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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-03-16 - Orange Coast Pilot• 7 -~---·---. • a s • •• Urp! r:£housands " ' Of ·Frozen· Pies . -. - Stolen • Ill Mesa ' ' Qu~ntiiplets Born In Los Angeles LOS ANGELES !AP) -An insurance man's wife gave birth to. quintuplets early toda,Y." One, a boy, was stillborn, but doctors said the four others, all &iris, appeared healthy. The babies, IO w!eks premature. Wi!ighed. between one and a half and" two pounds apiece and were reported in guarded condition. They were pla~ed in isolettes under constant observation at Valley Presbyterian Hospital. "This is tbe greatest thing that could possibly happen~" said the father, Paul Kaplan. 2.3, pn insurance administrator for L. K. Lloyd and Associates. · Hjs wife, ·pe.arl, 25, was described fn excellent condition by her obstetrician, Dr. Hubert Rubenstein. Kaplan told a newsman he and his wife first · lea med they were going to have five childrP.n -their first -about five weeks ago. "Or. Ruben stein said she looked a bit larger than usual and decided she thould be X-rayed," Kaplan said. "We knew then." ~ Sixteen physicians . ~ssisted in . ~he delivery - a pediatrician. obstetr1c1an and anesthesiologist for each baby and a cardic>-pulmOntiry s;>ecia\ist. The first baby was born al 12:28 a.m. The others followed -at 12'.~. 12 :33. 12 :39 and the fifth, the stillborn boy, at 12 :4-0. ,. . ' Orange Coalt •. We11ther The weatherman's lighting a can1Je under the thermometer Wednesday, pushing tpe mercury up io 80 degrees in the central county and . in Lhe low 70s locally. ~SIDE TODAY Ar~ you rtady for the bigge.~t week._ of living lhi!oter ever 1n Oronge Countu? It starts t(}- rugl11 . a11d you 'll fn1d oil !he dttaill on Enter(tlinmtni Page 20. ... . ..,, ..... , IMmfft Lkt11Nt f -In l"te --· "··· u WllllMI MIM ... Ori-(-If • s ....... ,..,,., ,. IW"' 1 .. 11 Si.di M1rMtll , .. II , ... -m.... " ,.....,. , .. ,. WMIMI' t Wiiii. WWI U w-·· M.ws 11-u Wtn' Iii..-. •·t ~ Mrs. Kaplan entered the hospital Feb. 9, the day of tlle massive earthquake. Hospital sPokes:men aaid the quake wa!I not a factor in her admission. Kaplan said he 4nd his wife had picked names for the ·ctttldreri' but were wailing until later in the day "to decide which names go with which ba):>y." Lois Wilson. director of nursing, said the babies would have to remain in isalettes until they weigh at least five pounds .;.. projected ·at from two to three months. "With any baby that small," Ruben- stein said, "they look good at· b i r l h , but babies this premature always have breathing problems.·• Kaplan said a cousin of his once had twins. "They're just gt'.At," he said. ''They're silting up there flinging their arms and kicking around." " Police Purtuing Pie Purl.ofner In Costa Meia The chocolate chiffon will hit the fan if 1 certain piernan meets some simple Simon peddling stolen samples of his wares around the Harbor Area. Bebe Dead Bebe Daniels. one of Mack Sen· nett's silent screen beauties, is dead at 70. The actress. wife of comedian Ben Lyon, is shown in 1941 I B<_>_~ip.g Threat Delays Hearing Of Angela Davis The thief took enough lo provirie SAN• RAFAEL (AP) -A telephoned dessert for the enlire Orange County bomb threat caused evacuation of the Jail inmate population for a mon!h, Marin Civic Center today a few minutes police revt?aled· today. before the start of a scheduled hearing Delbert A .. Gabaldon reported the for Angela Davis. black militant charged frozen pie factory burglary lo Officer with murder, kidnaping and conspiracy Sam Arnold Monday. in a shootout at the center last Aug. Using a key obtained somehow, the 7. thief has been lootiog Contemporary Scores of newsmen and supporters of' Capital Corporation, 2'49 Randolph Ave., Mi!s Davis, lined up outside the for a month. I G baldo look 1-n-courtroom waiting to. get in. were forced Missing supp ies. a n b h ·11· d -J th b "Id" ventor~ and disrovered a total of Y s er1 s . eput1es to eave e _u1 1ng. $1 792 01 worth o( piu and pastry in· he Thearmg, on several motions by g~1ents pilfered. " Mis11 Davi.!t. was . scheduled to be con- Oflicer Arnold said the loot includes d~te~ .. ~~··John 14 ooo aluminwn plfle4t-~-' wa--« 'Wt:M , . wliO--retired Jan. 4 ...:.1'!1Uq}fltM;"bi!gL..ol •'floill' • .i~ _ iQ ,11\YO ~\:r. 11••1\!>-llaled /le bo-!"":. of butter and 170 cases of finished frozen not to conduct. tHe actual . trial, aay1ng pies. "IP.1 one of tboae younger (ellows do The loss nf finished pies with his ll" The Butler Recom!Mnds .•. trademark Supporters or the acc:Used woman includes 60 cases of cherry, 50 or applt. gathered outside the courthoule and said and 20 each of blackberry, blueberry they planned demonstration. and rhubarb, Gabaldon added. Miu Davis, a 27-year~ld one-timt Unless ht peddled them to 1 com· UCLA phUoaophy Instructor, is accuselt petitor. police uid, they were 1t a of havtng furnished the guns ind plotted IMS to explain what a burglar would the escape attempt' In which tour were do with a few lhouqnd hot lroze:n plea. CSte BO~ISING, Pa1e 21 I • • ' av1s SI6~0o·o Pot Daul!) I 6 Susp:eets Seized In S _a .11: Cle10e~te :Cop,.Friend Held After Fatal Brawl .By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI ' Of l!ot 01lly "l"l tt1ff An argument over a dog that w as fed a cigarette in a Huntington Beach bar Monday night resulted in the shooting death of a 29-year'°ld man and the arrest or an off-duty Los Angeles policeman on a murdt:!r charge. ~iark A. Rodgers, 29, of Buena Park, was hil in the chest by a .38 caliber bullet. police said. He was dead on arrival at Huntington Intercommunity Hospital about 9:30 p.m. Police arrested two m~n on murder chilrges. They are: Clifton J . Schusse, 26, of 5672 Rogers Drive, Huntington Beach. a two-ye~r patrolman with the L-Os Angeles Police Deriartment's Harbor Division, and James E. Jordon. 31. of 6762 Warne r Ave .. Apt. K·lO, Huntington Beach. a foreman at an aluminum manufacturing company. Witnesses lo the shooting said that an argument started at the Swinger bar on Beach Boulevard south of Garfield Avenue between two groups of patrons after tl:le policeman allegedly gave a dog a cigarette to eat. Officers did not say who had fed the animal the cigarette. When the argument got out of hand and persons in the bar began arming them.selvfls with pool cues, the patrons W":'e itiked to leave, police said . jAcccrding tn a witness, the dispute continued outslde the bar. JnveStig11tors were told by witnE'ss1s lhat onl!: shot ~as fired into the pavement dllrlng 1.he argument. . Anot~r shot. believed by witnesses to 'havl!'I been fired seconds later. struck Rodger; near the heart. Two .38-caliber buUets 'have been recovered by police, one from thfl dead man's body. ~liief Murray Up (}nd ,-tro~nd '. "'· I • San Clemente Police Ch.!ef Clif· lord IRWT•Y ~.., up .JI!)~ ,"1king this raomiril" al" ~t: Vinr.enrs Hofpital. making swift recovery from major heart surgery perform· ed 19.!t Friday. The chief was reported doing WeU. but. experiericlng considerable aoreness from the major artery bypass surgery. He will remain ln SI.. Vincent's Hoflpital for the next t~ee y.reeks. ' I DAILY PILOT * * * '10' * * * TUES DAY AFTERNOON0MARCH '16, ~97 r '\'CIL. 64,· HO. M. t llCTIOMI, » .,ACIU Murder Vi~thn ·D•IL-Y . .,ILCIT"fl~ ATTENDANTS HAUL AWAY BOOY OF SHOOTING VICTIM' Argumtnt Over Dog Ends in .c>.ath Outside' Btach Bar Big Pot Haul, 6 Suspects · . . Seized in San Clemente San Clemente narcotics detectives and stale agents arrested alx local residents and !tlzed $16.000 worth of marijuana A-londay evening in one of the largest hauls of the weed In recent city history. Most of the arrests and seizure of the lion},~ .of,tbe• forbi~en . .-weed took place at the Alpha Beta Market parking lot at 003 S. El Camino Real at 7:30 p.m. The three men arr~st.ed there and booked on ,charges of possession of _mar,i- juana for sate are SteVen 'Jon Crain, 22, of 106 Calle Balboa , S;in Clemente ; Jame..s Carl Dodge , tl .. glving an address of 22.3 La &lpera~za, and William David Anderson .. 21 , ~f '22t W,'Calle Marquita. Office~s ··said they seized a total of 40 ki}rn; o[ the weed. about 88 pounds, in a vehicle in tbe parking lot. Later; 1they drove to Anderson 's Mar- qu ita !4d.reu and arreslad the man's wife, "Uy Jean, ··20. and a 17-year-0!d girl. ln the1 ae~rtment...atflcer1 ,eld fhey. foupd two more..ldlos•of the weed. ·The arrest·of the .sixth San Clemente resident was the result or a fluke, and officers doubted th11t lhe man was · directW,•reJal(ld to the other five. per~ As Ult Investigation at the parking lot progressed, officers said, Dana Rene Nadeau. 18, approached the plainclothes agenll and struck up 11 conversation. Officers asserted the man was smoking a marijuana cigarette dur ing the con- versation. They arrested him on charges of po11se11&lon. Nadeau gave his address' 111 'l03 Via Ballena. Police said lhe arrest& took place dtr~ Ing an undercover buy which bad been arranged in advana. Crain, Dodge and AnderllOn were If.ill In custody this morning, held Wldtr $25,lm bail apiece. Bail amount,, on J,trs. 'Anderson a~ Nadeau were not immedlatt.ly available. The juvenile girl 'W&I releaSed to custody of an elder &rother, potiee Mid. Arraignments are' scheduJed In ~h Orange <;aunty.' MtiTiiCipal Court early Wednesday morning.. · ' · · I .. ! Jewelry' Stolen I ln_.NeWJ>,ort ~<J.~e Newt>tfr:t Beach. poUce •todar' are tn. vestlgatlrig the lhelt•of more than $1,tp> worth of jewelry from a Bayshorts home. John E. Neville, of 26%2 Crestview Dcive-, reported roof plecea Or jewelry valued at $1,075 and a $4.85 botUe of whiskey missing from his home Monday. Investigators said the burglar entered the home by pryina open a bedroon1 window. The missing Jewelry lnchides two 1ot4 braaleta, a eotd charm bracelet ~ a sllvu bracelet ·whlch belong to Nevllte.•t wile. • • r ' ' •• > Middle East War Threat Fears Cited WASfllNGTON (AP) -Secttlary of. Slate William P. Rogers said today that failure of Middle East peace efforts could produl'e a very dangerous situation In the world and •·possibly lead to World War Ill." flpgera told a new s conference: "The climate has never been better for a setllemeiit in the ~tiddle East." But he added: "If .,.,., don't make a settlement now v.·e're going to plant the seeds of future y,•ar." Al a later point he stated lhis warning again. ""'' think,'' he said, "that if lhe situation Is not worked aut in the reasonable future the very dangerous situation C(fuld develop and ~Jy lead to \Vorld War Ill." Rogers sb..-ply disputed the Israeli policy expressed by Premier Golda Meir th•t Israel must base Its future security on the geographical position it establisQea throu.&h a peace setUement. 'He urged instead that Israel give at ]eaat equal import.Ince to political ar- rangements built ll'OWld a United Na· tlons Middle East pea~keeping force in which the United States and the other great powers would participate. Rogers retused to say that be was proposing a Middle East security treaty. But he said he was talking about a •·written document" and a "contractual agreement entered Into by the parties and signed, sealed and deliver~." He exprused confidence that if such an agreement could be ~ached it would have the support of the Senate and . House, whatever the form it might take . Rogers made these other points in the queation-and-aru:wer session \Yhich was dominated by the Middle East: I. The MJddle East peace talks between Israel and El)'pt through United Nations mediator Gunnar Jarring seem to be in an impasse at the moment but "we are convinced the impasse can be overcome." 2. The U.S.-supported South Viet- namese lnvaalon of the North Vietnamese supply llne area of Laos has been suc- cessful so far. Among the achievements he listed extensive destructioo of enemy supplies, intercepUon of supply move- ment to the South and a virtual halt in hostilities in South Vietnam. Tund•Y, March 16, 1971 DAILY ,ILO'P lltO l"r. .. PUBLISHER WEED !LEFT) ACCEPTS FLAG FROM REP. HANNA Stars and Stripes Once Flew Over Nation's Capitol ·Prisoner Admits lulling Robert Liberty in Cell Special to the DAILY PlLOT Dudley said he thought Liberty was SAN DIEGO -The man who strangled a. ~all~d _snit~h and. acc:.,used his _co- Candlelight Killer Robert \\~.-c~rry-L1111..-·-""'"'':"'~;,, ...... ~.i-• ..-n1gp;-ol1; Of plotting fessed in court here l\1on<fay, arte r being the kilhn~. promised prosecutors wouldn't seek the Sent~ncing was set Mar~h 25.by Jud.ge deat h penalty. Francis E. Gallagher, ~·h1le Riggs, trial Timothy E. Dudley, 24, adm itted the .for ~iber!y'~ San Diego County Jail death Jan. 20 jail cell killing of Liberty, is s~1ll pending: . while a second prisoner charged in the R~ggs .and hts ol~er b~other face t~1al slaying bas entered no plea . Apnl l 1n connection with the shooting Ironically the former Orange Coast la st ~ember ?f an off-duty policeman mental patient authorities credited with \l.'h~ intervened in a holdu~. . • at least three murders himself died Liberty was garroted with his own f. due to mistaken belief he was a police shin in a five.man cell he shared wilh informant ~dley and Riggi . only five days before , ) Escaped Female his own murder tnaf. .. He and the woman he married in Colorado while both were charged with kidnap and robbery last summer were charged with the torture slaying of a 1nale nurse last June in San Diego. Welfare Reform Seen • Hanna, Top City Officials Mee t at Pilot , "" By GEORG~ LEIOAL Of ·~· Dtli, f'llll lttll Orange Coast govern1nent officials were told Monday that tax credit and welfare reforms are likely to precede passage or President Nixon's revenue sharing pro~sals. Rep. Richard lianna {D·Anaheim) met with represcnlatives of clly governments from along the Orange Coat invited by the DAJLY PILOT to participate in flag raising ceremonies marking the first public tour of a new $1.3 million prir duction plant in Costa Mesa. A U.S. Flag that has flov.·n over the nation's Capitol was presented to the DAILY PILOT by Congressman Hanna. In remarks following a lun~eon, Han. nii predicted •·much agony" in Congress over the Nixon administration's sug· gested reorganization of gavernment t.o "bring administration closer to the func. tion." Nixon's call to eliminate administrative duplication by "reducing numbers of departments by defining fWlctions'' has "a-logic that is very impressive ,'' Hanna said. "But when you do lhat you run inlo powe rful ongoing forces." he cautioned. Among these forces are the civil service establishment and the t r a d J t i o n a I jurisdictional lines within the House :'lnd Senate. ~ Hanna suggested the "personalities o~ the existing power structures'' \\'OUld make creation of workable solutions from the proposed concepts difficult . Further hampering change v.·ill be th e 1972 Presidential election in which both parties may be expected to "posture their actions and more important their explanations of actions. with an eye toward '72." Revenue sharing. specifically, is in trouble, Hanna sald, because both the chairman of the House Ways and Means committee and the senior Republican , merriber oppose the concept of the federal government raising funds to turn lhem "freely over to other agencies -stale and loca l governments -to spend them ."' Until the issue of reve nue sharing Qr so me other means of lessening the tax burden of local government is devis· cd, Hanna urged the city officials l'lo keep up the pressure for reform." He also suggested to keep applying for federal grants under existing or proposed legislation such as the Clean Waters Act, the safe streels program. and the educational programs including the Elementary and Secondary Education Act. for ·recipients, and reallzot10n of.) locally delermlned work progran1 that provides for retraining and worker paychecks coming from the federal government. The conllicl between group and in· dividual practice ot medicine was cited by Hanna as one of the public health battles that will result from the national J1ealth care insurance proposed by the Nixon administration. "Siner Medicare the govern1ncnt has realized there is no way to get half way fnto the health. act ,., tie said. ~ Among those attending the DAIL'' PILOT luncheon \Vere Supervisor Honald \Y. Caspers. Nev.'.port Beach: Councilman Lindsley Parsons. Newport Be a c b : f.olayor Robert At \Yilson, Costa Mea:; Mayor Tony Forster, San J i.11 n Capi!trano: lt1ayor Walter Evans, San Clemente; Couocilman Charlton Boyd. Laguna Beach: Mayor lt1orton Dawn, Seal Beach: J\layor Ed Just, Fountain Valley; and John Beekman, ad· nlinistrative aide to Hl!nna. Mayor Donald Shipley of Huntington Beach "'as unable to attend. Supervisor David Baker, Ga t den Grove, attended the tour and the flag ceremonies. Social Security Bill • Sent to Nixo11's De si{ from \Vire Ser\·Jces \YASHINGTON -Congress approved and sent to the White House today a 10 percent across-the-board increase in Social Security benefits for 26 mil- Jion Americans. Acting with surprising swiftness, tile House approved the increase re tro- active to Jan. I ,in the monting and the Senate completed congressional acUon less than two hours later. /See related story, Page 5.l ll was the first major legislation to emerge from the new Congress. Its progress \\'as speeded when the Senate tacked the Social Security benefits increase onto a bill raising the national deb! hmll from S395 billion to $430 Jill ion. The Senate vole was 76 to 0. Voting against the bill in the ·House were Reps. John !\1 . Ashbrook of Ohio, Philip !\1. Crane of Illinois and John G. Schmitz of California, all Republicans. Rep. Alton Lennon (O.N.C.), voled "present'' • South Vietnamese Troops Fall Bacl{ Towru·cl Border SAIGON (UPlJ -South Vietnamese troops retreated today by foot and by helicopter from positions deep inside Laos and moved closer to the South Vietnamese border. The U.S. rommand rushed U.S. arti llery reinforcements to !he border area lo pound advancing Communist forces . for naming the new base Lolo. Lolo was third in a line of four fire support bases the South Vietnamese oc· cupied, running southeast from Sepone. Fire Base Sophia v.·as evacuated early this week. Troops remain on fire Base · Liz, mldv.·ay betv.·een Sophia and the old Lolo. Brown is lhe fourth base nn the chain. 3. In spite of what SetretarY of Defense Lldrd has. said about a residual force o[ perhaps 50,000 American troops in South V"'tnam at the end o[ 1972, Presj.. dent Nlxon hu yet to make a decision on his future witl1drawal schedule and . on lbe force be will leave In Vietnam. 4. Roge'rs does not believe that the Chinese Communists will get involved In the war In Indochina es a result of the invasion of Laos. He ariued it posed no threat to China. Prisoner Caught In Santa Ana Candles v.·ere left burning beside .. .Robert J. Irion, 52, wliom Liberty knew at Atascadero State Hospital. where he was treated after lhe June, 1966 candlelight killing. \Yelfare reforms Hanna supports v.·ould isolate recipients v.·ith fixed handicaps, such as blindness. to remove them from the socia l workers' caseloads: would ap- ply cost effectiveness to cooperalive services such as health care arranged Altogether . 2.000 South Vietnamese \\'i1 hdtew from positions astride the Ho Chi lt1inh ,Jrail inside Laos. One force of 700 \1•!. flown out under fire by U.S. helicopters from fire base Lolo, the fourth major ARVN fire base aban· cloned in L&ps in the lace of advancing tank·led Communist 1roops. Soulh Vietnan1ese ofiicial spokesmen in Saigon and at northern operational bases refused to admit \\'ithdrav•al from Lolo or any major fighting anywhere In Laos. They in~isted there \\'ere only light and scattered action and no major. engagements. From Pagel BOMBING • • • killed, Including a Superior Court judge. Two convicts and an alleged accomplice also were shot dead. Allo cbarg~ in the incident ls convict Ruchell Magee, whose two court·a~ pointed lawyers say they will try to withdraw from the case becal15e Magee doesn't trust them and insists on representing himself. Attorneys for Mi!s Davis are seeking dismissal of her indictment bail. sup- pression of evidence and permission for her to act in her own defense as co. counsel. After security checks found no bomb. participants returned to lhe courthouse less than an hour' later. I OU.N•I COAST DAILY PILOT .............. -·-S.Clc:•• .. OllAHGI!: COA.IT l"UILllHIHO COM l"AHY ••t•rt H. w,,4 '"'"'°"'' ltld l"v'I ....... J.,1.: l . C11rl-v V~ Ptftld~I t"4 <itMl'f l ~ T~o,.,,, t'11¥il Edottr l~oro•l A, M~,,~;,,, Mtnttlnt Ell11'0!' Ch1rl1s H. 1 101 li'~''' P, N4ill .... 1itr.11/ Mt"'9l"'J E~I~ otflt•I CO.ti Mitt : »0 W•I lty $!"°'! 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I A female prisoner facing federal smug· g\ing and local forgery charges is back behind bars today, after escaping a Costa Mesa courtroom Monday, just long enough to dye her hair. Elizabeth Barry, 20, of 6(l71h Marigold Ave., Corona del Mar, was arrested about eight hours later at a Santa Ana apartment house. She was booked ba ck into Oran ge Coun- ty Jail on an additional charge of escapr. Investigators said Miss Barry v.•as being ushered Into a mobile courtroom at Harbor Judicial District C o u r t at 9 a.m. with two other women. Marshal Al Eichler said tl1e suspect .J.. third in the llne - suddenly broko and ran eastward to an alle-Y and north across Wesl 18th Streel. None of the defendants was handcuHed and Eichler stayed v.·ith the other tY>'O, rather than risk their fleeing too. Costa Mesa police said Miss Barry was scheduled for a hearing on her local charge of passing stolen and forged checks when she escaped. Sheriff's fugitive detail spokesmen said today she also faces prosecution by federal authorities on a drug smuggling charge. !-.Jiss Barry had changed from her jail frock, sweatshirt and tennis shoes 1.0 more attraclive clothing and dyed her blonde hair a dark shade .... Capsi_zecl "Cat') Still Mi ssing Near Catalina U.S. Coast Guard Search and Rescue authori$:!s said today a 4 3 • f o o t catamaran that capsized Saturday off the v.·est end of Catalina Island is still missing. The Imi Loa . owned py A. Victor Stern. of 109 Dolphin Ave ., Seal Beach, vanished in high winds and heavy seas after the owner and crew or seve n were rescued by helicopter. Air and surface craft out of Long Beach were Informally maintaining the hunt for the lmi l..oe. while Stem v.•as"' searching for her wilh a commercial boat. The craft capsized In full view af observers on the Island In winds up 10 40 knots, while parUripatlng in the 11nnual Santa Barbara Island Raef! out · of Los Angeles, I One huJI was lifted from lhe ~·11tr l\nd wet sails jammed before they could be relea~ to prevent the !mi Loa lrorn ov!r\uming. Crew membel'!I, all experlenctd hands in the Trans-Pacific catamaran race~ • ir.cluded · Curt Huddlt!on. Seal Re11<'h : Dit'k Knof, Huntington Bench; Ken Wi~e and Jtrry MullenhoU, both or Costa ~•lCJli, Alai\ Burg, La,gun11. Niguel, and Jerry Winter. San Diego. lie was never convicted or murder in the death of Mrs. P.1arcel!a Landis , 31. of Westmins ter, whose body was surrounded with candles that earned Liber ty his nickname. Dudley's role in Liberty's demise and his accusations against the other cell111ate were submitted i!l a transcript of his testimony to the San Diego Counfy Grand Jury . He had already pleaded guilty to manslaughter charaes in the shoest ring strangulation of a nude young man in Balboa Park last September. Jury Clears Man Of Bribe Rap In Mesa Ca se Copter Sights Burning Vessel Lo\o is nine miles southeas t of the supply hub of Sepone. abandoned to .an advancing Communist division last \veek. The others withdra\\'ing \\'ere l;O\'ernment infantrymen thwarted in their efforts to reach a big Communist supply dump just south of Lolo. They fought their way back by foot lo Fire A U.S. Coast Guard spokesman in Base Brown. four. miles fa r th e r Long Beach today credited the Newport southeast. .. Beach helicopter with spotting a burning The Communists had attacked Lolo tuna skiff which sank off Seal Beach v.·lth rockets, mortars and tank guns Monday. and U.S. helicopters braved heavy an- The skiff belonged to a San Pedro tia1rcrart fire to bring out the ARVN tuna boat owned by Nick l\1arinovich troops. The South Vietnamese spiked and was unoccupied at 1he time of six artillery pieces be.fore leaving and its sinking. the equipment v.•as later bombed by Field reports and ;etails from other military sources told of the vastly out· numbered South Vietnamese b e I n g plucked from Lolo In an armada of Ulfl Huey helicopters. The choppers barely touched the ground beforf! they "'ere filled by troops dodging n constant rocket and mort.ar barrage, the reporls said. Priest Hears Man's Bo1ubshell Confess ion The spoke1man said Marinovich·s cre\v B52s MILAN, Italy (UPI) -The penitant \\"as cleaning the skiff when the fire U.S. fighter·bombers and helicopter kneeling before the Rev. Robtrto Zac· broke out . They abandoned it for the gunshlps poured bombs. rockets and caria made a bombshell confession. larger boat and the flames were spotted machinegun fire on the Communists dur· The man pulled a grenade from his do\\'n coast by helicopter crewmen whn ing the evacuation, the front dispatches pocket and handed it to the Roman nolilied the Coast Guard. • reported. The \\'eather lifted after a Catholic priest before disappearing. Zac- The Coast Guard buoy tender \Yalnut period of heav y clouds and fog . caria called police, but said the secret S I R f . ans\\·ered the call and fought the flames The troops from fire base Lolo y,·ere or the confessional forbade him f r 0 m amue osman o Laguna Niguel \\•as until the skiff sank. No ini'uries \vere fl t (h b '· I t'· 1· cleared Monday night of charges lhai ov.·n o ano er ase w1\ 1 'ffl' same reva ing the man's name or what be he bribed a Costa lt1esa patrol man but. 'J'r;e~p-or;te;do;.iiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~n;a;miOiie ._M•il•i t;'~' y;_s~o:ur~c~e~s ~g~';;;'~';"~'i.i;"~'~'°~"ii;i.i;h~adii;,is~ai;id~. iOiiiiiiiiiiiiiio;iOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii>j an Orange County superior Court jury II found hln1 guilty of one o r re n s e -conspiracy to commit bribery. It took the panel six hours lo clear Rosman, 27, of 29351 San Briso Placr, on t~e major charges a(ter a trial in which they heard recordings of telephone conversations between officer Gary Barwig and the defendant. Barwig testified from the \\'ilness box lhat Rosman gave him $10,000 to plant drugs in the car of a vital prosecution wilpess in a liquor hijacking case. Drugs charges against Rosman were also dismissed by the jury. Judge Ronald Crookshank ordered Rosman, a Saddleback College student, to return to his cou rt April 5 for what could be al the ~t a three-year ternl in state prison on rhe conspira cy count. Rosman was accused during his l\vo· week trial of planting narcotics in the l'ar or Charle s "Chuck" Dreyer. 31 o{ 1645 Sunset Ridge Drive, Laguna Beach. II was alleged that he bribed Barwig In collaborotion with Eugene Rondondo, 44, a forme r partner wit h Dreyer In the OOIY defunct Fellciano's Restaurant in Newport Beach. Bolh men allegedly plotted lo blacken Dreyer's reputation because of the Laguna Beach man's decision to testify against Rondondo ln a liquor hijacking indictment. Rondondo of 2422 E. 22nd St . Is scheduled lo face trial May 26 on iden· tlcal charges. .- What's ... My Lii1e? • You won't be fe d any lines at Alden's. We ore more interested in developing loya l custo mers th an ma king a fast sole. . None of our sole s ~eo pl e will bothe r yo u if you 1ust wont t o brow se, bu t wrll b* ple a sed to assi st you if yo u wis h, with truthfu l an swers to your Gue stions. When we d isc uss carp et lines, we wou ld hove t o "mod estly" admit t hat we hove th e la rgest selections in t he area. To p b r • n d s such os: Bigelow, Berven, Beattie, Mage e, Mo narch , Barwick, Mohawk, Rox bury, Mill ika n, Ar mstro ng. ' , 7 7 .. ' . -..... -... . . ~-.. -... -........ • I Dnniing-on ·ueaeh ED IT 10.N VOL 64, NO. 64, 2 SECTION S, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCI-I 16, 197 1 -· teer -· Salary Fight Safety Employes Win Court Delay fluntington Beach pollce and firemen took their six-month-old pay dispute with the city to Orange County Superior Court Monday and V•on a 16-day delay on the city's plans to implement pay scale proposals in its 1970-71 budget. Judge Robert Banyard set March 31 as the date for a hearing on charges contained in the two lawsuits -one filed" by the Huntington Beach Police Officers Association and the other by the Hunting ton Beach Firemen's Associa· tion. The HBPOA wants $650.000 in dama ges and both asSQciations want the judge to set aside a City Council resolution of last Sept. I in which an 8.25 percent pay increase v.•as ordered for all city employes. Both police and firemen asked for an 11 percent pay hike and they argue 1 that the city should have continued discussions on the issue. Both writs of mandate claim that City Council action violated a longstand~ ing agreement .,between the city and both associations. The plaintiffs ask Superior Court to Mexie,o Jails 20 to Thwart Revolt Pwt MEXICO CITY IUPJ) -The Mexican government said Monday it has smashed a plot in which North Korea trained Mexican students as guerrillas in an atlempt to overthrow the government and replace it wilh a Marxist-Leninist regime. Attorney General Julio Sanchez Vargas announced the arrest of 20 Mexicans and said the search v.'as on for 29 ()ther members of a· group trained in terrorism at a North Korean army camp confirm that those agreements were violated when councilmen authorized the 8.2:1 percent pay raise. City officials estimate thal the pay in- creases for firemen, if granted. would cost the city about $61,000 a year. Increases for policemen over the 8.25 percent le\!el would cost the city a further $43,812 annually. • . . . . HOSPITALIZED FOR TESTS Hunti ngton Beach's Shipley • • Ma yor Undergoes near Pyon~jlng. -H • l T "'!hiy'froup was trained by North 0Splta estS Ko~f"n soldiers with the aim of imposing 8 arxist·Leninist regime on Mexico," J ll ti" l San h" said. n Ull ng On Sa chez said the p\ol v.·as hatched at Patric& Lumumba University in Huntington Beach Mayor Don a 1 d Moscow among Mexican students v.·hc Shipley entered the new Pacifica Hospital were !here on scholarships under the ,._fonday for a series of tests suggested Mexicao·Russian Cultural Exchange by his doctor. Jnstitute in Mexico City. He said the Councilman Norma Gibbs said during Mexicans went to East Berlin ~where Monday night"s counci l meeting that the they received North Korean passports mayor had "taken ill" Monday. He was and went by lrain to ~loscow then by not at the council meeting. plane to Pyongyang, North Korea. Hospital officials sa[d this morning Sanchez said the plot was broken with that the mayor was in for a regular the arrest over the weekend of the check up. suspects at wtiat he called guerrilla Shipley be.came one of the hospital '• academies and hideouts in Mexico City, first patients. He was lhe 19th admitted Jalapa, Acapulco and Pachuc. Automatic as the hospital opened its doors for rifles and revolvers, mort than 1.000 the first time t<.1onday. cartridges. grenades. short"wave radios Pacifica HO.!ipital, located at 18792 and surgical equipment were seized. Delaware St., was once a convalescent Those arrested were charged with con· hospital. but was recenlly converted and spiracy. incfting to rebe.\lion, criminal expanded to an 86-bed general hospital. association, robbery with vi o I enc e, No word was given on wben Mayor homicide, hoarding arms, falsification Shipley. a biology professor at Cal State cf documents and using forge d Long Beach, would be released from documents . the hospital. • e Fluoride Hearing Deferred The fluoridation issue was delayed b:1 the Hunlington Beach City Council Mon• day night to allow further ~tudy by the city 's Environmental Council. The council agreed to a request by the ecology group to hold up funding for fluoridation until after March 31. Mrs. Margaret Carlberg, chairman ol the environmental council, informed councilmen that the group wished to evaluate the findings 0£ Dr. Jack McKee, a hll&lth erigineer with the California Institute of Technology. The en vironmental group sought Dr. McKee's advice on the fluoridation matter. The council also decided against taking action on a request by Gerald Bogart, president of , Huntington BeBch Citizens for Pure Water . to submit the question of adding fluorides to the city's water supply to a public vote. Bogart said that 4,480 persons had signed a petition urging the council ID draft a new ordinance calling for 1 public vote on the question. Bogart said that although I.he petition was not valid -it was filed a month later than the law allowed -this was because the group received Incorrect information from 1he county registrar al· vOtets. · "But we do have 4,480 signatures show- lfll that the comn'lunity does want the right to vote," he added. . Vice Mayor Jerry Matney said that the request v;ould be cansidered. but that any · actton should be deferred until the environmental council has studied the question. Dr_ McKee . has indicated that there may already be sufficient fluoride i11 .Southern California wat.tr supplies to re· duce dental decaYin children. The na"tural fluoride content in Hun- tington Beach water varie:ii: from 0.4 to 0.5 parts per million. The city was planning to add chemical fluorides to increase the amount to cne part per million. Fountain Valley. which has a natural content of 0.6 part per million in Us water, has also approved raising tHe level to one part per million. Both cities were applying for fluo ride pennil!I fro~ the California Public Health Board m Anaheim today .. Copter Sights Burning Vessel A U.S. Coast Guard spokesman in Long Beach today credited the Newport ,. Beach helicopter with spotting & burning tuna skiff which sank off Stal Beach Monday. The skiff belong~ to a San Pedro tuna boa t owned by Nick Marinovich and was unoccupied at the time of it.'! sinking. The-spokesman said Marinovich's crew was cleaning the skiff when the fire broke out. They abandoned it for the larger boat and the flames were spotted down coast by helicopter crewmen who notified the Coast Guard. The Coast Guard buoy tender Walnut ans wered the call and fought the fl11mes unlit the sklff sank. No injuries were re~ted. $3.6 Million Asked ar DAIL 'f f'ILOT l lt tl ,l"lltte ATTENDANTS HAUL AWAY BODY OF SHOOTING VICTIM Argument Over Dog Ends Jn De.th 01:1tsld1 Beach h r Counclltnen Bid For Hearings On Oil.Drilling The Huntington Beach ci;iuncil ls t1 petilion the California Lands Commission to hold a public · hearing in the city on any application that would allow offshore oil drilling in the city limits. Councilmen ordered Monda}' night that a ·resolution to this effect be prepared and sent to the commission. The action was taken alter CoUncilman Norma Gibbs voiced conC1!rri •l the oom- mission 's recent -decision to extend permil! allowing offshore s e I t m 1 e surveys. The comm1ss1on extended the geophysical permits for Texaco Inc. and Union Oil Co. which allow surveys in state tidelilnds. including the stretch from the Santa Ana River north to San Luis Obispo. These permits authoriJe .:.nde rwater explosions, but do not cover test drilling. Mrs. Gibbs said shf! re cently lunched with Houston F'Journoy, a member flr the !ands com mission. and he assured her that the board would not approve drilling permits. "He said the seismic surveys were automatic, bu t what concerns me i~ if they do find a pool of oil off Huntington Beach !hey would wa nt to go ahead and drill," Mrs. Gibbs added. Canberra Bomb Scare CANBERRA (UPI ) -A large squad of police searched Parliament House for a bomb today afler an anonymous phone call was received at police head- quarters. The message was passed on .to Canberra Criminal Investigation Branch which sent men to augment the police on permanent duty at Parlia· ment House. ARRESTED IN MURDER LA Officer SchusH Illegal Aliens Caught; 1 Dead In Truck Fall OCEANSIDE (AP) -Thirteen Mex4 leans . who were in the United State• illegally were in custody today, but anolher was ._il.ead after falling from a truck. The truck driver escaped . The California l:fiR)lway Patrol said Eli as Medina-Ortega: about 20. was fatally injured Monday v.·hen he fell Crom the back of the pickup truck and was hit by two cars. He recently lived ln Tijuaha. '" The robbery and homicide charges were the result of twn Mexi co City bank robberies earlier this ye ar in which Sanchez said $100,000 was stolen to finance guerrillas activities. A bank gua rd was shot and killed in one of tbe holdups. Parents Learn Of New Math Library lncre~~.e Sought After the truck was stopped a few miles away, l 1 other aliens were found under a tarp covering . lhe truck bed. Two other1 who fled with the driver were captured. The Mf!xi can nationals said they paid the driver 5200 each to be taken to Los Angeles. ~Y crossed the border about 12' miles west of CaJe1i~ early Sunday. The library ln the Huntington Beach cenl!al park will be built on piling over -a former dump. · Parents in the fountain Valley School And the 'City's Library Board 111d the Disl!ict can go back to class Y.'edne5day Recr.ealion and Parks Commission are night at Tamura School. recommending that the library budgel The tardy bell rings at 7:30 p.m. be increased from 51 mllhon to 13.6 After th11t, Mrs. Deloris Flint, a learning million. (()Ordinatilr "111l Tamura , will ·1tart This would allow advanclng the second teaching the folks about new math. and third canstrucUon phase• to buUd • She'll explain to Ule parenta the ••me twn lfings at the library. things their kid s are teaming. She'll City cooncilmen Mooclay night were teach it each Wednesday for 1iJ: wee:k.5. given copies of an en,lneering report aid The adult education program is C<l-of the mi nules of r~ent library and rec. 11ponsored by the local schobl district realion <:4lmmi1sion mef!linfii. The ooun· and I.hf! Orange Coast Co1M1unity Colleg1 cil maY Uke action on the project March District. No rtgitlratlon ifl Jlecessary 29. for the course and no fee Is char1ed. The engineerin1 repart, by Robert • • • Stone & Associates, Irvlnf!, recammended that a combination of piling and rerom· pacted sou be wed in laying tbe libary foundation. The additional cOllt for this W()rk was estimated at $30,000. The council also w1s U>ld that the library board and recre•tion commission had approved a 4S-foal 1hi!t lo the east for lhe library s.ite near Talbert Avenue and Goldeft Wut Street The basis for building the twa libr11ry wing& wou1a be to create 7)00 1quart ftet or spact whtcb could be used by the recreation •ltd parts ltlff for aa interim perkld of five 'to 10 years, the council wQ told . This would 8.llnw the preMnL recrt1!.lon center at 17th Street Md 0[11111 Avtnlle lo ·be used solely as a senior eitiuns Cf!lltet. Architect Dion Neutra had re.com· mended to the library and recreation boards that the second and third phases of the library be advanced to offset rising labor costs and reconstruction costs estimated at $50.000. The engineers aaid that deptlu of fill at the dump site were From two fee{ to 4(1 feet . They recommended that !he llW11ry be built on concrete or · steel pilings drive n from 20 to 300 feet below the fill. A mat of compacted nu be.neath a concrtte .basement 1lllb also Is rtcom· mended to minlrnlie the effect of methane 111 emanating from the old dwnp" · 'l QUA KE HITS IN SOUT H PACIFIC BERKELE Y (AP) -A 1argf! urth. quake measurlng 6.2.5 on lhe Richter ac11le took place In the South Pacific today, according to the Univerglty of Callfomla seismograph at Berkeley,. The quake epicenter waii placed 6,000 mlle1 110uthweiit of Berkel .. y ln the Solomon or Ne..li Hebrides area. It oc- curred' at 4:ts a.m. PST. • . .. ' _, -. ~ Today's, Final N.Y. Stoeke TEN GENTS ea Buena Park Map Slain In Beach By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI ot the DtflY f'll•I ltt ff An argument over a dog that w 1 s fed ·a cigarette irr a Huntington Beach bar Monday night resulted in the shootin l death of a 29-year-old man and the arrest df an off-daty Los Angeles policeman on a murder charge. Mark A. Rodgen:, 29, of Buena Park. wa1 bit in the chest by a .38 cali ber: bullet. police &aid. He was dead on arrival at -Huntington InlercommwUlY. Hospital about 9:30 p.m. ' Police arrested two men on murder charges. They are Clifton J . Schusse. 26, of 5672 Rogers Drive, Huntington Beach, a two-year patrolm an with the Los Angeles Police Department's flarbor Division• and James E. Jordon, 31, of 67Q Wai:ner Ave ., Apt. K-10, Huntingto n Beach, a foreman at an aluminum manufacturing company. Witnesses to the shooting sai d tha t an argument started at the Svdnger bar on Beach Boulevard south ol Garfield Avenue between two groups of patrons After the policeman allegedly gave a dog a cigarette to ut. When the argument got otJ"of hand and pe rsons in the bar began armin g themselves with J>OOI cues, the eatrons were u~ed to leave, police said. · ACC()rding to a witness, the dispute continued outside the bar. Investigators were told by witnesse1 that one shot was fired into the pavement during the argument. Red Police Take Soviet Family Fro1n Embassy · MOSCOW (AP) -Russ ian police iseiz.. ed a Soviet doctor's family today after they had enlered U.S. Embassy grounds tn seek information -on emigration. The embassy delivered I strong protest. ac- cusing the police of "violation of efDoo bassy territory." An embassy spokesman said the In- cident developed into a struggle between a dozen U.S. emp!oyes and the Sov iet militiamen. Militia guards pulled the doctor's wife and two daughters. aged S and 9, onto the sidewalk in front of trte embassy and took them Away. The doct or, a short, stocky man Iden. tified as Vasily Nikitenkov. locked his arms around an iron gate and called, "Help me~ Help me !" About a dozen tmbassy employes quickly came to his r~cue. The.y foiled police efforts to take the man away by swing ing closed the heavy iron gates, onto the inside of which the man h.Bd braced himself. The spokesman uid the three· police regularly a~ig~d tn watch the embassy had by this time been reinforced but the~e was no count of how many, pohccmen had taken part in the incident. Orange Coast l\'eother The wealherman's lighting a candle under Utt thermometer \Vednesday, pushing the mefcury up to 80 degrees In the central county and in the low 705 locally. INSIDE TODAY Are uou rtad11 for the biggest week of Utnng thentfr ever i" Orang1 Count11~ 1& a&art1 to- night, and you'll find all the <Uto.ilt on Entertainment Page 20. •'""' ' C•tlftrlll• I ~'"' u. 11 ci.nn1.. tt·H '-k• u CNU"""' 11 DHlll Ntlkn t .. ..,._ ' •llll!trl•I f'•t• f •11ttrt1lftl!Ht1l 1t.N -. ... "" 1•11 Mt........ " AM Ll l'lllttt u ... ,.. . ) Ml'11••t Uc.,...n t "'1Jvo•' IP.M Mw!ufl """" 11 N1!1.cr~tl Ntwt -.1 OttllM (-fY t IYl¥il l"trltl' 11 1'4!•h , .. , .. llK• MM111tt 1 .. 11 TtltYlt.lttl It T~fl1fft lt-lt w .. 1111r ' W"ff WI'~ II Wtmt11'' Ntwt 1>11 Wtrfll Ntwt ... ' ' .. % DAILY PJLOT Tutsd.ty, Mart~ 16, 1971 - Death of Good Friend: A Sad Story to Write By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI O! tf\<I OaHr PU•I Jiaff '1MARK A. RODGERS. 29, of Buena Park, v.·as shot in the chest by a .31-<:allber bullet. He was d~ad on arrival at HWltington lntert{)mmWllty Hoapital." 1 Monday morning, I never believed I would have to write these words. ' But when I arrived at the Swinger bar moments after he had been felled by a revolver bullet, I was sure. J took his last picture. . Less J.han a month ago Mark and I met under far : more pleasant circumstances at the same Beach Boule- vard bar. WE SAT AROUND for !;lours in the pleuant com· pany of friends swapping lies about our favorite sport- motorcycle racing. It was one of thoae rare evening that come along unexpectedly and linger ln your memory for a IODg time. The good fellowship was of such I!-high order that l even invited my wife to come and share in it. UNFORTUNATELY, it didn't last very long. Three bar patrons sudden· Jy became bellirose when they thought we were laughing at them. We tried to • explain. but they att.acked. The police came and they were arre.sted. Monday night, the same gang of friend.a were there -~ithout me. I was dO\\'Yl at the police station inquiring of deak officer GUJ' Wright whether any- thing exciting had happened. l didn't have to wait long. My camera was already <>ut ot :ts ease and the !lrObeUghl charged when r got to the bilr and fired <>ff two frames into the dark night as ·ambulance crews were attending to Mark's lifeless body. AND WHILE THE ambulance was wailing through the Beach Boulevard stoplights J spotted my friends st.anding against the wall. They werP. crying. When I went back to the police staUon to gather information about what had happened , I suddenly found myself covering a different type of story than I ever had before. It was pretty personal. The editors said they might not want to use the picture I look, and I don't blame them. I don't care U I ever see it. . That night as I drove home <>n Pacific Coast Highway I bad a lot of things to think about. And when I got up 11iit morning, I felt sick to my stomach. Ponderosa Project Gets Aoother Council Delay The rate of a planned 66-unit apartment complex that has raised the wrath of homeowners in southeast Hut1Ungton Beach remained unknown today despite a public hearing by the city council Mondaf night. About 300 homeowners turned , out to urge the council to deny the project oo Hamilton Avenue and Buahard Strett. The hearing was punctuated by handclap. piog and applause, but the cheers turned to rumblings of discontent as the council voted 3-1 to back the planning com· anissi<>n's approval of the project. Then a recess was called by Vice ~1ayor Jerry Matney to allow the crowd to quiet down. After the rectss the case took a new twist as Councilman Norm-a ·Gibb!J, who had missed the first hour of the meeUng, asked if the matt.er could be reconsidered by the full council. She noted Ulat Mayor D<>nald Shipley. ,.,.ho wu Ul, Jack Green and herself were absent from the hearing and did not vote. City Attorney Don Bonfa explained that the move to reconaider could be made and entered in the minutes for consideration at the next meeting. Coun- cilman Ted Bartlett made such a move, but Bonfa empha1lzed that the vote to reconsider could be made only by the !our councilmen who had voted cirlginally. The attorney also said a new public hearing would need proper notice. After that, Bonfa warned Phifip Anshutz, representing Coldwell Banker &: Co., not to take 39YJ acUon in reliance O~N•I COAST DAILY PILOT CllANOI CO.UT PUILIJHING COM,.AHy R•b•rt N. W~,, l>t•ldtnt ..... ,.,.......,. J1c~ R, C11rf1( Vlei "'•"'"'' 11\d ~· ~ ' 1\oM•t JC.141( IEdllor, Tho"'•• A. Mu1;,l11it M•~•11no l!1110r Alt~ Dir.in • w.i.1 Onnoe eou~11 £dltllf' Alb1rt W, l tlit Auocltto £41,,,. )fntfittff "-k Office 1117$ htch lawl 1~11d. M1 nt111 ~,,..,1 P.O. lff 7,0, '2641 0.... Oflkn ll""'9 ... di: m ,.., .. , ,.,_ C".elltl Mont• Ja W•I l1r S!r91t tf9WP1'T a.di! U» H........, '°"il'fll'f IM °"""""l as ~omt I.I C..r11111t lt•I I ·' on the conditional exception and use pennit granted the development. Asked when the developer, Ponderosa Homes or Newport Beach , could proceed, Bon;a told Anshutz, "I don't know how the council is going to jump next time. Jn the parlance of catd players, ·~•'YU\inf ~ ~aj. Y'l',<ll>uif.n;t,go, atoWld aplendlng any modey relying cin the permits. I suggest you return at the next meeting to find out what the next chapter in this serial will be." The. j•serial" has been running since September. The 3.06-acre parcel Js aur· rounded by single family homes but has been ioned for apartment.a aince the early 1960'11. 'Ibe planning commluion was asked to consider rezoning the property to single family homes but the planning board recommended against it, pointing out that the zoning had been in existence for Some time and that a plot plan had been "filed. The commisalon later coruldered the appllcaUon for • rondltlonal exception to permit corut.ructlon of carporta alcing the side and rear of the property instead or the required five-foot setback. This was approved frl. John Firmly, representing the Southeast Homeowners Association, handed the council a petition with the signatures of 232 persons opposed lo the project. .... He amt <>ther speakers argued that the development would reduce the value of nearby homes and ad d to traffic and school problems. One resident, John L. Davis, termed the case "a classic example of subterfuge ~nd lack of feeling by the city's elected represenlatlves, We see tonight an· tagonism and unfriendliness. It )Ol)ks like we're really at each other's throat! on something \\'.e should be together on." Doug Simpson, representing Ponderosa Homes, Pointtd <>Ut the land was zoned for apartmentl and the project met the 11Jlowed density. He said the co mplex would serve as a buffer between a commercial area and the single famlly homes. Conway Nielson, representing the Mormon Church which owns the land, said th at the church \vas opposed to a reroning if that meant it would not be able-to reroup its Investment in . the property. CouncUman Al Coen said that he did not like the spot zoning that would result but he felt the council had no Jqal alternative but to approve the pro- ject. He understood that the situation came about as a result or churches not being covered ln zoning ordlnances. Matney moved that the planning rom- mlsston be overruled, but he gained no support. Councilmen G e o r g e McCracken, Bart.Jett and Coen voted against overruling the planning board. Boy Gored, Killed < PENANG, Malaysia (UPll -A 17- y,ar-old boy was gored to death todsy by a whlte elephant, his father reported . The boy. Arrltl.n Bin Yaacob, suffered deep sid, WOU11ds and dleQ in s boet '" route to Grlk Ho1pllal near the Thal· Malay5ian border about 70 milts east ot Penang, ' ' ·wry Scot • Takes Beef To Council A truck driver with a rhythmic Scots accent charmed the Huntington Beach council and city <>fficlals Monday night by engaging in Y-TY debate on the merits of storing a detached camper in the driveway, Edward Docherty approached the microphone at th e end of Jbe council proceedings, then ·with hands in pockets coolly complained about a notice saying ~ .. hF was vi~lating a city ordinance by leaving his camper body in his driveway at 8312 Friesland Drive, 'The ordinance allows campers to be left in driveways but not the dismounted bodies-. "l just wonder why you.-ere pushing this at this time," he asked, maintaining his nonchalant stance. "I could easily evade the ordinance by buying a jWlk truck: and mounting it on that bu t it wouldn 't look very good, would it? "Being Scottish. I thought ma-ybe you picked on me as some sort of a minority group," he drawled dryly. "I see the name of the man who signed the notice is Irish (building inspector Bud Mui· queeny) but I don't know whether he ~olic or Protestant.'' ~uncilmen chuckled at Docherty "s remarks. The homeowner continued his good-natured parries. "I was wondering what would happe n to me if I just left it there, you know?" he said, Vice Mayor Jerry Mabley commented that no doubt the rest of the <>rdinance explained the pen.ally. Councilmen asked if Docherty couldn't move the camper body to his back yard. "I'll need a crane to get it over the house," he pointed out. "You have a problem," Matney ag reed. ~'Yes, well, can I leave it tbere?" Docherty countered. Building Director Jack: Cleveland said that <>ne avenue would be for Docherty to go before the planning commission to obtain a variance. Councilman Norma Gibbs suggested that Do<;herty put the camper body on wheels, perhaps on the kind of dolly that ls used to move refrigerators. "That's an idea," 'Docherty responded. "On v.·heels. Will that do? Will Bud Mulqueeny go for that ?" Docherty's final quip brought another roW'ld of laughter \'lilh Matney com· menting that the homeowner \1·ould be better off if he ignored the advice of the rouncil. Mrs. Cibbs said she felt sure that Docherty wjtb his aoo<i\: llwnor woold be able to resolve his difference with the building department. Jury Clears Man Of Bribe Rap In Mesa Case He'd Go Again \Var resister David Harris, 25, just released after 20 months in fed· eral prison, says he'd do it again even if he had to serve 10 years. Harris is shown on arrival at San Francisco Airport with his wife Joan Baez, his infant son Gabriel and his dog. See story, Page 8. South Vietnamese Troop.s Fall Bacl{ Toward Border Set Blaze In Office, "" M~Admits By TOM BARLEY 01 "" O•llY ,llft S11n ~A prosecuUon Witness today testified before an Orange {;ounty Superior Court jury that he burned Dr. Ebbe Hartelius' Corona de! Mar offices-last April 9 nt the physician's direction and that 1 nine days earlier he helped t~e doctor fake the theft of Hartelius' car. ._ "I pour.ed gas a'u ovfr the desk and. dr-<1wers and the filing l:abinet," Jim Blev ins said. "Then I struck a match · -and threw. it into the. office." Blevins, 39, testified that· he then took ''just three steps and then there was . a big explosion. . "f!:verytbing just blowed up and it• hurled me down the ball," he 11aid. •·1 fell-ttat <>n my face. My ears were ring(ngJ and I thought the whole building had bfowed up.'' B1evins said he du mped the gu can fn the hallway, fled from the building lo his Long Beach home. and dumped the office keys in a vacant lot on the \vay . Blevins, who is the brother or the • "' doctor 's ex·mistress, Reba Vaughn, faid J1is immediate reward from Hartelius was the comment : "You did • nasty job." f _ Bul he te stified that his sister later gave him money from Hartelius to leave the state. "I ~s told that if l left they wouldn't have anything on the doctor." he said. Blevins also admitted that be met Harteliu.s last March 31 and followed the doctor in his car to Long Beach \vhere the physician parked his imported auto behind a market. He said Hartelius faked,. the theft ef the auto ''because he said he needed the insurance money." It is alleged that ~arte}ius made insurance claims for the fir~ at 2345 E. Coast Highway and for the loss of his car. Deputy District Attorney Al Novick claims Hartelius offere d Blevins $2,0CO ~o leave the state when investigation Jnto both alleged frauds intensified. · He. also alleges that Hartelius planned the . fire because of "highly incrimiJ!ating patient records that might become available at a pending State Board of 1-fedical Examiners hearing into the doc·· tor's activities." Defense attorney h-1a'tthew Kurilich SAIGON (UPI) -South Vietnamese U.S. fighter-bombers and helicopltr d~ew fr~m. Blevins in ~ long grilling troops relrealed today by foot and bY gunships poured bombs. rockets and t e admission . that Blevins had stole n helicopter from positions deep inside machinegun fire on lhe Communist! ~ur--_t~r~e cars ~nor 10 the alleged theft Laos and moved closer to the South ing the evacuaUOn, the front dispatcl!Q -~~h! Hartehu~ ~uto. . reported. The weather lifted after a . hard·hitting lawyer described Vietnamese border. The U.S. rommand period of heavy clouds and fog. 1 Ble_v1ns as "a very comi;iet~nt car thief'' rushed U.S. artillery reinforcements to " . while he got the adm1ss1on from tbe the border ~rea to pound aivancing The troops from fll'e ba.se Lolo were witness that he had served s term Communist forces. flown to. aryother base with the same in federal prison for such an offfense. Altogether, 2,000 South Viet namese name. ~dltary sources gave no reason Blevins is the proseculion·s fina l withdrew from positions astride the Ho for naming the new base Ullo. 'vitnes.s in its case against Hartelius Chi Minh Trail inside Laos. One force Lolo was third in a line of four lire 50. It is expected that the .defense phas~ of 700 was flown ciut under fire by suppcrt .base~ the South Vietnamese <>C· of the trial will open late today er U.S. helicopters from fire base Lolo, cup1ed, running southeast from Sepone. Wednesday morning. the fourth major ARVN fire base aban· Fire Base Sophia was evacuated early doned in Laos in the face of advancing lhi.s week. Troops remain cin Fire Base tank-led Communist troops. Liz, midway between Sophia and the Nader Will Talk Lolo is nine miles southeast of the old Lolo. Brown is the fourth base nn supply hub of Sepone, abandoned to th h I Samuel Rosman of Laguna Niguel was e c an. . an advancini' Communist division last V cleared ·Monday night of charges that week. The others withdrawing were South ietnamese official spokesmen At Coast Campus he bribed a Costa h1esa patrolman but government infantrymen thwarted in in Saigon and at northern operational an Orange County superior Court jury their efforts to reach 8 big Communist bases refused to admit withdrawal fron1 C.On.sumer crusader Ralph Nader will found him guilty of one offense supply dump just south of Lolo. They Lolo or any major fighting anywhere speak at Orange Coast College in Costa -conspiracy to commit bribery. fought their v;ay back by foot to Fire in Laos. They insisted there were only Jl.!esa Wednesday, covering efforts by It took J.he panel six hours lo clear Base Brown. four miles r 8 rt he r light and scattered action and no major his famed team <>f Nader's Raiders in Rosman, 27, <>f 29351· San Briso Place, southeast. engagements. the field of ecology. <>n the major charges after a trial in Field reports and details from other The free 11 a.m. talk in the 1,200.seat which they heard recordings of telephone The Communists had att3cked Lolo military sources told of the vastly out· OCC auditorium is sponsored by the conversations between officer Gary '1'ilh rockets, mortars and tank guns numbered South Vietnamese being Associated Students and its ·Distin'guished BarWig and the defendant. and U.S. helicopters braved heavy an· plucked from Lolo in an armada of Speakers series. Barwig testified from the witness box tiaircraft fire to bring <>ut the ARY N · UHi . Huey helicopters. The chopper:"! Nader -best knov.'O for his expose!! that Rosman gave him $10,000 to plant troops. The South Vietnamese spiked rbarely touched the g~d before they of safety and other inadequacies in the drugs in the car of a vital prosecution six artillery piece! before leaving and v:ere fill~ by troops ;....i,.ing a co•••--t US a t t· · d t h th . 1 ""6 .... \.0.11 • , .u omo 1ve m us ry -a!'i recently v.·itness in a liquor hijacking case. Drugs e equi!)ment was ater bombed by rocket and mortar barrage, the r~rts organized several new public service charges against Rosman v.·ere also B52s. said. groups, dismissed by the jury. 'lr;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j Judge Ronald Crookshank ordered I Rosman, a Saddleback College student. to return to his court April 5 for what could be at the most a three-year term ill state prison on the conspiracy count. Rosman v.·as accused during his two- v.·eek trial of planting narcotics in the car of Charles "Chuck" Dreyer, 31 <>f 1645 Sunset Ridge Drive. Laguna Beach. It was allege~ that he bribed Barwig In rollaborotion with Eugene Rondondo. 44, a former partner with Dreyer in the now defunct Feliciano's Restaurant in Newport aeach, Mari11e Held ' In Mess Hall Kirif e Figl1t A young Camp Pendleton Marine. ·whose name still is being \vithheld by authorities. remained in custody today during the invesligation of a fatal stab- bing of a fell ow Marine fro1n Tennesse e in 111 mess hall fight last weekend. The victim, pronounced dead on arrival at the base hospil a\ during dinnertime last Sunday, \Vas Lance Cpl. Hugh S. Laster of Pittsburg Landing. Tenn. Base spokesmen said the incident, which stemmed from a dinnertime argu- ment. \~·as not raciall>"inspired. The dead ~1arine was part of Head· quarters and Servirl' Com pany, l~l Tank Battalion. •61h Piitirinr Expeditionary Bria:ade. The .~\al'!Jing ocrurrtd in the Las Flores;n1css h11!1 . Inform ationa l Servlct$ aid ts said tht name of thl' arrested Marine V.'Ould be rtteased after the Provost Marshar1 office rompletes Its investigation. Wthat's ••. My Line? . ,You won 't be fe'cl eny lines et Alden's, We er& more interested in developing loyal customers tlien meking e fest sale. None of our seles ~eople will bother you if you just went to browse, but wdl be pleesed to eui1t you if you wish, with truthful answer ~ to your questions. When w'e 'cliscuss carpet lines, we would lieve to "modestly" edmit thet we have the largest selections on the eree- Top b re n d s sucli e s: Bigelow, Serven, Beattie Megee,· Monarcli, Bah.tick, Mohawk, Roxbury, Milliken: Armst ro ng. ' . SANTA ANA, OlANCll. TUSTIN C•ll • , • ALDIN'S llllD HILL ~ARl'nl & MAll'lllll 1U7t '"'"' l:'"'• C.I. . 111·1 ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 ,' ' • • ' ' • • -. . . .... . .. -· - Tuf'Sday, M1rch 16, l9n DAILV PILOT 1J Rogers War~s of WWIII Over Mideast Crisis the seeds of future war." WAStil~ON (API -Secretary o( State William P. Rogers said today that failure of Middle East ?ieace efforts CQUJd produce a very dangerous situation in t e world and "possibly lead to World At a later point he stated thb warning on the geogr-.phical position ii establishes through a peace settlement. He urged instead Jhat Israel give at least equal importance to political ar. rangements built around l" United Na. tions Middle East peace-keeping force in which the United States and lhe other great powers would participate. agreement entered into by UM: parties and signed, sealed and delivered." in an impaSSI!! at the moment but "we are convinced the iinpasse can be 3. In spite of l,.,at Secretary QI. Defenw Laird has sail'~bout a rt.!lidual force of perhaps 50,000 Amerlc1n troops 11 South Vietnam at the end of 1~ Presi· dent Nixon has yet to make 1 decialo" on his future wlthdrawaJ .schedule an4 on the force he will leave in Vietnam, again. overcome." War " Roger Id a news conference: "The climate has er been better for a 11ettlemenl in the 1¥liddle East" But he added : "If we don't make a setJlement now Y.·e're going to pJant "We think," )le said, ''that if the situation js 1iOf worked out in the reasonable future the very dangerous situation could develop and JlOllllbly lead to World' War 01." Rogers sharpll disputed the Israeli policy expressed 6y Premier Golda Meir that JSrael mil.st base ;ts fUtUffl security Rogers refused to say ihat he. was proposing a Middle East security treaty. But he said he was talking about a "written document" and a "contractual He expressed confidence that if 1uch an agtttment could be reaCbed it would have the support of the Se.nate and House, whate'ier the form it might take. Rogers ma~e these other pojnts in the question-and-answer sessiop which was dominated by the Middle East: 1. The Middle East peace talks between Israel a.nd Egypt through United Nations mediatDr GUMar Jarring seem to bt 2. The U.S.-suppOrltd South Vitt· namese Jnva!ion of Utt Nbrth Vietnamese supply line area of Laoa has been suc- cessful w far. Among the achlevemenl3 he· listed extensive destruction of enemy supplies, interception of supply movr.- ment to the South and a virtual halt in hostilities in South Vietnam. 4. Rogers doe! not believe that th• Clunese Communists will get involved in the war in Indochina as a resull of the invasion of Laos. He argued it posed no threat to China. B~mh Ttireat ·Delays Angela: Hearing Quintuplets Born in LA; .Four Alive LOS ANGl=:LES (APJ -An insurance ma~n·s "'ife .. eave bri;h to quintuplets· early today. One, a· boy. was -stjllborn, but doctor!! said " !he four others, all girls, appeared healihy . The babies, 10 Weeks premature, "'eighed brtwe~n one and a ~alf .and t>A·o pounds apiece and were reported ln guarded condition. They were placed in isoleltes under eonstant observation at Valley Presbyterian lfospital. "This is the greatest thing that could possibly happen," said the father, Paul .Kaplan, 28, an insurance administrator for L. K. Lloyd aod Associates. lfis wife, Pearl, 25, was described in excellent condition by her obstetrician, Dr. Hubert Rubenstein. Kaplan told a newsman he and his Wife firsl !earned they were going to have five children -their first -about five week s ago. ,. "Or. Rubenstein said she lOOked a bit largr.r than usual and decided she should be X-rayed," Kaplan said. "\Ve knew then." Sixteen physicians assisted in the delivery -a pediatrician, obstetrician and anesthesiologist for each baby and a cardio-pulmonary specialist. .The first baby was born al 12:2.8 a.m. The others· follov.·ed at 12 :30, 12:33, 12 :39 and the fifth, the stillborn boy, at 12:40. Mrs. Kaplan entered the hospital Feb. 9 .. the day of the massive earthquake. Hospital spokesmen said the quake "'as not a factor in her admission. Kaplan said he 'and his v.'ire had picked name.o. for the children but were waiting until later in the day "to decide v.·hich names go with which baby." Lois Wilson, director of nursing, said the babies "'ould ha1'e lo remain in isolettcs until !hey 11•cigh at least five pounds· -projected at from !11·0 lo three n1onths. "\\1i1h any babl. that smal!,'ir· uben- ~tein said, "I.hey look good at 1 rt h. but babies this premature alw ys have breathing problem~.·· R USS RO ULETTE FATAL TO YOUTH SAN DIEGO f AP -An l8·ycar-0ld boy killed himself playing RussiHn ro'.Jlel· le Monday. police said. The pislol \\-'as fired at his own head by Douglas Clark r~raser even though five lccn-agcd friends ::;ay lhey lried to talk him out or it. • Bebe Dead • •' ' I • • ' Bebe Daniels, one of Ma('k Sen: nett# Silent screen beauties, is· dead at 70. The actress, wife · of comedian Ben Lyon. is · shown in 1941 (lop) and 1958 {bottom). See story, Page 4. Capsized 'Cat'. Still Mi ssing Near Catalina U.S. Coast Guard Search and Rescue authorities said today a 4 3 -Io o t catamaran that capsized Saturday off the west end of Catalina Island is still missing._ The Jmi Loa, owned by A. Victor Stern, of 109 Dolphin Ave .. Sea l Beach, vani shed in high winds and heavy seas after the owner and crew of seven "'ere rescued by helicopter. Air and surface craft cut or Long Beach were JOrormalty maintaining the hunL for lhe Jmi Loa. while Stern was searching for her with a commercial boat. The craH cap.sized in full vie w or observers on the island in winds up lo 40 knots, wh ile parlicipating in the annual Santa Barbara Island Race oot of l...Os Angeles. One hull was lilied from the water and wel sails jammed before they could be released to prevenl the !mi Loa from overturning. Crew members, RH experienced hands in the Trans-Pacific catamaran races, ir.cluded: Curt Huddleson, Seal Beach : Dlck Knof. fl uni ington Beach; Ken \Vise and Jerry f\1u!lenhoff, both of Costa f\.1esa ; ,\Ian a'urg. Laguna Niguel, and Jerry Winter, San Dir.go. French Strike End~ PARIS (AP) -France's three major airlines and striking flight crews reached -agreement today after an all-night session. Partial service is to be resumed Wednesday, ending a stoppage of more than three v.·eeks. Tricia's -. 'News' Set To.night • By HELEN THOMAS \VA SHINGTON ctJPr) '_President and M"cs. Nixon.· at a White House social gaµlfring toriight will .make. lhe long-ex· pected announcemr.nt of the engagement of their clde~daughter Trici3 to Harvard law Student Edward Finch Cox. ""11ie Presjdenrs blonde 2.S-year-0ld daughter '14-111 marry Cox, 24, scion of an aristoCratic "New York City and Westhampton Beach. N.Y.. family in the 'While liouse orl Saturday. June S. Dr. Edward G. Latch. chaplain of th~ House of Representatives and former pastor or Washington's Metropolitan Memorial Methodist Church, wlli of· ficiate: The President chose to formally break the 'news -although it has been an ·open secret for weeks -at an "Irish evening of entertainment" which has been previously p!anne4to celebrate Mrs. 'Nixon's 59th birt~day, · 1\fii;s Nixon v>'ill be the eighth president's daughter lo be married in the \Vhile Hous·e. Her sister, Julie Eisenhower. 22. is expected to be her matron of honor; cOx' brothr.r. Howard Ellis Cox Jr .. a systems analyst at the Penla~on, "'a~ expected-to be the. best man. Cox "'viii complete hi.t secdnd year at Harvard oo June t, a day befor• lhe wedding. He graduated from Prin· ceton in 1968 and re«ivtd a certificate from the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and lnternatiinal Affairs. He has a military defermeht and holds a .second lieutenant's comhiission in the U.S. Army Reserve as a result of his ROTC training. A former member of Ralph Nader·s ''Raiders'' and one of the youthful in- vestigators who wrote a sludy on the Federal 'I'rade Commission, Cox is con- sidered more "liberal'' politically than Miss Nixon. He is the son of Col. and Mrs. Howard Ellis Cox and also has an elder sister, ~-tazie. 25, a Smith College graduate .,,,·ho is now a student at Yale School of Architecture. His father is the senior part11er in the New York law firm of Cox, Treanor and Shaughnessy. IMPALED DRIVER STILL CRITICAL l\fOUNTAIN VfE\V (UPI) -A Uis Altoi; man whose skull was pierced by a lhree·quarter-inch pipe in an auto accident rcn1ained in "very crilical con- dition " today at El Camino Hospital. The pipe was removed frorn !he head or William N. Emery, 22. in an emergen- cy operation Sunday night. The Highway Patrol said Emery's car veered off a freeway and plowed into a landscaped area along the road. The car sheared off an irrigation pfpe and the broken end went through Emery·a forehead and cut the roof of the car. DAILY ,.ILOT Sltfl' ,..._ PUBLISHER WEED (LEFTJ ACCEPTS FLAG FROM REP. HANNA Stirs ind Stripes Once Flew Over Nation's Capitol Welfare Ref orm'Predicted By Hanna at Pilot Lunch By GEO RG E LElDAL 01 I~• Otllr "1191 11111 Orange Coast government of!icial~ were told Monday that lax credit and welfare rt"forms are likely to precede passage of President Nixon's revenue sharing proposals. Rep. Richard Hanna (D·Anaheim) met with representatives of city governments: from along the Orange Coat invited by the DAILY PILOT to participate in flag raisi ng ceremonies marking the first public tour of a new $1.3 million pro- duction plant in Costa ~1esa. A U.S. flag that has rlown over the nation·s Capitol was presented to the DAILY PILOT by Congressman Hanna. In remarks following B luncheon, Han- na predicted "much agony" in Congrc8S over the Nixon administration's sug· gested reorganization of government to "bring administration closer to the June· tion ." .... Nixon's call to eliminate adminislrati~·e duplication by "reducing nu'mbers or departmenls by defining functions" has "a logic that is very impressive,'' Hanna said. Big Pot Haul, 6 Suspects "But when you do that you run inlll powerful ongoing forces." he caulionr.d. Among these forces are the civil service estabHshment and the tr ad it ion a I jurisdictional lines within lhe House .-~nd Senate. fianna suggested the "personalities of the existing po"·er structures" would make creation of workable solutions frqm the proposed concepts difficult. . DAILY PILOT FLIES FLAGS On New · Nautical Flagpole r1a11h1g l'~lr Sen. Mervyn Dymally (D·Los Angelesl. chairman of the ~en· ate Ele<'tions and Reapportion- n1enl Co1nn1ittee. pled.i.:e.s a ''fair and open" rcdislrirting plan de s pi I e Rep11bllcan charges to the contrary and sayi; I here \\ill hp no "deal s" or "gerrymandering." Seizecl i11 Sa11 Cle1nente San Clemente narcolics detectives and state agents arrested six local resident.-; and seized $16,000 worth or marijuana f\1onday evening in one of !he largest hauls of the )Veed in recent city history. f\1ost of the arrests and seizure of the lion's share of the forbidden weed look place at the Alpha Bela Market parking Jot at 903 S. El Camino Real at 7:30 p.m. The three men arrested there and booked on charges of possession cf mari- juana for sale are Steven Jon Crain, 22, of 106 Calle Balboa. San Clemente : James Carl Dodge. 23, giving an addres.s of 228 La Esperanza. and William David Anderson. 21. of 221 W. Calle f\1arquita. Officers said lhey seized a toh1l of 40 kilos of the weed. about S8 'pounds, in 11 vehicle in the parking loL Latef. they drove to Anderson's Mar- quita addrcsi; and arre.'lted the man ·~ \\'He, Sally Jean . 20. and a 17-yea r-nld girl. In the apartment officers said they found two m(lrt kllo~ of the weed. The arrest of the sixth San Clemente re~ident \va.~ the rr:c:.ult or a fluke, and officers dnubted that the man wa_, directly related to the other five persons. As the ~investigation al lhr. parking lot progressed, officers said, Dana Rene Nadeau, 18. approached the plainclothes aRents .and struck up a conversation. Officers asserted the man was smoking a marijuana cigarette during the con· versa lion. They arrested him on charges of possession. Nadeau gave his address as 203 Via B.allena. Police said lhe arrests took place dur- ing an undercover buy which had been arranged in advance. Crain, Dodge and Anderson were stlll in custody this morning. held under $25.000 bail apiece. Bail amounts on l\1r.:. Anderson and Nadeau were not immediately available. The juvenile girl was released to custody of an elder brother, police 1aid. Arraignments are scheduled In South Orange County Municipal Court early Wednesday morning. F'urther hampering change will be the 1972 Presidential election in which both parlies may be e)(pected lo "posture their actions and more important their f'xpJanalions of actions, v.•i!h an eye fO\\IBrd '72." Revenue sharing, specifically, is in trouble, Hanna said, because both the chairman of the }louse Ways and Means committee and the senior Republican member oppose the coi'l'cept or the federal government raising funds to tiirn them "freely over to other agencies -state and local governments -to spend them." Until the i.o.sue of revenue sharing or some 'other means of lessening !he lax burden of local government is devis· ed. Hanna urged the city officials "lo keep up the pressure for reform." He also suggt-;.led lo keep applying for federal gra~ under existing or proposed leg ishition sach as the Clean Waters Art, the safe streets prrgram, and the f'du catlonal programs including the F.lementary and Secondary Education Ac!. \VeUarf! rrforms Hanna supports would isolatf' recipien ts wiMl fixed handicap.~. such a5 hlindnesi;. to remove them from the socia l workers' ca~eloads. would ap- ply cost effectiveness I• cooperative I services such as health care arranged for recipients, and realization of a locally determ ined v.·ork program that provide~ for retraining-and worker paychecks coming from the federal government. The conflict between group and in· dividual practice of medicine was citl"d by Hanna as one of the publ!c health battles that will result from the nationa l health care insurance proposr.d hy the Nixon· admini st ration. "Since Medicare the government has realized !here IS no way to get half way into the health acl," he !aid. Among those atlendi!JC the DATLY PILOT luncheo n were Supervisor Ronald \\'.Caspers. Newport Beach : Councilman Lindsley Par110ns, Newport Be a c h : Mayor Robert Al Wilson, Costa file:sa: Mayor Tony Forster. San J u a n Capistrano : Mayor Walter Evans. S:in Oemente : Councilman Charlton Boyd, Laguna Beach : h1ayor li1orton Baum. Stal Beach: f!ilayor Ed Just. Fountain Valley: and John Beekma n. ad· ministr3Uve aide to llanna. Mayor Dona ld Shipley <1f Huntington Beach was unable ff) attend, SuperYisor DaYi~ Roktr. Garden Grove, .11Hended the lour and the flag ceremonies. I \ Blast Peril -Evacuates Courtroom SAN RAFAEL (AP) -A telephoned bomb threat caused evacuation ot the Marin Civic Center klday a few minutes before the start of • scheduled .hearing for Angela Davis, black militant charged with murder. Jcldnaping and conspiracy in a shootout at the eenter last Aug'. 7. Scores. or newsmen and 1upporten of Miss Oilis. lined up outside the courtroom waitin~et in, were ~or.ced by sheriff's depu to ~building. The hearing, several tions by Miss Davis, was i;cheduled be con· ducted by Superior Ccurt Judge John P. McMurray, 62, who retired Jan. 4 in Inyo County. He has stated he hopes not lo conduct the actual trial. saying "let one of those younger fellows do it.'' Supporters or the accused woman gathered cutside the courthouse and aaid they planned a demonstration. . Miss Davis. a 27-year-0ld cne-time UCLA philosophy instructor, is accused of having furnished lhe guns and plotted the escape attempt in which four were killed, including a Superior Court judge. Two convicts and an alleged accomplice also Vlere shot dead. Also charged in the incident is convict Ruchell Magee, whose two court-ap- pointed lawyers say they will try to. withdraw from the case because Magee cicesn't trust them and insist. oa representing himself. Attorneys for MiS! Dalis.are aeeking dismissal of her lndlctment. ball, sup- pression of evidence and permission for her to act in her own defense as co- counsel. After security checks found no bonib, participants returned to the cow;thousc less than an hour later. Prisoner Admits Killing Liberty In Sf!-n Diego Special to the DAJLY PILOT SAN DIEGO -The man wbo strangled Candlelight Killer Robert W. Liberty con .. fessed in court here Jl.1ond'ay, after being promised prosecutors wouldn't 1eek the death penalty. Timothy E. Dudley, 24, admitted the ._ J an. 20 jail cell killing of Liberty, while a second prisoner charged in the 1laying has entered no pica . • Ironically t he former Orange Coast mental patient authorities credited wittt al least three murders himself died due to mistaken belief he w-aS a police informant a scrcalred snitch and accused his CO· defendant. CarJ R. Riggs, 21, of plotting the killing. Sentencing was set March 25 by Judge Francis E. CallaglTer. whlfe Riggs, trial for Liberty's San Diego County JaU death ls still pendin3. Riggs and his older brother fa=e .trial April I in connection with the shootipg last December of an off-duly policeman who intervened in a holdup. Liberty "'as garroted with his own T- shirt in a five-man cell be shafed with Dudley and Riggs only five days before his own murde r trial. lie and the woman he married In Colorado while both were charged with kidnap and robbery la~t summer were chftr,i::ed with the torture staying of a male nurse last June in San Diego. C11ndlcs v.·ere left burning beside Robl'rt .I. Trion, 52, whom liberty knew al Atascadero State llospital, where he was treated after the June, 1966 candlelight killing. He was never convicted of murder in the dE'ath of Mr!. Marcella Landis, 31, cf Westminster, whose body was surrounded with candles that earned Liberty his nicknamt. Dudley 's role in Liberty's demise and his accusations against the o I her cellmate were submitted in a transcript of his testimony lo the San Diego County Grand Jury. Insult and Injury GRAIN VALLEY, Mo. iAP) -S. C. Henry. former mayor of this Kall$Js City sul>urb. was convicted in Pollco Court Monday nisht under tan ordinance passed Jasl year by the Cl!y Council over his objection and without his si~naturc, Henry Wit., fined $100 for f11il· lng to secure a city permit to ope'4M,t a mobile homes court. I • • • 4 DAILY PILOT Tuesday, Mire~ 16, 1971 \ \ I ~ps • White Panther Drug-Sex Lure Cited- • ,- WASHINGTON (UPI) -A Senal< Internal Security subcommittee 4released secret· accounts today te!Ung how the White Panther Party allegedJy used JI rock band to lure young people into a commune life of drugs and sex. The accounts also said party leaders had discus"sed kidnaping Viet President Spiro T. Agnew, the governor of Michigan or a member of Congress. its. manaaer, John A. Sinclair Jr., one of the two cofounders of the White Panther&. Sinclair and Lawrence (Pun) Plamon· don organized the White Panthers in Ann Arbor, Mich., in December, 1968, after they were refused permission to join the Black Panthers, the testimony said. Murray aaid .a "confidential sourct" had told police that party personnel were considering using the tactics of the Tu pamarq, iuerrillas in Uruguay to win the release or ••political prisoners.'' 1uaaestion that with someone of the pro- minence of the Vice President Spiro Agnew, one coold 'write his own ticket.'" li-lurray said the source also reported that Plamondon once 11aid riots were no longer useful but "he noted that during a riot was a good time to 'rip off banks' or to ·snatch governor (William) Milliken (of Michigan).'" distribution of materials printed by the White Panther Party that related to city and state politics and the alms of the White Panther Party," he said. ''All of these concerts have featured profane language and the distribution of profane literature." Iron Horses Still a Thrill The party's aim. two Michigan stale police detectives said, was to cause a ' Mao Tse-tung style revolution in this country. "' The band, called the: MC-5 had as "If a youngster was i9terested as a fan of the MC·5 band and wrote for a picture or something of this type, they would in turn receive this White Panther literature." detective Sgt. Clif· ford Murray told the subcomm.lttee. "This reC1lmmendation included the suggestion tbat Michigan congressmen could be traded for John Sinclair. Prominent national figures such ~as Sen. Robert Griffin and Congressman Gerald Ford might be good for trading for Black Panther Party leaders such as · Huey Newton and Bobby Sei!ile," Murray said. "This recommendatio11 included lhe He 'l.dded that the White Panthers began a series of' rock concerts in May. 1969, which appeared to be politically oriented. "Each of these concerts, along with a band for music, would include the Murray testified along with detective Richard M. Schave in September, and the transcript was released today. Mur· ray said it was both his opinion and that of the state police that the White Panthers were working toward obtail).ing control of young people "for the primary purpose of causing revolutjon in this country." By mOMAS MURPHINE Of ,... otn, l'INI 511tt RAILS REVISITED: Jn thi& age o( multiple computeri, moon shots and elec- tronic pr~ing. it's pleasant lo learn that one lure of youth hasn't really changed. Kids still seem to_ love old· fashioned steam engines on railroad trains. Outside of horse operas on the telly or an occasional museum v i s i t , youngsters today don't really get mucll opportunity to see a real puffer·belly In action. I mean, let's face it, somebody wrote "Farewell lo Steam" a long time ago. And since then, efforts at developing some form of rapid transit along rails have seemed to win something less than univetaal acceptance in S o u t h er n California generally and along the Orange Coast in particuJar. * Like the other day, nolict came through that Southern Pacific wants to shut down its one-man ticket office which struggles along up in the County Seat. That's hardly evidence that Orange Coun- ty r.aU.traffic is on the upswing. * Despite dwindling interest in rail travel by elders, there's still some proof at hand that youngsters retain a certain fascination in watching a st e ~ m locomotive at work. I noticed this 1ust the other day up at Knott's Berry Farm in Buena Park; where the Knotts operate a steam-propelled traln salvaged from the 1800s. Now, I'm not certain how many young people are actually enthralled with the notion of riding. But indeed they do love to watch the old steamer pull in and depart from its depot -which it does often at Knott's due lo th e brevity of its run. * Watching isn't all the fun. The kids have learned the big old locomotive can smash things. Like a penny. Place the -penny on the tracks and after the big loco has rolled by. you have nothing but a lone:, thin piece o( copper. * Some youngaters have refined the art. They tape a string or toy gun caps to the track to get the big engine drive wheels make them pop like a machinegun. Or, place the whole roll of caps on the track and you can get one pretty good e1plosion. The games seem endless, although there are always a couple of cowboy-suited Berry Farm hands out in front of the cowcatcher to assure tracks are c l e a r of lhe youth corps be.fore the big engine rolls off again. Yet as one delighted youngster ren\ark· ed while examining his squisbed penny after the train departed : ''Wow~ Heap heavy iron horse ... " Well, maybe in the younger generation there's hope for mass transit yet. Or maybe just thinner coin of the realm. * GE'lilNG THE BOOT: Down at ~tuirlands Junior High in San Diego the other day they ordered suspension of a ninth grade honor student because she ran barefooted to catch the bus. Turned out she had b e e n rehear11ing a dance routine arid had to choose between running barefooted or putting on hCr bootr; and missing the bus. You can bet· the whole thing precipitated a bit of controversy. Summed up school board Vice Presi· dent Arnold Steele: "This is just in· credible ... " I I ~i ! I To be sure, Colleen Sterling, 4, is Irish (and half Japanese) but she'll be all Irish tomorrow on St. Patrick's Day. Here she wheedles·a kiss from secret pal Brian Naslund, 4, to get a head start on that glorious day. Brian holds his head but bears up well otherwise. Started In '1901 Early Hollywood Star Bebe Daniels Succumbs LONDON (AP) -Bebe Daniels, sparkling brunette star of "Rio Rila" and hundreds of other early Hollywood Wicks 'When Tricia leaoes, will we need such a big house?' films. died today at her London apart· ment. She was 70 and had Jived in seclusion with her husband of nearly 41 years, actor Ben Lyon. since suffering a stroke in I 9 6 3. She suffered another in November, developed pneumonia and was returned home from a Wimbledon hospital this month. She died of a cerebral hemorrhage. Frail and weak in her last days. she nevertheless told an interviewer at her bedside a few days ago: "l'll get out of here, real soon.'' "She died peacefully at 5 a.m.," her adopted son Richard told newsmen. Her husband was at her bedside. Miss Daniels died a week after Har old Lloyd. with whom she made a CCJmedy a week for four years. Their collabora- tion began when she wt1s 14 and already a seasoned performf' Her mother, a Spanish actress natr j Phyllis Griffin, carried 2-monlh-old Bebe on stage in a 1901 CC1medy called "Jane,'' and at age 4 the child's career was launched in earnest as the hapless Duke of York in Shakespeare's "King Richard ~ 111." Russ ia Boosts Number of Jews Going to Israel MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet a:overn· ment has taken a major policy decision on the Jewish emigration problem here and within the past 10 days has permitted about 150 Jews lo leave for Israel, reliable Soviet sources reported today." The sources emphasized that although an average of 15 Jews have left the Soviet Union daily since the decision, the authorities placed no limit on the number who would be allowed to leave. If the current emigration pace is main· fained. more than 5.000 Jews would be permitted to go to Israel by the end of this year. The sources, however would not CClnfirm this figure. Three weeks ago a group of Jews conducting a sit-in demonstration in a Soviet parliament building in Moscow \Vere told that "very high government officials" would make and reveal a com- prehensive drcision on the question of Jewish emigration to Israel. The decision, reliable Jewish sources reported at the time. was to have been made public through the Soviet press by March l. There has been no officia l report to date on a policy change but the information provided by the sources today apparenUy referred to the pro- mised decision . • Indiana Lashed by Squalls China May Lease Vital Port Site On Indian Ocean Five Hurt as Winds Blow Over Trees, Power Lines California I • UNITID ,.lllSS INTlllNlTIDNAl TOIHY Wll I tDOCI d•Y +or <>eoPlt •Ill! "H1v• • Nlct Ot v" bvmo•• t fld<t n , n w1•. 11 1t111 "''"~1·w1se. 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Stft. f •M 1.m. ~ Tenaperature s \VASHINGTON {AP) -U.S. in- telligence sources s11y China is trying tn lease port facilities in Ceylon, which could give Peking a strategic toehold in the Ind ian Ocean. I' UNITID "llESI INTlllN.lTIDNAL f.,,..,.,.turtf I M P•KIP1111lon tor tnt ?•·"Our P1rlod t11dl"9 1! ' • m . A.lbY•Uff'flYt A!l1111t Ancl'l<l,.1• Boilon BYllllO Cntrlon• Chlc110 Clntlnn•U Cle vii end 0111•• 0...vtr o.i Moine\ -·· F1lrb.ll'lk1 1-1-1utu lnclltlllPOllJ J1et!Klllvl111 J.,....tu 1Ctnt11 CllY Ltl v"'' LOI Aftlflf$ Loultwl!lt Mlf"IOll4 Ml1ml .Mllw1lllt;tt Mln,..tpollo Ntw Orlt1n1 NfW YOflr: Ol<llM"'I (ilV °"'~ P•r,,, s~r11111 Plllltdtlplllt P-l• Pl!h~u"ll PD<fl11{11, Ort ltPld (II, .. ~ .i1c•1m1n't S•. LOU'I ~Ill Lt~t Cttr Hit/I LIW PrK. ;\O ll .01 65 36 ~~ f; 71 The Red Chinese want a new port 60 "° .a1 at Trincomalec . to service naval and ~ ~ :'i: merchant ships, these sources say. !~ : ·01 Intelligence analysts expect t h e ,, :JG .1 1 Ceylonese government will be receptive ~ ~ lo the Chinese overtures, though favoring o JO an errangement that would limit port ~ .:; .OJ use to mercllant craft. ~ ~ ·: This report roincid.is with Other in· " '-5 11 telligence information that the Chine&e ~~ ~ -" have converted a 12,000 ton cargo vessel ,, ,1 Into a missile tracking ship. " ~ m ,. American officials Interpret deploy· ri ;~ ment of the tracking ship •s indicating 11 11 a1 Pek ing may be near its long awaited .u '' .. first full lest of an intercontinental 16 'l 1..1 JJ oi ballistic mjaile, using the far reaches ~ ;: of the lnd ilfi"""Ocean as a test range. ii u ·01 Already concerned about Soviet ~~ ~ 01 penetration of the Indian Ocean, U.S. ~-'' strstegls!s "°"' see the paulblllty of " " .01 the other Communist su""rpo\Yer movln" '' n ... ~ " 11 " into an area once domin11ted by the ~ ;: Britiii;h N8vy but now willttlut any major ,J xi Jt Western militarNrtsencc. $6-7 Million Embezzlers Take Huge Bank .Haul CHICAGO (UPI) -FBI agents in· vestigated today what could be one of tbe largest amounts of money - estimated between $6 million and $7 million -ever embezzled from a bank. The embeulement occurred at the Cosmopolitan National Bank and was discovered when a customer "confessed" the crime to a bank official Feb. 25. Donald D, Magers, bank pi'esident, said Monday. The embezzlement scheme. which in· volved checks as large as $900,000 writ· ten on the customer's account, also in- volved a veteran member of the bank's bookkeeping department. Magers said. He said the employe has &ince b e e n discharged. . Magers. said the customer allegedly ~nvolve~ 1n the crime is a key executive in a Chicago merchandising corporation. He said the exact Joss of bank fund s will not be known until an audit is conducted of the bank's books. Magers said the bank loss was covered fu!ly by United States Fidelity & Guaran· ty companies. FBI agents reportedly questioned the bank customer and the former employe, but no charges have been placed against them. 1'.1agers said the embezzlement ap- parently occurred when the executive wrote checks on a corporate account in excess of the amount of money deposited to the account. The checks were only handled by the one bookkeeper involved, he said. The bank has issued a statement to shareholders about the incident. The statement said the employe suspected of participating in the embezzlement had been employed in the bank's bookkeeping Fa ll on Knife Blade Fatal to 9°year-0ld WEST CONSHOKOCKEN, Pa. (AP) -A nine-year-old boy died Monday night y.•ben he fell on a kitcben knife'"' while helping wash the dinner dishes. Police said Samuel Tartaglione was standing on a fool stool, helping his sister, Doreen. 