv11tm1nt wr~I re~:r tenan:!'~~you PSS, Btaut. 3 BR 2 BA cua· ~nter. S:>acious 5 bedroom. " ~ fam rm, din'r rm, beamed unltJ from owner. Newport/ ~nl I anytlma FREE or chl.f'lt!, • ,Mllny tam bit. Beams thruout. Unique ramily t1re1. Very cellint, dbl carqe Ii: frull I _M""";:•;:""':::;•~· ~5"!=-,":.:;:752=-.,.,..-Prlvate money from SlSOO deslnble, tenant! .on our I FlrepJ, lmmac, &12·7449 eve delightful bullt·in kit~n. tree~. Must ~tove! 12112 •COSTA MESA up for lst & 2nd }oan.s. W11Ufl&' 1111. 11 LGE BR, 1 am BR, ftpl, Be1u11iful heated 30' pool II Barrett Ln, 544-409i Trust o •• d c.nt•r Inc. ALA Rentab • 645-3900 lge patJJ, cptd, 1 bl~ ocean. \\'Ith all the equipment. Irvine iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• TRIPLEX 1323 N. Broadway, S.A. l ·aDRM., 1''amlly rm., park nr storts. $195. 497-1528. Loarls 01 deck\~ Brick 1-------, The closest you can come to Loan Brokers Since 1949 like yard. Coat& Mt!aa.. Kida Lido Isle BBQ pit Covered patio. 1 I R11! E.11111, J l..fJI] living for rrtt alter an inlt-543-8381. anytime j OK, brk., $200 a nwnth. NO ---------- Low down and take ovt'r FOR SALE . Ge!llral . !al Investment of only 20% I ~~~~~~~~~~~ f"EE. 54.~l'ral. 3 BR, crpt'd, b.ltins, patio loan. Shops and schools OR LEASE down (approx. $8300) b this I ~ J~l·J-e-u-RM-.-.-.. -mil-· ,-rm-.,-lllll-& b'pl. Lease. AdltJ. $300. nea.r·by. 2 miles to beach. Or leeae/optlon well located west.side trl.. ......_ dlnln&' rm., bullt-lnl., brlt. 673-4063 or (213) &l!l-2808. l!'s immaculat!' .. Priced to Thf'ff3 8ft 2Ba. townhouses ~a.oe for aale lSO pie .... Three roomy 2 Bed· HousMfarR1nt . 11CJ S390 a month. NO FEE. **WATERFRONT•• sell fast. Hurry. Call (n4) offered under !his conven· EGG RANCH room units with se~raie Newport, 54.G-1120. LARGE :i Br, 2 Bath. 962·5585. ient p1.1rchase plan. Bring I On 8.3 acres Brookh1.1rst Ave. !~ge~, 1 hanlti~ floors H F , h-" 300 Costa Mesa $400/mo. Lease. 613--8886 · your 1erms & let's talk~ fron1a~ In \Vestminster. ••nu pnva e pa 0 areas ex-ouses urn•• mu ----------1 Nowport tseach They vary in price from LEASE • SELL • TRADE, cellent for the owner occu-Generel VERY NICE $1500 DOWN Vermont 2-Story 5 Br. & F.R. & Poo~ llOUDAY Pl..AZA 0£1.UXE $pacious 1 BR tum •Pt $U5. Heated pool. Ample paridn&. No chUdttn -no pell, 1965 Pomona, CM CUSTOM FURNmJRE RENT AL. h ad cla.sa 810 * Call S.l&-3481 ... Balboo Island ATTRACT. 2 Br upl)('r, patio, £at, util's. Mature adults, nO pets. SlM yrly. U6i,s Aaate. (ll {Zl3) GL 4-5104 CHARMING new 2 Br. apt. Bllns. Now 'til June 19, S200 Mo. Realtor 61.5-3331 elboa Peninsula $30,000 to S:W.SOO. Cl zoned, exceJJent shopping pant. 3.4 hr, 3 ha, family.1Lae 1---------- cenler site adjacent lo r-.10. $41 ,500 6734550 I yard, Frplc, Sl50 lease. I 3 BR, n.r. all level schls.1. -.-S2S--WX..OC:---EAN--FRO--NT- bile Home Park. Chl.•ner mo· • , • I Av ail 4/1, 6'i5·1976 or gardener included, $300 !"°· Lovely Ba.chelon 1 _ BJt ired hill tlvated, submit!!!! • , I 8JJ.386J. For appt 673-1234 or Maid _, p "1 Util ~~2481 se .... ce. oo . . Larwin Realty, Inc. RENTAL FINDERS VERY CLEAN 3 Bedroom. e 67S-3740 e E xclusive Agents Fr•• To Landlords In prime Costa Meu. area IMMACULATE· 2 Br. 2 Ba, 2 BR. furn, $185/mo. in- 21562 Brookhurst, H.B. \VANTED. 2-12 clean units iMS-0111 with lovely crpts Ir. dtps. frpl. steps to heh. 1225. eludes util. Yearly. Rltr. Cntv. Park c'"'"· ln<i"' I 19131 Brookhunt Ave. Huntington Beach 546-5411 anytime for private party. '4JSW lftll C M I Lease or mo/mo OK at ALA Rentela e 645-J900 507 E .. llalboa. 673-68fll I Willows California 1 * G42-3504 • ' ' ut• HB 1235· Agent 546-4.14! BEST Newport location, 3 BACHELOR apt.I, util paid, 2 houses on '14 acres already I Lots for Sale 170 BUDGET BOOSTERS 2 BR. Gar. Pali?. Crpts, BR, den, dining, incl lswn 190 & up a mo. 310 E. GI NO DOWN Call Anytime 83J.08:20 ACT f\'0\\1 ~ : J.ow interest ( ,.!!!!!!!!!!!'!'!!!!!!I!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!! avw. C"'tomi"d 3 BR, 3 YJLLAGE II BA. huge cilrus tre" lll!t'd ·lot, fi9:<1.20 patio, Cal! &-17-&507, La Salle Model. 4 BR, lamily, eves: 968-4377• 968'1178· 3 ba. 2 story, price reduced rented Pl1t11ty ol wa1er. ) All Utilities.,_ Paid j drps_, srove, refng, Quiet maint. $~25. Call 646-4414 Balboa Blvd. Small dO\~n. Easy 'te.rm.s. FORECLOSURE 1 l Br nr everything. $95 tropical setting for adults Santa Ana Height& I C.;::.o~ron=o.::::d~o~l~M,,_•-,--'--·I Owner Box 484, Glenburn, Bach Pad qu!e~ priv $60 only. ti blk to sops, SlEio-1 _________ _ Ca. 00136. 2~ acre hors!!: ranch repos-I Walk t~ beach. s1JO 6464~30· HALF acn? horse ranch or 1 "F_U_RN-lSHE--D-B·a-oh<l-o-,-.-,, ieised from former aero-ALA Rentals e 645-3900 LRG 2 BR iv/gar. No licensed dog kennel Clean for man only, util paid. I .*1 151JOO. Bm .,, , , ,~,~(!ft ' BRASHEAR REALTY • ._ ... ., 847--8507 Eves: SlJ..2053 -IUllY * Choice multiple zoned Orange County arreage space employee .f"IOIV avail· children or pt>ls. Sml yd. 3 BR house. 3 children OK. \ b all able at developers cost 5 Min. 1valk to bch·Nlce 1 Br \''al•' l"'"'d. Sl50. ~· ~•. Qu et. 1 lk from shops. -Sa1e $$·II-Finish It Laguna Beach i111ni11 £e11lty A I II"" " "' " ""°'""""" S275. Avail 4/1. Owner. Call 644-nol lor appt to apt. VI yr Y· ""· 2627B. Santa Ana Ave. Jnq'r 54.5-2536 Blue Beacon* 645-0111 house c. ,..:.:.:...:=------1c."c.'-------- on the~6 fabuioll.!l, oak •tud· L N ' I Universlty 'Park • LRG Bachelor, turn util SAVE $3000 """"" SPACIOUS 3 Br • On~ $181000 2700 Sq. ft ocean vi•w fom-MUST .. u "' ·=· ""' ""' aguna 19ue 2 BR. House, crpts, drps, pd. 2 blkl Big C.orona. ded, ranch size spreads. ,,-,,.,..-,--------1 or 2 small children, no ;-;;;;·::;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; pd. 2 blks Blr Corona. J Located in the booming 2 BR, vlew of r-.tts. Occ'pyd pets. Garage. $15.i 64~7719 4 BR. &; family rm •.• , $335 Adlt. $144. yriy. 642-8520 Are yoo a handy man? Fin· ish 1 room as a BR .. play rm., dark nn., etc. Jl.1alrr· i~:s are rhere. Clean mod· ern charm. l.arie roonu. Lush carpetini. Sparkling all etec. kltcht-n with Span- ish tiled lloor1. Reo-1tat chandt-liered dinin&: are•. Stained mim>red glass. 2· c:ar fl\rage. Boat door. Walk 10 schools. Jog to beach. Low, low, down. Bettt'r Htlrry. ea1I <n4> !£1.5.)85. ily borne. 4 Bedrooms, 3 river. Take over w/S29 do1,1·n: $29 mo. 968--0047 baths. Pool table size family I---------- room with fireplace & v.·et Cemetery bu. Built-in ta.rnily stylt' Lots/Crypts 156 kitchen; 1tone fireplacz in I---'-_;..'-----HARBOR Rest Memorial living room: laundry room. I Double rarage. ~ Acre, Park, Costa Meta. plot 618 professionally landscaped. spaces A·B, Sunse1 Lawn, Several decks. Reduced $400. {213) 322-0819 aft 4 pm. $49,SOO. Call. Commercial 158 ~~ Property ,./TOian CHARMING Loi'""' Beaoh REAL ESTATE ''°"" & apt.'" eo .. t Hwy. Lot 80' X 105'.-10 •lley. 1190 Glenneyrt St. Owner will finance at 7.5%. 494--9"73 &49.0316 Broker. TOP CONDITION Realonomtcs Corp. 675-6700 Summer rental area. Duplex Condominiums n·ith ch8rm. \Valk to beach. tor sale 160 Fully furnished & rented. 1---'------= 19131 Brookhurst Ave. Z • BR. & 1 • BR. Asking COZY CONOO, &iT\ile 1tory 1 Huntington Beach $47,900. 2 bedrm, 2 bath, form.al din· 1 ER, .1 ha. Liv nn, kif, ENGLUND REAL ESTATE ing room, air cond., l~ury 1 No pea, a\lail i\far 19, Sl65 318 Thalia, La.guna Beach crpts, drps, vacant. Only I mo. "Calby Be n d a 11 · · 494-8093 $1450 down FHA or no d0'1.1n South Coast area near San to end of sch! yr. Mr LEASE • b,/2 b., lg •--" J BR l • d' ~ · H · h p ni £.,., , u~ ., ani. rm. • tn. rm. Juan '-"'Pl5trano. lg eterson .. • .w~-4573, I "rrl. Chldm OK. Tu bo the · ~ . rtle Rock .... , • .. • • $325 a ve smog, pnva!e Lido Isle * * 64&-573.4 * • 3 BR., & din. rm ....... $325 road and lOcked gate guar-4 Bil 2" b& 3 BR, lrg lncd yd. Bltin , >a tlu · · ...... $325 antee the natural beauty ol TO sublet 2 BR, 2 BA furn Slo\'e, dbl gar, ;t70. Near this form.er Spanish Grant on nice Lido Street. 2 shop'g. 548-Ei680 surrounded by beautiful months a1 s u b. t e n a n 1 , Cleveland National Fort>st. Landlord appro1'al 1,1•ill e:<1.· All utifitlea available. tend 12 mdnths. S 3 7 5. 67S-8246 I BR. w/w crpt'g, patio. gar attached, 1 adlt. 1 rm! child ok. S128. Yrly. 642-&i20 'll11l1 "I ':·!Id . ---l L·1ill11r PRICED rnor-.t $9.950 LOW DOWN ·EASY TERMS Newport Beech * Collage 1 Br, stove & l"t'trlr supplied, all util dp. "SINCE 1M6" Circumstances force the im- mediate disposition o! these few choice parcels whose lonner owners LOSS is your GAIN!! Call or write !or complete dl!:tails and color on.site photos. Buy direct lrom the developer: RANCHO CAPISTRA.!\:"0 '2172 DuPont Dnve, Rm 8 Ney.·port Beach, Cal. 92664 83.1-3223 * ACRE FOR HORSES 3 BOR)f, bay lront, cam· $153. 54&-6294, 557-8400 1st Western Sank Bldf pJ.r,Ltly Jurn. ~175. Mo, incl , 2 Br. Duplex. Garage, No j Uajve~lty Parle util. 6421699, 548-655.j ,pets. Adults. $144/mo 773 •Days 833-0101 Nights Houses Unfurn. 305 \\.'. Wilson. 548-2802. General HOUSE in court, 2 Br, crpts, rirp~. patio. 976 W. 17th St. A, C.1\1. 548-2839 SHARP Eastside. 3 bedroom. S240 per month Bill Fuller, Rial tor 546.{18l4 Dana Point 3 SR. 2 baths , .. • . • .. 1300 3 BR .. '?~ baths ....... , 1350 3 BR. 2 ba. lam. rm.' •• S340 3 BR. 2 ba. home ....•• S325 ired hill REALTY 6/:rll'll Laguna Niguel CI. BUSIEST marketplace ln *29 MONA."-R-C"°H_,B_A_Y_*_ -20271 Acacia, Santa Ana Htl. DliTCHCLEAN,customcar.l Ownr. 673-2 259/eve 3 Huge bedrooms, 2 lovely baths. large kitchen with gas built ins. Carpe~ and drapes thru out. Hardwood floors, brick flreplacP, dou· hie garage, and renced yard. Renr at S210 n1on1hly, a bargain. Call Broker ~5-046.l SPANISH oceanfront villa, spac. secludt'd g r o u n d s . YachlmfJ1's paradise. $450. 499-2128 Univ. Park Center, Irvine Cali Anytime 833-0820 trl\'T.. The DAILY Pll.DT BY OWNER Classified section. Sa v e Beaut. Colo.niaJ tri·level 5 mon~y. 1 time & elfort by BR, 2~ BA, aundeck, Fan. arm hfl r. tastlc white water view. 2· pe~ & drps, private t'ncl I 673-5123. patio. 3 bedrm, 2~ ha, 2 .:::::..::=------ car gar. Take ovt-r 6'Xi Govt Real Estate Wanted 114 loan, askinr $24,950. fas! possession. Fountain Valley UNIQUE Townhouse 3 br, 2 ba, lrg tam rm, nr pools, l.ennis, golf, she.ls . $295. Owner 838-4575, 644-7321 1 BR. Furn incl util. Privatr patio. Garagt', Close in. 501'1ii Larkspur. &18-7'47 * LRG Bachelor, furn util pd. 2 blkl Bir Corona. 1 Adlt. $120. Yrly. 64U520 Cost• Mesa e $30 WEEK & UP 1 BR. or STUDIOS turn wl comp!. kitchen (all dee.). Free Une115, heated pool , ail'. cond, TV I: maid service avail. Dally & Monthly rates 2080 Newport Blvd .• at 21.st • 642.-3311 • B.Amt>ricard e M/Cha.rge Unbelievably Beautiful VAL D. ISERE Garden Apts. AdultJ -no pt>U. Flowers everywhere. Stream & Waterfall, 45' pool Rec. Rm, Sauna, Sgls 1·2 Bdrm, Furn· Untum. from $235. SEE IT: 2000 Pat!Ons, 64~70 * * .. * EI Puerto Mesa Apts * * * * 1 Bedroom Apts. hl""--------il rs new. C.OmpJ crpted, all hlt-ins inc vacuum system PVT pty needs 3 br. 1 + ba In C.?.1., Hunt. Bch, N.B. Have $1000 !or eq. Pmnts under $190 mo. 646-7081 1 BR prlv collage •• , ... S80 I BR turn cottage .•••.• S90 2 BR. cples or singles .. Sl lO 3 BR kids/pets OK ••.• Sl50 4 BR with evf'rything .. Slgj Hol"S!' ranch iv/corrals $195 STAR*LET 776-7330 $1 10-Attrac 1 Br. Bltns, cp!s, drps, gar, yd. FOR lse, immac 3 BR, 1~1 ba, new shag cpts &; drps, lrplc. bltns. S240 mo. 968-9543 or 213 /241·1588. Condo. Furn. or Sllo &; up ind. utilities. Also Unfurn. 325 turn. Pool 4i: Recreation I CLASSIFIE D HOURS 8:00 a.m. to !S p.m. Monday thru fl'iday 9 to noon Saturday k sauna bath. 3 car gar, game rm, a.uto sprinkler. Many dlx xtru too numer· out to mention. $135,000. 499·4198 or 831-1400 EVERYTHING SHIP·SHAPE bltn bunk beds ln down.srairs bedrm, lge menanlne mas· ter bedrm & bath suite + guest room. Dble rarage hA1 bltn cabinets, work bench and elec door opener. Best \\.'A NT VACANT il-1, 2 lo S acres, lo lease, Bkr. Realonomics 6T.>fi700 Blue Beacon * 645-0111 F AilfILIES Welcome 2 Br, Jg yrl . gar, pets ok . $125, Huntington Beach lil1MAC. ex lrg 3 br, 2 ba duplex. Crpt, drps, bltns, lrg lovely priv ya.rd, ga.r + huge park'g. $195, Respon married a d I t s . 842-3276 -'--------;:;.1 area. Qulet Environment. ~gun• Beach _ Ott street parkina. No OUJ. Lovely 2 Br/2 Ba. Condo dren, no pets. lll69-1961 Maple Ave. Costa Jl.lesa Lido Isle * REDUCED * value at $23.500, an.'C!ous owner. Advertisers may place 11·--..,-=.,.,.='="...,..--thelr ads by telephon& I~ Fln1ncl1I ALA Rentals e 645-3900 S145 . Nice E.side 2 Br, bltn&, yd, g11r, kids/pets. 1:\1;\lEDIATE possession, 4 BR, 11~ BA, crpts. drps. children & pets OK, $200 per mo. South Co as t Realtors 54;;...s424 Laguna Beach Home IDEAL for year round c.om· fort & gracious relaxed Jiv. ing. All exterior maintain. I ~~~~~~~~~~ COSTA ?l!ESA OFflCE 330 \V. Bay 642·5678 Immac. 5 BR., family rm. Larwln Realty, Inc. 45 Ft. Lot street.to-21562 Brookhurst, H.B. 'treet. By app't. only 546-5411 Anytime Business $93,150 Opportunity 200 BEACH LIVING. Cpls, drps, LIDO REALTY INC. EXECUTIVE Condominium I 1 stv/rt>I. kids. SIJO. Blue Beacon * 645-0111 TIRED of that old furniture? It'• really' oo( that ha.rd to replace. J ust watch the furnlturw A: m.lsc:tllanetTJS columns in the Claa.IW.ed Se<:tlon. NEWPORT BEACH 3333 Nr11·port Blvd. 642·5678 HUNTINGTO~ BEACH 17875 Beach Bh•d. 540-1220 3377 Via Lido 67~7300 in Mesa Verdt-. Nt>.'11 10 1 AAA I ALA Renta l& e 645-3900 3 BR. Crpts, elec. bit-ins. Goll Course 2 SJoru 3 dbl gar. forced t1ir heat, Mission Viejo . ·~ J CANDY AND $12'5·2 Br. elec bltns, cpts, S195/mo. 1st & la1t mo 's Br/2\1 baths, Intercom, SNACK SUPPLY drps, chl!dren ok. + 1100 "l•a-·g d•p. ~ ~·1 ance attended. Te n n i g courts, only JOO stt'ys to prl· vate beach, also overlooks glamourous heated pool. AU l'lec kit. incl: refrig, range, dish1vasher Ir disposal. C.Om- plelely carpeted wall 10 wall I.:~=======~ thruout. Lower level laun· LAGU~A BEACH 222 ForC"St A\'e. 494·9466 SAN CLEil!ENTE 305 N. El Camino Real 492-4420 NORTH COUNTY dial free 540-1220 , BY O\\'NER: Deane Home. Custom Cabin er r Y Jn Bl B '"'Ol l I ' " ~~ Kitchen & Bath. Spacious WE ESTABLISH ue ••con* ~;po J' BR d I 3 br, 2 ba, tam nn. ALL ROUTES . A u ts. No pet1. At crp!ldrps, cvrd pa 1 io. dining & living ;-oom. It's RARE INDEED· _1 Br. yard. beach. Sl60. References. S60 830-ll68 Yours for the price $3;),500 INo st:lling involved) g11r. x!nt loc. $11.:i. deposit. 536--0347 Wiii sell furnished. See at CASH REQUIRED ALA Rentals e 645-3900 TNHSE>cpt. drp, rt'f. wshr Newport Beach 3024 Club House Circle, Plan one . , .......... $975.00 .J. M()..g799 for appt Art Ada ir. Plan tivo .......... stsn.OO 4 Br or l den. bltns. gar, rtryr. rng, pool, 2 Br, $165 SCADS • SCADS fncd yrl for k1rls &, pets. 5210 J Br S185. 5-18-140.;, 968-9425 lncom• Units Galor• NEWPORT BEACH: 2 Br. Plan,ihrt-e ·······• SJ25(1.00 Blue Beacon* 645-0111 3 Br, rumpus room, ! Set US for the BEST aelec· 2~ ba., pool, sauna, rec. Exce lent incomt' for a [pw rm. Low down payt. Owner hours \Vet'kly 1,1•ork.1 Dayg & ONE monrh·~ rt'nl .... ye;, crpts/drps encloSt'd yard. dry has wshr/dryt'r, stor- aae room & double carport. Th is is a corner unit in beAut Jndscpd, patroled area. Close to market & shp'ng. Avail furn or unturn. Priced under market for di· recr sa!('. Phone: 837.0791. Duplexes Unfurn. 350 Costa Mesa l~~;r,;~. the beach a~e;iCEs ,viii l!nance. I Evenings). Refilling and col. It's! than one month's rent Av11.il 4/l S4l-l886 CLASSIFIED FORTIN CO. &12-500Cl I lccllng money from coin OP· is your 10111.I do1vn payment Irvine 3 -bach. S42,5CXI d d. ; h on many line 3 or 4 bcdrm ----------1----------DEADLINES 13 - 2 $47,500 Income Property 166 erate ispenser1 v• t in " NE\V 3 BR 2 BA 2 BR crpc'd, p! drp"d, water neadllne tor copy&: kills 3. 2 S49.soo CUTE EAST SIDE quantied are a. iHandies ~~~e;~111~r~~1 ~1~~0r.t Q~ ~ drps, htd ~mm. ·~('~ lll'Pn'd. No children or pets. Is 5:30 p.m. the d11y be· 2. 2 $49,500 • j name brllnd candy and REALTY. call 847-1221 . rec incl. Prefer family, S133. 96S-9253, 2621 Santa fore publication, except 3 . 2 (3 Ava.ii.) $59,500 DUPLEX snacks). For personal inter-• S2li0. 17662 Manche s I er , Ana Ave. Inq'r house C. f o r r.Tonday Edition 4 . 3 Oceanfront $90.500 vie11· !lend name. addres5 Xlnt 2 B~: ii·/frplc. hllns, _gar 1 833-8210 I DELUXE du le:<1. 3 BR. 2 11·hen dt-ad!!ne Is S•t"~-New condition, T11·0. one hffi. "d ho ,,.. "-1 '' 11· & 1·0. Kids [X'ls ok. $16,) P ' "' 4 -3 Baylront $210,000 a.. P ne .. m.....,r o ' u I· 81 . B * 645-01t1 Laguna Beach ba, cp!s. drps. Fr P] c. day, 12 noon. 6 uni!i, 2 Br. $!L,OOO room units v.·ith 11.ttached Sratl' Dis1rihuting, Inc .. 1681 ue eacon Garage. No pet!. 54;HU9,1 CLASSIFIED BURR WHITE garages. Olvner built, qua!· We5t Broad..,.·ay, Anaheim, REAL FIND. 2 Br. Fncd yd. NE\V Hilltop home w/ocean Huntington S.•ch REGULATIONS REALTOR 67>4630 ity construction. S300 per Ca. 92802 (714) 778-5060. cp!s. rtrps, kids & pets. SI JO view. 3BR; 2BA. Cpts. drp!, l----"------- ERRORS: Advertisers 2901 Newport Blvd .. NB mo. income. See toda)· -DISTRIBUTORS NEEDED ALA Rentals • 645-3900 J bH·ins. irplc. Wet bar & 2 BR, 1 ba, Cpts, drps, Stove, should cht-ck their ads 11 -*--B-A-Y~S-H_O_R~E-S--*-1 \Von't l~sr. '46-7171 HUNT'S "SNACK-PACK " LAGUNA 2 8 \IS blk bch open beam ceilings +_lam. garagt-. Rectntly deco_ra.ted, daily & report errors $34, 900 T er ma NPii· multi-mLl lion d 0 11 a r bl ~ \' 1 ;165 · rm. $300 mo. 972 La Mirada I La.ke Park area. Av1..1l 4/1 immt'dlately. THE B t B ;ir!vertised Jnllck pack Prt>I tns. gar, Y · ry · or call 4.94-5200 $165. 962-7137 DArLY PILOT assumes es UY ducts . NEED KO\\'! Blue Beacon * 645-0l l l OCEANFRONT I Sr. \'ilia, VcA=CAN:::.=c=r~E=S::.:.C~o-,-,-mo-,,.-,,, liability for !he first In· S32 500 I Co--t l" •• ,1,-0" O"I•. · Rrli;1.ble men or 11·orrft'l'I in ROO~!Y • 2 Br, Crpts, drps. Partially furn. Priv. beac:h. Rent )'Our hou1e. a.pt .. store ...... """ .. "" Attract.iv!!: 2 BR & den. Im· 1 4· macula!e. Private bl'ach. ~-our t1rt'1.. to sl'r.'l<'P last-rh1 drl'n & Pf'I!. SI .i. I Parklike grounds.> S 2 7 5 bldg .. etc. thru a Daily Pilot CANCELLATIOKS: ..,,.~6 ~stview Dr. o-n INCOME UNITS moving coin operated pro-ALA Rentals e 645-3900 i\lonth. 49-~~ Clusttied ,l)rf. When killing an ad b. ...,., "''"' .,.. (41 2 BEDROO:'>I rtucr.o; in company St'cuted I -;;;:;;::;:;;;:;;:::;;::=:;;::;:;;;:;;::;;:.~:;:::;::;;::;;;:;;:;;:;;;:;;::;:;;;:;;::;.:.;:;:::;::::;;;:;;:::;;::;:;;;;;;::;;::; sure to ma.ke a record Sun, 11·5) or ca 11 frank 1 1 · 1 -of the KIU. NUillBER (ll 3 BEDR00~1 <>cat f\n~. commf'rClil or gh·en you b.y your ad James Rlb' 548-4617. I 0\llf'1'ERS UNil fac!Ol'y Part or full time. taker as r~tpt or your BEACH UNITS Fenced patl01i, closed 1ar· 6 lo J2 houn per \1·Pek canC'ellaUon. This klll bl ages, Income Sl0.080. Nwpt · no ~eU1n1;. CASH RE· number must be pi·e· ll Unit aparlment dg, QUIRED SSOO to S29!l5. sented by t_ht' advertlser Cose to beach, Newport Hghrs area. Pere Barrett \\"ritp for niore ln lormatlon· In ~ase of a dispute. Shore1. Full litle. 14 Car· Riiy, 642·43.)J. Instant Food Suppl)', P.O CANCELLATION · OR 1.ge1. Oniy 8 yrs. old. $1600 COSTA MESA Box 315.\. Torrance, C•hl. CORRECTION OF NEW mo. Income. $139.500. 30% TRIPLEX oo.;:i;;, Includ!' p hon l' AD BEFORE RUNNING : On. number. (Not affl\111ted "''lth Every effort Is m•de to GRAHAM REALTY 646-2414 The closest you can comt? to j Munts·\\'e~son (oods, fnc.1 I kill or correct a ne1v ad 1 f that• has ~t'n ordered. CHAR.,ltNG hillside home living or lree a ter an in· BEAUTY SHOP for sale • but v.·c cannot fuaran· v.·/vit''A". N~"'-port ~I l . itial investment of only 20'l 4 chairs, &OOCI loc.ation-tn tee to 4o 10 untl 1he ad 54S-79S.1 do1vn (approx. $S300J 11 this Lagun11.. 496-SSO!I ha.s appeared In the pa· Newport H'eights 1,1·~u located '"'e&llide trt· BEAUT\' Shop for sale. 2 per. plt>x. Three roomy 2 Bed-operators. Rc111onl!.ble . DIME·A·UNE ADS: BIG VALUE room ·units with 1t>parate ~6-J671 or 962-i:l66 Th~ ad.I a~ 1trictly bdr t .1 garaif~· hardwood floors I FOOD TO GO· ~!O~l &. POP cash In advance by man Laree 3 m, aml Y rm. I al\d private n.r.!io are1. ex dl"1·-g nn, 2 bat"·. H .. ,, ,~ 1 ' CAFE LSE OR SELL ol' at an6v one of our of-··" '04 " IJl!:nt lo the 01,1·ne rices. N phone orden.. Mparate m111tr bdrm, 2 c:e ~ r r o;fCU· .. * ~2-7806 • * G panL nlE DA.J:i.Y Pl'LOT re-frplcs. *I'll"" on alley. $41 1500 673-1550 Money to Loan 240 serves the-rtaht 11) clas-f ll'll! He icT'lls ma. $35,000 ~~~~Fl~~:~ <•LL · 0 · .... ,... lf!11.~DI : lst",!~~~an ., relO'latlona "ilhout 91~.~~ -----2 d TD l prior notice. ~t•r Ne•••rt P••t orrle.1 OFFICE BLDG. 0 Q8ft CLASSIFIED SECLUDED 3 br, 2 b&. frplc. N•t lnc.ome $:26,SOO MAILING ADDRESS re-modeled kl!, lit patio, Sln&la tenant "AAA" Terms h.15ed on equity. tl"t 11r, t~l!.n1lve 1arden. Pt1ce S2i0,000 642·1171 545..()611 P-g.~~f;;:o. Nr &ehll j:• church, Jdtal Reiurla 10-:ti en cash Inv. Se.rvtnr Harbor area 21 yn 92826 for family:-$39,!IOO. Prln· W. R. DUBOIS JNC. Settler Mortgage Co. .. -~~~~~!""-"'! cl pals only. 64~27$4 ar1 9 &m + MS.._7!_'6_* _ 336 E. l7th Strttr $©\t~lA--/££tfS9 Tho Purzlo with fh• Builf;ln Chuck/• f. I T U· G M A I ! I · A 3 .2% betr bor s1rvica s I I I • opened In the studantt' union of o university. It Is known I HEB L 0 0 1•• !"9 -l!cord. l ·I! I I ' 1 8 Comcil.tti "'-chuc:kr. quct.J I I ' r.r •n .. In .... ,.,,. _.._ . . . . . . . ~ d...,.~ f""" •P No. 3 IMlow. & ~~~~~~~~~~E~tn!tS I' r r r I' r I' I 0 _g~r::~~·. l!TTE" TO I I I I I I I t SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 900 • I i j I I I I , I ·~; . ' : \ I ,. ' I •I l I ' l \ / ~-· ;t;1 t;b Reed Claa11flutlons For Expert Auishlnce 6500-6900 In tho DAILY PILOT SAYE t~ASI! • c L A 5 5 I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 'The DAILi · PILOT ORANGE .. COAST'S leading Marketplace • llEST1 1111lsi Apt•. Furn. 360 Apt. Unfurn. r .... -------Co1ta Mtta Gener1I "5 Apt. Unlurn. Cotta Meta "5 Apt. Unlum. Cotta M••• 365 Apt. Unfurn. L1gun1 Beach 365 Aptl., Furn. or .. Apt1 ., Unfurn. 370 Furn. of Unfurn. Announcement• IMI " OAll.Y I'll.GT ft 0 'T -I~ WANTED Huntington Beach Huntington Beach * it.00 UP * GIANT I • 2 BEDROOM! VEN DOME CORSICAN • NEAR BEACH • Gorgeous, park·llke r.ettln~. ' HARBOR· NEW 1·2-3 Bdtn1. All bltns, !¥Bdrm. lo"·cr dupll'X Liui;e Closed garagea tor max· JAt?i1ACULATE APTS! Shag crpt.s, drPll, closed i1tr-llvtng room. kitchrn wlth /) n J / Jm11m ffcutity, Quier ztreet. AOULT and TOWNHOUSE ..,ge1, frple Jn 3 Br. % mi. range & rtfrigcrator. AU oLa 'o(ulnfa ....JVermoda ~dulti1, no petii. 2020 FAMILY Section E. So. Coast Plaza. OH Sun. ulllitil'!I paid. i; ullerton Ave (Ha1·hln· ti:> Cl t h k nower at Ross. Mgr at 42l SllO AtONTII Casual estate living. Enter La Quinta Her- 88.y, Uit.n So, until 2 blks ose 0 • oppfng, Par 2211 Harbor, near Wlla:on '1/, Stevens. 545-2321 ~llSSION REALTY 4fH--0131 I So. o1 Newpo~ Blvd. 6,., * s~ciou, 3 BR's 2 ba e 2 BR 1 BA TOWNHOUSE 1 ~==~'---"""=-'---mosa's u.sh green atmosphere & stroll tre& 8690 ~· '" ._ s"·i1n pool, put!Sreen Aii ' l lloo 12 n · NEWLY decor 2 BR, cpts, Newport Beach lined walk ways to your ;j,t • ,~ 1 di ; on r. S 5· 35 d-, bllN, 2,car garag•, 'LL UTILITIES I CLUDED ·Ir GARDENS t · & 2 B · '11 • In v l~ry fac'ls e Heated pool-MuJts only .,..., .. "" · R 5• ! 1845 Anaheim Ave •No pets·Adj to 5'ioppitig Sl!iO 673-7909 Mf';RINER SQUARE -1 BR. Unf. $rSO -Furn. $180 Furn orunturn. Bltns, crpts, COSTA i\1ESA €~2-isit •No childrfln LRG.QUIET·CLEAN APARTMENTS • 2 BR. Unf. $180 -Furn. $210 drapes, p001; $140/up. NAs.:'t ~~,.,;,;;;;;;;.;....,..;,;;;;;;; S S fl SAU p ta. S 1 I $Hl5. 2 BR. 1% BA. GE kilth. Announces the availability l>! pac. f, plans, decor. (Urnishings: live AL 1 • 177 E. 2Znd Balboa Peninsula ORL£AN Adlts. E-side, C~t. 5'18-&l.32 2 & 3 BR units tor adults within romantic setting w/tun or privacy. St., CM. 6'12-3645 or 675.6044 ',..._..;~.;...;;;;:;;;:;::__ S APTS d , "2 BR • Slf"1. 1 Bdr. Dix. Bit-•·"'· es1ring to live amidst beau. Terraced pool, pri. sunken gas BBQ's w/ • D~Lu~ ,. BR • .. frplc, b•lco"y· 315 b 'r.. ~ E. Ba.y. \VintPr rates. 