13, wash dishes. The stool apparenUy slipped and the boy fel'. against a dish rack sending the knife's eleven inch blade thro~ his heart. · Co.Id Chicago department for 24 years. The statement assured shareholders Lie loss was covered in full and aaid reserve accounts are available to further protect the bank from loss. Magers said the loss was substantial, but the bank w a s in a position lo take care of it. Golda Meir's Peace Plan Carries Day JERUSALEM (UPl)-Prlme Minister Golda Meir won an overwhelming vote of confidence in a stormy session of the Knesset (parliament) today after outlining a peace platform that rules out Israeli withdrawal from East Jerusalem, the Golan Heights, the Jordan River and Sharm El Sheikh. The opposition right·wing bloc that had proposed the motions of no con· fidence in Mrs. Meir 's leadership walked out of the session even before the final vote was taken- The vote in favor of the government was 62 votes, with no one voting against and 12 members abstaining. The 26-mem· ber Gahal bloc stalked out after its motion for a secret ballot w a 1 overwhelmingly defeated in a 45--minute shouting match. Mrs. Meir said earlier in an intervie\v there would have to be some revisions ()f the Israeli.Jordanian frontier and that the Sinai would have to be demililariud. But she said Israel would not give up the Syrian Golan Heights, Old Jerusalem and Sharm E\ Sheikh. "Israel is ~titled to defensible borders and on this it will not compromise " she said. ' ''She wants true negotiations and has no intention of imJX>sing conditions on others and most cert;iinly will not accept CCJndltions imposed by others. "This has always been the govern· ment's policy and remains the govern- ment's policy. Similarly, the Israeli government has no intention of accepting any sort of international guaran~es as a substitute for agreed, .recognized and defensible borders." Pedestrian bows head and plows into blinding snow flurry on Michl· gan Avenue. Temp~ratures plummeted from 60 t.o 30 degrees dur- ing the day ,and wind• reached 52 mile5 per hour. i • 17 17 --·-·~ --... • .r ' -· . • ' ' • Fo1111iai:•• Valley VOl.. 6-4, NO. 6-4, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA .• ·TUESDAY,.MARCH 16, 1'17.1 · ~ ' ' . ' • 1cer e Ill ar . ' . • Salary Fight • Fluoride Safety Employes Hearing Win Court Delay Deferr~d H~ polke and firem~n confirm lhal those ag•eement .. were The fluoridation Issue. was dela.yed by took. their six-month-old pay dispute with yiolated when councilmen authorized the the Hunhngton Beach City Council Mon- the city to Orange County Superior Court 8.25 percent pay raise. day .nl.ht to. allow further ~tudy by Mon~ won a lfi..day delay on City officials estimate that the pay in-the city s En~1ronmental Council. the city's plans to implement pay scale creases for firemen , if granted, would The council agreed to a request by proposals in it.a 1970-71 budget. cost the city about $61,000 a year. the eCol~. group to. hold up funding Judge Robert Banyard set March 31 Increases for policemen over the 8.25 !or fluoridation until after March 31. as the date for a hearing on charges percen( level would cost the city a < Mrs. Margaret Carlberg. chairman of contairied in the two lawsuits -one further $43,812 aMually. the environmental cour1cil, informed filed by the . Huntington Beach Police councilmen that the group wished to Officers Association and the other by •• ev:iluatt the findings of Dr. Jack lhe Huntington Beach Firemen's Associa-.. MCKee, a health engineer With the tion. ft. " • 1 California Institute of Technology. The The HBPOA wants $650,000 in damages ., '., ~ environmental group sought Dr. McKee's and both associations want the judge advice on the fluoridation m;1tter. to set aside a City Council resolution The council also decided against taking of last Sept. 1 in which an 8.25 percent action on a request by Gerald Bogart, pay increase was ordered for all city . .president of Huntington Beach Citizens employes. for Pure Water, to subinit the question Both police and firemen asked for of adding nuorides to the city's water an 11 percent pay hike and they argue supply to a public vote. that the city should have continued Bogart said that 4,480 persona bad discussions on the issue. signed a petition urging the council to .. Botb writs of mandate claim that draft a new ordinance calling for a City Council action violated a long.stand-public vote on the question. l , , C : ' t DAILY 'PILOT"Sllff\l'~lt · . ATT~NDANTS HAUL AWAY BODY OF. SHOOTlNG VICTIM A•9¥..,.•I. Over Dot .Ends ln :Dellh Q~bld•"'""'" '"' · tng . agreement between the city and Bogart .said that although the petition both associations. was not valid -it was filed a monlb The plaintiffs ask Superior CoW'l to later than the law .allowed _. this we• because the iroup te~ved !ncprrect infoimation froin the· ~unty ~1lstrar ' Mexico Jails 20 to Thwart ' Revolt Plot MEXICO CITY (UPI) -The Mexican government said Monday it has sma~hed a plot , in w&ich North Ko~ea t.t:amed Mexican students as guerrillas 1n an attempt to overthrow the government and replace it with a Marxist-Leninist regime. Attorney General Julio Sanchez Vargas announced the arrest of 7.0 Mexicans and. said the search was on for 29 t1ther members of a group trained in terrorism at a North Korean army camp near Pyongyang. "ThiS group was trained by North Korean soldiers with the aim of imposing a Marxist-Leninist regime on Mexico," Sanchez said .. Sanchez said the plot was hatched 11 Patrice Lumumba University in Moscow among Mexican students who were there on scholarships under the Mexican-Russian Cultural E x ch a n g e InStitute in Mexico City. He said the Mexicans went to East Berlin where they received North Korean passports And went by train to Mose.ow then by plane to Pyongyang, North Korea. . Sanchez said the plot was broken with the 11.rrest over the weekend of the 1uspecta at what he ~ailed ~err!lla academies and hideouts 1n Mexico City, Jalapa, Acapulco and Pachuc. Automatic rifles and revolvers, more than 1,000 cartridges, grenades, short wa~e radios and surgical equipment were seized .. Those arrested we.re charged with con- spiracy, inciting to r~bellio~. criminal association, robbery with v 1 o I e n c e , homicide, hoarding arms, falsification of documents and using f o r g e d documents . The robbery and homicide charges were the result of two Mexico City bank robberies earlier this year in which Sanchez ·said $100,000 was stolen to finance guerrillas aclivities. A bank guard was shot 1nd killed in •ne of the holduJ .. Parents Learn Of New Math Parents in t.be Fountain Valley School District can go back to class Wedntsday night at Tamura Sc:hoot The tardy bell ring1. at 7:30 p.m. After that, Mrs. Deloril Flint. a learning coordinator at Tamura, will •t..vt teaching tht folks about new math. She'll explain to the parents the same things their kids are learn_ing. She 'll teach it each Wednesday for sis: weeks. The adult education program is co- gponl!llred by the local school district and the Orange Coast Commlllllty Collea• tJlstrict. No registration 11 Mces.sary for the course and no let ii charged. .. of voten. ' "But'we do have 4,480 signatures show· Ing that -the community -does want the right to vote," he added. Vice Mayor Jerry Matney said that the request would be considered, but that any action should be deferred until the environmental council has studied the question. Dr, McKee has indicated that there may already be sufficient· fluoride ifl Southern California water supplies to re· duce denlal decay in children. ( The natural fluoride content in Hun· tington Beach water varies from 0.4 DAILY l'ILOT tt•ff l"M• ~to 0.5 parts per million. The city was planning to add chemicaL fluorides to increase the amount to one pprt per million. HOSPITALIZED FOR TESTS Huntington Btach's Shlplay Mayor Undergoes Hospital Tests In Huntington Huntington Beach M11yor Don a 1 d Shipley entered the new I acifica ijospital Monday for a series of tests suggested by his doctor. Fountain Valley, which ha~ I natural content Of 0,6 part per million in it.a water, has also approved iais!ng the !eye! to one piirt per million. Both ciij,es were applying f9r fluoride permits from the California Public Health Board in Anaheim today. Copter Sights Burning V !ssel Councllman Norma Gibbs said during A U.S. Coast Guard spokesman in Monday night's council meeting that the "bmg...Befich today credited the Newport mayor had "taken ill" Monday. He was Beach helicopter with spotting a burning not at the council meeting. tuna skiff which sank off Seal Beacll Hospital officials said this morning Monday .. that tile mayor was in for a regular /'n\~f belonged to a San Pedro check up. tuna boat owned _by Nick Marinovich Shipley became ont': of the holglitaJ's 8hd was unoccupied at the time of first patient.s. He was the 19th admitted its sinking. as the hospital opened its doors for The spokesman said Marinovich's· crew the first time Monday. was cleaning !ht': skiff when the fire Pacifica Hospital, located at .18792 broke ·01,1L They abandoned it for the • Delaware St., was once .a convalescent larger boat and the flames were spotted hospital, but 'was recenUy converted and down coast by helicopter crewmen ·who expanded to an. 8().bed general hospilal. notified the Coast Guard. No word was given on when Mtiyor The C.Oast Guard buoy tender Walnut Shipley, a biology professor at Cal State answered the call and fought the flames Long Beach, would be released from until the skiff sank. No injuries were the hOspital. reported. $3.6 Milliota Asked COulicihnen lJ1a: For Hearings On Oil Drilling The Huntington Beach council ts to pelilion the California Lands Com.mission to hold a public hearing in the city on any application that would allow offshore oil drilling in the city limits. Councilmen ordered Monday night that a resolution to this effect be prepared and sent to the commission. The action was taken after Councilman Norma Gibbs' V'Olced concern at 1he com- mission's recent deciskln 'to ext.end permits allowing offshore 1 e t s .m i c surveys. · 1 The commission eXteoded t h e · '"'geophySical permits for Texaco Inc. and Union Oil c;o. which allow surveys in state tidelands, including the stretch from the Santa Ana River north to San Luis Obispo. These permitA authorize underwater explosions, but do n<rt cover test drilling. ' Mrs. Oibbs said she recently lunched with Houston Flournoy, a member or the lands commission, and he assured her that the board would not approve drilling, permit.s. "He s~id the seismic surveys were automatic, but what concerns me Is il they dn rtnd a pool of oil off Huntington Se8.ch they would want to ao ahead and drill ." Mrs. Gibbt added. Canberra Bomh Scare CANBERRA (UPI) -A large squad of police searched Parliament House for 'a bomb .today after an allOllymous phone call was received at palice head· quarters. The mes.sage was passed on to . Canberra Criminal Investigation Branch which sent men to · augment the police on permanent duty at Parlia· ment House. Library Increase Sought ' The library in the Huntington Beach Stone&. A.s&OCiates, Irvine, recommended tQ. be used solely as a senior citizens central park will be built on piling over that a combination of piling and recom· l!tnter. a former dump. pacted soil be used in laying the llbary • Architect Dion Neutra had recom- • And the city's Library Board and the foundation.~ The additional cOflt for thii; mended to tht': library and recra.tion boards tha~ the sei::ond and third phases Recreation and Parks Commission art work was estimated , at '30,000. of the IJbrary be advanced to otfset recommending lhtt the library budget The council also was told that Ute rising labor costs and reconstn.li:Uon be increased from $3 milllon to $3.6 library board and recreation ~pn costs esUmat~ at $50,000. million. had •pp,r.oved a 45-foot lhirt to ~tti!(.t¥1t . The engineers said that depths of fill This would allow advancing the se:OOR.~ l for-Ule· library d&a a.ear Teilbert AviriW at tht dump site were from two feel and third construction phases to build ~ Golden Welf,: Street, to 40 feet. They recommended that the two wings at the li~rtu·y, rJ!l'ne""iaals for "building the two~brary library be buill on concrete <If st.eel City councilmen Mondaf nigh( were ~ing,s would bl ~ create 7,Soo are pjllngs, driven from 20 to 300 fett btlow given copiu of an engineering r'eport a11d feet ol space Ji!IUd1 couJd be wed the fill. of the ml'nutes of recent llbrirfaod rec-bt, tht recrutil)R .. Id par,U 1t~f for ! A mat of cempacted Oil beneath i. reat.iOn commluion meetinp. The coun· an Interim periQlll. ~ five le 10 ;year1, . tpncrtte basement slab a1Jo ii: recom~ ctl may take action on the project Marcil th• council was•tofd. • .·~ ~fQded to mtnimlr.e the effect · of 29Th. e This w<luld •II• tile present ~ ! l!l•ll>Ane gas emanatilll from the old , enginetrina report, by Robert center at 17th s.,_t and 01~v1,a. ,rump. --.... ,., '(( .. ARRESTEQ .IN MURDER LA Officer· $chu1se Illegal Aliens Caught; 1 Dead In Truck Fall OCEANSIDE: (AP) ~ Thirteen Mex- icans who were in the United Stales Ulegal)f were in custody tOciAy, but another was dead aft.er falling from a truck. The trlick driVer escaped. The Californ!a Hlghwa~. Patrol sa,id Elias Medina-Ortega, about 20, was fatally Injured Monday when . he fell from the back of the pickup truck and was hit by two cars. He recently !Jved in Tijuana. After the truck was stopped a h~w miles away, II other aliens were found under a tarp cOvering ·the ' truck bed. Two others who ned, with the driver were captured. . Tbe Mexican nalionals said the:t. paid the driver $200 eaCh to be taken to Loa Angfles.' They crossed the border a'bout 12 rniie1 welt of Cale.ticO early Sund!Y· QV~KE H~TS IN $0VTH. PACIFIC • • BERKl':LEY (AP) -A large eartll- q,uake mea11uring 6.25 on the Richter 1eale 11.ook place in the South Pacific tod1~~ .. accord1ng to t.))e University ,of C.alllorrllt selsmOf!"'Ph al Be•k•l•y"< , The quake epicenter was plac:.d, a1000 miles sout.bwest of Berkeley 1 pi' ,the ~1otf1op or N~w, .. H~rldes If'"'· It oo-cur'ld •t l :U 1.m. PST. .. :1" -. • Today's ~al N.Y. S~u ~N CENTS e ' . a - Buena Park Man Slain In Beach By RUDI NIEDZIEU!KI 01 tllf! Dellr 1'1 .. 1 Sltff An argument over a dog that • a 1 fed a cigarette in a Huntington Beacla bar Monday night resulted in the Sbootlnc death et a 29-year-old man and the arrest of an off-duty Los Angele! policeman on a murder charge. Mark A. Rodgers, 29, of Buena Park. wss hit in the chest by a .38 caliber bullet. pollt!e tu1irl. He was dead 01:1 arrival at Huntington lntucommuoitY. · llospital about 9:30 p.m. Police arrested two men on murder charges. They are· Cllfton J.-S!:husse, 26, of 5672 Rogers Drive, Huntington Beach, a two-year patrolman with the Los Angeles Police Department 's Harbor Division, and James E. Jordon, 31, of 6762 Warner Ave., Apt. K·IO, Huntington Beach, a foreman at· an aluminum manufacturing company. Witnesses to the shooting 'aid that an argument atarled at the -Swinger bar on Beach Boulevard south of Garfield Avenue !>f.':tw~n two groups of patrons after tbe policeman allegedly aave a dog a cigarette to eat. When tfle argtiment got out of )land a.qd persons in the bar began arnti{la: the~ves .wtlh pool cues, the patroM were •sked to leave. police said. Aecordini to a witness, the dispute contJnued outllde the bar. JnvestJgators were told by witnesse1 tha t one shot was fired into the pavemenf during the argument. Red Police Take .Soviet Family · From Embassy MOSCOW (AP) -Russian police selz.. ed a Soviet doctor 's family today after t~ey had entered U.S. Embassy grounds to seek information on emigration. The embassy delivered. a strong protest ao- ~ing the police of "violation of em· baasy territory." . An emb~ spokesman said the in. cident developed into a struggle between a dozen U.S. employes and the Soviet militiamen. Militia guards pulled the doctor's wife and two daughters, aged 5 and 9, onto the si'clewalk in front of the 1e.mbassy and took them away. The doctor, a short. stocky man iden .. tified as Vasily Nikittnkov, locked bis arms around ao iron gait and called, ''Help me! Help me!" About a dozen embassy employes quickly came to bis rescue. They' foiled, police effort.~ to ·take· the man away by swinging· closed the heavy iron ga~ onto the inside o( wbich the man had braced himself. , The spokesman said the three police regularly ai;signed to watch 'the embassy had by this time been reinforced but there was no count of bow many po!icemen h~d taken part in the incident.. Orange Weather The Weatherman's lighting a candle uiider the thermometer Wednesday, pushing' the mercury up to 80 degrees in the central county and In UR-low 70s locally. INSIDE TOJtA Y Art you ready for . tha biQari t wttk of living thraur rvtr ita Orangt County? It •tarts to- night, ond uou11 /in4 all U.. detail$ on Etatertoinment f.""' 20, ' . .- ,,,,.,. . Ctllltrlllt I Cllttlfl119 Ut 11 c1 ... 11i. 11.2• c..,.ic1 -'' CrM~ 1S °"" "-'"" ' '""'"" ' ... llllrill -..... • lftNl'l•lfllMllit 1t-1t "'"'1114 '"" .....,..._, ,. "ft~ ..... " u M111Mx • M1M ... L~f .,., 1 .. tt Mlll11el ....... M "lliontl IC1wt 4.J °""" (ffftty • S.hlll """"' ,, ,_._ , .. ,. SIMt: Mlr-lh 1 .. 11 T.i.+tltlM It 'hlftl'" lt-lf w .. ""' • Wll~i. Watfl 1• .,.,,,..,.., "'"" U•lt Wttllll M"'" W • • }' z DAILY PILOT "-' H T~y, Much 16, 197l • '• Death of Good Friend: A Sacl Story to ·Write By RUDI NIEDZIELSIU 01 l'llt 01111 f'latt $11~ "AIARK A. RODGE&, 29. of Buena Par.k, was shot in the chest by 1 .38-caliber bullet. He. was dead on arrival at Huntington Inttrrommunlty Hospital." ?i.fonday morning, I never believed I would have to v.·rite tmse words. • But when I arrived at the Swinger bar moments aftu he had bttn felled by a revolver bullet, l was sure. I took his last picture. Less than a month ago 1'1ark: and I mel under. far i more pleasant circumrtancel 1-t the Amt Beach Boule- vant bar. WE SAT AROUND for boun ·tn the pleasant com• pany of friends swapplng Utt about our favorite 1port- motorcycle racing. It was one or Uloee rare even.in& that come along unexpectedly and linger In your 1n1mory for a Iona: time. The good fellowship was of such a high order that I iv1n invited my wUe to come and sha~ in it. UNFORTUNATELY. it didn't last very Jong. Three bar patrons sudden· ly became bellicose when they thought we were laughing at them. We tried to explain, but they attacked. The police came and they were arrested. Monday night. the same gang of friends were there -without me. I was down at the police station inquiring of des officer Gary WrJgbt whether any· thing exciting had happened. I didn't have tong. 1'-ty camera was already out of its and the strobellght charged when t got to the bar and fired oft two fram into the dark night as ambulance crews v.°1!fe attending to Mark's lifeless AND WHILE ntE ambulance was through the Beach Boulevard :itoplights I spotted my friends standing the Jffll. Tbey were crying. ' W·ry Scot • Tt;tkes Beef To Council . ~ .. A truck driver with a rhythmic Scots accint charmed the Huntington Beach council ilnd city officials Monday night by engaging in wry debate on the merits or storing a detached camper in the driVfl\\'ay. Edward Docherty approached the microphone at the end of the council proc'edlngs, then with hand.1 in pocket. coolly complained about a notice saying he was violating a city ordinance by leaving his camper body in his driveway at 8312 Friesland Drive, The ordinance al.lows campers to be teft in driveways but not the dismOW'lted bodid. "l just wonder why you are pushing this at this time ," he a.sked, maintaining his nonchalant stance. "I cou)d easily ·evade the ordinance by buying a junk . truck and mounting 1t on that but it wouldn't look very good, would it? "Being .Scottish, I thought maybe you plcUd on me as some sort of a mtnorlty group," he drawled dryly. "I see the name of the man who signed the notice is Irish {building inspector Bud Mui· queeny ) but I ·don't know whether he ii Catholic or Protestant." The councilmen chuckled at Docberty's remarks. The homeowner continued his good-natured parries. "I was wondering what would happen to me if I just left it there, you know?'' he said. •• Set Blaze In Office, Man Admits -By TOM BARLEY 01 tt\1 IHllr ,1111 Sttrt A prosecution witness today testified before an Orange County Superior Court jury that he burned Dr. Ebbe Harte.lius' Corona del ·Mar offi ces las\ April 9 at the physician·s direcUon and that nine days earlier he helped the doctor fake the theft tif Ha1'elius' car. "I poured gas all O\''r the desk and dra\\·ers and the fili ng cabinet ," Jim Blevins said ··Then I struck a match and threw ii into the offi ce:· Blevins, 39, 1estified that he then took "just three steps and then lhere was a big explosion. "Everything just blowed up and It hurled me down the hall," he said_ •·1 fell flat on my face. J\ly ears were ringing and I thought the whole building had blov.•ed up." Blevins said he dumped the gas can in the hallway, fled from the building to his Long Beach home and dumped tlie office keys in a vacant lot on the \vay. Blevins. \\'ho is the brother of the doctor's ex-mistress. Reba Vaughn, siiid his immediate reward from Hartelius v.·as the comn1ent: ··vou did a nasty job." But he 'tesltfied tha t his sister lat.er gave him money from Hartelius to leave the state. "I v.·as told that if I left they wouldn"l have anything on the doctor," he said. When I went back to the police sta~ to ,a~~ inlonn.a!ion about what had happened. I suddenly found myself covering a dif emit type of story than I ever had before. It was pretty per90rla1. The editors said they might not want to use the picture I took, and J don't blame them. I don·t care'if I ever Stt il That night as I drove home on Pacific Coast Highway I had 1 lot of things to think about Vice Mayor Jerry Mabley commented that no doubt the rest of the ordinance .Jexplained the penalty •. Councilmen asked if Docherty couldn't move the camper ...body to his back yard. "I'll need a crane to get Jt over the house," he pointed out. He'd Go Again Blevins also admitted that he met Hartelius last J\farch JI and followed the doctor in his car to Long Beach v.·he.e the physician parked his imported auto behind a market. He said Hartelius faked the theft ef the auto "because he said he needed the insurance money." It is alleged that Hartelius made insurance claims for the fire at 2345 E. Coast Highway .11.nd for the loss of bis car. And when I got up this morning, I felt sick to my stomach. .Ponderosa Project Gets ,Another Council Delay The fate of 1 planned 66-unit apartment complex that has raised the wrath of homeowners in southeast Huntington Beach remained unknown today despite a public hearing by the city council Monday night. 1 About 300 homeowners turned oul lo urge lh4: council lo deny the project oo Hamilton A venue and Bushard Street. The hearing was punctuated by handcl1p-- ping and applause, but the cheers turned to rumblings of discontent as the council .voted 3·1 to back the planning com· mission's approval of the project. Then ii. recess was called by Vice Mayor Jerry Matney to allow the crowd to quiet down. After the recess the case took a new twist as Councilman Norma Gibbs, who had missed the first hour or the meeting , asked lf the m1tter could be reconsidered by the full council. She noted that Mayor Donald Shipley, who was ill, Jack Green and herself were absent from the hearing and did not vote. • City 1'ttor0ey Don Bonfa explained that I.be move to reconsider could be made 1nd entered in . the minutes for consideration at the ne:1t meeting. Coun· cilman Ted B11Uett made such a move, but Bonfa emphasized that the vote to reconsider could be made only by the four councllmtn who had voted originally. The attorney also said a new public hearing "''ould need proper notice. Aller that. Bonfa warned Philip An!:hutz, representing Coldwell Banker &.: Co., not to take any acUon in reliance OUN•I COAST • DAILY PILOT Otu.MG! COAST l'UaL.laHINO COMPANY' l•li1rt N. W.H -4" ,._IHnt ""' ~ Jtt\--... C•rf•'f vie. ...,..ldl!I, ffllll co-.1 ~ n."'.1 x •• ,1r ltllw l\0111111 A. M,,,J.1111 """'""" l.d11W Al11t Di•\i~ W•I Or•llOO '-''1 1!4111W Albtrf W. 111,1 Al.Mita.I~ Ed•'M' H1M1...-hecllOffke 1717l l11ch 11~1,.,,4 M1 ili11t A4Cr.111 P.O. ••i: 1•0. •2•4a °""' 0111 ... ......,.._U>!ml'••t.A.._ Clilt. M9l1; D Wftt •iv Jttwt ... .....,, hM:lll; »13 M1-.-t ._,........., &.II ~: JO$ HOt'lll l:l C.rQlftt lt..t lel•r•••• C714J M2-4Jn Q-lfW A'-ftallt '4Z..N11 C:.,,..llJlf. un. OtlWW9 tMat "-'w.ftt ~,.. ... -.,.,,.., 1u. ... 1 ..... .. 1 ..... 1 _,.... • M'Wr1...._.. .... _, " .................. , ......... .. l'ltla,_ ft ~I .,._.. __ ......... ~-= _,.. C. .. M;M,--Ctl!filr'llll, lsa1 "1 ~ ti.If ~"'1¥1 .,, IMlf a.11 ,,...,,,.,, "'"""1T ••INNM, b .Jt .... fNY. • on the conditional exception and use permit granted the development. Asked when; the developer, Ponderosa Homes of Ne\.tpel~t,Seach, could proceed, Bdfifa told Anshutz, "l don't know how the council is going to jump next time. In the parlance of card players, every~g 11*1& Pl~ Yotl iioaldhl )lo around spending 1ny money relying on the permits. I suggest you return at the nett met.tin£_ to find out what the next chapter in this serial will be." The "serial" has been running since September. The 3.06-acre parcel la aur· rounded by single family homes but has been J.Oned for apartments since the early 1960's. 1be plannlng commission was asked to con&ider rezoning the property to single family homes but the planning board recommended a1alnst It, pointing out that the :.oning had betn in ex1~e for some Ume and that a plot plan had been filed. Tbe comrnlssibn later conskiered the application for a conditional ucepUon to perm.it construction of carports along the akle and rear of the property Wflad or the requirtd five-foot aetback. Th1s WIS approved 5-1. John Firmly, representing the Southeast Homeowners Aasociation, handed the council a petlUon with the signatures of 732 persons opposed to the project. He and other speakers areued that the development would reduce the value of nearby homes and add to traffic and school problems. One resident, John L. Davis, termed the case "a classic example of subterfuge and lack of feeling by the city's elected rtpre!tnlalives. We see tonight an- tagonism and unfrlendllneas. It looks like we'Pt!"really at each other's throats on something we lhould be together on." ., Doug Simpson, reprtsenling Ponderosa Homes. pointed out the land was zoned for apartments and the project met the allowed density. He sald the complex would serve as a buffer bet"'·een a commercial ares and the single family homes. Conway ~'ielson. representing the Mormon Church \\·hich owns the land, said that the church was opposed to a rezoning if that meant 1t "''ould not be able to recoup its investment in the property. Councllm1n Al Coen said that he did not Uke lhe spot zoning that \\'OUld result but he relt the council had no legal alternative but to approve the pro- ject. He undenlood that the situation came about as a result of churches not bein« covel"l'd in toning ordlnance1. Matney' movl!:'d that lhe planning com- mission bre ottrruJed. but he 1ai.ntd no support. Councilmen G e or g e ·MC'.Ctacken, Bartlttt and Coen voted against ovtrruUn, the planning board. Boy Gored, Killed PENANG, Malaysia <UPI \ -A J7· year-old boy was gored lo death loday by a wbite elephant. his fathtt reported. The boy, Arrifin Bin Y1actib. 1ufftffil detp side W'OU11da and died in a boat 'n routt to Grik Hospllal near the 1'hal· '-1alayJ1an border aboul 70 miles eu:t of Penanc. "You have a problem," Matney arreed. "'Yea, well, can I leave it there?'' Docherty countered. . Building Director Jack Cleveland said that one· avenue would be for Docherty to go before the plaMln&.. coinmLssion to obtain a variance. , Councilman Norma Gibbs suggesttd that Docherty put the camper body on wheels, perhaps on the kind of dolly that is used to move refrigerators. "That's an idea." Docherty responded. "On wheels. \Yill that do? Will Bud Mulqueeny go for that?" War re~lster David Harris. 25, just released after 20 months in fed- eral prison, says he'd do it again even if he had to serve 10 years. Harris is shown on arrival at San Francisco Airport with his wife Joan Baez, his infant son Gabriel and his dog. See story, Page 8. South Vietnamese Troops Fall Back Toward Border SATGON (UPI) -South \1ietnamese U.S. fighter-bombers and helicopter Docherty's final quip brought another ' round of laughter "''ith Matney com· menling that lhe horneo1vner v.·ould be bettu off if he igno red the advice of troops retreated today by root and by gunships poured bombs. rockets and helicopter from posiliopr deep inside machinegun fire on the Commwtlsts dur-the council. · }¥ifs. G~bs said she felt S\lrf that Docherty with his good huinor-' Would be able to resoh•e his difference vdth the building department. Jury Clears Man Of Bribe Rap In Mesa Case Laos and moved cloier to the South ing the evacuation. the fronl dispatches Vietnamese border. Tbe u .S. command reported. The weather lifted after a rushed U.S. artillery · reinforcements to period of hea\'y clouds and fog. the border area to pound advancing The troops from fire base Lolo were Communist forces. flown lo another base with the same Altogether. 1.000 South Vietnamese name. Military sources gave no reason "'ithdrew from positions astride the Ho for naming the new base L-Olo. Chi Minh Trail inside Laos. One force Lolo was third in a line or four fire of 700 w1s flown out under fire by support bases the South Vietnamese oc- U.S. helicopterll fr om fire base Lolo, cupied, rUMing southeast from Sepone. the fourth major ARYN fire base aban· Fire Base Sophia was evacuated early doned in Laos in the face of advancing this week. Troops remain on Fire Base tank-led Communist troops. Liz, midway between Sophia and the Lolo is nine miles southeast of the old 1-0lo. Brown is the fourth base nn Deputy District Attorney Al Novick claims Harte\ius offered Blevins $2,000 !O leave the state when investigatio11 into both alleged frauds intensified. He _ alS,Q._ alleges that Hartelius planned the .Jire because of "highly incrimiJ.atln( pati~nt records that might become available at a pending Stale Board of J\ied.ical Examiners hearing into the dee· tor's activities." Defense attorney 1.!atthew Kurilich dre"' fr~m. Blevins in a Jong grilling the admissio n that Blevins had stolen three cars ptior to the alleged theft of the Harteli us auto. · Th~ bard-bitting lawyer described Blevlll!!l as "a \'ery competent car lhief" \~hile he got 1he admi ssion from the witness that he had served a term in federal prison for such an offfense. Blevins is the prosecution's final "'itness in .,its case against Harlelius 50. It is expected that lhe defense pba~ of the trial will open late today ar Wednesday morning. supply hub of Sepone. abandoned to lh h · Samuel Rosman of Laguna Niguel was e c a1n. an advancing Conununist division last cleared 1.fonday night of charges that week. The others withdraY:ing "'·ere South Vietnamese official spokesmen Nader Will Talk At Const Ccunpris he bribed a Costa t.lesa patrolman bul government infantryTI 1 'b.warted in in Saigon and al northern operational an Orange County superior Court jury their efforts to reach a big Communist bases refused lo admit "'ithdra\\·al from Consumer crusader Ralph Nader will found him guilly pf one o f re n s e supply dump just south of Lolo. They Lolo or any major fighting any"·here speak at Orange Coast College in Costa -conspiracy to commit bribery. fought their way baek by foot lo Fire in Laos. They insisted there were only l\~esa Wednesday. covrring-efforts by It took the panel six hours to clear Base Brown, four miles farther light and scattered action and no major his famed team of Nader's Raiders ia Rosman, 27. of 29351 San Briso Place, southeast. engagements. lhe field of ecology. on the major charges alter a trial in Field reporl.9 and details from other The free II a.m. talk In the t,200-seat which they heard recordings of telephone The Communists had attacked Lo\o military sources told of the vastly out· OCC .auditorium is spo nsored by the conversations between o[!icer Gary \\"ilh rockets, mortars and tank guns numbered South Vietname•• be; "g A I d St d •- d US hel . "" • .. ssoc1a e u en..,. and its Distinguished Barwig and lhe defendant. an · · iropters braved heavv an-• plucked from Lolo In an armada of SpeakeNi series. Barwig testified from the witness bot liaircraft flre to bring out the ARYN UHi Huey helicoplec•. The choppec• N d be .. _ t Th South a er -st A.uov;n for his exposes that Rosman ga\·e him $10,000 to plant roops. e Vietnamese spiked barely touched the ground before they of safety and other inadequac ies in tha drugs in the car of a...wital prosecution si:t artillery pieces btfore leaving and were filled by lroo~ ~'gi•g a co•sla"I us 1 1· · d lh · 1 .. ~ uuu " 11 " • • ~u omo 1ve 1n ustry -has recen!ly witness in a liquor hiJ·acking case. Drugs e equipment v.·as ater bombed by rocket and mortar barrage. !he cepocl•. ocg ed t BS2s " aniz Se\•era new public service charges against Rosman were also · said. groups. dismissed by the jury. lr:;:;:;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;E2;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, Judge Ronald Crookshank ordertd Rosman. a Saddleback College studenl. to return to his court April 5 for what could be at the most a thrtt-year term in state prison on the conspiracy count. Rosman \\·as accused during his lwt>- \\'eek trial of planting narcotics in the ·car of Charles ··cbuck" Dreyer, 31 of 1645 Sunset Ridge Drive, Laguna Beach. It was alleged that he bribed Barwlg in coilaborotion with Eugene Rondondo. 44, a former partner v;ith Dreyer In the now d'funct Feliciano's Rtstaurant in Ne~-port Beach. Marine Held In Mess Hall Knife Fight A young Camp Pendleton M1rlne, .,..·hose name aUU is being withheld by authorities; remained in custody tod11y during the investigation of a fatal stab- bing of a fellow J\tarine from Tennessee in a mess..llall fight last weekend. • The victim, pronounced dead on arrival at the bilSe hospital durint dinnertlme last Sunday. was Lance Cpl. ffuih S. Lister of Pittsburg Landing. Tenn. Bise sp(ikesmtn said the lncldenl, "'·h!ch stemmed from a dinnertime argu. ment , "·as nol racially inspired. The dead J\tarinr \\·as part of Head- quarters and Ser\'ice Company, 1st Tank BalUlilon. 5th ftlarine E~pedltion1ry Brhll<lf. 'I"'-stabbln{ occurrfd In lht Las f'lort>s mess hal l. _ Informational Servict~ aide:a said the n•me of th~ arrested Marine would be relf'1'aed after the ~vost Manbal'I office completes Its l.n1ftstigation. I / Wthat's ... Mri tine? .,.. .. Yau won't lie feCI eny lines •t Alden's. We ere more interested in developin g loyal customers tlian making a fast sale. None of our sales people will liother you if you just want lo browse, but will be pleased lo assist you if you wish, wi th truthful answers lo your questions. Wlien we Cliscuss carpel lines, we would liave to "modestly" admit that we have the large.st selections in the area • Top Ii r a .n Cl s such e s: Big elow, Serven, Beattie, Magee, Monarcli, Barwick, Mohawk, Roxbury, Millikan, Armstrong. / ALDEN'S IAHT A ANA. OAAHOI., TUSTIN C•ll, •. ALDIN'I 11:10 HILL CAJ:l'ITS & HAPlllll 11S74 lrYIM. TWl"ttn, Co1I. Ul-1:)44 ' CARPETS • DRAPES. 1663 Ploc•ntia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 - 7 • .l - 7 I I • . . - ' • ""r -... ~ . • Newport Beaeh I ~ EDITION . ,. -· + ' VOL. 64, NO. 64, 2 SECTIONS , 26 PAGES ORANGE C~UNTY, CALIFORNIA . TU.ESDAY, MARCH '16, 1971 TEN CENT$ Historic Newport -Cannery to be Torn Down , . . /\ ·~ .. "'11,..11:sw.,w *f* 1 By L PETER KRIEG and 30th Street. Corporation, said plans now· call fiJJ' hls ~ 01 t11e.0tnir l'u•111aff Western Canners ceased inierations firm to develop the project. Western Canners Company, Newport nearly three years ago, then a, the .last He .estimated the conslruclion. price Beach's last monument to the commer-survivor of Newport's cannery row. tag, alone, to be upw.rards of $500,080. Re cial fishing industry that thrived here The structbre was"purCh8sed recently declined to say what his-firm had paid for nearly half a hundred yeara, will ht by Robert and William -Unger, brothers for the old building and the land when torn down -and part of it rtbuilt as a Jon' act t v e Jn Harbot\ Area civic and it was acquired last April from W~ 300-seat luxury restaurant, look!n1 just business affairs. 1'ile original buildln1 Longinoor. Is It looks today. only, the half bordering· 30th 'Street, will Plans for the entire project still must And today it :stands picturesquely be reconstructed at seven-eighths ac:ale. win formal approval from, the city of along the shores of the Rhine Channel, Robert Unger, former. Costa Mesa city Newpor:t; Beach, however, :and Ungei: the entire block between LldcrPark Drivt manager and now heading Unger-Pacific (See CANNERY, Pap·!) ' . •• • ... 2nd Bomb Fight Over Dog Threat Off-duty .Lawman _____ P_l_•_n_s_c_._1_1 _1o_r_T_h_i•_L_._11_._._._r _F_r_•_m_A_n_o_1_h•_r_E_r_•_l_o_Be_G_u_1_1ec1_._R_••_•_m_ped __ ._._R_•_•_l•_•_•_•_•_i ----: De lay seen Slaying Held • Ill Mexico Jails 20 to Thwart . Revolt Plot MEXICO CITY (UPI) -The Mexican government said Monday it has smashed 1 plot in which North Korea trained Mexican students as guerrillas in an attempt . to overthre.w the government and replace it with a Marxist-Leninist regime. Attorney General Julio Sanchez Vargas announced the arrest ef 20 Mexicans aild fai'd the eearc)! wa1 on for 29 t>lber members o( a group trairu!d->in terrorism at a North Korean army camp near P)i.ongyang. "This group was trained by North Korean soldiers with the aim of imposing a 'Marxist-Leninist regime on Mexico," Sanchez said. Sanchez said · the plot was hatched at Patrice Lumumba University in Moscow among Mexican students who were there on scholarships under the Mexican-Russian Cultural Exchange Institute in Mexico City. He said the Mexicans went to East Berlin where they received North Korean passports and went by train to Moscow then by plane to Pyongyang, North Korea . Sanchez said the plot was broken with the arrest over the weekend of the 1iuspects at wh~t he ~ailed ~uerr~tla academies and hideouts 10 Mexico City, Jalapa. Acapulco and Pachuc. Automatic rifles and revolvers, more than 1.000 cartridges. grenades. short wa~e radios tnd surgical equipment were seized. Those arrested were charged with c0n- ~piracy. inciting to r~bellio~. criminal 1ssocialion robbery with v 1 o 1 e n c e , homicide , 1hoarding arms. falsification of documents and using f or g e d document s. The robberv and homicide charges were the reSult of !\vo Mexico City bank robberies earlier this year in which Sanchez said $100,000 was stolen to [inance guerrillas activities. A bank guard was shot and killed in ene of the holdups. Stocks Register Sharp Advances Beyond 900 Level NEW YORK (AP J -Stock prices scored sharp gains in today's· heavy trading. soaring even farther beyond the 900 level which the clos:in,IZ Dow average penetrated Monday. (See Quotations, Pages 10-11 ). The 2 p.m. Dow Jones average of ~ (ndustria! stocks rose 6.44 to 914.64. nus ..,.as its highest level since .Tune 9, 1969 when ii hit 918.0:>. . . Big board V<>lume was 17.48 m1lhon shares, up from I he 13.09 ml_llion shares traded Monda:v at the $3ffie time. Advances led declines 011 the New York Stock Exchange bY 3 to l. . Analysts said the market was stimu- lated by the Dow'.c conviryclng break· fhrough of the 900 level, which has been a psychological barrier to market ad· · vances since mid-February. Analysts also noted a pickup in instiht· tional activily. . Two major bank!! f\Jrther reduced their rime rate to SV. percent from 5'12 pe:r· ~nt. Chase Manhatlaa began thi!I trend fast week when it cut its primt lending rate to 5V4 percent from 5% ~rcent while other bank& only pared their rate to 5111 perce11t. . Copper stocks were higher k>r the 1hird 1tr11ight session after rtportg of 1 cutba~k in Chilean cop~r output. Kenne- tott (-Opper was up 3/8 at 33-518, and Phelps Dodge was up 1 at 47-318. South Vietnamese Troops Fall Back T<>ward Border SA N RAF A EL (UPI) -Two bOmb threats ~mptled the Marin Couniy COurtboui;e today,' delaying a scheduled hearing for black militant Angela Davis for hours. More than 1,000 persons were ordered out of the sprawling, Frank Lloyd Wrigbk designed building' about 9:~ a.m. SAIGON (UPI) -South Vietnamese troops retreated today by foot and by helicopter from positions deep Jn~ide Laos and moved closer to the South Vietnamese border. The U.S. command rushed U.S. artillery reinforcements to the border area to pound advancing Communist forces. Altogether-:"" 2,000 South Vietnamese withdrew from positions astride the Ho Chi Minh Trail inside Laos. One force of 700 was flown ' out u.nder fire by U:£. "h~IJcl}p!_e~_frotn · firt ba5e· Lolo, the· fourth major A'nVN fire ba1e aban- doned In Laos in the lice of advancing tank-led Communist tr~ps. Lolo is nine miles southeast of the supply hub of Sepone. abandoned to an advancitig Communist division last Board to Get Dr. Cunningham Resignation ?>.'ewport-Mesa Unified School District trustees tonight will formally receive Superiatendent William Cunningham's resignation and begin developing the pro- cess for selecting 1 suc~sor. The matter wlll be taken up during the 7 o'clock board meeting at TeWinkle School._ 3224 California Ave ., Costa ~fesa. Dr. Cunningham. 44. announced his resignation over the v.·eekend. On July l , he ' becomes executive secretl:\rY of the newly formed Association of California School Administrators. Bart Hake, executive secretary of the Newport-Mesa Education AssociatiOn, in· dicated the teachers organization would seek representation on tbe selection panel. lb!° Mrs. Marion C. Bex:geson, trustee from Newport Beach, said today, that although the board will be interested in hearing teachers' concerns, the selection process is "primarily a responsibility of the board ." , Because ''a superintendent carries out the directives of the board" she indicated she did not feel anyone other thaJI board members would serve on the ~election panel. Mrs. Bergeson echoed board· pres ident Selim "Bud" Franklin's praise of CUn- ningham and said, "We'll miss him a great d~al." Franklin has said a committee of three or four board members would begin reviewing candidates for the 11upei'in· tendent opening. , Board Clerk Thomas C. Casey, trustee from Newport Beach, said CUnningham 's resignation came as "a complete surprise to me." · "It Is a great opportunity ' fof him and rm sure the di&trict will miss him. He's an excellent man ," Casey said. Casey said he believes the board is generally familiar with most of the top administrators in the state and that the selection process will be a matter of screening canClidates accordln.g to availability. The neW organization which Cun- ningham will sta!f, is the outgrowth of a three and a half year effort by representativeii: nf seven apoe.iations of tcp level ~hool administrators. Franklin described the appointment ·as ••probably the most aignificant th i n g in Callfornla education today:• nollng ht lhought Qmnlngham was 1 "natural for the job." ' week. The others withdr.awing were government infantrymen thwarted in their efforts to reach a big Communist supply dump just south of Lolo. They fought their way back by foot to Fire· Base Brown, four miles f a r t h er southeast. The Communists had attacked Lolo with rockets. mortars and tank guns and U.S. helicopters braved hea vy an- tiaircraft fire to bring out the ARVN troops. The South Vietnamese spiked ai~ .,..lllery. pieceJ, ~wt lea'11!a~ Uie equipment w'as later bm1:lbed< by B52s. . U.S. fighter-bombers· 111d helicopter gunships poured bombs. rockets and machinegun fire on the Communists dur· ing the evacuation, the front dispatches r'eported. The weather lifted after a period of heavy clouds and fog. The troops from fire base L-Olo were flown to another base with the same name. Military source! gave no reason for naming the new base Lolo. , Lolo was third in a line of four fire support bases the South Vietnamese oc- cupied. running southeast from Sepone. Fire Base Sophia was 'vacuated early this week. Troops remain on Fire Base ~ Liz, midway between Sophia and the old Lolo. Brown is the fourth base nn the chain. South Vietnamese official spokesmen In Saigon and at northern operational bases refused to admit withdrawal from Lolo or any major fightlng anywhere in Laos. They insisted there were only light and scattered action and no major engagements. Field report! and details from other military sources told of the vastly out- numbered South Vietnamese b e l n g plucked from Lolo in an armada of UH i Huey helicopters. The choppers barely touched the ground before they were filled by troops dodginJ: a constant rocket and mortar barrage, the report! said. QVAKt HITS IN SOUTH PACIFIC BERKELEY (AP) -A large earth- quake measuring fi.25 on the Richter Beale took place In the South Pacific today, according to the University of California seismograph at Berkeley. The quake epicenter Was placed 6.000 miles southwest of Berice!ey in the Solomon or New Hebrides area. It oc· Curred at 4:45 a.m. PST. Included were 100 spectators and newsmen who had already started filing into the courtroom where attotneys for Miss Davis were to seek dismissal . of murder and k.idnaping charges. They were al!Owed to return abol,lt . an hour later but no sooner. wert · back in the building than a deputy anrwunced : "There is 'nother bomb threat. You 'IJ have to evacuate." ·E~ llliN,~~?'~lff;­lhose insl<Te opmed citit to mUJ .-..i· Wlth t &r0Winl crowd .O\rtt:i4t Which was boldin& ·an · all-day "mobiliutio0'' In support of Miss Davis. In Washington, meanwhile, a crowd of about a5 persons chanting "Frffl Angela'' demonstrated outside the Justice Department. Afler the f.(Tst bomb threat, some ~pectators, mostly supporters of MIA Davis, who were already being cleared to go inside tht courtroom, apptared ready to refuse to le1ve. Red Police Take Soviet ·Family From Embassy MOSCOW (AP) -Russian police seiz- ed a Soviet doctor's family today after they had entered U.S. Embassy ,grounds to seek information on emigral.i9n. The embassy delivered a strong ·pro~st ac- cusing the police of "viOlation of em· bassy territory." An e111bassy spokesman said the in- cident developed inl-0 a struggle between a dozen U.S. employes and the Soviet militiamen. Militia guards pulled the doctor's wife and two daughters. aged 5 and 9. onto the sidewalk in front or the embassy and took them away. The doctor, a short, stocky man· iden- tified as Vasily Nlkitenkov, locked his arms around an iron gate and called, "Help me! Help m·e!" About a dozen embassy employes qtiickly came to bis rescue. They foiled police effort3 to take the · man away by swinging closed the heavy ir6n gates, onto the inside of which the man had braced hlmself. The spokesman sald the thret! police regularly assi"gned to watch the embassy had by this time been reinforced but there was no count of how many -------------pollcemen had taken part in the incidenL Pie · Eyed Thief $1,700 • lll Mesa Pastries Stolen ~e· chocolalt chiffon will hit the fa" if a certain pieman meeta some aimple Simon peddling stolen samples .of hi& wares around the Harbor Area. The thief took enou&h to provtde dessert for U!e entire Orange County Jail inmate populaU6n Jor 1 month. police rtvealed today. Delbert A. Gabalclbn reported the frozen pie factory ~glaey 'to Officer Sam Arnold Monday. 1 Usin~ ~ key obtai..lol' -.haw. the thief has been ·1ootfzlt. Conte:mporaty Capital Corporation , 29'9 Rlhdolph 'Avi., for a month . , Missing 1upplie.~. Gabaldon look in· ventory and disclivered .a tot.al ot $1,'m.O) worth of p;.,. and paatry In· gredit11ts pilfered. , Officer Arnold said the Joo( includes 14.000 aluminum plates, 1,~ pwnds ~f shortenlnt. 38 baas of nour, •IS cubes of butt.tr and 170 cases of finished frozen pies. The lo.51 of finl.shcd pies ·With his The B~Uer Recommends .•. trademark Includes llO cisea of cherry, 60 of apple and 20 each of blackberry, blueberry and rtruharb1 Gabaldon added . 1 Unless· he petkfled them to 1 com· pe'itor •. ·pellet ·said, the~ were 1t 1 loss l;O erplaJn 'wMt A burglar would do with a few thousand hot frozen piea:. • ARRESTED I L/l Office MURDER Schuue 1 Building Penmts . . Show Increase . In. ·~ewport Boosted bY 1 a $.1.6 mllliOn addition to. Park Newport APartments s'tart.ed last month, building permlt3 in Newport Be a ch showed a marked increase in February, city officials said today. Oliver Grant, acting· assistant director nf community development, said building totals authorized in February totalled •~,563.152, compared with only $1.t million in January. The Park Newport addition will con· stitute 201 apartment! in section 5 of the massive development on Jamboree roa'd, Grant said: Despite. the .major jump ·last month, Grant said bl!ilding totals the first two months ol 1971 are · well behind the 1ame period la!t year when ptrrnifs for building valued at more than $8.3 million had been Jssued. Figures for the first eight months of · the current fiscal year are also well behind those of t96g..7o, Grant said. During the first two-thirds of the pr~ceding y e a r , building "built were valued at $34.1 million, he said, while the valuation of construction to date Jn 1970-71 i.s only $28.6 million. Need a 'Gavel? Take the Pipe Newport· Beach Mayor Ed Hirth was bringing a recect joint city COUllCU·planning c o m m i s s l o n meeting to a close when a sharp "rap, rap. rap'' rtsouni:led from one eud t>f the table. · The ·meeting, at Mariners lJ. brary rathtt than tJ1e nonhal City IJ•ll chambers·. had, up to that ·pofnt, betn conducted v.iit:hout the uru11l parliamentary tonl!l, such as 1 gavel . ''That's what l'vt been miasing," the mayor said.interrupting blm•elf and looking down at Coun- cilman 'Qon Mc'IMls. · "You're welcome to borrow Jt. I cuus." Mcinnis 11id, W.ging his s~otllders and plalntlvdy of· .• ftrfng ht· pass te the mayor the pipe he had· just emptied. By RuDl NIEDZIELS!q . Of ,~. DallY ,llfl •.ttff . An argument over a dog that w a s fed a cigarettt in a Huntington Beach bar Monday night resulted in the shooting death of a 29-year-old man and the arrest of an off.duty Los Angeles policeman on a murder charge. Mark A. Rodgers, 29, of Buena Park. tJ..is hit in the chest by a .38 caliber bullet, police 1t1id. He was dead on arrival at Huntington Jntercommunity Hospital about 9:30 p.m. Police arrested two men on murder charges. They are Clifton J. Schusse, 2.6, ol {1672 Rogers Drivt, Hl!ntingtQn Beach, a two-ye.ar patrolman \filh tht Los Angelea Police Department's Harbor Division, and James E. Jordon. 31, of 6762 Warner Ave., Apt. K-10, Huntington B'a~ · a foreman •t an aluminum .... manufacturing company. Witnesses to the shooting uid tbat •n ariument started It tbe Swinger bar on Beach "Boulevard south ol Garfield Avenue between two groups of patrons alter the pOUCeman allegedly gave .a dog a cigarette to eat. When the argument got out o! .. hand and persons in the bar began arming themselves with pool cues, the patron! were asked to leave, police said. According _to a witness, the di&pute continued outside the bar. Jnve!ltigators were told by witnesses that one shot was fired into the pavement during the argumc:nt. . Another shoi., believed by wltnesset to have been fired seconds later, struck Rodgers near the heart. Two .38<aliber bullets have been recovered by police, ()ne from lhe dead man's body. Officer& said a woman motorist passing by the bar taw what was happening 81ld .stopped . a patrol car. The officer arl'ived at. the· S_winger moments after the .1Jhote "iere fired and arrested Schusse and Jordon. Rodgers,· a drywall taper working at 1 HunUng1on Beach construction projec:i,, was a frequent customer at the bar. fie was the· father of three children. Caspers Slates . Costa Mesa Talk Freshman Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers will give a speech in Costa' Mesa Thursday on bis ·11rst SO days in office. Caspers will address the Citizent Harbor Area Research Team (CHART) at a 7:30 a.m. ~breakfast seSsion at the Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club. Reservations for the CHART seBSion must be made _by calli~g 834-5314 bf. noon Wednesday. The public ls.invited. Coast Weather The weatherman'& lighting a candle under the thermomder Wednesday, pushing the mercury up to 80 degrees in tbe Ctntral C1>unty and ln the low 70s locally. INSmE TODAY ·Ar~ you ready /or the biggest wiek of (lving thed:ttr ever in Oronge County, It start.s to- night, and you'll /Ind au the dttajl$ On. EnteTta1nmtnt Pag~ .20. aim.. 1 t (•lllonllt ' •• CllMlllMI Ue '' C.1'"1,,.. tt•li c. .... k. ,. Cf'f.-4 U OMtlt '"°''"' ·t 0"-'t.. ' .. .,.., .. , ,... ' ,.~, .... l'lrl•-1•11 ~-" Allll Leflllel"I 14 M-911111111 • Mtrri.M Llteft1t1 t ,.,,....... , ..... """"" 'ulllft 1t ,,..... Newt .. , Of•"" (-11 ' IY)'tl• ,.,,., 11 '""' , ... ,. li.ct Men•rt 1•11 ,...., .. ., '' ~ ,,.1'! w .. n.. 4 Wlllle "'"" 11 W-•t Mf'll't 13•\4 .......... _ ... \ > • Tuesday, Mir~ 16, 1971 4 O.IJLY PILOT I c - \ \ •' I ~ps Iron Horses Still a Thrill By moMAS MUjlPlllNE 01 the O•llr f'lltl Sl1fl RAll.S REVISITED: In this age of multiple computers. moon shots and elec- tronic processing, it's pleasant to learn that one lure of youth hasit•t rtally changed. Kids stil1 seem to love old· fashioned steam engines . on railroad trains. Outside of horse operas on the telly or an occasional museum v i s i t , youngsters today don't really get much opportunity to see a real puffer.belly In action. I mean, let's face it, somebody wrote "Farewell to Steam" a long time ago. And since then . efforts at developing some form or rapid transit along rails have seemed to win something less than universal acceptance in S o u t h er n California gener41ly and along the Orange Coast in particular. * Like the other day. notice came through thal Southern Pacific · wants to shut down its one-man ticket office which struggles along up in the County Seat. That's hardly evidence that Orange Co~ ty rail trafliC is on the upswing. * Despite dwindling interest in rail travel by .elders, there's sUll some proof at hand that youngtlers rt!:tain a certain fascination in watching a st eam locomctive at work. I noticed this just the other day up al Knott's Berry Farm in Buena Park, where the Knotts operate a steam·propelled train salvaged from the 1800s. Now, I'm not certain how many .young people are actually enthralled with the notion of rlding. But indeed they do love to watch the old steamer pull in and depart Crom its depot -which it does often at Knott's due to !he bfeVitY of its run. * I Watching isn't all the fun . T.l:Je kids have learned the big old Jd'Omotive can smash things. Like a penny. Place the penny on the tracks and after the big loco has rolled by. you have nothing but a lone: thin piece of copper. * Some youngsters have refined the art. They tape i string of toy gun caps to the track to get the big engine drive wheels make them pop like a machinegun. OT. place the whole roll ' of caps on the track and you can get one pretty good explosion. The games seem eridless. although there are always a couple of cowboy-suited Berry Farm hands out in front of the cowcatcher to assure tracks are c I e a r of the youth corps before the big engine rolls off ag ain. Yet as one delighted youngster remark· ed while examining his squished penny aft.er the train departed: "Wow! Heap heavy iron horse ... " Well, maybe in the younger generation there's hope for mass transit yet. Or maybe just thinner coin of the realm. * • Wl1ite Panther· Drug-Sex Lure Cited .. dlstribution of materials printed by the White Panther Party that related to city and state politics and 0 the air:ns of the Whitt Panther Party,' he sa id. ·•All of these concerts have featured profane language and the distribution WASHINGTON (UPI) -A S.na1' Internal Security subcommittee released secret accoUnts today telling how lhe White Panther Party illegedly used a rock band to lure young people into a commune life of drugs and sex. Tbe accoUnts also said party leaders had disolssed kidnaping Viet President Spiro T. Agnew, the governor of Michigan or a member of Congress. The party's aim. t~·o Michigan state pollce detectives said . was to cause a Mao Tse.tung style revolution in this country. The band, called the MCS had as fi! .. -aoager, Jo~n A. Sinclair Jr,, one 'ifhe two cofounders of the White Panthers. Sinclair and Lawrence (Pun) Plamon· don organized the White Panthers in Ann Arbor, Mich ., in December, 1968, after they were refused permission to join the Black Panthers, tbe ~stimony said. "If a youngster was interested as a fan of the MC-5 band and wrote for a picture or something of this type, they would in turn rece ive this While Panther literature," detective Sgt. Clif· ford Murray told the subcommittee. Luck of the Irish Murray said a "confidential source" had told police that party personnel were considering using the tactics of the Tu pamaro guerrillas in Uruguay to win the release of ''pol itical prisoners.'' "This recommendation included the suggestion that Michigan congressmen rould be traded for John Sinclair. Prominent national figures such as Sen. Robert Griffin and Congressman Gerald Ford might be good for trading for Black Panther Party leaders such as · lluey Newton and Bobby Seale," Murray said. "This recommendatio11 included the ' 1 l _'.I'p be sure, Colleen Sterling, 4, is Irish (and half Japanese) but she'll be all lriSh tomorrow on ·st. Patrick's Day. Here she wheedles a kiss from secret pal Brian Naslund, 4, to get a head start on that glorious· day. Brian holds his head but bears up well otherwise. Started In 1901 Early Hollywood Star Bebe Daniels Succumbs LONDON (AP) -Bebe Daniels, sparkling brunette star of "Rio Rita" and hundreds of other early Hollywood Wicks films, died today at her London apa rt· ment. She was 70 and had Jived in seclusion with her husband of nearly 41 yeafs, actor Ben Lyon. since suffering a stroke in I 9 6 3. She suffered another in November, developed pneumonia and was returned home from a \Vimbledon hospital th is month. She died ol a cerebral hemorrhage. Frail and weak in her last days, she nevertheless told an interviewer at her bedside a few days ago: "I'll. get out of here. real soon." Russia Boosts - Number of Jews Going to Israel MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet govern· ment has taken a major policy decision on the Jewish emigration problem here anq within the past 10 days has permitted about 150 Jews to leave for Israel, reliable Soviet sou rces reported today. The sources emphasized that although an average of 15 Jews have left the Soviet Union daily since the decision, the authorities placed no limit on the number who Y»Ould be allo•,ved lo leave. If the current emigration pace is main· tained, more than 5,000 Jews would be permitted to go to Israel by the end of this year. The sources, however would not confirm this figu re. au1a:estion that with someone of the pro- minence of the Vice President Spiro Agnew, one could 'write his own ticket.' " Murray said the source also reported that Plamondon once said riots were no longer useful but "he noted that during a riot was a good time to 'rip o!f banks' or to 'snatch governor (William) Milliken (of Michigan).'" He added lhat the White Panthers began a series of' rock conctrts in May, 1969, which appeared to be politically oriented. ·'Each of these concerts, along with a band for music, would include the $6·7 Million of profane literah!te." . . Murray testilied a)ong with detective Richard M. Schave in September, and the transcript was released today. Mur· ray said it was both his opinion and that of the state police that the White Panthers were working toward obtaining control of young people "for the primary purpose of causing revolution in thi s country.·• ~ • ' Embezzlers Take Huge Bank Haul CHICAGO <UPI) -FBI agents in· vestigated today what could be one of the largest amounts of money - estimated between $6 million and $7 mill ion -ever embezzled from a bank. The embezzlement occurred at the Cosmopolitan National Bank and was discovered when a customer "confessed" the crime to a bank official Feb. 25, Donald D. Magers, bank president, said Monday. The embezzlement scheme, which in· volved checks as large as $900,000 writ· ten on the customer's account, also in. volved a veteran member of the bank's bookkeeping department. Magers said. He said the employe-has since b e e n discharged. . Magers said the customer allegedly involved in the crime is a key executive in a Chicago merchandising corporation_ He said the exact loss of bank funds will not be known until an audit is conducted of the bank's books. Magers said the bank loss was covered fully by United States Fidelity & Guaran· ty companies. FBI agents reportedly questioned the bank customer and the former emp!oye, but no charges have been placed against them. • Magers said the embezzlement ap-- pareT\tlY occurred when the executive wrote checks on a rorporate account in excess of the amount of money deposited to the account. The checks v.•ere only handled by the one bookkeeper involved, he said. The bank has i.Ssued a statement to shareholders about .the incident. The statement said the employe suspected of participating in the embezzlement had been employed in the bank's bookkeeping Fall on Knife Blade Fatal to 9·year-old WEST CONSHOKOCKEN. Pa . IAP) -A nine.year-old boy died Monday night v.·hen he fell on a kitchen knife while helping wash the dinner dishes. Police said Samuel Tartaglione was sta nding on a foot stool, helping his sister, Doreen. 13, wash dishes. The stool apparently slipped and the boy fel'. against a dish rack sending the 1 knife 's eleven inch blade through his heart. department for 24 years. The statement a~ured shareholders the loss was covered in full and uid reserve accounts are available to further protect the bank from loss. Magers said the loss was substantial, but the bank w a s in a position to take care of it. Golda Meir's Peace Plan Carries Day JERUSALEM (UPI)-Prlme Minister Golda Meir won an overwhelming vote of confidence in a stormy !iession of the Knesset (parliament) today after outlining a peace platform that rules out Israeli wilhdrawal from East Jerusalem, the Golan Heights, the Jordan River and Sharm El Sheikh. The opposition right·Wing bloc that had proposed the motions of no con· fidence in Mrs. Meir 's leadership walked <Jut of the session even before the final vote was taken. The vote in favor of the government was 62 votes, with no one voting against and 12 members abstaining. The 26-mem· ber Gahal bloc stalked out after its motion for a secret ballot was overwhelmingly defeated in a 45·minute shouting match. Mrs. Meir said earlier in an intervie\v there would have to be some revisions of the Israeli.Jordanian frontier and that the Sinai would have to be demilitarized. But she said Israel would not give up the Syrian Golan Heights, Old Jerusalem and Sharm El Sheikh. "Israel is entitled to defensible borders and on this it will not compromise," she said. "She wants true negotiations and has no intention of imposing conditions on others and most certainly ~·ill not accept conditions imposed by others. "This has always been the govern· ment's policy and remains !he govern· ment's policy. Similarly, the Israeli government.has no inte nlion or accepting any sort of international guarantees as a substitute for agreed, recognized and defensible borders." GETTING THE BOOT: Down at . Muirlands Junior High in San Diego the other day they ordered suspension of a ninth grade honor student becauae she ran barefooted to catch the bu,s. Turned out she had b e e n rehearsing a dance routine and had to choose between running barefooted or putting Qn her boots and miS!ing the bus. You can bet the whole thing precipilAted a bit of rontroversy. "She died peacefully at 5 a.m .. " her adopted son Richard told newsmen. Three weeks ago a group of Jews conducting a sit·in demonstration in a Soviet parliament building in ,.1oscow 'vere told that "very high government officials" would make and reveal a com· prehensive decision on the question of Jewish emigration to Israel. Summed up sch~. board Vice" Presi· dent Arnold Steele : "This is just in· credible .• ," 'Wheo Tricia leaves, will we need such a big house?' Her husband was at her bedside. Miss Daniels died a v.·eek after Harold Lloyd. with whom she made a comedy a week for four years. Their collabora· ... lion began when she w;is 14 anctalready a seasoned performe Her mother. a Spanish actress na rr :i Phyllis Griffin, carried 2·month·old Bebe on stage in a 1901 romedy called "Jane,'' and at age 4 the child's career was launched in earnest as the hapless Duke of York , in Shakespeare's "King Richard• III." The decision, reliable Jewish sources reported at the time. was to have been made public through the Soviet press by March I. There has been °" officia l report to date on a policy change but tne information provided by the sourc,s today apparently referred to the prcr mised decision. Indiana Lashed by Squalls Chlna May Lease Vital Pori'Site On Indian Ocean Five Hurt as Winds Blow Over Trees, Power Lines Callfornla •r UNITIO .. lt'l!SS INT'l!IN'illONAL To4•Y WIS I I CIOC! diV lot ote~lt wllh "Mavt 1 Nltt 0••" b\Jm~" 111c-1rs. tt w11, 11 l!.111 ...-e.1~""''11, 11 •111>nv ll<lfl-1...i w1tm 1e<"<>e•t•u•n ,...v1llld l tt>Jtld ~•~t'" (~t1!0<"•• Tiie LM .,t,1>gel11 t••• ""' ivnnv 1...i WI""'' wl"' ~•Mlt!t'C! ('"'' (fn· ...... hltl'I to et1m11rM wit~ I) .,.. Not '° 11ltt WIS '"' A1• l'oltuliCft (;o!lt..i OIJtrlct """'1 ti lltM 1m"t In tM c..,1r11, $tfl G1btlt1 tnd •~ ~l·Wtl"\11 V•I!"' 1><1,..,1..,1 a! !~• Lei AnHl.. ltt!n. Mt•lmvm 01011• ...... Wtl't JIJ ... .,. ""' "'ll\!Oll H rll of 11r 111 mosl lf'fft, boJI .10 pam ·~ tl\e wttl "" F.r111f\40 v11i." 1nc1 .u ...,... I" 1t!9 SI" Gab•\11 Vt lltv. • ... <Mt wtr• '"""' wllh l\lt~• •~ tt 111 Inf "" Wt*' $-1. MO\ln!llM ....-. 1\lfl/lr wll!t Mtlll " .. " ,, '"°'' ltvtl•. OeWll _, -• wltfl Mtl\t mo•" Ir Ill 1111 101 111 hltl\ Yl lMl¥1 fll~ !11 1111 I05 111 leW Yl lltyt. "6n'tl l\lt"' MOl!llt r 11\d t'!•dl(tM hitM todtY IM!ullld: LO"' 11 .. cl\ JO. IO. $•1111 Monltl '2"5. l ur-Mnll 1'·1l. Mt, Wll-41M,, ,tlmdtlt 10-13. ltlv• '"let 11-111, tlk ... Jflt lG 61·1', $111 OIMe ••·n, 111111 II•·~·• u••· ,.&lm W\tltl t).N tt'ICI M 1Mlln·j•11t1 Ant 71<IO. v.s. ~ummaru Temperature• \VASHINGTON (AP) U.S. in· •r UNJT~O ,.ltli l INTlltNATIONAL T•m<>er1h1•ts 1tld ~•ttl~llttlon tor !~t 7'·P'IOur ii.rlod endln' at ' 1 m. telligence sources say Dlina is trying to lease port fa cilities in Ceylon. which could give Peking a stralegic toehold in th!' Indian Ocean. Coastal II *Ill k mo•llv •~nnv tt1111v 11&111 ,,.. o'""'' C~···· ~t CICOJ<IY tonloM. *I"' Ill• PM•il:lllil'I D! r1>n Wfdlll>llff, f..,..l>frllvrt~ 1lo111 ·~• <'.<>Ill w111 r1ntt lram 4 lo 6S. wllll• 11111"°' ,,,. r1~•• will flt tj •o 15. W1ter ,..,.,Pltl• !Utt 11 )ol ~tHI Alt~u~ve...,ut A!le~11 J.nctl<or•tt 8ct1on a...11110 (llt•kitte Clllc•to Clncl•n111t C1ev1!1ncl Otllll °"""'' 0.J MOl11ts o.t•oll Ftlrt>.111~t H""°lu!u llldlt .... 1><1111 Jl(~sonvlllt Julltl\I IC•n•U Cllv LIS Vege\ LC• A"'tl n LOllh"lllt Mfl"ltll• Mltml Mlh"tU~lt M!"~~IJ>Oll1 N1w 0'1•t nl N~'l'orll; Sun. ltlo ~Jt. Tides 01i.t1NJm1 c11v Olnthl 1'Ul.SOAY l'tl!'I'\ 5~rlntl 1 '' 1 "' 11 "llllldtln~l l 11 llO•"' ,, l'llOelll• W'l!DNl!SDAY Pll!o~urt~ l'lrs! 10...-• Jll • m o I l'o•tl11'1d, Ott Fftll flitll \2 '.M 11 m, 1 • Jllo1d ("~ 5KOl'fd low j !j II m, ) 1 ~fl\0 ktOl'ld l\!th 11 "3 • m. •' .S1c"m.,.IO ''"' !tit" 6 0) I m, 11!1 •-OI t m. SI Ll)ojit Moon ··-10:d • l'fl, ltl't 1:03 1,ITI.,... .Stll l.t~t C1tv ( Mi th LtW ,.rK. loO Jl .Ol 65 l& n '° 11 n 11 The Red Chinese want a new port .~1 at Trincomalee to service naval and ·~ merchant Ships, these sources say. " . " » . " 57 '' 49 •D " ~ H •5 ~ " •> M ·01 Intelligence analysts expecl t h e .11 Ceylonese government will be receptive St 31'1 ,Cl to the Chinese overtures, though favoring an arrangement that would limit port use to merchant craft. 0' .{II 11 11 ... ..... " ~ " " 6t " 11 56 m ~ " " ., 11 51 11 ll " 7~ ,, .m This report coincid-s with other in· :~~ telligence information that ths Chinese .Ot have converted a 12.000 ton cargo vessel into a missile tracking ship. American officials interpret deploy· ment of the trstklng ship as indicating 01 Peking may be near its long awaited ... first full test of an intercontinental .h111ll!!tic missile, using the far reaches of the indian Ocean as a test range. 6J $1 117 •5 ,, ,. ,. ',01 , Already concerned about S o v I e t .01 penetration of the Incilan Ocean. U.S. tJ " 11 'l " ~ ~ " .. " " ~ .. " n n • " " ~ !ltrateglsts nmv see the possibility of .01 lhe other Communist superpo\ver moving into an area onct dominated by the Briti!ih Navy but now without any major .ls Western military presence. Cold Chicago Pedestrian bows head and plows into.blind ing snow flurry on Michl· gan Avenue. Temperatures plummeted from 60 to 30 degrees dur-- lng th e day and winds reached 52 miles per hour. • • , • • . Newport Beaeh ' EDITION VOL. 64, NO. 64, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today'11 . .Fld N.Y. Steeb •'. . TUESDAY, MARCH '16, 1971 TEN CENTS • Historic Newport Canµery to he Torn Down • • By I. PETER IUUEG ot 1119 0.ll)o ~ .... lttlf Western Canners Company, Newport Beach's last monument to the commer· cial r~ing industr)' that ttlrlved here for ne1rly half 1 hundred years, will be torn down -and part o! it rebuilt as a 300.seat luxury restaurant_ lookin& Just Is It looks today. And today it stand1 picturesquely 1!ong the lhores of the Rhine Channel, the. entire block between Lido Park Drive 2nd Bomb - Threat Plan• Call for This Leftover Frorri-·Another Er1 to Be Gutted, Revamped as R1st1urant Delay S_een Mexico Jails 20 to Thwart Revolt Plot• MEXICO CITY (UPI) -The Merican government said Monday it has smashed a plot in which North Korea trained Mexican -students as guerrillas in an attempt to overthrow the government and replace it with a Marxist-Leninist regime. Attorney General Julio Sanchez Vargas announeed . the arrest &f 20 Mexicans and aaid tbt aearc~ wa1 en for 29 e>tber 'members of a group trained in terrorism. al a North Korean army camp oear f>)oongyang. "This group was trained by North Korean soldiers with the aim of imposing a ·Marxist-Leninist regime on Mexico," Sanchez said. Sanchez said the plot was hatched .it Patrice Lumumba University in "toscow among Mexican students who were there on schola rships under the Mexican-Russian Cultural Ex ch a n g e Institute in Mexico City. He said the ?.1exicans went to East Berlin where they received North Korean passports and weot by train to Moscow then by plane to Pyongyang, North Korea . Sancbez said the plot was broken with lbe arrest aver the weekend of the suspects at what he called guerrilla 1cademies and hideouts in Mexico City, Jalapa. Acapulco and Pachuc. Automatic rifles and revolvers, rnore than l.lnl cartridges, grenades, short wave radios ind surgical equipmenl were seized. Those arrested were charged wilh con· 1piracy, inciting to r~bellio~, criminal association robbery with v 1 o l e n c e , homicide, 'hoarding arms, falsification of documents and using forged documents. The robbery and homicide charges voete !he result of l\\'O Mexico City bank robberies earlier this year in which Sanchei said SI00,000 was stolen to finance guerrillas act ivities. A bank 11Jatd was shot and killed in ttne ()f the holdups. Stocks Register Sharp Advances Beyond 900 Level NEW YORK fAP ) -Stock pr kes tcored sharp gains in today's heavy trading. so;iri11g even farther beyond the toO level which the closlnll Dow average J)ellf:trated Monday. (~e quotations, t:>age11 10-11 ). 1'be 2 p.m. Dow Jones average of ~ Industrial stocks rnse 6.44 lo 914.64. nus was its highest level since June 9, 1969 when it hit 1118.05. . . Big board W!lume w;u; 17.48 m1lhon lhares. up fr om t he 13.09 ml.Ilion ghares traded Monday at the same time. Advance.. led declines 011 the New York Stock Exchange by 3 to 1. . Analysts said the market was sllmu· tated by the Dow'!\ convincing break· through of the 900 level, which has bttn 1 psychological barrif.r to market ad· vances since mid-Febhiary , Analysll!I also noted a pickup in lnslilu· tional activity. . Two major bank! l\lrthtr reduced their prime rate lo sv, percent from 51,ii per· cent. Chase Manhattan began this trend last week when il cut lts prime lending rate lo sv, p!rcenl from s~ pe:rcent while olher banks only pared thdr ratt to 5~1 perceJ1t. Copper stock!\ were hl~htr klr the th1rd ·!ltrrtight ~1111ion after report! (JC 1 cutb1~k in ChJJean copper C'.ltltput. Kenne· cott Copper was up J/I •I 31-Stf, and Phelps Dodae wu up I at (7·-' 8' ·1 \ South Vietnamese Troops Fall Back Toward Border SAN RA FA EL (UP!) -Two bomb threats emptied the ~farin County Courthouse today, delaying a scheduled hearing for black militant Angela 03"iJ for hours. Mo~ than 1,000 persons werl! ordered out of tbe spraw ling. Frank Lloyd Wright. designed building about 9:30 a.m. SAIGON (UPI) -SOuth Vietnamese troops retreated today by foot and by helicopter from positions deep Jnside Laos and moved closer to the South Vietnamese border. The U.S. command rushed U.S. artillery reinforcements to tPe border area to pound adva{lcing Communist forces . Altogether , 2.tnl South Vietnamese withdrew from positions astride the: Ho Chi Minh Trail inside Laos. One force of ·700 wu flown ' out under fire by U:t htlicqp~ from fire, ba1e LoJo, the fouflh major -AllVN fire baae aban- doned in Laos in the fice of 1dvancln& tank-led communist troops. Lolo is nine miles ioutheast of the supply hub of Sepone, abandoned In an advancing Communist div ision last , Board to Get Dr .. Cunningham ·Resignation Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustees tonight will formally receive Superintendent William Cunningham's resignation and begin developing .the pro- cess for selecting a successor. The matter wl\I be taken up during the 7 o'clock board meeting at TeWinkle School. 3224 Galifornia Ave .. Costa hfesa. Dr. Cunningham . 44 . announced hi! resignalion over the weekend . On July l , he becomes executive secretary of !he newly formed Association of California School Administrators. Bart Hake, executive secretary of the Newport-Mesa Education Association, in· dicated the teachers organization would seek representation on the seTection panel. Mrs. Marion C. Bergeson, trustee from Newport Beach, said today, that although the board will be interested in hearing teachers' concerns. the selection process is "primarily a responsibility Of the board.'' Because "1 superintendent carries out the diredives of the board" sbe indicated she did not feel anyone other than board members woull' serve on the selection panel. Mrs. Bt!rgesnn echoed board· president Selim "Bud" Franklin's praise of Cun· ningham and said, "We'll miss him a great deal." Franklin has said a committee of three or four board members would begin reviewing candidates for the supei'in· tendent opening. Board Clerk Thomas C. Casey, trustee from Newporl.Bt!ach, said Cunnlnghl~'s resignation came as "a complete surprise tome " · "ll .is 1 great opportunity ' for him ~nd I'm aure the d.ialrlct will miss him. He's an ex~llent man," Casey 11aid. Casey said he believes the board is generally familiar with ~t of the lop admini'llrators in the state ind that the seltcHon proceu wiU be: 1 matter of screening candidates .11ceordin1 to av.11ilability. The new organiza.Uon which Cun- ningham will 11.aU, iii the outgrowth of a three and 1 half year effort by representatives t>f stven t&!()C/«tlt>n11 of top levtl scHool 1dmlnlstr1tors. Franklin described Uwi: 11ppolnl.mtnt·1! 1'probably the mO!t aignillr.ant t h I n g in California educ•tion today,'' noting hf thougtll Cunningham was a "n~tural for th• job." 9ieek. The others withdrawing were government infantrymen thwarted in their efforts to reach a big Communist supply dump just south of Lolo. They fought their way back by root to Fire Base Brown , !our miles r ar t her southeast. Included were 100 spectators and newsmen who had already started filing into the courtroom where attorneys for ,.,tiss Davis were to seek dismissal of murder and kidnaping charges. The Communlsb had attacked Lolo with rockets, mortars and tank guu: iind U.S. helicopters braved heavy an· tiaircraft fire to bring out the ARYN troops. The South Vietnamese apiked 11~ lrlilluy. pi,_ Mlort k•VfliJ .li,6, the equipment was later bonil*if by 852!. ' ..... , ,...•~-- They were allowed to return about an hour later but no 100ner. were back in the building than 1 deputy announced : "There is another bomb threat. You 'll have to .evacuate." EllCll tlml ,tb4'l!U)k!in& ~. t.hosa lnskJe 1pirled Out ti) mW areund- wlth a crowina crowd outal~ whlcb was holdini an all.day "moblliiltioii'' In support of Miss Davis. u .s. fighter-bombel'> and htlloopter gunships poured bombs, rockets and machinegun fire on the Communists dur· ing the evacuation. the front dispatches reported. The weather lifted after a period of heavy clouds and fog. The troops fr om fire base Lolo were flown to another base with the same name. Military sources gave no reason for naming the new base Lolo. Lo!o was third in a line of four fire support bases the South V!etnamese oc- cupied, running southeast from Sepone. Fire Base Sophia was evacuated early this week. Troops remain on Fire Base Liz, midway between Sophia and the old Lolo. Brown is the fourth base M the cha in. South Vietnamese official spokesmen In Saigon and at northern operational bases refused to admit withdrawal from Lolo or any major fighting anywhere in Laos. They insisted there were only· light and scattered action and M major ' engagements. Firld reports and details from other military sources told of the vastly out· numbered South Vietnamese be i n g plucked from Lolo in an armada of UHi Huey he!iropters. The choppers barely touched the ground before they were filled by troops c!nd&ing a constant rocket and mortar barrage , the reports said . QUAKE HITS IN SOUTH PACIFIC BERKELEY (AP) -A large earth- quake measuring 6.2.i on the Richte:r scale took place fn the South Pacific today, according to the University of Califomla seismograph at Berkeley. The quake epicenter was placed 6,000 miles southwest of Berkeley in !he Solomon or New Hebrides area. It OC· curred at 4:45 a.m. PST. In Washington, meanwhile, a crowd of about 15· persons chantinL.."Free Angela '' demonstrated out!ide the Justice Department. After the first bomb th~at, some spectators, mostly supporters of MiS8 Davis, who were already being cleared to go inside the courtroom, appeared ready to refuse to lt1ve. Red Police Take Soviet Family From Embassy ~fOSCOW (AP ) -RU5si1n poli~ seir· ed a Soviet doctor 's family today after they had enlt:red U.S. Embassy grounds to seek information on emigrati9n. The embassy delivered a strong •prote:st ac. cusing the police of "violation of em· bassy territory." An embassy spokesman said the in- cident developed into a struggle between a dozen U.S. emp!oyes and the Soviet militiamen. Militia guards pulled the doctor's wife and two daughters, aged S and I. onto the sidewalk in front ()f the embassy and took them away. The doctor, a short, stocky man ' iden· tHied as Vasily Nikitenkov, locked his arm11 around an iron gate and called, "Help me! Help me!" About a dozen embassy empJoyes quickly came to his rescue. They foiled police efforts to take Ute man away by swinging closed the: heavy iron gates, onto the inside of which tbe man had braced himself. The 1pOkesman said the three police regularly assigned to watch the embassy had by thi11 time been reinforced but there was 11<> count of how many policemen had taken part tn the lncident. Pie Eyed Thief $1,700 .(n Mesa Pastries Stol,en The. chocolate chiffon will hit the fa" It a certain pie:man meet.I some simple Simon peddling stolen samples of hi.a wares around the Harbor Area. The thief .fOOlc tnOUQb lo provide de~rt for lhe e:rrtlrc Orangfl County Jail lnmsle-papul1tlon for a month, police revealed today. O.lbert A. Gabaldon rtpOrled tbe froien pie factory Uglary to Officer Sa:m Arnold Monday. ' , "7 us rnc • key obtAU>etl somehow, lbe thief ha! been lootfng, Conl.emP!Jr•ry Cspllal Corporation, 2949 RaMdolpb Ave.1 for 1 monlh. Missing suppUes, Gabaldon took in· , venlory and dlsoove.red 1 tot.a.I ol ll ,7UOJ worth nr plea and putry in· 1re<Jltnta pilfered. Officer Arnold 1.11K:1 the loot include& 14.000 aluminum plates, J.850 pounds of ahortening, 3tl hap of floor. •16 cut>e. of butter ind 170 cases of finiahed fnnen pt es. The · JOSI of finished plea with hl1 The 8"ller Recommends .•. trademark Includes 60 c1ses of che:rry, $0 of 1pplt and 20 e11di of blackberry, bhitberry and rltubarb, Gabaldon added . Unleaa· he pedd led them lo a CMn· ptlitor, pallet said, \hey were 11t 1 loa!I to eipla.ln whal a burgl1r woold do with 1 few tbouaand hot froun pies:. ... and 30th. Street . We11tern Canners ceased ope.rations nearly three years ago, then a& the last survivor or Newport's cannery row. The 1\ructllre was pureh~aed recently by Robert and William Unger, brothera Ion' a e t I v e In Harbor. Area civic Ind bos1ne!I! aff.11irs. Tt\e .i(iginal building only, the half borderinT 30th' Street, will be reeonstructed at seven-eighth!: acale. Robert Unger, fonner, Costa Mesa city manager and now heading Unger·Pac:lfic Fight Over Dog Corporation , u id plans naw call for his firm to devl"lop the projttt. He estimaled the construction~ price tag, alone, to be upwards of $500,000. Re d~llned to say what his firm had paid for the old building lfld the land when it was acquired last April from Walter Longmoor. Plans for the entire project aUll must win formal approval from, the city of Newport Beach, however, ·and Una:ez: (Set CANNERY• Page Z) Off-duty Lawman Ifeld in Slaying ARRESTED IN MURDER LA Officer Schu1M Building Permits Show Increase In. Newport &osttd by , 1 $.1.8 mllliOn addition to Park Newport Aj:>arlmenls s:arted last month, building permit! in Newport B e 1 c h showed a marked increase in February, city officials said today. Oliver Grant, acting aSsistant director of communil.y development, said building totals authorized in February totalled sq,563,152, compared with ()nly $1.l million in January. The Park Newport addition wlU con· stitute 201 apartments in 11eclion 5 of the massive devel opment on Jamboree road, trant said. Despite the -m1j<ir jump last month, Grant said building totals the first two months ()f 11'11 are well behfnd the ~me period last year when permits for building valued at more than $8.3 million had been Issued. Figures for tilt tir1t eight months of· the curreot fiscal year are also well behind those of 1969-70, Grant said. During the. first two-thirds of the prl!ceding y e a r , building built were value"d at $34.l million, be said, while the valu1tlon of constru ct.ion tD date In 197B.71 is only $28.6 million. Need a Gavel? Take the Pipe Newport ' Beach Mayor Ed Hirth was bringing a recent joint eity council-planning c o m m i s s I o n tnteting to 1 close when 1 sharp "rap, rip, rip'' rtlOUOOed from one end of the t1ble. Tht meeting, 1t Mariners LI. ·brary r1thtt than the norm.1 City Rall chambers. had, u.e ,kJ that 'point, been conduc~d WUtioot the usual parll1me:ntarj tools, IUCh 1.11 1 gavel. "That'• whit rve betn miaslng,'' the m1yor Mid, I nl er ru ptfng himself 1u1d looi.!n« down at Cot!n- cilman bon McJhnL•. "'You're ~ccme to borrow it, t auea," Mclnnls 11ld, shru,uing tU1 shoulders 1nd plafntlve.ly ot· ftrlni te pl.ts to the m1yor tOe pipe be ti.d· juot tmptlod. . ·-- By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of ""9 OallJ PUii ll•ft An argument over a dog that w ~ s fed a rigarette in a Huntington Beach bar Monday night resulted in the shooting death of a ~year-old man and the arrest of an off-duty Los Angeles policeman on a murder charge. Mark A. Rodgers, 29, of Buen.11 Park, ".i' hit in t~ chest by a .38 caliber bullet. police 1aid. He wu dead on arrival at Huntington Jntercommunit)' Hospital about 9:30 p.m. Police arrested two men on murder charges. They are Clifton J. Scbuw, 26, of "672 Rogers Drive, Huntington Beach, a twcryear patrolman with tbt Los Angeles Police Departmen\'1 Harbor Division, and James E. Jordon. 31, of 6762 Warner Ave., Apt. K-10, Huntington Beach, a foreman 1t au 1luminum manUflduring company. Witnwes to the shooting .aaid Uial an argument started at the Swinger bar on Beacb Boulevard aoul.h ol Garfield Avenue between two group! of p~trons alter the potlCeman allegedly 1ave • dog a ciga rette to ea t. When the argument got out of hand and" persons in the bar ~gan arming them.selves wllb pool cues, the patrons were asked to leave, police said. , According to a witness, the dispute continued out.s.ide the bar. lnvesUgatora were told by wi tnesses that one shot was fired into the pavement during the argum~nt. Another shot, believed by witnesses to have been fired aecooda Jater, struck Rodgers near the heart. Two .lkaliber bullets have been recgvered by police, f!ne from the dead man'a body. Officers said 1 woman motorist pua:ing by the bar saw what wa11 happeninc and stopped •. patrol car. The olfid!r arrived at the Swinger moments: after the shalt: were fired and arrested Schuue and Jordon . Rodgers.· a drywall taper working 1t 1 Huntington Beach construction projecf.. was a frequent customer at the bar. He was the· father of three c.hildr!n. Caspers Slates Costa Mesa Talk Freshman Fifth District SUpervisor Ronald Caspers will give a 11peech In Cosla Mesa Thursday on his first 50 days in oUice. Caspers will .11ddress the. Citizens Harbor Area Research Team (CHART) at a 7:30 a.m. breakfast session at the Costa Mesa CoU and Country Club. Reservations for the CHART susion must be made by c.lling 834-5814 by noon Wednesday. The public Is invlt.ed. Oruge l1'eatller The. weathennan'a U,hUng 1 candle under the thermometer •Wedneiday, pushing tht mercury up to 80 deg~ ln the central county and in the low 70s locally. INSIDE TODA l' A rt UOU-rC~li for tht biggt1t week. of lit>ing tMottT tvtr in Orange Countu? I& itarta te>- 11ight. and !i()U.'U ftnd all th1 details on Entl't-tainment PCJq~ 20. , ' I --. 'I DA.IL Y PILOT N Freewa1 St1uly Mesa Unit Mulls ' Election Impact One week after the Newport Beach anti-frttway vote, a new Costa Mesa panel is today reviewing its impact on local plaru; and options. plus the possibili- ty of suing its sister city. The committee wa1 appointed Monday night al the initiation of Councilman Jack Hammett. He d~lartd last ~·eek that legal action should be undertaken to recover all or * * * Group Seek6 Route Clear Of Newport A Newport Beach citizens' committee studying possible routes for the future Orange Freeway has decided that wherever the superhighway goes, it shouldn't be through Newport Beach. The committee has narrowed possible corridor• and desUnationa ol the freeway, known as Route 57, to four. One alternative ls that there be. no Orange Frttway on Newport's side of the Sanla Ana Freeway. ~ Proposed rout1n1 for the freeway aligns along tbe Santa Alfa River and g0ts inland from the coaat, somewhat parallel to the future and eWUng Newport Freeway. A section from the Sant a Ana Freeway inland has already been adopted. Two basic corridors a.re. still being probed, according to Menill Skilling, ch.,!rman of I.he 21·m~mber panel. One follows the Sant.a Ana River to the coast, Sklllin&s said, noting that one alternative ls to terminate lt at the San Diego Freeway while another is to bring It to either the future Pacific Coast Freeway or Pacific Coast Highway. The third poastblllty, Skilling 1aid, "ls to bend it around to the San Diego Freeway ne.l.r the 1tart of the Corona del Mar Freeway." .Newport Beach Traffic E n g I n e c r Robert Jaffe, in a report at the com· mlttee'• last meeting, aald the effect on traffic in Newport would be jwt about the · sam~ regardless of wblch altemaUve ls choaen. The clUuna committee is o n e of several appointed by the State Dlvi!lon ol H.lgbwaya from communJUes that may be affected by lht new lr<eway. Coast 'Walk' Raises $1,400 Participants In the Savt Our ·coast Walk, held Feb. 71 in Newport Beach, raised approximately •1,400 for the CallfOrnla Coastal Alliance, Orange Coun- ty Chairman Eleanor G. Smith reported today. Mrs. Smith& 1ald the funds will be used to get a bill through the state legislature which will establish a state board to control developmenl of the e<>a!Ulne. The vent, which featured more than 300 people who were paid to walk dis· tances of up to 20 miles, was sponsored by the county chapter of the statewide organization. A public meeting sponsored by the CCA will be "held at 7:30 p.m. April l at St. Mark's Presbyterlan Church, Corona de! Mar. Mrs. Smitll said CCA board member 1t1ichael Jacobs will speak at the meeting. OU.N•I COAIT DAILY PILOT dMHOI COAST .. UILISH1NCJ CCM .. ANY ' l•it•rt H. w,,. ,.,~, •l'IC l'!llDlblltf' J.11~ a. C'utf,., VlcC:" f'm*nf .lnilll ~I MIMJW t'•fll•' l(,,¥1r l:tllMt Th•~•• f.:, M•rphl11• ""-Mt".nl I:""" L.. ,,,,, K,i11 )ir#pllf"t INUI (lty £tlllor ~..,." IHcll OHIM t' ]Jll N1wp11t loul1¥11d ( J1f1ilin1 Addr1u: P.O. 1111. 1175, 91663 ,,, ... .,_ CO.ti 1Mt11 :UI W•l ••'f Sll'M '-"""' a.d\1 ft: ,.,., Av..,.,. 1111Mllflllll:1 a.d'lr 1'•75 "'"'" lovlrv11t1 ·1111 (.__..I JN Ntrlll II "(.11'11r\e R ... , 1.i.,, ... l714) '4J-412t Cl··~ .u..nt1et i4J·li71 ~1. "11· Orlftll C»tolf ""'WllNI C.,...ny, ff• MWt 11Wt11. 11'-"'i....., edllil!NI ""'".. 9f' ...,..,lt4'IMl'lh ...... NY ~ r....-vc:M wfl!IWI ~ltl ,_. '"*'" " ~Ill\. ~. ....... <l•t• ,. .... ,.,. If",.......,. l9dl .... C..t-,,,._, C..l""""lt. ~llfl .., a rrllr U.JS -"'IY1 .-, IMll Alf ...-...1,, ""'ltttf Mtw..t• ti.II ll!llfllNJ, ' • I parl or more lhan $100,000 spent to date in freeway-related traffic studle1. Newport Beach voters' 5 to 1 referen· dum b a I Io t against the Pacific Coast Freeway route through their city could have impact on Costa A1:esa'11 own Newport Freew1y preparatlons. Hammett's memo outlining the com· m.ittee's makeup and-funcUori was unanimously endorsed by fellow coun. cilmen. "This action is engendered as a result of many thousands of taxpayers' dollars spent in the past several years," it declares. He referred to a $50,000 Downtown RedevtlO'pment Program study o.f east. west traffic flow, Jlllor Newport Freeway planning and many related mipl-hour1 expended by the staff. Deptndlng -on developments in the wake of Newport Beach's anti-freeway vote, these may be jeopardized. "I feel this commlllee should com- mence sifting and re-evaluating our present data in view of what ls best for Costa MeJa," Hammett said, reading his recommendation. Spending of fWld1 toward this end would be authorlud. "I also think that the report should be made public at the earliest possible oppol"lunity as well as reCommended action, iI feasible, to recaplurtl aome oC our taxpayers' money." Mayor Robert M. Wll!on lmmedlately named Hammett and Vice Mayor Willard T. Jordan to head the panel. City Mpnager Fred Sorsabal, City Al· tomey Roy June, plus PlaMlng Depart· ment personnel Will be Included. Costa Mesa leaden said they fear the Newport Beach referendum action may be the first step in atteD'lptlng to lhlft the freeway route out of NeWport Beach and inlaftff. Council members vow a new and mili· tant stand on speeding construction of the Newport Freeway, which will carry 58,000 cars daily into tbe beach city. The philosophy ls now to Jet Newport Beach cope with the summertime Influx in whatever way Jt can. "Let them put the traffic down there and stack it up 28 deep," remarked Councilman Alvin L. Pinkley during the Monday night strategy talks. "It i! time to determine whether we have been hurt," be also said, relative lo the intra-city traffic studiea which may require revlsion. ,. * ·* * ' ' Irvine Support Vowea by Mason In Traf fie Ills Jrvi?}e Company President William R. Muon today called ror an end to "acrimony" over the future Pacific Coast Freeway and pledged his finn to help solve Newport'a transportation needs. In a statement released today, Mason said the anti-freeway vote and CI t y Charter amendment displayed "lhe overwhelming aentiment of Newport's voters,'' and noted that "some hard decisions Ile ahead for the communlty. "l\teeting Newport's e:zlsting and future transportation needs will require the kind of ef~ort that only men of good wlll can give. "The I~ine Company Is prtpared to ~sslst in any way it can be helpful in fu ture studies of these problems " he said. ' From Pagel CANNERY ..• saJd tr clearances are received wi!hout delay, work will be&in immediately and the rutauraat may be ope1 by Christ· mu. Unger ha1 flled an application for 1 use permit tor the restaurant with the Plan· ning Commiulon; the approval i• neces· sary because the property &its in an Jn· dustriaJ zone. A public heariRg on the rtquest wltl take place April 1 at 8 p.m. in City Hall. According lo plans, the two·story struc- ture will include about 200 seafs on the fi.~t floor, another 100 In tl]e loft and ad- ditional seats on an oulsicfe patio. In rebuilding the caryiery, Unger said, the existing dock will &e removed and a new concrete bulkhead will be construe!· ed .a'long the channel from Lido Park Drive to and including the end of 30th Stttet. Plans IUbmltttd to the: city also ln· elude rtbulldlna: the sect.Jon of 30th Street runnin,c from Lafayette Street to the channel. The pl'Op)ltd project was greeted with enthusiasm by Councllma• Carl Kyml1, who i1 chairm111 of lhe city's Lower Newport Bey Civic Dlslrlct study com· mlttee. His panel ls currently putting toaether recommf!ndations on tough new controls for building$ alone the entire lower bay and ocean front. ''J wouJa have to reserve final Juda:· ment unUI T He the plans. of courar.'' Kyn1la said. "but I am d'Uflh led by this kind or approach. It fall!: in line with whal we have been talking aboot. Jt stays within the c.har1cter nl N1.1wport Bea ch . "lt certa.!nly Is far more accepllble than hlgh·rlse," Kymla said. • Wide Open · Spaces You are standing at 32nd Street and Balboa Boule· vard, looking down 32nd to Newport Boulevard. The expanse of sand in front of you was once filled with houses. They have been torn down to make way for the widening of 32nd Street, whic;h is now a one-way street. City plans call for it to become a two-way thoroughfare. Survey Reyeals_ Checkups Guard Against s·ickness A five-year survey bas revealed that middle-aged men who have periodic health checkups have fewer illnesses than men who do not have examinations, the Ca\Jfomia Medical Association was told Monday in Anahetm. Dr. Morris F. Collen said the report was the first scienUfic evidence that periodic health surveillance really works. Collen said he found a significant decrease in disease in men aged 45 to 55 who have had periodic examinations as compared to another group that did not. He said a total of 10,000 men were followed for five years to get the results. In another address, Dr. Vincent W. Cangello of Oak.land described a ne\Y * * * Gal CMA Chief Battled Bias To Be Doctor By BILL STOCKTON "" S(itnCI Writer diagnostic procedure that makes it poss i· ble to examine the ovaries, appendix, ut.er:us, bowels, gall bladder and liver without doing an exploratory operation. He 1aid by inserting an instrument into a small incision in the abdomen Jt .was possible to photograph the various organs by using new lighting and opti.c systems. Jury Clea~s Man Of Bribe Rap In Mesa Case Samuel Rosman of Laguna .Niguel was cleared Monday night of charges lhat he bribed a Costa Mesa patrolman but an Orange County superior Court jury found him gullty of one o f f e n 1 e -conspiracy to commit bribery. It took the panel six hours to clear Rosman, rl. of 29351 San Briso Place, on the major charges after a trial in which they heard recording11 of telephone The first woman ever elected president conversatiorui between officer Gary of a slate medical society tak1.1s office Barwig and the defendant. today. She still remembers having to earwig testified from the witness box overcome sexual discrimination _by her that Rosman gave him $10,000 to plant parents to become a doctor in the first drugs In the car of a vital prosecution place. witnen 1n a liquor hijacking case. Drugs Police Halt Bid For 'Death Dive' Off Coast Pier Escape artist D.D. 1tfasco Is alive and well in Alhambra today. Seal Beach police officers stopped him f r o m attempting a "Dive to Death" off the municipal pier Salurday. The 32-year-0ld stuntman was to have jumped into the water, weighted down and shackled by two handcuffs and 2:.- feet of chain padlocked in th ree 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 end of the pier. He didn't get far. Masco was met al the head of the pier by Sgt. t.1artin Black who took him to see Police Chief Lee Case. "The city has 1n ordinance against jumping off ·the pier,'' the chief !Old 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 annou~d to the crowd of 2,000 thrlll-sukers lining the pier that he v.·ould make good his claim next Saturday, at 2 p.m. Retired Admiral In Newport TQlk Dr. Roberta Fenlon, 59, an Internal charges against Rosl'\)an we.re also Retired Adm iral u. s. Grant Sharp, medicine specialist in San Francisco and dismissed by the jury. former commander of U.S. naval for~s a faculty member at the University Judge Ronald Crookshank ordered in the Pacific, wlll address a planning of California, assum1.1s the reins of the Rosman, a Saddleback College student. sessia1 of Operation Alert Wednesday 25.000..member California J\.fl! d I ca I lo return lo his court April ~r what at noon at the Stuft Shirt restaurant in Association at its convention in Anaheim. could be at the most a three-yffi term Newport ijeach. "No daughter of mine is going to in state prison on the conspiracy count. Adm. stiarp, a 45--year Navy veteran. medical school." Dr. Fenlon recalls her Rosman was accused during his two-will talk on the subjtet, "Will We Allow physician-father declaring when, as a \veek trial of planting narcotics in the the United States to Become the Number young woman, she seriously began con-cir or Charles "Chuck" Dreyer. 31 of Two World Power?" sidering the study or medicine. 1645 Sunset Ridge Drive. Laguna Beach. The plaMing session of Opera tion "Father was opposed because he It was alleged tha t he bribed Barwig Alert, • self-styled watchdog of national thought mecjical school was too hard ln collaborotion with Eugene Rondondo. security, is one of several takiRg place for a woman," she said in an interview. 44, a former partner with Dreyer in in advance of the group's "cold-war "And mother kept saying, 'Oh, be the now defunct Fellciano 's Restaurant college'' to take place in Anaheim in Set Blaze In Office, .. Man Admits By TOfi! BARI.EV 01 ''" P•llY "llol suit A prosecutiOn witness today teslified before an Orange County Supe~ior Cour t . . . jury that he burn1.1d Dr. Ebbe llarteltus Corona del fl·lar office~ last April I at the physi cian 's direction and that nine days earlier he helped the doctor fa kt the theft of llartclius' c3r• "I poured gas all over the d\sk and drav.•ers and the filing cabinet.., Jim Blevins said. ''Then I struck a match and threw it into the o(fice ... Blevins. 39, testified that he then took "just three steps and then there was a big explosion. "Everything just b!owed up and it hurled me down the hall,'' he said. ';I fell fial on my face. My ears wer~ ringing and I thought the whole building had blowed up." Blevins said he dumped the gas can in the hallway, fled from the building to his Uing Beach home and dumped the office keys in a vacant lot on tbe way. Blevins. Y.'ho is the brother of the doctor's ex-mistress; Reba Vaughn, said his immediate reward from Hartelius was the comment: ''You did a n11tY, job." But he testified that his sister latet gave him moneY from Hartelius to leave the state. "I was told that if I lefl they wouldn't have anything on the doctor," he said. Blevins also admitted 1hat be met Hartelius last March 31 and fC>Jlowed the doctor in his car to Long Beacli where the physician parked his imported auto be bin J a market. He said Hartelius faked the theft of the auto "because be said he needed the insurance money." It is alleged that Hartelius made insurance claims for the fire at 2345 E. Coast Highway and for the los s of his car. Deputy District Attorney Al Novick claims ~lartelius offered Blevins $2.000 to leave the state wbeo investigation into both alleged frauds intensified. He also alleges that Hartelius planned the fire because of "highly inci'lminating patient records that might become available at a pending State Board ot :t.1edical Examiners bearing into the doc- tor's activities." Defense attorney Alalthew Kurillcb drew from Blevins in a long grilling the admission that Blevins had stolen three cars prior to the alleged theft of lbe Hartelius auto . The hard-hitting lawyer described Blev!M as "a very competent car thief'' while he got the admis$ion from the witness that he had seryed a term in federal prison for such aft" offfense. Blevins is the ·prosecution's flnsl v.·itness in its case against Hsrteliu1, 50. It is expected that the defense pb•s• of the trial will open late today or Wednesday morning. Jewelry Stolen In Newport Home Newport Beach police today are in· vutigatlng the theft of more than $1 ,000 worth of jewelry from a Bayshores home. John E. Neville, of 2622 Crestview Drive, reported four pieces of jewelry valued at $1,075 and a $4 .SS bottle of whiskey missing from his home f.1onday. Investigators said the burglar entered the home by prying open a bedroom window. The missing Jev;elry includes two gold bracelets. a gold charm bracelet and a silver bracelet which belong to Neville'• wife. a good mother or a ·good school teacher in Newport Beach. !\.fay. or a nurse. There's nothing finer than J-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;- a good schocl teacher,' she would say." That v.'as in Clinton, Io.,.,·a, in the 1930s. The young \\'Oman. whose medical career began as a small girl helping in her father 's office, ignored the paren. tal advice. Working her way through school, shie earned a medical degree in lMZ from Iowa State University. Dr. Fenlon In· terned the follov.:log year at San Fran-- cisco General Hdspital and stayed two more years as an internal medicine resident before beginning private prac· tice. Jn a quarter century or practice , has she encountered sexual discrimination by her colleagues? "Absolutely not. They've all been wonderful.'' What about medical school? "Oh I could say that maybe there \\·as some discrimination in medical school." she said. "But I can also say I sav1 some o( my profes so rs discriminate against some of my m'le colleagues. Teachers. after all. are only human." Dr. Fenlon. who never married, agrees with the goal!! or women liberalionisll but dislikes their methods. "I cafl see what .,.,·omen's lib is 11aying and trying to do in terms or jobs and equal rights," she said. "But any Changes in our pla('e tn this world must come through e~·olulion and not revolulioo.'' Boy Gored, Killed PENANG, t.lalaysia (UPI) -A 17· year-old bCy was gored lo death today by a white el,phant. his father reported. The boy, Arrifin Bin Y111cob. suffered dttpfBid(' \l'OU1Kls and died in a boat en route to Grik Hospital near the Thal· fl.!alay1i11n border about 70 miles east of Penang. I WTL' ' ----? WiJtai_J;,/.. M~·Eine? • :You won't be foCI any lines at Alden's. We are more interested in developing loyal customers tlien making a fast sale. • None of our soles people will bother you if you just wont to browse , but will be pleased to assist you if you wish, with truthful en•we" to your quution•. Wlien we discuu carpet lines. we would nave to "modestly" admit that we hove the lorgut selections in the area. Top bra n d s sucli es: Bigelow, Berven, BeetticJ, Megee, Monercli, Berwick, Mohawk, Roxbury, Milliken, Armstrong. • ALDEN'S SANTA ANA. O~NOl, TUITIN Call • , • ALDIN'I llD HILL CA•l'ITS & DlllAl'llllS 11J74 J"lft9o Tu1tl", Cal. -- CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 • ' ( I , ' 7 7 • • ' Costa.Mesa Today's F1-al ---.- • EDIJION '• . I VOL 6'4, NO. 64.-,1 SECTIONS, 58 PAGES ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . TUESDAY, MARCH 16, 1971 TEN CENTS • v Councilmen Clash on Costs of Memo Copies Conflicting concepts over channels of autbority in Costa ~1esa city government led to a stinging exchange ~1onday night between f\1ayor Robert f\1 . \Vilson and Councilrhan William L. SL Clair. ·The is.sue 'A'as an $8 to $10 order for 1,000 memo copies. By the time the fur finished flying, the mayor was accused ol conflict of authority and SL Clair stood charged with lack of respect for his colleagues. City Manager Fred Sorsabal was • caught in the middle. but kept srruhng. Councilman St. Clair angrily charged Monday that the mayor had coun- termanded his order for 1.000 copies of a memo by Planning Director William L. Dunn. Thi! June 19 note urged caution In pr{)('tssing new apartment developments Jil prevel)t a costly future vacancy factor of perhaps 20 percent. Councilman St. Clair wanted to distribute them to the East Side Property Owners Association. a group working against adoption of the East Side Study Report no\11 under consideration. The l969+COmpiled document envisions a tr'end in that 2~acre area toward multiple high and medium density in direct conflict with the Dunn memo. ''I definitely re:sent your canceling that order. And I definitely resent not being told it was done," St. Clair siid. He added that he has been told to make such request& through Sorsabal'1 1cer e Cop Car .Creamed Carmen Burtco of Costa Mesa didn't have to look around for a policeman to investigate his traffic accident Monday -there \1:as one right in fr'ortt of him. Officer Gary \Vebsler and Burtco collided at VictOria and National avenues with the police car getting the worst of it. Pas&engers Connie Cha vez, 28, and Lee Ann Col ch, 91 suffered· minot injuries. Jury Clears Man Of Bribe Rap In Mesa Case I Samuel Rosman of Laguna Niguel WB! cleared f\.1onday night of charges that he bribed a Costa Mesa palrolman .but an Oran~e County superior Court Jury found him guilty of one off en s e ...:. conspiracy to commi! bribery. ll took the panel six hours to clear Rosman. 27. of 29351 San Briso Place, on the m;:ijor charges ;:iftcr a trial in which they heard recordings of telephnne~ conversRtions between officer Gary Barwig and the defenicint. Barwig testified from the "'itoess box that RDsman gave him SI0,000 to plant ·dr ugs in the car of a vi1al prosecution witness in a liquor hijacking case. Drugs charges against Rosman were also dismissed by the jury. Judge Ronald Crookshank ordered Rosman, a Saddleback College studeot, to return to his court April 5 for what could be at 1he most a three-year term tn stale prison on the conspiracy count. Senate Okays Proposed 18-year Old State Vow · SACRAMEt\'TO (UPI) -The Senate today reversed itself and approved a propoi;ed Constitutional amendment to lo\\·er !he voling to 18 Rnd enfranchise an estimated 1.5 mi!Jlon young Califor· nians . The vote on lhe measure by Sen . George Moscone ([).San Francisco). was sent to the Assembly on a 28-9 vote \\'ith llttle debate. It required 27 af· firmative votes. Nearly three weeks ago the Senate rejected the same proP1?~al. 14-9, but to.1oscone y,·as given permission to submit it for another vote. He said at the time some of his. supporters were absent. The measurf'. in addition to lowering the voling age also eliminates al lliteracy tests and reduces voter residency re- quirements to JO days. lf approved by the lower house. the measure--will be submitted to voters fdl" ratification. to.1oscone predicted the proposal will appear on tl1e June 1972 primary ballot. A ·recent Cahfornia poll showed that 59 percent of the persons polled favored gi111ng IS-to 20-year-olds the vote, while 36 percent opposed It. to.loscone. who has carried the same proposal for four straight years wil'hout success. told colleagues that it has been "debated ad nauseam" -and he didn't \\'anlr lo reiterate told arguments. But Sen. Clark L. Bradley (R-San Jos>:'). a stout opponen! or lov.·ering the voting age, said an 18-year-old Is "not mature to the point of being a qualified eleetor. "He is a. developing individual." Bradley said. "He has not had lhe o~ portunity in the field of hard knocks for the experience and judgment he needs." f.1oscone said the proposal would con- form California law to the. new federal st.atutf: giving IS-year-olds the vote in national elections only. He said he doubted whether a proposed federal Constitutional amendment would affect his measure. since it would pr~ bab!y take ye ars for three·fourths of the states to ratify it. office. charging the ma yor with conflict of authority and attempting to suppreM the memo. ··Well Bill. il"s 1 two-way street," Mayor Wilson countertd. · "You never notified me. I think it's Ume we started going through the chair and you start respecting fellow coun· ci\men." "Mr. Mayor, I don 't think .you're run- ning this city," SL Clair snaPi'ed back. •·r think you're the titular-bead of the city." He y,•a1 told again thlilt policy ~ particularly in light of the t.000 requtSted copies instead of a oouple for personal reference -dictatea going through the mayor's chair for approval. Fuming by this lime, Councilman SI. Clair renewed his argumen~ that be has been told to do It through Sorsaba:l. "I don't see a reason in. . " he said pauslng, "on earth that I should . • Ill ar Newport Vote On Freeway Gets Mesa Eye Thomas Dewey Dies at 68 MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Foriner New York Gov . Thomas g.., Dewey, twice a Rtpublica11 calldldate for President, died in & hotel here · Tuesday. The Seaview Hotel, whert Dewey One week ·after the Newport ·Beach had an apartmen t, reported the death of the former governor but anti·freeway vote, • new Costa Mesa hotel president Duane Andreas. a panel Ls today rtviewing iU impact on friend of Of:wey, would not give local plaru; and options. plus the possibili· out details. He was 68. "" ty of suing !ta gister city. Dewey ran for President on the The ct>mmittee was appointed Monday Republican Ucket in 1944 against the !ale Franklln Roosevelt and night at the initiation of Cowicilman again in I~ against Harry S Tru· Jack Hammett. man. He lost both times. He declared last week that legal action Dewey hid been in apparent good health in recent Years ucept (or 1hould be widertaken to r1!!C9Ver all or oCcasional pailful bouts with arth· part of more , than $100,0IXI ipent to riti1, ,and told lritnda al Grid· ••tt 11 fttitw19'ril1ted titffit'P1 l11. ~~ .... -'t:?ilb Banqtii Nl!!'W'pOrt Bea.eh voters' • 'If r rtf!ren-lut .weekend ht llad "Dete.r ·felt iluDi I> I 1.1 et i(alnot tl\i PMilfle-Ceq( --~~~~ :~ ~~I ~~!'w.'. Freeway route through their cltr could Alice Roosevelt .LonJwort.h . onct have Impact on Costa · _Mesa• own said made him "look like the man Newport Freew:1y prePf!rations. on top of the we.iidi11g cake." Hammett's memo outlining the com· mittee's makeup •nd function was unanimously endors~d by fellow cou.n- cilme.n. ''Thil action is engendered 1s a result of m• thousands of taxpayers' dollars spent In the past several years,.. it declares. He referred to 1 $50,000 Downtown Redevelopment Program study of east· y,·est traffic now, prior Newport Freeway planning and many re lated man-hours e1pended by the staff. Depending on development.! in the wakt of Nelfpart Beach's anti-frttway vote, these may be jeopardiud. "I feel· this committee should com· me ce sifting and re-evaluating our pre ent data in view of what is best for Costa Mesa.·• Hammett said, reading his recommendatiOn . Spending of funds toward this end would be authorized. f "I also thlok that the report should be made public at the earliest possiblt? opportunity as well as recommended aclion. if feasible. to recapture 101ne of our taxpayers' money." . Mayor Robert M. Wilson immediately named Hammett and Vice Mayor Willard T. Jordan to head the panel. City Manager Fred Sorsabal. City Al· torney Roy June, plus Planning Depart· ment personnel will be included. Costa Mesa leaders said they fea r the Newport Beach referendum action may be the first step in atte.mpting to shift the freeway route out of Newport Beach and inland. Council members vow a new and mili· tant stand on .!peeding construction of the Newport Freeway, which will carry 58,000 ca rs daiif into the beach city. The philos!phy is now to let Newport Beach cope with the summertime inOu1 in whate11er way it can. Board to Get - Dr. Cunningham Resignation Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustees tonight will formally receive Superintendent William Cunningham'& resignation 111d begin developlni th! pr~ ~ss for selecting a successor. The matter will be taken up duriii g the 7 o'clock board meeting at TeWinkle School. 3224 Caliiornia Ave., Costa Mesa . Or. Cunningham, 44. announced his resignation 011er the weekend. On July t. he becomes executive secretary of the newly formed Association of · California School Administrators. Bart Hake. e1ecutlve secretary of the Newport-Mesa Education Association, in· dicated the teache rg organitation would st?ek representation on the selection panel . Mrs. Marion C. Bergeson. trustee from Newport Beach, said today, ,that although the board will be inttre&ted in hearing teachers· conceriu. the selection process ~ "primarily a responsibility of the board." • Because "a superinlendent carriea oul the directives of the board" she indicated she did not feel anyone other than board members would serve. on the 1election panel. Mrs. Bergeson echoed board president Selim "Bud" Franklin 's praise of Cun- nlngham and iiald, "We 'll m.isa him a great deal." Rosman was accused during his two. week trial of planlinJl narcotics in the car of Charles .. Chuck" Dreyer, 31 of 1645 Sunset Ridge nnve, Laguna Beach. It \\'IS allei:ied that he bribed Bar\11ig In collaborotion \\'ilh EugC'ne Ronrlondn. 44. a former partner \\'\1h Dre yer in the now defunct fel1 c1ano's Reslaurant in Newport Beach. Stocks Regisrer Sharp Advances Beyond 900 Level Pi~· Eyed Thief Franklin his said a committee of three or four board members would begin reviewing candidates for the superin- tendent opening. Board Clerk 1bomas C. Casey, trustee from Newport Beach, said Cunnlngham·s resignation came as "a complete surprise to me." QUAKE HITS IN SOUTH PACIFIC BERKELEY (AP) - A large earth· quake measuring g 25 on the Richter &eale took place in the South Pacific today. according to the t;niven1ity of Califonua seismograph at Berkeley. The quake epicenter was placed ~.non miles wuthwest of Berkeley In the Solomo~ or Nt?w Hebrides area . lt oc• curred at 4:45 1.m. PST. . . ) . ' NEW YORK (API -Stock prices :scored sharp gains in lodlily's heavy trading. soari ng even farther beyond the 900 level which lhe closin" Dow average penetrated Monday. (See Quotatiorui, Pages 10·11). The 1 pm. Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks rose 6.44 to 914 84. This was its highest level since June 9, 1969 when it hil 918.M. ,.,elg board volume was 17.48 mlllion .-res. up from I ht 13.09 mJlllon shares traded Monday at thf' same lime Ad vances led declines 011 the New York Stock Exchange by l to J. Analysts 1a1d tht mark!t was atimu- lated by the .Dow'1 ~nvlncing breaJt· through al the 900 level; which his been 1 psychological b11rrler tc. markft 'llld· \'ancts since mld·February . $1,700 in Mesa Pastries Stolen The chocolate cl'liflon will hll lhe fa11 if a certain pieman meets some 1imple Simon peddling stolen s-amplea: of hia wares around the Harbor Area, The thief took enough to prov1de dessert for the entire 9.fanp Cckmty Jail inmate population ·ror a month, police revt1led tbd:ly, Delbert A. Gabaldon report.ed the frozen pie fa ctory burglary to Olftetr Sam A mold Mond'y. .. U!iing a key _oHtalned someho.w. the thief has been looting Contempor1ry Capital Corporaliol\, 2949 Rand~~ Ave., for 8 month . · fl.Ussing supplies, Gabaldon toot W ve.PJtory and discovered a total of $1 ,792.01 worlb or pies and putty in· gredienta pilfered.. Offiar Arnold 11\d the loot Includes 14.000 1tuminu.rn plates, 1,850 poundt: of &hortenJng, 38 bq1 of Ooor, IS Ct1bel of butter aM J'Jlt eases of finishtd frozen p1e.1. The lqu of flnlshe.d pie1 with his The Butltr Recommends .•. trademark Includes liO casa of cherry, 50 of •Pp.le 1nd !O eech of blackbtl"t)>--bluebtrry .•nd'rhubarb, Gabaldon 1dded., Unl@IS he peddled IM:m 00 a com- petitor, poll ct 1ald, they were 1t a 1008 lo, Ul)iaJn Whit I bvtJlot Would di! wil.I. 1 lew thooland bot lmeo pies. \ ' I "It is a great opportunity for hiQl and I'm 1ure the district will miss him. He'• an excellent man," Casey said. Casey aald he believe• the board Is generally ramlllar with most of the top admJnlatratoN In the staWi and that the ftlttUon proctu will be a matter of screenlo1 candld1te.1 accordlne oo. 1vanability. TM new oreanliatlon wlilch Cun· nlngham will 1taff, \11 I.he outgrowth of a thtte and 1 half year effort by representatlves of aeven auociations of top level acbool 1dmlnlstr1tors. F'r1nklln descrlbfld the 1ppolntment as "probably the moat 1lgnifle1nt t b l n g 4' tn Cllif\mlla educ11Um today.'' notina IS.. TRllSTEl!:S, Part I) ask you," he snapped at Wilson. Two-time Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley leaped igto the discussion, landing on St. Clair with both feet .. "lifr. Mayor, having been where you are twice -which probably 1bow1 the height of my ignorance -I don't feel it is fair to put the city manager on the spot," h~lared . He said Sorsabal is forced into a ,.ensiUve situation of lite~lly 111ying · (See MEMO FLAP, P1p 2J ea Buena Park In Beach By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI An argument over a dog that Yi a .:; fed a cigarette in a Huntington Beach bar Monday night resulted In the shooting death &f a 29-year-old man aod tbe arrest of an off-duty Los Angelea policeman on a murder charge. Mark A. Rodgers. 29. of Buena Park, •11 hit in the chest by a .31 caliber bullet. police 111ld. He was dead en arrival at Huntington JntucommunJt1 li"l>ital about 1,30 p.m. POlice arrtsted two men on murder charges. They are 'Clifton J. Schusse, 26, of 5672 Rogers Drive, Huntington Beach, a two-year patrolman with tha Los Ange les Police Department's Harbor Division, and James E. Jordon , 31, of 6762 Warner Ave., Apt. K-10, Huntington Beach, a foreman at an aluminum ~anulacturing company. Witnesses to the shooting said that an argument started at the Swinger bar on Beach Bo ulevard south of Garfield Avenue between two groups of patrons after the policeman allegedly gave a dog a cigarette to eat. W)len the argument got out of hand and persons in the bar began arming themselves with pool cues, the palrOllJ were asked to leave, police said. According to a 'Yilness, the dllpute continued outside the bar. Investigatof'! were told by witnesses that one sho\. was fired into the pavement during the argument. Caspers Slate~ Costa Mesa Talk freshman Fifth Dia:trict Supervisor RORald Caspers will give a: speech ln Costa Mesa Thursday on blt fir.rt · 50 days in office . Caspers will address the Cltizen1 Harbor Area Research/Team (CHART) at a 7:30 a.m. breakfast session at the Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club. Re..~rvations for the CHART session must be made by calling 834-5814 by noon Wedne!iday. The public Is invited, .ora11ge l\'eatller lfh.e weatherman's lighting a candle under the thermometer \Vednesday, pushing the mercury up to 80 degrees Iii lhe central C<Junty and in the low 70s locally. INSWE TODAY A re JIOlt reody for tJie bigge.tt week o/ liuing theaur t Vtr In Oronge County! It start.I t~ night. and you1lt find all the dtt.ait.s on En~rtaJnmni.i PaQt 20. Mt"""6 Uctft'" • .IM'.olft 1t.:at /Mhl.ll ,.ullft 1• N1liell1I N...,. +J OAll .. (-ff t lYIYll ~llrfw II 1,.,i. '"11 llwdr M•r'm 1•11 t.i1m1t11 lt Tllt1tw1 IJ>M W•l llMI t Wlllt. W1'11 ,, W-n'i Nr<n ll•lt Wtrr. ".._ t-1 ' , ' • ! ·-.. 2· OAU .. V PIL01 c Set Blaze -' In Office, I I • _,. __ . Man Admits \ By TOM 8.\RLEY ot 11111 ptllY l"Otl l lf" A prosecution witness today testified be.fore an Orange County Superior Court jury that he burned or. Ebbe Hartenus• Corona del Mar offices last April 9 at the physician'' dlre<:tlon and that nine days eartle(be helped. the doctor fak e I.be theft ol Hartellus' car. "l pouttd gas all over the desk and drawers iind the filing cabinet ,'' Jim Blevins s1ld. "'1'11en I it.ruck a match and threw tf into the office ... Blevins, 39, testified that he U~n to0k "just tbrt:e atepa and then there was a big explosion. "Everythlnt just blowed up and lt hurle<i me down the ball," be 1aid. "1 fell Oat on my face. My ears were rtngtna and l thought the whole bulld.Jng _had bl owed up." · Blevins said he dumped the gas can in the hallway. fled from the building to bis Lona: Beacb home and dumped the office keya 1n a vacant lot on tbe way. , Blevln.s, wbo 11 the brother of the doctor'• ex-mJ1treu, Reba Vauahn, &aid .. , his immediate reward from Hartelius was tbe comment : "You did a nasty job." But be testified that his sister later gave him monty from HarteUus to lea ve the ... ,._ "I was told that if I left they wouldn't have anythini on. the docto r," he said. Blevin! &llO admitted that he met Hartelius last Mareh SI and follow~ t.he doctor in his car to Long Btach where the physician parked h1i Imported au to behind a market. He said Hartellu.s faked the theft of the auto "because he said he needed the iruiurance money." It Is alleged that Hartellus made insurance claims for the fire at 2"45 E. Coast Highway and for the loss of hl.! car. Deputy Dlatrlct Attorney Al Novick claiqu Hartellua offered Blevin1 52.000 to leave the ""8tlte when inve1ligation into both alleaed !rauds lntensJCled. He aho allea:es that Hartellus planned the fire becauae ol "highly lncrlmi11aUng paUent records that rnJi:bt become available at a pendln&' State Board of Medical Examlntn burJni into the doc· tor•1' actlvltles." DeJeme attorney Matthew Kurillch drf:w from Blevinl tn a Jong grilling tht admlsalon that Blevtna ·bad atolen three earl pri9r to the. allea:ed theft of the Hartellus auto. The hard·hltUnc lawyer described Blevtns 11 "a very competen t car tldef" ti while he got the admission from the wltne11 that he had served a term in federal prison for such an oftfen&e. Blevins ls the prosecutlon·s final wltneu Jn its case again.at Hartelius, SO. It is expected that the defense phase of the trial will open late tod ay or Wednesday morntng. 'Chaillot' Due At Mesa High Students of Colta Mesa High School vt'\11 present "The Madv;oman o f Chaillot" 8:30 p.m. March 17, 18, 19 and 20 in the achoo! Lyceum. Directed by Donna Krlstianun, the play stars Julie Ackelson as the countess • and Rebekah Kennedy, Lois Behne and Sue \Yiebel as the madwomen. - Ticket.I may be purchased et the door. OIANGl COAST DAILY PILOT Jtolo•rt N. w •• d Pru.d'l"r 111d Pul:tll1lltr J1,k R. Curl1v \.'1c1 Prcsldrnl 1•.d (;..w••I M 1l'llgcr Tho1'111 K11•il f(lllOf Tho..,11 'A. M,~11phiRe MlnlOl"ll 11•11"" Ch ;,1111 H. Loos J1i,h1rd P, Nill AAlil••· Mtn1olnt1 Ellllon. Co•t• M"' OHie• 110 w,,, ••v s11.1t M1ilin9 Addt111: P.O. lo• 15lr0, 9211211 Ortler OtflcH • TutSday, Mttch 16, 1971 Reds Advancing Viets Retreating From Laos Bases SAIGON (UPI) -South Vletnameise troops retreated today by foot ind by helicopter /rom poliitiona deep iniide Laos \nd moved closer to the South Vltlnlmue border. The U.S. command ruahed U.S. artillery rfiillorctmenU to tht border area to pound advancln1 Communl1t forces . military sources told of the vastly <>ut· numbered South Vielname~ b e i n I pldcked from Lola in an armada 9f UHi Huey helicopter!!. The chopper• barely touched the ground before they were filled by troops dodging a constant rocket and mortar baFragt. the reportl st.id. Plans Call for This leftover From Another Era to Be Gutted, Revamped 11 Restaurant Altogether. 2,000 South Vietnamese withdrew from posltiorui astride the Ho Chi Minh Trail inside Laos. One force of 700 wu nown out under fire by U.S. bellcopter1 from fire b1ae Lola, the fOW'tb major ARYN fire base aban· doned in Laot In the face of adv1ncing tank.Jed Communlat troop.s. Bomb Threats Delay Angela Proceedings Four Na1ned To Mesa's Aviation Panel Despite suggestions that the Costa Mesa Aviation Committee is flying \Vith t~ many p~saengers, four new members ware appointed to it ?-.1onday night. Replacements from. amona 20-plu• original appUcanls were offered by Coun· cllman Jack Hammett to fill tbe rour vacaocie!. He has also steppped down as a formal member, to serve i11stead as council iaison for the committee created as his first act after election in April. ''How many members are there now?" asked Councilman William L. St. Clair. Himmett said 11 lO 13 are needed. because fliers spend a lot of time away and it is sometimes hard to field a quorum for voting. Councilman St. C1air -emphasizing nothing personal toward the group - 1ugae1ted 11 to 13 members is topheavy and unwieldy. ''Sometimes we don't get much done and we've got five on the council,'' be said with a. chuckle. Hammett eiplelned the complex nature of aviation today tequlres men educeted in lbe full range, from fliers to runway construction eng ineers. He added that profesaional reassignme nts, moves to other cities and job changes have created the four ex· isling vacancies. Councilmen voted unanimously to ap- point Dale B.' Rumel, of 298.1 ~1indanao Drive, William 0. Scholes, of 2072 Goldeneye Place and Dick Dahill, of ~ Yale Place. The fourth appointee on the list, Rutlin B. Thayer, Is currently moving to the city. No left Turn Pockets Sougl1t By Mesa Group Renewini demands for better traffic control, a delegation of Costa fl.tesa residents may have a headon collision with city officials, over 'No Left Turn pockets. They want Ulem. The city doe!n't. Organized by Mrs. Dorolhy ~1cKee, <>f 3072 Coun.try Club Drive, the principal protest.on: plan to go before the Costa Mesa Traffic Commission March 24. ··we only want "'hat the majority want.s and the majority wants No Left 'Durn at Adams Avenue and ~1esa Verde Drive West," she explains. Backed by the Mesa V e r d e Homeowners AMociation, the Country Club Drive re a Iden t s independently gathered traffic data which was matched by city checks. findings showed excessive use for a residential street, 4.700 cars per day, speed! ranging 10 miles over the posted 25 limit and 40 percent of the Oo1v generated out.side the tract. Traffic Engineer Jim Eldridge's probe showed only 11even accidents from ml!cellaneous causes in three years. a ratio 58 Country Club Drive residents still find alarmlng. They maintain much of the annoyance is caused by Hunllnglon Beach com· muters using their street as a shortcut to the San Diego F'reeway, which a left turn ban would eliminate. City Decid es Fairview Road To Be Wid ened Continuing studies of lraffic volume increases have led to a decision to initiate \\'idening or Costa ~fesa '!! Fairview Road along virtually ilJ enlire length. Acqulslllon of rtght-of·"·ay for the 11 4 million project from the San Diego Freeway to Newport Boulevard wlll begin late next month. Construction Itself Is scheduled for summer of 197•. according to Aslllstaht City Engineer Norm Spielman. Generally. the city "ill purchaSf' 10 feet oL land on each ~ide of the thoroughfare. making 84 fptot of pave.· men! within· I 10111 100 foot r1ght-flf·"·ay. Spielman 1ayll properly owner11 v•lll be. contacted lo negot111te rlght11-0f·entry and plans for a uniform, C!lght-foot 'llde"·alk containing tree wells for lllldS<:aplng. I -·- Historic Coast Cannery To Be Razed, Rebuilt Lolo is nine milu aoutheast of the 1upply hub of Sepone. ab1ndontd to an advancLnc COmmunJs t divlak>n last week. The others wlthdrawln1 \\'ere government infantrymen thwarted ,in their eUorta: to reach a big Communist SAN RAFAEL WPll -')Wo bomb threats emptied the Marin County Courthouse today, delaying a scheduled hearing for black militant Angela Davis for hours. Bv L. PETER KRJ EG •Of t111 01liY PUii Sttff \Vistern Canners Company, Newport Beach'i la&t monument to the commer· clal fishing Industry that thrived here for nearly half a hundred years, will be torn down -and part of it rebuilt as a 300-seat luxury restaurant, lookin1 just as It looks today. And today it stands picturesquely along the shores llf the Rhine ChaMeJ, the entire block between Lido Park Drive and 30th Street. \\'estern Ca1111ers ceased optrations nearly three years ago, then as the last survivor of Nt1i\-'JXlrt's cannery row. The structure ""as purchased recentj.Y by Robert and William Unger, brothers Jon~ ac t ive in Harbor Area civic and business affair!. The origin.al bulldlng only. the half bordering 30th Street, will be reconstructed at seven-eighth.!! scale. ·Robert Unger, former Costa Mna city manager and now heading Unger-P1clfic Corporation, said plans now call for hill firm to develop the project. He estimated the construction price tag. alone, to be upwards of $500,000. He declined to say what his firm had paid for the old building and the land when it was acquired last April from Walter Longmoor. Plans for the entire project still must win formal approval from the city of Ne"'port Beach, however. and Unger (See CANNERY, Page :!) what we have been talking about, It st1y1 withi n the character of Newport Beach. "U certainly is far more acceptable than high.rise,'• Kymla said . Fish ~aMlq: -I.a Newport Beach was a major indu1try from the 1930s through the 1950s when, one by one, the commer- cial · fishermen moved on to cleaner waters and the three canneri!1 alona: the Rhine. the Newport CaMing Com pany, the West Coast Packing Corporation and, finally. the Western Canners pompany, were all forced out of business. In a vain attempt at salvaging some of the once.lucrati\·e busil'less, Western Canners turned to canning albacore for anybody and pecking all sorts of fish for cat food companies from 1966 to 1968. The blame for the demise of the 1ncha· try wa1 laid aquarely on water pollution by Thoma• A. notn11, a former partltet wl1h Loc!Jmoor who 1tlll wort. out ol the caMery office. "Pollution really wrecked It," Thomas once 1ald in an interview. He 1ald It was detergents. ''They don't dls1lpate." he said, "11>ey're fresh water de tergents." Escaped Female Prisoner Caught In Santa Ana , 1upply dump just south of Lolo. They fought their way back by foot to Fire Bllff Brown, four miles fa r ther southeast. Th. Communist.!! had attacked Lola with rockel!, mortars and tank guns and U.S. helicopters braved heavy an- tiaircraft fire to brlng out the ARVN lroopa. 1'e South Vietnamese 1plked six artliler'y. .pieces before leaving and the tquipment was later bombed by B52s. U.S. fighter-bombers and helicopter gunships pouttd bombs, rockets and machlnegun fire on the Communists dur--fig the evacuation, the front dispatches reported. The weather lifted alter • period of heavy clouda and foa. · The troops from tit base Lola were flown to another bue wltb the aame name. Military IOUl'CU 11ve no reason for naming the new bate Lolo. Lolo wu third In a line of four fire 1upport bues the South Vietnamese a<:· cupled, running 10Ulht11t from Sepone. Fire Base Sophia w11 •vacuated early thil week. Troop1 remain on Fire Base Liz, midway between Sophia and the <>Id !Alo. Brown 11 the fourth base nn the chaln. More than 1,000 persons were ordered <>Ul of the sprawling , Frank Ll oyd Wrl&hl· designed building about 9:30 a.m. Included weri' 100 sj>ectators and newsmen who had ~ready started filing into the courtroom where attorneys for t.iiss Da\'is were to seek dismissal of murder and kidneping charges. They were allowed to return about an hour later but oo :sooner were back i!\.the building than a deputy announced : "Thert Is another bomb threat. You'll have to evacuate." Each time the buildina: was evacu1ttd, those inside spilled out to mill around with a growing crowd outside which was holding an alJ..(lay "moblliAUon" in support of Miss Davis. ln Washington, me anwhile, a crowd <>f about 25 persons chanting "Free Angela" demonstrated out.tide tbe J u1tlce Department. After the first bomb threat, aome spectators, mostly supporter• of Mils Davis, who were already being clelftd to go inside the courtroom, appelttd ready to refuse to leave. said if clearances are received wiUtout A female prisoner facing federal 1m111· delay, work "'ill begin immediately and gling and local foraery charges it back South Vieblamese official 1Poke1men In s.teon and at northern operatiorial bun rtfuaed to adnUt withdrawal from Lolo or any major fiahtJng anywhere in Laot. They in1ialtd there were only light and IClttered ad.Ion and no major engq:ement.. Field repcll'ta ind dellila from othtr Mesa Cub Scouts Give Councilmen Lawmaking Tips the restaurant may be ope.A by Christ· behind bar• today, aftfr escaping a Colt• mas. Mesa courtradm Monday, ju,at Jane Unger has filed an application for • use enough to dye her hair. F J S • permit for the l'l!staurant with the Plan· El!Zlbeth Barry, 20, of etnl> Mulgold Uilef8 ervice ning Commission; the appro~al _is nee~•· Ave., Corona del Mar, wu arrested sary because the property sits m an 1n· about eight hour3 later at a Santa Ana Slated 1•Il Mesa F I dustrial zone. ~ tom out o the mouths ot Cub Scou!1 A public heari11g on the request wlll apartment house. c.ome more than the traditional· pledges take Pl.Ce Aprl·1 I at • p.m. In City Hall. She was booked back into Orange Coun· ' t J ·1 dd 't' I h f sc "'" F J • S }i in support of God, Country and c\ean·liv· According tQ .Plans, tl'te: two·!f.Ory struc-y al on an a l 1ona c arge o e a"~. or n lure will include about 200 seats on the lnvutlgat'brt... said Mlss Barry was S pu.r ll ing in general. first floor, another IOO..in the loft and ad· being "Ushe red ihto a mobile courtroom One comment from Thad Tropea, of ditional seats on an outside patio. at Harbor J udicial District Cour t at Funeral services will be held Wed-Webelo Troop, Pack J9, earned him In rebu'.ldi'ng the cannery_ Unger said, 9 a.m. with two other women. nesday for lrill Spurlin. Jong·time Collta d I · hi 'd th t a roun , of applause in Costa Pi.1esa the existing dock will be removed and • Marshal A Etc er 1a1 e 1u1pec Mesa resident who succu mbed after l!Uf· new concrete bulkhead ·will be construct· -third in the line -suddenly broke fering a heart attack Saturday morning. City Council chambers 1'1 onday night. ~ along the channel from Lido Park and ran eastward to an alley and north She was 43. A delegation of six 'Yas present with Drive to and including the e11d of 30th across West 18th Street. Mn. Spurlin was a resident of Oran&e advisor Hank Pan1an to lead the Pledge Street. None of the defendan ts was handcuffed Coonty ror IS year1 and at the tlme of Allegiance as one qualification for Plans submitted to the cily also in· and Eichler stayed "'Ith the lither two, of her death was employed at Howard's community Si'rvice merit Dadges. elude rebuilding the section of 30th Slreel rather than risk their Oeeing too. Restaurant in Newport Beach. Tropea, David Koelsch. John Wam· runn in.it: from La!ayette Street to the Costa_,...Mesa police said Miss Barry She leave! her husband, Rupert: two baugh, Richard Penian, Mal t Beal and channel. "'as scheduled for a hearing on her sons, Billy Underwood and Timothy Cliff Potts each had a role in the The proposed project was gretted with local charge of passing stolen and forged Spurlin, both of Colt. Me11; two ceremony. enthusiasm by CouncilmaR Carl Kymb1. checks when she escaped. daugbterl, Rosa Let Stff\e, of Hun· One cf the ir 1ervices bas been Jitter who is chairman of the cily"s Lower Sheriffs fugit ive detail spokesmen said tington Beach and Sandra Cindrich, or cleanup and Tropea told councilmen they Ne"·port Say Civic District study com· today she also faces prosecution by Pittsburg; a brothe r, George Bo11gs. and could make the job easier when asked mlttee. federal authorities on a drug smuggling lhTtt grandchildren. ~ for suggestions on improved city govern· His panel [s currently putting together charge. Servletl will be conducted at Bell ment. recommendations on tough new controls Mi!ll Barry had changed from her Broadway Ch apel at 10 a.m. The family "l think you should pass 1 law on for buildings along the entire lower bay jail frock. sweatshirt and tennis shoes has 1ugge1ted tributes in form or dona· people putting advert isements on cars and ocean front. to more attractive clothing and dyed lions to the Orange County Heart at South Coast Plaza on "'indy dayi," ··1 y,·ould have to reserve final judg· her blonde hair 1 dark shade. Association in he r name. he explained, 1 1nent until I see the plans, of course,'' \;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-Kym\a sald, "but I am delighted by this kind of approach. It rails in line with From Pnge 1 MEMO FLAP ••• no to l11s <>v.·n bosses. "'hile going through the mayor"s chair eases the squeeze. "I feel strongly about this.·· he added. Councilman Pinkley also defended Sorsabal"s record in telling individual <'ouncilmen no "·hen he his considered them ou~ of hne. Vice i\fayor Willard T. Jordan fell into line with the rest, saying the whole memo issue is a pollcy matter. Still unsatisfied, St. Clair charged that It may indeed be a policy matter, but rhe policy al"·ays seems to "·ork against hi in . lie settled the l.000 memo problem b\' ha1•ing 2.000 printed priv11tely nl :l cnst of $15. he had already announced. "'If a councUman can't spend $4 or SlO by Roing to the city manager . thrn thli> clly -with lls $9 million budget -is a larce." he fwned. From Page 1 TRUS TEES ... he Lhou11:ht CUMmgham wu :ii '"natural for the Joh." Cunnin,::ham said the formation of the .\~sociation of Cahfom1a Sc h <> o I Adm1ni!{trator1 (ACSA l was II '"hrst'' and v.·ould begin operal.IOn! July I with a membcr11h ip of from 12.000 to IS.000. ACSA 11 ill attempt to upgr11de the l'flOP<'tCn<'y of 11dministratllr1. Improve the !mag~ of educational le~dershlp and rorl{! new and better working rtla· tlonshlps with the lcilslaturt, he said. I Wihat's •.. MJi Eine? • ,You won't be fe"d any linu et Alden's, We era more interuted in developing loyal customers !nan maki114 a fest 1ele. • ~ None of our seles people will both'er you if you just went to brow1e, but will be pleased to ossi•t you if you wish,_ with truthful answers to your questions. Wfien we discuss carpel lines , wt would liove to "modestly" admit that we have the largest selections in the erea. · J op b r e n d s sucli e a: Bigelow, Berven, Beattie, Megee, Monarch', Barwick', Mohawk', Roxbury, Milliken, Arm•trong. IANTA ANA. O•ANOI. TUSTIN Call ••• AlDIH'I 110 Hill CA ... ITS • DttA .... , •• 11S74 lr¥1M. Twtln, Cal. ... IM4 t ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave . COSTA MESA • 646-4838 I • • • • I 7 • I 7 ' . u • • • '\ Saddlehaek VOL. 6-4, NO. M, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY~ CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH 14, 1971 TEN CENTS -• 1 Clubhouse Designer Still Seel{ing $8.00 Bill , The designer of San Clemente's pr~ posed new community clubhouse has changed his mind and Wednesday will again pursue payment of a $800 bill which the city has refused Ul pay. Eric Boucher, who has been reuding In rectnt weeks wilh Mayor Walter Evans and members of the cily staff. originally decided to let lhe $600 bill for extra services drop. • But in a letter attached to ligendas for Wednesday's meeting Boucher reiterates his position that Mayor Walter Evans, City Manager Kt!n Carr and Parks Supl. Arlie Waterman either asked for or consented to last-minute changes. Both Evans and Carr have denied giving any directions as to the change.s in air conditioning systems. But Boucher insists the directions in· ~. o ice Rotary Project Youths to <;amp On Baja Island By JOHN.1.V4LTERZA OI IM D1llY Plitt Sltff Twenty-five San Clemente youths who have been aclive in a unique scouting venture since last year will spend a week off Baja California Easter Week in a blend or survival trainiQg and the ultimate in aquatic recreation . Under sponsorship of the San Clemente Rotary Club, the youths will join 15 Mex- Rogers Tells WWID Peril In Mideast WASHINGTQN (AP) -Secretary nf State William P. Rogers said today that (ailure of Middle East peace efforts could 'prOduce a very dangerous situation •In the world and "possibly lea<l to World War JU ." Rogers told a news conference: "The climate has ne\'er been better for a 1ettlement in the Middle East." But he added : "If we don't make 1 settlement now we're going to plan!. · the seeds of future war ." At a later point he stated lh1s warning .again. "We think," he said, "that if the situation is not ,worked out in the reasonable future the very dangerous s(tuation could develop and possibl y lead to World War Ill." Rogers sharply disputed the Israeli policy expressed by Premier Golda Meir that Israel must base its future security on the geographical position it establishe s through a peace settlement. He urged instead that Israel -give at least equal importance to political ar· rangements built around a United Na· lions Middle East peace-keeping force in which the United States and the other great powers would participate. Rogers refusecl to say that he was proposing a Middle Ea?t sei;:urity treaty. But he said he was talking about a "written document" anl:i a i'contractual agreement entered into by the parties and signed. sealed and delivered." Orange Coast Weather The weatherman'& lighting 11 candle: under the thermometer Wednesday. pushing Lhe mercury up to 80 dtgrces in the central county and in the low 70s locally. INSIDE TODAY A r f you rl'ndy for the bigpPsl Wtrk of hVft!j7 th ratcr f't)fr 1n Orange County~ It .!lorts to· ?11ghl. a11rl. !lou"ll fittrl oll th e d.t tcils on E:n~ainmtnt Page 20. llrfllt t Ctllteflf1 I c-••"" v• n c1aulf!MI 11·1• C11n11t1 II c.-.u....... ll °""' "''"" ' Divan~ , 't &l!lef'lfl ..... ' fft""1t lll-I lt tt '~"'· u .11 --" l!MI l 1"6tn 1' ,llltlfM• • llU,..,_ lk ... M1 ' Mtlllu 1Nt ........... """" II M•lltMI "--t-J l Of'1ft" Ct11ntJ ;t 11111i. l'.otf" ,. ._,. ·'"'' ltt<k ... ,.... , .. 11 '•"'"'''" 1'"' ,.,,..,.,, ,.," w .. 1i.1r • W~llt Wt1• 16 W .... tll't Ntwt II·" Wwtl Ntwt 1-1 ican Explorers and a crack aquatic com- mando unit from th Navy for the five-day trip to Cedros Island near Scammon's Lagoon. On the rugged , picturesque island , the scouts will set up five base camps, each headed by a mem~r of the five-- man team from a Navy instail{'1inn at Coronado. Each group of boys will vi.sit a separate camp each day W isampl"e a different phase of shoreline survival. tn between experiments at eating such delicacies as seaweed soop, the youths will surf, skin dive and fish. The San Clemente contingt'nt is a new Explorer Scout post set up last summer as a pilot progr~m offering few of the scouting rituals and unifonns. but regu- lar opportunities to attend informal out· ings on the coast's best surfing spots and ocean-<lriented institutions. Lifeguard Capt. Phil Stubbs was one of several founders of the troop. Since the group's beginnings the youths have surfed legendary surf spots, normally closed to the public. The lrip to Cedros, however, will be the highlight of the group's schedule thus far, Stubbs said. Be.sides support from local Rotarians. the 1'roop has received financial and ·supervisory help from the Laguna Beach· based Kalos Kagalos Foundalion . Preliminary lraining for the Baja ex- pedition will take place on S an Clemente's beaches this weekend. The five -man "Seal" commando team from Coronado will conduct instruction in use of \iferafts and other basic tools. The real thing will begin on April 5 when the youths board a charger cargo plane in Tijuana for the ride lo the wilds of the Baja peninsula and the rendezvous with the Explorer team from Mexico. The encampment on the large island lying off !he lagoon wheie lhe California gray whales breed each year will last for five da yis, stubbs said. Rockhounds See Mexican Flicks ~1embers of Lhe Tri Cities Lapidary Society will view slides taken during a recent mckhound trip to Mexico Wednesday at 7 p.m. in San Clemente Hi11:h School 's Little Theatre. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Parll(>ll will give an illustraled lJJlk on their Mexico trip. ,_1embers also ~1ill discuss their next field trip on April 24 and 25 to the Imperial Valley. The general public is wel c?me. SqU<tre Dancers Hold Exhibition . Thi" Shipmates Square Dance Club will hold it!I ;innuAI Fiesta La Golondrlnas dance exhihl~on Saturday al the corner of Del Obispo Road and Camino Cap istrano In San Juan Capistrano. The squ are dance exhibition will begin Immediately after the 11nnual parade commemorating the return of the swallows. A club refre5hmcnt st.and will ht creeled neAr the dancing are:a offr.r\ng food and drink. Potential Tn('mbl':r11 can rece:ive infnrm8tion 3b<°lul rlub act•viti es and registr1 tlon at the:_ daQCtts' "'f )I. I deed came from the of!iclala. "Why did we go to all the work of providing two complete systems for alternate bids?" he asks. "Because we were directed to by the mayor." Boucher also take! the Mayor to task for comments made at a oouncil meeting two weeks ago when Evans said the designer submitted the bill "betause he ,.,., ....... was made at me." "'G<l)Uemen, I have """" .. nt a bill t.o anyone because I was mad at them," Boucher contends. "Perhaps a more pertinent queitlon loday would be, _are you going to withhold payment because you're mad at.me?' The bill---0ver and above the $1(,000 muimum fee set for Boucher's des.igni.og se~ices-.stems from 1 final .study \ session held last month by the council to review the: workjng drawings of the $400.000 fac!illty . Boucher claims Utat his architect associate lefl the meeting with In- structions to add an alternate air con· ditioning system, thus allowing bidders the chance to make offers on either one. No discussion about extra payment took place al the sb..l~y session. Boucher said later that those.directions o~ caused him to work about four more day~ver a holiday weekend-and com- pletely revise several plates of the in- tricate drawings. Councilmen received the bill at their meeting two weeks ago and unantmously agreed not to pay It. At that time City Manager Xen Carr told them there were no atipulaUons for billingbilling for additional services in the city's contract with Boucher. au 6 Suspects Also Caught In Clemente San Clemente narcotics delect1vt1 and atate agenb arrested six local residents and seized $1§(000 worth of marijuana Monday evening in one of the largesl hauls of the weed In recent city history. Most of the arrests and seizure of the lion 's share or the [orbidden weed look place at the Alpha Beta Market parking lot at 903 S. El Camino Real at 7:30 p.m. The three men arrested there and booked on charges of posse5.51on of m11ri- ' juan1 for 11ale are Steven Jon Crain , 22, of 106 Calle Balboa, San Clemente: DA1i.Y l'ILOT'11i11 l'l'ftl9 • TOBY WHIPPLE HANOLES ,AUTOGRA.PHS AS EASILY AS 'HE MOVES THE BALL Junior College All Ame ri can Apptoar1 net P1rt of Cord lll1ra School Progr1m ..... ' itlission Viejo Prograna Grid Star Model for l(ids By PAMELA HALLAN Of lht Dilly l'llel Slllf Toby Wlupple. junior college All American , sat on the edge of the stage a.t Cordillera ~hool Friday. movin.s ques- tions as adep y as he moves a foci"tball. Whiwle 's ppearance was part of a unique program developed by Cordillera teacher Jim Wilson ror Mission Viejo's newest -school.· The program attempts to grapple with problems like smoking. alcoholism, and drug abuse on a people to people basifi, using terms elementary children can understand. Whlpple 's talk on why most athlete's don't· smoke provided more than in· formatiol). It also provided a model . "Children have to have mO(lels," said Wilson, watching Whipple as he patiently signed autographs for his fans. "We at school have an obligation kl provide them." Models are particularly important when it cbrriea lo. drug abuse . 'Wilson said that when drug abuse reaches children in elementary schools. many are found to have observed older brothers or sisters involved in drug use. "Children begin forming their atlitudcs Lawman, Buddy Arrested In Beacl1 Tave1·n Slaying By RUDI NJEOZIELSKI Avenue between two groups of. patrons .... 01 ,,.. o.1ry l'1ttt su" after tbe policeman allegedly gave a An argument over a dog that w a s dog a cigarette to eat. Officers did fed a cigarette in a Huntington Beach not say who had fed the animal the bar Monday night resulted in the shooting cigarette. death of a 29-year-old man and the When the ar&ument got out of hand arrest of an off-duty Lot! Angeles and persons in the bar began arming policeman on a murder charge. themselves with pool cuea. the patrons Mar1i: A. Rodgers. 29, of Buena Park, were ·amd to ledve, police gaid. wa!'I hit in the chest by a .39 caliber ACOOfdlng. to 1 w!tness, the dispute bullet. police said. He wa! dead OJ! conlinued-outside tht bar. arrival al Huntington lntercommuniJy lnvestigatorc wert told by witnesses HMpltal about 9:30 p.m. that one shot WfS fired into the pavement Police arrested two 'mtlf en' murder during the 1rgument. charges. They are Clifton J . SchUSle, Another shot, bel ieved by witnesses 26. of 5672 Rogers Drl"ft, HUnling:ton to have been fired aeconds later. struck Beach, a tw<ryear patrol"fn1n with the Rodgers near the "he1rt. Two .38-caliber Loa Angeles Police Depa~'l l!""~bor ~lieu'" have betn ~rtd by poUc~, Division, anii James E. Jordon, SI. of oae from the dead m1n's body. 8762 Warner Ave., Apt. K-to, Hunt lngUm Officers said a wom1n mo\orlst passing Beech, a forem•n at 1n alwiililum. by the-bar 111:w wha' l'IM bapptnlng manufacturing company. 1 ... . ... \•od ~ a _patrol cir. The officer WitntSM!!I •to the s~ootmg safd M 1nTlved at the ~winger moments after !In argument Ma rted at .I.he Swinger the shole were lired ant 1rrested Schusse b:1r nn Bt11ch 8()lllt-vard sou'~ of Garfit\d l'nd Jord<in ·~ and goals very early," he said. "I think i~ important to spend time on athletics and cultural events In· addition to ~ formative programs." The complete information uqit Include& Jour ·week& on various. aspect's of smok- irig, two days on alcoholism . and a special unit on drug abuse that begins ":ith a talk_ by former dr4g users. The first talk will be at 9 a.m. Oii March 25 in t h e school auditorium. Speaking will be former drug users lrom the Orange County Melodyland Drug Prevention Center. Members o'r the Dangerous Drugs and Narcotics InfomaUon and Education Team led by Lt. E>ici: Rossi nf the El Toro Marine Corps Air. Station will be ·guest& on March 31 at l p.m. in the school. They will discuss the rrtMical aspects of drug abuse. Rounding out the program will he a view of the legal asj>eeb presented by a narcotics officer from the Tustin Police Department . This program will be April I at I p.m. Wilson feels the program Is helping to create communication between parents and children. "When we talk about smok· ln·g most parents are honest ancl if !hey smoke they admit they wish they had not started," said Sue Goddicksen. whn has assisted· with the ptogram along wtlh student teacher Jean Thorpe. Parents have been invited to all the programs and letters have been aenl home urging them to attend. "We · don't preach to the children ," said ,_fiss Goddicksen. "We encourage them to make up thtir own minds. We tell them that we madt our decisions ·. And when the time comes they will have to make theirs. 00 job Is to present as much infonnation as posalble to guide them." At the end of the series of programs, members of the (ourth and fifLh gr.ec\es whd have been Involved In the 'Course will produce 11 film called Tobacco Goes In Court. v.Ti tleyt bv Wilson. to enter ~ 1n the Kodak 1tU!1nt fiom fe!ltiv111. James Carl Dodge , 23. giving an address of· 228 La Esperanza, and William David Anderson. 21 , of %21 W. Calle Marquita. Officers said they seized a total or 40 ldlos of the weed. abaul 88 pounds, in a vehicle in the parking lot. "Later. they drove to Anderson 's Mar- qUita address and arrested the man 's wife, Sally Jean, 20. ancl a 17-year-old girl. In the apartment officers said they found tv.'O more kilos or the weed . ,The arrest nf the siirth San Clemente resident was the result of a fluke, and officers doubted rfhat the man was directly related to the other five persons. As the investigation at the parking lot progressed, officers said, Dana Rene Nadeau. 18. approached the plainclothes agents and struck up a conversatioh. Officers assert~ the man was smoking a marijuana cigarelte during the con- versation . They arrested him on charges of possession. , Nadeau gave his address as 203 Via Ballena. Police said the arrests took place dur· ing an unµer cover buy which had been arrange~ in advance. Crain, Dodge and Anderson were 1till in custody this morning. held under $25,000 bail apiece. Bail amounts on Mrs. Anderson and Nadeau were not immediately available. The juvenile girl was released to custody of an elder brother, police said. Arraignments are scheduled in South Orarige County Municipal Court e·arly Wednesday morning. 'Tee n of Year' ' Nominees Told f our San Clemente High SChoot students have been nominated by Prin- cipal Darrell Taylor to compete In the Elate competition for the Outstanding Teenager of the Year. Vying for scholarships and other honors will be John Allavie, Tim Duvall, John Russell and Jay Went:i. Selection of the state winner will be made later In the spring. Those: winners then will enter naUonal competition which leads to a l 000 scholarship. ' Chief Murra y Up and Around San Clemente Police Chier Cllf· ford Murray was I.IP and walkihg thl!I morning at St. Vincent '1 Hospit1I. maklng swift re:covery from m11jor heart surgery perform· ed IMl Friday , The chief w1s reported doina well, but experiencing constderabht soreness from lhe major artery bypass 11urgc ry. He will rema in in St. Vlnctnt'1 HMpltal for the nex t thret wttlcs, -(· --. -- .::! DAILY PILOT SC • Welfare Reform ·seen ' - Police Hunt Hanna, Top City Officials Meet ·Pilot Car-hopping Burglar ' P tl,llL Y PILOT Sl11! P ... Jf UBLISHER WEED (LEFT! ACCEPTS FLAG FROM REP. HANNA . Stars and Stripes Once Flew Over Nation's Capitol Capo Scl1ool Truste~s 01{ 13 Experime11tal Classes Thirteen courses at San Clemente High School will be offered on a credil·n~ credit basis next fall. • Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District voted unanimously Mon- 1 day to ai:prove the courses for the I experimental program whiclT will allow ~tudent to take a course without receiv- lr-.in~ a letter grade. . "It will be up to the parent to decide \vhether or not his child will particlpate,'' 1 said Superintendent Truman Benedict. ' "Some may compete for the grade." The courses include crafls, ceramics, painting and drawing, student service, boys and glrls physical education, homemaking. advanced clothing, tailor· ing, family living, journalism (newspaper and annual), and th ird and fourth-year drama. Seventeen English courses, two math courses, two business courses, a humanities pilot program and four sicence pilot programs also v.·ere sug· gested fo"r the non-graded syste m but the board refused to consider them. High school principal Darrel Taylor explained that each department• chairman had expressed which if any of his courses could be placed on the list. Some chose not to participate. ··None or the courses on the list are req uired for graduation or college en· trnnce," said Taylor. The purpose of the new system is to relieve the pressure for grades and pron1ote the concept of learn ing for learning's sake. "Sonic students might want to take A course. but are in over their head v.·Jth other courses and might he sitate lo take ii for fear of getting a bad ' O'AN•I c;OAIT DAllY PILOT OlAMG~ C0.1,Sf ,UILISHIHG COMPANY' Robert N. W11d Prn;o.,, 1..cl PlilOlbllef" J1c\. It Cvrl1y Vk f ,.rt:1iG1nt I ncl G-11 MllllW Tho"''' x.,,a l!°'11or Thorfl.11 A. Mvrphi110 MfntQl119 Eallor Ch1rltt H, loo1 R.idurd '· Nill A1tlll1n; M1,..;l"f fallen lAt•H S..C.~ Offko 222 for11t A•tnut S•• C'-N OHie:• JOl North El C 1inino R11I ,,_ Oflkeo COlll Mn1· D:l w.tt l1V Slrftt HtW!ID" INc~: 1m "'""l'Ort 1 ..... :..-il'll Hlll'lllf'l;10ll IMdl; 11t7J '"'~ lloulr.1'4 DAILY PILOT, """' wfl\dl "co"l!llftfd !IW: H-4'1 .. i., It pybt..,... dl!fV u ceoi S- 41T Ill tep.arll1 alllli.. .... l..t;1m1 hid! H~l 19Kfl, ,C•tt Mlo1, H""rlftg...; I~ P'Miteltl vau..,, Stft c:~i..r c.r.i.,,.,. Ir.I lHlllftJ<•, 1W., wllfl -,,,.lotlll tldl!IM. P•l11Clpll P..lftll"'O IMlflf 9' It · Jll w.t .. ., .$1rtol, ~It M"'· , ......... 17141 642-4J21 Cl•lrlM M••"dit M2·1171 S-c1.,.,. Al P.,srt-•ttt , ........ 4f2--44Jt t.tw ........ o., ........ : , .......... , .. , ... ~!, I.,\, Orl1'0' (.iUtl "vMhflfllt '-"''· NI M'WI llvr!ti. lllvllnl'llM, "''"°"Ill ,,.,..,. ..-td~ltitmtfti. 11..--"I _,, .. ~ •It"""' MIH.ltl ,.... "'"'· . """'"""'/ -· ..... CU.. """"' •Ill •I H"'99't l•Kl'I • .., Oltt1 Mt.•, C•!llOl'fllt. l11>tcrfto!IM ..-. ~;'* 11.u -.1111,, i.v -11 a.ts I lftlllJlry -llMllonl. U.11 .-1J11Y. grade," said Becedict. "Many who are college-bound might not take an art course fearin,lf it would bring their grade point avera~e down H they found they bad no talent. ' Taylor added that performance levels hQ.ve been established in all classes and will help the teacher to determine if a student 's work is high enough to receive credit for the class. The student . will have to make up his mind whether or not to take a course for a grade or on the credit-no .. credit system by the end of five weeks. Tim Duval, student body vice president at the high school expressed the rear that a credit student who does the same work as a graded student would not be judged equally by people examining his record -future employers or a college. Ray Campbell. school board candidate in area three, disapproved of lhe system entirely. "Many members of teaching staffs all over the county would like nothing better lhan to remove failure altogether from education," he said. "\Yhat you've done here is opened the door. You 're contributing to the \veakness of the education system in California v.'hi ch is already weak enough." * * ·(.[ Capo Teachers To Seek Raises In Start Pay Salary negotiators for teachers in the Capistrano Unified School District will be proposing an increase: from $7 .200 to sa.ooo a year for the beginning teacher. The board of trustees learned of the proposal ~tonday in open session a re· qu~ren:ient of a new law which p~vides gu1dehnes for sala ry negotiations. "When the negotiators from the certificated employes contact us for the first meet-and-confer ses!ion, we'll have 30_days in which to reach an agrtement." said Sam Chicas, Assistant Superin· tendenl for Business Services and chief negotiator for the administration. "Under the old law we could take all year if we wanted to," he said. . If no conclusion is reached, the negotia- tions go to a three-man board \Yith one member selected by the ad· ministration, one by the teachers and the third selected by both. This board must then rome to a decision lo ~ presented to the board of trustees. The teachers association Is proposing the $8,000 per year as a starting point, with increases progressing gradually along the other s~ps lo the highest step of '16,000. Priest Hears l\lan's Bonibshell Confession r-.tJLAN, Italy <UPI ) -The. penllant kneeling befofe the Rev. Robtrto Zac- tana made a bombshell confession The man pulled a grenad e from his pocket and handed It to the Roman Catholic priest before disappearing. 7..ac- caria called polic.r., but said the secret of tht confesslonol forbade him I r om revallni;: the man's name or whAt he had suld. GEORGE LEIDAL Of "'° Doll)' PUM ltllt Cout government officials Monday that tax credit and e reforms are likely to precede ·e of President Nixon's revenue g proposals. Rep. Richard Hanna (l)..Anaheim) met with representatives of city government! rrom along the Orang~ Coat Invited by the DAILY PlLOT to participate in flag raising ceremonies marking the first public tour of a new $1.3 million pro- duction plant in Cost.a Mesa. A U.S. Flag that has flown over thellt nation's Capitol was presented to the DAILY PILOT by Congressman Hanna. In remarks following a luncheon, Han- na predicted "much agony" In Congress over the Nixon administration's sug- gested reorganization of government to "bring admi.nistraUon closer to the func- tion." Nixon's call to eliminate administrative duplication by "reducing numbers of departments by defining fwictlons" has •·a loglc that is very impress!Ve" Hanna fiaid. I "But when you do that you run inlet powerful ongoing forces," he cautioned. Among these forces are the civil service establishment and the tr a d i t I o n a J jurisdictional lines within the House :'Ind Senate. · Hanna suggested the "personalities of the existing power structures" would make creation of workable solutions from the proposed concepts difficult. Further hampering change will be the 1972 Presidential electlon in which both parties may be expected to "posture their actiorui and more important their explanations of action!, wilh an eye toward '72." Revenue aharing, apecifically is in trouble, Hanna said, becaUR ~th the chairman of the House Ways and Means committee and the senior Republican member oppose the concept or the federal government raising funds to turn them "freely over to other agencies -state and local governments -to spend them." DAILV PILOT Sl1U Pl\Otl St. Pat's Parade Youngsters. at J\.1ission Viejo's ?t1ontanoso Recreation Center prepare float ~or big parade. From lo\l:er left moving clockwise. youngsters are ?ti1chelle Zeramby, 10; Todd Sorenson, 7; Cathy O'Rile y, 7; Bruce Bombard, 7; Lance Reed, 7; ?.lilly 1i1cKnight, 10; Dana Noven1ber a· and Brenda Hollandsworth, 6. -' ' Predict Record Turnout For Viejo St. Pat's Fest Until the issue of revenue sharing or some other means of lessening the A record turnout has been pred1·cted d t d · tax burden' of local government 1, •·vis· an moun e units. d wi:: for lhe annual St. Patrick's Day parade B d f ' e , Hanna urged the city offi·ci·'· "to Wedn sd an s rom Saddleback Co 11 e g e . eui e ay In "Mission O' Viejo." keep up the pressure for reform." He Starting at 3:30 p.m., the parade \\'ill ?\,fission Viejo High School: sin Clemente also suggested to keep applylog for begin at the corner of Jeronimo Road High School and Marco Forster Junior federal grants: under existing or proposed and Marguerite Parkway and will weave H. h h be · legislation such as the Clean Witers 1g ave en invited to participate. through the community to the Mission Fl hed I • Act, ~e safe streel.! program, and the Viejo Inn. oats sc u cd include Planters educational programs including -the Peanuts' f\.1r. Peanut. Old ~1acDonald "s Ele t d Se People from the Saddleback Valley men ary an condary Education d Farm with Fulton Shaw's spotted mule Act an surrounding rommun.ilies have been Welfare reforms Hanna supports wouJd invited to wear green and join the spec-''Judge'', Deane ~1en's Club. y Indian isolate recipients: wilh filed handicaps tat.ors gathered lo watch floats, bands Guides and Maidens, ~1ission Viejo Laguna Beach police are searching ror a "car hop" burglar who called on several autos in the Cliff Drive area sometime Sunday night , rcn1oving more than $1 ,800 in 111erchand1se from seven c:ars. The thief ~·as pa rlicular in what he took, investigators sa id, as only items \1 hi ch could be easily sold \\'ere stolen from the vehicles. One of !he victims Y.as the son of Laguna Beach police officer Lt. Robert Mc~1urray . As most or the theft s appear to have occurred in the same area between 2 a.m. and daylight Monday, police speculated they were <.'<lmmiUed by th"c same person or persons. l n several of the caseJ;, the unknown suspect entered the locked au~os by forcing open the left wind "·ing and opening the door. Some o[ the cars V.'Cre unlocked, police siiid, and arc therefore technically classified as thefts rather than burglaries. , According to police reports, the victims and the items taken were : ..,, John F. Bowman, o{ 1259 Cliff Drive, reported the loss of a set of drums and cymbals valued at $1,072 from bis Joc ked auto. ·• Judy Clifford, of 872 Cliff Drive, was missing a stereo tape player and tapes valued at $81 from her locked auto. Her husband, Gayland Clifford, a J so reported that a $78 tool box was removed from his unlocked auto. Police Lt. Robert AfcMurray said a stereo tape player and several tapes \"alued at $210 were taken from his son's Jocked auto. Dennis F. Dewitt. of 1287 Cliff Drive reported the Joss of the two black vinyl bucket seats. valued at $300, from his unlocked vehicle. Stephen \Vhile, of 1271 Cliff Drive. told police his stereo tape player and tapes valued at $68 had been removed from his loc.ked car. Christine Contino , o[ 1101 Marine Dr ive. reported the loss of a tool box valued at $16 and a plastic Frisbee \"a!ued at $1 from her unlocked auto, Jm·y Clears MaJl Of Bribe Rap In Mesa Case such as blindness, lo remove them fro~ Activities Committee. Sad d I e back the social workers' caseloads·, would an.. Mothers or 'twins, and parent-leacher Samuel Rosman of Laguna Niguel was I • Ille l Al• organizations. clea ed 'I d . h I h p y cost effectiveness to cooperative ga •ens r "on ay rug t o c arges that services such as health care arranged " Other units v.•ill include the Leisure he bribed a Costa Mesa patrolman but for reeiplents, and realizailon of a locally \Vorld Hikers. the Rancho ~1ission Viejo an Orange County superior Court jury determined work program that provides Caught,• J Dead ~lounted Posse. the Costa Mesa Police found hin1 guilty of one 0 ff ens e for retraining and worker paycbeclts Color Guard, the Marine Corps band, -conspi racy to comn1it bribery. coming from the federal government. and many other floats and units. It took the panel six hours lo clear The conflict between group and In· J T k F ll Grand Marsha l \viii be Dick \Vhit· Rosman, 27. of 29351 San Briso Place divldual practice of medicine was cited JJ, fUC ll li~ghill and Lord Mayor of the parade on the major charges after a trial i~ ·by Hanna as one of the public health \\"Ill be Bob Brennan in authentic regalia . which they heard recordings of telephone battles that will result from tbe national OCEANSIDE (AP) -Thirteen Mex· Free food will be served to youngsters conversations between officer Gary health care insurance proposed by the leans who were in the United States after the parade v.·ith an authentic lrish Barwig and the defendant. Nlxon administration. "Since Medicare illegally were in custody today, but dinner offered aj the Inn for adull.'I. Barwig testified from the y,·itness bo:t' the government has realized there is another was dead after falling from Telephone ca ls to Ireland and the that R?sman gave him $10,000 to plant no \\'ay to get half way into the health a truck. The truck driver escaped. dedication or the Blarney Slone \viii drugs in the car of a vital prosecution act," he said. The California Highway Patrol said be part of the after parade gala which witness in a liquor hija cking case. Drugs Among those attending the DAILY Elias Medina-Ortega, about 20, ,vas will be climaxed by the parade awards charges against Rosman v.•ere also PILOT luncheon were Supervisor Ronald fatally injured r..1onday v.·hen he fell and a dance for the teen set. dismissed by the jury. \\",Caspers. Newport Beach ; Councilman. from the back of the pickup truck and Judge Ronald Crookshank ordered Lindsley Parsons, Newport Be a ch ; v.•as hit by t\'fO cars. He recently lived Rosman. a Sa?dleback College student. f\tayor Robert 1'1. 'Yilson, Costa 1t1esa; in Tijuana . Insult and 1111· u1·y lo return to his court April 5 for what ~layor Tony Forster, San Ju an After the lruck \1'as stopped a few ~ould be ~t the most a lhree-year term Capistrano; Mayor Walter Evans San miles away. 11 other aliens were found GRAIN VALLEY, ~'lo. (AP) _ J . In state prison on the conspiracy count. Clemente: Councilman Charlton Boyd, under a tarp co\·ering the truck bed. C. Henry, former mayor of this Kansas Rosm~n was acc~sed during his tY.'O- Laguna Beach; Mayor Ii1orton Baum, Two others \'fho fled with the driver City suburb, was convicted in Police \veek tnal of planting narcotics in the Seal Beach: litayor Ed Just, Fountain were captured. Court Monday night under an ordi.riance car of Charles "Chuck .. Dreyer, 31 of Valley; and John Beekman ad· The Mexican nationals said they paid passed }ast year by the City Council 1645 Sunset Ridge Dri ve, Laguna Beach. ministrative aide to Hanna. ' the driver $200 each to be taken to over his objeclion and without hi., ll was alleged !hat he bribed Barwig Mayor Donald Shipley of Huntington Los Angeles. They crossed the border signature. Henry was fined $lOO for fa il-in collaborotion with Eugene Rondondo Beach was unable to atlend. about 12 mi!es west of Calexico early ing to secure a city permit to operate 44 • a former partner with Dreyer i~ Suhervlsor David Baker, Garden Sunday. b.I h "' ~he now defunct Feliciano's Restaurant • l~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'~m;o;;•;•;;o;m;o;s;c;o;ur;t;.;;;;;;;;;;;;~/;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~'"~N~ew~po~r~t ~B~e~a~oh~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~; Grove, attended the tour and lhe flag ceremonies. Marine Held In Mess Hall Knife Fight A young Camp Pendleton ti.farine, y,·hose name still is being withheld by authorities, remained in custody today during the lnvesllgation of a fatal stair bing of a fellow Marine from Tennessee in a mess hall fight last \Yeckend. The victim. pronounced dead on arrival :it the base hospital during dinnerlime last Sunday, Y.'as Lance Cpl. Hugh s. Laster of Pittsburg Landing. Tenn. Base spo kesmen said the incident, \\'hlch stemmed from a dinnertime argu· men!. was not raeially Inspired. The dead Marine was part or Head- quarters and Service Company, lst Tank Baltallon. 5th Marine Expeditionary Brili:ade . The stabbing occurred in the Las Flores mess hall. lnformallonal Services aldes said the name of the arrested Marine would be released after the Provost MarsbaJ 's office completes its investigation. Boy Gored, Killed PENA!\"G. ~falAysl1 (UPf} -A 17· year-<1ld boy was gored to deAth today by a white elephant. his father reported. The boy, Arrtfln Bin Yaacob. ruJfered deep side woUJ1ds and died In a boat en ro~ue lo Grik llospilRI near the Thal· ~1aUiyslAn border about 70 mlles tast of ~enang. ' Wihat's ... ~Y Ln1e? .You won't be fed any lines at Alden's. We ore more interested in developing loyal customers than making • fast sole. . None of our soles people will bother you if you 1ust w.ant t~ browse, but will be pleased to assist you if you W!Sh, with truthful answers to your questions. · Wfien we discuss carpel lines, we would fiave to "modestly" admit that we hove the largest selecti ons in the area. Top b r o .n d s s~ch as: Bigelow, Serven, Beattie, Magee, Monarch, Barwick, Mohawk, Roxbury, Millikan Armstrong. ' SANTA ANA. PltANGl. TUSTIN ~I • • • ALDl!N'S RID HILL CAltll'ITS & OltAPllllS 11J74 lnlM, Tu1t1", C•I. ISl..JJ44 I ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 1 7 7 I I I • Lagu11ri Beaeh ' • • VOL. 64, NO. 64, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE cou~ CALIFORNIA . . • • Today'• Final N.Y. Stoeka TUESDAY, MARCH 16, 1971 • TEN CENTS ( • Ill Marijuank C~ptured • Ill Cleinente San Clemente narcotics detectives and state agents arrested six loc'ai residents and sei.r.ed $16.000 worth or marijuana Monday evening In one of the largest hauls of the weed in recent city history . Most of the arresUi and seizure of the lion's share of the forbidden weed took place at the Alpha Beta M~et parking Jot at 903 S. El Camino ~al as Fight Over Dog at 7:30 p.m. 40 klloa ol the weed, about 88 pounds, The three men arrested there and in a vthicle in the parking lot. booked on charges of possession of mari· Later, they drove to Anderson's Mar- juana for sale are 'Steven Jon Crain, quita address and arres~ the man's 22, of 106 Calle Balboa, San Clemente: l wife. ·sally Jean, 20, and a 17-year-0ld James Carl Dodge. 2.1, giving an address girl. In the apartment officer5 said they of 228 La Esperanza. and William David found tWo more kilos of the weed. Anderson, 21, of 221 W. Calle Me.rquita. The arrest of the sixth San Clemente Officers said they seized a total of resident was the result of a fluke, and offictrs doubted that the ·man was direcUy related \ii the otht:r five per&0ns. A! the invHtigation at the: parking lot progressed, officers ;aid, Dana Rene Nadeau. 18. approached the p.lainclothes agents end struck up a ~ersatlon. Qfficers a53erted the man was smoking a marijuana cigarette du,ring the con-. versatlon. - They arrested _ him on charges of Po""'ion. Nadeau gave his address a1 203 Via Ballena. Police said the arrests took place dur· ing an undermver buy wh!ch had been arranged in advance. Crain, OQdje and Anderson wert! atill Off-duty Lawman . . Held • ID By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Ot ffl• DlllY P'llol Sl1fl An argument over a dog that w a .!i led a cigarette in a Huntington Beach bar Monday night resulted in the shooting death &f a ZS.year-old man and the arrest of an off-duty Los Angeles policeman en a murder charge. Guards Seek Dory Funding Froni Laguna Laguna Beach may soon have its own navy if the City Council Wednesday okays purchasing a used dory on behalf of the city's Ufeguard Association. The lifeguards want the dory, which will cost $550 used, for participation in National Surf Lifesaving Associalion competition. The guards have raised $420 toward the purchase price, but ar/e still $130 short of their goal. City Manager Larry Rose feel.!i the dory is needetl to furlher the guards relationship with r'<>part,menls in other cities through the \-or.:petitive events. Rose said the city rannot legally buy the dory and give it to the lifeguards. but it would be possible to buy the dory and let the lifeguards use it. Rose has recommended to the CQUDCi! tbat the dory be purchased using $130 of public funds and given to the Lifeguard Association for custody. Since the city will own the craft, the public liability and property damage insurance will cover use of the dory, Rose said. Reds Ex plain Orbiter TOKYO CUP!l -Communist ~hina today officially announced the launching of its second earth satellite ~1arch 3. The aMouncement. coming 13 days after the United States rep:irted Peking had sent its man-made moon into space, said the earth satellite is "now continuing the planned work of scientific ex- periment." Orange Coast Wea Cher , The wea!herman·s lighting a candle under the thermometer \Vednesday, pushing the: mercury tJp to 80 degrees in the central county and in the low 70s locally, INSW E TODAY A rt you ready for the biggest week of living theattr ever in Orange County? It lllarts lo- t11ght. and you'll find nil the detail.! on Enttrrafn menr Page 20. a+rt111 t (111 ..... 11 I ci.c-1,.., u, 11 c111111..-t1.u C-k• ·-· 11 ,,..,__.. II °""' frttlk.. ' Dl_,;ei t l•tll>rlll ~... • •"tl!rl•l-1 If.ff Pllll Mt 1 .. 11 ...... _ u A1111 L111ier1 !I Mlltwir I Miff .... Lkt<'lttt ' _ .. , lf·ff Mllhlel l'UMI II N.tltMI NIWI ~ O••• c-1y t .,, .... ,...,..,. 11 UM'tl , .. ,. lltdl Mllftlth 1 .. 11 T11tttll1H 11 TM1tl!r1 ""t WM""" I Wlllf9 W11ll II W-'I ,...,., IS.II W~ N-. l ·I Slaying Mark A. Rodgers. 29. of Buena Park, was hit in the chest by a .38 caliber bullet, police said. He was dead on arrival at Huntington Intercomm\inity Hospital about 9:30 p.m. Police arrested two men on murder charges. They are OifLon J. Schusse, 26, of 5672 Rogers Drive, Huntin&ton Beach, a two-year patrolman with the Los Angeles Polict Department's Harbor Divisio11, and James E. J~rdon. 31, of 6762 Warner Ave., Apt. K-10, HUl'ltincton Beach, a foreman at an aluminum manufacturing company. Witnesses to the shooting said that an argument started at lhe Swinger bar on Beach Boulevard south o! Garfield Avenue between two groups of patrons after the· policeman allegedly gave a dog a cigarette to eat. When the argdment got out of hand and persons in the bar began arming themselves with pool cues, the patrons were asked t.o..ltave, police said. According to a wllness, the dispute coniinued outside the bar. · Investigators were told by witnesses that ont shot was fired inlO the pavement during the argument. Laguna Niguel To Hqld Voting On Coa st Route Laguna Niguel residents w ! 11 participate in their own freeway election tonight at a special meeting of the Niguel Homeov.•ners Association. The Association is proposing a route change in the adopted Coast.al Freeway that would eliminate 5.4 miles of freeway construction in the planned community. The proposed alternate would carry the freev.·ay 2.5 miles from a p(jint south of the Fluor plant to join the San Diego Freeway at a p:iint one mile south of the Crown Valley Parkway interchange. As routed, the freeway would extend 7.9 miles from the ~ame 0poinl, to join the existing freeway at Capistrano Beach. Perspns attending the Homeowners meeting tonight. at 7:30 in Crown Valley School. will be asked to vole on the proposal. If it wins support. the Board of Supervisors will be asked to request a re.hearing on the route by the Division of Highv.•ays. ARt iSr'S .RENDERING SHOWS PROPOSfO GAS STATION AND ,AMED STAR PINE Oil Com-pany Maintain• R.Ht1lgn9d St1tlon Wiii Be "AsHt" to Community . . . Irvine Support Vowed by Mason In Traf fie Ills Irvine: Cmnpany Pre.!iident William. ft Mason today called for an end to ".acrimony .. over the future Pacific Coast Freeway and pledged his firm to help solve Newport's transportation needs. In a st.atement released today. Mason said the anti-freeway vote and City Charter amendment displayed "the overwhelming sentiment of Newport's voters," 8nd noted that ''some hard decisions lie ahead fo r the community. "Meeting Newport's existing and future transportation needs will require the kind of effort that only men of good will can give. ''The Irvine Company is prepared to assi!lt in any \11ay ii can be helpful in future studies of these problems," he said. QUA KE HITS IN SOUTH PACIFI C BERKELEY (AP) - A large earth- quake measuring 6.2.S on the Richter scale took place in the Soulh Pacific today, accordlng to the University of California seismograph al Berkeley. The quake epicenter was placed 6,000 miles • southwest of Berkeley in the Solomon or New Hebrides area. It oc- curred al 4;45 a.m. PST. Ragers Warns of WWIII Over MUleast Situation "- WASHINGTON fAP) -Secretary of House, whatever tht form It n1ight take. State William P. Rogers said today that Rogers made these othtr p:iints in failure of Middle East peace . tfforts the question-and-answer session which could produce 11 very dlingerow situation was dominated by the Middle East: in the world and "poas.ibly lead to World I. The Middle East peace talks between War III.'' lllrael and Egypt through United Nations Rogers told a flews confertnce: "The mediator Gunnar Jarring seem to be climate has never been better for a in an impasse at the moment but "We settlement In the Middle East.·• are convinced the impasse can be overcome." But . he added: "If we don't make 2. The u .S.-supported South Viet· a settlement now we're going to plant names:e invasion of the North Vietnamese. the seeds of future war." supply liDe area of Laos has been suc· At 11 later point he stated this warning cessful so far. Among the achievements agiiin. he listed extensive destruction of enemy "We think," he said. "that if the supplies. interception of supply move· situation is not worked out In the ment to the South and _a virtual halt reasonable future the very dangerous in hostilities in South Vietnam. situation could develop and possibly lead 3. In spite of what Secret.ary of Defense to World War Ill." ... Laird has said about a residual force Rogers shllrply disputed the Israeli of perhapll 50,000 American troops in policy expressed by Premier Golda Meir S th v· I t t•· d I 1972 p · that Isrtiel must bAse its future security 4 ou ic nam a •ic en ° · resi· dent Nixon hall yet to make a decision on the geographical position it e.!ilablishes on his future withdrawal schedule and through a peact fftUement. on the force he will leaye in Vietnam. He urgetl instead that Israel give at 4. ftogers does not believe that the least equal Importance to political ar-Chinese Communists will ge.t involved rangements built around a United Na· io the war in Indochina as 11 result tion.s Middle East peace-keeping foree of the Jnvaston of Laos. He argued in which the UniIBd States and the it posed no th~at to China. ,.. other great powers would participate. Rogers refused J!.> say that he was proposing a Middle East security treaty. But he said he was talking about a "written doeument'' and a "contractual agreement entered Into by the parties and signed. sealed and de!Jvered ." He expressed confidence that if such an agreement could be reached it would have Lhe aupport of the Senate and Bombing Threat Delays Hearing Of An gela Davis More Parking Donated SAN RAFA.EL (AP) -A telephoned bomb threat caused evacualion of the Marin Civic Center today a feW"'minutes before the start, of a &eheduled hearing for Angela Davls. black mllftant charged with murder, kidnaping and con.!ipiracy In a shootout at the: center last Aug. 7. Sawdust Fest Permit ·oK'd Happy lo hear that the Sawdust Festival had picked up an additional 3S parking spaces over what 1t had last year. Laguna Beach Planning Com· missioners • unanimously approved a perrpll for the summer 1~71 ~ of the 'retslyle art festival . "4guna Auto Body has donated 35 ·patlt1ng spaces to the S&wdwit F'tstlva'I." Ed Van Deusen, a member of the &..1guna Artislg and Gallery Owners Assoc,. told the planners. "We h11ve allO made firm a vubal agreement with lhe Boys' Club for space as well .'' Van DeUHT1 said the: parlctng 1rt11 1t the repair shop coold be used dally after 5 p.m. and all day on Saturday1 and Sundays. With the ·addition of the new space, the Sawdu.st Fe.sUval will have over 60 parking spiee1 avaUable for festival goer1. Van .Deusen said ~at the nuri'lb&- of exttibltlng artista had been par ' d to 160 from J~. "Antj of .the unused space on the grounds wUI go lo artllb who want t.o display larae art worki. '' he noted. This year the Sawdust Festival will ., I atttmpl to follow more closely city regulations on gtructures, wiring, sanlta· lion. fire control and security. The ntw eontrols were drawn up In rt:~pon'se lO quesUon1 raised by the city 1laU In tht wake of lut year's popular shot.. · "But, we are now convil'ICfd that-we can . ba~e an exhlbltloQ. that Is n.fe fOr the public. an-1saet tO .the cammunily and etRI 1 ·IM uprts!ion of 1crutW11: Individual!," Van Deusen ralttrated to the commis!ion. Scores or ntwr;men and supporters of Ml!I Davis. lined up out111de the courtroom waiting to gel in. were forced by sheriffs depulies to leave the building. ~ Theai'ing. on several mo11ons by Miss Davis, was schedi.lled lo be con- ducted by Superior Court Judge John · P. McMurray, 62, who retired Jan. 4 in tnyo Co\lf'lly. He hes stated he hope\· not to co~uct the ftctual tri11I. sayin& "let one •of those younger fellowi do ' It." Supporters of tht. accused ' woman gathered outside the cour!houst and 1ald Uley planned a demon&lralloo. • in custody this morn.inc, held under $2$,IXXI bail apJece. Bail amounts on Mr~. Andersoa and Nadeau were not immediately available. Tbe'juveni/e girl waa released to custody of an elder brother, police said. Arraignments are scheduled in South Orange County MuitJclpaJ· Court early Wednesday morning. • IXe Oil Firm Concerned For Pine By FREDERIC K SCHOEMEllL Of tr.. Dl ll'I' P iiot 11111 Dtspite prttrests that Laguna's ramed St.ar Pine might die and that fumes would add to an already polluted en• vironment. Laguna Beach planning com· missioners Monday night approved a conditional use permit lor the con· 5lruction of a Sla.ndard Oil gas station at t2Sl N. Coast Highway, at Cliff Drlve. Standard Oil property manager Gf.rald Buck presented the commission with a revised refldering of the prop:ised station, praising it as "an asset to the com· munity." "We have never intended to remove the Star Pine,"' Buck added. "and we will make every effort to save it. We: have totally redesigned the building tQ accommodate the tree." Buck had submitted an earlier plan ror the s?tition at lhe commission's.. Feb. IS meel.ing, but i( was turned down afld termed "a melal giant." The new design, Buck pointed out, will, be a "rar cry from a metal giant." "We have tried to capture the warmth of Laguna in the wood tones . We propose a wood shingle roof, heavy timbers and brick on the fa cade, redv.