'ADULTS ONLY Cpts/D.rps, Prl. ba1c. Ga.r. ty Y the sea in the pres· seculded seating compl. w/Ramada & Foun-Bachelor apts. $35 ""kly & 1 1• like nu, xlnt Joe. 962-4180. 1igiou11 \\'estclltt area ol lain. up. Fun'I. incl utii. Monthly 1 :>Imo. Y1·Jy $225/mo. ln-2 & 3 BR. Avail. Private pa-Newport Re h terms a\'ail. 998 El Camino. quire No. C. Gil-1521 or Uo, pooJ. Jndlv. laundfy tac. NE\\'LY redecorated studio, · FRO:,.c 5230 * Color eo-ord. kit w"/ indirect lighting. :HG-0451 5.tS-7771. (Nr. Orange Co. Airport; Tus-2 BR, lh b:i, nr shopping F . 1 . .,_ .,. * Deluxe range &: oven1 * Plus h 1h•g erptg. C d . & schools. $16:i. 546-17j3 t>r 1n ornmt.iOn p ..... ne ;•fr * B n I t C .t $25 P er Wee~ & Up i;io~roi;;i;n~a;;iie~liiMiiiiaii;r tin al 17th St; nr. \\'estclill). Robert M Buckley Manag' o us s orag• 1ptce ov. c•rpo BACHELOR 1 BR, --UPPER 2 BR. Cpts drpi;, er, at (il•i) 645.0252 or writ· * Sculptured mar~le pu lm1n & tile b•tha -17~1 Tustin, Costa l\fesa bit.ins. Enc. garagr. 0 Adulls Tl 0 . e * Elegent recreation room. J'V & maid sen: avail. l\fgr, ritrs. Thompson 642-4641 no pets $140 646-5209 eves ' to ie 1.hcc or Uie l\1an-FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY . OVERWEIGHT LADIES For weight reducing program to establish statistics tor r apid permanent weight loss, conducted by qualified physical culturists. Must be a rnlnlmun1 o( 20 pounds over- weight, have transportation and not current- ly under doctor's c are. All inquiries com· plete1y confidential. • ASK FOR MISS POWELL -537·5410 Office Rental 440 Industrial Rental 45(1 Vlctorla, C.?11. ~-agf'r, l\la11ncr Square APL'! , ~ !---~~~~--A'ITMC like .ne\v 1·2 BR. 12~t Irvine Ave NB eai' Blk from Huntington Center, San Diego tPooB 1 R.Bl$tn125 :l.~R,. $140 ow• MARCH Lg pool, ""· '"''· dt•pl, 9266t ' · · Frwy ... Goldenwesl cone... SUPER,DELUXE QU•IJTY r--S-M_A_L_L_U_N_IT""S,.....1 · s, "'""'' rp.~. MI I ull pd, 188·1 r.1onrovla. I ,....,..,-..,..,..,..,..,..1 San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvll., So. on l·Z-3 room, up to J,000 sq. f"' children, no pets. 32;>..J E. ON TEN ACRES Move•ln Bonus a.18-0336. PARK NE\VPOR'r-ea~·r fr('r · Beach 3 blks. to Holt; w. on Holt to • • • fl .office 1uites. Immed. oc-COSTA MESA- 17th Pl. C.M. 54S-2738. l & 2 BR. Furn & Unfurn. 1 mo's Free Rent l:~ASTSIDE 2 Br, bllns, Jivg overlk~ llw \\"1111.'I'. 7 LaQuinta Hermo sa 714: 847-5441 cupancy. Orange County. $95 . .t $167. Per Month DBL. wide mobile hon1c. Fireplaces I Priv, patios. dshwhr. crpls, drpi;, cftC! pools, 1 tennis cti1 S7~JO.OOO /Jrport Irvine Commerc· Immediate OcC'uP811C7 Cornp. furn'd. ,,1 at u re Pools Tennis Contnt'I Bkfst. $50 move-in allowance gar, priv patio. &15-2939 Bach. 1 01· 2 Br. Also 2 A t ~ Complex, adj. Airportu New 6500 sq, ft. unit, 18th & adults. Until Oct. 1st. 900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-2611 2 BR. FROM $15;). COM-sty To11·nhouses. Elec. kil., P s., -Hotel &: Re1taurant, banks, Whittier 110-220 power, 54S-2436,. !MacArthur nr. Coast Hwy) PLETELY REQEC, CLEAN Dana Point pr. pat or bnl subu·n parkg F~rn. or Unfurn. 370 l ______ _,11 .a:t.J San Diego&: N'pt Fwys. plenty ~r parking, $155. "SHARP 2 BR. & COZY FAJ\tlLY UNITS. SPECTACULAR ocean!rnt Qpt niaid sl'r; ('pis, drps. M Rental• ,,,,_, UNCROWDED PARKING Se<!: Robert Natlreu, Rl!r. !teated Pool. Arllll ts, no pets * COROLIDO APTS * CONV. LOCATION. VILLA vie\\', 2 BR. 2 ha. sinve. Just N. of Fashion Isl a: Costa esa LOWEST RATES Costa l\fesa 642-1485 (teen ok). ,642.9520 2 Br. 5ludios & street levels, 1'.fESA API'S, TI9 \V. \Vilson. relrig. cpts & drps. s225. J:i1nbo1 .... c & San Joaquin I----------i •••••••••• Owner/mgr. 2172 DuPont Dr. $185 & up. Penthouses $2lO. 646.12.11. S37-53i0 Hills Rd. 64·1-1900 tor lens· BAY MEADOW APT$, Rooms 400 Rm 8, Newport Beach FIBERGLASS Mlgrs & ing infu. 83J.3223 Courtesy to Brokers woodworkers welcome. Ex· AVAIL no\V 1 & 2 Br. furn. Pool, ree nn, gd location. .No pets or c hild r en, ltshwhr. !rpl, dbl carport. * $130 UP * East Bluff I,,.,....,...,-,..------· tra hazard fire 11prinlden. Pool. 673-3318 GIANT 1 & 2 BEDROO'-f! A New Way To Live Beam ceilings. paneling, priv. COLLEGE or working girl DESK SPACE 3750 st & up for rent. .FOR lease, deb:. all elec. Gorgeous, park-like setting. in Newpor t Beach patios, recrea1ion facilities. Balboa Isl, 5hr kit & TV Ashwill-Burke, 534--023z lge, new lv/a view 2 BR, Closed garages for max-NEWPORT BEACH OAKWOOD GARDEN AH Adult.!!, no pets. rn1, !e!e, $65/mo &: up. 222 forest Avenue QU~T. studio;; Sll5, 1 BR'i, imum security. Quiet streef. V'll G d APARTMENTS * fla(·helor Apt SllO • 6T>-3613. l 8 h NEW bldg, 1368-1728 t<1 ft. Sl2;,. No chldrn or pets. ~i~~~sharp,t. r1~r1 bg~'.~ A1d.':'1~ A4ults. no pets., 2020 F ' ~-d rana a, Apbalts. • On 11ith Street bt•Nn * 2 BR. !nun S165 • 2 ROQ;\1S, double & single. agCJna eec Nr Baker & Fairview, 1 2135 Elden Ave. cir, see " F'ullcrton Ave (Harbor to .our f; rooms w th con. Ilvino and Dover Dr. En1ployed n1ale. Pt·i honie.(,,,===494-"'-'~94'6'-"'----yr. lease. Sullivan, MM429. '64~582-1. mgr Apt 6. only. 673-6992· Bay, then So. until 2 blki; 1~". a ve & :eln\V. Craci~us 387 \V. Bay St, (bt\vn Har bor 642-118.i BEAUTIFUL 3 room o!fice Rentals Wi1nted 44C FURN Bachelor & 1 Br. EXCEP'L 1 BR. brains, shag So. of Newpol't Blvd.) hvtng & . quiet. s11.rto1.1nding I ~=~'~7~14c~I ~64~2~,~8~17~0:_ __ ( & Ne1vpo1·1 Blvd. ~ mi N. suite w / kitcheneu~. Ideal Exceptionally nice! crpts, pvt patio, trt>es. '7&!='~"=690;:::.,-:--,.-,""~--I rNor tacm ily 'v,>thl 'lim1ldHr;n. YOURPLEX, 3 BR, 2 BA, of l9lh St). NICI:: roo1n for working man for architect. ln1urance YNG family needs sm 2 br Adults. $1~. mo, 6i3-7629 1-• · ear orona e .., ar 1gh D\V, lrplr, in1n1ed occupy. CALL &JG-0073 \V/ or v.·/o cook'g privil. agent, realtor, ~tc. On 2110 Ne wport Blvd., CM Lovely Spanish Decor I School. Fireplace \\'Ct bar & $2'li Adults. lnq. 41j() Al ~~=~,=------E·5ide, C;\J. &12--0326 Monrovia SI. In N. B. house for about "'1 mo. ,/ 1 BR. Heated Pool. NO s,rA,CIOUS -lid br/2~l 1.ba. FROM $1~5 built.In kitchC'n aPpliances. Patrice Rd. 6·12-4387 • LO~ELY •. lt-g 1 & 2 BR.1 '•~1~l5""'P~E~R'-'w~kc,;c"~P~'-,-,~,~,-t.1 $350/$300 ""r mo. 645-0710 \\'ill give loving care , rp c, crp!s rps, b hns. Gas and Water included ~~~ Al\1IGOS WAY 644 .~1 "l .. l'<ll Panel g, patKl, yi'tl, gar/w1r $2' k OT ..-Father still Iii school. Partly pets.Crpts,drps.l26i\1onte $.'.H:l/mo 6442272 av.} ~JJ .,. • pd 1 f k 12192 ',,,.'91~,~c upApt.s.M EL DESK SPACE lur"i'h_, "P•••lbf<. v· t A C!\1 I,::=:.:::~·_:::.:..:-:::::._ ___ I 1 & 2 Bedrooms Col<ll\'ell Banker & Co. · nan! o · · ~ Ediugl'r. ...,.,_ ~ "' ~-.... u is a vc., . 6().l'~ HELIOTROPE. 2 BR. Built·ifl!I e Ai r Coral P.lanagiog Agent 5-ll·SZZI 2 BH, vie1v ot &ck Bay. Harbor Blvd to Zoclie's, E. 30 El C 1;833-:.:;:,~20~30.:...,~---~--I Coi\l:PL turn'd I BR apt. Garage apl. Redecorated, ! Crpt~. drps, 1111 elec. Pool, 'on Edinger. 839-0959 f''tJRN roon1, gold medallion 5 No. 1mino R••I 2, CAR Garage in 'Costa $105 mo. 131 Flower. new cpts. Sat & Sun only. Carpels • Drapes e NEW DELUXE___ 1cnn1~. Securer! b Id g • home, kitchen priv. fl1ale S.:in Clemente .Mesa. To .. A -·--" for 6'16-7883 Enclosed garages .. BR 2 BA A f $279.50. 644--02.'>J rvr~. . Huntington Beach only, $20/wk, Eves &16-2042 492-4420 .,., w.eu Costa Mesa Pool & Rrcreation R,Qom :. ' Pl or lease. lncl storage. Call Terry, 'lbe TO\VN l:IOUSE E-s1de 2 Br, liiiiiiiiiiii-160 W Wilson 642-73J3 spac. nias!er sul!e, din rn1 2 Blks hun1 bcac.h-3 Br. 2 J.RG front room for renl, 5 NEW offices, 17877 Beach Real Estaters 546-2313 .1'.I Ba. Pool. No pets, $175. --*' $l 7 0 & dbl garage. auto door*' Ba Dup!e..'I:. Patio. llih\\·11r, ON' B·EACH! kilch. privil. Ample park· Bl. Lowest rents 842-25251 =c=R~Q~UN=D°"'F~loo_r_o~U~l.,,-,-,-,-,,.-1 Ca ll 646-6610 NEW NEW NEW * I opener avail. POot & Re<:. S2.l5/mo. R1~1890 ~1on-f'rl; 1ng. $70 mo. !}18-0516 or 213: 391--0015 ,.. •-ill 3 B I want'f'd, Corona del 1'14.1, r, 1~ Ra, patio. bit-ins, area. v.·knds fr12-IS37 FOR l't'nt turn room in Co8ta CORONA DEL MAR So f H' h 64' '~ ' * $15 per week up ,_ ..1-A''' ,, e s-' I Bd · · o J.& way. ,.....,..~ w/kitchens, J25 per \\'eek crp..,,, o.uyS. "" auuut our ~n.J • \VESTCLlFF' area 2 BR, 2 * I'm • ........... S205 Mt?sa. In nice & quiet honie l & 2 Room office Sl\Qt::eS I -~-~--"1---= up Apts. ~IOTEL, 548-9755. VILLA CORDOVA discount plan, 88o Center 86.3 Amigos \Vay, NB b;.i, Jrplc, bltn.~. adults only. * 2 Bdrm ........ b-om $235 for "·ork'g nian. 64Z-4794 avail. OWNER + 613-6757 Misc. Renti1ll 465 , St. 6'12-83-IO i\1anaged hy $200 mo. 67.'>-4.'lli2 * 3 Bdrm ••••...•...• , , $3i5 I ~N~tCE=-=-~1 ---c-:!~8~~-~--~,..;.,:,.e,c I ,...,.,......_------- 2 Br. Newly deror. furn $15J. \\'ILLIANt \\'ALTERS CO F ·t A 'I h rm a rpo1·l, P v I u1ines1 Rent•I 4145 LOCKED. fenced 11torage tor Adlts, no pets, 820 Center QUIET-SAF'E HARBOR GREE.NS 1 ~ • DUPLE.X unfun1 l Br, Im. urni ure vai a Jc ent, ba, men only. Gar, boats or campers. 50c per St. &J2.~S. 40 Unit Adult GARDEN & STUDIO APTS T 2 0,WNBall0UbSIE rie 1 l;.;r 2 Br, mac-ulatet Encl garage. Ch'e""ot•di..poodral11C•a"ul~~h,"1~~~:r laundry, pl, 1cnn. 83J.1306 PERI ME LOCATIONS foot. per month. Cat l ·~=~=~-~~~-I A t t C I ~ , Ins, !'pl, paliQ, Adu!!s, no ""t~. 6~2--8226 ... · ..... ._ .... is ... l,"·.EPING ROO,I. ,1,1,,... . 17th St., Costa Mesa ""' r:r". ·-s11-1 BR F u .,, pd par men omp tic . Bach. 1, 2, 3 BR's. from n10. Q · ,,~ c room-oce v· " ,._ " ... ,,..~""" "· , urn. h. s , 1 & 2 BEDROOMS ~oo P IV C 'I enc gar. u1et. 67;,...j(J33 San Clemente re an icv.·s k' , . k 1120 !'" f! with pa'ki"• r ~~===------1 Nr. ~!Gres • Quiet adult. ~~.., n 3 -, 0 eterson ay, ·". 2 BR 2 B D' 1 1 ............. pa!los-ampte parkini: wor tng person, non-ur1n er, :;k P~r Sq. Ft. e FENCED storage area, 1983 Pomouo. c,, 1 >'IS .-,28 Entertaining wiU be a pleas. ..n17'1J • <1. in. rm, Jl · .. _ ·t -• non.smoker. 6-16.6010 oil surfaced·, ~--1& Me ... .,, l·LM>el. View. $"'."" !\lo. DELUXE 2 BR., 2 8.."l., u""'cur1 Y guaiuS, '-""' ure. Decorating this lovely, * GARD , <~ H NTINGTON I I G b f I b Call 646--0281 962-7813 NEAT 1 Br \v/gar. $110 spacious apt v.·iJI be a joy.. ENS, 1 & 2 Bil's. Avail ;\lay I. &t<l-1133 Bkr hltins, dshwhr, rrc. f'OCl1n. • r u a pv! en!r Broad\\'ay. Lagu'la Beach • · Back Bay area, 280 Del • Special cabinet space Furn or unfurn. Bl!ns, crpts, Garden Grove Adults· only. $180. 492-22;i9. PACIFIC P~\io 3 blkg b ch Iba Y 1650 Sq. ft. v.·ilh parking I 1 ~"~·~'~· ~"~'~"~"~'--'-"-'---1 •Lock garages w/ lg stor ~i~· ~~~SIHlll;upE, ~~S· Santa Ana 613.J023 nr ll ,p.n1. 30c Per Sq, Ft. [ It") BACHELOR. mature person. e Bm ceil e Lndry e Patios · ' , · nd EASTGATE AREA Clran, ;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;I 711 OCEAN AVE., H.B. Guest Home 415 Realonomics Bkr. 675.6700 ,-.nnounctments $115 mo inc util's. 261 Mesa e D\V/displ e Huge gas stve St., CM. 642-3645 or 6i5-6044 spacious 2 BR l1fi. BA studio VILLA MARSEILLES (TI-ll 536·l4Si -----------[SUITES available. Medical ~--;;;;;;;;;;· ;;;; Or. 646-7.'H2 e Special soundproofing 2".,Be9rooms unfurnished apt. apt. Pa1io, crpls, ilr'P~. el('c BRAND NEW Ofc open lO am-6 pm Daily ROOi\1, board & care. tor professional bldg, 17612 I SPAC I B C d • D 2 I ... *ith private patio, carnr.ts kitch, laundry f11Ci!itics. \VILLlA.\f \VALTERS CO. gen!leman with ~ing l e Beach Blvd, H.B. Park!--·. Announcemo'nts . r. rpts, rps, eep coor ""ag '" \\' lk ho · SPACIOUS ' • .,. pool, nr stiops, Ul.il pd. lSfH carpets, dtapes & bltin11. Eastside Olsla a 1o 11 pping. Nr frwy. l & mother. 240 Amherst, C"f, Air cond: Heat i n g CANCER i\lonro'lia.Ave.,C:\f.J.iS-03:;6 GAS&\VA1'ERPA111 .\Iesa $135. 642-7368, SHiO n10. 12092 Baile)'. 2 Bdrm. Apts. 3 Br. $180/up. Pntio. Pool. a.1.'>--2.16J. Carpeting: Janitorial serv \\'rlter doi ng research for Mo M F 6'!