·ood plank fen· cing along the rear and exten1ive landscaping. We also have a monument sign, which will be only 19 feet high, a.!i opposed to the 25 feet allowed under the present sign laws." Buck said. An irate Arnold Hano charged that the station would "turn more poison loose into our air.'' "The fumes from the automobiles pour. Ing in and out of the station may have an adverse effect on the Star P i n e , ' ' said the writer. Buck replied that UC, I r v I n e horticulturist, Wesley Humphreys had stated the pine would live for many more years. if disturbed as little as possible . "The tree." Buck quot~ Humphries as saying. "is reasonably tiealthy and has an extensive root system." Buck noted that Stafldard Oil had hired local landscape architect Richard 81,ll'er to landscape the grounds and keep tabs on the cond1t1on of the SO-,year--0ld SW Pine. Bigler told the commission that he would use infrared photography to determine the vitality of the tree. "If ""'e find it is getUng too much or too little waier, we can adjust our main· tenance accordingly to the basis of the inrrared photographs," Bigler said. Commissioners, reasonably assured the famed Star Pine would not be harmed and noticeably pleased with the new rendering, unanimously approved t h e permit for the station. They noted the new station will replace another Standard OU station on the cor· ner of Coast Highway and Broadwity, which wall sold lo the city as para of the Main Beach purchase . Chief Mur.ra y Up .and Aro und Sah Clemente Police Chle:f C'lll· ford Murray was up and walking this morning at SI. Vincent's Hospital, miking awifl recovery from major heart surgery perform· td last Frida.)'. The chief was reported dolilg well, but experiencing considerable goreneu from the majcir arte:ry bypau surgery. He will remRin in St. Vinttnt'I Hospital for Ule riez:t three weeks. , I • I I :! DAIL V PILOT SC T,.>d.IJ, Mirth 16, 1971 Welfare . Reform Seen ' Hanna, Top City Officials Meet at Pilot ~ DAIL 'f PILOT lltff l'MM PUBLISHER WEED (LEFTl ACCEPTS FLAG FROM REP. HANNA Stirs ind Stripes Once Flew ~·,. N1tion'1 C1pltol Capo School Trustees 01{ 13 Experimental Classes Thirteen courses at San Clemente High School will be offered on a credit-ncr credit basis next fall . Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District voted unanimously ~on­ day to approve the courses for the experimental program which will allow a student to take a course without receiv- ing a letter grade. "It will be up to the parent to decide whether or not his child will participate " said Superintendent Truman Benedict. ~Some may compete for the grade.'' The courses Include crafts, ceramics, painting and drawing, student service, boys and girls physical educatlon, homemaking, advanced clothing, tailor- ing, family living, journalism (newspaper and annual), and third and fourttryear drama. Seventeen English b)urses. two math courses, two business courses, a humanities pilot program and four 5icence pilot programs also were sug- gested for the non-graded system but the board refused to consider them. High school principal Darrel Taylor explalned that each d e p a r t m e n t chairman had expressed 't1:hich if any of his courses could be plat:ed on lhe list. Some chose not to participate. "None of the courses on the list are required for graduation or college en· tranct," said Taylor. The purpose of the new system is lo relieve the pressure for grades and promote the concept of learning for leaming·s sake. "Some students might want to take 11 course. but are in over their head with other courses and n1ight hesitate to take it for fear of getting a bad O~AN•I COAST DAILY PILOT OftANG:O: COAST l"UILllHINO COM,,AMV leHrt N. Wee4 r r•lfftll tnd ,,.,WW J1c.li I. Curt.., \'let ,.mldont •nd 0-•I M.......- Tho,..11 ic:,,.,11 ll:clltor lh'""'' A. Mo,,11;,.. Mtn1glftg E~llot- Ch1rl., H. Looi kich1r4 r. NIH AUlllln; MIMllllCI Edlllt) ............ Offtt• 122 For11t AY1nu1 So• C~ Offk• lOS Nollh ll C1 .... ino 1111 l>A1L'f PILOT, wll'll '<lll:Cll 11 clmllll!!N 1t11 H-"fftl• IJ. Pllbll~ t1111V nttpt 1vfto .... "' ..,... "'''*" fW UV-. ~ .. ...._, "'di. C.11 Miili, ~­IUdl,. ,._..,,, \11t""Y. $111 C:"'-IW ~11'9111 11111 SrtlOl"ICll, 1111'>9 wllfl - ,. ....... clllll•••• .... 'ln<ip.1 prlfiflnl """" .. II· Sii .. I ..., $11,.,, C..11 M1H. T...,._w 17141 642-4J21 C..uflN A4N1f1 .. '41-1671 S-C~ Al ••••rt••": ,...,... 492-MH L..t•• ._. Al Dt• 11T•""""1 , ......... , .. .... ~··· ,,,,, ~ C:-1 ~"""" c.n.1~,. ... -·-· 111111111'"1-. •••i.• """"' ... ....,. .. "......,.'-......... _,, .... , ...... wttlllwl .... i.1 ,.... """'*' .. .,...~ -. l«•dt11t ........... ,IH-.wt .. 1dl ..... C:.1 ...... °''"""'"· k4ito"~ W nffllr IUI ~I ~ !'NII ··'' ~l'lty1 I'll!""..., .... , ..... ti.JS ---1-. ' grade," said Benedict. "Many who are collegt-bound might n~ take ~n art course rearinJit it would bring their grade point average down if they found they had no talent." · Taylor added that performance levels have been established in all classes and will help the teacher to determine if a s~udent"s . work Is high enough to receive credit for the class. The student will have to· make up his mind whether or not to take a course for a grade or on the credlt·no cre~it system by the end of five weeks. Tim Duval, student body vice president at the high school expressed the fear that a credit student who does the same v.·ork as a graded student would not ~ judged eqUfllY by people examining his record -'iuture employers or a college. Ray Campbell. school board candidate in area three, disapproved of the system entirely. "Many members of teaching slafk all over the county would like nothing better than lo remove failure altogether from education," he said. "What you've done here is opened the door. You're contributing to the weakness of the education system in California which is already weak enough.'' 1::r 1::r 1::r • Capo T eacliers To Seek Raises In Start Pay Salary negotiators for teachers in the Capistrano Unified School District will be prbposing an increase from $7,200 lo $8,000 a year for the beginning teacher. 'tJJe board of trustees learned of the pr~posal ~tonday in open session, a re- qu!ren:ient of a new law which provides guidelines for salary negotiat.ions. ''When the negotiators from the certificated eniployes contact us for the first m~t-and-confer session, we'll have 30.days 1n which to reach an agreement.'' satd Sam Chicas, Auislant Superin- tendent for Business Services and chief negotiator for the administration. "Under lhe old law '>'"e could take all year if we wanted to.'' he said. Jf no conclusion is reached the negotia- tions go to a three-nlan ' board "·ith one member !ielected by the ad· 1 minislratlon. one by the teachers and the third selected by both. This board must then come to a decision to be presented to the board of trustees. ): The teachers association Is proposing SB,000 per year as a starting point, th lncrtases progressing gradually along the other steps to the highest mp of $16,000 • Priest Hears Man's Bombshell Confession &.11L.AN. ltRly (UPI ) -The penilant knee Una before the Rev. Roberto Zllc· carla m1dt a bombshell coofesslon. "The man pulled a grenade from his pocket and harftled It to the Roman Catholic priest before disappearing. Z&c· C'aria called pOl11.>t, but said the secret or the confesS:iohal forbade hin1 Ir om revaling the man's n1me or what he had .said. By GEORGE LEIDA!. Df .. ....... ''"' Steff Orange Coast goverm1W1t officials were told Monday that tax credit aR<I weU31e reforms are likely to precede passage or President Nixon's revenue sharing proposals. Rep. Richard Hanna CD-Anaheim) met \\'ith repreSentatives of city governments from along,. the Orange Coat invited by the DAJ.LY PILOT to patlicipate in flag raising ceremonies marking the first public tour of a new $1.3 million pro- duction plant in Costa Mesa. A U.S.,. Flag that has flov.·n over the nation 's Capitol was presented to the DAILY PILOT by Congressman Hanna. ln remarks foUowlng a luncheon, Han· na predicted "much agony" in Congress over lhe Nixon administration's sug. gested reorganization of government to ''bring administration closer to the func· tion .. , Nixon's call to eliminate administrative duplication by "reducing numbers of departments by defining rwictions" has ''a logic that is very jmpressive," Hanna said. •·But when you do that you run into powerful ongoing forces." he cautioned. Among these forces are the civil service establishment and the t r a d i t i o n a I jurisdictional lines within the House ~nd Senate. Hanna suggested the "personalities of the existing power structures" would make creation of v.·orkable solutions from the proposed concepts difficult. Further. hampering change will be the 1972 Presidential election in which both par_ties i:nay be expected to "posture theU' actions and more important their eiplanations of actions, with an eye toward '72." Revenue sharing, speeifically, Is in trouble, Hanna said, because both the chairman oI the House Ways and Means committee and the senior Republican member oppose the concept of the federal government raising funds to turn them "freely over to other agencies -state and Jocal governments -to spend them." Until the issue of revenue sharing or some other means of lessening the taI burden of local government ·is devis· ed, Hanna urged the city of'flcials "to keep . up the p~ssure for reform." He also suggested to keep applying for federal granls under existing or proposed legislation such as the Clean Waters Act, t~e safe streets program, and the educahonal programs including the Elementary and Secondary Education Act. Wellare re.forms Hanna supports would Isolate recipients with fil:ed handicaps such as blindness, to remove them fro~ the social workers' caseloads; would ap- ply cos~ effectlveneJS to cooperative services such as healttl care arranged for recipients. and realization of a locally determined work program that provides for retraining and worker paychecks coming from the federal government. The conflict between group and In- dividual practice of medicine was cited by Hanna as one of the public health battles that will result from the national h~alth care insurance proposed by I.he Nixon administration. "Since Medicare the government has realized there is no way to fet half way into the health act," he said. Among those atten~g the DAILY PILOT luncheon v;ere Supervisor Ronald \\'..Caspers. Newport Beach; Councilman Lindsley Parsons, Newport B e a c h · Mayor Robert ]\.f. Wilsan, Costa Mesa~ A1ayor Tony Forster. San Juan Capistrano; r..tayor Walter Evans. San Clemente; Councilman Charlton Boyd, Laguna Beach: Mayor Morton Baum, Seal Beach ; Mayor Ed Just. Fountain Valley; and John Beekman, ad· ministrative aide to Hanna. r..1ayor Donald Shipley of }iuntington Beach was unable to attend. Supervisor David Baker. G a r d e n Grove, ~ttended the tour and the flag ceremonies. Marine Held . In Mess Hall Knife Fight A young Camp Pendleton Marine, "'hose name still is being withheld by authorities. remained in custody today during the Investigation of a fatal 1tsb- blng of a fellow Marine from Tennessee in a mess hall fight last \\'eekend. The victim, pronounced dead on arrival at the. base hospital during dinnertime last Sunday, was Lance Cpl. Hugh S. Laster of Pittsburg Lar\ding. Tenn . Base spokesmen said the incident, v.·hich stemmed from a dinnertime argu- ment, was not racially inspired. The dead Marine was part of Head- quarl~rs and Service Company, 1st Tank Baltalton, Sth ~farine Expeditionary Brigade. The stabbing occurred in the Las Flores mess h11U. • informational Services aides said the name of the arrested Marine would be released after the Provost Manhal's office completes its investigation. Boy Gored, Killed PENANG, Malaysia !UPI) -A 17· )'tar-old boy was gottd to death today by a white elephant. hi!i father reported, The boy, Arrifin Bin Y11acab, suffered deep side wou.tds and dfed in s boat en route to Grik Hospital near the Thai- Malayaian border about 70 miles e11sl-- or Penang. ., • • • St. Pat's Parade Youngsters. at ~fission Viejo's ~tonlanoso Recreatio n Center prepare float ~or big parade. From lov•er left moving clock\vise. youngsters are Michelle Zeramby, 10; Todd Sorenson. 7; Cathy O'Riley, 7; Bruce ~mbard, 7; Lance Reed, 7; Milly ~1cKnight, 10; Dana November S· atid Brenda Hollandsworth, 6. ' ' Predict Reco1·d Tur11out - Police Himt Car-hopping Burglru· Laguna Beach police are searching for a "car hop " burglar who called on several autos in the Cliff Drive area sometime Sunday night, ren1oving more than $1 ,800 in n1erchandi.se from seven cars. The thie~ was particular in what he took, in\•estlgators said, as only items \\"hich could be easily sold "'ere stolen fron1 the ''ehitles. One of lhe victims was the son of Laguna Beach police officer LI. Robert f\lcf\turray . As most of the thefts appear lo have occurred in the same area between 2 a.m. and daylight ritonday, police speculated they wer~. rommitted by the same person or persons. In several of the cases. the unknown sus"pect entered the locked autos by forcing open the left wind wing and opening the door. Some of the <'Jlrll "''ere unlocked. police said, and Ire therefore technically classified as thefts rather than burglaries. ~ According to police reports, the .victims and the items taken were : John F. Bowman, of 1259 Clift Drive, reported th e loss of a set of drums and cymbals valued at $1.072 from llis locked auto. Judy Clifford. of 872 Cliff Drivr, was missing a stereo tape player and tapes \"alue d at $87 from her locked auto. Her husband, Gayland Clifford, al 1 o reported that a $78 tool box was removed from his unlocked auto. Police Lt. Robert l\lcMurray said a ste reo tape player and several tapes valued at $210 "·ere taken from his son's locked auto. Dennis" F. Dewitt, of 1287 Cliff Drive reported the loss of the two black vinyl bucket seats valued at $300, from his unlocked vehicle. For Viejo St. Pat's Fest Stephen \Vhite. of 1271 Cl"lff Drive. told police hi s stereo tape player and tapes valued at $68 had been removed _ from his locked car. A record turnout has been predicted for the annual st......eatflck's· Day parade Wednesday in "Mission O' Viejo." Starting at 3:30 p.m., the parade will begin al the corner of Jeronimo Road and Marguerite Parkway and will weave through the community to the Mission Viejo Inn. People from the Saddleback Valley and surrounding communities have been Invited to wear green and join the spec- tators gathered to w.a.tch floats, binds Illegal Aliens Caught; 1 Dead In Truck Fall OCEANSIDE (AP) -Thirteen l\·le1· icans who were in the United Stales illegally \\"ere in custody today, bul another was dead after falling from a truck. The truck driver escaped. ' The California Highway Patrol said Elias J.tedin.a-Ortega, about 20, was fatally injured P.fonday when he !ell from the back of the pickup truck and was hit by two cars. He recently lived in Tijuana. After the truck was stopped a lew mites away, 11 other aliens were found under a tarp covering the truck bed. Tv.·o others who fled with the driver were captured. The Mexican nationals said they paid the driver $200 each to be taken to Los Angeles. They crossed the border about 12 miles west of Calexico .early Sunday. and mounte"-unils. Bands from Saddleback C o I I e g e . Mission Viejo High School, San Clemente High School and Marco Forster Junior Jfigh have been invited to participate. Floats scheduled include Planters Peanuts' Mr. Peanut , Old MacDonald's Farm with Fulton Shaw·s spotted mule ''Judge", Deane P.1en's Club, Y Indian Guides and r..1aidens, Mission Viejo Activities Committee, S ad d I e b a c k l\tothers or Twins, and parent-teacher org41iaUons.: . Other units will include the Leisure \Vorld Hikers, the Rancho l\1ission Viejo l\1ounted Posse. !he Costa Mesa Police Color Guard, the Marine Corps band, and many other floats and units. Grand Marshal will be Dick Whit- ti~ghill and Lord Mayor of the parade will be Bob Brennan in authentic regalia . Free food will be served to youngsters after the parade with an aulhentic Irish dinner offered at the Inn for adults. Telephone calls to Ireland and the . dedication of the Blarney Stone y,•ill be part of the after parade gala which '"ill be climaxed by the parade awards and a dance for the teen set. Insult an cl Injury GRAIN VALLEY, !\lo. (AP) -J . C. Henry, former mayor of this Kansas City suburb, was convicted in Police Court Monday night under an ordinance passed last year by the City Council over his objection and v.·ithout his signature. Henry was fined $100 for fail- ing to secure a city permit to operate a mobile homes court. What's ... Mri Line? Christine Contino. of 11 01 Marine Drive. reported the Joss of a tool box valued at.J16 and a plastic Frisbee valued al $1 from her unlocked auto. • Jury Clears 1\1.an Of Bribe Rap In Mesa Case Samuel Rosman of Laguna Niguel was cleared Monday night of charges that he bribed a Costa ~1esa patrolman but an Orange County superior Court jury found him guilty or one or fen s t -conspiracy to commit bribery. It t09k the panel six hours to clear Rosman, 'l'/, of 29351 San Briso Place on the major charges after a trial i~ which they heard recordings or telephone conversations betv.·een officer Gary Barwig and the defendant. Ban.,.ig testified from the witness box that Rosman gave him SI0,000 10 plant drugs in the car of a vital prosecution witness in a liquor hijacking case. Drugs charges against Rosman were also dismissed by the jury. Judge Ronald Crookshank ordered Rosman, a Sa~dleback College student, to return to his court April 5 for what ~ould be ~t the most a thrtt-year term 1n state prison on the conspiracy count. Rosm~n was acc~ed during his tv.·o- week trtal of plantmg narcotics in the car of Charles "Chuck"' Dreyer. 31 of 1645 SunSt>t Ridge Drive, Laguna Beach. It y,·as alleged that he bribed Barwig in collaborotion v.·ith Eugene Rondondo 44. a former parln~r. '>''ith Dreyer j~ the now defunct Feliciano·s Restaurant in Newport Beach. .You won't b"o fed any lines al Alden's. We are more interested in developing loyal customers tlian making a fast sale. \ None of our sales people will bother you if you just want to browse, but will be pleased to assist you if you wish, with truthful answers to your questions. Wlien we 'discuss carpet lines, we would liave to "modestly" admit that we have the largest selections in the area. Top bra .n d s such as: Bigelow, Berven, Beattie, Magee, Monarch, Barwick, Mohawk, Roxbury, Millikan, Armstrong. SANT A ANA. ORANOI, TUSTIN C•ll • • • At.DIN'S i. ltlD HILL CA'l•ITS & DRAPlltll 1U74 lrvl""' Tvatln, Cal. llWM4 ' ALDEN'S CARPETS 9 DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 I .. • • I #( ~ San (;lenienie . - Ca istrano VOL. 64, "i°· 64, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COU NTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCf'l 16, '197f JEN CENTS Clubhouse Designer Still Seel{ing $800 Bill . . The designer of San Clemente's pro- posed new community clubhouse has changed his mind and Wednesday will again pursue payment of a $800 bill which the city has refused to pay. Eric Boucher, who has bet>n feuding in recent • weeks wilh Mayor Walter Evans ctnd tnembers of the city Jtaff, originally decided to let the '800 bW for extra services drop. ' Rotary Project But in a letter attached to agendas for Wednesday's meeting 8 ouch er reiterates IW position that Mayor Walter Evans. City MaNger Ken Carr and Park! SupL Arlie Waterman either asked for or consented to Iut-m.lnute changes. Both . Evans and Carr have denied giving py directions u to the changes ill air conditioning a:y.stems. But Boucher insists the directions in- Youths t9 Camp On .. Baja Island By JOHN VALTERZA OI HM Dl llJ l"itet Jtelf Tweaty-five San Clemente youth! who have been active in a unique scouting venture since last year will spend a "M-'eek off Baja California Easter Week In a blend of survival training and the ultirilate in aquatic recreation. Under sponsori;hip of the San C\emente: Rotary Club, lht youth.! will join 15 M~· Rogers Tells WWIIl Peril In Mideast WASHINGTON lAP) -Seerttary of State William P. Rogers said today that failure of Middle East peace effom could produce a very dangerous situation ln the world and "possibly lead to World War III." Rogers told a news conference: ''The climate has never been better for a &ettlement in the Middle East.." But he added: "If we don't make a settlement now we 're going to plant the seeds of future war.·• At a later point he st8.ted this warning again. "We think," he said, "that"' if the situation is not worked out in the reasonable future the very dangerous situation could develop and possibly lead to World War III." Rogers , sharply disputed the Israeli policy expressed by P.remier Golda · M~ir that Israel must base Its future security on the geographical position it establishes through a peace settlement. He urged instead that Israel give at least equal importance to political ar· rangcmenl!J built around a United Na· tions Middle East peace-keeping force in which the , United States and the Dlher great powers would participate. , Rogers refused to say that he was proposing a Middle East security treaty. !Jut he said he was talking about a •·written document" and a "contractual agreement entered into by the parties and signed, sealed and delivered." Orange Co ast Wea t iter The weatherman's lighting a candle under the t.hermometer \Vednesrlay, pushing the mercury up to 80 degrees in the central county and in the low 70s locally. INSWE TODAY Are you ready for tht bigge,,.t • week of living theater tvtr in Orange County~ It starts lo-- night, and you'll find all the detaila on Enlerlainment PoQt 20. •"1fl• ' ("1...,.lf I (l'IKlll• u, 1J CIHllti-1 H•r. c-1e1 u ,,...._,. 11 OMJll "9tka f Olvwtn f llllllWll! ''" • 111ttr1•~' , .. ,. '111111n • U·11 tfff9tc#t " .f.1111 LI~" l• Mil ... ~ • -II .. Lk-t Mn<IM 1J.tf .. , ..... ,.... ,, """"" ........ Or• ... CWl'ltf ' JJt..U. 1""'1W 11 1-'I , .. ,. Jlfel M.,..,. 1 .. 11 T ..... IM!t lf ,..,..,.,. ,,." WllltlM" I WMM WI... 16 "Wtif!llll'I M...s 1•U w...w "-... ican1 Explore.rs and a crack aquatic com· mando unit from th Navy for the five--day trip to Cedros Island near Scammon'• Lagoon. On the rugged, picturesque. island, the scouts will set up five base camps, each headed by a member of the five- man team from a Navy installation at. Coronado. ta.ch croup Qf boyi, will viii\ • aeparate camp each day to saeple a different phase of lhoreline survival. "' Iii betWffn experim~nts at tating such delicacies as seaw'ted !Kltlp, th~ youths will surf, skin dive and fish. The San Clemente Contingent is a new· E~ploreWScout post set up last summer as a pilot program offering few of the scouting rituals and uniforms. but regu· tar oppottunitfes to aUend infonnal out- ings on the coast's best surfing spots and ocean..oriented institutions. Lifeguard capt. Phil Stubbs was one of several founders of the troop. Sin~ the group's beginnings the youths ha ve surfed legendary surf spots, normally clOM!d to the public. The trip 1o Cedros, however, will be the highlight of the group's schedule thus far. Stubbs &aid. Besides support from local Rotarians. the Troop has received. financial and supervisory help from tbe Laguna Beach· based Kalas K.agatos Foundation. Preliminary training for the Baja ex· peditio!l' will take place on S a n Clemente'• beaches this weekend. The five-man "Seal" commando team from Q:ironado will conduct instruction in use of liferafts and other basic tools. The real thing will begin nn April S when the youths board a charger cargo plane in Tijuana for the ride to the wilds of lhe Baja. peninsula and the rendezvous with the Explorer team from Mexico. The encampment on the large island lying off the lagoon where the California gray whales breed each year will last for five days , stubbs said. Rockhounds See Mexican Flicks Members of the Tri Cities Lapidary Society will view slides taken during a recent rockhound trip to Mexico Wednesday at 7 p.ro. in San Clemente High School's Little Theatre, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Parnell will give an illustrated tilk on their Mexico trip. Members also will discuss their ne:s:l field trip on April 2-4 and 25 to the Imperial Valley . The 1eneral public ls welcome. Square Dancers Ho ld Exhibition The Shipmates Square Dance Club will hold its annual Fiesta La Golondrinas danq exhibition Saturday at the corner of Del Obispo Road and Camino Ca-plstrano in San Juan Cl.lpistrano. The square dance exhibition will be(in Immediately after the annual parade commemorating the return of the swallows. A club refreshment stand will be trected near the dancing area offering food 11nd drink , P<lttntial members can receive information 1bout club activilld and regiatraUon at the dancers' booth. deed came from the olflc1als. "WhY . did we go to all the work of providing two complete systems for alternate bids?" he asks. "Because. we were directed to by the mayor." Boucher also takes the Mayor to task for comments made al a council meeting two weeks ago when Evans· said the designer submitted the bill "because he e was made at me." "Gentlemen, I have never sent a bill to a:nyone because I was mad at them,·• Boucher contends. "'Perhaps a more pertinent question today would be, are you going \o withhold payment because you 're mad at me?" The bill-ever and "8bove the $14,000 maxirn\¥11 fee set for Boucher's designing serViCe~ stems from a final study • ; session held last month by the tooncl.l to review the working drawina;s of tbe $400,000 facility. Boucher claims that his arcllitect associate left the mttling with tn- structiotU to add an altema~ air con· ditionlng system, thus allowing bidden the 'chance to make offers on either one. No discuSsion about extra payment took place at the study &ession. Boucher said later that lho8e direcUons 0 OAILY ,tLOT $1111 '°"'1' TOBY WHI PPLE HANDLES AU TOGRAPHS AS EASILY AS HE MOVES THE BA LL Junior College All American Appeara nee Part of Cordilltrt School Pfogram Mission Viejo Progrn1n ' Grid Star Model for Kids By PAf\tELA HALLAN 01 IM O•ll"t l"llel ll•U Toby Whipple. junior college All American. sat on the edge of the stage al Cordillera Schoo! Friday. moving ques· lions as adeptly as he moves a foolball. Whipple 's appearance was parl of a unique program developed by Cordillera teacher Jim Wilson for Mi ssion Viejo's newest school. The program attempts to grapple ~·ith problems like smoking, alcoholism. and drug abuse. on a people to people basis, using terms elementary ch.ildren can understand. Whipple's talk on why most. athlete's don't smoke provided more than in· ... formation . It also provided a model. ··Children have to have models.'' said Wilson, watching Whipple as he patiently signed autographs for his fans. "We at school have an obligation to provide them." Models are partkularly important when it comes to drug abuse. \Vilson said that when drug abuse reaches children in elementary schools, many are found to have observed older brothers or sisters involved In drug use. "Children begin forming their attitudes Lawman, B11ddy Arres ted In Beach Tave1·n Slayi ng By RUDI NIEOZIELSKl An argument over a dog that was fed a cigarette in a Huntington Beach bar Monday night resulted in the shooting death .o.f s ~ye.ar-old man and the arrest" of an off-duty Los Angeles policeman on a murder charie. Mark A. Rodgers. 29. of Buena Park. was hit in the chest by a .38 caliber bullet, police &aid. He was dead on arrival at Huntington Intercommunity Hospital about 9:30 p.m. ~nl'!: .-netjed ·two men on murder tharaes. 'lbay are CU!ton J . Schusse, 211. of 5672 ftoaers Drive, Huntington Buch, a two-~ _patrolman with the Los Angeles P,ill"ice Department'• Harbor Division. and James E. Jordon. 31, of 8762 Warner AYI\. Apt. K-to. Huntington Beach, a fotetnan at an aluminum man"'acturinf cornpa:ny. Wl\n,Mes lb the sbootinC said that an ar1urue"t · ataf\ed at the Swln&er btr en Seacb Bohtevard &outh of Garfiel d Avenue between two groups of -patrons after the policeman allegedly gave a dog a cigarette to eat. Officers did not r;ay who had fed the animal the cigarelte. • \Vhen the argument got out of hand afld persons in ,the bar began arming themselves with pool cues, the patrons were asked to leave, police said. According ln a witness, the dispute continued outside the bar. Investigators were told by witnesses that one shot was fired Into the pavement during the argument. Another shot, believed by witnes.o;es to have been fired seconds later, struck Rodgers near the. hearl Two 38-<:aliber bullets have been recovered by police, one from1he dead man's body. Officers said a woman motorist pa!Sing by the bar saw what was happening and stopped 1t patrol car. The of'ficer arrived at the Swinger moment!! 1fter the 1hote were fired and arrested Schusst and Jordon. and goals very early," he 1aid. ''I think its important lo spend time on athletics and cultural events.. in addition to ln- formative programs.'' The complete information unit Includes rour weeks on various aspects of 1mok· ing. two days on alcoholism, and a speclal unit on drug abuse that begins with a talk by former drug user1. The flrst talk will be al 9 a.m. °" March 25 in the school auditorium. Speaking will be formef drug users from lhe Orange (',aunty Melodyland Drul Prevention Center. Members of the Dange,ous Drugs and Narcotics lnfomation and Education Team led by Lt. Dick Rossi of the El Toro Marine"'Corps Air Station will be guests on ~1arch 31 al l p.m. in the school. They will discuss the medical aspects of drug abuse. Rounding out the program wUI be 8 view of the legal aspects presented by a narcotics officer from the Tustin Police Department. This program will be April I al I p.m. Wilson feels the program Is helping to create communication between parents and children. "When we talk about smok· ing most parents are honest and if they smoke they admit they wish they had not started." said Sue Goddicben. who has assisted with the. program along with student teacher Jean Thorpe. Parenl!! have been invited to all the programs and letters have been sent home urging them to altend. "We don 't preach to the chUdren." said f\-Uss Goddick!en. "We encourage them to. make up their O"M-'n minds. We lell them Urat we made our decisions and when the time comes they will have to makt theirs. Our job it to present as much Information as pouible to guide them." Al lhe. tnd of the seri~s or -prognims. member11 of the fourth and fifth gr11des who have been involved In I.he cdune will produce 11 film called Tobacco Goes to Court, wrltltn b;; WIUon. to enter ln the Kod1k student !iom festival I t caused him to Wttrk •bout four more days-over a ¥lid1y weekend-and com· pletely revise several plates at the .jn.. tricate drawings. C.ouncilmen received the bill at their meeting two wttkJ ago and unanimaualy agreed not to pay it · Al thal-time City MWatt JI.en .Cm told ~ there were no ltipulatJml for bUUngbilling for additional lilrvioel In t.he city's contract with Baucber • au 6 Suspects '.Also Caught In Clemente San Clemente narcotics detectiwa and 1tate agents arrested six local residents and seized $16,000 worth of marijuana Monday evening In one of the large.st hauls or the weed in recent city history. Most of the arrests and seizw'e of the lion's share of the forbidden weed took place at the Alpha Beta Market parking lot at 903 S. El Camino Real at 7:30 p.m. The three men arrested there and booked on charges of poasesa.ion of mari· juana • fpr sale ~· Stt.ven Jon Crain, 22, •f lb& Call< Balboa, &an Clemente; Jam.ea Carl Dodie. ». aiv'1'tc an addma Cif. Z28 La Esperanza, and William David Andttson, 21, of 221 W. Calle Marquita.., Officers said they seized a tbtal of 40 kilos of the we,ed. about 88 pound5, in a vehicle in the -parking lot. Later, they drove to Anderson's Mar- quita address and arrested tf\e man's wife, Sally Jean. 20, and a 17-year-old girl. In the apartment o!ficers uid they f d o more kilos of the. weed . rrest of the 1ii:tb San Clemente was the result or a Ouke, and officers doubted that the man was directly related to the other five per!OO.S. As the investigation at the parking lot progressed, officers said, Dana Rene Nadeau, 18, approached the plainclothes agents and 1tru.ck up a conversation. Officers. asserted the man was smokinc a marijµana cigarette during the. CQD- veraation. They arrested him on · charges of possession. Nadeau gave his address as 203 Via Ballena. Police. said the arrests took place. cfur .. Ing an undercover buy wbicb bad been arranged in advance. Crain, Dodge a.nd Anderson were still in custody this morning,. held under $25.000 bail apiece. Bail amounts on Mr1. Anderson . and Nadea'4._ were not immediately available. The juvenile girl was released to Cllltody of an elder brotl)f~, police aaid. Arraignments are scheduled tn ·South Orange County Municipal Court early I Wednesday morning. · 'Teen of Year' Nominees Told Four San Clemente Biab School students have been nornlnt:ted •by Prin- cipal Darrell ~yklr to compete l'n the slate competition for the. Outat.andin.f Teenager. of the Year. Vying for schol1rship! and other honors will be John Allavie, Tlm Duvall, John Russell and Jay Wentz. Select.ion o( lhe state winner wm ' be made later in the spring. 'fhose winners lhen will enter natlooal compet.ition wtuch leads to a 1 OOI) scholarship. ' Chie f Mu rra y · Up and Aro und San. Clemente: Police Chier CHf. ford Murr1y was up and walking this morning al St. Vlncqt'a Hospital, maklna awlft recovery rrom major heart aurcery perform- ed fut Friday. The chief wu r<)>Orlod <loin& well, but etpe.riencina: con&lderable 10ttne11 from lht major ar1erJ bypt11 •urgery. ~e will l'!maln In St Vh\Cent01 Hospital for the nut lhrtt week& 'f • I I \ ' • :! DAILY PILOT SC Tue~ay, Marth 16, 1971 Welfare Reform Seen P-olice Hunt • Hanna, Top City Officials Meet at Pilot Car-hopping CAIL Y l'ILCT Sf•H l'heM PUBLISHER WEED CLEFT) ACCEPTS FLAG FROM REP. HANNA Stars and Stripes Once Flew Over Nation's Capitol Capo School Trustees 01( 13 Experimental Classes Thirteen courses at San Clemente High School ""'ill be offered on a credit.no- credit basis next fall. Trustees of the Capistrano Unified Sctl>ol District voted unanimously J\-1on- day to approve the courses for the experimental program ·which .,..·ill allow a student to take a course without recei\'- ing a letter grade. • "It will be up to the parent lo decide whether or not his child v.·i ll participate,'' said Superintendent Truman Benedict. "Some may compete for the grade." The courses include crafts. ceramics, painting and drawing, student service, boys and girls physical education. homemaking, .advanced clothing. tail or- ing, family living. journalism lnew·spaper and annual), and third and fourth·year drama. Se\•enteen English courses. t>\'O math courses. two business courses, a humanlties pilot progra m and four sicence pilot programs also were sug- gested for the non-graded sys tem .Out the board refused to consider them . High school principal Darrel Taylor explained that each d e p a r t m e n t chairman had expressed which if any or his courses could be placed on the hst. Some chose not lo participate. ··xone of the courses on the-list are req uired for graduation or college en· tra nce,'' said Taylor. The purpose of the new system is lo reli('\'e the pressure for grades and promo!e the concept of learning for learning·s sake. ··some students might \\'ant to take 11 cours('. but are in over their head \1·ith other courses and might hesilate 10 ta l;r 11 for fear of getting a bad i>AllY. PILOT 0"-ANG:: COAST PUllLll HIHG COMPAlrtY Robr rt N. w •• d Prrr-s.oent •rid Pub!l111e1' J1c\ R. Curl•y Vice Pral0tn1 •llG <;..,....,, M•Mtll" Tho"'"' l(,,.a Ea nor Tho"''' A, Mur1>lli111 M1111101no Ea•OOr ' Ch1rl11 H. Looi Ricl.1rd P, Nill Au1t11n, M1n1g1"'J Ea11~ let••• hwcll Off\c • 12? For11t A•1•u1 S-C~Offk• JDS N1rth l l C11•1ino R11I Ottttr Otlk .. (OU• MMI. lJO Wnr lllV M, .. t ,.,,...,,.,.., llH{ft: "" NtWCXl'I 9.,.,, ""'"" H11nUN1ICll'I llHQ'I; llt7J llHC~ 81>1,olt•t•ll DAILY l'ILOT. w!lll .tt.c~ 11 -=-!Md !he .. _"''"'· 11 Pl*ll"*' llllly ••C9p! klrt> 4•v "' -·•"' ""'"'"' '°" u,,... a .. a. NINl'O"I t .. dl. C•t• ~. N1111tlfta• eNCI'\, Fwr1t1ln V1ll•Y. S1" C..._,tei ~!r•1111 ••.ii St"411tlttctl, lleo'\t •111'1 - ,.-.,., u ntio.., Pr1ni:1~1 ~ir111"9 lle!lt It al • IJll W.I 111' 51'M •• (.Dr.11 Mott.I. l elepllffe 17141 64J-'JJ1 C1nlHW .MMttt1S.. '42-1671 ... C'-te Al O.,•,._..,.: le.._,.. 4fJ-44JI i..-...._II Al Depwlwwwh : l...,.. ... , .... , ... , too.,.-ltflt, nn, O••.,.,. c.o.11 l'\lbllt~lftt ~¥. Nt -,..,..,.,, l!IVltt't"""'' O!lfl"""" --.. • •• ...,1 ........ 1, ........ ""'Y M ~.. wtlllooJI al*ltt JI"'· "'"'*' 91 «'P'l'!'llfl\I -·· lot-~ .... _,_ tttlCI t i N-rr t1.c- •l'd c., ........ C•oi.....11 t.WKr!•I ... by 11rr11W •t.at: -"'''' ll>y '""JI It.ti .._ll!lti· llll.., 11 .. 111111!101u, U.JJ "*'"''"" I ' grade," said Benedict. "Many who are college-bound might not take an an course fearin,it: it would bring their grade point average down if they found they had no talent." Taylor added that performance levels have been established in all classes and \\'il l help the teacher to determine if a student's work is high enough to receive credit for the class. The stude'nt will have to make up his mind whether or not to take a course for a grade or on the crtdit-no credit system by the end of five weeks. Tim Duval, student body vice president at the high school eXJJressed the fear that a credit student who does the same \rork as a graded student would not be judged equally by people examining his tecord -future employers or a college. Ray Campbell, school board candidate in area tbree, disapproved of the system entirely. "Many members of teaching staffs all over the county woul d like nothing better than to remove failure altogether from education." he said. "Whal you've done here is openeJ the door. You·re contributing lo the "·eakness of the educalion systen1 in Californ ia which is already weak enough." * {:{ ·:ct Capo., Teachers To Se ek Raises In Start Pay Salary negotiators for tea chers in the Capist rano Unified School District will be proposing an increase frt1m $7,200 lo $8,000 a yea r for the beginning teacher. The board of trustees learned or the proposal Monday in open session, a re- quirement of a new law which provides guidelines for salary negotiations. "\Vhen the negoUators from the certificated employes contact us for the first meet·and-confer session, we'll have 30 days in ""'hich' to reach an agreement,'' said Sam Chicas, Assistant Superin- tendent for Business Services and chief negotiator ror the adm inistration. "Under the old \a.,..· .,...e could take all year if we \\'anted to," he sa id. I( no ronc!usion is reached, the nego!ia- lions go to a three-n1an board 1\•ith ()ne. member selected by the ad· ministration. one by the teachers and the lhird selected by both. This board must then co1t11? to a deciS ion to be presented to the board of trustees. The teachers association Is proposing the $8,000 per year as a starting point, with increases progressin!' gradually along the other :1teps to the highest step or s1s.ooo. Priest Hears l\J an 's Bombshell Confess ion ~llLAN. Italy (UPI ) -The penlta11l ~n<'t'ling before the Rt¥· Roberto 7,ac. tarta made a bombshe11 confession. '!;,he man pulled a grenade from lus ~k<'I and handed It to the Roman Catholic priest before disappearing. Zac· carla called police. but sa{d the secret of the conlcsslonal forbade hln1 f r o m rev11l1n~ the man's name or v.hat he 1-:ad sa 11f . I \ 87 GEORGE LEll>AL Of IM Dllfto Pl• lltft' Orange Coast government officials were told Monday that tax credit and welfare reforms are likely tr> precede passage of President Nixon's revenue aharing proposals. Rep. Richard Hanna (D-Anaheim) met with representatives of city govemmenl!I from along the Orange Coat invited by the DAILY PILOT to participate in flag raising ceremonies marking the first public tour of a new $1.3 mllllon prcr duclion plant in Costa Mesa. A U.S. Flag that has flown over the nation's Capitol was presented to the DAILY PILOT by Congressman Hanna. In remarks foUowing a luncheon, Han- na predicted "much agony" in Congress ()Ver the Nixon administration's sug· gested roorganizatioo ()f government to "bring administration closer to the func· tion." Nixon's call to eliminate adntini.!tratlve duplication by "reducing numbers of ~departments by defining functions" has •·a logic lhat is very impressive," Hanna said. "But when you do that you run into powerful ongoing forces," he cautioned. Among these forces are the civil service establishment and the t r a d i t I o n a I jurisdiclional lines with.in the House ~nd Senate. ' llanna suggested the "personalities of the existing power structures" would make creation of workable solutions from the proposed concepts difficult., Further hampering change will be the 1972 Presidential electlon in which Doth parties may be expected to "posture their actioll.!I and more important their explanations of action!, with an eye toward '72." Revenue sharing, specifically, ia--in trouble, Hanna said, because both the chairman of the House Ways and Means commlttee and the senior Republican member ·()ppose the concept of the federal government raising fWlds to turn th"em "freely over to other agencles -state and 1ocaJ governments -to spend them." DAILY PILOT 11111 l'ht1• St. Pat's Parade Youngsters at ~fission Viejo's 1'-1ontanoso Recreation Center· prepare float for big parade. From lov.•er left moving clockwise, youngsters are Michelle Zeramby, 10; Todd Sorenson. 7; Cathy O'Riley. 7; Br uce Bombard, 7; Lance Reed, 7; Milly ~1cKnight, 10; Dana November, 8; and Brenda Hollandsworth, 6. Predict Reco1·d Turnout For Viejo St. Pat's Fest • Laguna Beach poliee are search.Ing for a ••car hop" burglar who called on several autos in the Clirf Drive area someti1ne Sunday night. removing more than $1,800 in me rchandise from seven cars. The thit-f "'as particular in v.•hat he took , investigators said, as only items \1·hich could be eas1l~ sold 11ere stolen fron1 U1e \'t'hicles On(' or the \'iClims ,vas the son of l..a guna Beach poli~e officer LL Robert fi.1cMurray . A5 rnost uf the thefts appear to have occurred in thr same area between 2 a.m. and daylight -ti1onday. police s~ulated they v.·ere committed by tl\._e same person or persons . in several of the cases. the unkno11·11 suspect entered the locked autos by forcing ope n the left \~ind wing and opening the door. Some of the cars \1•ere unlocked, police said, and are therefore technica lly ('lassified as thefts rather than burg1arirs. Aecording to police reports, the victims and the items taken were: John F. Bown1an . of 1259 Cliff Drive. reported the loss of a set o( drums and cyn1ba ls valued at $1,072 from his locked auto. Judy Clifford, of 872 Cl1H Drive, \\'as missing a stere-0 tape player and tapes valued at $87 froni her locked auto. Her husband. Cayland Clifforil. a Is o reported that a $78 tool box was removed from his unlocked auto. Police Lt. Robert 1'1cf\lurray said a stere-0 tape player and several tapes valued at $210 were taken from bil son's locked auto. Dennis F. Dewitt , or 1287 Cliff Drive reported the loss of the two black vinyl bucket seats valued al $300, from his unlocked vehicle. . Stephen \\'hite. of 1271 Cliff Drive. told police his stereo tape player and tapes valued at $68 had been removed from his locked car. · Until the issue 0£ revenue sharing or some other means of lessening the A record turnout has been predicted :.ind mountrd unl!s. tax burden of local government is devls-fo r the annual St. Palrick 's Day parade Bands from Sadd!cback c 011 e g e, Christine Contino. of 1101 Marine Drive. reported the Joss of a tool box valued at $Hi and a plasl ic Frisbee \'alued at $1 fron1 her unlocked auto. ed, Hqna urged the city officials "to Wednesday in "Mission O' Viejo." keep up. the pressure for reform." He Starting at J :30 p.m., the parade will J\-lission Viejo High School. San Clemente also S11ggested to keep applying for begin at the corner of Jeronimo Road High School and J\-1arco Forster Junior federal grants under existing or propo5ed and Marguerite Parkway and will y;eave High have been invited 10 participate. legislation such as the Clean Water1 through the community to the Mission Floats scheduled include Planters Act, the safe streets prcgram, and the Viejo Jnn. Peanuts' f\1r. Peanut. Old 1.lacDonald·s educational p['(lgrams including the People rrom the Saddleback Valley . Elemen'"'"" and Secondary Education Farm with Fullon Sha .... ··s spotted mule __. J and surrounding communities have been Act. invited to wear green and join the spec· ''Judge··, Deane Men's Club. y 1nd,ian Welfare reforms Hanna supports would t to IJJ d 1 tch fl ts b d Guides and 1.laidens. f\1ission Viejo Jury Clears Man Of Bribe Rap In Mesa Ca se hol1te redplent.s with fl.red 'b1nd1Ca1S5, a rs ga ere , 0 wa Oil ' an s Act i\'ilies Committee. Sad d I e b a ck such as blindness. ta remove them from ~foth~rs" .of TwtnsL. and parent.teacher Sa1J1uel Rosman of Laguna Niguel was the social worke rs' caseloads ; wo\llif ap. Jlle l Al• organ1zatwQS .• • " : . . cttailed M9nday night of' charges that ply cost dfectiveness to C()()perative ga ieltS Other units wil l include the Leisu re he bribed a Costa 1'1esa patrolman but services such as he1llh care arranged World Hikers. the Rancho Mission Viejo ;in Orange County superior Court jury for recipients, and realization of a locally l D d Jl.fountcd Posse. the Costa f\1esa Police found hin1 guilty of one o ff ens t determined work program that provides Caug it,· 1 ea . Color Guard. the J\1arine Corps band, -conspiracy to commit bribery. for retraining and W()rker paychecks and many other floats and units. It took the panel six hours to clear coming from the fed eral -government. Grand Marshal \1•ill be Dick \Vhit-R-osman, 27. of 29351 San Briso Place , The conflict between group and In-111 Truck Fall tinghill and Lord Mayor or the parade on the maj or charges after a trial In dividual practice of medicine was cited v.·iJI be Bob Brennan in authentic regalia . .,..·hich they heard recordings of telephone by HaMa as one of Ute public health Free food will be served to youngsters conversations bet"''een officer Gary OCEANSIDE (AP) -Thirteen ,.,.feX· d h d f battles that will result from the national after the P'''"de wi'th an a·'thentt'c tr1·s11 Barwig an t e e endant. icans who were in the United States u r health care iruiurance proposed by the dinner offered at the Inn for adults. Barwig testi ied from the ""'ilness bo:t NI dm S illegally were in custody today, but th t R h' ltO ooo t l t xon a inistration. " Ince Medicare Telephone calls to Lreland and the a osman gave 1m , o pan th I another wa s dead after falling from d · th r ·1 1 · e govern ment has rea ized there is dedication of the Blarney Stone will rugs 1n e car o a vi a prosecution a !ruck. The truck driver escaped. ., · I' h'' k' n no "'ay to get half way into the health 1 be part of the after parade gala \\•hich \YI ness 1n a 1quor 11ac mg case. rugs The California Highv.·ay Patro said h · t R I act,'' he said. \\'ill be climaxed by the parade awards c arges agains osman v.•ere a so A th t d. h D !LY Elias Medina-Ortega. about 20. \1'as d' · sed b th · mong ose at en 1ng t e A and a dance for the teen set. 1sm1s Y e Jury. PILOT luncheon were Supervisor Ronald fatally injured Monday \\'hen he fe ll Judge Ronald Crookshank ordered W, Caspers. Newport Beach; Councilman from the back of the pickup truck and Rosman, a Saddleback College student, Lindsley Parsons, Newport Be a c h ; \lt'as hit by '"'O cars. He recently lived J I l J • to return to his court April 5 for what ?o.1ayor Robert ?-.I. Wilson, Costa Mesa: in Tiju~. llSll l <10( llJ ttry cou ld be at the most a three-year term Mayor Tony Forster. San Juan After the truck 'vas sto pped a fe\V in state prison on the conspiracy count. Capistrano; Mayor Walter Evans. San miles a .... ·ay, 11 other aliens .,..·ere found GRAIN VALLEY, Mo. (AP) -J . Rosman was accused during his two- Clemente; Councilman Charlton Boyd, under a tarp covering the truck bed. C. Henry, rormcr mayor of this Ka nsas 11,eek trial of planting narcotics in the Laguna Beach: Mayor Morton Baum, T.,..·o others 11·ho fled with the drh·er City suburb, \\'as convicted in Police car of Charle.& "Chuck'' Dreyer, 31 of Seal Beach : Mayor Ed Just. Fountain y.·ere captured. Cou rt Monday night under an ordinance 1645 Sunset Ridge Drivl', Laguna Beach. Valley; and John Beekman , ad -'f'he ri.-Jexican nationals said they paid passed last year by the City Council Jt was al!ege d that he bribed Barwig rninislrative aide to Hanna. the driver $200 each to be taken t•1 over his objection and wi thout his in collaborot ion \•lith Eugene Rondondo. Mayor Donald Shipley of Huntington Los Angeles. They crossed the bordf'r signature. Henry '''as fined $100 for fail-44. a fonner partner with ·Dreyer 111 Beach was unable to attend. about 12 miles v.·est of Calexico early ing to secure a ci!.v pcrn1it to ope rate the now defunct Feliciano's Restaurant Supervisor David Baker. Ga rd en Sunday. a mobile homes court. in Nel\·port Beach. Grove, attended the tour and the flag \~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.- ceremonies. Marine Held In Mess Hall Knife Fight A young Camp Ptndleton ?o.farint, \\'hose name still is being v.·ithheld by ai.ithorities. remained in custody today during the Investigation of a fata l stab- bing of a felto11• f\.1arine from Tennessee in a mess hall fight last \l'ttkend. The \'ictim. pronounced dead on arrlv11l at the base hospital during dinner time last Sunday, 1vas Lance Cpl. Hugh S. Laster of Pittsburg Landing. Tenn. B3se spokesmen said the incident, which stemmed from a dinnertime argu- 1nt'nl, was not racially inspired. The dead 1.1arine was part of Head- quarters and Service Company, 1st Tank Battalion, Mh J\-1arine Expeditionary Bri~ade. The stabbing occurred In the Las Flores mess hail. lnrormational Servicts aides said the name of the arrested ~1arine would be rele111ed after the Provost ti1ar1hal 's olfice completes its invest igation. Bo y Gored, Killed PENANG, Malaysia IUPI) -A 17· year-old boy was gor'd to death tod•Y by a white eltphant. his father reported . The boy, Arrlfin Bin Yaacob. suf!ertd deep side wou11ds and dled In a boat en route to Grik Hospital ne•r the Thai- Malayslan border about 70 mile• east of Penang. • ' Wl1at's ... My Lit1e? You wo n't be fe<l a ny lines al Alden's. We are more inte rested in developing loyal customers than making a fast sal e. No ne of our sale s people will bother you if you just wa nt to browse, but will be pl eased t o assist yo u if you wish , with truthful a nsw ers to you r qu eslions. Wh'e n we Cl isc uss carpet lines, we would fiav e to "mod estly" a dmit that we hove t he largest selections in th e area. To p Ii r a n d s such as: Bigelow, Serven, Beattie, Magee, Monarch, Barwi ck , Mohawk , Rox bury, Millikan , Armstrong. • • •• ALDEN'S SANTA A"'A. ORANG[, TUSTIN C•ll , •• .ALDEN'S RED H ILL CARPETS & DRAPiRI ES 1•374 lrvl"•· Tu1tln. C•I. ll•..Jm ~ARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave, COSTA MESA 646-4838 • • • • j For the Marriage Licenses Births Record SOUTM CO.UT (OMMl,IMITY Hoti .. ITAL .... IN. •tllll M", It. Pflll lltt.H. !lMI ce,.,1110 S.nfO 0om1...., ,.., J1Hn (epl11t1no, fltl .... Mr, 111d Mro. "•ul S.M:hll, ltr1IN Orlwt, C.111 Point, llOY Mt, •!Id Mrs. Cllttero M. V~Ofl, noi,, s. Er C•!'l'llno 1tu1, i.111 C!-tt. girt Mr. •IMI Mr1. Wiii/"" M. 8-M. 2M1J Tttt-Orlv1, Ml•llllln Vl•lo 11r1 ...... Mr. Ind Mn.. lttll&ld C. $.m!lfl, 2'll2 PINll YO, Mlulan Vltlo. elrl Mr, end Mra . .t..potomi. °'11!'ffrot. ~ MatQUUI , Sen Cltmenlet. g1rl ,,,..,ell 2 Mr. Ind Mt1. 0 , Rltl'lll"tl Ce,,, "11$2 lt1..._ L.tlMI, H11ntl11111tln BHCfl, ..., . Mr. end "'""· 01m11n Ororco 1211:1'11 Allt, D1t Lt £1lttl11, kn Clemen19, 1lrl Mr tNI Mn~ J-MtJt, P, 0. ~ tM, Sift J111n CtPltlrtl'IO. boy Mr, incl Mrs. WIUl11n L11r, 1n11 Maw1«1, Ll91.H'11 HHI'-t lrt ~. 1<111 Mr1. H..wv Roltl"ft, 1» S.nt1 81rb.r1, Stn CMmlftlt bo'I" Mr. •nd Mrt. Devld Thom11, 2S2n Gtl1wn All., LH lll11 Hlllt. tlt1 ....... Mr. ll'ld Mt'I. Wllll1m W, MQ111\oll. JlCM Del l"tltlden~, No. I, Sin Cler!Mnll. t lrl Mr. 11111 Mr1, D1vld J, Mu~rv. 12:1 Sin K!m.1, SI" Cle.....,,11 11!r1 Mr, 11111 Mr1. D1vlll 0. N•-· No. 4 Glli.r11 Plnthot Or!v1, fllln«t. 1trl ·-· Mr. tl\d Mfll. c~u Jl. s unntll, tull l"nill1 Ori.._, Ml11l~n Vltlo, 1/r1 ....... • • Maripe Capt. Barbara Dolyak or COsta Mesa, takes firm grasp of unit colors during recent change of command ceremonies at El Toro Marine Corps Air Mr. 11\d Mfll. 011n C. Mfv111, 122 "'"*· Mlr1m.r, Si n Clem,nl1, 1lrl HOAG MIMo•iAt HOSl"ITAL Station. Capt. Dolyak, 3129 Bray Lane , is the new commander or Women 1\tarine ""· 11 Detachment 1 at El Toro MCAS. She is former director of public relations at -----~ -'----~·-·-~ • I TutM11y, Mllrth 16, l!J7l DAILY PILOT 0 Arraignment Scheduled - For Park Riot Suspect SANTA ANA - A Costa Mesa man accused b y Fullerton police of being a member of a group which pelled lawmen with rock~ bottles in a Hillcrest park riot has been ordered to face ar· raignment March 30 in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Byron K. McMillan sel that date for Fre~ Hiram Pfeiffer Ill, 23, or 939 Oak St. atter charges of assault with a deadly weapon were rtad aealnst the youth and his five companions. Fullerton police arrested the six defendants and a juvenile~ during the Oct. 26, 1970 f7ta'" cident In which offi ce rs ticketing illegally pa r k e d vehicles were bombarded with rocks, bottles and trash. Mr. 1nc1 M11. Geor1e e. T•vlor the Orange County b.ase. 2Dt7 Ph1l1..-Ct., Cot!• Mtlt, _____ __:c_ __ _: __________________ -,------------1' '"' Mr. erld M<1. Voll1len Stllovlc, 307- IClllYOrooke Ln .• Cost1 M111, eov Mr. •!IC Ml'$. ICMMlll Wooten, ]61 Otr., N I. 8, r~•tt ~11. t l•I "•· n Mr. "'" Mt1. Robert Numrkh. 111?4 Lt rou L.n. Fo.,nt1ln V•ll•'I" ktv Mr. elMI Mrs. Chtrh~s ICtl!Mr,, H11t l11$111td, No. l , Wn!mln•t .... 1lr1 Mr. t lld Mrs. MlchHI McGuire, 1tll4 Cokor• Avt .. COiii Mew, lwln 11r11 Mr. ""' Mt1. Oout'-• Slt11burv, 1612 Clrclt Dr.. NIWHrl llttcll. t lrl Ftl. U Mr. 1'1d Mr,. G"ree A P11tnc111r ,,.,, CI Hfl St., N•Wl'Orl l!oe1c11, 11lrl Jiff. ,, Mr. tlld Mfll. Wlllltm E11n, 9'90 C"-vlfftllt, COl!t Me11. llav Mr. f M Mt'I, Gt rv 1'1rr, "'6 51'11dY Dr., Cot!• M~t. bely Mr. t lMI Mrl. Jo/In Wt rd, 3'0t S. Aldl!I", S.nlt AM bov Mr. I nd Mn. O•ltlert Wl11t11rll, 4m W. Celes1e, S.ntl A~1. g!r! Mr. 111'1 Mtl. Glorite Pli>tr, 10lS1 Motiltor Dr .. Hunll,...ton l11ch. bclv Badham Endorsing Support Bid SACRAMENTO -Newport Beach Assemblyman Robert Badham has endorsed the recommendations of the state welfare refonn task force. Irvine Pilot Misses Superior Court Date SANTA ANA -An airline pilot accused of pistol whip- ping a Newport Beach doct:ir in a dispute over the pilot's estranged wife has failed to _, "It Isn't Whether l 'ou Win or Lose It's Wl1ere Yo11 Ploy the 6on1e" r AMERICAN BILLIARDS 145 E. 19th ST. (Behind Weekdays 10 am to 2 pm Weekends 24 hours Costa Mesa the Mesa Theatre) Refrest.m1nt B•r-Games T ournamtnts Held WHkly $1000 "9.BALL" Monday, April 19tli TOURNAMENT • • • $50 Entry Fee TIRE PICK YOUR SI/El PICK YOUR PRIC .. ? GENERAL-JET ... wit~ famous Ouragen· runner ~ual trea~ ~esign COMPACT CARS SIZE6,50-13 Tubt!~s Wh•lt.,..111 F11s most P1nlo•. Veg•s. Corv1115. Chevy ti I. Ol•IS. 1'"1 lton1 Vah1nl$ INTERMEDIATE CARS SIZE 7.75-14, 7.75-15 Tubelt'S Wh•ltw.llll Flis mosl Ambi ssadof'S. C1m1ro1. Chevy's Cht•yll's Ood9ts F-8S '· Fords. P1~mou111s, Bu•C~ Spec11l1 STANDARD CARS SIZEB.25·14, 8.25-15 Tubel~ss Wno1ewa11 F11s most Chevy s Ooc!qes; Foras. Merc,,ry1, Pl~mouths, Pori!1acs. Bu.ck Spet1111, T-B11di; BIG CARS SIZE 8.55· I 4 Tubeless Wt>•lew1l1 Fils mos! s111lo" w19on1, Buttk LI S1b1e-W 1!dtal-R 1 ~111r1 . Old1 M , cr·uy~ler New York .... °""'' Coronet . $ $ $ Plus ,, n ftd [• T1r t nd ••t hl n!lll c111n1. 25 Plus S2 14 on.,1218 F&~ .£< fol '"" ••ch1n111 c1 .. n11. Plus S2 31 """ s~ ~, Ftd £0 Too 1 n<1 e•eh1ng1 Clll"9. Pi111 12 50 r.~ f 1 T1• '"" f>t~lngt <ll'"Q. .... (.Ml(• , ........ °"' ·-·"' -""'"'''""' , .. _..,..,I•" .. ,.1 ..... 11-"l "f• .. pootH_ ... ..,., ... .....,., .... _,,_ .. 'ff 3-PIECE vws ~~~1~~··15!~ I WIND 'N RAIN SUIT •HOOD •JACKET •Wind and ra 1np1ool • H111h v1s1b1li1y l'leavy d11ty p1as1 ic Special This Week Only •SLACKS o C-•• illlouldo>n , .. h , .. ••ll $IO-•' t\.A(;-11.1.l Olll.• ... ··-> .......... ,, .... ~----~ .............. _ ·-• ' ...... GENERAL TIRE Charge Don Swftitund . COAST GINERAL Tl.E 515 W. 191"11, Cott_. Mn• 140·1710 •••·SOJl AVERY GENERAL TIRE SERVICE 1•941 lffc• ... , ... rd, "41f1tl ... ,.. .... 147·1150 • • • ... • J 0 OAllV PI LOT SC T1.1esda1 Mmh lb 1971 Yo..-Jtl o11ey's ll'ortl• OVER THE COUNTER Complete-Ne,v York Stock List Sail -'tA \vay and Stay Home ll••-1111¥• 19 ....... lol~ <wllllleno 11 ....... ~lt/y t ' 111 Inn> H"'SO l'rkH ... "" llo<l!Ollt ttltli It Oftlrl~t" nw'11 .. Wfl It 4911111\IUIH NASO L1st1n9• for Mond•y, March 15, 1971 HfW YOlil:K !A,I T~• t <O'!'llllflt Nt" York SIOC\ IE >.Cft ...... • ltn '.... , , ~~· >•~•" '' ·· 11l• 11 , '1\4 -, Fluor ..ie ! -' -2•-··FtwTl1r lt 4-I Hit~ a._. ClliH Cllt I II ~ 1 21 1 JO ' >'--.. FIVT ... pl1 10 (11.eOt<I IM lll I'• I t -. l.j l )3 • ™ " )Of ll'• ff: :t1. ... u~ + '" -· ' "" t It m:-. (11.0Dllt>I °' J / I 1 t ... fMtC• li 3fi ~~o lfV,. • -At Saine Time 011 Houseboat '"~ 1i• AlkH ... -A--cn,..,..s 1 l1I n li 1 >c1. ,..-, -• ::5 ~2, fC "OOl:Z• !Akt~~,. ...._ n 11 11\o lf>'o -\1 c;:ntrl., "IV J IOI :If • :J9-lo .J9lto , ... Cl •• ~ Ablt•U> 1 ii" wi ,. , 11 ,.,, -"'C,..nM•n" 7 1Ju JI }J , _,.. •11, ""'' ... ,,.., ACI' Jl\d 1 40 u' S1lo 51\li Silo ~ftl•MT ..... u .,~. •7 fl\'J +l"'-FOOi• Ml<I l i<ll4tltMll<I A<rntCtev 10 iJ Ill. Ulo 1J -\\ "-c:lll'l"Mot 61•• 1j • 1• ·~~ootof>fJ ~O ACIMMlir ~ ~ "' .... a \\ t l\lo 1111~·· JI .. \J t }, ut -., F:~ .. tll M If>• 100 t h ~ \I.., 2:1114 • I lOl 'IJ. '" • "' "" " " ~' t1 t "' !JI, . ' . • • • ll -•• 31 0 -l o By S\LVIA PORTER Aloni;: '!I.Ith the CQunfless other \\alter i\1itlys of th!s natwn pre spring 1s \.\hen I yearn to get on 01 boat and just sail into the sunset This is the seasan \.\hen I stare 01Jt the car window with open en\ y al the boats docked Jn th Long Island Sound and Hudson Ri' er and drea m up t:all tfl.les about how the boat peopfe hve \Vhether I "'ill a ctually e ver live on a houseboet 1s ques. t1onable but I can eas1lv understand the lure of lhl!I • roof over your head And that s \lo hy I am not lhe leastl bit amazed at the inroads the houseboat 1s now m11k1ng m the U S hou.s1ng market -At the recent National Boat Show 1n New York for instance, dozens of different makes and mQdels o f houseboats were on display -and I m told more than 25<t houseboat mod0 ls are no\Y available 1t1anv of these "'ill ht sho'!l.n al the ma1or ex positions stHI to be held 1n c1t1es across the countrv are d oing) !!I about IOc per root ptr day w11h m onll1lv rates about 25 percent lower than dally rates Typ1eol costs of docking 111 New York s Long lsl11nd Sound during the six month s umme r season art $300-$800 depending on the location fac1l1t1es st>rvlces 1n eluded You also can JUSI t ie up your houseboat to a moor ing a\.\ay from the pier at no cost or a tiny cost Insuring your houseboat will I} p1ca lly eost $400-$450 a } ear, inc luding hab1hty Insurance A~ for financing thats !limilar to the financing of mobile homes toda y Typically you may borrow 60 percent of the C0.!11 of a houseboat at interest rates starhng at around 9 percent and you may repay the loan V\ er a seven year period If you are t hinking of a houseboal as a second -or first -home you II benefit from these guiaes t I I Above all rent a houseboat a few limes before you buy to get a clear f"ehng of hfe aboard a floallng vaca llon ho me Tvp1cal rental cos ts are $200-$900 a week, e1 erythlng Inc luded NEW YORK (API F05t Grnl -l .... IOllOWlftl 1 .. Folom t .t ~.ctoa FrnO.l CP Nt ,,.._I &Kwt1tlt1 Fm1<ln E l>ttl"' Aon _, '""' El hf COU#llt• ltnll, Frfld !Ct ~2) Answer each of these tn•Y ...... 1. 1fldu• 111 cm11 !rll! llOCO.I ~ D Flt questions carefully how many ... 10\let h h bo I d 8•nk .tnd TfUll K $U( must t e ouse at s eep an ht B111<P s"" s.,. 1Y G D 111 what degret of comfort' 11::&~Ds1: tl:: ;% :1~~:~ How much time will you be • "• Bk 10 1oo,r, 111 E•t Mttf HC ll~~u G !len l1v1ng eboard' How elaborate St.•w Bo• ss<. St\'1 11ut1 U\lf Bon J0to J.04" .,,lotlft W a kitchen do you need' "' He~• ,.,, uv. .. 1o11 11vb 11\ltlfllOC• ofO (l'f' (3) Have a professional F1aun LI •l'>• 4"At ts '"""llrl•h c :!lurveyor go O\er any second .v.1 co ,,. ~Goulo 1T hand boat } ou are cons1dtr1ng !ft 1~\ ~~ 1~ g~J'F~~ Sbo al and bu I rn AlTS In( J 1 1,. G toh Sc p y ro AVMCll I• t~GIA Mt• ceputable dealers only '!I.ho 40o<"1 lfl<I 1 • l \\ Groen Mt AC:u.,,n P 1• , 1«. GrnU JI E will agree lo guarantee any A\1rf\lr 1 n} G••w Ad~ Add In W U'r1 II Grove Pr c.:la1ms they makt ,,.,. /1'01 01 ...,, Gu11 Int Al1tt' SI• I! t 111.. GYrodn ~41 As an altern.!lll\e to "' 1t1<1 J l 'H''°''., I ht h d A Ote Ho l o •l"t Httltn In OU rig owners Ip cons1 er lJbtfll ll'• 11111 Htn•ocl F lg lo "'ICO•C S S .. H..-11 J°" s n I n g u P r a n .,1c"" lo S& sn. Herl! C• Aquamlnium an enormous-:i~ ~,!i 1:~~ 1:.;, ~:;:.:":'ti ly s uccessful deal offered by .0.11 Tech ' o 1 ~Ho Ob"' Al f Be• • > ''" Hoover Chris-Craft \lnduslr1es You AJ1<1 Eiwi 10 10. 1-1ow a r.1 bo "' lyn B.t< 15 15Vo H_... •~ buy the at and use it up A oe c rm 1•• ,., 1-1uc~ Ml lh lh II lh 4 P'l"m j S , Mud PP to six mon s e se e.r en ,.,1,,,. Geo .s , 6, Hurst P l n ,. h I Am l u1P lt~ 19\o H••tt CP ren s you!'" oaung ome or .,m cm., 15 , 16 Mytn 1 1 lh lh 4 E l•b 1'1'1 It~ IM•ef $/ e r emaining six mon s A"' E•o .. ~. ,, ~ 1mt~ N c~ both Of YOU Share lhe prcr 4m F nl Jl,. lJ<. l::for r:c Am Fun' ttnln!oO•<> ceeds Am G•H 11 5lh ~1 ard (sh Id ha"' any" Ml'<l cP 11 •21 .i,1n1 c.;ont OU you • • ... Ttlf• Tl~· 'IJ. I~ ,,. ~ I db hi "'"'W•ldlful1 0 1n1mt ( 1ngenng ou ts w a soever An•o • i i , 1ni ~w h abwt the s ize of the •boat !~~·1: tr.:.~~ i~:l~~ .~ market in our land Ameneans :'~.....'~' ]f~ l~ 1:. c~v' now own '!I.ell over g ooo ooo "1w1c 1 , 1J J 1• SGU t "'•n•v " , , 1 Jt cob• F Pleasure craft and gales 1n "' -H l6 J1 , Ji au" c Ar• G• 11 0 !l J&m WM 1970 alone hit • record $J 4 .o. .... e~ sv J o •. 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HO IJ.>o l3 ° ' ::18 ~ Amll<1<:11 ) l~ 111 31~ "" 1''"'-1 ll llklln!1t 1 IO 91 lllo )1• J7'o -Gens on 1 2ll 11 ~ • 60lo 6th -1 ~11 9 ~ Am Ct~ 110 <1111 "'-Q:;" ~ t f~f !~lor ~ 2:10 '9 19 '9 GtnS !" p! ; J l~I 10~ 105 l~ ~~1: ~c"tJ,'~.,15 ,: '$"' 1;,,! 1,,. '!Dir 1npt•2s '~ :c·~ U ~·:t ,•·g~'f.e111 ~~ t:! J~" !s~ li~i .!' 11 h MUTUAL A. c111n1io Sf 11 :v "a1 t~p1!t0 1 :n 1 22 '11>"'-'o(;TeEI Prl!.O .,, ••~«Ir-• J\I • A~r~Sua 1 •0 11 UI~ fl ,, 271 • ~ It I r'f' 2U '(I• '° 'o ~" ~ 1 GTF •pl\ ;o LJO(I 11 , 19 lP • I ,. 'I 0 1:1! :,:•~ ~!1 25 1 ~ ~\'-> l:it ~'4 t : ~~ ~P8~1 ~?• 1!: !Z ~g": R,:.: 1 i ~:rie;~0t 1'° ~:, ~.: ~~~ ~: St~ S • ' AO 1 Te IOt;i 1•,•, u •1 0 •l ~ -f I lolSoOh 110 t~ !!.\• h lo If>'• -'Genslt• •Ot U 1 ~. ll"' -'• '" FUNDS ,-,..,, OY•IVt•I 9 t 9 4 m.b en I JO "' ,. 1'I ;t -IGtnYlnl>r II .t j '° • .o•o '°'•-+ ,• l~ 0 I~ !~vEV~:' 1"1~ s~ 1t • ~1' ~. -=!~1·, !!. 1 l: ~f I ~~ ~ ~ 0 -:. g::~~ ;t r:. ;i; M • ~:"! i{'; "<: : I '0 l P Am E•P I"" 1" I . 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Inv llt!~ I(!] S 511 A Mt!Ct• 1 •O lltl 71> JI JI I ! ' Con Eoh Ill' I !5 17 '> 11 11 > (;It""' p!J" l It 71 II -1 1•1 l llltorctlt!W"(hl"tl 1k 'tt ~ ... M!l(l•o•• 1lllJ .. JJ 3J -ConE'.dlt M S •61 11> 61 '&~"Aid~!] &I• 1t1 1 lOn-l • 11 .. 1 .rn1t •<ry , .. ,., I ll Ill • " "• 99 '(O!'Fd!. l)Q ]61 ~. Uo •5 • I •·n .. I pt) s l 9/ lt • lt'1 • i LOUd lfV~ -~JM~ ...... Moor; •1l ,, ,., t>o ,CIW'Fd ol•$G 11 111 1 1 w1r.:+,"' 1.)9 1• 1~1·"-'' 15 16 10 0 4 ~n1 t ou9fll ,_ ~« ,•,o! l 1' "'N1!(i~1 '10 tt J9 , JI> Jt\o ~~.(QI! F e<iM t 10 Jl • J], 11>' 0 Gotltl "''•" >>' n•• "" .,. ll >ktdl Moll<I" '"'~' n 1 72 ll "'"' Pllo•o I I 111 Ii l>•• O>> _ , COtl l t••lno ti 1 ' -Glebf IJ" -1971 s houseboat is an Imposing type of shelter made of fiberglass or fe rro-ce ment (re1nrorced concrete) or aluminum 1\1\h a cos llv deroraled 1nter1or '!I.all to-\\all carpeting 11\ 1ng quarters for rour or more people a fullv equipped k,itc hen patlB deck, a couple of s ho'!l.ers etc ll .s 40 or 50 feet long 10 many Co11s11n1er and Economy Btl PnlC 7 1>.o K• sSt 1> llllll HY ll • 11 1 KflYf B~1m lllt 26 • 761• K•m•n IS&fr!l9 II ' • l'o K•l• G ~ B1u~1 F 4 d 1 K•••"' B•11mrlt loll 1 t l ... K'fl l B•vll Mk 1' 11h rCHnt Co Bt.c~m ll ~ :M.,, Ktlll'll &tt!lne F ll'o 11 o IC'tl 6m eent s d 11 , 1•, Kell..., lltrk M1t l 'j II It• Iv Svc l!f! lab •l u ~ M;eull t: 1< .,.. M;111tone f und; A 11.~sO• °'' -o ConH ,,.. 1 0 6 ' &'o -• Goodr ,n ! I • :.C ll 'lo lOlo .. I • 1) • A !kl 10 Jt 1 21 ~' !) Sl !1 o • 1 f•u I 401 30'1 30 o JO 7 , ..... ,, II 10! J 0 I , 31; -'• .)J J1 llt Alk PO I "''" ~et n 31 lf>o 1• 1ti1 ._ ' ~ons Pow•1 'I 111 )JI. lJ 31 Go•J.,l•I 11 6• JI 10 , )I + o 11 , 11 ' :~,nt11Y i,.1:..,,1 •O ~~: ~; i::; ~~ ~ ~"'s~~\P I ~ 10~ ~ r ~~ ~r• ~ ~ c::~: ~: u J~~ :: > :~ , :~V. +I GOlllal~c I <0 •'>>' ',i', >221~1 ~: _.. , , o c;,.,. h Ill 111 5u> ,•,• 0 •1 t 7' AmSo, ... I IQ M '9 4 1, '9 .. ConPwl PIO l• ls.I IP 61 1 • > 1.. g~:~tv I r'.o I' 11 'IS 0 U -•o ~ 1' \l , tnr:om i JI • 11 '""' I 0 1 11 "'"' Id 1 20$ 16 19o ?t'o _ >o (on! Ar Lin 111 161 6 16 -G"ndU~ I() I) ll "¥1 )I , -4 , u,1 .Jn>Uf •2'1G1 1 CY•IC!5 19!11ASt(l ~!•IS '1.Sk•IS 15 -,Cont (en \60 n ..... "T'•c.-••• ,,, •• ,. ,, ... l,,o t l • l o l ~""'Y "1 \~I •16 c ... SI l'Oi 10 IO""' SJ• I .. 1'111• ,, 11:i..... ,contcoo Dig .. 10• 10 ~ 10 ...... -,, ••• ~ 311.,-+-~. t 1 Arln1 FdlOOl lOff(W1 S110,1)111'J AT&T wt ..a..l!\oll li t • 1ontl(orpJ 70 44>, G1nlt~l 1 l >"O> ·L -.\•o • .:i ; ... u 1 /!91 71 Cu•S.J 1:ro1tsAmll,l 1 601•SI ..... , •• + •• • t(ppt .. ?M ",.-e .. ~,·.··.!,'',G•tn!W l50 ...... jj 4 l'~•Afut:ta 1 11 ,61 CY1 S4 •fJSol"'W•IW~ IO N i.0 !tol"I -• t(ppfB1 SO '1 11 ol .; ,Gr1yOr11 l l'O ,.lJ l1 :t.I ' ll>ii ll o•ll "'m F 11 fO Poll• 1 tl OJJAW1>rlfl ll JjlOll~!61,!1 Con 'l\osta .:l667lut 11o21 _0 Gr "'&PI» 11 31'-13\""Jlh-~ Ill > I "'U11t!f 11 U 11 '6 Kn c•b I S1 I 19 "'W • 1>1 i IJ •170 2!.., ?l ) , -t l Cont 0 I l SCI Jill 3"o> l l 1 llt. -> :i., G1L•Or 1 10• 11 JI'• .]l:i., Jll~ -' '"I' AIP1>1Fdl1091l ?l Kn cl G J010 10iAmZ11< :io P'/o 1 1 , +1i Con10ll plJ l•l'••l ••l .. -+oGH...-l •Dllio lJ ll lo ll 11 • llltoe Ml ..,_ lO\., Ko11 F b Relying on Each Other C8S"S ,, -And 1\ costs from $5 000 to $50 000 The key advantages of houseboats are impressive too }OU don l have lo buv a building ~1te they do not rC'qu1re landscaping you neerl not pav property taxes \OU can maneui cr them :tlmo~t anywhere yo u \.\ISh (~t 30 mph or rnn re l sl o ng thousands or n11le~ of our coastlines and throughout o ur \as l syst~m of inland \.\ater\\ays The low costs \V:t rroinl 11 couple of paragraphs of thr1r o'!l.n The a verage <'<J!il of docking a housl'boat 1n Florida today I as thousands of people rf yo1 .,, •ot 111ho9 .Amw•nflq s,.nic:1 Y111 .,.. IOI f1tth1, •II ef 'f'OIN' c:e11 .. TILl,HON! .ANSWERING IUIU.U 835-7777 UP+ oow11 t . Com,,.od ly Fulu•11 mo•• f••! 1nd 010 .. <jl~ly IPt <Yl •I •e St~d fo !1f&1t '"'"putt 1cd Buy & s. I Prtd el on1 ~ I~• Po k !elly S 1.,, l Saybetn 0 J l!lttk1h Hlffll 4H-.tl 'Miii l J 0 Ir! ... I A1•oclotM hte 164' W.-..t<Uff D1lt• NtwporT kec:h Collf '1660 641 100' 540 4166 I\E\V YORK (AP) -Its as 1f the pro1e~t1on equipment were being (lperated on reduc.: ed pov;er dimmmg the picture on the screen fuzzing the 1m ages and making the action to appear 111 slow mohon The voices on the audio por lion pitch do"n to a slurring croaking d r a w I 1n ac compan1ment to tht mad den1ngly slow responses of th' eharacters \I ho seem to walk v;1!h 1nv1s1b!e y,e1ghts a1 \ached This situation C' o m m o n enough for old!ime moviegoers lo remember "ell 1 s s omewhat analagous to !he economy todav The script calls for vigorous ac11vKv but the dro'!I s y scent unfolding '!1.0Uld put the audience to sleep if 11 weren I so upset What happened to l h' po.,.,er" A~k the eonsume because hes the one who \\<IS s upposed lo supply 11 and he still might But he seems now to be surferlng from a \ 1la m1n deficiency and m need of a s pnng tonic So vou a sk h m \\hat s the matter and he replies that c.:C"rta1n ly he 1\ould kic k up h is heels and s pend some or lhose s aving s he built up over the past \ear if hr \\ere cer ~· 1 01)0 i Of OIL PAINTINGS WHOLESALE W.AlEHOUSE 0'EN TO THE 'UlllC 50°/o OFF Phtnt U5- , 0EALEllS WANTED" ,-,.,.,. tain about the future es~clally as it concerns his 11 IYPl W Ill., 11>, ~eYI (YI B tO !oOti II ,ft K'ii:' I~( B rlc~r 1 l Kjn~I I Ille• MIU$ ,,~. JIU, K rk c~ 809ue El l \? llo Kn•o Vol ()Wn income e .... tM< 11 11v, Li~c• 1n A d lh h lh lloo AM 11 I '"• l•ll<I 110! n ere you ave ano er 8011 c •• i1 11,. L•"" Wd Or those emgmas that plague 8••d.., • ~ •I• L"''"" B• !\kl SCI•> SI lfldv C• planners They are relying on :!-'n~S<.\r Z!~ n ~ t:".u~~ the consumer lo supply powur !lr111 Bor 11 11 ~Lewi• eF llu~kb M II 17" l n Bct1I lo the economy bul the con lluck•Yt 11"' llh Lau~' Bunni n l • l11~ I ll' sumer IS s1tt1ng back bu1ld1ng llu•n slm m, ~ • Lat1 ,..ay h h b l I r c Lra• 9>., 10, Lo1 rr n is energy per aps u no c11wsv 21•.,.., Lvn.:11 < Us g Ch ' l C•mbr H l\o 11, Mid Et In mu O i C•nn M 11 n 111> M•I Poot Only too reeently he tried ro~ncn B " 11.,, ~: k~1 • I C•!lldP I S o M C leading lhe way taking he t 1 .. MIQ• 1• 1° M:""'Mt• l I d h lhe CIPSWI 9 ''M ll ro ... , 1n1 1a 1ve an c.: art1ng CtPln .o. r •. 3~, Aliul LP d h kl I d C•P TN: l > 3'4 M'Cor course an e qu1c Y oun ~· e CP s , 1 McOu•v htmself enmes hed 1n a !angle ~:gt G~: ,~ 1!: ~!: cMt~ of 1nflahon l1kt barbed wire C•K HG 11 ~ 11 u Mr<11 n l..1vnen C lllo ""' MHld In laid for an enemy He 1s not r,.,1~· 1J 4 ,,.., Mtl<• en CenVt PS II 1 11,,_ Mdl .. l'I In an expansive mood Cen• Ltt> ,i. '" Mo a c. H h (t\en(t .. H o 21 o MIOlr~ ' IS lo put II anot er (II• I 011 I'-\ I\\ Mldw GI "'ay still Sttk.i11g b tg waJ?,e ~= Lnn 1! ~ 1~"' ~l111"Mu, increases for himself but he Cl\fl• vo ,,"' 11 ~~ner G1!' Chi Brld• 16~ an.:. ,.._I • ts n I spendlng proport10nalelv Ch '"" ii•. uv.: :: ~ G H lh CIW'ls~e lll\ 12l~') Mo Jl<elo e is nol 1n1ect1ng into e c~r11s pf '°' 1111 Mod sci economy the spending power ~l:!~v "''% ~. k":': =:""cc~ that IS hi! lo use He IS a ll Ch1"UI B 2114 l7V. Moot p Cl Mlo 11"1 "" Moort S potential very little kine.lie Cl•rk Ml "~ 19•o Morr~" " Cl.tUlnl I• Ao M11e Tr"' An ed1lor1al 1n the American cunrn 0 1 3 • • Mrvir ~t h h CIDW (p 71 1 •Moten M Banker p raseti t e s1tuat1on c..,., 50 ,...,, Mo1 CluD h (Oii n fd II II Mui e• l IS way cmc" s1~ l6 )6-111 Mu1Ph P ' Since 111 o st econom ists l~Lcir Sii 3'~1fl"' ::-c~ 1~1 agree that the cvnsumer holt!'\ Com G•• n 11v. ~··12a, t~ Com .. Pt 1s> '6~ N• t a.o the key lo the economy of Com 1-tnh 11~ 1:µ• N·H~P h I r C<>m P•• JS!o 1~\ N I lb 1971 t e ates! mani cstat1on ccm~ A • • 1 H:, MH ' lh CmDI (nt 15'.. 16\I N P11tnl o apa y comes as an e.~ cm• inst s s 1 " """' tens ion o f d1sappo1ntmeal cm11 1"" 1" 1., H•t snfi ~ (""'res ?!o JU, N•I 5 lyr although by no means .1 ~: :::~ ~l "' ~"" ~1 N~~Gt surprise COtll •n 7>1 ? 'o H chl1n F (001>1• L 11'o '1"o 'lltJSn A To a large degree the Corene: J)~, :Jlt, H •l•n B apathy of the consumer 1s l~~ 5vr ,~\~ ,~i. ~~~~ Oil d I I d I CwlrO HW.U NWH~I/; irect V re ate o a n ,,0,. co .10 3.0:i. NW l'u~~ apathetic r esponse throughout c1u1<h R • • ,.,, ,"ox!1 R~~ Cut"'F l ~t u<: -the economy The statistical cv1 ·~ c • • •" £!'/, .... :t o .... lb1 •to 10 ........ evidence reveals .Jhat pnces O•nlv "" 11 11\, gno5:1t~, I I nd Ofll Ca 10 o 11 •()pl ~(Pn wages unemp oymen 3 ~o 0.11 oes 5 • s1, 0rii, ,re on remain poor despite Ot• GAn ~l :Jl"o•rv M!I 011• Pc~ I • t Ormont \\ ashln"ton pr"" rams 00111n P 1 • J • o"~' T• h -., Oi•S Fd6o6~0•!•P~"' Otv Mir 1• '111 , O•• c.r • ~ .o.mc1p 6 •I 1111 Lene• Fd I 19 I SJ "'m~on 60 31 11 21 ?l _ Con! Sii IO 1 1J:\o 7Jlo ?J'il -C.INcN•k 1 6l 11 SO • '' • SCI o ... \lo J•lo • "'m Bu• J •l l llll•• Gn~ tlOl01t Ametek llll• tS 11~ If'.:, ir> _ t ..,,rlel 1111 3•! 1Y 2!'• 25'\o + ~. GNN pfAolO l 1' 1ll• llh -\-. • A "'m Ov n 1116111'Le• Il le ~ 16 0Qll i9 AMf IA<to 'In lJ'\o J H4 Jl ' Conlol Dlt ~t 66 , IS• .j ....... G!Wt1I F nl •5J 711 ll ~ 11~-ri.. ••~ •"'mEotr 'llJIS l~I~ 6 51 11 1 4m!•cl0 211M••t ~'o -+&i(anWOOO l to f 36 1 ~lo\ +I GWnUn I'll lOll •lJ ll -~• 15~> :JI-• 4mer EAa/tn Le• R I~~ 160011 0 AMP Inc M JI 6l o 61"" 6Jl,, I ~ COOi!. Uni 511 U JJ, lib JJ~ -t ... GWUnpl lit t1 111 2Ho 77, :JI 'l 31 (IPI ' 1 '" A.mpPgf\ 19 16) 1~. '. 1~ -+ I Coo~rin l '° .. l6 • .l6 3' -~ G!W&•~ln IO 51 9 • • lh -+ .... S) S , ntmt 9 t• 10 51 L bl 1• 6 Sl I l Ami>!'• Corp $16 21 7111 7; • >,Coo~ TR ID! 111,. 11 11 Grn Gltn 96 ~ 11\o 16 1• 1~\ll 1~'; ~~~~1 ~ ~~ '91 tll! ~~~ ~ ~ ~ li :::::!':' pl/fs 1~ t1 • ti"' ~)h + '• ~!:11~'\7!0 i ll~ llt~ L~ -' g;~vi:'o':nd1 '° ~ ~<\ ~. ~at -+ ~ ?ti• 1 , Srock t l51071Llnc N" lll!l1lf.,m1t1• pf~ 9\o 9>,. •~-,CoooRoe lollb J30 )9,. JI• 31o-'~Grol8' I'll llll Jlo j)f 1!~_,, ?, ?'•"'m "-11 6IOl<J Lnt 41J An1tl'<l l 61.> 6> 31 J 1 31 +• CopwldS!l I 11 Ho 15•1 JS.._-•GrYmmn(pl 61 JI 14h 700 -•1 1' U • Am Inv' SI! S !S loam \ StYle1 Am e ll Jl t~ 9>o t 7 _ ! Car nl~B 070 11 JJ > ).11.; :15 ~ -t Gl!LfHld 119 llS •1 ; 01 I) , + ! 11 ~ 1 "'m M~I • 07 10 JS C1naO l 11 l l 11 An•<onOt i 6) I H V. 1 1 ll 0 + 11 CorGIW 1 .IOI f) 100 fl.I 1.0 1i, G !MOh l tot 1 M U , U , ll 11 1 AmN "'~ 14 l lO C1Pt 1! llll /1 Anc~tiock 1 lf 31 llt-. JI T , ~~~lj~<OC,om_ ?.ll l~>,i l~o 1~0 4 > G~I 01 ISO JO 31•1 JI ~ li ~-+ o • t • Allc~or Group MY '61 U 61 Ancg <> Sv< I h ?O>t 19\1 1<Mo -t , CPC In I I lo jll 'lf • 11 • 11'1> + ~Gu Rts ct 10 t?•o 17 U•o -t • 1 • CnDt lit•S)lun Bol1 lJ l3 "6.,~dCavllO J' '"' 1J ,., + C 1 195 ll ' j' 31 "'"''G Ul~•PllO 1111 > 1 , ll o-\o l • 'I I G w " I 16 n 19 N11en~ In ''' 9 69 AP~cnecp 2S JS 16 . 1"'-u , -•• ·~i " 61~ l! l6 I ll -+ 0 " ?l'• 11 ' 11 , i~:1~. ~~<m•Y :~1~1 :;:;:r111::'r1n !-:!!:~!~toOc~~ 1: ~ "'"'11•0 -1t>oc11Nrt1 60 ll ~i ~ ~~+ g~~su'~u :,' 1so " H '' 41 0 111• II • venl 11 'V>I • OllMtH•<hu>el co "'Pl pt Ct °' 1 lll., ll -\o Cromot< kl JI 19 1 11• 19 + , Gu ISU "" .0 ll 0 6 I 61 lo ) I A•ron Iii ••l F ff~ 1•1 919 APL p 95Cl 19 , 9 I 19 -•C Oll'ltMna I IO 11 1''' , ...... 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" ,. ... 31 1J JO • 'o I o I '3'.. n ,,, 32~ J ;t lS I t lU 11 :i.i 10C °' )I! 1 ~ ' -N-". 's 11\\> " . ,. 12' " 'I• •S ! • 6J l • 111• t5 • " . ' " "' ' 1 ~ •l o1 lr.· 1J1 I• • • ~ •j.., ' , " . 11 XI ' " . I.I 16 " ., ,. ' ' ' . . " • • " .. ... . "' ' " I 0 $1 101 'l • iJ J " H ll .ic J) • J 107 ,, ,, si-k Leaden MOST SllAIU.'S • 1$1? " .. • '" • • • • " " " '" " " • ' , J• '" " .. • " ... '" "" ". , , ~~ " ., ~ et ,, ~ " ,. JC 70:i,:; 11 J:) • :J? ••• • ' " '" '" .. • • .. ' ... • "' " ... • ' •• ' ~ " " • ... " " " " JS I o ~lS ,.'It "' 111 »'~ S1 1 I> " ' . " " "" l6 , .. lOS 3' • . " " " " " 1110 54 ' " ' ' ' . lll 11'4 l~ 21~ ' . " . ' ,. J1 11"' ' ,. "' ~ ~ ,;~ . " ,, " " ~ " " • .. "• " • • "' " ' " •• , ' " " . " .. " " " 2J • "'' ,. ,)" "" '" " "" ~~ •P .,. • '" " .. ' . ' ,,, '" " " .. '"' ... N.Y. Wintaers and Losers ' " ' " ' ' .l ll • " ~ • " .. • ~~ • " ~ • •• .. • " .. " • "' " " .. " .. " , ' " " ' • " " • 1'1• ' • .. • • " " • l " -· • ' . .. "" ,. . ,~ • ' "" , .. " ' ' .. ' , " • • ,,,, , . " ' • '" " " . '"' .. " .. " "' ' '" " " ' ' ' '" "" ,,, ' . " ' " . -"' '" ~ " '" '" ' " " .. ,., .. Prices Advance In Heavy Trade NEW YORK (UPfl -Prices advanced m heavy trading on the Ne\v York stock exchange Tuesday The Dow Jones Ind 1str1aJ Average was up 6 44 at ~ 64 near lhe fu1al bell whlle Stanard & Poor s 500 stock index sho\ved \gain of 0 54 at 101 25 Of the l 690 issues on the tape 85;;t pointed higher \Vhile 565 retreatPrl Closing prices 1nrlude 1-\T&T 48 s up ~~ Chrysl.qr 281/11 off 1t1 D 1Pont 140~., up 1 Gene1 al Electr)t 110'~ off \~ General ~1otors 84 'h up l/4 IBM 362 off 1 Southern Pac1f1c 42 off 1s Standard of Jersey 78 up :\g and US Steel 33 up 1 B "' ,. ' ,. '" .. " ' "' .. • • " , •• " . • ~ '" ,. ,,. .. "" " • • ' ,f "' " " ,. " " • • " • ' " • "' • " • " " • ,., , " " " 'I '" •• ,/ "' " '"' "" " "" '" '" ,ii ,, " ' ,., "" ". " ,, ' ' 11 .. l ~ ~ . " " . ... " . ' ' •• JI 609 •J • ,, '" '"' '" ,., ,. ,, '" "" ... T11t!d:iy March l" 1971 SC DAil.( PILOT )) ---"--~-"-~-=~~~~ ...... .. .. u.N.J Kltill 1. .. OIM Olio ,~. -~ Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List $1.. ,.,, 111111.J H tit .... C Ott Cht ' " ' " • • " • "' " .. ~ " "" • " • '" ' .. " • ' " " " • " " • "" ;i ~ '" ' . .. • " '" •• 'l: ' . " " 1~\. " " r, ~ ' ' " • '" , • ' • " .. " .. • ' ' " ' " " ., ' '" l}~ ,,. "' .. ,. " "' .. •• ~ • ' ' " • ' .. . • • " " ~ ,1. ' ' '" .. • ' " • "' .. ' . ' ' • •• • . , .. • " .. '" ' .. "' • ' " ' ' . 'ii: r 1._ "" ... ' • •• If• " I . ... 1~·· I " I' " " . '. w· ; ! . J~ • Iii " ,f • )~~ • Ii~ ~: 111.. lilt! ll'Hla I Hltll ltw ClfM Chi ., 'II l I l• ... • ... ... ••• l•V. ~ " " •O N ~ 31 ' .. 10 1 I > 31 3 11) ... I •1.<o ' l l 10.\, II I J I 1 frl• s 173 •• ' ' " .. " ' .. ' . " ". . "' 31 0 • . ' lJ 16 11 " • 0 Jlo Jl I~ J' 73~1 lt 1~ • ., Jl ' ' • • • " .., .. •• J ' • " " ' ' " • ~ " " • ' • " • ' izg " ,i " • ' " " " " " " .. '" " • ., ;~ ¥ :i 1•11 "' • " .. " • " •• • ' " "' " 1~ " • "' • ., • " "' " ·~ 'I . ~ " " In " • .. " • l 11 ' • • ' -J ~t " • , .. .. ,. ~.,. . ' " " .. .... •• .... • ••• "' .. " • • " Iv ' " !' .. • " • .. ,. ,. • ' ' 1ih ' '" .. l • ' '" ,,. ~. ~t I . .. , 5 .. ' " l. ~ ' • • " ' • • •• 31, " 1• • ' .. 11 'Ro ., " • • " " ' " " • ' • • • " " '" ~ ,, . • •• " . '" • " • •• " ' " " .. m ~ • • " ' ' • " ' " " ' " " .,, " ' • " '" • " ~ " ' ' p , • • ' . " . " • " '" ... "' . .. ' ' • " • ... • " .l " ~. •• • • .. •• "" " '" " '" ' . '" .. ... " ' • • • . " . " • " " • ' ' " • ,;, • " ' • " • " ,j "' '" "' " '" ~' " • • ' • ' ' " " " . .. " ro..! 'l" '. ... ,,. • • '" • ·.~ ·i· " "' " " '" ~t }ill ' " it 1m .. J~ ff ,,,,. l • .. • " '" •• • 1: ' ... " J .. • • ,. " j~ " .. '1-: Moo 51)Q Ht! Clltl .. I Hltll t,.,. c-.. Oil I .. _ . .. . .. DAILY PILOT . . . . -. ' .. . . lll!sday, March lb, 1971 CHECKING • UPi • I Draft Case Logjam To Ease? I' A.tllL \f CIRCUS · '111 BU. Keane Cit y Bringing Troops Home • . I ! i It Was tl1 e lrisl1 SAN FRANC ISCO (AP) - The U.S. government Is adding prosecutors to clear a logjam of draft refusal cases in the San Francisco area, where young men have been flocking for generall;.r lenient treat- ...,., OLATHE, Kan. r API -This . no other solicitation and no communHy which paid for strong-arming." Wl10 Found Scotch By L. M. BOYD MEN HA VE l\10 RE red cor- puscles than do women. Red corpuscles contain hemoglobin. Hemoglobin car· ries oxygen. Oxygen makes the brain work. So when you're trying to explain why men are smarter than v.·omen, says a man of science. bear in mind the red eorpuscles, the hemoglobin. the oxygen. What do you ma'ke of that, young lady? Fairly simple, isn 't it? Q."Do we perspire when we sleep?" A. More than when we're awake, usually ... , Q. "Let's see you add 4 to 11 and c<>me up v.•ith 3 for an answer. old buddy."' A. So you're going to get tricky with me , are yi;u'! All right, I 'IJ bile. How about adding four hours to 11 o'clock so you get 3 c;i'clock? .... Q. ' 0\Vhafs going on now at Peenemundc. that tow n in Germany v.•here Adolf Hitler's scientists put together Uie first war rockets?" A. Not much. lt"s just a fishing village anymore. ment. U.S. Atty. James L. Browning Jr. said Friday the Justice Otpartment has ap- proved forming a special five· man force to clear the pending draft cases from the l.J.S. District Court here. Previous· ly his nine assistants ha\·e. handled all cases. • Selective Service officials ha've said that draft resisttr! flock from throughout'· the country to the Oakland Army Induction Center <icross the "Mommy! ... Grardma's more than ONE year old, isn't she?11 Lousy Spelers bay because federal judges CJ k p , Pl F '[ d hem ha,. the reputation of iec assuig an oi e being sympathetic. Christmas trips home for About 50 servicemen from eight of Jts servicemen has the Olathe area are in Viet· raised $2,300 to bring five nam, bl.it only seven names more here for E a s t e r v.·ere su bmitted to t h e furloughs. newspaper. To be eligible lor the 14-<lay leave. the men Harry Welch said Friday the inusl have served in Vietnam new drive was a natural at least fou r months and not outgrowth of the Christmas more than eight months. Also, effort. Welch, a retired Army lhey must obtain permission from their commafldinl of-caplain, orig i n a led the ficers. Christmas furlough program1-==----.,--:c=:==::;;---------• , IAlllRrflMm""'l and is chairman of the Home · for Easter Committee. •·11 was so successful at Christmas that we had to cut off solicitations because we had tOO mUCh money, II said _ No\v ... Plastic Cream Invention For Artificial Teeth Dick Buzbee, publisher of the Artlflcial Teeth Never ·felt So Natur1I Before Olathe Daily News and a For the tint timt. 11eH!:ncc offcn a plastic cream that holds den-member or the commitlee tures as they'\IC never hti:!!l held member. before-forms ao elastic mcm- "We had $600 left over from brane that Mlps Mid J(IN1 dm-111rtJ to I/it naturQ/ lissi11J Qj J'{!Wf Christmas, and we thought lhe moutlt. \. FI XOOENT hold1 denture. finner ... und mort coP11fertQ&Jy. You may bite harder, chew btlte:r, cat more naturally. AVERAGE SALE in a garden shop runs $10.40 worth, did I mention that? .... ANOTH ER Ll'I"fLE KNOWN FACT is the Irish, not the Srots, invented scotch. Before that , the ScolS drank brandy . , . . WHY MA NY r,iORE men than 11'omcn come down with appendicitis remains a mystery, sorry lo report. ONLY THE EGGS al ready cracked will crack 1vhen 1fOU hardboil them. That's wllat Julia Child says. Could be. The ladyfriend always holds them up lO the light, Only picks the solid ones to boil. Never gets cracked shells Browning s11id 400 young CEDAR RAPI DS, 1 o "Na Easter pro~ct was a good ll't a rtvQlutionary discovery one," Buzbee said. "We just called F1xOOENT9 for daily borm: FEXODENT lasts for hours. Rt- aisu .moisture. Denturu that fit are esscnlia1 to health. Stt: your dentist regularly. Get e1:1y·to- usc F !XODENT _Denture Adhtai ve Cream al all d.rui c.ountefl. children left. put coupons il'I the paper ask· f5e· (U.S. Patent 13,003,988) They returned later with a ~in~g~fo~r~d~o~n~,t~io~n~s-~T~he~r~e~w~a~s~~~~~;:;:~~~~=~~~=~=~==~ POLITICALLY. a man v.·ho v.·ears both a mustache and a beard generally is left of renter. If he wears sideburns, he '~probably reac- tionary right wing. So con· tends George Carlin, who calls himself a come d ian, un· derslandably. OPEN QUESTION: \l/hy can"t we tickle ourselves? men are under indictment and (APJ _ Two children spelled await trial in his Northern trouble at a local restaur<1nl California district. and ended up in the arms He said 3,500 refusal case~ of the Jaw. are under review and Police gave this account : eslimatcd the nev.· rorce might The children, age 7 and 3, develop 800 more indictnlent.s. entered the restaurant nrie Lasl year Banker Phare."S, evening and presented a check a Selective Service counsel, for SJO to the waitress. It said 50 percent of the San was made payable to ''hl)le Francisco district d r :if t dainner.'' apparent I y in- refusal cases were registr<inls dicating they wanted to ex· v.'ho hltd-transferred from change it for a whole dinner. note they claimed \\'as from j;: their parents. It read, "it isl all whrit to cash this cack." The waitress called police. Officers talked to the brother-sister teem. then tu;-n- ed the youngsters over to their parents. Authorities said the check was one of several blank cheeks found in a pile of trasll. other areas or the country. The check was sig n e dl/r----------,11 ''Ronald C'' and it was en-A government spokesman dorsed with the same name said no firm statistics are avai lable. but he estimated in large Jetlers. It was dated ''Wednesday, 1971." G roffiti is A Jo ke ... Reolly SPIRAL SLICED WH OLE OR HALF MAYBE YOU KNO\\I about the "super check." First Na- tional Bank or Arizona issues it. A blank that lists numerous merchants and ut1hlies. You write out one check to the bank, marking what bills you want paid this month. How much and to v.·homi. that's au. The bank then makes those payments. Prelly nif· ly, what? You can pay as many as 48 bills with on& signature Iha! way. Al the moment about 130-other banks are getting ready to do likewise. Your questions and com- 1ne11t11 are welco,ned and will be used in CHECKING UP w!1erever possible. Ad· dress letters to L. M. Boyd. P. 0. Box 1875. Newport Beoch. Coli/ .. 92660. that 35 percent of the pending The waitress refused to nr· draft cases in the Unitedll~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;~~;;;~~~~~~~~ States arc In N o r t h e r n _::p_t _t_he check and the California. Ct.;STO~ER SE RVI CE: DANISH FURNITURE I RI DAL REGISTRY : . ~-- SWEDISH CRYSTAL CHI NA & STEEL . . The pallern of San Fran- cisco sentences for resisters convicted des pi t e con- scientious objector claims ht1s been a six-month term or pro- bation for twn years in alternative service. usually work in a' hospital or 'NJth a charitable organization. In \\lashington, the Selective Service System announced nev.· rules thal would prevent a draft resister from transfer- ring his case to a court jurisdiction which he considers more lenient. 'Wed11.e$day-~ crJiur$day 011.I:r 4pm CZJ.11 Clo$ing Introducin g COMPLETE DINNERS ~-~ ~ •... ... ,. ,,, ••""'. I Y\a\\tt (f \l,aa~\ %tt1 , l.!ttl tt1, ,, e '4 "''"• 99t G. ~~8111 o,.st 9£,£.f * ,,,~ 'Jc ea ~ tU~ R ·t1> cir•'l'I * llt,,. .. c001t..,~ open ieell W' 41;r c;' ..nu\a1' ..... 01'\ ..... ft\£.S r 'fttt, '" ftt£.MC" f Clf I". ~ co\.£. s\.'-"' Col.ts "!tits l~~~~~p~~\~C~t ~S'~·~--...... ~·Gu1,b tt.., ~tG\J~~~ '"~ Pfttco RIX ./Jg~ 2196 HARBOR , COSTA MESA 310 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA RIX FAMILY RESTAURANTS \ l -, . FROST-FREE FREEZER • WAS FROST-FREE REFRIGERATOR HAMS " • . . So Good It Will Haunt You 'Til It's Gone" Our htm• 1r1 the finest corn-fed lowt porkt•• -Olir 1low ,,.,., curing mernoo, rwl Wl!.1'.0n1ln hickory •nd Nl!ll•-•mokfflll '"" :JD.l'IDUr ovtn ba-lng lloney 'n SPice g\111 1rt un•<!Ut In tll lht world. So dt llclevs '"" •-!111119 ..,. I""' ~ldn't -"°"' flow le 1~,.. 1M~ ~1,11;1 we'w tleefl making tor :J.i yttro. Splrll •llced 100, from lop ta: DO!tom .so th•! t&cll d•l«T•ble uniform tlke con be removed 9'fm11B5tv. Comllltrtly baked '"" ...,Illy Ml strvt. 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PHONE 548-7780 l l I / - -T11tsd&i, MJ,rch 16, 1971 s DAILY l'ltO'Y 3 Lifeguards Protectr Beach as Well a·s Bathers By PATRlCK BO\'LI::: Of lho D.tlh Pii.1 St•U Under its new leadership. the business cf'-guarding Jives on the Art Colony's many bea~hes and coves i~ being ex· pa~ed to 1~clude protection of the entire marine environment. After spending many years as part of the. Recrealion Department, the newly orga~1zcd Laguna Beach Lifeguard Service has become an indepcindent city agency and been given lav.• enforCt'ment re~ponsibility. Mov.·ever, chief lifeguard Skip Conner d~sn't v.·ant his deparhnent to take on the image of a police force. "Jn many cilies. such as Huntington Beach." Conner says, "the lifeguards ;ire, being called the 'beach pigs·. J don t want that to happen in Laguna ." Rather than become law enforcement officers, the 32·ytar-old Co11n'r would like his department lo take on J different rote by helping protect the entire marine environment. To accomplish this, he recently began a program of marine tours for area youngs ters ... The youths are shown ex:· amples of the five basic tidal iones and ar' taught the concepts of the ecology cycle in marine lif,. Conner , who has a degree in marine biology. tells the youngsters the coastal area can be divided into the five zones. depending upon the type of animal life found there. The zones are tht splash zone. where barnacles are usually found: the lichen zone, where mostly plants are found: the crab area, usually the tide pools; the mussel zooe and the kelp zone, which is covered except al A1ial1ei11i Co1ave1atio1i Gal CMA Chief Battled Bias By BILL STOCKTON Al' Sclt lllt WrHtr The fir st woman ever etected president of a slate medical society takes oUice toda y. She still remembers having to overcome sexual discrimination by her parents to become a doctor in the first place. Dr. Roberta Fenlon, 59. an internal medicine specialist in San Francisco and a faculty member at the University or California. assumes the reins of the 25,000-member Calirornia Med i ca I Association at ils convention in Anaheim. ''No daughter of mine is going to medi cal school." Dr. Fenlon recalls her physicia n.father de claring when, as a young woman ,' shr seriously began con· sidering the study of medicine. "Father 'was opposed because he thought medical school "'"as loo hard for a woman," she 'I.aid in an interview. ··And mother kept saying. 'Oh. be a good mother or a good school teacher or a nurse. There's nothing finer than a good school teacher,' she would say." That v;as in Clinton, Iowa, in the 1930s. The young v.·oman. whoSe medical career began as a small girl helping in her father's office, ignOred the paren· tal advice. Working her way through school, she earned a medical degree in 1942 from Jo\\·a State Universily. Dr. Fenlon in· terned the following year at San Fran. cisco General Hospital and stayed two more years as an internal medicine resident before beginning private prac· lice. In a quarter century of practice, has she encountered sexual discrimination by her colleagues~ "Absolutely not. They·ve all been \\'onderful.'' \Vhat about medical school? "Oh 1 could say that maybe there "'as some discrimination in medica l school," she said. ''But I can also say J saw some of my professors discriminate against some of my male colleagces. Teachers, after all, are only human.'' Dr. Fenlon, \Vho never married, agrees with the goals of \\'Omen liberationists but disli~es their methods. "I can see what \\'Omen's Jib is saying and trying to do in terms of jobs and equal rights," she said ... But any changes in our place in this world must come through evolution and not revolution." * * * * * * Survey Reveals Checkups Guard Against Sicl{ness A five-year survey has revealed that middle·aged men \\'hO have periodic health checkups have fev.·er illnesses than men v.•ho do not have examinations, the California ~1edical Association was told ~1onday in Anaheim. Dr. Morris F. Collen said the report "'as the fir st scientific evidence that periodic health surveillance really works. Collen said he found a significant decrease in disease in men aged 45 to 55 \\'ho have had periodic examinations as compared to another group that did not. He said a total or 10,000 men were follov.'ed ror five years to get the results. In another address, Dr. Vincent W. Cangeuo of Oakland describtd a new diagnostic procedure that makes it po5Si· ble to examine the ovaries, appendix, uterus, bov.·els, gall bladder and liver without dQing an exploratory operation. He said by inserting an instrument into a small incision in the abdomen it was possible to photograph the various organs by using new lighting and optic systems. Chief's Son on Drugs, Sentenced to Norco Accused burglar Steven liiurray was found Monday to be in danger of being addicted to narcotics and sentenced in Orange County Superior Court to an indefinite term in the Ca I i f o r fl i a R'habilitation Center at Norco. Judge Byron K. f.lc,,Ullan pronounced sentence on lhc 2,1.year-old son of San Clemente Police (,"hief William f.1urray and also found the Costa Mesan to be in violation of the probation imposed in the same court last year foll owing f,!urray 's conviction on drug charges. Murray had earlier pleaded guilty in South Orange County municipal court to charges of attempted burglary. lt was testified In the lower court that he v.