&-1287 897-50·12 Adult Living Children ok. Tnq. rentlll V 1· R t I 425 luqulrc Suite 8 II £/SIDE 1 Br. 1v/\v crpl'g, , to o. rom $140. Furn. & Unfurn. bonus now. ilTORA KAI aca ion en a I •un 5~'. • or ca film, would like to il'lterview -• .1 2323 Eiaen Ave c:-.1 2 BR. upstairs . .stove & Re· Hunting1on Beacn A t 18881 M K 1 L .,. .. ,... ,...., volunteers Who have ...... or : h\1ns, sunueck, ut1 pd, I • · D•'•. hwo·her , -lor ,~,-·,·"''' P s, 1 ora a n, EASTER & S r J BR •-'N B ,,, Ba J frig drp• & c-1 IV/gar ·' "' .. u ·"" u • 1 lk E umme • STORE bldg or of< for !'". h •-· ~ t d . Adlt. $138. Yearly. 642-8520 ·1 ear a<.:11. Y • .,, s, · Children Welcome •I i ~. of Beach, off & 2 h afk b "" "' o are now ucllll' .,...,a e L~~----. ~~~-~ Sce l\tgr, Ted Woodhead U1iJ ful'n. $1~0/mo. Ad!ls eel appliances · plush shag Gorfil'lil. 962·R9!J.I. a. w 10 ch & Xlnt Npt Blvd txpo:c;ure. 960 for cancer. Ca!t March 16th, BR. ui:.e_d b11c:k fr.Pl, crpt'd. 646-00l2 only. 169 \Valnut PL, No. E Imn1ac. 4 Br. 3 Ba. Studio car(ltc.'t • choice o! ~ colorl-c=~~~=~==-pool, Wkly or monthly. 714: ~II. Acro&s from ciry hall. 17th. 9 am-4 pm. 549-l.824, bl1ns, ul!! pd. $14:l. Yearly. I ~ 548.695-t apt. 4·p!ex. Priv. polio. schenies • 2 baths • stall , LIVE AT THE BEACH! 5-1~2861 6i~l60l . ! J Adlt. 642-8520 --· Crp1s. di'P~. bl!ns. Lrg play sho\\'ers • mlrrorerl ward· New 1 BR. Shag crpt, drps. Rentals to Share 430 GALLERY Shop !or R••t. Evi!s 4 9+377B. , . RB GARDEN APT. 2 Br. 11.Z ••·e· C"I de"'' I N t be d CASA PLAY A Apts 14th " * PLEASE * NICE-I BR. Duplex. Quiet. HA , OR B•. S\ud '•o. Now '''' & '" u -.. s · o IX' s. ro onrs • Indirect Jigbt. . • C Se b Adu! 17871 Bell Circle. 842-3677. ing In kitchen -breakfast & Walnut. ;i,_:IJ>.8:_36_._7___ BACHELOR 10 shal'f! apt ontacl Village Inn Holel, * JOIN US * p. Y garage!!. ts . drps. fn cd patio, 1,.2 blk to ---~ w / same. Bc.iutifully furn 696 So, Coast Hwy, LagUna IN CELEBRATING OUR . over 30. No pets. 548-1021 JOWNHOUS"E . 17th SL s!rip'g. $160/mo. * FRESH AIR bar • huge privale fenced Newport Beach Rpt. Air cond, color TV, Reach. 494-9436 lOTH .Dana Point Adlrs. 2:13 Cabrillo. &12-0~til \Valk ~ b!ks 10 Beach! ~;i1~~ s;;.~~s-~.~a~:::~:at: VISTA DEL MESA 1 pool. SIOO mo. Call Terry Industrial Renti1I 450 ANNIVERSARY 1----------1 22 l H . * BEAUTIFUL I & 2 BR. Beaut. big 3 BR ap!. \l'/\v ed """ls ,• lanai. Apartments <t\ :'i:17-2819 before Sam or e VILLA SWEDEN e ~I",'GLE, TV. pool. pct· •k. I arbo,r, near ,\Vilson C""le G _, , 1 1 I bit ,~ • I' 2 BR 1. & U •fl' I'"' X>MMERCIAL-INDUSTRIAL 522 M•I• SI. " ~ ., .,., mporary a11.1en "P s. crp .~. t rps. ns ..,;.;cc11t 3101 So Br'isJol St , . ur·n nf. Oi.,h-" • " $2.l & "P· v.•kl.'" Dano I 2 BR. l~ BA STUDIO Palios fr pl<' pool f . $22' N "'"1711 1 ' ' h 500-1500 sq ft 13c to 12c 11 · "'''"' '""· 34111 Con't TO\VNHOUSE. $140/mo. • · · · · ~~1.lr:.___2 ~~-~--Jl; ~IL N. of So. Coast Plaza) \\'fl.' er ·.stove and Refrig -YNG gi11 w/2 children needs * San Clemen'te 496-lS40* un\!ngton Beach, Calit. H\vy. • Heated pool-AduHs only J.14~$160. Call 546-5163 1 Mo.'s. Free Rent . Santa Ana Shag crpt i,:. Lr_g Rrc center. ap! to share w/same. Callh~""'""'~7"0,::C:.,~~ GARMENTS not called for H t • I " h I ~· No pets-Adj to shoppini:e ./ :)'TUDIO 2 Br. New cpci;, ASK Abou1 our discount plan! PHONE: 557·8200 Of'Rf'~~Tncy ~ Ma_r;h Kathy 6":1-40.rl ,/ RENT !\f.1 ll25 liQ ft, $125 in 30 days will be wold un 1ng on ... eac _ drps. Patio. Closed i:;~r. 1 1 ~ 2 BR, crpls, drps, bltns, car· .i:..1• Sra11.~ $1.1;1, Garages for Rent 435 ~~5~~ Logan, No. 6, CM. for cleaning charges. Polly Ba. Nr shop·g. Adu!Ls, no port. Sl•lO. Tustin & Mesa Drive io'+,;c:::,,,""=----\VatTen's Pro fessional BEAUTI~UL .FUR~. A~S. Park-Like Surroundings pets. $l:l5. £4.'>--:til.l Tl~ Ulira s.~.2.)62 1 CAN'T BE BEAT * 545.4855 * ----------Seil the old stuff Cleanen. 2756 E. • Coast $14~$16;,. Quiet, priv. pa~10, QUIET _ DELUXE 1 & 2 BR 1150 •0 FOR motor homei;, trailer, Buy the new stuff Jtwy, Cd!\t. 2 \l.·ardrobes, frplc, dressing 1.2 & 3 BR APTS • . · & SI 1 · BEA(HBLUF-FA~ BACHELOR & 1 br apt~. boat. etc. 1652 Npt Blvd, Civt.l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiii;iii;;;::;iiiiiiiiiiill nn, locked sep. gar, Pool. Al FURN BACHELOR lncldg util. Adul1s only, !NEW 2 BR, 2 BA. dish\\'ash-SINGLE STORY Nr B11y, Eves. 61'~7876 or &12·2821, 642.5106. !1 Sauna. Rec rm. p so . ·• H d p 1 ~~~· 241 Avocado, C,\f. ers, pool, patio. 8231 Eliis. South Sea Atmosphere 1~'~!)j~-22='ill"'-------Office Rental 440 * * * * * * 17301 Keelson Ln. (1 blk ,V. lV pat.ios · t oo s 8·12-8477 or B·l7~<Jj7 2 BR.· 2 BATH Santa Ana of Beach Blvd, on Slater/.' Nr shopg * Adults only "THE GABLES" Carpets & drps 1----------!·---------· * 842-7848. MARTINIQUE APTS 2 DR, 11ir BA w/ gar. $150. 2 Br apl-w/w, drps, bltns, Air Conditio~ LAS PALOMAS NEWPORT BEACH Civicl,..-----------------... 1 Adil C ,, d f d d disposal. lau~pacc. No i.. c 1 300 1 1000 1 e Bach apt, ideal for 1777 Santa Ana Ave. Ci\f s, p..,,, rps nc Y · !16" o'7 Private 1~atiO!'I APAR'ri1~:NTS en er, t to t. 2'31 D o'-• e A' "'36'120 pets.· :.-,,:J infu. B Ao•w •Se r l · I student, 2 blks ocean. S:l5 l\Igr. Apt ll3 646.5~~2 ... -,,..,g ve. u. .., .~~~ 1-fEATED POOL rand TI('W from $140 ·• · c e a r ia · & $65, Furn + util. Yrly. LGE modern 2 Br, 2 Ba, WALK TO B ACH ll Plen1y ol la1vn l & 2 BR. furn .. unfurnishcd 1 ~6_7'1_16_111 _______ 11 t ad!t. 642-8520 LRG dL'I: apts, $140 2 Br, ne1v cpt, nea r sf'hools. LOVELY NE\V 1 & 2 BR's. Carport & Storage with dishwasher. Heated 3100 NE\VPORT BLVD, NB s12·, . $135. LGE, niodrrn $160 3 Br, 2 &. Htd Pool. B!tns. Storage. $16 5. Crpts, drps, dshwashers. HIDDEN VILLAGE pool & lanai. Central ·ga5 e ON THE BAY e • 1 B I d Ne\\"ly rlPc. Pla"y ,.d. Cptd. 6-l:i-1496 109 Palm • 8~l39J7 GARDEN AP'TS. healing & air-condiJioni"""· 67~2464 or s.\1·5032 r nr ocean: crp s, rps, ''b l'tC, 409 Calif. 536-tWl, Drps, Bltns. Patio. Child. STUDIO api $!!~ + util. 2 AVAIL NO\V -2 Br. all Xi00 South Salla Gai; & watf'r paid, Privale 1670 SANTA ANA AVE, C!\1 8~7-5169 ok. Br trailer $120 + u!il. f':\trjl~. Pool . Kids ok. $1 39 Sanla Ana "' 546-152j patio.~. Color choice ghag From 300 sq. fl. JSc sri ft. [,:CC.,,='----~~~ ]998 r-.faple Ave. 642-6344 illature ""rsons 0 n J y. & $1 59. Furn, av11il. 17411-C carpeting. ' 67:i.2.f64 or Ml-5032 * Bach apt. coin pl kitch 2214 c JI A ' -& both 1 blk H.B. pier. o ege ve, 6-16--0627 646-1809 Rft 4. Keclr.nn Ln. 968-i510, San!a Ana :~10.4988 S&:J. YrlY. l adult. 642~520 * BRAND NEW * 2 BR, 111 BA, sharp. Crpts, 8~l-44&1 . . Apts., 1400 West Warner Ave. drps. 1200 sq. ft. Available VERY spacious 2 Br s!udio Furn. or Unfurn. 370 North of Soulh Coa~I Plaza LIKE To trade? 0 u r Trader·, Paradise coulmn Is for you? 5 Lrnes, 5 Days for Trader's Paradise lines tfmes dollars 1.L:;;.:id~•:....l~sl~•:....----"."'' /LA COSTA APT'S, 1 & 2 BR. now, $165 mo. S.1:>.-0718, if apt. SmaJI <"hildrcn ok, 1767-l Ge ne ral Shopping Center ': n<'ar San $5: Call today .•. 642-5678. !'-----./ BEACH APTS, Bachelor Bltns, swimming pool & gar-no answer. 835-4427 Van Ouren Ln, l·I . B. Diego & Newport Free\vays. $200. l BR. S225, $2j(J, 320 age, All utll pd, $150 to $170 SPACIOUS 2 Br, l ~J Ba. 847--0034 I;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;[ ConvenicnUy localed corner 17 ti. Shasta selt-cont. ti-vi. Nord. 642-4097 or 5'1S-22Il m~ Adults. no pets. New crpts & (lrps, ·b!tns. 2 BR. crpls, d1'Ps, stov(' Jm. PALM MESA APJS \\'arner & Bristol. ri:iil u·lr. Slps 6, lOxlO sldt tent, ext'228 • 3;;,t:Z.voc:ado,Ci\J. 6'J2-9i08 Near shop'g & sch!s. $165. mac111<1te! La undry facil.1 • DJALdlrect&U-5678.Charge Ap•rh~nblorRe"t J~ elec. brks. Trade for VW .. , t t p 1 • 54fr-1TI3 T111merl occupy. $ 130 . l RR ''"' Sl 3• OO your ad, then sit back and Squrbck of same value -WILSON GARDEN Ari's. 962-3~S6 . 111 ' 1 ' •••••• ' 'J. _ listen to the phone nn~! I '~~-------· 1;(1~1~551J~),c_'>l~~~26~25~' ~=~ Newport Beach 2 ~R u 1 N 1 d 2 Br ~ludio-Pv' patio. encl ___________ I 1 BP. furn ........... S149.50il~=c:.,:;,,:"'"::=;;:,.:.=:::,_ ..., n urn. e\V Y ec. gar, 11,t b11, crpts / d'rps/ ~IODERN 2 Br. Duplex. 1 1 Bach~loi·s r11rroi~hert Apts., Apt&., 10.2 ~units CM Sl25 l\.1. BAYCLIFF MOTEL New cpl</drp•. SP" bl N l , I I' ·•I · htlo• crpl I F U ' 370 F U f 370 i wutWs. Adlrs, no pets. tns. o. Cil·J. $ 65. Adu ts. 1 •• c, . .'" · ,; .. < n1~. from Sl'.ti urn. or n1urn. urn. or n urn. Lonn ·,ooo assumable at * LO\V WEEKLY RATES * Sf·to I mo. 22~~ Fountain 549-0.133. l\rll·n1~111l;11nrd. 3 1"h1!dren 2 BR apts $175 mo. 1----------"-----------16.6%. Trade for clear home * T-0 -nk . s1:t1/rnn. l\.12-;iS1 7 n10./mo. QL' Huntington Beach Huntington Beach lhls re ·~""M. Kl!chen,,TV'11. n1aid service. 1 \Vay E. (!{arbor, \urn \V, WNHOUSE * "' a a.,,.,,.._,, owner Heated Pool. ou \Vilsonl. 2 BR, J'~ DA. crpts. drps, 1 BR $\'.!.i, gu.~ & y.·111er •POOL ljiiii -1'I carry 2nd. Agt 549-0218. _,. _ incl. \\11\V Cl'JllS, drpt<., e SAUNA' 6~6-,,,., .. 1 SE,ACLIFF i 1a.""r A p 1 .'. patin. Adu!Ls, $160. l:Vl E. Oevelo ....... will consider ac-'"' ~ ~love. Adult, no Jl c ! -~, e JACUZZI r- 1 BR near pier. U!ili!ies llachclor f., 2 BR,-11, BA. !\lelody Ln, 548.1768 '1·12-838.~ 13611\lesa Dr. Sanla Ana at the h a h cepting package o[ TD's free, $125 n10. $137.50-$160. ·sao move in * LRG 1 BR. apt. A!I new CHEZ ORO APTS e c e.. tor equity in new atlracrive 109 23rd St. 714/826.3184 allowance + re;. discount. crr-t~. drps, Ule & pain!. 8234 Allal'lta, 1.2 BR, pool, Costa Mesa mobile home park, Intrepid DUPLEX 1-BR. fu\'n., 1 blk. Crpts. drps, pRtlo, pool, Bltns. Sl4::i/mo. 546-0451 private garage, Washers, 9/10 Of 8 mlfe from the beech 18 Financial, 83U090. , (l{'{'an. Sl50 Yrly incl util. children o!t. 152.l Placentia 99s' El Camino. C.M. dryers .. 536-8038: 536_2727 " RTNG tfiios. An110uncc11 -l"'QSQ "Recreation City" with 2 swimming STl t W. Balboa-&l?_J272 Ave. S.18·2b82. 1 BR. Duplex. Slo\"C, reJrig, Arits. Now Al\vuiluhlc nt "-1--I • 2 BR apt. 3 b!ks rro1n oecan. def poo s, putting green. gym, volleyball Newport Heights LARGE 1 BR a pt . garage. $13:;. Adut1.~. no $165 mo. Avail i lar. 20th. MEDITERRANEAN court, sauna, b illiard rOom, c,lub-Oishv.·a~her, rt:,fri~rator. pt!.s, 164 E, \VilllOn. :~1~27Tl a.16-1'1'10. 'fl VILLAGE h 0 b d new •al'Pf'ls, pain1. drtl~s. 2 BR 1, BA d =,_,_'--~-~-~ Sol ous e. ne or two e rooms, fur· CL.EAN 1 or 2 Br. Adib!, no pets. Lg kl!. $135-SJSO. 2~21 E. 16th St. NB. 646-1111 _, , h · ~ · cpti;, rp$, s.;o moving allow. Nrw 2 IOO ll;irtJOr Blvd. nishe d e d f I h d torc•:u 11.1r t•at. $130. 720 pa!iu, ho IX't~. s17;:i mo in<'! R 1 SI " c _, Costa "lesll n un urn s 8 , prlv~te SJ1allmar. 968-4622, 6·12-0S44 ulil. 3.~A c,brlllo. 54~ "~"'.! · r itim "'1· pls/.,rps, . patio, fireplace In two bedroom, Apt. Unturn. 365 ·)"" ,........,.,,_ bHn11, fned palios, play (714i 5;37-M10 2 Br. unrurn Apt. Slov~ & 3 Lg Br's 2 Ba new cpl!! lirtll. S-16-7m . f':XCITING furn 1 BR apt elevators, d lshwa1hera, carpets rcfrig _incl'd. Gi'IJ't\ge. Pool. I drps no 'pets, ~hlldren ok'. 2 BR. Clo~~ garaite. Patio 1 si:~c •. rvi de ck, pool, Crpts, -and drapes, no lease, adults only, ell Gener1I , All util pd. Adi!$ only, no Avail now. $1~/mo. 545·12·15. an:a. Children· & $mttll pt'T rlrris. bltn!>, v.alk io iov.•n. utilltles e xcept lights paid, pets ~ts. Mgr. No. 9. 383 \V, J4~ E 111t1 c >! 548-"'"9 • eccep•·d f $145 .. .Just for Single Adults \Vllson s1: -. 2 BR Duplr.x. ~Arage, pn,io. ok. $140. 842-836j I . b' l, " . ;JJ"f I v .. l:: UCI • rom .• "f"'SOUTH BAY CLUB . Adults. 359 16th Pi, C.i'o,t. CONDO, 2 Br, 111 b<\, frplC'_. evei; tv.'n 5 & 6 APARTMENTS 1 . Br unfllrn, dbl !ink. Sl.5:i mo. year lease. MS·521B patio. pool, adults. $185. * S50 niove in aJlov.'&nCC' , 1 J.c a .. ~ n.. • d1spo5al. 1 w/porch.l o'~"=''-'""""""C,_,~-1 1 1_ ....... ,. ... J:\.-." '! Newport Beach S11Wl25. 91'1 W, 19tb St SHAJtP lge. 1 BR, Cpl. Drps, 4~34&1 eVe:s. t l..ove './ l & !l Br, poo ·apt!; :.."'1'. J. ' I from $120, Alfule.s, no Pf'I'" '"-.~n rrvlne Ave. 673-5729 B tns, quiet bid£", No pets. Laguna Beach nr !thnps, h'\\'Y & be-I' Ad1m1 ~ g : ''le '4~~~~) • Newly Decor_;ted $130. 540-9772 OCEAN VfE~V. Lrg Bachelor 612-ZlB t or 673-0::.07 CASA ! j t 21881 Brookhurot SL Huntington Beacht (714} 862-6653 Aal< for Comm1nder Rettfng Rave $26.SOO equity in 22 units Long Beach. \Vant home or Jot, Costa l\fesa ltl'ea. Call Mr. J tnsen Agt. Gi:>-5726 642·f120 eve11. '63 Cad Sedan DeVille Will trade for: equity in house. ramper or submit anything of value. 111 521-8766 Lara:e Westcllff lot • Free and clear. Trade tor lfar. bor area home, or condo- minium, or 111?1 ·-· What do .vou haV..to lnldt:f Llllt lt· he:ns -tn Prange Coun1y'1 laraest read: trAd- ~ Quiec J k 2 BR's, Gar & • 1 k 2 BR.. Newly carpeted, & t BR np~. Cpts. drps. 'I & 2 hr furn & unturn. itf1 CEL 1 i LI< 2 BA, nu sh~ pool, Crpts, dr~•. Adull11 1 dra!)(!ll, elec. '°i~n. l bltA\os, patio. \Valk'lt di~t. $125 . $160. Pool·Putl\rtg grri t. ~SOI. t /Vkt 1 tSi:. 1, nrwly dee. Nr .•=n~fy~·~"':::,~P'=l~>.~64:::2$1:::::=2 __ [ _,_'1_il_d_o_k_. _P_h_._64_~ __ . '-·--10 lnwn. 100 Cliff Or, B~hl;i ,\!11.r /lf'!s, 5'1S-0-192 "o.. e or 1 ~· _.·1. ;f!1-6.!,j~ 2 OR. unfum 11pt, w/w crpl~, $125 CLEAN .2 Hr, Crpls. i.11~na Bcoch, 4M~ftl!m. 112.'JO &q fl tit 2 Br, 1',) b..1, -., 11 ll'be ··1·1·llnv• rn~,.. (If l11'Bflet, blln fling,, 1>ne anr. rir1rt. hlln.,. U0 Rt>chtt!ter. 0111Jy Ptlot \V11nl l\d1 Mve lrU trn for v1h/dri 'J>AtiO, • 'Cl&Billlt>d . , . 64Z..Yi78 Ad1111J>, M Pf>l.li, 5·16-4~. _CnJt :..IQ..8100 bargains galore. ~at. rpt/rll'I $16:>. ;;. 6-8688 . _-c.: ~ :pos•64; * • • ' . ' \Vant Hi Desert Calif • out- Of·state, health. Have Cl corner 90xll7 2 bldga. Eq $>12M. F.P. $68M Inc. U4S n10. Owner C.M. 646-8558. Have Custom %,K Diamond ring w/3 baguettes set in yellow gold. ApPl'lllsed al $1500 vo.I. $500. Trade for U- 14' camp trailer. 645-2468. llave E·Side Triplex, 2 br each, tncd yrds, garages. lncon1e $415 per mo. Trade for approx 6 uni1s in aame area. &12.$31. Ocean(ront acre near ere .. cent City, clear. Want eat> in Lake ArroWhead I Bla: Bear. RJchard K. Irn·in Realtor/exchangor 67>6060 Buslnus Opportunity-book. Ing hunt'g & fll1h'a trip,, O. Cnty toe, $mJ VAi, Trade ror car, boat, ~P or 1 !J68.*'73 Desert home, 6 ac., nr Josh· ua Tree. Attrac. Jndscp'd, l'lU servlct1. $30 M value. WANT: Local property. 49MT.fli or 499°1331 English 6 rooms, RCJuded on level hlll!op Jot. Beaut cond, nr PaMderm.. FOR 1 Ouplex/housetvaeant lot, NB/Cd)f/CM. Ont MS-8533. . " * * * --- . McncWy, M1nh 15, 1971 DAILY "LDT 3J -r [ l[ll] [ ~{ · r~~v .. [§) [ l~I : l[ll] I .. dwt .... :·Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanfod, M & F 710 Antiques a FumltUre Ill CACl'US, C.•""> 4 Pur, Gonor1I . 900 Moillle HomH m Aui. Servi .. , Pim Hl daa>n.tlve,amalllcept..,t&. -~..:...:.:..~~~~.:.:1;;.:::~::-:i-~::::::;--J;..;;......;~;;iii~~-• aom• 1uccule nu; -N"'W OP"'N LEASE RECE PT./'IYPIST, run SECRETARY •••••••••• ABANDONm lfl·Fl modem CAtbt w/W' ...... ""· amall Ice ....... BOAT, motor, trailer, " .. " A NEW im : "c;r;: .. · ~~-l Fl~~~ .. !~ • GENERAL OFFICE • L·r·quid•tion S•le JBL ,pea.ktr in matchlna U·DI&. 96W993 S/16 bc:n. electrlc •tart u:;o. CONTEMPO. PINTO -~~ DI ,.. ,.. cabt "1"'., Rodwood picnic t --'"-"'-""'---'--t 1169 bonet Lane, C.M. LAGUNA HILLS i S.acb. Pb: ,.,.,,,, ctatJon.manuacripta \;~ anu-•-Shop 5 RM. GROUP -"JSIMBA" baout. all wht G. $50 00 1 L,y~um Prod Lio Inc""""'*" "_. 1 table 6 ft. w/matchl"i Shep A Samoyan mix, fem. Boatt/Marlne 23301 RII>GE ROtrl'E DR. • IJIO• : R1.c1pt. Gen'I Ofc. P.O. n-~c • ..:!!· . lust Uquld11te all at I beocMs SlO. Alum. chl.lte 7 ,_ kids nd E I -.. (Corner ot Molllton Pkwy) (38 mo.) NB I · _.. ~ "'"' COST OR NcAR COST "·· Chol-1-a"·n 2 tot• WP, mo. wVH • s qu P. 7-, .. ,..UNA HILLS open .~ ; TofUJO ... co wants rienu· L.aruna Beach, Ca. W2 ,.. Livinr room sel, dresser, ..,. .. .., ..,._""' ad home, lncd yd . ---------1 _ ·~ b' person to welootne ell· ;19-1-62» 223 62nd $t., N.B. mirror, headboard -fUll Harbor Rest CemetarY di1o 638-9536 3/16 * * INVERTER, Heath Kit, Prestige adult community ad· R!NT Allu Laur", ~1·6122 ... AbJ. SERVICE Sta~on Attendant, 646-6<'86 A11yt1me -5 pc. dinette aet-2 twin EXECUTIVE walnut deak, cockapoo pup, 5 mo, nds VAC, 60 cycle11 tOO wau1. Beauutul IWTOUodingi, aU Plf'TO entl, i:tn'l otficr dutlea. Call I (Nf!v>'Port Shores! &Ile box apr!nr &: mat~ss count~ 54>3406 L 0 VA 8 LE blk fem. modtl MPlt. t2VDC to lll jacent to Le11UN World. A NEW 1911 r&il Abbot Penionnel Agen· full or part time, oot under •••••••••C box springs&: mattresses-tie top $00 ..• 4 chain, gd home, fncd yd. 6f&-6981. NEW a11emblea le checkM luxury appointmenta, pUI· $4 DAY : cy, 2'JO \I/, Warner, Suite 18. !\lust be neal, &ood a~ 802 4 dr, chest -hhigentor. hi-hack . awlvel. blk $28 MZ-1096 ..3/16 GUt. SacrlllCil $100. Call tJna: ~ bobby lhop AND , : '211. S.A. pear&.'lce & personable. _A_P_P_li_•_•_ .. _•_____ $2.15 PER WEEK ea, •. TV. 1ge table top RCA ......, G $h ·-• ~ii•-528-984.) after 6 P.M, week. mucb men. ' MIL Good l't'lerence!. 3 O O 6 S30. 962-6116 .-.-• • ep ........ pt ......, i<:: days. CAlJ.. 330-3900 ' 4¢ E Harbor Blvd., C.l\f ~ ne~~E ~::~ :~ 1 $238 BALANCE DBL mattrtsa & box aprlng :~t 3 0 ~:~ a~m ~i~ I ;;Boa;:'=~t,:--,•p'-o=w=e::r:---;906;;ul-~T~H;;E;.=B.;,E,;.So;,T,;.;..;O:,F~-I PUT A ll'M"lZ SERVICE SfA. Salesman. 4 cyc:lt wuhing machine w/R.attan tieadbrd &. spread. 836-4493 3116 BOTH WORLDS KICK lN YOUR full time, graveyard shill. ,vhite. 9Jth under w1tttanry: 1WEL!<'S FURNITURE like new S7S, maple chest '6S OIRYSLER 14' ~ tlP LIFE! Experienced, neat a~ Npt Bch 67S-8812. * :.ANTA ANA* do I d t POOR Priuy. "''e have an $1395 '62 Chr!J 19' wood ' For a beautuui borne, )OW THEODORE 2590 N t 1.AA W • h ST $35.. avoc:a ve "1 ua allern problem • a midnile 185 H p Sl500 OR BEsf maintenance and arcbltteur. pearanc:e , e w Po r GE auto wai1:her $50, Ken---"'-~,:,,,·.,..:,•',:;,,"-;..' --bedspread $2>. ~ blk 1\11 yr old mini-cat. OFFER." 6-t2-llJ97 ~ all,y lmprelllVe destp, See ROBINS FORD Blvd., C.:\t. more auto walher $65. Both WHY BUY ORIGINAL Oils S:ZO -up 491-3100 3116 ext 228 ' ' the eXcltlnc new "VWa.ge D'(I HARBOR BLVD" S1E~_VICE Sta. Salesman, late models &: xlnt cond. • Muriel.I St aq ft&: up GEmlAN ·•-rt h•'r, fem, l G'--House" by Levitt Mobile COSTA M!:SA u...., ex per. ALSO mechanic:. Guar & delivettd. 540-8672, 8TJ..949'7 Antonio -.i,.., ... 15' llt.afron 'A'/'50 Me~. let• Sys le mt on ~ now at 60-0010 Neat appeara!W. App, in MT-8115 FURNITURE? yr, Xlnt w/chlldrtn, all than 12 hrs, lnc:i trlr. All In BAY HARBOR ''Autos~-~W~a"n"led.:_,.;,,,.-~Hl~I r R.E. Salesmen ' LOOKING FOR A JOB? WE'RE LOOKING FOR YOU person 4903 E. lTth, C.'.\J. GE aultl waaher $35. Ken-~~l~:y~SeA~c:~:s .shots. 4~1 3116 ~~ cond. 11 !~ !~~-MOBILE HOMES , SERVICE Sta Sa le s man . more combo washer & Be FlexJbleJ Ntwport Blvd. 6'2.8400. USED boards and shingle!. lo se ~ · 1425 Baker St Cotta Mesa ; As a part of our Inve!tment Salary plus comm. 3195 dryer, elec $50. Both aood Rent mo. 10 mo. wtlh . Good for tlre~ etc. Haul 642-9787 Prrf eve Just S. ol S.D. Fwy at Harbor WE PAY TOP : Coull5eling Department we I ="='a'ort>o"=r;;.Bc.I'-::'~· c::·;:i\r'".-~~ I oond. Guar & delivered. 100% Purchase Option Miscellaneous a"A'8y. 646-1025 3/15 MOVING, must &ell 16' Ken-714J540..9f1D ; will teach you all !here is SERVICE Estab'd. Fuller I '">l&-8672,::.,,:.:,:-=· -:'~"---81'--.IS'-~~7 I Ind. Item &election Wanttd 120 FREE pupples, % German nedy v.•/75 hp Evlnrude, 1'.!0DEL MOBILE HOMES : necessary to pass y0ur real Brush rte, $125-$175 wk. to KENMORE auto "A·&flher ~. 24 Hr. Daly. WANTED: Ladles quality SMp l % Husky. 6 Weeks bait Wik, trailer. l\tan.v ex. In Costa Mesa's Grffnleaf I es1ate license exam, and st., also pt. time 546-5745. Norse i&a dryer S40. Both CUSTOM Sprln! & summer 'A~ar. old. Bl-0088 3115 tnu, $650 or bett oUer. Park. 24xfi0 Amer i cana : then p1.1t y0u with profession. good oond. Guar &: Furniture Rental Bags, jewelry, small an-SEVERAL cs s of g90d 673-4670 or 67S-3597 $15.000. 20x52 Mo n t e r ey al oou'naelon who 'vUJ 1tart SERVICE CENTER delivered. 546-8672, 847-8ll5 517 W. 19th, C.h-1'. 548-3481 ttques 'On consignment. clean ha on cre ase 25' Trojan Cabin Cruiter 112.750. COmpJetely setup CASH lor -"" ' ....... just call ua tor tree eaumat ... GROTH CHEVROLET : Yoll on your w11.y to a seeure Employment. Agency * GAS dryers &: reblt A-.,aheim 774-2800 Tues-Fri. 9:30-SPJ\1. 5'4-9311 ~Z-9846 3/15 Sleeps 4. Loaded with extras w/aklrtl, awntng1, _porch, arwl rewarding future. If you v.•ashj!rs, S50. Will de I LaHabra 694-3708 WANT TO BUY TO QUALIFIED ho me ' $4950, Will con1kler late etc. AP tor Sales ManqW , already have Areal estat• * Sec'y Legal $600 w/~ar. Mslr Chg. ?tfaytag BEAtrrlFUL King-5z bed,, AC.'1:~ JUICER beaut. amber colored male model car ln trade. Call GREENLEAF PARK 1!211 Beach Blvd. license, you can start mak· Min. 3•yrs Calif. eXper-gea'I repa.irman. 531...s637. firni. Never used, ilill 548-8763 .kitty. Sweet. 548-0813 3/16 842-7642 lTflO Wh1ttler Ave ., C.~f. Hunttnaton Beacb ' Ing (hat big money lmmed-practice/top SH & typina DOUBLE ovtn \11/elec stove. packaged. Frame included. Musical Instruments 922 8 WK. old puppy, pt-boxer. SO. COAST 18' Inboard 645--2510 •* 64~50 847-6087 Kl 9&.n ' iately. skiUs/some stenorette, clean . Like N•w l Best Of. $130, V.'Orth $260. W i 11 .-... " " --· -673-5143 3/16 Lapstrake var n I 1 he d 1n-J1jiiifl~jiiiiti[iii!i;iiiiiJ=::~W£iii;;-;;piiAi\Yf1CiiA~S~ff:P,~ * Payroll Clerk $425 fer. 968-9658 deliver, usually home . * FENDER Super.reverb, terior & deck, SiaOO. Cambridgti Monterey : • I med'11te Open'ong• Hand ·""•m /approx. lOO ~.,.,.-.. ft AKC Dalmatlon love1 kids. nL"I =~1. 615-4623 Owner. 24X5J • " m ...,,,. RSFRIG. 'A'/J.... b o 11 om 8-12-6636 original owner .,..a. or ....,.st 897 .,80 3/l6 ~~ i F d NI ht empl./accur. typist. freezer $95. ·• ~ DINING nn ·-t w/hi-back oiler • .,.. 1958 Chris Craft Connie Xlnt 2 BR, 2 ba, Lot1 of ward· ffiR YOUR CAR : ·* T:~in~yor SI *Girl Friday $450 Call 646-7820 decorator c:~ln. 1'.flac * GIBSON J1mall electric FREE Schnauzer poodle cond,·$3,250 Days 547-MOti, robeA:cablnel!i. <•1032). • Apt mgmt/Hve on premises/ REFRIGERATOR chairs. Oil paintinp. Drop guitar SlOO. or best l ~m~a~l•~pu~po~. ~64~1~4~899~~3~/!~6 I eves 61~7%17 Ddlghtfu1! ........... Sl1.900 ( * Top Compensation gd typist/'A'ork w/figures. LARGE FREEZER leaf desk. Chinese 9xl2 rug. * MS-7890 Eve1. Boats, Rent/Chart'r 908 CAPITAL SALES CO. CONNEU ; * Incentive Plan• f"rntO~~:·~x!~~;:t·~: ~~meras & . ~7820 ~~ ~~~-9-3. S76 Seaward ~~:i:.umlture/ 124 :, ___ ; .... -••• ~11~~~:' ii ."~·~-~~~w=Chru~=· _· ~ful=lyll~(coi!l~!!!ir!!I ~'!,"~:a,,~c~hta~~~'~1~··!iii.i....i!!·"~·~6J ~~O!!_T ! LANDHOLDERS, INC. know x-ray & bkkpng. E · nt IOI * * E'VERYTIIJNG GOES · · ""'lp'd. Fllhlns or Cruis-1' Coot& Meaa ..._l>JO * Sec'y./ $650 qu1pm~ -Redecorating home, 10 .A_D_D_RESSOG _ __,_RAP __ H_•_to_d_e l ln&. 548-2434. 24xOO D E L U XE PON·-1-...::;:;::;::;_:;;,.;:;,:;;::::_ • PLEASE CALL IN ORANGE COUNTY (7141 5474n1 As.le: For Mr. Young Pl't'v. e~r. reporting to top **TELESCOPE, 8" 18, l't'• R00i\;1S of Quality 200. Crapbotype ?.todel l50. Pets, General aso Boeta, Sall tot DERO.SA 2 br/2 ba, lrac:pd, TOP DOWR t/frn I l • 2 1~ porch/crpt, c:ement patio, mgm t o c pose ap. n-•tor, w Ith -·•tor'··' Furniture. 494-364 1000 pl•t•s & cabinet •~1,· ~ """ ~ .. ~ .... ..,, · ---------1 CAI:,..34, like new, \"ery comer lot. Space 18, 1750 pearance/top !kills. mount including 2 fixed & FOR sale or trade!'.' 6 piece l.\1.?.lodel 107 Drycop!tr AMAZON parmt, Finche1, t.lean, jtat 2 )'J'S old. Racing Whlttlu, CM. SH Th urs It for * Recept/Steno $450 one-zoom orthoscopic eye Rattan living t"OOm set, also Slj(I, 774-5200 Doves, Reptiles, Kangaroo & crullilli'. equip. Call Sun'a . CLEAN USED CARS i'.1ust be xln'l typist/ability pitces. Excellent c:ondiUon. ruitabte fur office, ucellent Pianos/Ornana 126 rat, exotic Pigeons, .Para-673-n84 Ste Andy Brown to v.'ork unde-r pressure. $275. POOne: 528-9843 after condition 495-441• • .__ 8 x 32 MASTERBUILT. THEOOORE AO:'!:'la. Moving to apt, Traditional Cape Cod cat 10 x 24 Cabana w/extra ..:6:..