•as involved in the burglary of a San Clemente home and that he later sold a stolen color television set to a Dana Point woman for $100. fl.turray's sentencing came v.•hile his father. Police Chief Clifford Murray, C<1ntinued to make good progress from open heart surgery carried out in a Los Angeles hosp ital. Sentencing on both the burglary and probation violation convictions will be deferred pending a report on Murray's treatment at Norco. He will eventually be returned to Superior Court for a final determinalion. Santa A11a Urgii1g Protest olh·vi11e City Boundary Santa Ana has made another move In its battle to wrestle 938 acres of industrial land rrom the proposed new city of Irvin<'. City councilmen Monday 11ighl voted to demand lhal the Irvine Company prote!it the boundaries of the new city. tri a formal letter sent to Irv ine Com- pany President William R. Ma.son the F r ench SLrike Ends PARTS <API -France's three major airlines and striking flight crews reached agreement today after an all-night !!E'Ssion. Partial service Is to be resumed ~Yr<tne!'ld11y, cnchng a stoppage or more Ulan three weeks. ' council asked the firm to file written protests with the board o( supervisors asking that land owned by the company within the 938·acre block of industria l land be excluded from the proposed J8.207·acre city, The disputed land Is' ju!Jt south or the Santa Ana ~1arine Corp.111 Air Facilll y and is subject to an agreement signed by the Irvine Company and the city in 1963 giving the city the right to annex the land this year. Mayor Lorin Grlset said that In the opinion of the ' city's legal counsel the 196.1 agreement ls a valid legal docum ent and binding on both parties. If thl' present move fail~ the city has vowed to sue the Irvine Company to make it ebide by the agreement. low lide. Conner begins most of his tours at Heisler Park, the marine pr,serve most often violated by shell hunters. He II· tempts to teach the youths that one marine animal is vital tu the life cycle of another. "You can't even remove an old beer can from a tide pool without upsetting the life cycle of some organism," Conner notes. "We tell the kids they should not disturb lhe coastal anir .. ai s and that there is no reason to ever remove any of the organisms because there are no rare species around here." Conr>er's program has been so suc- cessful so far that one Girl Scout troop is thinking of creating a Marine fl.1erit Bartge based on the coastal tour. Because Laguna Beach does have a total marine environment with the five basic tidal zones, Conner u ys the job of ''Lifegulll'ding'' is even more difficult than In other ct1mmunities. In Laguna Beael1. water sport enthusiasts can surf, swim and dive whereas most oUler com· munities hav e only swimming. To cope with this problem, Conner sa.Ys all Laguna Beach lifeguards are trained and qualified scuba divers. even the 39 iidditlonal guards hired for the summer monlhs, ''Since they all have a diving certificate," be notes, "'they can better appreciate the problems of divers and more readily identHy these problems. Laguna Beach iS one of the finest diving areas in Southern California and there are divers in the water every day of the year arowid here, Jl is di[ficull to 'lifecuard' when a person is under water." Because of their scuba training, Cooner says Laguna Beach guards can "siz.e up'' a diver before he enters the water and dete.nhine al a glance if the diver knows what he is doing. Laguna Beach lifeguards are so well known for their diving expertise that Conner's department wa s recently asked to train guards for the city of Huntington Beach. '' Hwilington Beach probably has the finest lifeguard service in the world ," he says. "in terms of equipment. person· nel and pay . So. it was quile a feather in our cap when they asked for training.'' Aside from diving rescue problems, Conner saft~mall craft in distress coni· prise most ~ his department's rescues OAIL T PILOT S .. 11 PM~ and the number has been Increasing recently with the.construction of Dana ~!arbor. Smallcraft problems require the aid of the Coast Guard, for Laguna Beach has only one small outboard motor boat in its "Navy," In ultimalely having a boat for smallcraft rescues. Conner reels hi11 depart1nent would be better equipped for water rescues because or the many enclosed coves and isolated beaches in the Art Colony. Jt would also provide more of a coastal protecUon image than a police in1age, he feels. Conner is greatly C<lncemed with the law enforcemen~ role many Southern California 'lifeguards are adopting, but he realizes his own age ncy, like others, must enforce same rules. However he does not want his law enforcement func- tion lo become the primary concern of the department, thus alienating many people. "\\te should be concerned with the total marine problern -all problems lhat arise around the sea,'' hi? says. ''I would like to see more of a park ;·anger than a policeman concept of the lifeguards." Through his conservalion programs and tours. Conner would like to expand tha mar.ine protection concept lo the entire community, making the beaches more than a place to go for a swim or a sun bath. He even plans to present a film loop series at the upcoming Festival of Issues to carry his concept to the public. "The name or this city is Laguna Beach," he says, "and it is our unique beach that distinguishes us from other cities. Once we forget that, we . \\'ill be just another city ." Hunted Embezzle Suspect Dulaney Sued by ·woman Stock broker Joseph Dulaney, who Is accused of embezzlement. was sued ror $200.000 Monda y by a San Francisco woman who charges the former operator of the World Fina'ncial Trends complex in Laguna Hills of converting $90,000 worth of her bonds over to his name. LIFEGUARDS IN LAGUNA BEACH AWARE OF IMAGE; ATTEMPTING TO CHANGE IT Chief Lifeguard Skip Conner Explains Tidepools to Mrs. Linda Bufresne, Son Michael f\1rs. Z. Eileen Ready claims in her Orange County Superior Court action that the former Newport Beach man made the sv.·itch on Marcil 20, 1968 v.·hen he forged her signature to her Dreyfus fund certificates and transferred the stocks to his account. 'Ecology Market' Owner to Speak At PEP Session A successful supermarket owner who found it paid to board the ecology bandwagon, will come to Laguna Friday evening to tell his :;tory to the Art Colony's new ecology group, Pro-en· vlronment-People !PEP). Veryl W. Alexander, head of Alex· anders Markets in the San Fernando Valley will be featured speaker at the 8:30 p.m. meeting in the Festival Forum Theater. He will share the platform with William Borders of the Borders. Jackson Agency that helped Alexander bring his ecology message to the buying public. Alexander said it v.·as his '.?!!·year-old daughter Christine. a student at UC Davis, \\'ho convinced him he should carry his environmental responsibilities into the market chain. Christine started with a "soft sell,'' persllflding her mother to switch lo a non.phosphate laundry compound. But by the time she was through, every one of her father's 10 supermarkets: v.•as featuring "ecology preferred" pro- ducts, identified by grt't!n and while labels. These include ecologically ~pproved cleaning products, biodegradnle meat and egg trays ~instead of plastic), soft drinks in returnable bottles and grocery bags imprinted wilh a form for writing your Congre ssman to support en· vironmentally sound legislation. " Bags, incidentally, are limited to actual need and customers are encou raged to bring bags back for refills. The effect of his one.man ecology drive on a thriving market business will be described by Alexander at the Friday meeting, which is open to the public. Homeowners 01{ Greenbelt Pla11 Members of the Hilltop Homeo\\'Tifrs Association have voted to support lhe La guna Greenbell campaign by staging their own door-to-door canvass lo solicit donations through the sale of Greenbelt bumper stickers and "Think Green" but· lons. Associal ion president J ohn De Fiore Jr. appointed Carylon Hendri ckson to head the dri\'e arter Greenbelt president James Dilley, photographer Ri c k Lawrence and Laguna J a :· : e es spokesman Rick Baiz.er outhned plan.!I to preserve the ring of open space around Laguna. First step is a fund drive aimed Rl acquisition of the 520·acre Sycamore Hill! property in Laguna Canyon. As open space land is acquired by the Greenbelt. il wl\I be deeded to the city ns a public pr,serve. Cauglat in Helin.et Copter PilotTal{eS Enemy r Bullet-Ho1ne as Souvenir QUANG TRI, Vietnam (AP) -For five days, Bobby Gunn was busy rerover. ing the bodies of son1e of his fellow fliers in the unfriendly hills of Laos. Bobby Gunn i:; a gentle, young Southerner, not eve n 21 years old. There are !;Cores of young American he llcopler pilots li"ke Bobby Gunn. ll'hO put aside all personal risks when one of their ov.·n is killed or wounded. "For five days we wanted to find the bodies of crewmen of a downed bird," Bobby Gunn said, "if there were any left. ~very lime we went out, we took fire."' " On the fifth day or trying to recover the bodies, Bobby Gunn, 20, from a rural Georgia town called Manor, had Best Decorated a brush with deallr:' }le escaped slightly wounded. "I saw tracers coming up ju St right in front of the helicopter," he recalled. "I prcs!;l'd the intercom on the floor. I told lhe rest of the people in the helicopter we were laking fire. "Al the time I got the words out of my mouth , a round came through the chin bubble'' -the lowe r part of the plexiglas.<J windshield . "I assumed it deflected off the metal strip along the bubble. It came in my helmet, went up three or four inches and stopped, The metal :;trip slowed il down." Gunn said he didn't rcaliz.e the bullet had enlered hi~ helmet until Jal.er. Dulaney, 37, is the object of a na. tionv;ide hunt and he is believed by FBI men and Orange County district attorney 's Investigators to be somewhere in the United States. He and his wife Marlene, 31, were seen in Dulaney's birthplace of Flora, Ill. six weeks ago, just six weks after the former .stockbroker and investment counselor returned with his three children from a year Jong sojourn in West Germany. The Dulaneys left for Europe afte r many residents of the Leisure World community in Laguna Hills filed com. plaints that led to a!legations that Dulaney, his wife and Financial Trends vice president Jameli E. Sh!pley of Hun· tinglon Beach had misused their in- veslment funds. The complex Financial Trend!!' cor- porate structure is now in lhe hands of the bankruptcy court. Investigators believe its investors' losses will total more than $3 million. Shipley. 38, of 16951 Lowell Circle ts due in court Thursday for arraignment on charges of grand theft , forgery and con:;piracy. He is free on $250,000 bail. · Dulaney and his wife face identical charges. It is known that investigator!! intend to obtain an Orange County Grand Jury indictment againsl lhe trio. OAILT PILOT S111f P .. ,. f\1r. and f\1rs. George Hammond on their tandem bicycl e arc i;ho,vn \\'ilh <laughters Nan<:y, 1·2, nnd Gayle, 7, during first family bike day at I~ake fort'.~t. The outinR covered five 1nil cs. Othen ludged best decorated \vere the John Stanton fam- ly, seco nd, and the Charles Bo\ver family, third. I • '-" 4 DAILY PILOT Tuesday, March 16, 1971 Wl1ite Panther Drug-Sex .Y,.re Cited \ \ •' I ~ps Iron Horses Still a Thrill By THOMAS MURPIUNE Of ""' Delly .. ii.t lllff RAll.S REVISITED : In this age of multiple computers, moon shots and elec· tronic processing, it's pleasant lo learn that one lure of yo1.1lh hasn't really changed. Kids still seem to love old· fashioned steam ene.ines on railroad traln'i Ou~ide of horse operas on the telly or an occasional museum v i s i t , youngsters today don't really get much opportunity to see a real puffer-belly in action. I mean , Jet's face it. somebody wrote "Farewell to Steam" a long time ago. And since then, effort! at developing some form of rapid transit along rails have seemed to win something less than universal acceptance in Southern California generally and ; along the Orange Cca1t in particular. * Like the other day, notice came through that Southern Pacific wants lo iihut down its one-man ticket office which struggles along up in the County Stat. That's hardly evidence that Orange Cou'.n- ty rail traffic is on the upswing. * Despite dwindling interest in rail travel by elders. there's still same proof at hand that youngsters retain a certain fascination in watching a steam locomotive at work. I noticed this just the other day up at Knott's Berry Farm in Buena Park. where the Knotts operate a steam-propelled train salvag~d from the 1800s. Now, I'm not certain how many young people are actuaUy enthralled with the notion of riding. But indeed they do love to watch the old st.tamer pull in and depart from its depot -which it does often at Knott'1 due to the brevity of its run. * Watching isn't all the fun . The kids have learned the big old locomctive <:Jn smash things. Like a peMy. Place the penny on the tracks and after the big loco has rolled by, you have nothing but a Iona, thin piece-of copptr. * Some youngsters have relined the art. They tape a string of loy gun caps to the track to get the big engine drive wheels make them pop like a machinegun. Or, place the whole roll of caps on the track and you can get one pretty good explosion. The games seem endless. although there are always a couple of cowboy-suited Berry Farm hands out in front of the cowcatcher to assure tracks are c I e a r of the youth corps before the big engine rolls off again. ·Yet as one delighted youngsttr remark· ed while examining his squished penny after the train departed : "Wow! Heap heavy Iron horse ... " Well. maybe in lhe younger generaUon there's hope for mass transit yet. Or maybt jutl thinner coin of the realm. * GE'M1NG THE BOOT: Down at Muirlands Junior High in San Diego the other day they ordered suspension of a ninth grade honor student because she ran barefooted to catch the bus. Turned out she had b e e n rehearsing a dance routine and had to choose between running barefooted or putting on her boots and ml51ing the bus. You can bet the whole thing precipitated a bit of controversy. Summed up school board Vice Presi· dent Arnol d Steele : "This is just iJl.. credible •.. " WASHINGTON iVPI) -A Slnole Internal Security subcommittee released secret accounti today telllns how the Whitt Panther Party alle&edly used a rock band to lure youna people in\O a ·commune life of dru&s and sex. The accounts also said party leaders had discussed kldnaplng Vice President Spiro T. Agnew. the governor of Mlchlau or a member of Congress. The party's aim , two Mlchl&an stale police detectives said, was to callSe a Mao Tse-tung style revoluUon ln this counlr)'. The · band, called the MC5 had as , lt1 mana«er, John A. Sinclair Jr., one o( the two cofowiders ol the Whlte Panlhtn. Sincl1ir and Lawrence (Pun) Plamon- don Organized tbe Whlte Panthers in Ann Arbor, Mich., in December, 1968, after they were refused permission to join the Bltck Panthers, the te1timony said. "lf a youngster was interested" as a tan ot the MC-5 band and wrote for a picture or something of this type, they would in turn rectlve this White Panther Uterature," detecUve Sgt. Cllf· f~rd MWTay told the subcommittee. Luck of the Irish Murray said a "confidential source" had told police Qi.at party personnel were cons.ldering using the tactics of the Tu pamaro guerrillas in Uruguay to win the release of ''political prisoners .'' "This recommendation included the suggestion that Michigan congressmen oould be traded for John Siticlair. Prominent national Clgures such as Sen. Robert Griffin and Congressman Gerald Ford might ~ good for trading for Black Panthel Party leaders such as Huey Newton and Bobby Seale," Murray said. ''This recommendatioa included the I I j!j I UPI Tti.plloto I I • To be sure, Colleen Sterling, 4, is Irish (and half Japanese) but she'll be all lrish tomorrow on St. Patrick's Day. Here she wheedles a kiss from secret pal Brian Naslund. 4. to get a head start on that glorious day. Brian holds his head but hears up well otherwise. Started in ·1901 Early Hollywood Star ' Bebe Daniels Succumbs LONDON (AP\ -Bebe j>aniels. sparkling brunette star of "Rio Rita" and hundreds of other early Hollywood Wicks 'When Tricia leaoes, will we need such a big hoaae?' films, died today at her London apart· ment. She was 70 and had lived in seclusion with her husband of nearly 41 years. actor Ben Lyon, since suffering a stroke in I g 6 3 . She suffered another in November, developed pneumonia and was relurned home from a Wimbledon hospital this month. She died of a cerebral hemorrhage. • Frail and weak in her last days, she nevertheless lold an interviewer at her bedside a few days ago: "I'll get out of here. real soon:· "She died peacefully a.t 5 a.m.," her adopted son Richard told newsmen. Her husband was at her bedside. Miss Daniels died a week after Harold Lloyd. with v.'hom she made a comedy a week for four years. Their collabora~ lion began when she v.·;:i_s 14 and already a seasoned performr Her mother, a Spanish actress nan). l Phyllis Griffin, carried 2-month.old Bebe on stage in a 1901 comedy called "Jane," and at age 4 the child's career was launched in earnest as the hapless Duke of York in Shakespeare's "King Richard III.'' Russia Boosts Number of Jews' Going to Israel MOSCOW I AP) -The Soviet govern· ment has taken a major policy decision on the Jewi sh emigration problem here and within the past 10 days has permitted about J:;o Jews to leave for Israel, reliable Soviet sources reported today. The sources emphasized that although an average of 15 Jews have left the Soviet Union dally since the decision, the authorities placed no limit on the number who would be alloy,·ed to lea've. If the current emigration pace is main- tained, more than 5.000 Jews would be permitted to go to I11rael by the end of this year. The sources. however would not confirm this figure. Three weeks ago a group of Jews conducting a sit-in demonstration in a Soviet parliament building in Moscow y.·ere told lha! "very high government oUicials" would make and reveal a com· prehensive decision on the question of Jewish emigration to Israel. The decision, reliable Jewish sources reported at the time. was to have been made public through the Soviet press by ~.Iarch I. There has been no official report to date on a policy change but the information provided by the sources today apparently referred to the pro- mised deei~ion. Indiana Lashed by Squalls China May Lease Vital Port Site On Indian Ocean Five Hurt as Winds Blow Over Trees, Power Line t California •r UNJTID , •• ,. INTl•HAT!ONo\L TOlkiY •II I ·-dt1 l•r o••l1 WI"' '"HIYf 1 Nlct 01v" burnMr •l'kk-. ll Wfl, ti 1 .. 11 w ••• ,., .... 1 ••• 11 lllllf'IY ll<IH '"" wtrm l...,H•l•u<t• -•llld 1rouNI Soutlltrn C111!orn11 Tilt' I.A AnHl91 t r .. Wit '"""' .... ......... wlltl Prtcllclfd (IYk '"" "" llltll • c_.r«I •1111 ll on Mtf!HY. T ... lelll'I l\W wm bf Sl "" "° nlcl w11 IM Al• l'ollutoon (ofttrvl Ol1ttlcl r-1 " ll1M l/T>O'l 111 ttw c.Mr•I. S.,, Gtlwltl t...i l'&- _..w11t1Ut V1lleY -1lor!I It! -lJll At!ftl• •11111. 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Sutt, /ti""'"· Tlole1 , tUllDAY StcOM low • !•1 m. 1 1 !ICOll4 nl"' 11 eo,..,, 11 WIONllOAY Flrtl IOW •)lam 0 1 f in! "1111 11 ·:.. 1 m, I ' 5tctnll IOW I .I•'·""'· I 1 ,,_...., .,!.., 11 111.m. •7 Jui. Rl .. 1 t tJ I m, Ill• .,., 1.m. #t#flll .u .. 10.a 1.m. St11 l :OJ 1.m. Te11tperatures WASHINGTON (A P) U.S. in- 1' uN1t10 ,.,., tNTlllNo\TIONAL tel\iucncc sources say China is trying 1tmHr111tr11 •rid orKl•ll•llon for " ,,.. u .r.ovr .,.r10c1 ff!lllno ,, , 1.m. to lease port facilities in Ceylon. which "'lt>lnY Albuout•<IUI A111n11 A~l!otltl ... ,,,,, lu«1lo Cl!t rloll• Chtcteo Cl11<lnnttl C!-ltlld 011111 De11¥9r OH Molrtt• ...,., ,.., ...... , -· l~ltl'llHll1 Jtck#ll~IU• Ju-u Kl-C"' L.11 YHl l Ln A"9•1fl Loul1vlllt "'""'"'ll Ml1""I Mltwlllll" • Mt_,..,.. lo W-(trtMIW N-Vort Ollll"°"" ,,ty .... ,.. Ptlm $1rl11t1 ,~ll1dtl.tll1 -·· l'lt!l~ll Port!ll'IO, Or' 111.id City .... .S1tr1m1n~ SI. LOUii !111 Ltkt (lty Hltll Ln '•K. could give Peking a strategic toehold •0' in the Indian Ocean. • " .. ~ " • n " .. • " » .. " " .. .. • " • .. .. • " .. • ~ • N ., " " .. » .. .. ll • " ~ .. " " M • • .. " " " " " ll " " .. .. • .. ., • " " • n ., n • .. " •• " " • " • .. " ~ M ., • .n The Red Chinese want a new port .01 at Trincomalee to service naval and ·~ merchant ships , these sources say. .oJ Intelligence analysts expect the .u Ceylonese government will be~ive to the Chinese overtures, thoug favo ·ng an arrangement that would limit rt 03 use lo merchant craft. .01 This report l'Oincides with other ill- " u telligence information that the Chinese ·°' ha\·t converted a 12.000 ton cargo vessel into a missile tracking ship. American off icials interpret deploy- ment of the tracking ship as indicating 0, Peking may be near its long awaited " rlrst full lest of an intercontinental 01 ballistic mi111ile. wing the far reaches of the Indian Ocean as a test ran1e . ·0' Already concerned about S o v I e t 01 pcnetr111ion of the Indian Ocean. U.S • slrattglsts now see the po~ibility of 01 the olher C-Ommun illt 11uperpowtr moving into an area once dorpin11ted by tht: Brlti~h Navy bul now without any major ·'~ Western milltary presence. suuestion that with someone of the pre> minence of the Vice President Spiro Agnew, one could 'write his own ticket.' " Murray said the source also reported that Plamondon once said riots were no longer uaeful but "he noted that during a riot was a good time to 'tip off banks' or to 'snatch governor (William) Milliken (of Michigan).'" He added that the White Panthers began a series of rock conaerts in May. 1969. which appeared lo be politically 01:iented. "Each of these concerts, along with a band for mu1ic, would include the $6·7 Million distribution of materials printed by the Wb1te Panther Party that related to city and state politics and the aims of the White Panther Party," he said. "All of these concerts have featured profane language and the distribution o! profane llteraturt." Murray testlfied along with detective Richard M. Schave in September, and the transcript was released today. Mur- ray said it was both his oplnion and that of the state police that the White Panthers were working toward obtaining co'htrol of young people "for the primary purpose of causing revolution in this country." Embezzlers Take Huge B;i~k Haul CHICAGO (UPll -FBI agents Jn-department £or 24 years. vesLigated today what could be one of The statement assured shareholders the largest amounts of money -the loss was covered in full and 1aid estimated between $6 million and $7 reserve accounts are available to further million -ever embezzled from a bank. protect tbe bank from loss. The embezzlement occurred at the Magers said the Joss was substantial. CosmopoUtan National Bank and was but the bank was in a position lo discovered when a customer "confessed" take care of it. the crime lo a bank official Feb. 25. Donald D. fl.lagers, bank president, said Monday. The en:ibezzlement scheme, which in- volved checks as large as $900,000 writ· ten on the customer's account, also in· volved a veteran member of the bank's bookkeeping department, Magers said. He sa id the employe has since b e e n discharged. Magers said the customer allegedly involved in the crime is a key executive in a Chicago merchandising corporation. He said the exact loss of bank funds will not be known until an audit is conducted of the bank's books. Magers said the bank..loss was covered fully by United States Fidelity & Guaran- ty companies. FBI agents reportedly questioned tbe bank customer and the former employe, but no chargts have been placed against them. Magers said the ember.zlement ap- parently occurred when the executive wrote checks on a corporate account in excess of the amount of money deposited . to the account. The checks were only handled by the one bookkeeper invol~. he said. The bank has issued a statement to shareholders about the incident. The statement said the employe suspected of participating in the embeulement had been employed in the bank's bookkeeping Fall on Knife Blade Fatal to 9-year-old WEST CONSHOKOCKEN, Pa. (AP) - A nlne·year~ld boy died Monday night whtn he fell on a kitchen khife while helping wash the dinner dishes. Police said Samuel Tartaglione was standing on a foot stool, helping his sister, Doreen. 13, wash dishes . The stool apparently slipped and the boy fel~ against a dish rack sending the knife's eleven inch blade through hi:s heart. Cold Chieago Golda Meir's Peace Plan Carries Day JERUSALEM (UPl)-Prime Minister Golda Meir won an overwhelming vote of confidence in a slormy session of the Knesset (parliament) today after outlining a peace platform that rules out Israeli withdrawal from East Jerusalem. the Golan Heights, the Jordan River and Sharm El Sheikh. The oppo!ltion right.wing bloc that had proposed the motions of no con· flden~ in Mrs. Meir 's leadership walked out of the session even before the final vote was taken. The vote in favor of the government was 62 votes, with no one voting against and 12 members abstaining. The 2fi.-mem- ber Gahal bloc stalked out alter its motion for a secret ballot w a s overwhelmingly defeated in a 45-minute shouting match. Mrs. Meir said earlier in an interviev1 there would hav e to be some revisions of dle Israeli.Jordanian frontier and that the Sinai would have to be demilitarized. But she said Israel would not give up the Syrian Golan Heights, Old Jerusalem and Sharm EJ Sheikh. '"Israel is entitled to defensible borders and on this it will not compromise,'' she said. "She wants true negotialions and has no intention of imposing conditions on oUlers and most certainly will not accept conditions imposed by others. "This has always been lhe govern· ment's policy and remains the govern- ment's policy. Similarly, the Israeli government has no intention of acctpting any sort of international guarantees as a substitute for agreed, recognized and defensible borders.'' Pedestrian bows head and plows into blinding snow flurry on Alichl· gan Avenue. Temperatures plummeted from 60 to 30 degrees dur· ing the day and winds reached 52 miles per bour. • lndusb·y Output Declines WASHINGTON IAP) After hiding it for two straight months, the nation's economy has again displayed its sag- ging pace, !Jelling back the Nixon Administration 's hopes of a quick recovery. The Federal Reserve Board delivered the bad news to the administration ftt o n d a y , • reporting its key industrial production index fell four· tenths of l percent in Januar-y. The decline followed two • QUEENIE By Phil lnlerlandl ' Social Secu1·ity Increase Assured WASHINGTON !UPI ) - Higher Social S e c u r I t y benefits. perhaps st a r l i n l'l June 3. seem assured for 26 States Sue Cannakers For Smog consecutive monthly advances ___.,.,, LOS ANGELES (AP\ Eight states filed suit in U.S. District Court Monday cha rg- ing that major American car manufacturers have conspired sine~ 1953 to delay de velop· ment of auto Anli-polluOon devices. in factory output, when the :5 ./_. economy rebounded from last ":' n ~ fa ll's General Motors' strike-. L.11~1..!::::::~=::..i. .. -,::•;:::".;-~::ai1w .... -:::.::.~:~.:::=::;~~:::;;:~~I But the snapback was not -••y - nearly as strong as the ad· oo-.boo! Are You wishing or are you in trouble?" ministration had hoped, and the February tumble In output sho~ed Nixon !las far to go in gelting the economy n1oving again. The drop disclosed con- tinuing weakness in l he economy, reluctance or big business to invest .jn more product,ion and c o n s u m e r hesitation to spend savings · Nixon has pledged a good year for the economy in 1971 and has turned W deficit spen· ding and easier money policies to make ii go. The slackness of t h e economy also partly explains the rapid decline Jn interest rates. \\'ilh corporate demands for loans at a relatively 101v level with money plentiful. Meat . Preservative Linked to • I _,ancer \VASHINGTON (AP) -A the r~oo d and Drug noted medi cal s p e c i a I i s t Adminis tration should allow asserted today lhe govem· barely one-tenth the amount ment permits excessive use of nitrite preser\'ative now of a food preserv ative that pennitted in cured meal and may cause cancer. fish . The cancer expert , Dr. "The main reason for add William Lijinsky -director ing nitrite to meat and pos- of the Eppley ll e s e a r c h sibly to fish appears lo be Institute at the University of cosmetic rather than function. Nebraska in Omaha -said al and this would seem insuf- This brings to 38 the total of states that in recent weeks and months have filed similar suits across the nation, court officials said. _ TY"enty such filings h&\'e oc- curred in the ' last two y,·eeks for fear a possible one-year statute of limitations might expire March 16, Mlid Fred Tausend. s)lfcial Washington state assistant a t torn e y general and lead counsel . for 19 states involved in lhe suits. The eight states filing suit together f\.ionday were Maine, \\'ashington, Colorado. Hawaii, Idaho, Nevada, West Virginia and North Dakota. Na med as defendants were General Motors. Corp., Ford -----------11 Motor Co., Chrysler Corp., BUZZARDS Ame<iCRn Moto",, and the • Au t omob~anufacturers ficient reason to' take even a Association. FLY /JOME I HOME DELIVERY We dell, ... dally, br\nql119 yow all tht fl11· ••t faod$, •lril 110 mor• lfffort the11 o tel•· phon• coll. 67l·l510 Coll Ill betwaa11 t a11d 1 Z a.111., 91•• ... your 1hopplitt ll1t, alld your order wlU be 111 your kit· ,) J~cr-• c.hat1 by mld-oft•r•o••· smal1 risk with our health," Tausend said the suit v.•ill I Lijinsky said in testimony try to force the companies lllNCKLEY, Ohio (UPI \ _ prepared fnr the House inter· to speed development of ;t A vanguard of five turkey 1 governmental relations sub-pollution-free engine an<l in· buzzards arrived al their sum·' stall at their expense smog n1er roost on Hinckley Ridge i commill.ee . ' control devices on all new l\1onday, fulfilli ng an Ides of Nitrite I m Par I s the cars and used cars dating as March tradition that local characteristic red color lo far back as 19$3 when the legend recalls for 150 years. cured ham. hol dogs, bacon. ~I.ates claim the conspiracy The buzzards' annual return saus~ luncheon meats. cor-:;tarted. from their winter roosts in The complaint charges an.: Kentucky and the Smokey 1 ned betf ~n dsmoked f 1 ~ h · titrust and nuisance violatlnus. ft1ountains has spa w l'l e di It is ~:iid also to prevent food "We think Los Angeles is another tradition. a celebra- • YOGA IS • • • DISCOVERY! l'rec.tic.ol TKh11lqua for • Vitallty e Fulf lllmtt1t e F,..edom Gta AMW•B aad lESULTSI kM De1110Mtratl11• Wl'dllffday 10 a.111, I Wlek <llHtl lflrt T~11r1., 111.m. 1 I '·"'· YOGA CENTER UI I . !Tito SI. s~1i. 1 1 .it>:.d~y . Marth l 6, llJ'n DAIL\' PILOT !> ·I Boggs Do'tvned De1nocrat Decked in Row The DAILY PILOT- The One That Cares Teach your children these safety rules: 1. Don't cross streets or highway& while flying kites. 2. Don't fly a kite with metal in the frame or tail. 3. r--·•'t use tinsel string, wire or anl'· :! 'vith metal in it • 4. lJou't fly a kite over TV or radio antennas. 5. Don't fly a kite near electric power lines and don't try to retrieve a kite caught in power lines. 6. Don't fly a kite in the rain. .sCE Southern California Edison po isoning called bolulism. the best place to have it lion known as "Buzzard Sun-1 Corn• •• Y*~ •ro. Recent research w i I h 11:r_r;':'°~·~"_T~a~u~se"'.n~d~s~a~id:· ___ __'.d~a!'.,y·~"--------~~~~~~~~~~~c_--------------------animals has indicated nitrite - , .. yo0 r 5hop~;·~ P~uie ·,, O.ti Uttil'f\a.lt: 6Da.t! ~·-COASr SUPER MAR!()oT 3l41 ~.O..\ ""r•O•••i<l<I ... trimming fo r any occasion MON..-SAT-t te &:JO-S11~doy • combines in the body with other food and d r u g substances known as amines lo produce a potent cance r- causing cl ass of agents known as nitrosainines. Lijinsky and several or his colleagues at the Nebraska center have been working on the connection betweel'l cancer stomach chemicals and food preservatives . • It tastes the way you'd expect a gi·eatwhiskey to taste. 's 39 s 4/1 QT. • \ Always smooth. Ahvays comfortabk. Invariably c.oruiltent in taate ind flavor. And unquestionably 1atL~fyin~. Drink after drink. Bo1rle after bottlc.)tar after year. Say Seacram'I 7Crown • and Be Sure. , How to saves9.00 / . and 20 minutes of hassle next time you fly. Take a look at the map. Orange County /San la Ana airport is a lot closer than you thinlt:.. And a lot easier. Think of the time you'd save. The traffic you'd miss. No big crowds, and no long walk to the plane. You'd even get your bags much fastA:r. Parking? Let's say you stay a • couple of days in Las Veg .... That's 3 days of airport parkin g, right? At L.A. International " you'd pay $15.00. San Oiega Frwy, At Orange County/Sanlll Ana you'd pay $6.00. You'd save $9.00. Hughes Air West jets 4 times a day to Las Vega5 from Orange County /Santa Ana. Jets to all kinds of the West's most excitin g places. All flights leaving from the airport closest to you. So think it over. And then jet Hughes Air West. .. Hughes Air West to Las Vegas from Orange County. • For rauvadom call your travel agent or Hughes Alr Wes t: Long Beach, 432-4444 ; Costa Meoa, ZE 2-4000; Santa Ana, 540.2060. • • • • • • • DAILY PILOT EDITOB{AL PAGE • Inf orillational Vacuum A facet of human nature well known especially to elected rublic bodies and to editors is the general ten· dency o vote.rs and readers to speak out only when they disagree or have a complaint. One body of elected orriCials -trustees of the Hun· llngton Beacll Union High School District -decided to do something about this vacuum. A professional opinion polling organiiatlon was retained to develop a feedback more meaningful than what the board had received from people who came to meetings or from telephone calls. \Vhile what they learned is directly related to the sprawling Huntington Beach high school district. the kind of information gap it revealed is relevant to most Orange Coast area districts. In this area of high popula· lion mobility and rapid growth, even the best use of the normal approaches and channels for school-citizen com· munication probably is no longer adequate. These are some of the survey findings: -Persons living in the school district are gen.erally unaware of the district and its method of operation. -Of those sampled at random. only 61 percent \vere a~·are in which high school district they were liv· ing. Another 22 percent were unaware of the district but could identify their local high school. Seventeen per· cent could identify neither the district nor their local high school. ~ -While many persons were relatively unaware ot the district, nevertheless 35 percent said they were fav· orabl e toward education, most of them saying they were for education in general. Only 13 percent gave unfavor· able responses, while 27 percent were neutral. -Those unfavorable mostly said they were dissat- isfied with student discipline, foUowed by drug problems, teachers. the administration and--the curriculum. -Of changes desired, 80 percent named improve- ment in drug abuse education, 78 percent said they would improve special education programs, 72 percent vocational programs and 64 percent counsellne services. -As for objectives of educ.-ation, those queried ranked vocational training above other factors -yet at the same ·time, 62 p4(rcent said they hoped their chil· dretf would attend a university, 42 percent a community college, and only 8 percent wanted them to enter a voca· lion. (Some named both university and community col· Iege.) These are representative but not all of the findings in the survey. They are not automatically transferable to other school districts on the Orange Coast. Huntington Beach has had a greater population explosion than any other city in the county, and a higher percentage o[ riew residents who don't yet identify closely with their new city. More ''market research" to pinpoint what the people \l.'ho vote the sch'f'.>l taxes -or don't vote them -have on their minds is a good idea for all school di.stri~. All share the problem of too large an informational vacuum where public attitudes are concerned. Good Move hy Supervisors The Orange County Board of Supervisors was sched· uled to act today to put an end to repetitious, tong-wind· ed speeches especially on minor matters. A change In rules would limit speakers before the board to five min· ... utes -except that the chairman may waive the rule on important subjects. Other new provisions would make the agenda more understandable to the public and require board members to disclose any conflict of interest -direct or remote. The board is to be commended for moving ils pro- ceedings toward greater orderliness, clarity and non·sec· recy. • I • (11'1' I (Ollp.15 .I • dP ...... Mlfli,A..11l):a., ~ ''THE CONVEYOR Sf LT WAS A 6REAT IDEA:' . "- A Matter of Dear Gloomy Gus: Kissinger Won't Te1tify on War Ripening Judgment Why do we find it so hard to admit that we sometimes like junky things -in fact, that we sometimes prefer them to good things? Most of our hostility tov.·ard critics in the arts comes from our stubborn unwi ll- ingness to make thU litmple confes.sion. For instance. I happe• tD like junky books and junky candy much of the time. There are evenings when I far prefer to read a gory mystery l.han a serious novel: when 1 v.•ould rather nibble on cheap candy than devour the most exquisite and expensive con- fectionery. BUT 1 DON'T pretend that my taste fn such malten is otherwise than bad; nor do l suggest that it is all a "sub- jective'' matter and that my taste in bloody mysterits or penny candy is any· thing but deliciously deplorable. So sue me. But, in the field of the arts. most people are so sensitive about lheir taste !hat they deeply resent lhose critics ~ho apply high and severe standards 10 plays, books, music and paintings. rhe y deny that there are objective :ri\eria in such matters, and insist !hat 'llle man's opinion is as valid as !nother's, which is utter rot. On this dubious basis, they attack lhE' critic as a :snob, a purist, a :iogmatist, and even less printable tpithets. TRE'r ''101.JLD NOT do the :same about food , tor instance. The man who Too bad he didn't get a fracturea jaw in that fracas in Madison Square Garden. Then they would have wired it ShUl (or a ctlUpJe o( ..months! -H.J. B. t~i. hllur-nileell .-.....n• ~i.ws. ""' lf<•H•fl/"f' TNM ef Ille M-IHf, lto!MI t...,r "' ,.. •• 1e GMfllr Gui. Cl•lh' P'lltl. prefers a frankfurter to a Chateaubriand, or a syrupy soft drink to a vintage Bordeaux, would admit, if cornered, that hts palate is uncultivated. And the more he learns about food and drink , the more his taste buds begin to ctlrrespond ~'ith those of the genuine gourmet. There are standards in every field, from beer to Beethoven. If you know beer, you prefer a superb imported brew to a green domestic one; and if you know music, you prefer Beethoven to Bizet. It is not "just a matter of taste,'' but a matter or ripening judgment based on experience and knowledge. JUDG!'t1ENTS r.1AY differ In particular, of course : I may care for r.1ozart more than for Beethoven; anothe r man may prefer Bach above both the others. But nobody \\·ho un· derstands music \\'ill put Bizet even in the same class ~'ith those three. any more than a trained oenologist will 'admit Dipsy C.Ola into the same company as Chateau r-.1outon Rothschild. \Ve are so sensitive about our esthelic taste, howt'ver. that \\'e feel forced lo defend our deficiencies in order to main- tain our sense of self·esteem. This is a foolish and fruitless attitude. and one that retards the progress of the arls. If I like cheap candy, that is my business. and I have a perfect right; but t have no right to insist that "quality" in candy is in the mind and not in the product. The New Warranty Law· 'The Legis\alutP ha~ O.K.'d the ;on!Wtler Warra nly Act. This applies n individuals or farnilies who buy cars, nachines, appllancts and the like. The aw aims to protect lhc retail buyer, oot the experienCt'd business buyers. Each item must meet certain stan· lards: 1. Pass without objcc1 1on in the trade tnder ita description. 2. Guarantee that thr i1em is fit for :he ordinary purposes for v.tuch it is ised. 3. Is free from defects uf 1n3terials •r workmanship. 4. Ts adequately contained, pa\'kaged, tnd labeled. 5. Confonns to tl\e promi~e~ uf la c! nadelmi Ult conUi:iner or label. THE SELLER. dlstribut~ or rnah<'r !fho hu reason· to know any parllrular DUrpot.e5 for which the goods arr re· luired and if the buyer i~ rel ying on lhe ll.kill.s and jud~ment of I h r , 11eller, thtn lbt.re ia one more impl1td warranty. Thal Is, lhe good~ must be ~11 for those addiUonll purposes. , ___ Blf Geor9e --~ Dtar George : I hear a lapping noise on my phone. Dots this mean my phone ii !>ting topped? E. E. Dear E. E • You know what:' It's peosJJe like you who AT'I! 11>ing tQ run mt r,ghl out of lhb rac~rt. • Law in Action i .... ~ The seller may also make additional express warranties. But the law says the above enumerated warranties are implied. The new law applies lo each sale or consignment of consun1er goods in the state. 0( course the buyer can wai11e these warranties. but only according to law. He can buy a thing "a!! Is" or "with all faults," But a sale "AS IS" MUST BE IN CLEAR \VRITING AT· T ACHED TO THE GOODS. The writing must tell the buyer that the thing is sold "as is·• ln simple and concise languqe showing tha1 the bu,yer takes all risks of -defects; EVERY r.tAKER of consume:r good~ "'ho sells In the state and mak~ express 11arranlies must hive an adequatt repair facility In the state. If • maker has nCI rt'p.alr faclllty1n the state, the buyer can return the defecUve Item lo the retailtr and &et a replacemtnt. If lhe selltr cannot ttplace or rtptllr the ar1 irle, then he must pay the bu>'er back. A v1ct1m of a wU\ful violation ol the 1aw can get treble d1m1aes plu.s attorney fees. No1,.: t o/1/on1io ln10urr1 nfftr lliil col11m11 so llD" mou know obo111 ll11r Jaws. Nixon Will Resist Senate Pressure WASHINGTON -President Nixon will not be pre ssured into sending fore ign policy adviser Henry A. Kissinger to testify before critica l congressional com· mitteea on the prosecution of the war in lndo-China. A principle is involved -lhe old .and controversial concept that advice from a ronfidential aide is privileged. Beyond that, however. White House aides are convinced that the Kissinger iSl!lue is just one partisan ploy in a dri11e by Democratic critics to discredit Mr. Nixon's policy-making machinery. There is a growing disposition in the While House to view the recent cf'JOnology in these related terms : First, the Senate Democratic caucus, at the urging of party leader Mike Mansfield, D-Mont., goes on record in support or withdrawal from Inda-China with a time certain -that is, by the time a new Congress convenes in 1973. -THEN, RATHER quickly, romes the negative report from the cocktail circuit. Sen. Stuart Symington, D·MO., a veteran canape cadger, tells the Senate that Kissinger runs the foreign policy show and that Rogers had become a laughingstock in the after sundown watering places. (While the President defended Rogers against what he called a "cheap shot'' by Symington, no one doubts that the senator was alming -however ineptly -at Kissinger and, through Kissinger, at Nixon himself.) Finally, there is the Kissinger ploy. Chairman J. William Fulbright, 0.Ark., cOmplains to the Senate that Kissinger is unavailable for questioning by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and &uggesls that Congress should act to make such policy aides appear. (To lend the proper, e11en-handed, deliberative senatorial tone to W.s speech, Fulbright even suggest.s that ft Senate. acting on il'I own, has the power to subpoena and even jail the likes of Kiss· in8<J11> rnlTh-iAN PRECEDENT -All this seems to be pretty well orchestrated to some of Mr. Nixon's aides. As would be expected, lhey are assembling the one of the principals in a much publicized precede'nts with respect to the doctrine Senate inquiry. of e1eculive privilege. Under these circumstances, while Mr. It is an old rontroversy and there Nixon does not want to -Offend tender are a variety of precedents, including-...... congressional sensibilities. he will not a refusal by presidential aide Sherman be pushed into serving up Kissinger Adams to testify during the Eisenhower· [or committee ronsumptlon. Nixon Administration in an investigation of the Dixon-Yates power contract. In cidents in the Truman administration may offer the besl insight however. On two occasions John R. Steelman, a top Truman aide (on domestic rather than foreign affairs), was subpoenaed by the House Labor Committee with respect to his of£icial duties. On each occasion Steelman told the committee that Mr. Truman had directed that he. NOT appear to testify. ON THE OTIIER hand, another Truman aide, Donald Dawson , did get Mr. Truman's reluctant permission to te stify in an inquiry with respect to the Reconstruction Finance Corp., since Dawson's personal activities and not his duties as presidential adviser were in· volved at that time. Jn the same vein Eisenhower assistant Adams volunteered to testify on his personal dealings with Bernard Goldfine, l\1A YOR ON MUSKJE -Ult Angelea lilayor Sam Yorty, long a ma11eric)t in Democratic Party council1. has opened fire on Sen. Edmund G. Muskie. D-Me.. the current front runner for the Democratic presidential nomuation in 1972. Yorty has written a 22·page, 5\ngle- spaced Tetter acidly criticizing policiet which Muskie has espou5ed and 1bt man- ner in which ttlu.skie bas espoused them. 'nle. Jetter, <J5lensfbly addressed lit Muskie, is now going the round!, 1mona Republicans as well as Democrats. Attacking Muskie's statements on Viet- nam a1'd his views on defense, Yorty says .. "I realize you were reared in a small state sheltered in many respect~ from the reillities of the forces of sub· version and the ideological war beina waged against us." Hy Robert S. Allen and John A. Goldsmith Opposes No-Fault Auto Insurance To the Editor : The Feb. 2l issue of the "Family \Veekly" supplement carried an atticl'e entitled "What You Should Know Aboot Auto Insurance." by Faye Henle. and, \11hile we know that the article in this nationally published supplement docs not necessarily carry your neWspaper's en- dorsement. we wish to take exception to purported facts about "no-fault" auto insurance used by the author. We believe the article is grossly misleading on several counts, but particularly in sug. gesting that "no-fault" auto insurance 'A'ill bring lower premium rates. THE NEWEST Pied Piper mo11ement abroad in the land is I.ht aUempt by a minority of the insurance industry to sell the public-and the state Legislature-an alien concept of "no- fault" automobile insurance. The rome-on is the glowing promise or &ubstantially reduced i n s u r a n c e premiums. extended by some of the larger casually carriers. that are being carried a\11ay wilh the profits being made by accid~nt and heillth companies and have decided that they. too. 'A'Ould Ukt' to become accident and health ~om· panles. The An1erican Insurance As.'!OCialion, for example, says its "no-fault " plan \\·ould' result in sa,•ings to auto O\\'ners ranging from 19 percent to '45 percent dcpt'nding on the type of insurifice c-ar- ried and whether he carries C<Jllision insurance. TlfE EVIDENCE does not 5Upport these lo'A'<OSt claims. The American Mutual I n s u r a n c e Associ11tlon :says the AIA ·•nc>fault .. plan ~·oold rlll.&e the present cost of Insurance for ~t pGllcyholders and 'A'OUld substantially reduce lhe benefits paid lo Innocent victirru of auto ae<::ldents. •·Specifically, we rind tbal the AfA Pl~n would increase the cost ot balic b&:lily Injury roverasc by at least 29 percent, instead of reducinK the cost 25 perctnt 35 Indicated by the AIA estimates," reported the AMIA The Nationa l As soc I a I la n -0f lndeptndcnL Insurers said Its actu~rl•I analy~ls of the CQ:il data ustd by the "nc>-fault'' plan's pro~nenl.s Indicates -. • , ' 1) ·~ailbox ' • L•tttn frlll'I rMHr. -Wik-. l+l,,,..1111 wrlltn .,,..,,.,. """'' lll1lr -~ Ill M ...,., W kt$. ,,.. rltlll le ctMMI.. ltrtfn lol fl! -., lllmlft•I• llHI II ,_,......, AH ltltert ""''" r ... <IHI ~,,_ 1M m1lllflt aHreti. kl 1111111• _, M wl"°"14 eft ..-11 If t\ltlkl1ott ,..._ 11 1,,.rtftt, ....iry Wiii ...i M 1t11ll•lililof. that the cliimed rate reductions will not materialize. For one thing, said the NAJI, \he promised premium cuts in the plan would be made on1y from \\'hat are described as "fully adequate present rate1.'' Thus, for many motorists in many states where the companies proposing "'no-faull" feel lhe rates arc now inadequate. the promised bonanza wllJ prove a mirage. RICHARD M. MARKUS, president of the American Trill Lawyers Association, recently commented: "Obviously, pro. \'iding full compensation al present levels to more pe<>ple, as true non-fault pro- grams would purport to do, must necessarily increase the cost. Thus the non-faulter would greatly reduce the compensation obtained by the relatively innocent victim in order to pay somelhing t-0 .the guilty driver. The real issue is whether innocent victims should ~ entitled lo full compensation for their peraonal damages .. , The California Trial Lawyers Associa· lion support.'! Go11ernor Re a g a n's Automobile Accident Study Commission recommendation of last D e c e m b e r against the adoption of a system of "no-fault" insurance In California. The ctlmmission found that "such plans offer a nurr.ber of substantial obstacles," in- or.luding, among others, reduced coverage and a possible unfortu1U1te effect <Jb insurance-rating techniques. WE BELIEVE theft are many basic legal. ethical, and m-0ral arguments against "~fault'' automobile insurance. Don't Renew the Draft \Yashington -On June 30, U1e draft will expire. We urged three years ago that it shouldn°l be.jenewed again. Never before in history, we pointed c.ut, has the U.S. relied on con- seription for so long a period. 11ie youth rebellion, me a n. w hi It , hiis spread /rom the campos to the camps. GI mlli· tairrta 1 r e talkini;: mu~ny. Mot.ale is sagging. Discipline is crumbling . An i~reaslng number of youni men have bet>n prtssed into 3ervlce lo fight a war they haw. Tht draft hu become 90 unpopular that draft dodging has become socially ac- ceptable. Those who escape: service aren't rtRarded is slackers so mueh as those who are dr11fled art reg1rded as suckers. ~ argurnent!I against the drnrt are more ~ntpclJln.g loda.y than • /aCk Andenou they were three years ago. EY~ DOWN-Rep. Tom Steed., r>- Okla., an okl-style politician, l" ~n­ temptuous of the new TV campaigning. tie defP.ated Jay Wilkinson. 50l"I of the p-0pular former Oklahoma football coach Bud Wilkinson, last Novembtr. Saya Steed: "Young Jay ran television a<b an over the statt. dl!:picting himsel! in a beautiful pa.storal ~ne. walking In the htlds, staring up «t the sky. Contented cows y,·ere: mUnching grass· hl.o; wife wea gazing up Into h I s face: I told +tht folks In Oklahoma I might not be as smart 111 younR J11y, but at least I gol enough ~no;e 10 look at tile s;round when T'm walkfng around CO\\'!I. 1 won by tht h1g,11est margin l ever had.'' And people who. quite rightly ind reasonably, are hoping for a reduction in insurance premiums should not look for it to come with ''no-fault'' insu rance. The real answers, of course, to reducing premiums will be round in increased auto and highway safety, impr oved con· struction of cars, stricter driver licensing requirements, and the many other fac· tors that can contribute to reduction of death. injury, and accident on ow- highways. • () RONALD D. SALK CalifOrfiia Trial Lawyers Association Sen. Philip A. Hart . D·Ahc/1., llos introdiiced 110-fault lt'gislation 111 Con· gre33 after three years of hror111gs by hi.s Senate antitrust Olld monopo/!J subcommittee. Senator Hart conleuds thai by drastically redud ug , if not eliminating, court actions -i 11volvina auto accidents, insurance premium! could be lower. The senator asserts that only 14 cents of tile personal injury l1abilir11 pren1i 11v1 do/lot actually pay motori.~1:, for 011l·of·pocktt losst s. Of tht Tl!.~t, lPgrll fees alone tora/ed 11.1 billion itt 1969 -"conservatively estin111ted to be one·fourth of the total incomt nf tlte legal profession that accidenc uear," he claims . -Editor ----Tuesday, March 16. 1971 T~u tditorial page of the Do1/u Pilot seek$ to inform and sti m· tllatt readers by prtstntl ug l h11 ntwrpape:r'a QPini0111 ond com- mentafll, on topic.i of inrertst and significance, by providing o /mrm for tht expression of our readers · r>pin ions. and by prt1tnti11n the diver1t vi8W· point$ of i11/orn1td obstrver1 and sp<>krs 111e11 011 topic1 of tJ1t day. Robert N. Weed, Publisher .... J ' ' • • • li;esd.11, Much 16, 1971 OA.ILV Plltr.' l ' • isccunl OUR NAME MEANS DISCOUNTS EVERYDAY! WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF QUALITY MERCHANDISE AT LOW DISCOUNT PRICES. P~ICES EFFECTIVE WED. THRU TUES., MARCH 17·23, 1971 , GROUND ~~~:·DABLE /) BEEF QU ALITY STANDING RIB ROASTLARGEE YE c c lb. NOllEMA:· ® 39c BUFFERIN f.!*'\ 69c EFFERDENT !"J.*', a· 2c SHAVE CREAM TABLETS ~ TABLETS ~ I FLORIDA I JUICE VALENCIA LB. ORANGES ' c lb. CANTALOUPES 39t. RADISHES .. ~=~~:s 10~. ' . ,,. . \ " GARDEN FRESH •GREEN ASPARAGUS c fresh cut forget-me-not flower~ GLADIOLUS 29 BUNCH GREENS e MUSTAtO • Wl •COUARD~ • SWIS.SCHAtD 10~. • r" , • ,;-- •ROWN ONIONS 31b~:z29c • STORE HOURS, DAILY 10 A.M. 10 9 P.M. Sol. & Sun: 10 A.M. 10 7 P.M. 'ORNISH FRESHFROZEN ~ . MIN.WT. , 1 lb.20z. ·GAME HENS FRESH PORK' ROAST PICMCSTYLE FARMER JOHN . SLICED PORK LOIN CHOPSt~;~:R SOME fAI STOIUS IM:KOdT (KAlG( PIKI @ii0uili .. ciif'ooD J8' 14c 61/JOLSfU.YOIS }ft 1Jc @cAKE 0Mlxis··"'"'' f(• 37c @Liiiu'1'D CLEANER :a· 43c @roMAT0°PUREE lf• 27c . . ~· 39c ~·37c ®ou.tDA•2ll•FtOllH --rench Fries ~; .. c ~· 25c ~· 41c ~· 54c 1f2Gl.LLON•FAMILY PACIC FOREMOST ICE CREAM j!1 63c 4* I OZ.•lOOO ISlANOOR ITAUAN ,,:;.., Bob's Dressings I OZ.• REGUlAR Qt! SWEET Milk• REFRIGllATm PILLSBURY BISCUITS }f• 9c l 3!i COUNT• ASSORTED• SOME STORtS CHARGE 37c @6IANT1UEAD 45s.33c ~FM• 6 PACIC • SUCED/FORl SPUT ~English Muffins 37~.._29c f1*'i 4STAa ~DISCOUNTi ARE EXTRA DISCOUNTS MADE POSSIBLE BY SPECIAL PUR-CHASES FROM THE MANUFAC· TURER & PASSED ON TO YOUl 1 LB. CAN e REGULAR •DRIP • ELECTRIC PERK J LL CU• lllULAl. ILICTIK PllK l.ll FAD . SAllTA AllA 2120so. BRISTOLATWAANER COSTA MESA 2200 HARBOR BLVp. AT W11.SON . LA PALMA 8023 WALl((R AT LA PALMA • I I .1 I . • l ' c • ,• Q OAILV l'lllo1 'Zodiac' Boasti1i<r c Of /(ills !.OS A'<;ELES IUPll - An clus1ve killer who calls himself ··zodiac·• and claims r .. pons1bilily for 14 murders tn the San Francisco area has bolsted in a letter of killing 1 college coed and olher ptr&onS in Southern Cs liforn ia. TM lltttr, p n s l rn ark e d Salurday in the Northern California town of Plf'asanlon, v;as recelvtd b~ tbt LOI Angeles Timtl Mond1y. It began wiUi the fa1niltar :salutation : "This is the Zodiac :speaking." it referred to a 1968 killing in Riverside County east of here· which was linke\1 by aulhQritles to the Zodiac. In that case. Cheri Jo Bales, 18, a Riverside City College coed, was knifed to death after being lured from her stalled IWtsdty, Marth lfi., 19/l A , Lile Ends ' Sel f-poi~oned Bo )/ Buried SAN OlEGO /UPI ) -There were bachelor's buttons and irises as final rite! for Bill Andreco tilonday _, just as he had requested Jn his JOO.page suicide diary. Anclreco 's body w.ms found last week on a cliff overlooking the Pacific Ocean. He had COO· sumed a beakell' of cyanide. llis family Lhen dl!ico\·ered lhe diary lhel outlined the tt- year-0ld student's thinking about hfe. death. farnily and h11r1dl In hl1 l11t d1y1 and duc~bed h~ molhodlcal p,.. paratlon for death. • ''There is no secret reason being kept from you as lo v.·hy he Is not with us today." said the Rev. Lucerne W. Sands, pastor or the Clairemont Con· venant Church "He had a busy life on campus. There. v.•as no indlc•· tion of unhappine11s, frustraUon '--/"' auto in a deserted parking lot. u,1 T•ltllfltl• or depression. ' "Biil hid f brilllanl mind . H• w•• · an lnlt!lll leholtr. a friend with 1 seh~ of humor and a scientist who rontributed much in his brief years.'' SCHOLAR BUll\llD Wllll1m I. A"~rtto Thi letter gave poUqe credit for ''stumbling across my Riverside aclivi!y, but 1hf'y are finding only the easy ones. There are a he ll of a lol rnnN! down tht:re." Andrero was top boy Jn his high school graduating class before moving on to the University of California at Santa Barbara. , In his last letter lo San Francisco papers !he ZOdiac claimed he killed 14 persons since 1968. Police have linked him with five. "Please be assured ifs not bec1use of God. grade•. sex or dope." he wrote in his diary. And in the final enlry Ma rch 10, he "'(Ole: "Pleese, please v.·hoever you are Y!'ho fin ds this first. Try to con· vince my famll y, my friend!. whomever, that I am nol bitter in my actions -but quiet. satisfied. content." The Times said in a pngt'! thtee alory today that it h"d the letter checked by ,handwriting expert J ohn Hnr- ris who \'erificcl that the same And lhen the final wordJ 1 "TM wJ\1 i• the rtalOll." person who v.·rote the San cisco letters was~ tt1e r of the latest one. S rUy after the HIM coed slaying the Riverside Pre.~s Enterprise received in Uie mail a typewrillen "con- fession" and lhree other notes, two of which were signed "Z.!' Hal\dwriting experts sa id thert was a ''d i1tincl posslbllltv" that the Riverside notes and the othe r letters were wr!tten by the san,e person. Pickets Halt Unloading Of Ecuador Banana Boat LONG BEACH iUPll Several hundred pickets block- ed lhe unloadil\f4 21o6o t.w of Ecuadori.mn bananllil Mon- daT from a German freighter in protest of the South An1crican country's seizure of ... i..u ........ SHOW HER YOU'RE NOT CLOWNING AROUND Tex ture~ finish dia mond bridal sets 1n 14 karat gold. A. $500. B. S595. C. $425. D. S300. E. S250. F Man's ring. goes with all sets. $35 We're in Show Business. Divided Payments Arranged. Clllrwt •~~h lnw1"'9. A-IUll llJ,..IU, l~ftlAll'llrk•"' I~ Mttltr O>tf'lt, IN SLAVICK'S .lr\\f'len Sint-e J917 18 FASH ION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644-1380 Open Mon. •nd Fri., 10 •. m. to ':10 p.m . American fishing vessels. Organizers o! the picketing ••kt t.h1 .10Uol\ w11 thf' star! oJ 1 n1Uo11wldt boycott of Ecuadorian products. Aboul 3 (I O longshoremen .refused to cross the lines and a spokesman for the Amer ican Tuna Boat Association said pickets would remain at the freighter Aldenberg around the clock. A 1poiesman for Slandard Fruit Co., distributors ofc the fruil, expresse-0 co"cem that the $500.000 wor\b ol banana• would spoll by lM 1nd of the week ii urtlon nt11Kl1\lon1 did not reso lve the issue. The pi cket lines were mad e up of members of the tuna association and cannery and fi shermen's unions. \Villiam Heintz, a Standard vice president, said th~ picketing was a "totally unfair action against the American consumer" and lhat it would affect such "innocent third parties" as house.,.,·ives and longshoremen. '1 '1 fl Ttu1ney Asks Accelerated ' Fine F1mds ' ·\VASHI NGTON (UPI ) -A California Senator declares he will introduce legislation to speed federal compensatio n I or commercial fishermen seized or harassed on the high seH.'i Sen. Juhn V Tunney. a Den1oc rat. on Monday called such seizures "a clea.r viola· lion of intern11lional lav/' ~hat "amount lo ransom b y piracy.'' Under his propo s al. fishermen would be rom· pensated directly from !he US Treasury rather than from funds fr om sup- plementary appropriation.'i. He estimated p1yments could be made in one or two weeks, rather than frnm sh: to seven months. Stand Against Nixon LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL SOTICE S l B 'h'nd Aid R f ,_°"!!!___.,,..__ , ...... "::-:::.,. ..... o ons e i e orm 1~Tt~ti!!1.~.~' ~".:.:::1!!.~~;p.~~:5·.~::~ ltltt. of 11.0llll:T S 01! GIA$Sf a1.1 .. Clh' o1 'i.11+1 Ml'W, (0<inh ~ Me ll:Oat lt T 01 Olt~Sf:, •~• ll:Ot t1tf ~:. ?~•.:i-n::...C~ll:.":~r..ri:::•:..n::: SACRAME"'TO 1UPll I . t ti 1a1· ' h' h IT CLAlll Of Oll:ASSI. o.t•...W .... ._. ' ,, m n 1 s r a ve regu ions. nn t ~m w 1e , among HOT1c1 11 Hll•••v et¥1N tci 1t11 :r• 1111 .tiow . '~. ''t': ::'':.\: ~~.~;,:_: Republica• Jt1d1n Qf the Others require legislation. olher 1 would estabUah ctM1..,, 11 *" •"9n ~-tec.o~n• , :;: "r'°"' 1~ '' Calilornl• Je.t1l1ture stood Burgener, gentr1lly ,,1~. a m1-•-·· ' 1 If "" •11 ,.,...,.. "-~1111 tl•llM "•1'"' .fE1rt0!11so"·s rv a. APll\.IANcrs ·~01 •• ••u JJQ1ui annua we are IM .. 1c1 ftud111t •r• te.ti!rM lt 1111 11111 1,1., 11r.., 11 t11m_..:1 01 1~· solldly with GGv. 1\onald ed as a p h l I 0 s 0 p h i c a I •llotmtnt of .200 for • r1 ml· r"':'.ltl J"" .... ...c:.:::."' ~•ucft4r;bo 1: lol"""lng ""o"•· WftO'lf 119mtl •"' Reagan and 11.lliftll Prt1\dent moderate, said a major effect Jv or four while ln<Ttulng .... ,11 ... twrt • ., ... ,.,..:; ,:-..,., wl~~ •nnrtH'• ••••• IO!il>WI l N • tod If f R '.J 11'9 ,., "' ' Rohr! W•n•, NI• tlO)I 11~b"' 1 1xon ay on we are o eagan's progr1m would federal wtUart apendtnf by 11,...r•::••1,.. ~utitr:; ""~'""":::. s,,.,,, 4ft1tt1er. w11111"' f.~'"' N•I reform . be to "immensely slow down" $4.5 billion The prOl(fam now ~!"fM," .!.."'°-'cMM1 D1t, ~1,w11tc11r1 ~~1~~1~ R:: s~:~~. "'I:~ ":11h n,1 Se Cl Ir W ' •-'d I . If . . I th H W --.i ...... ""'' .... ""' .. ~ .. , 111 .. "'11 , n. a . Burgener tR-·~ rap1 r s1 1n we are rec1-is n e ouse ays "'N nuo. <Mileft i. t11t •itce lff bu•1r1tu " Fet>ru•'Y· 197 Y San Diego), Introduced plents. They 11ow number Means Committee "' 1111 ..,,. .. ,ti.,_ IR 111 "'''"'' ,..,. wR~ ... ·,~~. ~~15Js JUI' h . 111111,.. ,. ................... ~, .... ..,., Reagan '! welfare leglslatlon more t an 2.2 million. Mo11ajlan; a roauthor of w1t11111 ,_. ftWltllhf •tt• 1111 11r11 1111111u: STATI!! oir CALtFORNIA d k I Tl S 01 Se I 'd Re ' I 1111 h d 11""'''~1•1101ici. an ac now edgf', ''lf the ie an ego na or sat 11.~an s eg s a on, a o.itt1 """~•r' u. 1tn couNTY Of ORA"IGE 1 President's ramlly assistance his ''n1ain reservation" about previously supported the =~"'0;1os.1 011.1.$I!' 0~~ 1~: ... ~"hrn:.•1 ,i:" ~':::,~~:~.:.0; plan passes that pretty much Nixon's plan is th11l it would President's plan. But he -said ot =' .:.:., ':!,,,W~"•-•nt Not.,.,. Public. •n 1M tor 11\d C1>unt• d h. II d Id" ,•··ghly double the b f h f th • w•Tilro\AM AMO scMMIDT .,,.. sr,i,, '"lfl~• t11tr•1~ du 1 ' ren ers l JS nu 11n vo . "" num l!!r o e now pre .ers e governors 1u1 wmn1t1 °"" iuut ,,. commlulp::'11 • .,. 1worn, .,..,j.(>~,11• He ldded., "l'vt -t •--n retlpien~ n1tionwldt. "becauat 1t clOiCI m 0 re "-"" ••Id. C•llt. ""' 1-••IS' •o111r1 w1ue~ NI• •ml w1111., .. •N ~ •·ll h ~ ol t' I -'-ol " 'hh tntl '*"" cvrw• NI• klll"1> 10 m• 10 1,. 1~• Niily 1t1thUti11Ue ebout the "" an II ntn Ont ol OOpu 11. iittwMYt ,.. 1.....,.. r:r11111 WllM• n•-• ••• 1vlll.~"1>tt I ·1 · I most f)Ulllpokell crill~ of Nia· ''*u....-or1,._ e .. tt Dtll' ,11411 IM wllfll~ 1n•1tum•11I 1n11 11.m1 Y assistance p an. I lhlnk LEGAL NOTICE Mlrtri 1, t. 16, 21, itn UI·" r.::~,:•f'll to "'' ,~., 1htv t•t(u1t~ this is a better approach." wiT1<1Es s ..,. hind ..... 0111t1111e•1 Other key GOP lawmakers •A••• LEGAL NCYrICE 101F1c1AL !EALI •i'eed a• the Ha · B ks NOTIC• TO c••D•To•s ..... y BETt1 MOlllOll g 0 Ver JI 0 r ms ac IU,•lllOll: COUltT DP' TM• ,..... No!1rv Public· C1lltofnll fonnally stnt his long -awailt'd IT•T• 0' C•Ll,lllU• 110• Clll:Tl,ICATI 0, •US INISS, ,rltl<i.1• ()l/i(t In welfare and M··1 ra1 b•'l l~ TMI COUMTY 0, DllAN•I ,ICTITIOUI NAMll 0••119t c ..... 1. ~ ~ ' p f i.l ,... A...-.i n... Ull .. tlltMd lo rtr11fv ltilY .,. ,.,y Comlr!IHlon E•P•rt• Monday lo a Democratic COO· eace 1 IE1t1t1 of IOlfll:T JAMfS Flt'l'E <••1ch1ctl11t 1 IMlll'IM• ti Po. 81• •J1e 'Ubtl~!I ~~:?.'. CNI• Ol tl• p, trolled Je.nslature. 1!10 k-•• ll:Dlt:IT J. l'ltYI!!, lr~i .... C111te.rn11, unw in. 11c1111ou, I' n ,,,. :tl 1111 ~rch 1 9 1~ ,. 1 ~· o~c••""3. """' ~·-flf l'LOll:AL MASTIEll,11lClt:$ • • • ' . •I 71 Assembly Republican Lead· NOTtCf IS HE•f•Y GCVl'M to ,,,. •llcl fflll HI• flrm It com_..i flf 0 Ro•· T M w p cr..:lll'Ort el IM 11Jo1>t Mm.cl OtttMftl llw 1911_1,,. "'""'' wl'>oil """" lft er U"Crt • onagan Of ar rotesl !~If Ill P1rH111 hlVlnt Cltl"'I ttlln•I lull 1<Mj •IMH 9f rHldtnc:e ltt ti Tracy vowed to oppose the 111t ulcl ""'"•nr '" r•ul rff "' 1111 tfll.w1: LEGAL NOTICE t!'>tm, wJth '"' ntc:Hn.., ~OIH:htri. In Cru.rl•• CE. s,...n II, uao w1111c1 stale budget, a tax reform '"" lfflc1 01 1111 c1,,. flf tf1.t • ._, ""'·· Ha. H, co111 Mu•. fnld tt. ••• :M:11 blll "or anything p]se" until SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -•nUtltd court, °' lo prtMnl 11141111. with si .. n, !toll w-ll1tt A~•· N•, tt, co111 NOT1ct: TO c1101To11 Orn 0 . . lh• nKtHIN WWtlltr ...... , ... ,...... SlJ' .. llttDlt COUllT 01' THI( his colleagues make ...a "gut 1 reslsler avid Harne. u~~tftW 11 ell •;:1111 Mlt-I""""'· liitrl "" " "l' sTATE o" c•Lcl'ORNIA 1'011: deci sion" on how to check paroled. from . fed1rll prison, ~;;;r ..... ~rr'.:. Lr.;11,::11 ft1,.T,h Wll~.·~tl i~~\P•,~oJbOAN 11 THI co~:.T:.:'no•ANG• runaway public assistance . says !us noviolent effort to tllt •l•c• 01 bv•fntn of lll• u..n,.1 .. .w 111i."' c11i1er~1 •. or1n•• count•: E1t•tt 01 Afl11Y l"OL5TE1N Rutrr~ Reagan's p'oposals _ ,,.,,, end the Vietna m war has met~ •1,',,"','",." P••111",':,• ", tht •11•1• On l'•bruor1 u, 1t11. bl!ort mt,,~. ABIY K RUTTEll, ~k• ABLI • ec Int. w '"" our ll'lcnth1 1 Noterv Public In inn IGt ••Id 51111 ll UTIER O•(t••td announced publicly on t.farch with much greater success •111• lllt ''"' pub11c.11en of 1M1 no11c1, "rton1nv 1pP11 rtd Ch••l•s e.. s1o.; NOTICE is ·HER EBY GIVEN '" 1•' 3 Id I than "Ill lh · llh II Diltd Ftbru••Y 1', 1'71. It tnll Enid H SINn known lo mt cr.dll'Otl or th• •llcoo n&rntd dt ttdr -WOU tr m "'elfare and e CrllJe! W I Nino Jt1n F'rvt. l!!~tcutrl1 to bf !ht ,,,.0,.. IOhOst lllll'lll ltl !~II •11 PfrtOlll h1vln9 cl1lm1 1;~,· 1 Medi.Cal sp end j n g ;, ) the OOmbs and all the machine °' "" wm °'th•.~ •ulttcr1b9<1 I• tM •llhln 1nitcu,,,...1 1N th• old n.c..,.n, 1ro rrqul••d 10 111 " above "'......., dtt..,tnl icknowltde.O lhtv tat1:ull<I tht 11m1 th.m, with !ht nttt11••Y vouthu\, •1 California by roughly $600 gun,, •o"ALb H. ,lllHJlllll !0,l'ICIAL SIAL! . !ht olflct ol lht (ltrk or t~· ·""~' mil!il)T1 in federal. state and The 2ii·year-0ld fonner SI.an-:1':8'V::;; ;.'ft1~:·11...... t~~~ E;ut?i~~~.11""ml• :;111•d,.~:~;!·,..,0' ':::C':::~~' 1~~"'· :"~1; county fund!'!. f~d Unlverslly student body ~t:• ,!;:: c,~~~, •"•'·u",111 Coun1v"' Ori"'• ur>0t.,l111t<1 •• '"" cnico or n11 A"D'"•· • A th lh . bl 'd • • . ~ My Comm!HIOI! l~•lrt• DURYEA. CAll PENTER .. !l<IRNf' mong o er 1n.e~. a e-pre.1>1 ent said 1t do.tsn't make Attw1111v tv ••.ecutrl• JU'll u 1t11 uiY· tANli:Sl J sci-r,1,c JR I, ":' bodied recipients would bf' re· sense to blow up buildings F~...t>~~..,:tl 0;•; .. M c~112 °/11', "",'i 'ubll•-o;,,.., Coa1t 0.11 .. '1101 M•cAr11111r 11M1 .• P.O. 110• 1·11.1, rl•wP~•• I _ _, , . . ru n trc • ' ! • l 7 l'1brv1rv n'11MJ Mlrch J, ,, u , 1•11 «!7·11 111tll. C.llfcrn11 '1663. 10hlch i. •~· qu r~ !o seek work, "'''fare bec11uu 'buildings don't make 41•11 111(• 01 1>u11,,.n ot Ille u"""''~~· 1 eli~Jbllilv standards would be ~•r · -..pf• make wir" , ..,.. ,, NOTI-r •QAL .ioncE 1~ •II rn111er1 .,.r111n1111 10 1ne ••"•" . · • ,..... · -....UAM -""" '' of u la aKtdr nt, wit Mn tour "''""I tightened and hl'alth can Hll'rit spoke 1t. ntwt'tioa-'"". •Ii.>' ltlt llnr publlc•!I ... ol !hit no!I~• would be trimmed lo more ference at San Ft·antisco weTic .. ~: ~oiToti woT1c1 TO t•tDITORs o.renJ~e:o~~v11 1;·H~~soN RUTlEll closely match al "average International Airport ,11,, h• "'!' ol' cAL1f'O•MtA .,o• ,\utr~•ig: c~~~::.:r,. ~~~ E•ecutor o1 int w111 ·•· ' u TN COUNTY 0' OllANGI of lht lllOY~ """'"" dtt<•d•rl CJ 1ien s. v.·as rele.msed from prison He. •-Mm THI COUMT'I' 0, 011.ANOe bURYE•. C•Rl'ENlER & ••RNES Snme of Reagan's proposals Monday H• new he-11.h E•t1!t ot JAMES ... ILAll:E, ·-· l:t111t 9f l!!U~· :H~R O Ooce1-·" IY : 1!1tN•sT J. 5CH•G· Jll. 1 . • .. w JAM!:S ANGUS !ILA llE, tnd JAMI$ 111!: ' ..,... QJJ -Arthur llvtl .. -Ike ~e work program -his wife. fol ksinJer Joan Baez, Eow1.11:0 11LA•ll. Otc111.ci. c.:i~~;E1/51.._H .':i:,v :.:.~N~!';ri f'.o. &e• 1ru e1n be 1mplementtd by Id· and J6-month-0ld son Gabriel cr:i~~~;E01111h:E,"t!~.Y ":~N.110"~'": ct111 111 --ft1~1,. c!1lm1 1111n11 ~~,:;.1eh. Ctll/. ""'' Angela Davis Backers Hold Court Rally SAN RAFAEL, Ca lif. !U PI) -Su pporters or black militant Angela Davis rall ied today oulside the courtroom in sup- port of her attorney's pleas to have charges a1ainsl htr di!misstd. An hour before a court he11.r- ing for Miss Davis "'as scheduled to start, several da1an parsons had gath!red. "l1lt t I r I y demonstratiors Wtrt quiet. but carried. a ''Free Angela" banner. Only a few spectators rould bt admitted lo lhe small JOO. person capacity courtroom for the proceedings. Those who wanted to gel in had to 11ub- mil to the extremely light security measures. including frisking and examination by a metal-detection dev1ce. Spokesmen fer I N1Uon1I United Cornmltttt fl) Jll'!'ff Angela Davis called for 1 "massive mobilization" out. side the courtroom "hlle her attorneys wtre pr!pired to l'lrgue inside Ult room that she should be frttd. The courtroom is at the ~farin C>unty Civ ic Center v.·herf: a judae and three other persons wert shot lo death during an abortive escape try by Son Quentin convicts Aug. 7. The state his charged Miss Davis. 27. 1upplierl the weapons used by the convicts in the shootout. Caucus Chief Resigns Po1l SACRAM~NTO !UPI) Sen11te Republltan Ca u e u 1 Chairman H. L. Rlt:~ll1rd1on has resigned his post in pro- test over refUsel by GOP col- leagues to help him relai• the Senate Subcommittee on Un·Americ.mn Activities. Richardton (R·Arc1di11). also sa id Monday he intends to criticize portions of Go1·. Ronald Re111n'! w ~If are reform pro1r•m and P~si­ dent NiJ:on'1 proposed revenue sharing pl11. , ' • lh ' " ltl1 Ml• dKedtnl 1•1 rROulr.0 to lilt AllwM ft 11 1 \\•ho met him 00 his release u 111 "'MM 111v1no cl1hT1• 1111ns1 "''"'· w!lh ltl• "9«H•rv V111C11tr1 1,, '1 r •K•., I h th• 31\d OK""""' .,, re<1ulrtd !O lilt '"-.Uk ol tft cl .... f I~ bo ,ubtllh'd Or1n1• c~11f D11IY p "' rom l. e La Tuna Federal tt.em, wTt~ itie '"'"""'"' vouc~er1. In Mrllltd ~. or •ie ;, ... ~1 -'m.' •1~ Fffru1•1 :tl 1nc1 M•r(~ ,, r. 1•. 11 ' CorrecUon al Instltullon ne1r ine ollk• of !ht <!"k ar Th• •bovt ltle nteHwrv """""•n, t. Ill.I 411 n tn!llll!d cour.t, or la P••••nl tn•m, wltn ""!ltralentd it th<I otl!c• ot her 1ttor YI El P1so, Tex. lh• nK•n•,.., vauch•n, I• 1 h e McKIHNA a. l'ITTtNG, P.O. Bo• ';"~ LEGAL NOTICE Harris who spenl -th uo,ersl•~ed •' 1tit olllct. of h•• 1rtorntv : 1•lll0 (I TMo ll:Md. Su!lt A, Li 9un•I--------------' ~ mon s H. JACK HALL, •U E1 ll 111h !h't"fl, HUii Ct!llCll'nl• nu::r ... hlch h th• ,...,.M in prlton for refu1ing te be COii• M•••· C•tlfotnlt 92,27. Wl'll~fld ''"' .• , II~!""• "'"1111 Uftdlrt11nt0 ClllTll'IClTI 01' COR,OltlllO"I FO~ " uel1d into the armed Ill ,11 1111!1•1' Hrllllll ... lt\I ... ,. flll\I. 0 ' .. ,.te Tll'ANS•CTION 01' IUSINEIS UNOEll I d ,..., 111<1 111 l>u•lntll of '"' uMt1111 a "' ..... .....1.1 ' th I If ..... I II~ i...... ' 1111 ..... ~,, Wttlll\ four •N!llltll FICTITIOUS NAM! force!, Sl id when he started :11,~•th• 11,:1111;1j,,~.:;, t~t• na:r'R ' • tr "" flflil M tc1lltl!" IM• r.on,,. The Und•'llgnt<I Corng'l!lon ~~·1 • -oup c1lled ' • Th' 01ttd F•bru1rv " \,11 • ff, 0.1 .. l'lllNlrv "· !01 lllffb~ c•t!lly lti1t I! 1. tonducfl~• e• G I • · l'!AllL SHE.,AltO LONEY 1 rt"'•<ll1I rofdlnv bu~lnni et l<'ll Resistance" in 1966 only a Ad~~;11•1r.~r7•' ll · • 11 '•· E•tt:ulft• If IM Wiii c111• n11 Sol. c ... 1,1r1r.o se1ch, C•lifo•n•• rew people wouldn 't coopefate Tllh·~~~--;111:~~·" ol Mctt•,.~' .. 7 ~~Nn;l'l'lftl ~tcfftnl ~nd~u1~":n~~(ll~::i.:1:~~m D~·~~.,~~ R~~:~~: with the Army. ,.:v~ ~1'm111 o!c..:iin• :~o ••~111110"· Md:•r'9'11 ceun1v 1nc1 1titt .. 1d ll•m I• et1rn1101H "Tod h H J.t.CIC M.t.Ll • • ha I !If ' tht !ollawlnq cOrP<1r•Hon. .,hO!>t ay. I e government has 1Jt E•$1 111~ Slrfft ""'II T•I ., .. lullt A ,..lntl l'll p11c1otbu•ln•u 11 ••follow·. lo draft two men to gel on~ c1111 M~u. c1Mrw~11 nn1 ~·r•~14",11.';e.,~·~n.r~lt "'" Cft1rle1 D1vlno" ccn11•u(!lon. If>( . Til· '-O·HU 1' HUI Clll'lfllO at E1tr1ll1, C10,.1t1.,. 1110 the Army. Now I call ,.11w,,.1 i.. •tm1~1",.h'1• Alllt"'V' .., ••1t111t1J Bte~. c.n1orn11 ' hi( th I · If' I wr,.,.tri.Wlll ••M•IOI l'ul>llih.O Dr•"'t c .. 11 0111, 'lltt WtTNll5S !11 1'1M 1hi1 111n aev " e mos sign 1can sue-.,ut>lllll..:1 •0,,,,,, c .. tt 0111• ,1101• ,_111rv 12 ,,.,. M1rdl t. '· ,,, 1n1 F1bru1rv. 1•11 Clll in the last five years. Ft1rv1r, t3 lftd Mt rtll J. 1, 1'. 1111 a.n fn"ies Ofviuon C0<01•ruci.t~ J ehallen1e anybody te come 111·11 LEGAL NOTICE c~ARLEs 0Av1ssoN, up wiU. a better 1u11ution. LIGAL NOTJOI aaa ,... ~~·~~~"~ o•v1~~0N "Now. itranttd. we haven't 111eT1t•-to t1tt111To11:s stcre1•rv · ' cul it off b I . • MERCHANT .... MIRCMA"T SlJ' .. llltO tt COUltT 01' TN• STATE OF C•LtFORNIA l . u 11e ve ro~e Num~•r o ... ,,, . ITATI 01' c•L"Oll "l l .. !'Oil COUNT'( OF O~•NCE hi a damn site closer to cutt1n1 MAll:sN•L'S s•L• TMll! cou"TY OI' 01tAHGll On r~i1 111n d•v or F~b•u1ry. 1~11. b• jt off lhan anyihfng J k !It ~Ir!~• ol In ••Kullon l1•utd ""' NI. A""'JI for1 m., I No!1ry Puo!lc \n a"o ror u~ , • nO\Y ol l~e SUPt rlor Courr ol Jualdl! Ol11tle!. 11!:3!1Tt of SAR•H M. GE RE N. Counl't' 1nd Siii•. tt"dlnf tne"'"' d~I> of. All the cr11.z1e1 with all Ctunt1 ot or1n&1. s11tt 01 c11U••nl1, Otc1t1t<1. cornm1111nnt<1 ind swo,n. P•'>ll"•"' th. bo b d II th h• d1rK1 fhe fth 01Y ct F•bru1rv, A.O. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEW ID !ht •Ht1r.O C ... rl11 01vln"" end £1••1 m S an a e m&C me 1'11, 1n • c1rt1ln tenon wherein JA.,f erKlll<lr1 !If !ht 1bev-n.,,,.., dtc..:ltnl C, 01vitlon known to "'' to bf •~·• guns vou want h11ve not come lEllESA DELLE MEll:CHANT '' ... ti. lh1I •II """"' n1v1,.. cl•Tm• •••1ft•I Prt•IMnl ..... SecroT11v "' '~. ' • I ·1 " h 'd 11.,,., roKOvtr1d lud•""'"' "1ln1t HAii;· I~• l•ld Oltf'11n! 1rt r111ulrM lo Ill• corporillon t~•I e•ttulltd 1~, ,..11.,. 11a C OSe, e !81 . RY MCEll:CH.t.NT 11 Rfl!IOndenr for !ht th1m. wit~ lhf n1cn11 rv YflUtfttrl. In l~1lru..,111! on bl!h1U of 1ne C"•PO•~li"! Harris called nonviolenct 1um ot 1tn.OD l•wlul mcn•v of 1h1 1~. olllct of thf ~!••• 01 1n1 •tiev-,,,.,,1n nim..:1. ..... •c~"owlta;.., 1, " h f United $1•r•1. bUld11 cmll 11'1<1 !n!tru!, ..,U!IKI eourl , er IO •r•1e<tl lt\tm, with mt !hit \UCh (OrP<l•l!IOn ••t(Ulfd !"41 I e most po\\·er ul too I 11(., c11 !h• 111h 01• ot •~Ru•t, 1Kt. tnt ntc11urv vouch•••· 10 1 ~ • 11,... availab!t lo anybody in this I h•v~ l•vl..:I"" the ro11owlne af1<rlbN unMroll""° 1! t~• ~111,, 01 ~11 11!1cnirr1: WllNESS mv hand •nd c!!lt lil •t•I . . . Pr...,tr1Y, lc-wl" MITCH LL, HAlllT & lll lSCOE, t!S (OFFICIAL 5EJl.LI society or any other society L111 1~ !11 Block l 01 l••d No, c1v1c c1n1tr or1v1 W•••· s1nr1 An1, P~L o McCL•~v J ~ ahd the only •volullo I l ISl 11 1hown on • M•• "torn.o C1ll!om11 t17DI, whlc~ 1• "" .i1tt NO'l•rv Public. Cill!'o•nlt , r nary 00 In 1.o!< 16, p1t11 II to JI of of butlnl'll ol lht ulMltnltned In 111 Prlnclpol O!li<I In available to anybody." M!1c111tn10U• MIP• '"''"'•I Or1r111 '"'"'" 1p1r11tnln• lo '"" t•l•T• er n·~rot ceuntv County, C1!1fornfe, CornmOlll, In.own 11ld dM;t<llnl, wlll\ln lour "'onll'I •flt• My C""'mlnlon E•olrt! ao: 1l2 Wiii Avtnld1 ~n AnlOl'lo, tht t1rll 1t11bllc1llon of lftl1 .,.11ee. Del. 10. lf1J !>111 Ct1,.,.ntp, C11Uornl1 011.0 F1br11trv 11, 1t11 l'vb•h~Pd Or•~·-co .. 1 01;1~ l'I'' Ntt!(t it ntrtbY tl~•n lhlf Oft TUtldfY, WALLACE 0. G!AEW Frbru~ry 1l 1na M~rcn l, '· )j, 1911 IOJ l'I flit 1111 ft~ -' AJ"ll, ltPI 11 111• ~"¥,.... !If 1111 1(11111 of t'i*I A.M., of ""' f11 •' Cturl t •~t ~•""4 ·~"'"' Houtt Door, 1010 CroWft Vt ll~V ,1'11WtY, Ml'f'CJlllL , MAll1' a lllltee• L11un• N!tvtl. County el Or•nO•. 5!111 '1J C!~h: Clft!er Drlv1 Wnl ---- - !If Ctll!ornl1 I will 1ell ••I t~t rltM, llftlt AM, Ctllf9rflll tvll NOTICE O~ THE TIME ~118,L•c l lll!t 1NI lnl\ .. 11 OI ••IO ro1pon<llnl T•h Us.ftt1 01' K•AllNO OF THE LDCl,L .t.GEl>I In Inf lo tfte 1bov• dt1trll>M! "ooerlv, •tf'O"'tY lw ••tt:wllr CY l'Oll:MATtON COMlj!llllON 01 11 .. ubllc •1>tllon. ler llw!ul m011r1, ,ull1!1/\f0 Or1"91.. Cc11t OtllV ,-!lot OR•NOt: C 0 UN TY , C•LIFOll01!1 Expert Says LEGAL NOTICE lo "'• ftltft••I ..... btll blddtr, '• ,l'brvltT n •NI M••<ll z. ,, u, 1'11 WHIJM .... ,R Ol'O\ED AHMl .. .t.TIOI A 1tl1dv lllO ••tcutll'll ..... 111 '°'"· 11).11 TO COUljTY IEllVICE ••E• NO Ppear b1tlOI ti lt•un• NltUIL 11\t 111h 1 01' Oii.ANGE (OU NTY, •HD O°' •11 9f M1r~h. 1'11. LEGAL NOTICE JfCT\ONI 011 PROTl!!STI lHER~rn OILLAll:O O. WILICI R50N WILL If ,ll.SEHTED r'Dtt NE•R Volcanoes May Mtrlhl! ol lt\1 C<>tlll!v SUf'llllOll COUllT 01' TNll ll>llJ LOS ANGELES (UPI) ot Or•,,.•· 1!1!t ol C1lllorn11 STATll 01' CALl,DllMIA. P'Oll NOTICE 1S HEREflY G•~EN i~ .. -llY Oorol'ltv J. P•r-••· Oepurv TNll COUNTY 0, DltAN•ll In ll>Pll<lllCHI h•• i..~n llltd .,,,~ u.1 California has IO much 'ubll1ftld lln C!tmtnlo Ealllo<t el Ni. A~ Loe•! AO•ncv F0<mu.on am..,,11,0~ "' Ort ntf (DI!! Ot!I' ,llol, Mlr(n U . NOTICI OI' N•AllJllO OI' ,.TITtON tnt Coun!1 ot Or•n;e. Srete ol (~hton '" geotherva1l heat 1l relatively u. 1nd M1rch ,., 1t1l "''"11 '0111 ,RD••T• DI' LOIT WILL ANO •IO<lvHlln; th•I l&la Com ... ru 1on ""O'O'" shallow depth! volcanoes could LEGAL NOTICE ,o• L •TT 11 s T•ITAMIMTA•Y tM orcco1e<1 1nne•~''°" ••iltn•'"" •' (IOND w•IVID) Unlv1t,!lt ol C•ll lornlf !rvln1 Ann••A1 ,.~ suddenly Ip p e I r in many E1t1l1 of IM IL y T. HAOLEY, Die:•• .. 'fo. I !o (OllnfV ~~rvlcr -··8 .. D •-f th t t ____.. NOTICI 01' aULIC TltA"Sl'lll H 1 of 0,lnQt Coum1. C8lllornl• Tit parl.3 0 e s I e. aco..v1u1ng ISt<I 11•1 -1117 u.c.c.1 MOTICE IS Hlllli.llY GIV EN Th1I prot01el ""'cmp11••• •ft• lt11D•'"' lo Dr. Robert W. Rei. director N1t1ce 11 hertb, 11v.,,_ to tnt C,.dltGt• Colon11 S•ll"' H1rr1,.. Fr•nklln h11 1111'1 o-••llv dtst•ll>ed 1•11 w~lcft I• "'"•1 1 th U I I r C 111 . ol L1rr1 '· H1ttW•lcl •nd Mt•lctl• fterolft • ••lltlOll ,.,. P•Obt!t "' lo•! o•fllC~l••!v dU<rlbr<! b• A l•••I d'Str•D 0 e n Vef'! ty 0 I Omla M. HHfWllO, Tr•111ltfll'I, whtl•• l>ut\r>tll wlll •!>Cl lor IHUlnCt ot l tllttl lien Oft lilt WI!~ lhf Comm!Hlftn at Riverside Geo therm a I Ht••n 1, 101 M1ln srr111, ll1Jllo1, T11111nt1111rv 1o '•tltl_, (!lend w11... S•ld inn•••11°" con t 1 i", ~o C•!lfornl1, C0<inh' al o .. ,,.,. !11!1 ol .dl, rtlot•n<I to .. ~lch 11 mid• tor PrOJlrnitfl• Hv•n •Crtl '"' Co.>•·1•1 Re10urces Project. Ctlllorn11. lh•I • bvlk 1r1111t1r 11 1l><lut 1urtn1r 01r!lcu!1ro. •nd th1! 1ne 11..,, 11r 1t11 rlgnt.ot·w1v ot Unlvtrii!v o .. ,. 1 f I R I Id h i..~ to bi "'""' lo Allrtd Brll••n 1...e 111d ol•c• or nti•ln• 1~ ••mt h•s belwetn M~c,.,rthur Aoult~tru on t<.1 n ae , ex 0 a C am.,..r Mllartd M. !l•!trin Trin•!•r.,.1, whoH t.ffn Ill for APrll !. 1111. 11 ':lO wut 1nd (1ll!o•nlt Ro1d on th• 11.i of commerce meeting Mon· r11101n1 1dOrtH 11 m L1rk1pur ,l vtnut. • m., In thr couc!room ot 0111rtm1n1 nortnwHttrlv er 1ht Unlvt r!lf• " h I . . . C••o~• dtl Mer, (1. '161S, County No. J o! u ld c0<i•!, 11 700 Clvl< C1ll/ornl1 11 \[Vine day, sue VO c111n1c activ1ty ol Or•n11. st1t1 11 Ci lllornl•. Ctnler Dtiv1 Weit, In ,~, c11v 01 Al 1ht 11,..,. er th• h•1rln1 no1,,., COU!d CICCUr W\lhin 100 years Th• Pl"""'lrll' ~ tt trrnlltrKI 11 lec11"" 51nU •n1, (tlltocnl1. ~ertln 18ld bound1Fln m1y bl "'C"·!•H '1t :!ll5 M1ln S!rttl, Bi lk•, Colllcrnli. 01!td M1rch is. 1tn bY 1~• •ddlli<t<> cl om'c ltrrl1~,, u f!SpeCi&lly in the northeastern C!>Un1r cl Orong•, Stolp ot Ct!l!crnl•, W. E. ST JOH"!. I/It vlclnltv of •h• Pr<ll'D\-1, I h I Stld pr01t•r1r 11 O•tcflbed In •entril Cnun!J. Cltlio, NOll([" 15 FURT>;ER GIVEN l'•I pa rt 0 I e S tl\I'. ""'AU 1111<1 in Tr•dt, llAl~rtJ, NUIP"'•nl COLOMlL SILIHI M. l'••"llLIN i1ld Ctmmlnicn n•• h•l>f W•an••d'I Rei said the northeaslem 1r1a1 n•"'t 1<1<1 oOOd win "' 1n11 111 •••• 1'tft 11,..c, '"1 '"h d•v o• MM<~. in1 11 1~1 . . !Cl Cr•llrl l>u1l11tu kt<O\On If Yp Oki• CIHll Mt!il, C1llttrlll1 ,2111 nour of , QC O'(ICCI< P.M ct ll•d "~· !'le<.'llon of Cahforn1a h Is Ice C•tlll\ '••IO<ir 1nd IOClled II 16.! Tth fntl Ml-fill "' •• IODn •• ••Id milter '"" II< I .f Mtln Str••I, Btlboo. C1lllcrnlt. counlv ,.,..,,...,. .., 'lltti-r ht1 rd In ll oom !Ill !n !l•J O•~n"' enormoUS Im 0 Un I fl Orin••· ~lilt II Cl lllornl•. 'ublll~ .. Or1n11 Cots! Dt!IV P!IOI County AOmlnl1tr.,lon Buildlnt, !II NMTft geothermal heat al relatively Tl!• llullt "•n1t1r .. rn "' con1u..,..,,,,... More~ 11. u. n 1111 Jll·11 Slctmort ltreot. S•nl• ""'· c1i.ro•n•" II d h d "'·· ~ or tllt• tllt :itltl dlJ ot Mlrcn. •• !tw llmt l<ld P1•<• ror ll>t ft••"~' ~ha ow ept s. as 0 U1'1 1t71, •••• , l1tr•• (<>, Inc , lSl l LEGAL N011CE ,, p!O ·'-••110'ltt!""' "'''" 111 P•Ol•.1" Imperial and Owens Valleys. ll. C••ll t11,~w,,, Coren• 0.1 ~· •"" (ll)l.c1ian1 t~•••lo ... ~lcn m•• ..., . Cf, ttdl. Cl\lnl'I' 01 0r • ..,1, S!ltl P'MN 111.0 •l'l<I •I w/llc~ li"'t Ind pli<• He SaJd geothermal hill .. C11li1rftl•, ,ICTCTIOUS IUSINllS :::.i-;~~~,';.trrrlltd !lltrtl~ rn1v 1cntu COUid be exploited to p_..UCI 11' lit I• ,_ ta 1111 Tr1n11•r..-.. "AMI ITATIMINT OU•~: Mire~ I. 1111 •W ~ -.Ut!H, "'""'' .... t<MrHIH voPd Tiit fellOWlft• --11 ...... Ml~IU BY OllOER power "'ithout re:lasinl ••Y , .. ~. ,.,. ,.. 1111 ltlrH ¥tlrl ••: OF lt1£ LOC ... l ... GfN(Y II . h I II 1t•1I, I "' .. ,..,,! t'911'1 l~t •ltowt, lllCMCO. "O l o• '''' •-o .... ,, FORMATION COMMISSION OF 011 ... N(i.E po utants 1ntn I e I •·~··.... , __ ,,,,.. ,._ .. COUNTY , CALIFORN IA ltd M, 1111 lt ·-· Alch•ra l . fumor mo1phere. And more Im· 11 •tt : " 111181111 M1th1~, c .... 11n1 -c1111,rn11. e~e<~llvt Ol!lcor • ..i ;,ir.::'l}litr ~ SJO E111 Oytr IM,, S1n11 An1, (Ill!, loci! Atl"CY port1nt, 1t could bf' usoin ta .. 1~ MI" T~11 11u.1~.n i. brln1 (Oftlluetflll II• F0<rn•r1on c0..,.,,,11"" od d • k' J ,.. .. ' ltll,.n I CtrN<tl l.., ol Ortnot Cc~nt.. pr uce. pure r1n 1ng WI If I'tf!•i'~ si9ntd! J. 1. Rldd l, c11itcrn1~ for Southern Cilifomil. ,.':1111~._"i,n '.,... co.111 D•il~ ,11m '"b11111111 o'"'" CNtt 01Ht Pi101 l'ub!lih..:1 0,.n,• c~.,, n,1,, ...._ t ca Jll-11 M1rcft If, JJ, :ID, A.,11 I. 1171 !11·71 M1rCA t 1nd ll. 1'11 :•:•1 FM • - For the Marriage Licenses Births Record SOUTH COAST , COMMUMI TT HO'l,IT'-!. f'ff;, M Mr. ,•nd Mf1. II:. P~ll lltttl!. Ci mino S.nto Ool'l'llnto, $1n C11>l1r.ano, 111r1 '"'-27 Mr. IMI Mr1. Paul S1ncl>eJ, Z1r1llo Orlve, 0&1>1 Poln!, bov Mr. •fld Mro. Cllltord M, Yukan, 120111 s. El CtmlftO litHI, San Cltmtlllt, t lrl Mr. tnd Mr1. Wlll!tm M. 81tbt, JS<ll2 T1rrer>0 Orlv1, M!nlon Vltlo ;lrl "'-rcl1 I Mr. tnc:I Mf1. 11.ontld C. Smll~, 2'312 , P1p1;1yo, Ml11lan v1110. 11•1 Mr. tnd Mro. ApoH)mlci Onllvtrot, :Kl~ MllQU/11, Stn (ltmenit& olrl Mire~ 2 Mr, •nd Mf1, 0, lllc~trd Ctrr, 702$2 111mon1 Li nt, Huntlng!ln 8t•ch, .. , Mr. Ind Mrt. 01mi1n OrOlCO lm\\ Ave. Do Lt E1tre111, S..n Clemtntt, llfl Mr. tnll ~? Jc1• Mt11. '" 0 . lox 95', Stn Ju1n CtPl•lrtn.o, bov Mr. tnd Mrt. Wlll!am lt1r, lSlll M1w.On, L1111n1 Hlll1, 11lrl Mr. •lid Mrs. Henrv ll:oll!ft9$, 230 S.nl• IUrb•r•, S•n Clem•nte bov Mr. '11<! Mr$. 0.Vld ll>om11, 2S211 Grluom Rd., l•gun1 Hlllt, 1lrl ""'(~ , Mr. 1nd M,,, Wllll•m W. Houston, 331)( Del Prtsldente, No. t, Clllf">en!e, girl Mr. 1nd Mr1, 01vtd J. Munro. 1?2 &In Klmti. S11n Cl•men!e glrl Mr. Ind Mr~. 01vld o. NHhfll', No 4 GIU0<d'Pln<;llo! Otlve. E!1lnor1, gfrl M1rch ~ Mr. ind Mrs. C•cll R. Bunn•ll. 211"32 • < Takes Co111111a11d DAILY "LOT 9 Arraignment Scheduled For Park Riot,Suspect SANTA ANA - A Costa Mesa man accused b y Fullerton police of being a member of a group which pelted lawmen with rocks and bottles in a Hillcrest park riot has been ordered to face ar· ralgnment March 30 in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Byron K. r-.icMi\\an sc! that date for Fred Hiram Pfeiffer Ill, 23. of 939 Oak St. after charges of assault with a deadly weapon were read against the youth and his fiye companions. Fullerton police arrested the six defendants and a juvenile during the Oct. 25, 1970 in- cident in which o f ficer ! ticketing Illegally parke d vehicles were bombarded with rocks, bollles and trash. P•1>11• or1 .... ~:;~°'; "1110• .'1'1 hfarine Capt. Barbara Doi yak of Costa Mesa, takes firm grasp of unit colors Mr. """ Mr1. 011n c. M1v1r•. 211 during recent change of command ceremonies at El Toro ~tarine Corps Air Ave. Mlrtmer, S•n Clement., girt f ! · Station. Capt. Dolyak, 3129 Bray Lane. is the new commander o \Vomen h ar1ne HOAG M•~°.:.1~~ HosPiTAL Detachment 1 at El Toro h1CAS. She is former director of public relations at Mr. •rid Mr1. George E. Teylor the Orange County base 20?1 Ph1l1r0Pe Cl., Colli M•••· _ _:_:_:_:_:_::oc:__:_::::_::_:_:_:c· ______________ -------------girl Mr. I nd MrJ. Voll5lon Slll<>vlc. 3014 Klllv~rooko Ln .. C<11t1 Mesi. bov Mr. Ind Mrs. ic.,.,,.,h Woolln, 261 otl•, Apt. 8, r"•!a Me~•· girl '"· 2'2 Mr. and Mrt. Robert Num•k~, \1!24 L1row Ln. Founl1in V1t11y, boY Mr. 1r1<1 Mn. Ch1ri•• Kolbe••· 101? 8ush1r<I, No. 1. Wnlm!nl!tr, 1lr! Mr. 1nd Mr!. Mlchetl M(Gulrf, 1064 Colcor1 -..vo., Cott" Mt53, !wl" gl•I• Mr. 1nd Mrs. Oougl11 S1llsburY. 2612 circle Dr .. NoWP<>rl eeech, v1r1 "tb. 2l • Mr. •rid Mrs. George A. P1ltnc1>1r 1''1 C1,1l1 St.. NowPOrl l!e1ch. girl "•b. u Mr, 1tld M". Wl1111m Egtn. 990 Chevenne, Co5ll Mt\.I, bov Mr. 1nd M". Garv Farr, '86 Sh1dv Or., Costa MMI. boY Mr. IMI M.,. John W1rd, ~ S. Alder, San!a A/oll boY Mr. arid Mri. 01lbert WIMard, oUZ2 w. (fles!f, Santa -..n1, girl Mr. 1n<1 Ml1. Geol'lie Pl1>1r, 11»51 Monitor Or., Hu1'tl~ron Bt1cn, boy Pissolutions Df Marriage 1!11!t...S Mtrcll t • , I Badl1am Endorsing Support Bid Irvine Pilot Misses Superior Ceurt Date SANTA ANA -An airline show up ror his Orange County pilot accused of pistol \\'hip-Superior Court arraignment. SACRAMENTO -Newport ping a Newport Beach doct::>r Judge Byron K. McMillan Beach Assemblyman Robert in a dispute over the pilot's issued a $10,000 bench \.\-'arrant Badham has endorsed the estranged ·wife has failed to for the arrest of Richard Hanley, 30. of 18742 Via San recommendations of the state ~~arco, Irvine. He set March welfare reform task force. L bb B 'll 23 as the n('W date for In a ne\\'Sletter sent to his 0 y l Hanley·s arraignment on constituents, 1he Repub)ic;:an charges of assault v..·ith R legislator cited the study Opposed deadly weapon. released last v.•eek \vhich Hanley, a former Navy pilot, recommended that the state \Vas arrested Feb. 16 shortly work harder at getting absent By League after he allegedly usod a pistol to beat Dr. Fred Teneyck , fathers to support their off-42, about the-.. head as the spring. SANTA ANA --. ~range doctor tried to prevent Hanley ''l't ls11't Whether Yo11 1'1i11 or 1..ose It's Where l'o11 1•1nu tire Ga111e'' AMERICAN BILLIARDS 145 E. 19th ST. (Behind Weekdays 10 am to '2 pm Weekends 24 hours the Mesa Costa Theatre) Refreshment Bar-Games Mesa Tournament' Held Weekly $1000 "9-BALL" TOURNAMENT Monday, April 19th • $50 Entry Fee The study stated that $100 County L.eagu~ of C1t1es CX· from entering his home at to $240 million could be saved ecutive committee me.mbers 5123 Rive Ave . annua!ly in welfare coots if are on record today in op·,··•••-•-•'••••i0ii0ii0ii0iiii0;,;;;;:;;; runawaY fathers could be lore· position to a measure fo r II ed to pay child support. registration and reporting by "Certainly, California can· lobbyists appea ring before the not continue to be a sanctuary county Board of Supervisors. for fathers who Will not sup· Concern was expressed that the new county ordinance port their children," Badham "went too far in requiring declared. any city official appearing a Badham said the task single time or occasionally to force's proposals •·will give adv 0 cat e legislation con· agencies , enforcement of-cerning his city to go through ficials and the courts the teeth lhe red tape and disclosures necessary !o do a job" in proposed." the collection of paymentsli"iOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiiiO-o from fathers. GOLFERS TIRE PICK YOUR SI/£! PICK YOUR PRIC .. -! GENERAL-JET ... wi1n lamau s ~ura~en· runner ~ual uea~ ~esi ~n COMPACT CARS SIZE 6.50-13 T ub"'less Whol"'wal1 F•l5 mns l Ptntos. Veg•s. Corv1ns, Cti"'•Y 11 g Darts. Falc.ont, va11•nts INTERMEDIATE CARS SIZE 7.75-14. 7.75·15 Tub"'le~s Wl'ulewart Frls most Amb~s~adors. Cama•°'· Ch"'l'Y'S Ch"'"" I! s Oo<Jpes F·8S s. Fords. Plymo1.111>s, Bu.ck Spec•als STANDARD CARS SIZE8.25-14, 8.25·15 .. BIG CARS SIZE 8.55-14 TulHlles~ w11uew~ll F•!S mo~! s1a1oon w8gons. B1.11cl( L• S1bre· W1l<l t 1!·A•v1e11 , O!!!s M . Chryl'ller New Yorker. Ooc!11e Coronet. Pl1<S IT I~ fed E• I•• t nd ~·c~•no• '"''"Y- 25 Pl«• i i 14 ""~ t .'.' 16 fp~ E• 1•• or~ r •<:~an9• <a<rn9 Plu' S? J? onll $2 J7 f•<I E• Tit 1"'1 ···~•"II• ''i•n~. 85 P1u• '' ~ Fo<I ( • lo< 0"'1 P•C~a toQn <••··--Q ~',!~ -I";;,! ~ .. ,. e..ct• ... ~,., .... "'"''"'., -.,,., ...... , ... ,.,..t ..... , "" ....... "'" ..... , .. , .. ~, .. ,,.,,._ ,., "'''" _,tt.., -.... ,.,.. •. 3-PIECE vws WIND 'N RAIN SUIT •HOOD •JACKET • Wind and rainproof • High V<Slbiloly heavy duty plastic I Special This Week Only •SLACKS Charge it at General GENERAL TIRE I Don Swedlund COAST GENl!RAL TIRI SIS W, 19th, Cede Mes111 140-5710 •46-SOl) General ·1516 SAFETY-JET' • • P•, .. .,,... CG•d '~ • 0..••'10"' ~"""''Trot(! ''"''~ 1i • Ge>nta..•or:I Sl>Oll!"-•• ,,. '' '" ~ill ~to.11 ik.i'C .. W/'1.~ ONl.l , , AVERY GENIRAL TIRE SERVICE' l 6t41 le«lt loul1't'Ord, H111tf1HJt111 '-• 147·5150 • l JO DAI LY f ._o s Tir~t!A~ ti.1arc:h 16 1911 l'o11r lflouey's lt'ortla By SYI VIA POltTF 11 Alon~ with lht' 1:01 rill!'~~ other \Val!er ~111\s 1f th1~ nation pre ~prini; 1 ~ 11hc1 L 'earn to ge1 on i 00:11 1n I just sail into the sunset 1f11s Is the sc 1svr1 \.\hen I "!:u~ out tile car v.1ndov. v.11h open en\y nt the boa1~ dr..<-ked in lh Long Island Sound and lludson R1~'"r and drtuQ1 u11 l:'l\I tales abou1 hov. t~l boil! reo1>le h\c Whether I v. 1!1 11i:tually t 1 rr Ille on a houseOOat J;; Qucs tlonablc b 11 I r;in i:asil) \Uldtr:;l<ind 1Jl(' lure r.f tl ;; ' roof ovt'r your head \nrl thats v.hy I <1nl 1ot the k:1~1 b11 amazed at lhe inroads thc- hvus"boat is now making 1n lhe LI :'.i housing rnarket -At the recent N<1t1onal Boat Show irt Nc1,1 \ork for 1nslance dozens of d1fferc111 n1akes and models o f J1ouseboats 1,1ere on dlSJllily -and I m told 1no1 c th.'.ln 2$0 houseboat mod"iS ;:ire. now :11 ail able ~1anv of these v. l!I Ix sho11 n al the 111aJ 1r ('X posillrms SI II lo t>C' held 1n ttlles across the countrv 1971 s houseboal lli in imposing t\pc of shLlter made of fiberglass or ferro-er ment (reinforced concrete) nr :-;luminum 1,11\h a 1:0-:!h decorated interior 11all {() w111l carpeting !111ng <tu 1rters for four or rnor£ people a f !llv f'qu )lJlrd kitchen p<1lH1 dltk :i couple of sho\\tr~ Lt<: I " 40 or 5!l feet Ion~ in hiµnv tas~<: ~ \nrl 1! to S.10 000 costs fron1 ~'1 000 The kc } ad1 anl<J~t'.'s rtt h<1useho11ts are 1mprrs~11r too \OU don t h~1c tu bll\ a build1rg q\e they do not requtre landscr1p1ng 1ou ncr t no1 pay propertv tax('~ 1011 c<1n maneu1er then1 a1mo;:t anywhere you wish lat lO mph or n1mtl along thou sands of n1iles o! our coastlines and \hroughnt!t t ir \ilSl S)St"nl c.f in! ;in d 11 aterwa)'s The lo"" cost:> v.