•:c·m::::... --='='a:::.'::'---18' SOFA, never used, quilted WE 549-2638 Sailboat 1 ton d!sp head bath. Completely tur n. ROBINS FORD R.tiL Estate -nttd licensed u.lesman or brokl:!r In- . teresttd in holding "Open house" on our listings in 'Onirinlty -Park & TUrUe j(JO N~'J>OM Center Dr., ~"'B Ca G •·• fl -• •-•-··~ d 112· meni. arage .,..,e o.... &oo"-""wuue a. Dogs 854 s.lp-.2 fam boat 834-38&3 Carport &. toollh@ds. $2250. 2J60 Harbor Bl .... ~!!su!!""'!''~"'~·..,1 ., .... ..,4.,'"..,.., 8;!~e[ax~~e~m~~t; ~~;~ng l<M!seat _ $.l.S· QUIT!!! -·-~ ·-··· ·-· -··-CAPE-coo·cAT"BU:.T 645-tti<t--· .. ..1.-..... ---costA"Meia!!l'.!L-~----1 Rock area, WEEKENDS SHARP GIRL, for production ONLY. Please call Bob Pet· assignments, scheduling, in- Voightlander, Ex a c: kt a, 1-------U---AKC SILKY PUPPIES 18', fbrblJ. (213) 834-3883. 10'x4'7', 2 bedroom, furnished. 642-0010 Re II ventory, pa r ts order- tit, a 0~101 Ing-typing required. Polaroids, movie proj. WUJ ":i?r~~~ m~~.se Also~·~~ I Alter 5 years, we~ closing We're 9 v.•ks I.: ready for COLUMBIA 28 1969. Day11 : $2300, Call lMPORTS WANTED accept gun in trade. & rumpu.t acces! 545.4332 (!Ur doors in Costa l\tesa. new homes, J10 come see :zi.3 I 636-0757; Eves: 714/ 646.4065 Oranp Coundtt 1----==-==--~, I l\1acG~ Yacht Corp. RESTAURANT help 'A'anted. 1631 Pla~ ntia, C.i'.t. 892-J83.I 1392 Galway Ln, C.~l. All remaining Pianos &. Or-us! \Ve boYJ are SlOO & ~724 or 213 I J33.3438. 8x35' 1 Br $2100 TOP$ BuYER gans, ne1v & used, to clear sls ls $125 w/o papers. $200 6t6-8291 ft 6 PM BILL MAXEY TOYOTA POLAROID delx 250, Zeiss finder. Like TII'\\'. Cost $149/ Sac S50. 962-S385 18 >'" or over, pt. time -~---+-~~~- days & nlihts. Apply be!. Sharp G rl Friday BAR stools originally $100 & $225 with. 548-4957 Boats, Slips/ Docks 910 a er 18881 ._ .. BJ·~ at auction prices. Savina• ~ n&. ea, queen sz bed. wic ker up to 50%. No dealers AFGHAN , blk mask/silver. BALBOA Island mooring &: Motor Homes 940 H. Beach. Ph. 141"555 • JOam any morning. JACK-JN-111£-BOX 38:J E. J7th C.lt. z RM lurn 11.pt. in Cd'.\1 in exchange for services o[ worna.n in overseeini elder- . ly couple. 675-0621 headbrd, nite atnd, lamp. Furniture 110 ftc, IW&-260J please. Crcat peraonalhy, house-21' inboard c:rul11er for sale. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR A . II .. 1---------=~~~-~--~;I \VARD'S BALD\VL"'f S'TIJDIO broken. Pure breed. Mr. Slps 2. Cray marine 6 cyl * Kl c h * FOR TOP USED--·· ttracuve, 111 <n'<V'lm SOF ' 8' long ba•"t -'d nns OQC ~ ··-PVT p~"" must sacrifice ' • " 11ua 1819 Newport Blvd, 642-8484 Woolard. 968-3<2'2 ('noine. $2100. Local~ in ":I , U ......,,., -.. , __ _.__ ~ "L!ve-\Vire" 11,• h ..........i tele-~·3 0 .. ,·11o<1 ,-lvet •-nd n•w ,..,. .1 ... -.......... KAY• fi""" house lull or beau'. .. . .,_ . DI-.. • CLEARANCE s.~"-"·'•'· ~~~...,~ay off Sapphire St. i. Jolor Home Agency "' "' 11nt. phone voice to ;'(:t as rec:ep-Spanlsh/Medit. furn: 9, Accept S17J, 968-4853 ' "'""---.: .:>It-I .,....,_._ M tionis1 in a bu,ly exciting SALE Chlhuahuas, good blood line. Superior * Landau BAUER BUJCX ~r'd. in gold velvet so!a & loveaeat, 4 PIECE Bedroom suite, Pups &: older dot!;. 1169 SUPS Ava!L Fine&I in tlM N Harbo Santa Ana 234 E. 17th St the public:. Kln&·sz bdrm .set, Game moc:a walnut. ~ or ) Over 100 Pianos It Orpns Dorset Lane, C.l\t. Newport for narrow beam Ope dan 9 ~ 9 839-9030 Costa Mesa stl-7'16$ d prefen-ed set , Il l-back velvet 962-7566 ~uced for lmm~. aal e. -----'-'-'-'---aallboats 26' to 34· Phone 1~!!·!!l!!~Y![!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'J!!!!!J'°"~-""=-~--=-=-""'1 M. F decorator chairs, Den 8' blk HID&A-B'ED Buy Now & Savel ?aruST sell pr blk mini Klnpley' 6'13-3ru bi'.wn 5-lOI~ WANT late model FCX'd van. e e e SALESLADY Call 111 or· naug, sofa le love.seat, 5' Good ... ,. poodle1, fem 6 mo. AKC pm 30' DODGE sleeps 6 100% 6 cyl. no Junk, pl.eaa. co I ion. n....n Daily 10 til 6 all ho h ...,,i. • 0 ' 61• vt":::C--C.::=.;;~=-;;;=..--1 cocktail table w/matching 67J-8796 aft 9 am .,;;:;, 10_9 * Sun 1.1.s reg, a la, c amp s"""" self conWned. 5 spd trans, 5-61154. after 4 p.m. IOr quality, retail bake., tt SHARP GIRLS corrunode:s. 10' 90la -green ... ,-, very reas. SJ6.l(XS. Boats. Speed & Ski 911 $5000 or ofr 5t0-8059 WANTED : Stock or · :::.r:n~ A::i!e~ rao11'. looking for a perma'.nent ~ &: gold -impol'ted Belgian Garage Sale 112 COAST MUSIC PEKINGESE pups, 2 ador. • Tr•llera, Travel 945 sl?'fftable 1948-00 Anlt1a s!tion. One or Orange Coun-cut velvet, Pictures, lamps, NEWPORT It HARBOR able females, 9 wks w/o 15 Glupar 50hp Mere. elec. Stdan, 646-8733 to 1'.lr. Ander90n • ty's finest botiques-. Must be etc All less than 3 mo CARAGE SALE-Cut cry1tal, Costa Mesa * 642-2851 paperw $25 ea. 968.&nl Windshield, control•, cover, 'f,8 AIR.STREAM Jnt'I 26 A lo I ~ old: Despera!e. 1/630-3377 orig art objects, tools, HAM..'1:0ND, stein way, • trlr, comp! motor over haul twin, AC, awntna. Top con-u 11 mpor .... eXJX'l"'d in all phase! of · clothes, etc. 8:30 to 6, Sat TURF Dalmatlans, male, •10. Cost S2000, 1tU $!195. dlllon. 642-7666 Snack Shop Bakery ' 3434 E. Coul H'A')'. Corona del Mar Coventry needs ti. botlque selling. Fu!J time ESTATE SALEI I lhru )Ion. 8141 Sterling Ave, Yamaha. New & used pick lilttr, shots, pet/show. 5.16--0098 642-9405. ALFA ROMEO perm position for right gal. From motion picture exec:u· Htg Bch. pianos of most make!. Best Terms. 642--1937 · Trailers, Utility 9471_..;.,, _______ .I Jr yt'IU qualify call for ap. tive 'a luxurious Tuslin home. buys In So. Calif. at Sc:hmidl Bo S 912 ALFA ROMEO •-1 Clu t Sac~1,.,, 1 rooms 01 ltaJo·on Miscellaneous 811 Music: Co., 1007 N. l'tlain, AKC. female Beagle pups, ats, torage 14' Tandem Tr•ll•r iw • c pointmefit. TIIE LOOK. '' 4 mo old, S25. AKC DAM Gullett.a Spyder, ful')' na'td ar pt time help. No in- vestment. \Vil! u·ain, min qe 20. 530-J407 & :>iJ-9066. &W·2·100 & Medlt !Urniahings lnc!Ud· * AUCTION * Santa Ana. & SIRE. 18 mo, $4D for OPEN Boat yard, repaln With 4 wheela. All •!e~ weld. 1n 1-e x t·m e c h ' l, SlllS. SITTER, matul't' u• 0 man ing oil paintings, Fine !iv-BABY GRAND PIANO the Ir 64>-3862 & storage. f!1<o per ft. ~ con1tructton. !'-Steel 6f6.l366 SEAMSTRESS CcL\1 Ing nn pieces, King bdrm Fine F'1rniture 60 Years old, $500, Upright, pa ' 67~ eves 962-tilll. deck platiq, Wtll sell (lfl-':":':=:=,...,==:-:=·I !,1:~ ,::.~~f,. ~J-0882. atta, suite, Pecan tables & lamps, &: Appliance~ $150. 548·9733 or 646-1517. SCHNAUZER Pupr, male at I iiiiiiii trade for pickup. 3166 SlcUY, AUSI!N HEALEY , ORANGE COAST :'):MPLOYi\IENT AGENCY . 1U Broad11,·ay, C.i'.t. I.. 6-15-Jlll 6' artif. plant!, Dinette set, Auctions Friday, 7:00·p.m. y Grand Sl 0 atud, grooming. I= (Me1a Verde) C.M, *STENO CLERK 11 Artobjects,TV.f\uchn1ore , Windy's Auction Barn ~~).Shown bya~pt~ POO 8'6-0839 Utl I Tf'lnlPOl'tatlon j/rffj _ ~~~~~ Sat & Sun only, 16-5. 13071 Ill 4.94-5861 OLE pup!, ~aut. t e _ . • • ...--$549 -$667 month Red Hill, Tustin. 2075% Newport, CNC 646·8686 -0;...;:Y.;.· -"'--·----·I tiny toy & toyl. Stud aerv. ) '' wk ends :r Ai\f-9 Pl\1 Daily. sat 9-6 :-SECRETARY Behind Tony'1 814 Mat'I. Sporting Goods 830 All colors. 893-9719 ~uto5 rorS.!e lct.ip, 1--'.C:,'=~~~--·1 I RE"'UIRES . High School SOFA + matching love &eat REFRIG s~ Cou h 1~ • -"'--------c s I /R t 920 . BENTLEY "' $75. Chairs, lamps, end ~ c ~ * * TELESCOPE, 8" f8, SILKY terrier puppJe1 ~ ampers, a • '" ' tab'... 'maU de.···, .,,,,.... pc: red11,'00d set Sl5. Dlnettt I Female •:11., Mal• 175. Adult CAMPER 1961 BENTLEY s n graduation experience "'Ol"k. and tl\'O years in stenographic :friendly gal for modern C't'n· iter. Type ;JO w.p.n1. working :w/men & eontracls, Call llelen Hayr-s. :COASTAL AGENCY 1790 Harbor BL, C~l ~·IQ.6Qj,'j ; Harbor Blvd. al Adan1s APPL\". by i\larck 24th, 19il to PersonnPI Office 1 -CITY OF- NEWPORT BEACH "" '"" set $10. Power moy,·er $20 reflector, w th tQUatorlal f al ::;: AKC ••• 7~~~ Antiques/Classics 953 EXCE" ~ CONDm-• tbl. Drapes, 'A'hile or beige, mount inc:ludinr 2 fixed & em e ..,.,. · ....,,... .Jo.>J o __ ,:.._..;. _____ •I ~" v" Ping pofli" table S 8 1 • ·~ -~ ..-.. all sizes. Holly~'ood beds Microscope $IO Slim.Line one zoom orthosc:oplc eye IRRESISTIBLE poodlt pups • '57 T.BJRD Oauic _...... ~ + dbl. bed. ~Iap e 'BR. set, coru;ole 'JV SJ , Dbl dr piec:e1. Exce.Uent condition. -Black mlnlature, 6 wks, CLEARANCE SALE Good cond. DATSUN 2 chests of drawt!l'S; al!O Whirlpool gas tt!rlg. $60 $275. Phone 523-9843 after I "'AK:O::C:C. ~155:;;.· :,S<::c!l-0844.=:.:...___ 83G-9678 or 830-5210 misc. items, Crec:lan motif Lo!s mo"". 111E.10th, Ci'.f 6 pm 'A'eekdays. DACHSHUND · '·-··' !lo Tl Ou B I 956 bar/rm. divider, orig, val. '" pups min., .-.5e 1KJtc: n pre ' ne ugg ea ·u ··" IJOO ru ~ • .,., MUS! SELL Etire Household S U RF B OARD/PROGRE!> AKC, Blk It tan le c.ampen No'v Sluhtd to Sl,<00, wi """" 4...-..._ SIVE 6'10", $50, Weeknites mahogany red.' TI4/6J3.-4018 DUNE Bow, Volks eng. bit. I 6. WALNUT & cane hl·fl loys, bikes, misc. 2:m =~='°~~=o---MINIATijRE SCHNAUZERS ACTUAL ,mm. $750, 5'5?-6981 494-7518 Furnishings, tree2er, piano, tmly 54f>..63lS s49 OYll 1970. Xlnt cone!. ?t1ust sell '1 SECRETARY 3300 Newport Boule· b. t I t & ood Meyer Place. 548·2469 or TV, Radio, tllFI, Add love for a perfect pet PACTOIY 1-".C:,7".;:.c.;:,,.,::~~--1 ca ine: wa nu rn!!ew S 136 Martlnc:re!t Kennels 546--0989 INYOICI 1960 CORVAIR DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAYS 188$ 8eaUi Blvd. Hun~ Beach SC. '1'78l or 5"0-GHI to V.P. property develop-vard. Newport Beach, dinette table: 'A'alnut & _64_>_5'_69_.______ tereo ~nt. Hea\'y typing, SH 80 Calilornia. 92660 (7141 rose'M>Od coffee &: lamp ** INVERTER, Heatll Kit,* ·-.--V-acu-um--t°',ba-°'v"'o"'L-T AIREDALE terrier puppies, SHOWCASE 54fJ.:i't!.t~~e: PJ 1 l'Up. Beautiful facilities. 1 673-6633. tablea; 2 new llal~an walnut model MP14, 11VDC to llO METER, Hewlett Packard, 9 wks. Pvt pty. Champion DEALER MISS EXEC AGENCY v.•a.11 lamps. Ml1c other VAC. 60 cycles, 400 w11.ttJ1. model 400 Ii, Xlnt eorwlitlon; ='"'"":,:,:·;,":.;.:.'-..;:1.::058;:,,._~~~ 1 FOR VW dune bum & trailer, New '71 Datsun ti 410 \V, Coast Hwy., NB TELEPHONE advertising piece•. ):136 Port Ramsgate. NE\I/ assembled & checked $75 or make oUer, Call EASTER Poodle• AKC. 3 ELDORADO CAMPERS $550, or trade for motorcy· 1600 offc, PJckup with camp.. 1f 646.3939 ltom our pleasant Newport Harbor View Home 1, out. Sacrifice $JOO. Call 5~98-15 alter 6 P. M mos old. Well·tra.ined, ~ ROTHBIENOSDOFROE RD c:le or van. •M-5551 er. Sale prtee f2l)99 dlr. 1-_ ollicea. Hr\y "'a~. Morn-=-~_,,»;.:I_S.~~~--~, 1 523-9845 alter 6 P M· v.·eekdays. tricks. 642-0326, 673-9357. ' (e Pl..521452270) W1lJ take liiiililili ecU\ft ing or e\~. shifts. 64f>-3030 DEATH in famlly-1nu!t sell 'A'eekdays. =2-5~1-,....,-'-,-.. -,..,,-.,..-. -AR'""'"'<~x. WEIMARANER, ma.le, AKC. 2060 HARBOR BLVD. Trucks 962 car In trade. WW finance f Sec'y Legal ~ 33, l\lr. r.tadrid privatl' pry, almost brand * • TELESCOPE. 8", f8, Brand new. Chem Cone!. ch line, 8 v.·ks. shts, wrmd, COSI'A MESA 642.0010•1--::0:-:U"'"""'P"'°""'T"R"'U""C._K private party. Call 546-1736 r,l'.ln. 3 Yr! Calif. expu.gen 1 ~TED: Lady to live-in, new spanish sofa & love reflector, v.·ilh equatorial 494-4881/Gene. pet, hnt, 1ho. 644-44;,9 m or «14.6S1J. J)ractice/top SH & tYPing ho"·•keeplng, Mu• t "''· sold for ~. please mount inclu ding 2 tlxed & -~~~~~==-.::;;;;..:=.=::..::.:..=-~ Cycles, Biker, $995 kil"/ t rel! .. """ '10 RCA color TV 24" GER~IAN ShepheM puppie1 Scooters 915 '65 D W • some s eno e. drive, assis t w/stroke pa.. make cash ' oUer. No one mom orthosc:opic eye AKC blood line, s25, 1$7 GMC atlU~ CICJOll ~rvlce Cenler Emp Agl:!ncy tient. Call aft 6pm: 548-6476 ~!~~ble offer refused. pieces. Excellent cond!Hon. Call$2:;3-4943 * 6'l5-0092 * Good operating condition. 4 speed. dlr. Rt Nice! M\ut ~ Ne11,'POrl Ct!nlcr Dr, N.B. """'"'"""""" S2i:l. Phone 5~98.15 after ~ See at Dally Pilot ., Suite 5Jj I 644-4981 * WANTED * ,, , 'NESS ·" 11 I 6 p:i.t v.·eokdays Panasonic 1!" Color TV AKC Germ. Shep. pups. 8 TlllNI .,. W••t •· s-·t sac:rillc:e! WW arade or fin. '-..!!!!!