<1rr:in1 :I couplr of paragraphs of lfu 1r own 1 he a\ erage cos I of docking a houseboat 111 Florid 1 today I as thousands of people If yo11 -11ot vsl1t9 A11S•Htitq Senlr;e Yo• •to 11of 9ottl119 all of yovr c.0111 Tl!LfrHONE ANSWERING IURlAU 835-7777 UP +oow11 t Ccimmod Iv F tu ti mo ~ f., I otnd e • i, q~lv •P•~ul•I •t Se~d j,. l•!e•! tompute 1nd Buv l Soll Ped et on1 n H•• Pok Brllv SI•• & Sovb~~n Olm•ke 1 ... Od I H ,,,, ... R J O Brl"' I Asioc:lotes l11c 1•49 Weucllff nriYe Neowp1Hf leach Cohf 92660 6A2 aoo• 540 47•6 rt 1!0 ngl ls ii bout !Oc rx r lo I fll'I !av "'1th muntbly rHC's ribout 2r. ixrctnt !owc1 th;.11 dfltlv rates T\ pie: al costs of dotk njl 1n N( w York:; t.ong l<ila11d Sound dur111g the six n1on1h suminer season are SJ00.$800 dtpenrl1i;g on th" Jocaticn f<u.:llit1e.s ser\1ces in eluded You ,dso can Just Ile up your houseboat I l n moor _,ng away froni the pier al no cost or a tinv cost lnsu r111g your houseboa l ""111 tvp1 c:atlv cost $40()..-$450 a yeat 111( h ding h11b1llty insurance As f 1r financing thal s s1n11lar to the f nanctng of 1n1Jblll ho111es t od a y 1 \pit ill) }OU may borrow 60 p~1Lcnt of 1hl' cost of a hou.<;eboat al inl"rest rates stcirltnl! <11 <iround 9 percent <ind you 1nay repay the loan 01 t r a seven year period I! 1ou are th1nk1ng of a houseboat as a second -or f rst -homr vou II benefit fron1 these guide!> l 1) Above all rent a houschoa l a few tJmrs brfore 1 (lu huv to get a clear f0 ehng or life aboard a floa ting vaca 1 on ! ome rypica l rental t osts ire $200 $900 a week c1 eryth!ng lnclude<J Consu111er a11d Econo111y Relying on Each Other 1\E\V YORK <AP\ -II oi; is I the proJC'"hon equipment \\('re be1n~ opciruted on reduc Pd po1l'er d1n1m1ng the picture on the screen fuzzing the 1m ugC'S and making th e action to appear in slov. motion 1 he voices on the audio por· lion p11< h dr wn to a slurring croak ng d r :i w I 1n ac comp<1n1mc.nt 10 !h{' mad derungly slow responses of lhe Lhnrac:.trs 1,1ho seem 10 '1alk \\1th in11s1blc v.eighls <1\ Inched 1 l11s s1 tuntion co m m o n enough for 1 ld11me mo11egoers to 1cmember \.\ell 1 s -;on1e11hat annlagous to the eronon1y todav Th~ slr1pt tails for \ 1gorous at!t111v but tl\e drowsy scene onfold111g '>lnuld put !he audience t:"J sleep 1f it 1,1eren t so t1pset \Vh at happened to the po11tr Ask the consume because ht stile 1ne \\ho v.as suppostd 11) supply tt and he still n1 1ght Ru t he ~ee1ns no1,1 lo b~ su lfen11g from a "\ 1t 1n1in dc:flc1enc} and In need 1 l ,1 ~pnng tonic Sr \OU ask hun 1,1 h~t s thr rn:'l!lcr 11 d hf' rrphes thnl tlrt univ ~~..Jv.ould kick up hi~ h~cls ~ spend some of lhosr ~\tings he built up O\er !hi' past ) car 1f he were cl'r 1 000 1 OF OIL rAINTINGS WHOL£5ALE WARfHOUSf OPEN TO THE ruaLIC 50°/o OFF P"-"t IU •.cl OEILEltS W•NTEO ~ t::un about cspee1ally as r-----------------------• I I I I I I 1 10 stocks I i that could outpace ! I the market. I I I I I II 1,.i > ,\ 111:: to r al t1 art 1\e in,cstnlent sl f\lcr11ll Lynch~ I IH\\ 1 )I ipni tc111J!lccl l 0st<><1"\s 101 Al-'PI ECIATION I I ,..1\1 11111 1 \t ... anc lhgu1csontc111.:on1µ1n1t=~\~hose stcxks I look 1111 u111 1111\ £lt l1altJ\C l 01 a l1eC lOl)YOf lh1svaluable I I 1r.1)1llt 1u t , 1 J hc<.:oupo11 Nool1hgal1on I I , , I I '" I I A >rl~ I II r ' ' ,, z,. I 1 II f ll'jl1 Bu,1nr~~plonl' I I ,,,., "'""'-· ! I Merrill Lynch: We look for the trends. I I ~l 1111l1L\1Ll lrnncr&Sm1th ln1.: I I ''i;crslrom tc11 lcr 11111111 :; Mam St) San ta Ana 92702 I 1tlt [!Ill l\f I ')17 7272 I ~' I L--·•••••••••••••••-••••• , ......................... ,., ............ ~ ... ..,.,... ..... ~ OVER 'fHE COUNTER • A..,.._t10v1 brttr4Nltr ,.,,..,11..,, •I •H"ll..,•ltlf I •"' lt*m N,.10 Prka ft ""' 1~"'9• t*l•ll •• .... n..., _."' .. ._" fl ~mllllulfll NASO L1st1ngs for Mond1y, Mlrch 15, 1971 ' MUTUAL FUNDS .. Ind T d " " "" .. " r., ""'" Gtn S•C • t• ti In ~vn<r•ell' •001 .,... !l'(I ,.. ~ '"•t"or lor Tllo t llet en• t<t 111 wMcPllG ,0;;. >•e ert 1r1010 lh a 1h1 •lo~ t"o c• rf.ed l ~: .. '•d n I~ OIVIDENOS I • Inn o t t ~ It.Fe! 'I un •U ar~e•w t• ld,.,!Uled • 1> u1 c~.~ .,~"~ •• I !~ !!~tit ~ or OA fl on U '""\ i'";-lg" •••• "" l~tj or •• e !tl 01¥m•M ~n ~ • cvmu """ <t " "'""' 10 01" 1011 ~:c'lo~~ ¥•• (o ti,~ O Vt ,101;-1 If) t nnQI ~~;~ It,~ ••• !>!us I oc• d" Otnd t~! DA II "'' 4Ml • ••• -18 ttl 111¥ ll•fld l!!Yllt!~/ I ~tr ~t I ;,,,, (" h $10 -... Cl .,. ¥••· ~! .... " b, •. " • to • •• ' ' J 11 • ~· 0\ '". 1~. 6 •l . " >M ' ' ' ' ~*nl "•r><"~ t•) "tNn• VDCY. fM r w tv• "nor ~'""'''kl" U~!I l':wth -~ Cl t"Dv'°" 1~1 t•-d vl<1~na iwll ( O" W~I" 1011"<1 (wfl W•r<tnlt.. ~ ~ O I rt•Cl ONS 11) ""1 tti.1 fll! &Wint 1"'" C a r ov •I• 11~1on ~""du Ill ndtcfl•t < • Complete-Ne,v York Stoel{ List ~ !•It.• .... ~·· i Nltll L•w Clett Cll._ 1l :: ~ ,!!: 7 I ''"' .... 11 ,, .. 1 .. tl... .... ,,.,, .. 1)\1• I!• r ,.~: -l JS'• -21 I <-I .sn 11 • ?t 11•"-~ ' I' !'" I" • JQ I I I 0 4\ -lo .~!!!!! !?(-+ !, Jl ;:, !!~ :11 ~. jg .O .0 IC ~ )I I • 'o d ' ;I 't • 11~. lt '', '" "" I 1 T1 I 1 -1 ~. H" \~ : ni! :i: 1! JI l o l j't I)• 11 n• ' n , ; • 4 '°' .00 .Oh +i.. ;>.141••1 •1-• '~ ~ .. T~· ls;-:-;. 141 2~ ,.1, s +, ' 21 l8 JI JI~~ J4 l0 tlolll •"T '• '' '71• 21. 1( • 1,.· '°''' lOI I 1. 1'11 11 .11 221 15lct I• • M ' l•J •)o<l 111 n 10 :ICI•{ 11 15 ,. • 2~ ... J llll>ll l•l )5 3• lS + OH>,51 ~:,;-+ 191 11, l l 1 t• +I 11 •1 11)\o 11 +1 •.i•l4i 3119 •'"·~·-+ 1G& 2:Mo ll • 2l - 4S ll 1 11'• ll'• + • 21 t \, • h 61 •• + • l 0.1 164 105 I 16-i J•o 1'•1 IJ ~ -ill la o Jj l-1'• JS ... 1 •••'4•4n.~· illlO 19 19 19 ' 1114 1 1••241+ 220 n l, 12t n i U JI, 36 • 31 •+ 25 11 1 • 2 -+ ll4<l••041l+• ll '>8\o 51\ !>1•1-+~, tl28 >!•-• 11 •S'I• •l ~. 71 B6 ,, .. 16 +1 6191!11 t H ll o ll o ll 11 '"" ,, +1 )f "'• ll'-• u • •\ ll1S04l~l J<I 4S ~ U1 u,-+I 1 21 2lo?l o +~ 110110 .. ,, 10 ..... 6 It 7.1 19 .+j 11).1 1l 6•1 7J +l • \ )II JI )II .+7 7019401' ,_, .I• 1'. 71%.lo ?;•\..,-!I 100 21 • ,,, ,,.,_ ~4 n 11 J1 1 +•-. l~?ll o1'o?O "'-• 10 Jl o JI ~ Jl o +lo 10 34\ l3li )C • 21 lll'o 14 76\1 + o 2e ,, .. ~,; n.-~. 6S .)(I 29 1 :JO 165 40i 59 60•"'"' 22 3'1 Jl o n ,+> 115 ]7 l JI 31 2111.11.11 70 1 ! 1 ntto.19~••'•+• .~1~~;.1~1 ~ ••ll lllJ+•· 11'>11 ,, 1J I , 1'1 llo ~16o 16 16 I SI JS n • l.I +1 ~ 251 xi . 16 ~ +ff n l• ll"' Jl•+ ~ l02So1•11S+il Jll 4g I 39 l , •• 1-+'~ 1 u ••• Ill . U? Jl JC' Jl +I~ IDl !1 11 11V. + !o I U~, !6l1 16 I 2111 »• 11 1 + \ SB ?l 7!1 27 )-~0 ?ID U ,. 64 1•0 61 61 61 60116 21 26 1 ~1 .. 1.J5• !4>.\ t5o '11 1 J Illa l~I lot -!l 1 5"&.S..S.\+ .. lJ r , 11" 11;. -H·I- 138 :1131 • ll o 38•• 38 •Ods.&5555~ J 5 I 5'o JO -o 3•75141,S+, 511Jo ll o 1J.lo -+'o "'" 4 • •l'.tl~ • '-1' 19~ ~1 1 ~. ;~. !1 ~ U S••5J•5•1 !" 11 45 1•!0"5. 1SJi5o6l 61 1 o •• n n 1 lO ?Bt '71 ;g , ~ 50 7• 73•i 1' ~ 16l02~1 JO+ ~· ~6 .,1 1;• 1:: t •l •S>o!'•+• 11 '' • ?Po 1H• >-'• ''""". 4 '>+• • o. 10'> 1011 :U1 ?I o ?I 1 ,,,, + ~ } 111 171 12 -1 1' JS'o I• S ._ ?7 ,,l, ,. • '' + • S5 1i, f'o 10 '6 7•1 1, '·-~· 111 .. J •l •• -'• JO :l01o 7910 .»to '10 4' 0 4< AO t j. • f9 '3 • '• 1111 _,_ • 3.0 I•'• 13lo 110 > , 730540•~·~ ;>I) ., '6 I.I> -11 71S 7'111 71 > 11 ~ •t 361 16lo JS 6"1 + ;,, 2J.t 41 • 'l.1 "' -+ •• 66 ~ 661 66 !" n IS\o s 15 6 ?I 71 71.'-•! 26 109 1> 105 lO'I +l . l13'1ll,J~ •?)fJl.lS••• JS 36 )6 '1 ~ .> I 26 1J t ll ,.~. 01 lj 1 S J 15 o l~l!o '1! 4!t ~• 1•"' 1•., ,. 1 1! 5S ) S•, ,",'-, 1 11 n 66 4604.!'b•• ~ jl.: ~· <6 ~-J.. "" ll ,,.. ~1!' -.-j• " i1 .. 21'c 7 . "' 14 • 14•\ ?4 -. "ll•1l n 11 ; 1'> ,, • + 12 I t It , 11 , 7 JJo ll JJ 1 + fl '"' 16 • • .. I ll !l 11 ..1.1 O~JlJ• I> 9 51 58 51 ~-0 •1 ., •0 3 ,3,_ ~19 11 ~ JO. 00 •1 1 j. l4 • 11 I 10 011 0 1 - 11 7• '' 1'l1 ) IOI > lGl 105 -1 l<i o ?9 o 1f'•+>o jf l6 ?!. , 1S•o •o 1117 1~7 10? •I 1 1 19 9 • .,.. • 151 ..... ,.. ... 17<0o •D oo 171 )lo 2!•1 ~ <lo l4"?~1il1 -+o U I~ 1110 II .>-i, IJ)l 21 21 > r ........ , •1•1 •0 )<19 <6 •6 • .it.• -+ • lj 2) )6 t 1/ + ]~ 16• ll~ l6l -19 ! ;JJ 't f il 0 54: _!:l I 7!l1 0 3"ll 1 Hl It , 9 9, ~ ~~ u· 1~· 11 !±" JO 11 l ) ~ ll _,_ 1 ••• 4Sl, "' •I l '• lu )7 J6•t :!$'• - 7!i ! I I , + •O 't16 fl • 6G ~11• 4.! • r 0 1Gf ;oi ,04 t u o 1&l 100> 107 "'-S ll 11 1 c O +I 1 07 IQ6 11>6' -0,. • 101 )~) 10? ~.,,,99 _._ 1•:!0 I~ t 14 IS .. .J. , '" 16 15 1~ •• 1 . il5•lt.lo ll~l 1'1 •t oa , +I , '' J] ll ll 10 ?01 19 19 5 ' ' ""1 t l~l 1! , 11 )> J:r ·~g·r · " 11 • l • t ' 7• ,, !l?<l/> . ' ' ' ' ,,~.,..,. ,, 00 3~ 40~ -JK- • • ~~ 1: • ·:: 11 . -~ 11 1 ' ~. - ??'"'"l l , ,.10 .•1~.t• • "'·• ,;, oi?:un.11 ~ 1171!11 1 11) 1J -l j 6i ~ 600 6')'~ 1 •1 40 .)t , 10 ., . .. . .. .. ' )4()(1 j , , 1• l1 1l .... ' J.u II J 1$ ?}4H ,1 ~r .1i~s1.~ 11 )) ??•.~·~- 1i h i1 : j,l. S\ Al , ~ ~ 1~ ,. ,, I !i o9 .. ' _, ,, ii ~, 1 l~ •• ·.~ ! ~ • ,, :M) 11(1) 1 • • ,. ll '" ,J ?1 ' l?. "!n .1~ ':1~")l, ,. " 1, .. i•lf '· ,, ... f )\o .~ ~. ;,: : lr• 11 11 !it ~t. ~· ~ " . ~ :, . " ' . -. " . ,, . -... Ii I 'l " " ' tt ' • i.! ~ I!'• ' " . ' . ,. ' ~:"II I • ' . ' . -. Marth Mond~ ·s Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List .. Uld Ntf 1----------- U....J "ill l .. CfllM Cl\t " . " % ... '" ~ " • " '" "" ' ••• ' " 191• ,. ... .. Stoek Leaders MOST SUARES loll I o ' " "• '" "•' 1l1 v. J; ~: ""' .. 1211'.1 .,.,., 2~ ~l2 " ' " " :i. 14 ~ 3 190,, . " . .. )J •l .. " ,. .. 20 ll • • • n " J 101 " .... 104 u . .. ,. , . " " ' " " • m ; S•llf IOI flHlt I H ... uw Cltt• Chi· l••"' .. "'"" ........... ..,"'"' .......... .,, ..... .,,.I " " " • "' ' " • • • • . ' " • ' • • • "' • ' ,, • " '" ' • " " • • " ' '" • • ... '" lt!o ,.'i,.· ... '" .. '"' ,., ~ .. '"" ·~ ". •• "" " '" 13•o " ' ' Marl{et Highest Since June, 1969 NEW YORK !UPI) -Glamor and blue chip Issues Jed a sharp upsurge on \Vall Street ~1onday ru1 nover was heavy Near the final bell the Do\v Jones lndustr1al Average the baiometer of 30 selected blue chips w a~ at its highest level since June 1969 up 9 66 at 908 00 Standard & Jloor s 500 stock index showed a ~a1n of 1 04 al 100 61 Advan<e:s lopped declines 996 to 407 on I 670 issues crossing the tape Closing prices included AT&T 4811~ off 1s Bethlehem ~teel 22 up 'k DuPont 139\:i unchanged General ElectrH' l ll up 2~ General ltfotors 841/4 up 11" IBM 363 1 ~ up 91h Southern Pac1f1c 42~a up 'Ill Standard of Jersey 77 % up 1 Texaco 37s.g up ~11 and U S Steel 32111 up I ~ A four hour turnover of l l 090 000 shares con1 pared \I 1th I 0 ()60 000 shares traded al a comparable period Frida) Electronics and fOrnpute1s \1ere antong the days b1,ggest fav orites Motors and steels showed scattered strength \\ hilc rails .. ir!Jnes aircrafts and oil gene1 ally traded 1n narrO\V price range s .. ' ,. • • • • '" ,. '' " " • .. ' • "' ... " • • .., "" •• " '" '" ., . " " .. .. l:Zfin~o '°~ ~ l>fo~ tO S~Z>rOll , l iG Sv• "" Oonn 1971 OAILY PILOf • • .. ' .. • '" " . .. . " . " .. ". 50 II o •"I ,,, 11 Ulio ,. . l'99 " ~ Complete Closing Prices -A1nerican Stock Exchange List , " '"' .. " ,. . ' '" ... " . •••• ~~·· ' .. n ., " . ' .. . ., n ,,.., ' 64 ' 50 1• I • • 1'11 1(14 Jl l 6.l " " I• J'/ ' ' ' J ,, • 31? :19 " . 1•6 '° • " . 100 J ~-101 •l • • • , " 9 " • ' ,. •• ' • ,., ... " • ,, •• "' " "' • '" " " " .. " ,. " "" ' '" ' " 71') • • • '" ' • " " " " • • .. "' .. " " "' '" .. "' • ' '"' •j: "' • ' " •• • " ' " • • 1 d ' "' . 19 ll • J S 71 11 , ••• " ' " " ' ' . I ro n1 ""' 0 T! o 1•6 ll n n ~ ll 6] " ' 9 6 t~. . " 1 O) ) 10 3J 1~~ l~) . " :J(ll l I 1 'J I S OS o " 16 •0 lt • M ti '' I ' f, l~ l l r, . " oss •l . " " 11 , •• • • • 1... IOlo IS 11\o '" ,, . -~ "' . ,. ,,.,, ' " • • N.Y. Wintiers 01id Losers .. 1S~~ .. "" ... " . . ' " 16h • '" ~" II: ' , .. ~J" '" " 1~~ "" j"'" UP u11111~ Arw U~ J~2Ct¥" 5~ ~: 17 • ~ ~::~ ~lrJ UD 1 'SL~t TV o\,\ u, 10 I I Kalsa p U11 101 1 PSlG •~f VII 10.J I ol.Out \Is ff UP 1DJ IO•IK ~ UP t O Fl~t Fa1 Uo l.S l'lt,.. IP f>t U• t f!1("'¥ "'' U• ,. J i.t,~f ~I UD 1 1' Sand 1'1(1 UO 11 IJ F.ot I N: UP It Cf'! f'G~ UP 11 ~ct1 o\ Pl UP t UC:.t fl'1 UI 11 11 M 0¥J Vf Jl~MdCON To i " 10 11 so0t; ,,So, Uo I tt M•COOrlf UD 1•Ull"'!ltl" U11 ) J )' Allbn .!h uo 11 s• r A~ A MOndtY l ~C<TIP t ctn $ oc~ E~Cl'l1~9e P t•~ ' ' S!~:: J Hl1M l ... (IOH C~: -AB- " ,J • • • • • •• " " • " • • • • ' • " " • ' • ' .. ~ • • " ' • " ' • " ' • " " ' • ' " • • • ' ' • ' ,. ' • • • " • " " ' " ,, ' " ' . ... " .. ,,., ~ ' • .. " " . " 79 •• ,,, " ,, '" ' ~ • '" • " " • lg " • .. ,i • • ·~ " " " • ' " • ,, "' '~ " ., • • ,,J ,j ' • ''" .. " I; ... .. I , .. n '" ... ' ! ~ •• ' '"' II!: ' •• " • .. • " " '" 1c~. '" . .. •• 9~. . ' ... . " ~ Ir~ ,l •,1 11 ~ " " I" " .. ''5 "~· •• '•,s ?Q '!' 'l" " «I I I • . " I 4Jo '"' • 1J~. ?JV. s, ,r '1 3S Oo ''' ~ '1' 1l" j l J ~ ~ ~I~ ;~ ;; . . . • , .. l'-.:>c O:.'> )tl "'" .& )llio ·~ It ) I 141- SI ti Nt Owh J H tM Low C'lott Cllt " ' '~ ' " ' • • .. ' " "' • "' " . • ' ' '• 11 16 ' ' I 4\fo I • ~ -~ 10 1, I • '6 '• ,, . '' ,,, •l '} " 0 I 1 6 • ) 1Q t ~ )0 ' ti• • ! '),.\-f\oo -E ,,_ • ' . ' " 'I " .. " . ' " ' :!Cl u l~ !~ ,. .,. 1 • n 1• ' " ,,. • ,. " • " • " " ,' r. .. ' " , i! ' • , .. 0 ,! l ' " "' '" .. ,., '" "' "• I' I .. " .. .. .. " l " . " ., •• ' ,, "' , .. " " .. .1. ... • 11 ft Htl llMI• I H th 1.tw 'lco1t (Mt " . .. " . • • H I o " 11• lO .)S ~· 16 ! • ' ' 19 l~~ s "' " • •• " " .. ,i ' " ' • " " t J • •i.. I''' •• 11 l•I-- " ' • • ' ' "' • • ' • .. " ' • ' .. ' " ' • ' • • • m • ' ' ' .. ,, f I .... ,. ' M " 18 I o • ' .. ' ' ' . l• J !I " ' ' " ' '. 02 4D ' .. ' .. ; u . .tl 1: I ' .. S Slh 1' 12'1) ' .. " ' II 9l . ' " . • •• 7a. 0 1 JI JI ' ' .. ' . ' .. ' .. " . ' " s 19 • .. ' •• II I'> . ' 1 l J\ ,.1 in. .. "~ ' . l! l • 1~ 70 .... t n o 1't IJV. ' " S JS o 11 70'o • • 616 I SJ 11 ' .. . " • ' " lOI 2W. ' .. • 11 ~ 291 ll'l:o I ll I ' " ' ' " . . "' •l ,~, ltlu Ntl 111111 ) Hlfh UIW ( H t (llt The follow1ng hst1ngs are for Fridays stock re turns Because of a failure in transm1ss1on from New York 1t was 1mposs1ble to report todays stock re turns in the following categories I ,u I ' ,' ' " • ' " 'l • • lth " " " . " • '' " " "' " S1lu Hat (Ml I Hl9h llW CllM Cllf • " • • .. " • " • • ' " • " • ' • • • ,. ,, • • 1~ • "' 1~ m ' I " " " " ' "' " ' '" • " ' l !l " .. " "' ' '" • ' " '" ' .. ' .. "' ' •• ' ••• '"" ,,. ' " . .. " . l\' ... ,. ' .. .. ... •• '" .. ... " . ' ' ... • • • • • • , -. • + • -,, ·~ • + • • ll . -•• " .. + • ' ~ . -s \ -• • + • '. -.. •• " l• +r , .. I -•1 '" .,_ " + ' I I I 0.AILY PILOT lut!.ddY, Marth lb, 1971 CHECKING • UP.• It Was the lrisl1 Who Found Scotcl1 B\' L. ~1. BOYD r.IEN HAVE r.10RE re~ cor- puscles" lhan (tl'.l v.·omen. Red <'orpuscles contain hemoglobin. Hemoglobin rar- ries C1xygen. Oxygen makes the br111n \\Ork So when ~·ou"re trying to explain why ~en art> smarter than women , ~vs a man of sr1ence. bear in· mind the red corpuscles. the hemo,::lnbin. the oxygen. \\.hat dn you make of that, ~oung lady'.' Fairly simple. isn't it? AVERAGE SALE in a garden shnp runs $10.40 1-1·orth. did I mentinn that'.' ANOTllER UTTLE KSO\\'N FACT ir the Irish. not the Se<1ts, invrnted scotch. Before thnt , the Scots drank brandv . \\'JI\' ~1A 1''\' r.1p RE illen than 1-1·omen co1ne down v.·ith ;;ppcndil'ills rcrnains a mYS1Cr\'. sorrv to reporl ~I A \"BE yo"u KNO\\" aboul the "super "hCl'k .. , Fir~! :\'a- !1onal Bank of Arizona issues ii. A blank that hst~ numerous n1erchanls anq uulities. \'ou \\"rite out one cheek-In !he b<1nk. 1nark1nc y,•hat bills you 1-1•anl paid this month. Hoy,· much and Ill whom, tha\"s all. The bank then makrs those payn1C'nts. Prel!y nif· 1y, \t,'hat~ You can. P"Y a<; manv as 48 bills Yi'ith one s1gnatorc that way . At the moment about 130 other banks are getting ready lo do likewise. CVSTOMf<~R S ER \I IC!'.:: DANISH fURNITUIE IRIDA.L REGISTRY • I. Q."Do v.·e perspire "'hen we sleep'.'" A. J\1ore than y,•hen we're av.ake. usually .... Q ... Let"s see you add 4 to 11 and ('{)me up with 3 for an ans1-1·er , old buddy." A. So you"re going to get tricky v.·it h me. are you'! All right, l"ll bile. HoYi' about adding four hours to JI o"clock so \OU get 3 o"clock? . , .. Q. ;,\Vha!'s going (in now at Peenemunde, that town in Germany where Adolf Hitler's stient1st s put together the first \1'ar rockets?" A. Not much. H's just a fishing village anvmorc. 0NL"\' TJIE EGGS already crackl!d will crack when you h(!rdboil them. That"s what Julia Chil d says. Could be. The ladyfricnd al"'ays hol ds !hrrn up to the lig~t Only picks the solid ones to boil. Never gets cracked shells POLITTCALl.Y, a ma n ''ho wears both a mustache and a beard generally is left of center. lf 'he wea r s sideburns. he"s probably reac- tionary right wing. So con- tends George Carlin. y,·ho calls himself a co med i a n . un- derslandably. OPEN QUESTION: \Vhy can't y,•e tic kle ourselves? Ynur que.~!io11.~ rnirl com· menl.~ ore welcomed 011d w1U be used in CHf,'CK/NG UP wherever possible. Ad· dre.~s lellers tn L. f.1 . Boyd. P. 0. Bo:c 1875, Newport Reach, Calif .. 92660. SWEDISH CltYSTA.L CHINA l STEIL Draft Case FAJlllL\' CIRCVS -b11 Bii Keane Logjan1 To Ease? SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The u.s. government{· :idding prosecul.ors to clea r logjam of draft rerusal case! In the San Francisco area, y,•here young men have been floc king for general!_· lenient treat- ment U.S. Ally. James L .• Browning J r. said Fr iday the Justice Department has ap- proved forming a special fLve- man force to clear the pending draft cases from the U.S. Dislrict Court 'here. Previous- ly his nine assistants have handled all cases. Select ive Scrvke officials 11Mommyl Grandma's more than ONE year old, isn't she?" have said that drart resistct! flock from throughout the country to the Oakland Army l nduclio n Center across the Lousy Spele1·s bay because federal judges c k he re have the reputation of hec being sympathetic. P nssing Pla.n ·Foiled City B1·inging Troops Horne ' OLATHE, Kan. <APl -Thi~ no other solicitation and no . community which paid ror strong-arming " Christmas trips home for About 50 serviremePI from eight of tt~ scrvlcen1en has the Olathe area are in Viet· raised $2.300 to bn~ five nam , bul only seven names more here ror Ea s t e r 11·crc submitted to the newspaper. To be eli~iblc for furloughs. 1hr 14-day lea~-e. the men Harry Welch said rriday the mu~t ha\"e se rved in V1e1na m new drive was a natu1·al al ]('<isl four months and nat outgrowth Of the Christmas 111ore than eight months. A!so, effort, \\telch, a retired Army they must obtairi permission A NI MA logic from their commanding of· captain, o r i g i n a I e d thr flcers. Christmas furlough program.,_.::.:.::.:c._ _____ -cc:c:===---------1.uwrt1""'..," and is chairman of.the Home for Easler Commill!?C. "It 1-1·a~ Sn SUCCC~llfu\ at Christmas that y,•e had lo cut off solicitations because ''''-' had too muc;h rnonry,'1 said Dick Buzbee, puhhshcr of the Olalhe Daily Ne .... ·s and a member of the co1nm1tlce member. NovJ ••• Plastic Cream Invention For Artificial Teeth Artificia l Teeth Never Felt So Natural Before For tht fir,t lime. science offers a p\~s11c cream that holds den- tures as they've nc\•er been held htlor~-rorms an e\a~t1c mem· hr~ne that lle/p3 hnftf your d(r1- 1111r.~ /11 the 1111/r.1a/ ti5!11t! of you r '"'''1//1. f lXODENT hold! dmtures lirmer ... ond 1111'11 tomfortably. •irou may bne hardu. chtw better, eat more naturally. "We had $600 left over from Chr1st1nas, and we thought the Easter project v.•as 11 good one," Bu7.bee said. "\\'r JUSI \t "s a rcvolu\lonary discovery c;11lcr! FixnDE!'.'r' fOf daily home use. (L.S. Patent #3,003,968) f!XODENT lastl for houn. Re- sists moisture. Dentures that fit are c~nt1al to health. See your dentist rtgularly. Get easy-t.o- use FJXODENT Denturt Adhesive Cream at all drua: counters. Browning said 400 young CEDAR RAPIDS, To 'N a children !rft. put coupons in the p~pcr ask· men are under Indictment and (A Pl _ Two children spelled They returned later with a ing for donations. There ·•:··~"'.'._:::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ await trial in his Northern trouble at a local reslaurant note ihey claimed w;is from l ---~----- California district. and ended up in the arms their parents. It read. "it is , He said 3,500 refusal casc1; of the la~'. all whnt to cash this cack. '' I are under review a n d Police gave this account : The waitress called police. I estimated the new force might The children, a~e 7 and 3. Officers talked to In e develop 800 more indictments. entered the restaurant cne brother-sister team. then twn-1 Last year Banker Phares, evening and presented a check cd the youngsters over lo th~ir a Selective Service counsel, for SJO to the waitress. I' parents. j said 50 percent of the San was made payable to ''h'lle Authorities said the check SPIRAL SLICl!.D f:rancisco district draft dainner," a pp arc n t I y in· was one of several blark WHOLE OR HALF refusal cases were registr<in ts dlcaling they want~d to ex-checks found in a pile of tra~h-. l who had transferred from change it for a whole dinner. 1------------11 'di/ ' other area~ of the country. The check was sign e d'r-----------1'1 r • ~ dorsed with the same name u ... • HAMS " • . . So Good It Will Haunt · You .'Til It's Gone" Ovr ll'J.m• '1•! "'e flnor CGrrt-..., low. PO'-'" -Our 1low *Y ! c11rl<>11 metllc>CI. ''"' wi.consln ~kk0<y and •PPI•-1moll!ng inn ' J0-1\0ur oven D.lklng ,,_., 'n spice 111111 1rt un1q111 !n 111 ""' , W<>rlo So cltlltOolri 1nd 1ppethi119 we flHI wovkln't klWlw how to I l'"oro.,. tllls prodl,ICt Wt've -mak'll9 IO• :U Vff"· So!r1I s11c..i 100. rro"' !op IO tiollom '° ttoal Nell cltlect•b!t unltorm 1llct c•n "" removed enor!l6•1V. Completely !Wk«! •nd rtlclV IO 1erv1. O•· I d~• VO!Jt l'<onev B•kecl Htm !oclly. 11n 1<1v1nh1rt '" "•m.lovmtnl ytu'll never lor11e!. A government spokesman "Ronald C' and it was eu-1 Gr•ff'1!1' '15 1~ .. ~ said no firm statistics .art' av11ilable, but he estimated in large letter~. It was clatrtl J k R II t ~ RETAIL STORES h t 3fi I r I d " "\Veclnesday, 1971." A 0 e . • • ea y 3700 E. Coa1t Highway, Corona del M•r-673-9000 t a percen ° 1 le pen in,g The waitress rcfu.~ed to nr•-drarl cases in the United ~ " 1222 s. 8rookhur1t, An•h1im 635-24'1 States are in No r ther nr.~c;;c•p•l"""l•h•e"""c;oh.e•c•k-'.".d-•l•he~,;;·-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.---.-;.-.-.-.--"::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Cali fornia. II ;.. The patlern of San Fr<iri-r ,. i cisco sentences for resisters ~· " j convicted de s pi t e con- srienlious objector claims h~s l been a six-month term or pro- bation for two years in alternative service. usuaPyl work in a hospital or 'Nllh a charitable organizalion. In \Vash1nglon , the Selec,ive Srrvice System announced! nrw rules that would preven t a draft res1slcr from transFi:r- ring his case to a court jurisdiction which he considers more lenient . J 'WedIZ.esdar 8? CJJiursday Oil,.lY 4pm 7111 Closing l • FROST-FREE FREEZER WAS I I l :~ 19 ~~: SIDE BY SIDE REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER Rolls out on wheels for easy cleaning • fRUU• MOlDS UP TO 230 LIS. ot lrot1n lood! 1t 1dtal 110•1~1 lt"'D''alu•r, · t Z MINI tUBf.. IC[ lRIYS Willi NANOY STO•A&E l lN th lt Jlolds 1~~ .. 1 zi,) utoa cub's • lOlOS 01 FREEZE~ STORAGE , .. ~ to>TVenrent !llrlves 01~1 bul~ ~"'~(e r~clo Cnnvenoen! door ihel~e' 1ntllldt 1 lieu~ /Ultl ca~ C'!Pr~str. plus 11 s Ice Maku reuiJ! • SEPlRlH HMPERllU~[ CONTROLS to1 both lroHn 1nd lru~ lord ~e~l'O"'. • FOU~ IDJU~Tlll[ CINTll[V[R SMClYES •n fresh ll)'ld iec!•Oll plu1 5 full width dcior shelvu arve you 1 pl1ct !or ev1r,t~'"I· • SPEClll tOM,lRTMENTS UD lo 1 dly "1!11 ~eroer. ll•ie Wlft- lab'e b1rs ... Pemovable tlli b<n and bullu 1nd chetse ~eeper .. I StiPe•mul1t 1! yiwr tin1erl•ps, 95 • GE SERVICE Stir/om nridrtf - A.lwt:i) 1 :-,• torby! PHONE 548-7780 • ~men BEA ANDERSON, Editor PHt II ' The eyes ha ve it, chimes Georgia Moe as she ponders her selection. A student of library science, she'll look any· thing but scholarly in either choice. Girl Watchers Fired Up Too Women Warm to Hot Idea By 1\tARlAN CHRISTY Whoopee is lbe name or the game. The tendency ! o w a r d ex- hibtionism. unsquelched in the face of the midi. is skyrocketing as designers revert back to the newest mini-equivalent short shorts. Christened •·hot pants" or "smarty pants." the shorl·shorts could be 1he saving grace of Seventh Avenue. whi ch ha~ been in economic doldrums e ve r slnct long skirts threatened to veil legs. Thousands n~ stores coast-to- e o as t are ordering hot ~ntc; and ~signers are no-so-quietly referring to them as "adrenalin, thank God.'' Girl watchers may re}oice. Legs. from ankle to upper thigh. are marching back into the fashion pic- ture. When a look is an instant beiil- seller. f;:ishion p0wers label the look ''hot.'' hence the nomenclature. But designers won't admit that sizzling s;i lc.~ of shorties represent a furth er determined public boycott or ltiidis. Bill Blass calls it a reaction to pantsuits. which have become ordinary and. presumably, a bore : "It's a rebellion against legs being hidden in trousers. The ladies ~·ant a pants look thal shows off their legs again." Vic tor Joris. whose COiton gabardine hot pants have already been ordered by fiOO stores. says: ''It's not "' sigii of the weakening of the m1d1 . It's simply another way to look." Geoffrey Beene is more !Sointtd In his opinion: "The hemline ~ still controversial. It hasn't 11ettl~ one way or the other. For women who don't want lo give up the minis. this could be an updated mini substitute." • If lhere's one thing that designers agree upon it's thal hot pants are infinitely more difficult lo wear than minis because the fit is tight and the upper thigh and derriere ·must be sleek -not a trace of flab. B_Jass was ulteflY dismayed tha t no-s pring-chicken Ethel Scull, wife of the New York taxi tycoon. show· ed up at Adolfo's summer 1971, show wearing green velour hot pants. "Women who are slaves In fashion are always among those who abuse the look." says Bia~. ''When a new fad catches on. ladies have to take into consideration the state of their being." BJ8ss is designing hot pants in silk prints and he hope!! his customers won't go beyond the terrace or patio in them. Name designers are insisting hol pants are for lei!!ure but predict that million!'! of women will wear them on city streets this su mmer, Victor Jori~. who haunts off-beat discotheques like Hippopotamus and the Sanctuary lo glimpse what the young are. wearing, sees fl natural transition from strobe light to sunlight. ''Hot pants are everywhere already." he s11ys. "There won't be any shame connected to wearing them on.city stree.UI. Women are no longer awe-struck with the idea of big-city livi ng. It's simply 'home.' so why think you have to go 'home ' in your hat and white gloves~" Geoffrey Bttne. just back from a holiday in Pa.rd. we nt lo 11 party hosted by Pierre Cardi n's assistant. Andre Oliver. Madame Herve Alphand's daughter was the belle of the ball In her black velvet hot pant,, and satin shirL "She wore dark stockings 1tnd lap dancer's shoes," s11y11 Beene, who ls puUin1 dark stockings and similar sh-Oes with his evening hot panls. "But I do hope the look ends up on the right women." he laments. ''Hot pants are really more demanding than mi n i 1, Proportion and height are im· portant -but a woman must hav e super-poise.'' Not only is the country leg-con- scious these days, everyone is look- ing for a bargain as the rigors of the rece ssion hit home. Beene, whose dresses are $350, will have hot pants outfit~ for $150. Joris is keeping his hot little numbers in the $50 range. "In my high ticket bracket I'm not sure hot pants will click because they're a contemporary fad," say!! Blass. Nevertheless he is churning out hot pants in silk prints. Legs will be under severe scrutiny because there's no veiling flaws or flab with shorl short. Designers are decorating legs with lightweight summer k n e e • h l g h boots or platform-solo sandals. Sometimes natural-colored pan· tyhose are worn. Sometimes it's the bare leg. The thing that has thrust hot paQts into prominence is the great trend toward the 01ass acceptance or shirts or turtlenecks with simple skirts. Designers are talking about how last year's marijuana partie!'I ha ve turned into Hawaiian punch and Coca Cola get-togethers were people dance and talk about the atmosphere and racial Injustice. The drug turn-of f, obvious as people get back to basics. certainly has affected fashion. Victor Joris sums it up : "'liie hot-pants rage can be traced back ID the agrarian Ideal and the blue-jean cra7A!. The young have chopped off the legs of worn-out jeans and worn them as shorts. Hot pant! are sleek veri'lions ot homemade shorts e>nly lhe edgea aren't ragged.'' Vantage Point By JACKIE ~OMBS 01 IM 01lly '11•1 lltH Framing the eye of the beholder is an array uf modern eye.wear to enhance every face. Er:h11nce not detract. for today's eyewear is styled with the facia l . f,eatures, personality and life style of (he wearer In mind. Contemporary manufa cturers consider tye wear as fashion. not just a necessity ; as being attractive while functional. 'fhe fashi on favorite of youlh, wire-rim- med glasses dot the faces of a great cross section of the country. Popularized by Beatie John Lennon lhree years ago, the trend is spreading into other age brackets. 'rhe current renaissance'"<>f wire-rim· med glasses, the speclacles our grandparents wore, may be based on the popularity of plastic frami:s• over the past 2S years. '"People aged 30-40 are the biggest buyers of the wire rims,'' said C. Wayne Cole, an optician. When qucstiont.'<I on the desire for the old· fashioned frames, customers reply, "Old, this is new to us. All we 've ever known is the plastic." The rebirth of the spectacle may be Cflnsidercd in terms of cyclical fashion or a penchant for the antique. But the new wire-rimmed frames are vastly dif- ferent than they were years ago. A variety of sizes and shapes have been de signed to please every eye from oc- tagon to round , granny glasses to huge, rose-colored moons. •·Tue desire for the wire-ri~ may be purely cos metic -they make the observer less aware of frames becausl! they blend ~into the face." commented Cole. When selecting frames , whether wire, plastic or aluminum one should consider hair, eye and skin color and especially the shape or the face . Men, who are notoriously nonchalant In selecting frames, are becoming more concerned with their appearance. "Most men look good in square-shaped frames while women are flatte red by the oval or octagon shape ." Both should realize the imJXlrlant role facial features should pla y in selection, he maintains. "A round-faced person should never wear round glasses as they would be all curves and appear moon eyed.'' Cole recommends squarish or octagon Frames in that case. A square face woultt look boxy with frames of similar angles so round or oval frames would be more attractive. The person "'"1\h an oval face has a wider selecllon -he can wear any shape. Mature women usually wear plastic frames with uplifted ends -lhe effect is to uplift the facial lines. ''Softly 11quarcd frames are becoming more popular with middle aged people as an option to the standard shape. A healthier attitude toward the necei;si· ly of eye corrections and all human imperfections exists today, ''Youth believes in total acceptance and the 11dults ,1, are pickin g up on it," says Cole. ''Youln 11nd adults are taking pr ide in their eye.wear as a means of identity and ii is all part of the youthful quest for what is honest and real.'' I Eyes • ·Focus 1n Looking as lovely as her daughter, Mrs. George Moe improves her appearance by selecting appro· priate frames. Stereotyped eyeweer will no longer content today's independent.thinking woman. ' I '- • • " First Lady's Wish: A MARKS NEW YEAR Mrs. Rlch•rd Nixon By HELEN THOMAS WASHINGTON !UPI ) President Nixon says his wlfe Pit. who celebrates her $9th birthday today. ·is a \\'onuin of "great strength o r character" and s u per b sensitivity whose "passion for privacy" prevents her from tiijoying all aspects or her role u First Lady. He also de scribes her, ln Navy Hngo, as a "sundo~·ner" -strict disciplinarian .,.,. with her two da~ghters, and a woman who likes to keep the Wh ite House "ship shape." She has strong views but 3grees Vt'ith her husband lhat tiny cannot speak with "t"·o ''oices" when they disagree, Nixon says "A "·alk or the beach , . , with her hair fl}'lng . , . and no photographers." T ha t "'ou\d be his birthday wish for her. The President thinks his wife will be re1nembered for her travels abroad and lier promotion of volunteer public service activities. BUI he believes her activities as First Lady are not reported as widely at they ;;hould ht>. He say! that while !\,rs Nixon neve r would ha1•e run for the "Office" of First Lady, "Any lad)' who is First Lady likes b!:lng ,.~irst Lad~·· I don'l care what they say. They like it." "Sl1e likes certain aspects of the position iWore th11n others," he explained •·She dislikes the fact tha t so 111uch of her (personal) activities 1nust be public . .. For ex.ample... he said. "one of the things she niisscs the 1nost is the <ibillty to JL:St walk on the beach or window-shop as we us2tl to do in New York . . . to go alone and not be recogn iz· d " ' . "On the other hand.'' he added, "she llke5 what she can do as First Lady." He said that his health wes •·excellent" but hers was bet· ter. And he envies the pies and potatoes she can eat and Youth a ·Precious Possession ~ DEAR ANN LANDERS: t want to ~e with you what I consider a rare Jliere of wisdom. ll i.s called "Teenage Lament" by Nancy Curtis: Tl]e New morality -and freedom From Classes -what a drag~ ANN LANDERS ~ From Mom and Dad-always arguing. 1 From homework -senseless hours. j From discipline -useless! For ironing -senseless hours. For dishes -useless. She y,·as very understanding. This past week I received four letters from relatives who think J am .>oine kind of animal. When my mother was alive J was very good lO her. I saw no point in going that distance for the funeral. Was I wrong? You be the judge. -CAri.1PBELL, CALIFORNIA BLACK SHEEP 1 From church -a bore. 1 From conformity -a hangup. ! l'm my own woman now. t Made so by one decision. l One hour of love and pleasure. For cooking -a bore. For sex - a hangup. Oh God, if you are there, Please let sOmeone take this crying baby off my hands i Free now to look at my cheer-leading .lweat.er hanging in the closet. Pt1y books and basketball schedule resting on lhe shelf. My material for a prom forma1 - •ever made -as il sits amid the hmnants l Of the fabri cs left over from my snaternity top.s. • My medals from band and choir. forsaken in the clutter of a jewelry !l>ox. And let my feel dance once more. I am so old. And I was never young. DEAR FRIEND: I'm grateful for lllis touching potm. I Are you listen log , students'! The slleoce is dt:afenlnc.) DEAR ANN LANDERS : My wife and ,~,.ill celebrate our 25th wedding an· niversary in May. I've been saving for a trip to Hawaii for four years. A v.·eek ago 1 got .a call from Bosloii. My mother passed away suddenly. DEAR CA~IP : If yo11t comc.ieoce la clear and YOU feel you did lhe right lblo1, that sbould settle it. Some people attach great importance to futterals, grave-vlsitln&. etc. Others do not. ~1y personal belief Is that it's what we do for the living that counts. Whateve r v.·e do for the dead, we really do for ourselve1. • My friends passing by my window l. Laughing over the g083ip column in tne iehool paper And gi&gling over who will be the '1!zl to 'experience 1 The new morality -and freedom From cleaning -what a drag! For him -always arguing. My wife and I talked It over and she said if it was her mother she would go to the funeral but it was up to me. I deeided against it and phoned my sister and asked her to send a bill for my share of the funeral expenses. Drinking n1ay be ''in'' to the kids you run with -bYi&., it can put you "our' for keeps. YoiJlll'can cool it and stay popular. Read "Booze and You -For Teenagers Only." Send 35 cents in coin and a long, self-addressed, stamped envelope V.'ifh your request in care of the DAILY PILOT. Club Plans Party Bi.rthday Candles Glow New provisionals will be in· troduced when the South Coast Junior Woman's Club meets tonight al 7:30 in tbe Fountain Valley Comm unity Center. The club v.•ill be celebrating its fifth birthday. and a special prog ra1n ·by Miss Jan Vester. Charm in a Capsule. \Vill follow the election of ol· ficers and by-law revisions. Miss Vester, f o rm e r merchandise buyer and travel· Ing counselor for a cosmetic c.'Ompany, also is a lashion model and will represent a Garden Grove modeling col- lege. She will be introduced by Mrs. Frank Fleck. program cha irman Special guests during lhe birthday 1neeting v:ill be past presidents including t he Mnies. \\'i lliam Mayes. Robert Som1na, R. Bond Thornpson and Jon McKibben. and pasl coordinators ,he 1\-imes. Frank Phares. John Migno1 and John Reilhmuller. Displayed will be the pain· Far Lawyers' Wives Colors Coordinated r-.trs. Margaret Russell . col· or consultant. will discuss the proper selection of colors to enhance the appearance when the Lawyers Wives of Orange County meet Thursday. March 18. in \he Dal Rae restaurant. Fullerton. Lunch and a general meeting will follow an 11 a.m. social hour and accepting reservations is Pt1rs. Lee Adair , Newport Beach. Among the Orange Coast members recognized for their hours of service during a rr- cent fashion show were the fi.tmes. \\'illiam C Adams, Easter Eggs Take Shape In Porcelain The making of porcelain bisque Easter eggs will lw demonstrated w~n the Sou1h Coast Federated Ch i n a Painters gather tomorrow evening in tJ1e La11:una Btarh home of Mrs. liarry Fa~an. An artist and teacher. ,_,rs. Fagan pours the lhin porcelain eggs in llOfl pastel colors After firing . lht delicate eggs are dewrated with either floral or scenic designs using a matte cttln1 pa int. Tht group secured a first plact-in Btsl Table Display during the California China Painting CO£_vt nt lon in Da k e rs f i eT'd . Members representing the chepter y,·ere the Mmes. Roy L. OswJld. Howard Morrett Leo D. Road!., Malcolm. Mabfn and Helm 'Wood.sjde. Newporl Beach; Yi' a 11 er Charamza . Huntington Beach and Ronald Owen, Mliision Viejo ,rlOO hours. and Ralph Dixon. Costa Mesa. 300 hours. Members intervie\v people seeking legal assistance from the Lega l Aid off kes in Santa Ana and Anaheim. More than 3,000 hours a year are donated by the volunteers. Sessions To Begin The Childbirth Education Association of Los Angeles, Inc. is initialing Orange Coun· ly chi ldbirth training classes during March. Expectant parents \\'ho are lnterested in the classes. wh ich include discussion or relaxation anc1 b r e a I h i n g techniques. nutrition and fam i· ly adjustment to the new baby, may call the in.!ltructor in their nearest area. Mrs. Dennis Jenan is in· st ructor for Huntington Beach ;ond Fountain V.alley, and Mrs. Jamt~ Hutcbltlgs for Laguna Hearh and San J u a n (;ap1s!ra no. Chapter Meets ting by Mrs. Richard Kobayashi "·hi ch took first plat".! honors in the Lo' Cer· ritos District Juniors' Act Frstival. Provisionals who will be welcomed by th(' gencr<il n1emhcrship inclutle I h c ~Imes. Jerome Ba!kee. Ter- rence Benson. Mike Brusseau, IJavid Cone. \\'illiani Griffen, Alan Hall. Donald Johnson, Da niel Kahn, David Kellner. Bruce Mattern and Jerry Smith. Re sidents o f Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley interested in community service and membership in the club are invited to call ri.1rs. Gregory Reinker for in· I formation . Mrs. Gerald Be il n e 11, hospitality chairman, •1 w i·l I serve special refreshments in honor of the occasion. Two Dates Circled Newport Alumni Sought Are you a Newport Harbor High School graduate of 1961 '! If you are, or if you kno\1• a 1961 alumnus who has not received an invitation to the 10lh year reunion of the class on .June 19 you are asked to help planne rs by letting them know your whereabouts. To gel in touch with those who are hoping to make the June 19th gathering a success , you may call Mrs. Steven H. Strauss or 11frs. Robe rt \\'interbotham 111 N t w p o r t Beach. Birthday Celebrated Lone remain very lhln , while he has to fUI up on cottage cheese. He said she has "great physlcsl stamina, and that carries over emotlona.Uy." "She does not blow easily. under stress whether traveling abroad or cam· palgning ... ·• He .said tr.at he discusses issues with Mrs. Nixon but does not ask her opinion on •·troop withdrawals." "I don't even pall the cabinet, let 11.lone 1ny wife." he grinned. Speak.Ing of the First Lady, Nixon said : "S~ is a very good critic . . . if we have a press conference. a speech or something of that sort. • • • ------ Elegant Easter Walk Nobody is a !>titer critic than a member of your family because llie"y will be perfecUy honest and generally kind . "Generally," he continued, "they tend lo be on your side , which doesn't mean that the criticism. therefore, is as 00.. jeclive as it ought to be. But she has a very good sense and the daughters have, t.oo . . . . in their understanding of the younger generation ... The Preside9t says the perSonalities of his I w o daughters are "totally" dlf· ferent. He described Julie as an '"extrovert , warm, very outgoing and gregarious. who is doing something all the time." • UPI Ttll•IMll Pierre Cardin ofl'er~ an elegant dress and jacket in pure \\'Orsted \VOOI crepe featuring a feminine jacket \1:ith stalloped collar and lapels. 1'hc dress. appropriate for Easter Sunday. is fini shed ,,·ith a scalloped bib. Schedule Varied Senior Group Active We can't sell during a 1neet1ng \Vetlnesda}·. :i.1arch li, in the c!ubhousr me1nbt'rs "'ill ha1•c a choice of playing bridg::.-. canasta , pinochle or ~huHleboard. t\o dues are charged other 1han a donation at the coffee bar on regular n1ecting days. first and 1hird Mondavs of the month , betwr'..'n 10 :30 anrl 11 :30 a.m. Other activiues planned 1n· elude trips to Ha1~·aii. L;:;~ Vegas and Lake Tahoe and this summer the group will tour Alaska. More inform ation may be obtained by ron1ac1ing Mrs. Marks. you the books ... on Beacb Tricia, he said, Is "more an . lntrovert. She Is not one who enjoys the spotlight..'' "E\'erybody tries to figure oul which is like which," he said. ''Probably both are throwbacks to grandparents. J am somewhat an unsual man to be in) political life because I tend to be less gregarious, frankly. than the average person in this position in public Uie." He said there is some j'private time" for the family when they are~Camp David or at San Cle e. And they have a 1trict p not to invite many outsiders during such times. Asked what he found the Horoscope ...... most "difficult" thing 1bout his life in the White House, be sald: "As a matter of ract. t have very few complaints about ii. I am a fairly disciplined person. I therefore do not allow the deteJls Lo burden me down. I am very di sci plined in tenns of criUclsm. It doesn't boUier me. J read it all. ''What I would like betler is more time, which ls 1ny time, just to read aod think ." he said . "Whal a man needs Is tu read, to think, in a philosophical vein, about the enormous pro blems he has to deal with." Sagittarius: • Do It Yourself tum in your favor. Take in· itiative. _ CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . WEDNESDAY MARCH 17 By SYDNEY OM ARR 19): Confidential affairs are ARJES (March 21-April 19): emphasized. Keep them free Whal appears to. be out-of. from any hint of scandal. reach y be closer than you Have fun, but remember you think versatile. Investigate do have to face yourself in fact s which are relevant to morning. aspi ations. Gain indicated AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. lhr gh writing, read in g , 18): Some friends, meaning s ial studies. well. could complicate issues. AURUS jApril 20-r.1ay Best to rely on you r own ) : Accent on settlements in judgrntnl. Be ready f o r partnerships. You gain insigbt rewrite. review. retracing of Into areas p re v i o us 'y steps. chance to correct past hermeticall.v seated. Don 't be errors. Acce pt social in· arraid to check subjects COfl-vitation. sidered ofr limits . PISCES (Feb. 19·1-·!arch 201: GE'.\11NI il\fay 21 -June 20): You get action in area y,·here Comn1un ica te \\"ith one \l'ho there has been discou rage. appears to opnose your views. men!. Outllne goals. Present Open yourself to new con· ideas, formats. De\'elop over· cepls. One 11·ho is talkative all concepts. Plan ahead. ma y actually ha\'e somethinR ~ ---- - \~·orthw·hile to reveal. Be ai perceptive listener. I CA.~CER iJune 21.July 22 ): Be al ert. Thost' who are sup- posed to perform b a sic services could be careless. Be diplomatic. bu t observant. Insist on qualii~. Fa mily member needs praise. en· couragemenl. Respond ac- cordingly. LEO /July 23-Aug. 22): A\'oid self-deception. See persons. situations in realistic light . Creative imap:ination is productive. \Vishful thinkinl? now could be destructive. Find out 11·here you stantl in affair of heart . \'IRGO <Au g. 23-Sent. 22):, Parents. o ! d e r indivi duals1 come stronglv into frame ofl refcr~nce. Accept re.I sponsibility. Realize lhert'.' DID YOU KNOW TAP WAT E R IN ORANGE COUNTY 0 0 E S NOT MEET THE TASTE ST ANDAROS OF T H E U.S. PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE? ;ire rewards. A void b e i n g I .. discouraged b~· minor delays .. 1 Check propert.v values. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): You p1id mil\ion1 of doll1rl lo d1•1lop 1 m1lhocl of w1t1r p urOiic•l;o., i" •p•ct . Emphasis on rel alives. travel. I llTitten messages. Fi nish proj. Now 1•••"• 01mo1;1 '•" b• eels. Get rid of burden whic~ u1•d in the hom• - Is not rij!'ht/y you r o\\·n. Spread influence. SCORPIO IOcL 23·Nov. 21): Stress greater independence. Fina ncial prob 1 ems . op- portunities are highlighted.I ~ individual cou!d plav prominent role. Say \l'hat yoU 1 niean -mean what you say. 1 SAGJ1TARf US !Nov. 22· Dec. 21.1: Do things yourself; not wise no\\' lo de!egBte ta sks. Imprint you r 01vn p e rsonality. Circumstances P11rifvin9 vo~• l•p w•ler Into good clr i1>kin9 w1!1r. Coll o-.d nk obo11t 1111ti"' •111 OSMOTIC Wottt 1'11rlf!1r o 111 I y 56.00 pt• '"•nth. Ho contT111ct to 1l911. 645-0520 LINVIRON Corporation B. D. HOWES IS HAVING A SALE i B. D. HOWES and SON FINE JEY.'ELERS FOR. THREE C&.'iEJlATIO:oiS NE\ll'ORT BE\CH: 3412 Via lido · !7S·27JI ' • . ' . ' . DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS MUTT AND JEFF JUDGE PARKER PLAIN JANE • OH,1llAHK \00! '-....P'-... YOU'RE A DEAR! NOW,EWISE1 YOU 0EAGOOD GIRl! , ly Chester Gould 19 VEARS IN A C.ELL GAVE ME. .1>.RTMR.ITIS, C..OUT.1-lEART TR.OUBU. Uu:..ERS, 1-lVPERT'ENSION ANO GAL..L510NES. 'TAK'E MEED, G uarrER ... By Tom K. Ryan .,.' N ·.:::.;:.,, ,,. .. ~ ....... ~ .. -· 01-\,NO! I BROKE -n\E ICE AND CRAWL~O IN TO DOAN UNDER WATER TAP O.ANCE 1 DON'T STAND THERE--- GIVE ME A l1AND.1 By Al Smith • '" '"°'"'' ...... ,, "•"" I 'D -PROPOSE TO MIM .-,GAIN -. 5UT MY EGO CAN'T STAND THE Tli',6.UM-' OF i:EJKTION.' I WISH VOil WER'E UN,\TTAC.HEt7, JUP6E PA.R'KER': By Harold Le Doux I'D MARRY YOU IN A MINUTE, ™E L•-:.r AB!5EV .. 1i: ONLY I COULD && TI ME I CERTAIN Tt-+AT TWO CAN LIVE I CJ.IECKED IT AS Cl-IEAPLV AS OME ON YOU[('. WAS UP TO l=OR'fY MlLLION DOlL,6.11:5 ! El<:iHTV '. By Frank Baginski Ll'L ABNER SALLY BANANAS GORDO ~ .1/.~ ·. MOON MULLINS ,A~, .JOKE .• You C,AMo ALON<'; ,AT AN OPf'Ol<TUNo llME".' ANIMAL CRACKERS - " .. .. ' I! ; .. ,. ' I··~ • .< lut~day, M•rtll 16. 1971 . . ,. -. 0.6.ILV PILOT J5 By Al CGpp -HAS FIN15HED1l-!E By Charles Barsotti By Gus Arriola "" rJ -r By Ferd Johnson No ?c,Aco --Wo ...JUST WANToD To REST A BIT TILL OUR 8US ARRIVES ·. By Roger Bollen \\.-E. AIR ?Ol..LIJTI otJ I NCEX 'SAYS THE AIR IS UN HEAL "'TH'f YEP! "THATS TIE \JORt> FoR lT .-UN-fE.N...'"l'HY! .. -Oil, I iWSr CAPTSfAWD M<l!>J;l.F ! QaJ SIW.Dll'T TAU< LIKE. "W;r-1,W I:a1r i!e,W..<J flleAIJ ll" 1- _ usioes, <MJ u:w ALi,. T!je F~eJJ!lS ~ cA~ Ger: '"TODAY~ ,.~ I ,, l DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by • A. POWER I' ACROSS I Grr ll 111in1ber 5 Li \€'J'\S• I~ 9 l'"'Dromnt1J: 2 word\ J4 Srn~ll s ~1n ~ra.,th )~ AmerocJ1 !ronl1er '""' o!ti<er l b Male hrP 17 Descende(t ia S11Jll group llJ Poe:ry 20 !.lov"'' hither .111 rl th•lher :'2 NC0s 24 C1\v or Ital 1 ~ 16 A t~rr;phrr1c d•~'11rhanCP 27 lnsh kmg's home 29 Cor1vcr1rd 30 Senl1mental drivel l nforrn~I :! 3 Posl·bS years, 101 many 37 R1ppr~ JS Me11tally del1c•e ' \ person 3? A prior tom~ f"ref1~ ~Q flY.1'~ ~J R 11J'1: lo t.1 I e ~ deh1n1's prootrly J • " 0 l• 11 ll ,, ' " " u " "' " " ,. " ., ncrfect mJnne r 44 Conducted 45 Frerich month ·16 Season 47 Ract-tra(k c l1ar~cters 4'l LookN} f1Yedly 53 As•al+c 11a1cot•c. 7 words 57 Pleast'd e~press1on SB l11c1dent 5'1 lri~h legislature bl Flair t.2 HarJ~S b3 A11glo·Saxon slave l.4 Ter1111s tourt fixtures b5 Harold -·-·-. Composer bb ······ gt1n b 7 B11\1sh Coli1mbla salmon DOWN 1 lnttll•gen\ 2 Tinge J V1bra11I 4 Co11f1nemtnt ~(specially (htrished b Pol~s for rowin g a boat · ' ' l " ' " n 25 ." 26 18 • " " .. Yesterday's Puzzle Solvtd: ' 7 Does one'~ btst 8 TV program feature: 2 words 'l Cal I aUentlon 10 Wrld fancy 11 Bereft of 12 Of the cur1ent m ont11 : """ IJ Honey-l!lakers 21 Commence 23 Horned 1um 1n ant animal 25 Mine produc t 2.8 E~tents of me ntal capacity 30 Objects of la1tll 31 Sc hool exam 32 £~elusively J /l&/71 33 Small brook 34 Mi ss Ada ms 35 Having the same score 3& Turning point 37 Old or New····-··· 40 O!ssolves 42 Ru1al deity 43 ···-Palmas 45 Made l iquid by heat 47 Nol rela~ed 48 Hide away ; Inform ii r 50 "The Life of--...,-" 51 Ra is e th t> spirits of 5Z Th ick 53 Greek letter S4 At any lfme s~ B!rd Sb Chinese: Comb. form hO Rent 10 u 12 1 " ' ' . . i ! PERKINS MISS PEACH STEVE ROPER NICE GOit.JG, Ml'l. RO?ER .' WE"VE BEE'-' WANTlt.!G TO GET THE GOODS ON ' ' _ ... ,_. ,.,.-·:; ... - OF couesE, TMEYl<E ONLY HIREO HELP.'····TOO BAO THEYLL HAVE TO ROT IN PRLSOW WHILE THEIR BOSS E"-IJOYS THE·GOOD LIFE / \ul By John Miles By M..._.," UM ,Of.I ~ J.lE'S GOTTEN WISE ... By Saunders and Overgard lOOK/···IF \YE ···UH ···5!t46 ON THE 016 GUY···WOULD YVH ···MAYBE LE T US COP A ill?:l-ITER PtEA····? By\ Charles M. Schulz .-~~~,.-,.~~~, &if I-WW CAN l Pt>5';18l "1' Lro< J.l!M IN T~ E'r'f. t&>ID Tai.. HIM WAT I CXN'T LJl(E HIM A5 MUOI AS HE l!KE5 ME ? • • WR/TE HIM A LINUS. IOIJ'RE LETIER .. .u:RITE A 6£N11JS)~ HIM A "DEAR \'---,~-; CHUO::• LETf~ MR.MUM .. " ' ' ( I ,a... ,. ~IL"11 DENNIS THE MENACE ·~ CANSETUPANY"JWe ICN,/loM . I €0!' EWRlllille oUJGGEO r! l<llO 1UllNE1l ()11 • l l • I l l • • JI DAILY ~ILOT • • .. ' I Twewl11, Mlll'Cl'I 16, 1•71 , -i I WHAT WRESTLERS WON'T 00 TO PLEASE A. CROWD ,,, PEDRO MORALES TAKES A FLYING LEAP ONTO THE BACK OF JACK MULLIGAN BEFORE A MADISON SQUARE GARDEN THRONG OF 21,430. fcap Shene I . Takes Stroll In Past Saturday marks the gplden anniversary of one of track and field's mosl spec· tacularl y suei:essrul high school meets -the Southern Counties classic at HijJl· tington Beach High School . And one of the men being singled out for special honors Saturday is" a fellow who has seen all but the first four of these highly reearded in- vitationals. Harry ~1. "Cap" Sheue took ove r management of the meet in 192& and guided its growth from 12 schools and fewer than 100 athletes to 75 schools and 1.200 performers when he ran his last Southern Counties in 195:.. And although Sheue dropped out of the organiiational picture. he stayed on ln one c.apacity or anot her -reporter, ----=-WHITE WASH -------- OLl:NM WHIT• photographer. whatever - for every meet aince '55. This year he's lending a hand v.·ith the ?Oth spectacular of a meet that has grown lo national sla\ure in repula· tion. Former , University or Kansas coach Bill EaJton . once mentioned to this col· umn 'tbaf he was indeed impressed by the 11mazing early aeason marks turned in atthe·Soulhern Counties meet. UCLA coach Jim Bush says of the Southern Counties : "I alwa ys considered it my favorite meet when I coached at Fullerton Hig h. Competition was great and ii was well-run ." Sheue touches a few of the bases nn his way around the Southern Counties rnen1ory circuit: He recalls 1929 when he had lo pile bricKs under the pule va ult &tandards to rnake them high enough so a young man 1rom San Diego High ....:... Bill Miller -could cle ar a national prep record height or 13-3\1. Three vears later Sheue sat in the LA Cohstum and watched Miller win the Olympic Games with a vault of 14-1 1'11. * * * Dy.ring Cap's many years of asaociati on \\.'ith the meet . he's seen many standout performers and performance:&. H e remembers thr 1933 meet which El Cen- tro won. The team was made up of only four guvs but e11ch one collt!ctl!d at least one gold medal. He says the t'.l.'O top lndlvidllal performers he 's ~cen are Dee Andrews of Long Beach Poly and Jerry Proctor of Muir !Pasadena\. Proctor won four gold medals -two in thr hurdles, one in the long jump and unr on lhe rela y. Hia 2>4 1/t still 1s 1he n1rcl long jump record. Andrews picked up v1c1orir.~ in the two hurdle races, rela y 11nd loni: jump. Sheue say s the late Ray \\'a\k('r gave blrth to the Southern Coun1les ex- travaganza when he found he v.•as unable to get much in the"'"~ 111 serious· competition ror his potent 1922 llun- Ungton Beach tligh track squad So he started lhc 1nvitat1onal mert. --'which Sheue says has grov.·n to be the largest. fa ste1t and best conducted mt>rl of Ila Jund 1n America <Walkt'r'~ team, by the v.·ay, wtnt on to win the state meet lhat year). -Cap Sheue. now 7~. and an art1\, coif player. sais he d~sn·t know r,f 1nyth ing in hls life more personal tu him than tht Southern Counties mcel And apparently 1'0mt of the prnpl~ who've bttn around Huntin~ton Re~ch think quite a bit of Cap Sheue. One called him the lt:gend of Hun- Ungton Beach High 1thlettc1. And they n11med the stadium alt.er 1\lm -an honor richly deserved. Defense Did It for No. 1 LOS ANGELES !AP l -UCLA coach John \\'ooden said Monday thaJ. his 1970- 71 Bruin basketball team beat 25 of 26 foes not because of rebounding. shooting or the fast break. He credits defense ,. Wooclen 'S team, unbeaten winners of the Pacific~ title, destroyed previously third-ranked Southem Cal last Saturday. 73-&2, and Wooden Yid his defense made the difference. "J'm not overconfident about our l(illebrew Has Shot at Ruth '.s HR Mark ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -!lank Aar on gets Harmon Killebrew's vote as the best bet to outlast the calendar in pursuit of Babe Ruth's lifetime home run record. Nobody will be .surprised, however, if Kill ebrew makes a strong run at the n4 barrier, too -except, perhaps, the Minnesota Mauler himself. "l think Aaron has the best chance lo break the record," said Killebrew. who began tuning up for his 18th major league season with lhree home runs and a string or seve n consecuti ve hits in the first week of exhibition play. ''Aaron plays a good hitter's park and a lot of warm weather al Atlanta . "He's still got that great swing, too. l think he's probably the best hiller in baseball. "P.fyself. l don 't think about lhe record. 1 just try to do my job. When I started out. I never dreamed I'd be up there with fello'ws like Lou Gehrig.·: The Twins' barrel · c h e s t e d third b:iseman is I Ith on the all-time homer list "'ith 437. But he conceivably could finish the year as high as No. 4, behind Ruth. San Francisco's Willie fl.1ays. 628. and Atlanta 's' Aa ron, 592. Gehrig's 493 total will be the first jump. Mays. beginning his 20th season with the Giants. will be 40 years old in May, Aaron, a 17-year veteran. is 37. Killebrew, who broke into the majors with the old Washington Senators a1 the age of 17, has three years on the Btaves' su perstar and five on Mays. Killebrew, who belted 49 homers two years ago and won the American League's Most V&\uable Player a"·ard, hit 41 last season. It was the eighth time in the last 12 years he ha s topped the 40 mark . "I think he'll gel his 4(J again," said Twins' Manager Bill Rigney. "He feels good. He·s in a lot bette r ~hape than he was lasl year after his ~iVP winter. He came up with a leg 1n1ury last spring and wasn'l able to work as hard as he wanted to. He was dragging that leg around and it was pa inful to sec. "But he's started off \\'~'!\ a bang thit year. He's really swin the bat." "l did a lot of traveling l .. l'~previous winter because of the av.·ard ." Killebrew said. "This winter I stayed home and took good care of n1yself. You have to watch your weight a little clo1er as the years go by." Killebrew would have to hit &Cl homers this season -one nlore than his 1964 and 1969 career highs -to pass Mickey M&ntle, fourth on \.ltt' all ·lime lisl with 536. Accident Kills Top Cycle Racer RErTE. Btlglum -A womRn drivini;: a Merctde• cr&11hed inlo 11 pack of C\'Clers tn a k>cal race Mond11~·. killini: World ch&m pinn Jean-Pierre Monsers, police re ported. ~1onsers. 22. ol Belf.!ium. w11s In n pack of 16 riders v.·htn the wom11n drovP into the middle of the ra~rs ht3d-on frrm tht opposite direction near the 10 ... ·n of St. Plettrs Lille. actord\ng to Pfrl\ce A wltnt.111. following In an nfltclnl c11r. said Mnnscrs. whn, w11s marrltd v.'i th ont thild, mutt hive died ln1tantly. chances in the regionals," he said. "but J don't lack confidence, either. ~1ainly, I feel Y."e more or Jess peaked at the right time. Our big sil'ength right now is defensivelv. •·That's one asPect of the game that's not often noted but I feel the players are all playing better defen.!lively. Last week in practice, I stressed teamwork on defense. "Oh. of course. I alv»ays stre~s teamwork but last week l did sn more than ever. And I felt we played ou r- best game of the season against USC from a defensive standpoint." The Bruins, \lo'ho lace Brigham Young in Salt Lake City on Thilrsday night, Cflmmitted.371 fouls this year, an average of only lt2 per game. "Well. it's almost always like that.'' said Wooden. "Down through the years, our teams are among the leaders in !he nation in fewe st fouls called against 11 \ . Baseball Shift~ t I O'Malley Proposal Met Coldly and It won't come up soon." 1 ~ FORT LA UDERDALE, Fla. !AP I -Skyrocketing salar ies and run;iway races in major league baseball have pro\·oked a real ignment plan lhal would split the American and National Leagues into three four· tea m divisions. The plan. which was formulated by Los Angeles owner \V a 1 t e r t O'Malley and closely copies pro foot· ball's new structure. was revealed ~tonday by Joe Cronin, president of the Ameri can League. But Cronin. who said the proposal had been submitted to Commi.!!sioner Bowie Kuhn. cautioned that the plan l was just now being studied and v.•as far from any definitive stage. Bul one American League club of- ficial said he hadn't found any sen- timent for the plan. "\\'e gave it to our schedule makers for them lo explore the leasibility of such a plan ." Cronin explained. "But we haven 't had any discussions on it. It has a long way to go • Sp"rts In Brief Under the proposed new alignment. major league b"seball 's structure v.·ould look like this: National League Easl -l\.1ontrea1. Nev.· York. Pittsburgh, Philadelphia. Central -Atlanta, Cincinnati, Chicago, St. Louis. M-'est -Hon1ton. Los Aageles. San Diego, San Francisco. American League East -Baltimore. Boston, New York, Wasblnglon. Central -Chicago, Clevel~d. Detroit . Mllwauket". West -California , Kansas City, l\.1innesota, Oak.lagd . i The plan would create three pennant races where two now exist in the two-di vis ion se tup in each league hopefully pre\·e nt 1ng runaway races such as occurred in the American League last year, and stimulating wider inleresl. The result supposedly 1 would be greater financial rewards. ...... - Backus Stops Gallois; Angels' Murph&-Sliarp PARIS -Billy Backus of Canastota, N.Y .• world "·elter\veight boxing cham- pion nutpninled France ·s No. 3 v.•elterv.·eight Roger Gallois in a 16-round, non·title bout. ~tonday night. BRckus v.·as floored at the beginning of 1he fiflh round by a right cross. Thi.' cha ippi on sprang lo his frel and indicated he had slipped. but the refrree called an eight count on Backus. Backus suffered a cul over the left eye in the ninth. Backus put Gallois down three limes: in the se\'enth. eighth and 10th rounds for mandatory eight counts. and cut the Frenchman's left eyebrO\Y. One Judge ga\'e Backus a four pOint margin. the other Judge a three point m:irgin. but the referee called it a draw. Backus opened a cut over Gallois lefl eye in the third. and lengthened h!s lead 1n the fourth \l.'ilh a series of uppercuts to the body and head . The champion took the eight rount early in the flfth and IRler received a warning from lhe referee for rough tactics. Gallois bored in during the sixth as Backus seemed to slov.· down. and landed punches freely, but the American came back strongly in t.he seventh, i;:corlng with a left that put Gallois down on one kl)('e. and a sinular punch in the ei~hth pul the frl'nl'hman dov.·n again for a mandatory l'ight. An cxchan~e of blows elnsr in during lhe ninth left Backus v.·ilh 11 ('UI over the lert rye. Thr rt.feree agaln v.•11rned him e An11<'I• \t'in PAt.M SPRINGS -Tern Murphy hurl· cd five hitless innings and Billy Co\\'an·s sticrifice fly in tht eighth inninf:( srored Ro!ltr ReJl<!.z v.·Hh the 11.!nnlni:i run ~1on­ d11y as the Calllornia Angell shaded !he Clf'veland Indians 3-2 in exhibition baseball. Murphy became the first Angels pitcher to go beyond three innings as he fRced only one man over the minimum in his impressive outing. The Angel s collected only three hits -one a homer by Jim Spencer in the fourth. another an RBI doub le by Chico Ruiz in the fifth . • llo11aver1a H11rt LOS ANGELES -Ourablt. O!car Bonavena. the Argentinian hea\·yweight, will not keep his fight date "'ilh Floyd Patterson in New York next month because of a badly injured left hand, a spokesman for the boxer said l\.1onday. "The ligaments are not broken but they are Oflf'n and the: doctor l'!fts put a cast on his hand." the spokesm&n. Nestor Pippo. sald. The fighter suffered the injury In an auto accident early l\.1nnday. Bonavena was lo fi,£:ht lhe former rh&mpion PatterM>n al Ne1v York's ~1adlson Square Garden but Pippo said t.he Argentine fighter would "probably not fight for at leasl four months. That's what the doctor here advised him to do ." • Indy on TV NE\\' YORK -This year's lnC:1.,11 pohs 500 "'Lil he shown on home television (ln the sAme elate of the auto race for the first time in history. This v.·as announced ~1onday by Hoone Arledge. prrs1dent of ABC S!XJrts. and Tony Holrnan. prrsident of lndianaPQlis ~rotor • Srrerlwny ABC \\Ill present the ~l;l.y 29 auto race du ring prime,time. 6·30 pm. lo 8 30 pm . tPOT), several hours after it1 l'Omplelion. Bruins us. And the ~ason for thal is the type ol delense .,.,.e teach. "We tell the pla yers not to reach in and lry to steal balls: we tell lhem to be aware of the position or their feet and their hands. We don't set screens against people but rather we set screens against spolS on the floor. "We don't rebound by block.ine: out. t don't believe in that type of play. We rebound by being at a certain place at a certain time.'' UCLA No. I; Wooden Tells Polls' Effect LOS ANGELES I AP) -For the third time in the past five years, UCLA has been named college basketball's top team on The A!$0Ciated Press poll. UCLA, \Yinner of sis of the last ttven NCAA titles, used a 73-62 thrashing of previously third-ranked Southern Ca I last Saturday to pad IL~ final margin over Marquette to 39 points. UCLA coach John Wooden winner of 502 games as a Bruin in l3 seasons, said he was pleased with I.he ranking but reminded that in college basketball, the national collegiate t o u r n a m e n t permi t s c rowning of the on-the-court champion. /1 "I don't thin k they (the polls) are as important during basketball seaso n as they are in football, where there 's no post-season tournament play." said Wooden. The ranking of the Bruins high on the list "hasn't put any undue pressure on us," he ~aid. "Oh, the players read &bout themselves and are excited about it but what they do on the court is what really counts.'' But the coach adm itted that high rink- ing in the polls makes It harder to play Yi"eek after v.·eek. "The one thing that h .. ppens is that teams in our conference read or hear we 're No. I and so they put out an extra effort. The polls provide them l'."ith an incentive to play harder. "But I th ink I'd always like to be in that po9llion -knowing that the other team can celebrate like It had won the national title by beatlnf UCL.A. Of course. I hope we don't lose. I just like being considered that highly.·• T .. !'I W•I '''· T11m w·I ""· I. UCL.A 1181 1S I 61& 11 . .Jlc~1orwlll1 1'·' 111 1 M1r<1'U!rllOI 21.0 sn 11 Notre O.mt '°'' 11 J ~enn (41 ll·O "It lJ, N. (1rallne H.6 U • K•nU• (1) U·I 4H u . HDl/llOlt '1.6 s• J. use 01 1•·1 ll• 15. Dtxl"""' 11·• JI l _ $ C•ro!ln1 ll·' )11 1'. (11 JI. Ill ) )J·i ~ 7. W K1ntuc~y )J.J 111 11. l tnnHIM '°'' .O I, Kfnluc-y 11-• 111 11. VIUanovt lU H t Fordll•m 1S.1 111 1' Ora-• ~I If 10. d111a SI lt ·J Ut ~. ar11. Yount It' t Oll'ltr ""'" •PC•fwlng "*'fi, lll ltd In -'111'1· btTkll order; IOwtll, ltlallt , M111"11I fQl'lle). Mkl!lg1~. Oltl11W1m1, 'u"'ue, SV•l<Utl, Unlvtfllly OI Ille P•<llk, Ui.11 Slt !t, New Racer A Bit Od a---- --But Fast SEBRfNG, Fla. (AP) -P.1arlo An· dretti calls his new Ferrari prototype endurance racer "a bit weird," but he said Monday it shou ld be one of the fastest machines he has ever driven. Andretti, fresh from the first Grand Prix. triumph of his career a week ago in South Africa , will debut the litUe Ferrari C-11 in the 12 Hours of Stbring Saturday. The Group 6 prototype, a three-lit.tr car \\.'ith an opposed 12-cylinder engine, ran briefly in a race in Argentina Jan. I, but since has been reworked in the Modena. Italy, factory to make it 80 pounds heavier and as Andretti put it, "a v.•hole lot safer." Ferrari built the car for the 1972 cam- paign for the World Manufacturers Championship, a title won the last two years by Porsche of Germany, but de- cided to use it in some of the 1971 races to gain experience with it. The formula for Group 6 cars drops from the present five liters to three liters next ytar. Andrelti. who hasn't actually driven the C-12 yet. said the car has proven "qulcker'' than the Ferrari 512, a 5-liter car that won Sebring last year v.•ith the U.S. star at the v.·heel. ''I'll get my first experience with the car wh!'n practice opens Wednesd av." s.:iid the Nazareth, Pa .. resident. ''It 's different in size and i;hape from the usual prototype. It is a bil V."eird to look at. but I guess you have to sacrifice look! for progress." Andretti's en-driver at Sebring win be ~!Rian Jacky lc}rx, who like Andrrr 1i is a top Ferrari driver on the Formula I Grand Pri:. circuit. Andretti s11id he expects Ferrari lo have one of its stron~est effort! at Stbrln~. thnueh except for his own car all of the Ital ian machines will be pr i· vately entered . One of th e too Ferraris, the Ro!l'er Penski entry, will be driven bv Mark Donohue Clf the United States. and David Hobbs of En~land. The car set fast time for the Daytona 24-hour races but w11s involved in a wreck that cost it any chance of victory. NIT Field Filled NEW YORK -Louisville, Duke, North Carolina and Purdue were added toda y to the N&tiorial Invita tion Tournament to nu Out the Jg.team field for the college basketball evenl al ~·fadison Square Garden. Louisville, 2n-B. was the runnerup In the Migsouri Vallty Confere nce. • Brunclage to l(eep Word On Relinquishing Post LAUSANN E, Switzerland (AP) -"l said I would give up the presidency at the Olympic games in Munich ne-xt year, and nothlnR haa happened to make me change my mind."' Avery Brundage. SJ.year-old president of the lntem11tlonal Olympfc Committee said Monday. "Ev'n if colleagues on the IOC asked me to sland again I don 't think I would do so." he said. Brundage made his remarkl in an interview 24 hours after the IOC nine· man executive board had re-Orarted the rule on eligibility for the Olympic11. The wording of lhe new rule was not relea~ to newsmen. But Brundage said : "If I htu.1 my way l would have made It stricter.·• The 7S members of the IOC Con&rl!ss hnve Oren asked to vote on the ntw ruJir wi.h'n the next 30 day1. Brund111e lf'n1phai.1 zcd 1h~1 in tht long run the lOC still had Ute flnal say on whether I certain 1thlete11 would be allowed tc compete in the games. "'We make the Olympic rules. We hope that the national Olympic com. mittees and tht various International !tderations will ensure that our rule11 are followed. but finall y we have the last word." hf! said. Brunda1e maintaintd that as far as sldini was concerned. ctrtaln top athletes should be barrtd from the Olym. pies. "Look at It lhia w1y The lntematlon&l Ski ' Federation has organlied a world cup which me1ins that sJHers had to travtl miles from one venue to another and spend many month! In the 1ff&ir. It 111 not like havlrtJ • world chim· plonshlp tak!rlg plaet In one vtnue for I \\'Ctk or so. "Ptrsoni'\lly, I think th1t F'tS hat 10~1 control of it.a ov.11 house, .. BruDdagt ••id. • J ' ' Wigrrioie to Quit MD Post; Troy Winslo'w Set for Poly tilater Dei High baseball roach Bob WJg. n1ire will be stepping down as the J\1onan:hs' roach after the current campaign. Wigmore, who has tutored the t.1onarchs for the pust six years, will quit lo make room for another football assistant. Tonl Carroll. low is said to be in litle for the vacant Long Beach Poly football coaching job. Winslow completed over 60 percent of hi.s aerials for the Trojans in two years (1963 and '66), tossed 17 touchdown passes and ac.-cumulated 2,042 yards net in that span. \Vigmore oper<lles an insurance firm iri Costa J\1esa and has been on the Mater Dei staff as varsity baseball boss and football aide since the days of Dick Courv. ltis 61 percent clip in '65 stands as the single season record for USC. His most recent efforts have been with a semi·pro team in Las Vegas. "I've had a C'}Uple of feelers from major league teams to scout for them and perhaps I'll dabble a bit in that," mused \Yigmore recently. * * * Angelus League football backers claim superiority ht ClF rlrcles ud t!iey !iave • lot to back them wlteD past pl•yolf1 re1lllt1 Carroll has been in cbarge of football ------- ROGER CARLSON .. ------ are scanned. • In the last six years, an An1elus cir- cuit team. has made the semis la uc!i la· stance. Three of those oceasion1 ended up wlli tbt champion from the Angelu1 circuit. l\1ater Dtl l\·on '15, SI. Paa.I tied with El Rancho in 'A and Bishop Amat ll'On it last year. and baseball at St. Anthony High and is slated lo lake the baseball reins and assist Bob \Voods in football providing there are no hitches. * * * Figure this one out: Coach John Cole's Folltltain Valley High Barons captured the first Huntington Beach double elimination baseball tourney despite "·hat orignally appeared to be insurmount- able odds. * * * Laguna Beotb Hlgh's Jerry Fair bas been busy lining up a six-leam summer bas- ketball league. The Barons lost their tournament opene, .. lo Pacifica. 4-1, their third Joss in the first four starts. The setup involves fl.fission Virjo, San Clemente, Los Amigos. University, Occau· side and the host Artists. They then turned around and .,.,·on six strai~ht games in a span of five days. cap- ped by victories o'•er ?ifarina in the finals Saturday. They'll clash on fl.1onday and Wednes· day for six ~eeks beginning June ?I with three games per night. !'.farina, which had '\'On its first three in tourney action. had a pair of days off be· fore the finals. En route to the title Cole's chaps blanked three opponents. * * * Prep bust of the year candidate; Villa Park High"s basketball team. which finish· ed fourth in the Crestview League. A quirk in the schedu1e pitted ~tarina and Fountain Valley against each other again l\1onday. the third meeting in two days be- t .... ·een them. * * * Ex-Southern Cal quarterback Troy \Vins-- The tourney results make the Barons' the \\'i nningest (7-3) team in the Orange Coast area. Next Season Outlook Bright For UCI Cag·ers A delightful dilemma races basketball coach Tim Tift and he plans on spending a good portion of his time this spring and summer pondering the situation before arriving at any concrete answers. Tift's 1970-71 Anteater team was composed of 11 players and 10 or them are eligible for at least one more season of campaigning at UC L Lone loss ts John Farwell, a reserve gu;ird. The Irvine freshman team had its best.ever season \\'1th a 22-2 record and Tift feels the entire starting five has a definite chance of making lhe varsity nt!Xl season. Garrick Barr. a sophmnore 1-1•ho 1-11as injured before the i;eason hardly started will be back: Steve Parker. a servlc:? relumee 1-1·ho "·as in line for a probable sta rting position lhis season before he was in- jured. will be ready next year as a senior: and Jim Pinola, a red-shirt player this season. will Uc available "'ilh two years of eligibility remaining. This is a total of 18 player5 v.·1thout recruiting ~1ny junior r-ollegC' transfers and Tift says he will rarry no n1ore than 14 on the varsity roster next SCilSQn Tift 1s rcluclant tn say v.·hat hi s prc~cnt pl:.ns are but it looks likl' three (IT four m'.'1nbl'rs of this year·~ ff111n Iha! posted an impre'isirc 16· 10 record 1nay net make 1t nexl !in11• :iround. "I thirk Ar:dy Han sen ha-; an exrellenl chance to pliiv \\1th us n<'xt \C:ir. Rick '.\losirr Rnd Gary Denton arcn·1 far heh1nd Tl1esc thrl'<' plal"~rs from thl' freshrnan learn ha1<' looked good to n1e along 11·i!h the other twn s t a r 1 c rs f!IO\\'ard llawk !ns and Charll!s Lumpkins1."' TH! adds '·Parker 1s .~Lill an unknown quantity but he can rebound and lh1s h;is alw<iys been on" of our weaknesses. Mc pl11y1o hard and has a great atlitu1tc. "Pinola played freshman hall al Oregon Slate and sat out his sophomorr season up lhere. He transferred lo UC! and sa1 out this last season ;is "'ell and 1-1•ill have two 1·cars-with us ·· ' A.~kt'd what 5'!'p<1raled lht' rurrenl freshman tram from past UC ! yt>arllng squads. THI said '"They played together a.~ a group real wrll and thl'y wrrr outstanding on def1.>nse. T think the ability to p\11y together w11s the big thing. though about next season and also the future. We will wade into the big time and take our [umps. if necessary, as we upgrade our program regardless or how long it takes." he says with an air of caution. '·\Ve are in the process of building our program with good players and an attractive schedule. We will not change our thinking in this respect just to get into the NCAA college division playoffs. •·we much prefer a goOd, • strong regular season schedule and one that is attractive to athletes thinking about UCI for school." he says wi th authority. ··1r we can find an outstan· ding junior college transfer. 1-1·e will go after him if he can qualHy. Scott t.lagnusson (Fullerton JC) played for Jer· ry Hulbert UC! (freshman coach) al Troy High and we \.\'OU!d like to have him although be would have. to sit out a year after playing at Minnesota. "There are also so me outstanding high schoOI boys we would like to have next year and the~ould be eligi- ble for the team that goes to Hawaii tv.·o years rr om now ." Tift reminds one and all 1 ncluded on the list of area prep stars are such names as Don Killian (Corona del ~lari. Jerry :\1aras <Pacifical. Dai e 8:-tker f\Varren High. Down~~·i. John Service 1 Palrick Henry High. San Dieg o!. Pat ,\1clnallv IVilla Parkl and Jeff Masterson t :\lission Viejo) to name a few . Killian \'.'as injured and d1dn·t play this season an1I Baker is il 6-5, 250·pound center wL\h surprising agility nn the \\'arn'!n learn th:it almost up~<'\ Verbum Dei in an overtin1c gan1e in th~ Clf playoHs. " ,.~ .... ,,_. 8~•1·"..,,""' Cl~•-... l'!e'r.n GferO• ' "'~'""""' ~ 8"••11 Bli ck •.. , lOlfh OH. To1111 . .. ., ~ !JtV!"f '" 1~1 !F!~fl) " " " "' 1•1 ... ' . " • ., " no ., .. " " •I "' '• ' . " " "' ,, • " " •• ' ' •• • ' " ' • • "' »• 1,0•1 "' ·~ , .,. "\ ucr Frt1~ in.n ,, .... 11 " " " Mo1•t r I ~ " "' lu,.,,o•lflt. .. " m ~·llnnn "' ii "' [)onlll" "' " N l99i~• " • ~ 1-\tW .. ~I ,, •• llvnc~ " " 1:1 ••• .. " "" Jo•~•" f, ' " !lf\(l 1~"" ' •• cn.,.,~1t.-~n " ' " P••~ "' ••• '" ' . " " ., " " .. " '. " .. " ! '" ... ". '" .. , '" " .. " " " .. " Diablos Suffer 3-0 Loss By ROGER CARl.'ION 01 ""' 0.111 Plltl Sit/I ri.i ission Viejo H igh 's baseball tea1n stumbled to its fourth defeat in six tries ri1on· day afternoon when t h e Diablos dropped a 3-0 verdict to host Bolsa Grande. The \\'inning Matadors of Bolsa took advantage of some silent Mission Viejo bats and some mental errors in the field and at the plate to dominate the visitors from start lo finish. •·1r "'e continue like this wt:'re going to be the foun· dation of the Crestview League -holding the. other seven up,'' steamed ah irate coach Harry Hilke afterwards. His defense gave the win· ners three unearned runs and he was quick to point out his team 's only wm s of the year hare been by shutouls. The Oiablos had their shots at l\latador pitcher Bob Poitras, but cou!dn·1 put it away. ni~~ w:d t~~~neirnsni~~ ~!~~~~~ and third but came up e1nptr· handed when Poitras fanned one batter and forced the next to ground to third. In the following frame Diablos Bob Dulich and Rich Price opened up with single." but again the lack of the clutch base hit nullified any scoring chances. ,\leanwhile, the ~latador s pecked away '"ith a single tally in the first frame ("•hich came as a result of a single. stolen base a n d a pair of pass balls) and two more in the fifth. The key blow "'as Gllry Bro\'.·ning·s fly ball double \\"hich knocked in one run . Browning later scored on a l'lean single to center for the third :\fatador marker. Hilke startt!d John \Vade on 1hr mound and the ri~hthaniJer toiled 2 213 in· nings, al\owlng three hits. lhreP. walks and one n1n. Southpaw Rick G~ten1vaters hurled the balance of the issue and gave up thr::e hits. M+UI.., Vltlt !ti •• ' •• '°~rtuoan " ' • • II Jont•. 7b ' • • MGlll1!. "' ' • • (l••o ,. ' • • . ·~('"' " ' • • o 11cn 11 ' • ' :1 P•I(.•. t i ' • ' C.n •n•· .... •• • • :1 WI•~·<-' • • ''•'"" .. • ' • W•(I,. • • • • Giii•~·,.•""· 6 • • • 1 1•10"· "" • • • °'G tl...-•• 1r • • • To1111 " • , • l llM Ott/IW '" .. ' • ·~1 ri;...,, tb I ' ' • Br~nlftt " ' ' ' ' O•t"ll. ' ' • • • l •"tl(ln, rf ' • ' ' Br-t, 1~ ' • ' • ~.1,~ •. " ' • • • MtCt nlt Y, lb ' • • ' Po<t•11. • ' • ' ' ~'""'''"''· ~ • ' • K~1tt>O. ,, • ' • • To1111 ' $( .. • '' lft"I••• ' • ' ' . . Twt~day, Marth lb. tq7} DAILY PILOT ll Track Pat1·ia1·ch Hartmann To Be Honored at IlB Classic By HOWARO 1.. RANDY Of """ 0•11'1 ..... , 51•11 Ernst Hartmann is a name synonymous with successful high school track and fleld ln general al'lj:t the Huntington Beach Southern Counties meet In particular and at 71 years young, is still going strong in the sport he lov'!s as a starter in numerous meets in the area. Hartmann. ex-Compton High cinder coach. enjoys the area Jn which the Southern Counties meet has been staged for longer than his tenure with the Tarbabes so muctl. he now lives in Huntington Beach near Golden West College. "The Southern Counties meet was our yardstick in the early days." he says. The ex-coach and retired revolving, so Intense is his interest and enthusiasm. "I began taking teams to the Southern Counties meet in 1938. That firsl year I had a couple or sprinters who ran against Eddie Morris (all-time HB greet and still the meet record holder at 9.5.) "Stan Skafte and J I m Jenkins werr both 9. 7 sprinters with Skarte finishing third in the state." However. Morris was too tough for them at Southern Counties. He goes down the list and remembers Al Zimmerman and Bob Lud\\'lg In the pole vault (13 feet) in 1943; Jack Ray. the ClF 440 champion in 1944; Charles Kohl. slate mile run winner: Jerome \Valters, state 880 champion in 1H7. The list goes on and on wlth sprinter Bill Yell, tw~ time state 880 champion \Vilbur Firestone, long jump star Rollin Garrison, distance star WOQdy Covin1ton , quarter-mile atar Ulb1 \Villiams, sprinter and Ion' ju1nper Walter Roberts. half mile runner DeVone Smith and a host of othtrl ~e names bring fond memories to the man who coachfld them in high school. What was t~ best team he ever brought to tht Southern Countif'.S meet! Perhaps it was In l!W: when he had Garrison. A n d y Slaughter in the h.lgh jump. (Ste TRACK, P•se II) machine shop instructor at ·-~~~~~~i:i:,~·~·~,.;,,.,.0.,;;;;,;;cvOliii~~~~c~1 Compton High, not only leads ~~ an acO'f Hie as a starter LOOK! ~-~, : but ci.lso does substit ute _ __..;;; ___ teaching and appears in good healih. BACK PACKING & TECHNICAL ERNST HARTMANN, COACH OF CHAMPIONS \Vhen the 50th anniversary meet is slaged al lfonlinglon MOUNTAINEERING E9UIP.MENT For Top Sports Coverage Read the DAILY PILOT Beach High ·Saturday, ~lartmann will b~ one of four roaches honored along with lG or 11 of his athletes of former years. When he talks of past meets, the world seems lo stop ValueCenters e rltOFISSIOHA~ ADYICI e TOUIS e INSTIUCTIOH IN CLAISIS e·llNTAL~e SLIDI SHOWS llH W. COAST MWY. SKI MART ..... ., ... " 642,8335 March Tire Values ·at ... Enco Value enters. Atlas 4-ply Nylon Cord Tires. Atlas Plycron Tires. 95 $Z1!!,, 11 . Extra Trading Stamps. 775. 14 775 ~ 15 IU.CllWALL l•I lr•d•·lnl 12.95 15.95 Wtlh U•d••ft, SJ.3S mort llCh. _:i ~~··1 !' 01~1 Sl.7f F.[.T. lor 15M1 ~ 13 1ube!111 bl1c~w1ll At111 Mll1.P1~ ll•e • Molded lo within • Four full pties of sturdy nylon co1d. Modern wrap-a1ound t1ead tor good control. Note other sizes and prices below. 14.95 17.95 "' 3/ 1000 ol an inch of (/ ~ perfect round for an exceptionally smooth, quiel ride. • Husky wrap-around tread. Check the values on all our Alias Plycron tires. llZE BLACKWALL (•lt••d•·ln) 7J$. 1• 26.55 11$. 1• 28.09 7J5 • 15 825. 1• 30.77 825. 15 ess • " 33.72 ~5/845. 15 30.28 32.02 34.95 38.53 Atlas Belted Tires. 541~~-"' PIU• $2 fol f E.T. IPf F70-1' tUl>eltl• 41111 H•P t!•t. • Two liberg11s1 belts, polyester cord boOy. • Up to 29% wider than conventional tires. • Whitewanononea111e. red slripe on the o1her. Simt!ar values on all our Atlas H·P tires ·~· Wlll\I/"" •ld•••ll (W/lrldl•ln) G10-1• 45.20 G70-15 H7f:l.11 49.86 ,.LT. ,_ .. .... 3.11 • 'i:~~ ~~~---·J_J _ __,,,;.; We've multiplied Iha number of slamp1 you get free when you buy gasoline at most Enco ValueCentera. Jusl look for the special mulUpre stamp sign. and drive in. ' S22.H lor •cyt. e1r.. • Prlttl lor 1t•nducr Ford•, f' Cht,YI, Plymouth1 tnd moll "' Am .. ltln COrt!P~tls. Ai•· concrlti1>111d '"' 1llQhlly hl11ti11. • Replace points, plugs, conefenaeir and rotor. • Adjust idle spaed, set fuel mlxlu1t. • Verify tlmlng. set centrllug1I advance. and much more. Oil Change and Lame. s320 • lubricate to manu. lecturers' speclli· cations; fittings extra if needed. Drain and add up to tour quans of Enco Extra motor oil; Unlllo9, our btst, 1Ughtly higher, Why Enco ValueCenters? look for these signs. Because 11 doesn't make sense for you to have to drive all fhe Wirf aero~ town to get a bargain on a tire Of a batlefY Of something eiSe for your ca1 Not when the Enco station 1n your r.aighborhood can sell you what you need at a pric:e lhal's nght And lel you charge it all on your Enco credit card. with tT"IOfllhS lo pay. Enco ValueCenters are Enco siations with a con1Jnu1~ program of real values for your car Stop in and see wha1 we mean. The above pnces on tires and seNI08S are available natJOnally at stations opera led by H!.Jmble ()ti & Rellntng ComPttny loealed in many metropolitan areas and conwoonities. Prices and offers may vary 11 pan1e1- pat1ng independent Enco dealef"S. Enco men are doing more • . ' . ' 1. .. <:· ......... , • _<§)_ ValueCcnters --...... ___ ···~~· T~lt 110!' !dlfllil'-1ttt1on.1 OIM!tlt1d 0,. Hu111bl1 OU & lltfl"lft9 ColllH!lr. ValuoConton --""''•Ifft tflfttl1111 lnd1Hfld9ftl (n;o fH11r1. -"llan~rn and ~tos1rr wrre oulst.lnding and I 1h1nk lkn!on ""ill hecun1e 11 Hnr varsity player," Tlf1 re1rals ... "l 1m reiilly opltm11t1c Jo11I\ ODD, 01111 • J •I 1 ~ 'r 5111 on "1 ., 4111.ll ,, . ' ' Ml o~ Vl•IO ot~ DOC f. ~ ' ! 80111 Gttr'Mlt IOC 11' •-) A 1 !---------------------------------------------------------- • • • • • ,-. -. J 1J DAILY PI LOT l11t>day M~rch lb 19 fl Start Yottr by Deke Hou lgofe • • \\hen the 4pc"Om1ng Quester Grnnd Prix v.a s :lMOunced by t~ people at Ontario fl1olor Speed"ay a lol of kno\\ledgeable racing folks chuckled to th~m:selvei; about tht mismatch of i'.urope.an lurn1ula I car~ on a tr1ckv road t'QUrsr against Amer lt:<&n enR1ne for1nula :MWIO c:ir~ \\ell the sn 1cker1ng and t1llt11ni.: IS ~1111 going on ttnd 1ht-11· •~ sull !ht' poss1blh\, of a m1s1nalch but the smart guvs ntil) have labbt:d 1t lhe \\roog \\3\ There 1s a d1sllnct possrh1hl\ th~I Amene&n 1 ars and dn' ers ma) run Cl\\<J} aru1 hldr rrom v.ha1 the rest o! the wotld has to offer on ~1arch 28 If th{' formula ~ 1formula A tf }OU prefer 1 drivers don t outclnss formuh1 I compet1tron al least !ht ra «' should bti a clo.~e matC'h of 1he two Takl' 11 lron1 Sarn ro~e' WThe formulu A car11 ...,111 be a l1Ult> bit he;l\1er but should ha1e a httle more horsepo"'er and qu11e a bil more k>rque flex 1b1hly lbere are a number of ven fasl tums That nex1bil lly, \\here 'Al' can Sia\ in fourth or fifth gear and the formula I cars "111 have to changt' bnck !o Fourlh belween gears should help us It should mnke 11 a little hit enster for us to dr1vt Righi 1n front l)f thf' main grandstands is a real long q1ra1ghU.\l ay with a real )):10\\ tum preceding 11 It s almos! hkto a drag slr1p Iha! J:oe! on fur 4 100 fe el II looks to us as 1f the furm ul" I car~ "'II bf' a btt sfo\\er down that vital stret;.;h of road I.cl ~ put 11 this "a1 \\e h;iven 1 c:'Qmf' oul here tu g1\t th15 race a11a} In th(I Europeans I assurr vou ' ~ ll1l•tt .,,, '1'1111 Dri1·er s Sl1••1v IJp :~ \\'&> then du Jackie Ste11art Graham HUI Df'nnis Hulmt John S"urttts, Jaclrit: lcb" and the resl bollter lo sb&w up 11 all ' • Bll~~ful lf!norantt probably ' Po~v ¥1isttracke-d The-n ht ,.rpla1nt"d The-) ba\tn I :1een an1 An1trk'an formula A cat~ run \OU se' The\ only run a:!'.aln"t !ht F.uroJH'aD tune-d slfl('k block Ame-r1c 1n t>n:!'.tnt~ I don t think th') l 1n tnut h our \\ e'l Coast engine butldt'r~ hilt Barlz T'rattJ and F.1Jrontr & l>unn In Europt: \\t ha1e-an tng1nr oper.1lln~ at l\art7. s r1J:hl """ "ht<h .... ould ab .. olulely hi\ 1111sf!o 10 an\ e-nelnr lhul ran las1 \tar and lhr l::uropt>ans IHI\ en t t'\en st'l'n 1 1!,vtid 1.i .. 1 \t'.lr s l'ng1nt Poi<rv ha .. n t l11rg11t1en f11r a m111nrn1 1ha1 hr 11111 bt up agaJn .. 1 lhe-11orld s 20 rank1ni,! drhtrs But ht bthe1e .. the 10111!,h r-~t comprllllon will tomr fro1n 1hrtt Amrr1tans tn tht' ract' - r.Jark Donohue Geor_Ke ,.ol\tner :.ind Peter Re 1son -\\horn hr calls lhret' 11( the fnur nr l11r best f11r1n11 l,1 .\ dr11 ers around Thi' field 1~ so potent thr ears !'fl• strnn11: Po .. e) s:.11d it ¥1111 bt no d1s~ace lo lose al Onl:ir10 •You co uld br dead last 10 quahty1ng and dead last 1n tht rate-and sa1 ""II I "a ~ 3lllh bt~I hr satd 'Youd bt laJk ln1: about 1n the \\Drld "h1<h \\O~dn I ht' too shal!;gy Onlarro m11na~e1nent 1~ ( urrt<nflv pulling curb~ on !ht-1n~ldr flt tht flat corners to dl~tourage ofr.<ourSl' shortcutting and "W hto th;it Is complrll'll l'o,e\ ~a td th e cour~t will bt \tty 1nltrest1n,i: to the drlver1 1tnd demand ~realer d1se1pllnc Earher critl< ism thal /ht' road course portfon of the layout 1~ too narrow or twisty, f'osey said must bavt come from • pt0p/r lrkt'" Ctaci: Brted/o\t and Gary Ga~heh l think II~ extre.meJ, 11\'ldt 11nd \er) ht sl <••••·lit"' ·r11ll.:" 111•1•111 A c•c·i1lc~111 Une 1h1ng for sure Don c.arhts LS no Camille ite wastes no !Jill(' \\ringing hlS hand~ OYl':t the f&CI fha t he has had ffl0.5l Of llne foot blown ay,a1 10 " draJ: racing accu1ent Hr docsn l mind t<1lk1ng about 1t either ' Alx>ut the 11nh thin~ I <an 1 do n' 1 I' run ' I cnn 1 gel up on tl11~ halls {•f m1 feel f_.arl1ts ._,ud Th at !\ be< au~ ht' is mu;s 1nJ,!, !he ball of un~ foul he \\earl'i a normAl sh!Je ttnd 1f he has <in\ hmr 1n JI IS C\:11 CITil'h d1H1cult lo drtect H1111ev('r h1~ \I alk \\hile he was 111 to11on \It a:s kf'd Gar!1Ls ho11 hf' C\CI got the name ' B1g Dadd} and this was has answer ' Bem1e Partr1d~e 1s rf'«Pf1nS1bl(I for Iha! 1n 1962 at the Nal1onals at lnd1anapoh~ !Partridge of Pomon.i w,1-: lhr Nl!RA !\ational~ lhen and still J'i 111 The Bird I c h1ef announcer at !ht' 1s kno\vn 1n the sport a~ 'I had a gas drag~ter and I al"ay~ run lue l you Imo" had never run g1u. before and I 11oas stumb[Jn' around there making ver} poor run" and brPak1ng parts wa~ what I wa"' dotn IJr11gste•· Ii,. pt IJ1·e••k I 11 ' 1\.t"lf'1 11 w•~n·1 lhal thtrt' \Ill~ an)lh1n~ Y.runJ!: '4l!h lbe engtnl' 11 "al jllll the darn think lit'pl brrak1n' axles SO I got a couple nr axles mede do"n in a ma<'htnr ~bnp and I rome back out there and J ran ""' c I tel.1pq.d tlmt 1n thr quar~r mllel rl~ht <l\\a\ on j(ui Bernie Partridge scrrams out uver thr p a s)stem \\ell II lnok~ llke they're t;:onnH hair to put up ¥11t h Big Daddy after :ill ' I d neYer heard lhe word Big Dadd\ u~td prior to that \nd lhf' press picked It up 11nd lhe l ~ :tit 1ou could hear • lhr new ntcknamt actually "11~ mu,1r to Garlits ear~ hr '11u~f' 1)r111r to tltal be hod ~n duhhed thr ' Florida Swamp flat and ht nPver really llked thr 1mptlt at1on of that 1\11" 01 111, Ume11 would Jr5..:t U11ruh ho1' ~t(k)d fo r rr~lr1 lion t' lht Swlimp Ra t°' Jle didn't tif'n lllir Ills: Oodd) f•fff'fif N l•ftf•llltlttt'Jlflll flf ft11c 0ilffJ { ..1rln• !' :i phcnHrncnon uf th!.' ..:potl I ro1n \111 unrn:irkC'd ho-<1tli\1ood~ uf t-lor1da to na!1onal ac:cl1t11n he sprang for seem 1nsh n<• re "''n l hfll " his image but 1t fiidn t h:oippcn hke th111 111 non ( (' 1rh racing days a cam ~rtnd('r ¥1 1th promotional ~ill~\ n 11 t oUI\ lllnOnl tOOk him under ht~ \\Ing I U'l•I 111 h~111.' on m1 tllr non " 1,arage' Garlits re c ailed 'lh ~.11d Thrr(' ~ a lhnui;; md Don " (,arages Pul ~our n~mt' Garlu~ nn 1L Anet things like that And folh•\1 up on lhe press \Ye used to do our o"n nc11os relr11•r1: frun1 lhf' , 1tf'S an d ~nd lhern to lhe papers If \1e dldn l nolhin 11 1~ i.:onna be written I al"llYS reporltd 'AhAt the other gu1~ r11d f'1l'11 1f I got heal And lha! 11oa1 1.1r gor a tot of pubht 11) Where \1•r h1 ~•l'o 111111 1.,1rl11q IS :;urroundcd bv rcporlrrs and fans \llh1tl 1s thl' 1111c~11f\n rnos1 frequently a8ked of him~ ' What• 11 fer\ hk1 t1 t:n '2fl miles an hour~ Thof ~ the 1110!!! famous que.sl1on 1n lh• 1111rld l\lv an~"er 1~ there real!\ 1sn t rnuch reelinJ? 10 ,1 11 ' h111~ 111 a srnsat1on bei ng suckerl do1vn that qullrltr mil<' 1 t1f u 111 ii 1 , you Jus1 wh1sUe lhrou~h !ht> hgh\!: 11 ~ real fa •l hu1 1111'11'" 111.itl' Qi a :!'.l'lltl<l!lOn Uj) on the Hnf> nr suck ing }OUr sto1TI 1rh 111 .. 11d ::tll of a sudden vou rt f'x ettdini;: i::ravlt1 At the 111hrr f'111I 1ou rt no longer cxcccdu1g grav1t} and !IO 11 i"i a 001 n1~1 11d• Ca r B11r11 .. , Uri' er Hurl· .. J.a ,1 'r:ir ~ All !'111 <'ha1n pion (,1 nt Can...,~1 of l nglt11 .. od u~"•I \;.i,1 Sa1urd111 fun111 citr '11111 ptl1l10fl ..11 llrang<' ! 11unt\ ln!trna1 1on;il Hact"a' :i' :i hltll'UJI for 1111 \larch 21 \/l f'ro finals i11 OC..:IR In 1art \\hcrr ~11rt 11 Holh"OOtl .. 23 1rnr.fllrl Jol111 l.ombardo "!l(nun\rp ii ii mah.ap. Cou11a) 11i11dc 11 ·~I • IV through llv 1\aY I'll rl ri ~ 11111np ~ a11f'r 11.ilr ru lr fhr roll' ;i1IOWi"i Thill shouhl lh<' \\ ltlt\Cr or ~ prC\ JOU~ rl1rn1n.i lu1n be unable t n t"!tfrn tn ( nmptlltio11 an al1 1 i n.ih •11 n lakl' hi~ plal'.f"' I J1111b<1r•tn, 1 n~tnt' cxplodrd rin h1111 1rn1 hi~ Camaro hinn\ r~r \\"'' "nculfrd 1n fla1ncs (,1u,111~ !uun' on his bOdy fk l' 1 urr<'ntll undergrr1ni.: ltf'alt11<'t11 1n11 rf'• ovr.rin' a1 Ornnse Lo1111lY Butn Ccntn.r And :II l;i~I tf'l)llf1 1 WR r<'~rond1n11 11r\1 Revenge; SC Loses ~farina got some 1nea~ure of revenge afle:r 1L~ double Joss lo Fountain Valley O\er the "eekend 111 the Hunllnglon J\each tourney a~ the host Vlk1n~ chalked up an 8 2 YIC' tory 'l'Ue~da} 1n non leaj:!ue basebull action In anothrr contest defcn ding Crt'SIY1Pw League t1tll8l San Cle1ne:ntc wa~ dtalt its first 1971 loss 10 f1Yt' ou11ni:q as !hr Tr11or1~ fell lo Sunset League: v1s1tor ~anta Ana b) a l l COUil! Brock Pembcrt1)n l f' d Marinas aSSlluH on <111 1n experienced Fountain Valley pJtch111g trio uf l>tln Jones, Kerr}' Loude:nbacl.i and SleYe Andre\\~ as he sockrd a 8ou ble triple and grand slam Jnstde the park homer The c1rcu1l blast htghhghted !he five-run \11k1ng second tll· 11 1ng and supported the h1 0 h 1 p1tch1ng of Ton~ Cresci and !