~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Foreign car mechanic w/ ........... m ... es a neceu -1 --·--~~· ----1 w/itand. 6 mos old. $300 'A'kll. Champion line. Shots, ...,.., .po.y .. = anc:e private puty. Sf6.l73f I ~ tool 548 56-1& ty to aell all 10 mama ** VACUU!\.1 TUBE VOLT v."Ormcd. SlOO. 8-12-727'9 HQND• a Coata Mesa or 49C-GBU. CaJI 642-5678 Now! own smJ s. · of near new l\1 edit. METER, He11i'let1 Packard, 847-2137 AM ll:'a. • or c:a.ll 1.,:;c.::.:.::::::~---- Help Wanted, Ml F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 furniture. Cheap example 8' model 400 H, xlnt coodltion: 2 ALTEC "Voice ol !ht • ELEGANT Afghan Pup1, • Mrs. Greenman '69 DATSUN 2000, 2 tops, black naug. aota &: loveseat $75 or make oUer!l Call Thtater" apeakera $473 for AKC. Black maik~ silver. ''fRIEDUNDER,. 642-021 xlnt cond. New tlrta. $1950 • *Rest•urant ANNOUNCING ANOTHER Exciting Far West Service ..• ~ s•= 121') ,~,..,-alter 6 p M both. "'2-5255 962-6956 aft •· 4!M-1709 eve• I"' k nd 1. !!~~r,,.,.,.""""' ....,, " w.«r • I ,C"'-'.:..O,~~==-=~~ '53 INTERNATIONAL %. T 833-6J33 da.y1. ;,~"" v.•ttkdayz. DYNACO ST120A, PAT-4A, AL.ASKAN Malamute pups, ma 1u.at1 fW"I'. It) P/U N tire &: b tt U .,. I t 4 A . ·-1 ,, FM '. '""•. Tabl•, AU or reds, AKC, male/fem. 5.17-6824 • 893-7566 ·~J-. ..!': I a try. ,,, DATSUN w•l"U'UJ ltf sr sacn Jct' my ve ve menc.an mag w.,... s .., nn..i ~a. ~ Santa Ana Ave, y 'U ·••· ,._ ..,..v .. a;ofa &. love aeal, like new!! x 6 fit Chevy SM ea. 2 part. 830-6007 642-3188 NEW-USED-SERV. CM. ou r'I!_,. 1.,.. thla car. Call 673-692S Mercrulser propelleni nJ. 1 23.c._"_CO_LO_R~1V~S-17-5.-IU_HF_· AKC Champion bred German .... - - -, 7 CHEV Just like new! 4 apeed. dlr. S6 Gal boat ga.s tank $3.S. Sh h rd • - -..... I $ • pickup w/1111 gate R A H. (YWT917) WllJ take ROUND Jonnica table w/ex. 673--0341 ~ VHF) 19" Por!ahle 130. ep e · -=-~=<"==~=:....:1 &: bins. $650. Ph: ~2486 a trade or financt prtvate 644-2229 BABY grand •piano $400, 8' GOLDEN retriever for •ale, ton, new t.lu tch, tires, '67 GMC %-T. Panel, ~.000 Y. or tension and chairs. $20. _________ 1 i~~*~''l.~.54~8-6529~~~*~*~~1 ~~~-~Cal~t ~53~1~~~28~1%~!:l500 cc VELOCETTE Thrux-· (9-5PMI part 546-87l6 4&t.QU. WALNUT Breakfront. Xlnt bar & slools Sl2S. ~burner i: Gentle. Dach.Shund, female, !)rakes, ~ls~on and lower m!'i. V-8 slick &hifL $1695. FIAT nd 6 41L· 1200 1528 stove S51l, 22 cut ft frttzer ''"to "ou 1 • approx 10 mo. ~2333 end. Purist a delight and l ~u~oi;u~-~!1'':.=-·;_.,.,l~:::;-:::::-;:;::-;::;-;::I ~m~·all :i;Ln'3 'N.B. &16-4048 St75, Plano moving dolly '' -1--'="--'-'---'--15-6 fn perfect sh&pe, Best oUerl-""°"" """""' n.nl'V'W'I · S25. 870-6919 1 :.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~ Horses over $950. 675-695f alter • Auto Service, P•rt1 966 * Now occeptin9 applications for - • FOOD & COCKTAIL WAITRESSES • HOSTESSES •COOKS • BUSBOYS • DISHWASHERS • BARTENDERS Apply In person only 1:30 A.M . to 4 P.M. 1842 Mac Arthur Blvd. - Across from Orange County Alrport NEWLY uhpols!t!rM chair """='""'~'=-~-- S35. Davenport $50. Ph. COMMODORE oulb~ motor LOVABLE Yl' femaJe AJrdale • * BOX $TALL & co!Tll. p.in. l~ CADILLAC ''THINK'' 1 642-1181 5-HP $M, Sailboat tiberglu1 Terrier mix med bred and You fwf, m. OSSA Stellelo 2!l'.lcc In ex· AIR CONDmONER over plyv.wd, SAbot mut male Terrier mix tan and 549-3591 cellent C(lndltlon. Extraa ID-RADIO ~Dllrl 6 Pc 110lld v.·alnut dhl bdrm & sail S125. 837-7039 ... I eluded. 54()..8855 after •:80 RADlATCR ~ M'l $115. King br11M headbrd --~------Wnt 10 ba. 8 mo. Good ~ $10. Rotiu $20. 546-TI47 LC garden howe (tool ahedl. homes, 136-4493; 538-0813. 1 J~ XLNT! Horwla 15>, beautltW WINDSHIELD ,..'A'IPER. c='=oo""D'-co-nd-C-: .,,~.-.,~,a~,~,,,"'°, Chic:kcl'll, duck!-all dif· 3/15 .:;:-~ t,f cone!, S235, ~Ult sell. MOTOR s. 6' oak cofle-e tbl, 2 ckatrs, fe,,.nl-sz cages. ~ ·ADORABLE blk pup, hun-~--;·--~~ * 646-3557 * MUST DISPOSE OF' THESE ''fRIEDIJtlar ~fagna\--ox 1t; miac. 644-116.J HARDTOP 1'or MGB, xln't Ung dog type, 10 wkll, Llb • MINI-bike Cat 400X • hp. ITEMS Tii~EK--END 117ao llACH kYD. cond. Side porthole .wJJ). &: G. ahort·halred polnlcr Gener1I 900 Good ccndt.tJon. $100. FOR APPO~~NT tH...,, Jtl SOFA, matching chair I. 3 •-·-"" ~"" ·-.. ~,.,i.e. tablu SlOO. -'-N~•o·~-"-"·-'.;.~-"'-'---mix. nd1 gd home. lncd ~aft 2.lJ. 19J.7561i • 5.17M24 968-9709 NEWPORT Beach tennis yd. ~718l 3/!6 SCRAM•LEJS SUZUKI 2:50, 6-tpd, Dual U • 1£159 CADILLAC NEW~USED-SIRV. dub Juli membersblp !or 2 Blaok -·•e ~·· pu,. ~n c•·m~-Dlrtf•-t TRANSMISSION • N:'!!=e;'*~~~::.~i aalc. 962-mo 546-096.l ...... ~ 3/1s ANsw~es ..:Xi.::cn''-'°=·~"--"'°',_'" •• "lsi3=--·-~1 ~T~g~~! llVt.n.rl.I ~ 536-1020 * BALBOA BAY a.us * POOL table, 3\t' x T, as 11. I;. '68-305 Scrambler. E."ICc:ellont lit CAU.ER BUYS .68 f'bl s:;ci ~ fLoO:> KINGSIZE hcadbo&rd, 2 1ide R.tG. mem"'rshlp $151)). Inc. 548.?nJ 3115 f'ourtb -Berun -C11mu1 condition $340. or beat ofter, S42-312l) ml, radiO • radlab 6f3..$tOJ table1, "antique •·h\te & trans. te~ 646·1781 2 Femalt! hamp1fen splil -Behold -DRAUGHT 962-76$9 rOR APPOINTMENT all 8 PM told, $123. 67S-t1228 IRVJNE COAST COUNTRY level c:ai'! movlns eut A 3.29f bttr bar Mrvlct '68 SU:nikl • gd COod. Slrtet IT'S Btach hOUse ti.mt BIC· TIIE "Yefiow Paa'tl'' or NO mailer what 11 ll, you I CLUB M EM BERSH?P · 6424438 S/16 npen('d In the student•' union bike. All dirt equip. '71 taga. cesl MlecUoni ever! sff tke cilus:LOtd. • , Da1J,y pt tot c!ln 11~1 It wUh 11 DAD~Y ,;6..:7"10;.;c.,:TS:_ __ ==~-4 n1oa. Auttn.Han Shepherd ol a unlwrsity. rt Is known Sl!iO. 8'17-~ alt J, DAILY PILOT · Ouslfled Strvice Dlrec:toey. Oeck ti ·············•••llJtllJ!!l l ~!LOT WANT AD! ~ Fo• ne11 resu11al 64~"ili73 mix puppy. 546-7308 S/16 at the DRAUGHT Boa.rd, , Whitt! Elt.phant Dime-A-LI~ HtUan ruw1 _ tor tbt 11trvlc. you~- \ ; ) l -• I " !"" DAil Y PILOT A...._, l'""erted JAGUAR ' t,\ondt11, Much 1.5, 1971 .. ,, __ 1~l 1 -·"""'"" r~l I -..... I~ I -...... I~ I -..... I~ l• --·•Iii iii-.--. ,,1§11 • --• l§J ~l~~~ l.~1 ~'.;;.;;;;~-~-' ~ ~~~~~ A-.-1mpor!M m A-. Im"°' i..r 970 Autos. I._,_ -m ;.;A.;.utos,.;.;;..;.u.;. ... :....... ___ 1_-.....;._u_'-' ____ 990_1.'A_utoo. __ u-o:sod=~--"°- TOYOTA VOLK~'f'AGEN VOLKSWAGEN CADILLAC CHRYSll~ FORD Autos, UtN 990 Autos. UMd, 990 _.,..ME_R_C-UR_Y_ PLYMOUTH JAGUAl HEAD9UA~TERS TOYOTA NEW '71 HO DOWN • ------1"9 MUSTANG 1970 MARQUIS CP E. NOTICE • or INTENTION c!:"::, Sec.:!:. CAD. '69 Cpe. De V'ille 'i5•CHilYstif"' oNEFo~maACu.~ v,,;t..,. SHoWR~:,"J~~·~·-CAR .;::'o~"'o~·~:~·~1 ~-1 -r-· """ Attractive meru~ turquoise AT 2:00 PM. 19&3 '65 VW SEDAN Radio & Heater. (VNU672J I 'n.. onb' authorhed JAGUAR "dealer In the antirt Harbor "-· <tt:; SERVICE PARTS BAUER BUICK IN COSTA-MESA 23' E. l'lUI street 5'8-'1'165 MERCEDES BENZ • " " 1: J"'1 "\ s . ,1 S .. •l,·cl•Ofl '• •'• ~ l' ,,.,i ""' .. J,. ,, •:• .. J im Sl cmon; Imps. , , . , ,, .. , & r .. 1111• S1 }.11111 An.1 5'16-411 4 Vans Kombfs I <3• to c:hoole from This beautiful car wu traded milt finish wlth whlte inter-PLYMOUTH s TAT Jo N • • FACfORY SedM. VS, •utom.ttic, power in on a new 19n Llncol.n Iii: lor "-Jaodau roof, jmmacu· y.• AGO N, 4 DOOR. Buses, New & Used I ; AIR CONDITIONING 1tetrln1. radio. bea!tr. Im-refteet. that kind of care, late' Premium equipped (3735106964) Llce~,nuit1bu .,, $69.01' MONTH* lmmedlete 0.Uvery Vinyl top, cloth It leather In-ma.cuJate. (ZLJ25.5) attractive llc"ht tulip ydk>w ' OOT154. AUas Chrylln'- Dd CHICK MRSON terior, tilt wheel. Full pow. $945 with black compact Bucket auto .. trans., am.Jm strreo ~Plymouth, 2929 Harbor 36 mos. ' pa.y-price. 18nt """CH 81.. ·-"~ AM "M di t •~ seats Auto Tran& radio radio, heater, power steer· Blvd. Costa Mesa. $2484.36 or cuh prt.ce VW OJ:.A .,.._,,_ er, -~ ra o, e c., e.... • · ·• • in&, power brakes, factory ~.55 ind. Tax &-Lie HUNTCNGTON BEAOI (059BQCJ fYPU636), BAUER BUICK heater, power steering, pow· air cond. Truly spoUess !& '53 .PLYMOtn'H 2. dr, bla~. ~ A.P.R. 014.:.4':4. Sttial No. ~~R·B~V:. •66 VW GHIA · YOUR CHOICE FOR er brakes, .factory air cond., like new 4 near new ti.rel. orig cond, 19 mpr $nJ flt 1.3'.l47. · $4222 "··•· M234 E. l'lth St.~••_,,, tih alt'i!rinr; 'Nlleel, etc. see •l'. •·-&.ask for demon· Trarle. 6(5.468'7. •Ott.approved credit COSTi.. MESA Yellow, with Black la.nd&u .::..._ ~=..-1 • to believe how near new. strati:: (9l6 BEQ), John-I ai6 VALIANT SIGNET Xlnt llff Maxey Toyota '68 WI CAMPER !Dp, new valve jnb XNHS:i ZLZL> ~ (ZSRTT2l Johnson & Son, son & Son, ?i26 Harbor Bl., running cond. Best , Offer; • 18881 BEACH BL. 847-85."6 In $1199 ~-lie~ '69 CHlfy . : Towt1 & 26:16 Harbor m., Costa Mesa. Costa Mesa. 540-56.'MI. l 494-48K1/Gene, HUNTINGTON BEA<;H * DELUXE SUNDIAL CHICK IVERSON ·~ °"' Countzy &-puoe.....-......,. 5'0-5&3o. 1969 Mucury Mont990 I PONTIAC $1871 • u .. MW. -~= Loaded, AM/FM. Mr ... , '68 Galaxie 500 •ITRACTIVE • I * New tiger paw wJde tires. VW -llllO ·HARBOR Bl.. =~ry ,.;'l!f.laiayS pnly, . ECONOMICAL __ D_A_V_E_R_O_S•S· Ml TOYOTA COROI:.l...A * Low miles new eng 549-3031 Ext li6 or V COSTA MESA CONTI ENT Hardtop. V8, automatic, 111r Light lvy finish with gold In-PONTIAC 2 DR. FACTORY' EQUIPPED • 124'15. Or ~t offer · 1970 HARBOR BLVD. • 54()-9100 Open Sunday N AL cond. dlr. Power 1~rina. te.rior equipped with auto. I •9878 • Pvt ..... rty 645-2SJJ alt 5 COSTA MESA • e IWSS489J Need to aeU qUick. matte trans., radio, hea rer. Qtmplete Sales &t Serv'lct CHOICE or s ' ~ VOLVO • H bo Bl d. L .68 vw Bus. >Ont condition. .68 Sedan DeVille fa.c air. ''10. LINCOLN Cov~!·,11 "!:'~·. Will take trade or finlmC!: poWer steering, etc. Priced 1 2480 a r r v fl • . Su r $2150 •---------loaded, xlnt 00~ Sacrifice Alr, leather, ... "?' private party. Call S4&-8736 . for quick aale. S16'1S. YCN· j at Fair Dr. llAM £ID1A nroo ~ · l.ftl'UVLI 511,000 ml warranty, $46.10. or 49f..QJJ. ~. Johnson .l. Son, 2626 Costa Mesa 5464017 Ulft, 543-1~87 $2500. 548-3002 '6"lS.8.14J TOYOTA 'Si""FL;t;;;;;;<Li>;;;;d;;biiil~~;::::'.,--==--,-=-, I 19'5 Shelb 350 GT }{arbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Open 'l days a week -""""'': c.M. 64<-9.103 1 AM·~ •. saExlu~l.R~~.csK •• ,,_ ~ .Y&._'Yo:. . ·;:.f~~!oi:'~FE ·~ ~:=;,~l~ s::: .~"."~~~:..'.·~:-: '"'~usTANG s·61'f1R'e81RoM t ,~,.., " ... v 1iu ... ~ seats. $0400 536-6695 -P · · : paint. "Would You Believe" ) PAUIEHT $699 TRIUMPH ficet Will IJn. pvt. pt)'.. dlr. · • '69 Convertible, Io ad c d, CORVAIJl "E~rything ~ew"! ! Only '66 MUslanrr Hard•-Excellent condition 1·~------:-".:::.-:::-t ----~...;;_;;;..._ (RFJ 78ll:cau P•t s<l!-3100 "FRIEDLAND.ER" $4200. c., """"'· p;-;v. ir11u.,.ted P""" ""' "b [ -•· . '., '71 SP""'. RES alt 10 am, pty. San Clemente '114: '63 Monza. Full pi-ice $299, 673-1551 . dlr. Full ipnce $1499. Take 1.~ n 111• ••Ac1t CHWY •> ,..., :,.,......, llO deliv•n. IEI•~i· '"" 1970 TORINO COBRA Hardtop. Black with red In· s.mall down, (ZRW889J Will . . -·N· NOW ON DISPLAY '64 vw BUG 893-7566 •.• _;,..,, "~~ ~~ -I ~ -ll vs Call «o310o • '"' " ...,,~ ---------1 Harbor, C.M. 646-M4S · terlor. dlr • .-,........., m es. , ftn. pvt. pty, ,r.,, or ' ''M .. 6'' Come tn for a.. test drive! 'ROW 399 NEW-l:JSED-SERV. • 429 C.1. -3'10 H.P. automatic Power steering 494-7506 alt 10 am FRITZ WARREN'S $799 ~ cad '67 Cpe De Ville '63 Corvair Monu (EJC::825J, Auto, lac. air, AM-FM ater .. 1 Must seu.'.Calt 494-7744 .. ·~G-TO Pontiac" Orlr . SPORT ~AR CENTER ~ , • Aukl, ~ $10 delivers, eo. tach, plus much more. ~. ~~-'--~..,,----,--~---· CHICK IVERSON _ Terms avail, 1945 Harbor Call S97-1980 or 892-2829 65 Mustang fastback. ~n-owner, Less than 40,uw _ _, AUl\ER'" 710 E.· lat SL, S.A. 'St?-0764 1 $3081 FAcroRY Blvd C.M. ' the-floor, disc brake,, air. ml's, 4-spd, Too many can, · FftlgnJUW' Open daily 9.9; closed SUnday VW Ul7l VOLVO AIR CONDmONING ., * '68 Ford Galaxie 2-dr Very good oond w/new rub-No reasonable oUer refused. · tlnl l&ACH iHWY. 10 1963 Triumph TR4 Roadster. 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 Demo •2Sl9 ruu power, beautiful cloth l CORVETIE hardtp, exceptionally clean. ber &. painL Best olfer.1-".67;;:U531,,:::' "======of 893-'7566 e '537.QUi \\'ire whee.hi. Original corld. :1970 HARBOR BLVD. leather inter. Slereo, door , . SlOO under book, $12'75 or Call 64H909 e 'li6 PONTIAC TEMPEST ~W.USED-SERV. 4 spd with overdrive, new COSTA MESA fi••• lftri.:1 locks, cruJse control., trunk 69 Corvette, all extru, air, best oft~r. 968-2'76! I '65 MUSTANG Fastba'ck. 6 4-0r, Xlnt cond, towner. ~.. top $945. 549--05.'ll --====o--UUlo U.VW opener. Light sentinel, .iulo Al *~i73-29'l2 ** LINCOLN cyl, 3 spd; new trans, gen; $495 * 548-3l59 ~ 1964 Triumph. Xln't cond. WANTED VOLVO dimmer. most every dlx. ex. · 1 allernater &. battery. $79) ·oo Bonneville Sta Wgn. JOO(!. ,.. MGB P.1ust &ell immed, ~ or I'll pay top dollar for ~ur tra. (TVV650). 1961 CORVETTE -Xlnt cond. 1969 Lincoln 4 Dr Sein or oHer. S7a.-t04fl shape needs $100 front t nd oHer. 557~ Mytimt. VOLKSWAGEN' today, Call t9Ei6 Harbor, c .M. ~9303 · S2666 4 spd, 427 en!. F~ll power. JN STOCX TOO ioNG ' '69 Mustang red fastback· \\mk.' $100. 5f.4..6969. 1--.... l,.,.964'"'"'M""G°"B:----~V~O~LK=s~w=A""G"""E~N~ I ... "" .,. Ron Pir>chot, Autos, Used --ffO -. -SJ>-3338 or ,..__ ISACIUFlCE) P•/pb, oew wld< oval•. RAMBLER $l200 . . 5(9.3031 Ext. 66-6'1. 673-0000. '63·Corvet~. 4 spd. B~nd Beaul:iful cameo green finish $1950 or best ofr. 962-6347 -------- • 838-1889 • '67 VW BUG '68 VW BUG BUICK ~e~ MW,."""'"" ... .i. withd""''""-"1""'"•~&!_•_•-=~--- MORRIS Blue with black-interior, 1500 VTS-90'1 ADii.LAC COUGAR ped throughout. Full power p/b, air~nd. Sl!iDO, .Call '66 RAMBLER Convertible, 6 cyl, auto tnna. Lie, SQK 44S. 1 AcD 968-2558 & landau roof, luxury equip. '68 MUSTANG 2+2, pis. -"·· '68 •· • $1299 AUT~ZED DEAL(lt . . ' t<AJ\2585 -"'''"" ·~ .... • '63 WILDCAT' 2600 HARBfJR 81.. "'"'" "'· AM/FM ,..~. =~""~"='=' =~~~C"C ~·--ti1!"!;,.~r:-~: 675'41!~~~=~r~-~":::.~;::.l:co~"=!i'. I ~~~r.t~S-s9:;9_.;9~ ~the c ~~~~.".Cvw. IYE~S9~----_ .. _ --~-·--.. ~ .... --.. ~~1oo~A .~;nday -'70 Cougar ~~ei'o.i~1~a:~.:'~ ~~ ~a!1%~~Ga-d~. ~m~ 4 Dr. H.T. Full power, Jae· • 15 000 M"l W t Harbor Blvd., Costa Me5.1'.l. maculale~ $1695. 830-7556 OPEL '.... 54g.30n Ext. 66 or 67 ' tory air, tilt wheel, 1 own-I . ' 1 1 •rran Y • 54(1..5630 '66 Mustang $499 s 1 o CHICK IVERSON mo HARBOR aLVD '" IOHY5'91 • mo COUPE d• Vill• by 2 0oo, """''""·vs. '""ma-MERCURY d ll tN' Rvrdn 1945 ln5 Harbor American ~ 646·0261 1 9~~ ~A~60R C051A M!SA 19'10 RM.LEY Opel Kadeu • •pd; ""' ,m:. moo. I :SJJ.<175 VW COSTA MESA ' $945 pvt party, $.5185. Uc, f~ctory air mnd; .. power He ::BiwJ°' CM ~9448 * 6'1J..4698 * t1teenng, power brake•, ar • • e '64 VW, A-1, rtblt engine, e I vinyl ·roof, tinted glass, ra· 1970 MERC. CONV. '66 MUSTANG Hdtp V8, auto PORSCHE 549.3031 Ext. 66 or ST 1970 HAA.8oR BLVD. COSTA MESA '65 VW SEDAN ~63 Porsche Super Cpe. Rahimi yellow WI.th blk Rad' & mteridr, AMIFM< chrome io Jjealer. <VJY6ii0) wheels, recent • n 11 n e 1 PXW9!2 $899 1195. BAUER BUICK CAD '68 CPE. DE VILLE d;o, h""'· whH• wall ti"1, THE SPORTY ONE ""'"'· al>-, PIS, + Xtnu. * Aft Spm: 545-5057 * . whttl covers. (837 AK'I') This flashy tulip yellow with $995. 644-5892 234 E. l'lth St. ..:.c~'-'=~~=~~ '68 VW $1000 Co•ia Mo" 5'8-'1'165 $3111 blacl< lop & loi";°' '"'°' OLDSMOBILE • 962-()389 • en lo choose from mobile has been driven only • '64 vw BUG • FACI'ORY Garden Grove 12,000 miles & must be seen '69 Olds. 442 2 Dr. H. T. XLNT COND '69.RJVIERA. Xlnt Cond. Pvt AIR CONDITIONING Ir. driven to appreciate. Ra· 1 ONE OWNER 14,000 MI, $700 + $48-03?2 Pty. Priced $2650, Full power. Tilt wheel, AM· LINCOLN.MERCURY dio, healer, power slcering, Beautiful r;ilver mist finish 6&242'l f'M radio or 1tetto, vinyl l01Z Garden Grove BJvd. pawer brakes, factory air w It h burgundy interior. T·BIRD '66 Thunderbird, 2 dr Hrdtp. Landau, R/H, A/C • Ex· ceUent cond . Priced to .ell immed. $975. Newport Bch 6'1;...ss12 eves . e '62 T-BIRD Good c ondi tion, Has Everything. Make .oHetl 675--61.10 '$2.399 . Harbour V.W. CHICJC · IVIRSON '69 VW Bus. SUNROOF A/C. MANY EXTRAS? $2450 * 646-Q2'1 .1.ll 6 'Ell VW Squ&J"eback, Air, Radio, Sl.895. Mwit sell. '62 BUICK Special. See to top, etc,, etc. IVTM 664} Garden Grov,. 636-2980 cond., etc. 4 near ne w tires. Equipped with auto trans., apprecia1e. ''11 lic. $265 . .2569 IWVK 4Ml <WEA 393). '67 COUGAR A5k for demonstralion. {'105-radio, heater, po\\'er steer. TIME FOR Santa Ana Ave, CM. •$3444. LUXURY SPORT AZP). Johnson & Son, 2626 ing, power brakes, power QUICK CASli ' ' ·V:W ' ~ Ext. 61 or 67 JSlO•IWU!OR BLVD. mil BEACH .BL.. 842-4435 HUNTING1'0N BEACH '65 VW SQUAREBACK. 1129 * 495-5352 * Beautiful lime frost Jinish, Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. windows air cond. U you THROUGH &· 4 with blackj nterior, equipped 540-56.lO Are hard to please, don't ~ GN'ttooifc wttb au~1tlc trans .• 'POW· '64 Mercury 2-dr, $299, $10 miss thiS line car. CXLJll!) DAIL y PILOT .._ ~ u ateenng. power brakes, delivers. See at 1945 Harbor Johnson & Son, 2&16 Harbor AIJTHORIUD D£AL£11 lactory a.it, radio, heater, Blvd, CM, 646-9443 Bl., Costa Mesa. 540-5630 WANT AD COSTA.MESA OR BEST OFFER. 1970 VW Squattbaclc, Auto . 499.lHO after 3 radio. lite blue w/bl1ck int, ~ Sabre. 4 Dr. Sed. V8, 1966 9U PORSCHE; Blba:m& '6T VW SEDAN _ 'lbp cond. lilte new. 14,000 mi Extras. )'eilow, 5 apd, 42,000 ml, Loaded w/extru. Factory -1-"~"°~·~"-""""=~~~-automatic, power ateef'in&. CTYZ007l -HARBOR BL completely 11trviced & ready A to. N 9IO Au'-u-w 980 Aut01, Now ~ " tor lmmedial~ delivery. u , IW ,_, ,_ aJS'J' A MESA $16'15, CUPH'lS'lJ Johnson·&: $40·9100 Open Sunday Son, El& Harbor Blvd., e Costa MeSll.. 540-5630 Am/flll blaupuot" ndlo. 1 .. -.-ft-M2 9942 '70 vw BUG ~~r. C.Omplet ·lttYiee "'"+ _.. - Jog. ·64&-2486 , Mt-lt!O. '62 VW rebutlt etlfine, new 71'1 AG'r $945 '.Eves muffie.r. new .brakes $450, $1699 LATE'"' POI'S< .. SanlW, : ~-· itl0.'8'7~923 CHICK IVERSON 23<,E. 17th St. Corvair' eonvers n. Vtry ·~ VW ~an. A·l oond.. Co!t!._ Mesa MS-7765 BAUER BUICK '.68 Cougar XR7 CAMARO '611 CAM°ARO, Xlnl eond. 1970 cle&n, all the goodit1. Sall l&,000 ml, radio, 1utom. VW .-- --• or trade. SJ&:.1690 trad·e or SU«. 494.6324 549.3031 Ext. &fl m· 6'1 n_ _KZlLRZU • 427 eng. 30,000 mi's, $2150. VS, autOmalic. dlr. Power Pvt pt)', 645--190'1 steering, 'air cond. Priced "JO 911 T. Wpd, Bt1.ut '69 VW BUG 1970 HARBOR BLVD. '68 Buick Riviera • Loaded. orange, ·9llS lot.. & whls. COSTA MESA A.1\1/FM ·grereo. Beautiful CHEVROLET lo "U! IWXEOOJ Wilt llOk• . trade or finance private par. AM/FM. Pvt pty. 644-534'1 ZVC '1D8 ,69 VW Bug silver w/black vinyl top. TOYOTA $1599 Wttkday.,ruy, 642-lOOO Mr . ty. Call 546-8'736 or 494-68U. '6'9. Cou&:ar. air cond, vinyl top, new tin:•, kl blue book, S2300. Call aft 4: 30 pm -CHICK IVERSQN 2 0oo" , ...... di" MH. l =jn.ij"jjiM~,Kji•-iji!i.ijiiiiiii BIIL MAXEY VW Golla "" MW I (ZPT 5"!)1 1 Will lak• "" 1" ... ,. " r;,. '68 BUICK 4 Dr. Sed. V8, autom1tic, 54!}..3161 549-3031' Ext: 66 or 67 ITIOIYIOITIAI l.9'10 HARBOR BLVD. &nee private ·paey. Ca 11 I • COSTA MESA 54&8136 °' 4,._..11· SKYLARK CUSTOM 1•1 BEACH BLVD. '66 STATION WAGON '66 vw, Gd Cood, nd ~. 2 D<. H.T. VS. '""m"i" R& PCJVitt 1tttrin(. radio. heat· •-~.~,7~C~O~U~G~A~R~-­ er. k>w miles. (NOYlt!i) . $6.45 Air, ~nt tune .up, new frr • es. Eves. &: Wknds. 39'1-81'14 Nuuf: a.ach SJ Call eves aft lD pm. H, pov•er steering &: brakes . ... If:;. "'""-147~ I 67"'4189 ""'" '"· v;oyl rool, >uci<-BAUER BUICK DODGE Radio le Heater. <SBH252> 1,,,,60,-.,K"wn-a-,-, -G"h"1,-c;,,"""',,..,-1, et seats. <WEfl9'1) 234 E. 17th St. 1969 DART SWINGER '68 Corona 11ardtop I $1099 . l\io>l rood, ..... W/blk lor. $1995 °"'' ..... 548-1765 THE PERFORMER' red inter., Rebll eng, 30 I Flashy competition orange Loaded. Black landau top. I M.P .G., $575. 644-63l6 · BAUER BUICK wlth white 1tripes, Landau Automatic, rad.Jo, heater. '6~ VW SEDAN roof. Equipped with .340 4 (VWN 743) Take small down.. 11 234 E. 17th St. BBL engine, 4 !I>eed trans., Will .finance pvt, pty. CaU 18711 BEACll·BL. 842-4435 '!.. .. 1 Cosla lt1eia 548-'1'165 :i Door 6 cyl. dlr. Automatic, radio, heater, etc. This beau. an'lO am 494.'15D6(1r 54i-3100 HUNTiblGTON" BEAOl Radio & Heater. {UUV&u) 1 radle, heater. ITPW .wn liful car sho\1.·s ca~ful main. VW F STBAC.,. $999 1 Must •ell ! Full · price $'19!1. lenance and loving care. BESI' BARGAINS '69 A " ''lia Riviera, xln't. 92,000 Call 494-'17«. DriVP. H 1oday. Only $15'1~. CX>ME SEE OUR YWD lf7 Tender mi's. New tires , I ;c===C'7.--7"'--I <XVJ7561. Johnson & Son, SEU'CI'JON OF $129' mag whls~ No accidents. l PAl\fPERED 'M, l owner l626 Harbor Bl .. Costa Mesa TOYOTAS CHICK IVERSON Owner. $950. ~2030. Jmpala conv. Air cond. New S4o.5630 Jim Siemon• Import• VW . '67 s,;,k GS· Xiol rood "''I Pl•. N•w ,,,,.,., """'·f,,..,==-,,=-~== 140 W. Werner lmIHUNTIBE•NCHG_TOBNl..BE84ACHz..M.35 air r/h a~to Must Sef!• Parnelli JQnes whls, radial RE BLT '5'1 DODGE •·nta •-a S4!J.JOl1. Ext. li6 or 67 Be~t Off~r. 54i,....s,s19 · titts. Call Paul 646-2#4. Suburban sta wag. ~ -~ ••70 u•••oR BLVD. "'6 VW ~Bk v jiiijjijjjjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii l Eves & sun. m-6499 tuneup. TMl.nsp car. Must Opon E•e1. &. Sun. ""' DAn.D ...... • ery &d cond . .------... 11· . 540-4125 COSTA MESA ..._ 42,00() mi. Call 557-4489 af1 SWVLLL\4W '57 Chev. 2 dr, V-8 eng, ~7 app. 50 ai 15. •~=-=~~~-1 'vw=""1=2007,~'67~body~,.~X1""°1'1 _-'-'-""=· ~----'65 SKYLARK PG. 1415· on,;,., '""''·•===~----LEASE A ·NEW ·'71 Toyotl. immac cond ttiruout. Must '6J DODGE Sta. Wag, $395. iJr only $49.98 mo. with just mech, $4'15. l!M V\V • · $400. ln see tn apprtt, 6J7-34&3 Good con d I t Ion , Call _ _ U Pvt pty' 642-_ 21'16 good condittnn. 7 Dr. H.T. VB, automatic.' 1 1 .. _. o:•a •883 . -·~ + . c. ., t.H Ana,"'1m ......-. BD..L M'6XEY TOYOTA . 'M vw &ii . Good cond '--,~ .. c·." .. ""'=-="=-n.ci.: 'poWPr steering, tac-..:.:=:::;;,=-==---1·----==:--- • -• 18881 &!Ocl> 81. • 1750' ' -• '61 VW, $1300 I '""' ,;,, fNlflll4'9 i '70 NOYA FORD 111.-""""-' """'b * 5J6.3180 * * "~5698 • $945 '66 Ranch Wagon ' '"'" '"· , . • WAI., JO 3.-.. 17·19 . ' • VS, automatic. power 1tee.r. BAUER BUICK Ing. dlr. 1.Mded. (CVE369) I >'.WI P'k• 1219'. C•ll 494-1744 p,;"'1 lo "11. d", A"'oma- 234 E. l'lth St. .61 Chevy 2-dr. VS Slgg tic, power 1teerin&. (SWJ. C(lsta Mesa 5'$8-7765 SID deliven. <l'hi. R°vP374i 003) Will 1ake car in trade l!M5 Harbor. Blvd, CM, or finance J].rivate. party, 646-9443 Call 546-8'73G lir 4!M-68U. '64 Chevy 2-dr hrdtp, Xlnt 19?1> Font M"averick I C,ADILLAC ------ \ I CAD. '70 CONVERTIBLE anape; ~99. (No. JVY389J Xln't value et $1800, New 1M5 Harbor Blvd, CM, w/w tires, heavy duty 646--94-tS .. · · t1uspemdon A shocks. Low •69 CHEVY P.U. vs."1 spt, mUeagl!. 644-238'1alter6. Factory Alr Conditioning r/h, Xlnt Ctind, $1950 or '61 Falcon, full price $250. GU1tl!lling executive black b!ll oft: 64~ INo. QYX941) See at 194~ f!nWi w/black top A black . -Harbor Blvd, CM. 646--94.48 fUll leather In terior. }'ull '6.1 Chevy , Xlnt tnnaporta· 'li6 FORD VAN xln cond power Incl. dooi lOclc:s, til t tion $200 nr best of.fer. $1500. • .,t · A: telt5COl)iC slffting, Sier'· 53fr.'19'11 ' CaU 9fi:l.(133l eo ete .. etc. A locaJ beauty 1965 IMPALA coupe -'lf-3 .. 67 FAIRLANE Conv: 3 spd, tbat'1 stiU rtear brand MW. 1uto, po~r. new vtl\)"I top. vs lo m; _ c1 ... 1- (9148&.Jl. S52S. <49S--3464 846-uss • · .. ., · '""· $5444 'S'l rnEVY,-78.1, Xlnt cond, '67 FORD XL. air c'Ond. 48,000 ml 1, needs tlrr1, Yellow blk inter Cood S300. S4S..lJ69 " cond. iu75. «3J....1tni. __ CiN°.q\efi .&4 CiEVY SS tmpe.la Convt. '66 Ford·Re:blt enc\ne le 4 '1-tADILLAC SHARP $59.~ trans. AVTWOllllZ(O OlAlflll Private party. 64~ $450 ..... 91)3..2558 ~ HARBOR BL.., SS OfEVY 2 dr Impala. [1 )'OU ad 1n the cJusSncd COSTA Mr;SA 317 en,g. 1600. SECTJON! Somtooe Is ~100 Open Sunday * C.11 1193-f9tl * watch1oc ttr It. DI a I e Sdl kilt ltflnf now! 5'J..56'11 todQI ---"'---- COMET .FQr !J71 Lincoln Mercury'a All New Sub Compa,ct_ BRAND NEW '71 COMET · 2 · DR. Ii Cyl., radio, healer, while sidewall faes, fully factory oquippe<l.- Seriol '.#I Kl I U532849 • FULL PRICE JOHNSON & SON LINCOLN CO_NTIN~NTAL e MARK Ill e MERCURY e COUGAR 2626 HARBOR BLV ., COSTA MESA 540-5'30 '42-0911 ( •