\irk Elh~un At S1111 C!e1ncncc 1nc<111 11hill' th1 Triton~ 11cre choli ed off 011 only 111oo h11s by a pair of Sania Ana pJtche1 s The Tri!ons picked up lherr lone tally 1n the top of 11-p first 11hcn 1\1Rrk King 11 a~ hit by a pitch ad v11ncrd II) ~erond on a balk and sco cd on a bad 1hro1\ fnt10111ng T.:i1 II rtghr s grounder Santa t.ni 0) .. ' " " ~·<>••vtao H c...,,. .. , " ,.,.,,,...., ' PO<t! lb I "'""" or M.<O:totl',.n (Pitt lo r! Mar•I•• o (hrl11!1111,., Wtl>b <> 4'a!Gen lb . " c1 r1 ~,... ?I> T"ll• , 0 ' 0 , 0 , ' 0 0 ' 0 ' 0 ' 0 ' ' ' 0 ' . ' 0 . ' 0 • 0 " • 0 ' . 0 • • 0 ' ' ' . ' ' 0 0 0 0 • 0 1 San (1em1ntt (11 AnG••l.0!1 n Kin~ JI> K~rln~" Cf Vol9~1 < Rncht n 1b Une1>1ck "' ~'"''' d JM1nn1t 11> G l>•On I! 01>u<1IA1• P rota ' .. 0 ' ' • • ' ' " ' " ' • • • 0 0 • • " ' 1' •bl . ' 0 • ' . . ' • 0 • • 0 0 • • ' 0 0 • Sc9•1 •1 Inn nu • S•nt• '"~ ~l~ 000 6--1 S•n C •men!• I~ 00Q 0-1 '' ' ' 11..,~Ttl• Vtlll• n c., ot 79 110<11 II M.••I•~ rl v.,,,., " rt-1• Jn B•il n~rn l• "·~· . snrn• •! OIM.•r • lb '' J-• 0 l.ovdltfll><>C~ P Andrrw• p To!1" Mt r!11t ~"~ '"" lb Ell•on p P•mbnron P C•,,..o~~" , VI !I ff C••u <>lh lowl• " wn1e1.r 11 ~'""'" lll Wl lh ( Tftn"''~ 11 TOl•ll .. ' ' ' ' • ' • ' 0 ' 0 " "' ' • • • 0 • ' ' 0 ' ' 0 0 ' " .. ' ' • • 0 ' • 0 ' . 0 ' 0 • ' 0 • 0 • 0 • 0 • 0 ' , ·-' h •ti I 1 • 0 0 D o ~ ft , ' ' ' . . ' 0 , • " 0 ' " " ' ' . 1 J I 0 1'1 \D' Hurclle Stars Rt111 111 Cla ~s i(· \\uh :..1orn1ng~1<Jp'~ ~pf>ed1 Al /fall lrsled a~ .,. doubtful 1'lf'rformf'1 11 loorn<; .;~ an uncerta1nr v as ro wl1e1htr rhl" rnl'rt hurdle rl.'C{WU' 11o 1ll be 1n n1uch Jropardv th1' S11lud<1\ 11 hen the :>oth annuul Southl rn Counties lrat k and field mcE1 gels under way at Munttngton Bc.ich High !hf' n1eel ,1 u1d,1nh an 1411 lh1j;ll\S) bl S<1n1A An •• .5 l~:;a( C'ur11~ In t!l68 an(\ IS :i flo\\.s1 b\ 1hr 111 11 T11111 l\tsttr of !:ian Ber nar<J1no in 19f'2 AlthOOAh !he 11\)Ur<'d Hall 1,11 I r~perlcrl to run Long Bl'ath ~1lhk11n's all round act' Hori Kot1nrk a ppea r~ to IX' lhc ('l:i~~ of 1ht> high hurdler~ "1th a 14 4 seasonal be~r Kot1nek also performs 1n 1ht lu-';:h Jump and IOnJ,!, JUtnp and runs a leg on 01\t of th" H11n1 relay Quartets N(lnp of 1hc o!hf'r e1111an1s 1n 11thrt !ht> lar~r or "1n111J scho:il~ l'at"~or1Ps '' und<'r r~ '1 hut ll1P Sou1hern rou11t1c s AH llr 11:<:11all) brini.:s nu1 n1nn1 1n•1>ro1r1l r l0<:k.1ni.:~ Al l{.,1st a ht1I! <lu7• 11 11 l 1 hurdle sw1ft1e~ will bf' or1 h,111d and an\ of lhf'ITI {'()Ulil plat <' 111 the nionr) 1n l'11her of Ille dl111>1on' M11nt1ng1on ~ U\\ n p111r or Stf'1r P1ckfor1I Hnd Garth \\'1qe :tr(' cntrrc1l 1n !he '1nr11! \.! h<'l'.ll~ r ltf'~ Ill bnlh lhf l!O high..: and 1h~ 180 1011, :in1! lhC'} \l' <'Or111>1nrd lflr l)r,i-ol l ~ft and 202 Thr fout :i1r1 •I 11 ~ Sfll'l'trih·o.t~ 111 Ou• l1ti,:f> 'lno,,1, rln1~1on ~rr \111 11'1•r1, \!1111 Hog"ttl fl$, 20 ?1 ~·011111.u n \.'111tev sol rnorf' H c 11 l tn1t 1 120 21 a ~laru1n' Drnn1• A1efyt 1 1 t ttl ll11.J 11u1 (;rnr Taylor t I~ l 19 811 1 VI II& P<1r k s 01111 1\1.'rihlnrl )'llilr crl third 111 th• ,111111 ~! h1~1I~ llltl~ JUlllll Ill 1hP ]'1111 ITI('('I but hr ~ rl"f 1111rll I •II u JI< JI mr1l 1! t 0111rnrl<'r In h11lh h11rrllr r;icr~ lh1, !1111<' .:111 111nol TRACK • Ne wport Nabs 5-2 Triu111ph Of lho Dt l• P i.1 Ulll I • 10• I w.-e .. l<> C •"ed ~ ~ W1' I• o ~w /0 I "'l~qora ~ (';Oii ,, .. w~ •• e w,~.~ t lo/;• ., I~ aow"'• I~ s,~"d " lb •m t~ lb ' ' , I •rro• " l oon• d 11 T<!I \ " \t. Yt!it , Ill I •'11" C.IO\O • l~ l>ID,On rt llola•n lb f' (Of!P II J•Htro I• t emQlelo" rl o;ol!v ' fl "ppf l 0 o'"""" ' Stt•r .. ' 0 0 • • ' • • 0 • ' ' ' • • ' ' • . " 0 JlO 100 11-J 100 QOO 6--l . ' Lions Hold Slim Lead ~llnl;i JJl I .I c ~•t•l~e••ll 110 Oil O'tllmtM \~111/ '"" ) "~''' .,,~ 1• '""' • " I"' ''~ q I \ fk • 11 • I ~ • (~ " (o ~ • f~•I t' • • 1r1 • / LEG.U. NOTICE LEG.U. NOTICE .. - • •' VC lrvi•ae. Orchestra • ~ Quth Concert Mixed Bag • By TOM BARLEY Ot l!Mo Gally 'll•f tltfl It iJ with diatlnct pleasure and a nol lnfre.quent sense ol relid that we occasionally tum from th!! prosceniums of profeSlional music making to UC Jrvine's Village Theater and the less inhibitlld and thoroughly refreshing erforts rJ Peter Odegard and his youna; UCI orchestra. We can, for example , count on a rousing, shirt-sleeved ef- fort on lhe lines of Suppe's "Poet 1;nd Peasant" overture and we have to confess, no !elf-mpeeting music critic should be heard to confess. Tuesday_ Evening MA"CH 16 6:00 iJ Ill Ntwt Jerrt Dunphy Q DIC NIWlln'lc:t lom Snydu. 9 LM;11 l1tkltbln (CGntd. tn>m 5:30) LA. l.akers n . N.Y, 11.nic:Q at Nw York. I 0 Sil O'Qoci Mowlt: (C) (90) '"fi.1 SMft NII RIMI" Put I (drt· 1111: '57 -Tyrone Pawt1, Awt Gttdntr, Errol rl)'nn, Mtl Ftr111, Cddlt Albtrt. Emtlt Htmlt1pty'i 9toly of peoplt aiuPI up lft th•] "!Gd 1'11tr1tlon" 1lh1 !ht fhsl WOl'ld W1r. fJDid V• n,\t m 1111 flintst.ftn Cl @ CIJ Stir Trtk m Mlfflllllnd "Wintw World ;#2." 9(1) Ntn/Wuttt.l/Spolb El fbitr ''"""' Ill""""'" m lll1nd1 In tflt 11111 m La Kort , •• m .. co11 Ctl\lu•lo al Ntn Jlm H1wtltomt. l:tS fl!} Art Sttdil l :JO fJ C.lldW C.Nrl m Tlllll f1Ji11 Nut i» ({) NIC Nns fD Hldppod11 LMI• 9 (J) CIS News that this venerable old pot boiler brings out lhe schoolboy in us. It ls brassy, archaic, prtten· tlous, crude, outdated a n d definitely soapy but it is a hl'.ll of a lot of fun and, Dr. Odegard and all, thank you very much. It is d. the stuff that is guaranteed to blow away the l'Obwebs of academe and a rousing 'rendition of a work that used to be a must on the repertoriet' of village brass bands in our days of yore got us a!f to 11i flying start Sunday night. A wobbly hom or two - ttl Soflrisls 1:05 GI!) LUI• Uto l:JO 1J !ifi (()HM Kn (R') Timmy Wyntth ind Geo11e Jont1 111111. 0 CHEVROLET PRESENTS * THE !3TH ANNUAL GRAMMY AWARDS SHOW THE BEST IN MUSIC 0 1121 llJ Ill Ullllill TIM Cirtrurry Anidi Andy Willilms hoih tllt IWlrds memorrlas of th1 Nlllonal Acade my ol Rta11dln1 Arts 1a.d Sci11KU, orisinttln1 lram th• Hollywood Ptll1di11m ind fr•· turin1 1n Olllst•ndinr l lTIJ of 111tnt ptrforminr !ti• rtc0rded hrts of ltst )'tU. m TV FIRST! APOLLO 14 * ASTRONAUTS with FROST m Dnid frwt Slltw Guests 111 ,t,oollo t• 1st10fltuts Ctpt. Al1n I. Shep1rd, Jr .. USN; ll Col. Stu11t A. ROOla, USAF; 11111 Ctpl. Ed11r D. Mitd!e!t, USN, t rid their wivts. m QuHt !or Adwnlllrt tii) "'"'"' I« lit'lnc (I) LI c:Ndt litn Cried• ucr1 hom section can be hor- rible on occasions -did nothing to diminish our en- joyment ci this grand old war horse. Odegard's piece de re.!istance was, of courte, Johannes Brahms• "Variations on & Theme by Haydo" and thi11 delightful work brought a dedicated reading from the UCJ players. It might have benefited in several key passages by a more vigorous baton in the hand of assistant conductor KerTy S. Grant and we would have much preferred to see Odegard on the podium for thi!'I major work. Odegard himself mi&ht disag~ with that conclusion but it was hard to reconcile Grant's la ckluster approach to at least two 1novemenls with the kind of direction that Odegard could have given his P'\ayers. Youngsters To Perform Wt also ne«led a aubstitu- tion for "loniution," a thoroughly mystifying wort by Edgard Value and one whlch, admittedly, drew 5UbslanUal applause from many members of the capacity audience. We wouJd have replaced Odegard and his reduced orthestra with a 10..minute ln- termlsslon in the s u r fl: knowledge that our musical educalion was not b e i n t hindered by one kit•. It Ui hard to know what Varese is telling ua with his mixture of a fire siren, gonp, Mils and petty parapbtrnalia but Joey Hosts Ex.rival's Video Sho\¥ whatever it ls it would have By CYNTHIA LOWRY been just as well to keep NEW YORK (AP) -Joey it to himself. Bishop, about to start his se-No such criticism can be leveled at Odegard and his ccnd week aa temporary hosl crew for their fine del.h•ery of NBC's ''Tonight Sho\I.·," of Mussorgsky's ''Night on a was wandering around, re- Bare Mountain" and here taxed and comfortable. The again the spirit of youth came network press agent had just through with nying colors in shoY:ed him some Neilsen an eager ou tpouring of the beloved classic. ratings indicating that in the A cellist who sltal\ remain New York area he had main- unnamed had us cringing for taintd ailing Johnny Carson's much of the fi rst movemf:n\ big lead over rival late even- but it was, overAll, a solid ing prograins. reading of 1 work that ap-pears all too seldom in our "A substitute hosl is like Two Laguna Beach 1 a substitute teacher," Joey youngsters. Henry and Charles concert ha I pro gr a ms. said. "You are w•.tho"t •"lh-Curtis, ages 12 and 10. respec-Odegard ensured its success .. .. lively, will perform on piano with his usual dynamic direc-orlly. J do ttUnk. though, that and cello at the regular lion of his young orcheslra. beca.use you are a !'lubstitute. · I · T \Ye can readily forcrive vtn-meellng of the rvme errace e• your acctss to the audience is tures into modernism on the Philharmonic As soc i ate s ,,,,·er.· Th•y slart off on vour lines of "Ionization" if only ~ - Thursday. Odegard and his m u s i c side ... llenry recently was voted makers will g u a r ant e e Bishop, an old friend of fel- besl in the piano division of something on the lines of low Philade lphlan Joe Fra- t he 0 r a n g e Co unt Y ''Poet and Peasant" _ "La zier, was planning to Oy in Philharmonic Music Festival Gazza Ladra," ••Li il h 1 from the coast for the big and took second prize com-Cavalry" and the like come fight and a visit lo Carson's peting with l~year-olds in the immediately to mind. show was just a stop-off. county's Young Artists' Audi-By all means. UCl, consider "They called me from the t1ons. lhe needs of the "with it'' show the Friday night be- Charles is better known as members of the audience. But fore ." he said. "They asked an actor. having played the f me to take over and then it spare a little time too or ArUul Dodger in "Oli ver," the wishes of those who'd wa s mostly talk about my· Winthrop in "The Music Man·• rather be: withoot it. bringing more clothes with S:OO 0 ti) Cil m NIC T11udQ Mowlt: and young Patrick l n me. Doing Johnny's show hai; (C) (2 hr) ~1.,., Did I tit• Wron1 "Mame," both for the Long few er terrors than doing my N~11ba" (1X1mtdy) '69 -Phyllil A 11 · h •--Ollltr. Bob Hope, M11jorlt Lord, Beach and Buena Park Civic 'C • • own. ctua y, 11 as u.:o::n one entur1ons' of the most en1"oyable weeks Elkt Sommtr. Cts1re D1nov1. HOPI Light Opera groups. finds himsttf bti~l ctlutd m 1 Thursday's meeting will be of my life. All I have had lo hill, d1lt ind bubbtt blth by hi1 held at noon at the home }.,ilming Set do has been to take what had wift, his mtld. 11'1d the Polite. of Mrs. r..iillicent Salisbury. been v.•orked out for Johnny. U t'llt F1fitiw HOLLYWOOD , (AP) "I've only arranged for tw{). O WATCH THE GRAMMY Columbia Pictures !'lays it will guests -Buddy Hackett on *AWARDS TONIGHT S,T. PATTY'S DAY begin production later this the first one. and Joe F'razier BROUGHT YOUR WAY WED., MARCH 17 year on a film version of who will be on -I hope - DAILY PILOr l@ Professionals Bead .Cast ' Stunning 'Ham"let' Mounwd By Student.s at Cal State By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of .... Dal'1 Piii! il•fl Theater reviewers have a tendency to shy away from the use of too many superlatives when describing an especially good production because of a fear of a sort of reverse overkill. The reasonlng on lhis phobia runs to the effect that the readers are not li._ely to "HAMLIT"' '"••-•·• 1••-•. alroc:tt<I w Kiri Mw. ICftlk Clf'l!9fl t1'¥ TOdd MOlfl1tll, COll\lm" ~ M••'IW"I• v1na~flOl'O.. 11or.!lng b• sr'°"*" WO/t.>lh, Cllo•H111<o.plly oy Mi•llm l ilt. . P<ewnt..i '"'"ill' lhr-11 SUnOI' •I ..,.. C11 51•1t Fuller!"" uni. Tllt•ltr. TMI C:AiT H1m!el Cl1.,.,h.1• POl<)lllU• ,..,.,.,,,, "'-rt.ham Vtrnon wtocri. ., , ., .. SI••• Siii Piro/ 0•" 5trlcller l1l1 Flklllml/ t10t•l•o ll.ose<1tr•n11 , loul.., Gr11t11bt•9 Sllttl Sfo.nM/ cv ... v '\'ochv Er11lp Swffr Gu!ldtnller" •• , , IC'•rmi! Ch•l•lm1n ..:,..., t11•d•m•n 11.iC M<111ltl1no l 01ve Wloteltr Ovlc L"'rtt • , , , . , , ... Ole~ O•harl Chrl• M~no1 Rlcll1•a s101~ f om Jallnvon M••C•!IUI • "' El•rn111k1 Fr~11~!.co Revn~lao Plover l(/11g •• Cornellu1 Vollem-O-• l•on•<d t1ftKDvll<ll (11,11 r-.<llltr N1ll Wol<OI! F 'NI !oul!D" Jonn Gr1v!1n believe that anything could be that good. But in the case of Cal State Ful lerton 's prOOuction of '"Hamlet ," there re.ally isn't anything else to do. It is a shov.· that abounds I n superlatives from the performances lo the costumes to the lighting and sound ef- fects. In an unusual move. two professional actors, ~fonlc Markham and Vernon Weddle, v.•ere given the leads of what is otherwise an a\l.coltegiate effort. The results are stunning. Markham -who starred in the television series "The Se- cond Hundred Years" :1nd ''Mr. Deeds Goes t~wn '' -took the role of H*nlet and brought out some of the more subtle aspects of t h i s CSF 'S 'HAMLET' .., Mont• Markh1m tragic character that actors have classically ignored. The slandlng ovation he rectived a fl er Friday night's performance was ~I deser\'- ed. \\'eddle, who has also work- ed in television and motion pictures. ably handles lHc character of Claudius, Hamlet's uncle. The standout or the student cast members has to be Steve Shapiro who played Polonius F'riday night. He played the role for its humor and "'lU! rev.·ardcd with .tloot.s o f laughter from the audience. Sheri Senne and Louise Grueneberg. who played Ophelia and Gertrude, respec- tive\}'. also turned in outstan- ding performances. Director Kirk Mee has again demonstraled his ability with Shakespearian plays. 1n 19'\9 he directed CSF 's production of "Twelfth Night." Under his talented guidance . the actor<; deliver a smooth performanct that never flags in Its pace. It would be remi.!s, If bt this recitali<>n of superie<r achievement, oo note wA!'i taken of the physical aspect;s of tb,e play. Technical director Dougla' Taylor deserves a special nole of recognition. Fine work was done on the sets by S. Todd Muffa t!i, lighting and sound by Stephen Woody and Ken Heller. Hamlet's father's ghost was marvelous and the use of the echo chamber was particularly effective. 1lle costuming b~· Margue r ite VanderHoek. n1usic by Andrew Charlton and choreography by Mlr\a1n Yait v.·ere blended in a way that the end result suggested a rich Medieval tapestry. The presentation of the players - their stately, sty I i z e rl movemt!nts -was a joy tu behold. "Hamlet" is slated to run through Sunday night in the campus LitUe Theater. Then in April, mucb of the sa1nc staff will be utilized in the production of Tom St.oppard '.; "Rosencrantz and Guilden- slfim Are Dead ." If the quality of the currenl production is any sort of a yardstick, the upcoming sho\v shouJd be another great one for Orange Coast theatergoers from the Cal State Fullerton drama department. New Title NEW YORK (AP) -"Tile House that Screamed" Is the new title American Interna- tional has given the film lt acquired from Anabel Films. S.A., for release in the United Stales, Canada and the United Kingdom. The film is cur- rently playing in Europe where it 'is cal!ed "Finishing School ."' £!! S.ltdld n11/Muti"lt m n. 0tttrt • .,.,, m!LH Olwidadl1 !!) ....... BY CHEVROLET! Or•n9• County'• "Tile New Centurions," a no-Wednesday." 8i99•1t C 1l1hr1ti•n vel about Los Angeles pollce-.1-;.:==========:;ll mn. lrrvldm TONS OF GlllN 111•-I, FIRST TIME IN COLOR! e FRAZIER vs. ALI FIGHT PICTURES BATTLE OF THE CENTURY! Dll.lECT FROM RINGSIDE ::::'.:·.~.~~" l.:1 0 CIS ......, W11t1r Ct11nkitt. D m NIC ""' Dwld 8rhklty. a n.r. Mt u1111 m 117Hll I "" "" m Dr•rntt Ci)()) T-_, (C) (Z hQ ''Tllt MtM Mlktt." ROd St1!1er. m iuti., '"" 11111 oni. 9 Cll Trwtli " Cllflteqlltl!Cll C!) atAlt tilt Urirll WM d) Ml Allllf ,... TI Ql)Slmpl1•1ntl M11il m 111w11 .... LET'S BE FRIENDLY men. -t'D Th Adwatll lrbll 1 .. r -A• S""lal p,1,.. The book was written by Eii) Q111ltn11 N11ttil11• lt•t lrflll nt•tk •II d.-y Sgt. Joseph Wambaugh, 34, a Iii""'""""" The BOATHOUSE detective in the burglary (I:) "riadlt SIS SO. MAIN-SANTA ANA ~~:~~on d:~a~~e::s Angeles ~~ ~~o~·;; annc;:,:c~~~: !:lOfJ9CIJ All Jn tllt F11111ly Clr·f~~~~~~~~~~~~~""'.'.:__'."~'..'.'.:'.'.'.".'.'.:.-----11 to our area. pJcase 1<'11 ua roll O'Connof, Jt1n St apllhin. so that v.·c may extend a Rainer. S1\11 Slruthen stir. Nthit P1· cl· Your Own friendly "'elcom~ and help rtteives word 11111 hi1 eomp1ny is "-them t o become acqu'aintf'd 1bout lo lty off pmonntl I/Id bt· in their nt'W surroundings, 11111 11t 1ll-ni1ht vi1il w1Uln1 lo hur If ht h•s lost hi1 Job CJ C.ndid Ctlltfl EID Mlllittlt/PUl:w't W m CHt11• " A11ro.t111 'Oscar' Winners So. Coast Visitor 4'4-0S7f 494-fUI Harbor Visitor From Cinr.ramfl Rel<'a~inJ::" Corp.-WILL NOT It: SHOWN ON HOME TV FO!t 6 M••· IN ADDITION TO REGULAR FEATURE -POPULAR PRICES! e NOW AT 2 EDWARDS CINEMAS e EDWARDS HUNTINGTON CINEMA ~ EDWARDS CINEMA WEST #1 847-9608 '; WESTMINSTER -8'2-4493 .. ~ ;we• I a.Jr: :1 l :~:f !~~~~~~~~RDtNOMINATl~M!_~~!EST PICTURE 7:JOfJ 9 CIJ lmrtf Hillblltlll Mike IO:OOfJ 9 ())IO Mllu,._ Tht DAILY PILOT. in cooptration with But1ui Park's 646-0174 Millllf rllums as Dick Br1mtrUmp, E I ii 5 ".... Movitland \Vax i\fu.seum. offers rtader! a chanct _to par~i-1~~~~~~~~~~~~11 1 lortUnt·lluntlnL oul..t'-wor\: IC· Q @(}) tif1 Mlftll.l WtlbJ, M.ft, cipate in natiO'nwidt balloting to stlect popular Winn trs 1:-;1~ tor ll'ith 1Mttller ploy d!rtdtd 11 ''1'11• CAntrict." Dr. W•lbJ lltlP' the "Oscar Dtrby." \.\leek's vacation for two in Mtxico Cit y y-n•uo . ,._,, '"\. , A~:::~~:aJ ~' . [Gp;.~-moo \~-m[ ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE· llSTSUPPDRTING ACTDl-Oiief o;;. Geo-;oe £!If M11 •nd !ht CltmPttt milllmS. 1 mulicltn's wlft w11o be1X1mt1 ijl or Honolulu and a place of honor at the Stars' Hall of Famt CJf!!l.11111 "'Tht Citndtr Trap."' on 1 tn111C011lin111t1t flicht. and Awards Banqutt in Hollywood await tht national winntr. Juli• arruu for wom111'1 rl1ht1 becoma Involved In thtir str1ln1d Vote now by filling out and clipping out this ballot: untn lht fillds 1 bttter WIJ to m11rl111 r1l1tlonship. . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 0 l1rttr Wu~ NIWl m1t1 pe1ce. I 0 ~(})al TM MM $41114 "W! Spy." f'l!l1 Po••t 11 t ufecrttktr to brtlk up 111 indU1frl1I 11itlonttt sy:dam ind lt11M of 111urdlf plot. m Ntn P'utMm/Flshfn1n OJ"'" ll lR, WIH Trml ll) Hltfl khool PToblt1111 f'.fark an "X" in the box \Vhich appears in front of your selection. Vote for only one person 1 or film in each category. Please be sure to complete the 25·word statement al 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 ballol.;; must be returned (1n person or by mail) to the DAILY PILOT by 5 p.m. on Monday, March 29. Rt:1t Aub1rjonoi1 llJUl·lttrt. II) O.ll:t-MI 0 Mini• $ Merrit: IC) (2 hr) a,;:) fnttn! Mnk1111 "!ltplltnt Wilk" (dr1m1; '5-( -r Ellubetll T1)'1or, D1 n1 Andrfn. 10:!01J Roed WMll Mowlt: (1 hi 45 m) 1 YDIJ~I Md• of I Ceylon pl1nlrtlon "RoM " Mortuit" {comtdy) '(2 I OWMI htt dtff\cutt lirnt tdlultln1 -l lnt Cn:lsby, lob Mope. Dorothy lo ~tr husblnd'1 lift 1"'1 !lit ww1r-t11nou1. Anthony Quinn. I pr111rit s11os1 of 1111 f1lhtr who ID 1111 JolmS ,....,. I C011trol1 him. mTrdl•Cen-.MKll m 1t r ... • nit! EmTM a-....,. l11iti Film dilpl•rs th• worn of W1t111 Kuhn, master flf Ptn:tPli't't r•lillll. ea-• Iii"- J:•s I) tt•• Ww11·Up \ "'" 0 Ill()) Ill .... m ~@m• ... I I fJ MIWll: "'MobedJ w .... Citod· I 1ry·1 (dr1m1) '65 -Jul ie 8!111. 1 Dal"'" m Morie: ""-t!Mllll Kii~ Sdltol" (dr1m1) '60 -Mie••Y Rooney. 1 (8 Mewit: -i... If 1lt Sn11p" I (11Mnture) '51 -Willi•m PtrMr. I I 7:11 Gm CMltitll .. Sq11116o1 l \ 1;0a 9 dtl Cll Cr•11 Aa'll Liu Qtu1· in "''"'""",. 011¥11 1111o • nnh m 1ttarltitt llOnt)'IYIOOn Yitlt to tht Motftl RtX· . lord Holl! m H1w1il ll:lOI) fit (IJ Mtl'V' '""'~ I CJ m 0.11 IMtb Gutsts 1r1 Juliet C!I ID()) m )oflnnr Ctr.n Jotr 1 Prw'lt, Dick Crtnnt. and Dou1 l ltl!op tr.1111 •t llosl. 1 111f1f11W. o m * tmtt 9 Vlftllllt lrtUM SM'I futurtd ,,. A11!1ndro Rtr. Sllaron ftmH, l!::O"I (}]) (J) Did Cnttt psythlc Di, Rltf1trd trt11Jld 1nd tft l:OD IJ Movie: "Rttl -.n" {dram•) ''7 I lll'ttll httiloll lhoiw, -Ptl O'Br1tft. Ann JtlfrtyL I mt• Tiii iN Tmll mt am:tUJloledlll A look 11 ttie C1l1f. Corrtd10111! Trtilllftl 11- ollty 11 Soltdld, lttnt 6f rte1nt 11d1I e»nnitt be!Wttn lrlm1te1 1"'1 "'"' ' er.n...-..... Jlt!I W•dnesday DAYTIME MOVIES mo..., 1 m All·Nlitil Slltw: "llitF Emturrt· I w," "T\t ..,.. "'"'" trwl (C) I .... ..,1111'11 111d ...... I w..-I 2:JO IJ Merit: .,..r ,KIM (wtsln) '41--Joll Metre• -Altt•nd• ll:llOJ.. Clu"-Coburn. CD .., .. , ,.. ...,.. .. {rnys!Hy) ''I I -M1l1 PtlWlri. Jtc(!Ufl 8erltff(, I Best Actor 0 MELVYN DOUGLAS for "I Never Sang For My Falher" 0 JAMES EARL JONES for "The Great White I-lope" 0 JACK NICHOLSON for "Five Easy Pieces" 0 RYAN O'NEAL for "Love Story" 0 GEORGE C. SCO'IT for "Patton" Be•t Actress 0 .JA NE ALEXANDER for "The Great Wh ile I-lope" 0 GLENDA JACKSON for "Women In Love" 0 ALI MAC GRAW for "Love Story" O SA RA MfLES for "Ryan 's Daughter" 0 CARRIE SNODGRESS for "The Diary of A Housewife" Best "lotion Picture of 1970 0 "AIRPORT" (Universal) 0 "FIVE EASY PIECES" (Columbia) 0 "LOVE STORY" (Paramount) 0 "M' A 'S'H" £20th Century Fox) D "PAITON" (20th Century Fox ) WHY I VOTED FOR TIUS PICTURE (in 25 .,,ords or !cs~): . . . . .... -......... -.. -... . .................. -................ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. -' ... ' ............ . Name Street City --- .. ' ...... -.... ' . •.. Phone . Address ........... ' .. Zip --------- I I l:fll!I m "SI"' Siii,.. (ld,tn!Urt) '31 I -Wuntr 81•"•1, Mic~.., Roo"t1. !:00 IJ 'Srtnif Ct"1'~" jCOIMCIJ) '50 2:00 fJ (C} "TM tolll'I JttWI'" (com· I -llklud Men "Mon•lf 1..i1111&"1 • edy) '5i---Dtnny ,..1,, Glynlt JOhns 1oomedy) ')J-lht J1111i l191htn ~')0 0 "Dl,itwlttk C..Wfttr" (dlll'l'll) 4:00 IJ "flit l1Q fl lflt lrlllt" (CCIII 'S2-T"'°"' ~wtr, 1'1lrld1 ""t. I tdYl ''7 -l)'TOll• '°"''· Mn• ·a (Cl "WJIM" !"iorr•Plry') ·•~ 11~1r. Mail ballat to: "Oscar", c Io DAILY PILOT, PO Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 ' - HELD OVER ·~ , •.•. ,,..,., .• .,,.._,< .......... ~ 1>1UYSIAAK·~TAOI$,,..,,._ Bartara Slnilald ~:r' °Et ll, . ... ~ . ALSO h • '''" " ' •' ' 1!•t t (I• I,• ,., • • THE ;:;;J,-;;;t;l\ LIFE OF SHERLOCK HOLMES BARGAIN MATINEE Every W•dn1sd1y, 1 p.m. Adults $1.00 2Ado tllWl'Olf ••loCl>I -..... -.. t""4-Ll4-.... -ot .... u.. HELD OVER EXCLUSIVE Elliott Gould Don Sutherland M1rcla Rodd in "The Unte Murders" Also Brl1n Keith Helmut Griem In 11The McKen1i• Break" ~ c;,:t·i::!,3 DUSTIN Homwi' -H•AT ..... _ "Lnilf 011:. UIAi.J• ... OOC!f .. .,, .. i (Oil!•.., ... -... ,,o u r.-~ -·--___ ., __ ,,,, Also Borbom HtnMy In "THE BABY MAIER" (R) IN MISSION Vll!JO EDWARDS CINEMA VIEJO ~A ,_ l'"'I) l\toV ,\I l• ~A/ llJI"<'"' ~ !" ''l<!O '" HARIOfl SHOl'PtlfG ClN'Tlll EDWARDS HARBOR t;i;:r~l 1 lllltJl IOUt" 1M OltGO fWV Now Al eolll H>WAR05 CHMAS •llll"Wftl-l'lllCIW!tll ~·Techriocb• ~­ CHIEF DAN GEORGE-FAY! DUNAWAY "diary of a mad hou•ewHe" • [!\) • T- .designed for laughter ,., ' Joanne L~C./~ 'They Might Be Giants" ~u-•-'<'~'-.. "· ·~''"'' ..... ·•• ric~\>tOt.Oll" ~ ALSO -HINIY p0NDA • JANIS JTIWAIT IN "The Cheyenne Social Club" , • ' DAILY PILOT .. ' I l ~ .. .. 'l'LL FIX HIM' -Ralph Richmond \vinds up to offer a not so \varm welcome to \Valter Daly, \\'hile \l'ife Jacquie Moffett cringes in this scene from "Janus," opening tonight for three weeks at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse. HE'S HERBERT -'. ~litche!I Sanford and Nat Michaud share a scene from "I'm Herbert" in the Lido Isle I'layers' "You Kno\v I Can't Hear You When the \Vater's Running," opening tonight. TH EIR ACHING FEET oc;;;;, How does marathon dancing grab ~ou? Right by the feet, say (from left) Kathy Ladd, Christine Scheele, Linda Whitmore and Nancy Korn, participants in Orange Coast College's drama Of the dance craze, ''Mara· thon 33," opening Wednesday. Theate1· N otes County Theaters Bursti11g at Seams; 8 Shows Opening H~' T0,1 TITUS OJ 1~f Oiil, PllO! s1art It \11on't make the l;uiness Book of \Vorld Records , but this is probably tht biggesl \\·eek of living lheater Orange County audiences have ever seen. Certainly there are rnore shO\vs o[X'ning -eight at latest rount -than in any comp:iruble seveo-day period 111 1ncmor~·. Co1nbined v•ith 1he five productions already io progress, they add up to a staggering 13 different plays lraospiring ll'ithin the county's bord(1f5_ In chronol ogical and alphabetical order , the newcomers are: - ''The Indian \\'ants the Bronx" aod "Next.'' which opened Sunday at South Coast Repertory and ~·i ll play Sun- days only through f\tarch. -.. Janus" at the Laguna f<.1oulton Playhouse. opening tonight for a three-~·eek run, Tuesdays through Saturdays. -"You Know I Can't Hear You When Lhe Water's Run· ning," the Lido Isle Players' spring offering, o p e n i n g tonight for five consecutive per~ormanoes only. -"Marathon 33'' at Orange Coast College, bowing in \\'ednesday night for a scant four--Oay run. ~ "Mame·· by the Buena Park Civic Light Opera. launching a three-weekend run Friday with Giselle MacKenzie in the title role. -"The Good Old USA.'' an original musical playing this weekend only at Leisure \Vorld Laguna Hills with Miss MacKenzie's old H.it Parade partner, Russell A r n1 s , heading the cast. -''Lilies of the Field" by the Santa Ana Community Players. also going up Friday for three weekends. -''A View From the Bridge," the latest production of the lr\•ine Community 'fheater. beginning a three· \l'eekend run Saturda}' at UC Irvine. These, along with shows already on the boards in Hun· lington Beach, \Ve stminster, San Clemente and two at South Coast Re~rlory, make for a mind-boggling 1veek behind the footlights. * Tonight's dual openings at Laguna and Lido offer a pair FIRST TIME IN COLOR! The Super Battle of the Century Direct from ingside Round by Round Blow by Blow Will not b1t .show on Home TV for 6 months POPUIAR PRICES! in addition to retular scmn shaw NOW PLAYING "ONE OF THEYUR'S 1111 BlSlf' --WANDA HAL[1-JQS[PH GELMIS I-GEN[ SHALIT 1-:-J,\YCOCKS NY_ 011ly News Newsday too~ Maaazinll!-Time Mapz1nt --~M.SHAW -.---·· ~ CMS.\ \lfffS ''°"" COlUMllA Pl(IURl\ STARTS WEDNESDAY MARCH 17 of fresh ne1v fat least from Orange County's v i e w i n g standpoint) comedies. \Vi!llam F'ucik is directing "Janus" for the Laguna players . v"hile Tony Brandt takes the reins at Lido lsle for .. Waler," an evening of four short plays. "Janus'' will see two \.\•ell known local actresses -Betsy Hev.•etl and Jacquie Moffett -alternating in the leading ro!e, with Ralph Richmood, \Ya!ter Daly, Mill Hanson and Phyllis Stroud completing the cast. Perfonnances are at !he playhouse, 606 La guna Canyon Road: Laguna B e a c h . Reservalions 494--0743. Comprising the cast or the Lido playlets are Stan Belt, Paul Steele, Ann Ashley, Al Spar, Iris Schneider, Mitchell Sanford, Linda Wyalt, Nancy Wells and Nat Michaud. The Robert Anderson comedies are being staged at the Lido Isle Clubhouse. 701 Via Lido Soud. Newport Beach. Reservations 673·5383. The grueling dance contests of the 1930s \V('rC th(' in- spiration for '·Marathon 33'' at OCC. John F'erzacca 1s directing June Havoc 's pla y. which will be performed in the college auditoriu1n . Admission is free. * Former Hit Parader s Giselle MacKenzie and ·Russell Arms shar-e an opening n1ghl F'riday several miles apart. Miss MacKenzie heads the cast of "Mame'' \\'ith Betty Motsinger, Pam Rich and Laguna"s young Charles Curtis featured in principal roles. Directed by John Rich , the Buena Park musical \\•ill be staged F'ridays and Saturdays for three weekends at tl1e city's theater arts romplex on Academy Drive off Magnolia Avenue. Reservations 879-4237. "The Good Old USA'' is an original show by Leisure Worlder Alan Post and is directed by Gwen Yarnell. Cast with Arms are Beverl~· Anderson, David Paul, Alan Harl. George Donka and'Judy Hirsch. Only three performances :ire scheduled -F rid a y through Sunday in the new theater in Clubhouse Three at Leisure. \Vorld. Music will be provided by Ruth Biehle and Florence G o b I e , ac· companied by ;:i JO.piece orchestra . * Sar)ta Ana ·s "Lilies" bloon1 un Friday under the direction of Hern1an Bondman. Buddy Fort and June \Yinslow head the ctisL supported by Bob Utz. Vrank Baltotta , Nancy Baloyan. Patricia Boyd . Alice Mallet, Karol McGill and Joe Dees. Performances will be given Friday and Salurday evenings at the Players 'fheater. 500 \\!. 6th St.. Santa Ana. Reservations ~43-7647. Ar!hur Miller's "View Fro1n the Bridge'' lakes Lhe stage of UCl's old Studio Theater on Saturday to open a three· \veckend run. Richard {)Qw is directing the drama and stepping into the role of Alfieri, made vacant by the death of actor Howard Malick last week. Art Gordon plays the leading role of Eddie Carbone. with Janet Gordon, Karen Gardner, John Mangels and G a r y Saderup rounding out the Irvine cast. Performances will be given F'ridays a n d Saturdays arter open i n g \l'eekend. Reservations 833- 1024. * \Vilh "The Indian Wants the Bronx·· and "Next." South Coast Repertory is n o 1v performing three productions each week through Ma rch. The others are ''Mother Earth,'' enjoying its third month. on Wednesdays and Thursdays, and Mo 1 i ere';; '·The Imaginary Invalid" on f'~ridays and Saturdays. All performances are staged in SCR's Third Step Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa ·Mesa. Reservations 646-1363. Climaxing a JO-performance run wilh final stagings tonight through Sunday is Cai State Fullerton's "Hamlet." with TV actor Monte Markham in the title roi. and the voice of Joseph Campanella as the ghost of Hamlet's father. "Hamlet" is performed in the LiUle Theater at the col- lege with reservations being taken at the box office, 870- 3371, weekdays between noon and 4 p.m. * \Yinding up a four·weekend run for the Westminster Com· munity Theater is Jean Anouilh's "A Thieve s' Carnival," which gives its final performances Friday and Saturday. Sondra Evans is directing. Scilly Crowley, Arv id three more performances al the San Clemente Community Theater is Frank Gilroy's drama "Who'll Save the Plowboy?" under the direction of Mary Eastman. Russell Martin, Chuck Sehicker, Marge Bradley and DQttie Smith head the cast at the Cabrillo Playhouse, 2Q2 Avenlda Cabrillo, San Clemente. Reservations 492- 0465. * The Nifty Theater of Hun· tington Beach continues its ta ndem production of Strindberg's "Miss Julie" 11nd Kafka's "The Judgment'1 Fri· day and Saturday. Elliot Fried directs both short plays. Carol Dunlap, Gary Don1azlicky, \Vilda West and Jeff Isaac comprise the twin cases for the dramas al the Nifty, 307 Main St., Huntington Beach. Reservations :>:J6..91~. Hogan"s Heroes Hit Vegas f\1a!naa , Burt \Varner. James E. Smith, Pat Warner and Bill Cullen are featured in the large casl at the Finley School auditorium, Edwards at Trask avenues in \Ve s tminster. Reservations 892-4985. "Ring Around Elizabeth'' resumes this weekend for two more performances Friday and Saturday at the Long Beach Community Playhouse under James Brittain's diree· lion. The theater is located at 5021 E. Anaheim St .. Long Beach. Reservations (213) tla- 0536. By VERNON SCOTT HOLLYWOOD (UPI) ''Hogan's Heroes" finally bust out of Stalag 13 only to find themselves in the middle of a trackless waste -Las Vegas. Star Bob Crane. along with \Verner Klemperer ( Co I . Klink) and Robert Clary (the French POW ), will open in a Las Vegas hotel June 1 with an act built around the television series. In a sense the night club number is an experiment. Other television stars make fortunes by hitting the road. 'fhe casts of "Bonanza." "Gunsmoke." "The Beverly Hillbillies " -as singles or groups -plc1y rodeos. fairs and clubs "'ilh great success. Jim Nabors was successful \Vith his Gomer Pyle several years ago in a sketch that 1vas part of his early night club days . "Crane. who has V.TJtten and \.\'ill produce the club show. is convinced his act v.·ill be successful. "In addition to our big 'Ho)i:an's Heroes' sketch ;ve'll ha.ve a comic magician and a chorus line," he said, "Wost -IALIOA PEH INSULA- IALIOA ILVD. AT MAIN OPfN 4o:4S e 67]-40~8 LA.ST TIM ( TON IGHT "THERE 'S A GIRL IN MY SOUP" IRI & "GAI LY, GAI LY" STAii.TS WEDNESOA Y T~ minister's daugh ter. Her fath('r taught her about God. T he gypsy taught her about Heaven. "'"'"'··~·.._/ ,...,. \ ,~ • -,I ' (Q / "D."H."Lawreitce•s nu: VIRGIN AND nu: GYPSY ' r ... .o. ..... i.~[B]~ ~~p .. ,..,,,,,, ......... c_..,._'"°""'"~ ALSO "LOVERS AND OTHER STRANGERS" GIGYOUHG CRC CLO•HS lfACHMA"' COLOR I I I I I ®<® 1--I I See by Today's Want Ads • Girl J'rid11y for an::hllrrts o[flCC', Grnrrai off1cC' du- lies, payroll & bookkrl'fl- ln,c:. son1r prt'v1ou~ of!1r1? r ).:J)(>r1e ncc. Ck "ilO.C cl:i.\h. 1f1cat1on. e BF:A,\1£0 CF:ll.J'\G.Sl";\. '."\'. -SECLUDED -l:\J. f\L\CU LATF: • Chrck th1~ one out roday. Class J!iO. • ,\ (Or\'/\ " Srydl'r I~ '1!1 lhr Joo~e. C11pll1rr th1.< baby 11xl:t) .•. Ck !l90. • 11•'11) 11antcd S.· 1h1s 1~ Ille prrfrl'I Jnh for }OU S<'rl'r· !rt1) -Typ1~1 kn• Nr11por1 lli'nch AdVC'i'11Sl111{ ;\~1''1- ry Cnni;:r111al ... surriiund- J llJ.'~. 1<111 10<'11!11111 1111 lr- 'lll<' rin&n<'111l Tu11·1•r • i-·~.~hinn l ~l11nd1, :\ln! ~al· At"V I.: romp11.n.v bt'nt'fit~. • of Lhe show. lhough. will be "As an entertainer a Wt Resuming Thursday for based on the nostalgia of post· of people in this business fee1li1====='===================. \Vorld \Var JI. you have to have a Vegas. NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES "\Ve'll star! out wi1h the feather in your cap." l'-,~~~~i~~~j~~~~~1~;1~~~ end of the \Var and llogi:ln As Crane spoke. his series going back to the big band v.·as in 40th place in the ,-.;vt.·. ·:~--~ business \Vith Colonel Klink ratings. W .lllJ.. A:4 as his n1anager. As part of I ·.,..--.,...::. • .,,,.--,.-..,.--,.,.-iw-n-•-~-.,-.-1 the show I play the drums. ~-..,. • r{)_ Lanvk _o._ while Werner and Bob sing." }~'rjJ I~• "1 '-a: With a finale like_ that. the ~ j _:..__ _ ' ···-f.Y H[PBURN RPI UlDOIMN lno may be back " Slalag WALT DISN EY ....,.,..I ,· AU~R [ ' V.11/U\n!JU l:J quickly. PltODUCT-::···;·,-.,,,.,,,.. nCllllCWll·PW'ftSllll "-'II~ wnM~ Actually, Ct'ane would have :L,;,J_ _ -Ii 1 / C J] , preferred lo use the entire Fr\.-1 a. 10 f'.M. cast of lhe CBS series. In-$1-t-l:JO-l & 10 eluding John Banner, the ro· s11~.-1:lll·s.i'111 tund Sgt. Schultz. "Truth of the matter is we can·t afford it." Crane ex- plained. ··The actors on the show draw l11gh salaries. And. tn be honest. I'd like to go on by myself But I'm known as Hogan and tha!'s the place to start. Exclusive Showing LIMITED ENGAGEMENT THE BATTLE OF THE BUTT! THE CHALLENGE: ~./-;rj;an~wo~:.:: child ! \'.:, \ to quit smoking for 30 days ..•. • ~r your country, for your honor, "5' for S25,000,000! ALSO PLAYING Angela Lansbury • Michael York . the basic blac~ comedy. "S omething for Everyone" ASTORY~~:~NGLO~~ ·.-c· Ul~eriQg g (~Ji Be1g-ts ,x7cusrvE Wffllt1y• ENGAGE!MENT J:U & f :IS Sii., So;n, 4:1J, I: 15, I : IS. ,,, 1 ! BEGINNING MARCH 24th A ONE WEEK LIMITED ENGAGEMENT SPECIAL STUDENT-& GROUP RATES AVA ILABLE CONTACT MANAGER NOW FOR GROUP INFORMATION VALDEZ IS. COMING ~- ' • Russ Navy 'Invading' S. America By PRti. NEWSOM U,.I ,.,, • .,. Ntw. ,.,..~II A succession of visits by Soviet naval VfilSSCls to Cuban waters . suggest& a Soviet buildup in lhe Caribbean similar lo that in the Mediter- ranean. Lalin American ports may become regular ports or call for Soviet warships. Beyond Bfl agreement reported, to have been con.. eluded last Oct. 13 against servicing of nuclear·armed Soviet submarines in the Caribbean areB, there iS'little lhe United States can do about a seemingly clear Soviet challeflge in waters previously 0 W t SJ • cons;dered exclusi .. ly a u .s. Jae ay 0 '' -·-----~·-• domain: Mark Millican of Longmont. Colo. appears to be demonstrating ne~est tech· The "agreement." whether nique for skiing at Winter Park, Colo. His bulldozer style is not recommended written or unwritten never has on crowded slopes. been made clefir, was an ex·-------"-------------------------- WANT TD CLEAN UP ON YOUR CLEAN OUT? FOR FAST! FAST! tension of that reached in 1962 between the then President Ke111nedy and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev whereby the Soviets withdrew nuclear missiles from Cuba and pro· mised not to return them in exchange for a U.S. promise not to try to overthrow the regime of Fidel Castro. Chief Jiistice AskS\ Help I ACTION! Soviet warships have been playing Caribbean waters regularly for more than a year, occasionally undergoing repairs at various Cuban ports. The first Soviet warships entered the Gulf of ~1exico il'I July 1969, were: back again in 1970 and have been rel>(lrled in the same area on a number or occasions since, including the last few weeks. Other Soviet forces have been reported south of Cuba in a position to maintain surveillance over a huge area traditionally used by U.S. naval forces for training. Latest Soviet vessels to visit Cuba, as.,feported by lhe U.S. Defense Department early in February, were a submarine tender capable or servicing 1 submarines armed with nuclear missiles, a guided· missile cruiser a n d a merchant tanker. 'Ibe Soviet news agency Tass also listed a submarine as among those making a "business call" on Cuba. Jt was last September that Washington, without previous public notice, suddenly warned the Soviets against attempting to establish a base al the Cuban port of Cienfuegos where U.S. U2 spy flights hall disclosed Soviet construclion ot two barracks capable of handlin.R: 100 men each, a foot· ball field and a oom· munications CTnter. At anchor were two Soviet barges that could handle radioactive waste and a submarine tender. The Soviets ridiculed the U.S.~arning and denied any intentions of building a Cuban base. Work on the Cienfuegos in· stallation subsequently was halted. The submarine tender departed only to be replaced by another 1 short lime later. 'From the Cuban crisis of 1962, the Soviets drew a serious lesson, which was that intercontinenlal missiles were not enough and that a globe· circling Navy remained a necessity. For Crowded State CouTts \VlLLIAJ.fSBURG, Va. (AP) -Chief Justice Warren E. Burger has proposed national center Lo help state courts averJ.a crisis of congestion. Burger said the courts are "suffering from a severe case of deferred maintenance." He said Americans n1ay lose patience with a syslem hardly changed since the 18th cen- tury, particularly when they wait up to lour years to have a civil suit tried "while they witness a flagrant defiance of law by a growing number of law-breakers." "The noblest legal principles will be sterile and meaningless if they cannot be made to work,'' the chief justice said. His proposed national center v.·ould help the slates pool tdeas about reforming their courts. He suggested close cooperation with the American Bar Association and other bar groups and said "the need is greal and the lime is now." A similar center already is In operation to assist the ,.,. ,.,..,, ASKS COURT AID Chief Justice Burger federal courts. t.1eanvlhi\e. largely at the urging of Burger. federal and state judges in 32 stales have set up informal cooncils to develop cooperation between their two systems. As evidence of an "im· pending crisis in u1t: courts.'' Burger said most criminals are not arrested or tried. lhm;e who are caught and charged are not tried quickJy and those who are oonvicted are not punished promptly because of delays in the ap- peals process. In the civil area, he said people' who cannot afford the high cost of litigation but are too well off to qualify for legal aid "are forced to stand by in frustralion and often in want. Y•hile they watch the passage of time eat up the value of their case." Burger added: "We are: rapidly approaching the point where this quiet and patie:nl segment of Americans will totally lose patience with the cumbersome system th a t makes people wait two, tttue, four or more years to dispose of an ordinary civil claim." Welfare Rolls Grow I in IO Get Aid in 20 Largest Cities WASHINGTON (AP) and made their problems even Se\'en of the nation's 20 more acute," he said. largest cities have more than The" listing is based on one resident in 10 on welfare February 1970 slalislics ahd rolls. the Department of focuses on the central city Health, Education and Welfare or county in the 20 largest reported Wednesday. metropolitan areas. Boston leads the list with As expected. the HE\V i5.3 percent receivi ng pub\lc report found that the pro· assistance, fellowed by New portion of in tercity residents York City at 13.4 percent, receiving ~·clfare exceeded Baltimore. 12.8. St. Louis, 12 .5. the rate in the suburban coun- San fi'ran cisco. 11.7, and lies by mo~ than 3 to I. Philadelphia and Newark. ll.5. Jn Baltimore, for example, "The . figures starkly ii· the city aided about one in lustrate the plight 0 r eight of its population but Ame rica's urban areas," said · suburban Baltimore County HEW Secretary Elliot L. helped 1 in 140, the report Richardson . said. In Chicago, Cook County "The rise of sonic two aided 1 in 15 versus 1 in million persons on the nation's 250 in suburban Dupage Coun4 weHare rolls over the past ty. year -from 11.6 million in n'!hardson said the findings February, 1970 to 13.S million '·highlight the urgency of last November -has fallen reforming the present system, heavily upon our large cities .which not only bu~ens our . states and cities, but fails to give the poor the means or incentive to climb out of poverty." Fire Destroys Historic Site EARP. Colo. (AP) -A fire has destroyed the E a r p Trading Post established by the frontier lawman Wyatt Earp in this remote Colorado River town by the Arizona line. Sheriff's deputies said the blaze started early Sunday after two men were detected trying to steal food and liquor from the building. One of the men burned to death in the building, officers said, and the other was shot 1n the leg by a night watchman. Lo1adota Bridge' Ott tire Desert In nursery rhymes London Bridge 4 is (alltng down, but in the desert or Lake Havasu City. an Arizona to"'1n developed from scratch, London Bridge is ris· Inf up. Industrialist Robert McCulloch artanged fmt 1 (),000 t.ons of the London landmark lo be shipped ~lock by block to America. At fir!it glance a bridge I 1n the desert may appear unnecessary, but Ameri· J can ingenl!ity ~as solved this .• McCulloch has built • a canal, d1verttng water from the Colorado River, t1nd redirecting it under the bridge. CALL DAILY PILOT CLASS· IFIED DEPT. D I A L D I R E c T • -- 6 4 2 -5 6 7 g Tutsday, March l&, 1971 • • OAILV PILOT if Gener el Oonerol G.tneral * * * * * * Attention R,altors • * * * * '* TAYLOR CO. * SOUlH COAST REAL ESTATE ls pleased to announce tbe opening of their second office at 1500 Adams Blvd., Costa Mesa on April 1st 1971. This ofiice· will be located on the gro'und floor adjacent to the main entry of the multi-story pro!essi.unal building. NEAR LITTLE CORONA BEACH Custom built spacious modern. 3 BR w I gourmet kitchen. Wide an2}e vu of hills le: some ocean vu. Beautiful wood panelina: " fabulous mstr ste. Priced to sell! $87,500 216 POPPY Open Wed. 1·5:00 We are presently seeking 8 experienced and professional men or women (brokers or ... ~· sociates) to stall this exceptional locatidfi. Should you be contemplating a change please contact :AI Black at MS-8424. ''Our 26th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 S•n Jo•quln Hiiis Rood NEWPORT CENTER -11 BONUS PLAN TO 84 % * * * * * * General MESA VERDE PICK ONE -------------------laeauliM homes -Beaulitul General G-.ono;;;;;;';;";;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I are11. -Take your pick: • 1-Sui>tt i;harp 3 + f'am. So TAX REFUNDERS FREE DOM c1, •• ;i """""' -$3l.500. 2-Corner for boat & trailer DANDY DUPLEX 2 Bedroom eaCh unit JO% Down $29,950 SHARP SHARP 2 Units on Costa Mesa St. $31 ,950 TERRIFIC TRIPLEX ' PresPnt Income $420 mo. l FHA appraisal & sales price 1 $39,SOO plus 4 BR & fam Rm - SPECIAL ,_::." M•"" Bdrm Big corner lot with a 4 bed· plan, 3 BR + Fan1 - room. 2 bath family home. $211,1.;>Q -FHA/VA OK. Big 6~ % assum11.ble Joa.n at $165 a month for every· thing. $24,750 Ntwport ot Fairview 646-8811 I Olli.SI [ Ol.SO\ •" I?£ Al TORS 2299 Harbor, Costa l\fesa OCEANFRONT Build a dream house 4 Studio apts. 112 BA each (1nytime) or n'IOre on fiO feet or FANCY FOURPLEX I $41,000 I ==~==~I Newport It'• Good To Be Home •t Especially when it'• a lovely 3 ~room. 2 bath Costa Fairview i\lesa nome. LA~ country 646·88\ 1 style kitchen, park like yard with niany treei;. Be;iutiful (anytime) covered patio. Perlect lora· REALT6Rs ,,,,,;..,. ...... !!!!!"'""'""'" tion, close to ~hools &r pnrk. srNCE 1944 MESA DEL MAR p,;"" "ooly $26,lOO. H;gh 673-4400 General U'°' HlUI: 11VMl:S R .. 1 E.i ... , 17MOCIO THE ROKOS' HOME A beaulifu\ 4 bedroom I bath, 2 story f11mUy hoine wi!h 2100 sq. ft, 11nd ex· quisi!e decor. Colorful wallpaper~. deep pi!e crpls, billowing ferns &: rich wall tones. This i!I a colorful home • tasteful yet excitinr • for the imaginative! The cnly thing run of the mill about it is the price. ONLY $43,950 UJ!tllflUI: 11()-'tU Re•I Etlet.. 11NllOO 244) IE. CNlt H'>flly, Col'Ollll Ott M&r,Cllr. ETREAT a.<:io;umable 6% loan. Onlyl!!!"'""'""'""'""'""'""'"""'-R ""' "'' mo. h>cloo" ""' .,2 950 '"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"""''"'"'"'"'I Smell the pines -As cozy &. insut'anCf'. Ca.II ~ .J. 4, as if ii were hidden in the iopcn eves.i. 4 Bdr. & Den GOLF ANYONE? Alps. Ankle deep carpeting Park like yard with large Beautiful 18 hOle golf course k. ·~· with modem clubhouae and even In the counter 1tchen. A? HElnAGt swim pool . BeautHul home, 3 big bedrooms _ Family ~ .. """ UfUt large rooms throughout, restaurant only a few feel room -Li\·e outside on central floor plan. Luxur. away. Lrg. Two i toey, large 20x20 patio rJl('ircled ---lous ki1chen. No down FOUR BDRM. Three bath by well kept grounds. terms~ Open Iii 9 p:,f, Home With s1rpdown Llving Schools -College & Sho~ OPEN DAILY 1 •S ;,,jQ.\12() Rm . Dining Rm. B/I Elttl. ping -Close. Only $31,500. 2016 Balearic Dr. TARBELL 2955 Harbor Ki!chen. breakfast area and Hurry, tUal 645.0303. I MESA VERDE C M largr Fam. Rm. New Cpt5. • ' · · DOVER SHORES &: 0111~. eleg~ thru-0ut. a Bedroom~ or 4 and a den Under con.~truction see !he Block wall fenced. Thrtt I ORIS! [ OL,O\ 3 Balhs. ('OmplC'U'IY rcdec· 1 1033 M · D · car iara&e. Excellent land· orated, formal dining room, ~~;tShores.ar;":crs5 ~: scaping. One year new . lovely eating ill't'a in kil ch· ONLY $42.950 w1ra LDW '"· beautiful 1fl.d2 living rmli, ( & 5 bath!, select •" I • I nIA/V A TERMS. room w/brick firrplaet, new your own co ors cus om l?EAtTOl?S 2299 HARBOR, COSTA MESA :i;hag carpeting, llnt'd drap. detalls. All with outstanding erie11. FA hra1, eltc hltns. V!eY.'s. Roy J. Ward Rltr. HARBOR tlble gar, shake roof + 646-1550, Open Daily., HIGHLANDS m'"y .xtrns! * MESA VERDE * A tlelighUul 3 bedroom home Lachenmyer Rlty. 1:,~;~f~g.1m;;;~t. ho:~n~:'. and separate den . 1'~ baths Call 646-3928 Eves: 673·8936 &. fi~place. Kitchen has bltn l ==~=~~~==cl Cov .. patio. Nevi copper 1 220 E.17tti 641·0555 range k oven, dishwasher, ~~~.~.g, Blk to golf course. Evenings Call 644-7003 BBQ, all in stainless steel. WESTCLIFF .,.... Walk to Mariners school, New listing George Wiiiiamson library, park and \Vestcliff Delii:hlful 3 BR. home In REAL641;!~~ EVES. Plaza shopping. Best for 1he choice location. Family 1:"cc':.-•.::350::._ _ _;.::~c:-::.::..::.= moflE'y at $M,950. Ca I J room. Pretty Y11rd. Short ,. 5-15-8424. "-alk to i\1arineni School &: New Orleans Villa Super sharp 4 BR, 2 1tor)' townhouse, Jge !iv rm., ror- n1al din area, be'atlt walnut cabinets, 2 bath areas, crpts & drpR, 2 pools, sep. play yard, close to beach & 5hop. ping. FP $23.500. GI or FHA terms. Call 847·1221 . ln41 Beach Blvd., Htgn Bch Open 'tit 9 p.m. Park. $46.500. 133-0700 ON THE WATERFRONT Jui;t !isled! 4 Bedroo m,11 l ban1s and rlen PLUS spac· lous panelled bonus rooni . All the amenilif's of grac· ious living at. the b<-ach. $49,500. Just calt 673-8550 to '"· $23,500 $158 A Month l Bel. & Dtn Lo1v monthly payments. En. * 5 BEDROOMS * · try hall, fine quality bull!· I Beaut. Harbor View Homes in,11, pic ture windows. Large res. w/wet her, lovely 1 covered patio. Open til 9 carp.: &elf.cleaning OVf'ns; P;l.f. 540.1720 ready lo move into. $.59.500 TARBELL 2955 Harbor Including the land. 2 STORY CORBIN· 4 Bdrm. & Family Rm. $24,950 Prime location! Prestlge MARTIN hon1e area. ow11er dl!'sper-REAL TORS 644-7662 ate. Prl~ reduced to $24.950. 1 --*~~6""-Uc,.N~l~T~S-"*-­ l[uge fam ily rm. entry hall, Ne•r Btach-$JS6,000 bit.in range . oven . dish· wllsht'r. MQ.l721'.1 Good localion. condition b TARBELL 2955 Harbor · parking. Income $20,IXXI +. Call 673-~ &12·2253 Eves associated BROKERS-REAL TORS lOlS W Balboa t.7J.J66l 3 BR CONDOMINIUM In eholce section of Mont\. cello. completely redecorat. ~ Including new carpeta. Prictd below market. Act fasl on this One. l ·~~..,..,..,..,..,..,..-1 $20,SOO EASTS I OE 3 BDRM PERRON 642-lnl Cute older home ntar Coun- try Club & Golf course, hrd· TRANSFER. wd flni, frplc and many frttl! YOUR PROBLEM tret!I. lDIJ~ Down or FHA! to SPECIALISTS VA temu. Asking. , , P $24,500 roperty M•nagement I PERRON 642-tnl Rt1I Estate STEPHENS & KAYE REOUCE0$5000- G4S-Ol22 ANYTIME ! Baycrest By Owner: Vacant The DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST'S leading Marketplace CHlLDREN \\'ANTED • 4 1 ~~ ba, like nr1v. S.'JS.CXXI bdnn • 2 bath· !Rm rm • . 2 . story.lge fenced yard. FINAL TWO 4PLEXES Cul de uc for M.fety. No CUJ>tom, $75,000. 4211 Dena traffic . owner anxious. I Rd, Newport B. 4228 Hllar· AGENT 675.4930 la .\Vay, NB. 213/981·7039 ... ' DRIVE BY 3071 Country Club Or. In ~fesa Verde. See your dream home. Now undrr construction. UM" your own decorating idt>as. 4 big bed · rooms, 3 baths and 3 car garag~ plus beauHful view of golf coorst. Plenty of .room !or a pool • plans available. Excellent tin~ ing. For compltte inform&· t ion call 546.2313 ~:;Q' THE REAL \'"" ESTATERS , OPUJ , '• • • KOOL POOL PAD 11·ith srclurll'rl patlo for iiri· vale en!C'!'lain men1 or biz e11011i::h for a BASH! Luth 1 shag carp,.ts, family room, n1oclPrn k11chen, and ttady ro movr into . all tor ONLY S28.000. Trade yours! Walker & Lee Rl!allor1 168'1 Edinger !71 H 842-4455 or S40.5140 -a-l INCOME PROPERTY? \\'t have it! 3 houae1 on cne lot. AU with 3 bedmoma and double ptages. Good ~nvesbnent for the ruture. t;.11 10 ... lhne -"' now: is2.rm •~~&CQ. _.... ,.,_.Jl..4 .. SHEER LUXURY 4 Bedrooms + malda• room in this ~ home with large family room I. formal dining room. Island ranae &. table KJ>&Ce In rounnet kitchen. Designed for pri. vacy & loaded with extru. Appointment only. Arnold & Freud 388 E. 17th St., 0irta Mta 64&-7755 VACANT 'or lease $415 mo.: or sale $69.500. CU!tom Ba¥cre1t I AF{, panelled den, dln rm., $<!11 clean pool. I PETE BARRITT ALTY 642-5200 • • • I • • 2.2 OAILV PILOT T11ttday, ,..,Jtth 16, 1971 Everyone Hes Somethin g That Someone Elie Wonts DAILY PILOT CLASSIFllD ADS The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad 2629 Harbor, C.r.I. 546-8640 Thinking of SELLING? .. Let us help, \l.'e will buy your house today for its full value-. The only ad· d.ltional charge Is 1 % of the i;ellin(i price. ~o ad- ditional expensl!. We Med hOUIMI It d0('$n't cost anything to i·all and fi nd oul··you ml;ht even save!! GET DIRTY BARGAIN $23.500 Located in Eastside Cos- ta ?o.1esa this 3 b!>droom home has 2 baths, a double garage, large fenced yard. "'alkini;: distance lo schools and shoppini::. It nvds some pe.int and T.L.C. but at this price your total payment v.·ill be ()nly 5189.00 per month. Hur· ry, woJ1t\ last. J.}n.Ja J3£ PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES .52 Linda Isle Drive Cust. 6 BR., study, 5 bath home '~·/4 frpl cs., circu1ar sta ir\.\•ay. decorator selected carp. & drapes. Shown by appt. . $215,000 For complete information on all home' & lots, pl•••• call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 833 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642...4620 General Macnab-Irvine Really Compa.ny BETTER THAN NEW Call to see this Immaculate 2.story U'aditlona.I home on a beautiful cul • de -sac. Everything for happy la.m. ily living, Lllf'ie Jloor to ce.iling brick fireplace, rais- ed hearth. Family roon1, dining room, 5 bedrooms, 3'--z baths, sewing room, cover· ecl patio, and evtn a child· ren's play home. A one o"•n. er home. s;);l.,000. Macnab-Irvine 642-1235 General HOME AND INCOME Enjoy living in ll'eshly paint. ed roon1y Two 8drn1, honic v.·lih HARD\\'000 YLOORS, f ,P. nJOdern !{11. Lar&e B1'i'akfast area and service porrh. Collect $150. mo. from Two Bdrm, home at rear ol Jot. Uni!s are sep- arately fencffi from each other • "ell landscaped in· eluding fruit trees. Dbl. Garage and workshop aiTa. 0:-l"L Y $34.950 \VITH 10';0 DOWN. East Bluff REPOSSESSIONS e EXO.USIVE AGENTs e Sparl<lina clean homt-1, some SAI..£S • LEASES newly painted & carpeted, 2, f Z, 4 &: 5 bdnns. Some with poola, FHA-VA conv. terma, ~ ~· trom $20,000 to S-40,000. t Collini & Watta Inc. 8143 Adams Ave. 962-5523 rea ty 8.ibo• Island 2U4 Vista Dtl 01'0 l BD, 2 b1 + covm .gar Newport Beach &M-1113 gal h.se \I/Ai ba. Nr wat . lrpt, pat, rovd tncd, SID Fou!1ta1n Valley :-.1 dn. 67H167. BOAT OR TRAILER 3 BDRM'S, 1; Jot. $-17,500. Super sharp, 4 BR lrplc heme SlO J\.t dn, Carry 1st TD. on Jg cor lot. Xlnt lndscpg, 138 Topaz. 673-02:>2 12x40 cov patio. Close 10 Corona dtl Mar school, new sha&: crptg, ----------1 drps, water ~ftener. A bar· DIJPLEX ,,1, at SJt.500. SOUTH-OF·THE ·Elll•·S~~;~:~ Rlt". HIGHWAY BLDR'S Sacr!lice-Span. slyle 2 nifty 2 btdroom units in nu custom of Br. $32,500. one of Corona de! f\-1ars bfost $1500 dn. Loaded \\'/ x:tras. dUJ?lex Jocalions. t.lake an Sh&ki>1. Frp!. Crpt thruout. investment that has a fu . Sprnkln, lndsepd. J n cg. lure call now tor informa-10223 Ph ea s 1 n t Ave. lion' at 673&50. c"='~-'1~380=------- 0 nly $45.950 Huntington B11ach \RTHEREAL '('. ES,TA'J'~W' Vermont 2-Story NEAT ... ,,,, eov.i, , 5 Br. & F.R. & Pool ·BR. home wilh 1arage st.rf"sserl for addt't unit. On J{Q'r ON THE i\.lARKET'. R·2 Jot. Brick tpl., shuHer! Need room? Entertainm~nt In liv. rm. &-,BR. Jltaut. center. Spacious 5 bedroom. patio. \Ve Y•ould II~ to $how UniQue family erea. Very l~I \ _ .. ,. I~ I A••I f:1t1tt, Gtnttal Hl.lntlngton 81ach BITS OF SPANISH GIANT 4 BR-$28,500 Newport BNch UP FOR GRABS 'l'his 3 brdroom and a bath, we1t of Harl>or Blvd. has a VA loan of n;i,80() th&I any. one can take over subject Income Prop•rty 116 Cemetery Lot1/Crypt1 156 ·PVT party wants lS lO ');) __ ..;.._;.:.._____ unit.I from owntr, Newport/ HARBOR Re1t Mtmor1al r-.tesA a.rt.a. 540.6752 Park, Costa f.Je1a, plot 61! spaces A-B, S~t Lawn, Lots for Sale s-&00. !213 ) 3n.os19 all 4 pm. 170 Spanish walltd iron ¥ate to $177 Per month. The court:Yan:I entry. 4 king-s11ed Price? How l!Ma this 1rab Condominiums bedrooms. 21A baths. \Valk-in you -$19.SOO. CALL 1 _.;.f~or;..,:•.;.•.;.l•;;,.,, ____ 1~60.;. 2~ acre hone ranch repos • FORECLOSURE ~:~~e 1V.:1,ed roo~i~ Walker •-Lee COZY CONDO, aina:le story sessed from former aero-GI 2 bednn, 2 bath, formal din-space employu now avail- crackJ.lnr fireplace. Large .,..,..,, H ~-BJ·~ d iog ~m. air eond., ltLXU"" able at developer1 cost. rourmet kitchen Laundry ,.,;JU a.-uur vu. at A ams "J center. Patio. l-CAR GAR-545-0465 Oprn 'Ill 9 P:\f crpt!, drps, vacant. Only SAVE S3000 AGE. Play yard !or !he kids. BEACH UNITS Sl4j(J down FHA or no down I I GI. on these !abulous, o&k stud· Only l yrs. old. Lo"' dow~. \I Unil apartment b!d11;. ded, rant.:h si:ie 1pre1.ds. i\lust see for yourself at lhts Close 10 beach, Newport DUTCH CLEAN. cuitom cat· Locatt'd in the booming lO\V, low $28.500. 1-lurry and • call (?J. 4 ) !J62.558j, Shores. } ull t1Ue. 14 Gar-ptlA & drps, private encl South Coast area near San ages. Only 8 yrs. old. SltiOO patio, 3 bfflrm. 2» ba, 2 Juan C1:1pistrano. Ht 1 h nm1sr L Ol.\ON mo. income. n 39,50J. 30% car rar. Take ovtr 6% Govt above the smoi, private On. loan, ask1ni: $24.950. Fasl road and Jocked rate iuar- GR.Al fA l\1 REALTY 64&.2·114 pcuse1sion. •ntte the naNraJ beauty of l this former Spa.nish Gran1 EVERYTHING SHIP·SHAPE su1TOunded by beautltU! ... ll l!/f I 7'()AS OCEANFRONT 19131 Brook.burst Ave. DUPLEX Huntin(ton Beach Good Income. $6!!,JOO GREAT VIEW BURR WHITE . Rea Ito• 675~30 -'l ou_ can :o;t"e !he ncean and 2901 Ne"'Jl0f1 Blvd. N.B. Catahna h-on1 !he lovely ' )-'ard and covered patio of a &r Y.'ATERFRONT. Dock, verv sharp trim home 3 boat 1ncm, J. BR. lo price tiech-oom 2 bath bea~ti-by O\\'nr for quick :o1ale. S, S, 67-1900 lul l11ndsciiplng, romph•te 1,.c-~_=·~~~--­ spnnkler system, water Newport Height1 soflener • and assumable 5'6'7"o V.A. Loan! S28.950. Call now to see. 842-2535 \1'.>' THE REAL ~"\... CSTATERS '"Pl•tr,,,r,11~~ ... BIG VALUE Larae 3 bdrm, family rm. dining nn, 2 baths. Huge separate ma1ter bdrm, l Crp!cs. Garaa;e on alley. Fine He ights area. $35,000 hltn buok beds in downstairs beod.1m, lie mezzanine mas· ter bednn &. bath sulle + guest room. Db!e garage has bltn cabinels, \\"Ork bench and elec door opentr. Best valut at S23,j0(], anxiou1 owne1· Larwin Realty, Inc. 21-1\iZ Brookhurst, H.B. S46-S41 I Anytime Cleve!11nd NatiOl"lal Fore1L All utilities available. PRICED FROM $9.~ LO\V DO"''N·EASY TER~1S Circutnstancios torc.'e ~ Im· mediate disposilion.of these few choice parcels v.·liOle former owners LOSS is yourl GAIN!! Call or v.•rite for complete detaU. and color, on-site photos. Buy direcl I trom the developer: RANCHO CAPISTIUNO nn DuPont Drive, Rm 8 l\'"e1\-port Beach, Cal. 9lEi&I , rn.:\223 I 61s-n10 I II lil!Zl=!Zl=~j 220 E.17t~ Fantastic Bargain! E""'"•' ca11 •t'·"" ACTION HALICREST you thl' . you'll like it~ delightful built-in kitchen. MORGAN Rl!AL TY BeautHul heated 30' pool '7~6642 675·6459 with all lhe equipment DREAMY LOCATION Loads of dec.'ldng. Brick -=T=R~A~N~s=F=E=R=R~E~o~i ..c-1 c" t 1• 0 · '"' • -1"' 1• DESPERATE! "'·~""' SPANISH DECOR, CATIIE-71fAl: TY EXECUTIVE Condominium 1n l\.lesa Ven:le. Next to Goll Course. 2 Story 3 Brf21A baths, Intercom, Custom Cabine try in Kitchen k Bath. Spacious dining & Jiving room. Jt'-'- Yours for the price S3J.:;<XI Will sell furnished. Stt at I Real Estate Wanted 114 3024 Club House Circle, I a.1~799 for appt Arl AdaU". WANT VA(ANT t.1-1 , I to SP'ECTACULAR This has to be the bt>st buY on the m11rk!'l at $27,lXKI. Three large bedrooms, 2 spacious baths. i;parklini:: bullt-in kltchen. new olive green high-low carpeting over extra thick pad bl"11uti- ul landscaping front rear -hu~,. cover- ed patio and 20 x 20 .paneled rumpus room. FHA//VA terms. 0Y.'T1· er is anxious -?liakc offer! FASTER MINIATURE HOllSI llANCH $)0,000 Situated in Costa 11esa on a ¥.. a.ere of land. Thi' home is t'l"m lnl.5-c.ent of a sec.ludf:d coun- try retreat complete with knotty riine oantl· lng, 1ep11.ratf' family room and ~1dc> O[X'n spaces. Zoned for hor~r.~ 11.nd the price is rii.:ht. See It and name your "-FROM OP'EN Alll LUXUllY 2700 SQ. FT. Th.ls beautiful soacinus executive home is only 1·11ii years old. A home to be proud of, 2 stories ot rambling prestlp;e, Javilh caroetlng over deluxe pad. expensive Corsican drapes flo\v from c.a th~ral ct-lling to floor -elaborate ma.st.er bfi:lroom suite with private terrace and luxurious tiled b11th -home is now \"8C911l and owni>r Is anxious. No down tn vet.!! or 8.1· sume pttSent VA loan. .Asking $43,000. FARROW HERE'S YOUR DOLL HOUSI llf,tSO lt's on the Eastside In grPat area, larp:e lot for c.'hildren. The re11idence i~ \l'ry neat and Clean and it's barra.ln priced for fact ~a.le. Take Ume to srl' ii~ ~BEDROOM RANCH STYLE This homr is 7 yean old and 1s ~bsolutely ,;or- ~rou<. lhP exterior Is acctntPd by comblnlnc usi>d hr ,1 k a.nd rustle v.ood. n .. au11fullv mani- cured ~aid \1'ilh \\'ind· ing pith ' , entrance lined \•ilh a nrofusion of 1·un1p!'1 • In~lde is tqu11 !y !>fl/"t't11r11l11r. 11·1th 1 mastPr ~i1r l'lf'drnom!. 2.1, b11111-~"1111.J"llt(' fan1ily r0111t1 ~nr:I fir•'- plac.'f'. Gnld '!rd111!ion hu1lt·in k1tr]1,.n 111111· to-\vall carr"1 !hrri111.::h· out. Se" thi< h'•nl" 10 • day, cra·ner 11 •k1n~ S3'1 . 150 FHA 11ppr1U~a1. ' S22,toO J l!DROOMS, l ·'lt IATHS Only 7 ytar~ nlrl it h'I.< 11 bullt·in kitchf'n rorrrd air ht>at. C11n be ,.,, t'\l• pied imn:t1>di11tt>ly, Hur. ry on th1' ont. 2629 Harbor Blvd. 546-8640 OPEN EVES. 'TILL 8:30 I Huge 2 story 5 bedrm, 3 bath home v.'ith extra large blue hving room. I t needs a hi· tie painting so bring your paint &: brushes and take advanlaie of this terrificaJ. ly pri~d hOmt-. At $36,500 it's i\fesa de! )-lar's BESf I BUY~! • Open Sun. 1-5 e ! and dreamy house V.'ilh 3 b<P BBQ pit. Covered patio. 1617 Port Abbey Way rms., 2 baths.% Btk . 10 the Low down and take over J1arhor View Homes, OL\l beach. Try lO)o down. Ask· loan Shops . and St"hools ioff Ford Rc!.l 5 BR. Beaut. ing $54 900. near.by. 2 miles to beach. home w/many elctras, rea9y Dela~cy Reel Estate lt'i; immaculate. Pritt<! to to move into. $59,500 • In· """28 E c 1 H · Cd'! sell f11.st. Hurry. Call 1714) ""'"' . oae ¥.y., , 962 "'°' cliJd!ng the land! 544.mo ·J.X>J· 1912 Part Weybridge PROV. CHAR:\! _ ~ Hwy. Harbor Vit"W lfonies, Cd:"-1 Op/beani, huge Jiv rm, COATS !oil Ford Rd.I I..ge. 4 BR., fmly r1n, 2 BR 2 BA, R-2, & be11ut.. deC11r. Fam. rm, 2 I dbl gar stres'd for expans I OKlST E OL\ON '" , R,'£A l TO R S · WALLACE I frpl. 156.000.. & xtra incm. :-O!ove-in cone!. REALTO S !I 2133 M iramar 432 Carn a tion . Ch\•nr 19131 Brookhurst Ave. • 54'"4 R Balboa Penin .. 10 bc>it resi-00-9199 Hunlington Beach -141-dl'ntial .area. s BR .: I blk. •c~.~.~,.~M"a~.~.=------[--...'.:=::::!:::CC-'::::C'..'.'..._. COpsn Evanings) 10 ,, '" ''"'" s1'1,500. Save $$·U·finish It JUST LISTED Df:llghtful Park ?ltesa, 3 bed· 1"'ITI&. la.f'ie living room & fiunily room. Pride of CM'll· e1·ship home. NiC"ely carpet- ed snd draped. Quiet cul-<le·sae, ready for move. in. FHA/VA Terms, top val - ue at $27.500. Call 54{1.1151, \open evesJ. ,!;;;;;;;::::;:;;;;;;;;;;;,_ I CORBIN YOU'LL Love this beautilu\ • Cambridi' Hi&hlam1' horn• J B O I $1 8 000 On quiet cul-de-sac. 3 large r • n y I MARTIN bedrooms · 2 of them shut- tered, 2 baths, family room, Are you a handy mFlrl! Fin- 2 fireplaces, ntw Jush shag ish 1 room as a. BR .. play REALTORS 644-7661 NEWPORT BEACH POOL HOME The invirlng back yard for outside Jiving. 3 bedrooms and den . convrrted inlo bedroom ii needed. 2\i spac· ious baths, large family roo1n v.·i th marble fJrt'placc, '.mx.W pool v.ilh reverse pump and completely O\'tr- hauled filter ~ystem. S~l,SCXI for quick sale. &lS.Tin carpels, electric built-ins. rn1 ., rlark nn., etc. ll1atcr· LJ:ively backyard wi!h patio, ialii; arc 1here. aean mod· near school.9-and shopping. <'rn charn1. Large rooms. $33.000 wlth a 5 1~ t;~ Lush 1.:arnetin~. Sparklini; assumable loan call SID-7413 alt clec. ki1rhen \\•!lh Span· SPANISH STYLE -beauli· ish tiled Jloors. Re<rstat fully kept 4 Bedroom 2 bath chandeUerM dining area. home \Vi!h large f11..mily Stained mirrored i;lass. 2- room. plush car Pr tin~, car gar11ge, Boat door. Walk sparkling blln kitchen, fan· lo school~. Jog to beach. lastic covered patio v.·i!h Lo1v, Jo\\. tlo1•:n. Beller ma5s1ve stone BBQ. $32,9~ Hu........_,_ Call (TI II '162 <m -assume lo~· intettst loan '' J • _ • ......,.,. or FHA/VA NO DOWN. Terms &\'ailable. C a I l 545-8424. South Co as I IORISI' [ Ol.\O~ Realrors. "' AF /f l. T O RS- 5 BEDROOM BEAUTY with 2 very luxurious ba ths. Ha rdwood Doors v.·uh lots o( nylon carpetin&: ~'ilh 1natch- in&: drapes. Gorieous Palos Verde stone firt-place, Huge ?11esa del i'.Jar, O\\'ner, \\·ell c.ountry style kitc.'hen. Short kept 3 BR. 2 BA, frp\c, 19131 Brookhurst 1\\'e, walk to schools. GI and FHA \ on over 10,000 sq. ft. cul-de-HunLinglon Beach lerms available y,·itb n('W -=========I sac lot. Prof. lndscpd &1 ---F-O_U_R_P_L_E_X __ LO\V 7% annual percenta:::e B / B decorated. Hrdv.d raised rate. Let us show it in you! 22 \'EARS OF Door, lu.'l:ury rrprd. FHA GI NO DOWN Walker & Lee REAL ESTATE SERVICE 5'A7D. $33,900. 546-5891 121 2 BR . I BA, j\1 1 BR, JNTllEllAP.BORAREA VACANT l Br+ lam rm, I BA,(1 ~38R,2BA.Ncw Bayfront Lovely 2 ba, bltn1. Crptsfdrp~. rrpt5, r!rps, sacrifice !or Realtors 5-1.).9491 Open 'tll !'.\ P;'lf * A·FRAME * 2-S!y. beach home xlnt cond. 3 BR. J!l, ba, 2 car gar. Bltns. Ntw cpts. $33.900 * LEASE/OPTION * Immae. 4 Br., &teps to ocean. 21Ai Ba. Only $300 pe~' mo. \\'/$500 opUon money. CAYWOOO REAL TY 6306 \V. Coast H~'Y., ~B S48·1290 A real boat \1·1111,:hei·s delii:;ht rt·pll", lrg yd, 2 "Yrs old. quick sail'~ Call 847·8507; Good locatlon. Take over 9~-l3TI-. n~o 1178. \Vit.h a. great s'~in1n1ir1g """" 6~' Y. VA $215. per n10. total. brar·h! This cust. home can ~ f'asily be ine1·t11sed 1o ri Q-.\TIM"/Agt S36-4470· F' ... : f f.1 'WI BR. Lowes1 prir-e on the Owner 63/4% VA Loan % :l!N ,,.: Big Bay -S97.~. $4000 cash . 4 BR, 2 BA. 2000 -•••.... .. .. 675 3000 sq. ft. $33.300. S270 n10. • P.I.T.I. Tmni. Poss, No qua\; mmn· & 1m .u·11l UEAU'\' IXC'. rs_!_~-_ _£~ ~1oe>~J Vacant $18,990 1fying. 557.6536, 548-05&8. 8'" ownt-r, E-Sldf' 3 BR. l BA, crpls, drp~, firepl. Lrg lot, sprinklers. On a U shafK'd strerr. \\'t-11 kept. .$25,000. &l.'Ui263 $25,500 Assurr.e tX lSting F1lA Joan S200 per mo. P.t.T.I . 3 Br-cl· room 2 b11.!h, bltn rang" & ovrn. Jai'gc ff'nred lot. dble 2aragl'. c.'&rpcl.~ & drapes. Your do\\ n \\'Lii handle - l'itli, ORAL CEILINGS. 3 Bed· Nr1r Nrwport Po •t Offltt room. 2 bath. VA/FHA SECLUDED 3 br, 2 ba;frpl c, ltrms or low down. re-modeled kit, lit pa!io, HAFFDAL REALTY elec gar, extensive rarden. 8-t2M05 Eves: 541-2446 Nr schls & c.hurch. Ideal Irvine JUST WHAT - fur family, $39,500. Pnn- cipals only. 64:>-7764 aft 9 am Senta Ana Heights Yau've been looking far * ACRE hOne ranch·Pool, • Picture pre!ec1 cond. complttely lenced. out e l Bedrooms bldgs, $~8.000. 5tl--814S. • 2~, Baths • Plush areenleal l'Pti;. • Tinted windo11 s e \Vasher & drye1· • Gorgeous pauo, v1e11• • l\.linim111 lndscpg. care e Ov:ner 11"/help financ.'e All this for only $34,000. \Von·1 )OU ll't us show 11 10 you 1'0DA'f~ ACRE for Comm'! Slobles or hnme &.· slablr~. 67:r.-2'162 or 673-J723 Tustin HORSE Property by O"'TIC'r. 1, Acre, attractive 4 br. ram rm. din'g nn. beamed ceiling, dbl garage & fruit trees. :\lust tllove~ 12i72 ~ d h 11 Barrell Lo, 54<-W'2 ~ re i !~ ... ~,, ... ~ ... ~[i]~ Gent1.tl REALTY I~----~ Univ. Park Center, Irvine !•••••••••• C11.IJ ,\nytime 833-0820 Acreage for sale 150 Laguna Beach Willow1, California L el 2 B /l B C d 2 houses on 14 acres already ov Y r a. on O rented. Plc.'n ty of water. Laguna Beach Home small do'l\'n, E8.3y Terms. IDEAL for year round com· Owner Box 484 Glenburn fort & gracioUs rela.i:ed Jiv· Ca 96036 ' ' ing. All exterior mi\ntain. 1 --·~-·-~~--­ ance attended. Tenn j s 1r Choice multiple zoned courts. only 100 steps to prl· Orange County ac.'reage vate beach, also overlooks ilania lltulty glamour-ous heated pool. All &lz.6360 elec kit. incl: refrig, range.1~~--'--'-"'-'---­ dish\\"asher & disposal. Com· 200 Acres, ocean vie\\', pletely carpeted v.•al! 10 wall 7-miles from ocean, Very thruout. Lower Jc\"el Jaun-hilly. S700 per acre. 10'~ dry has v.·shr/dryer. star· dn, 6'7" int. ALA.'>l" REALTY Age room & douile carport. 714-7'2G.J188 ask !or A!an. Thi~ is a t"Orner unit in btaut \ndscpd, patroled &usiness Praperty IS4 area. Close 10 market & sh~'ng. Avail furn or unfur~. DOG KENNEL Priced under markrt for di· . . rect salt. Phone: 837.0791. Established rommercial ken· -~-'--~=-==~=-I nel on 2.8 acn!'11. Includes GLASS ROOF !•,..•. mod•m 3 B•droom 2 Bedroom baC'helor pad. 2l~ \Valls of glas~ 11·it h clu' root. Prtv1tp thn haftlf'r .. , end ot ~U'ttt }'anl f'IN'an. r-il)' It f'NlllhN' \'11'1\".<"", Pnrl" 111('l1Hk• ad- .)01n1ng lOr. S-l0.000. c.JJ • ..AV tan NE\VPO~BEACH: 2 Br. ~1 1 mt.: I. sauna, rec. rn1. Low cl· wn payt. Owner v.·ill fina ncr. F'ORTIN CO. 642-SCKXJ lncame Property 16' CUTE EAST-SIDE DUPLEX Ne .... · condition. Two, one bed- room units .,.,,i!h attached garages. Owner built, qual- ity construction. S300 per mo. incom". See today - \\'on'\ la~I. $34,900 Terms· 646-7171 INCOME UNITS (4) 2 BEDROOM (l J 3 BEDR00"'1 O\\'NERS UNIT 5 acres, to leue. Bkr. Realonomlcs ~75-6100 -------·- fln1nci1I Business Opportunity I~ 200 DISTRIBUTORS NEEDED HUNT'S ''SNAC K-PACK'' New multi-million do 11 a r advertised snack pack pro- d 11ct1 . NEED NO\Y ~ Rt lia.ble men or 11.-omen In )-'OOI' area to service tast- moving coin operated pro- ducts in company attUn"d loc•tiom. commerciaJ 01' l.aetory . Part or tull tim~ I 6 to 12 hOun per-v.·et-kl • m selling. CASH RE- QUIRED S60D to $299:1. \Vr!te for more lntonnatlon: Instant Food Supply, P .0 Box 3155, Torran~. Calif 90~5. Include phon r fenced patios, closed i;ar-number. (Not affilialed wllh age!. Income SlO,OSO. N"''Pt Hunt!·Wesson Food•, Inc. I I Hghts area. Pete Barrett RHy, 642·4353. BEAUTY SHOP for ule ---===~--,~=~-I 4 ch11irs good location in COSTA MESA LaguM. 4.,;.5809 I TRIPLEX BEAUTY Sho>p f" .. 1 •• '11 ope!"llon. Reaaonab lt .. The closest you can come to 646-3621 or 962-1:166 Jivin1 for lree after an init-I ====='""'=.,.,-.,.-,= ial investment of only 20% FOOD TO GO: 1'.IOM Ir. POP I down fap-prox. S8JOO) g this CAFE LSE OR SELL. v.·ell located "'estside tri. * * 642-1806 ** plex. Three roomy 2 Bed· Money to Loin 240 room units with ~parate gara.gips, hard11.·ood floors .and private patio areas ex- cellenl for the owner occu- pant. $41 ,500 673-8550 \1'.> THE REAL \""\.. ESTATERS . ""'''Jiii "~' \I/ANTED, 2-12 clean units for private party. * 642-3304 * 1st TD Loan 61.6 ';'o TNTEREST 2nd TD Loan Term! b~ <in equity. 641-2171 545-0611 Serving Harbor a~a 21 yrs. Sattler Mort1•1• Co. 336 E. 17th StrMt Cash Fast! OFFICE BLOG. Net iJlCQm~ Sin&:le tenMt "AAA" 11t &. 2nd T r u1t Deeds Piice ;2i0.000 FREE APPRAISALS Returns 10% on cash inv. I Cast• Mese Investment \V. R. DUBOIS INC. 548-7711 anytime * 5.l5'TI66 * LIDO JSLE-32tl Nord. 6 Pn\•ate money trom Sl500 beach apts. Furn. Gar. so· up for 1 ~1 & 2nd loaru . beach. Lt11eho\d yr. 2014. Trust Deed Center Inc. Mking $140.000. Consider 1323 N. Broadway. S.A. trad•. 611-4097, s.IS-2'211 exl Loan Brokers Sintt 19U LIDO WATERFRONT APTS.-320 LIDO NORD $140,000 Price with 1~ Isl T.D. 6 Beaut. rurn. units: I 6 car prqes It uW. room. 80 Ft. on awimmlng beach. ! \Vill consider trade for boat or maximum $85,000 lge. ~ BR. tiowe. 3 Bedrm Townhouse in eX· C'l'llrnt area. Close 10 every. !lung. 2 Bath areas, v.· lw $22.500 ... NO QUALIFYING! I' 10'7co dn w/2nd TD. Exist. FlL\. l BR, liTshly painttd. ''t.+Cll (-) 546 llOl hgt. 67~89/6i:,.....;930 lAsk 1"" • rp!5 & drp,s, blln ran_ge for ANN COATS/ S\8,4~. QUIE..I 2 bedroom n1·tn + f'l'lrtg. Outdoor J1v· 1 · h fl! bo---' * BY O\VNER 3 Br. 2 Ba.. 10me on corner lot v.·1th REAL ESTATE 1190 Glenneyre St. hOme-plus smaller 2 Bed- room KUelt or f'mployee houN' and !e\'t-ral utility bulldlnp. F..xl111ng sel-UP c"'OUld bf' modified for ''eler- 1riary rhn1e or 1ncorporare " Jll'I -t1'rt. Sl?.0,000. for tunhf'r lnlonnation, please call R.E. Knox ~1th Eckhoff &. Assoc., Inc. 541 -2621 Eve11/wknds m.9435 l'=::=:;=::=:;::~::::::~:"'~::::::::::~::::~::::'"~,..~381~·="=yt!=·;m=·;;;;=;.1 494-9473 549--0316 ,,,!~~. ~~1~o~~ob',,1" i · $©~~1A-.!t£~s· Biii G,rundy, Rltr. 1ni:. 5 u e . d.lu, tenn is, Family rm, forced Jn1s & lots of fru it 1l'fes. pool, BBQ .. 11 ~ ready lor I Sv.·imming pool S28 500 air. All bltn~. dble 1ar, dinini .vou! Full price SlS.990'.. Suh-* S4S.S'l80 .:,.. and l'X<."el!e:nt residential 1n1' ,\"1'111r ll'L'lll~. Call S'11-l2'2l area. O"·ne r v.·UI sell for with charm. Wall< to boach. The Putzle wilh the Bui/I-In Chudfe S33 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-4620 92X340 LDT Best Harbor Blvd. SPOl' • acet11 front and I rrar Grt1I potential!! Vinco Heany ))!.! llartior. C~f &16-0033 UUPLEX + LAND 2 . 'l Bl'droom units wnh 11;ara::cs ht-rv.een, Room tor -1 nV>rr un1h. Allty entrance • Ul.7.C(I. Call 646--nn 10 aee ritESA v~~('. By (hvner, 3 11~ IO\I' A~ 10 percent do~·n. I ~_rm. l ' BA._ Obit. frp~(.' Cell 51.)..8424 South Coa1t I 1.150 sQ. fl. S30.300. 54;t-207;,. n1•;illnr~. 1il41 Bt>ach Bll"d .. 111111 Bch I Dan• Paint $100 MOVES YOU IN Open 'tll 9 p.m. THERE IS NO PLACE GI Fully furnished & rented . : • BR. &. l -BR. Asking S47,9QQ. ENGLUND REAL ESTATE 3\8 Thalia, Laguna Beach 494-8093 LIKE HOME Cool pool. 4 BR. 2 BA tiome. CANYON SITE & you'll be lieve it ~·hen y(IU Crpt1, drps, newly p11in!td. _L_i~d~o-l~l~l•;,,..,,..,'°'",....--,I ,.ee U1ts 4 bdrm lamUy b!tns, 1•11'l'P.1.ace:, HURRY!! * REOUCEO * With paT1iJI ocean vitw. 2 C II & W Btdnn & den, 2 hllth -1.. home .,.,,/fantaitir. vu ol v11 I· O 1n5 Qfts 1 lrnmac. 5 BR., family rm. btaullf1LI l11mily r(lt')m n?x !ey t.· ~mp ocean liOO sq', '62...S.523 45 Ft. Lot slr'Mt·tOo la;e brick patio,. pint> trres. stre t By app'L onl 37) \1.-ilh nagstor\f' f]~phicf'. I frplc. On qultt cul~e·MC, GI. NO DOWN e $93.750 y s~cisl p11oe.lhno;.. 1moktd gll\!• "·indo1-1~. S2fi.7:;o. I 1 m1, lrom harbor. $32.000. $SO TOTAL COST LIDO REAL TY INC. ASSU:'\1f. \IA LOAN 5''i~ I Btdnn. 2 ba,11.~. bP--1 n, ...... 3377 Via Lida 673-7300 Roy M cCardle, Realtor POINT REALTY ., """ I\' n.m lnt rd thn1ou1, -u. lSlO f"t"P01"1 Biid . C.:'\I ·11~ Co II D p "w .... r Ml11ian Vle1'0 541-7729 ·' "" 151 ,.,-y, al'IA 01nt llrp$. Va cant, Movio in ~ I ..... ,.... __ ....,....,,., 111<1 ,,..5323 Collins & Watts . 8AYSHORES 4 BR. I Oovar Shores 961-5523 BY O\VNER: Dune Home, 3 br, 2 ba, tam nn. crp1fdrp1, c.vrd patio Close ro he1 r.h k ph1y11:rounrl 2 Barh,s. NH"ds decor<Jtlni: 130.l(JJ). * UNEXCELLliD I BR, I ha. Liv rm. kit., 83(}..116S V I EW ~·o pet~. Al"ail :-.tar !!I, S16:; ~N~e~w""~,7t'B~.-.-e'h ___ _ r'"•"1r"L''''~ .. -,'°"B~Rc--,~,--:c~.o~,~1.' I Ham• Shaw Realtors ;\ll'~ll ,..,,.11 or exch.in:e. up. 1 1 "Arn1cha.•r ll<JU~f'huntln~" Mm" ~11·11 3.»3 E. C"O~f.t lll\)', Ct\;\1 P1ctureM3Ut !-:uropc:lln afY\e mn "Calhy Bend fl It · --'po-------- 11111 t'On1empo1·11.ry I.· c(ln\·rn-67:r-:i:-.::1 CHAR.\llNG h1llf.1de home 1tn1, lot f1n11ly & rntrrta..1n· I~ you ad ln the clu1ll1ed I 11 f\"1tw, Ne11 port HI •, ini;:. 5 b"th1>. \.rl)r ~Arai(' -SECTION~ Someone ls 548-'iS.,3 A. PRINT NUM&HED I' ~ lEITfRS I' I' I' I' I' l"I' r I .,~~~~"'0'111111I111 FORTIS • o. i;12.~m J 67S-722S !!?!!!!!2$!!:t0,.11e,..-,.,,,.· ,.u..,1.,· -·~ Lw;;;,=;,;,U:.;h-:.,1,:p..:yo::,-, -,.-11-1..:'642:56i1 Whitt Elephant Dlmft-A·Llne i 1n11ny xt1l: ff'llturt~. $169.500 1vatching for ll. DI'' j A.;..;.<~ood,:;,~.~ .• ~,~1-,~,,....,.,: -,-,~ood:-> 5-18-7~-19 6-li....:.673 toda.,yl tnvl"S!Jnent ----=='----SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLA5SIRCATION 400 • • ' \ Tu~sdat. March 16, 1971 * DAILY PILOT :Jt3 ----------- [ _ ..... l~I [ _,,, ...... I~ I ._.," ... 1~:1...,•-b'"' .. I~[ ... rt~,b~··"' l ~ E~•UIO<R'"t I~ .~~~,~~=~ .--'11111<net1li;for ~t ~ ( Ap1rtmenutorRent J~I AparlmentsforRent )~ Houlff Furnished 300 1 Houses Unfurn. 305 Duplexes Unfurn, 350 Apts. Furn. 360 1Apt. Unfurn. lG·-,-.. -,-.-1------J Co-;I• Mesa 1 Corona del Mar Coste Mesa Corona del Ma r 3 Hr... 1::.i 8.\ Condon11n1iuu. 1''~;\v l 81· :! ba, {'pl!. drp:. • $130 UP • 365 Apt. Unturn, Co5ta M esa 36S Apt. Unfurn. 36$,Apts.. Apts., ----------_ Fu rn,'_~! __ ~_n__f_~r n .• _3_7_o_F_u_rn_. Costa M esa ·~~ - Hun tington B each H untington Beach ol' U nfurn . 370 RENTAL FINDERS Fr•• To L•ndlords 64S-01I1 Cl.l'·r l '· ._, SEDR~., •. SPAC!Ul'.S hr/:!1_ i,,, Bll·JI\ l'<Ulbl' 0 \ f' 11. gar s:ioo .\lo, 1 .. r ""' vv.• ORLEANS APTS dishwasher & g a 1 b 8 J.: <' Corh111-\lart1n Rltrr.U-11-itil.il Gorgeous, park-lik<? selt!ng 11'1'1"· lT('ll~/di:~~. hi I in~. I .llll'l.·i ,; '''' ·,· • d1~:iu,..,1 L11r1:1> n1 a~ It• 1 I Costa Mesa Clo~d gnn11:es !or nu1x-~-.IJ/1110_ 6ll-_22_._-___ _ I.! :(i <!!\ <iflT •, SJ 10 2 Cr. I°'==""========'='"='=----=== SHiO 3 Hr. i RJ lltd Pool :'\1>..,iy .1 ..... )'18)' ~J ("p1.1 !\qi~. B!ln~. J\it:o, C:!HlJ Quinla fienno:Ja brd ro•1n1 11/r0nnC'ct1ng ! imu1n ~ccurily, Quiet :;.1,--... 1 Costa Me5a h11!h l RI~ h.1« lari::f'; '2 AR l'rfll'd, p1 r!rp'd, ,,81rr Adult~. no pc'I~.. '101 Oi'iiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiii~iiii-~D.iiii ~ ,t 1 ~ft A1 ;1t! !'111 .!!r pi haltOll), fully {' :i 1' fl l' f e cl, 1 lurn'd, ('\(> rhildr<>n or Pf'!~., Fullt•rlon Al'c !l-1;11·bur lo'I NEW lrto, puo)l 111rt1L !.1unilr•, t.1• tl~·;ifl('d $22j, A1a1!. Aprtl S\~j. 9GS-92j,1, 2627 Santu I Bay, thrn So, urHil 2 b!J.,:-, NEW NEW ('\r. Ch.ill"r t•., .\1rp111 T11~-"' l~~I\ i\l<if\lf' Air f>.t2.t;~M Casu al estate livin g. Enter l~a Quinta 1-ler· nlosa's tush green atmosphere & stroll tree. lined \\'alk \vays to your apt. '1~1 \ f'roll<':O<' .\it•. lilll-O!i~7 -I · .. 19-~162.·.· ! _Ana_Al'r 1111]'1' hou~L' c Sn. ol :-\r11 porl Blvd. til2·1 11r I( r Jh ,SI JI \\ ·q ·J1fl l 86~1 I , , , .... l 2 ~rt. G;:;r Patio. C'rpl~. ..:__: I VILLA CORDOVA ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED ----\\Jl,SON C\ROEN APTS. Bachelo1· parl 1\/}tt.rd SOO Bach p11rl w/!na1rl srr SSO ALA Rentals e &l.}.3~ d•·p•. ''"'e. "'"'"· Qwct Unbelievably Beautiful tropical ,.._.!!111::: 1or &thil!s Aparlmen_,._i_"'_'_'_"'~~l VAL D' !St-~r:E Gardrn Apl~ 1,1.11 .. l'·S\l'"r onl). 1 blk 1u sllP!'>, SJCO-_. Adults -no 1J('1~. Flo11('J'" < tHtl-lJ:iO. r1rr)11hrrr Slt'P:itn .~ 40 Unit Adult \\';1trrfall, ~~,· IT'QI nee R:n, b.;:.lrtment Complex LP.G 1 BJ: 11 /;.u· ~o',Apt5 . Furn. 360 Sanna. S<>ls I-2 Brlrnl. fu1·11-1 & 2 BEDROOMS Bli0Gf.'T SAVER I Br. han· rh1ldrl.'t1 or 1~1~ soil ~,I, -----------" I rly l(l brh. Utll pd 59."1_ \\;11e1 furn<! Sl50 96t-~2:,::.1 Genera l l'nfurn_ ft'O!ll srr. ~EE IT Enh'l'lillnin;: "11! be a pll'ol~ I \LA Rrntal~ • si:.,.;:m 26liR. Santa Ana A\E'. lncfr 1 ~'Ul~J Par-on', &tl-R6~0 u1-..·. l>l't-C.1'.~t111c !111s lo1L·l~ I houM' C CL.S'TO:\I L'''R.,ll"RE ~Q\\'-l~lhrThach. !)lll)L ~p;1t·1ou, .afll 11111 b,~ .i J•'Y· ·Balboalsland 1 ,.... .. •' ·J t I EE.\LTIFl. L ,IJ ES.\ DEL RE,'IT ..\L_ srt" ad r-Jas:. 810 1 ulll rd Sl 20 .t Sl0:1 • P"•·1.i 1·,1 >111<•1 ~ri "'•• ----:--:---:':"'-:":-,\IAH, .: 13C'drm. 2 h;.lh. • f'all :~1"-?-181 * Srion-1-::. 1 k Z Br uni. t'p! • Lot·k i.;111·11gr~ 11 1 1::: st.ir '.! BR. furn. housr. (iarag, ~------rrll~lo1r, rani;r. ;;..i' f'!I • Bm cr1l • Lnrlry • Pdlin~ ni11 rar1X't-'. a1~11 111 s2~-, Bal' I I d ' S2j(l Yt-ar!y. " DOa S an Slf)", & $120. Q1·cr ~; 1 e P\\' ,j1,pl e llu;.:(' ;:a~ sl\'l' ti-,:~"-3::\ f*r n1<> <>11 JraS{'. Call agl'nt I REA LTOr. • -51":...Zlfl7 '• Sf)('C1.1I M1Undrirnnfln; ;,11,...1111 ATTRAC B<tf'h. pat1n . * G\ROE\'<;; I~;' BR'~ e Di'<'t•'.:tn!nrShJ>,: I ~ Br. iJul)I<'\ t~arJge. '.'\11 ~howrr u1! rxl $9i/n10. 116 · · · · ' -· · , , . I. -,-,3 · • · Furnorunf11r11 Hl1n~ crp:.. '•r[l(t<, <1;1fl"• < ---o:---:'--"-:c:'.:'.":':-r><'I' Ar!ltlts ~1·l-l/n10 A ,'\zulr OP~-~ . ' . G 1..; \\ 11'1-'P. r \If"! !• ho \! t -------rlr.1pr .. rool SJ 10 UP N.\S-1 . ,\· . . . ' SHARE ni) nir. · a Ill'•' ~·~~·-:H"i-l~O:t. Balboa Penins ula ,..;At; P.\l.:'l!S 111 E: 2~nd Mo. to Mo. F rom $140. lady or couplr. rtooni frrr . Huntington Beach 17!} 'J'11,IH1 (\,· .1 \I•·~ t .\I~ .• \11,. Tll•ii:;p-.un Ll:.'-1.I! 1 MARCH Move-In Bonus mo's Free Rent SSO move.in a llow ance ! nit. l· l:IJ\1 5; ,, r11\! rL1-rF.LY r.EDLC, ('Lt\:, .~ C(lT.1" J"\\Jl!.Y \ \;JT:' l'fl\;\-. t.f1(' \'fit"'\, \•!LL\ \11. ·.\ ,\P1'.\ 71!! \\" \\ 1buri ! 1' 1~-.1 •~!"otr • c:J.\'\T 1 ,\ ~, r.1:nn()(l\J' \i,,1:.:• Pll., p <l'k·i'k" ~•'1\l!l." :-.,·,'I' fJ'!,/r!rp,, S fl ;1 •' ~·r,,1ul<l~. ,\1111~ ,,.., p• 1, ~I Ill rnn 2?·~ Voun1.1111 \\." 1: l/l:u·loC'r, turri \\' ''" \\'I., 111 Dana Point 1 BR. Unf. $1SO -Furn, $180 2 BR. Unf. $180 -Furn. $210 3 Spac. fir. plan s, deco:-. furnishings: live \\'ithin ro1nan tic setting \\'/fun or privacy. Terraced pool. pri. sunken gas BBQ's w/ ~ecul ded seating compl. w/Ramada & Foun- tain. :->J't.Cf.\CLL.\R 01 1•;.nfrnt * Color co-ord. kit w/ ind irect lighting. '•'11 -Z HR, 2 h.;i ~1~\~' * Deluxe ra nge & oven~ * Plu sh shag crptg. 1••1r,:.". <'Pl~ .~ rhp~. s •. I * Bonu~ storage •p•co it Cov. carport ':1--i:!in ------1* Sculptured morble p u lmdn & +ii• bo!itht E ast Bluff * Elegant recreation ro om. NEWPORT BEACH V!lla Granada Apts. r1>11r b.,d1001n~ \\l!h ha!<·on. ll'~ .1l>(l1e & "<'low. C:racious FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY Rik from 1-Iuntington Cen ter, San Diego f 'r\l'V . Golden\rest Colle~e. fo r pl iimr lil f' llskpn:;. I Dana Point 19 S2J \\'l.::-OCF:ANfRONT St. C:"-1. 612-?.t>l.i nr ti(j.f-0.JI 2~2~ Ehh'r1 A\r, r~l O~~ I ( '\r;1r !>;1d.; Ci1.\ l l'l1!ld ok. !H6-I ·' ,..;p,\:'\ISH orr11nft·ont \'1lla. Lovrly Ba(·h<>lur~. l -BR. * • Sl~.'i • • d I ,. I ,. ·''"'''"''''''".Pool. Ul<I. I I 'Rn I ' ' ' I II Sec :\!i.;r. T"d \\oodhr~1 Laguna Niguel I S[HI(' Sl"'i' ll11{'( i:: l'O II n ";" ~ w• . '.. -.0111• y •. n:: •. ;\~ r ll \ 646-0032 I l'll"~d :'.ii'•····-f .. l' lli'i'. 1<1111111 ~1·, 'II ol) Q•·,!(•! ~ '", ' \ 11111 1 I J '•. ~ (l ~ 'i \•\ U•J.: ,\· 'lllirl "\lfl'11lnr(1n1; San Diego Fr'''Y· to Bearh Blvd ., So. on Beach 3 blks. to I-Iolt; \V. on l-fo!t to ... LoQuinl• Her mosa 714: 847-5441 fn1 frunily 11llh :hlldr<'n.l~c==========""";===;::?"=:===='I i\.-.1r C•lN•111 r!rl l\l:1r lllgh Apt5., Newport Beach Y•;<·!;1~;1:1n s para<l1sr. $~j(J. • ~7.~1 \~ • __ I lUl'll . Encl ):Jl'd. Ln(bcp11 11::;:;:;=;;;:: D d 1!lJ-_J_s I B/\Cll ELOR <tpl.<. lltll paid f'ln"' tn orr 100-I EJI . ~ BR, \'Jew of ,\l1s. cc'py · -If ··0-1 lo rnd of s<·l1l ~r. .\11 Fountain Va lley S!lll s_, up a rno. :;10 l:: <.a in inn " ,__ 11 HAR BftiR --- Prcrrson 71 1 -:12!~1:,;.1. I Balboa Bl\11 ------UI FO!~ IS<', Jn1n1ac ~. BR ] I • -- D a na Point Lido Isle ha. nc1\• shill: cpts & ;Jrps~ I ~~a def Mar frpll'. b!tn~. S:!lO mo. FU!l,\l:)ll.l::D B;it:h<'lor :1pl tur n1an onl,\. ut1l 1•aui Quiet. l hlk froin all ~hop~ C,111 6-1-1-7101 for appt 10 TO i.uble1 2 BR , 2 BA !urn rin nice Lido S1rcr1. :! mon1hs as suh·tt"nanT . Landlord appro1 al "ill l''>- 1cnd 12 monlh~. S:: i j 6i~2-Mi I ~!1:~1'.: or ll:l 2-11-l:l."S. Huntington Beach l BR Crp?~. f'll'<'. bl!-111;;, rlhl gar. forl'f'rl i11r hril!, Sl~f>/Jl\O. 1~1 ~· l:i-1 Jt;i) ~ + $100 1·lran':; ri<>p 962-W-1i Newport Beach 1 CL!'.:,.\~ :l br 2 ba S200 n10. -...-.,,--,---:---:---:---1'' S. ta-t .\~k for .\Jr Du· :: BDR:'>I, bay Iron!· coin· rfall' •Jti2-j.J66 or .\ln<. Clai k plrtely furn. sr;:1. )[o, incl ulil. ~2-6699, 5-Js-6j,'1J .• 1s.11;~----·--- 1 BR, patiu. ll')t1I. 11111ural • LRG Bachrlor. /urn util nc1. '! hlk~ B1i:: Corona pt1 :! hll;!< ~:1:; Cornn;1. I ,\<lit S!ll ~rl,\ 612-8,'i:lO I • -LRG ~ Rat"hl'lffi·~furn----uii'l pd '1 hlks Bi::: Comnn. l ,\1!1t ~l~'fl Yrl.1-. &l!-S.'.:ln I Apt5. Furn. 360 S!~GLE, TV. ,,..,1. pel~ ok TOWNHOUSE s2:1 " lip, II kh , Oana 'hir\na Inn. 3'11 ll Coa~! I Ill'). :!.'17 ll;,rhor. r1'.'r \\'1!~1111 Huntington ileacli :.! RH, 1 '; "·' STl '1)10 1'0\\':\llOL'SE. Sl 1n [1\f1, Bt~AL'T!FUI. FUP.:-.'. APTS. • ll<'alrd p.i.1J .. \1lul1, nuly Sl~0--$\6j Qui\"1, pri1-. pallo, e i\n J'l('l~-,\rl t In ~t1u1111111;.: Z \\ardrohc~. rrpll'. <lrc:-fiw::: ru1. locked !.ep. i:ar. Pon I I HARBOR Sauna P.cc rm. 11::01 h£¥>lson Ln. " hlk I\' · ol Bcar·h Blvd, °" Slatrr,. TOWNHOUSE • s 12-7.~~~ . -I "" pa!1t:t, fl<lOl, natural 221< 11 ..irhnr. 11<' •r \\ .l•f'11 I I[~ J 11 1 hran1 l'Cihngs. Nr ho.~p1t;;.I. A1·;11I April ~ Sl6.i utt! pd. HousesfMRtnl 176i6 Camrron. Nl~-~l!J2. --~-------2 BR. Arlult.s. No pcls .. '\I h<'lll\\ trllillJ:S. N1· hn~p1la! -, ' ' ' ·c;; •• Costa Me5a I ,\1·;.1 l i\pril 1. $!6.1 u1i1 pd .,.~ BR.1 CA 101~ .. ;_lf)L .. I. ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;; l'iti76 ('amrm11 , 11.~2.~.1·1~. ,\IJ 011 I lln.lr. ;11~.i-~1. •. , • ----e lleal<'d ponl .. \dulf~ 11rtly * * * * • 1)11(']1 ilfll. Ideal f~: • J\'o p('l~-,\dJ ICI ~ti11ppH1,: Jos h('a('h. $\fj(J. Rrtercncri.. St~ Hou5es Unfurn. .. 1 .,,, "" 1· 11<'fJO~l . ,J.l ,..._,,, I El Puerto Mesa Apts ~1ud~n1, _2 hlk~ °"'"•in . S·~1 1 e Nn ('hi!rlrrn ...-* * • .i.: $(1.1 Furn + uttl. \rly. -=========== General Ti\HSE-cpl, drp, ref. 11~hr fir~ r. rn;::, pool, 2 Br .. \16:1 :; Br Sliij, :1-!S-l~O.i. %.S-!ltr. 1 Bedroom Apts. 1 arll r. 612-8:i20 1. Ul~l-:-l;x~.i;.~~ hr· \\laik\Parl<·Like Surroundings 3 Huge bedroom.~. 2 lO\<'lY :: Br. rumpu~ r oo n1. balhs. lari;:e kitchen \1ith 1·rpt~/rlrp~ f'nclo~d )'iil'il gas bu111 ins. Carp<'1S and 1\vail 4/1 S47-18Sfi drapes 1hru ou1. llarrlwoo<l Irvine floors, brirk f1rcplacr. rlou-1 ----------- blr caragt", :ind lrn<'rrl /\"E\V J Bn. ~ B.\. 1·rpt~ yard. Rent at !210 n1on1hh. j <lrp:-, hid 1·on111i. f)IXJ! l.. a h11rga1n. Call Broker, rPI' incl. Prefer Iatnily. 5-l:>-016.> S260 11662 :\I an ch es 1 c r SPACIOUS -2 Br bl!n~. 8.U-8210 ctp/dll's, rnt·d )d, gar cL_a_g_u_n_a_B~e-a-c7h ____ _ Sl4<1- .-\LA Rental~ • fi l'o·:l'KY'l 1 c::c:..cc__~~, ~111).Attrac I Br. Blln~. CPI-', rlrp.•, gar. yd. Blue Beacon * 645-0111 . '\EIV llillt'l[l hoinr 11/Qf"ran view. 3BR, 2BA Cpt~. dtp~. b!t-1ns. frplL'-\\'ct h<Lr .\ upo'n lw am C'Pilini:~ + fan1 rm. S300 n10. ~;2 Lil i\l1rada :-iPRE:ADI NG roo111 ~ Bi tJr l'illl 4!'1~-.1100 hug<' )d, CID, dbl i;ar s1:i:, ( oCi-:A.'<1··Ro:-;T_l_B' ALA Ren1ab. • _ 6-_'1_~i-::~ro Purt1i11ly furn_ Pn1·. $l·IJ. Nice E-sidf' :! Br. bltns, Parkl1kr _ground~. yd, gar, k1ds/prls. I :\lonth. •19-l-J6j3 \'111!1. bcarh. SI::<! & 11p incl Ul1litu'~ 1\1~'1 furn. l'onl S.: Rrcrea11tJn arf'a Quiel Environment. Off ~tn~ct p.11·k1ng No Chi! Uren, no pe1s. 1~.ll-1961 .\l..tple Al ·'. Costa ;\lcsa e $30 WEEK & UP I BH. or STUDIOS furn "' ron1pl. kirchcn ((II[ f'l<'C. I. Free linrn~. h<'illrrl pool. ,111· • 4 ond, TV S: n1a1d i.erv1cc a'a1L D.11!y & i\!011thly rate.< ~o~o Nr11·1vir1 Bl\rl .. ar 21~1 • fi12-~llil l • B.,\n1C'r1(·an1 • :'11 Char::P DBL. 11 1rlr 111obilr hnn11• ln111p. lu1 n'd. ~1a111 rr ~111111~. U1111J Oc1. Ji.-I ,)4,c;...2116 Blu• Beacon* 645-0111 I LGE_B_R-:-1-,-,-,-R-r..-1-,p-I. LUXURY Liv1Til:-. -3-B~ 2 1 lge ratio. f'P1rl. 1 hlk rocean. l Br.. bi•::i1n cc 1l1ni::. ~unn). Ba. POOL. Child &. pct~. ,_'.'•_·_~t_or~:' Sl!l.l 49i-1,'i28. I sf'eludrri. 1n1m..1r. AoluHs, no .S200. Lido Isle pr!!: 62:, Shal1n1ar Dr A_LA __ R_ental~ e 61T.-:l'XXJ ---------r.\111 Ap1 p,-.. ,-.-,-.,,--,. • • \\'ATJ:::RFROXT * • $1 2j-2 Br. elf'C bl1ns. c-pls, LA HGF. :l Bi, '.! Bath bHlh. Gar<tli:<' a1'llll Cpt~ drp~ 1.'hildrcn ok. SlOO/mn. Lcasf' 673-S~~6 I ~11 pd .S10 n~'-.. 1c;;..ris11 Blue.Beacon* 645-0111 I BDf:.:'11. Arllt.,, nn p('1• POOL -2-B,-. -2B;, Newport Beach ' si2;, n10_ incl. u11l :'\r cpts/ctrr~. bl1n.~. kul' k Adults P referred ~i;!J;21 :~~:-C!'nlf'r S 1 Jl('IS. $J:iO POOL :\\',\JI.ABLE -------,~ ALA P.Pnl11I• • _61."~~~ 1 2 Br. :! B•1; i;:ara,!.'r .. sr.;1 s::o \\'!\ -l pC'r. 11/ k11 c::::.:_:.:_~o, --,-11 ° BP. 2' B S.1\ \J,11r! 'f'r linf'n~ TV I Br or 3 · -df'n. 1 Ins. i;:sr. " • • a' .::ar«:.:r .~ lrlr. Scalar~ \101e1.' :!::01 !ncd yd for kids & fl"!-' S2lO RF:.\LTOP.. :}IS-696(, Blue B •• con * 645.0111 :'\pl Bll!l G!•i-'il[, BJ:::ST :'\cwpor1 ]O('a!1on, :l I LI;~; n:, rl~ furn 1 t:r.. ar1 ONE n1onth 's J'f'Tif )C~. BR. d<·n. du11n.:. Jill l,111n I . < • s•·r C 11 6'"<111 -~L'>-•. Clo•rrl i;::irilt:" ,'\,, le!S than one n1ont 1 s rrn n1a1n •. ~-·'· a ~Q"'" I fl"!•, tm n1,.n. !1111111rr 1 ~~~1 ls your 1otal do"n paynienl Newport Heights "13 · \\'1111aer '11' K'.~-fll'l.1~ on n1a ny fine J or ·l brdrn1 hon1e~! Call u~ 10 !lrr ir 2 BR , rllh gar. IC'nc~r! .'arr! ~ou qu11 lify. SF:Y\!OUR I .S21Xl pi•r n1nnth. i21:;1 TIF:ALTY . call 11..\7-1221. ' ll!)..~~j.-, 1 P\I 'Id 6 P:\! ;.)Int 2 Br. w1frplc, b1111<;, i::ar ,(· yd. Kidslpcl ~ ok ~1 6:, Blue Beacon * 645.0111 .\IOVE In Today • 2 Br s1:..o Al:A Rrnt~l~ e f..l.1-.'.~~l L.\GU~A 2 Br. J 1 ~ -blk-;-heh, hltn,<; gar. yd. Yrly S\6:1. Blu .. Beacon * 645-0111 Santa Ana Heigt'lts 11.\l.f <11Tf' h<w~r ran1·h {Jl' !1t•1•11srd drn:: k~nnf'I Clra>i :: RR h\•U~r. :; rh1]llrt>n 01\ ~~Ti. ,\1a1l •l/t. Q,1nrr .1r ... i:1:a; -cc---=~-­Univer5ity Pa rk FA:\11LY nr<'derl • 2 Br. I; ·I BR. &_ family rm .... Sl"',j l BP.. Tri1Jlrr SIOO + u1il ~11ll11rr f)f·ripl:' r1nl~ :;;1ur!1n ~pl, S~lt) inclcJ'i. utll 6·1fi-18(1!J ,di ,! p111 1\ \ • 1\ I J-, -,-o-w_l_&c·-,~B r. I u r1~ Pf)()I , rrc rn1. ;::d loca11on. ;\o r"'~ rlr chtldren nu~:i8'11. Ol'!ET, s1ud1~S JICT°BR ~.· s1:z.-, .'\'rt chlrlrn or pct~ :Zl:l:J L lrlrn Ave. C:">!, SC!' FURN B act'lelor & 1 Br. 1 .. 1>r,1rh. Adull.•. lit:::, S.· Q U J~:T -DELUXI-. 11r. ~20 121h Si , Zl!l l~lh J.:! .I. :i i:a: ,\PT.-> ::-1 A!~ run:--<. 1.1.\CJJI ... t.or~ BA YCLIFF MOTEL • (-[L'll·."r. ,\dulr.'. ~ 1;1: • LO\\' \\'t:~.:i.::LY n,\TE'.". :\n fll'I~ [Jl'Jl'. f !' r I' l\1H·hrn. T\"~. n1aaJ serVK'C d•ll\\lii·, hrat<d [Yl<d ti:r, llt•i!ICd Pl)OI, ;/~!1.1 f'ao ·1l1< \11 L.11 616-326.) -, 1~-fi::l7S ur fj 1~-111'1 1 sn "('"" pier. u11!11Jc ~ J.:P.(;;;J.1~ i.;a \.-.-.L- frf'r. s12:, mo. rrpl. 81111•. C<1rpor1 _109 21rd~t. 114 1~~6-~l&-I ~1 \jQ/nin f','1•11lv d,.,. \1 Ne wport Heigt'lts Ori· ·, •i-~1~1 CLl~A,-.; l or 2 Br. Arlh~. -• Newly Decoral_ed nn flf'L~ L::: k!t. Sl'.:.J.$150 Q111f'! I ,\ 2 RP.~. f1.1r l.. 2121 !-:. lli1h St. i\R f;4fr-l.~1 J>O"I, f''J1!·, rf i.-• .\•11111 ---.. nlv, n .. flf'I~ Iii:! •ill:.' Apt. Unfurn. 365 -· .--· ----o----c·-------I* l.HL I HR ~pt. All 111" General •tr 1~. dq1·. r 1,.. .t r·, 0:1 f.il!ll' ~!!,/in" :.11~-tll'i! ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ I ~"" f. I (' ,1111 inn, (" 'I VEN DOME J\J:'llAll.LATE: ,,M'S~ ,\[\ULT ~nrl f'\.\111,.\'. 5'<c11•1TI Clo5e to shopping, Park • Sp:H'IOU:, .3 GI{'~. 2 hi! * S111n1 ponl, p1i1 /grrrn • Frpl, lnrl1v/]11riry f.-.r'ls 1845 Anaheim Ave. 2 r:1~. hnll\OI t).,,1r ""1' I ! ,., "' 11 :11r, Ii, '" I $12 · r1.1 \.'\ : 1;, err:' d11•s. hllr,' \•lirll-. nn lll'I~ ]~f/ r.,11"1\r·,l1•t olll .;)IJfl '.! r:r:. 1 '.. r~.\_ , 1i1 ,, 1 11·. p;,111•. 11<) p•·I~. ~)~, 111'' 11ul 11111. ::~'.1-A (";.!1r1ll" .ol~-~'i(I', COSTA i\IES,\ ti l2-:!..~21 .~ Ll:" P.r"c. 2 H.1. 11rw l'pl• ,_..,..,------,-~_,,I rh'P\ nro prl', •·l11lllrrrt nk Just for Single Adulls A111il nro11 Sll"1 n1r1 :.i1 oll, SOUTH BAY CLUB APARTMENTS Newpo rt Beach :-so /r\1nr ,\1r I !l"'I inc anrl lfilh• 17141 645,0SSO :: Bl: l>url"'· r::.tr.i:.!•'. p . .i1• \•1111!~ :: /l !lill1 r1 (' \I I SI.:,"' 111~1 .1r:u· !1·:1•r ;!) ·,:J>. ..;11,\r.fl h::r 1 fil:. C111 IJ1p•. n11n_,, fllll' I t.1 .. 1~. ''" J•f I.• sr:o :il<~'li~~ -----Exceptionally nice! 2110 Newport Blvd., CM yd. V11.<'anl A1·\ 001\' s1:r. I' BP. I & d · 64. 3900 "' •, ..inL rn:. 111· rm. l!f>LID1,Y PLAZA e 1 .~ 2 i.;1: \t11I\' 1;1J'f" 1•'<1 ALA Rrlnals e .>-.. Tu1·Ue Rork .......... $1:?;, * DF.Lt:Xr:--Bil &· Dl'I L:\E Sroa<'l"U~ 1 Rr, rlraf)f'.'. , I•·~-J;ol<·l1rn. I ;160. Spi'c :l Br. g11r, yd. J (3R., .t: din. 1n1 ....... $!~;, Rachr!rir l'lpt~. S35 1\k!y 1.· furn apt $13-1. Jtr-a!rrl rxrol rlulrl ol.. Ph. fili.~1·, .. children k Pf'!.'i 1\rlromr. 1Bn.,2'~ bath~ ........ S::2j up Furn. incl u11i. i\lnn1hlv An1plf' p11rk1n::. '\o rh1lc!rcn ~ r.r. 1 I'\ l~-.-1-- Blue Beacon *_64S-O..!..!_! ,,.nn<; •Hail. 998 El Camin0. 1 -no P<'I' 1!l6~ Pomona -' ·, '· 1 Ii·< 'rp' 5-16-0-l,'iJ ("\l ' hll11' ~11::! ~;ir, I h1!tl. 'lk. Landlord5-0wners ----1"'' Pl'I.' ~1 ! •/n1ri (i 1r,..::1 ;;,o \\'r 11·11! rrfl.'r 1rn.1nts tn \nu -$25-P ;;:-Week&LJP Bal bOaPe;i~I~----·-:-.r.\I L\. il~~Or ;,i BH. 1111;, FRF:J:: of l'har:;:.r l!,111y B,\CJIELOR !: l Bft. -~ I hi , 2 Sr:.. frpll' halcony, ::J;1 ! I~~. --ln'i. ··C1lf ~;1rni;:r. dr~llil hlr 1cna111' nn uur TI'&rna1d~erYll\illl. E Blly 11.101 .,r ratr ~ ~l+,flfi .. :-T!lfl'l wiitinc !hi .. 51,.CE 19.16.• 'I.Ml \"i!'!ol'I.•. C :\I s1;;,/n10 \"riv S22.llnor· In-LRG-OUIET-CL-EAN-1\LA rlr111;1I~ • til:i-~'ll'lll 1 B $ - Bl R . 125 -2 BR. $140 ri11w" '\n. C f.i3-Jj:."! nr Slfi.-,. 2 Bl{ 11 • fl.\ <.;1 : k11r!< 3-BDn\I-.• L"a111ily rn1-:-, park l.•l \\c,1fn1 Bank dg.... P I Bii ct ~··~ -7"1 -r l.ln111·r~11)· Purk ,, oo. ll'i, t·ri11~. rri~. n•l .... ,-1 i, Arlll~. t-,i.lr, l '\J. ~J!~.1;1;2 llkl' ,·11rd. Cosla :'>1c1a. Kirls 1·hildrrn. 11n fll't.' ::2;,..J E. Corona del Mar OK, .brk., S200 a munlh. NO Day5 833·0101 Nigt'lt5 lllh Pl. C.'.'11. :ell!-2i3S. Sl~O. 1 ndr J)I,, Blt-111~ F EE. ;~1)..1720. -------'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Cp!.~/Dt'P~. rri. h~l<" Gar I II l"\!QUE To11nhnll~• .~ hr . ./ I Bn. l!r;orrd Pool ~·01 • ]Jkc nu, xln\ l11r. fl!l2-1180. 3 BlJR\11. + lam1ly r m .. 11 ""t~ Crp", dr<1.•. l~"' :\Inn!" -, k 2 ha. lri; fa111 nn. nr pn<>I~, ,.. "' ' ~ • -.. ,L,\ I \' " 1--1-dinin; rn1 ., bu1lt-!ns., .,r · 1 . 11 h "". v 1,1<1 Aif., {'\! ft 6 .., •'L , r<>.,rrnraier )ltu 10 h No FEE lPnrn~. J::IJ . ~ •·I~ •·1.} """ 2 RP., l '2 h11. nr ~hllppin.-S~flfl ;i m'lnt .:..,,. ' 011n!'r S.i"-r,-;-, fi!l-~:::1 ('O:'ITPl,[11rn'dJ8r.-, •Pl Or-t• ~ Nr11110rt, 5-10--11.:v. -I'.· .~t·h11nl•. SJf .. 1 ;,~r-17: ----$Hl.• 1110. l:ll Flo"rr. -•- Corona d•I M•r 11 BR 2 h,111h~ ........ ~.:r.Q 61\i·i"-'3 O:"' T&'IJ AC2ES lJ'P! P. ~ Rn C"p1~. rirr· "RP. 71 b t) S ··,o I "' 2 BP.. F urn & L:nlurn. bl1-1n~. J.nr. l'.,,r.,l:" J\'11111~. 1 "8 "· hJ a,~ ........ \-'1,. 1'(1\\''.\llOt'SF; J .. ~1rk '2 l:i· J-n·<'pl~r,.,~ I,·,"·· P"•o•. _.!'l°fl<'!\Sl4fl61f>-_·,10'1r\<~ :: r.. 2 a fl\111 1n1, ·-· .:.,'! 11~ n~ Pf'l!"ll \n /)('!~ Sl!., "'" "1- lilk tlrnm 3 BR. 2 b<t hoo1" ...... ~.,.,)l Call 6 1(1--1.filfl f~ool.~ Tt'nnis C~ntnt'I Bkf.,!. A'f'Tlpt\C like rir1v I~ AH 3 r,r., 2 B,\. ': b!111 h s::nn n10 '' ''"· i;;:; .r.1'1~$ :"0 rr11< !(~Sr~ U.nl.'. L1l:\l 6-14-7til l l '-::: ponl, ·-r,1~. (lrfl'. '11•1•1 --1 'ii··, red h1"ll ~Br '\c11ly '1rn•r lu1n ~1'1.1. L\lac,\rlhur nr Co~sl l b1yJl 11ll p.t, I~' I \l,,llff'11..i·o c-0-,-la Mesa ,\rllt~ '"' 1'f'r,_ 1120 Crr11('r ,,......... ;,1<;..1J:-:,..,; ___ _ I 'u:'· r,I~ ·"1' * COROLIDO APTS * • ql Dl<1 1 r.i ""''' • r•~ HOl'S[ 111 rourt ~Br. I ''jll"'· 1 r \ \.1 -1-1;1 '1 •"' Sl ll· 1 Br glud111:1; t. ~1rr.-1 lr\f'I< I drr~. rr~•I 1 rl111!! ( .... ,,·p•. 1iahn 'li6 \\ lith SL : .\L! rk Ra\ ;,1~·1 . 21'0 Ori Slt·1.t-up .. f•rnrhouse~-1220. • fil'i(H'lo, * " 1 l.in1\' P,11k l r1"rr. 111 t1r _,.--~ A, ('\I ;,1c;.._2S_:_,_~-,--t'llll An~ lilt, ~ •. : li\.OJ \l;•i ~!~• !~l-~i·ifi1;___ J),h11hr. lrpJ, dbl caql<lrl. 1 r,r, 11•1 rl hr11 h lq>I<· 11 /11, 2 BR. llnu~r. 1·1p1 ... rlrp~. ..;p\(' l Ar frp:~. drri•. l"O<ll. +,ll-3.l7~ / hlln•, hr.1n1 jr1l. f'·"·' SllO 1 nr ~ ~n1all 1'hilrl1<'!\, 110 We5tcliff ff!'>O], nr Shl))l~. e111 pd. 1u1 ror. l1>1>•r, <lrl\ 111! tlrr ..! Adi: Yr.111,\ ~1J-loi'1.r1 - P":~. Gar::tg<' St'i.i 61fi..2i19 I \loniTJii..t ,\ir · C\T. ~1 ... fl.~_1r, li:t:r. ne\v "'( \ ""' 2 BR.I -'--TOWNHOUSE * --P.\HK-l.ikr ~ r 111 l. l"r )( LE\1:.i::"1hi·12-b-a;--1,. lni·d \\{'~l rl1f1 ~hop'1: .\"l.i<' 2 r .. ~llJE l Br." I• 111•t}: l nA apT I ti hh-1nf. 1nrl 2 UR, J1J [l,\, 11p1 ... rlofl )1"ii C'hlrl1'!1 ')K, A1 lt'l'-hl~· [llH'"'•I, ti•'\ hiln• 'illrJrl~rk 11!11 rd \ d1•h11·~~· '1,t,J, gur, 1\dlt.~1 flill rn ,\rLtltr. Slf~I, 1.:1 }~, •_•_6-lf,.,'i,~ * __: __ ~h>1S: r11t, pi .v p;rtio, ,111 ,.\, ,\dll S l1~ )r11.1h lil2-~.:i1 <1i\I\' 6i.:flM2 ______ \Io·ioolv Ln. ,~\ ),1~ -- J I 1•/11 rq11~·, fllf,•• )1t1Hl1•. n" I•''''· r."t' l''lol • Sl· f'l'r """)( Hf• 1:.!\CFl''L\OR.hf' ... nl• ,n~~~l\"l!'Cl[l!, :: /\+, l·lln l:'AI rl!1··hrd 1 111'111 I•"'' S-~l/11~, 1rwlrl~ ~'l'.t'rlt"nt"r f.. .. 1\·•·h,.t:• ,:-, 11"' "'"1.;1 11•1 ,1~. f"I p.111 .. l1""~1r!shuhr, 1rp1 •, tlq'L• rn<·I , , •• '. I• ' \ "1 \ ' • " ' • I I • f 1 l·1illt'rl11n ,\11 ill ,t'l,,1-I•• H.1,1 , 11,. 11 ~" 1111111 2 hlk-. Sn ,,, ~;. lljlHil !:hd ' !• l.'-.~l ,'I I Lovely Spani~h De cor FROM 5135 f, '' ;olHI \\" I' II" ht·l1-,J l & 2 Bedrooms ~·11.i Hh • .l1r L\•r•-1 (_',11 '1'<'!' e IJr:qn•s l.n1.•••ld ;.,.11',< .. o, r '1•1 ,I !;,., l"o'.lloVll l:•I•)" I 160 VI . V/ilson 642-7373 CORSICAN ~chool. firrpl::irc. 11 ··~ bllr S.-Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 lnull -i n k11!'hr>n appl1.1nc,..~. ~:-, A:'>lll.f'\S \V.'\Y &ll-2'J:Jl Santa Ana Sa nta Ana (',1h:11t•\! Hanl.cr ,i:, Cn. ill~1111:.;111;: Agrnt 51L·5~21 --0 NEW DELUXE e ''Live and learn" MY. Mommy says. '7hat's why we Ji'f'e at \El\' l .'-~ /;dnu .. \II hlllh. Tll\\\1101 :'!' <ff·l\r ~ l:r. ~II·~ fl J>'< <!f[". Ph)~•·d ;.:;11·. ;1 • (1·p!i-.l'I '', f:r ! . 1111 :'.<• l'11.1-I l'l.lf1 lift C-1111- {ltll\o'I' .11 ll'· \!..:i at 121 \\ ~1. \ .. 11-" ~ ,!I * $170 * '.; 1':1 , J 1 · /~.1. I' 111t1 .li!L·ltl•, 4 l'[JI~, <iJp' ,\•f; .tllOtll ••U!' r11~• ,,11111 plHl1. ~'ll Cr111c-1· ,..;1_ r,1;.,, lU l 'n1 ·· ~111p·-,r , r;. t "''"I!·•· ,\pt· 1·.o1 1ri • r 1· r 1 ,, 11 ,,r ~ ! I ... ~1 ,I) (' I !I '11, I•:: ./ .'~Jl'f)jl) ',! J;I '\1'\\ <'Id, ol1p~ 1' .. 1 ... 1·1,, ··d 1•·,, l f: 1 ,\I' I• )1\ \<:1111 II" I" I· ' ,{ ~ J~r.. J111 Ide. 1111/ ll<J ,,,.t ti 1·: 111.;•l " I I! !. 1, \Pl,] '1:1:, I j;\ 11/ :,..•r ~l~ll ,,d,f~ ('jol , <I!'['', /l,1 d ,1.J ·.I • <)1:.11 .\1 "·"' ll.'fl '•w f ~11 , ll. ,<'Ill .' hr, c·pr. rir ··r ~·1·1 ' 1:1 t' 1, ; ;, 1 • .~ I l [)/( J •1111 <; I , t 11 ·I f ,,. !1,,.)r r .S 1 ·ri ! •IU1't' J•f"~!I• I I , J ~I~! <ii I I I 11! "' I ~·I'll , I' I:\, 1' •11• 1·1· , n•~. 1">1tl '(( !' \• I o'olr 1 n••n. sir:. 111·· .1.-1.~r. ~ I,, >), 1 !' ~ ,-1 r , !--i',\('lfJI'~ ~ 11• I'.' 1~:, '.\1·11· o·r11I> ,\ d.·;1 hl!•· '\»·11• •!1'1p :'..( ,~ •>'l\I, ~[Ii' •' lj : ' Lr !1101 •-1'1 I 11.111•', f'n1·I '·ll l•H <TP' tll'i•' lolrn' '\,, C\1 ~]I, 1\rlUI!~. ·lHld their parents .. A whole MW coriupt In 9P11rtment livini. Play llWS. swimming pools, rec~aHon center, ~unas, and the smartest new apart• ments ever. Come ••• and bring the kids. 1110. ~Ji-"ill! J\ r ! I'll~· lia1lry. Huntin_9_1_o_n~B-,-a-c_h __ _ a f~Tlj ICUtd•1td ptl¥tl• ~<r •'~OOI 00 o•r 0"• 1•-0•. t"ll tor wco~1n~ pl!e•I• ~ flu•N• \(~•G· ~'•. ••Q<•~ 100:1111 .. ., I• 1uil'.ou. 1 Mo.'s. Free Rent \"I, .\h,.111 r,111' rli.«··111111 plijn' ! Br:. •·r1·1~. dq1<, hlln.~. L.l r · ~ (;"llloll ~{,.;Cc Ir ·•· ,,,.••l 1 fl~-l """"'. ! fl•Or-• • J 8•~'"°"" • ~·••It \lo.-Y l !.r"1 l1-.4 '"'" '""'""' • Jn too~•· 1.on.,.·Sr•!..:ltoru•1 O;n. ! --rw1. """" Ir°"" $U55 pt! l!lOn\11 l ' , ...... O\t 'O •·~· (IJ,)S~IUOO -· ~:.t 11ra ~.-~( .. ~\,;~ Altl>lf\cf °""''IJ btftlOl'!tlfnt DJ ne ~ eo.p .. , Ill v .... i..r • .!!II IJ. I. re _.. Nr Huntington Harbour Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 36$ T•··!'·•·>: • q1111 t at<'<l Ln: I B h Huntington eac Rr . ~11fl,:: Hit -$210. Pei ~ Newport Beacli <>k 1111 • .~ [!J./)1)7 ! 1--,"".,--------- : !;H, l lo.i 01 ,h111,hrr, Children We lco~e GREAT LCCATION J • 1 1 Tn1n1ac. ·I Br. 3 Ba. ~\ud10J r••1•· ! i·f"".i · ··ip:,, fl'll'. :ipr 1-plcx Pr11· p1111n 2 H"rtrnon1. 2 hath apt 11!1 111'u1 .. 1 h• 1111''1!111c~. p.1110 · , d· 'LI c · • 1 , 1 , 1 '1 11 ('rpr~ rh·p~ hltns Lr~ p\av l <'!'fl~. 111~ .,.. 111~ h1ldrcn .\f""' r,,.1111 ,,u~ ,.. · · ur nql\ 'l"i pl I Pll•I Jjf;jf, lll'r.i 'uJ-dr ~.ti' st. N<J fl•'!s. '·. . . 17Si1 l'lrll C1 rcl" SIJ:l!i77. ./l.,\.'IJ S.\l/fH. RLTR I IH<'!•IP ~I~ •I".' ~--lflf] L 17111 S1 .. C\J &16-32.~:I \\'A!L. :\n11-! Br nll Xll'.1~. * FRESH AIR -A N;;-Way T0 Liv8 P•"•I l\111< r[, ~r:•J .~-~\.'i:l \\',1!k 3 hlks t<i Brach' V111 o .• 1 ;, d l< !'il. ,,_ ;~ El Br"''· hig :; RR ;ipt, 11 w in N ewport Be ach I\• ,•l•(,11 l.n '.l r,;;_ 1 'I 0 . rrpi~. rlrp~, bltns cX'"fll OAKWOOD GARDEN ~li-l'--~' APARTMENTS _ ,,,In:: ~2'2.l. Nn J'lC'L•. \1•i.Ji11 BEACHBLUFF A I On 16th ::-11·rc! ht1•n P s $1.:.l-CLt1\N-:ZBr;-l1 p~ 11'\Jll<' ;inrf Dn,·rr Dr 'I\\ .! 1:1: .: B.\, ct1,h11 ·~h-<Irr~ 1>1111 .. Adul1• n1 prrs ~·r~. )""''· p.11 .. 1 "12::1 l·,;J1~. l~O Hnrhr,rrr ;,ii"llf)I) ~I~ llj<7 rw Rli-.'!'l."17 -(7141 642°8170 San C/;;;:;;nte ;J -~,01-11111. rJ1·p~. 1.i•n•. l:aguna B each <l1<r•'~··I. ]111t•d1·1· 'flH'{', :\u ... :-.t:,\rt BJ-:.1111 • 1 DELUXE 2 BP.. 2 Ba .. fl'"· ''' _._,-,;, fr.1· "f11 ·Rdrm ln11r1· rluplPX L;1r;:;r I WALK TO BEACH!! lo11n.: rnn1n. k11 chf'11 1111h Lf)\.Ll.i" '.\t.\~· I ,1 7 HI{'~ r,1111!•' S. l'•1frt:;era1or. All (.'11 °1, olf'fl~. (j,h11.i•hrr~. Ullhlu< p;old i!r1 P.1lt11 e llli-.:'l-,7 '11fl \J(l\;'J!I ---1'll'~l()N RF.>\LTY ~'ll..fl7Jl · 1;!: 11t<l,,1il'j!', 'l11l<' 1111---' n1.1··11l.1h' J..11u1riry f:1ril N ewport Beach llitl"'' (h'('IJ(•~. ~1 .~0 I I ·i,;;:-::''1; ______ MAR INER SQUARE \lr1r11·.ll,'\ 2 Rr lJLll•lr\. APARTMENTS 1"•1.11•·, hl!ll", ri:•I•. rl1·p .... A11n1111r1cC's 1hc a\·ailab1lily of "' l-r11·1111t;1HlP•I ! 'lultlt\'11 ? v "\ HP uni I r1.r ;id11lts 'I.(. ~1'''"1" ::il~-:.~li ~1r:.1ri,11;:: 1; live .:midst bl'illl- f'llEZ f1J11) Al'TS 1y 11.v !hr ~•'3 in 1he rrr<;- ~1"1 1\ll01nl;i, 1 2 J:J~. f'O'll, t1g1n11f: \\'11strlilf area of rir1\;dr :,:.11·~1:,., 1\'~1\h<'r~. :'\l'llpnr! Br:iL'l1. d1·, • r' ~.~i; ~!i':'I, ~.::r;.z;:n F R OM $230 : HI: il/•1. :: till· lr•,111 """;111 Fnr l11!011n<1t1nn phonr ;\lr, ~11;' 1110. 1'1Jil '1.i1 :!01h_ nobf>rt :\I. Bu('kl"~" ill;in;it>- -;;1; 1710 <'f, 111 171 !) 61J.025Z nr \\Tl!<' IJl!in~. f]~)l\\'h!', l"('C mom. Arlult~ <1nly. SlSO. ~'l:!-:Z2Y.). Santa-Ana VILLA MARSEILLES BRANO NEW SPACIOUS 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. Adult Living Furn. & Un furn. Disl11w1shr r -color coordinat. rrl ;1ppli.;11ce!i . plush .:hag carpet • choice ol ' color srhrn1rs . , l)J!h!'J -stall ~ho11crs . Jllll l'l}l'f"d 11ard- rnhc dor·r~ . indircrt lii;:hl- in:: '" kilrhrn . breakfast '" • hllgf' private fenced pati11 • piu~h Jand~c-aping . hrwk r:,r-R-Q'!'l. Jar;;:e heat- ..L.. B~AND NEW ..L.. ~ •1 1,1,,.-1;;;:-;ill;,;-i\~ Ill The Office. nl lhr ;\lan- J.{ 1' nr lrnm s1~:. ('pls/rlrp... a::!:rr. '1al'lllCJ" SfJUfll'" ,\pt~. t'd fYIOls .tr: lanai. 3101 So. B ri5tol St. t. \ ('T)i,, ['I ,\PT'=. 1 I;.-'.! r.r· hltrJ<: lrwol piLliO•. pla) 121 1 il'\1nc ,\\"{', :\B, Cal 1;•111~. ~\\ltl~tl'!ll:; pnnJ .~. ;-:11-~ 1····. ~ir· .. 1277 ~!lf',61 " ,. All t!l 1! pd s I~: ,,., ~/i'I . :; -nr. -('l.;;:d ;::-;;;;::-;:--r;i1 II) - ~:n•) ,\o1,1'1s. n" r111~ .,,-I ;••' ,· fluld··-n .~ ~niall pct PARt\: :-.El\'PORT·('Rf" Ir('~ ... I A,·n,·:idn. C'IT fil..J,(l~ nk ~lll'J !'1211:;r-. h\::" f1l<'rlkt: lh"' 11.i!f'I' • ----1>001~. 7 trnni~ rl" S7."11l_())fl 1 t·'nr Jh;1! 1!1':11 unr!rr S.".O, C<l.'\[lO l l~r. 1' · h.i. lrri!r. l:ac-h. 1 or 2 Br. Al~r. '.:! ltv t!u· Pr•111v J'1nrhrr I r '11". pnrl. iHhllt~. ,SJF.j ~!y To11nlin11<:•·' Lit••, kt1 ----_ --,_ l'rl-._1r.1 r1<'~ '-I I< <' _ r1 p.11 «r n1 i;u • n1 P" -~t: Apt. Unfurn. 36S Apt. Unfur n . 365 flfJ! n1:i1d <rr, rp1~. dtp< Santa A na Santa Ana ,r11~1 ·'· o! ro~111n11 I•! at .J:irnb,,rrr S.. .":on .IHll'JUln =iiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiii~I 11111.~ Rd. fl ll-]'l(_i/'I r .. ,. 11• .. s-,. It\£'. lrlfH I Come and Rela x ... ''~1C)(t door" to Sotilh CfJJ~l Pl aza. !Jctizzi, swimmint; pClul, built-in ~1tchcns , automatir .rppl1,1nccs, car- prts and drapes, ~,1s B.irl:r~s, large rec hall, private patios. ( )n1• hl"droom -S 137 / 2 Bedroom ilnd cxlrd ba!h -on:y S 167 I To\vnhou~c -S 175. J9U() Sou1h Fro\ver • SJnla An.t • A~k for Ed Horf, M .:inol&Cf • (714) 545-3214 "~-ALLrrr :-.1a11-w \p'~. 2 Ar, tpt~. rlrri•. hiln" pool, pr•1v flll!IO, ~111<110 t.\I''" 1 ·~ nri. Ch Ir! nk. '>l'-~~~2 J-,~·i rl~n·rri11.o. 1\~t.. .1l}li111 our tll\!'<•unl t'OURPIJ-.:\. -:BR, ~ RA, I nl\', fq•k 1n1•11rrl O('f'llPY $21~ Arf1JI!' J11q 4Jt/I A P11rrir" J~d. 642 -13~7 hll-lii\ --~~~~­' HJ-:. 1 • 1 '~ R.i('k R:Jv C'rp!", , 1 r•. }Ill rler. J\ .. ,l I• f,I' • '•'''llrl'rl h [ rl :.'° S.'i'l ·,1 1, t I 11~·1:1 f'\'"~ 1 RI'•' 11 .,,1 htoneh-:\ r.r 2 I', 1n111lf' P1111<l'. n,i.111 r. '-' .i/n:o Ji~'>.-01{90 :\lnn-tn. 11~r I 612-lq:;; X1r: I L.\Rt.;E~,~A~,-.-, ,, r·1T1l\/rlrJ1:<. b\111•. r •t '" r·••·I ~ru. Sl7). CJ4q_37r,~ \I t.:,fCLIFf ,irrii Z !:!!. ~ I 1 •. ~. frpl(', 11\111<, ~rlult' 0111~ I ~.'00 rfll) Ii~>-rr,7 llf·.Ll i\'L-:':!W\~ l~\\1• .. i· I \ll"\1' I~ l1IJ.. '" ""'" h y,. 'l 1 • \ ' /, - ' (1• :\11 N. ot So. Coast Plaza) Santa Ane PHONE, SS7°8200 CAN 'T BE BEAT SINGLE STORY South £ca Atn10~11hcre 2 BR. - 2 BATH Oi~ts & ll rp!<: Air CondirionC'd PrivatP Pa!in~ llEATED POOL Plrn1y of b111·n Carport & Stora,(:'e HIDDEN VILLAGE C:ARDEN Af>TS. 2500 Sou1h Sa11.i Santa Ann " 5'11>-lSlJ ' -Apts., Furn. or Unfurn. 370 General PALM MESA APTS. I Br un!u1 .1 .••••••• SIJ::i no I 131\ furn ........... S i l~.;,() r:acn<'1or~ 1-~1M11shet1 fnim $13.'i 2 Br: rir!~ Sli:i rno mn.1mo. ?" e POO i. e SJ\1.::-;',\ e J.\Cl!7.7.I J'ifil :'lll:'i..a D1·. !=:;111!111 AMiii n 111 Y r11 nr frir •rt1nn' I ' t "-•\ r f , TlltSd~Y. March 16, 1971 i" DAILY PILOT I "..-. ...... I~ ~I _ . .,_ ... __,]~I I . ., .. ,. I~ I -~-~ J~ ~I -_t__,• I~ I ~tN<t.. I~ 1-.. oM·-I~ 1 !...oM._ 1~1 1 --l[fiJ l•A•p•,•,•.,••••••• 1R•oo•m•,••••••~• Bu•ine11 R•ntal 445 1 ;A~n;nou;;n;c;e;m;•;n;l;s;:~5~0;0~A;n;n;o;u;n;ce;m;;e;nt;1;;~~500;:.1 S~c;h;oo;;J1;;&;;;;;;;;;; Gerdening Power 5wHplng I Help Wonted, M & F 110 1 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 COLLECt: er \\tirkin£ girl PRIME LOCATIONS iiiiiiiil ln1tructlon1 575 EXP.ER. Hawaiian Gardentr PACJflC P!Jy,·tr S\\'eep1ng & CARPENTER Cost• Mes• Balboa I~. lhr kit & TV l.. 11th St., Cosia li1,.sa VffiGO 5.,.,•!Jn School Complete Gardenlnc Gardenini;: Seiv. No job loo ORANGE COAST rm, tr.le, $65/mo & UJI. 1120 Sq, IL y,·1th parking WANTED Lf'&10n1, 6 mo's thru adull. Servi~. Kamalanl, 646-4676. small. 6?3-1166 24 hrs. Ei\fPLOYMENT AGENCY BAY MEADOW APTS. ti75"3613. 'l7c Pt'r Sq. Ft. • Carrlt-n Grove & Balboa Isl GARDEN 1ervice, main-Roofing 124 Broadway, C.i\1. 2 R00~1S, double le s1nglr. Scam l'ellings. paot'hni;, priv. Employed niale. Pri hon1e. 1 Bro.1d11ay, 1.aJ:"U'la Beach OVERWEIGHT LADIES 636-2550. 11.'nance, clean.up, aeedllli:' Deal 9 Ai\f·9 Pl\1 D<1ily, Sat f.6 etc. CaU 892-8956 1:'· Guy Roofing. k 6-15.3111 J)lltlos, recreation .facilities. 642-418.l. lWO Sq: ft . l\~lh 1~arkll1i: All Adults, no l)t't!, NICE room ror "ork1ni; n111n 30c Per iSQ. t t. _ .. Bachelor Apt $1~0 * I \\I/ or l'./O t:ook'g pn\'il. J Rra1onom1rs Bkr. 67J·6700 r~or \Vcigh t reducing program to establish • 2 BR. trom $165 * E·sic.!e, Ci\I. 6.i2~326 I Industrial Rental 450 statistics for rapid per1nanent \veight loss, PE conducted by qualified r hysical culturists. 387 \V. Bay St. (bt.,.,11 Harbor • ~~,) R \\'k wp "1 kll. SMALL UNITS ~lust be a tn1·nt'mttm ' 20 pounds over· • N Bl d " mJ N' -$25 \\'f't'k up Apl5. :'llOTEL " (I; ewport \ · "' · a.l8-97il I COSTA MESA \Yeight, have trans portation and not current-COSTA MESA of 19th Stl. -I d d 11 C\LL G.i6-007l r·unN rooni. gold m{'daJhtin S9.;. & ~167. Per .l\>f(llllh Y un er actor's care. A inquiries com· PRE-SCHOOL home kl!{'hen pnv 'la!P Itnmediate Occupancy pletely confidential. 18tf' • .&: ratonrovia. " day + e LOVELY 1,... I & ' BR ' . • -· • • ~ ~ . · .. ., -, · only. $20/1'.k. f.\·rs 6·16-20-1~ Nrw 6500 sq. fr . unit, lSth · ASK FOR MISS POWELL 537_5410 full day sessio11.9. Planned Panel g, pa!io, yrd, gar/.,.,. tr \\'hillier D0·220 power I -program, hot lunches. Ages pd. Infant ok. 12192 Edinger, NICE rrn a1rpor1, JI_ 11 t plenry C:r parking. ' 2-6 Har~r Bh·d to ~1e's, E.I ent, ha, nirn only. Gar, See: Robert Nattl'('ss, ru1r.:~~~~~~~~~~-! us' =~:e~~:~~ on Edingf'r. 839--09Y.J laundry, pl. tenn, 8JJ.J306 I Costa tllesa &12-1485 ! ~ ! lllliiiiiiiiii or 8J8..5237. • ARINGNBROAS. Anloob"lnces Ft.\lk11/ba~h. bplk\'t o"n,l·~a~h'u :-.'El\' bldg, 1368.1728 sq ft. I /~< I Lo•t-df-·~ /[SJ "c~H~IL~O,,_,-.,,..--,,-n-,,-h~,-m-,. pl1'. ow. avai a e at coo ing. ~ ! ut' c · N Bak & f' · · J ffflon;il$ .... ....,., 57-67.>--0--l r ·er · au-i.'!ew, In/ant to 4 yrs old. Have MEDITERRANEAN ,), '' yr. lease. suuivan, :H0-4l29. 3 yr old daughter. FenCt"d I ServlcH •nd Repairs I~ Babysitting =-~=~---~--1 Direct. I do my owi'I \Wr -. COl\1PLETE yard Ca re . 645-2780 548-9590. Cleanup, trash Muling byl---~·------­ job or mo. 897-2~17, 84&-0032 \VENEDA Roofing, Authorit. PROFESSIONAL. Pruning, ed Apphcator for_ Sno.H1dt' tree '\\'(lrk-, sp rinklers, aera-Roof Systen1s. 64r169I tion, pesu. disease, v.e¥d Sewing/Alteratlons control. Clean up jobs. , Tenns George 64&-5893 ALTERATIONS, resryl1ng. . ' Expert f1trer. Top 1<t>f'.~. AL'S GARDENING N.B area &l&-2701 Call for gardeninz .&: .1 ma I I Ruth Call · ' landscaping services, call . 540-5198. Serving Ne\vport, EUROPEAN ~ressmaking Cdl\f O:ista l\tesa Dover all cusiom titted. Vecy Slto~s. \Vestcli!f. ' reasonable. 673-18-19. J OHNSON'S GARDENING Alterations 642-5845 Yard care, clean-ups, Neat, accurate, 20yearsexp, planting, sprinklers . Tile VILLAGE Guest Home 415 X>~lt.·IERCIAL-lNDUSfRIAL yard, large hoine. Cal! :llOO HMbor Bhd. ,.,_ for ;£0--lj()() •n fl, l3c to l2c I Personals 530 Loa;t 555 830-4370, hrs 7:3(1 to 6:00. General Service• CERAMIC flle new & C 'I ROO:'ol, board & ,._ I '" ----------El T · · v· -.,,-.,-,.,---,---I remOO.el. Free e.~t. SmaU ln',',".,.·7_~~ "'f'nlleman. 11l!h s 1 n" IP , * San C!er:nente.496-1840*. • '·"ULLY LICENSED _ I -LOST oro, M15sion ieJO 8l"E'a -. ...., .,., .. 11 ,, ,., ,. .. Husband Busy'! call !\loose jobs \1·etcomc. 5 3 6 · 2 4 2 6, ~11t?'",',,1:: 2~0 Amherst, C~! . ./ RENT !\'1-1112;:, s11 ft, $12.J Renownt'd Hindu Spiritualist I \\'oman's ta11 il'S.llt'I Sat. BABYSITTING my home. 545-0820 after &-Repair 536-8885 962-IDµ LXCITJ:\G fuz·n l Br. apl .> .r-J. ~?· _13."!5 Logan, No. 6, C~I. Ad11ice on all mal1l'rs. J/13. Vic. ~lark .. 1 Saskl'!. y,•kdays & ivkrnds. Behind Bu!ld-Serv ?1-tost Things Tree ServJce Sll5. Pvt dt't k, pool. Crpts. Vacation Rentals 425 61.,,__;1116 Love, l\1arr1ai.::e. Business N.B. or Bal·Broasted Chit.ii-Pomona School. 6-l&-5SS4, \\'ELDING rlrpi;. b!tns. \\alk lo town.·-----------C:\I 11;, E. lSth, C.)1. 5-IS-!l!}i9 EA!:ilER & Surnnicr, 3 BR Rentals Wanted 460 Rrft~in1g0s given 71r!o1ys a f'n, Balboa. h'.ePp money. MON _ Fri. lrg playroom, Portable welding. Call TREES, Hedges, Top. Trim. .,,., htw· ,. '· 6 & 2 b,, tt'alk 1• ,,1, & \\-l'C • a.m. to 0 p.m, Ht•turn I.D. Call 673-6434 afl . Larry aft 4 pm. 642--0679 1 d h J-• 1 " ' " "" ·~ ~12 N £1 c · R I <-'Ongenial playmates, honie cu , remove . au =· ns. * $50 move in allowanef' pool, \\'kly or monthly. 71~: YNG family nl'<'ds .sin 2 br " · amino ea • 3 pni. a11·ay from home, C.)1. Hauling 642-4030 Big John. . '"'28'il ti11use for about "90 mo. San Clemenlr ~r<"Ectct.cAcRcD-cr--r---dc. -I Lo\'ely J & 2 Br. pool. apts . ....,.,... ., 49,9,36 19, ~76 ~ or in o lea 1ng 5-lS--0706 ·----------iUpholstery \\'ill "'ive Jovin" ca r e , .~. · •,M.....,.., t th & · t' le~====------l'ron1 $120. Adult&, no pets, Rentals to Share 430 " e 0 t' arrest · convic ion BABYSITTING, my home, YARD, Garage cleanups, nr shop•. fr\.\"-' & heh. l'ather still in school. Partly REDUCING I e ch no logy of person Y.'ho stoic 1970 d dirt 1 -'" 1,-,"'°._,.,..,..,----...,--,,-, r · h--' " · b 1 I 1 • 1 h k ay & night: Costa l\lesa, trees vy removal, ,...,p LIC Uphol•I•••· _ ~.,1,.ty &12-2181 or673--0j(l7 IBACllELOR to share apt urn1s ..... , 11 poss1 e. rrvou 1on1zp,,. nc es la en Jlond<i. niini trail lrom 126 •• -'<l!u 833-2030 ff 70 . t Ne.,.,·p't, area. Re as . loader, backhoe. 962-8745. \\-Ork. An thony'• Up h. 1 & 2 hr furn & unfurn "' / sanir. Bt'd.iuLirullly 1T"'vn · 11ras~~1able rcs~l~n uDe~o~~ I '.~ ~01'1'1"7tV. isla, C\1 .Sun eve. l='c.'c'"c'ot64=·=~-~--~ HAULING, gen'! cleanup, ServiC('. 642-5827 N.B. ' · •· 1 $100 Call T •1 T "' -• ,_,,,. ''crv "y<'~ "·""n>" BABYSITTER, all ag", 24 tree serv. Handyman. Reas. B •• ,, \l•r Apt• '" "l92 poo n10 eny "esa. o us"" for ·'" ' ·.r ~ ·'· DI.'"-" ~ LO~ ' I CARPET Cleaner. clean.cu t.I ne~t hairs1yle, dependablt> and ,.,·tIJing lo ~·ork. Apply 11).3pm Ji40 Superior A .. e. C.~L <-'Or New110rt & 17th Civll Eng1neerjn5 TECHNICIAN t-.J;ijor L.'in~ Development Co, sttks a technician to per. lcr1n various Civil Engineer· Ing, drafting ! office tasks. Pos1lion requires High School graduate \vith drafting/de· si;n pxpt'r. in civil ~n;:i· ncering includ ing exposure 10 street design and grad- ing, Some college and pub- lic works office experiencP ' in a .sub-professional capac· tty 1s desirable . This 1~ a caree_I' posirion w11h excellent gl'OWlh oppor1un· ity. Plt'ase send resume or lc11e1 outlining quaJH1carions and salary histo ry ro - Classified ad • 126, Dail), Pilot, P.O. Box 1:J60, Costa ,- !11esa, Calif. 92626. COCKTAIL \Va1tresse.1 - Dinner hou!e exp. At. tractl\'e. Call 642-0800 as!> for Ale:o.. ' 1•,· • 1160 Pool·Puttin• ,..,.n ap! ,\1r con , co or . 2 CAR Garage in Costa ·> !~~~~~~~~~~~ "'" .. ,,...,.... . S··dtlrnly Sle••l•r. ll•>n•-J •'', ,,1anieS(' ca•. n1a r. ho•·•-\V'"n• "''''' b1·g £•" ::o•g -• I al :1~7-281!\ before Sant or storage. CaU Te[T)'. The u '"" ~ s I B B k & "'"· ... • .,.,,.......,... • 1250 S" fl J" 2 Br 11" ha sel f·ap11lif'd mrthn<l. r·rcr at ta rr ros ..• , a er · back yard. &12-t a92 C.\1. TRASI' & G 1 I II if•) Combuiation '' ., • ~ '' ::if! Ii pni Real Es1aters 54&-2313 I 1-'awvirw 01. K 1art at "°""'"""°'="'°~--,--I -. arage c can-up, Employment utl rm for \Vh/dr, patio, rlas~ & <l<'1l'tonsrra!1on Cal.I ·. BABYSITTING in my homel ~7~d:a~y;"i'!l~l~O~a~lo~a~dt.~fu:.:o:t~·;;;;;;;;;;;:;~ .C::SCRO\\', BOOKKEEPER gar, cpt/dp. $165. 5-16-8688. I \"NG i;:ul w/2 l"luldren IJ{'t>ds RESPONSIBLE cpl .. ~.-ants to for rrservatinn . .51&-J90-I Harbor ~ \Vilson. Ans. to _all ""f!S, aoytime. est Anytime, S48-50lt. Call &1.>-5200 N.B. H . B h J apt to sliarc: 11·/samc. Call rent h~t' or apt !o SI.)(). I ~~~~~~~~~~~ "Al..-1n." Re1\•ard 5-16-3882 -I ;o.7.0;;<"'°'°""""',--,---unt1ngton eac Kath)' 615-ID:::l L.1;;: Reh nr C.:\f. &14~8~ RF:\VARD for info re lost 5-l.:>-7641 f.10V.ING, G_axage clean.up Job Want•d Female ]Ol CUSTODIAN Days for se1'\· I l[g] BABYSl'rTING in my llf'lme. & lite hauling. Reasonble. ' contracltlr. Cou nties finest \\ILL Sh<irr 111y 2 br. 2 GROUND Floor office spacr Q n1al<' Sian1Pse ki1ten 16 ON BEACH! Furniture Availablt' Carpe I s.draf11's-d1shwasher heated pool-.~aunas·)cnnlS rec room-IX'ean \•ie11·s pa!los-ample parking Security guards. HUNTINGTON PACIFIC 7U OCE1\N AVE .. H.B. {714) 536.1487 Ofc open lD am-6 pm Daily \VILLIA;\f WALTERS CO. l ost and Found · fenced yard. rrf's. Costa l ~F~"'~'..C'c'~u~·rn~o~t~'~'-~64~5-~1~602~-/pAfi:T"-;;;;;;-7,;;;;;--;;:;;:;; I bldg. gen'] c1eaninl? exp. ''· pool ;int \l'/stuflcn! or \\anted, Corona drl J\1ar. mo·si. 'l'/yellow t•yes. Vic. p RT ,. ~--·····;;;;;;;; 1\1esa atta. &1Z-0384 H I . A llmr office 1\ork only, Southro, 54&-j322 . .,1'1rking .t:irl. N.B. &12-.'!971 So. of lligh11ay. 61·1-1361 Solana \Vay, L.B. 494-j!l!µ _o_u_•_•_•_•_•_"-'"_9 ____ , 1 desired. l-ia\'e knowledge inl=~~=-~-~--- \\'ILL ,h,,. my hnmr in Misc. Rentals ""l BLACK frma!e Afghan lost BABYSITTING by hour or -real estate. legal & CO 0 KS· bu s b O Y • ,r.:_ " -Found I free ad•) 550 \reek. a.ny hours day or T\\1> cleanlng women. dis h11•ashers for a •• ,, Costa :'llrsa 'W'/emp!oyed on \Vi\snn bh•·n llarbor & 4 ho k \V kl securit1cs. 548--0393 ,,.. 54-0963 I It I Pl<icrntia, 691 J o ann, nite my home.642-7316 urs "'"r · e<' y, opr ration, Applica tioni:. \\'Onlan. ;i. LOCKED. fenced ~torage for S:\1ALL black puppy, a~ 833-6009 Builders bi-monthly. 962-Sj()6 NURSE taken between J pm-4 pm. Garages for ~ent 435 boats or campers. a!k per 11·h1le t·hrst & 11a\1S a11rl ~·=~·----~--~ Mesa Cleaning Service Exp. \Vi!h elderly \\ted, Thurs, Fri. &e ?.tr. FOk motor homes, trailer. boat, rte. J652 Npt Bl11d, C.i\1. 642.2821, 642.5106. foot, J>{'r mon!h. C a l I srnall \\'hLle ~pot on bat•k LOST youn}! male r' d Carpets, Windows, Floors etc. Local references 64&-1SZ2 Cu nrungham. at :'11r. Steak. "2·"""". of neck. rtl'lay •-"'''•at-1hichshur1d. Vir:. Santa Ana BRJCK, bloek, concrete, R 'd C , .,,, AIDES ""' """"' '-"' t' • ,,,,...,.11t-•-'' 1· esi . & ommc I. J't041U For co11va!escenCf', Cl\!. 2267 Fairview Rd,. l('J'rirr & min. Dobt'rma11. A\P .t: J\\C'.~a Drivf'. &1&-5309 ... ···~ •.r . uuuse ve ing, Id 1 e .FENCED storage area. 6-16-::&i:i all types rt'modeling. No Bay & Beach Janitorial e er Y care or family care. 548--0368. oil surfaced; Costa r-.tcsa. I ,-==~-.--,.,-.,--,.-,-, I PR~GNANT Cat. T 1 ge r job too small. Lie. Contr. Crpts. \\'indows, floors etc, , _H_o_m_•_m_•_k_'c'c'·c"''-"7--66Sc' =.1 __ 440 I Call fi.16--0281, 962-7813. LARCI'.: fir! rabbll, light strip<'{!, sMrt l>nh !ail. Vic. 962---6945 Res. & Comm'I. E>4&-l4i..'l r h1Y11\·n ln culor. \\cir.:hs ar-1.'l!h St, N 8. ft.Jj....()S\O 1 =-~-.,-~-----1 -~==~"""c.c~c;..,c:.:::....1Help Wanted, M & F 710 Office Rental e COUl"TER GIRL. App!y: KENT UCKY FR TE D; 0-ilCKEN, 693 So. Coa~1! H1vy, Laguna Beach, betwn ~ l-4 P:'ll, in person • lo II Business Service HOUSE OF CLEAN SUPER-DELUXE QUALITY prox. )S J\lar. 11 San· HE\VAJUJ! I r1~h Setter pup, 3-2-3 room, up lo 3.DOO sq. I Announcements 11 -'l liago Dr, l b!k trom Irvine. mall'. ~' mo'i;. ~1arilyn. TYPING SERVICE Complete64~s;4 Cleaning *S AD~IJTTTNG CLERK ft. oUice guiles. Immed. oc-_ &l6-:i886 I 516-2969 nr 673-1434 Neal, accurate, fast. Pick up I T upervisory experiencP. cupancy. Orange County. ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ 1 3,,-,cr,-4,-,-,,-,,-,,c11-0c1dc-cblck~l~ab & dPJiv. 6ti.!HSJ. ncome ax \Vri1e, Cla~si fied ad No. 12~ C 0 UP LE .. v / c r. u rch '. 2 BR. $l j.). 3 Br. $180/up. Pa-/lrport Irvine Commerc· I \Vilh \\ht marking.; Vic 1 Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1561l, custOO.ial exp for religious\ tin. Pool. 011ktren ok. Complex, adj. Airpor1er Announcements 500 l\1onmvia & 17th s1 C~! //l• J P~J:-ITrNG, repairs. i\'eai. 1°' f Smiley TaX Service Costa ~lesa. Calif. 92626 °1~· Sal & apt on prem. 1 1110RA KAI Apt~. JSS~l ~lora Hotel & Restaurant, banks, .'>18-iil67 til noon only. Instruction _ cal, ttas. Homes, boats. .. Advertising Salesmen il2-6724 i Kai Ln. 12 blk F.:. of Beach, San Diego & N'pt Fwys. CANCER S.\1ALL hlk & iihlle <lo{;, :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~-~ 675-3949 1 e 13th YEAR LOCALLY e 10 sell space for Orange COUPLE fo n1anage 14 ap1s! .,u Garhclrl. 96"1-899-1 UNCRO\VDEO PARKING \l'riler iloing research tor \'LC. J71h & sanla Ana A\e. Carpenter Qualified. Reasonable Counry publ1cat1on. \Vri1f': in Balboa. ITI41 892-1585 LIVE AT TH E BEACl-1' LO\VEST RATES filni, \vould J1ke tn interview Ci\1. Call lo 1 dent l f y . Schools & CARPENTRY W. A. Si\tILEY P.O. Box i.?04, Santa Ana. SCCYJ'T REALTY. 309 N. r\'e111 l Bn Shag crpt, drps Owner/mgr; 2lTI DuPont Dr. 1·olunlcers \l'ho have tiad or :>-18.J200. instructiont 575 1 )rtNOR REPAIRS. No Job Certified Public Account'! Calif. 927Dt EtJClid , Upland, Calif. CASA PLAYA Apts, l·lth I 833R3!!, S,cN'rtl\']'.lOrtt BB,aokh 11ho are no1v being ln'aled FOU:-.'D on )!('~a Vrr(!r 642·2221 anytime 646-9666 * Ai'IJYONL O\'<'r l) \Vho DENTAL ASSISTANT At .t \I a!nul 536-8.167 -~4" ou esy o ro en Too Small. Cabinet in gar-for cancer. Call :'11arch 16th, Drl\'C.. 011ncr identify IT'S YOUR MOVE ages & 0 th c r cabinets. Central Business Services JS 111iling 111 "·ork. apply least l !•ear experienct . Newport Beach DESK SPACE l7!h. !I a1n-4 pm. 54g..182·1, 5-10-3!Y.11 5-JJ.Sli5 if no ansiver lealle eTHE TAX ADVISORS in person DELANEY'S SEA 1 :'llature. 968-5782 222 Fore st Av enu9 1E~·~,"~'~'~!J.t~-~3~77~8~· ~~~~!I POODLE, n1alr, bla1·k. 11h INDUSTRY CAREERS rrug. at &l&-2372. H. O. Perm. oHice-Reas Rates SHANTY, 630 Lido P ark * DENTAL HYGIENIST -. ~ spot ()11 chr~l vie )J1ss1on Andc~n. 1 328 No. Newport Blvd. Dr., N.B. par! time V ISTA OEL MESA Apartments 1 & 2 BR. l'urn .t Unf. Dish· 11·ashcr . Stov!'.' and Refrit: . Sha;:: rrpl'g _ Lrg RPc center, Oecupancy in i\tarch RE7\'T Srarls S\jJ Tustin & Mesa Drive * 545-4855 * Loguno Beoch I I~ Vicjn. 830-7!'187 I CARPENTRY • Repair. All Opposite Hoag Hospital •ASST. HELPER• * 962-6671 * 494•9466 ~--'-'_"_'_"'_1' __ _, ' FE:'llALE Blk ;i,1111 i;;r<1y c.1 AIRLINE & TRAVEL phast'.~. Jlome & ap1. l.!le For Appt. Call 645-0IOO_ • $3.75 HR. • .. DINNER COOK BEAUTIFUL 3 room off1~---Shep. Vic nl Spn11gdalc and haulln~. [\·e: 5 48-626 6 , TAX SERVICE $4 UP PPrmanrnr employment. run Experienced. \l'/referenl't"s. su11e w I kitchencttr. Ideal \Va1·n!'r llB $ilti--OS7.l f' OPERATIONS AGENT Day: 5.17-1860 App't available days, tlm e or part ume. Depend-Plea~e apply in person lo for arclutrct. ins u r II n c e Personals 530 Lost SSS !I e TICKET SALf~~ RE:'llODELING &: R!'pa1r ('ves, \1·knds. 548.D;,&S, able. Ha1"0ld, ALLEY \\'EST 210li at:ent, rcal1or, ctr. On e RESERVATIONS Specialist. Comm·1. residen· 18~2 Ne"'])Ort, C:'IT Call -'Ir. !'rank * ;>46.9862 Oceanfront. Nev.·part Beach.I :\1onr'l'.111a ~r. in N B. 1--7',.,..-:C"'."OO-.,,,-.,-,-,,. Blk m 1 11 ff across from pier. *SAILING VOYAGE · al' pup~, very 11 Y e AIP. FREIGHT-CARGO nal. Pancling. cabinets, T forTaxService ASSEMBLER-- DESK SPACE Sh<tre t>->.!Jl'llS('s on a ron1a.1i. ac!ZJ6?jJ • TR,AV,EL' AG,ENT1 6~7 \V, 19th St, C.i\f . TRAINEES your own busi ness W/ln· s:ri0/$?.00 Jl('r mo. 6~.-...0770 Vic. Collrgr Park C.:'11. fl C0;>.1i\1UN1C \TIONS mar!ite, Corm tea. &H-7398 DISTRIBUTOR, man ll ~el BAOIELOR & 1 hr ap1s. l!c Old \l'or!d 150' square I ~=~· 0"-~--,,----· I Cement, Concrete Oppaslt~ Bethel To1\·eJ·s ORANGE COAST Nr Bay. E\'es. 67Z,..i876 or 305 No. El Camino Real r1~t;t•d chpprt· ship. Calling LOST Ln Dana Point 1\rt>a A irline Schools Pacific 6~6-6i6J E:'-1PLOY:\1ENT i\GEN'CY come potential of SlOOO per 22 'I 1 T P-·'I 610 E !7th S t An ee CONCRETE. Floors, I •=====.-..,.==·I nio. Initial inves1ment Tess j 4!»-50 Sun Clement• In J.2 roun11'ics & J7 ports, 1 · a!e, 11 ii!e, ny ""u c. • • an a a SKOUSEN TAX SERV. 124 Broadway, C.l\1. lhan SJOO. Early retjrrmcnl Santa Ana 492-4420 ilC>parung in 2 "eeks, Eric RF:\VAT!D 196-111:: 543-6596 ~l~t~~·Re~i.v~n ~~~'.G, Reas. Your 1-lome. 540-3894 &15.3111 pos~ible £42-2JJO I ·----------· 5 t-;E\V oflices, 17877 Beach Nord, !ron1"n9 9 A:'ol·9 P:'lf Dally. Sat g.s OMV BOOKKEEPER •· 21111-18 ~·· * * * * * * CE:\JEi'l'T \VORK, no J·ob too LAS PA LOMAS Bl. Lo\\'est rents 8-12-2525 i -~=~-. . -~"''·1 ~niall, reasonablt. Free ::o°"::-:-::--,-..c.----181\BYSITTER 1\•anted, my APART:\11-:NT:;: or 213: 3!H-0015 e DISCOVER YOGA! £ · rr s o· k 540 ~ 5 IRONING -$1.J..i per hour. home, 2 pm·7 pm i\lon-Fri. !'>Tust have sL'\' months exper. lencr Jn processing D.\IV forms and general ()fflce procedures for Auto DeaJrr. Pald 11aca1ion, sick le1111r, ' group ins. benefits, efc. Sal· ary com mensurele \Vllh abil. it~·. Call Ed 1-iacqucbord, 346-8017. shn1. . tu IC • • o-oul , y f · ' Brand new rron1 Sl-tn CORONA DEL :'>1AR Ger \\Iha! you nrcd~ For ears o exper1cnre. Call Call ?II~. Bohav 714: •-·I 1 " • 1 , PATIOS, 1valks, d'ives, in-6-16-34DZI for info. .,._o"'I or 527 •80;, _11.,1. I & 2 BR. rurn .. unlurnt.<.h~d 1 & 2 Room olfic• ''''''· ,.._.. y, n1 n .. ·>: -~flint. t s ~'""' --< " "" " stall new lawns, M.111, hreak. ,.... __ _, s F VI Q 1\· j th dl.<h"·asher. Heated a1•ail. Q\\"NER * 67J.67:i7 na1ural, scientific. FN'e remove. 5-!8-8668 for est. IRONING 20c pl'r pil'cP. vt"uuar t, nt Y· ""n I & I . c I I 1lemon<lrnt1on \\'rd. a1 10 I Trader's Pa rad ,·se Bring 011·n hanrers. Costa lransp. poo • anai. en ra i;:as NE\VPORT BI::ACH Civic " l~===~------ 1 I. & •. ,. · A:\l, YOGA Ccnlf'r. ·l•l:J E. Contractor i\l<'sa, 64.>-IR7.i. BABYSIITER. !~ y• old 1ca 1ng air·c'nn 1 1onini;::. Cl'nlrr, 30(I ft to 1000 ft • Ga.<. & \\later paid. Privalr An •ii• & Sec ret 8 r i a'· l-'c'c'"='o'c·oC='clo. 06c'60·0828~·01.=~ ROO:\i Addi lions. L . T . ffiONT:-iG my home Sl.2:i f)t!r boy. 2 greaf dane.<.. 8·11 p;ittos. Color chOice shag 67:1-Jf.01 DISCOVER DISCOVERY , ,. nes Con~!niction. Sing!f' story or hr. Bring own hangers. A)l, 711on lh_r:-1_ ~rl. :J.16-9UO DAVE ROSS PONTIAC t'llrpcting. 3"7cllll~Nc'F.o,tcl'cPoOcrrcT~BoLcV=D-.-,c.cB I Find 't'nur.<~lr 2. E.<.tim., plans & layout. .1'1.>-i &ll. days/Eves ;i.;i 1-.>Sl8 Sa111a Ana 51D··l9SS e ON THE BAY e In :'.on1conc J::lSt' • 81i-!Zll l Janitorial BEFl.INE J'ashions needs ID DQ;\fESfJC _ Livr in larly 1100 \Ves1 \Varner Ave. 67'."i-2161 or .:H\.J032 Call .~O"' -No Ohl1gatlon ti mes ROOM Additions/Remodel-0:::"'.":""'='-C------1 aml>ltio us ladies. \Vardrobe not und{'r •l.j, lor couple 7'<.ir1h ol South Coast Plaza (711! S3.>-6SS:i SPARKLE Jarutorial. \Vin--+-profit. Car neCf!ss. CaU only, c d ill. 67:""l808 f:hQppin'! Center ·.near San l~iO SANTA ANA A~E. C)f Thr A11·arrt \\'Inning S<'rv. ing. Free planning sen>. dO\\'S, floors, crpts & constr Vi f714l 522-7647 Di<'co & Newporl Free1\·ays. ,'-,","'1,""'r ''5q. It. ·"~11s~,,t,t.; SINGLE? WIDOWED?-dOl larS ~aev~~~~~~~:~~ 633.6210 cleanup. A co~plete comm'! BOOKKEEPER I ODRRAUNGG~TcOo~~ Convrnl""lly 1-,1--' corncri ;>o " ·,JU --·' •· i;erv. !'or Free est cail,' • • • r~ ~1 "" .,... "" Divorced? Over 11? u E\lPLO\'\IE \\'arn!'r ,t, Bris!ol. OFFICf-:. ;-.l11t lnr:, R11•rr~1rlP .\!\' \\'ay, quality home 962--0672. nique, young, growing com-• · NT AGE'.':CY Dr, l'\B, $1li nin. A1·111! 411 Fnr a self rxplanarory nlcs. --~ rrpair. \Vall s. re1hng. floors p . . pany \lith an extra ordinary I 12"' Broad11·ay, C.i\I, fl.17'-.'IO~-ll nr lll-l-."1177 sage 2~ hrs a day call f'tC'. No Job too smrdJ. apintingh& . potential, seek~ a vivacious, 6~5·3111 '!16 '801 "'I 0991 Devrloiv>r I\ 1)1 1'fl11s1der ,,,.. Jlll.\'C' F:-S1de Tr1plrx. 2 br aper an91n9 · ··• or ...., -. ,,_ 517-0036 2~ hr an~ serv abovr avrrage r 1c Book· 9 A"1·9 P_\l Daily. Sat !1.6 445 <'"P\ir1.c; p::11·ka:::(' of T[l's .... 1.·h. f1lt'rl )11-1~. s:aragrs. · ' · · · · I P1\L:'lt & Cnrd Rrarlrr. $10 fri1 • r11uily In nrw a11rac·1111• lneonie Sil;, per nio. T'rarle \\'AL.KJ...:G Deck Coating! of PAfNTit-;G , professional. All krrprr, Thi~ is an ('.'\'crp. * DRIVERS *-__________ , l'f'ar!ingi; 'llllv SJ 11·/Jhi.<. ad. . I all h""'s. Lee Roofin' Co, "'O tk guarn. Color r1onal opportunity for the SUITES ava1l1tble, f.\rd1cal lOSJJ Bc~c·h, ~ 1a n 1 0 n n1oh1lc lmn11' p.u\,, Jlll'"JllJ fnr ;1ppro" 6 unJts in samr c.•i'.' ,~1,.-,-~,. ••I. N E , l.___•'"t-•I• ___,,~ Business Rental Rooms •oo professional blrl,t:, J 7612 1 ~·27-:ilflG r1nancial. S?~1.:;(l',I() ,11r11 ti l:!.~i:l.11 " U' LU" ... .. spccialist. 6'16-70Sl: ~7-1441 right per.son. 17141 ;,30-60:() 1 0 xper1enct • B h Bl d II B p k -~ Addit""n~ * n. _ .. ,1·0 PA TNTING ' H on••t , Anaheim. I N I ('QC \I • <Lr 1ni:-• '6.1 Cud !'eda11 L>rVJJI(• \\ 111 ()f'C':u\[rOnl acrr nrAr Cre.<.· "' ,_ ........ niuu I g ecessary ''-"'O:"::'.:"-:-------A Ir c 0 n d 11 ca 11 n i.:: 1' OR ladL<'S only. Sl niassa.r:e ;-Geno.·ick & Sons, Lie. guaran!ecd \Vo r k. Lic'd. C ARETAKER ,(. , • . 1f:LEEPl\G ROQ\I. )lalure Carpel1ng: Jan11orial serv f;P£'Cial $5 27~34 Beach tr<ir!r fur: "11,1111 .Y in hnu~r. rrnt ('ii~. i·lrar. \\'ant cah-67::-&'.Hl * a-19-2110 Local refs. Call 67a-5i40 GARDENERS HELPER for :\lust ha ve cll'an Calif. driv. l'.Ork1nc: prr~11. non-<lrink<'r, Inquire Suite S. , or cull I Bl\'d., H.B. ~1-9213 ,','",',"',.~~ o. r .su Hui any1h111~ Ju L"lk•• •,\fl'Ol\head I Big aft :;. ~-Coast <'Slate. Xlnt hvin.r: Jl1J! record. Not under 2'.i. I "O 01 u... PA't1r_ l~11'hn1·d K. Irwin Lic'd Contr. P.eniodehni:: ====.,--~-~--1 qt-pi"s ,m,ll ••la-. Id-al YELLOW CAB CO. non-s11111krr. l\!li.!iOIO 540-5724. A A.. II .,.JCS Anonymous. Il l ~·" ~~,.,. I I s·" ~""n Addi tions. Plans. Layout PAINTL~G/pa""ring 18 """' ·~ .. •.r "' !" "12 72 7 ·'~'-''"'" (rJ !Or o'\<'hllll_;fir i:Miuou ,,... . .r·-il>.b fo<' .•1.ngl" ""~~.,· ... ~n,.I 186 E. 16th St., C.i\L ~i;--rli'!ti.1 p\1-r nlr STORE bldi;: <Jr olc ror lS(' r1onc '~ -I or \\'l"ite 10 . _ -~ Karl E. Kendall 548-1537 in Harbor area. Lie & JU '" ,,, ... , ""'' ""'"'"'"""70:-=:::.::....~1 patio 3 till<• h ch 1b 3 y Xlnt Npt Blvd e:-lpo~ure. 960 P. 0. Box 1223 Co~ta i\Tt'sa. I Liq;c \\cs1d1fl J•)! • f-r('r B11.,1111'<~ Oppor!u1uty-book· bonded. P..el's furn. &12-2l56. \\'ho loves plan!~ & f101rers . EL EC T Ro NJ c supply I ,1,,1 •I"~" T .. ~,1, r-1· ll•r in" 111uJt·,. ,•. fish" •• , ... furniture \\:rite c1,,,,fird , ... , 12• 1 r 67:\.1013 til 11 p ni. sl f. Across fz'Oni city hall. DA:\'CE lessons; Latin & ' ':-::·· "' n ." " -., ,., ·' " u •· l'.'iT & E~l<'r. . · . · "" · _ "•I roun er sa ~.<.man. 11 . \V. Bus'"sr 67'.'r-HiOl Atnrrican. Introductory off-rinr a11a honir, ~ i (.'011dv· (l C111y !•J<', s.-iOOQ v11I. T'radr -----------1 -, ~ Painting. Daily P1lol, P.O. Box 1Zi60. \\''RIGHT CO. 17iD 1'e""J>Orl "' m:i.rkr!place In -ntJn1tu11, or ~~·· ·· f.,1· •'i<r, OOil!, Jrcp or ~ FURNITURE Stnpping. any Lie <l. ins. Free est. 30 yrs Costa i\!<"~R Calif. 92626. • Blvd c \1 IC'A'r.. The D.\!LY PILOT GALLERY Shop for P..{'nl. !r ~I pc'r hr. fin.1185 .. \i.l(i.!l.'Jn:, * I t''\'p<'l'. Chuck, 64~809 . 1 .. -.c··=-"~· ~~~~~~ Oassilit'd ~thon, Sav e I Contact Villai:?e Inn l!olt>l, \IHS. Rflbrrt L. :\111lf'r, .lt·, 1 ... . , _ ,:-:;,"-.~•';'.: at\·~ra.g~ .~·h~i,i,· ,°1,r-rocker * PAPERHANGER * Help Wanted, M l. F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Ila "'" t• l'C ''''' U,·,.01·11••••>r,6n, .. 1>1·Jo.•h. i;rippe .. ·1·'" • .,. " molll'y .. time &· ellort by 696 So. Coa.~1 l·h\y, Laguna 1< proud lo announcr .~he 'l'r '""'.' 'rl''. • .... • '. · ' 'V" ., nr~I \\ ~111 hn ,, 11 1r u;1 ·1·r .. r "11 ,,.,, .. l-d.•,p'd, Garden"ing Prior instrucror. &16·24~9 armrhaU'. &ach. 4!}.l-!J.l.11j i~ prrJ!;nanl. · A. • · . 1111 1.11 , " " 0(MIHI r;-:r "'A~ ii • r"'r JU/Jl 10 "'"'13~37-40.... h60-7l-15 CANCll (Jit!\i,JUllEi1 f!t{i)JUtY i1 '"""·""" .<..Jsi-76--79 • mob11<• hon1 ... TD·,,, uJ' •Ul)· ~Jl ~!'J'\ l•'C'~ $30 \! va/IJI'. No \'Vastin!; ni1t . 'Ir. Jcn,rr1. ug-1. 1\.\,\1. L•Ji·~l prof't'rt.11. I EXPERT JapallP!!.e *WALLPAPER* f,7;...·ii.'f. ~;1'.!!\l~O 1·1 0·• __ 1·1 ~i~11i:__4!1!!.l~'.ll __ I gardener. Complete garden-\I.lien you caJJ "l\lac" 63 F'i1rd '1 r plt-.,-.. -,r--;1 ~;nc:li,11 1; 1.....,1ns. 5rctudl'rl ini:? . .,...rvicc. Free e s t . 548-1~44 646--1111 lu111bi'r rack f..· 1001 hn:o.t·~. 011 l1•1rl h 1!11or l<J!. Brant I &l:r-03-IJ. LE:::CO Pain!lng ·c ontractor Trod11 roir \'1lll <'1]1\IT\ 111 ··•itld. II!' P;1~{ldf'l1/I, J'OR £:-tPER Japanr~r G11rden<'r. Int/ext. 2 Story '.';pec:1al\J1t. lritr niodrl P1rk-t1p or ' 1'fl1, nupl"' h••u~ \','ir:lnt Joi, Coniplf'T~ liil\ n S('I'\' & Ali;o, a c: roust. ceil. !fl n11lrai::r. __ ,,_,._l!'ll'•___ i'-H Crl:\I c'' Onr ?JIS-S:i.32, I landscaping. .) 4 6 ·D 7 2-1. ,<;praying. Llc & ins. 6-l.>-:.!399 l\'A\'.T GOOD NF::\r Ort :.!! 1~1n 11'h'r ~11ilh<i1H. sll'('p~ j -'c"-"--'-'c"-~-~---- 1.11\E N I~\\' Lf.:(i RJ>.::~TU< ;. 1i. dn<'i-rd :it ~liJ'l. f''.\l"h:tni;:r At."$ Lanrl.lcij.pirl~. Tr(' e PAPERl-IA NCER. flock. fen! Coo , vin)•I. "''ar., e5timates, rhe l'OR , n Cl .~O\I I !'. 11rrkrnrb for n111b11 ... canip· rc1no\'al. Yard remodehni;:. ~y !IOL. or YOU!t CHOICE. ('r. I Trash ha11lin~. lot cleanup. 1l angm an, 547-5846, I Srh11·ar!Z i;l()..ll,;:~ It till.f;,'\'}(J • __ Rr~11.\r ~prinklcrs. fi73·1166 l=-===~-~-~~- -TO-l\'i\110t;S~~ .1 BH. ". HA LA\\ N care &_ ga d \ \ ork PAINT ING/paprring, 18 yr.l 1; ... 1f r1iur~r /oJt.Chnstmas / 1 · r "' 1. · in Harbor llN'B. J.ir & \rwpo11 Brarh J·:J,·,· k11 \'.'1 .. <•rf' l'rirrrt It! S:iortl LIJ::hl hauling . -Exp. d bonr!rd. Rrl':c furn . &l:?-2336 fq1t.·, pool rri f'll!ioi \' ,i. l"r q11wk 1fo•.<1I \\'i\l tl'd $!\~'.Kl ~"~'~'~'~o~on~b~l'..r.,_:C:•~11c·"::::'·::'c7·,:3·•'.;_·_ i pf;;,;;;--P";o.'hc~~i:;" 1h· St?,C.IO T.1k" T n Trail· , ,1 fnr c·.q· M:•t 1rll•·lry. Gardening 'Plast'!r, Patch, Repair rl' nr ~ 0,1 n•·r h It> r.1~1 I ;111t11111(', , •r ~ f,D.Oilfl:.' PLASTER pa 1 r h. R m . \\' \\!Fl)l<llr 11i1ul<'i 1·\~ ---t:XPJ-~n ,Jnp11.nc~r ~ardrner Adds. Nr11· \1·nrk. frr!'.'1 "IJURl'l'00t k ll;11r l'H\fi l~r flld f,rrat [)nnr \l11l" Hrllttlll(' m11fntenanc r , e.<·lirns.tt'S. ;,lj..4Wl ;.ft ~ 'I t.. hr1ndl1•. P11/)C'rs.AKc.;, grn R ., uM11niz I Ii, ;Hl!flni:UIC'I , eas. montruy r a I e S. 1> PATCH PLASfERl~G I I I rii·d .1·h,111ip. glOC'k. Inc. doc 892 l2t0 •111' 1111 !'il J;:r', j.!Oi)( IU'f'<, -, • All ., ..... ,s. Free e~timales .• ~ 7 h~<' Trd fnr old 1·11r. ~nil. ,.~ 01·1i: nwnrr. 10 11.. 1;.,.,;!l,'1 Gardening Service Call ~2J •• 11 ~-1, .• ,. 0,,,,1,~,,,, 1 ilr-. hr1.1t. fllrri. or., tl~'J.6942 , "" " , by e:-lperlenCf'd Japanese Plumbing l•\1!11'rl. S~'l:>'l: 'fi7 Chf'1·y \\1v1t do you h111·e to trn.dc? • 968--018.1 • lr11ral11 I dr. l.i;idrd, $11''ifl List ir hPfl' -In Oran,i;P MRED O[ that old furniture~ PLli;\lBIN(; REPAIR 1'11 \!:\}'. l01r m·~. l•ns. "ti.11 County", lnrgr~t read trod ll'1 rt:tlly not that hlltd Nn job IOQ 11n11lll n.1 1c )'00. •1'l.l-I~) 1111: po~r.&12-5tii8 to rrpl11ct. Ju~! "'atch !hr • &t2-31~ • !1i1'1lltu:re " ml!f•tl\a.r!NYJ' • PLU:i.ln1N°G .-- rolumns In lh• Cluslfied F:lr1•tric11l Rrp1111r S.'< hr • * * * * * * Srr:tion fil:!-27Y• Gl2-1 IO:I *Restaurant A~NOUNCING ANOTHER E xciting Far West Service * * Now acceptin9 opplicotions for - • FOOD & COCKTAIL WAITRESSES • HOSTESSES •COOKS • BUSBOYS • DISHWASHERS • BARTENDERS Apply in person only 9 ,30 A.M. lo 4 P .M . 1842 !\lac Arthur Rl\'rt , Across £ro1n Ornnge County Airport 111e~11y, Mareh lb, 1971 DAILY PILOf ZG [ ..,_ ......... 1~1 1 --· J[ll] I -~ J[ll].! rn.;.,...... J[ll]ll ':'"""' .J[ll]l.__I _ .... ,,,,._ ..... __,]~I -I~ I .... _ 1~1 ~1 .... _ .... _-~llB~~1 Help Wonted, M & F 710 I Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wo,Utd, M & F 710 Holp Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Furniture 110 Ml1coll1noou1 111 TV, Radio, HIFI, Dog• 154 I I Stereo IU -• ENCIOlE>:RS aod MATURE, "'"""' lady 10 e PHARMACIST e SECRETARY· TYPIST ** SHARP GIRLS ABANDONED HJ.f'I inod"n cabt w/1.\"1---------GREAT D.,,., M"'• lkUxlle. • £U:CTRON1C TEClll"I-stay with 2 girl.1, ages 12 Beach ad\·erttstna agen<'Y· Jookl/'11 for 0 permanenr po-JBL 11peaker In matchln1 l yr. Papen-AKC-3 sen. CIANS Df'1.l1:11 and & 16, trom 2'.30 to 6:30, 1 Reller, part tlme, s·uurday , Conaenlal surroundings, tu('I i"Jtion. One ot Orana:e Cou11° 5 RM. GROUP 1 cabr $35., RedwOOd picnic fo' ANT AST 1.c. VALUE: pedlaree-champ, •tock · 1i:ae1nbl.)', MJl!d s 'ate 1 5 days. Also 11ghI 1 am <I hours. Hospital ex~a·-location On trv!ne Flnanc-1y's fif'le•t botlques. rt.1ust be table 6 ft. w/n1atchln.g Spanllh Medit stereo con-Shots, ears cropped, vtry circuitry ~~Sl'"''?rk. Call anytln1e. I Jenee preferred. • HUNr-\aJ To\\·rr·Fuhion I!lttndl. t:xper'd in alt phases 01 bcnchtoa $10. Alum. c·hlllse sole, AAIJF'~l. tape outlet gentle I h 0 u 1 ' bro kt n · Advanced Kini>tlci;,. ~nt·. j3&...l!W)6 J INGTON INTERCOMMUN-XJnt $Ill~&. company i>I'" bol\qU{' llt'lllna. full 1in1t' Living roon1 set, dreutr, S:Z., Choice !oca.rlon 2 101.s ~';.~~ New: Now $l1'S. Opghouse incl. lnvtttn'lf:nl l23l Vl<'lur!a S~ti,-C. 1 '\IATURE t>Xp'd 11on1an for !TY HOSPITAL e ~r50n-£>fl1~. 't\lil pailtlon involves pern1 po~1llon for right a11l. mu'1111'. headboard -!Ull ~!arbor Rest Cf'mttary di.J. . $l,OOO + $350 or best offer 171~1 t1-1~7 ' 1 J housework & lauodl'y 6--h1·1 nel Dept, 17712 Btoach Blvd . hr11.vy typinl( _ yuu 111u~t he U ynu quality call lo!' ap-~~c box sp1•ing & mattres! counted 54:>.3406 2 Stereo .11~akers, AR 4x, or trade for'! 646-6!).ll F.11ual opportunlt)' ~inp '-'>1'1' 1 day, once a wk. ~l1h11.ve Huntlngton &ach, or caJi a top knotch typist to quaJ . j poin!mera. 1111::: LOOK. -5 pc .. dlnette set·-2 tv.·in * *' INVERTER, Heath Klt. Brind n"w. Chen')' Cond . MALE Silky&: male, creme, • ENGINEER • Fiberglass t'l'l's S2 ht 557-9600 j 847-7801. ify. Dictaphone experience I &H-240o box 'prings & mauresses -niorie! MPl.,, 12voc 10 110 '194-4881/Gen!'. toy-mtn: Poodle. Both proctuctio11, :-01 a c Greg~ r I MECHANICAL PR 0 Ft: S SIONAL phOne helptul, but not i1ecessary. SITTEH.. n1ature "om an 4 dr, che•t -rrftlgerator. VAC, 60 C)'cles, 400 wait~. ~~1!~~~1 33~ 4 6E~O ~:1~ ;I~ ~~~ht Corp. \G3l Plare~tla. Experlenct'd with hand & J Kllicitor ~ Dana Polnt, San Pho11r for appt. Af.-. !o.lar-from N.B. or Cd'.\.f a,1~a. $2.75 PER WEEK l NE\V as~cmbled & checked I ][' ': CM ·· · powl't toola. Capable of 1 Cleinente, Capistrano area. !h/\11 644-5284. I oY>n transp. 67>-08&2. $238 BALANCE out, Sacrlllce $100. Call _ f lft to You _ 1--·-~==~===-I EXEC. SEC'Y accurate v.ork. 549-1178 \York In your o\\·n hon1e. 'TELEPHONE ad\·e1·t1.sini; ''~28-~98~4;5~~,1~":''._~6~~P~':'~·l1~~~iiii~~~~~~ AKC SlLKY PUPPIES For bulld<'r or 1u.~ury apts. I TOPATRON, INC. Bi;_.t ~ea! in area. Phone S1cr1ta~die1 d . !rom our pleasant Newpol'I WELK'S FURNITURE -"''-'<'kdll)'li. CACTUS C t & Pear. ~!·: t!m:~ ! :~~ :; • M-E-0-1-C-AL 1 8J.).146J bet\\'een 9:00 a.111. S700. Fees pai • A nun,, offices, Hl'!y ".Ages. il_.Jo. ,_,,. * SANTA ANA * .-• TELESCOPE 8" f8 . en ury Girl ore. Top !(kills. Lilt' ;;nd noon. exrc. & legal in the L.A. JO.::.O r1_1flc<'tor, \\'Ith ~quaioriui decoraUve, small ice plantl, us! \\'e boys are $100 & booldeeeping. SECRETARY e area, ing or t'\'f. ~hifls. &I:>-600 W. 4th ST, niount lncludln• 2 flxtd & some succu.le n.t•; sis is $1.25 wlo pa.~rs. PlO MISS EXEC AGENCY Recept. Gen'I Ofc. I F J h 33• ~Ir ~iadnd WHY BUY I O"" -m oo·iho·-i>lo '"' dtt'l'.lratl\'e, ,;mall lee plants. & S2'25 with. 548-4957 To $400. N.B. co \1·ants friend-1 A s0 'tt o .s ee TRAINEE e e "" ·~ """" ~ u D'" ~09993 3/!6 I 7=="""~c---,-'°"'-410 \V. Coaar l·hvy., ;\'D ~lalUl'e, 11eU groomed, 2 )'rs. NEWPORT • pieces. Excellent condition. · <A· """"' AFGHA.iV, blk muk/1Uv.-r. IHG-3939 secl'elaria.J f'Xperienct>. Type ly person 10 welcorne ell-Personnel Agency II Depot .\!_gr. Sa!es·St'rv. Elec S2'i:1. Phone 528-!)Mj aftcrl--~-------Great petM1na1lly, house-~r;::~;:::::;;;::~;::!:~ 30 1~11n1, SH 80 v.•pm, fainiJ. ents. gen'I office duties. CaU & trolu.x Corp. ln1m. e1np! fURNIJURf7, 1 6 p:-,1 \l'ttkd&.)'B. ADORABLE blk pup, hun-broken. Pure brttd. lt1r. I.~ iar \\!lh medical terniinol-illiss Laura, 5.)7.6L"'2. Ahl· 833 Dover Dr., N. · For 1n1. ph, GriS\1'ald S.10 ting dog type. 10 v.ks, Lab \\'oolard, 968.~22 * ExeC se'C·v---$700 OIQ". • \\'ES'f)JINSTER gall Abbot Personnel A1en· 642·3870 l an1 on!) -196-23&3. ,. * VACUU~I TUBE VOLT & G. shorl-hAlred polnter 1---..,,---7-0.,.,-==-- Career pu.1;1hon SH 120 CO'.\IMUNITY HOSPITAL . cy, 230 W. \\1arner, Suilt * WANTED * Be Flexible! .\IETER, ltewlett Pac~~rtl. mix, nds id home, !ncd Sacrtnce Sale! 211 s A I Rent mo. to mo. with n1?C1cl 400 11, Xlnt cond1tLOn: yd, 539-7181 • 3116 Chihuahuas, aood blood line. Personnel ~p1. lm2Beach · · · i SERVICE Sta!Lon Attendant, Foreign car mech11n1c .,.,,/ lOOo;. h S7.1 or make oUer!! Calt1-----------1 Pups & older q, 1169 lir Reinder• Blvd., Huntington Be;;ch, or 1 RESTAURA..~T help v.·anted, fuU or ruort time, not undt'r own sm] tool•. a-18-SSlti • Pure ase Option :J2S-984) after 6 p )I "Kl'.\IBA •• beaut. all wht G. Do-•t • ---c •1 P.,,onnel Agency "·U 847.,..,,... .--~ lnd. item sl:"lection •= ••1'-""'• ·" • 4500 Ca D NB bl 24 Hr Cely TURF Da1n1alians, male. ........ .,.,.,,, f 18 yrs or O\"er, pr. rime 1 18. :O.tust be neat, 5vuu al)-\l'ttkdays. Shep & Samoyan mix, fem. inpus r., . . *MEN and WOMEN*' I days &: nlghts. Apply bef. pearlU'lce & persona e. • • DBL mattress & box spring pup, 7 n10. loves kids, nds pick litter, .11hots, -t/show. Cal! For Appointn1en1 I lOani any morning. Good references. 3006 I 11~) CUSTOM gd ho1ne, lncd yd. r -546-211S JACK-IN-THE-BOX 38) t:. Harbor Bl\'d., C.~t Men:handise V Furniture Rental \v /Ratfan headbrd & spr.-ad-6]8.9)$ 3/16 Terms. 642-1937 ~ 0111nge County distributing 1 . .:;17 \V. 19th, C.iil, 5-18.3.151 like new S7:i, n1ap!e chest AKC, female Beaglo pups. company, nO\\' hiring due to 1 th C.I\I. r~-o avocado wlvet dual LOVABLE golden Br. Nlale EXECUTIVE sec')' r or di\'en:iried financial Co , AbO\'e average secret11rial ~kills rt'(fd. Salary open 833-3822 \1krlys !or ariP1 -FIBERGLS-MARINE ORA~GE C'OA~'T EMPLOY~lENT AGE~CY JU Broadway, C.'.\I. 9 A~1·9 Pi\! Daily. Sal 9·6 61)..31 ll --- GAL FRIDAY SERVICE STA. Salesman, A"laheim 77-1-2800 """' S · S · l M_, C 11. 4 mo old, $25. AKC DA:\f recent expanslon. For those 2 R:O.f furn apt. in Cdl\t in full lime, graveyard i;hif>. Antlque1 800 Llillabra 694-3708 bedspread S20. 6~4-6j2!1 P.ringer parur auu o le & SIRE, 18 mo, $40 for qualified, salary starting at exchange for sendces of Exper!en{'t'd, neat a-p.-BEAUTIFUL K' h<'d OH.IGJNAL Oils S20 _ up ~~kl!s yr i.ov~~ed c :~~· the pair. 645-3862 $140. WEEK · Y•oman in overseeing eldtr· pearence. 2590 Ne \\•port ·~·.••.••••t !irni. Ne\er 1~~~: stlli l\Iuricl.s $1 sq ft & up 542-7096;. S3G-4493 3118 SCHNAUZER Pups, ma1e ·at .\TR. ED\\' ARDS 81().006() I !y couple. 615-0021 I Blvd' c.;o..r_ L1qu1dat1on Sale pal·kag<'d. Frame included. 613-9-197 Antonio LOVABLE blk fem. gtud, grooming. I :O.fARRIEO man lo assume S!:RVICE Sta Salesman Propoiierl :intiqu{' :ihoo $130. \\'Orth $260. \V 111 ·\VE Joan-Buy-Sell anythint:. cockapoo pup, 5 mo, nds 846-0839 rstabhsherl Fuller Brush • • • SALESLADY Salaiy plus comm. 3l!JJ .\lust Hriuirl;.rr ull 1•1 drh,·rr. u.sunl!y hon1c Coast Pawn & Auc!ion. 2426 i;:d honie, filed yd. 64(H;981. POODLE pu1>9, beaut. little ruule. 832--0:>18. I for quality retail bakcn·. Harbor Blvd, C '.\!. I COST OR NEAR COST S42-66.1G Ne\\'J)Ort Bl\•d, 642·So\00. 5-i2-7096 3/16 tiny toy & toys. Stud u rv. Medical Sec'y Experien<'e prefc!Tt"d but SERVICE Est.ab'd. Fuller 22~i fiind st , N B, OINl~G rni S+:"t \1'/hi-back PT G. Shep and pt Collie All colors. 89J..9n9 Tq $j5() N.B doctor 11 ant.s I not a mus!. Appl)' 1n person, Brush rte, S~Sl?) \\'k._ to 1 N<'1vpot'I Shnrr~• drcoriitor chairs. .\l is c Miscellaneous about 3 nionths loves kids SILKY te1Tler puppies • outgoing exper person for 10 l\lr . .Anderson . I st., also pt. hme 54&-57.f;,. fi IB-li.JS6 any1 unr <'ha 1rs. Oil paintings, Drop Wanted 820 a. n d o t he r an J ma. I 9 Female "°; Male $7S. Adult fast paced ofc. Some back SHARP GIRL, for production 1 ••••••· •••C leaf drsk. Chlnt>se 9xl2 rug , . 836-4493 .; 3/16 female $50. AKC. 646-7335 S k Sh B k .,.,i nments scl'K'duliog in-Sun onlv 9-3. 576 Sea\\ard J \VANTED Ladies q11alityl"°=~"7---~--Ca/J Loraine, &15-?770. \\'<'sl-ofr. Call :.1iss Connie. nae op a ery "'"" g ' 1 ~ I * ANTIQUE * Rd Cd~! .Spring & summer \\f'ar. POOR Prissy • \\'e have an IRRESISTIBLE poodle pupi:; cliff Personnel Agency 2W3 557·6"122. Abigail Abbot Per· 3~34 E. Coast Hwy. vcnftlf}•, par s 0 er· ' · Siu:: je elry small an· allergy problem a mldnlte • Black miniature, 6 ,·ks, \Vestclirt Dr., N.B. · J sonnel Agency, 230 \\'. \\'ar. Corona de! ;<.tar ing-typing required. I Spanish ~alnul dining rm 8' SOFA, never used, quilted tiqu!~ ;n 'consignment. blk lh yr old. mini.ca!. AKC. $55. ~9-0844 . ner, Suite 211, S.A. I SALES trainee !or marking ~lacGregor Y~cht Corp. se!, 6 Chairs & table w/ca_rv. floral. scotchguo.rded Sl25. Tues-Fri. 9:J0.5PM. 544-93U 49-1-3100 3/16 HorSll GE.i'l/ERAL Clerk _ Req. 11.S. 1 devices & station("''"'· Earn 1631 Placentia, C.~l ec. base. Sl50. Also old trunk !\latching loveseat $1 5. i:rad, 1ype SO/fiO "·pm tsta. -~ · $15. 646-7335 53.')..lg.j5 Musical Instruments 822 SUPER affectionate calico usticall. sonic knowledge of *** MOLDERS \\hile you learn. If 1101 will-Sharp Girl Friday ---::-.. kitten desperalely needs a ing to learn at tratnrc pay, Appliances 802 SOFA. mast, S1J. Virtlle 2 Speaker {'8bu1ets "'/l;> good home 6 mo old long JIM'S Hilltop Mesa Board·1 ing Stables. All steel corrals, auto. v.·aterers. ~; ml. aut Ortega liwy from San Juan Capistrano, 493·3lll, aft 5. JO key adding niachiflf' & ~~,r;~e;;c.~ 0~~~:[ 3i.'.!~.· 1 don•t apply, Good op- 1 ---rl1nr!tl' set rnd t11ble 6 i:;peakers S30 _ea., Hollow hair. 5JO-Oi5l ' 3118 ditto machine ht'lptul. Good .,. portunit) Outline qiialif1ca-Anrac\l\'t', well groomed i\E\V Caloric gas i<1ng" -<'hr'li S·l:i. ~II xlnt g.J&-6ooo body bass guitar \1·/casc,1=~=--~~~-~ starting salary + po1cnt1al \ti.11 Placentia, C.'.\f. lions. \\"t'llr Classified ad "L1ve·\V1re" \I.Ith good tele-v.-on as prizr,. never used. nil 5. ' xlnt C<lnd. S60 847_50:;s BEAUT. reg Collie needs \11th growin~ firm . Call ror ! No. 110, Dii!I)' Pilot. P.O. phonevoicf'toactasreC('p-Self-cleaning ovrn, _ ne"· home. Nee..ls lots of lntervle\\, 49'1-115:1. illrs. j ~10RNING ne\\·spaper auto Box l5GO, Costa l\le.sa. 92626 lloni!t in a busy, e."<Cituig I lhern1oi;tatic top burn<'1', In-~IOVlNG must sell 1naple Office Furniture/ Jove & affection 546-2910 * * BOX ST ALL & con'ILI. You feed . $20. Gonzalez. rou!r, 1 days a \Vk, app. office. Must be exper'd. in fra-red bro1lt'r. Rcte!ls S~J. furn. good cond. Also; b~r Equip. 824 bl\\'n 9-5:30 3/18 4 hrs, 4-6 am. Xlnt pactime SARAH ~oventry nee;ls 0., dealing v.·i!h the public. hf'st ofler. &16-6:l:>4 & run1pus aCc<'ss. frl~.43.12 ADDRESSOCRAPlt 'olod<l FIRE\VOOD lo• h•a•lo, !H9-3591 GENERAL HELP · p 1 or pl time help. No ln-'· 1392 Gah\llV Ln C i\I " ' ... Jn<.-onir. re niature, mar-\'estment. \\'ill train. min Sales backgrnd pref<'1:1·Ed :0.IUST Sell~ t.Tust ::=l'e! ' , '. · · 200. G!'aphotype Model 350. \\'llshing machine, ringer- • $3.8S HR. e rled person. 540-3(00 ;ige 20. 530-1~7 & 5'13-9066. bu1 not nee. Call J\ohss f 01·-1 Like ne1v GE heavy duty BAR stools originally . $100 I 1000 plales & cabinet $575. 1ype _in v.·orking con d . I BoltiMd 11~ )f ) Large chain needs 9 men, 1 NEED -2 .\1olders, 2 AssPn1-res! fi4j.4121. 4 cycle \Ya~hlng n1achi11f'. e~. queen .sl bed, \\'icker :::r.f.t\Todcl 107 Drycopier 5-18-0~~2. 3118 Marine Equipment 1C.. full or part tlme for mer· tilers I iroodll'orker, SEAMSTRESS SHARE ho ~tature ivhlti>. Both undl'r v.·a1Tanty, hc11dhrtl, n1te stnd, lamp, $1"1l. 774-5200 2 T-•a•e k'ollono, .,,.,,,,~. iiiijiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiij~,;;;-;1 ORANGE COAST my nie. · · --r1c 816-260:> "'"" " " chandising and service. for fiberg!a>s boats. , E'IPLOYMENT AGENCY lady or couple. Roon1 !ree I Np! Bch 61.'H!Sl2. . · . CALCULATOR, cur r '-' n t ~lolly and Teddy Boy Jots Call l\1r·. Day ~6-9862 Exp'd. only. 6--12-iilil • · 1 • for pl liine hskpng. 1 child CE auto \1·;1sh1•r S:ill. Ken-ANTIQ. chest. oak triple niodel. 12 Digit v.•ilh lape. or lonq: hair and love, Aft e GIRLS e GIRLS I Nul'sing: RN relier 1~4 Broad\\·ay, C.'.\J, ok. 8-l&-4083 n101'C auto 11·asher S65. Bolh chest, bunkb<'rf & spring. rcc!lll meniot·y. 6/J-6060 5'19-1~17 3118 900 . LVN -1 dav a \\'k 18811 ' £.15-Jlll --STENO CLERK II I !11.t<' models ~ xlnt t.-onrl. 2.iiG Fair"a.Y Dr. C:\I. AH F.stablished r1rn1. opening Florirla S!. · !Staog ·Lan"\ I 9 A;\l-9 Pl\1 Daily. Sat 9-G * Guar & delivered. 5<16-86T2, 4P:O.T Pianos/Orgons 826 WHIRLPOOL "'asher dryer SCRlM-LETS ANSWER·S Fl I ~ combo. VPry clean needs new branches. 01' P ·I 1-lunlington Beach. p h: SECRETARY 5549 • $'67 month 8~7-8113 USED :'lledi1etT8Jlean couch WE new bearing 6'12-9799 3118 1!me. j 847-3313 * GAS dr.·rrs & rehlt & chair. Gold. Good con· Call ~I' $~~~dH~ ~ti-9362 I NL'RSING . R.V·s I T~e~:p He:~~:;ng~e~~;o~ REQUIBES -Jligh School \\:ashe1~,' s5o. \Viii ~ e I d11'.on S~5. 962-6077 I cl~~,::;;une:~: Experienced B "f 1 f ii'. gradua!lon and two years ! \1/gua1. -~str Ch~. :.la;,: tag SOJ.11 8 long, beaul golrJ QUIT!!! 3118 Lounge -Eject -Occur - G!Rl. FRIDAY r.or * 5-19-3061 .- 1 M"'·tSSoaEutXouEC•A<G"E1esN.CY , experience in stenographic repairman, 531-8637. qu1ltt'd ''t'_l~et. Bra_nd ne\\',1 DUE 11 _ Oenoie -f\'EGLECTED archi!('(:t'S o(fice. Gen offl('P ' DOUBLE N Arcep\ SI 1J 968-185."' to a ergy musl give Next to the Bible, the cook. duhi>s, "~yroll ~ hook-PART 11me Bookkeeper 1n -410 w. Coast Rwy., NB v.ork. ~_oven. wl rr ~10\'e. _ · ' I Afll'r 5 years, \l'I' are closing S\\'av Black l\lanx kitten. book is the most NEGLECT-'m i~v ollice your hon1e for Gas Service 646.3939 I clean. Likr_ Nev.·t Best Of·~ PIECE Bedroo111 Sult<'. our doo1"! in Costa f\lcsa. :M>-i452 3118 keeping. Sonic P Sta. Exp pref'd. \Viii 1rain.J APPLY_ by :O.larrh 2~th, 19il fer. 968--9658 mocar v.·alnul. &f6-.362t or All remaining Pianos & Or-ED volunie in most homea. exp req'd. &12-3392· Corona del :\-Jar onl)'. to Personnel Office , REJ''RJG. wllrg bottom 962-7566 I gans, new & used, to clear LO~~LE C~ke~l Terrier BOAT, motor, tcaller, 35 GRINDER 675-4112 -~•Sec'y Legal $600 " I freezer $95. GOOD cond: 8' sofa S.l:il, at auction prices. Savings ~x. ~ "' ~19-J:l ~M horsf'· electric start $4.51). ORANGE COAST PBX answering servicr. ex· ~1in. 3 Yrs Calif. expcr.gen'I _CITY OF -Call 646-i820 6' oak coUce tb!, 2 chairs,! up lo :xi~~. No dealers ves c 1 i:n. • 1169 Dorset lane, C.M. E'.\.TPLOYfilNT AGENCY rX'r pre!'d, Full time, steady practice/top SH & typina; NEWPORT BEACH :O.lagna\•ox & misc. 644--1Hi3 plea!><:'. HIDE-a-bed m gd cond. 281.> 13' Aluminum car top boat 124 Broadway, C.'.\1. l\'ork. 536-8.l!Sl H.B. skills/some stenoret!e. Cameras & SOFA, matching chair & 3 \VARD'S BALD\VIN STIJDJO l\1onterey Ave., C. ~f: & 71.~ Hp. Elgin motor. $W , &1:>3111 pf,\1'0 teacher, ovC>r 39 yrs, Service Center Emp Agency 3300 Newport Boul~ Equipment 808 tables SlOO. 1819 Newport Blvd, 642.8484 546-3086. 3/16 Phone 842-3276 9 AM-9 P'.\1 Dally, Sal 9-6 11 llling 10 be trained for ::.00 Ne1vport Center Dr. N.B. \'ard, Nel\'J)Ort Beach, • . . , , ., . !Mi.S-9709 CLEARANCE i\IISS m11rked Siamese and I '"B'o-a7ts-/"M,.-•-r'ine-----I HAVE FUN niaking xtra · l t · · Suite 53) I 644-4981 California. 92660 (71~) ** IELESCOl E, 8 IS, ic-.• . labby maro.: 6-8 m o's, E J -• money Sll.99 invrs1. gives ~~~oo~'.m~:~ m in music flector,. 11• i t_fl equa1orial i\E\V )·Jedi!. Oa~ coffee table SALE !en1ales . .)46-7308. J/18 qu p. 7V"I G73-S6J3, mollnl 111clud1ng 2 JJ>:cd & & commode, S30 each. Call you catalog, ~an1~~· ~~-The fastest dra1v tn the 'Vest I DAILY PILOT DIME -A one zoon1 orthosc.-opil' !'ye 536--1020 I Ovn· JOO Pianos & Organs GEJ~M~N short h.a.lr, fem , I * * INVERTER, Heath Klt, ~~~t~s ~oa~ni;1fcij ~he I Fast results are ju5t o. phone -LINES cost you just pen-House Hunting'? \Vatch th<' pieces. Excellent condi!ion. l\INGSIZE hradboarrl, 2 side Reduced for lmmed. sale, yr. Xlnt \v/children, all ~~~I :~~~lel:V~ ~a~~~ Holidny :O.lagic ron~ is I: call away. &12-5618 -nles a day. OPEN' HOUSE calumn. sm. Phone: j28-9843 aflcl' tables. antique \\'hite & ' Buy Now & Sa~• I shots. 4D-1"6671 3/16 NE\V assembled & checked &W---05Sf1 Help Wanted, M & F 710 I Help Wanted, M & F 710 '"lelp Wanted, M & F 710 6 p.m. u·eckdays. gold. Sl25. 67)-8228 1 ~1"0 9oally SlO tJI126~ I adontble black & white out. Sacrifice SlOO. Call .~~==Es·.·· • 6 1 •·1·rc11EN lable ,,,, h · I ~-'· · * un -;> frmale rats ""Jlge cagt. All 528-9845 alter 6 P.M. week-* HEAD \VATTR '' " ~ c airs. COAST MUSIC ''''"'· "" "'°' 3/17 D I [)'""' H Furniture 810 Good sha"". Sl:i. c,111 v.:iv-v.,,,, day,, a 111 "" r ouse., ,.~ l\'EWPORT & 1-fARBOR 1===~~-~~--Penn. lnlerviews 9 lo l:.! VT ,,e•llo'oe ~6-0.114 after 6. TO QUALIFIED ho ni e · JOHNSON JO"" shaft o/b, Ou CA P pany niust • .. Cost.a 1'1eM * 642.2851 h<'aut. amber colored male . ..., noon. S~:'ll'S SEAFOOD y rt MAKE A house luU of hcaut. KING·SIZE BED $75 w/manual & parts. Never 16278 P f II fluol HAMMOND, Steinway 'li>k]oi~ty~. ~S;jw~'-'i;";;;;5.J~s.-08;;;;;~13-;J~/iil6o 1 ,;:_·-""-"!J~·~~)>h'.:,C._~~-~·~~ a 1 JC 11'Y· · SpRnishl:\1edit. furn; 9 · * 544.2475 * U....-u . ·" • : ~'"""' Bch. ld 1 1 & 1 Yamaha. Ne1v & used 2 Female hampsters spill LOT OF MONEY WITH Us g:~ ve vet §0 a ovesea1. Garage Saie 812 pianos of most makes. Bes! levrl cage nlO\!ing easl B~ts, Power 906 HOSTESSES & \Va1tres~e,. King·sz lxlrn1 set, Gani<' b I So C l"I t Sch ldt for a 11f'11· operat1011 .\p· set, Hi· back v <'Iv i> t DRESSER & ,·anit)', old UY! n . ' a 1 • a. m £42-2-138 3116 '69 CHRYSLER 14' 45 HP, I k be''' •• ,, t I -h . D 8' blk I k I h & . lllusic Co. 1907 N . .-.Iain, ' A •-1· Sh h , 1139,·, '62 C""s 19' •·ood. p 1cat1on.; 111 rn , ~ • ecora,vr c airs, en c oc s, <' ot es misc. Sa t A ' " mos. us .. a 1an ep ern nn pm-4 pn1 \\"ed. Thu1·s. fn: BUT If TH TS LL naug. sofa & Joveseat, 5' 11en1s. 9-5 \Ved-Thurs. & n a na. nil:< puppy. 54&-7308 3116 ]Sj ff.P., S1500. OR BEST See :\Ir (11nn1111~han1 al .\Ir • A 1 A rocktail rablr 11·/mal<'hing fri. 19S2 Rosemary Pl. C'.\.I BA~Y GRA~O Pl~NO 8 WK. old puppy, pt·boxer. OFFER. £.l2...4097, ~3-22U, Steak. CV!. :?2Gi Fair\ 1c11 Mn1n1odrs., 10· sofa • ~r~rn Misce llaneous 818 60 ) ears aid. $500. Upri~h!, 67H 143 3116 ~·~x~'~"'=------- Rd , 54s--036.S. YOU WANT, WE DON'T & gold -Hnportrd Belgian _ Slj(I. 54$..9733 or &16-1517. :\IOVING, must sell 16' Ken-t t p J AKC Dalmallon loves kids. ('Ut vc \'C • ictures, amp.~. PRIME Y•cht CI u b PRIVATE party. Chickering 897_j.lllQ 3116 nedy w/75 hp Evinrude, HOUSEKEEPER, L11·t· -in, , p,-1 roon1, TV. o;:pan1~h speaking Of\,. Good salar~. 8~&-3~1. H8IJ>RS En1plyr pays fee. George All en Byland Agney 106-B E. 16th, S.A. 5-17-{l39i JNHAl.AT!ON Tlli~l)llPJST I RI' !I: is lcred, exp{'Pi'encerf. South Coa~I Community Hosp. :':JS72 Coast H"·y. Sa. Lai:::una. 499-1~11 ('Xl 3.'JG --- ·' IR.VINE PERSONNEL I SER.VICES.i-AGENCY I 133 F.. 11th fa1 lrv1\e 1 C 'l • 642~1•10 .. I -,.-JANITOR * 1ul1 1ln1c. EX/>et'lcnced :\int. salary and t'O. bt'nelits I ~1 for llPPI. 5-1{)-~ll)j() Ext. ~OSEPH MAGNIN I Equal opp'!y C!1nployrr ! JANITORS- 10 clean offlcf' blrl,11 "· E\'r'I'. :-l.S. llu~bnnd/wile team~ Oft Call ,\1r. :->m1!h, 3-b pni. ~lon-rri, ~~11.6.·u;; IJo~fJfER~10rkeni-_-"-,-,,-,-,, 1\flllng to laCf' ~. Apply, 1 l.ftllher Baron, 1829 1 1'~rt Bvd, C.:\I. 9:30 am LIGlfT assrmbl) CI ran I rta.~1 1r novelties 6 hr dfl~. .1 o.da~:. niornlngs S9-l \\ 19th. C~I LVN-Da)S. AIDF.:S-F.x11 ~- fl!JlrM. B 8 p I t 5 I Orl- Vn.k'l<'t'n! llos p1!al. 6 6 1 C•n!!'r !'1, C.'.11 ·r111 f11~1t"' (11·Aw In 1he \''to~r • I 11 nti ily Pr lot Clas1ified Atll 6.12-3678' WANT YOU. <'tr. Al! Jes;; Iha.~ 3 mo Membership For Sale grand. Beautiful tone re-l ~=~~-----~-1 bait tank, trailer. Many ex· I old. l:>tsfl!'tat<'. 1/630-33n Below Market. Owner centlv tuned $1500 4g.j_77:;s FREE Schnauzer poodle tras. S6)() or best offer. We're not looking for salesmen .,,,.jth dollar signs in their eyei. We're looking for men and women .,,,.ho want io build a career with the foremost land torporation in the West. Land Consultants of America, Inc. is a multi-million dollar land in· vestment firm. Publicly held and just five years old. We have a lot to offer the right peoplj . so check these advantages. Here's part of what you get! * VESTED CONTRACT * TOP COMMISSIONS IN THE INDUSTRY * CAREER OPPORTUNITIES * HEALTH AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE * LIFE INSURANCE * SALES INCENTIVE PROGRAM * EXCELLENT INVENTORY • EXCELLENT WORKING CONDITIONS • TRAINING PROGRAM If you're college e ducated, that's good. If y ou have previous sales experience, so much the better. What we really want to buy from you is your ability t o thin k.and your ability to b ecome a vital into· gral part of our sales team. From your area call one of the numbers below. Oran9e County Area 1714'1 835°3233 Riverside Area Los An9eles Area LCOA Investment ( 714 I 793°3580 (2131 981°8050 and Realty, Inc. A Subsidiary of Land Consultants of . .\merica, tnc. 1 .~)f',1\ + n1alch1ng love seat M d A F · · · male pup5. 644-4899 3/16 673--4670 or 675-3597 OV8 way r Om STEIN,VAY Grand $1800 I ""ho'lo male •IUd •at $7j. Cbairi>. lamps, t"nd A C 11 (213) ,. ' 25' Trojan Cabin Cruiser !ables. s1nal1 desks, collce re a. a (co!ft $500Ctl. Shown by appt. ·/ 5.»--01""' 3/18 588.7557, Mon. Thru only. 4M-5861. 11 cage. J.. • Sleeps 4. Loaded with extrei. 1hl. Drapes, white or beige. F ri. 9AM-S PM. Wknds :\!ALE 217 yr o!d Collle. S-1950. \Vlll con.sider late: all stzt'~. H(lllyiv()()(I hl'ils 17 141 75,2196. Sporting Goods 830 J.fsbrk. &16-2043 3/18 model car ln trade. Call + dbl. bed. ~Japle BR. SCI, g. 842-7642 2 "~t'S!s o{ drav.·cr.>; alsri * AUCTION * 0 "'---==~.,.-.,.-,-~1 ~~~l-n~~e~i~id~;~c~~;~_m,?~:'. r·ine Furniture ! The I ;et• ind 5upp11e1 J!L j 5~ps;~:e8! a r 1!'1 s ~~~ Sl.000. will sell $300 4M-243G & Appliance-"Et1rl Of Arms" . . r-. 1<'rior & deck, $1500 . 491-'i;il& Auctions Friday, 7:00 pm, Gun Shop 962-81)37, 675-4623 Owner. 6' 1\'ALJ.;UT &. cane hi-fi Windy's Auction Barn Cogs 854 1958 Chrlz Craft Connie Xlnt b I ood cond, 13,250 Days 547-5466, i:~ incl; w11 nut & rosew 207j\; Newport, C:-01 646-8686 e • All Guns, Ammo & Ac-eves 673-7257 dincUe tabl<': \\•;;]nut & Bchlnrl Tony's B~c!g. Mal'J. At Below \YhOle· DACJJSllUND pup! min., ~~-~~=c-~~=I roseM)O(I coffee & lamp I ttssones AKC. Blk "-tan & Boats, Rent/Ch•rYr 908 laules· 2 n!'IV Jlalian "·al11ut '.\lL'ST SELL E!lr<' Household J sale. mahogany red. TI4/633-40l8 "·all '1amps :.risC" othrr Yum1sh1ngs. Ireez<'r, P!ano. ,\llNIATURE SCHNAUZERS 32' Twinscre\Y Chris. tully piece!!. 2036 Porl Hl!.1n,11:rite, ln)'s. bikes. mlM:. 2235 [ Open ~oon "tll 8:3/J P~t Adrf love for a perfect pet <'IJUip'd. F!shin&: or Cru1s. Jf1<rbor Vle"' Ho ni cs, ~lt'y<'r Plilc<'. 5-18-2469 or Tuesday fhru Saturday l.l.1artincrest Kennels 546--0989 ~'~··~·7'4_S.~2'_34."'-----,= "'11-""J.i. 6-12-)769. Boal• Sall 909 ~ I'°~=-~~=--~ AIREDALE temer puppies, • DEATH in family-must sell :\lG-1600 niotor SIOO or parts, (Newport et Bay) 9. "·ks. ~vi .P'Y-C'narnpion -,,T-ra·di-.tlo-,,.,--c~.-.,-Cod--,.-t-1 prlva!e ply, almost branrl sc"ing n1achine S25, \\•ig sired. 54:>-1058 I Sailboat 1 ton d\gp head I ne1v ~pan1sh tof11 S: In\ P $25, girl.~ bike SlO. l\ll~cell Costa Mesa EASTER Poodles AKC. 3 slp..2 lam 6oat 834-3883 I seal, sold for $Ii.){), plea~ iirn1s 1{)(' to '"' 3/~ & 646-7318 I n1ake cash offer. No 21 al 82S \V. l~th St. C.:'if. tn?s olrf. \Vel!-tra!ne~. do CAPE COO CAT BOAT r<'aWnflble offer refused L,\UJES ski boots size 61.1 . !ricks. ,642~326. 673-9357. 18', fbrbls. (213) su.3883. BG&-~ l11dir'i clo\\'r1 1iki r'urka. ~ir.; * * TEL~SCOPE, 8", .18. SILKY fen·rers i\1alr puppy COLUf\IBJA 28 1969. Ollys: I lLLNESS m<ik<'s i1 a 11cccssi-8 i;ki n1rk NN·t•i SU""r rerle<'tor, v.·!th equatoriAl Sr 2 a<lult females .• Reas 713 I 636-0757; Eve1: 714/ ' ' ''~ I n 1 I d' 2 ]' I • lo good homr 64G-733J I ly to sell all 10 roon1s Kova f;.P\\1ng rnachine. All iriun inc u ing 1.xcr "' · 646-572-t or 713 / 333-3-t.38.. r' nc:ir new l\t e d ; t. :; pm, 613-4292 j one 7:00~1 orlhoscopt<' eye /RIS.H .,s;ner pupp1e~. AKC Boats, Sllpt/Oockt 910 furniture C0€'Ap l'Xllmple . . I plcces. Excelle.nt condl11on. regd. Fleld and gho1v. Ph: hla<'k na~g sof::i "' lovest';f BAB\ granrl p1a1J:> $400, s· S27:>. Phone 528-9845 arter 968-69Z7 BALBOA Island ........... rl.,,. •-. , bar & Jl!tools 112'5. &burner 6 pm "'et,>krlf\Y!i "'""' •-o "" ne~l'r used SISO. 1213) ~!ovc SJO, 22 cut ft freezer I . BEAUTIFUL BOXER PUPS, 21' Inboard c1i.iiser for sale. ~2;).3622. $J7j, Piano mo\1lng doll)' S UR P ,B ?,ARD/PR,OGRES. 6 v.·~ old, SlO. 642-4818; Sips 2. Gr&)' marine 6 cyl (.'ONTEMPOR,\RY d 1 n In:;: S2j. 1\70-6919 Sl~E Jl~ig $!){!. \\ttknlles f'VI!~ 5.'14-3&~3 engine. S2100. Located in roon1 r11ble 515. ~ <'ha1rJ1! SjNE\\"PORT Be;;ich Tennis f ony • SILKY temrr puppies, north Bay of! Slpphlro St. "", hult·h S20. Dlirtl~h rouch ('lub r ha r 1 er mrm-J TV, Radio, t'llFI, fe1n11ll', AKC, shotl. ll wks. ~"~'~·~l836C-7'=-=-~..,..1 k rhair11 Sl:i. 8Ji-51134 brr~hlp-S'JOO + transfer. Stereo 136 .'i4.>-2991 1 SLIPS Avail. Finest in ~llJ:;'I' fl J Call ttl2-2-l·IO \ El,tARA'iER aJ AKC Newport for narrow beam • .') ~acr1 Cf' my \e \l'I ( * * Vacuum tutw VOLT \' · · · 111 e, ' saUboatz. 26' to 34'. Phone i;ora 1" lO\'t se,al. hke ne1\:: A~lPllI Cat, hrand II('\\', 2 l\IETER. n~wle!I Packsrd, ch lllX', 8 v.·ks. shtx, wrmd, KJngslty 67J.$7I1 btwn 5--10 Call 6P.r6!!26 hrs nn rn,1t1ne run 1n v.11ter. model •IOO 11, Xlnl concllllon: JM'!, hn!, ~ho 6-14-4459 pm. Y."ALl\UT Brr11krmnl. Xlnt 5and, i.now or \\'hel't'\"er. $75 or make offrr. Call CER:'>iAN Shepherrl puppi's ,;,--~-=~-~~- ! cond. 6'1•l'/, S200. 1.'iIS '.\lu5t srll S1095, 54~ I :>28-~ alter 6 p :.1 AKC blood line, $25. 26' slip, $GS/mo. Private 1 Corn11·11ll f,n, N Fl &16-40.18 CO\l\iODORJ.: ourbrrl mot(lr "'t'f'kdAy~. • 6~5-0092 * bath No. 2 Balboa. CO\<ts, 6Pc satJd "alnut dbl bdrm ~llP $80, Sllllboal f1bc1"ila11s 1 --·rORCA color TV 2-l" <\fo\C Gl'm\. Shep. pups. 8 N.B. Call 6Th-43Jt ~~~ 'I .wl Slli !\Ing bM11!5 ht>11dbrd over ply-.voorl, Sllhnt m1111t J $263 w!li. Champion line. Shots, E!'a t1, Speed & Ski tll SIO. RoHss S20. ~6-7147 & .. an Sl2:i. ~37-1039 Call 893-4943 "ormed. $100. 842-7279 _ l~ Gla!'l>flt 50hp Mere. eltt. FIRM K111gsi2r bt'cl 3 mo's * BALBOA BAY CLUB * , Panasonic 18" Color TV i El.EGANf Af~Mn ?ups, Wlndshl,ld, conlro.ls, cover. olrl. Xln't Cond1!1on, $1 00. RE(;, mt'mbrr~hip $1500, lnc. v. Island. 6 mos old, 5300 AKC Rl11.ck ma~ke:d sliver 1rlr, compl motor over h1111t 962-619'.l 1r1111~. fee 6·16.1787 8<17-2137 96~..S!l:..6 alt 4. ·io. Co~I $2000 1tll $995 .\IOVl:'OG -Li\ilna: r111 2111\V.JNE -COA!IT-COUNTRY '6!l Zenith SOHds!'";;lt-/\l\C Ch~mploQ b'i-ed Ge-rrnan ~~&-009~. 642-9465. lv'r111 Jtf'!Jt. n11ir 1!tm1. '2iJ8 C L UR 1-1 E :.t BERSlllP · \ por1o.blo 11crco $50. 675-207111 Shrpherd, I s.-iftii;" oldaruft Buy the ...,_,., ____ .. _.., ____________ ..,...,..,..,..,.,_..,,, S11€'r.1·00<1 .i:t + I ~1 f.7;)..1fl7i ~ C'all 111 ··1U1 __ new st11tf __ I •• t I ~ I I • I l -.. I ' H DAil y PILOT TutKlil.1, MltUI 161 1971 IJ, S""•Vo 912 Moblla Hom" r---r,:::;:.:::;:=:;_~ OPEN Bol.t yard, repam I 1torq:e. 9lr: ptr ft. fi?3..8809, evn !llj2...6LU. f35 Auto.1 W.tnted 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, UMCI 990 Autos, U&ed '90 Auto1, UMd 990 OLDSMOBILE --·----- ' 1~T-" __ 1011on~J~1 MODEL MOBllX liOMES in Costa Me1a·s Greenleaf Puk. 24Xti0 Amer ica na $15,900. 3DQ:Z Montere y $12. 750. Ccmp~tely ~tup w/1kirl$, •~'11ings, porch. etc. GREENLEAF PARK 1750 "'hittitt Ave .. C.r..f. C•mptrl, Sale/Ret1t 920 1 .~;c"'.::>-c,":::"c:clO'=•~•="='""'.;;.;;'°c__- CAMPER 8x35 VIKIN~lean, neat furn I br, stg. Laguna tam park. S50/mo, $ I 7 :i 0 , WE PAY TOP CASH tor used can & tn1cks, Jusl call us for ltte estimates. GROTH CHEVROLET JAC XKE 2x2. 4-1pd, F~1/AM, \\'lre whls, lo ml. Beaut cond, Pvt. owner. Sac. 675-5127, MERCEDES BENZ TOYOTA LEASE A NSW ·n Toyota tor only $49.98 mo. with jUJt $99.96 + Llc. B1U.. MAXEY TOYOTA 111881 Beach Bl. 847-R.'"65 Huntington Beach TRIUMPH VOLKSWAGEN '65 YW SEDAN R.adio .ft: H~1tu, CVNU6T2l $699 Harbour V.W. CADILLAC DODGE '68 Fltttwood. Powder blu REBLT '57 DODGE ' e w/dk "" top. AM-FM '"""""" "' wag. RO< OLDS '69 JQRQNADQ · 11terec. Tilt wh.I. F).ill pwr h1neup. 1'ran1p car. Must seati. $3400 53ti.fi&95 see to app. Sl~ u ia, FACTORY ~' '69 Convertible, I q ad e d , [ ...:c:..::.:::_ ______ l Affi CONDJTJONCNO $4200. Can finance, I prlv. FORD fo'uli power Incl. vunk open~~ pty., San Cleml'lnt• 71.f: ilt, cruise control, till wheeL~ .. 492-2800. alereo-multlplaic, ~c:. Bea~ ' '71 SPITFIRES 1BnJ BEACH Bl. 8424435 CAD. '65 Cpe. De VlllP. Air, 19•5 Ford Gal SOOXL tiful fire frt1st gold with M l ..,. NOW ON DISPLAY J-lUNTINGTON BEAOI all pwr, lrhr, landea11 top, Buckel seats, pawer iituring, vlnyt dlx. in lerior. Loo-.1 ---------I -tilt Wheel. Xlfjj cond. Sl.6.10. powt:r brakes, automatic ill owner jewet. (YCL561H. Come ln for a test drive! '66 VW GHIA 6'5-6000 64.f..fill l trutJ., 46,000 orig. mile!. t3333 CLEARANCE SALE ,:::'HomH FRITZ WARREN'S . . Woo't Int 1oog. NMV 261. ~ L.a.rre ae.Jection PNJ '71 SPORT CAR CENTER I Yellow, with Black landau CAMARO $775. J1>hnson & Son, 2626 710 E. l~t St S.A. 547.m&I top, new vlllve )rib XNHS.-:t lla...._r Bl., Cos1a Mesa . ib ti Omperg Now Slashed to I* K' C h * · $1199 ·~ 940 1ng5 OGC Sl'dan. Air, beaut Open daily 9-9; closed SUnday '68 CAMARO, Xlnt cond. 1970 54().5630, <JN'gl e s49 .~~l Motor Home Agency CONNELL '"s.~ilices~;..s~I p t y ~ 1963 Triumph TR4 R.Mdster. I CHICK IVERSON . 427 eng. ~.ooo mi's, S2150. I '64 Ford G•laxit 500 ·~CADILLAC ,ACTOlY -.::::cc=..:....:.._,.:....c___ Wirf' wheels. Original eornt. vw Pvt pty, 64>l907 -2 Doo' H••d<op. Radio, heat-Al!IHOfUZEQ.llEAUI\ Superior * Landau RO --INYOICI 604 N. Harbor. Santa Ana CHEV LET MG :0:~9-1.f.'.~~rlrive, nev.• 549-3031 Ext. fi6 o' 67 CHEVROLET rr, po!J,'.rr steering, pawer 2600 R'ARBOR BL.. SHOWCASE Open daily $ 10 9 839-9030 2828 ltarbor Blvd. brakes, laclory air, automa. COSfA MESA DEALER eo ... "'"' 546·1200 - -~ VOLKSWAGEN mo HARBOR BLVD. '66 Chevelle •k "'"'· .... ,. ORB 512 ....... oo o,., s,..i., FOR 945 ............... ,._ --~~~-~~--t ~~~CO~ST~A~M~ES~A,___~~I l ;~J~oh~<UO~o~·~So~o~.~2626;;~H~•~rl>o~,1~~ii!i~~·~!!i!iif!ii;f 00 Trailers, Travel JQP DOLLAR ELDORA CAMPERS & THINK La-• Select'ion '67 vw BUG 2 0oo Bl•< .. ea.ta M•"'· """"" THEODORE '61 Shasta Travel Trailer. I ''~G'' •':I r 6 cyl. dlr. Automatic, ROBINS FORD Jr with ''"'fr '''"''·'· IO< Of vw Campen, Bl"' wHh black '""'1"· 1500 "'10• h'""· ITPW ,,,,, '67 COUNTRY SQUIRE '69 OLDS CUTLA·ss f · t l · USED ARS engine, ha.!I '68 sea.ts & Mu.~t ll<'ll~ Full price $799. -HARBOR BLVD. stovt. re rig 6 gas mari,ne CLEAN C Vans, Kombis, bumpers. Special of the Cit.JJ 494-7744. COSfA MESA &i2-00lO !oilet, sJe('ps comlortab y. ~ Andy Brown ''FRIEDLANDER" k ZXU°"" 390 VS, AT., P~, pb, 1.ac 11.ir, Supreme 2 Dr. H.T. vg, auto., Comp I e 1 e I y encloserl THEODORE Buses, New & Used 1 wef' ' { """'1 PAMPERED '65, 1 owner lug rack, 48.000 mt. Ney, R&H, powrr sleering & '68 YW CAMPER cabana. all jack~. :\Ct gal. ROBINS FORD ISISt 11EAC:H CHWY. JJJ Immediate Delivery $999 Impala conv. Air eon<!. Ney,• br11kes, shocks, ballecy. Re-brake! vinyl roof lactory ~ress:;t,zed oo7~8i~: '~~kn k&. 206() Harbor Blvd. 893--7566 • 537-6824 CHICK IVERSON c HICK IVERSON ;~~e11~'~ne~~i1, ::~~~ bl! trans. Clf'an good cond. air. <XvF4S4t • • • NEW-USED-SERV. SttiOO. 1192.2970. $2395 Beautiful cond. Will takf' Costa J\.fesa YW VW tires. t:all Paul fi46-2444 . 1965 Shelby 350 GT S1550 r.ash or .,.,[JI trade 642·0010 ~ M" ~n Ext. _ or ., Eves & Sun, R30-6499 * DELUXE SUNDIAL * Like new. + New .. ti&er paw wide "tire•. * Low mUes, new eng.4 for mall station 1113.~n fY\V ~ uo 549-3031 Ext 66 or 67 ,70 N A Serial •256. New f'ng, new BAUER BUICK • s .. -WE PAY TOP DOLLAR I mo HARBOR BLVD, 1970 HARBOR BLVD.' DY rear end, headers. tires &. Squareback or Toyota, etcL FOR TOP USED CARS MGB COSTA •~•• COSTA MESA °'"2625 ,....,..,,.. paint. "Would You Believe" 234 E. 17th SL ·"~ I If ""Ul car is extra clean, ---------------~-- " ,_ 1067 'IGB-XI t _, Lo '69 YW ~. "'~ V\V SQUAREBACK. 1729 VS, automatic, ""Wer •teer-"Everything New"~! Only Costa Men. 548-7765 "66 AJRSTREAM Inf'! see us first. 1• • n CO•KJ. m1. DUG "" .,., 101i Custom Cabover Ford I "'''in, AC, awning. Top con-BAUER BUICK I Pv! ply OR BEST OFFER. ing. dlr. Loaded. fCVE36.q) lnte~sted parties call: * $2175. Or best oHf'r + Pvt party 645.2613 a.fl 5 66. -4 Spd: slick sips 6 butane dition. 642-7666 234 E. 17th SL Call 11!1rr fl. 675-4!i02 $ZVlCS 7 9 ., 9 499-3440 Riter 3 FuU price $2195. Call 4!M-7744 l --=~6-1~3·~li751_~-- 'le' 12500 D.y 64'1711· 67 VW SEDAN T 1970 "o~ Ma··•··o<k '69NOlds. 442 2 04 r. H .T. -•·-.·wk•nd .r , T railers, Utility 947 Costa Mesa 5-18-nro l , -op eond. '68 Chev. M11.llbu 2 dr, PS, c ,.., •' 0 E OWNER 1 '" OPEL CHICK IVERSON Uiaded w/extnis. Factory 6 cyl. Bst ofr over S15.'i0. Xln't value at $1800 N~w .000 MI. * 54S-1423 * 14' Tandem Trailer WANT la!e m°?el Ford Van. jjjii~i!ij~~ii!'-_iiijiijj S-track. SlZXI. 642-9!M2 Xln! cond. 83().7395 I f've w/w tirPs, heavy, duty Br.~utilul silver mist 1i~L11h FOR Sale: '67 NI m rod \Vith 4 wheels. AU steel v.·f'Jd. 6 -c_:rl: no Junk, please. I VW &r 1546 11.11penision & shock.'\. Low v.· 1 t_ h bu~ndy interior. 67.r:>.<Q4 alter 4 pm • '68 VW, $1300 .r mo.I••••· 644--~ alto· 6. Eq"'p,....d with auto tra111., camper, Sips 4 comfortably ed · constructiOn. l,4" Steel · · '70 OPEL S4S.3001 Ext. 66 or 67 69 CHEV ....,.,, ' ,.- Xln. _, Mk II CT * 645-5698 * ·,/h. Xl -yt PCo.Und·.V!,19503 ·~ .,. ~RD VAN, xl-t --". '.adio, he-ater, power ateer. t ODllO. a e o er. de<:k pla ting. Will sell or Autos, Imported 970 19711 HARBOR BLVD. .. • ~· cv " '""'"' 545--16.1ll, 564--068'! ._, ... _ tor pickup. 3166 Sicily, __ .;.......;.;..____ COSTA •1ESA •·t I 64" ~~ $1500 ing, power bralu!1, power Cycles, Bikes, " ~ ALFA ROMEO .. VOLVO li~~i-'ii'u' ~~~;;;;--:1;:,: I ~-· ,<:a"...!~~2~1__1 wi..iow •. '" "'°'· u ,., ff.lesa Verdf'l C.M. ,\utomatic, radio, heater. r1>d I ,69 VW FASTBACK 1965 lMPALA ~ "'lfh black VlnyJ Interior. ---------1 • coupe -V-8, a.re bard to please, don't Only 7,000 miles. 1 9~1BE.J t Y\VD tn I ......... -• lllifo, power, new vinyl top. •67 FA1RLANE Conv: 3 spd, miss th is fine car. (Xl..Jll8l Scooters 1------11--, .. --... .. .. Au101fo•S~1t /.1 ·----·I I~ THINI .;;;---~..; HONDA ... "FRIEDLANDER" J*'lt IUClll (NWT. •I 537-6824 e S9l-7566 NEW-USED-SE RV. ~ 500 cc VELOCE'ITE Thrux· ton, new clutch, tires, Antlques/Cli1ssica 9Sl • '57 T-BIRD Classic Good rond. 830-96711 or S30-5210 Dune Buggies 1960 CORVAIR Make Offer 546.7817 After 6 f'M 9S6 Trucks 962 brakM. piston and IO\l.'f'r • end. Purist's dellghl and 1 '" """' ,h,,.. "'" o"" 1 68 CHEVY 1-l·TDN over $95(1. 67~54 alter 4 ALFA ROMEO 1961 Classic Gullelta Spyder. fuJ'y res"1rl I ln!·ext·mech 'I. $1295. 64&-1366 $309 $1299 - ---.. $525. 499-3464 VS, lo mi, very clean. $795, Johnson & Son, 2626 Harbor 5 CHICK IVERSON ~ THINK lc.°'57~CH=E°'vv~-~,.~,.~X~l-ot-.,.-,~,, '4&-116' Bl., C0<oa M'"· 54<>5630 VW YO .. LVO' 48,000 mi's, needs tires, '67 FORD XL, . a.ir co n d. ,69 Clm..ASS Sup~e. auto BENTLEY GAUER BUICK S.300, 54!1-136!1 Yellow. blk inter. Good fm"· P/S P/B &h 1 conrl $1175. &33-3921. ·~~. · , , r · m- 234 E. 17th Si , 54!)..3031 Ext. 66 nr 67 '6."i CHEVY 2 dr Impala, fti!fi·m;;-.;;;;;;;;,;;O.-,;Cii"Xi:;\..'.m~•~'C''°~"'C.·!'P~"~'."."""'~'~':'.<l-°'80~!'!1 CoSI?. i\IPSi!. 548-776.i 1970 ltARBOR BLVD. UFRIEDLANDER'' 327 eng. s~. ·m f'ord Ra~ro. 500 XL 1961 BENTLEY S It EXCELLENT CONDITION $5900 494--0232 BMW PORSCHE BMW·s NEW • USED, .,1 1 '63 Porsche Super models, par1~ and semce. Cpe. Bahama yellow witb blk Overseas ~livery. I interior, Af.1/FM, chroine C. BOB AlITREY J\fO'T'ORS v.·httl~. recent en g In e 1860 Lfing Be-acti Blvd, P.X'"\\1982 2JJ."9l·S72t $2399 CORTINA CHICK IVERSON '69 roRTINA r:T COSTA MESA * Call S93-4!M3 * P/S. R/H. Auto. Best offer PLYMOUTH '68 YW CAMPER * DELUXE SUNDIAL .. Like nf'll.'. * New liger paw widf' Llrf's. * Low miles. new eng. * $2475. Or be&t OHl'r + Pvt pa11y 64~2633 Alt 5 "68 V\V Bus. Xlnt condition. Sunroof. $2150. ~18-1~87 • 548-79'27 • '64 Chevy 4 dr, r/h, power, ~::~;:R;;bii~;;;g;;;-;;liiiiii~iij;iiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiil fa et. air, Xln't cond. $69:5. ·~ Ford·Reblt engine & ~ .:2~:'.,.,, Sed'"· '"'" , s:';.;"'· • •• '6<-2558 '69 PLYMOUTH 1JJM 11.A.('9 IHWV. #I 893-7566 • 5.17-6824 NEW-USED-SE RV. $3081 1971 VOLVO Demo •2Jll9 ..Demt Lewi& VI VOLVO oyl. p/•. ,th $41'. Pd. IMPERIAL pty. 67:\-2921 alt 4. ,.,.,,,.,,.,,.-:-:.,-:--::---I Roadrunner 2 Dr. H.T. V3. CHRYSLER !MPER1AL Le Baron . au to., R&H , power stttring Loadf'd! 6 !TI(! old. 20,000 & brakf's, bucket Sf'a~. Only mi, $8200 new; S.i600 ca.sh 16,600 miles. (YPT372J or take over p y mnts . <1945 "1&-42'1 wkd•Y• "30 lo JO ~ pm. BAUER BUICK vw p.in. l..flng "''hf't'! base F1ee1s1dr XI.NT COND. $1200 "69 Yama.ba 125 Enduro like pickup. Nabers Cadillac 5'-r-or Best offrr! 54::..1282 ~9-3031 E!-:t. 66 or 67 '66 SOUAR[BACK "69 CHRYSLER Tov.·n & Country 6-p11.Menger v.·aJ'l'.on. Loader( AM IFM. Mr. Rnn Mrt\eodry v.eekd11y1 only, 642-<000 1966 Harbor. C.:\I. 616-!1303 ,61 C h~lf"r Newport 4 dr. JEEP %W E. 17th St. new. '71 He plates. Lots vicp Truck. VS. automati~. , ___ _cc.______ 19/0 HARBOR BLVD. A!.t/FM. Exlnt. eond. Sacri- of extnu $445. Call Tom power brakes, full custom, DATSUN I ~==C~O=ST=A='~'ES~A~--l fice! Will fin. pvt. pty. dlr. Crl5.1 Jru;urantt, S40-7!17S or radio, heater, mag wbttls, 1---------· 1966 911 PORSCHE: Bahama IRFJ 781). Call Pat 540.noo VOLl,(0 1962 4-dr sedan. Xlnt Needs repair. i.:e motor. eond. $450 or belt ofter. e11sy on gas $200. RIH, , CM!a Mesa 543-7765 62 Scout Jeep, Post Off ice model. Good cond. Special 673-2736. alr, Pxtrss. 5-48-6768 inter. d~r. ~take offf'r. '53 PLYMOtrra 2 dr, black, 830-1548 or1g cone!, 19 mp& PlO et '4S JEEP $800 Tnul• ........... l -'67'-<~="':.:cal=t'-5'-.~~-~-l &1de rails etc. DOT DATSUN yellov.-, 5 spd, 42,000 aii, Alf. 10 am. '68-3li Scramblf'r. E."'<cellent $1888 OPEN DAILY Am/F'm b111upunt radio. 1 --,-6-4-.-YW~-~B~U-G-- Autos, Used 990 COMET condltion $340. or best otter. AND O\.\'nrr. Complete seivice 962-7689 SUNDAYS log. 64&-2486 days, 54s-8I80 ROW m BUICK '63 Mere C.Omet_ Auto tra.n11. Good lra n1 por tati ot1 . Cuh, 546-2154, g AM· 9AM. 1966 VALIANT SfGNET Xlnt running eond. Best Otter; 494-4881/Gene. ib ~ 1-< •-,,h Blvd. Eves $799 '68 SUruki • gd rond. Strttt ~ e -~ bi~. All dirt f'QUip . 'Tl taaa. Huntington BeAch LATE 1966 Porsche. Sani!ary CHICK IVERSON $150. 847-2684 aft 3. CAOtl l..AC 842-7781 or Y.()..(l«2 Con•l\\r conver~ion. Very MERCURY ~7879: Art 'l, 673--0343 CONTINENTAL '69 BUICK WAGON .t.UTMOFllZEO OE.ALER _...:.:::.;_:::...:::...;:;.:.;;.;;::.__. [ clran. all !he goodies. Sell vw '65 Yamaha 250. New tran1p 2600 HARBOR BL., New '71 Datsun nr tradP. ~:\fi....H\90 ""' ~"31 Ex " Sports v.•Rgon. 9 Pass. VR, '70 LINCOLN Cont'] 4-rlr., all!o., R«H. P.S., P.B., roof Air. leather, Vinyl lop, rack, factory air. IYMM052l 50.0()0 mi warranty, $46.:iO. &: paint. $400, Call S97-7942 COSTA MESA ..... ;,-.,., I. nr 6? 1600 OHC, Pickup with camp.. '70 !111 T, ~~rrl. Beaut 1970 HARBOR BLVD PONTIAC Altracllve medium turquoise mist finiah with while inter.llii!i!iii!ii~~~~-i, alt 5 pm ~~"."too o,." s"-"'Y 1 · s · J'llJ~ " uu er. Siie pMCf' 2099 dlr.• orl\nge, 9JJS ints. &. \\"hi~. COST MES HONDA ~"" "~rambl••. xlnt e A A $3295 1c'c::.7·'""'==-3 ----!or & landau roof. immacU·11 .:>.l'J ""'-< • Pl.521452270) \Vill take AM/FM. ?vi pty. 644-5347 llco~,64~~~~ n!blt enci~. -~D-U_M_P_T=R_U_C_K_, car ln tnde, Will tlnance WANTED CORVAIR 1"" p,,m;,m .. ,;pped '68 BONNEVILLE Auto. trans., am-Im stereo private party. Call 546-8736 TOYOTA Mobile Homea 935 $995 or -194·6811. 1!YJ7 GMC ru P•Y top dollar for ·"""' BAUER BUICK '&1 co,,,,;, Mo"'A tEIGl2.ll. VOLKSWAGEN today, c.e..11 234 E, 171h St. Auto. $299, $10 deliven, .11.nd ask for RDn Pinchot, CosUi Mesa 54R-7765 Terms avail. 1945 H11rbor radio. heattr, power tfter- ing, pawer brake1, factory 4. Dr. H.T. VII, 1ufo .. RkH. air co11<t. Truly spotless ~ pov.·er steenng Ir. brake&, likf' ne.,., 4 near new tires, vinyl mo!. fac1ocy .11.tr, low · etc. Sf'e & e.sk !or demon. miles. (VCl.948) . NOW OPEN Good operating cond1t1on. CONTEMPO. See at Daily Pi.lot LAGUNA HILLS 330 \Vest Bay Sll"tet 23301 RIDGE ROtrrE DR. Costa Mesa or ca.Ji (Corner o1 Moulton Pkwy) Mrs. Greenman LAGUNA HILLli 642-4371 Prestlie adult community ad. ~---'--'-'c..,.. __ _ J<tcent to Leis~ World. FOR Ule or tradt : "63 Ford Br.auUtul surroundings, all 1-i T ptck-up "''ilh lum~r 111.xury .appointments, put· rack & tool boxes. $450. ting green, hobby shop, ~1945 much more. '57 CHEV. pickup "'/lift gate. CALL 839-3900 & bins. $650, Ph: ~2486 THE BEST OF l!l-5 PM) • BOTH WORLDS '67 GMC ~ T. Panel, 20.000 For a beautiful borne, iow mi'~. V-8 slick shift. $1695. maintf'na.ncl!! and architecur. 543-3224 moms. ally impressive design, See Auto S.rvic11 P.art1 966 the exeitin~ new "Village LEASE House·• by Uvi.U Mobile Systl!!ms on display now at A :i~J971 I BAY HARBOR MOBILE HDMES $50.00 mo. 1425 Baker St. Costa Mesa (38 mo.) Just S. of S.D. Fwy e.t Harbor open end 714/54Q.9470 RE NT AOAfiN8¥8A .. p~J9'1 SHORECL IFFS $4 DAY MOVE 1' '°'"' Cambridge '24XS.1 t a t091'l AND '69 DATSUN 2000, 2 tops. xlnt cond. New ltres. $19.=;o. <194-1709 eves/wknds . 8J3..003J days. FIAT TOYOTA NEW '11 NO DOWN PAYMENT 549 ;3°'68 1 Evw"· ... .,B, U 6 n-0900G . ~!!!'!!!!l!'!i!!l!ll!i~~~llB~lvdi·~· c~.~M=. :....:=..::.:=I '69 RIVIERA. Xln1 Cond. Pvt GOOD transportation '6 21 VTS-907 Ply. Pricr'd S~. i\lonza, 11uto. S:r.5, $1299 ""'"' 64&-6160 - - - - -,. m$6 0 9.:.01 DM•1.0N 0 ayTH•pM<•· CHICK IVERSON '68 Buick Riviera _ Loaded. ·ro Corv11ir Monza, 4 sprl, • - - - -I ->9 ~ AM /FM 5tereo. Beauttful ~ood rond. SJ.'il, 847-2013 ''THINK'' I S248-l36 or ca~h price YW silver w/hh1ck vinyl top. or Evt'R. 926-3032 I $200.1.55 inrl. Tax k. LJC 54:).3031 Ext. r.6 or 67 \Vef'krla)o's only, 642-!00) Mr. e ·6J CORVAIR c n n v t D r.:wn 1\.P.R. 01154~. StriaJ No. 1970 H.ARBOR 3L\'D. Ron McKendry. Spydrr-Good eond. Make of- rQ~ -134347. COSTA f.fESA '62 Buick lnv1 c!a. ~ dr. P IS-lf'r. Eves 642-6&.12. •on approvW credil 1 --~,68-7vw=~$~1~000---1 P/B. Bir, s1ereo. fmmac. '62 MONZA. black. Fi1lr S.. Bill Maxey Toyota • 962-0l89 • Ex. cond S450. 646-8610 cond. $165 or offer. Call "FRIEDLANDER" !"8I BEACH AL. '"·""I •. ,, vw BUG • CADILLAC l-'-64..::2·c.:92=20'--~-~- 1l750 HACH ILVD, HUNTINGTON BEACH ' XLNT COND CORVETIE !Hwy. 391 $1871 I 1700 • '"·0.122 e 893-7566 • sn-AA2' l -.~=, ~~==~ C d '67 C D Y'll NEW-USED-SERV 197\ TOYOTA COROLLA l 69 V\\ Bu~. SUNROOF' a . pe. e I e '69 Corvette, all extras, Air, ' 2 bR. FACTORY EQUIPPED A/C. MANY E.X'TRAS! Al ~~~u~7l-29Z2 • * •fratioo. 191' BEQJ. Joh~ $2295 Mn & Son, 262.6 Harbor Bl., Cosl a ~fe!lt . 540-5630. BAUER BUICK 1970 MERC. CONY, THE SPORTY ONE 234 E. lTfh SI. This nashy tulip yellow with Costa t.fe u 543-7'1'65 Complele Sales & Service 2480 Harbor Blvd, at. Fa ir Dr. black top & interior 11uto- mobilf' has been driven only 12.000 miles & must be sef'n &: driven to appreciate. Ra· dio. heater. pawer steering, pav.'er brllke1, factory ftir cond ., f'tc. 4 near new tires. A~k for demonstration. (705-Costa Mesa 546-8017 AZPI. Johnson & Son, 2626 Opt>n 7 clays I wel'k Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. 11:30 AM to !1:00 PM 540-56.10 .............., ! #98711 1524,10 * 646--6327 11f! 6 FACTORY CHOICE Of 5 '6!1 VW Squareb11.ck, A.Jr, ATR CONDITIO~ING 1968 CORVETTE -Xlnt cond 1969 Mercury Montego ·68 . F1111_ 850 Sp_yder 41.000; " l • Radin, Sl lt9:l. Mu~! ~It. FUil pov.·er. beautiful clotl't & -4 sprl, 427 f'n~. F~U pawer. ATTR.AcnVE k Hardtop. Exrel]enr condition. '67 FIREBIRD mi, r11d10 & radials 613-j.101 eaJt elD\& * 49:.,~2 -. Jr11ther 1nrl'r. S1f'reo, door 5.12-3.t'\ll•or 54;)...430S EOONOMICAL dlr. Full pncl!! $1499 Take Aft 6 pm 1970 V\V Squareback. Auto. lock.~. cruise control, trunk '68Corvette-327, 4 spd, Branrl Li2~t Ivy 1i~ish wit~ gold in-small down. (ZRW889) Will 1967 fiat 4--dr sffian. 4-~pd. TOYOTA \ rarlio, li"'-blu.-w/black int, openPr. Light 11rnt1net, auto n£'W; w1uTI1..nly • v a i I 1 lf'rtor equipped with AUIO· fin. pvt. pty, Ca.II 540-llOO or lo mi. Good tra~porla hon. hke nrw. 14 ,000 mi. Extras dimmf'r, mo~! e~'l'I)' dlx. ex-968-2.i.5A ' mBllc lr•ns., radio, heater, 494-T;:,06 alt 1(1 am. $650 C JJ 642--24~0 l!l66 II •-c \I I"~ 673-•·27 tra. (TVV650l. power stttring, elc.. PriCf'd , . · a ar • .,,.r, 6-lti·!t'\03 ..... ..,, ,,;i $2666 COUGAR lor quick sale. $167$. YCN-, Pont1i1c~ Ft~est JAGUAR I B" T MAXEY '70 YW BUG 3'0. Joh"'°" < Soo. 2626 '" G~'"' Pri• woth all lho ---------ILL 211 AGr '70 Cougar Harbor Blvd., ~ta Me.sa. goodieg, Bf'auti1u1 1urqouls Cambridi!;e :'olonterr\ 24X5J 4¢ MILE Capital Sales -Co. PITT A LITTLE !0951 Beach Blvd , H A. KICK IN YOUR (comer Allantat • :.'.;6.~16 LIFE! JAGUAR I $1699 ib :'i40-56.10. with white landau top. SJ166 HEADQUARTERS JTIOIYIQITIAI CHICK IVERSON ~ e~ u,ooo Miia w°'""'Y --'-'-"M~U"'S"'T~A"°"N;-:;;G:---1 !~~;~~!.!°~;.!" ~= I TI1e only authorized JAGUAR 18881 BEACH Bl VO. CADILLAC 2 Door Hiu'Cltop. V.R, autom ll-'61 GTO vw .t.UTMQl'l•ZEO DEAlE 'I IU', f~rtory air ronct , pnv.'t'r '66 Mustang Pontiac, Ori I dc11le:r in the entire Harbor Hunt. B•ach 147-ISSS 2600 }!ARBOR BL., s!Pf'rlJ\Jt, powt'r brakes, owner, Lesll' th11n 40.noo Ar'.. l ml N I ~~ H--ft-t. 5.19-3031 D.:t. 66 oo· '7 COSTA "ESA I mo·· 4 ~ T THEODORE ON waier-24 B a:r~1 r1r ROBINS FORD VUlq:e, N.B. 2 br. 1 ti~. ~ HARBOR BLVD., Ip ~ba n11 liv"g l'm din·;; COSTA MESA rm combo. Frpl<', ru~t·1m 64.2-00lO kitcben, :'>1l'x1can ~ 1 11 n r --=,...:.;;,::""'.,.-,,,----I ~tki. country c 1 u h h ~ r 1959 CAOil.J.AC w)pool prlv, boa! shp ~\'?.ti AIR CONDmONER ! 15'-A yr land il'a&" $11,fri~ RADIO U,,-2816 RADIATOR Ux60 D E LU XE PO:-.. \\'lNDSHlELD Y.'JPER DEROSA 2 hr/2 ba, lnsrprl, MOTOR .la: porchlcrpt. cemeni pat i". ;\l l'"'T DISPOSE OF THE!\£ comer lot. Space 18. lt/l ITE.;\lS THIS WEEK-&ND "'"'m , Whittier, CM. Stt Thur< & JU-.> SUn'& l"OR APPOINTMENT A x 32 MASTERBUILT, 19~1!1 CADILLAC 10 x 24 Cabana v./f'xtra TRANSMISSION hath. ComplPtf'ly f urn READY TO TAKE A\VAYI .Ca,,,ort &-too!shedl. $2250 f:XCELl.E~T CONDITION - 64;,...2159 1st CALLER BUYS BtACH Homtl Avail Nov. ~•t2.~12o Lido, 8ayshorr Huntington F'OR APPOINTMENT United Mobile Homes Autos W•nted 961 ~:..ll«l, 63.1-Zl&l. ll'>fPORTS WANTED 8x35' l 8r $2100 Or11ngf' Co11ntie, Ot&ml Altf'r 6 PM TOP $ BUYER. DIAL d!.rtd 642--567B. 01uJe BILL 1-IAXI:Y TOYOTA }'fJUr ad, then •it bl.cir and 18881 8':1ch Stvd, hftten lo Ow phone nnsf H. &!ach. Ph. Mi~ .( · 0 """"'' ""·on"""" ,v, vinyl ronl, tinted J{lllll's, ra-. s, -s.,..., 00 many can. Complt'!e '68 C ff di 197n HARBOR BLVD, ~0-9100 Open Sunday dio, h!'atf'r, whitf' w11.!l lires H~rdtop. Black with nm 1n. Nr> rra~nable oiler retuaed. SALES Orona ar Op COSTA ME.SA e Whel'I eovP.r~. Hl.11 Ah.'Tl ' lr.rinr. rllr. 28,000 m1lt-s. VR.t>'.-7.c;><l;c53-;l==:-;;-===I SERVICE '66 V\V: Gd Conrl, r11rlio. ----.-----< $3111 Automatic, powrr s!ecring. e 'li6 PONTIAC TEMPEST PARTS Lo11drfl. Black !Anda.11 1op. Call f'V!'~ 11f\ ln pm . L S I • Mu~t atll. CaJI 4M-1744. 4-dr, Xln1 cnnd, 1 owner. A11 1"matic. radio, hr:i1 er, I '7~. 'IR' i1rge1t e ect1on G d G BAUER l'I'~' 7'8 T k n .r·• OF LUXURIOUS Gr en rove '65 Must11ng futback. 4-on-S4!1j * ~S-3059 \V "" n.11rm11nn la onv1, CADILLACS e-oor, 1~c rake~. air. ounnev1Ue Sta Wgn, toOd BUICK I ~j~ ~ ) 11 ·e smAJl do1vn. ~°" c• Gh c th n •. h ... "-. JN Ill !1n;ince rv1. ply, Call Xl nt conrl bt'\ge w/hlk top LINCOLN-MERCURY Vt.ry ~oorl cone! w/new rub-shape, need~ SlOO front end alt 10 am 4!}4-7306 or .'140 3100 •l'C'd 1n1er'. RrbH !'ng, JO 10120 Gan:lf'n Grove Blvd. her & p.11.lnt. Best of.fer. work. $1 00. 5#-6969. COSTA MESA BEST BARGAl'5 " P.G . 1375, &14-<J.11' ;n o,.ng. County Gonleo G"'vo 636-2980 Call .....,.,, RAMBLER 234 E. l'lth Strut COME !'EE OUR '66 VW Sq-Bk. VPry J:r1 rond e '67 COUGAR '6.\ MUSTANG fastback, 6 5'18-nGS SELECTION or 42 000 m1. call 5.i7~1·1R9 11f! 119 Cpe OeVUleg. 18 Serl. [)to . LUXURY SPORT cyl. 3 sprl : ~w tr11ns, ~n --.------- 1'0\'0TA.'i .fi pm. I VIJles, 6 El [ll)r11.dns . 5 Con. Bl'!IUliful lime fros! llnl~h. al temater t: bAltery. s1ri 66 RAMBLER '69 JAGUAR XKE J im Slemons Imports -19.--.!I \·\v . SIOO Jn \'f'r!lblf's. 16 nrhPr select wirh hl11ick inl trinr, Pquipprd or olll'r 67.)..104.\ Convertible. 6 cyl, auto traNI 140S W. WA•rner ~ ro~dlt11)n. I tr11d1'-1n~ \\"l!h autom111tc 1r11n5 , pow· "69 Must11n,: red faslb11ck· Lie. SQK 44R. anta na Call 67.i-6822 1963 tli ru 19'0'r f.'r ~1rrnn1t, pa111er brakes, P~/pb, new v.ide nv11.I !< St7S Coup!'. 4 apt'M, radtn. hrRt· Open Eves. & Sun. ibeijj larrory 11.1r. rtidio, ht'ater, Sl!l50 or best olr. 962-6347 Harbor American er tlr mndi11nnlni;i w1r" 54~125 196? f"ASfBACK -AM/Fi-.1, · Gl\Tal ('(llflplt1 rly M"rvlrt'rl & re11.rly aft 6 ~I~. British r11cina:.1:rrt'n !.fi!J Corona 4-<lr BluP. R.t·H, ~Unf'()(lr. In mi. ~pci1IPu. 4~CAOILLAC for 11Timtdi111.-delivery. '68 MUSTANG 2-+2, pl~. • t.4• 0161 w I 1.11.nttlf',1~·oOO ll'ath~r tn· lllr, 11.uto. \lu~I s,. I I, Sl 4!r.-i f.44-l:W.t AUT~Z!O OEAUR S !67~. 4 UPH7R71 J()hni;nn Ir p/b, 11 ir-cond. $1600. Call ttrlot. (XXD2601 \ S149:'i/hr!<t nflrr. 96.~72 '54 V'i\1 '61 Engine, Ne. w 2liO(l HARBOR-BL., ~n. ~ Harbor Blvd.., ~· 1969 lo!1ReOA CO~TA Mf l T-BIRD $3795 hrRkr~ J'M"rl('Ct r un n in I COSTA MESA Cn~!11. i\1r~11.. 54(1.,563() "1\IAKE Rnon1 For Dad-f'Onrl. 644-1740 11.ft 6 d y' ', .. c If' 11. n out ~ 1 --154().9\00 Opt"n Sunday 'fi!I Cou1:11r, 11.ir ronrl, vlnyl p:11ra~fl .. your tr11<.h 1s CASH • ~QUAREBACK-Auto frttns, e mp, new lil"f'5, lo blue book. \\!lh 11. Ollily Pllot ClaJ:s1f1f'd new br11.kcs. I ·119 Coupe lkVilft $2300. Call aft -1:30 pm - 234 E. JT!h SI, lld . Sl!'\00 * fi7.1-lilli2 Full powrr. gO('l(f Mnrf. 549-316~ ~ta.!!"'.!.... _ .21~.ft\ IT'S \\.'UNO ERflJL 1 ht I '67 V"' BuJ:, bl-1i:f', 2t00fl I 67:\-2262 or fi7l-;i723 -167 COUGAR--a&V.a:w>.V m11.ny hu.\'s In 11.ppll11.nce~ mi C~f'an, l11pr deck Sloo:I e t9i(l COUPE de Ville by Air. rr<'<'nt tunr.up, ntw tlr· Dail)' Pilot W11n1 Ad• ha\•e I you fin<! In I.he Cl11s$lfied I li-l2-277Jfi/lll! 6 M•l-CS&l I pvt p11rty, .S~Jll.i ,.s. Evt's. k \~'knd.~. 89?~17<1 bars&lna pJoni. Aris Check lheom no10.·! \Vhite Elf'ph11.nt D!ml!!·A ·Llllt * 673-IW + Call 642-56111 & Saw! BAUER BUICIC I "68 MUSTANG GT. ll1 4 "fi6 Thundtrbirrl :Z rfr Hnttp. hll.rrrll . Loaded! Im-Lllnrllll R/H, A/C Ex maculAtP! $169S. AJ0-7'5.l6 <'tllen/ ~nrl. Pr1~ ~ seii '66 M"USTANG Hdtp VS, rutn immeri . Sm. Ne'A·port Sch trans, l!l ir. PIS, + Xtr;1.s. 67S-88J2 evf'~. S99.i. 64~ -.,;--.,,"~T~.s~1=R~o--1 '69 1'1AOl I. Air CQnd, discGoorl co nrl !t !nn . Hu hr11.ke1 lactnry a! ere o . Evi:ryttu~ ~1ake oiler! l.mdrd fM....6319 . fi7~1YI ------ • 7. •